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                  <text>Hometown·Market
donates to 'Dozers
concert, AS

·.Immigration bill
crushed, As

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.) 0 l'b\ITS • Vul. !)b, No. :!;J:.!

1'1{1 ll \\ .. J I I \i 1·: :!&lt;), :!007

Wl\1\ ,lltHhoih "'lllioH"I.t·ooo o

SPORTs
• Oden becomes first
Buckeye selected No. 1
overall. See Page 81

B~ln

J. Rllld/pltotOI

A flagpol!i) in a Letart Falls yard was snapped in two by
heavy winds during Wedn~sday's downburst.

Officials .survey
·stot•nt dantage
BY BRIAN

J.

classified the storm as a
do\Ynburst, based on the
nature of damage to trees
and property. The storm
struck both Letart Falls and
Letart, W.Va. in Mason
County, just across the Ohio
River, early Wednesday
evening. The heavy winds
were accompanied by rain,
which was still standing in
pools in fields on Thursday.
Byer said damage was
limited to downed trees
and tree limbs, some dam age to roofs, and some
''minor
crop
damage.

'REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

LETART FALLS
Meigs County Emergency
Management
Agency
Director Robert Byer and
County Commissioner Jim
Sheets visited the Letart
Falls community Thursday
afternoon to s~rvey property damage caused by a
heavy storm that touched
down there Wednesday.
A National Weather
Service investigator visited
the scene yesterday and

INSIDE

Page24•

2007 ·Big ·Bend Blues ·Bash

•

semce

• Diocese ordains new
priest. See Page A2 .
• America, bless God.
See Page A2
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A7
• Governor, legislative
leaders celebrate
setting aside polrtics.
See Page AS

BY BETH SERGENl'

Annie's Mailbox
A6
Calendars
A6
Classifieds
B4-6
.comics
B7
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A2-3
Movies
As
NASCAR
B8
Sports
B Sec.tion
Weather
AS

LETART, W.Va. - An
investigator
with
the
National Weather Service in
Charleston
confirmed
Thursday morning that a
tornado did move through
the Letart area Wednesday
evemng . .
"It was a landspout," Dan
Bartholf, warning coordination meteorologist, said. "A ·
landspout is like a waterspout, but only on soil."
Around
7 · p.m.
Wednesday evening, residents along W.Va. 62 from
Sandhill Road south to
Larry's Locker experienced
trees, utility lines and damages to their homes after a
severe thunderstorm moved
through the area.
Bartholf said the damages
shown that winds wc:;re estimated to be between 95-100
mph and some of the path
was about a mile long and
indicated that the funnel
cloud was on the ground for
at least one minute. It then
crossed the river and did
some minor · damage to
Utart Falls in Meigs
County, Ohio.
The cloud was discovered
by a West Virginia State
Trooper as he was driving
through the area.
Cpl. C. K. Zerkle of the
. Mason County Detachment
was on his way home when
a call about a possible
vehicle accident came over
his radio. Since he was
close to tbe area, 'Zerkle
thought that he would
answer and investigate the
accident.
When he was close to the
intersection of W.Va. 62 and
Sandhill Road, he said he
noticed a storm coming and
was attempting to beat it to
.. the scene when he saw that
several utility poles began
to snap·in two. As he looked
around, it was then that he

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing Co .

Please see Tornado, AS

WEATHER

HOLZER
CLINIC

DelaNo on Page AS

INDEX
2 SECTIONS -

Caring:
Everywhere

16 PAGES

.

•

• +··

•• •

lJ,

•·

thunderstorm. In a downbrust, the downward
speeds in the thunderstorm
must be unusually high,
and this downward flowing
air must penetrate close to
the ground.
Barnhof cited the damage
pattern resulting from the
storm in identifying it as a
down burst.

BSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

DPOTTORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

'

limited scope of damage.
Byer said he spoke to
Investigator Dan Barnhof
after they both had visited
the site of the damage, and
confirmed the storm classification as a downburst. A
downburst is a localized
area of damaging winds
caused by air rapidly flowing down and out of a

Concerns
over site for
new Rutland
Post Office

BY DIANE PonORFF

'

· Deputy EMA Director
Scott Hill said an inch and
a half of rain fell in Letart •
Falls during the storm.
In one yard, an aluminum
flag pole was bent in half by
the heavy winds; in another.
tree limbs and roofing material were scattered. Byer
said a disaster declaration is
unwarranted because of the

Weather ·

· Thursday, June 28, 2001 ·

confirms
Mason Co.
tornado·

.

· Meigs County EMA Director Robert Byer and County Commissioner Jim Sheets talk to a
property owner in the path of Wednesday's downburst. storm in Letart Falls.

::

Nancy Lockard,
also known as
"Nancy the
Turtle Lady"
poses with
Tessa, her pet
turtle which had
a close call on a
recent trip
through
Southeast Ohio.
Beth Sergent/photo

'Don't shoot, that's my turtle!'
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - In 1968
Sly and the Family Stone
sang, "different strokes for
different folks," a sentiment
that has sometimes become
all too lost in 2007.
· Take for instance. Nancy
Lockard of Powell who is
also known as the "Turtle
Lady." .
Nancy says she lives in a
regular house with a regular
husband, four regular children, a regular dog, two regular cats, lots of birds, frogs,
toads, fish, lizards and "lots
and lots of turtles." Nancy
loves her turtles like most
people love their dogs or cats.
Nancy also travels across
Ohio and other neighboring
states with not only her turtles but·her snakes, toads and
lizards as part of her presen- .
tation on respecting animals
and encouraging conservation . She visits schools,
church groups, birthday par·
ties, daycares, retirement
centers and summer reading
progrdills to encourage chi!-

RUTLAND Mayor
April Burke says she is concerned about the location
chosen by the United States
Postal Service (USPS) for
the new Rutland Post Oftice.
The recommended loca- ·
tiori, at this point, is I08
Salem Street and is privately owned property according to Burke.
Burke said she and sev'eral residents within the vii- ·
!age are concerned about
placing the new post oft'ice
in a location which she says
is a known "tlood zone."
Burke is also concerned the
Salem Street location . has
limited parking space. She
sent these concerns in writing to the USPS on April 10
and received a response in
writing on June 12.
The letter came from Tom
Please see R~and, AS

dren to read about turtles.
turtle native to Aliica who
During a recent . tour of ·· was bred in ~aptivity and
West Virginia and Southeast enjoys eating plants. Turtles.
Ohio, which included a visit like Tessa can also live up to
to the Meigs County 75 years and weigh well over
District Public Library's 100 pounds. These are some
Summer Reading Program, of the reasons why Nancy
Nancy left her hotel room in said turtles aren't easy to care
a neighboring county and for and are a life-long comtook one of her favorite tur- mitment but it is a committies, Tessa, with her to a men\ Nancy has gladly made.
Nancy's initial mortilicapublic recreational area.
. Bv CHARLENE HOEFliCH
Nancy said she sat on the tion at the man wanting to
HOEFLICH@MYD AI LYSENTINELCOM
grass and read a book while shoot her pet "as probably
17-pound Tessa grazed next pretty evenly matched with
POMEROY
to her in the grass.
the man thinking she was Temporary appropriations
Nancy said the afternoon "crazy," according to Nancy for fiscal . year 2007-2008
was suddenly interrupted by who has a good sense of which begins on July I were
a pickup truck that roared to hulll6fiibout the whole inci- approved at . this week 's
a stop near her and .the 'tur- dent. Nancy supposed the meeting of the Meigs Local
tie. A man jumped out of the man was only attempting to Board of Education.
truck and told Nancy, protect her.
Mark Rhonemus, treasur"Don't worry, ma'am, I' ll
Perhaps teaching those er, 'reported a figure of
take care of it." Nancy said "different strokes" and not · $24.855.009 as of this date
he then grabbed a shotgun to make assumptions about · noting that not all anticipated
in the bac.k of the truck and other people (or their pets) revenue is included in that
was going to shoot Tessa. was the lesson learned in amount and the expectation
Nancy immediately told the this situation. Speaking of is for more funds to come in
man not to shoot, that the assumptions, for those for operations next year. He
turtle was her pel.
g4essing the neighboring also reponed on the final
"That's not a pet, that's a county containing the man revised permanent approprisnapper,'' was the man's with the pickup truck and ations for the current fiscal
response and assumption.
gun was in West Virginia.
Please see Board, A5
Actually, Tessa is a Sulcata . you ' d be wrong.

·Board approves
temporary
appropriations
for 2008
. operation

J

~

I&lt;'

�•'

FAITH. 'VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

America, bless ·God
Bv

KERRY

Wooo

PASTOR, RACINE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH

When Irving Berlin wrote
his fi rst version of "God
Bless America" in 1918, I
imagine he never expected
that song to be even more
popular today almost century later. Through the years,
"God Bless America" has
become the unofficial national anthem. It was the most
popular s0ng at · memorial
services following the terrorist attacks of September II ,
200 1, and the New York
Yankees play it during the
"seventh-inning stretch" of
every home game.
We sing "God Bless
America," but how often we
do think about America
blessing God? Can we bless
God? Absolutely! Every
time we do a kind deed for
another rerson without
thought o reward, we are
blessing God. Every time a
child is hugged and told that
he or she is loved, we bless
God. Whenever we put the
interests of others ahead of
our own, we bless God. ·
So what is a blessing? It's
an action or experience that
points towards divine
approval. Jesus taught "ask
yourself what you want people to do for you, then grab
the initiative and do it for
them." (Matt 7:12, '{he
Message: The Bible in
Contemporary Language). I
like the way Eugene
Peterson paraphrased this
verse. We are to grab the initiative in doing good for others, not wait for others to do
good for us. We bring our
actions into divine approval
and, in a sense, make God
more visible to others.
More often than not, even
as Christians, we tend to act
out of self-interest rather
than other-oriented-ness.
We put a "numero uno" sign

a

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Cancer. Treatment Centers
of America (CTCA). The .
keynote presenter is Rev.
Percy McCray, Jr., director
of pastoral care I social services for the CTCA at
Midwestern
Regional
Medical Cen.ter in Zion, Ill.
CTCA is offerin~ this free
service for parishioners and
clergy to help them Jearn
what this spintual outreach
is and how to reach out and
support cancer patients
within their own church
and community and understand the special needs of
cancer patients. Lunch will
be provided.

Submitted photo

Newly-ordained priest, Rev. Seth Wymer, is pictured at his
ordination with Bishop R. Daniel Conlon of the Diocese of
Steubenville. He is the latest priest ordained in the diocese, which includes Meigs County and Sacred Heart
Church, Pomeroy.
the culture and remedies,"
the new priest said he has
learned from the pope's
writings.
After graduating from the
Josephinuin, Fathe~ Wymer

enrolled at St. Vincent
Seminary, Latrobe, Pa.,
which has what he
described as a completely
different feel than his previous place of study, because

Union members can opt out of dues based on religious beliefs
COLUMBUS
An
employee whose religious
beltefs conflict with the
political positions of their
labor union cannot be
forced to pay dues, a federal
judge ruled.
U.S. District Judge
Gregory Frost's ruling
broadens the .category of
employees who may opt out
of unions because of religious . beliefs beyond
Seventh-day Adventists and
Mennonites.
Catholic
A Roman
-teacher who refused to pay
dues to the National
Education
Association,
claiming its views on abortion conflict with her own,
sued the State Employment

Relations Board after the
panel ruled . against her
claim for a religious
exemption.
Carol Katter, a teacher in
St. Marys in western Ohio,
said the union supports
abortion rights and she does
not. "I was not going to give
I cent to those causes,'.' she
told The Columbus Dispatch
for a story TUesday.
. The National Right to
Work Foundation, which
opposes mandatory union
membership,
funded
Kauer 's legal. fight.
The National Education
Association on TUesday
referred calls to the Ohio
Education Association, the
state teachers' union. OEA ·

spokeswoman
Mic.helle
Prater said the association
had no corilment.
In his ruling Thursday,
Frost struck down the Oh10
Jaw that held only members
of religions that "historically held conscientious objections" to union membership
could opt out. The judge
said anyone with demonstrated religious beliefs
should be exempt from paying dues to unions whose
positions they find objectionable.
The law di scriminated
among religions by recognizing the Seventh-day
Adventist and Mennonite
objections to joining unions
while denying the same right

to others, the judge said.
.In deciding Kalter's case,
the State Employment
Relations Board was following the state law that
defined religious exemptions more narrowly, executive
director
Arthur
Marziale Jr. said.
He said board officials
were consulting with their
attorneys on whether to
appeal the judge's ruling,
which also said empl~ees
who opt out of unions will
have to pay the equivalent
of their dues to a qualified
non-religious
charity.
They still will be entitled
to the protections of the
union, such as collective
'
bargaining.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Rutland Fl'ft Will Bl ptl!il

Churth of Jtsu~ Christ Apostolic
VanZandJ and Ward Rd .• Pastor: James
Mtller, Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.,
Evening - 7:30 p m.
Rlnr Valley
River Va ll ey Apostohc Woc&lt;~h i p Center.
873 S. 3rd Ave . Middleport . Rev.
Michael Bradford , Pastor, Sunday. 10 .10
a.m. Tues 6·30 prayer. Wed . 7 pm 1:!1 ble
Study
Emmanuel Apostolic Tabtrnade Inc,
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland .
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:.30 p.m..
Thun 7·00 p m.. Pastor Many R. Huuon

Assembly of God
Llbtrly A"'mbly or God
PO Box 467. Dudding Lane. Mason.
W.Va .. Pastor: Neil Tenn11nl, Sunday
Serv1ces- IO:UO ~. m . and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Pagtvllle Fmwill Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Mike Harnlon . Suriday School
9:30 to 10:30 am . Worship service 10· 30
to I I;00 am. Wed. preaching 6 pm
Carpenter Ba.plisl Churd
Sunday Sdmol • ll·3tlam . Preachmg
, Service !0:30am. Evening Sem cc
7: 00pm , Wednesday B1 ble Sludy 7:l10 pm .
lntenm Preacher - Aoyd Rms
Cheshire Baptist Church
Pbtor: Steve Linle, Sl!nday School: 9:30
. am . Morning Worship: 10:30 am.
' Wednesday Bible Study 6: 30pm; chmr
practice 7,30, youth und Bible Buddies
6.30 p.m. Thurs. 1 pm book study
Hope Baplisl Churrh (Southern)
570 Grant St .. Middleport. Sunday school
- 9:30 a.m., Worship - II a.m. arul6 p.m..
Wedne!ifiay Service - "7 p.m Pastor: Gary
Ellis
Rulland First Baptlst Church
Sunday School - 9.30 a.m.. Worsh ip 10·45 am .
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert . East Mam St..
Sunday Sch . 9:30am . Worshtp 10:30 am

.

t-1rst S~Juthtrn Bapli~t
4 1872 Jlomeroy Pike , Pastor: E. Lamar
O ' Brya nt. Su nday Sc hoo l - 9·30 a.m..
Worship - 8:15a.m .IJ 45 um &amp; 7·1MI p.1h .
Wedn e ~u y Smicc• - 7 0:1 p.m
First Uapti ~ l Lhurcl1
Pastor: Billy Zu&lt;&gt;pan 6th und l1almcr St. ,
Middleport. Su nday Sdwol - 9 : 1~ a.m..
Worshi p - 10 15 ~ m .. 7:011 p.rn ,
WI.'Jnesday s~mce. 7 un p.m
Racine t·irst 8uptist
Pustor : Rya 11 Euton . pa., tor , Sunduy
School - 9.]0 a rn ., Worsh1p - 10:40 a.nl .
7:00 p m .. Wednesduy Se rvices - 7:00
p.m.
S_llvcr Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson , Sunday School IOa .m .. Worsh1p · ll a.m .. 7:00 p.rn
.Wcdnc,d:ry shvil'es- HXI p m
i\11. Union Raptist
Pastor: Dennis Wl.'a\'er Sunday School9 45 a. m .. E\•enin g • 6 30 p.m ..
Wedne ~dil )' Scrvict:s- 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Baplisl Chun:h
Great Bend , RoUie 1.24 . Rac ine, OH .
Pastor: Ed Curter, Sunday Sd oel - 9:30
a.m. , Sunday Worship - 10:30 a .m..
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Churcb .
2860 I St. Rt. 7. Middleport, Sunday
Service - ·10 a m , 6:00 p.m .. Tuesday
Services -6:00

Hlllslde'Bapli.ol Cbur&lt;h
St. Rt . 143 just off Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev.

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lames R. Acree, Sr. , Sunday Unified
Service , Wo r~ hip - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday ~nice s -7 p m.

·j

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

. Victory Baptist Independent

525 W 2nd St. Middlepon . Pastor: James
E Keesee. Worship - IOa .m., 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Scr\ices- 7 p.m.

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

You

Michelle Kennedy

Fatlh Bapll!il Churth
Railroad St , MilSon. Sundny School - 10
a.m , Worship - II a .m., 6 p.m.
. Wednesday Serv1ces • 7 p.m.

Director of Marketing and Admi ssions
Forest Run Baplist- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Su ndny School - 10
a.m.. Worship ~ 11 :30 a.m.

MI. Moriab Bapllst

Wann Friend!)'
=.u:~-:...... 209

Third
Racine, OH

We all make mi~tak.es, and sometimes these mistakes are big ones which adversely
afJecl oorselves and the ones we love. II is often easier to live with
nustakes that affect only ourselves than those
which hun the ones we love. But we should
not allow ()Ur.;Cives 10 be aushed by our
mtst*es. We really should pick ourselves up.
do what we can to alleviate the dainage that we
may have caused and get on with rur lives.
In fact, we mould really have a mindsel that
plans on making mistakes. Net in the sense of
acrually trying 10 do something wroog, but in the
~ that because we are human. we know that
we will err and that our errors may mmelimes he
oosdy and paillful. Ck.lr favorite cup will someday be '
broken. because we, or someone ebc, win drop iL
Most car crashes are caused. by driver error, arxt
we can wallow in our guilt afler an acCident. or we
C&lt;ll "dust ourselves off." and move on with our life.
I'm not suggesting that we be cnlloos about our
rruslakes. A cutai.n amouit of guilt and rtTllOne is
appropnate, but it is irJl'OR8lU that we not wallow
in self-pity precisely because that attitude makes it
roore difficult to help those we may have harmed.

740·949·2210
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

We Sell Homes at
TEAFORD REAL ESTATE
Members of lhe MLS and REALTOR"

Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy
740.992-3325
www.teafordrealestate.net
Karl Kebler III
CeniDed Public Acrounlallt
. email: kkebltr@charttr.net
618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-7270

KEBLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

FOr we all rreke nany mistakes , arrl if mt aE rrakes m mi.stakes in
re sa;s re is a perfe::t 11111, able oo tridle t:re &gt;IDle txcy aloo.
R.S.V. J ares 3:2

~hit

IRA St, Rollovtrs', Stocu- Bonds', Mutual
Funds-, Annuilit.f-. LLmg Ttrm Can
Karl Kebler. Ill , CPA. RegiMered
Representative of H.D. YeS( Investment
Servicess.. Securities offered through H.D. Vest
In.vesurient Se~ iccsu., Member SIPC Advisory
services offered throogb H. D. Vest Advisory
Serv1cesa~. Non-bank subsidiaries of Wells·

•

F - &amp; Company. 6333 North Slate HWY 161
4th Floor. Irving TX , 7l038 (972)87Q.HXXI

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd. ·
Racine, OH

740·949-2217

Atmosphere

Hours
6am·8 pm

'lvfi[[ie's !Rgstaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
· Home Cooked Mtals &amp; DailyS pecials

740.985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Voun

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday Sclwol • 9:30 .a. m.. Worsht p ·
10:45 a..m., ~u nda y Evemng - 6:00p.m ..
Pastor: Don Walker

.,.

, Morning worship II am Evening - 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m
flnl Baptist ChuKh of Mason , WV
(ln_deptndent Bapt1st)
SR 652 and Anderson S1. Pastor; Rober!
Grady. Sunday school 10 am. Morning
church I I an\, Su nd&lt;~y ~vl!nmg _6 pm . Wed.
B1ble Study 7 pm

Catholic
Sac~ d

Jleart Catholic Churth
IM Mulberry A\'e .. Pomeroy. 992-5K9K.
Pastor: Re\ . Waller E. Heinz. Sar Con.
4 ·45 -.~: 15p.m : Mass- 5 30 p.m . Sun .
Sun. Mass - 9:30
Con. -H:45-9.!5
a.m.. 1Ja11y Mass· ~DO a.m.

a.m.:

Church of Christ
Westside Chur( h or Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd. Pomeroy. OH
Cent act 740-441 -1296 Sunday morning
10:00 . Sun morni ng Bib le stud )':
following worship . Su n. eve 6:00pm ,
Wed b1 ble study 7 pm
Hrmlock Cron Chrlsllan Church
Larry Brown , Worship - 9: 30
a.m. Sunday School - 10.30 a.m.. Bi ble
Study- 7 p.m.
M1m ~1e r :

Pomeroy Churth or Christ
212 W. Main St.. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m , Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Pomemy Westsidf Church ol Christ
33226 Child ren's Home Rd .. Sunday
School • II a.m.. Worship - !Oa.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
5th and Mam , Pastor : AI Hartson .
Childrens Director, Sharon Sayrt , Teen
Director· Dodger Vaughan , Sunday School
- 9:30 am .. Worship- 8: 15, 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m.. Wedn es~y Services- 7 p.m.
Keno Churth of Christ
Wo.rship - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday Sc hool •
10·30 a.m.. Pastor-Jeffrey Wall ace . .1st and
Jrct"Sunday
Rearwallo ... Ridge Church of Christ '
T..:rry. Sund ay Sc hool -9:JO
am
Wonh1 p - 10 :30 .1. m .. 6 ~ 0 p.m.
Wl!dnl.'.-.d.l) Sernce~ - 6.3Up.m.
Pa~rur : B ru~·..:

Zion Clmrth or Christ
Pmntwy. /larn , ou vi llt:' Rd . (RI.I4 J ).
Paslllr. Rnge r Watson. Sunday School \1 :10 ;un .. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p .m .. Wednesday St.•n•iccs- 7 p m .
'1\tppers !)lain Church 11f Christ
' hhtrurne nt.al. Wnrsh ip Se r v i ce ~ \1 a 111 .,
Communicm · 10 u.m , Sunday Sc hool HI· a.m.. Youth- 5:30pm Sunday, Bible
Smd}· \\cdne~day 7 pm

I'

lttadhury Churth or Christ ·
1\linl'acr: Tom Runyon . .\955K Bradbu ry
Road. Middlcporl. Sund11y School • 9:30
a.m
~or~ hi p - 10.30 a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday Sc hool 9.JO a.m., Worshi 11 and
Cornmunitm · IO:JO u.m .. Bob J Werry.
Mini !iter
8radrord Church of Christ
Corner of" St Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury ~1"..
Mi mster: Doug Shamblin , Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger. Sunda) School · 9 30 a.m.
Worship • !:1 .00 a.m ., 10:30 a.m.. 7,00
p.m..Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.
Hickory Hills Church or Christ
Tuppc1s Pli1ins. Pastor Mike Moure , Bible
class. 9 am . Sunday: worship 10 a.m.
Sunday: worship 6:30 pm Sunday: Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

Rerosvllle Church of Chris I
· Pastor: Phi lip Stunn . Sunday School : 9:30
a.m .. Wonhip Service: 10:30 a·.m .. Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m
Dtxtu Churrh of Christ
Sunday school 9:30a.m., Sunday worship
- 10:30 ~ . m .
The Church of Christ of Pomeroy
lnte ~ec tio n 17 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent , Su nday Bible Study •
9:30 a.m.. Worslup: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wed ne~d.ay Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Church of Chrisl in
Christian Union
Hartford . W.Va .. Pastor: Da vid Greer,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship •
10:30 a.m .. 7:00 p.nl .. Wednesday
' Serv1ce~- 7:(Xl p-m

Church of God

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

your light so shine bef&lt;lreI
that they may see your
works and glori fy your
••awe• in heaven."
Matthew 5:16 499 Richland Avenue, Athens

S}racuse First Church oCGod
Apple and Second Sts, Pll&gt;h&gt;r: Rev. David
Russe ll , Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. Eve mng Se rvices- 6:30 p. m.,
· Wednesday Services-6:30 p.m.
Churtb of God or Prophecy
OJ . White Rd . off St. Rt. 160, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman . Sunday School - 10 a.m..
Wo~h ip - II a.m.. Wednesday Services - 7
pm .

Congregational
Trinity ChuKh
Se¥Qnt.l &amp; Lynr1. Pomeroy, Pastor. Rev.
Jonathan Noble. Worship 10:25 a.m..
Sl!nday Schooi 9:1S a.m.

Episcopal
Grace Eptscopal Cburth
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy. Sunday S~ hool
and Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m. Rev.
Edwa·rd Payne

Holiness
Conuitunlty ChuKh
Pastor: Ste ve Tomek . Main SLreet,
Rutland. Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m..
Sunday Service-7 p ~

DtnYIIIe HollntSS Chun:h
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle. Pastor:
B'enjamin Crawford. Sunday school · 9:30
a.m., Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 .
p.rh . Wednesday prayer sem ce - 7 p.m.
· Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisunville Roat.l, Pastor: C lmrle~
McKenzie, Surl(lay School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II am .. 7:00p.m.. Wednesday
Service - 7:00p.m .

Rose of Shanm Holiness Church
Leadi ng Creek Rd , Rlllland . Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King, Sunday school· 9: 30 a.m.,
Sunday worshtp -7 p.m., Wednesday
pra~·er meeting- 7 p.m. ~
Pine G rove Bible Holiness Ch un:~
112 m1le oil Rt. 325, Pa.stor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 am ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7: 30 p.m..
Wcdn ~dlly Sc=rvicc - 7.30 p.m.
Wesleyan Bihle Holiness Church
75 Pe~ rl S1.. Middlcp(ln Pastor: Rid
Bourne. Sunday School·- 10 am Worship
-10:45 p.m . Sunday Eve . 7-(JO p,m..
WcdncsdiiY Service -7:30pm
Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Larry Lemky; Sunday School
- 9 :.~0 a m . Worship · 10·45 a.m.. 7 p.m..
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.
Laurel Cliff Frte Methodisi Church
Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Sunday School 9. JO a.m .. Worshtp ; IO:JO am . a;1d 6
· p.m.. Wednesda;· Service - 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Ttle Cbun·h or Jesus

Christ oC LaUer-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160 . 446-6247 or 446-74N6 .
Sunduy School 10:20- 11 a.m , Rel ief
SocietyfPri csthood I I:OS - 12:00 noon,
Sacram ent Se rvice 9- 10 15 a.m.,
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thurs - 7 p.m. , .

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
P1r1e Grove. Wonh1p - 9:00a.m .• SundaY
S~.:hool · 10.00 a. ~ . Pastor:
Our Saviour tutheran Chvt:h
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravens wood.
W.Va .. Pastor: David Russell. Su nday
School - 10:00 a.m.. Worship - II a.m .
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St.. Pomeroy.
Sun . School - 9:45 n.m.1 Worship - I I a.m.

United Methodist .
Graham United Methodist
Worsh1p - I I a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
Bechtel Unlled Methodist
New Ha ven , Richard Nease , Pastor.
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues . 6": 30
prayer and Bible Study.

l\1t. Olhe Uolltd Methodist
Off 124 Dehind Wilkesville , Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m., Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.
Melg.~&gt; Coopnatlve Pari.'h
Nonheast Clu; ter, Alfred, Pastor: Jim
Corbitt . Su nday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship · II a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Chrster
Pastor: Jtm Corbi tt , Wor ship - 9 am .,
Sunday School - 10 a.m.. Thursday
Se rvices- 7 p.m.

lntr rdentH11inatiomd l'hurch
Road. l'&lt;htm : Kober1 \ 'ancc.

Kmg ,bu r~

Pomem) Cburrh or the Nazart ne
Pastor h.n Lavender. Sunday SdHiul 9:30 a.m.. Wnr, hip IO :JO a.m. dnU 6
p.m.. Wedne\da} Scmce~- 7 p.m.

Lon" Bottom

Sunday School - 9:30 &lt;;J .m.. Worshi p .
10:30 a.m.
Rffllsvllle
Worsh1p • 9.30 a.m .. Sunt.luy St.:hool
10:30 a.m.. hnt Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. serv1ce

Sund&lt;J; School

Tuppers Phdn~ St. Paul
Pastor: J1m Corbitt. Su nday Schon! · 9
a.m.. Worsh1p - \0 a.m., Tuesda} Services
- 7:30 p.m.
Centnl Clmter
Asbury tSymcuse ), Pastor. Bob Robin\On.
Sunday School - 9:45 i.m . Worship - II
a.m.. Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 JO p.n1

pm
t"re'fdonlt; ospel \-1ission
Knob . on Co Rd. 11. Pa, tor: Re\.
Rclgt'r Will ford. SunJ.t ~ Sl·hool - 930
a.m Wor,htp- 7 p.rn
B&lt;~ld

. White's Chaprl \\"es lc~· a11
Cooh•tllt' Road . l'•t•lor : Re1 . Charle•
MilMind.!lc . ~und ;1~ SdM..c..JI •. ':1 JO a.m..
\\\11, h1p - 10 Jl/ "m . Wednl·,da) Serv1ce
- 7 p.m ~

Other Churches

J'airvie"· Biltle Church
Letart . \\ V3 itt I . Pa~olur l:!n.m Ma) .
Sunda ~ Sl·honl · ':1 .'0:. m .. Wc11'h1p - 7 00
p 111 . WeJne-.J:I) Btbll.' StuJ) -7:00p.m
t·~ ith t'ellow)hijl Cru!oadt· ror Christ
Pa,tm Ke\ 1-ranllm 0Kken '. Sr:r\'ICI'
Fnda~ 7 p.m

Syracuse C11m munit ~· (hurrh
!4KO Sel·ond S!.. S)rncu-.c . OH
Sun. School 10 um. Sunt.ly mght fdO pm
P:~~tnr : Joe Gv.J nn
A New Beginning t•·uu GO!ipel Church ! Harn'&gt;(liJ\ ilk .
Pastors: Bob and ~ a~ M o~r, h all.
Sunday Ser\ ice , 2 p.m.

Enterprise
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday School .
10:30 a.m.. Wonhi p - 9·30 a m.. Bible
Study Wed . 7.30
Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader. Su nd :~y School - 10
a.m.. Worship - II a.m.

Ca lv11r~· Uibh: Church

•
Pomero~

P i~C .

Blackwood.

Amazing Gnt(t Community Church
Pastor· Wllyne Dunlap. Stille Rt . 6lll.·
Tupper~ Plai n,. Sun Wur~o h 1p : 1011111 &amp;
(rJII pm.. Wed B1bl&lt;' S t ud~ 7 110 p m .

Forest Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson . Sunday School . 10
a.m. Worsh1p - 9 a.m.

lJ :JI/ a .m .. Wor,hip

Sctii L'r !IJ·3il a rn . bcnmg S&lt;."nH.:e 6

Chester Church of Ihe Na7.al'@nt'
Paslor Rt\ Herl&gt;cn Gnne . Sund~y S.:h\x1l
- 9 30 a.m Wor~ h1 p - II am . 6 p.m..
Wedne'&gt;da~ Serv"·e~. 7 p.m.
Rutland Clturch of thl' ~IIZart'ne
Pastor l ,aa~ Shu~. Sundil1 ~- hvo l - l): }fl
a.m.. Wersh1p - 10:30 a.m . h . 'O p m .
WeJne~a y Sen ict'' · 7 p.m.

Wor ~ hip

Co . Rd . l1 a,t ()r Re\ .

School - 9.JO a.m .
7 .~{1 p.m.
· 7 JO p.m

Sund.1 ~

IO ..lU

Wl·! h ll.''d~) Scrn c~

~. m ,

Stinrs,i lle Commu nit ~· Churrh
Sunda) Sd10ol 10.00 am . Sund.1~ Wl.lr~h1p

Oasis Chnstian Fello" ship

11 .00 am. Wcdnl•,uay 7:00 prn f'a, tor
Br)&lt;lll &amp; ~1 1"Y D~llc)

(No n -de n mmn &lt;~ t lt llla l fe llow,hip)
Mectmg th the M c1g ~ ~h ddlr Sl·hool
Cafeteria Pastor Chn' S!t.'ll. :1n
lll:OO am.- Noon Sund~ ~: Informal
Wor~h i p . Ch1 ldren·~ 1111 11 i~uy

Heath !Middleport)
Brian Dunham . Sunday S' hool 9:30a.m, Wo~h ip - II:00 a.m.
Pa ~! o r ·

Rcjoidn~

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Worship - 10 am.
Pomeroy
Pastor: Bnan Dunham. Worship - 9:30
a.m., Sunday School· 10:35 a.m.
ROt:k Springs
Pastor: Keith R:~der , Su nday School . !J· I)
a .m .. Wors hip
10 u. m .. Youth
Fellowship . Sunday- 6 p.m:

l.i£e Chun:h

500 N. 2nd AH. Midt.l lepun. Pastor:
M1t e Fun! man. P.l,lllf Ementu ~ Lawre nce
Fort' man Wnr'lh lp· 111·m ;un

Communi!~· or Christ
Ponl and-Ranne Rd .. P a~tor. Jim Proffitt.
Sunday Sc hool · 9.30 a.m . W01 ~ h 1 p 10:311 a.m., Wedn e~day Serl'ites - 7:011
p.m.
Bethel Wor!ihlp Center
.1\J7H2 S R 7. Rccdwilk. 0 11 45772 . Ill
mile nonh uf Eastern Schuoh o n SR 7. A
Ful l Gmpcl Chu rl"h. Pastnr Koh Harber.
Associate Pastor Karyn Da\'is . Youth
P :~ ~tor Suzie Francis. SunUay \C rvices
10 00 am worsh ip. 6:1:0 pm Fum ily Life
Cl.t ~~e§. Wed Home Ce ll Grou p~ 7 00
p.m .. Outer L t m i t ~ Ce ll Grou p ul the
churc h 6 30 pm 10 8:30 pm

Minersville
Pastor· Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 9
a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m

Wedne,da)

s~- ~~ 1("&lt;'~

· 7 p.m

Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton . W Va Sund:t} School - HI am .
Wnr\ hi p - 7 p.m.. We dnc~d •l ) Scr\' ICC- 7

p.m.
~CW ure Vietor~· Ccnler
H73 George~ Cr!'d. Rmd.Galllpol1 ~. OH
Pa5tor: Bill Slatl'n . Sunday St'nu;c)- 10
a.m. &amp; 7 .r.n_l. Wl'f.lnesd&lt;~)' -. 7 p.m &amp;
Ynuth 7 p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bourne, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a m.. Thursd3)'
Services- 7 p.m.
Sa lem Center
Pa&lt;~tor: W1ll iam K. Mm hal l. Sunday
School - IU": 15 a m.. Worshtp - 9: IS a m..
Bi ble Study: Mon d :~y 7:00 pm
Snowville
Sundty Sl hool - 10 a.m.. Worship lJ .un.

Ash Street Churrh .
398 Ash St , to.l!ddleport-Pastur Jeff Sm1th
Sund ay S!;hool · 9.30 a.m._. Morm ng
Worshtp - 10:30 a.m. &amp; . 7:00 pm.
Wednesda) Ser\'ice - 7·0() p 111 • Youth
Serv1c·e- 7·00 p.m.
Agape tire Center"
"Full-Gospel C hur~· h'". Pastnrs John &amp; ·
Party Wade. 61H Semnd AH~ Ma"'-m. 77'511 17. Sc n1 ~c lirnl' : Sund ;1 ~ 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Kethany
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School - 10
a 111., Worship - 9 a.m .. Wednesday
Services· 10 a.m

Abundant Gract R.t-. 1.
923 S. Tiurd St.. MidU k purt. I\ J.,tor Tnr:~.i
Dav is . Sunday 'crvicc . 10 .1 111 ..
Wednesday !&gt;l'rvire. 7 p.m

Full Gospel Churda
or the Living Salior
Rt.338. AntiQUII}. Pastor: Jesse Morris.
Servtces: Saturday 2 00 p.m.
Salem Community Cbureh
Back of·West Columbia. W.Va.om L1eving
RtMd, Plstor. Charb R &lt;m ~ h (.l041 675
22H8. Sllnday School 9:JO am .. Sunda)'
evening service ,7 :00 pm. Bibl y Stud;•
Wednesday service HXJ pm
Hobson Christian t'ello"'Sbip Church
P.htor. H e rsc ~d" W h i t e. S u nt.lu~ SchoolIll am. Suntla) ChurL·h &lt;;ervin· - 6·JOpm
Wl'dnc~d a) 7 pm
Restoralion Christia n Ftllowship
A t h e n ~. Pastor:
L011nic Cum~ . Suru.la) Wo r ~ hip 10.00 ;mt.
Wednesday 7 pm .

9365 Hnoper RoaU.

Camui-SuUon
Carmel &amp; Bushan Rds. Ractne, Ohw .
Pastor: John Gilmore , Su nday School 9·45 a.m.. Worship - II :00 a.m.. Bible
Study Wed. -7.30 p m ."

Faith f ull {jospel Church
Long Bottom , Pa~ t or . Stc:l"l.' Reed. Sunda)
School . 9:3tl a.m. \Vur~l up . ':J ·JO .1m
·and 7 p.m . Wcdnc:~ua~· - 7 p.m.. Fridil~ fe llowsh ip M:rVIl"e 7 p.m.

MorninK Star
John Gil more. Sunday Sehoul - II
a.m.. Wur~ h1p · 10 a m.

P a~tor : Theron Durham . Sunda~ - 'J: '0

Wur,hip ll.l :.lO :.m

a.m and 7 p m.. Wedne sd ~~ - 7 p.m.

Sen ire 7.Ut l pm

East Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday Sc hool 9a .m.. WorshiP, · 10 a.m.. I st Sunday
every month evenidg se rv1ce 7.(M) p.m :
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

1\liddlt·port C ommunit~ Church
~7S r e·arl St. . MidJiqxm . P~~wr . San1
Anderson, Sunday Srh uol 111 il.m ..
E\ enmg- 7 JU p m . Wedn c ~day Service ·
7:.l0p .m.

HGusc uf llca ling Minislries
St. Rl. 124 Lungs,·llle. OH
Fu ll Gmpcl. Cl Pa ~t ur\ Robert &amp; R ohen ~ .
~ ~ ll~'er. Sun~o1y School li .J fl am. .

Jliurisonville (:ommunit~· ( 'burch

Pa~ tor :

Racine
Pru;tor: Kerry Wood. Sundn) School - 10
a m , Worsh1p - II a m.Wednesday
Services 6 pm , Thur Bi ble Study 7 pm

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline, Cool v1lle Church.
Main &amp; Fi fth St , Sun . School - 10 a.m..
Worshtp - 9 a.m.. Tues . Services · 7 p.m.

Ha;,;cl Community Church
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Hart, Sunday
Sch("\01. 9:30 a.m . Worship - 10:30 a.m..
L \O p m

Hockingport Church
Street. Sur~day School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10·30 ~ 111 . Pa ~lnr Ph111ip Rei!

Dyes\'ille Community t:hUrrh
Sunday School • ':1 :30 a.m . W1Jrsh1 p .JO:J(J n.m , 7 p.m.
Mor~· Ch11pt"l ChuiTia '
S u nd~ y school · 10 a m.. Worship - ll
a.m.. Wednesday Sel"\'ice- 7 p.m.

G r~nd

Torch Church
Co. Rd : 6J. Sunday School -9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Middleport ~burch of I he Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midca p. Sunday School 9:30 u1 ..Worship- t0.30 a.rn ., 6..l0 p.m..
Wednesday Semces - 7 p.m .. Pastor:
Allen Midcap
Rt.'eds\llle Fe ll u" ~ hip
Church of the Naza rene. Pastor Ru ssell
Carson . Sunday School - 9:30 a.m•.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Servtces- 7 p.m.

11ent crostal Assembly
l'ot .. tnr: Sl. Rt. 1!4. Rac me, Tornudo Rd .

Sunday Scl10ul · 10 a.m .. Evening - 7
p.rn . W~dncsd :c y Services - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
ll arrisonville Presbyterian Church
Pa.tor: Roben Crnv. . Worship - IJ ;1m.
~·liddl eport Prt&gt;Sh~· t trill n

P&lt;hlor:

a.m..

Jamc s. Sn)d~r.

v. ur~ h1p

Sunday S..:hool 10
1erv1cc II am

Seventh-Day Adventist
• St:H:nth-Da~ Adn:11tist
Mul be rry Ht s. Rd . Pomeroy. · Sm urt.la y
Ser vice•: Sabbat h Sc hoo l - ~ p.m .
Worshi p - 3 p.m.

United Brethren

Faith Gospd Church
.Long·Bonom. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Worshi p - 10.45 a.m ., 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30p.m
Mt. Olh·e Community Church
P:~st e r : Lawrence Bush. Sundny Sdwol 9:JO a.fn . Even1 ng - 6 :\0 p m . Wl'dn~d ~ }
Service. · 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road , Pomeroy, Pa ~ ! or . Roy
Hunter. S u nd ~y School - 10 a 111. E1emng
7:30p.m.. Tuesday &amp; Thurs · 7.30 p.1n

Nazarene

WeJ .

Pentecostal

Syracuse Missiun
1411 Bridtl.' man S1.. Sy ra~· u se . Sunduy
School - 10 a .m. Evt'ntng - 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen•icc · 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C. Sundlly School • 9
a.m. Worshi p - 10 a. m.. WeUncsday
· Services- 10 u.m.

7 flU pm

Teani .lesus 1\linistrics
Mcctmg 111 the M u\he rr~ Cmnmuni(y
Center Gymnasium P a~tu{Eddic Bai!r.
Set~' ll"C ..:very Tue•day !L "\1 1pm

Faith Vall e~· Tabernacle Ch urch
Umlcy Run Road. Pa}ttw Rev. Emmett ·
R ~wm n . Sund :1y Evening 7 p.m .
Thursday Sel"\ice - 7 p.m

\1t.llernmn Uniled Brethren
in C hri~t Churd1
Te:..:~ ~ Communi!)' ~6411 Wid h ~ m Rd.
Pastor: Peter MartlnJak. Su nday Sl'hool .I HO a m \\'11r~oh ip - Ill '0 :t 111 . 7 On
p.lll. w~·dnc,d a y Sc rvi.:l'S - 7:00 p.m.
Youth grou p meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sunda) s
7 p.m.
Erlen lJnill'd Brethren tn Christ .
Sli.ll( Route 1~4. lx:twce n Reedsville &amp;
H odin~porl. Sunt.lay Sc hool · 10 il_.m ..
Sunda} Wor~h i p · II :00 a.m. Wed ne sd :~y
Scr vi.:e~ - 7 00 p m. P ~swr- M. A dam ~
Will

Soulh Bethel Community Church
Silver Ridge- Pastor Lint.la Damc v. onJ.
Su nday School - 9 am .. Wmsh1p Ser\lce
10 a.m 2nd and 4th Sunday

Syracuse Church or the N..zarene
Pastor Mike Adkms. Sunday School - 9:30
a. m., Worship • 10:30 am .. 6 p.m.. ·

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; lEES
Middlepqrt, OH
740.992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !·shirts and more

190 N. Second Sl.

jfis~er

jfuneral ~orne

284llltiii1CIIUW. • 'IISIUll,ll

Davis-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
INSURANCE ·
Insurance words abitle in you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products+ as/£ what ye will, and it shall
.
Financial
214 E. Main
be done unto you .
Services
AGENCIES Inc.
992-5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
Bill Quickel
992-6677

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

ROCKSPRINGS

Let vow· light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, rhcu rhey may see rour
41111
The care you deserve, close to home good works and glorifv vvw·
741-112-5141
,36759 Rocksprings Rd.
lniCiliiiMr·lltncllr
Father in heaven ."
Pomeroy,
OH
45769
Mall hew 5: /6
...... 1141119
741-1112-ita
1-800-451-9806 -~~~~--·
740·992-6606

740-594-6333

tirlli
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

174 La)nr St""l' PO lljlx 270 ·
New Haven, WV l!Z6S
Funtral Dirtdor

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
MatthewS.

SWISHER &amp;
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992-2955
Pomeroy

lbeiW I'ten SOil ...

John 3:16

.~

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience-clear before ~ •Let OIJr jamif~ ~cfp
protect ~o u r Jamify ~
God and man ."
Su'ppresSion • Ex'tinguishcr~ • Sprinklers

, Acts 24: I

• Security

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353-0837 Fax:

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Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
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l-740-667-3156
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MY i!race is sufficient
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streneth is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
137·C N. 2hd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

,.
t

Setond Baptist Church
Ra\'enswood . WV, Sunday School 10 am-

t:a rl~hm

J oppa
Pastor Denzil Null. Wor~hip - 4:3() am
Sunduy School · 10:30 a.m.

740-992-7713

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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~­
(740) 992-3279
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Fourth &amp; Main St., Mtddleport , Su nday
School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship · 10:45 a.m.

Salem St., Pas10r: . Sunday School · 10
a.m . E~e n ing · 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Servu:es. 7 p.m

Mile Hill Rd .. Racine, Pas10r: Ja mes "
Satterfie ld. Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m , Wednesday Services - 7
p.m.
Rutland Churth of God
Pastor: Ron Heath, Sunday Worship - 10
a m.. 6 p n1.: Wednesday Se:rvices • 7
pm .

Open 7 days a week

Sizes available 5x10to 10 x 20

The Hppllcmce man

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS-WEEK

2007

of its embracing vario~s
communities - college students, men studying for the
priesthood and monks. The
monks, whom he said provide stabilit y and prayer,
offer what he called a great
influence.
As he worked toward his
master's of divinity, a
degree he recently obtained,
Father Wymer said he particularly enjoyed Mariology
and the birth narratives,
which he found interesting
and thought provoking.
While studying for .the
priesthood, Father WyiRer
was assig ned to various
diocesan parishes, St.
Sylvester, Woodsfield; St.
Mary,
Shadyside;
St.
Bernard, Beverly; St. Agnes,
Mingo Junction; and St.
Joseph and St. Lawrence
O'Toole, Ironton. The experiences he received working
in the parishes with the pastors and the courses he has
taken in ·sctwol have prepared him well for his vocation, he believes. At the
same time that he said that
he was able to learn the nuts
and bolts of palish operations, parishioners were able
to see a seminarian, who
young men interested in the
priesthood could question.
Father Wymer is looking
forward to his assignment
as a priest. He said he wants
to be able to assist ihe pastor
and join in teaching youth
and adults more about their
faith. One area he especially
likes is apologetics, which
provides information on
why Catholics .do and
beheve the things they do.
Father Wymer's first
assignment
will · be
parochial vicar at St. Mary's
Church in Marietta.

BY PAT 0EFRANCIS

STEUBENVILLE
Like. lots of other little boys
growing up Catholic, Rev.
Seth T. Wymer declared his
intention to become a priest.
But, he acknowledged
that the idea of priesthood
fizz led so mewhat by the
time he was a pre-teen.
However, by the time he
was enteri ng his final year
at St. John Central High
School. . Bellaire, Father
Seth T. Wymer knew he
really wanted to be a priest.
On June 2, at Holy Name
Cathedral, Steubenville, he
was ordained to the priesthood by Diocese of
Steubenville Bishop R.
Daniel Conlon.
Born in Wheeling, W.Va.,
Father Wymer moved to
Tiltonsville when he was in
second grade and became a
member of St. Joseph Parish.
"It was not a big, booming
voice," Father Wymer said
of what occurred when he
was convinced that he wanted to be a priest, "but an
inner peace," which came
when he was an altar server
at an Easter Vigil Mass.
He graduated in 1999
from St. John Central High
School ·and earned a bachelor of arts degree in English
in 2003 from the Pontifical
College
· Josephinum,
Columbus.
He enjoys reading, especially Greek literature,
which he did as part of independent studies, and James
Patterson, for rleasure.
More recently he s added
the writings of Joseph
now
Pope
Ratzinger,
Benedict
XVI,
to
his
library.
(Kerry Wood is pastor of
"He has a good grasp of
the Racine United Methpdist

Church in Meigs County. He
can be · reached at
racineumc® sudden/ink. net.)

Friday, June 29,

DIOCESE ORDAINS NEW PRIEST

above our heads and act as
if others are unimportant or worse - downright
inconveniences that get in
our way. That kind of
behavior certainly doesn't
point others toward ~· God.
Is it any wonder that we
Jive in a society that doubts
God's existence? Check the·
recent New York Tunes' bestseller list. God is not Great by
Christopher Hitchens is in the
top ten. The God Delusion by
Richard Dawkins is #52 at
Amazon.com even after
being out for more than 18
months. Not a book reader?
Then how about the recent
Di'scovery Channel special
on the "Lost Tomb of Jesus"
that claimed DNA evidence
proved archaeologists had
found Jesus' real grave (and
that of his wife and child).
Never mind that other scientists scoffed at this James
Cameron-produced "documentary" and that it was
more about creating contro. versy and generating big
bucks than practicing real science.
We live in an age of skepticism of all things religious
because we are not a people
who bless God. You and I
have rendered God invisible
by looking out for our own
interests instead of the interests of others. When we
practice a "what's in it for
me?" mentality, there's nothing left for anybody else.
· So as you prepare for next
week's July Fourth parade,
barbeque, and fireworks celebration, I invite you to do
one additional thing: grab
the initiative in doing something good for others as you
would have them do for you.
America, isn't it time to
bless God?

Journey of Hope program
MARIETTA
"The
Journey of Hope" program
scheduled for July 14
attempts to help those ministering to cancer patients and
their families. The program
is from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.,
Saturday, July l ~ at the
Marietta Memorial Hospital
Strecker Cancer Conference
Room, Marietta, with reservation required by July 5.
Call 740-706-1450, 740585-2654 or locally, call
Lenora Leifheit at 992-5836.
The program is sponsored by Mid Ohio Valley
Health Ministry Council
and is presented by the

PageA2

Friday, June 29, 2007

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�•'

FAITH. 'VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

America, bless ·God
Bv

KERRY

Wooo

PASTOR, RACINE UNITED
METHODIST CHURCH

When Irving Berlin wrote
his fi rst version of "God
Bless America" in 1918, I
imagine he never expected
that song to be even more
popular today almost century later. Through the years,
"God Bless America" has
become the unofficial national anthem. It was the most
popular s0ng at · memorial
services following the terrorist attacks of September II ,
200 1, and the New York
Yankees play it during the
"seventh-inning stretch" of
every home game.
We sing "God Bless
America," but how often we
do think about America
blessing God? Can we bless
God? Absolutely! Every
time we do a kind deed for
another rerson without
thought o reward, we are
blessing God. Every time a
child is hugged and told that
he or she is loved, we bless
God. Whenever we put the
interests of others ahead of
our own, we bless God. ·
So what is a blessing? It's
an action or experience that
points towards divine
approval. Jesus taught "ask
yourself what you want people to do for you, then grab
the initiative and do it for
them." (Matt 7:12, '{he
Message: The Bible in
Contemporary Language). I
like the way Eugene
Peterson paraphrased this
verse. We are to grab the initiative in doing good for others, not wait for others to do
good for us. We bring our
actions into divine approval
and, in a sense, make God
more visible to others.
More often than not, even
as Christians, we tend to act
out of self-interest rather
than other-oriented-ness.
We put a "numero uno" sign

a

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

Cancer. Treatment Centers
of America (CTCA). The .
keynote presenter is Rev.
Percy McCray, Jr., director
of pastoral care I social services for the CTCA at
Midwestern
Regional
Medical Cen.ter in Zion, Ill.
CTCA is offerin~ this free
service for parishioners and
clergy to help them Jearn
what this spintual outreach
is and how to reach out and
support cancer patients
within their own church
and community and understand the special needs of
cancer patients. Lunch will
be provided.

Submitted photo

Newly-ordained priest, Rev. Seth Wymer, is pictured at his
ordination with Bishop R. Daniel Conlon of the Diocese of
Steubenville. He is the latest priest ordained in the diocese, which includes Meigs County and Sacred Heart
Church, Pomeroy.
the culture and remedies,"
the new priest said he has
learned from the pope's
writings.
After graduating from the
Josephinuin, Fathe~ Wymer

enrolled at St. Vincent
Seminary, Latrobe, Pa.,
which has what he
described as a completely
different feel than his previous place of study, because

Union members can opt out of dues based on religious beliefs
COLUMBUS
An
employee whose religious
beltefs conflict with the
political positions of their
labor union cannot be
forced to pay dues, a federal
judge ruled.
U.S. District Judge
Gregory Frost's ruling
broadens the .category of
employees who may opt out
of unions because of religious . beliefs beyond
Seventh-day Adventists and
Mennonites.
Catholic
A Roman
-teacher who refused to pay
dues to the National
Education
Association,
claiming its views on abortion conflict with her own,
sued the State Employment

Relations Board after the
panel ruled . against her
claim for a religious
exemption.
Carol Katter, a teacher in
St. Marys in western Ohio,
said the union supports
abortion rights and she does
not. "I was not going to give
I cent to those causes,'.' she
told The Columbus Dispatch
for a story TUesday.
. The National Right to
Work Foundation, which
opposes mandatory union
membership,
funded
Kauer 's legal. fight.
The National Education
Association on TUesday
referred calls to the Ohio
Education Association, the
state teachers' union. OEA ·

spokeswoman
Mic.helle
Prater said the association
had no corilment.
In his ruling Thursday,
Frost struck down the Oh10
Jaw that held only members
of religions that "historically held conscientious objections" to union membership
could opt out. The judge
said anyone with demonstrated religious beliefs
should be exempt from paying dues to unions whose
positions they find objectionable.
The law di scriminated
among religions by recognizing the Seventh-day
Adventist and Mennonite
objections to joining unions
while denying the same right

to others, the judge said.
.In deciding Kalter's case,
the State Employment
Relations Board was following the state law that
defined religious exemptions more narrowly, executive
director
Arthur
Marziale Jr. said.
He said board officials
were consulting with their
attorneys on whether to
appeal the judge's ruling,
which also said empl~ees
who opt out of unions will
have to pay the equivalent
of their dues to a qualified
non-religious
charity.
They still will be entitled
to the protections of the
union, such as collective
'
bargaining.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Rutland Fl'ft Will Bl ptl!il

Churth of Jtsu~ Christ Apostolic
VanZandJ and Ward Rd .• Pastor: James
Mtller, Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.,
Evening - 7:30 p m.
Rlnr Valley
River Va ll ey Apostohc Woc&lt;~h i p Center.
873 S. 3rd Ave . Middleport . Rev.
Michael Bradford , Pastor, Sunday. 10 .10
a.m. Tues 6·30 prayer. Wed . 7 pm 1:!1 ble
Study
Emmanuel Apostolic Tabtrnade Inc,
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland .
Services: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:.30 p.m..
Thun 7·00 p m.. Pastor Many R. Huuon

Assembly of God
Llbtrly A"'mbly or God
PO Box 467. Dudding Lane. Mason.
W.Va .. Pastor: Neil Tenn11nl, Sunday
Serv1ces- IO:UO ~. m . and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Pagtvllle Fmwill Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Mike Harnlon . Suriday School
9:30 to 10:30 am . Worship service 10· 30
to I I;00 am. Wed. preaching 6 pm
Carpenter Ba.plisl Churd
Sunday Sdmol • ll·3tlam . Preachmg
, Service !0:30am. Evening Sem cc
7: 00pm , Wednesday B1 ble Sludy 7:l10 pm .
lntenm Preacher - Aoyd Rms
Cheshire Baptist Church
Pbtor: Steve Linle, Sl!nday School: 9:30
. am . Morning Worship: 10:30 am.
' Wednesday Bible Study 6: 30pm; chmr
practice 7,30, youth und Bible Buddies
6.30 p.m. Thurs. 1 pm book study
Hope Baplisl Churrh (Southern)
570 Grant St .. Middleport. Sunday school
- 9:30 a.m., Worship - II a.m. arul6 p.m..
Wedne!ifiay Service - "7 p.m Pastor: Gary
Ellis
Rulland First Baptlst Church
Sunday School - 9.30 a.m.. Worsh ip 10·45 am .
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pastor Jon Brockert . East Mam St..
Sunday Sch . 9:30am . Worshtp 10:30 am

.

t-1rst S~Juthtrn Bapli~t
4 1872 Jlomeroy Pike , Pastor: E. Lamar
O ' Brya nt. Su nday Sc hoo l - 9·30 a.m..
Worship - 8:15a.m .IJ 45 um &amp; 7·1MI p.1h .
Wedn e ~u y Smicc• - 7 0:1 p.m
First Uapti ~ l Lhurcl1
Pastor: Billy Zu&lt;&gt;pan 6th und l1almcr St. ,
Middleport. Su nday Sdwol - 9 : 1~ a.m..
Worshi p - 10 15 ~ m .. 7:011 p.rn ,
WI.'Jnesday s~mce. 7 un p.m
Racine t·irst 8uptist
Pustor : Rya 11 Euton . pa., tor , Sunduy
School - 9.]0 a rn ., Worsh1p - 10:40 a.nl .
7:00 p m .. Wednesduy Se rvices - 7:00
p.m.
S_llvcr Run Baptist
Pastor: John Swanson , Sunday School IOa .m .. Worsh1p · ll a.m .. 7:00 p.rn
.Wcdnc,d:ry shvil'es- HXI p m
i\11. Union Raptist
Pastor: Dennis Wl.'a\'er Sunday School9 45 a. m .. E\•enin g • 6 30 p.m ..
Wedne ~dil )' Scrvict:s- 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Baplisl Chun:h
Great Bend , RoUie 1.24 . Rac ine, OH .
Pastor: Ed Curter, Sunday Sd oel - 9:30
a.m. , Sunday Worship - 10:30 a .m..
Wednesday Bible Study - 7:00p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will Baptist Churcb .
2860 I St. Rt. 7. Middleport, Sunday
Service - ·10 a m , 6:00 p.m .. Tuesday
Services -6:00

Hlllslde'Bapli.ol Cbur&lt;h
St. Rt . 143 just off Rt. 7. Pastor: Rev.

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lames R. Acree, Sr. , Sunday Unified
Service , Wo r~ hip - 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday ~nice s -7 p m.

·j

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

. Victory Baptist Independent

525 W 2nd St. Middlepon . Pastor: James
E Keesee. Worship - IOa .m., 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Scr\ices- 7 p.m.

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

You

Michelle Kennedy

Fatlh Bapll!il Churth
Railroad St , MilSon. Sundny School - 10
a.m , Worship - II a .m., 6 p.m.
. Wednesday Serv1ces • 7 p.m.

Director of Marketing and Admi ssions
Forest Run Baplist- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Su ndny School - 10
a.m.. Worship ~ 11 :30 a.m.

MI. Moriab Bapllst

Wann Friend!)'
=.u:~-:...... 209

Third
Racine, OH

We all make mi~tak.es, and sometimes these mistakes are big ones which adversely
afJecl oorselves and the ones we love. II is often easier to live with
nustakes that affect only ourselves than those
which hun the ones we love. But we should
not allow ()Ur.;Cives 10 be aushed by our
mtst*es. We really should pick ourselves up.
do what we can to alleviate the dainage that we
may have caused and get on with rur lives.
In fact, we mould really have a mindsel that
plans on making mistakes. Net in the sense of
acrually trying 10 do something wroog, but in the
~ that because we are human. we know that
we will err and that our errors may mmelimes he
oosdy and paillful. Ck.lr favorite cup will someday be '
broken. because we, or someone ebc, win drop iL
Most car crashes are caused. by driver error, arxt
we can wallow in our guilt afler an acCident. or we
C&lt;ll "dust ourselves off." and move on with our life.
I'm not suggesting that we be cnlloos about our
rruslakes. A cutai.n amouit of guilt and rtTllOne is
appropnate, but it is irJl'OR8lU that we not wallow
in self-pity precisely because that attitude makes it
roore difficult to help those we may have harmed.

740·949·2210
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

We Sell Homes at
TEAFORD REAL ESTATE
Members of lhe MLS and REALTOR"

Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy
740.992-3325
www.teafordrealestate.net
Karl Kebler III
CeniDed Public Acrounlallt
. email: kkebltr@charttr.net
618 E. Main Street
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-7270

KEBLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

FOr we all rreke nany mistakes , arrl if mt aE rrakes m mi.stakes in
re sa;s re is a perfe::t 11111, able oo tridle t:re &gt;IDle txcy aloo.
R.S.V. J ares 3:2

~hit

IRA St, Rollovtrs', Stocu- Bonds', Mutual
Funds-, Annuilit.f-. LLmg Ttrm Can
Karl Kebler. Ill , CPA. RegiMered
Representative of H.D. YeS( Investment
Servicess.. Securities offered through H.D. Vest
In.vesurient Se~ iccsu., Member SIPC Advisory
services offered throogb H. D. Vest Advisory
Serv1cesa~. Non-bank subsidiaries of Wells·

•

F - &amp; Company. 6333 North Slate HWY 161
4th Floor. Irving TX , 7l038 (972)87Q.HXXI

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd. ·
Racine, OH

740·949-2217

Atmosphere

Hours
6am·8 pm

'lvfi[[ie's !Rgstaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
· Home Cooked Mtals &amp; DailyS pecials

740.985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Voun

Antiquity Baptist
Sunday Sclwol • 9:30 .a. m.. Worsht p ·
10:45 a..m., ~u nda y Evemng - 6:00p.m ..
Pastor: Don Walker

.,.

, Morning worship II am Evening - 7 pm,
Wednesday 7 p.m
flnl Baptist ChuKh of Mason , WV
(ln_deptndent Bapt1st)
SR 652 and Anderson S1. Pastor; Rober!
Grady. Sunday school 10 am. Morning
church I I an\, Su nd&lt;~y ~vl!nmg _6 pm . Wed.
B1ble Study 7 pm

Catholic
Sac~ d

Jleart Catholic Churth
IM Mulberry A\'e .. Pomeroy. 992-5K9K.
Pastor: Re\ . Waller E. Heinz. Sar Con.
4 ·45 -.~: 15p.m : Mass- 5 30 p.m . Sun .
Sun. Mass - 9:30
Con. -H:45-9.!5
a.m.. 1Ja11y Mass· ~DO a.m.

a.m.:

Church of Christ
Westside Chur( h or Christ
33226 Children's Home Rd. Pomeroy. OH
Cent act 740-441 -1296 Sunday morning
10:00 . Sun morni ng Bib le stud )':
following worship . Su n. eve 6:00pm ,
Wed b1 ble study 7 pm
Hrmlock Cron Chrlsllan Church
Larry Brown , Worship - 9: 30
a.m. Sunday School - 10.30 a.m.. Bi ble
Study- 7 p.m.
M1m ~1e r :

Pomeroy Churth or Christ
212 W. Main St.. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m , Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Pomemy Westsidf Church ol Christ
33226 Child ren's Home Rd .. Sunday
School • II a.m.. Worship - !Oa.m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Church of Christ
5th and Mam , Pastor : AI Hartson .
Childrens Director, Sharon Sayrt , Teen
Director· Dodger Vaughan , Sunday School
- 9:30 am .. Worship- 8: 15, 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m.. Wedn es~y Services- 7 p.m.
Keno Churth of Christ
Wo.rship - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday Sc hool •
10·30 a.m.. Pastor-Jeffrey Wall ace . .1st and
Jrct"Sunday
Rearwallo ... Ridge Church of Christ '
T..:rry. Sund ay Sc hool -9:JO
am
Wonh1 p - 10 :30 .1. m .. 6 ~ 0 p.m.
Wl!dnl.'.-.d.l) Sernce~ - 6.3Up.m.
Pa~rur : B ru~·..:

Zion Clmrth or Christ
Pmntwy. /larn , ou vi llt:' Rd . (RI.I4 J ).
Paslllr. Rnge r Watson. Sunday School \1 :10 ;un .. Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p .m .. Wednesday St.•n•iccs- 7 p m .
'1\tppers !)lain Church 11f Christ
' hhtrurne nt.al. Wnrsh ip Se r v i ce ~ \1 a 111 .,
Communicm · 10 u.m , Sunday Sc hool HI· a.m.. Youth- 5:30pm Sunday, Bible
Smd}· \\cdne~day 7 pm

I'

lttadhury Churth or Christ ·
1\linl'acr: Tom Runyon . .\955K Bradbu ry
Road. Middlcporl. Sund11y School • 9:30
a.m
~or~ hi p - 10.30 a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday Sc hool 9.JO a.m., Worshi 11 and
Cornmunitm · IO:JO u.m .. Bob J Werry.
Mini !iter
8radrord Church of Christ
Corner of" St Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury ~1"..
Mi mster: Doug Shamblin , Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger. Sunda) School · 9 30 a.m.
Worship • !:1 .00 a.m ., 10:30 a.m.. 7,00
p.m..Wednesday Services -7:00p.m.
Hickory Hills Church or Christ
Tuppc1s Pli1ins. Pastor Mike Moure , Bible
class. 9 am . Sunday: worship 10 a.m.
Sunday: worship 6:30 pm Sunday: Bible
class 7 pm Wed.

Rerosvllle Church of Chris I
· Pastor: Phi lip Stunn . Sunday School : 9:30
a.m .. Wonhip Service: 10:30 a·.m .. Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30 p.m
Dtxtu Churrh of Christ
Sunday school 9:30a.m., Sunday worship
- 10:30 ~ . m .
The Church of Christ of Pomeroy
lnte ~ec tio n 17 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent , Su nday Bible Study •
9:30 a.m.. Worslup: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wed ne~d.ay Bible Study· 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Church of Chrisl in
Christian Union
Hartford . W.Va .. Pastor: Da vid Greer,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship •
10:30 a.m .. 7:00 p.nl .. Wednesday
' Serv1ce~- 7:(Xl p-m

Church of God

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

your light so shine bef&lt;lreI
that they may see your
works and glori fy your
••awe• in heaven."
Matthew 5:16 499 Richland Avenue, Athens

S}racuse First Church oCGod
Apple and Second Sts, Pll&gt;h&gt;r: Rev. David
Russe ll , Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. Eve mng Se rvices- 6:30 p. m.,
· Wednesday Services-6:30 p.m.
Churtb of God or Prophecy
OJ . White Rd . off St. Rt. 160, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman . Sunday School - 10 a.m..
Wo~h ip - II a.m.. Wednesday Services - 7
pm .

Congregational
Trinity ChuKh
Se¥Qnt.l &amp; Lynr1. Pomeroy, Pastor. Rev.
Jonathan Noble. Worship 10:25 a.m..
Sl!nday Schooi 9:1S a.m.

Episcopal
Grace Eptscopal Cburth
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy. Sunday S~ hool
and Holy Eucharist II :00 a.m. Rev.
Edwa·rd Payne

Holiness
Conuitunlty ChuKh
Pastor: Ste ve Tomek . Main SLreet,
Rutland. Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m..
Sunday Service-7 p ~

DtnYIIIe HollntSS Chun:h
31057 State Route 325, Langsvlle. Pastor:
B'enjamin Crawford. Sunday school · 9:30
a.m., Sunday worship · 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 .
p.rh . Wednesday prayer sem ce - 7 p.m.
· Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisunville Roat.l, Pastor: C lmrle~
McKenzie, Surl(lay School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - II am .. 7:00p.m.. Wednesday
Service - 7:00p.m .

Rose of Shanm Holiness Church
Leadi ng Creek Rd , Rlllland . Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King, Sunday school· 9: 30 a.m.,
Sunday worshtp -7 p.m., Wednesday
pra~·er meeting- 7 p.m. ~
Pine G rove Bible Holiness Ch un:~
112 m1le oil Rt. 325, Pa.stor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30 am ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7: 30 p.m..
Wcdn ~dlly Sc=rvicc - 7.30 p.m.
Wesleyan Bihle Holiness Church
75 Pe~ rl S1.. Middlcp(ln Pastor: Rid
Bourne. Sunday School·- 10 am Worship
-10:45 p.m . Sunday Eve . 7-(JO p,m..
WcdncsdiiY Service -7:30pm
Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor: Rev. Larry Lemky; Sunday School
- 9 :.~0 a m . Worship · 10·45 a.m.. 7 p.m..
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.
Laurel Cliff Frte Methodisi Church
Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Sunday School 9. JO a.m .. Worshtp ; IO:JO am . a;1d 6
· p.m.. Wednesda;· Service - 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Ttle Cbun·h or Jesus

Christ oC LaUer-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160 . 446-6247 or 446-74N6 .
Sunduy School 10:20- 11 a.m , Rel ief
SocietyfPri csthood I I:OS - 12:00 noon,
Sacram ent Se rvice 9- 10 15 a.m.,
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thurs - 7 p.m. , .

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
P1r1e Grove. Wonh1p - 9:00a.m .• SundaY
S~.:hool · 10.00 a. ~ . Pastor:
Our Saviour tutheran Chvt:h
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravens wood.
W.Va .. Pastor: David Russell. Su nday
School - 10:00 a.m.. Worship - II a.m .
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St.. Pomeroy.
Sun . School - 9:45 n.m.1 Worship - I I a.m.

United Methodist .
Graham United Methodist
Worsh1p - I I a.m. Pastor: Richard Nease
Bechtel Unlled Methodist
New Ha ven , Richard Nease , Pastor.
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. Tues . 6": 30
prayer and Bible Study.

l\1t. Olhe Uolltd Methodist
Off 124 Dehind Wilkesville , Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m., Thursday
Services - 7 p.m.
Melg.~&gt; Coopnatlve Pari.'h
Nonheast Clu; ter, Alfred, Pastor: Jim
Corbitt . Su nday Schoo l - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship · II a.m., 6:30 p.m.

Chrster
Pastor: Jtm Corbi tt , Wor ship - 9 am .,
Sunday School - 10 a.m.. Thursday
Se rvices- 7 p.m.

lntr rdentH11inatiomd l'hurch
Road. l'&lt;htm : Kober1 \ 'ancc.

Kmg ,bu r~

Pomem) Cburrh or the Nazart ne
Pastor h.n Lavender. Sunday SdHiul 9:30 a.m.. Wnr, hip IO :JO a.m. dnU 6
p.m.. Wedne\da} Scmce~- 7 p.m.

Lon" Bottom

Sunday School - 9:30 &lt;;J .m.. Worshi p .
10:30 a.m.
Rffllsvllle
Worsh1p • 9.30 a.m .. Sunt.luy St.:hool
10:30 a.m.. hnt Sunday of Month - 7:00
p.m. serv1ce

Sund&lt;J; School

Tuppers Phdn~ St. Paul
Pastor: J1m Corbitt. Su nday Schon! · 9
a.m.. Worsh1p - \0 a.m., Tuesda} Services
- 7:30 p.m.
Centnl Clmter
Asbury tSymcuse ), Pastor. Bob Robin\On.
Sunday School - 9:45 i.m . Worship - II
a.m.. Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 JO p.n1

pm
t"re'fdonlt; ospel \-1ission
Knob . on Co Rd. 11. Pa, tor: Re\.
Rclgt'r Will ford. SunJ.t ~ Sl·hool - 930
a.m Wor,htp- 7 p.rn
B&lt;~ld

. White's Chaprl \\"es lc~· a11
Cooh•tllt' Road . l'•t•lor : Re1 . Charle•
MilMind.!lc . ~und ;1~ SdM..c..JI •. ':1 JO a.m..
\\\11, h1p - 10 Jl/ "m . Wednl·,da) Serv1ce
- 7 p.m ~

Other Churches

J'airvie"· Biltle Church
Letart . \\ V3 itt I . Pa~olur l:!n.m Ma) .
Sunda ~ Sl·honl · ':1 .'0:. m .. Wc11'h1p - 7 00
p 111 . WeJne-.J:I) Btbll.' StuJ) -7:00p.m
t·~ ith t'ellow)hijl Cru!oadt· ror Christ
Pa,tm Ke\ 1-ranllm 0Kken '. Sr:r\'ICI'
Fnda~ 7 p.m

Syracuse C11m munit ~· (hurrh
!4KO Sel·ond S!.. S)rncu-.c . OH
Sun. School 10 um. Sunt.ly mght fdO pm
P:~~tnr : Joe Gv.J nn
A New Beginning t•·uu GO!ipel Church ! Harn'&gt;(liJ\ ilk .
Pastors: Bob and ~ a~ M o~r, h all.
Sunday Ser\ ice , 2 p.m.

Enterprise
Pastor: Arland King. Sunday School .
10:30 a.m.. Wonhi p - 9·30 a m.. Bible
Study Wed . 7.30
Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader. Su nd :~y School - 10
a.m.. Worship - II a.m.

Ca lv11r~· Uibh: Church

•
Pomero~

P i~C .

Blackwood.

Amazing Gnt(t Community Church
Pastor· Wllyne Dunlap. Stille Rt . 6lll.·
Tupper~ Plai n,. Sun Wur~o h 1p : 1011111 &amp;
(rJII pm.. Wed B1bl&lt;' S t ud~ 7 110 p m .

Forest Run
Pastor: Bob Robinson . Sunday School . 10
a.m. Worsh1p - 9 a.m.

lJ :JI/ a .m .. Wor,hip

Sctii L'r !IJ·3il a rn . bcnmg S&lt;."nH.:e 6

Chester Church of Ihe Na7.al'@nt'
Paslor Rt\ Herl&gt;cn Gnne . Sund~y S.:h\x1l
- 9 30 a.m Wor~ h1 p - II am . 6 p.m..
Wedne'&gt;da~ Serv"·e~. 7 p.m.
Rutland Clturch of thl' ~IIZart'ne
Pastor l ,aa~ Shu~. Sundil1 ~- hvo l - l): }fl
a.m.. Wersh1p - 10:30 a.m . h . 'O p m .
WeJne~a y Sen ict'' · 7 p.m.

Wor ~ hip

Co . Rd . l1 a,t ()r Re\ .

School - 9.JO a.m .
7 .~{1 p.m.
· 7 JO p.m

Sund.1 ~

IO ..lU

Wl·! h ll.''d~) Scrn c~

~. m ,

Stinrs,i lle Commu nit ~· Churrh
Sunda) Sd10ol 10.00 am . Sund.1~ Wl.lr~h1p

Oasis Chnstian Fello" ship

11 .00 am. Wcdnl•,uay 7:00 prn f'a, tor
Br)&lt;lll &amp; ~1 1"Y D~llc)

(No n -de n mmn &lt;~ t lt llla l fe llow,hip)
Mectmg th the M c1g ~ ~h ddlr Sl·hool
Cafeteria Pastor Chn' S!t.'ll. :1n
lll:OO am.- Noon Sund~ ~: Informal
Wor~h i p . Ch1 ldren·~ 1111 11 i~uy

Heath !Middleport)
Brian Dunham . Sunday S' hool 9:30a.m, Wo~h ip - II:00 a.m.
Pa ~! o r ·

Rcjoidn~

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Worship - 10 am.
Pomeroy
Pastor: Bnan Dunham. Worship - 9:30
a.m., Sunday School· 10:35 a.m.
ROt:k Springs
Pastor: Keith R:~der , Su nday School . !J· I)
a .m .. Wors hip
10 u. m .. Youth
Fellowship . Sunday- 6 p.m:

l.i£e Chun:h

500 N. 2nd AH. Midt.l lepun. Pastor:
M1t e Fun! man. P.l,lllf Ementu ~ Lawre nce
Fort' man Wnr'lh lp· 111·m ;un

Communi!~· or Christ
Ponl and-Ranne Rd .. P a~tor. Jim Proffitt.
Sunday Sc hool · 9.30 a.m . W01 ~ h 1 p 10:311 a.m., Wedn e~day Serl'ites - 7:011
p.m.
Bethel Wor!ihlp Center
.1\J7H2 S R 7. Rccdwilk. 0 11 45772 . Ill
mile nonh uf Eastern Schuoh o n SR 7. A
Ful l Gmpcl Chu rl"h. Pastnr Koh Harber.
Associate Pastor Karyn Da\'is . Youth
P :~ ~tor Suzie Francis. SunUay \C rvices
10 00 am worsh ip. 6:1:0 pm Fum ily Life
Cl.t ~~e§. Wed Home Ce ll Grou p~ 7 00
p.m .. Outer L t m i t ~ Ce ll Grou p ul the
churc h 6 30 pm 10 8:30 pm

Minersville
Pastor· Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 9
a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m

Wedne,da)

s~- ~~ 1("&lt;'~

· 7 p.m

Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton . W Va Sund:t} School - HI am .
Wnr\ hi p - 7 p.m.. We dnc~d •l ) Scr\' ICC- 7

p.m.
~CW ure Vietor~· Ccnler
H73 George~ Cr!'d. Rmd.Galllpol1 ~. OH
Pa5tor: Bill Slatl'n . Sunday St'nu;c)- 10
a.m. &amp; 7 .r.n_l. Wl'f.lnesd&lt;~)' -. 7 p.m &amp;
Ynuth 7 p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Rick Bourne, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a m.. Thursd3)'
Services- 7 p.m.
Sa lem Center
Pa&lt;~tor: W1ll iam K. Mm hal l. Sunday
School - IU": 15 a m.. Worshtp - 9: IS a m..
Bi ble Study: Mon d :~y 7:00 pm
Snowville
Sundty Sl hool - 10 a.m.. Worship lJ .un.

Ash Street Churrh .
398 Ash St , to.l!ddleport-Pastur Jeff Sm1th
Sund ay S!;hool · 9.30 a.m._. Morm ng
Worshtp - 10:30 a.m. &amp; . 7:00 pm.
Wednesda) Ser\'ice - 7·0() p 111 • Youth
Serv1c·e- 7·00 p.m.
Agape tire Center"
"Full-Gospel C hur~· h'". Pastnrs John &amp; ·
Party Wade. 61H Semnd AH~ Ma"'-m. 77'511 17. Sc n1 ~c lirnl' : Sund ;1 ~ 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday 7 pm

Kethany
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School - 10
a 111., Worship - 9 a.m .. Wednesday
Services· 10 a.m

Abundant Gract R.t-. 1.
923 S. Tiurd St.. MidU k purt. I\ J.,tor Tnr:~.i
Dav is . Sunday 'crvicc . 10 .1 111 ..
Wednesday !&gt;l'rvire. 7 p.m

Full Gospel Churda
or the Living Salior
Rt.338. AntiQUII}. Pastor: Jesse Morris.
Servtces: Saturday 2 00 p.m.
Salem Community Cbureh
Back of·West Columbia. W.Va.om L1eving
RtMd, Plstor. Charb R &lt;m ~ h (.l041 675
22H8. Sllnday School 9:JO am .. Sunda)'
evening service ,7 :00 pm. Bibl y Stud;•
Wednesday service HXJ pm
Hobson Christian t'ello"'Sbip Church
P.htor. H e rsc ~d" W h i t e. S u nt.lu~ SchoolIll am. Suntla) ChurL·h &lt;;ervin· - 6·JOpm
Wl'dnc~d a) 7 pm
Restoralion Christia n Ftllowship
A t h e n ~. Pastor:
L011nic Cum~ . Suru.la) Wo r ~ hip 10.00 ;mt.
Wednesday 7 pm .

9365 Hnoper RoaU.

Camui-SuUon
Carmel &amp; Bushan Rds. Ractne, Ohw .
Pastor: John Gilmore , Su nday School 9·45 a.m.. Worship - II :00 a.m.. Bible
Study Wed. -7.30 p m ."

Faith f ull {jospel Church
Long Bottom , Pa~ t or . Stc:l"l.' Reed. Sunda)
School . 9:3tl a.m. \Vur~l up . ':J ·JO .1m
·and 7 p.m . Wcdnc:~ua~· - 7 p.m.. Fridil~ fe llowsh ip M:rVIl"e 7 p.m.

MorninK Star
John Gil more. Sunday Sehoul - II
a.m.. Wur~ h1p · 10 a m.

P a~tor : Theron Durham . Sunda~ - 'J: '0

Wur,hip ll.l :.lO :.m

a.m and 7 p m.. Wedne sd ~~ - 7 p.m.

Sen ire 7.Ut l pm

East Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday Sc hool 9a .m.. WorshiP, · 10 a.m.. I st Sunday
every month evenidg se rv1ce 7.(M) p.m :
Wednesday- 7 p.m.

1\liddlt·port C ommunit~ Church
~7S r e·arl St. . MidJiqxm . P~~wr . San1
Anderson, Sunday Srh uol 111 il.m ..
E\ enmg- 7 JU p m . Wedn c ~day Service ·
7:.l0p .m.

HGusc uf llca ling Minislries
St. Rl. 124 Lungs,·llle. OH
Fu ll Gmpcl. Cl Pa ~t ur\ Robert &amp; R ohen ~ .
~ ~ ll~'er. Sun~o1y School li .J fl am. .

Jliurisonville (:ommunit~· ( 'burch

Pa~ tor :

Racine
Pru;tor: Kerry Wood. Sundn) School - 10
a m , Worsh1p - II a m.Wednesday
Services 6 pm , Thur Bi ble Study 7 pm

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kline, Cool v1lle Church.
Main &amp; Fi fth St , Sun . School - 10 a.m..
Worshtp - 9 a.m.. Tues . Services · 7 p.m.

Ha;,;cl Community Church
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Hart, Sunday
Sch("\01. 9:30 a.m . Worship - 10:30 a.m..
L \O p m

Hockingport Church
Street. Sur~day School - 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10·30 ~ 111 . Pa ~lnr Ph111ip Rei!

Dyes\'ille Community t:hUrrh
Sunday School • ':1 :30 a.m . W1Jrsh1 p .JO:J(J n.m , 7 p.m.
Mor~· Ch11pt"l ChuiTia '
S u nd~ y school · 10 a m.. Worship - ll
a.m.. Wednesday Sel"\'ice- 7 p.m.

G r~nd

Torch Church
Co. Rd : 6J. Sunday School -9:30 a.m..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Middleport ~burch of I he Nazarene
Pastor: Allen Midca p. Sunday School 9:30 u1 ..Worship- t0.30 a.rn ., 6..l0 p.m..
Wednesday Semces - 7 p.m .. Pastor:
Allen Midcap
Rt.'eds\llle Fe ll u" ~ hip
Church of the Naza rene. Pastor Ru ssell
Carson . Sunday School - 9:30 a.m•.
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Servtces- 7 p.m.

11ent crostal Assembly
l'ot .. tnr: Sl. Rt. 1!4. Rac me, Tornudo Rd .

Sunday Scl10ul · 10 a.m .. Evening - 7
p.rn . W~dncsd :c y Services - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
ll arrisonville Presbyterian Church
Pa.tor: Roben Crnv. . Worship - IJ ;1m.
~·liddl eport Prt&gt;Sh~· t trill n

P&lt;hlor:

a.m..

Jamc s. Sn)d~r.

v. ur~ h1p

Sunday S..:hool 10
1erv1cc II am

Seventh-Day Adventist
• St:H:nth-Da~ Adn:11tist
Mul be rry Ht s. Rd . Pomeroy. · Sm urt.la y
Ser vice•: Sabbat h Sc hoo l - ~ p.m .
Worshi p - 3 p.m.

United Brethren

Faith Gospd Church
.Long·Bonom. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ..
Worshi p - 10.45 a.m ., 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7:30p.m
Mt. Olh·e Community Church
P:~st e r : Lawrence Bush. Sundny Sdwol 9:JO a.fn . Even1 ng - 6 :\0 p m . Wl'dn~d ~ }
Service. · 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road , Pomeroy, Pa ~ ! or . Roy
Hunter. S u nd ~y School - 10 a 111. E1emng
7:30p.m.. Tuesday &amp; Thurs · 7.30 p.1n

Nazarene

WeJ .

Pentecostal

Syracuse Missiun
1411 Bridtl.' man S1.. Sy ra~· u se . Sunduy
School - 10 a .m. Evt'ntng - 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Sen•icc · 7 p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C. Sundlly School • 9
a.m. Worshi p - 10 a. m.. WeUncsday
· Services- 10 u.m.

7 flU pm

Teani .lesus 1\linistrics
Mcctmg 111 the M u\he rr~ Cmnmuni(y
Center Gymnasium P a~tu{Eddic Bai!r.
Set~' ll"C ..:very Tue•day !L "\1 1pm

Faith Vall e~· Tabernacle Ch urch
Umlcy Run Road. Pa}ttw Rev. Emmett ·
R ~wm n . Sund :1y Evening 7 p.m .
Thursday Sel"\ice - 7 p.m

\1t.llernmn Uniled Brethren
in C hri~t Churd1
Te:..:~ ~ Communi!)' ~6411 Wid h ~ m Rd.
Pastor: Peter MartlnJak. Su nday Sl'hool .I HO a m \\'11r~oh ip - Ill '0 :t 111 . 7 On
p.lll. w~·dnc,d a y Sc rvi.:l'S - 7:00 p.m.
Youth grou p meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sunda) s
7 p.m.
Erlen lJnill'd Brethren tn Christ .
Sli.ll( Route 1~4. lx:twce n Reedsville &amp;
H odin~porl. Sunt.lay Sc hool · 10 il_.m ..
Sunda} Wor~h i p · II :00 a.m. Wed ne sd :~y
Scr vi.:e~ - 7 00 p m. P ~swr- M. A dam ~
Will

Soulh Bethel Community Church
Silver Ridge- Pastor Lint.la Damc v. onJ.
Su nday School - 9 am .. Wmsh1p Ser\lce
10 a.m 2nd and 4th Sunday

Syracuse Church or the N..zarene
Pastor Mike Adkms. Sunday School - 9:30
a. m., Worship • 10:30 am .. 6 p.m.. ·

MIDDLEPORT
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Middlepqrt, OH
740.992-6128
Local source for trophies,
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190 N. Second Sl.

jfis~er

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Full line of
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Insurance words abitle in you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products+ as/£ what ye will, and it shall
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be done unto you .
Services
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John 15:7
Pomeroy
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992-6677

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Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

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t:a rl~hm

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Pastor Denzil Null. Wor~hip - 4:3() am
Sunduy School · 10:30 a.m.

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Salem St., Pas10r: . Sunday School · 10
a.m . E~e n ing · 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Servu:es. 7 p.m

Mile Hill Rd .. Racine, Pas10r: Ja mes "
Satterfie ld. Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.,
Evening - 6 p.m , Wednesday Services - 7
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Pastor: Ron Heath, Sunday Worship - 10
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Sizes available 5x10to 10 x 20

The Hppllcmce man

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS-WEEK

2007

of its embracing vario~s
communities - college students, men studying for the
priesthood and monks. The
monks, whom he said provide stabilit y and prayer,
offer what he called a great
influence.
As he worked toward his
master's of divinity, a
degree he recently obtained,
Father Wymer said he particularly enjoyed Mariology
and the birth narratives,
which he found interesting
and thought provoking.
While studying for .the
priesthood, Father WyiRer
was assig ned to various
diocesan parishes, St.
Sylvester, Woodsfield; St.
Mary,
Shadyside;
St.
Bernard, Beverly; St. Agnes,
Mingo Junction; and St.
Joseph and St. Lawrence
O'Toole, Ironton. The experiences he received working
in the parishes with the pastors and the courses he has
taken in ·sctwol have prepared him well for his vocation, he believes. At the
same time that he said that
he was able to learn the nuts
and bolts of palish operations, parishioners were able
to see a seminarian, who
young men interested in the
priesthood could question.
Father Wymer is looking
forward to his assignment
as a priest. He said he wants
to be able to assist ihe pastor
and join in teaching youth
and adults more about their
faith. One area he especially
likes is apologetics, which
provides information on
why Catholics .do and
beheve the things they do.
Father Wymer's first
assignment
will · be
parochial vicar at St. Mary's
Church in Marietta.

BY PAT 0EFRANCIS

STEUBENVILLE
Like. lots of other little boys
growing up Catholic, Rev.
Seth T. Wymer declared his
intention to become a priest.
But, he acknowledged
that the idea of priesthood
fizz led so mewhat by the
time he was a pre-teen.
However, by the time he
was enteri ng his final year
at St. John Central High
School. . Bellaire, Father
Seth T. Wymer knew he
really wanted to be a priest.
On June 2, at Holy Name
Cathedral, Steubenville, he
was ordained to the priesthood by Diocese of
Steubenville Bishop R.
Daniel Conlon.
Born in Wheeling, W.Va.,
Father Wymer moved to
Tiltonsville when he was in
second grade and became a
member of St. Joseph Parish.
"It was not a big, booming
voice," Father Wymer said
of what occurred when he
was convinced that he wanted to be a priest, "but an
inner peace," which came
when he was an altar server
at an Easter Vigil Mass.
He graduated in 1999
from St. John Central High
School ·and earned a bachelor of arts degree in English
in 2003 from the Pontifical
College
· Josephinum,
Columbus.
He enjoys reading, especially Greek literature,
which he did as part of independent studies, and James
Patterson, for rleasure.
More recently he s added
the writings of Joseph
now
Pope
Ratzinger,
Benedict
XVI,
to
his
library.
(Kerry Wood is pastor of
"He has a good grasp of
the Racine United Methpdist

Church in Meigs County. He
can be · reached at
racineumc® sudden/ink. net.)

Friday, June 29,

DIOCESE ORDAINS NEW PRIEST

above our heads and act as
if others are unimportant or worse - downright
inconveniences that get in
our way. That kind of
behavior certainly doesn't
point others toward ~· God.
Is it any wonder that we
Jive in a society that doubts
God's existence? Check the·
recent New York Tunes' bestseller list. God is not Great by
Christopher Hitchens is in the
top ten. The God Delusion by
Richard Dawkins is #52 at
Amazon.com even after
being out for more than 18
months. Not a book reader?
Then how about the recent
Di'scovery Channel special
on the "Lost Tomb of Jesus"
that claimed DNA evidence
proved archaeologists had
found Jesus' real grave (and
that of his wife and child).
Never mind that other scientists scoffed at this James
Cameron-produced "documentary" and that it was
more about creating contro. versy and generating big
bucks than practicing real science.
We live in an age of skepticism of all things religious
because we are not a people
who bless God. You and I
have rendered God invisible
by looking out for our own
interests instead of the interests of others. When we
practice a "what's in it for
me?" mentality, there's nothing left for anybody else.
· So as you prepare for next
week's July Fourth parade,
barbeque, and fireworks celebration, I invite you to do
one additional thing: grab
the initiative in doing something good for others as you
would have them do for you.
America, isn't it time to
bless God?

Journey of Hope program
MARIETTA
"The
Journey of Hope" program
scheduled for July 14
attempts to help those ministering to cancer patients and
their families. The program
is from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.,
Saturday, July l ~ at the
Marietta Memorial Hospital
Strecker Cancer Conference
Room, Marietta, with reservation required by July 5.
Call 740-706-1450, 740585-2654 or locally, call
Lenora Leifheit at 992-5836.
The program is sponsored by Mid Ohio Valley
Health Ministry Council
and is presented by the

PageA2

Friday, June 29, 2007

I•

•

"
------~--------------~----~---------------------------------- ·

�,_

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
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

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
jrre exercise thereof; or abridging tl1e freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-

Th!i! First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READE R'S

VIEW

Beneficial
Post 28 program speaks volumes
Dear Editor:
As parents of the Post 128 Legion baseball team, we'd like
to express our opinion of this year's program. Let us start by
" tying the team is 90 percent represented by Meigs County
play~rs . For several years. the team has been comprised of athletes from Meigs, Eastern, Southeti1, River Valley, Gallia and
Oak Hill. We appreciate the coach and two quality players
making the trip from Galli a County just to be part of this team.
That's quite a commitment and speaks volumes of the Post
128 prognm1. Commitment to their team is something these
young men have leamed since being young players in youth
leagues. When they get to the level of Legion baseball; that
commitment is protiably the hardest thing to hang on tq. They
come to the team knpwing that playing time is earned by hard
work and consistency.·During their first year, every player has
felt underrated, under-appreciated and treated unfairly, and at
some point. feels ihat quitiing is the best option.
But all have committed themselves to sticking out th~ first
year of frustration by chasing toul balls and, yes, sitting the
bench. All accept the fact that J;hen they are told to warm up
ft1r a position, it may be a position they don't want to play, and
even feel uncomfortable playing.
Through it all, they don'tquit, they do what needs to be done.
1l1at is how they eam playing time, and how they are evaluated for nex t year's team. Legion ball teaches our beys not only
'ljllality baseball, but some of life's basic lessons. Life is not
always fair, and life doe~ not hand you what you want. Hard
work and commitment are what it takes.
We'd- like to thank your Gallia County teammates, and
Legion Post 128 for their commitment to being part of our
sons' baseball experience.
Ja11ict Gieseki11g
Middleport
(Editor\ No1e: I 4 111her.1·also signed this teller.)

PageA4

Friday, June 29, 2007

Friday,June29,2007

Local Briefs

Ruth Graham was her husbands (X factor'
-

There was a time just after
the Watergate scandal when
Billy Graham. stung 'by his
ties to the fallen President
Richard Nixon. tried to let
his hair down a bit.
Graham began addressing
a wide range of social issues,
including nuclear arms control. He focu sed less attention on America and said
that the church 's future was
in the Third World. Some
long-time supporters began
to gru mbl e - literally abcut his hair.
"People were worried that
BillY. was letting his hair get
too long. We were getting
telephone calls about it ,"
said one insi&lt;;ter at the Billy
Graham
Evangelistic
Association, years later.
Evemually, Graham's .wife
heard about the minicrisis
and responded' in her own
way. Ruth Bell Graham quietly suggested that Billy
should consider growing a
mustache.
"That was," the insider.
said, "her way of saying.
'Leave my husband's. hair
alone. For that matter, leave
my
husband
alone."'
Anyone who has studied the ·
career of the world's most
famou s evangelist knows
that Ruth Graham was much
more than his wife or even
his "sou! mate," the label
many commentators adopted
after her death on June 14, at
the age of 87.
Historians will always ask
how Graham evolved from a

sion, she kicked her husband
under the table . when
President Lyndon Johnson
tried to lure him into political talk. When asked if she
had ever considered divorce,
Terry
Ruth passed along this wiseMaHingly crack to Barbara Bush:
"Divorce? No. Murder?
Yes."
It is no surprise that Ruth
narrow Southern fundamen- declined a thousand intertalist into the evangelical view requests for every one
who preached to the world. she granted. When I left full Here's one obvious answer: time .reporting to start teach"He married Ruth Bell." She ing, I included this item in
was nothing less than the X- my
farewell
Rocky
factor, the source of that Mountain News column:
sense of otherness that, when "Allowed to interview one
blended with her husband's living religious figure , I
essential humanity and would choose Ruth Bell .
North Carolina sense of Graham, the media-shy
grace, added a note of mys- Presbyterian poet who also
tery to his career. His instinct happens to be married to the
was to try to get along with world's
best-known
everyone. Her instinct was to Southern Baptist pre'!cher."
resist the people who wanted
I hoped to interview her in
to own him, body and soul.
1987, when I spent a day
Graham kept saying, in with Graham before a
that "ah,' shucks" way of his, Denver crusade. But the timthat Ruth was smarter than ing was ironic. He was at
he was. Still, it was hard to home, while his wife was
determine her precise role.
away - visiting a clinic due
The basic facts were to her already fragile health.
amazi ng enough. She was Graham offered a tour but
the daughter of missionaries admitted that he was not the
in · China and as a girl best guide.
yearned to be a martyr. She
"My wife runs all of this,
never planned to marry, yet to tell you the truth," said
raised five children in their Graham, mystified by a
unique North Carolina home leather-bound copy of
(she hired mountain men to "History of the Reformation
combine several abandoned in Scotland" on a den table.
log cabins) that she defended Ruth, he stressed, was the
like a lioness.
theologian in the family, the
On one memorable occa- one who could dig into

Greek texts.
"She 's way over my head
when it comes to the books.
... She knows everything
about everything . in this
house. She's collected and
read a 101 of wonderful
things and they're all here
somewhere," said 'Graham,
before settling into one of
their twin rocking chairs on
the back porch, facing the
mountains.
"I just wish she were
here."
There were, of course, far
more days when Ruth
missed her globetrotting
husband. She poured her
emotions into poetry, offering glimpses into a private
life behind the very public ·
ministry. Here is one of her
poems.
"When I in the morning II
make our bed, I pulling his
sheets I and covers tight, I I
know the tears I I shouldn't
· shed I will fall unbidden I as
the rain: I and I would kneel,
I praying again /. words I
·mean I but cannot feel, I
"Lord, I not my will I but
Thine I be done." I The
doubts dissolving I one by
one. I For I realize, I as I
pray, I that's why it happened I and this way."
(Terry Mattingly is director
of the Washington Journalism
Cell/er at the Council for
Christian Colleges and
Universities and leads the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the news.)

.POMEROY -_ The Meigs County Health Department
Will hold evenm~ ch mc hours until 6 p.fl). on Tuesday.
Servtces offered tnclude childhood and adult immunizati~ms, blood pressure measurement ~. Wit •. prenatal se r~lces, preg~ancy te.stmgs. head lice screenings and eradication edqcatton, envtronmental health, vi tal statistics, receipt
of answers to general health-related question s.

Tornado
. from Page A1

I
I

ROUNDTRIP
TICKET
TO CHINA.

saw the funnel cloud
approaching several homes
in the area.
Zerkle then ca lled for
other emergency responders
to start toward the Letart
area since he thought that he
was going to have a disaster
on his hands, he said.
· · "I was scared," he said. "I
. have never seen one like
this before m West
Virginia."
He was not the only one
that was frightened by the
storm.
Penni Rollins had been
mowing her yard when suddenly the skies on the horizon started to turn dark. '
Rollins said the wind had
.not yet began to gust but the
rain started to fall.
"I walked into my home
and told my husband that
the wind didn 't sound
right," she said. "He looked
out the window and then
yelled for the kids to get
into the basement."
She and her husband
were still on the main floor
when they heard the tree
-located in their backyard
fall and strike lheir roof of
.their house. A swing set,
dog house and other items
that were located in the
back yard - were also
destroyed by the strong
wind, she said.
·
Fortunately, Rollins said
that she and her family were
not injured, but she was
concerned about her nextdoor neighbor, Dottie
Lingerfelt, who is elderly
and lives alone.
Lingerfelt said that she
was in her garden when the
storm struck :
"I could see it coming,"
she said. " Then the rain
started coming down. There
was a lot of wind."
She said she was going
inside of her home when a
gust shut her door very hard

behind her.
Not being able to see outside due to the heavy downpour. Linge rfelt said she
heard a lot of noise then
something had . hit her
hou se.
"I looked ou t and could
~ee something whit e," she
said. "Then, I realized my
garage was gone. I just
couldn 't believe it."
Knowing there was nothing she could do until the
storm was over, Lingerfelt
said that she had to si t and
wait it out.
Rollins said once the
storm was over, she went to
check on her nei ghbor.
"Everybody checks on
everyone around here," she
said. "Everyone is shook
up, but we are all tine.''
She said that the storm
came on very suddenly and
that there was damage to
roofs and trees were
knocked down.
" I don 't want to see tornados no more," Rollins
said.
Meteorologist Alan Rezek
said that the strong storms
brought some rei ief to the
high temperatures. More
rain visited the area again
on Thursday.
Earlier on Thursday,
Mason County was one of
42 counties declared to be
in drought conditions by
Gov. Joe Manchin .
Reze k said the area
needs a period of rain of
three to four times a week
in order for the drought to
be over. The rains on
Wednesday and Thursday
helped with th e surface
moisture but it was not
enough to bring the water
table up to where it needs
· to be, he said.
Once the storm s are
over, Rezek said that the
weather will fall back into
the same pattern that it has
been follow ing for several
weeks.
·
The nel\t chance of significant rain fall will be around
the Fourth of July holiday
weekend.

Board

TODAY IN HISTORY

from PageA1

Today is Friday, June 29, the ,I 80th day of 2007. There
arc 185 days left in -the year.
Tuday's Hi ghlight in History:
On June 29, 1776, the Virginia state constitution -was
adopted, and Patrick Henry made. governor.
Thought for Today: "r-le who is firmly seated in authori- ·
ty soon learns to think security, and not progress, the highest lesson of statecraft." - James Russell Lowell,
American essayist ( 1 8 1 9~ 189 1).

year which ends this week in
the amount of $30.116,915.
Both figures were approved
by the Board.
Other financial matters
. discussed and approved by
the Board dealt with reauthorizing the
Budget
Reserve Fund in the
amount of $296,906 to be
used to handle future general fund deficits. This is
required by law, it was

Candidates, anyone?

Anyone who doubts the
vitality of the American
political system must be
reassured by the number of
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev should be leis people seeking the presi1han 300 words. All leiters are subject /o .editing, must be dency. It 's a fair question
signed. and include address and telephone number. No why anybody would want
unsign ed lel/ers will be published. Letters should be in the job. but there are rough/iOOd taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leiters of ly a dozen hopefuls in each
tlu111ks lo organizatio11s {Uld indil•idua/s will no/ be accepl- party out there running for
it, and now New York City
ed(or tnthlic£1/ion.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg
has let it be known that, if
the conditions look right
about seven month.s from
now, he may abandon both
Reader Services
(usPs 213-9601
parties and spend a billion
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
or two of his $5 billion on
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
an independent bid. What
be accurate. If you know of an 'error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
does a. handicapper do with
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
in a story, ca ll the newsroom at (740)
pa id at Pomeroy.
a
field like that? .
992·2 156.
Member: The Associated Press and
Start with the Democrats.
the Ohio Newspciper Association .
Hillary Clinton probHere,
Our main number is
Postmaster: ,Send address correcably deser-ves the title of
(7401 992-2156.
lions to The Daily Sentinel, ttl Court
"front-runner." She leads
Department extensions are:
Street . Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
the polls; she has buckels of
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By
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has the shrewdest politOne month ........ .. .'10.27
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One year . . .... .... .- .'115.84
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Dally ..................so•
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sometimes
tin ear for politiOne month .. . ........'10.27
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sage
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It's
hard to see
Subscribers should remit in advance
Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 ' direct to the Daily Sentinel. No subscripa rival who looks likely to
Outslde Sales: Brenda Davi s, Ext16 lion by mail permitted in ?oreas where
upend her. John Edwards,
CtassJCirc.: Judy Clark. Ext tO
home carrier.service Is available.
Bill Richard son and the
long
list
of
other
Mall Subscription
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
Democratic wannabes have
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all failed (at least so far) to
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catch fire, and the steady
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drumbeat of ·mayors, connews@mydailysentinel.com
Outside Meigs County
gress ional lt!aders · and
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www.mydailysentinel.com
fies to their calculation that

LETTE;RS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

William
Rusher

she is the likely nominee.
Barack Obama, who burst
onto the national political
scene a few months ago
with a flood of favorable
publicity, has settled into
second place in the polls,
and seems likely to wind up
where many observers have
always
calculated
he
belonged: in the vice presidential slot on her ticket.
Only . former
Vice
President AI Gore (who hasn't even said he's running)
fails to tit the template. He
is nationally known and
widely respects;:d, ~nd, after
all, he actually got. more
votes than George W. Bush
in 2000, though theit distri•
bution among the states prevented him from winning a
majority in the Electoral
College. But
he
is
inescapably
yesterday 's
news, whereas Hillary has
not yet "had her chance." It
is true that the American
people sense in her an unappealing steeliness, which
pro~ably accounts for her
high negatives in polls that
seek to rate mere likeability.

But that calculation is more
likely to affect her chances
in the general election than
in the race for the nomination.
As for the Republicans,
they have a zoo of their
own, and not even a candidate who can plausibly
claim to be the front-runner.
Why anybody would want
the Republican nomination
is a mystery, given the
party's · gloomy prospects
for 2008, but hope springs
eternal, and never more so
than in the case of politicians who consider themselves presidential material.
John McCain, who overshadowed his rivals a few
months ago, has faded
markedly,, in part because of.
his no doubt courageous,
but politically foolhardy,
support for the immigration
"reform" bill, which is
anathema
to
most
Republicans. Rudy Giuliani
consistet:ttly tops the polls,
and 'it may. be that I am
underestimating his stayingpower, but I am by no
means the only observer
who thinks that his popularity among Republican~ will
sag markedly when they
realize (as most of them
have yet to do) that he is
loudly pro-abortion, progay riglits and pro-gun con,trol. Mitt Romney has conducted a flawless campaign
thus far, and his looks and
.clothes are right out of

"

Central Casting for a
Republican
presidential
candidate. But his appearance and performance have
been so good that, perhaps
unfairly, a lot of people
wonder if they aren't too
good to 'be true. Still, the
polls have him ahead in the
key primary state of Iowa,
and it would be foolish to
count him out prematurely.
The wild card in the
Republican deck is, of
course, Fred Thompson, the
former Tennessee senator
whose known views on the
issues fulfill the fondest
dreams of conservative
Republicans.
But
Thompson hasn't even
declared his candidacy yet,
and the rumpled charm that
ha_s made him so popular on
"Law &amp; Order" may tum
out to be more an artifact of
television than a fact of life.
So will America opt for
Bloomberg? It hardly seems
likely. But his candidacy
could easily deiermine
which of the two major.party candidates will win.
Say what you will about the
confusion, living in a
vibrant democratic society
sure beats living in a' dictatorship when it comes to
excitement.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship arfd
Political Philosophy.)

2

pointed out.
The treasurer and superintendent were authorized to
obtain district property, tleet
and liability insurance coverage through the Ohio School
Plan administered by Hylant
Administrative
Services
effective July I through June
30, 2008 with an annual.premium of $645,757 to include
$4 million excess liability
coverage.
The Board also approvt;d
co ntinued membership m.
The Ohio Coalition . for
Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding at 50 cents
a student; the ed ucational

th ey approved this location." Russell also wrote the
site provides "ample park,
ing for post office cusfrom Page A1.
tomers and employees."
According to Ru ssell's
Russell, manager, Eastern letter there were seven
Facilities Service Office for offers of land and existing
the USPS, and was an buildings submitted 10 the
attempt to answer these USPS for the new site. Only
concerns. In response to one comment was received
flooding concerns, Russell from the community which
wrote: " Before the Salem was a "favorable one" and it
Street site was selected, ·our was for the I 08 Salem
. environmental speciali sts Street site.
reviewed all information
Other poten\ial sites
concerning this site, includ-_ included the Rutland Civic
ing !load maps and ·other Center and property ac ross
environmental data . . and from the Rutland Volunteer

Rutland

BY JULIE
HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
President Bush's immigration plan to legalize as
many as 12 million unlawful immigrants while forti fying the border collapsed
in the Senate on Thursday,
crushin g both . parties'
hopes of addressing the
volatile issue before the
2008 elections.
The Senate vote to drive a
stake through the delicate
compromise was a stinging
setback for Bush - who
had tnade reshaping immigration laws a centerpiece
of his domestic agenda engineered by members of
AP photo
his own party.
Sen.
Jon
Kyl,
R
-Ariz.,
left,
speaks
during
a
news
'conference
on
Capitol
Hill
in
W
ashington
.
It c·ould carry heavy politThursday,
to
discuss
the
defeat
of
the
immigration
reform
legislation.
From
second
from
.
ical consequences for
left
are,
Commerce
Secretary
Carlos
Gutierrez,
Sen.
Arlen
Specter,
R-Pa
..
and
Sen
.
Lindsey
Republicans and Democrats,
'
many of whom were eager Graham, R-S.C.
to show they could act on a
complex issue of great inter- know enough about the uct of a liberal-to-conserva- who was a strong supporter.
immigration legislation to ' tive alliance led by Kennedy ''By its nature, because it was
est to the public.\
whether they supported and Sen. Jon Kyl , R-Ariz .. a compromise, it was hard to'
say
"Legal immigration is one
that forged an immigration muster intense support. But
of the top toncerns of the passage.
"I
believe
that
until
another
compromise intended to the opposition was very
American
people and
Congress' failure to act on it election occurs, or until some- withstand challenges from intense."
is a disappointment," a thing happens in the body the left and right.
Conservative foes' were
They advocated the among the loudest voices dur·
grim-faced president said politic, that what occurred
after an appearance . in today was fairly final," said resulting meas ure as an ing the debate. led by Sens.
Newport, R.I. "A lot of us Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Ra., imperfect but necessary fix Jeff Sessions, R-Aia .. Jim
to the current system, in DeMint, R-S.C., and David
worked hard to see if we the GOP chairman.
'"I don 't see where the which millions of illegal Vitter. R-La. Their view'
couldn't find common
political will is there forth is immigrants .use forged doc- were amplitied by talk mdio
ground. It didn 't work."
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, issue to be dealt with," said uments or lapsed visas to and television hosts who
D-Mass., his party 's lead Martinez, who helped live and work in the U.S.
attacked the bill and urged lisdevelop
the
bill.
negotiator on the bill, callec:)
The proposal would have teners to tlood Congre;s with
House Democratic lead- made those millions eligible calls, faxes and e-mails.
its defeat "enormously disappointing for Congress and for ers signaled they had little for lawful status while tightThe conservatives hailed
the country.'' But, he added: appetite for taking up an ening border security and the demise of. the .bill us a
"We will be back. This issue issue that bitterly divides creating an employee ve rifi - fitting death of an effort that
both parties and has tied up cation system to weed out had thwarted the public's
is not goi ng away." ,
illegal workers from U.S. will. They faulted Bush ami
The bill's Senate support- the Senate for weeks.
Rep. Zoe Lofgren, who jobs.
ers fel l 14 votes short of the
their own party for trying to
The bill also would have set push through a measure that
60 needed to limit debate · heads the House Judiciary
and clear the way for final subcommittee that · was to up a temporary worker pro- lacked public support and .
passage of the legislation. write a version of the bill, gram . and a system to base placed ~ ep ubli c ans in a
The tally was 46 to 53, with . said the Senate's inability to future legal immigration more politically tough spot.
"They made a big · misthree-qu arters
of
the move forward "effectively heavily on employment criteSenate's Republicans voting ends comprehensive immi- ria, rather than family ties.
take. I think the president's
gration reform efforts" for
Ultimately, though, what approach _ didn't work."
to derail the bill.
Lawmakers in both par- the next year and a half.
came to be known as their Sessions said. Rep ubli cans
"The .Senate voted, for the "grand bargain" commanded "need to be careful we don ' t
ties said further action was
unlikely this year, dooming status quo," the California only lukewarm support walk into such an adverse
its prospects as the political Democmt said in a statement. among important constituen- circumstance aga in . Thi s
The vote already had led cies in both parties. That was did not work out well. Our
strains of a crowded presito partisan fin ger-pointing.
dential contest get louder.
no match for the. vehement own members were placed
Only 13 percent of those
Howard
Dean,
the and vocal opposition of in di ffi cult positions."
in a CBS News Survey Democratic Party chairman, Rjlpublican conservatives.
Bush made an unusuall y
taken earlier this week said said it was "a reminder of who derided it as amnesty. . personal appeal f9r passage
the·y supported passage of why the American people
"The end result was a blan- of the legislation, appearing
the bill. Almost three times voted Republicans out in ket that was too small to at a luncheon with Senate
that number. 35 percent, 2006 and why they ' lL vote cover everyone," said Tamar Republicans this month to
opposed _i t. Even more, 51 against them in 2008."
Jacoby, an analyst at the con- urge them to put itside their
The measure was the prod- servative Manhattan Institute skepticism.
percent, said they did not
technology for southeastern Ohio at 55 cents per
student, atid the Coalition
of Rural and Appalachian
Schools at $300.
Approval was also given
by the Board to the purpose
statements and budgets submitted for next year's prin"
cipals and district managed
and student activity ·funds.
During the
mt;eting
attended by all five Board
members, Scott Walton,
Young,
Roger
Victor
Abbott;
Norman·
Humphreys and Ron Logan
along with Rhonemus and
Superintendent
William .
Fire Department which
Burke supported as choices.
Burke said she "along with
a -majority of the residents"
supported these sites as well
due to their central location
and "ample parking." As for Russell 's answer to
the flooding question ,
Burke said she isn't buying
it and that the location is
known to tlood. She also
fears residents near the
Saletn Street' location being
incon ve nienced by USPS
customers parking in front
of their homes.
.When the sites were being
physicall y looked at by the.

Bring Thll r:amily
&amp; Comg· Cl!ll!btlltll
July 4-th In
.~ ......... go

~rWJ~~~In Mini-Park
*

Middlgpott

~iteWOtkl:
~lnale

Unveiling .

At
Dusk!!!!!

·g:go.s:so

1:go ~tile
Phil Dirt &amp; the unz1•r~

Coin ~how
ging

Buckley, several personnel and sale of the property on
matters were handled. As which the old Salem
previously reported Ben Center School stood prior
Ewing II was hired as head to the construction of a
boys basketball coach. The new elementary_school.
resignation of Nathan M.
Ha'nsen as a social studies
teacher at Meigs High was
accepted, and Jennifer
Wheaton was hired as a
Spanish teacher at Meigs
High on a one-year contract
Vegas Weekend
pending completion of
Ju,n e29&amp; 3D
requirements.
Call now for tickets and details
Discussed at an execuCasino Night June 29 7-10 pm
tive session which followed the meeting were
win great erizes! '
hiring and compensation of
Movie "Viva Las Vegas"
personnel , negotiati ons, .
June 30 at 2 pm
Vegas Legends Concert
June 30 at a pm
featuring Dwight Icenhower
USPS Burke said she was&amp; more
n't permitted to go on the
tour, adding, "I fee l this was
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
a done deal before it got
Gallipolis, OH (740) 446·ARTS
started."

A!!&amp;·

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•

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FRt61z9107 • THURS 7/5107
I
Box Office Opens 0
6:00PM FOR EVEN IN~ SHOWS
12 :00 PM DAILY MATINEES

OPEN EVERYDAY
FOR MATINEES

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THE SILVER SURFER (PG)
1:10,3:10,7:10 &amp; 9:10
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"TRANSFORMERS"
· MON., JULv'2, 2007 8 PM

Fact Sheet

Whal parents should know:

Public awareness campaign
Subject: Underage Drinking
Target audience: Parents of teens
Obil'Ctive: Inform parems that
Don't be
• It is illegal to host or allow teen drinking
a party to
parttes 'n your home.
teenage drinking. •It JS unhealthy for anyone under age 21to
dnnk.
.It's ;tgainst
• It is unsafe and illegal for teens to drink and
the law.
drive.
• Parents can be rrusel' Uied under the law.
· • Everything associated wi\h a violation. such
as personal property, can bbconfiscated.
lndemge llrin/.:111g / .1111'1
Things you can do as a parent:

• As 01 parent, you cannot give alcohol to your teen's
friends under the age of 21 under any ~: i rcumstancc,
even .in your own hOme. even with their parent's

• Refuse to !o&gt; upp!y alcohOl to anyone under 21.
• Be at home when your teen has a party.
• Make sure that alcohol is not hrought into your

pq mtsSion.

home or property by yourtcc.n's friend&gt;.

.

You cannot knowingly allow a person under 2 1, other • Talk to 'other pare nt ~ ahuut not providing alcohol at
than your own child, to remain in your horne or (lll
other events yoor child will he attending.
your proptrty while consuming or possessing alcohol. • Create alcohol-free oppon uniti~s and w.: ti v iti c~ in
your home ~o teens wi ll feel welcome.
• Report underage drinking to local law cnfon:cmcnt.
If you break lhe taw:
• You ean face a maMmum sentence of six morlths in
A program of.
jail and/or a $I .000 fine .
t

• Others can sue you if you give alcohol to anyone
under 21. and they. in tum. hun someone. hurt
themselves or damage property.
• Officers can take any alcohol. monCy or property,

used in commining the offense.

,.
7

Immigration bill crushed as supporters
·fall14 votes short of keeping it alive

Evening clinic

.

The Dail y Sentinel• Page As ·

Www'.mydailysentinel.com

Drug-Free Acti011 Allia11ce
With support from the Ohio Department of
Alcohol and Drug Addictio~ Services ·

�,_

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
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

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
jrre exercise thereof; or abridging tl1e freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-

Th!i! First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

READE R'S

VIEW

Beneficial
Post 28 program speaks volumes
Dear Editor:
As parents of the Post 128 Legion baseball team, we'd like
to express our opinion of this year's program. Let us start by
" tying the team is 90 percent represented by Meigs County
play~rs . For several years. the team has been comprised of athletes from Meigs, Eastern, Southeti1, River Valley, Gallia and
Oak Hill. We appreciate the coach and two quality players
making the trip from Galli a County just to be part of this team.
That's quite a commitment and speaks volumes of the Post
128 prognm1. Commitment to their team is something these
young men have leamed since being young players in youth
leagues. When they get to the level of Legion baseball; that
commitment is protiably the hardest thing to hang on tq. They
come to the team knpwing that playing time is earned by hard
work and consistency.·During their first year, every player has
felt underrated, under-appreciated and treated unfairly, and at
some point. feels ihat quitiing is the best option.
But all have committed themselves to sticking out th~ first
year of frustration by chasing toul balls and, yes, sitting the
bench. All accept the fact that J;hen they are told to warm up
ft1r a position, it may be a position they don't want to play, and
even feel uncomfortable playing.
Through it all, they don'tquit, they do what needs to be done.
1l1at is how they eam playing time, and how they are evaluated for nex t year's team. Legion ball teaches our beys not only
'ljllality baseball, but some of life's basic lessons. Life is not
always fair, and life doe~ not hand you what you want. Hard
work and commitment are what it takes.
We'd- like to thank your Gallia County teammates, and
Legion Post 128 for their commitment to being part of our
sons' baseball experience.
Ja11ict Gieseki11g
Middleport
(Editor\ No1e: I 4 111her.1·also signed this teller.)

PageA4

Friday, June 29, 2007

Friday,June29,2007

Local Briefs

Ruth Graham was her husbands (X factor'
-

There was a time just after
the Watergate scandal when
Billy Graham. stung 'by his
ties to the fallen President
Richard Nixon. tried to let
his hair down a bit.
Graham began addressing
a wide range of social issues,
including nuclear arms control. He focu sed less attention on America and said
that the church 's future was
in the Third World. Some
long-time supporters began
to gru mbl e - literally abcut his hair.
"People were worried that
BillY. was letting his hair get
too long. We were getting
telephone calls about it ,"
said one insi&lt;;ter at the Billy
Graham
Evangelistic
Association, years later.
Evemually, Graham's .wife
heard about the minicrisis
and responded' in her own
way. Ruth Bell Graham quietly suggested that Billy
should consider growing a
mustache.
"That was," the insider.
said, "her way of saying.
'Leave my husband's. hair
alone. For that matter, leave
my
husband
alone."'
Anyone who has studied the ·
career of the world's most
famou s evangelist knows
that Ruth Graham was much
more than his wife or even
his "sou! mate," the label
many commentators adopted
after her death on June 14, at
the age of 87.
Historians will always ask
how Graham evolved from a

sion, she kicked her husband
under the table . when
President Lyndon Johnson
tried to lure him into political talk. When asked if she
had ever considered divorce,
Terry
Ruth passed along this wiseMaHingly crack to Barbara Bush:
"Divorce? No. Murder?
Yes."
It is no surprise that Ruth
narrow Southern fundamen- declined a thousand intertalist into the evangelical view requests for every one
who preached to the world. she granted. When I left full Here's one obvious answer: time .reporting to start teach"He married Ruth Bell." She ing, I included this item in
was nothing less than the X- my
farewell
Rocky
factor, the source of that Mountain News column:
sense of otherness that, when "Allowed to interview one
blended with her husband's living religious figure , I
essential humanity and would choose Ruth Bell .
North Carolina sense of Graham, the media-shy
grace, added a note of mys- Presbyterian poet who also
tery to his career. His instinct happens to be married to the
was to try to get along with world's
best-known
everyone. Her instinct was to Southern Baptist pre'!cher."
resist the people who wanted
I hoped to interview her in
to own him, body and soul.
1987, when I spent a day
Graham kept saying, in with Graham before a
that "ah,' shucks" way of his, Denver crusade. But the timthat Ruth was smarter than ing was ironic. He was at
he was. Still, it was hard to home, while his wife was
determine her precise role.
away - visiting a clinic due
The basic facts were to her already fragile health.
amazi ng enough. She was Graham offered a tour but
the daughter of missionaries admitted that he was not the
in · China and as a girl best guide.
yearned to be a martyr. She
"My wife runs all of this,
never planned to marry, yet to tell you the truth," said
raised five children in their Graham, mystified by a
unique North Carolina home leather-bound copy of
(she hired mountain men to "History of the Reformation
combine several abandoned in Scotland" on a den table.
log cabins) that she defended Ruth, he stressed, was the
like a lioness.
theologian in the family, the
On one memorable occa- one who could dig into

Greek texts.
"She 's way over my head
when it comes to the books.
... She knows everything
about everything . in this
house. She's collected and
read a 101 of wonderful
things and they're all here
somewhere," said 'Graham,
before settling into one of
their twin rocking chairs on
the back porch, facing the
mountains.
"I just wish she were
here."
There were, of course, far
more days when Ruth
missed her globetrotting
husband. She poured her
emotions into poetry, offering glimpses into a private
life behind the very public ·
ministry. Here is one of her
poems.
"When I in the morning II
make our bed, I pulling his
sheets I and covers tight, I I
know the tears I I shouldn't
· shed I will fall unbidden I as
the rain: I and I would kneel,
I praying again /. words I
·mean I but cannot feel, I
"Lord, I not my will I but
Thine I be done." I The
doubts dissolving I one by
one. I For I realize, I as I
pray, I that's why it happened I and this way."
(Terry Mattingly is director
of the Washington Journalism
Cell/er at the Council for
Christian Colleges and
Universities and leads the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the news.)

.POMEROY -_ The Meigs County Health Department
Will hold evenm~ ch mc hours until 6 p.fl). on Tuesday.
Servtces offered tnclude childhood and adult immunizati~ms, blood pressure measurement ~. Wit •. prenatal se r~lces, preg~ancy te.stmgs. head lice screenings and eradication edqcatton, envtronmental health, vi tal statistics, receipt
of answers to general health-related question s.

Tornado
. from Page A1

I
I

ROUNDTRIP
TICKET
TO CHINA.

saw the funnel cloud
approaching several homes
in the area.
Zerkle then ca lled for
other emergency responders
to start toward the Letart
area since he thought that he
was going to have a disaster
on his hands, he said.
· · "I was scared," he said. "I
. have never seen one like
this before m West
Virginia."
He was not the only one
that was frightened by the
storm.
Penni Rollins had been
mowing her yard when suddenly the skies on the horizon started to turn dark. '
Rollins said the wind had
.not yet began to gust but the
rain started to fall.
"I walked into my home
and told my husband that
the wind didn 't sound
right," she said. "He looked
out the window and then
yelled for the kids to get
into the basement."
She and her husband
were still on the main floor
when they heard the tree
-located in their backyard
fall and strike lheir roof of
.their house. A swing set,
dog house and other items
that were located in the
back yard - were also
destroyed by the strong
wind, she said.
·
Fortunately, Rollins said
that she and her family were
not injured, but she was
concerned about her nextdoor neighbor, Dottie
Lingerfelt, who is elderly
and lives alone.
Lingerfelt said that she
was in her garden when the
storm struck :
"I could see it coming,"
she said. " Then the rain
started coming down. There
was a lot of wind."
She said she was going
inside of her home when a
gust shut her door very hard

behind her.
Not being able to see outside due to the heavy downpour. Linge rfelt said she
heard a lot of noise then
something had . hit her
hou se.
"I looked ou t and could
~ee something whit e," she
said. "Then, I realized my
garage was gone. I just
couldn 't believe it."
Knowing there was nothing she could do until the
storm was over, Lingerfelt
said that she had to si t and
wait it out.
Rollins said once the
storm was over, she went to
check on her nei ghbor.
"Everybody checks on
everyone around here," she
said. "Everyone is shook
up, but we are all tine.''
She said that the storm
came on very suddenly and
that there was damage to
roofs and trees were
knocked down.
" I don 't want to see tornados no more," Rollins
said.
Meteorologist Alan Rezek
said that the strong storms
brought some rei ief to the
high temperatures. More
rain visited the area again
on Thursday.
Earlier on Thursday,
Mason County was one of
42 counties declared to be
in drought conditions by
Gov. Joe Manchin .
Reze k said the area
needs a period of rain of
three to four times a week
in order for the drought to
be over. The rains on
Wednesday and Thursday
helped with th e surface
moisture but it was not
enough to bring the water
table up to where it needs
· to be, he said.
Once the storm s are
over, Rezek said that the
weather will fall back into
the same pattern that it has
been follow ing for several
weeks.
·
The nel\t chance of significant rain fall will be around
the Fourth of July holiday
weekend.

Board

TODAY IN HISTORY

from PageA1

Today is Friday, June 29, the ,I 80th day of 2007. There
arc 185 days left in -the year.
Tuday's Hi ghlight in History:
On June 29, 1776, the Virginia state constitution -was
adopted, and Patrick Henry made. governor.
Thought for Today: "r-le who is firmly seated in authori- ·
ty soon learns to think security, and not progress, the highest lesson of statecraft." - James Russell Lowell,
American essayist ( 1 8 1 9~ 189 1).

year which ends this week in
the amount of $30.116,915.
Both figures were approved
by the Board.
Other financial matters
. discussed and approved by
the Board dealt with reauthorizing the
Budget
Reserve Fund in the
amount of $296,906 to be
used to handle future general fund deficits. This is
required by law, it was

Candidates, anyone?

Anyone who doubts the
vitality of the American
political system must be
reassured by the number of
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev should be leis people seeking the presi1han 300 words. All leiters are subject /o .editing, must be dency. It 's a fair question
signed. and include address and telephone number. No why anybody would want
unsign ed lel/ers will be published. Letters should be in the job. but there are rough/iOOd taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leiters of ly a dozen hopefuls in each
tlu111ks lo organizatio11s {Uld indil•idua/s will no/ be accepl- party out there running for
it, and now New York City
ed(or tnthlic£1/ion.
Mayor Michael Bloomberg
has let it be known that, if
the conditions look right
about seven month.s from
now, he may abandon both
Reader Services
(usPs 213-9601
parties and spend a billion
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
or two of his $5 billion on
Our main concern in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
an independent bid. What
be accurate. If you know of an 'error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
does a. handicapper do with
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage
in a story, ca ll the newsroom at (740)
pa id at Pomeroy.
a
field like that? .
992·2 156.
Member: The Associated Press and
Start with the Democrats.
the Ohio Newspciper Association .
Hillary Clinton probHere,
Our main number is
Postmaster: ,Send address correcably deser-ves the title of
(7401 992-2156.
lions to The Daily Sentinel, ttl Court
"front-runner." She leads
Department extensions are:
Street . Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
the polls; she has buckels of
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By
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has the shrewdest politOne month ........ .. .'10.27
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It's
hard to see
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Outside Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 ' direct to the Daily Sentinel. No subscripa rival who looks likely to
Outslde Sales: Brenda Davi s, Ext16 lion by mail permitted in ?oreas where
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Bill Richard son and the
long
list
of
other
Mall Subscription
General Manager
Inside Meigs County
Democratic wannabes have
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all failed (at least so far) to
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catch fire, and the steady
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drumbeat of ·mayors, connews@mydailysentinel.com
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gress ional lt!aders · and
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www.mydailysentinel.com
fies to their calculation that

LETTE;RS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

William
Rusher

she is the likely nominee.
Barack Obama, who burst
onto the national political
scene a few months ago
with a flood of favorable
publicity, has settled into
second place in the polls,
and seems likely to wind up
where many observers have
always
calculated
he
belonged: in the vice presidential slot on her ticket.
Only . former
Vice
President AI Gore (who hasn't even said he's running)
fails to tit the template. He
is nationally known and
widely respects;:d, ~nd, after
all, he actually got. more
votes than George W. Bush
in 2000, though theit distri•
bution among the states prevented him from winning a
majority in the Electoral
College. But
he
is
inescapably
yesterday 's
news, whereas Hillary has
not yet "had her chance." It
is true that the American
people sense in her an unappealing steeliness, which
pro~ably accounts for her
high negatives in polls that
seek to rate mere likeability.

But that calculation is more
likely to affect her chances
in the general election than
in the race for the nomination.
As for the Republicans,
they have a zoo of their
own, and not even a candidate who can plausibly
claim to be the front-runner.
Why anybody would want
the Republican nomination
is a mystery, given the
party's · gloomy prospects
for 2008, but hope springs
eternal, and never more so
than in the case of politicians who consider themselves presidential material.
John McCain, who overshadowed his rivals a few
months ago, has faded
markedly,, in part because of.
his no doubt courageous,
but politically foolhardy,
support for the immigration
"reform" bill, which is
anathema
to
most
Republicans. Rudy Giuliani
consistet:ttly tops the polls,
and 'it may. be that I am
underestimating his stayingpower, but I am by no
means the only observer
who thinks that his popularity among Republican~ will
sag markedly when they
realize (as most of them
have yet to do) that he is
loudly pro-abortion, progay riglits and pro-gun con,trol. Mitt Romney has conducted a flawless campaign
thus far, and his looks and
.clothes are right out of

"

Central Casting for a
Republican
presidential
candidate. But his appearance and performance have
been so good that, perhaps
unfairly, a lot of people
wonder if they aren't too
good to 'be true. Still, the
polls have him ahead in the
key primary state of Iowa,
and it would be foolish to
count him out prematurely.
The wild card in the
Republican deck is, of
course, Fred Thompson, the
former Tennessee senator
whose known views on the
issues fulfill the fondest
dreams of conservative
Republicans.
But
Thompson hasn't even
declared his candidacy yet,
and the rumpled charm that
ha_s made him so popular on
"Law &amp; Order" may tum
out to be more an artifact of
television than a fact of life.
So will America opt for
Bloomberg? It hardly seems
likely. But his candidacy
could easily deiermine
which of the two major.party candidates will win.
Say what you will about the
confusion, living in a
vibrant democratic society
sure beats living in a' dictatorship when it comes to
excitement.
(William Rusher is a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship arfd
Political Philosophy.)

2

pointed out.
The treasurer and superintendent were authorized to
obtain district property, tleet
and liability insurance coverage through the Ohio School
Plan administered by Hylant
Administrative
Services
effective July I through June
30, 2008 with an annual.premium of $645,757 to include
$4 million excess liability
coverage.
The Board also approvt;d
co ntinued membership m.
The Ohio Coalition . for
Equity and Adequacy of
School Funding at 50 cents
a student; the ed ucational

th ey approved this location." Russell also wrote the
site provides "ample park,
ing for post office cusfrom Page A1.
tomers and employees."
According to Ru ssell's
Russell, manager, Eastern letter there were seven
Facilities Service Office for offers of land and existing
the USPS, and was an buildings submitted 10 the
attempt to answer these USPS for the new site. Only
concerns. In response to one comment was received
flooding concerns, Russell from the community which
wrote: " Before the Salem was a "favorable one" and it
Street site was selected, ·our was for the I 08 Salem
. environmental speciali sts Street site.
reviewed all information
Other poten\ial sites
concerning this site, includ-_ included the Rutland Civic
ing !load maps and ·other Center and property ac ross
environmental data . . and from the Rutland Volunteer

Rutland

BY JULIE
HIRSCHFELD DAVIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

WASHINGTON
President Bush's immigration plan to legalize as
many as 12 million unlawful immigrants while forti fying the border collapsed
in the Senate on Thursday,
crushin g both . parties'
hopes of addressing the
volatile issue before the
2008 elections.
The Senate vote to drive a
stake through the delicate
compromise was a stinging
setback for Bush - who
had tnade reshaping immigration laws a centerpiece
of his domestic agenda engineered by members of
AP photo
his own party.
Sen.
Jon
Kyl,
R
-Ariz.,
left,
speaks
during
a
news
'conference
on
Capitol
Hill
in
W
ashington
.
It c·ould carry heavy politThursday,
to
discuss
the
defeat
of
the
immigration
reform
legislation.
From
second
from
.
ical consequences for
left
are,
Commerce
Secretary
Carlos
Gutierrez,
Sen.
Arlen
Specter,
R-Pa
..
and
Sen
.
Lindsey
Republicans and Democrats,
'
many of whom were eager Graham, R-S.C.
to show they could act on a
complex issue of great inter- know enough about the uct of a liberal-to-conserva- who was a strong supporter.
immigration legislation to ' tive alliance led by Kennedy ''By its nature, because it was
est to the public.\
whether they supported and Sen. Jon Kyl , R-Ariz .. a compromise, it was hard to'
say
"Legal immigration is one
that forged an immigration muster intense support. But
of the top toncerns of the passage.
"I
believe
that
until
another
compromise intended to the opposition was very
American
people and
Congress' failure to act on it election occurs, or until some- withstand challenges from intense."
is a disappointment," a thing happens in the body the left and right.
Conservative foes' were
They advocated the among the loudest voices dur·
grim-faced president said politic, that what occurred
after an appearance . in today was fairly final," said resulting meas ure as an ing the debate. led by Sens.
Newport, R.I. "A lot of us Sen. Mel Martinez, R-Ra., imperfect but necessary fix Jeff Sessions, R-Aia .. Jim
to the current system, in DeMint, R-S.C., and David
worked hard to see if we the GOP chairman.
'"I don 't see where the which millions of illegal Vitter. R-La. Their view'
couldn't find common
political will is there forth is immigrants .use forged doc- were amplitied by talk mdio
ground. It didn 't work."
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, issue to be dealt with," said uments or lapsed visas to and television hosts who
D-Mass., his party 's lead Martinez, who helped live and work in the U.S.
attacked the bill and urged lisdevelop
the
bill.
negotiator on the bill, callec:)
The proposal would have teners to tlood Congre;s with
House Democratic lead- made those millions eligible calls, faxes and e-mails.
its defeat "enormously disappointing for Congress and for ers signaled they had little for lawful status while tightThe conservatives hailed
the country.'' But, he added: appetite for taking up an ening border security and the demise of. the .bill us a
"We will be back. This issue issue that bitterly divides creating an employee ve rifi - fitting death of an effort that
both parties and has tied up cation system to weed out had thwarted the public's
is not goi ng away." ,
illegal workers from U.S. will. They faulted Bush ami
The bill's Senate support- the Senate for weeks.
Rep. Zoe Lofgren, who jobs.
ers fel l 14 votes short of the
their own party for trying to
The bill also would have set push through a measure that
60 needed to limit debate · heads the House Judiciary
and clear the way for final subcommittee that · was to up a temporary worker pro- lacked public support and .
passage of the legislation. write a version of the bill, gram . and a system to base placed ~ ep ubli c ans in a
The tally was 46 to 53, with . said the Senate's inability to future legal immigration more politically tough spot.
"They made a big · misthree-qu arters
of
the move forward "effectively heavily on employment criteSenate's Republicans voting ends comprehensive immi- ria, rather than family ties.
take. I think the president's
gration reform efforts" for
Ultimately, though, what approach _ didn't work."
to derail the bill.
Lawmakers in both par- the next year and a half.
came to be known as their Sessions said. Rep ubli cans
"The .Senate voted, for the "grand bargain" commanded "need to be careful we don ' t
ties said further action was
unlikely this year, dooming status quo," the California only lukewarm support walk into such an adverse
its prospects as the political Democmt said in a statement. among important constituen- circumstance aga in . Thi s
The vote already had led cies in both parties. That was did not work out well. Our
strains of a crowded presito partisan fin ger-pointing.
dential contest get louder.
no match for the. vehement own members were placed
Only 13 percent of those
Howard
Dean,
the and vocal opposition of in di ffi cult positions."
in a CBS News Survey Democratic Party chairman, Rjlpublican conservatives.
Bush made an unusuall y
taken earlier this week said said it was "a reminder of who derided it as amnesty. . personal appeal f9r passage
the·y supported passage of why the American people
"The end result was a blan- of the legislation, appearing
the bill. Almost three times voted Republicans out in ket that was too small to at a luncheon with Senate
that number. 35 percent, 2006 and why they ' lL vote cover everyone," said Tamar Republicans this month to
opposed _i t. Even more, 51 against them in 2008."
Jacoby, an analyst at the con- urge them to put itside their
The measure was the prod- servative Manhattan Institute skepticism.
percent, said they did not
technology for southeastern Ohio at 55 cents per
student, atid the Coalition
of Rural and Appalachian
Schools at $300.
Approval was also given
by the Board to the purpose
statements and budgets submitted for next year's prin"
cipals and district managed
and student activity ·funds.
During the
mt;eting
attended by all five Board
members, Scott Walton,
Young,
Roger
Victor
Abbott;
Norman·
Humphreys and Ron Logan
along with Rhonemus and
Superintendent
William .
Fire Department which
Burke supported as choices.
Burke said she "along with
a -majority of the residents"
supported these sites as well
due to their central location
and "ample parking." As for Russell 's answer to
the flooding question ,
Burke said she isn't buying
it and that the location is
known to tlood. She also
fears residents near the
Saletn Street' location being
incon ve nienced by USPS
customers parking in front
of their homes.
.When the sites were being
physicall y looked at by the.

Bring Thll r:amily
&amp; Comg· Cl!ll!btlltll
July 4-th In
.~ ......... go

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Unveiling .

At
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Phil Dirt &amp; the unz1•r~

Coin ~how
ging

Buckley, several personnel and sale of the property on
matters were handled. As which the old Salem
previously reported Ben Center School stood prior
Ewing II was hired as head to the construction of a
boys basketball coach. The new elementary_school.
resignation of Nathan M.
Ha'nsen as a social studies
teacher at Meigs High was
accepted, and Jennifer
Wheaton was hired as a
Spanish teacher at Meigs
High on a one-year contract
Vegas Weekend
pending completion of
Ju,n e29&amp; 3D
requirements.
Call now for tickets and details
Discussed at an execuCasino Night June 29 7-10 pm
tive session which followed the meeting were
win great erizes! '
hiring and compensation of
Movie "Viva Las Vegas"
personnel , negotiati ons, .
June 30 at 2 pm
Vegas Legends Concert
June 30 at a pm
featuring Dwight Icenhower
USPS Burke said she was&amp; more
n't permitted to go on the
tour, adding, "I fee l this was
Box Office: 428 2nd Ave.
a done deal before it got
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started."

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"TRANSFORMERS"
· MON., JULv'2, 2007 8 PM

Fact Sheet

Whal parents should know:

Public awareness campaign
Subject: Underage Drinking
Target audience: Parents of teens
Obil'Ctive: Inform parems that
Don't be
• It is illegal to host or allow teen drinking
a party to
parttes 'n your home.
teenage drinking. •It JS unhealthy for anyone under age 21to
dnnk.
.It's ;tgainst
• It is unsafe and illegal for teens to drink and
the law.
drive.
• Parents can be rrusel' Uied under the law.
· • Everything associated wi\h a violation. such
as personal property, can bbconfiscated.
lndemge llrin/.:111g / .1111'1
Things you can do as a parent:

• As 01 parent, you cannot give alcohol to your teen's
friends under the age of 21 under any ~: i rcumstancc,
even .in your own hOme. even with their parent's

• Refuse to !o&gt; upp!y alcohOl to anyone under 21.
• Be at home when your teen has a party.
• Make sure that alcohol is not hrought into your

pq mtsSion.

home or property by yourtcc.n's friend&gt;.

.

You cannot knowingly allow a person under 2 1, other • Talk to 'other pare nt ~ ahuut not providing alcohol at
than your own child, to remain in your horne or (lll
other events yoor child will he attending.
your proptrty while consuming or possessing alcohol. • Create alcohol-free oppon uniti~s and w.: ti v iti c~ in
your home ~o teens wi ll feel welcome.
• Report underage drinking to local law cnfon:cmcnt.
If you break lhe taw:
• You ean face a maMmum sentence of six morlths in
A program of.
jail and/or a $I .000 fine .
t

• Others can sue you if you give alcohol to anyone
under 21. and they. in tum. hun someone. hurt
themselves or damage property.
• Officers can take any alcohol. monCy or property,

used in commining the offense.

,.
7

Immigration bill crushed as supporters
·fall14 votes short of keeping it alive

Evening clinic

.

The Dail y Sentinel• Page As ·

Www'.mydailysentinel.com

Drug-Free Acti011 Allia11ce
With support from the Ohio Department of
Alcohol and Drug Addictio~ Services ·

�The Daily Sentinel

~ BY THE BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My brother,
"Bob," is a very controlling,
overprotecti ve fa ther. He
has three teenage children.
He has to know what they
are doing at all times, even
when they are in the house.
When hi s kids were
younger, they were not
allowed to go on school
trips unless my brother or
his wife could chaperone.
He doesn't allow his kids to
be driven anywhere by anyone other than their parents.
I think he loves his kids
.so much that he is afra id
something bad will happen
if he's not there to prevent
it. Bob never encourages
them to go outside. ride
their bikes or play in the
neighborh ood. His wife
ge nerally follows his lead.
We are especially worried
about hi s 17-year-old
daughter, "Jane," who still
sits on Daddy's lap with her
arms wrapped around his
neck, playing with his hair.
She also will sit next to her
mother, · with their legs
intertwined. We are uncomfort able being in the same
room when this happens.
We don 't suspect abuse or
incest, or .else we would
speak up. Jane is an inielli-

gent, sweet, timid girl. She
Dear Annie: I am advissits with the adults, listening ing a student in the gem
intently, but rarely speaks.
and jewelry industry. ·He
Bob's child-rearing meth- comes from an extensive
ods have caused friction in background in the medical
the fa mil y for years, but fi eld, and this will be his
when we've said something, second career. He still has
it results in an argument and hi s medi cal license, and
the si lent treatment.. My par~ wants to know if it's approems are elderl y, and we priate to use "M.D." after
don ' t want to· upset them his name in his new profeswith si bling squabbles at sion. He doesn't want to
family gatherings, but we look snobby.
are findi ng it harder and
I believe a medical degree
shows discipline and intelliharder to bite our tongues.
Should we say something gence, and he should use it
for the sake of the children? at least until he obtains the
Or do you think that since certificate for his new (ield
the kids are loved (which of graduate gemology, and
they are ), they can eventual- has the G.G. to put after his
ly break free and lead inde..... name. What do you think?
pendent
li ves? ·
- ""·. -Curious in California
Dear Curious: He earned
Concerned Aunt
Dear Concerned: If that medical degree and can
Bob's children are loved, use it in any professional
provided for, happy and not capacity he chooses. It is
abused. he and his wife get only "snobby" when used
to decide how to raise them. in social situations, but
We agree he seems over- even then, it's becoming
protec ti ve, but kids who more acceptable.
feel smothered in such an · · Dear Annie: I am writing
environment tend to make in response to "Bewildered
up for it later. All you can Parent," whose daughter's
do is ·model healthy choic- coach appointed the captain
es, letting these children sec · rather than allow voting.
how their cou sins are treatI have coached sports for
ed and making sure you over 23 years. When players
stay close enough to be are allowed to vote for capavailable to talk when, for tain, it becomes a popularity
example, the 17-year-old contest, and the player chofinds a boyfriend.
sen is not always the best

one for the job. And mothers should not be calli ng
other mothers to rec ruit
votes. Choosing a captai n
should be on the shoulders
of the coach, who should
watch the first fe w practices
and appoint the person with
the best qualities for the
position. Registering a complaint with the principal is
wrong. Voting fo r a captain
is wrong. Parents rec ruiting
for votes are wrong. Coach
in
Volleyball
Danbury, Conn.
Dear Coach: Our objection was not the lack of an
election . It' was that the
rules were changed in midstream, which made things
look suspicious. If coaches
plan to appoint a team captain, team members should
be aware of it from the start.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell a11d
Marcy Sugar, longt~me editors of the A1111 Landers
colum11. Please e-mail your
questions to alllliesmailbox@comcast.llet, or write
to: A1111ie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
606ll. To ji11d out more
about A1111ie 's Mailbox,
a11d read features by other
Creators Sy11dicate writers
. and cartoonists, visit tile
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
I

State: Animal feed product kills up to 50,000 aquatic animals
ASHLEY (AP) -- Runoff
of an ingredient used in
li vestock feed into &lt;1' tributary of Alum Creek killed
40,000 to 50,000 fi sh and
other aquatic animals. a
wildli fe investi gator said
Thursday.
An estimated I ,500 to
2,000 gallons of whey, a
dairy byproduct, spilled into
a field drainage system that
dumps into the west branch

of Alum Creek, said Ken
Fitz, a district law enforcemen t supervisor with the
. Ohio Department of Natural
Resou rces. The spill happened last week.
The whey dissolved oxygen in a several-mile stretch
of the tributary, killing fish
and at least 3,000 crawfish
near thi s town about 30 ·
mile- north of Columbus,
according to investigators.

Investigators are not fipding any more dead fi sh.and
Fitz said he believes the
waterway will recover. The
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency . helped
aerate the creek at one location and flush the water
with pumps at others
·Most of the 50,000 animals were minnows. Other
species of fish that were
killed include catfish, blue

Friday, June

FAITH • VALUES
- A Hunger For More-

29, 2007
'

The Daily Sentinel

'

Community Calendar

Overprotective, but a good·provider
BY KATHY MITCHELL

PageA6

,gill, bass and carp.
The spill remains under
investigation
and
no
charges have been fi leu.
Fitz said the cost of the
investigation - including a
value for each fi sh that di ed
- would be the responsihility of the polluter.
Fitz said minnows, for
example, are vahJed at 6
cents apiece while a 28-inch
catfish goes fur $10.70.

CHESTER
Chester
Lodge meeting 6:30 p.m.
with potluck picnic. Also
Monday, July 2
District 13 Past Councilors,
REEDSV ILLE - Olive / District Past Councilors and
Townshi p Trustees meet in District Deputies meetings.
reg ular session.. 7:30 p.m .. Installation of Districr officers
townshi p garage.
SYR ACUSE - Sutton by Esterh Smith. Members to
Township Trus1ees, regular wear white. Distrist members
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse to be insdtalled
Village Hall .
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees.
reg ul ar meeting, 5 p.m ..
Sunday, July I
office building.
GREAT BEND - Praise
and 11 orshp 'service .at the
Bethlehem Baptist Church,
Great Bend, 6 p.m. featuring
the Fisher Family Singers.

Public meetings

Church events :_

Clubs and
organizations

Saturday, June 30
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- Fifteenth anniversary rally
for Local 5668, noon, union
hall. Take covered dish.
Sunday, July 1
POMEROY Meigs
County
Christian
Motorcyc le
Associati on
Chapter
"Delivered.' '
rescheduled meeting, 2 p.m.,
Common Grounds, members encouraged to attend.
Thesday, July 3
MIDD LEPORT
Regul ar monthly meeting of
Middleport Masonic Lodge
#363. F&amp;AM , 7:30p.m. All
MasterMasons invited.

Other events
Saturday, June 30
MIDDLEPORT
'·'Singing in the Street"
gospel bluegrass concert, I0
a.m. to 6 p.m., at The Corner
Restaurant, 308 S. Third Ave.

Birthdays
Thursday, July 7
POMEROY · Harry ··
Lodwick wi II be 80 years
old on July 7. Cards may be
sent to him adt 37842 West
Shade Road, Pomeroy, Ohio ·
45769.

Auctiort
50150
·Food

Middleport, Ohio

J-'"

,./

• lOP~\\..

Part two
Jack gazed at the seed lying in
the palm of his hand. It was
small, smooth, and its light green
husk stood in stark contrast
Pastor
against the tanned and cailoused
Thom
flesh of his hand. It look:ed like a
simple bean, but hidden inside
Mollohan
was a key to hope and a doorway
to adventure! He raced to the
doorway of the small hut in which
he and his mother lived . .
The delight he felt as he shared gazed up at it completely
the new life that was now theirs awestruck. He carefully touched
was quickly dimmed by the scowl it, feeling its trunk, and marveled
that his mother's eyes leveled at for he could feel the life within it.
him. "Y-y-you WHAT?" she He pulled his hand away and
spluttered. "You stupid bOy ! How found that it was covered with
could you? Have you no feelings some sort of dew from the vine.
for tradition? Do' you not care for He put it to his mouth' and found
family loyalties? Do you even that it tasted like a sweet nectar,
care that our family has always but was refreshing, cooling his
parched lips. He cupped his hand
had. a cow?" She pointed an against
the vine and allowed the
accusing finger at him. "Of course
moisture
to pool there. He
not," she scoffed . . "But if you
quenched
his
and felt as if
. want to live under my roof, you ' II he were being thirst
made new.
run right after that charlatan and
He looked up and saw that he
give him that bean back for our could
not see the top of the vine,
cow! Either you get our cow back that it appeared to go on up forand give up on this whole 'seed' ever. As his eyes drifted downthing, or .. . never come back! I ward again he then observed a
won't see you anymore!" Jack · parchment nailed with three
looked at her both saddened and spikes to the base of the vine.
astonished. He had thought she Realizing that there was writing
would receive this turn of events on it, he read the notice, "He
with as much hope as he was feel' Himself bore our sins in Hisbody
ing~ not with horror and certainly
on the tree, so that we might die
not by giving him such a drastic to sins and livl! for righteousness,
ultimatum.
.
by His wounds you have been
"But I can't do that, Mother," he healed" (*I Peter 2:24 NIV). As
protested. "You are dying'! Our he read these words, another
whole land is dying! I know in my parchment floated down from
heart that this is best for all of us! somewhere above and landed by
How can I turn down the one his feet. He picked it up and read,
thing that will give us hope?" His "Therefore if you have been
mother looked at hirn with accus- raised up with Christ, keep seeking eyes. "You don 't love me. You ing the things abov~, where
never did. If you did, you would- Christ is, seated at the right hand
n't treat me so!"
of God. Set your mind on the
The heaviness of sorrow began things above, not on ·the things
to. fill his heart as tears began to that are on earth" (*Colossians
fill his eyes. "Mother, how can 3:1-2 NAS). .
.
you say that? You know that I loye
Jack smiled. He took a deep
you for I've cared for you since breath and leaping up, seized the
Papa died.'' But the woman would lowest branch of the vine, pulled
hear nothing more and shrieked at himself upward onto it and began
him until pe finally ran from the to climb the bean stalk. "Keep
house and out of the yard.
seeking the things above," he
His feet led him off the path and repeated to himself. "Yes, that's
up the slope of'a hill. He crossed exactly what I will do."
its top and descended until he was
When Jesus gave His great
no longer in sight of the house. He Sermon on the Mount (see
found a large rock and sat heavily Matthew chapters 5-7), He was
down beside of it, glad for a bit of inviting them also to receive the
shade but overcome with sadness seed of His Word for their lives
still. His heart felt as though it so that they too could be lifted
would burst from rejection and he up above the pointless drudgery
wondered if he had ·been foolish~ that life without Him offers. As
Still, he had made up his mind to He did so, He lovingly spoke to
reach out for life and if it meant the future for those who follow
that he appeared foolish to others, Him, sharing with them that
even his own mother, he was will- choosing to walk with Him is
ing to endure it.
·. often fraught with persons who
, He pulled the seed .out again do not understand and even will
and wondered what to do with it. reject us because of our devotion
· Plant it surely, but where? And to the Savior.
how could it grow in a land so
"Blessed are those who are per. dry and desperate that no other secuted because of rig~teousness ,
· things could grow or bear fruit? for theirs is the kingdom of heavAs he mused over these ques- en" CMatthew 5:10 NIV). For
tions, he slowly drifted off to those who desire to experience the
sleep. One final tear slid down, kingdom of heaven even while
for a moment leaving a narrow they tread the soil of everyday
glistening track on his cheek but life, there is only one True Vine
quickly fading as the hot and dry (John 15: 1). For anyone who
air cruelly blew over him. The wishes to be lifted up, becoming
seed, still resting in his hand, heirs of hope, as well as agents of
quivered ever so slightly, and healing for our weary world, he
then rolled over on its own, off of must come to Jesus, the True
his palm and into a crack in the Vine, for in Him alone do we have
lifeless ground.
·
the means by which we may
When he awoke, his first ascend to the very throne of God.
(Thorn Mollohan and his famthought was wondering where he
was. Then he remembered the ily have ministered in southern ·
seed and looked at his hand for it. · Ohio the past 12 years. He is the
Not seeing it, )le wildly looked pastor of Pathway Community
around at the ground about him. Church, which meets 011
Then he noticed the enormous Sunday mornings at 455 Third
tree trunk beside him. Wait! It Ave. He may be reached for
wasn't a tree trunk; it was some comments or questions by ekind of giant vine, springing up mail . at pastorthom@pathwa;-.
from the earth and into the sky. He gallipolis.com).

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Friday, June 29,

2007

. . w-

In t~is photo provided by the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano. Pope Benedict XVI leafs through an
anctent volume, part of the collection of books of the Vatican library, during his visit to the library, Monday.
Pope Benedict XVI is going ahead with his plan to allow more churches to use the old Latin Mass a concession to traditionalists that has CiJused concern among those fearing a rollback of one of the Vatic~n ·s key liberalizing reforms.
.

Pope moving ahead with plan to
allow wider use of old Latin
Mass, document expected shortly
BY VICTOR L. SIMPSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

VATICAN CITY Pope
Benedict XVI is going ahead w1th
his plan to allow more churches to
use the old Latin Mass, a concession to traditionalists that has
caused concern among those fearing a rollback of one of the
Vatican's key liberalizin$ refonns.
The pope explained h1s plans to
a group of prelates from Europe
and the United States, .the Vatican
said Thursday, in what was considered an unusual meeting underlining the resistance created by his
proposal.
.
·
The statement said the meeting
was called to "illustrate the content and the spirit" of the document, which will be sent to all
bishops, accompanied by a personal letter from the pope, and be
made public in the next few days.
The decision follows months of
debate. Some cardinals, bishops
and Jews have opposed any
change, voicing complaints about
everything from the text of the old
Mass to concerns that the move
will lead to further changes to the
refonns approved by 1962-1965
Second Vatican Counc.il.
The !6th-century Tridentine
Mass was sidelined . by the socalled New Mass that followed the
council. The refonns called for
Mass to be said in local languages,
for the priest to face the congregation and not the altar with his back
to worshippers and for the use of
lay readers: Latin could still be the
language, but in celebration of the
New Mass:
With the text still not public, it
remained unclear how wide a use
of the old rite will be allowed.
To celebrate the old Latin Mass
now, ·a priest must obtain permission from the local bishop. Roman
Catholic Church leaders are anxiously awaiting the details of
Benedict's decision• to see how far
he will go in easing that rule.
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the
Vatican secretary of state, told
reporters Thursday bishops will

still have a "central role" - but he
didn't elaborate. Bertone called
the old Mass a "great treasure" for
the church.
Benedict's move is widely seen as
an attempt to reach out to an ultratraditionalist and schismatic group,
the Society of St. Pius X, and bring
it back into the Vatican's fold.
The late Archbishop Marcel
Lefebvre founded \he societ~ in
1969 in Switzerland, in opposllion
to the Vatican II' refonns, particular!¥ its liturgical changes. The
Vatican
excommunicated
Lefebvre in 1988 after he consecrated four bishops without
Rome's consent. The bishops were
excommunicated as well. ·
Benedict has been keen to reconcile with the group, which has
demanded freer use of the old
Mass as a precondition for normalizing relations.
There was no immediate reaction from the Lefebvre group. No
one answered the phone at its
headquarters in Switzerland.
Some cardinals and bishops,
particularly in France - ·where
Lefebvre's group is strong- have
objected to any liberalizing of the
terms for using the old rite, saying
its broader use could lead to divisions within the church, and could
imply a rejection of other Vatican
II teachings.
Other concerns have come from
groups involved in ChristianJewish dialogue, because the
Tridentine rite contains prayers
that some non-Christians find
offensive, inCluding references to
"perfidious" Jews. The Tridentine
liturgy predates the landmark documents from Vatican II on improving relations with Jews and people
of other faiths. ,
"A good half of. the (Catholic)
fundamentalists in the world are in
France. This is why French
Catholics are particularly concerned about their influence on the
pope," said the Rev. Michel
Kubler, religious editor of the
French Catholic daily La Croix.
He said bishops were also worried that any major change "could

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erode their ability to control how
the faith is practice(!."
"The· real issue here is not limited to liturgy but has wider implications for church life," the Rev.
Keith Peclders, a Jesuit liturgical
expert, said in an e-mail. He said
proponents of the old Mass "tend
to oppose the laity's increased role .
in parish life and worship since
Vaucan II along with the Catholic
Church's ecumenical collaboration with other Christians and its
dialo~ue with Jews and Muslims."
Visitors to· the Gesu e Maria
church in Rome, which celebrates
a Tridentine rite Mass on Sundays,
appeared divided.
Marie Borg, an 80-year-old
Italian, said "celebrating Mass the
traditional way reminds us of the
importance of religion and the
authority of the church, which is a
good thing." But Tamas Moritz,
40, visiting from Hungary, said "it
seems archaic."
In a 1988 document, Pope John
Paul II urged bishops to be generous in granting dispensations to
allow the Tridentine rite to be celebrated. But many proponents say
bishops have been stingy - either
for personal reasons or . because
they don't have enough priests
who know how to celebrate it.
. Benedict 'appears wary of ignoring tradition . This week, he
changed the rules for the election
of a pope, reinstating the rule
changed by John Paul requiring a
two-thirds majority for election of
the pontiff.
In the 1997 book "Salt of the
Earth" Benedict said it was·
"downright indecent• for people
who are still attached to the old
rite to be denied it.
"I am of the opinion, to be sure,
that the old rite should be granted
much more generously to all those
who desire it," then-Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger said. "It's impossible to see what could be dangerous or unacceptable about that."
Associated Press writers Marco
Cllown Oved in Paris a11d Rose
Hackman i11 Rome colllributed to
this report.

�The Daily Sentinel

~ BY THE BEND

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: My brother,
"Bob," is a very controlling,
overprotecti ve fa ther. He
has three teenage children.
He has to know what they
are doing at all times, even
when they are in the house.
When hi s kids were
younger, they were not
allowed to go on school
trips unless my brother or
his wife could chaperone.
He doesn't allow his kids to
be driven anywhere by anyone other than their parents.
I think he loves his kids
.so much that he is afra id
something bad will happen
if he's not there to prevent
it. Bob never encourages
them to go outside. ride
their bikes or play in the
neighborh ood. His wife
ge nerally follows his lead.
We are especially worried
about hi s 17-year-old
daughter, "Jane," who still
sits on Daddy's lap with her
arms wrapped around his
neck, playing with his hair.
She also will sit next to her
mother, · with their legs
intertwined. We are uncomfort able being in the same
room when this happens.
We don 't suspect abuse or
incest, or .else we would
speak up. Jane is an inielli-

gent, sweet, timid girl. She
Dear Annie: I am advissits with the adults, listening ing a student in the gem
intently, but rarely speaks.
and jewelry industry. ·He
Bob's child-rearing meth- comes from an extensive
ods have caused friction in background in the medical
the fa mil y for years, but fi eld, and this will be his
when we've said something, second career. He still has
it results in an argument and hi s medi cal license, and
the si lent treatment.. My par~ wants to know if it's approems are elderl y, and we priate to use "M.D." after
don ' t want to· upset them his name in his new profeswith si bling squabbles at sion. He doesn't want to
family gatherings, but we look snobby.
are findi ng it harder and
I believe a medical degree
shows discipline and intelliharder to bite our tongues.
Should we say something gence, and he should use it
for the sake of the children? at least until he obtains the
Or do you think that since certificate for his new (ield
the kids are loved (which of graduate gemology, and
they are ), they can eventual- has the G.G. to put after his
ly break free and lead inde..... name. What do you think?
pendent
li ves? ·
- ""·. -Curious in California
Dear Curious: He earned
Concerned Aunt
Dear Concerned: If that medical degree and can
Bob's children are loved, use it in any professional
provided for, happy and not capacity he chooses. It is
abused. he and his wife get only "snobby" when used
to decide how to raise them. in social situations, but
We agree he seems over- even then, it's becoming
protec ti ve, but kids who more acceptable.
feel smothered in such an · · Dear Annie: I am writing
environment tend to make in response to "Bewildered
up for it later. All you can Parent," whose daughter's
do is ·model healthy choic- coach appointed the captain
es, letting these children sec · rather than allow voting.
how their cou sins are treatI have coached sports for
ed and making sure you over 23 years. When players
stay close enough to be are allowed to vote for capavailable to talk when, for tain, it becomes a popularity
example, the 17-year-old contest, and the player chofinds a boyfriend.
sen is not always the best

one for the job. And mothers should not be calli ng
other mothers to rec ruit
votes. Choosing a captai n
should be on the shoulders
of the coach, who should
watch the first fe w practices
and appoint the person with
the best qualities for the
position. Registering a complaint with the principal is
wrong. Voting fo r a captain
is wrong. Parents rec ruiting
for votes are wrong. Coach
in
Volleyball
Danbury, Conn.
Dear Coach: Our objection was not the lack of an
election . It' was that the
rules were changed in midstream, which made things
look suspicious. If coaches
plan to appoint a team captain, team members should
be aware of it from the start.
Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell a11d
Marcy Sugar, longt~me editors of the A1111 Landers
colum11. Please e-mail your
questions to alllliesmailbox@comcast.llet, or write
to: A1111ie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
606ll. To ji11d out more
about A1111ie 's Mailbox,
a11d read features by other
Creators Sy11dicate writers
. and cartoonists, visit tile
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.
I

State: Animal feed product kills up to 50,000 aquatic animals
ASHLEY (AP) -- Runoff
of an ingredient used in
li vestock feed into &lt;1' tributary of Alum Creek killed
40,000 to 50,000 fi sh and
other aquatic animals. a
wildli fe investi gator said
Thursday.
An estimated I ,500 to
2,000 gallons of whey, a
dairy byproduct, spilled into
a field drainage system that
dumps into the west branch

of Alum Creek, said Ken
Fitz, a district law enforcemen t supervisor with the
. Ohio Department of Natural
Resou rces. The spill happened last week.
The whey dissolved oxygen in a several-mile stretch
of the tributary, killing fish
and at least 3,000 crawfish
near thi s town about 30 ·
mile- north of Columbus,
according to investigators.

Investigators are not fipding any more dead fi sh.and
Fitz said he believes the
waterway will recover. The
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency . helped
aerate the creek at one location and flush the water
with pumps at others
·Most of the 50,000 animals were minnows. Other
species of fish that were
killed include catfish, blue

Friday, June

FAITH • VALUES
- A Hunger For More-

29, 2007
'

The Daily Sentinel

'

Community Calendar

Overprotective, but a good·provider
BY KATHY MITCHELL

PageA6

,gill, bass and carp.
The spill remains under
investigation
and
no
charges have been fi leu.
Fitz said the cost of the
investigation - including a
value for each fi sh that di ed
- would be the responsihility of the polluter.
Fitz said minnows, for
example, are vahJed at 6
cents apiece while a 28-inch
catfish goes fur $10.70.

CHESTER
Chester
Lodge meeting 6:30 p.m.
with potluck picnic. Also
Monday, July 2
District 13 Past Councilors,
REEDSV ILLE - Olive / District Past Councilors and
Townshi p Trustees meet in District Deputies meetings.
reg ular session.. 7:30 p.m .. Installation of Districr officers
townshi p garage.
SYR ACUSE - Sutton by Esterh Smith. Members to
Township Trus1ees, regular wear white. Distrist members
meeting, 7 p.m., Syracuse to be insdtalled
Village Hall .
LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees.
reg ul ar meeting, 5 p.m ..
Sunday, July I
office building.
GREAT BEND - Praise
and 11 orshp 'service .at the
Bethlehem Baptist Church,
Great Bend, 6 p.m. featuring
the Fisher Family Singers.

Public meetings

Church events :_

Clubs and
organizations

Saturday, June 30
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
- Fifteenth anniversary rally
for Local 5668, noon, union
hall. Take covered dish.
Sunday, July 1
POMEROY Meigs
County
Christian
Motorcyc le
Associati on
Chapter
"Delivered.' '
rescheduled meeting, 2 p.m.,
Common Grounds, members encouraged to attend.
Thesday, July 3
MIDD LEPORT
Regul ar monthly meeting of
Middleport Masonic Lodge
#363. F&amp;AM , 7:30p.m. All
MasterMasons invited.

Other events
Saturday, June 30
MIDDLEPORT
'·'Singing in the Street"
gospel bluegrass concert, I0
a.m. to 6 p.m., at The Corner
Restaurant, 308 S. Third Ave.

Birthdays
Thursday, July 7
POMEROY · Harry ··
Lodwick wi II be 80 years
old on July 7. Cards may be
sent to him adt 37842 West
Shade Road, Pomeroy, Ohio ·
45769.

Auctiort
50150
·Food

Middleport, Ohio

J-'"

,./

• lOP~\\..

Part two
Jack gazed at the seed lying in
the palm of his hand. It was
small, smooth, and its light green
husk stood in stark contrast
Pastor
against the tanned and cailoused
Thom
flesh of his hand. It look:ed like a
simple bean, but hidden inside
Mollohan
was a key to hope and a doorway
to adventure! He raced to the
doorway of the small hut in which
he and his mother lived . .
The delight he felt as he shared gazed up at it completely
the new life that was now theirs awestruck. He carefully touched
was quickly dimmed by the scowl it, feeling its trunk, and marveled
that his mother's eyes leveled at for he could feel the life within it.
him. "Y-y-you WHAT?" she He pulled his hand away and
spluttered. "You stupid bOy ! How found that it was covered with
could you? Have you no feelings some sort of dew from the vine.
for tradition? Do' you not care for He put it to his mouth' and found
family loyalties? Do you even that it tasted like a sweet nectar,
care that our family has always but was refreshing, cooling his
parched lips. He cupped his hand
had. a cow?" She pointed an against
the vine and allowed the
accusing finger at him. "Of course
moisture
to pool there. He
not," she scoffed . . "But if you
quenched
his
and felt as if
. want to live under my roof, you ' II he were being thirst
made new.
run right after that charlatan and
He looked up and saw that he
give him that bean back for our could
not see the top of the vine,
cow! Either you get our cow back that it appeared to go on up forand give up on this whole 'seed' ever. As his eyes drifted downthing, or .. . never come back! I ward again he then observed a
won't see you anymore!" Jack · parchment nailed with three
looked at her both saddened and spikes to the base of the vine.
astonished. He had thought she Realizing that there was writing
would receive this turn of events on it, he read the notice, "He
with as much hope as he was feel' Himself bore our sins in Hisbody
ing~ not with horror and certainly
on the tree, so that we might die
not by giving him such a drastic to sins and livl! for righteousness,
ultimatum.
.
by His wounds you have been
"But I can't do that, Mother," he healed" (*I Peter 2:24 NIV). As
protested. "You are dying'! Our he read these words, another
whole land is dying! I know in my parchment floated down from
heart that this is best for all of us! somewhere above and landed by
How can I turn down the one his feet. He picked it up and read,
thing that will give us hope?" His "Therefore if you have been
mother looked at hirn with accus- raised up with Christ, keep seeking eyes. "You don 't love me. You ing the things abov~, where
never did. If you did, you would- Christ is, seated at the right hand
n't treat me so!"
of God. Set your mind on the
The heaviness of sorrow began things above, not on ·the things
to. fill his heart as tears began to that are on earth" (*Colossians
fill his eyes. "Mother, how can 3:1-2 NAS). .
.
you say that? You know that I loye
Jack smiled. He took a deep
you for I've cared for you since breath and leaping up, seized the
Papa died.'' But the woman would lowest branch of the vine, pulled
hear nothing more and shrieked at himself upward onto it and began
him until pe finally ran from the to climb the bean stalk. "Keep
house and out of the yard.
seeking the things above," he
His feet led him off the path and repeated to himself. "Yes, that's
up the slope of'a hill. He crossed exactly what I will do."
its top and descended until he was
When Jesus gave His great
no longer in sight of the house. He Sermon on the Mount (see
found a large rock and sat heavily Matthew chapters 5-7), He was
down beside of it, glad for a bit of inviting them also to receive the
shade but overcome with sadness seed of His Word for their lives
still. His heart felt as though it so that they too could be lifted
would burst from rejection and he up above the pointless drudgery
wondered if he had ·been foolish~ that life without Him offers. As
Still, he had made up his mind to He did so, He lovingly spoke to
reach out for life and if it meant the future for those who follow
that he appeared foolish to others, Him, sharing with them that
even his own mother, he was will- choosing to walk with Him is
ing to endure it.
·. often fraught with persons who
, He pulled the seed .out again do not understand and even will
and wondered what to do with it. reject us because of our devotion
· Plant it surely, but where? And to the Savior.
how could it grow in a land so
"Blessed are those who are per. dry and desperate that no other secuted because of rig~teousness ,
· things could grow or bear fruit? for theirs is the kingdom of heavAs he mused over these ques- en" CMatthew 5:10 NIV). For
tions, he slowly drifted off to those who desire to experience the
sleep. One final tear slid down, kingdom of heaven even while
for a moment leaving a narrow they tread the soil of everyday
glistening track on his cheek but life, there is only one True Vine
quickly fading as the hot and dry (John 15: 1). For anyone who
air cruelly blew over him. The wishes to be lifted up, becoming
seed, still resting in his hand, heirs of hope, as well as agents of
quivered ever so slightly, and healing for our weary world, he
then rolled over on its own, off of must come to Jesus, the True
his palm and into a crack in the Vine, for in Him alone do we have
lifeless ground.
·
the means by which we may
When he awoke, his first ascend to the very throne of God.
(Thorn Mollohan and his famthought was wondering where he
was. Then he remembered the ily have ministered in southern ·
seed and looked at his hand for it. · Ohio the past 12 years. He is the
Not seeing it, )le wildly looked pastor of Pathway Community
around at the ground about him. Church, which meets 011
Then he noticed the enormous Sunday mornings at 455 Third
tree trunk beside him. Wait! It Ave. He may be reached for
wasn't a tree trunk; it was some comments or questions by ekind of giant vine, springing up mail . at pastorthom@pathwa;-.
from the earth and into the sky. He gallipolis.com).

Sammtr in the sun
Bonjour
Flourets Thongs

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"

Friday, June 29,

2007

. . w-

In t~is photo provided by the Vatican newspaper L'Osservatore Romano. Pope Benedict XVI leafs through an
anctent volume, part of the collection of books of the Vatican library, during his visit to the library, Monday.
Pope Benedict XVI is going ahead with his plan to allow more churches to use the old Latin Mass a concession to traditionalists that has CiJused concern among those fearing a rollback of one of the Vatic~n ·s key liberalizing reforms.
.

Pope moving ahead with plan to
allow wider use of old Latin
Mass, document expected shortly
BY VICTOR L. SIMPSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

VATICAN CITY Pope
Benedict XVI is going ahead w1th
his plan to allow more churches to
use the old Latin Mass, a concession to traditionalists that has
caused concern among those fearing a rollback of one of the
Vatican's key liberalizin$ refonns.
The pope explained h1s plans to
a group of prelates from Europe
and the United States, .the Vatican
said Thursday, in what was considered an unusual meeting underlining the resistance created by his
proposal.
.
·
The statement said the meeting
was called to "illustrate the content and the spirit" of the document, which will be sent to all
bishops, accompanied by a personal letter from the pope, and be
made public in the next few days.
The decision follows months of
debate. Some cardinals, bishops
and Jews have opposed any
change, voicing complaints about
everything from the text of the old
Mass to concerns that the move
will lead to further changes to the
refonns approved by 1962-1965
Second Vatican Counc.il.
The !6th-century Tridentine
Mass was sidelined . by the socalled New Mass that followed the
council. The refonns called for
Mass to be said in local languages,
for the priest to face the congregation and not the altar with his back
to worshippers and for the use of
lay readers: Latin could still be the
language, but in celebration of the
New Mass:
With the text still not public, it
remained unclear how wide a use
of the old rite will be allowed.
To celebrate the old Latin Mass
now, ·a priest must obtain permission from the local bishop. Roman
Catholic Church leaders are anxiously awaiting the details of
Benedict's decision• to see how far
he will go in easing that rule.
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the
Vatican secretary of state, told
reporters Thursday bishops will

still have a "central role" - but he
didn't elaborate. Bertone called
the old Mass a "great treasure" for
the church.
Benedict's move is widely seen as
an attempt to reach out to an ultratraditionalist and schismatic group,
the Society of St. Pius X, and bring
it back into the Vatican's fold.
The late Archbishop Marcel
Lefebvre founded \he societ~ in
1969 in Switzerland, in opposllion
to the Vatican II' refonns, particular!¥ its liturgical changes. The
Vatican
excommunicated
Lefebvre in 1988 after he consecrated four bishops without
Rome's consent. The bishops were
excommunicated as well. ·
Benedict has been keen to reconcile with the group, which has
demanded freer use of the old
Mass as a precondition for normalizing relations.
There was no immediate reaction from the Lefebvre group. No
one answered the phone at its
headquarters in Switzerland.
Some cardinals and bishops,
particularly in France - ·where
Lefebvre's group is strong- have
objected to any liberalizing of the
terms for using the old rite, saying
its broader use could lead to divisions within the church, and could
imply a rejection of other Vatican
II teachings.
Other concerns have come from
groups involved in ChristianJewish dialogue, because the
Tridentine rite contains prayers
that some non-Christians find
offensive, inCluding references to
"perfidious" Jews. The Tridentine
liturgy predates the landmark documents from Vatican II on improving relations with Jews and people
of other faiths. ,
"A good half of. the (Catholic)
fundamentalists in the world are in
France. This is why French
Catholics are particularly concerned about their influence on the
pope," said the Rev. Michel
Kubler, religious editor of the
French Catholic daily La Croix.
He said bishops were also worried that any major change "could

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erode their ability to control how
the faith is practice(!."
"The· real issue here is not limited to liturgy but has wider implications for church life," the Rev.
Keith Peclders, a Jesuit liturgical
expert, said in an e-mail. He said
proponents of the old Mass "tend
to oppose the laity's increased role .
in parish life and worship since
Vaucan II along with the Catholic
Church's ecumenical collaboration with other Christians and its
dialo~ue with Jews and Muslims."
Visitors to· the Gesu e Maria
church in Rome, which celebrates
a Tridentine rite Mass on Sundays,
appeared divided.
Marie Borg, an 80-year-old
Italian, said "celebrating Mass the
traditional way reminds us of the
importance of religion and the
authority of the church, which is a
good thing." But Tamas Moritz,
40, visiting from Hungary, said "it
seems archaic."
In a 1988 document, Pope John
Paul II urged bishops to be generous in granting dispensations to
allow the Tridentine rite to be celebrated. But many proponents say
bishops have been stingy - either
for personal reasons or . because
they don't have enough priests
who know how to celebrate it.
. Benedict 'appears wary of ignoring tradition . This week, he
changed the rules for the election
of a pope, reinstating the rule
changed by John Paul requiring a
two-thirds majority for election of
the pontiff.
In the 1997 book "Salt of the
Earth" Benedict said it was·
"downright indecent• for people
who are still attached to the old
rite to be denied it.
"I am of the opinion, to be sure,
that the old rite should be granted
much more generously to all those
who desire it," then-Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger said. "It's impossible to see what could be dangerous or unacceptable about that."
Associated Press writers Marco
Cllown Oved in Paris a11d Rose
Hackman i11 Rome colllributed to
this report.

�I.

The Daily Sentinei

Page AS

LOCAL • STATE
Governor, legislative leaders
lozers
celebrate setting aside politics
Friday, June

BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

.'

Submitted photo

Kathy Thomas (center) of the River City Players (RCP) accepts a donation from Richard and Wendy Hill of Hometown Market
which is contributing all the food for the RCP's.concession stand ·at the Phil Dirt and the Dozers Concert on July 4 at the
Middleport Football Field.

Local Stocks ·
AEP (NYSE) - 44.55
AJczo (NASDAQ)- 85.85
Aahtand Inc. (NYSE) - 64.02
1111 Loti (NYSE)- 30.41
lob EYIM (NASDAQ) - 37 ~1.
llofiiWMIIIr (NYSE) - 8&amp;.16
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) -

13.88
Ch8mplon (NASDAQ) - 7.15
Charml"'l Shopo (NASPAQ) 11.07
•
City Holdl"'l (NASDAQ) - 39.08
CDillnl (NYSE)- 70.31
DDI"'r Clllneral ( NYSE) - 21.88
DuPont (NYSE)- 50.93
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.20
Go-u (NYSE) - 55.09
Genel'lll Electrtc (NYSE) - 38.12
Hartey-DII\'klson (NYSE) - 59.79
JP Mor.... (NYSE) - 48.96
..._ Kro&amp;er (NYSE) - 28.27 .
Umlted Brandl (NYSE)- 27.92
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) - 53.24

Oak Hill Flnanc"'l (NASDAQ) 22.10
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)

-25.12
BIT (NYSE) - 41.12
Pooples (NASDAQ)- 27.72
Pepotco (NYSE) - 811.25
Prtmler (NASDAQ) - 18.09
Rockwell (NYSE) -89.47
Rocky.llooll (NASDAQ) - :1.8.112
Royal Dutch Shell - aci.14

SNrl HCJicltW (NASDAQ) -188.113
Wai-Mart ( NYSE) - 48.21
Wendy'a (NYSE) - 36.92
Worthlnjlton (NYSE) - 21.96
Dally stock raporta ara the 4 p.m.
ET ctollnl quotea of transactions

fur June 28, 2007, provided by
Edward Jonas llnanelal acMaoro
loaac Mills In Gallipolis at (740)
441·9441 and Leoley Marrew In
Point Plelie!lnt at (304) 6740174. Me-r SIPC.

·Local Weather
Friday...Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers in the
moming ...Then a slight
chance of showers · in the
~moon: Highs in the upper
70s. Temperature falling into
the mid 70s in the afternoon.
Nortil winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Friday
nlght ... Partly
cloudy. Patchy fog after
midnight. Lows around 60.
North winds 5 to 10 mph.
S$turday...Sunny. Highs
in . the 'lower 80s. North
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Saturday night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
North winds 5 to I0 mph.

Sunday
through
· Monday
night ... Mostly
clear. Highs in the lower
80s. Lows in the upper 50s.
. Thesday
· through
Independence Day... Partly
cloudy. Hi$hs in the upper
80s. Lows m the mid 60s.
Wednesday
night ...
Partl~
cloudy in the
eventng ... Then becoming
· mostly cloudy. A chance of
thunderstorms
in
the
evening. A chance of showers. Lows in the upper 60s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday ... Most I y
cloudy. Highs in the upper
80s.

COLUMBUS - Ohio's
political leaders stood side
by side Thursday to deliver
a niessage to vqters: We
listened.
The unusual lovefest convened by Democratic Gov.
Ted Strickland and legislative leaders of both parties
·came after historically harmonious
passage
Wednesday of the $52.3 billion operating budget,
wtiich will pay for state
operations for two years
beginning Sunday..
Bickering over the budget is generally intensely
contentious, as political
factions vie for their pet
programs amid an atmosphere of limited resources.
This year, in the wake of
last year 's political power
shift in which Democrats
captured four of five
statewide races , of 264
potential votes on the bill 's
various versions, a si ngle
no vote was cast.
Strickland
introduced
Senate President Bill Harris,
a term-limited Ashland
Republican, at the event as
"a Marine with a big heart,"
and later in the event
rea~hed out and hugged
GOP House Speaker Jon
Husted, after the two had
been razzing each other
about their relative ages.
Husted, of Kettering, told
the gathering Strickland's
initial budget proposal
reflected many of his priorities, so there was no need to
fight it. He cited as positives
the
continuation
of
Republican-crafted changes
to state tax code, money for
higher education ·and an
emphasis on high-tech education and job development.
He also said Ohio's dire
economic troubles . helped
fuel the cooperative spirit.
"If you got elected . and

29, 2007

you didn't realize that, then
shame On you," he Said.
"Because our state is experiencing challenges."
House Democratic Jeader
1
• Joyce Beatty said lawmakers of both parties were able
to agree on the state's
biggest problems.
"We talk about good pubIK: policy, but we are also
politicians- and every one
af us campaigned on three
things: health care, education and the economy," she
said. "So today we deliver."
Harris said the budget bill
is notable for the breadth of
the programs it was able to
support that benefit the
poor, middle-class college
students and businesses.
"It's balanced, it 's fiscally
responsible, and it reaches
out across the whole spectrum of our society in
Ohio," he said.
Since introducing his
budget in March, Strickland
had made dozens of stops
across the state selling its
big ideas - which included
a property tax cut for senior
citizens and the disabled
that will be paid for by selling Ohio's tobacco settlement proceeds.
Senate Leader Teresa
Fedor, a Toledo Democrat,
said the fact that Strickland
gathered ideas directly from
7 citizens helped explain the
., proposal's success: She
called it a budget "by the
people, for the people."
"Their voice clearly
reflects what we did in a
bipartisan manner in this
budget," she .said.
Strickland, the state's first
Democratic governor iJ~ 16
years, continued his crossstate travels Thursday to talk
about the budget. He
plann~d stops in Toledo,
Cleveland,
Youngstown,
Ironton, Cincinnati and
Dayton before his expected
signing of the bill Saturday,
the last day of the fiscal year.

·Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Gators dominate NBA Draft, Page 82
Biggio, Thomas reach milestones, Page 83
NBA Draft breezes past Cavs, Page }13

I

Friday, June 29, 2007
LocAL SCHEDULE

Buckeyes have three first-rounders

POMEROY - A schedule of IJI)COI'TlinQ co1eQa
and high school varsity sporting events i'lvrMig

teams from GaHia and Meigs counties.

BY MATT REED .

·Today'a game.
Legion Baseball

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Gallia at CK Tourname nt. TBA

COLUMBUS The
news from New York wasn't
a huge surprise: the Portland
Trial Blazers made Ohio
State's Greg Oden the first
overall pick in Thursday's
·
NBADraft,
Three slots later, 1 the
.Memphis Grizzlies ended
weeks-long suspense over
how high Mike Conley Jr.
- Oden's Buckeye teammate - would be selected,
choosing him with their No.
4 pick.
Daequan Cook became the
third Buckeye to be selected
in the first round when the
Philadelphia 76ers selected
him at No. 21. but was
immediately traded to
Miami for Jason Smith.
The Heat had drafted

Saturday's games

Legion Baseball
Gallia at CK Tournament, TBA
Athens at Meigs (DH), 1 p.m.
Juetday's game

Legion Baseball
Meigs vs Portsmouth (at Minford HS),

5:30p.m.

Wtdn11day 'a.gamt
Legion Baseball

Meigs at Athens Fourth ol July
Tournament, TBA

Thursday'• game
Legion Baseball

Gallia at Logan , 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

BBYFL sign-ups
for 2007 season

AP photo

Ohio State's Mike Conley (1) drives to the basket past
Eastern Kentucky's Julian Mascot!, rear, and Mike Rose
(20) during the first half of a college basketball game in
Columbus during this Nov. 17, 2006 file photo. Conley was
selected fourth by the Memphis Grizzlies on Thursday.

Smith out of Colorado State
with their No. 20 pick.
Cook, a 6"5 guard, had
hoped to go in the late first
round, said AI Powell, a paid
assistant coach at Dayton's
Dunbar High School who
helped coach Cook, Oden
and Conley when they
played AAU ball.
Oden, a 7-foot center, and
fellow freshmen Conley and
Cook led the Buckeyes to
the Big Ten regular season
and tournament titles in
2006-2007 and helped Ohio
State to its first NCAA title
game in 45 years. Both players decided in April to enter
the draft after one year of
college ball .
"It's a great thing," Oden
said on ESPN of Portland's
selection. "I' m a better player because of that year in
college."

Portland general manager
Kevin Pritchard told ESPN
that Oden 's habit of winning
was a deciding factor in
choosi ng him over Texas'
Kevin Durant, who was
selected second by Seattle.
"We started with one
thing: who was going to get
us to the champtonship
level ," he said .
Pritchard said the Blazers
wanted a center with athletic
ability, character and the
ability to change a game on
either offense or defense.
"Greg fits that bill," he
said.
. Conley, considered to be
the top point guar4 in the
draft. said he 's confident he
can lead the Grizzlies.
''I'm able to handle whatever situation is thrown at
.
Please see Buckeyes, Bl

MIDDLEPORT - The
Big Bend Youth Football
League is having sign-UJ!S
for any child who will be m
grades . 3-6 this coming
school year.
.
Regular sign-ups will be
held at the Middleport
Stadium on Saturdays (July
14th, 21st and 28th )from 10
a.m. till I p.m.
Parents need to be with
the child as fitting for
equipment will be done at
the time of sign-ups.
Football camp will begin on
Monday, July 30 and the
one-time membership fee
will be $25.
The league will honor its
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
early sign-up fee reductions.
Jimmy Rollins had four
Parents may take advantage
hits,
including a game-winby mailing in the child's
ning
RBI single in the botname, grade, school attendtom
of
the IOth inning and
ing, age, address and phone
the
Philadelphia
Phillies
number, along with $15 to
beat the Cincinnati Reds 8-7
P.O. Box 212. Middleport.
on Thursday night.
·
Ohio 45760.
Chase
Utley
hit
a
pair
of
There will also be an early
two-run
homers
for
the
sign-up held at the Rutland
.Phillies, who pulled with
Celebration on Saturday,
July 7, where the league
three games of NL Eastwill have its dunking booth
leading New York. The
set up. Sign-ups being
Mets, who were rained out
mailed must be post marked
at home against St. Louis,
by July 5.
come to Philadelphia for a
pivotal four-game series
For more information
AP photo
contact Roger Thompson at Ohio State's Greg Oden, right is shown with NBA commissioner David Stern after being selected by Portland Trait Blazers starting with Friday's day740-992-0351, or Dave as the No. 1 overall .in the first round of the 2007 NBA Draft Thursday in New York.
night doubleheader.
Jenkins at 304-674-5178.
Alex Gonzalez, Adam
Dunn
'and
Edwin
Encarnacio'
n
each
homered
HYL holding men's
for Cincinnati, which finished its road trip at 3-6.
Fans
rushed
the
court
at
picked,
Durant
saw
on
TV
softball tourney
Pinch hitter Rod Barajas
the Rose Garden, '.~(here a that the SuperSonics had
led
off the IOth with a walk
perennial
playoff
team
has.·
traded
Allen,
their
leading
HARRISONVILLE
against
Victor Santos (l-3).
fallen
on
hard
times
after
scorer.
to
Boston
.
Fans
The
4th
annual
BY BRIAN MAHONEY
Portland
opted
for
the
7One
out
later, Abrham
some
worse
behavior.
But
booed
the
Allen
trade
at
a
Harrisonville
Men's
AP BASKETBALL WRITER
footer
who
can
dominate
a
Nunez
laced
a single to left
the
Blazers
got
Rookie
of
.
draft
party
for
the
Sonics,
Softball Tournament will 'be
game
with
his
defense
over
field.
With
a
1-2 count to
the
Year
Brandon
Roy
last
who
still
face
losing
Rashard
held on Saturday, July 28,
NEW
YORK
The
the
sensational
scoring
of
Rollins,
the
Phillies
elected
year
and
got
an
early
start
on
Lewis
to
free
agency.
and Sunday, July 29 at the
Portland
Trail
Blazers
got
Durant,
who
wo4ld
have
having
next
season's
winner
·
But
the
6-9
Durant,
to
pinch-run
Jayson
Werth
Harrisonville ball fields.
Greg
Oden
and
felt
like
they
been
the
No.
I
pick
in
many
at
'
second
base
.
Rollin
s
when
they
grabbed
Oden
to
wearing
an
orange
tie
to
The two-day tournament
won
a
championship.
other
years
after
one
of
the
worked
the
count
full
before
play alongside LaMarcus match Texas' colors, doeshas a $100 entry fee per ·
The. Seattle SuperSonics . most outstanding freshman Aidridge.
·
n't consider hims elf the lacing a line drive to the
team and all teams are wel"They did have a bad (rep- Sonics' savior.
right-center field gap,' easily
come. All proceeds will go settled for Kevin Durant, seasons in NCAA history. ·
But franchise centers are utation), but I think Brandon ... Not at all, not a.t all," scoring Werth .
towards tfie Harrisonvine thrilling fans disappointed
.
Youth League. Deadline to by the trade ofAII-Star Ray hard to find, and most and LaMarcus kind of Durant said. "W.hen you
Clay C:ondrey (3-0)
believe the Blazers got one. turned that around," Oden play since you were 8 or 9 escaped a first-and-second ,
register is Monday, July 23. Allen to Boston.
The
Trail
Blazers
ended
"I was on the phone with said. "I hope that I can come years old, you know the two-out jam in the IOth to
For more information
months
of
debate
Thursday
the
radio .station back in . and just push that along game is.not a one-man sport. pick up the victory.
plea~e coritact Sarah at 740992-0351 or Regina ·at 740- night when they chose Oden Portland," Oden said. "They some more."
I'm far from being a savior."
Gonzalez gave Cincinnati
698-2804.
over fell ow college fresh - said they stomped the floor
Even with Durant, feelOden led Ohio State to the a short-lived 7-6 lead in the
man Durant with the No. I · like they won the NBA ings weren't quite the same national
championship eighth, homering off reliev pick iri a highly anticipated championship once they in Seattle.
HYL holding co-ed NBA draft.
Piease see Reds, B:S
Moments after he was
Please see Draft.. Bl
called my name."

Phillies
outlast
Reds in 10

I

Young Guns: Underclassmen dominate draft
Oden, Durant go 1-2; become first
freshmen duo to accomplish feat

softball tourney

. HARRISONVILLE - A
co-ed softball tournament
has been scheduled for
Saturday, August { and
Sunday, August 5 at the
Harrisonville ball fields.
The two-day tournament
has a $100 entry fee per
team. All proceeds will go
towards the Harrisonville
Youth League. Deadline to
register is Monday, July 30.
For more information
please contact Sarah at 740992-0351 or Regina at 740698-2804.

CoNTACfUS
OVP Scoreltne (5 p.m.·1 a:m.)

1-74.0-446·2342 ext. 33
Fox- 1-740·446·3008
£-mall- sports@mydailysentinel.com

Sporta Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-~342 . ext. 33
bsherman@mydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext. 23
lcrl-Jm@mydaityregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Wrltar
(74D)446·2342 , ext. 33
bwaltersOmydailytrlbune .com

{

Indians slip past Athletics, 4-3
CLEVELAND (AP) .....,
Jason Michaels can find a
lot of ways to win a ball,
game. Playing long ball
isn't usually one of them.
"I'm not a home run hitter," he said.
The Oakland Athletics
might beg to . differ.
Michaels hit a three-run
homer in the seventh inning
and the Cleveland Indians
held off the A's 4-3
·
Thursday.
The Indians trailed 3-1
when Michaels hit his sixth
home run. He connected off
Ron Flores (0-2), sending a
drive into the bleachers in
left-center field that extended his hitting streak to II
games.
"I was looking for something in the middle of the
plate," he said. "I was trying
to hit lhe ball up the middle."
Ironically, an ill-advised
throw by Michaels from left
field helped Oakland's
ninth-inn.ing threat against
closer Joe Borowski.

. The Athletics put runners the outfield shaking his
' on second and third with one head.
out, but Shannon Stewart Asked when he realized
10-for-20 in ·the four-game his mistake, Michaels said, ·
series - popped out and "When the ball was about an
.Mark Kotsay flied out, giv- inch from my hand. I know a
ing .)3orowski his 22nd save lot better than that."
in 24 chances.
Paul Byrd (7-3) allowed
"I'm not happy going 1-3 three runs in seven innings
here," . Oakland manager in winning for the first time
Bob Geren said. "We just since May 30. The rightdidn't get it done."
· hander gave up 10 hits,
Dan Johnson homered, struck out three and didn't
doubled and singled twice walk a batter.
for Oakland, which held an
"It's, been too long," he
early· 3-0 lead. The Athletics said of the gap between
wins.
fell to l-6 on their nineByrd, who allowed six hits
game road trip.
in the ftrst two innin~s, had"It's tough to win a four- n't pitched seven mnings
g11me series, especially since May 20, a stretch of
against a starting staff like seven starts.
that," Indians manager Eric
"I don't know if you guys
Wedge said. "I'm pleased noticed, but I got through
with the way we've played the seventh inning," he said.
this series."
"It might be the sign of the.
Johnson singled to start end of an age."
the ninth. One out later,
A's starter Joe Blanton
Jason Kendall singled to left took a 3-1 lead into the sevand Michaels th(ew late to enth. Kelly Shoppach led off
third base, allowing Kendall with a single and Josh
to el!_sily take second. After Please see Indians, B:S
the play, Michaels stood in

I'
•

,.

•

t

•

APphoto

Cl&lt;&gt;voiand Indians pitcher Joe Borowski. right. receives a
hug from catCher Kelly Shoppach after getting the final out
to save the Indians' 4~3 win over the Oakland Athletics during a baseball game Thursd.ay in Cleveland .

�I.

The Daily Sentinei

Page AS

LOCAL • STATE
Governor, legislative leaders
lozers
celebrate setting aside politics
Friday, June

BY JULIE CARR SMYTH
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

.'

Submitted photo

Kathy Thomas (center) of the River City Players (RCP) accepts a donation from Richard and Wendy Hill of Hometown Market
which is contributing all the food for the RCP's.concession stand ·at the Phil Dirt and the Dozers Concert on July 4 at the
Middleport Football Field.

Local Stocks ·
AEP (NYSE) - 44.55
AJczo (NASDAQ)- 85.85
Aahtand Inc. (NYSE) - 64.02
1111 Loti (NYSE)- 30.41
lob EYIM (NASDAQ) - 37 ~1.
llofiiWMIIIr (NYSE) - 8&amp;.16
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ) -

13.88
Ch8mplon (NASDAQ) - 7.15
Charml"'l Shopo (NASPAQ) 11.07
•
City Holdl"'l (NASDAQ) - 39.08
CDillnl (NYSE)- 70.31
DDI"'r Clllneral ( NYSE) - 21.88
DuPont (NYSE)- 50.93
US Bank (NYSE) - 33.20
Go-u (NYSE) - 55.09
Genel'lll Electrtc (NYSE) - 38.12
Hartey-DII\'klson (NYSE) - 59.79
JP Mor.... (NYSE) - 48.96
..._ Kro&amp;er (NYSE) - 28.27 .
Umlted Brandl (NYSE)- 27.92
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) - 53.24

Oak Hill Flnanc"'l (NASDAQ) 22.10
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NASDAQ)

-25.12
BIT (NYSE) - 41.12
Pooples (NASDAQ)- 27.72
Pepotco (NYSE) - 811.25
Prtmler (NASDAQ) - 18.09
Rockwell (NYSE) -89.47
Rocky.llooll (NASDAQ) - :1.8.112
Royal Dutch Shell - aci.14

SNrl HCJicltW (NASDAQ) -188.113
Wai-Mart ( NYSE) - 48.21
Wendy'a (NYSE) - 36.92
Worthlnjlton (NYSE) - 21.96
Dally stock raporta ara the 4 p.m.
ET ctollnl quotea of transactions

fur June 28, 2007, provided by
Edward Jonas llnanelal acMaoro
loaac Mills In Gallipolis at (740)
441·9441 and Leoley Marrew In
Point Plelie!lnt at (304) 6740174. Me-r SIPC.

·Local Weather
Friday...Mostly cloudy. A
chance of showers in the
moming ...Then a slight
chance of showers · in the
~moon: Highs in the upper
70s. Temperature falling into
the mid 70s in the afternoon.
Nortil winds around 5 mph.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Friday
nlght ... Partly
cloudy. Patchy fog after
midnight. Lows around 60.
North winds 5 to 10 mph.
S$turday...Sunny. Highs
in . the 'lower 80s. North
winds 5 to 10 mph.
Saturday night ... Mostly
clear. Lows in the upper 50s.
North winds 5 to I0 mph.

Sunday
through
· Monday
night ... Mostly
clear. Highs in the lower
80s. Lows in the upper 50s.
. Thesday
· through
Independence Day... Partly
cloudy. Hi$hs in the upper
80s. Lows m the mid 60s.
Wednesday
night ...
Partl~
cloudy in the
eventng ... Then becoming
· mostly cloudy. A chance of
thunderstorms
in
the
evening. A chance of showers. Lows in the upper 60s.
Chance of rain 40 percent.
Thursday ... Most I y
cloudy. Highs in the upper
80s.

COLUMBUS - Ohio's
political leaders stood side
by side Thursday to deliver
a niessage to vqters: We
listened.
The unusual lovefest convened by Democratic Gov.
Ted Strickland and legislative leaders of both parties
·came after historically harmonious
passage
Wednesday of the $52.3 billion operating budget,
wtiich will pay for state
operations for two years
beginning Sunday..
Bickering over the budget is generally intensely
contentious, as political
factions vie for their pet
programs amid an atmosphere of limited resources.
This year, in the wake of
last year 's political power
shift in which Democrats
captured four of five
statewide races , of 264
potential votes on the bill 's
various versions, a si ngle
no vote was cast.
Strickland
introduced
Senate President Bill Harris,
a term-limited Ashland
Republican, at the event as
"a Marine with a big heart,"
and later in the event
rea~hed out and hugged
GOP House Speaker Jon
Husted, after the two had
been razzing each other
about their relative ages.
Husted, of Kettering, told
the gathering Strickland's
initial budget proposal
reflected many of his priorities, so there was no need to
fight it. He cited as positives
the
continuation
of
Republican-crafted changes
to state tax code, money for
higher education ·and an
emphasis on high-tech education and job development.
He also said Ohio's dire
economic troubles . helped
fuel the cooperative spirit.
"If you got elected . and

29, 2007

you didn't realize that, then
shame On you," he Said.
"Because our state is experiencing challenges."
House Democratic Jeader
1
• Joyce Beatty said lawmakers of both parties were able
to agree on the state's
biggest problems.
"We talk about good pubIK: policy, but we are also
politicians- and every one
af us campaigned on three
things: health care, education and the economy," she
said. "So today we deliver."
Harris said the budget bill
is notable for the breadth of
the programs it was able to
support that benefit the
poor, middle-class college
students and businesses.
"It's balanced, it 's fiscally
responsible, and it reaches
out across the whole spectrum of our society in
Ohio," he said.
Since introducing his
budget in March, Strickland
had made dozens of stops
across the state selling its
big ideas - which included
a property tax cut for senior
citizens and the disabled
that will be paid for by selling Ohio's tobacco settlement proceeds.
Senate Leader Teresa
Fedor, a Toledo Democrat,
said the fact that Strickland
gathered ideas directly from
7 citizens helped explain the
., proposal's success: She
called it a budget "by the
people, for the people."
"Their voice clearly
reflects what we did in a
bipartisan manner in this
budget," she .said.
Strickland, the state's first
Democratic governor iJ~ 16
years, continued his crossstate travels Thursday to talk
about the budget. He
plann~d stops in Toledo,
Cleveland,
Youngstown,
Ironton, Cincinnati and
Dayton before his expected
signing of the bill Saturday,
the last day of the fiscal year.

·Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Gators dominate NBA Draft, Page 82
Biggio, Thomas reach milestones, Page 83
NBA Draft breezes past Cavs, Page }13

I

Friday, June 29, 2007
LocAL SCHEDULE

Buckeyes have three first-rounders

POMEROY - A schedule of IJI)COI'TlinQ co1eQa
and high school varsity sporting events i'lvrMig

teams from GaHia and Meigs counties.

BY MATT REED .

·Today'a game.
Legion Baseball

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Gallia at CK Tourname nt. TBA

COLUMBUS The
news from New York wasn't
a huge surprise: the Portland
Trial Blazers made Ohio
State's Greg Oden the first
overall pick in Thursday's
·
NBADraft,
Three slots later, 1 the
.Memphis Grizzlies ended
weeks-long suspense over
how high Mike Conley Jr.
- Oden's Buckeye teammate - would be selected,
choosing him with their No.
4 pick.
Daequan Cook became the
third Buckeye to be selected
in the first round when the
Philadelphia 76ers selected
him at No. 21. but was
immediately traded to
Miami for Jason Smith.
The Heat had drafted

Saturday's games

Legion Baseball
Gallia at CK Tournament, TBA
Athens at Meigs (DH), 1 p.m.
Juetday's game

Legion Baseball
Meigs vs Portsmouth (at Minford HS),

5:30p.m.

Wtdn11day 'a.gamt
Legion Baseball

Meigs at Athens Fourth ol July
Tournament, TBA

Thursday'• game
Legion Baseball

Gallia at Logan , 6 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

BBYFL sign-ups
for 2007 season

AP photo

Ohio State's Mike Conley (1) drives to the basket past
Eastern Kentucky's Julian Mascot!, rear, and Mike Rose
(20) during the first half of a college basketball game in
Columbus during this Nov. 17, 2006 file photo. Conley was
selected fourth by the Memphis Grizzlies on Thursday.

Smith out of Colorado State
with their No. 20 pick.
Cook, a 6"5 guard, had
hoped to go in the late first
round, said AI Powell, a paid
assistant coach at Dayton's
Dunbar High School who
helped coach Cook, Oden
and Conley when they
played AAU ball.
Oden, a 7-foot center, and
fellow freshmen Conley and
Cook led the Buckeyes to
the Big Ten regular season
and tournament titles in
2006-2007 and helped Ohio
State to its first NCAA title
game in 45 years. Both players decided in April to enter
the draft after one year of
college ball .
"It's a great thing," Oden
said on ESPN of Portland's
selection. "I' m a better player because of that year in
college."

Portland general manager
Kevin Pritchard told ESPN
that Oden 's habit of winning
was a deciding factor in
choosi ng him over Texas'
Kevin Durant, who was
selected second by Seattle.
"We started with one
thing: who was going to get
us to the champtonship
level ," he said .
Pritchard said the Blazers
wanted a center with athletic
ability, character and the
ability to change a game on
either offense or defense.
"Greg fits that bill," he
said.
. Conley, considered to be
the top point guar4 in the
draft. said he 's confident he
can lead the Grizzlies.
''I'm able to handle whatever situation is thrown at
.
Please see Buckeyes, Bl

MIDDLEPORT - The
Big Bend Youth Football
League is having sign-UJ!S
for any child who will be m
grades . 3-6 this coming
school year.
.
Regular sign-ups will be
held at the Middleport
Stadium on Saturdays (July
14th, 21st and 28th )from 10
a.m. till I p.m.
Parents need to be with
the child as fitting for
equipment will be done at
the time of sign-ups.
Football camp will begin on
Monday, July 30 and the
one-time membership fee
will be $25.
The league will honor its
PHILADELPHIA (AP)
early sign-up fee reductions.
Jimmy Rollins had four
Parents may take advantage
hits,
including a game-winby mailing in the child's
ning
RBI single in the botname, grade, school attendtom
of
the IOth inning and
ing, age, address and phone
the
Philadelphia
Phillies
number, along with $15 to
beat the Cincinnati Reds 8-7
P.O. Box 212. Middleport.
on Thursday night.
·
Ohio 45760.
Chase
Utley
hit
a
pair
of
There will also be an early
two-run
homers
for
the
sign-up held at the Rutland
.Phillies, who pulled with
Celebration on Saturday,
July 7, where the league
three games of NL Eastwill have its dunking booth
leading New York. The
set up. Sign-ups being
Mets, who were rained out
mailed must be post marked
at home against St. Louis,
by July 5.
come to Philadelphia for a
pivotal four-game series
For more information
AP photo
contact Roger Thompson at Ohio State's Greg Oden, right is shown with NBA commissioner David Stern after being selected by Portland Trait Blazers starting with Friday's day740-992-0351, or Dave as the No. 1 overall .in the first round of the 2007 NBA Draft Thursday in New York.
night doubleheader.
Jenkins at 304-674-5178.
Alex Gonzalez, Adam
Dunn
'and
Edwin
Encarnacio'
n
each
homered
HYL holding men's
for Cincinnati, which finished its road trip at 3-6.
Fans
rushed
the
court
at
picked,
Durant
saw
on
TV
softball tourney
Pinch hitter Rod Barajas
the Rose Garden, '.~(here a that the SuperSonics had
led
off the IOth with a walk
perennial
playoff
team
has.·
traded
Allen,
their
leading
HARRISONVILLE
against
Victor Santos (l-3).
fallen
on
hard
times
after
scorer.
to
Boston
.
Fans
The
4th
annual
BY BRIAN MAHONEY
Portland
opted
for
the
7One
out
later, Abrham
some
worse
behavior.
But
booed
the
Allen
trade
at
a
Harrisonville
Men's
AP BASKETBALL WRITER
footer
who
can
dominate
a
Nunez
laced
a single to left
the
Blazers
got
Rookie
of
.
draft
party
for
the
Sonics,
Softball Tournament will 'be
game
with
his
defense
over
field.
With
a
1-2 count to
the
Year
Brandon
Roy
last
who
still
face
losing
Rashard
held on Saturday, July 28,
NEW
YORK
The
the
sensational
scoring
of
Rollins,
the
Phillies
elected
year
and
got
an
early
start
on
Lewis
to
free
agency.
and Sunday, July 29 at the
Portland
Trail
Blazers
got
Durant,
who
wo4ld
have
having
next
season's
winner
·
But
the
6-9
Durant,
to
pinch-run
Jayson
Werth
Harrisonville ball fields.
Greg
Oden
and
felt
like
they
been
the
No.
I
pick
in
many
at
'
second
base
.
Rollin
s
when
they
grabbed
Oden
to
wearing
an
orange
tie
to
The two-day tournament
won
a
championship.
other
years
after
one
of
the
worked
the
count
full
before
play alongside LaMarcus match Texas' colors, doeshas a $100 entry fee per ·
The. Seattle SuperSonics . most outstanding freshman Aidridge.
·
n't consider hims elf the lacing a line drive to the
team and all teams are wel"They did have a bad (rep- Sonics' savior.
right-center field gap,' easily
come. All proceeds will go settled for Kevin Durant, seasons in NCAA history. ·
But franchise centers are utation), but I think Brandon ... Not at all, not a.t all," scoring Werth .
towards tfie Harrisonvine thrilling fans disappointed
.
Youth League. Deadline to by the trade ofAII-Star Ray hard to find, and most and LaMarcus kind of Durant said. "W.hen you
Clay C:ondrey (3-0)
believe the Blazers got one. turned that around," Oden play since you were 8 or 9 escaped a first-and-second ,
register is Monday, July 23. Allen to Boston.
The
Trail
Blazers
ended
"I was on the phone with said. "I hope that I can come years old, you know the two-out jam in the IOth to
For more information
months
of
debate
Thursday
the
radio .station back in . and just push that along game is.not a one-man sport. pick up the victory.
plea~e coritact Sarah at 740992-0351 or Regina ·at 740- night when they chose Oden Portland," Oden said. "They some more."
I'm far from being a savior."
Gonzalez gave Cincinnati
698-2804.
over fell ow college fresh - said they stomped the floor
Even with Durant, feelOden led Ohio State to the a short-lived 7-6 lead in the
man Durant with the No. I · like they won the NBA ings weren't quite the same national
championship eighth, homering off reliev pick iri a highly anticipated championship once they in Seattle.
HYL holding co-ed NBA draft.
Piease see Reds, B:S
Moments after he was
Please see Draft.. Bl
called my name."

Phillies
outlast
Reds in 10

I

Young Guns: Underclassmen dominate draft
Oden, Durant go 1-2; become first
freshmen duo to accomplish feat

softball tourney

. HARRISONVILLE - A
co-ed softball tournament
has been scheduled for
Saturday, August { and
Sunday, August 5 at the
Harrisonville ball fields.
The two-day tournament
has a $100 entry fee per
team. All proceeds will go
towards the Harrisonville
Youth League. Deadline to
register is Monday, July 30.
For more information
please contact Sarah at 740992-0351 or Regina at 740698-2804.

CoNTACfUS
OVP Scoreltne (5 p.m.·1 a:m.)

1-74.0-446·2342 ext. 33
Fox- 1-740·446·3008
£-mall- sports@mydailysentinel.com

Sporta Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-~342 . ext. 33
bsherman@mydailytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, ext. 23
lcrl-Jm@mydaityregister.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Wrltar
(74D)446·2342 , ext. 33
bwaltersOmydailytrlbune .com

{

Indians slip past Athletics, 4-3
CLEVELAND (AP) .....,
Jason Michaels can find a
lot of ways to win a ball,
game. Playing long ball
isn't usually one of them.
"I'm not a home run hitter," he said.
The Oakland Athletics
might beg to . differ.
Michaels hit a three-run
homer in the seventh inning
and the Cleveland Indians
held off the A's 4-3
·
Thursday.
The Indians trailed 3-1
when Michaels hit his sixth
home run. He connected off
Ron Flores (0-2), sending a
drive into the bleachers in
left-center field that extended his hitting streak to II
games.
"I was looking for something in the middle of the
plate," he said. "I was trying
to hit lhe ball up the middle."
Ironically, an ill-advised
throw by Michaels from left
field helped Oakland's
ninth-inn.ing threat against
closer Joe Borowski.

. The Athletics put runners the outfield shaking his
' on second and third with one head.
out, but Shannon Stewart Asked when he realized
10-for-20 in ·the four-game his mistake, Michaels said, ·
series - popped out and "When the ball was about an
.Mark Kotsay flied out, giv- inch from my hand. I know a
ing .)3orowski his 22nd save lot better than that."
in 24 chances.
Paul Byrd (7-3) allowed
"I'm not happy going 1-3 three runs in seven innings
here," . Oakland manager in winning for the first time
Bob Geren said. "We just since May 30. The rightdidn't get it done."
· hander gave up 10 hits,
Dan Johnson homered, struck out three and didn't
doubled and singled twice walk a batter.
for Oakland, which held an
"It's, been too long," he
early· 3-0 lead. The Athletics said of the gap between
wins.
fell to l-6 on their nineByrd, who allowed six hits
game road trip.
in the ftrst two innin~s, had"It's tough to win a four- n't pitched seven mnings
g11me series, especially since May 20, a stretch of
against a starting staff like seven starts.
that," Indians manager Eric
"I don't know if you guys
Wedge said. "I'm pleased noticed, but I got through
with the way we've played the seventh inning," he said.
this series."
"It might be the sign of the.
Johnson singled to start end of an age."
the ninth. One out later,
A's starter Joe Blanton
Jason Kendall singled to left took a 3-1 lead into the sevand Michaels th(ew late to enth. Kelly Shoppach led off
third base, allowing Kendall with a single and Josh
to el!_sily take second. After Please see Indians, B:S
the play, Michaels stood in

I'
•

,.

•

t

•

APphoto

Cl&lt;&gt;voiand Indians pitcher Joe Borowski. right. receives a
hug from catCher Kelly Shoppach after getting the final out
to save the Indians' 4~3 win over the Oakland Athletics during a baseball game Thursd.ay in Cleveland .

�Friday, June 29, 2007

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 29, 2007

Gators dominate .draft day like they did Final Four
.

Bv

and clapped his hands, the
famed "Gator chomp" 1that
so many opponents saw the·
last two seasons.
Horford knows it will be
tough to have new team mates after all the success he
had at Florida.
"It's goi ng to be different.
We 're go ing our separate
ways," he said. "We had a
grea:t time at Florida, but
now it's time to move on."
The earliest · three teammates had been taken in the
draft was Indiana in 1976
when Scott May (2), Quinn
Buckner (7) and Bobby
Wilkerson ( II) were taken in
the first II. UNLV in 1991
had Larry Johnson (I ),
Stacey Augmon (8) and
Greg Anthony ( 12) taken in
the first 12 picks.
North Carolina had four
players - Marvin Williams
(2), Raymond Felton (5).
Sean May (13) and Rashad
McCants (14) go in the top
14.
Overall No. I pick Greg
Oden and his Ohio State
teammates lost to Florida in
the title game. He was asked
if his selection took away
any of the sting from that
Monday night loss in ApriL
"No. Not at ·aiL I still lost.
They still won two national
championships in a row and
that doesn 't change," Oden
said. "This feels good but
it's two different categories.
I'm always going to have
that memory of that loss for-

JtM O'CONNEU
AP BASKETBALL WRITER

NEW YORK Two
months- after earning their
place in college basketball
history. the Florida Gators
made their mark on the NBA
draft.
. ,AI Horford, Corey Brewer
and Joakim Noah, the players who returned to Florida
to lead the Gators to a second straight national championship, became the first
trio of college teammates to
be selected in the first I0
picks of the draft on
Thursday night.
Horford was taken third
by Atlanta, while Brewer
went seventh to Minnesota
and Noah was taken two
picks later by Chicago.
"It means a lot," Noah
said. 'Tm really proud of
my teammates. It's such an
exciting time for all of us.
r m at a loss right now."
Two more Gators were
. taken in the second round:
senior center Chris Richard
was selected by Minnesota
with the 41st pick and junior
guard Taurean Green was
taken by Portland at No. 52.
It was the IOth time five
players from the same 'team
were taken in one draft. The
record is six by UNLV in
1977.
Noah was the only future
NBA player in attendance at
Madison Square Garden
wearing a bow tie. His pinstriped cream suit didn't ever."
draw nearly as much attention as his hair.
ONE-TWO
PUNCH:
People used· to seeing Greg Oden and .Kevin
Noah play with it pulled Durant were the first
back in ·a pony tail, instead American-born college playsaw a lot of his thick hair ers to be the first two picks
flowing down to his shoul- in the NBA draft since
ders. It took some work to Kenyon
Martin
of
get it under the Bulls cap he Cincinnati and Stromile
was .given to wear for pic- Swift of LSU went to New
tures.
Jersey and Vancouver,
"That was the longest hour respectively, in 2000.
of my life," Noah said of sitOden and Durant were the
ting and waiting to hear his · first freshmen to ever go
name called. "I'm really with the top two picks.
happy for AI and Corey. I'm Twice before freshman went
really happy for those guys." third and fourth: Shareef
When Brewer was done Abdur•Rahim of ·California
shaking hands with commis- and Stephon Marbury of
sioner David Stem on the Georgia Tech in 1996, and
stage, he extended his arms Carmelo
Anthony
of

Draft

director of player personnel.
The Carolina connections
didn 't translate into a long
career there for Wright. His
draft rights were traded to
the· Golden State Warriors
for Jason Richardson and the
rights to Jermareo Davidson
of Alabama, the 36th pick.
"I still feel honored to still
be in a good situation and
going to a team that really
can run and tries to score a
lot of points," Wright said
after the trade. "I've never
spent .a lot of time in
California but it's always
been a great experience for
me."

li!iiii

)l!i~~. .

AP photo

Florida's Joakim Noah, right, poses for a photo with NBA
commissioner David Stern after being selected by the
Ch icago Bulls as the nintH overall pick in the 2007 NBA
Draft. Thursday at Madison Square Garden in New York.

Syracuse and Chris Bosh of
Georgia Tech in 2003 . ·
"As long as we're in the
league, I know we're going
to be connected for a long
time." Oden said of Durant.
"He's a really, rea II y good
player. I'm a pretty decent
player. So I hope things
work out. I would love to
win more championships
than him."
Durant echoed the feelmgs.
"I know we are going to be
linked for a long time. We
are I and 2," he said. "r
don't see me and him as
player rivalries; our teams
could be rivalries, but we
play two different positions. ·
It's been great getting to
know Greg as a friend and
gaining a new friendship."
CONFERENCE TIE:
The selection of Ohio State's
Greg Oden as the No. I pick
brought the Big Ten into a
tie with the Atlantic Coast
Conference for most overall
top picks with nine.
The last Big Ten player to
be taken No. I was Glenn

Robinson of Purdue by the
Milwaukee Bucks in 1994.
. The last ACC player to be
the top pick was Elton Brand
of Duke by the Chicago
Bulls in 1999.

game, despite never playing
at full strength after surgery
on his .right wrist. Still, he
averaged 15.7 points and
shot nearly 62 percent while
drawing comparisons to
Bill Russell for his rebounding and shot blocking abilities.
Looking nervous and battling a head cold since arriving in New York, Oden
shared a long handshake
with commissioner David
Stem before heading off for
interviews. He was expect·ed to fly to Portland later
Thursday night.
Oden could have been the
top pick last year out of
high school if not for the
NBA's age requirement
rule.
· "I'm a better player
because of that year in college," Oqen said. "Coach
(Thad) Matta, he taught me
so much, first about being a
young man growing up in
. Columbus."
The Pacific Northwest
rivals got an immediate
jump-start to their rebuilding plans by moving up in
last month's lottery to grab
the top two picks. Though
this is considered .the deepest draft in years, Oden and
Durant are regarded as the'
only can't-miss players.
'Joining Durant to help the
Sonics
rebuild
is
Georgetown's Jeff Green,
picked by Boston will\ the
No. 5 pick. Durant knows
Green from growing up in
the Washington, D.C. area.
"I know Jeff pretty well,
on a D.C. Blue Devils team,
and we gained a friendship
from there," Durant said.
"He's a great player, and I
can't wait. to play with

him."

The Atlanta Hawks used
the No. 3 pick, their first of
two in the lottery on AI
Hurford, who saluted the
pro-Florida crowd with the
Gator chomp. The two-time
defending NCAA champions became the first school
with three players selected
in the top I0 of the same
draft.
They made it when Corey

•

Brewer went to Minnesota at No. 8, and Washington
at No. 7 and Joakim Noith center Spencer HaweS&gt; was
- · donning a brown bow tie picked by Sacramento, the ·
and getting a huge reaction fourth and fifth freshmen in
from Page Bl
from his hometown crowd · the top I0.
- was taken by Chicago
The Bobcats later sent
two picks later.
Wright's draft rights to · me," he said.
Oden and Conley have
"This is an unbelievable Golden State for guard
played
together since they ·
experience" Horford said. Jason Richardson and the
were
sixth
graders. Both
"Winning two national rights·
to
Jermareo
attended
Lawrence
North
championships. Moving up Davidson, taken by the
High
School
in .
to the next level is unreaL"
Warnors
· at No. 36 .
.
Indianapolis,
leading
the
.
The Hawks passed on
Ohio State's Daequan
school
to
three
straight
Michael Conle~ Jr., even .Cook went to Philadelphia
th~ugh they sllll n~ed a \ at No. 21, giving both Class 4A titles.
Conley was projected to
poi~t guard after passmg on national
championshipbe
picked as high as No. 3,
Chn~ Paul and Deron · game teams three players
Williams two year~ a~o. in the first round. His rights but the A.tlanta Hawks
Florida's AI
The Memphis Gnzziies later were sent to Miami selected
Hurford
even
though · they
then ' grabbed . Conter. for the rights to Jason
needed
a
point
guard.
·
Od~n s t~ammate smce their Sm'th of Colo 'd0 St t
JUmor high days and the
I
ra . a e,
Conley was asked by
third freshman in the top taken by the Heat With the ESPN how he would handle
four picks.
20th ptck.
playing without Oden.'
Atlanta finally grabbed
Thaddeu~
Young
:·1 think I'll be fine," he
that point guard by taking (Philadelphia, No. 12) and said. · "It was great playing
Acie Law at No. 11 _ the Javans Cn.ttenton (Los with him. He definitely
· first college senior taken.
Angeles Lakers, No. 19) made me a better player,
"Freshmen are very very gave Georgia Tech two and we had great times
talented" Law said think first-rounders.
Sean together. But I know I can
in the draft, it's ~II about Williams (No. 17, New play by myself without him
position and what a team Jersey) and Jared Dudley and have the confidence in
needs, and you see some (No. 22, Charlotte) did the myself to do whatever I
great, great players in this same tor Boston College want to do."
·
As a freshman , Conley
draft. I' m happy with the -:- though Williams was
team that I wem to and just kicked off the team last led the Big Ten with 6.1
happy to get to Atlanta and season for rules violations. assists artd 2.2 steals. He
help turn that franchise
around:"
The Milwaukee Bucks
took a chance at No. 6 on
the draft's mystery player,
Yi
Chinese
forward
Jianlian. Though Yi was
getting plenty of attention
- half of the record 60
international media members were from China - he
came with plenty of question marks. He hasn't
played against top competition in the Chinese leagues,
and he is rumored to be
older than the 19 he is listed.
Milwaukee · also ignored
concerns that Yi only wanted to play in a major market
with a large Asian population. He didn't even work
.out for the Bucks.
'
"It's a surprise to me as
well, because when I was in
China, Milwaukee didn't
come to watch me play or
work out," Yi said. "Myself,
I'm not really familiar with
the city, but I'm happy with
the team and I'm happy to
play in the NBA."
Charlotte took North
Carolina's Brandan Wright

"I

-~-- -·------

... "

SENIOR CITIZENS:
Acie Law IV of Texas A&amp;M
was the first senior taken in
the draft, picked II th by the
Atlanta Hawks. He and AI
Thornton of Florida State.
who was taken 14th by the
Los Angeles Clippers, were
the only seniors . taken
among the 14 lottery picks.
Last year, there were five
seniors taken in the lottery
.,...- Shelden Williams of
Duke, Brandon Roy of
Washington, Randy Foye of
Villanova, J.J. Redick of
Duke and Hilton Armstrong
of Connecticut.

TRIVIA ANSWER: This
CAROLINA CONNECwas
the second draft since
TION:
The
Charlotte
1
the
NBA
implemented its
Bobcats have been around
age
requirement
rule, which
for four NBA drafts and
U.S.
players
to be 19
forces
three of their first-round
and
a
year
out
of
high
school
picks have played at North
before
they
are
eligible
·for
Carolina.
the
draft.
It
appears
the
rule
The Bobcats selected .
Brandan Wright, a freshman will be around for a while so
with the Tar Heels last sea- the burning trivia question
son, as the eighth overall will be who was the last high
school player taken in the
pick Thursday night.
In 2005, Charlotte took NBA draft?
Amir
Johnson
of
Raymond Felton with the
fifth pick and Sean May Westchester, Calif., was
with the 13th. They were taken by Detrl;&gt;it with the
key members of the North 56th pick of the. 2005 draft.
Carolina team that won the The 6-foot-9 Johnson played
national
championship in eight games · for the
Pistons last season, averagmonths before.
Michael Jordan, probably ing 5.9 points and 4.6
the most famous Tar Heel of rebounds.
them all, became a partHe was one of eight high
owner of the Bobcats last school players drafted that
year. He hired Buzz year and, unless the rule is
Peterson, his former. college changed, will be the last one
roommate, as the team's ever taken.

·Buckeyes

from Page Bl

-

~---:r-.'1!'11

Astros' Biggio reaches 3,000 hits

NBADraft .

No.1 Selections··
8v Till AssociATID Puss

c.

201)7-0reg Odell, P!lrtland, Ohio
State
2006-Andrea Ba~ani. F. Toronto,
Benenon TriMSO (Italy)
2005-~ndrew Bogut.
C,

Mi-.

Uttih

2Q04-0wlvhl H-rd. Orlardo, F,
SOuthwest
Atlantlo
Chrtstlan
Academy (Atlanta)
2003-leBron James, Cleveland, G,
St. Vlnoent·St. Mary HS
•'
2002-Yeo Mlng. Houston, c. China

2001-Kwame Brown, Washington,
F-e, Glynn Academy HS
2000-Kenyon Matnn, New JaiS8)', F,
Cincinnati
t999--aton Brand. Chicago, F, DW..
t 998-Michael Olowokandl, LO,S
Angeles Clippers. C. Pacific
1997- Tim Duncan, San Antonio, C,
Wako Forest
199&amp;-AIIen Iverson, Philadelpllla, G,

Georgetown
199i'r.Joe Smilh, Golden State, C,
Maryland
1994-Giflnn Robinson. Milwaukee,
F. Purdue
19li3-Chris Webber, Orlando, F,
Michigan
,
1992-SI\aqullle O'Neal, Orlardo, C,
Louisiana State
1991-u.try Johnson; Charlotte, F,
UNLV
1990-;-llerrlcl&lt; Coleman, New JeiS8)'.

F, Syracu11e
'
1989-Pervls EHison, sacramento." C,·
Louisville
1988-0anny Manning, Los Angolea
Clippers, F, Kan11es
1987-Davld RObinson, San Antonio,
c. Navy
1986-Brad Daugilerty, Cleveland, C,
North Garollna
'
1~trlek Ewing, New York. C.
Goorvetown
1984-Akeem Olajuwon, Houston, C,
Houston
1983-Ralpll Sampson. HOU8ton, c,
Vlrvlnla
198~es Worthy, Los Angol&lt;16
Lal&lt;ers, F, Nortn&lt;:arolina
1981-Mark Aguirre, Dallas. F.
De~ul

.1980-Joe. Barry · Carroll, Gplden
State, C. Purdue
1979-Earvln Johnson, Los Angolao .
Lakars, G, Mk:hlgan St
1978-Mychal Thompson, Portland,
c . Mlnneaola .
19n~t Baneon, 'Milwaukee, c,
Indiana
·,
1978-John lucas, Houston, G.
Maryland
'
11!75-0avld Thompson, Atlanta, G,
Nortll Carolina St. •
·
1974--llii Walton. Portland, C, UCLA ·
197~yg cCtilna, Philadelplllar \'1 .
IIDnola St. . :
.
.
1972-,-LaRue Martin: Portland, C,
L~a&lt;:hlcago

1971-AusUn ·carr, Cleveland, G,
Notre Came
• ·
197o-8ob . Lanier, Detroit; C, St.
BonaventUre
11169'-Kareem
Ab&lt;lui.Jabbar,
Milwaukee, C. UCLA .
19~Eivln 'Hayes, . Houston, C,
Houslon
1987-'.Jimmy Walker. Detroit, G.

Providence •
.
1~1e Rumil, New York, F,

t.!lohlilan

·

also scored 13.2 points a Powell said.
game and shot 52 percent
The Dayton native . was
from the floor.
gathering with about 200
The Grizzlies held a draft friends and family amid finnight gathering for fans at ger food and a big-screen
the
FedExForum
in TV at a Holiday Inn hotel
Memphis, where guard conference room in his
Kyle Lowry said he looked · hometown, Powdl said.
forward to playing in the . A fourth Ohio State playsame back court with er, senior guard Ron Lewis,
Conley.
is a possible· second round
"He's a great guy," he selection.
said. "He's a great decision- . - - - - - - - - - maker, and he can penetrate
INGELS CARPET
and score."
Oden and Conley are
expected to be represented
by Conley's father, Mike
Conley Sr. He won the
Olympic gold medal in the
triple jump in 1992 in
Barcelona,
but
said
Thursday he's proud to be
more famous these days
for his relationship with
his son.
"About two years (ago), I
officially became the father
of ·Mike Conley," he told
ESPN. "But I'm proud to be
that."
Cook, who average~ 9.8
points as a guard for the
Buckeyes in 2006,2007,
worked out for about 20
NBA teams in recent weeks,

SUMMER

CLEARANCE SALE

www .mydailysentinel.com

HOUSTON (AP)
ture
and chance to reach the mark at
Craig Biggio kissed his
3,000 that home .
wife, hugged everyone in
s pan ne d
"The fans are excited and
sight and dragged former
from
the they deserve to have this
teammate Jeff Bagwell out
train track happen and I'm going to do
onto the field to soak in th e
to the roof my part to make it hapcelebration.
of the stadi- pen,' Biggio said.
It was the perfect place
urn
was
He reflected on his career
for the Astros second baseu n v e i I e d and the importance . of
man to get his 3,000th
after
the reaching the milestone
career hit.
hit.
before Thursday 's game.
Biggio reached the mileBiggio .
Everyone
"I've been very grateful
on
the and blessed to be in the sitstone number on Thursday
night with a single to cen- team. including those in uation where I'm at now
ter ·field in the seve nth the bullpen , stormed the and to play one of the
inning and th en passed field
to
congratulate greatest games in the world
Roberto Clemente for 26th Biggio . His wife Patty, for 20 years," he said.
on the career li st with the so n ~ Conor and Cavan, and 'Th is is very, very spefourth of his season-hi gh . daughter Quinn also joined cia!."
five hits.
in the celebration . Hi s sons
Astros general manager
He was thrown out tryin·g were in the dugout acting Tim Purpura said the team
to stretch the 3,000th hit as bat boys.
plans to honor Biggio in
into a double against the
He kissed his wife and August for reachin~ the
Rockies . He smgled to held his 7-year-old daugh- mark. Barry Bonds 1s the
right in the ninth and sin- ter in the air.
.
next closest player to 3,000
gled again in the lith in
He went to the dugout hits. The San Francisco
Houston 's 8-5 win .
and hugged everyone while Giants slugger is 104 hits
Biggio is the first player the crowd continued to go away and needs seven
to reach 3,000 hits since wild. Biggio then pulled home runs to pass Hank
Rafael Palmeiro on July Bagwell out of the dugout Aaron on the career list.
15, 2005 , with Baltimore. and returned with him to
"He's a great phiyer,"
The 41-year-old, who the field , where they stood Bonds said of Biggio.
entered the season needing arm and arm . Biggio and " He's always been good,
70 hits to reach the mile- Bagwell played together ever sirice I' ve watched
stone, has played his entire for 15 seasons be fo re him play. He's phenome20-year
career
with Bagwe ll
retired
in nat. 1 would love the
Houston, making him the December.
opportunity to play with
· longest tenured player in
Biggio's first hit of the htm. Leadoff hitters don 't
franchi se history.
night came on a single to come around that often."
The sellout crowd stood center field in the third
During his two decades
and chanted 'Bi-ggi-o' at inning.
with the Astros, Biggio has
each bat and cameras twinThe second hit, also a become known in the city
kled with each pitch. Fans single, came on a grounder as much for his charitable
held signs that read 'Mr. to third base in . the fifth. work as he has for his play.
3,000' and 'Biggio's Hit Garrett Atkins badly over- He has been the nat10nal
Parade.' One woman wore threw first base on the play, spokesman
for
the
an orange shirt that fea- leaving ·the official scorer Sunshine Kids Foundation,
lured block letters that read to pause for several tense . which helps children with
' Biggio' and '3,0'0o.'
seconds before calling it a cancer, for more tha·n a
His 3,000th hit came one single and ruling an error decade.
day shy of the 19th allowed Biggio to advance
He hosts an annual 11arty
anniversary of his first to second.
for the patients at Mmute
career hit, a single off Ore!
He is the only player in Maid Park and puts on a
Hershiser on June 29, major league hi story . to golf tournament each year
1988.
have at least 600 doubles to raise money for the
Fireworks went off, the (658), 250 home runs foundation. Sunshine Kids
counter in left-center field (286), 3,000 hits and 400 officials estimate that the
with red illuminated num- stolen bases (413).
tournament ha s raised
bers ticked to 3,000 and a
He said before the game more than $1 million for
giant banner with his· pic- he was glad to have the the cause.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

2007 NBA DRAFT SELECTIONS
·First Round

1. Portland. Greg Odell! c, Ohio Slale.
2. Seat11e, Kavln Duran , f, Texas.
3. A~anta. AI H&lt;lrlllnf, f, FloriOa.
4. Memp_llia, Mk;haeJ Conley, g. Ohio State.
5. A-Boolon, Jell Green, I, Georgetown.
e. Milwaukee, Yl Jlanllan, f. GuanciOng ligors (China ),
7. Minnesota, Corey Brewer, I, Florida.
\ 8. B-Charlotte, Brandon Wright, f, North Carolina.
9. Chicago (frqm New Vo&gt;1&lt;), Joaklm Noah, f, Florida.
10. SacramentO, Spencer HawN, c, Washington.
11 .,AUallta (from Indiana), Acle Law, g, Texas ~M.
12. PhtiaOOiphla, Thadcfeus Young, f, Georgia Tech.
13. New Orleans. JUifln Wrigh~ !, Kansas .
14. L.A. Clippers, AI Thornton, I, Aorida Sial~.
.
15. Detron (from Orlando), Rodney Stuckey, g, Easlern
Wuhlngton.
16. Washington, NiCk Young, g, So&lt;rthem Cal.
17. New Jersey, Sean Williams. f. Bostoo College.
18. Golden Slate, Marco &amp;llnelll, g, Cllmamlo Bologna
(llaly).
.
19. L.A. Laker&amp;, Javalis Crittenton, g, Georgia Tech. '
20. C·Miaml, Jason Bmith, f, Colorado Slate.
21 . C·Phllad~phla (lrom Denver). Oaequan Cook, g, Ohio
Slate.
22. Cha~otle (from Toronto thrQ\Igh Cloveland). Jared
Dudley, f, Boslon College.
·
23. New YoO&lt; (from Chicago), Wl~on Chandler, I, DePauL
24 . 0-PhooniK (from Cleveland through Boston), Rudy
Fernandez, g, DVK Jovenlul Badalona (Spain).
25. Ulah, Morrie Almond, g, Alee.
26. HousiOn, Aaron Brooks, g, Oregon.
27. Detroit, Aaron Afflalo. g, UCLA.
28. San Antonio, 11ago Splitter, f. Teu Vhona (Spain).
29. PhQenh1, Alando Tucker, I, Wisconsin.
30. E-Phlladelphla (kom Dallas through Denver and Golden
Slate), Peneri Koponen, g, Honka (Finll{ld)'.

""

Second Rouna

31. F·Seanle (from Mempllls). Canlandl)', f. Purdue.
32. Bostoo, GaDa Pruitt. g, Southam Col.
33. San Antonio (from Mjlwaukee), Marcus · Williams, f,
Arizon~.
•
, ·
34 . Dallas (from Allanta), Nlcl&lt; Fazekas. f. Nevada.
35. A-Seattle, Glen Davie, I, LSI:J.
•
36. 8-Golden Slate (from Mlnnesola), Jermareo Davidson. f.
AlaDama.
·37. Portland, Josh McROberts, 1, Duke.

•

36. Philadelphia (from New York lhrough Chicapo). Kyrylo
Fesenko, c. Cherkasy (Ukraine). ·
39. G-Miaml (from Sacramento lhrough Utah and Orlando),
Stanko Barac. c, Sirokl (Bosnia).

4C. L.A. Lakers (lrom Charlotte), Sun Yue, I, Aooilen
(Olympian). China.
4t. Mlnne501a (lrom Philadelphia), Chrts Richard, f, FlOrida.
42. E-Portland (from Indiana), Der~ck jlyars. g, Vanderbilt.
43. New Orleans. Adam Haluska, f, lqWa
·
44. Orlando, Reyshawn Terry, f,•North Carolina.
45. L.A. CJippers, Jared Jordan, g, Marist

411. Golden Slate (lrom New J"'""y), Slepllane Lasme, I ,
Massacnusens.
47. Washington, Dominic McGuire. f. Fresno Slats.
48. LA. Lekers, Marc Gasol, c. Akasvayu'Girona (Spain).
49. Chicago (from Golden State through Denver, Boston and
Phoenix), Aaron Gray, c, Pittsburgh.
50. Dallas (from Miami through LA Lakers), Renaldas
SeiDutis. g, Olyrnpiakos (Greece)
•
.
51 . Chicago (from Denver), JamesOn Curry, g. Oklahoma
State
52. Portland (from Toronto), Taurean Green g. Florida.
~- Portland (from 'chicago), Demetris Nichols, f, Syracuse.
54. Hous1on (from Cleveland through Orlando), Bred
Nqwley, Q, Townsville (Australia}.
55. Utah. Herbert HilL f. Providence.
56. Milwaukee (from Houston), Ramon Sessions, g, Nevada.
57. Detroit, Sammy Mejia, g, DePaul.
58. San Antonio, Giorgos Prlntezis, f, Greece.
59. Phoonix. D.J. SlrawDerry, g, Mal)'land.
60. Dallas. Miovan Rakovic, c. Mega lshrana (Serbia).

Draft day Transactions

A-Boston traded the rights to F Jeff Green. a tutore second·
round draft p~. G Delonte West and F Wally Szczerbiak to
Seattle tor G Ray Allen and the rights to F Glen Davis.
B-Charlotte traded the rights to F Brandan Wright to Golden
Statu for G Jason Richardson and the rights to F Jermareo
Davidson.
·
C-Miami traded the rights to C Jason Smith to Philadelphia
lor the rights to G Daequan Cook, a 2009 second-round plck
and c:ash considerations.
D·Phoenhc sold rights of 0 Rudy Fernandez to Poniard.
E·Phlladelphla traded the rights to G Petteri Koponen to

Portland lor lhe nghiS to G Derrick Byars and cash.
F-Seanle traded the rights to F Carl Landry to Houston lor a
future second·round pick and. cash ..
G·Miami traded the rights to C Stanko Barac to Indiana for il
2009 second·round draft pick.

Draft breezes past Cavaliers

CLEVELAND (AP) - second round·.
time in franchise history - ·.
With an NBA finals appear''I'm happy because I did- the Cavs were blanked in
ance on their resume, the n' t think we make any bad the draft. Cleveland was one
Cleveland Cavaliers can deci sions. It was a good of (our tea ms, along with .
a~ford to be choosy.
decision to stay put with Denver.
Indiana
and
Left without a pick where we are and we ' ll go Toronto that didn 't have
because of previous moves,_ from there."
selection.
·
general manager Danny
The Cavaliers didn' t own
Ferry said the club came ·
Ferry was unable to get a pick this year because of close to making a deal.
back into the NBA draft two trades - ·one good one,
''We thought we had one
Thursday night, leaving the and a really bad one.
at one point toward the end .
Cavs to improve their roster
In 2004, they se nt their of the fir st round," he saicl, .
through free agency or second,rounder (No. 54 "but at the end of the day .
trades.
overall) to Orlando as part that team decided to · stay ·
While a few other teams of a deal that brough1 Drew with what they are doing ·
swapped
money
and Gooden and Anderson · and stuck with their plan. I
exchanged players on a rela- Varejao for Tony Battie and think that team made a good :
tively busy night in New picks. In 2005 , the Cavs deci sion."
York, the Cavaliers, who .1raded a first -round selecWhile the Cavaliers were
had identified 15 players tion (No. 24) to Boston for unable to add any new play- .
they were inlerested in , Jiri Welsch, who averaged ers, two 6f their Eastern
couldn't find a deal that 2.9 points in 16 forgettable Conferen ce rivals appeared
suited them.
games.
to add quality. Chicago took
"By the time those guys
Ironically, both of those Florida center Joakim Noah
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ___:_
line when previous 10 games. He has. were available, none of pi cks were · \&gt;ought on a 1No. 9) and Detroil picked
Frank Thomas. hit his 500th
he crossed 13 this season. This was his th em were on the board any- . ni ght when the Cavs fail ed Eastern Washington forward
home run Thursday, routhe plate as second lifetime homer off more," Ferry said. "So we to strike a deal.
Rodney Stuckey (No. 15)
tinely putting. his head
Tor o n to Silva.
took. a step back and just
It was lhe second time in and UCLA guard Aaron
down as he rounded the
p Iaye rs
The Big Hurt has hit 50 watched things unfold in the three years - and the third Aftlalo (No. 27).
bases while joining one of .
spi.lled out career home·rs against the
baseball's most elite clubs.
of
the Twins, his most against any
"It 's no secret our bullpen Rich Harden threw bullpen
The Toronto slugger
·dugout to team and the most by an
has been wearing it," Flores sessions Wednesday and
became the 21st major leacongratu- active
player
against
said. "Hopefully, it's just a Thursday. He's scheduled to
guer to reach the career
late him.
Minnesota. Rocky Colavito
rough patch." .
from PageBl
throw two innings in relief
mark, a milestone that has
T 'h a t hit 52 against the Twins and·
Johnson led off the sec- Friday or Saturday in New
Thomas
Thomas did Mickey Mantle and Reggie
usually meant an eventual
spot in 'the Hall of Fame.
it in the Jackson each hit 51.
Barfield hit a line drive that ond with his seventh home York .... The A's have lost
12 of their last 16.
Thomas hit a three -run Metrod01:ne. was fitting. He · The seventh overall pick fell in front of right fielder run.
Eric
Chavez's
infield
hil
shot in the first inning, con- hit his first career home run by the White Sox in 1989, Nick Swisher. Unsure if the
necting against Minnesota's at the ballpark against Gary Thomas spent 16 years in ball would drop, Shoppach gave Oakland the lead in the
Carlos Silva and se nding a Wayne .while with the Chicago and established got a late break off first and first. Stewart and Jack Cust
singled and Chavez hit a
1-2 pitch an estimated 396 · Chicago White Sox on Aug. many franchise
bests, was forced out at second.
ground
over the third
feet into the left"field 28, 1990. Thomas has 16 including 448 home runs,
Following Casey Blake's base bagball
that Mike Rou se
stands.
homers overall at the stadi- I ,465 RBis and 3,949 total pinch-hit single, Flores
Todd Eisenlohr, sitting in . urn.
bases. His .427 on-base per- relieved Blanton. Grady gloved without a play.
Following
Johnson's
the fifth row and wearing a
The 39-year-old Thomas centage and .568 slugging Sizemore hit a long drive to
jersey of Tw.ins player is in his first season with ,percentage are also fran- right-center that Swisher home run, Bobby Crosby
doubled and Kotsay sinJason Bartlett jersey, caught the Blue Jays. He played chise bests.
caught - he held onto the
·
the ball in his glove.
last year in Oakland..
But an injured ankle lim- ball despite falling to the gled.
Sizemore hit an RBI dou "1 lost it in the roof as it
Next on Thomas' ascent ited Thomas to 108 games
was
coming
down ," on the career home run list in his final- two seasons and ground and hitting the waiL ble in the fifth.
The good defense went
Notes: Byrd has walked
Eisenlohr said. He said he are Eddie Murray (504 ), led to a falling-out with the
for
naught when Mi chae ls two batters in his last 71 2-3
traded the souvenir ball for Mel Ott (5 11) and Ernie team.
· innings , both intentional.
an autographed ball, bat and Banks and Eddie Mathews
After joining Oakland as homered.
"It
was
supposed
to
be
a
His last unintentional walk
jersey.
(512 each). Also within a free agent, Thomas hit 39
fastball
inside."
Flores
said.
was on Apri I 26. .. . The
The Metrodome crowd reach of 500 this year are home runs and drove in 114
"I
feel
bad
for
Joe."
Indians
placed
RHP
gave Thomas a standing Alex
Rodriguez,
Jim runs last year in helping the
The
A's
bullpen,
which
is
Roberto
Hernandez
on
ovation. The two-time AL Thome
and
Manny A's reach the At: champiwithout
injured
·
setup
meri
waivers
Thursday
for
the
MVP took his home run trot Ramirez.
onship series. He signed
and then pointed toward the
Thomas entered Thursday with the Blue Jays as a free J ustiri Duchscherer and purpose of giving him his
Kiko Calero and cl&lt;1ser unconditional rel ease . He
suites down the right-field with four home runs in his agent on Nov. 17, 2006.
Huston Street, ·has been was designated for assignstruggling. Al an Embree ment on June 20. The 42·
gave
up five runs in ' the year-old Hernandez went 3ly a left-handed hitter.
Cincinna'ti took a 5-4 lead
ninth
inning in Tuesday 1 with 6.23 ERA in 28
Dobbs showed . -little in the fourth inning on
night's
8-5 loss.
ga mes.
Oakland RHP
effects of being hit at tirst. Hatteberg's RBI single,
Two pitches later, he roped which scored Josh Hamilton
from PageBl
a one-hopper off the ri ght- on a bang-bang play at
center field fence to plate home plate.
er Ryan Madson for his 13th Howard and Rowand and
Philadelphia took a 2-0
of the season.
give
the
Phillies
a
6-5
lead.
lead
in the first inning when
The Phillies rallied in
Dobbs, who bent over and Utley connected on a 3-0
their half of the eighth off held his head while on base, fastball. for his first homer
Marcus McBeth . Jimmy was replaced in the top half of
the game.
Rollins delivered the big of the sixth by Michael
Belisle appeared to be
hit, roping a two-out triple Bourn.
cautious with Utley again in
to right field to score Nunez
Bourn lost a fly ball in the the third inning, but the Allwith the tying run. Rollins lights in the seventh innin~. Star second baseman hit
finished a home run short of resulting in a double for another 3-0 fastball over the
the cycle. .
Scott Hatteberg and moving right-field fencefor his 15th
July 4th· Happy Hour All Day and DJ. from 9 pm -1.am
. The victory was a painful Norris Hopper to third. home.run to tie the game at
July 5th .· OJ 2-6 pm • Bart &amp; The Chasers from 8-12 pm
one for Philadelphia's Greg Brandon Phijlips then lifted 4.
Dobbs, who was beaned in a sacrifice fly to center
75¢ Draft 2 pin-12 pm
Belisle worked five
the side of the head b,Y Reds field, scoring Hopper and · innings, surrendering six
July 6th • Poo Bah from 4-8 pm "$3.00 Cover charge"
catcher Chad Moeller in the ·tying the game at 6-6.
runs and eight hits. He
Bart &amp; The Chasers from 9-1 ·am "$3.00 Cover charge'~
fifth inning.
Encarnacion cut the walked one and struck out
50¢
Hot Dogs from 3 pm -12 am .
Dobbs was struck on the de tic it .to 2-1 in the second . SIX.
left side of the head when inning with his fifth homer.
. Horseshoe Tournament at 4:30 .pm $5.00 entry fee
Eaton yielded five runs on
Moeller was throwing the
After a Ken -Griffey Jr. six hits over six innings. He
July 7th - Hog Roast 5:00 pm
ball back to starter Matt sacrifice tly tied the game at walked three and fanned
Good Times
Poo Bah plays at 4 pm
Remind s You
Belisle. The ball caromed 2-2, Dunn crushed an Adam two.
Bart &amp; The Chasers from 9 pm "1 am
Designate A
all the way to the far end of Eaton fastball off the base
Notes: It was Utley's 13th
Driver!
the Reds dugout , but the of the second'level in right- career multi-homer game
Wet
T-shirt
contest!!!
unusual · play
caught field.
and tirst of the season. .. .
baserunners Ryan Howard
Dunn: the subject of Phillies I B Ryan Howard
. Horseshoe ·Tournament!!!
and Aaron Rowand by sur- numerou s trade rumors, has made a nifty over-theI
prise and neither moved up. homered in three straight shoulder diving catch in the
Only $5.00 cover for ALL DAY FUN!
The ball appeared to hit games and leads the Reds third inning. ... Dunn has
50/50
Games!
Dobbs just over the left ear, with 23 homers , second in homered in three straight
which wasn't protected by the NL behind Milwaukee's games three times this sea·CR 7A • Pomeroy, OH • ,740-992·5~86 .
an earflap since he is strict- Prince Fielder (27).
son.

a

Thomas hits SOOth career home run

Indians

Now-Open
For Business
Monday,
June 18, 2007

Portland Plant
McDade Rd.
Portland, OH

Reds

l·740-843-5293

es

·Invites You 7o Spend
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�Friday, June 29, 2007

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Friday, June 29, 2007

Gators dominate .draft day like they did Final Four
.

Bv

and clapped his hands, the
famed "Gator chomp" 1that
so many opponents saw the·
last two seasons.
Horford knows it will be
tough to have new team mates after all the success he
had at Florida.
"It's goi ng to be different.
We 're go ing our separate
ways," he said. "We had a
grea:t time at Florida, but
now it's time to move on."
The earliest · three teammates had been taken in the
draft was Indiana in 1976
when Scott May (2), Quinn
Buckner (7) and Bobby
Wilkerson ( II) were taken in
the first II. UNLV in 1991
had Larry Johnson (I ),
Stacey Augmon (8) and
Greg Anthony ( 12) taken in
the first 12 picks.
North Carolina had four
players - Marvin Williams
(2), Raymond Felton (5).
Sean May (13) and Rashad
McCants (14) go in the top
14.
Overall No. I pick Greg
Oden and his Ohio State
teammates lost to Florida in
the title game. He was asked
if his selection took away
any of the sting from that
Monday night loss in ApriL
"No. Not at ·aiL I still lost.
They still won two national
championships in a row and
that doesn 't change," Oden
said. "This feels good but
it's two different categories.
I'm always going to have
that memory of that loss for-

JtM O'CONNEU
AP BASKETBALL WRITER

NEW YORK Two
months- after earning their
place in college basketball
history. the Florida Gators
made their mark on the NBA
draft.
. ,AI Horford, Corey Brewer
and Joakim Noah, the players who returned to Florida
to lead the Gators to a second straight national championship, became the first
trio of college teammates to
be selected in the first I0
picks of the draft on
Thursday night.
Horford was taken third
by Atlanta, while Brewer
went seventh to Minnesota
and Noah was taken two
picks later by Chicago.
"It means a lot," Noah
said. 'Tm really proud of
my teammates. It's such an
exciting time for all of us.
r m at a loss right now."
Two more Gators were
. taken in the second round:
senior center Chris Richard
was selected by Minnesota
with the 41st pick and junior
guard Taurean Green was
taken by Portland at No. 52.
It was the IOth time five
players from the same 'team
were taken in one draft. The
record is six by UNLV in
1977.
Noah was the only future
NBA player in attendance at
Madison Square Garden
wearing a bow tie. His pinstriped cream suit didn't ever."
draw nearly as much attention as his hair.
ONE-TWO
PUNCH:
People used· to seeing Greg Oden and .Kevin
Noah play with it pulled Durant were the first
back in ·a pony tail, instead American-born college playsaw a lot of his thick hair ers to be the first two picks
flowing down to his shoul- in the NBA draft since
ders. It took some work to Kenyon
Martin
of
get it under the Bulls cap he Cincinnati and Stromile
was .given to wear for pic- Swift of LSU went to New
tures.
Jersey and Vancouver,
"That was the longest hour respectively, in 2000.
of my life," Noah said of sitOden and Durant were the
ting and waiting to hear his · first freshmen to ever go
name called. "I'm really with the top two picks.
happy for AI and Corey. I'm Twice before freshman went
really happy for those guys." third and fourth: Shareef
When Brewer was done Abdur•Rahim of ·California
shaking hands with commis- and Stephon Marbury of
sioner David Stem on the Georgia Tech in 1996, and
stage, he extended his arms Carmelo
Anthony
of

Draft

director of player personnel.
The Carolina connections
didn 't translate into a long
career there for Wright. His
draft rights were traded to
the· Golden State Warriors
for Jason Richardson and the
rights to Jermareo Davidson
of Alabama, the 36th pick.
"I still feel honored to still
be in a good situation and
going to a team that really
can run and tries to score a
lot of points," Wright said
after the trade. "I've never
spent .a lot of time in
California but it's always
been a great experience for
me."

li!iiii

)l!i~~. .

AP photo

Florida's Joakim Noah, right, poses for a photo with NBA
commissioner David Stern after being selected by the
Ch icago Bulls as the nintH overall pick in the 2007 NBA
Draft. Thursday at Madison Square Garden in New York.

Syracuse and Chris Bosh of
Georgia Tech in 2003 . ·
"As long as we're in the
league, I know we're going
to be connected for a long
time." Oden said of Durant.
"He's a really, rea II y good
player. I'm a pretty decent
player. So I hope things
work out. I would love to
win more championships
than him."
Durant echoed the feelmgs.
"I know we are going to be
linked for a long time. We
are I and 2," he said. "r
don't see me and him as
player rivalries; our teams
could be rivalries, but we
play two different positions. ·
It's been great getting to
know Greg as a friend and
gaining a new friendship."
CONFERENCE TIE:
The selection of Ohio State's
Greg Oden as the No. I pick
brought the Big Ten into a
tie with the Atlantic Coast
Conference for most overall
top picks with nine.
The last Big Ten player to
be taken No. I was Glenn

Robinson of Purdue by the
Milwaukee Bucks in 1994.
. The last ACC player to be
the top pick was Elton Brand
of Duke by the Chicago
Bulls in 1999.

game, despite never playing
at full strength after surgery
on his .right wrist. Still, he
averaged 15.7 points and
shot nearly 62 percent while
drawing comparisons to
Bill Russell for his rebounding and shot blocking abilities.
Looking nervous and battling a head cold since arriving in New York, Oden
shared a long handshake
with commissioner David
Stem before heading off for
interviews. He was expect·ed to fly to Portland later
Thursday night.
Oden could have been the
top pick last year out of
high school if not for the
NBA's age requirement
rule.
· "I'm a better player
because of that year in college," Oqen said. "Coach
(Thad) Matta, he taught me
so much, first about being a
young man growing up in
. Columbus."
The Pacific Northwest
rivals got an immediate
jump-start to their rebuilding plans by moving up in
last month's lottery to grab
the top two picks. Though
this is considered .the deepest draft in years, Oden and
Durant are regarded as the'
only can't-miss players.
'Joining Durant to help the
Sonics
rebuild
is
Georgetown's Jeff Green,
picked by Boston will\ the
No. 5 pick. Durant knows
Green from growing up in
the Washington, D.C. area.
"I know Jeff pretty well,
on a D.C. Blue Devils team,
and we gained a friendship
from there," Durant said.
"He's a great player, and I
can't wait. to play with

him."

The Atlanta Hawks used
the No. 3 pick, their first of
two in the lottery on AI
Hurford, who saluted the
pro-Florida crowd with the
Gator chomp. The two-time
defending NCAA champions became the first school
with three players selected
in the top I0 of the same
draft.
They made it when Corey

•

Brewer went to Minnesota at No. 8, and Washington
at No. 7 and Joakim Noith center Spencer HaweS&gt; was
- · donning a brown bow tie picked by Sacramento, the ·
and getting a huge reaction fourth and fifth freshmen in
from Page Bl
from his hometown crowd · the top I0.
- was taken by Chicago
The Bobcats later sent
two picks later.
Wright's draft rights to · me," he said.
Oden and Conley have
"This is an unbelievable Golden State for guard
played
together since they ·
experience" Horford said. Jason Richardson and the
were
sixth
graders. Both
"Winning two national rights·
to
Jermareo
attended
Lawrence
North
championships. Moving up Davidson, taken by the
High
School
in .
to the next level is unreaL"
Warnors
· at No. 36 .
.
Indianapolis,
leading
the
.
The Hawks passed on
Ohio State's Daequan
school
to
three
straight
Michael Conle~ Jr., even .Cook went to Philadelphia
th~ugh they sllll n~ed a \ at No. 21, giving both Class 4A titles.
Conley was projected to
poi~t guard after passmg on national
championshipbe
picked as high as No. 3,
Chn~ Paul and Deron · game teams three players
Williams two year~ a~o. in the first round. His rights but the A.tlanta Hawks
Florida's AI
The Memphis Gnzziies later were sent to Miami selected
Hurford
even
though · they
then ' grabbed . Conter. for the rights to Jason
needed
a
point
guard.
·
Od~n s t~ammate smce their Sm'th of Colo 'd0 St t
JUmor high days and the
I
ra . a e,
Conley was asked by
third freshman in the top taken by the Heat With the ESPN how he would handle
four picks.
20th ptck.
playing without Oden.'
Atlanta finally grabbed
Thaddeu~
Young
:·1 think I'll be fine," he
that point guard by taking (Philadelphia, No. 12) and said. · "It was great playing
Acie Law at No. 11 _ the Javans Cn.ttenton (Los with him. He definitely
· first college senior taken.
Angeles Lakers, No. 19) made me a better player,
"Freshmen are very very gave Georgia Tech two and we had great times
talented" Law said think first-rounders.
Sean together. But I know I can
in the draft, it's ~II about Williams (No. 17, New play by myself without him
position and what a team Jersey) and Jared Dudley and have the confidence in
needs, and you see some (No. 22, Charlotte) did the myself to do whatever I
great, great players in this same tor Boston College want to do."
·
As a freshman , Conley
draft. I' m happy with the -:- though Williams was
team that I wem to and just kicked off the team last led the Big Ten with 6.1
happy to get to Atlanta and season for rules violations. assists artd 2.2 steals. He
help turn that franchise
around:"
The Milwaukee Bucks
took a chance at No. 6 on
the draft's mystery player,
Yi
Chinese
forward
Jianlian. Though Yi was
getting plenty of attention
- half of the record 60
international media members were from China - he
came with plenty of question marks. He hasn't
played against top competition in the Chinese leagues,
and he is rumored to be
older than the 19 he is listed.
Milwaukee · also ignored
concerns that Yi only wanted to play in a major market
with a large Asian population. He didn't even work
.out for the Bucks.
'
"It's a surprise to me as
well, because when I was in
China, Milwaukee didn't
come to watch me play or
work out," Yi said. "Myself,
I'm not really familiar with
the city, but I'm happy with
the team and I'm happy to
play in the NBA."
Charlotte took North
Carolina's Brandan Wright

"I

-~-- -·------

... "

SENIOR CITIZENS:
Acie Law IV of Texas A&amp;M
was the first senior taken in
the draft, picked II th by the
Atlanta Hawks. He and AI
Thornton of Florida State.
who was taken 14th by the
Los Angeles Clippers, were
the only seniors . taken
among the 14 lottery picks.
Last year, there were five
seniors taken in the lottery
.,...- Shelden Williams of
Duke, Brandon Roy of
Washington, Randy Foye of
Villanova, J.J. Redick of
Duke and Hilton Armstrong
of Connecticut.

TRIVIA ANSWER: This
CAROLINA CONNECwas
the second draft since
TION:
The
Charlotte
1
the
NBA
implemented its
Bobcats have been around
age
requirement
rule, which
for four NBA drafts and
U.S.
players
to be 19
forces
three of their first-round
and
a
year
out
of
high
school
picks have played at North
before
they
are
eligible
·for
Carolina.
the
draft.
It
appears
the
rule
The Bobcats selected .
Brandan Wright, a freshman will be around for a while so
with the Tar Heels last sea- the burning trivia question
son, as the eighth overall will be who was the last high
school player taken in the
pick Thursday night.
In 2005, Charlotte took NBA draft?
Amir
Johnson
of
Raymond Felton with the
fifth pick and Sean May Westchester, Calif., was
with the 13th. They were taken by Detrl;&gt;it with the
key members of the North 56th pick of the. 2005 draft.
Carolina team that won the The 6-foot-9 Johnson played
national
championship in eight games · for the
Pistons last season, averagmonths before.
Michael Jordan, probably ing 5.9 points and 4.6
the most famous Tar Heel of rebounds.
them all, became a partHe was one of eight high
owner of the Bobcats last school players drafted that
year. He hired Buzz year and, unless the rule is
Peterson, his former. college changed, will be the last one
roommate, as the team's ever taken.

·Buckeyes

from Page Bl

-

~---:r-.'1!'11

Astros' Biggio reaches 3,000 hits

NBADraft .

No.1 Selections··
8v Till AssociATID Puss

c.

201)7-0reg Odell, P!lrtland, Ohio
State
2006-Andrea Ba~ani. F. Toronto,
Benenon TriMSO (Italy)
2005-~ndrew Bogut.
C,

Mi-.

Uttih

2Q04-0wlvhl H-rd. Orlardo, F,
SOuthwest
Atlantlo
Chrtstlan
Academy (Atlanta)
2003-leBron James, Cleveland, G,
St. Vlnoent·St. Mary HS
•'
2002-Yeo Mlng. Houston, c. China

2001-Kwame Brown, Washington,
F-e, Glynn Academy HS
2000-Kenyon Matnn, New JaiS8)', F,
Cincinnati
t999--aton Brand. Chicago, F, DW..
t 998-Michael Olowokandl, LO,S
Angeles Clippers. C. Pacific
1997- Tim Duncan, San Antonio, C,
Wako Forest
199&amp;-AIIen Iverson, Philadelpllla, G,

Georgetown
199i'r.Joe Smilh, Golden State, C,
Maryland
1994-Giflnn Robinson. Milwaukee,
F. Purdue
19li3-Chris Webber, Orlando, F,
Michigan
,
1992-SI\aqullle O'Neal, Orlardo, C,
Louisiana State
1991-u.try Johnson; Charlotte, F,
UNLV
1990-;-llerrlcl&lt; Coleman, New JeiS8)'.

F, Syracu11e
'
1989-Pervls EHison, sacramento." C,·
Louisville
1988-0anny Manning, Los Angolea
Clippers, F, Kan11es
1987-Davld RObinson, San Antonio,
c. Navy
1986-Brad Daugilerty, Cleveland, C,
North Garollna
'
1~trlek Ewing, New York. C.
Goorvetown
1984-Akeem Olajuwon, Houston, C,
Houston
1983-Ralpll Sampson. HOU8ton, c,
Vlrvlnla
198~es Worthy, Los Angol&lt;16
Lal&lt;ers, F, Nortn&lt;:arolina
1981-Mark Aguirre, Dallas. F.
De~ul

.1980-Joe. Barry · Carroll, Gplden
State, C. Purdue
1979-Earvln Johnson, Los Angolao .
Lakars, G, Mk:hlgan St
1978-Mychal Thompson, Portland,
c . Mlnneaola .
19n~t Baneon, 'Milwaukee, c,
Indiana
·,
1978-John lucas, Houston, G.
Maryland
'
11!75-0avld Thompson, Atlanta, G,
Nortll Carolina St. •
·
1974--llii Walton. Portland, C, UCLA ·
197~yg cCtilna, Philadelplllar \'1 .
IIDnola St. . :
.
.
1972-,-LaRue Martin: Portland, C,
L~a&lt;:hlcago

1971-AusUn ·carr, Cleveland, G,
Notre Came
• ·
197o-8ob . Lanier, Detroit; C, St.
BonaventUre
11169'-Kareem
Ab&lt;lui.Jabbar,
Milwaukee, C. UCLA .
19~Eivln 'Hayes, . Houston, C,
Houslon
1987-'.Jimmy Walker. Detroit, G.

Providence •
.
1~1e Rumil, New York, F,

t.!lohlilan

·

also scored 13.2 points a Powell said.
game and shot 52 percent
The Dayton native . was
from the floor.
gathering with about 200
The Grizzlies held a draft friends and family amid finnight gathering for fans at ger food and a big-screen
the
FedExForum
in TV at a Holiday Inn hotel
Memphis, where guard conference room in his
Kyle Lowry said he looked · hometown, Powdl said.
forward to playing in the . A fourth Ohio State playsame back court with er, senior guard Ron Lewis,
Conley.
is a possible· second round
"He's a great guy," he selection.
said. "He's a great decision- . - - - - - - - - - maker, and he can penetrate
INGELS CARPET
and score."
Oden and Conley are
expected to be represented
by Conley's father, Mike
Conley Sr. He won the
Olympic gold medal in the
triple jump in 1992 in
Barcelona,
but
said
Thursday he's proud to be
more famous these days
for his relationship with
his son.
"About two years (ago), I
officially became the father
of ·Mike Conley," he told
ESPN. "But I'm proud to be
that."
Cook, who average~ 9.8
points as a guard for the
Buckeyes in 2006,2007,
worked out for about 20
NBA teams in recent weeks,

SUMMER

CLEARANCE SALE

www .mydailysentinel.com

HOUSTON (AP)
ture
and chance to reach the mark at
Craig Biggio kissed his
3,000 that home .
wife, hugged everyone in
s pan ne d
"The fans are excited and
sight and dragged former
from
the they deserve to have this
teammate Jeff Bagwell out
train track happen and I'm going to do
onto the field to soak in th e
to the roof my part to make it hapcelebration.
of the stadi- pen,' Biggio said.
It was the perfect place
urn
was
He reflected on his career
for the Astros second baseu n v e i I e d and the importance . of
man to get his 3,000th
after
the reaching the milestone
career hit.
hit.
before Thursday 's game.
Biggio reached the mileBiggio .
Everyone
"I've been very grateful
on
the and blessed to be in the sitstone number on Thursday
night with a single to cen- team. including those in uation where I'm at now
ter ·field in the seve nth the bullpen , stormed the and to play one of the
inning and th en passed field
to
congratulate greatest games in the world
Roberto Clemente for 26th Biggio . His wife Patty, for 20 years," he said.
on the career li st with the so n ~ Conor and Cavan, and 'Th is is very, very spefourth of his season-hi gh . daughter Quinn also joined cia!."
five hits.
in the celebration . Hi s sons
Astros general manager
He was thrown out tryin·g were in the dugout acting Tim Purpura said the team
to stretch the 3,000th hit as bat boys.
plans to honor Biggio in
into a double against the
He kissed his wife and August for reachin~ the
Rockies . He smgled to held his 7-year-old daugh- mark. Barry Bonds 1s the
right in the ninth and sin- ter in the air.
.
next closest player to 3,000
gled again in the lith in
He went to the dugout hits. The San Francisco
Houston 's 8-5 win .
and hugged everyone while Giants slugger is 104 hits
Biggio is the first player the crowd continued to go away and needs seven
to reach 3,000 hits since wild. Biggio then pulled home runs to pass Hank
Rafael Palmeiro on July Bagwell out of the dugout Aaron on the career list.
15, 2005 , with Baltimore. and returned with him to
"He's a great phiyer,"
The 41-year-old, who the field , where they stood Bonds said of Biggio.
entered the season needing arm and arm . Biggio and " He's always been good,
70 hits to reach the mile- Bagwell played together ever sirice I' ve watched
stone, has played his entire for 15 seasons be fo re him play. He's phenome20-year
career
with Bagwe ll
retired
in nat. 1 would love the
Houston, making him the December.
opportunity to play with
· longest tenured player in
Biggio's first hit of the htm. Leadoff hitters don 't
franchi se history.
night came on a single to come around that often."
The sellout crowd stood center field in the third
During his two decades
and chanted 'Bi-ggi-o' at inning.
with the Astros, Biggio has
each bat and cameras twinThe second hit, also a become known in the city
kled with each pitch. Fans single, came on a grounder as much for his charitable
held signs that read 'Mr. to third base in . the fifth. work as he has for his play.
3,000' and 'Biggio's Hit Garrett Atkins badly over- He has been the nat10nal
Parade.' One woman wore threw first base on the play, spokesman
for
the
an orange shirt that fea- leaving ·the official scorer Sunshine Kids Foundation,
lured block letters that read to pause for several tense . which helps children with
' Biggio' and '3,0'0o.'
seconds before calling it a cancer, for more tha·n a
His 3,000th hit came one single and ruling an error decade.
day shy of the 19th allowed Biggio to advance
He hosts an annual 11arty
anniversary of his first to second.
for the patients at Mmute
career hit, a single off Ore!
He is the only player in Maid Park and puts on a
Hershiser on June 29, major league hi story . to golf tournament each year
1988.
have at least 600 doubles to raise money for the
Fireworks went off, the (658), 250 home runs foundation. Sunshine Kids
counter in left-center field (286), 3,000 hits and 400 officials estimate that the
with red illuminated num- stolen bases (413).
tournament ha s raised
bers ticked to 3,000 and a
He said before the game more than $1 million for
giant banner with his· pic- he was glad to have the the cause.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

2007 NBA DRAFT SELECTIONS
·First Round

1. Portland. Greg Odell! c, Ohio Slale.
2. Seat11e, Kavln Duran , f, Texas.
3. A~anta. AI H&lt;lrlllnf, f, FloriOa.
4. Memp_llia, Mk;haeJ Conley, g. Ohio State.
5. A-Boolon, Jell Green, I, Georgetown.
e. Milwaukee, Yl Jlanllan, f. GuanciOng ligors (China ),
7. Minnesota, Corey Brewer, I, Florida.
\ 8. B-Charlotte, Brandon Wright, f, North Carolina.
9. Chicago (frqm New Vo&gt;1&lt;), Joaklm Noah, f, Florida.
10. SacramentO, Spencer HawN, c, Washington.
11 .,AUallta (from Indiana), Acle Law, g, Texas ~M.
12. PhtiaOOiphla, Thadcfeus Young, f, Georgia Tech.
13. New Orleans. JUifln Wrigh~ !, Kansas .
14. L.A. Clippers, AI Thornton, I, Aorida Sial~.
.
15. Detron (from Orlando), Rodney Stuckey, g, Easlern
Wuhlngton.
16. Washington, NiCk Young, g, So&lt;rthem Cal.
17. New Jersey, Sean Williams. f. Bostoo College.
18. Golden Slate, Marco &amp;llnelll, g, Cllmamlo Bologna
(llaly).
.
19. L.A. Laker&amp;, Javalis Crittenton, g, Georgia Tech. '
20. C·Miaml, Jason Bmith, f, Colorado Slate.
21 . C·Phllad~phla (lrom Denver). Oaequan Cook, g, Ohio
Slate.
22. Cha~otle (from Toronto thrQ\Igh Cloveland). Jared
Dudley, f, Boslon College.
·
23. New YoO&lt; (from Chicago), Wl~on Chandler, I, DePauL
24 . 0-PhooniK (from Cleveland through Boston), Rudy
Fernandez, g, DVK Jovenlul Badalona (Spain).
25. Ulah, Morrie Almond, g, Alee.
26. HousiOn, Aaron Brooks, g, Oregon.
27. Detroit, Aaron Afflalo. g, UCLA.
28. San Antonio, 11ago Splitter, f. Teu Vhona (Spain).
29. PhQenh1, Alando Tucker, I, Wisconsin.
30. E-Phlladelphla (kom Dallas through Denver and Golden
Slate), Peneri Koponen, g, Honka (Finll{ld)'.

""

Second Rouna

31. F·Seanle (from Mempllls). Canlandl)', f. Purdue.
32. Bostoo, GaDa Pruitt. g, Southam Col.
33. San Antonio (from Mjlwaukee), Marcus · Williams, f,
Arizon~.
•
, ·
34 . Dallas (from Allanta), Nlcl&lt; Fazekas. f. Nevada.
35. A-Seattle, Glen Davie, I, LSI:J.
•
36. 8-Golden Slate (from Mlnnesola), Jermareo Davidson. f.
AlaDama.
·37. Portland, Josh McROberts, 1, Duke.

•

36. Philadelphia (from New York lhrough Chicapo). Kyrylo
Fesenko, c. Cherkasy (Ukraine). ·
39. G-Miaml (from Sacramento lhrough Utah and Orlando),
Stanko Barac. c, Sirokl (Bosnia).

4C. L.A. Lakers (lrom Charlotte), Sun Yue, I, Aooilen
(Olympian). China.
4t. Mlnne501a (lrom Philadelphia), Chrts Richard, f, FlOrida.
42. E-Portland (from Indiana), Der~ck jlyars. g, Vanderbilt.
43. New Orleans. Adam Haluska, f, lqWa
·
44. Orlando, Reyshawn Terry, f,•North Carolina.
45. L.A. CJippers, Jared Jordan, g, Marist

411. Golden Slate (lrom New J"'""y), Slepllane Lasme, I ,
Massacnusens.
47. Washington, Dominic McGuire. f. Fresno Slats.
48. LA. Lekers, Marc Gasol, c. Akasvayu'Girona (Spain).
49. Chicago (from Golden State through Denver, Boston and
Phoenix), Aaron Gray, c, Pittsburgh.
50. Dallas (from Miami through LA Lakers), Renaldas
SeiDutis. g, Olyrnpiakos (Greece)
•
.
51 . Chicago (from Denver), JamesOn Curry, g. Oklahoma
State
52. Portland (from Toronto), Taurean Green g. Florida.
~- Portland (from 'chicago), Demetris Nichols, f, Syracuse.
54. Hous1on (from Cleveland through Orlando), Bred
Nqwley, Q, Townsville (Australia}.
55. Utah. Herbert HilL f. Providence.
56. Milwaukee (from Houston), Ramon Sessions, g, Nevada.
57. Detroit, Sammy Mejia, g, DePaul.
58. San Antonio, Giorgos Prlntezis, f, Greece.
59. Phoonix. D.J. SlrawDerry, g, Mal)'land.
60. Dallas. Miovan Rakovic, c. Mega lshrana (Serbia).

Draft day Transactions

A-Boston traded the rights to F Jeff Green. a tutore second·
round draft p~. G Delonte West and F Wally Szczerbiak to
Seattle tor G Ray Allen and the rights to F Glen Davis.
B-Charlotte traded the rights to F Brandan Wright to Golden
Statu for G Jason Richardson and the rights to F Jermareo
Davidson.
·
C-Miami traded the rights to C Jason Smith to Philadelphia
lor the rights to G Daequan Cook, a 2009 second-round plck
and c:ash considerations.
D·Phoenhc sold rights of 0 Rudy Fernandez to Poniard.
E·Phlladelphla traded the rights to G Petteri Koponen to

Portland lor lhe nghiS to G Derrick Byars and cash.
F-Seanle traded the rights to F Carl Landry to Houston lor a
future second·round pick and. cash ..
G·Miami traded the rights to C Stanko Barac to Indiana for il
2009 second·round draft pick.

Draft breezes past Cavaliers

CLEVELAND (AP) - second round·.
time in franchise history - ·.
With an NBA finals appear''I'm happy because I did- the Cavs were blanked in
ance on their resume, the n' t think we make any bad the draft. Cleveland was one
Cleveland Cavaliers can deci sions. It was a good of (our tea ms, along with .
a~ford to be choosy.
decision to stay put with Denver.
Indiana
and
Left without a pick where we are and we ' ll go Toronto that didn 't have
because of previous moves,_ from there."
selection.
·
general manager Danny
The Cavaliers didn' t own
Ferry said the club came ·
Ferry was unable to get a pick this year because of close to making a deal.
back into the NBA draft two trades - ·one good one,
''We thought we had one
Thursday night, leaving the and a really bad one.
at one point toward the end .
Cavs to improve their roster
In 2004, they se nt their of the fir st round," he saicl, .
through free agency or second,rounder (No. 54 "but at the end of the day .
trades.
overall) to Orlando as part that team decided to · stay ·
While a few other teams of a deal that brough1 Drew with what they are doing ·
swapped
money
and Gooden and Anderson · and stuck with their plan. I
exchanged players on a rela- Varejao for Tony Battie and think that team made a good :
tively busy night in New picks. In 2005 , the Cavs deci sion."
York, the Cavaliers, who .1raded a first -round selecWhile the Cavaliers were
had identified 15 players tion (No. 24) to Boston for unable to add any new play- .
they were inlerested in , Jiri Welsch, who averaged ers, two 6f their Eastern
couldn't find a deal that 2.9 points in 16 forgettable Conferen ce rivals appeared
suited them.
games.
to add quality. Chicago took
"By the time those guys
Ironically, both of those Florida center Joakim Noah
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) ___:_
line when previous 10 games. He has. were available, none of pi cks were · \&gt;ought on a 1No. 9) and Detroil picked
Frank Thomas. hit his 500th
he crossed 13 this season. This was his th em were on the board any- . ni ght when the Cavs fail ed Eastern Washington forward
home run Thursday, routhe plate as second lifetime homer off more," Ferry said. "So we to strike a deal.
Rodney Stuckey (No. 15)
tinely putting. his head
Tor o n to Silva.
took. a step back and just
It was lhe second time in and UCLA guard Aaron
down as he rounded the
p Iaye rs
The Big Hurt has hit 50 watched things unfold in the three years - and the third Aftlalo (No. 27).
bases while joining one of .
spi.lled out career home·rs against the
baseball's most elite clubs.
of
the Twins, his most against any
"It 's no secret our bullpen Rich Harden threw bullpen
The Toronto slugger
·dugout to team and the most by an
has been wearing it," Flores sessions Wednesday and
became the 21st major leacongratu- active
player
against
said. "Hopefully, it's just a Thursday. He's scheduled to
guer to reach the career
late him.
Minnesota. Rocky Colavito
rough patch." .
from PageBl
throw two innings in relief
mark, a milestone that has
T 'h a t hit 52 against the Twins and·
Johnson led off the sec- Friday or Saturday in New
Thomas
Thomas did Mickey Mantle and Reggie
usually meant an eventual
spot in 'the Hall of Fame.
it in the Jackson each hit 51.
Barfield hit a line drive that ond with his seventh home York .... The A's have lost
12 of their last 16.
Thomas hit a three -run Metrod01:ne. was fitting. He · The seventh overall pick fell in front of right fielder run.
Eric
Chavez's
infield
hil
shot in the first inning, con- hit his first career home run by the White Sox in 1989, Nick Swisher. Unsure if the
necting against Minnesota's at the ballpark against Gary Thomas spent 16 years in ball would drop, Shoppach gave Oakland the lead in the
Carlos Silva and se nding a Wayne .while with the Chicago and established got a late break off first and first. Stewart and Jack Cust
singled and Chavez hit a
1-2 pitch an estimated 396 · Chicago White Sox on Aug. many franchise
bests, was forced out at second.
ground
over the third
feet into the left"field 28, 1990. Thomas has 16 including 448 home runs,
Following Casey Blake's base bagball
that Mike Rou se
stands.
homers overall at the stadi- I ,465 RBis and 3,949 total pinch-hit single, Flores
Todd Eisenlohr, sitting in . urn.
bases. His .427 on-base per- relieved Blanton. Grady gloved without a play.
Following
Johnson's
the fifth row and wearing a
The 39-year-old Thomas centage and .568 slugging Sizemore hit a long drive to
jersey of Tw.ins player is in his first season with ,percentage are also fran- right-center that Swisher home run, Bobby Crosby
doubled and Kotsay sinJason Bartlett jersey, caught the Blue Jays. He played chise bests.
caught - he held onto the
·
the ball in his glove.
last year in Oakland..
But an injured ankle lim- ball despite falling to the gled.
Sizemore hit an RBI dou "1 lost it in the roof as it
Next on Thomas' ascent ited Thomas to 108 games
was
coming
down ," on the career home run list in his final- two seasons and ground and hitting the waiL ble in the fifth.
The good defense went
Notes: Byrd has walked
Eisenlohr said. He said he are Eddie Murray (504 ), led to a falling-out with the
for
naught when Mi chae ls two batters in his last 71 2-3
traded the souvenir ball for Mel Ott (5 11) and Ernie team.
· innings , both intentional.
an autographed ball, bat and Banks and Eddie Mathews
After joining Oakland as homered.
"It
was
supposed
to
be
a
His last unintentional walk
jersey.
(512 each). Also within a free agent, Thomas hit 39
fastball
inside."
Flores
said.
was on Apri I 26. .. . The
The Metrodome crowd reach of 500 this year are home runs and drove in 114
"I
feel
bad
for
Joe."
Indians
placed
RHP
gave Thomas a standing Alex
Rodriguez,
Jim runs last year in helping the
The
A's
bullpen,
which
is
Roberto
Hernandez
on
ovation. The two-time AL Thome
and
Manny A's reach the At: champiwithout
injured
·
setup
meri
waivers
Thursday
for
the
MVP took his home run trot Ramirez.
onship series. He signed
and then pointed toward the
Thomas entered Thursday with the Blue Jays as a free J ustiri Duchscherer and purpose of giving him his
Kiko Calero and cl&lt;1ser unconditional rel ease . He
suites down the right-field with four home runs in his agent on Nov. 17, 2006.
Huston Street, ·has been was designated for assignstruggling. Al an Embree ment on June 20. The 42·
gave
up five runs in ' the year-old Hernandez went 3ly a left-handed hitter.
Cincinna'ti took a 5-4 lead
ninth
inning in Tuesday 1 with 6.23 ERA in 28
Dobbs showed . -little in the fourth inning on
night's
8-5 loss.
ga mes.
Oakland RHP
effects of being hit at tirst. Hatteberg's RBI single,
Two pitches later, he roped which scored Josh Hamilton
from PageBl
a one-hopper off the ri ght- on a bang-bang play at
center field fence to plate home plate.
er Ryan Madson for his 13th Howard and Rowand and
Philadelphia took a 2-0
of the season.
give
the
Phillies
a
6-5
lead.
lead
in the first inning when
The Phillies rallied in
Dobbs, who bent over and Utley connected on a 3-0
their half of the eighth off held his head while on base, fastball. for his first homer
Marcus McBeth . Jimmy was replaced in the top half of
the game.
Rollins delivered the big of the sixth by Michael
Belisle appeared to be
hit, roping a two-out triple Bourn.
cautious with Utley again in
to right field to score Nunez
Bourn lost a fly ball in the the third inning, but the Allwith the tying run. Rollins lights in the seventh innin~. Star second baseman hit
finished a home run short of resulting in a double for another 3-0 fastball over the
the cycle. .
Scott Hatteberg and moving right-field fencefor his 15th
July 4th· Happy Hour All Day and DJ. from 9 pm -1.am
. The victory was a painful Norris Hopper to third. home.run to tie the game at
July 5th .· OJ 2-6 pm • Bart &amp; The Chasers from 8-12 pm
one for Philadelphia's Greg Brandon Phijlips then lifted 4.
Dobbs, who was beaned in a sacrifice fly to center
75¢ Draft 2 pin-12 pm
Belisle worked five
the side of the head b,Y Reds field, scoring Hopper and · innings, surrendering six
July 6th • Poo Bah from 4-8 pm "$3.00 Cover charge"
catcher Chad Moeller in the ·tying the game at 6-6.
runs and eight hits. He
Bart &amp; The Chasers from 9-1 ·am "$3.00 Cover charge'~
fifth inning.
Encarnacion cut the walked one and struck out
50¢
Hot Dogs from 3 pm -12 am .
Dobbs was struck on the de tic it .to 2-1 in the second . SIX.
left side of the head when inning with his fifth homer.
. Horseshoe Tournament at 4:30 .pm $5.00 entry fee
Eaton yielded five runs on
Moeller was throwing the
After a Ken -Griffey Jr. six hits over six innings. He
July 7th - Hog Roast 5:00 pm
ball back to starter Matt sacrifice tly tied the game at walked three and fanned
Good Times
Poo Bah plays at 4 pm
Remind s You
Belisle. The ball caromed 2-2, Dunn crushed an Adam two.
Bart &amp; The Chasers from 9 pm "1 am
Designate A
all the way to the far end of Eaton fastball off the base
Notes: It was Utley's 13th
Driver!
the Reds dugout , but the of the second'level in right- career multi-homer game
Wet
T-shirt
contest!!!
unusual · play
caught field.
and tirst of the season. .. .
baserunners Ryan Howard
Dunn: the subject of Phillies I B Ryan Howard
. Horseshoe ·Tournament!!!
and Aaron Rowand by sur- numerou s trade rumors, has made a nifty over-theI
prise and neither moved up. homered in three straight shoulder diving catch in the
Only $5.00 cover for ALL DAY FUN!
The ball appeared to hit games and leads the Reds third inning. ... Dunn has
50/50
Games!
Dobbs just over the left ear, with 23 homers , second in homered in three straight
which wasn't protected by the NL behind Milwaukee's games three times this sea·CR 7A • Pomeroy, OH • ,740-992·5~86 .
an earflap since he is strict- Prince Fielder (27).
son.

a

Thomas hits SOOth career home run

Indians

Now-Open
For Business
Monday,
June 18, 2007

Portland Plant
McDade Rd.
Portland, OH

Reds

l·740-843-5293

es

·Invites You 7o Spend
July 4th Weekend With Us!

�.....................

(·C~~~~----~----~--~------

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 29, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

~rtbune

Friday, June 29,,2007

www.mydailysentinel.colll

- Sentinel ~ l\egtster

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Utribune -

CLASSIFIED
'

I""

WANllll

To Do
Lawn mowing Rates by the
JOb, not rhe hotJr Free
Est1mates Call Paul @
(304)675·2940
Lawn Care Servtce Mowtng
&amp; Tnmmtng Call (740)441·
• 1333 01 (740)645.()546

In One Week With Us
E-ma11
class1f1ed@ myda1lylnbune com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
~rtbune 1

Webs1tes

Prolesstonally
Clean
Offtce / Hau sectean1n g
• Reasonable
Rates
References (304)675 2208

www mydailytnbune com
www myda1lysentmel com
www myda1lyreg1ster.com

Wanted to Do Care gtver
Wtll care for elderly m the r
home,
16
yrs
e~~:p
References Avatlable

l\egtster

II\\\( 1\1

{304) 675-1333

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AO

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the ri ght to edit,
re1ect or cancel any
ad at any time
,.Errors Mu st B
eported on the firs
ay of publlcatton an
he Tribune Sentmel
b

he sp,ce occ upte

y the error and ani
he f1rst msertton W
hall not be liable lo

ton of an advertls
ent Corrections w11
e made In the f1rs
vatlable edition

1\\111 \(I \II \1'

In Ne xt Day ' s Pa per

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Sunday In- Column . 1 : 00 p.m.
For Sunda ys Paper

Sunday Display ; 1 .00
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid'

FOUND

POLICIES Ohio Valle~ Publishing r11ervea 1tte right t o edh, reject, or ctncel any ad at any time Errora muat be reported on

are alwaya confidential • Current rate card appllll • All real Illata advertlaemenlt ar~ aub]ect to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1988
I wanted 1d1 meeting EOE t landarda We will not knowingly accept any advertlalng In vlolltlon ol the llw

&lt;\.NNOUNCEMJ.:NTS

Sf~ffl~

YouR.

it~""- Al'll:&gt; C. f\~E&lt;&gt;E&lt; IN

YOJJ~ \"oa:~ MAIIil ,

&amp;;;;:-----~

IW·E't.\1

I r._.Y_A_RD_S_AI..._r

Yo \J '?.

YARII SM.E·

PRAY 740740 PRAY FOR
THE USA @ 4 o clock
everyday unttl 7 4 07 4

r

Yov'R€.

Echomg
Meadows
Aestdenttal Center ts now
accepttng appltcatlons for
mature and responsible
Program Asststant/Nurse
Atd s (STNA preferred but
not requtred) F.ull time and
Part time shltt s are both
avatlable for afternoons wtth
a Full ltme ntght shift post
!ton also avatlable Fullttme
postttons are offered wtth a
full beneftl package Apply 1n
person
at
Echomg
Meadows 319 W Unton
Street Athens Oh1o Phone
740·594-3541

G AUJIU.IS

ocloc~

2489 Mtll Creek Rd 6/30 7/t
G IVEAWAY

15 cu II Uprtght Freezer

9 5 fabnc patterns craft
suppltes etc Everythtng
ctTeap ram or Shtne

Older but runs Good 304
882 2447

3 Fam1lies 6129·6130 from 9
5 .Corner of 218 and Cot&lt; Ad
4 ktltens all males black tn Mercervtlle Ktds clothes
&gt;Box number ads ar
and wht!e to good homes Ve1a Bradley Furn
lways confldenl tal
379 2981
3 Fam1ly Sa1 Only 9 4 1 112
G.· l,
Free pupptes to a good
&gt;Current rate car
mt!e out Brushy Pomt Ad
tlome
Call
740
256
1059
pplte s
Turn by Jordans Gas
Kmens 3 F black w/orange
www com1c s com
&gt; All Real
© 2007 by NEA, Inc
&amp; whtte 1 M black wfhtlle 376 Addtson Ptke Sat On ly
dv erlt sements ar
whtle Wtll be ready July 10 9am 1pm Clothes Womens
ubJect to the Federa
Call44 1 0405
Stze 18 26 Household
~;~--::::---~....,
074
atr Houstng Act o
Home ln1enor Mise
YNU&gt; SAIJ. ·
I
WAIIrft]l
11110 H ELP \"A·~
los'l ANil
1968
l'oM~llov/Mn&gt;DLf.
Bm
' · '" ~
4 Famtly Yard Sate 201 &amp;
FOUND
135 Ktnfi!:On Dr Frtday 6/29
&gt; Thts
newspape
Large garage sale July 2 &amp; 3 Absolute Top Dollar U S
ccepts on ly hel
Found on McCormtck Rd Saturday 6130 &amp; Sunday 711 Noble
Summtt
Ad Stiver and Gold Cams Arrow Concrete Company
8am-3pm
anted ads meetm
around 6/22 Small black
Mtd(jleport OhiO Ratn or Proofsets Gold Rtngs Pre
Now hmng for the
EOE stand ards
and gray female dog Well 6 Famtly Frt/Sat 8 ? 2 mt shtne somethmg f01 every 1935
US
Cu rrency
fo llowing pos11tons at our
groomed 645 74B7
out 21B to Raccoon Ad 1 5 one
Solitatre Dtamonds M T S
Galltpohs facthty
) We wtll not knowtng
m• Watch for stgns Large
Com Shop I 51 Second
lost
Blue
Merle
Auslfaltan
Qualified
Mhler Drivers,
ly accept any adver
Movmg
sale
36160 Avenue Gallipolis 740 446
ttems too much to hst
Shepherd male dog wtth red
Meehanlca, Laborers &amp;
lsement tn v1olatton
Rocksprings Ad Pomeroy 2842
collar and dog tags 740 6129 30 Bam ? 3fa m 2 m1les
Loader Operators
t the law
June 291h&amp;30th
9 00
388 9064
out Cla r~ Chapel Ad 5 00 Appliances furntture an Want to buy !ratter/land con
Must be Wllltng to travel
AUeKpenses patd
Btd.vell Baby I toddler ttems d m01e•tt
tract Can pay $400 500
furn tools household t!ems
VacatJon &amp; Healthcare
/man Will also do odd JObs
avatlable
6/30 712 Burnett Ad m sale' Movtng' Frt Sat June 446·2743
4x4 s For Sale •
• ••• 725
Ret rement package
29
&amp;
30
9
00
3
00
2575
Kana uga Clothes kntck
Announcement . . .
...030
I "PI 0\ \II\ I
avat lable
Second St
Syracuse
knac~s aquartums etc
Ant tques
••• 530
,11!1111'
Anllques furmture ~ttchen
Apartments lor Rent
•
440
Drivers
Garage Sate Saturday On ly tlems tools name brand Jr
Auct1on and Flea Market
080
110
Must have at least a current
446 Spuce Street EKt
clothmg vtnyl reco rds
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones
• 760
Hu~ WA~~rrtl l
Class B COL
Auto Repa1r
770
Hauldren Sktdmore Famtly Three famtly yard sale
Must have a satisfactory
Autos for Sale
710
Yard Sale Tons of baby Rttchte restdence Tyree
MVR
100WORKERS NEEDED
Boats &amp; Motors for Sal e .
750
clothes women s clothes Blvd Racme Oh June 29
Must have a current
550
Buoldmg Supplies
JUn ors thru plus stzes baby 30th 9am 5pm b1cycles Assem ble crafts wood
DOT ph1stcal
Busoness and Buoldlngs
. 340
accessones home decor et&lt;erctse equ pment clothes ttems To $480/wk Matenals
Company wlll train
provtded
Free
tn
format
on
Busoness Opportunoty •
2t 0
too much to hst Sale IS and mtsc tlems
mexpenence dnvers who
pkg 24 Hr 801 426 4649
Busmess Trammg . •
.140
located behtnd 5 Star
meet the above cnterta
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
• 790
Mortgage on AT 7 North rust YARD SALE 825 Page
Earn wages 14110$ 18 00
Camptng Equipment. • •
780
before dnve tn theater Frt Street Middleport 6 30 7 2
per hr
Cards of Thanks. .........
010
6/29 &amp; Sat 6/30 from 9 5
and 3
Ch ild/Elderly Care •
190
To apply please send a
Hugo Sate 6/29 30 1/2 mtle Yard sate H1llstde Bapust
Electncai!Refngerat1on
840
resume + a copy of your
out
Georges
Creek
Coke
300
Bnatwood
Drive
EqUipment for Rent
480
Church At 7 June 30 also
Ortver s license MVR and
slut! anttques new socket Ba~e Sa le
Gallt po lts OhiO
Exc avallnb .
830
DOT physlcal10&lt;jl
sets
name
brand
clothes
740
441
9633
Farm Equipment . •
610
YARD SALE' across from
Fa rms for Rent •• • •
430
Movtng Sale 6/29 6/30 9am
Arrow Concrete, Inc
Holzer Asststed Ltvtng
Fa rms for Sale
330
?
on
At?
behtnd T&amp;T P•t Stop Chester.S·?
ATTN Marla Jenkins
Galltpolts has Employment
For Lease
490
Burttle/Sunoco
Stahon ~6
YARnSAu~.
PO Box 4336
Opportuntltes tor
For Sale
585
Furn
tool s
household
Pl. PLEASANT
Parkersburg, WV 26104
TI
ME
and
as
needed
PART
~or Sal e or Trade
590
ttems
employOarrowc:oncretewv com
Restdent Asststanls
Fr uots &amp; Vegetables. • • •
580
Phone 1 866 505-2776
3
Famtly
Yard
Sale
Sat
11
4
Prefer expenenced STNA
Furn1shed Room s
450
Multt lamtly 6/29 30 Bam
Fax 304·485- t 682
but not requt red
Genera l Haulmg
850
5pm 18B8 Whtle Ad N1ce Howard St Haven Hetgllts
EOE
Bay
&amp;
Toddlers
tlems
Please
apply
1n
person
or
Gtveaway
040
adult and ktds clothes
Household
goods
send Resume to
Happy Ads
050
household ttems &amp; toys
Collecttbles &amp; plenty mtsc 8
Otane Camden AN DON AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Hay &amp; Gra1n
640
Sat 6/30 9 3pm
Tara ?
Sell Shtrley Spears 304
Help Wanted
••••• 110
Estates
tn
Addtson
675 1429
Home Improvements.
.•• •• 810
Furnuure d1shwasher k ds 5 Famtly Yard Sale July 2 3 A Otl &amp; Gas Br o~er
Homes for Sale •
• •• 310
clothes and toys
4 9 am !til dar~ brand name Company IS looktng for an Bartender needed Pomt
Household Goods
510
teen gtrt clothes et&lt;erc1se admm asst lor the Galli polis Pleasant Moose Lodge
Ho uses for Rent
410
Sat June 30 Bam ' 3 lamtly
equ1pment prom dresses otftce Candtdates should be apply tn Person
In Memonam
020
sale 1057 Second Ave
Insurance
•
130
ventless wall heater hOuse self starters and posses
Yard
sale
Saturday
6130
hold ~ems To much to men good organ•zal tonal skill s Desk Clerk needed at
Lawn &amp; Garden Eq utpmenl
660
proftcten t tn Word Et&lt;cel and Budget Inn 260 Jackson
lrom 9 2pm 264 LeGrande !ton 3rd Autumn St Mason
Ltvestock
630
Outlook Knowledge of land Ptke Looktng for a person
Blvd
Losl and Fou nd
060
B•g GaragefYard
Sale descrtphons and !tile et&lt;p IS who ts mottvated great
Lots &amp; Ac reage
350
4
SALE·
Mason WV 4th St 9 5 June a plus Must have a htgh communlcalton sktlls and a
Miscellaneous
•
170
J'oM~liOYiMIDilLE 30th July 2nd &amp; 3rd dtploma and some college poSIItve attitude Pl ease
Miscellaneous Merc hand1se.
540
expertence
preferred apply wtthtn
Everyth ng extra cheap
Mob1le Home Repa1r
86D
Please call Andrea Healy at
2 lamtly across street from
Mob1le Homes for Rent
•. 420
Bashan Ftre Dept 6 29 to ? lnstde Salel Baby clothes 740-446-6800 or fa)( to 740 DRIVERS
Mob1le Homes fo r Sale .
•• 320
boys p1eemte 24 months 446 6802
9AM 1o6PM
Money to Loan
•• • •
• 220
gtrls preem1e 9 months
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
• 7 40
Family Ortented Carner
6 30 3 famWy At 7 across baby Items
materntty A c c e p t t ng
Mustcallnstruments
570
based 1n Canton OH needs
frOm Me tgs Memory Garden women s JUntor g1rls scrubs Apphcattons/ Resumes for
• • •••. 005
Personals
OTR dnvers to pull relngersecretanat/
recepttont
sl
&amp;
much
mQre
Net&lt;t
to
Pets for Sale
•••.••••. 560
810 Elm St Ractne by Atpley Au to Glass m pos1t1on Must tle proltctenl ated trailers to the South
Plum bmg &amp; Heating
. •• 820
and Eastern States
Me1hodts1CHURC H
Hartford WV Sat June 30th n 0Utck Books Pro Apply m
Professiona l Serv1ces
• • • • 230
Bed Camper game boy _1
9
person 1743 Centenary Ad
Radto, TV &amp; CB Repair
160
atlvance&amp;games
•Weekly Pay
Galltpohs OH 45631 No
Real Eslate Wanted •
••••• 360
clothes toys
Yard Sale 32 Burdette Phone Calls Please
'$ 40 Por Milo/All Mllao
Schools lnstructeon. . . .
. ... 150
Addtlton June 30th
Model Frelghtllner
•Late
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer
. • 650
CARPORT SALE Sa1urday
An Excellent way to earn Condos
S ~uattons Wanted . • •.•.
• 120
June 30th Laurel Cltff Ad
AucnoNANil
money The New Avon
•No Now Yor1&lt; City or
460
Space for Rent
Name Brand New Items
F'I£A MARIO:r
Call Martlyn 304 8B2·264!)
Canada
Sporting Goods •• • ••
• • •.• 520
Boys &amp; Womens Clothtng
•95% no touch tnolght
• •••••. •••.• 720
SUV 's for Sale •
Cross Creek Auct on Buffalo Computers 4 U IS seekmg a •Me&lt;llcallno &amp; 401 K
Truc ks for Sale
•••••. 715
Garage Sale T PI Area AuctiOn Saturday 6pm Computer Tech for parl ttme
•Hometlme moat
Upholstery
870
above Eastern Htgtf School Butldmg IS full of used leadtng to full ttme work You
WHktndl
Vans For Sale •
730
6 30th 7 2nd 9 00 ? furm Merchandtse
21 mch mlJsl be prof1c1ent tn com •$500 Sign on bonus
Wanted to Buy
•
• •••••••• 090
tu re k1ds&amp;adult
clothes Crattmans sell prope lled puter repa1r dependable an
Wanted lo Buy- Farm Supplies
••••• 620
designer purses
lawn Mower m1lk cans lots honestl Bn ng resume m
Wan ted To Do
• •• . 180
of
small
Collectibles person to Computers 4 U Muat have 1 Claa A COL
Wanted to Rent. ••• ••••.• • ••
• •. •• .• 470
June 30 Only 9 00 to 4 00 BUtldtng 1s Atr Condtttoned Inc 303 Matn Street, Potnl with 2 yNra experience
072
Yard Sola· Gallipolis
1691 Ltncoln Hgts Clean Vtsa and Master Card (304) Pleasant WV 25550 or call
Yard Sale·Pomeroy!Middte ••• •• • • • • • . 074
clot hes all sizes furmture 550 1616 Stephen Reedy for dtrect1ons at 304-675 can Bob at BOIHI52· 2362
••••.••• 0 76
Yard Sale· Pt Pleasant . • .. •
everythmg goes
Mon·Frt Bam 4pm
5262
1639

~

r

t

CLASSIFIED INDEX

f'

I

YARIJ

•

i

m

ELEC CONTROLS ENGI
NEEA Defense program
needs hands-on engtneer
lor PLC programmmg
(RSLogiX I RSVtew) ~gh
speed data acqwst tton alec
!neal test equtpmenl heavy
eqUtpment and automated
control sys1ems BSEE +
related et&lt;penence or equ1v
alent destrecl UTRON Inc
www untrontc com FAX 703
369·5298
Gallta Metgs CAA ts seektng
a part ttme Reg1stered
Nurse for the Meigs Help Me
Grow Program
Wtll be
reqUired to com plete m
home tnlant and maternal
health assessments w1th
parttctpants of all socto-eco
nomtc backgrounds Must
work flext ble hours wt th
extensiVe local tra... el and
some out of area travel
Mu st be bondable have
vali d drtver s license and
reltable
transportatto n
Deadline for applications
and resumes Is July 12
2007, 4 00 p m a1 GMCAA
PO Box 272 Cheshtre Oh10
45620 GMCAA ts an EOE
Help wanted at Darst Adult
Group Home some ltft1ng
7 5 shift 740·992·5023

John Sang Fonl Lincoln
Mercury
Needs three lndiVtduals
that are mterested m a
career as an Automottve
Consultant We are loo k~ng
for tntivtduals that are out
gomg sell mottvated and
profess100al We have one
of the best compensation
plans tn the tndustry end a
benef1ts package that has
health msu ranca 401K
retirement dtsabtlily and life
tnSI,l rance If you want to
ears an et&lt;cellentltvtng and
bener yourself centact Pat
H1ll or Brtan Ross.

Ove rbroo~

Center located
@333 Page 51 Middleport
Ohio ts pleased to announce
we wtll be holdtng an STNA
Class scheduled for July
Hours w1ll be Sam 4 30pm If
you are tnterested tn JOtnmg
our fnendly and dedicated
staff please stop by our
front offtce Man Fn 9am5pm and ftll out an appl1ca
t1on Full hme and part t1me
pos1tions available to those
quallfted mchvtduals com
plettng the class Appltcants
must ba dependable (attendance IS a must) team players wtth poSJttve attitudes to
JOtn us tn prov1d1ng outstandtng quahty care to our rest
dents 1f you have any ques
t1ons
contact
Halite
John Sang Font Lincoln Bumgarner LPN
Staff
Mercury
Develop ment Coordmator
Has a postllon open tor an @740'-992-6472 Overbrook
Automottve Techntoan We Center ts an E 0 E and a
are loo ~ l ng for an mdtvtdu al part1c1pant of th e Drug Free
that has a well rounded
Workplace Program
knowledge about automotive repatr Ford Motor
R&amp;J Trud&lt;tng Leading The
Company tra1ntng wtll be
Way R&amp;J Truckmg now
provtded lind Is on gotng
Hlnng at our New Haven,
We offer a competl!tve com VN Term1nal For Aegtonal
pensatton plan and our ben- Hauls-Dump Otv 1 year
efit package tncludes health OTR venftable exp Gall 1msurance 401K reltrement 800·462 9365 ask for Ken1
d1sabtlily tnsurance and hfe
1nsurance If you are hred of Scemc Htll s Nurstng t enter
working for someone !halts IS currently accepting appll·
not workmg for you or want cattons for AN s ar1d LPN's
to better yourself contact Appl cat10ns mu st possess a
Servtce Manager Jtm
current license m the State
Thomas
of Ohto Potential applicants
should
contact
D1ana
Harless DON a1 (740)446
7150 EOE

Thanks to
everyo11e who
helped make
Wilma
(Ginther)
Seama11 's
birthday a day
to remember!

The Cratg Group needs outgoing Ohto re stdents to help
with statewide campatgn
Each person wtll make 1 to 2
dollars per Signature &amp;; up to
$500 weekly Cell 740·251·
7591 &amp; ask for Chns or
dbanas @cratge mall
group com
The Craig Group needs outgomg tndtvtduals lo help wtth
state-wtde campaign Make
$1-$2 per stgnature &amp; up to
$500 weekly Please call
Chris a1 740 251-7591 or

e

m

a

1

......

3 or 4 bed1oom house lor
sate 1n New Haven The
bathroom IS newly remod
eled covered front porch
back deck garage fenced tn
back yard new central heat
and a1r new crown moldmg
and baseboards new dtsh
washer anct oven As~mg
well below recent appratsal
ol 80k Call 304 882 3773
f01 more detatls

2007 Clayton
58A/3BA 2000 Sq F!
Starttng at $33 00/sp ft t
NO DOWN PAYM ENT
to quahhed buyers
Th e Home S how
Ashland , KY
888·928·3426
2007 Doublew1de
3BR 2BA
Delivered &amp; Set $39 999
The Home Show
Ashland Ky
Toll free 888 928 3426

2008

$49,989

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC1AL SECUR11Y /SSt•
Nolee Unless We Wm1
1 888 582 3345

Beauttful Mtddleport hamel
JaR 2BA full basemen11
1/2 car garage wrth a room
above Many NEW leaturesn
Must see ttus one' 740 416
1548

HOMES
FOR SALE
0 Down even wtth less than
perfect credtt ts avatlable on
th1s 3 bedroom 1 bath
home Corner lot ltreplace
modern kitchen ]acuzzt tub
Payment amund $550 per
month 740 367-7129
104 Tatum
Dr
New
Haven WV 3bd/2ba Ranch
tg StJr.troom 2 car gar great
area 0 304 675 3637 E
304 882 2334

Help Wanted

Now Accepting Applications
For These Positions
• Service Manager
• Service Advisor
• Auto Technician
Jam ihe Automol! ve Excellence group al
Sm11h GM Superstore CondHI,ue shou ld
have automotovc knowledge and &lt;1b1hty 10
work well With employees and customers.
Dehver Resume 1n person to
1900 Eastern Avenue G&lt;ill tpolts OH
40 I K Benefit Pl.m
Hea lth/L11e Insurance
Generou s Pay Plans
Clean Work Envuonment

SMITH SUPERSTORE
Chevrolet· Bu 1ck- Pontiac
1900 Eastern Avenue. Galhpohs

All real estate adver11slng
tn thts newspape r ts
sub)ect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes ll !llegat to
advertise 'any
preference, hmrtatton or
dlscrlmlnalton based on
race, color, religion, sex
famlhal status or national
origin or any mtentlon to
m11ke any such
preference, hm1tatlon or
d1scnmlna 11o n

This newspaper Will not
knowingly acce pt
adver11sements for real
estate which is In
vJolatt on of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that au
dwellings advert aed In
this news paper are
available on an equal
opportuntty bases

New 3 Bedroom homes lrom
$214 36 per month Includes
many upgrades dehvery &amp;
set up (740)385 2434
Ntce used 3 bedroom home
vtnyVshtngle Wtlt help wuh
deltvery 740-385-4367
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program $0 Down II you
own land or use Fam1ly
Land We own the Bank ~our
F

'oved

::;;;~;~80

1 56 Acres Ohio Rtver
lrontage Gas Electnc
Wa ter on stte 446-0974

I 0 66 acres 1594 Northup
Rd tn Green Twp Galha Co
24t&lt;4B barn recent survey
no restrlcttons beauttful
house locat1on all utthtles on
Sl1e $79 900 (937)362
4775 (9 37)605 3581
2 Acre Bldg lot on State
Route 7 304 675 4421
55 acres mora or less
569 000 Call 740 256 9247

H OLSKS
HUD HOMES1 4b0 only
HJHREN
I
$1551mo 3bd $18 1/mo
More 1 4bd homes avatl
ablo 5% dn 20 yrs @ 8% $155/mol Buy 4bd HUO
For hS!tngs 1 BOO 559-41 09 hamel 5% dn 20yrs @ 8%
For l sttngs BOO 559 4109
X F144
x1709
Newly built home tn Green
Twp on Ktng Ad off 1
2 Br House In
Netghborhood Rd Approt&lt; New Haven $3251mon1h
Pets
1200 sq It 3 acres mfl 2 SA $325/depOSII No
4)c.8_82_36_5_2_ _ _ _
2 full baths w/whlrlpoot tubs c(3_0_
large LA Askmg 87 500 -1302 Hogg St 2br House
740 446 7029
Central HeaVAC 1 year
Lease No Pets Secu nty
DepoSit Ty 304 675 4030

posSI~y

23

Bedroom turmshed
14x702 bedroom 2 full bath House for Rent tn PI
newly remodeled New cen Pleasant No Pets Call 304
Ira I a1r umt and furnace call 675 0032
740 3677142 or 740 794
3Bd house 138 L1ncotn Httl
0022 $9 000
$400 Call 614 491 4650 1or
appltcauon No pets Dep
1979 Htll Crest 12X65 good
$400
condt!IOn 2 Br 1 bath
$1 500 740 416 6520
HUD HOMES! 4bd only
$1551mo 3bd S18 11mo
1998CiavtonSptrtl ll Lotsof More 1 4bd homes avalleKiras et&lt;cellen! conditiOn able 5% dn 20 yrs @ B0 0
Must be moved Call 949 For ltsttngs 1 BOO 559 4109
,269B after 4 p m
x F144

Truck Drtver with Class A
COL Local Hauhng Man Fn ,
home avery night Reliable
responstble mature Send
resume to Dover Resume
PO Box 655 Galhpolts Oh
45631

Galllpollo Coroor Collogo
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-446-4367,
1·800 21 4.()452
www gaU1polisclreercollege com
Accredited MerMer AccrM1IIng

Council lor l ~end&amp;nt Colleges
and Schools 12748

WANTID
To Do
A·OK-Corrals &amp; Barns
Melal Rooll ng, Shingles
Concrete
Remodeling
Decks,
Pole
Barns,
Garagts Free estimates Call
304-633·1230

Attention!
Local company otl'ertng "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro
grams for you to buy your
home tnstead of renttng
' 1QOOJ., ftnancmg
' Less than perfect cred 1
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
locators
(740f367 0000

r

• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
• Central heat &amp; AJC
• Washer/dryer hookup
• Tenam pays electrtc

(304)882-3017

F

Remodeled 2br 1 ba
Hartford wv $375/month
Aeferences / Oepos 1t
raqutred No Pets 304 5764037

~:--:------.,
!""~'

APAKThii~~TS

..__. .
f{.JRiioiiRiiitN-1_,.,
•
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for Rent Me gs County In
town No Pets Deposit
Requtred (740)992 5174 or
F 40)44 1 0110

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments, furmshed and unfur
ntshed and houses tn
Pomeroy and M ddleport
securtly depostt requtred no
pets 740 992 2218
1 BR Apt WID Hookups
0 Utet wooded tocat10n
Free tnternet www spnngvalley properties com
(740)339 0362

Tumca, MISSISSIPPI
THE GRAND CASINO
September 5· 7, 2007

Contemplatmg gastnc by·pass
or the Lap- Band procedure?
J01n us to learn more
For more 1nformat1on, call

446·5825

$295/person
Based on double occupancy
State roo m taxes wtll be applted to
credtt card at check·tn
Includes flight, hotel accom·
modattons luggage &amp; transfers
Pnvale tel leaves from Charleston,
WV Must be 21 years of age
credtl cards, checks, money
orders and payroll deduclton
accepted No refund s
Ll MITED SEATSI
To make reservattons pl ease
call PVH Commumty Relat1 ons,
(304) 675·4340, ext 1326

MOTOCROSS RACE
Sat. 6/30/07
6:00p.m.
MASON CO
FAIRGROUNDS
At 62 N

Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30 pm)
• 675-5463

'

'

BINGO
Middleport
American Legion

Saturday
6:30pm
Be sure to come out &amp;
support your veterans

.

'

'
,,

3 Br $395 M plus U1 Plus
Dep av 1st ol M 3rd St
Racme 740 247 4292

,\tl\l\1()(1\.

Old ptano&amp;lots of sheet
EQIII':\IIXI
mustc &amp;200 OBO needs to
be moved 5200 BTU AIC
never used $50 446 3460 0% Ftnanctng 36 Mos
liM
avatlable now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero Turns 8
One ot a ktnd 17x21 1ramed 5 99% FtJBd Rat e on John
coal mmtng ptcture shows 2 Deere Gator&amp; Ca1m chael
yOung men wtth mmtng EqUipment (740)446 2412
equtpment on gettmg off
work m front of btll board John Deer 5500 4WD 73
around 1930 should see HP cab atr 540 loader
$165 Also lult 2 ptece bo)( bucket manure forks round
of 25 "Eiey Kynoctl" 14 bale fork very good cund
gauge snot gun shell s rare 740 256 6864
$200 740 533 3870
Kteler Built Valley Btson
and
L•vest oc~
Pole Barns 30)(40~10 Horse
Loadma)
Delivered &amp; Ereded $8 595 Trailers
Dumps
&amp;
plus Sales Ta•
Call Gooseneck
(937)71B 1471 www nat on Uhhly Aluma Alummum
Tra1lers B&amp;W Gooseneck
widepolebarns com
Httches
Tratler
Parts
Schwmn Atrdyne Evol Carmichael
Trailers
Camp
EKerctse
Bt~e
(740)446 2412
--,..-:..._
Excellent Condthon $200
OBO (740)446 7937
Ma s!ley Ferguson
150
~z:---~-----, Tractor
wtth
loader
Pf.~I'S
lnternaiiOnal 574
165
__
tUR SAi f
Massey Ferguson
2B4
1n1erna110nal
9N Ford
AKC Boston Terner Pups 7 1740)286 6522
wks old both mate Parents
on prem with pedtgree vet
LIII:SfOc K
chkd shots wormed 740
388 9325
6 Donkeys 5 female 1 whtte
AKC Reg Vor1oe ( F ) 11 male Call 740 256-9247 or
wee~s
old Shots and
wormed Call 740 339-3600

____

i

r

f 25665~~~

r

SUVs
lOR SAI.F

04 N1ssan XTerra 4900l
mrles S 10900 740 256
1618
1999 Mercury Mountamee1
4WD 102 000 mtles EKe
Cond
Sunroot
Powel
Leather
Seats
S6200
(740 245 0344 after 5 04Jm

r

4x4

foR S~1 1

02 Goelge Dakota 4K4
79000 mtles Asktng $8500
Day 645 7920 Evenmg 256
1905
91 Chevy Ext cab 4X4
excellent true~ lor the year
ctean ou1 has some rust
runs great 740 256 6160

rlO

I

95 Plymouth van atr auto V
6 $1200 060 740 256
1652

40 MlflllRL)'UrJo;/

I

4 WHt:IU.RS
2005 H DFat Boy custom
maroon
w 1embossed
flames 1 ol 200 made BOO
m•les
smce
new pnc e
$19 000 OBO ca n tor

AKC Reg Beagle Pupp1es
304 576 2779
AKC Reg Shttzu plJpp1es for LIVestock Feed shelled corn
sale $350 740 388 8477
$5 20/50 lb &amp; horse crunch
$7 22/ 50 tb
&amp; more
AKC Reg
Black Lab ~evtlle 740 69B 091 1
Pupptes $15000 74D-742
111
2966 If no answer please
leave message
10

•'1Mk"fi'

+

ALTOS

AKC

Vor~te pupptes

2
10wks old $900 each
3 female 8wks old $BOO
each 2 males $700 eaCh 2
female 6wks old $900 each
very small 1 male 6w~s old
$900 very small shots &amp; vel
checked 304 B95 3926

-""l"'"

(740)992 5856

\In I "''"''Ill'

t

l::t::O:o--~
fA
~R!
-,1 -~

Ellm View
Apartments

HJR SAI E

77 Searay 351 Skts anct
table Allns good tandem
81&lt;1e tra1ler S1600 446 2923

88 Wellcra« 20« V 6 350
Mercru1ser tandem a)(le
tratler w/brakes good cond
740 256 6160

89 Bayhner 27ft New VB
03 Ford Taurus 54 000 351 OMC Eng Frtdge
bathroom/shower
m11es 55900 OBO 740 256 stove
1618
Sleeps ~ 6 tandem a)(te
tratler
w1brakes
greal
05 Chrysle1 300 Lmted shape 740 256 6160
35000 m1le s fully loaded 1
owner garage kept $20 000 93 Marada 21ft 4 3 V 6
CKC Toy Rat T.erners Choc 245 5017 I 304 593 6446 Mercrwser tandem axle
&amp; While 1st shots tails
tratler w/brakes great condt
docked Asl&lt;mg $250 379 1954 Chevrolet 210 2 Door !ton 740256-6160
350 V 8 350 Automaltc
9515 or 645·6857
$13 500 00 (740)949 2909
CI~II'I RS &amp;
Mtnt Dachshund pups vet
MoroR
HI1\1E);
checked shots &amp; wormed 1991 Ford EKplorer XLT 9
(Aegtstered) 7w~s old $125 Ltft 33 t1res nert bars
148 ooo mtles Auto PW 1988 NomadCamper twtn
7410 388 03 18 Mom&amp; Dad
PL
$2000 (740)339 2070
bunks &amp; front bed Excellent
on Premtses
condtl ton
Bath/w tub&amp;
Purebred Toy Poodle pup 1995 Chevy Lum1na runs shOwer Pull behmd 3dog
tuck saw mtll mAke an ofler
Twm Atvers Tower IS accept ptes CKC vet checked Ia Is great 446 9370
9492115
mg applications for watttng docked dewclaws removed B7 Mercury Sable runs
Its! for Hud substzed 1 br shots &amp; wormed we have good new parts $375 OBO 97 Httchhtker Discovery 34
the blk &amp; apucot M &amp; F puce 740 446 2923
apartment lor
1/211 S!h wheel camper
elderly/dtsabled call 675 Males $300 Females $350
made
by NU WA 1 Double
97 Fo rd Mustang v 6 5
6679
Equal
Housmg (740)992·7007
speed $2800 740 379 sltde and 1 smgle slide plus
_
o pi;p~q-rtu_"..;
'1Y-::-.,..--.,
&amp;
et&lt;tras that wtll go wtth thts
9381
"
rK
urut Et&lt;cellent shape As~tng
15
TRl'tKS
S 16 500 Call aher 6pm 740
_
1
HIR'SALE
208 0507 or 256 1243
Home grown tomatoes No ·--ioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio_,.,
Mobtle Home space m Rto Sunday Sates 1t mtles west
04 Ford Ranger X\T e~end
Grande W1ll ta~e up to on 141 Galli Its
ed cab 4)(4 Standard V 6
16 80 446 3617
X
e)(c
cond
S 13 500 10
1111'11
(304)675 8893 al1er 5prn
Pnme commerctal space for
L\U'KUVI:Aib"IIIS
rant at Spnngvall ey Plaza
1995 Ford F 250 P1ck up
Wanted to E)(Change or
Call 645 2192
BASEM ENT
Trade Westem Books 304 truck good mechan1cal
WATERPROOFING
cond
5
9
l
5
speod
trans
WA~TfJ)
675 5884
Uncondthonal ltfet me guar
$4000 Ftrm 740 949 2127
IURENl
antee l ocal references fur
1999 Ford Ranger XLT 4 0 mshed Establtshed l 975
LANDOWNERS NEED
Engtne 4t&lt;4 Sup Cab 5 spd Call 24 Hrs (740) 446
EXTRA FARM INCOME?
Automa1c $6200 17401446 0870 Rogers Basement
We have responSible sports
1492
Waterprooftng
men lookmg to lease hunttng
property tn th1s area
Mtdwest Trophy Leases Inc
(304)532 60 15 or 1-BOO
698·1073

r___

""·urrs

Flliiis•"p,iii~iii~
iiio-rl L,--V·EG-I:.I,·\H·I·~~-,.1 f

r

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Responstble,TN hunter loo~
tng to lease your land or
farm for hunting Please call
423 748 7045 or ema1l
rdavts@M USFIBER com

\IIIH II I \lll'i
1o

5 30 pm • 6 30 pm

MlSOolJAN~:oL~
Mf:ROtANIIL~t-

Large 4 bedroom hOuse tn 8187 or 304 593B107 Attor Spm
Pomeroy very clean newty Gracious Living I and 2
remodeled new cabtnets Bedroom Ap!s at Vtltage
new carpet, (740)949 -2303 Manor and Alverstde Apts tn
Mtddleport hom $327 to
Mouu~: Ho~m;
$592 740 992 5064 Equal
l'oR RFN1
Housmg Oppor!untty Thts
tnst1tutton ts an Equal
14x70 very nice 3 BA 2BA Opporruntty Provtder and
pnvacy tn country Metgs Employer
School dtsl $475 + dep
859 806 4354 or 740 742· Immaculate 2 bedroom
apa rtment New carpet &amp;
3046 Available July 1
cabtnets fres hly pa1nted &amp;
2 Br
A/C Very mce decorated WID hookup
Johnson Mob1le Home Park Beautiful country setttng
740 446·2003 or 446 1409 Must see to apprec1ate
$4001mo (614)595- 7773 or
2 BR 1 BA c/a, 1710
1 800 798 4686
Chatham
Ave Gall tpohs
Ooublewtde (28x48) 3BA' Mtddteport Beech St 2 br
2BA c/a 1622 Chatham furntshed apartment uttlittes
Ave Galhpohs 2 BR 2BA patd depostt &amp; references
cia 9101 SA 7 Cheshtre no pets [740)992 0165
740 208·7861
Mtddleport North 4lh Ave 2
2 BA Btg yard Storage br furn1shed apartment
butldtng $325/mo plus $225 depostt &amp; references 1o
depostt Renter pays all uhh- pels (740)992 0165
110S (740)256 6202
Modern 1 BR Apt Call 446
3 BA 14)(70 Addavtlle 3736
Scheel dtstnct 740 367
New 2BA apartments
7762 or 367 7272
Washer/dryer
hoo~ u p
Beauttful Rtver Vtew tn s!ove/relrtgerator tncluded
Kanauga Ideal for 1 or 2 Also unrls on SA 160 Pets
people references No pets Wek::omel (740)441 0194
Loc 5 m1 from Gavm
Tara
Townhouse
(740)441 0 181
Apartments Very Spac1ous
For rent 2 Bedroom tratler 2 Bedrooms CIA 1 112
$250 Mo tncl water $200 Bath Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby
depoSit-no pets 740-985 Pool Patte' Start $425fMo
3945
No Pets
Lease Plu s
Mobile homes tor rent Security Deposit Aequ red
M1ddleport area no pets (740)446 348 1

-----

HOLZER CENTER FOR
COMPREHENSIVE WEIGHT
LOSS INFORMATIONAL
MEETING
Monday, July 2

APARTh1~J'&gt;TI
FOR RENT

For rent or for sale 2 BA
Ntce Aemocleled Home m
town No Pet s Renovaled
All new carpet
Call Furnishe d Apt 2nd Ave
Gallipolis
Upsta1rs
(740)446 7425
Bedroom No Pets All utth
In Pomeroy House lor rentt 3 lies patd (740)446 9523
Bd 2 bath newly remodeled total electnc 740 643- Garage Apart Masoo t br fully
lurolshed ut1frt~es pa•d $450.mo
5264
$350dep References 304 593

2 bedrooms hvmg room
ktlchen 1 bath apartment
have central a1r Furntshed
w1th couch, cha1rs washer
dryer stove mtcrowave
199B Redman &amp; 2 acres 3 For Rent Bnck house m
beds dtnnmg table and
bd &amp; 2 baths oH New L!ma Mercerv1Ue 1BA Apt all uttl·
chatrs $400 depostt $450 a
m Rutland for sale or rent tttes 8. cable pa1d tn Crown
month call 304 B82 2523
74().992 3514
C11y (740)256 81 32
leave a message and num
ber tf no! al home

I

The Woda Group, a leader
1n affordable hous1ng ts currently searchmg for a FullTime Property Maintenan ce
Techn1c1an tn the Pomeroy
Ohto area Experience wtth
apartment or multi-family
complexes ts a strong plus
Requirements
"Matn tatn property to a htgh
standard curb appeal
• Ab16ty to organize and pnonttze work
"Expenenced wtth plumb
1ng drywall.lpamttng electrt
cal
"Must be able to pass background check
Salary ts defendan t upon
e)(penence We are an equal
opportuntty employer You
may apply be ema tltng
dlarue@wodagroup com or
by matl to Attn 0 LaRue, 8
5th Street, Wheeltng WV
26003 or by l ax to 340·214
0720 EOE

--- ---

0

r

dbanas@cratggroup com

--- - -... - ---- ....... . - --

IiL,-M-~.!....:8."•'"OM·£··-~.,J ...t.'-·ro·"-~.R-~-~T I

HO\Jt);
mRSALF

HUGE

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
Help Wanted

~10

3bd
GALLIPOLIS
Forec losure!
Bu y 1or
$50 9001 Only $404/mo 5%
dn 20yrs @ 8"/., For hsttngs
call 800 559 4109 xF254
Great used 2005 3 Ued10om
16x80 wllh vmyllshmgte
1
Attentton
Must sell Only $25 995 w11h
Local company offertr'lQ NO deh\16ry Call (7 40)385 4367
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams for you to buy your
home tnstead of rentmg
• 100"o ftnancmg
PROfi-..'!SIONAL
• Less than pertect credtt
NEW
4 Bed
Sj,JNICES
accepted
M&amp;J Cleantng Servtce • Payment could be the
Busmess and Residential same as tent
111111111141.121.2151
Locators
licensed tn Oh1o and WV Mortgage
mymldwesthome com
Call304·444 4694
(740)367-llOOO

3 BR 1BA Large Fam1ly
Room frtdge W/0 large
lot Close to Holzer Call
441 5826 or 446 9664

- '

Immediate opening for
tnataltatlon/sarvlce technl·
clan for the secunty alarm
CCTV su rvetllance field
Candtdates should be
dependable honest, and
self starter capable of work
tng on own Education or
training m Electro ntcs,
lndustr al
Matntenance
Computer
Tra1n1ng
or
Networkmg would be plus
es Company wt ll tratn quah
!ted candtd~t e Compet111ve
pay scale wtlh posstble ben
efu package For personal
mterv1ew respo nd wtth
resume 10 Consohdated
Secunty Systems
240
Upper
Atver
Road
Gallipoli s
OH
45631 Local home health agen cy
now htnng PCA, CHHA,
(740)446·2304
CNA STNA w1U tran tf necessary Classes start July
IRS JOBS
91h Call 740· 441 1377
$18 46 $32 60/hr now htr
tng Pad Tratn ng IS provtd MACHINIST For manual
ed For appltcatton and tree lathes, m1lhng machmes,
government JOb tnfo call saws radtal dnlls Must be
Amer1can Assoc of Labor 1 able to hold tolerances to
913·599·8244 24/hrs emp 00005" tn ftne wo r ~ and
serv
accurately cut 'lanous mate,
female and buttress threads
JOb T1tle Towboat D1eset Must read drawings and
Mechantc mmtmum 40 m a ~e parts to speclftcatton
hours a wee k Monday G Code destred ltft trUck
th rough Fnday Wtl hng to operatton a plus UTRO N,
wor~ overttme some light Inc www utromc com FA&gt;&lt;
electncal abtlitles on call 703·369·5298
twtce a month expenence
requ1red Excellent benefit Middeport Pubhc Works 1s
package 401 K avatlable, now takmg epplt cahons for a
patd holt days company pen laborer Appltcattons can be
ston patd vacation Blue picked up at the Publtc
Cross/Blue Shteld Medtcal Works Office 237 Race
Mlddleporl
V1s1on Included Dental plan S1reet,
Bonuses Please contact Application dead! ne ts 4 PM
Mtke Gray at Campbell on July 18 2007 EOE
Transportation Company at
POST OFFICE NOW
304·675·4545
HIRING
Avg Pay S201hr or
Overbrook Center ts current
$57K annually
ty accepttng appl cattons for
lncludtng Federal Benefits
STATE TE STED Nursmg
and OT Pa1d Tralntng,
Asststants Full Ttme and
Vacattons-FTIPT
Part Ttme pos1t1ons avatl·
1 800·584 1775 Eld #8923
able Interested applicants
USWA
can ptck up an a~ hcatlo n or
contact Halite Bumgarner VACANCY. H S Sclonco
LPN Slaff Development ln1tructor
Valid Oh1o
Coordtnalor
@ 740 992 Science
certlflcahon
6472 M F 9a-5p at 333 Page reqUired CONTACT Gallla·
S1, Mtddlepor1 Oh EOE &amp; a Jackson-Vmton
JV SD
parttclpa.nl of the Drug-Free (740)245 5334 Ext 201
Workplace Program
EEO

Borrow Sman Con tacl
1he Ohto DIVISIOn ot
Ftnanct al
lnstJIUtton's
Offtce ol Consumer
Affatrs BEFORE you ref1'
nance your home or
obtatn a loan BEWARE
of IBQuests for an~ large
advance payments of
fees or tnsurance Call the
Olftce ol Consumer
Affa1rs toll tree at 1 B66
278 0003 to learn 1f the
mortgage broker or
lender
ts
p1operly
licensed (Th1s ts a publiC
servtce announcement
from the Oh10 Valley
Pubhshtng Company)

3 Bed10om
2 Bath
Fireplace
40x60 Barn
Pleasant Valley Ad near RIO
Grande 1 8 acres ava1lable
starttng
at
S85 000
(740)709 1166

L'JUI _.

LABORER EARN AS YOU
LEARN Slart bulldtng lor
you r future now by jotmng
OlK ProfessiOnal Team and
learn the sktll s to become a
Htgh Pressure Cleaning
Matntenance Techntctan All
postttons reqUtre weekly
TRAVEL outstde of Oh10,
Company provides lodgtng
and
transportation
PerDiem AVERAGE s1ar1·
mg wage w~ h cost of benefitS mctuded ts $205 00 per
fteld day worked , wtth a
chance to advance up to
$263 00 per ft eld day
worked We provtde patd
tratntng and EXCELLENT
BENEFITS
Pre·
Employmen1 DRUG TEST
and a valtd Dnver's ltcense
IS requtred Class A COL ts
a plus but not required
Send work htstory and day
ttme phone number to
TECH NICIAN TRAINEE.
PO BOX 565 MARIETIA
OHIO 45750 EOE

HN OH C•:**

Hllii'ilil

kttncarlyle@comca st n et

LOST DOG
Gray and wh te female
I am looktng for a Chrtstan Shttzu t2 yrs old answers
Man no smoktng or drink to Katie lost Sunday
tng No mustache or beard 6/24/07 on 3rd Ave
Ages between 58 lhru 70 Reward offered 614 271My cell number 1 304-812 5B8B

r

Carll of Thanks

Tribune-Sentinel-Register will be ru pont lble tor no mort than the coal of the apace occupl«&lt; by the errOl' and only thellrat innrt(on.
any 1011 or eKpense that reaulla lrom the publication or orntaalon ot an advtrtlaement Correction will be made In tht nrat avallab$e edition

PE
_ ·.RSO
- NAU
- S

4252

Now you can hove borders and graphics
"'-'
added to your classified acts
(.~
,.,
Borders$3.00/perod
~
Graphics soc for small
$1.00forlorge

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

LfflT AND

_.I r

L,__
r

Display Ads
All Display : :&amp;2 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To

• Start Vour Ads With A. Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
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Dally In- Column . 1 : 00 p.m .
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•NOTICh
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommends
that you do business With
people you know and
NOT to send money
through the matl until you
have mvesttgated the
offenng

Mt~'IEV
ffiUlAN

HousEHOI o

Gooo;

Exerctse btke table lamp ftl
tng cabtnet set of chtna for
12 set of crystal goblets set
of Chrtstmas dtshes tor 12
4AM &amp; Bath SIO'Ie frtdge mahogany dresser w/mtrror
ultltltes patd upstatrs 46 double bed w/mattress full
Ohve
St
No
pets stzs swJVe l olftce chatr
$450/month 446 3945
wooden glider w/cus hton
btg mans rocker reclmer
book shelves computer
table desk &amp; cha1r 1
mahogany ntgh! stand alltn
very good condttton 740
245 5633
I

3 Rms &amp; bath WID hookup
clean No pets 446 1519

Mollohan Fumture Great
selec tton lor a Great prtce
A HIDDEN TREAS URE'
Drtve a ltttle save a loti 202
laurel
Commons
Clark Chapel Rd 1 Btdwell
Apartments Largest m the
OH (740)388 0173
area' Beauttfully renovated
throughou t tnclud ng brand
MlSCI LIANIDUS
new ~l i chen and bath
MERCHANDISE
Starting at $405 Call today'
(304)273 3344
$ For Old Auto Battertes 1
Apartment avat lab le now 99 $2 50ea 100+ $3 ooea
Atverbend Apts New Haven 250+ $4 OOea THE BAT
WV Now accepttng apphca TERY TERMI NAL 1 800
lions for Hud Substdtzed 796 6797
one Bedroom Apts Utlflltes
Included Based on 30% of
$500 Coupon
adjusted Income
Call
Hot Tub Outlet U
(304)882 3121 avatlable for Top Quality/Warranty Mtlton
Semor and Dtsabled People Flea Mkt SIS 606 326 0777
Equal Housmg Opportuntty
Apartmen t for rent 1 2 2003 Ex1ss 3 Horse
B~rm remodeled new car Gooseneck Tra1ler Excellent
pet stove &amp; fng waler cond can 304-576 2201
sewer trash pd Mtddleport
5425 00
No pets Rel
JET
reqwred 740 843 5264
AERATION MOTORS
Aepatred New &amp; Rebutlt In
Beautiful Apts at Jackson Stock Call Ron Evans 1
52 Westwood 800 537-9528
Estates
Drtve from $365 to S560
740 446 2568
Equal
NEW AND USED STEEL
HouSing• Opportuntty Thts
Steel Beams Ptpe Rebar
lnSIIIUIIOn IS an Equal
For
Concrete
Angle
Opportuntty Provider and
Channel
Flat
Bar
Staal
Employer
Gratmg
Fo1
Drams
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· Drrveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L
Scrap Metals Open Monday
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE I
Townhouse
apartments Tuesday Wednesday &amp;
and/or small hOuses FOR Friday Bam 4 30pm Closed
RENT Call (740)441 11 11 Thursday
Saturday
&amp;
for appltcahon &amp; tnformatton Sunday (740)446-7300

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or ·older?
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Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 29, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

~rtbune

Friday, June 29,,2007

www.mydailysentinel.colll

- Sentinel ~ l\egtster

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Utribune -

CLASSIFIED
'

I""

WANllll

To Do
Lawn mowing Rates by the
JOb, not rhe hotJr Free
Est1mates Call Paul @
(304)675·2940
Lawn Care Servtce Mowtng
&amp; Tnmmtng Call (740)441·
• 1333 01 (740)645.()546

In One Week With Us
E-ma11
class1f1ed@ myda1lylnbune com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
~rtbune 1

Webs1tes

Prolesstonally
Clean
Offtce / Hau sectean1n g
• Reasonable
Rates
References (304)675 2208

www mydailytnbune com
www myda1lysentmel com
www myda1lyreg1ster.com

Wanted to Do Care gtver
Wtll care for elderly m the r
home,
16
yrs
e~~:p
References Avatlable

l\egtster

II\\\( 1\1

{304) 675-1333

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IQ WRITE AN AO

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the ri ght to edit,
re1ect or cancel any
ad at any time
,.Errors Mu st B
eported on the firs
ay of publlcatton an
he Tribune Sentmel
b

he sp,ce occ upte

y the error and ani
he f1rst msertton W
hall not be liable lo

ton of an advertls
ent Corrections w11
e made In the f1rs
vatlable edition

1\\111 \(I \II \1'

In Ne xt Day ' s Pa per

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Sunday In- Column . 1 : 00 p.m.
For Sunda ys Paper

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POLICIES Ohio Valle~ Publishing r11ervea 1tte right t o edh, reject, or ctncel any ad at any time Errora muat be reported on

are alwaya confidential • Current rate card appllll • All real Illata advertlaemenlt ar~ aub]ect to the Federal Fair Houalng Act of 1988
I wanted 1d1 meeting EOE t landarda We will not knowingly accept any advertlalng In vlolltlon ol the llw

&lt;\.NNOUNCEMJ.:NTS

Sf~ffl~

YouR.

it~""- Al'll:&gt; C. f\~E&lt;&gt;E&lt; IN

YOJJ~ \"oa:~ MAIIil ,

&amp;;;;:-----~

IW·E't.\1

I r._.Y_A_RD_S_AI..._r

Yo \J '?.

YARII SM.E·

PRAY 740740 PRAY FOR
THE USA @ 4 o clock
everyday unttl 7 4 07 4

r

Yov'R€.

Echomg
Meadows
Aestdenttal Center ts now
accepttng appltcatlons for
mature and responsible
Program Asststant/Nurse
Atd s (STNA preferred but
not requtred) F.ull time and
Part time shltt s are both
avatlable for afternoons wtth
a Full ltme ntght shift post
!ton also avatlable Fullttme
postttons are offered wtth a
full beneftl package Apply 1n
person
at
Echomg
Meadows 319 W Unton
Street Athens Oh1o Phone
740·594-3541

G AUJIU.IS

ocloc~

2489 Mtll Creek Rd 6/30 7/t
G IVEAWAY

15 cu II Uprtght Freezer

9 5 fabnc patterns craft
suppltes etc Everythtng
ctTeap ram or Shtne

Older but runs Good 304
882 2447

3 Fam1lies 6129·6130 from 9
5 .Corner of 218 and Cot&lt; Ad
4 ktltens all males black tn Mercervtlle Ktds clothes
&gt;Box number ads ar
and wht!e to good homes Ve1a Bradley Furn
lways confldenl tal
379 2981
3 Fam1ly Sa1 Only 9 4 1 112
G.· l,
Free pupptes to a good
&gt;Current rate car
mt!e out Brushy Pomt Ad
tlome
Call
740
256
1059
pplte s
Turn by Jordans Gas
Kmens 3 F black w/orange
www com1c s com
&gt; All Real
© 2007 by NEA, Inc
&amp; whtte 1 M black wfhtlle 376 Addtson Ptke Sat On ly
dv erlt sements ar
whtle Wtll be ready July 10 9am 1pm Clothes Womens
ubJect to the Federa
Call44 1 0405
Stze 18 26 Household
~;~--::::---~....,
074
atr Houstng Act o
Home ln1enor Mise
YNU&gt; SAIJ. ·
I
WAIIrft]l
11110 H ELP \"A·~
los'l ANil
1968
l'oM~llov/Mn&gt;DLf.
Bm
' · '" ~
4 Famtly Yard Sate 201 &amp;
FOUND
135 Ktnfi!:On Dr Frtday 6/29
&gt; Thts
newspape
Large garage sale July 2 &amp; 3 Absolute Top Dollar U S
ccepts on ly hel
Found on McCormtck Rd Saturday 6130 &amp; Sunday 711 Noble
Summtt
Ad Stiver and Gold Cams Arrow Concrete Company
8am-3pm
anted ads meetm
around 6/22 Small black
Mtd(jleport OhiO Ratn or Proofsets Gold Rtngs Pre
Now hmng for the
EOE stand ards
and gray female dog Well 6 Famtly Frt/Sat 8 ? 2 mt shtne somethmg f01 every 1935
US
Cu rrency
fo llowing pos11tons at our
groomed 645 74B7
out 21B to Raccoon Ad 1 5 one
Solitatre Dtamonds M T S
Galltpohs facthty
) We wtll not knowtng
m• Watch for stgns Large
Com Shop I 51 Second
lost
Blue
Merle
Auslfaltan
Qualified
Mhler Drivers,
ly accept any adver
Movmg
sale
36160 Avenue Gallipolis 740 446
ttems too much to hst
Shepherd male dog wtth red
Meehanlca, Laborers &amp;
lsement tn v1olatton
Rocksprings Ad Pomeroy 2842
collar and dog tags 740 6129 30 Bam ? 3fa m 2 m1les
Loader Operators
t the law
June 291h&amp;30th
9 00
388 9064
out Cla r~ Chapel Ad 5 00 Appliances furntture an Want to buy !ratter/land con
Must be Wllltng to travel
AUeKpenses patd
Btd.vell Baby I toddler ttems d m01e•tt
tract Can pay $400 500
furn tools household t!ems
VacatJon &amp; Healthcare
/man Will also do odd JObs
avatlable
6/30 712 Burnett Ad m sale' Movtng' Frt Sat June 446·2743
4x4 s For Sale •
• ••• 725
Ret rement package
29
&amp;
30
9
00
3
00
2575
Kana uga Clothes kntck
Announcement . . .
...030
I "PI 0\ \II\ I
avat lable
Second St
Syracuse
knac~s aquartums etc
Ant tques
••• 530
,11!1111'
Anllques furmture ~ttchen
Apartments lor Rent
•
440
Drivers
Garage Sate Saturday On ly tlems tools name brand Jr
Auct1on and Flea Market
080
110
Must have at least a current
446 Spuce Street EKt
clothmg vtnyl reco rds
Auto Parts &amp; Accessones
• 760
Hu~ WA~~rrtl l
Class B COL
Auto Repa1r
770
Hauldren Sktdmore Famtly Three famtly yard sale
Must have a satisfactory
Autos for Sale
710
Yard Sale Tons of baby Rttchte restdence Tyree
MVR
100WORKERS NEEDED
Boats &amp; Motors for Sal e .
750
clothes women s clothes Blvd Racme Oh June 29
Must have a current
550
Buoldmg Supplies
JUn ors thru plus stzes baby 30th 9am 5pm b1cycles Assem ble crafts wood
DOT ph1stcal
Busoness and Buoldlngs
. 340
accessones home decor et&lt;erctse equ pment clothes ttems To $480/wk Matenals
Company wlll train
provtded
Free
tn
format
on
Busoness Opportunoty •
2t 0
too much to hst Sale IS and mtsc tlems
mexpenence dnvers who
pkg 24 Hr 801 426 4649
Busmess Trammg . •
.140
located behtnd 5 Star
meet the above cnterta
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
• 790
Mortgage on AT 7 North rust YARD SALE 825 Page
Earn wages 14110$ 18 00
Camptng Equipment. • •
780
before dnve tn theater Frt Street Middleport 6 30 7 2
per hr
Cards of Thanks. .........
010
6/29 &amp; Sat 6/30 from 9 5
and 3
Ch ild/Elderly Care •
190
To apply please send a
Hugo Sate 6/29 30 1/2 mtle Yard sate H1llstde Bapust
Electncai!Refngerat1on
840
resume + a copy of your
out
Georges
Creek
Coke
300
Bnatwood
Drive
EqUipment for Rent
480
Church At 7 June 30 also
Ortver s license MVR and
slut! anttques new socket Ba~e Sa le
Gallt po lts OhiO
Exc avallnb .
830
DOT physlcal10&lt;jl
sets
name
brand
clothes
740
441
9633
Farm Equipment . •
610
YARD SALE' across from
Fa rms for Rent •• • •
430
Movtng Sale 6/29 6/30 9am
Arrow Concrete, Inc
Holzer Asststed Ltvtng
Fa rms for Sale
330
?
on
At?
behtnd T&amp;T P•t Stop Chester.S·?
ATTN Marla Jenkins
Galltpolts has Employment
For Lease
490
Burttle/Sunoco
Stahon ~6
YARnSAu~.
PO Box 4336
Opportuntltes tor
For Sale
585
Furn
tool s
household
Pl. PLEASANT
Parkersburg, WV 26104
TI
ME
and
as
needed
PART
~or Sal e or Trade
590
ttems
employOarrowc:oncretewv com
Restdent Asststanls
Fr uots &amp; Vegetables. • • •
580
Phone 1 866 505-2776
3
Famtly
Yard
Sale
Sat
11
4
Prefer expenenced STNA
Furn1shed Room s
450
Multt lamtly 6/29 30 Bam
Fax 304·485- t 682
but not requt red
Genera l Haulmg
850
5pm 18B8 Whtle Ad N1ce Howard St Haven Hetgllts
EOE
Bay
&amp;
Toddlers
tlems
Please
apply
1n
person
or
Gtveaway
040
adult and ktds clothes
Household
goods
send Resume to
Happy Ads
050
household ttems &amp; toys
Collecttbles &amp; plenty mtsc 8
Otane Camden AN DON AVON! All Areasl To Buy or
Hay &amp; Gra1n
640
Sat 6/30 9 3pm
Tara ?
Sell Shtrley Spears 304
Help Wanted
••••• 110
Estates
tn
Addtson
675 1429
Home Improvements.
.•• •• 810
Furnuure d1shwasher k ds 5 Famtly Yard Sale July 2 3 A Otl &amp; Gas Br o~er
Homes for Sale •
• •• 310
clothes and toys
4 9 am !til dar~ brand name Company IS looktng for an Bartender needed Pomt
Household Goods
510
teen gtrt clothes et&lt;erc1se admm asst lor the Galli polis Pleasant Moose Lodge
Ho uses for Rent
410
Sat June 30 Bam ' 3 lamtly
equ1pment prom dresses otftce Candtdates should be apply tn Person
In Memonam
020
sale 1057 Second Ave
Insurance
•
130
ventless wall heater hOuse self starters and posses
Yard
sale
Saturday
6130
hold ~ems To much to men good organ•zal tonal skill s Desk Clerk needed at
Lawn &amp; Garden Eq utpmenl
660
proftcten t tn Word Et&lt;cel and Budget Inn 260 Jackson
lrom 9 2pm 264 LeGrande !ton 3rd Autumn St Mason
Ltvestock
630
Outlook Knowledge of land Ptke Looktng for a person
Blvd
Losl and Fou nd
060
B•g GaragefYard
Sale descrtphons and !tile et&lt;p IS who ts mottvated great
Lots &amp; Ac reage
350
4
SALE·
Mason WV 4th St 9 5 June a plus Must have a htgh communlcalton sktlls and a
Miscellaneous
•
170
J'oM~liOYiMIDilLE 30th July 2nd &amp; 3rd dtploma and some college poSIItve attitude Pl ease
Miscellaneous Merc hand1se.
540
expertence
preferred apply wtthtn
Everyth ng extra cheap
Mob1le Home Repa1r
86D
Please call Andrea Healy at
2 lamtly across street from
Mob1le Homes for Rent
•. 420
Bashan Ftre Dept 6 29 to ? lnstde Salel Baby clothes 740-446-6800 or fa)( to 740 DRIVERS
Mob1le Homes fo r Sale .
•• 320
boys p1eemte 24 months 446 6802
9AM 1o6PM
Money to Loan
•• • •
• 220
gtrls preem1e 9 months
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
• 7 40
Family Ortented Carner
6 30 3 famWy At 7 across baby Items
materntty A c c e p t t ng
Mustcallnstruments
570
based 1n Canton OH needs
frOm Me tgs Memory Garden women s JUntor g1rls scrubs Apphcattons/ Resumes for
• • •••. 005
Personals
OTR dnvers to pull relngersecretanat/
recepttont
sl
&amp;
much
mQre
Net&lt;t
to
Pets for Sale
•••.••••. 560
810 Elm St Ractne by Atpley Au to Glass m pos1t1on Must tle proltctenl ated trailers to the South
Plum bmg &amp; Heating
. •• 820
and Eastern States
Me1hodts1CHURC H
Hartford WV Sat June 30th n 0Utck Books Pro Apply m
Professiona l Serv1ces
• • • • 230
Bed Camper game boy _1
9
person 1743 Centenary Ad
Radto, TV &amp; CB Repair
160
atlvance&amp;games
•Weekly Pay
Galltpohs OH 45631 No
Real Eslate Wanted •
••••• 360
clothes toys
Yard Sale 32 Burdette Phone Calls Please
'$ 40 Por Milo/All Mllao
Schools lnstructeon. . . .
. ... 150
Addtlton June 30th
Model Frelghtllner
•Late
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer
. • 650
CARPORT SALE Sa1urday
An Excellent way to earn Condos
S ~uattons Wanted . • •.•.
• 120
June 30th Laurel Cltff Ad
AucnoNANil
money The New Avon
•No Now Yor1&lt; City or
460
Space for Rent
Name Brand New Items
F'I£A MARIO:r
Call Martlyn 304 8B2·264!)
Canada
Sporting Goods •• • ••
• • •.• 520
Boys &amp; Womens Clothtng
•95% no touch tnolght
• •••••. •••.• 720
SUV 's for Sale •
Cross Creek Auct on Buffalo Computers 4 U IS seekmg a •Me&lt;llcallno &amp; 401 K
Truc ks for Sale
•••••. 715
Garage Sale T PI Area AuctiOn Saturday 6pm Computer Tech for parl ttme
•Hometlme moat
Upholstery
870
above Eastern Htgtf School Butldmg IS full of used leadtng to full ttme work You
WHktndl
Vans For Sale •
730
6 30th 7 2nd 9 00 ? furm Merchandtse
21 mch mlJsl be prof1c1ent tn com •$500 Sign on bonus
Wanted to Buy
•
• •••••••• 090
tu re k1ds&amp;adult
clothes Crattmans sell prope lled puter repa1r dependable an
Wanted lo Buy- Farm Supplies
••••• 620
designer purses
lawn Mower m1lk cans lots honestl Bn ng resume m
Wan ted To Do
• •• . 180
of
small
Collectibles person to Computers 4 U Muat have 1 Claa A COL
Wanted to Rent. ••• ••••.• • ••
• •. •• .• 470
June 30 Only 9 00 to 4 00 BUtldtng 1s Atr Condtttoned Inc 303 Matn Street, Potnl with 2 yNra experience
072
Yard Sola· Gallipolis
1691 Ltncoln Hgts Clean Vtsa and Master Card (304) Pleasant WV 25550 or call
Yard Sale·Pomeroy!Middte ••• •• • • • • • . 074
clot hes all sizes furmture 550 1616 Stephen Reedy for dtrect1ons at 304-675 can Bob at BOIHI52· 2362
••••.••• 0 76
Yard Sale· Pt Pleasant . • .. •
everythmg goes
Mon·Frt Bam 4pm
5262
1639

~

r

t

CLASSIFIED INDEX

f'

I

YARIJ

•

i

m

ELEC CONTROLS ENGI
NEEA Defense program
needs hands-on engtneer
lor PLC programmmg
(RSLogiX I RSVtew) ~gh
speed data acqwst tton alec
!neal test equtpmenl heavy
eqUtpment and automated
control sys1ems BSEE +
related et&lt;penence or equ1v
alent destrecl UTRON Inc
www untrontc com FAX 703
369·5298
Gallta Metgs CAA ts seektng
a part ttme Reg1stered
Nurse for the Meigs Help Me
Grow Program
Wtll be
reqUired to com plete m
home tnlant and maternal
health assessments w1th
parttctpants of all socto-eco
nomtc backgrounds Must
work flext ble hours wt th
extensiVe local tra... el and
some out of area travel
Mu st be bondable have
vali d drtver s license and
reltable
transportatto n
Deadline for applications
and resumes Is July 12
2007, 4 00 p m a1 GMCAA
PO Box 272 Cheshtre Oh10
45620 GMCAA ts an EOE
Help wanted at Darst Adult
Group Home some ltft1ng
7 5 shift 740·992·5023

John Sang Fonl Lincoln
Mercury
Needs three lndiVtduals
that are mterested m a
career as an Automottve
Consultant We are loo k~ng
for tntivtduals that are out
gomg sell mottvated and
profess100al We have one
of the best compensation
plans tn the tndustry end a
benef1ts package that has
health msu ranca 401K
retirement dtsabtlily and life
tnSI,l rance If you want to
ears an et&lt;cellentltvtng and
bener yourself centact Pat
H1ll or Brtan Ross.

Ove rbroo~

Center located
@333 Page 51 Middleport
Ohio ts pleased to announce
we wtll be holdtng an STNA
Class scheduled for July
Hours w1ll be Sam 4 30pm If
you are tnterested tn JOtnmg
our fnendly and dedicated
staff please stop by our
front offtce Man Fn 9am5pm and ftll out an appl1ca
t1on Full hme and part t1me
pos1tions available to those
quallfted mchvtduals com
plettng the class Appltcants
must ba dependable (attendance IS a must) team players wtth poSJttve attitudes to
JOtn us tn prov1d1ng outstandtng quahty care to our rest
dents 1f you have any ques
t1ons
contact
Halite
John Sang Font Lincoln Bumgarner LPN
Staff
Mercury
Develop ment Coordmator
Has a postllon open tor an @740'-992-6472 Overbrook
Automottve Techntoan We Center ts an E 0 E and a
are loo ~ l ng for an mdtvtdu al part1c1pant of th e Drug Free
that has a well rounded
Workplace Program
knowledge about automotive repatr Ford Motor
R&amp;J Trud&lt;tng Leading The
Company tra1ntng wtll be
Way R&amp;J Truckmg now
provtded lind Is on gotng
Hlnng at our New Haven,
We offer a competl!tve com VN Term1nal For Aegtonal
pensatton plan and our ben- Hauls-Dump Otv 1 year
efit package tncludes health OTR venftable exp Gall 1msurance 401K reltrement 800·462 9365 ask for Ken1
d1sabtlily tnsurance and hfe
1nsurance If you are hred of Scemc Htll s Nurstng t enter
working for someone !halts IS currently accepting appll·
not workmg for you or want cattons for AN s ar1d LPN's
to better yourself contact Appl cat10ns mu st possess a
Servtce Manager Jtm
current license m the State
Thomas
of Ohto Potential applicants
should
contact
D1ana
Harless DON a1 (740)446
7150 EOE

Thanks to
everyo11e who
helped make
Wilma
(Ginther)
Seama11 's
birthday a day
to remember!

The Cratg Group needs outgoing Ohto re stdents to help
with statewide campatgn
Each person wtll make 1 to 2
dollars per Signature &amp;; up to
$500 weekly Cell 740·251·
7591 &amp; ask for Chns or
dbanas @cratge mall
group com
The Craig Group needs outgomg tndtvtduals lo help wtth
state-wtde campaign Make
$1-$2 per stgnature &amp; up to
$500 weekly Please call
Chris a1 740 251-7591 or

e

m

a

1

......

3 or 4 bed1oom house lor
sate 1n New Haven The
bathroom IS newly remod
eled covered front porch
back deck garage fenced tn
back yard new central heat
and a1r new crown moldmg
and baseboards new dtsh
washer anct oven As~mg
well below recent appratsal
ol 80k Call 304 882 3773
f01 more detatls

2007 Clayton
58A/3BA 2000 Sq F!
Starttng at $33 00/sp ft t
NO DOWN PAYM ENT
to quahhed buyers
Th e Home S how
Ashland , KY
888·928·3426
2007 Doublew1de
3BR 2BA
Delivered &amp; Set $39 999
The Home Show
Ashland Ky
Toll free 888 928 3426

2008

$49,989

TURNED DOWN ON
SOC1AL SECUR11Y /SSt•
Nolee Unless We Wm1
1 888 582 3345

Beauttful Mtddleport hamel
JaR 2BA full basemen11
1/2 car garage wrth a room
above Many NEW leaturesn
Must see ttus one' 740 416
1548

HOMES
FOR SALE
0 Down even wtth less than
perfect credtt ts avatlable on
th1s 3 bedroom 1 bath
home Corner lot ltreplace
modern kitchen ]acuzzt tub
Payment amund $550 per
month 740 367-7129
104 Tatum
Dr
New
Haven WV 3bd/2ba Ranch
tg StJr.troom 2 car gar great
area 0 304 675 3637 E
304 882 2334

Help Wanted

Now Accepting Applications
For These Positions
• Service Manager
• Service Advisor
• Auto Technician
Jam ihe Automol! ve Excellence group al
Sm11h GM Superstore CondHI,ue shou ld
have automotovc knowledge and &lt;1b1hty 10
work well With employees and customers.
Dehver Resume 1n person to
1900 Eastern Avenue G&lt;ill tpolts OH
40 I K Benefit Pl.m
Hea lth/L11e Insurance
Generou s Pay Plans
Clean Work Envuonment

SMITH SUPERSTORE
Chevrolet· Bu 1ck- Pontiac
1900 Eastern Avenue. Galhpohs

All real estate adver11slng
tn thts newspape r ts
sub)ect to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes ll !llegat to
advertise 'any
preference, hmrtatton or
dlscrlmlnalton based on
race, color, religion, sex
famlhal status or national
origin or any mtentlon to
m11ke any such
preference, hm1tatlon or
d1scnmlna 11o n

This newspaper Will not
knowingly acce pt
adver11sements for real
estate which is In
vJolatt on of the law Our
readers are hereby
Informed that au
dwellings advert aed In
this news paper are
available on an equal
opportuntty bases

New 3 Bedroom homes lrom
$214 36 per month Includes
many upgrades dehvery &amp;
set up (740)385 2434
Ntce used 3 bedroom home
vtnyVshtngle Wtlt help wuh
deltvery 740-385-4367
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE
Program $0 Down II you
own land or use Fam1ly
Land We own the Bank ~our
F

'oved

::;;;~;~80

1 56 Acres Ohio Rtver
lrontage Gas Electnc
Wa ter on stte 446-0974

I 0 66 acres 1594 Northup
Rd tn Green Twp Galha Co
24t&lt;4B barn recent survey
no restrlcttons beauttful
house locat1on all utthtles on
Sl1e $79 900 (937)362
4775 (9 37)605 3581
2 Acre Bldg lot on State
Route 7 304 675 4421
55 acres mora or less
569 000 Call 740 256 9247

H OLSKS
HUD HOMES1 4b0 only
HJHREN
I
$1551mo 3bd $18 1/mo
More 1 4bd homes avatl
ablo 5% dn 20 yrs @ 8% $155/mol Buy 4bd HUO
For hS!tngs 1 BOO 559-41 09 hamel 5% dn 20yrs @ 8%
For l sttngs BOO 559 4109
X F144
x1709
Newly built home tn Green
Twp on Ktng Ad off 1
2 Br House In
Netghborhood Rd Approt&lt; New Haven $3251mon1h
Pets
1200 sq It 3 acres mfl 2 SA $325/depOSII No
4)c.8_82_36_5_2_ _ _ _
2 full baths w/whlrlpoot tubs c(3_0_
large LA Askmg 87 500 -1302 Hogg St 2br House
740 446 7029
Central HeaVAC 1 year
Lease No Pets Secu nty
DepoSit Ty 304 675 4030

posSI~y

23

Bedroom turmshed
14x702 bedroom 2 full bath House for Rent tn PI
newly remodeled New cen Pleasant No Pets Call 304
Ira I a1r umt and furnace call 675 0032
740 3677142 or 740 794
3Bd house 138 L1ncotn Httl
0022 $9 000
$400 Call 614 491 4650 1or
appltcauon No pets Dep
1979 Htll Crest 12X65 good
$400
condt!IOn 2 Br 1 bath
$1 500 740 416 6520
HUD HOMES! 4bd only
$1551mo 3bd S18 11mo
1998CiavtonSptrtl ll Lotsof More 1 4bd homes avalleKiras et&lt;cellen! conditiOn able 5% dn 20 yrs @ B0 0
Must be moved Call 949 For ltsttngs 1 BOO 559 4109
,269B after 4 p m
x F144

Truck Drtver with Class A
COL Local Hauhng Man Fn ,
home avery night Reliable
responstble mature Send
resume to Dover Resume
PO Box 655 Galhpolts Oh
45631

Galllpollo Coroor Collogo
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl740-446-4367,
1·800 21 4.()452
www gaU1polisclreercollege com
Accredited MerMer AccrM1IIng

Council lor l ~end&amp;nt Colleges
and Schools 12748

WANTID
To Do
A·OK-Corrals &amp; Barns
Melal Rooll ng, Shingles
Concrete
Remodeling
Decks,
Pole
Barns,
Garagts Free estimates Call
304-633·1230

Attention!
Local company otl'ertng "NO
DOWN PAYMENr pro
grams for you to buy your
home tnstead of renttng
' 1QOOJ., ftnancmg
' Less than perfect cred 1
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent
Mortgage
locators
(740f367 0000

r

• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
• Central heat &amp; AJC
• Washer/dryer hookup
• Tenam pays electrtc

(304)882-3017

F

Remodeled 2br 1 ba
Hartford wv $375/month
Aeferences / Oepos 1t
raqutred No Pets 304 5764037

~:--:------.,
!""~'

APAKThii~~TS

..__. .
f{.JRiioiiRiiitN-1_,.,
•
1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
for Rent Me gs County In
town No Pets Deposit
Requtred (740)992 5174 or
F 40)44 1 0110

1 and 2 bedroom apart
ments, furmshed and unfur
ntshed and houses tn
Pomeroy and M ddleport
securtly depostt requtred no
pets 740 992 2218
1 BR Apt WID Hookups
0 Utet wooded tocat10n
Free tnternet www spnngvalley properties com
(740)339 0362

Tumca, MISSISSIPPI
THE GRAND CASINO
September 5· 7, 2007

Contemplatmg gastnc by·pass
or the Lap- Band procedure?
J01n us to learn more
For more 1nformat1on, call

446·5825

$295/person
Based on double occupancy
State roo m taxes wtll be applted to
credtt card at check·tn
Includes flight, hotel accom·
modattons luggage &amp; transfers
Pnvale tel leaves from Charleston,
WV Must be 21 years of age
credtl cards, checks, money
orders and payroll deduclton
accepted No refund s
Ll MITED SEATSI
To make reservattons pl ease
call PVH Commumty Relat1 ons,
(304) 675·4340, ext 1326

MOTOCROSS RACE
Sat. 6/30/07
6:00p.m.
MASON CO
FAIRGROUNDS
At 62 N

Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 3:30 pm)
• 675-5463

'

'

BINGO
Middleport
American Legion

Saturday
6:30pm
Be sure to come out &amp;
support your veterans

.

'

'
,,

3 Br $395 M plus U1 Plus
Dep av 1st ol M 3rd St
Racme 740 247 4292

,\tl\l\1()(1\.

Old ptano&amp;lots of sheet
EQIII':\IIXI
mustc &amp;200 OBO needs to
be moved 5200 BTU AIC
never used $50 446 3460 0% Ftnanctng 36 Mos
liM
avatlable now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero Turns 8
One ot a ktnd 17x21 1ramed 5 99% FtJBd Rat e on John
coal mmtng ptcture shows 2 Deere Gator&amp; Ca1m chael
yOung men wtth mmtng EqUipment (740)446 2412
equtpment on gettmg off
work m front of btll board John Deer 5500 4WD 73
around 1930 should see HP cab atr 540 loader
$165 Also lult 2 ptece bo)( bucket manure forks round
of 25 "Eiey Kynoctl" 14 bale fork very good cund
gauge snot gun shell s rare 740 256 6864
$200 740 533 3870
Kteler Built Valley Btson
and
L•vest oc~
Pole Barns 30)(40~10 Horse
Loadma)
Delivered &amp; Ereded $8 595 Trailers
Dumps
&amp;
plus Sales Ta•
Call Gooseneck
(937)71B 1471 www nat on Uhhly Aluma Alummum
Tra1lers B&amp;W Gooseneck
widepolebarns com
Httches
Tratler
Parts
Schwmn Atrdyne Evol Carmichael
Trailers
Camp
EKerctse
Bt~e
(740)446 2412
--,..-:..._
Excellent Condthon $200
OBO (740)446 7937
Ma s!ley Ferguson
150
~z:---~-----, Tractor
wtth
loader
Pf.~I'S
lnternaiiOnal 574
165
__
tUR SAi f
Massey Ferguson
2B4
1n1erna110nal
9N Ford
AKC Boston Terner Pups 7 1740)286 6522
wks old both mate Parents
on prem with pedtgree vet
LIII:SfOc K
chkd shots wormed 740
388 9325
6 Donkeys 5 female 1 whtte
AKC Reg Vor1oe ( F ) 11 male Call 740 256-9247 or
wee~s
old Shots and
wormed Call 740 339-3600

____

i

r

f 25665~~~

r

SUVs
lOR SAI.F

04 N1ssan XTerra 4900l
mrles S 10900 740 256
1618
1999 Mercury Mountamee1
4WD 102 000 mtles EKe
Cond
Sunroot
Powel
Leather
Seats
S6200
(740 245 0344 after 5 04Jm

r

4x4

foR S~1 1

02 Goelge Dakota 4K4
79000 mtles Asktng $8500
Day 645 7920 Evenmg 256
1905
91 Chevy Ext cab 4X4
excellent true~ lor the year
ctean ou1 has some rust
runs great 740 256 6160

rlO

I

95 Plymouth van atr auto V
6 $1200 060 740 256
1652

40 MlflllRL)'UrJo;/

I

4 WHt:IU.RS
2005 H DFat Boy custom
maroon
w 1embossed
flames 1 ol 200 made BOO
m•les
smce
new pnc e
$19 000 OBO ca n tor

AKC Reg Beagle Pupp1es
304 576 2779
AKC Reg Shttzu plJpp1es for LIVestock Feed shelled corn
sale $350 740 388 8477
$5 20/50 lb &amp; horse crunch
$7 22/ 50 tb
&amp; more
AKC Reg
Black Lab ~evtlle 740 69B 091 1
Pupptes $15000 74D-742
111
2966 If no answer please
leave message
10

•'1Mk"fi'

+

ALTOS

AKC

Vor~te pupptes

2
10wks old $900 each
3 female 8wks old $BOO
each 2 males $700 eaCh 2
female 6wks old $900 each
very small 1 male 6w~s old
$900 very small shots &amp; vel
checked 304 B95 3926

-""l"'"

(740)992 5856

\In I "''"''Ill'

t

l::t::O:o--~
fA
~R!
-,1 -~

Ellm View
Apartments

HJR SAI E

77 Searay 351 Skts anct
table Allns good tandem
81&lt;1e tra1ler S1600 446 2923

88 Wellcra« 20« V 6 350
Mercru1ser tandem a)(le
tratler w/brakes good cond
740 256 6160

89 Bayhner 27ft New VB
03 Ford Taurus 54 000 351 OMC Eng Frtdge
bathroom/shower
m11es 55900 OBO 740 256 stove
1618
Sleeps ~ 6 tandem a)(te
tratler
w1brakes
greal
05 Chrysle1 300 Lmted shape 740 256 6160
35000 m1le s fully loaded 1
owner garage kept $20 000 93 Marada 21ft 4 3 V 6
CKC Toy Rat T.erners Choc 245 5017 I 304 593 6446 Mercrwser tandem axle
&amp; While 1st shots tails
tratler w/brakes great condt
docked Asl&lt;mg $250 379 1954 Chevrolet 210 2 Door !ton 740256-6160
350 V 8 350 Automaltc
9515 or 645·6857
$13 500 00 (740)949 2909
CI~II'I RS &amp;
Mtnt Dachshund pups vet
MoroR
HI1\1E);
checked shots &amp; wormed 1991 Ford EKplorer XLT 9
(Aegtstered) 7w~s old $125 Ltft 33 t1res nert bars
148 ooo mtles Auto PW 1988 NomadCamper twtn
7410 388 03 18 Mom&amp; Dad
PL
$2000 (740)339 2070
bunks &amp; front bed Excellent
on Premtses
condtl ton
Bath/w tub&amp;
Purebred Toy Poodle pup 1995 Chevy Lum1na runs shOwer Pull behmd 3dog
tuck saw mtll mAke an ofler
Twm Atvers Tower IS accept ptes CKC vet checked Ia Is great 446 9370
9492115
mg applications for watttng docked dewclaws removed B7 Mercury Sable runs
Its! for Hud substzed 1 br shots &amp; wormed we have good new parts $375 OBO 97 Httchhtker Discovery 34
the blk &amp; apucot M &amp; F puce 740 446 2923
apartment lor
1/211 S!h wheel camper
elderly/dtsabled call 675 Males $300 Females $350
made
by NU WA 1 Double
97 Fo rd Mustang v 6 5
6679
Equal
Housmg (740)992·7007
speed $2800 740 379 sltde and 1 smgle slide plus
_
o pi;p~q-rtu_"..;
'1Y-::-.,..--.,
&amp;
et&lt;tras that wtll go wtth thts
9381
"
rK
urut Et&lt;cellent shape As~tng
15
TRl'tKS
S 16 500 Call aher 6pm 740
_
1
HIR'SALE
208 0507 or 256 1243
Home grown tomatoes No ·--ioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio_,.,
Mobtle Home space m Rto Sunday Sates 1t mtles west
04 Ford Ranger X\T e~end
Grande W1ll ta~e up to on 141 Galli Its
ed cab 4)(4 Standard V 6
16 80 446 3617
X
e)(c
cond
S 13 500 10
1111'11
(304)675 8893 al1er 5prn
Pnme commerctal space for
L\U'KUVI:Aib"IIIS
rant at Spnngvall ey Plaza
1995 Ford F 250 P1ck up
Wanted to E)(Change or
Call 645 2192
BASEM ENT
Trade Westem Books 304 truck good mechan1cal
WATERPROOFING
cond
5
9
l
5
speod
trans
WA~TfJ)
675 5884
Uncondthonal ltfet me guar
$4000 Ftrm 740 949 2127
IURENl
antee l ocal references fur
1999 Ford Ranger XLT 4 0 mshed Establtshed l 975
LANDOWNERS NEED
Engtne 4t&lt;4 Sup Cab 5 spd Call 24 Hrs (740) 446
EXTRA FARM INCOME?
Automa1c $6200 17401446 0870 Rogers Basement
We have responSible sports
1492
Waterprooftng
men lookmg to lease hunttng
property tn th1s area
Mtdwest Trophy Leases Inc
(304)532 60 15 or 1-BOO
698·1073

r___

""·urrs

Flliiis•"p,iii~iii~
iiio-rl L,--V·EG-I:.I,·\H·I·~~-,.1 f

r

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

Responstble,TN hunter loo~
tng to lease your land or
farm for hunting Please call
423 748 7045 or ema1l
rdavts@M USFIBER com

\IIIH II I \lll'i
1o

5 30 pm • 6 30 pm

MlSOolJAN~:oL~
Mf:ROtANIIL~t-

Large 4 bedroom hOuse tn 8187 or 304 593B107 Attor Spm
Pomeroy very clean newty Gracious Living I and 2
remodeled new cabtnets Bedroom Ap!s at Vtltage
new carpet, (740)949 -2303 Manor and Alverstde Apts tn
Mtddleport hom $327 to
Mouu~: Ho~m;
$592 740 992 5064 Equal
l'oR RFN1
Housmg Oppor!untty Thts
tnst1tutton ts an Equal
14x70 very nice 3 BA 2BA Opporruntty Provtder and
pnvacy tn country Metgs Employer
School dtsl $475 + dep
859 806 4354 or 740 742· Immaculate 2 bedroom
apa rtment New carpet &amp;
3046 Available July 1
cabtnets fres hly pa1nted &amp;
2 Br
A/C Very mce decorated WID hookup
Johnson Mob1le Home Park Beautiful country setttng
740 446·2003 or 446 1409 Must see to apprec1ate
$4001mo (614)595- 7773 or
2 BR 1 BA c/a, 1710
1 800 798 4686
Chatham
Ave Gall tpohs
Ooublewtde (28x48) 3BA' Mtddteport Beech St 2 br
2BA c/a 1622 Chatham furntshed apartment uttlittes
Ave Galhpohs 2 BR 2BA patd depostt &amp; references
cia 9101 SA 7 Cheshtre no pets [740)992 0165
740 208·7861
Mtddleport North 4lh Ave 2
2 BA Btg yard Storage br furn1shed apartment
butldtng $325/mo plus $225 depostt &amp; references 1o
depostt Renter pays all uhh- pels (740)992 0165
110S (740)256 6202
Modern 1 BR Apt Call 446
3 BA 14)(70 Addavtlle 3736
Scheel dtstnct 740 367
New 2BA apartments
7762 or 367 7272
Washer/dryer
hoo~ u p
Beauttful Rtver Vtew tn s!ove/relrtgerator tncluded
Kanauga Ideal for 1 or 2 Also unrls on SA 160 Pets
people references No pets Wek::omel (740)441 0194
Loc 5 m1 from Gavm
Tara
Townhouse
(740)441 0 181
Apartments Very Spac1ous
For rent 2 Bedroom tratler 2 Bedrooms CIA 1 112
$250 Mo tncl water $200 Bath Ad ult Pool &amp; Baby
depoSit-no pets 740-985 Pool Patte' Start $425fMo
3945
No Pets
Lease Plu s
Mobile homes tor rent Security Deposit Aequ red
M1ddleport area no pets (740)446 348 1

-----

HOLZER CENTER FOR
COMPREHENSIVE WEIGHT
LOSS INFORMATIONAL
MEETING
Monday, July 2

APARTh1~J'&gt;TI
FOR RENT

For rent or for sale 2 BA
Ntce Aemocleled Home m
town No Pet s Renovaled
All new carpet
Call Furnishe d Apt 2nd Ave
Gallipolis
Upsta1rs
(740)446 7425
Bedroom No Pets All utth
In Pomeroy House lor rentt 3 lies patd (740)446 9523
Bd 2 bath newly remodeled total electnc 740 643- Garage Apart Masoo t br fully
lurolshed ut1frt~es pa•d $450.mo
5264
$350dep References 304 593

2 bedrooms hvmg room
ktlchen 1 bath apartment
have central a1r Furntshed
w1th couch, cha1rs washer
dryer stove mtcrowave
199B Redman &amp; 2 acres 3 For Rent Bnck house m
beds dtnnmg table and
bd &amp; 2 baths oH New L!ma Mercerv1Ue 1BA Apt all uttl·
chatrs $400 depostt $450 a
m Rutland for sale or rent tttes 8. cable pa1d tn Crown
month call 304 B82 2523
74().992 3514
C11y (740)256 81 32
leave a message and num
ber tf no! al home

I

The Woda Group, a leader
1n affordable hous1ng ts currently searchmg for a FullTime Property Maintenan ce
Techn1c1an tn the Pomeroy
Ohto area Experience wtth
apartment or multi-family
complexes ts a strong plus
Requirements
"Matn tatn property to a htgh
standard curb appeal
• Ab16ty to organize and pnonttze work
"Expenenced wtth plumb
1ng drywall.lpamttng electrt
cal
"Must be able to pass background check
Salary ts defendan t upon
e)(penence We are an equal
opportuntty employer You
may apply be ema tltng
dlarue@wodagroup com or
by matl to Attn 0 LaRue, 8
5th Street, Wheeltng WV
26003 or by l ax to 340·214
0720 EOE

--- ---

0

r

dbanas@cratggroup com

--- - -... - ---- ....... . - --

IiL,-M-~.!....:8."•'"OM·£··-~.,J ...t.'-·ro·"-~.R-~-~T I

HO\Jt);
mRSALF

HUGE

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
Help Wanted

~10

3bd
GALLIPOLIS
Forec losure!
Bu y 1or
$50 9001 Only $404/mo 5%
dn 20yrs @ 8"/., For hsttngs
call 800 559 4109 xF254
Great used 2005 3 Ued10om
16x80 wllh vmyllshmgte
1
Attentton
Must sell Only $25 995 w11h
Local company offertr'lQ NO deh\16ry Call (7 40)385 4367
DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams for you to buy your
home tnstead of rentmg
• 100"o ftnancmg
PROfi-..'!SIONAL
• Less than pertect credtt
NEW
4 Bed
Sj,JNICES
accepted
M&amp;J Cleantng Servtce • Payment could be the
Busmess and Residential same as tent
111111111141.121.2151
Locators
licensed tn Oh1o and WV Mortgage
mymldwesthome com
Call304·444 4694
(740)367-llOOO

3 BR 1BA Large Fam1ly
Room frtdge W/0 large
lot Close to Holzer Call
441 5826 or 446 9664

- '

Immediate opening for
tnataltatlon/sarvlce technl·
clan for the secunty alarm
CCTV su rvetllance field
Candtdates should be
dependable honest, and
self starter capable of work
tng on own Education or
training m Electro ntcs,
lndustr al
Matntenance
Computer
Tra1n1ng
or
Networkmg would be plus
es Company wt ll tratn quah
!ted candtd~t e Compet111ve
pay scale wtlh posstble ben
efu package For personal
mterv1ew respo nd wtth
resume 10 Consohdated
Secunty Systems
240
Upper
Atver
Road
Gallipoli s
OH
45631 Local home health agen cy
now htnng PCA, CHHA,
(740)446·2304
CNA STNA w1U tran tf necessary Classes start July
IRS JOBS
91h Call 740· 441 1377
$18 46 $32 60/hr now htr
tng Pad Tratn ng IS provtd MACHINIST For manual
ed For appltcatton and tree lathes, m1lhng machmes,
government JOb tnfo call saws radtal dnlls Must be
Amer1can Assoc of Labor 1 able to hold tolerances to
913·599·8244 24/hrs emp 00005" tn ftne wo r ~ and
serv
accurately cut 'lanous mate,
female and buttress threads
JOb T1tle Towboat D1eset Must read drawings and
Mechantc mmtmum 40 m a ~e parts to speclftcatton
hours a wee k Monday G Code destred ltft trUck
th rough Fnday Wtl hng to operatton a plus UTRO N,
wor~ overttme some light Inc www utromc com FA&gt;&lt;
electncal abtlitles on call 703·369·5298
twtce a month expenence
requ1red Excellent benefit Middeport Pubhc Works 1s
package 401 K avatlable, now takmg epplt cahons for a
patd holt days company pen laborer Appltcattons can be
ston patd vacation Blue picked up at the Publtc
Cross/Blue Shteld Medtcal Works Office 237 Race
Mlddleporl
V1s1on Included Dental plan S1reet,
Bonuses Please contact Application dead! ne ts 4 PM
Mtke Gray at Campbell on July 18 2007 EOE
Transportation Company at
POST OFFICE NOW
304·675·4545
HIRING
Avg Pay S201hr or
Overbrook Center ts current
$57K annually
ty accepttng appl cattons for
lncludtng Federal Benefits
STATE TE STED Nursmg
and OT Pa1d Tralntng,
Asststants Full Ttme and
Vacattons-FTIPT
Part Ttme pos1t1ons avatl·
1 800·584 1775 Eld #8923
able Interested applicants
USWA
can ptck up an a~ hcatlo n or
contact Halite Bumgarner VACANCY. H S Sclonco
LPN Slaff Development ln1tructor
Valid Oh1o
Coordtnalor
@ 740 992 Science
certlflcahon
6472 M F 9a-5p at 333 Page reqUired CONTACT Gallla·
S1, Mtddlepor1 Oh EOE &amp; a Jackson-Vmton
JV SD
parttclpa.nl of the Drug-Free (740)245 5334 Ext 201
Workplace Program
EEO

Borrow Sman Con tacl
1he Ohto DIVISIOn ot
Ftnanct al
lnstJIUtton's
Offtce ol Consumer
Affatrs BEFORE you ref1'
nance your home or
obtatn a loan BEWARE
of IBQuests for an~ large
advance payments of
fees or tnsurance Call the
Olftce ol Consumer
Affa1rs toll tree at 1 B66
278 0003 to learn 1f the
mortgage broker or
lender
ts
p1operly
licensed (Th1s ts a publiC
servtce announcement
from the Oh10 Valley
Pubhshtng Company)

3 Bed10om
2 Bath
Fireplace
40x60 Barn
Pleasant Valley Ad near RIO
Grande 1 8 acres ava1lable
starttng
at
S85 000
(740)709 1166

L'JUI _.

LABORER EARN AS YOU
LEARN Slart bulldtng lor
you r future now by jotmng
OlK ProfessiOnal Team and
learn the sktll s to become a
Htgh Pressure Cleaning
Matntenance Techntctan All
postttons reqUtre weekly
TRAVEL outstde of Oh10,
Company provides lodgtng
and
transportation
PerDiem AVERAGE s1ar1·
mg wage w~ h cost of benefitS mctuded ts $205 00 per
fteld day worked , wtth a
chance to advance up to
$263 00 per ft eld day
worked We provtde patd
tratntng and EXCELLENT
BENEFITS
Pre·
Employmen1 DRUG TEST
and a valtd Dnver's ltcense
IS requtred Class A COL ts
a plus but not required
Send work htstory and day
ttme phone number to
TECH NICIAN TRAINEE.
PO BOX 565 MARIETIA
OHIO 45750 EOE

HN OH C•:**

Hllii'ilil

kttncarlyle@comca st n et

LOST DOG
Gray and wh te female
I am looktng for a Chrtstan Shttzu t2 yrs old answers
Man no smoktng or drink to Katie lost Sunday
tng No mustache or beard 6/24/07 on 3rd Ave
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Apartmen t for rent 1 2 2003 Ex1ss 3 Horse
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UEILIC
.OTICES

Friday, June 29, 2007

Friday, June 29, 2007
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BRIDGE

Publi c Noti ces In N e - s papers •
. Your Right. t.o K .. o_.. Deli v ered Right to Your Door.

ACROSS

pencil

Phillip

PUBLIC NOTICE
following :
Board of Trustees will executors, , legatees, or recorded with tho
An
application
to This is a Prevailing offer for sale by devisees, successors Meigs
County
transfer coal mining Wage project.
"SEALED BID'' the lot- and assigns of Creola Recorder.
and reclamation permit
specifications In lowing plec:e of equip- Frost-,
deceased,
• There has been no
0.0098 from Waterloo bid packet
ment: 1988 L8000 Ford names and addresses actual production or
Coal Company, Inc., Specifications, and bid Diesel Dump Truck, 5 unknown.
withdrawal of mineral•
P.O. Box 626, Jackson, forms may be secured speed, 2 speed axle. 5. To: Opal Mitchell aka by the holdera nor has
OH45640 to Jaymar, at the office of Meigs Minimum bid $4000.00. Opal Mitchell Smith or anything ole occurred
Inc., 8751 State Route C o u n I y Bids due by July 3 at her assignees, · last as specified in (BK3Kbl
7, Cheshire , OH 45620 Com m iss i on e r s , noon and will be address unknown, if of said Section.
has been submitted to Courthouse, PomQr9Y, opened at the regular living, if deceased to
• There is no usa of
the Ohio Department Ohio
45769 Phone monthly meeting of the the unknown heirs, the mineral interest for
of Natural Resources, 740-992·2895..
trustees on July 3 at next of kin, administra· underground gas starDivision of Mineral A deposit of 0 dollars 7:30 p.m. Mail bid to tors, executors, lega- age .
R e s o u r c e s will be requir.ed for Chester Township, P.O. tees, devisees, succes·
• No drilling or min·
Management. The per- each set of plans and Box 46, Chester, OH sors and assigns of ing permit has . been
mil area Is located In specifications, check 45720·0046·
Clearly Opal Mitchell aka Opal issued to the holder
Lots 392, 395, 398, made payable to- . The marked " Truck Bid". Mitchell
Smith, and filed with the
Salisbury Township, full amount will be For more information deceased, names and Meigs
County
Meigs County, Ohio returned within thirty or to
tho truck call addresses unknown.
Recorder.
and can be found on (30) days after receipt Elmer Newell at 985- Please lake notice, Roy · • Thera has been no
the Cheshire 7 1/2 of bids.
3537, Blair Windon at F. Van Meter and Bonne claim to preserve the
minute U.S.G..S. quad- Each bid must be 992·6981
or
Alan F. Van Meter, the own- mineral Interest filed
rangle map. The permH accompanied by either Holler at 992-5010. The ers of the following with the Meigs County
area contains 12.8 a bid bond in an Chester
Township described real estate: Recorder in secoracres.
amount of 100% of the Board
of
Trustee Situate in the Township dance
with
Ohio
Written comments may bid amount with a reserves the right to of Sutton, In the Revised Code section
be submitted within surety satisfactory to accept or reject any County of Meigs, and 5301 .56(C).
ten (10) days after pub- the aforesaid Meigs bid.
Stale of Ohio:
•There Is no saparalely
llcation of this notice C o u n I y Chester Township
Being Forty acres of listed tax parcel numto
the
Ohio Commissioners or by Fiscal Officer
land In the Southwe~t ber for the mineral
Department of Natural certified
check, Janet Life
' Quarter
of · the interest reserved ..nd
Resources, Division of cashiers check, or lei· ·(6) 29, (7) 1
Northeast Quarter of excepted on the Meigs
Mineral
Resources · ter of credit upon a solsection 18, T.2, R. 12, of County Auditor's tax
2045 vent bank in the
the Ohio Company's list or the' Meigs
Management,
Morse Road, Bldg. H-2, amount ol not less
Public Notice
purchase, and reserv- County
Treasurer's
Columbus,
Ohio than 10% of the bid
lng and excepting duplicate tax list.
43229-li693.
amount in favor of the PUBLIC NOTICE
therefrom the right to The surface owners,
aforesaid
Meigs Chester Township will the use of road now Roy F. Van Mater and
(6) 22, 29 (7) 6, 13
C o u n· I y hOld their 2008 Budget used as such from the Bonnie F. Van Meter,
Commissioners. Bid hsarlng on July 3 at residence of B.B. Intend to file In the
Bonds shall be accom- their regular monthly Gibbs to Intersect the Office of the Meigs
Public Notice
ponied by Proof of meeting.
road heading from Old County Recorder, an
PUBLIC NOTICE
Authority of the official Janet R. Life
Town Creek to L Cross affidavit
of
The Village of Pomeroy or agent signing the Fiscal Officer
Mill for the uses and Abandonment at least
P.O. Box 46
purposes mentioned In thirty (30) days bu1 not
desires to sell certain bond.
real estate located on Bids shall be sealed Chester, OH 45720
deed of George J. later than sixty (60)
East Main Street sltuat- and marked as Bid for (6) 29
Reeler and Catharine days altar tho date on
ed in the Incorporated Pomeroy
Distress
Reefer to E. A. Mitchell. which thla notice is
Village. The property Sidewalk Replecement ·
Also th.e following served or published.
lor sale, Is described project and mailed or
Public Notice
real estate beginning (6) 29 .
. as Lot 82 In the Village delivered to :
at the Southsast corof Pomeroy. This prop- Meigs
County NOTICE OF INTENT TO ner of the above
erty Ia beat described Commissioners
· DECLARE MINERAL described Forty acre
P.ublic Notice
In a warranty deed Courthouse
INTEREST ABANDON- lot in the South half of
MENT
the Northeast Quarter IN THE
COMMON
recorded In Volume Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
136, pege 379, Volume Attention of bidders Is .1. To: Ralph Mitchell or of said Section 18, T.2, PLEAS COURT OF
133, page 605 and celled to all ol the his assignees, last R. 12, of the Ohio MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Volume 144, page 482, requirements
con - known address: 1315 Company's Purchase; Farmars
Bank
In Meigs County Deed talned In this bid pack· Stale
Route
160, thence east to the &amp;Savings Company
Records.
et, particularly to the Gallipolis, OH 45631, If Southeast corner of Plaintiff
Sealed bids shall tie Federal
Labor living, if deceased to said quarter section; vs
accepted until 12:00 Standards Provisions the unknown heirs, thence North 80 rods Charles Keiih Pyles, a
noon on July 20, 2007. and
Davis-Bacon next of kin, admlnlstra- to the Southeast cor- minor, by and through
All bids shall(le clearly Wages, various in sur- tors, executors, toga- ner of the North ha" of his mother and next of
marked
Jr.
High anee
requirements, tees, devisees, suc~es- said quarter section ; .kin, Aimee Pyles, et al
Property Real Estate various equal opportu- sors and assigns of thence West to the Defendants
Bid, on the outside of nlty provlsl~ns, and Ralph
Mitchell, Northeast comer · of Case No. 07 CV 063
the envelope and sub- the requirement for a deceased, names and Casper Reeler's forty NOTICE BY PUBLICAmilled to the Village payment bond and per- addresses unknown.
acre lot above named; TION
Clerk, 320 East Main formance bond for 2. To: Waid Mitchell or thence South to the To: The
Unknown
Street, Pomeroy, OH 100% of the contract his assignees, last place of beginning, Heirs, Next of Kin,
45769.
price. No bidder may known ~ddress: 1754 containing Forty acres, Devisees, Legatees,
All bids are subject to withdraw his bid within Richard Street, Akron, more or less.
Ad m I n I s I rat or s ,
a previous agreement thirty (30) days after 0H 44332, if living, if
Also the following Executors, Successors
with the Meigs County the actual ddle of the deceased
to
the real estate in said and Assigns of Randy
CIC, lor "Right of First opening thereof. The unknown heirs, next of Section 18, T.2, R.12, K. Pyles, deceased,
Refusal"
Meigs
County kin,
administrators, commencing
at a and the Estate of
The Pomeroy Village Com m I s s i o n e r s executors, legatees, stone at the southwest Randy K. Pyles whose
Council reserves the reserve ·the right to devisees, successors corner of Ed Mitchell's names and addresses
rlghllo accept or reject reject any or all bids.
and assigns of Waid land; · thence East 9 are unknown.
Mlck
Davenport, Milchell,
deceased, . chains and 65 links to You are hereby notified
any or all bids.
(6) 25, 29 (7) 5, 11, 20
President
mimes and addresses the canter of the said that you have been
County unknown.
road; thence south 64' named Defendants fn
Meigs
Commissioners
3. To: Perry Mitchell or West 7 chains and 70 the action entitled
Public Notice
(6) 21 , 26, 29
his assignees, if living, links to the center of a Farmers
Bank
&amp;
If deceased to the ravine coming down Savings
Company,
NOTICE TO CDNTRAC· - - - - - - - - unknown heirs, next of hill; thence North 38' Plaintiff, vs. Charles
TORS
Public Notice
kin,
administrators, Wast 4 chains and 25 Keith Pyles, a minor, by
Sealed proposals ·ror
executors, legatees, links to the place of and through his moth·
the Pomeroy Distress The Scipio Township devisees, successors beginning, containing or and next of kin,
Clearance
Project, Trustees will hold their and assigns of Perry one and 63/100 acres. Aimee Pylas, el at.,
Meigs County, Ohio 2008 Budget Meeting Mitchell,
deceased,
Excepllng ·therafrom Defendants.
This
will be received by the July 10, 2007 at the names and addresses the coal, oil, gas and action
has
been.
Meigs
County Pagevllle Town Hall at unknown.
other minerals under- assigned Case No. 07
Commissioners at the 6:30 P.m.
4. to: Creola Frost or lying the premises cv 063, and is pending
Meigs
j::ourthouse, (6) 28, 29
her assignees, last h e r e I n a b o v e In · the
court
of
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
known address: 556 described, which coal, Common ·Pleas of
until
1:00
p.m. - - - - - - - - Laurie Street, Eua oil, gas and other min- Meigs County, Ohio.
Thursday, July 5, 2007 .
Public Notice
Gallle, FL 32935, If ltv· eral rights were hereto- The object of the
and then at 1:15 P.M., - - - - - - - - lng, II clec:eased to the lore reserved lor and C!)mplalnt demands
at said office opened PUBLIC NOTICE
unknown heirs, next of conveyed to Rolph judgment against the
and read aloud for the The Chester Township kin,
administrators, Mllchsll, Waid Mitchell, Defendants,
The
.-----..,....,...,..----Perry Mitchell, and Unknown Heirs, Next
Kin, · Devisees,
Creola Frost and Opal of
Mitchell Smith, the L e g a I e e .s ,
grantors herein, In a AdmIn lot r ·a tors,
. certain warranty dsed Executors, Successors
recorded In Volume and Assigns of Randy
141, Page 218 of the K. Pyles, Deceased and
Meigs County Dead the Estate of Randy K.
Recorda, and reserv- Pylas, In the sum of
lng such easements $29,081 .68 with Inter·
and rights of way as est thereon at the rate
are necessary in order of $5.35914 per day
to use the coal, oil, gas until fully paid; In the
and mineral rights sum of $1,700.39 with
underlying the above Interest thereon at the
described premises. rate of $0.61369 per
The grantee herein · day until fiiiiY paid; and
reserves the right to in the sum of $2,666.67
prohibit the drilling of with Interest thereon at
wells lOr oil and gas the rate of . 12% per
within on.e hundred annum until fully paid,
feet of the farm house in order to foreclose
located on said prom- upon a mortgage upon
ises.
real estate located at
Grove
Road,
Reference
Deed: Oak
Volume 332, page 289, Racine,
OH~5771,
Meigs County . Deed being approximately
. 14.666 acr~s In Sutton
Records.
Auditor's . Parcel No. : Township and 4.288
18-01271 .000
acres In tho Village of
have declared the lot- Racine, Meigs County,
lowing mineral interest Ohio, which Is more
as baing abandoned fully described In deed
Ohio recorded In Volume
pursuant
to
Revised Code Section 219, Page 419, Meigs
5301.56.
County
Official
The mineral interest Records, and costs of
abandoned was an this action; that the
undivided 112 Interest mortgage be loreof oil and other mineral closed and that the
rights underlying the liens and/or Interests
above described real In or on said property,
·estate.
,
if any, be marshaled
This mlnorallnterast and the real estate title
was reserved and quieted and said real
excepted In a deed pre- property sold In the
sented lor record on lbractosura action and
amounts
due
October 15, 1935, all
which was recorded In Plaintiff be paid from
Volume 141 1Page 218, the proceeds of the
of the Meigs County sale.
I
'.1
J
.
Deed Records.
You are required to
Roy F. Van Mater and answer the CO!Rpialnt
Bonnie F. Van Mater within
twenty-eight
attest that the owners (28) days after the last
of said mineral interest publication of this
have done. nothing Notice, which will be
required
by
Ohio published once each
Revised Code Section week lor six (6) sue5301.26(B)(3) within cesslva weeks. The
the twenty years imme- last publication will be
diately preceding the made on the 3rd day of
date of the service of August, 2007, ·and the
thls notice, namely:
twenty-eight (2~) days
• The mineral !merest for answer will comhas not been the sub- monee on that date. In
ject of a tRio_transac- the case of your lailura
L:...:....::.:;~~=-.:t::.~-l.--:.:..-...:......:+:J.ll::::.l!J.:.~"'-:...:!...;.......J lion that has been filed to answer or otherwise

44 Brush off
46 Tinkers w~h
4 GUII!dhouse 50 Eatuary
8 Com throw· 51 By Jove!
away
53 Great Wall
11 Aloelocale
12 Eye
54 Fore
protector
opposne
13 Yea, to a
55 Resounded
matador
56 Beliefs
14 Coup d'- 57 Crusty
15 Kruger or
dessert
Preminger 58 Construction
16 Stain filler
..,.
17 Real
59. Society
19 Dieter
column
10 Edible root
· ofrhyme
word
11 - out
21 Curtain
(relax)
hanger
DOWN
18 Kappa pre22 Heat unns
ceder
23 Winter
1 Big
20 Litter memloracaat
celebration
bers
26 Scatter
2 Where
22 Wait a
28 Vast stretch
Tehran Is
while
of time
3 Inherent
23 Stage
29 Sleeping
character
scenery
31 Jagged tear 4 Having
24 Knowledge
33 Undeniable
llghl..:olored 25 Say clearly
35 Banjo
hair
26 Hockey
cousins
feint
5 Loan figure
37 Make do
6 Devotee's
27 Body
with
suffix
of water
38 Give power 10 7 Spooks
30 Daffodil
40 Cover girt
8 Became
starter
42 Grouchy
rough
32 Hair goop
paroon
9 Clay pot
34 Snakes
1 Surfer's
w.nlng

.~lder

see

•RENTALS SALES
SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

I

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

TheDaily.

nbap·

...

·

I

I

•

East

• 7 52

• A
• 74 3 2
• 863
. 9 7541

• A6
• Q J 10 9
•AI08 ·3

r7amibj (e})1ij3:1

South
•KQJ6 3
• Q9
+ A5 I
• KQJ

70 Pine Street • Gallipoli s
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

Wise Concrete

-------Public Notice ·

6

West

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

see

•aUI»oli~ latr, 'rt&amp;Mt.
JQtnt f)leasa~t,ltmster

North
,..,...,
• .(0 9 8 4
• K J 10 8 5
+ K72

I

All types of con.crete
Owner- Ri ck Wise

740-992-5929
74041.6-1698

South

West

I•
4•

Pass 3 •
Pass · Pass

North

Opening lead: t

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
T~fS~ f~f5ti

vtGfTArH5
/ PlitNOf&lt;llfNAL! .

•

•

A~f

IT'S

...,. IJNGANI'IY!
-------Public Notice

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

*Prmnpl and Quality
Public Notice
County: Meigs
Work
The following applica- * Reasonable Rate s
lions and/or verified
complaints
were *Insured
received, and the lol- * bperienccd
lowing draft, propPsed, References Available!
or final actions were
Call Gary Stanley @
Issued, by The Ohio
740-742-2293
EnvIr on ment aI
Protection
Agency Please leave messa c
(OEPA) last week.
"Actions" include the
YOUNG'S
adoption, modlllcatlon,
or repeal of orders
(other than emergency
orders); the Issuance,
Room Additions &amp;
denial, modification or
Remodeling
revocation of licenses,
New Gnrages
permits, leases, variElectrical &amp; Plumbing
ances, or certificates ;
Roof ing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
and the approval or
Patio and Porch Decks
dlsappro~al of plans
wv 036725
and
specifications.
"Draft Actions" are
V.C. YOUNG Ill
written statements of
992·6215
the
director
of
Pomeroy OhiO
E n v I r o n m e n t a I 25 Years Local Expenence
P r o 1 e c t i o n ' s 'I'
(Director's) Intent with
respect
to
the
issuance, denial, etc.
of a permit, license,
Construction
order, etc. Interested • Vinyl Siding
persons may submit , Replacement
written permit, license,
Windows
order, etc. Interested
persons may submit • Roofing
written comments or • Decks
request a public meet- • Garages
ing regarding drall , Pole Buildings
actions. Comments or
public
meeting ' Room Additions
requests must be subOwner:
milled within 30 days
James Keesee II
of notice of the draft ·
742·2332
action.
"Proposed ":======~
Actions" are written statements of the .
Public Notice
director's Intent with f:::ll-ed-:-----w-,l"'th-:
respect
to
the
Issuance, denial , modi- ~~~!~~m~~~m~:;;~~
fication, revocation , or 309 South Fourth
renewal ol a permit, Street, RoQm 222 ,
license, or . variance. Columbus, Ohio 43215 .
Written comments and A copy of the appeal
requests for a public must be served on the
meeting regarding a director within 3 days
proposed action may after filing the appeal
be submitted within 30 with the ERAC.
days of notice of the Final issuance
of
proposed action. An renewal of NPDES
adjudication hearing Permit
may be held on a pro- southren Ohi Coal co.
posad action If a hear- General
Office
lng request or objec- Building
lion Is received by the Rt. 3 and sate Rt 689
OEPA within 30 days of Point Rock, OH
Issuance of the pro- Action
· DAte:
posed action. Written o810 1/2oo7
comments, requests Receiving
Waters:
for public meetings, Unnamed Tributary to
and adjudication hear- Brush Fork
ing requests must be Facility Description :
sent to: Hearing Clerk, Industrial Sewage
Ohio Envlrqnmental lndentlllcation
No.:
Protection
Agency, OIM00003'ED
P.O.
Box
1049, This final action r\'Ql
Columbus,
Ohio preceded by .proposed
4 3 2 1 6 - 1 0 4 9 action and is appeal·
(Telephone: 614-644· able to ERAC.
2129). "Final Actions: Final Drinking water
Are actions of the source designation
director which are The Hot Spot
upon issuance or a 53160 New Beginning
stated eHective date. Rd.
Pursuant
to
Ohio Portland, Ohio 45770
Revised Code Section Action
Date:
3745.04, A final action 06/1812oo7
may be appealed to the Facility Description:
Environmental Review Non- Community water
Appeals Commission Identification No. :
(ERAC)
(Formerly 5331312
know
as
the This final action was
Environmental Board preceded by the same
of Review) by a person or substantially the
who was a party to a same proposed action.
proceeding before the Designation of ground
director by tiling an water.
appeal within 30 days (6) 29
of notice of the final
action. Pursuant to
Ohio Revised Code
Section 3745.07, A
Final Action iasulng,
denying, modifying,
revoking, or renewing
NO
a permit, license, or
WHAT YOUT.~I
variance which Is not
preceded by a proposed action, may be
appealed to the ERAC
by tiling an appeal
within 30 days of
issuance of the final
action. ERAC appeals,
accompanied. by a $70
... THE
filing fee which th
ecommission in It discrelion may red~ce if
by aHidavit the appellant demonstrates that
payment of the lull
amount .of the fee
would cause extreme
hardship,
!RUSt be

CARPENTER
SERVICE

J&amp;L

l!§

BARNEY

Hardwood hbln~ry And Furniture
www.u.nl&gt;a Cleekcabllletq.com

MY MAW SEZ THAT'S
WHAT LADIES WEAR
TO KEEP THAR HANDS
CLEAN!!

DIDJA ASK YORE MAW WHAT
LADIES WEAR TO KEEP i'HAR

. L.I'L. WHITE GI.OVES CL.EAN ?

BDPP AnD CENTER
St. Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains, OH

740-667-3177
Full Service Auto Repair ·
Oil Change, 1\Jne-Up, Engine
Diagnostics, Full Brake Service, Air
Conditioning Recharge &amp; Repair,
Alignment, Custom Exhaust
Rocky Hupp-Owner

F"'~A..AAn:EROFFKT, YOV"'&lt;I

~UNI&gt; ~ """......'"'
T~l!&gt;

Jeff Bissell. Manager

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTIUCDON
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

MushrooRl Compost
$35 A Scoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed, ·
Fertilizer and
Showmaster Show
Feeds

... HEY, WHAT$ THE
NAME OF THKr t;UY ·
T'OLO U.S

Ag S erv ice
Sl. I&lt; I 7
( "lw..,tn
Nii-'ISo- .IS.\1

Stop &amp; Compare

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.PEANUTS
Ill! M'&lt; NAME IS RERVN .. I'VE NEVER
BEEN TO T_,IS PLA'I'GROU"(D SEFORE ..

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446·0007

MIKE MARCUM
HoottN(,

&amp;

Ht.~HHH. i.IN(,

&lt;u

.

Rubber Roof1Jly. Room Addil1ons. Df'r.ks. Shmg l e~
S idi ng. Windows. Pole B;uns. Gnrngcs.
Insurance Work. Rc~ 1 den t 1ill &amp; Cummerc1..ti
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Exp~rience

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
RaciQe, Ohio
4577 1
740·949·2217

Sizes 5'x1 0'

to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8;00 PM

.'
.,

"
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(()'\(1( 111
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Concrete Removal
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All Type• Of

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740-992-6971

111411 mo.pd

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Free Estimates •

Manlay•s .

Recycling
503 lUI Sl• Mlddllllllt OH 45180
740-992-anc

GARFIELD
GARFI!&lt;L.P, I
FEEL. POWN

Pl17 YOO &amp;AY HAPPt,&gt;
OR 5TUPIP?

•

......ltfllll.. 9:081111-5:00.11
SIIUnlllll:llllll-12:00 1m

PlYING TOP PIICES Fill

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. GRIZZWELLS

Q

lack thsm
36 Black mark
39 Cookie
cooks·
41 Get hold of
43 Push genii!
44 Decorate
gifts
45 Stereo
system
(hyph.)
46 Wheaze
47 Latin I verb
48 Icy coaling
49 Eur. airtlne
52 Moo goo
- pan

n.

AstroGraph
-

CELEBRITY CIPHER ·
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Cipha" cryplegams are creatlld !rom quoWJons by ramous people past and p-esent
Ead11Stertn the opher slaMs !Of another

Today's clue: VeqUals P

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MNLH

COFGWSWX

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ZNHJ

NH

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MNL

MNL'HW

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GR

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XNGRA

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IWCOOM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ' The a1m ol art IS lo represenl not lhe outward
appearance ol things. but their inward significance .· · Anslolle

THlTOAILY
PUULIR

Clif'l'O ~h. ,(- f) "C. ~C,®
0~ 1.'-~ ~}. ~ ~&lt;/' r:J

WOlD
GAM!

ldlt•d by CV.Y R. POUAN

'lllrUtdl(y:

S.turday, Jun• 30, 2007
By Bemlce Bede Oaol
There Is a strong possibility that favor·
able changes could take place concern ·
ing your affairs. H9wever, be prepared for
the early stages to s.how signs of failure
instead of winning. Keep the faith and
keep plugging ahead .
CANCER {June 21-July 22)- VotJ may
move your funds around In a manner that
robe Peter to pay Paul and then kid yoursell into believing you 8re balancing your
budget. Unfortunately, it'U catch up with
you.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - It would be
unwise to agree to something before you
know all lt1at is expected of you, regard·
less of who asks. Even if it turns out to be
disagreeable. once locked in. you won't
get out.
VIRGQ (Aug . 23•Se pt. 22) E\len
· !hough there may be a number of tasks
!hat require your attention. you might be
smar1 to postpone them if your heart Isn't
where it needs to be. You're likely to
bOtch up the jobs .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Lady Luck
could be a bit fickle, so it would be best
not to bank too heavily on chance and .
only upon corrimon sense. When you're
. up against taking a risk, you'd be wise
not to do so.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· NOV. 22) -You usually enjoy people and welcome drop·ins.
However, if y_ou aren't in the mood for
guests, your Scorpio sting might be felt
by those JJ"Iwise enough to stop by your
place .
·
SA~ITIAA1US (Nov. 23·.Dec . 21) ShOuld you encounter someone whO is
antisocial and treats you impolitely. don't
lower your standards and respond in a
similar manner. Smother this person with
graciousness.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - If you
make a llmmclal loan to a friend or fami ·
ty member, do so In a businesslike man ner. There Is a chance it'll never be satisfied and could cause ill will where once
there was lo\le.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb. 19) Ask
yourself if you're being honest witll
someone with whom you are closely
associated. 11 1t1e answer is "no.~ correct
this situation immediately or suffer
heartache when the truth is out.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - Be sure
to include yOur lo\led ones in your plans.
or your lhou!1'tlessness could easily hurt
them more than you ever .expected
Once the damage Is done, it'll be difficult
to mend.
ARIES (March 21 · April 19) Don't
· spend your energy circling around only
those people you believe to be the most
popular tor merely tnose reasons. You'll
put restrictions on your abilities to
expand.
TAURUS (April 20·Msy 20) -Your mode
of behavior wilt be wttnesaed and scrutl ·
nlzed by your peers. and If they find you
lacking In SQCia l graces or cominon cour·
tesy, It could tarnish your Image tor a
ton; time.
·
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) · Usually, you
. c:an got away wtth flowing with the vlele ·

Illude• of life and rnake a good lime out
of whatever comee along; however, It
waul" be m~o.~ch wlllr to makt 1olld plana

SOUPTO NUTZ

YUMI

Pass
Pass

You are the declarer in a suit contract .
when the dummy comeS down, you see
lhal you have one loser more than you
can afford.You cannot ruff it in the short·
er trump hand, but you can discard
Sasms simple enough - bul occasion·
al~ some care will bs required.
You reach lour spadss. West leads the
diamond queen. How VI'Ould you procoed? At. a side issue, what do you think
of partner's game·invitational three·
spade lim! raise?
Moving In reverse order, North is worth
·three spades. A lim! raise' shows 10-t2
support points and eight losers. North's
hand has seven high-card points and
three lor his sin{jeton club tO support
points. (You get tv.&lt;&gt; points for a singleton
when you have an eight-card lit.) Nor1h's
hand also contalls eighf klsers: three
spadss, two hearts, tWo diamonds and
ons club.
You have lour potential losers: one in
e8ch sun. You cannot avoid conceding
tricks to the three ace~ so you musl dis·
pose ol that diamond loser. You can sal
up your club suil, discarding dummy's
diamond klser on the second ·round of
clubs, then rutting your remaining low
dlomond on tho board.
But where must you win tnck one?
If you win n in your hand, you will drive
out the club ace lind lake trick lhree on
lhe board. You will bs stranded there,
unable to get to your hand for lhe ksy
pnch.
Win Irick one on the board.Then, aner a
club 10 Wosl's ace and a diamond back,
you take thai in your hand and can cash
a club winner for iha key diamond dis·
card.

and ltlck by them.

~ F\PRA''S

. 6dt' M~ ~A
91UPID Rl~
DIEi.

East

You need a.pitch,
but watch entries

G

BIG NATE

Shade River

740-992-1611

wt-..'&lt;, roo

43 Womdown .

A R FE

t~

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P YZ P I

,,'
~

"Have you ever noticed," the
asked her friend, '1hat
the best p&lt;Ul of dinner is
dessert, when you're too lull to
woman

~

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eat ••. : .••'/"
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.

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by

·
·
the ''".kic quoted

hll1n9 h !~e ~·~tr.g word1

L-..L...JL-...1..-1-J._- yC)0 develop fro., ste~ Nc. 3 beloW.

j1 ,ji·-r, ·

f}

PRINi :~UMBf,~EV. LET ![~S
IN lf1 ,Sf SQ,,4..~ t5
,

e.

UNSCRAMBlf iJTiHS TO

4

~ Gfl ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS r, ··11 .. ; '!

Knight ~ Sadly - Query - Inward - WINun LIES
"To win i11at cl:~.~s el~ction I ~wu l d have made w stories about
myself," (complained . Gramps replied. " ll's b&lt;t~r tobi: defeated
on principle tlmn to WIN on LIES ··

ARLO &amp; JANIS

,,

••1..

IF Thl£V15l0!.15 HAD A

HO~e;

PAGE:., .All~ r.w&lt;,.O
"fUIWER CLA&amp;':&gt;IC /Af)llf,!J'

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!

Page 86 •. The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

UEILIC
.OTICES

Friday, June 29, 2007

Friday, June 29, 2007
ALLEYOOP

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

Publi c Noti ces In N e - s papers •
. Your Right. t.o K .. o_.. Deli v ered Right to Your Door.

ACROSS

pencil

Phillip

PUBLIC NOTICE
following :
Board of Trustees will executors, , legatees, or recorded with tho
An
application
to This is a Prevailing offer for sale by devisees, successors Meigs
County
transfer coal mining Wage project.
"SEALED BID'' the lot- and assigns of Creola Recorder.
and reclamation permit
specifications In lowing plec:e of equip- Frost-,
deceased,
• There has been no
0.0098 from Waterloo bid packet
ment: 1988 L8000 Ford names and addresses actual production or
Coal Company, Inc., Specifications, and bid Diesel Dump Truck, 5 unknown.
withdrawal of mineral•
P.O. Box 626, Jackson, forms may be secured speed, 2 speed axle. 5. To: Opal Mitchell aka by the holdera nor has
OH45640 to Jaymar, at the office of Meigs Minimum bid $4000.00. Opal Mitchell Smith or anything ole occurred
Inc., 8751 State Route C o u n I y Bids due by July 3 at her assignees, · last as specified in (BK3Kbl
7, Cheshire , OH 45620 Com m iss i on e r s , noon and will be address unknown, if of said Section.
has been submitted to Courthouse, PomQr9Y, opened at the regular living, if deceased to
• There is no usa of
the Ohio Department Ohio
45769 Phone monthly meeting of the the unknown heirs, the mineral interest for
of Natural Resources, 740-992·2895..
trustees on July 3 at next of kin, administra· underground gas starDivision of Mineral A deposit of 0 dollars 7:30 p.m. Mail bid to tors, executors, lega- age .
R e s o u r c e s will be requir.ed for Chester Township, P.O. tees, devisees, succes·
• No drilling or min·
Management. The per- each set of plans and Box 46, Chester, OH sors and assigns of ing permit has . been
mil area Is located In specifications, check 45720·0046·
Clearly Opal Mitchell aka Opal issued to the holder
Lots 392, 395, 398, made payable to- . The marked " Truck Bid". Mitchell
Smith, and filed with the
Salisbury Township, full amount will be For more information deceased, names and Meigs
County
Meigs County, Ohio returned within thirty or to
tho truck call addresses unknown.
Recorder.
and can be found on (30) days after receipt Elmer Newell at 985- Please lake notice, Roy · • Thera has been no
the Cheshire 7 1/2 of bids.
3537, Blair Windon at F. Van Meter and Bonne claim to preserve the
minute U.S.G..S. quad- Each bid must be 992·6981
or
Alan F. Van Meter, the own- mineral Interest filed
rangle map. The permH accompanied by either Holler at 992-5010. The ers of the following with the Meigs County
area contains 12.8 a bid bond in an Chester
Township described real estate: Recorder in secoracres.
amount of 100% of the Board
of
Trustee Situate in the Township dance
with
Ohio
Written comments may bid amount with a reserves the right to of Sutton, In the Revised Code section
be submitted within surety satisfactory to accept or reject any County of Meigs, and 5301 .56(C).
ten (10) days after pub- the aforesaid Meigs bid.
Stale of Ohio:
•There Is no saparalely
llcation of this notice C o u n I y Chester Township
Being Forty acres of listed tax parcel numto
the
Ohio Commissioners or by Fiscal Officer
land In the Southwe~t ber for the mineral
Department of Natural certified
check, Janet Life
' Quarter
of · the interest reserved ..nd
Resources, Division of cashiers check, or lei· ·(6) 29, (7) 1
Northeast Quarter of excepted on the Meigs
Mineral
Resources · ter of credit upon a solsection 18, T.2, R. 12, of County Auditor's tax
2045 vent bank in the
the Ohio Company's list or the' Meigs
Management,
Morse Road, Bldg. H-2, amount ol not less
Public Notice
purchase, and reserv- County
Treasurer's
Columbus,
Ohio than 10% of the bid
lng and excepting duplicate tax list.
43229-li693.
amount in favor of the PUBLIC NOTICE
therefrom the right to The surface owners,
aforesaid
Meigs Chester Township will the use of road now Roy F. Van Mater and
(6) 22, 29 (7) 6, 13
C o u n· I y hOld their 2008 Budget used as such from the Bonnie F. Van Meter,
Commissioners. Bid hsarlng on July 3 at residence of B.B. Intend to file In the
Bonds shall be accom- their regular monthly Gibbs to Intersect the Office of the Meigs
Public Notice
ponied by Proof of meeting.
road heading from Old County Recorder, an
PUBLIC NOTICE
Authority of the official Janet R. Life
Town Creek to L Cross affidavit
of
The Village of Pomeroy or agent signing the Fiscal Officer
Mill for the uses and Abandonment at least
P.O. Box 46
purposes mentioned In thirty (30) days bu1 not
desires to sell certain bond.
real estate located on Bids shall be sealed Chester, OH 45720
deed of George J. later than sixty (60)
East Main Street sltuat- and marked as Bid for (6) 29
Reeler and Catharine days altar tho date on
ed in the Incorporated Pomeroy
Distress
Reefer to E. A. Mitchell. which thla notice is
Village. The property Sidewalk Replecement ·
Also th.e following served or published.
lor sale, Is described project and mailed or
Public Notice
real estate beginning (6) 29 .
. as Lot 82 In the Village delivered to :
at the Southsast corof Pomeroy. This prop- Meigs
County NOTICE OF INTENT TO ner of the above
erty Ia beat described Commissioners
· DECLARE MINERAL described Forty acre
P.ublic Notice
In a warranty deed Courthouse
INTEREST ABANDON- lot in the South half of
MENT
the Northeast Quarter IN THE
COMMON
recorded In Volume Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
136, pege 379, Volume Attention of bidders Is .1. To: Ralph Mitchell or of said Section 18, T.2, PLEAS COURT OF
133, page 605 and celled to all ol the his assignees, last R. 12, of the Ohio MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Volume 144, page 482, requirements
con - known address: 1315 Company's Purchase; Farmars
Bank
In Meigs County Deed talned In this bid pack· Stale
Route
160, thence east to the &amp;Savings Company
Records.
et, particularly to the Gallipolis, OH 45631, If Southeast corner of Plaintiff
Sealed bids shall tie Federal
Labor living, if deceased to said quarter section; vs
accepted until 12:00 Standards Provisions the unknown heirs, thence North 80 rods Charles Keiih Pyles, a
noon on July 20, 2007. and
Davis-Bacon next of kin, admlnlstra- to the Southeast cor- minor, by and through
All bids shall(le clearly Wages, various in sur- tors, executors, toga- ner of the North ha" of his mother and next of
marked
Jr.
High anee
requirements, tees, devisees, suc~es- said quarter section ; .kin, Aimee Pyles, et al
Property Real Estate various equal opportu- sors and assigns of thence West to the Defendants
Bid, on the outside of nlty provlsl~ns, and Ralph
Mitchell, Northeast comer · of Case No. 07 CV 063
the envelope and sub- the requirement for a deceased, names and Casper Reeler's forty NOTICE BY PUBLICAmilled to the Village payment bond and per- addresses unknown.
acre lot above named; TION
Clerk, 320 East Main formance bond for 2. To: Waid Mitchell or thence South to the To: The
Unknown
Street, Pomeroy, OH 100% of the contract his assignees, last place of beginning, Heirs, Next of Kin,
45769.
price. No bidder may known ~ddress: 1754 containing Forty acres, Devisees, Legatees,
All bids are subject to withdraw his bid within Richard Street, Akron, more or less.
Ad m I n I s I rat or s ,
a previous agreement thirty (30) days after 0H 44332, if living, if
Also the following Executors, Successors
with the Meigs County the actual ddle of the deceased
to
the real estate in said and Assigns of Randy
CIC, lor "Right of First opening thereof. The unknown heirs, next of Section 18, T.2, R.12, K. Pyles, deceased,
Refusal"
Meigs
County kin,
administrators, commencing
at a and the Estate of
The Pomeroy Village Com m I s s i o n e r s executors, legatees, stone at the southwest Randy K. Pyles whose
Council reserves the reserve ·the right to devisees, successors corner of Ed Mitchell's names and addresses
rlghllo accept or reject reject any or all bids.
and assigns of Waid land; · thence East 9 are unknown.
Mlck
Davenport, Milchell,
deceased, . chains and 65 links to You are hereby notified
any or all bids.
(6) 25, 29 (7) 5, 11, 20
President
mimes and addresses the canter of the said that you have been
County unknown.
road; thence south 64' named Defendants fn
Meigs
Commissioners
3. To: Perry Mitchell or West 7 chains and 70 the action entitled
Public Notice
(6) 21 , 26, 29
his assignees, if living, links to the center of a Farmers
Bank
&amp;
If deceased to the ravine coming down Savings
Company,
NOTICE TO CDNTRAC· - - - - - - - - unknown heirs, next of hill; thence North 38' Plaintiff, vs. Charles
TORS
Public Notice
kin,
administrators, Wast 4 chains and 25 Keith Pyles, a minor, by
Sealed proposals ·ror
executors, legatees, links to the place of and through his moth·
the Pomeroy Distress The Scipio Township devisees, successors beginning, containing or and next of kin,
Clearance
Project, Trustees will hold their and assigns of Perry one and 63/100 acres. Aimee Pylas, el at.,
Meigs County, Ohio 2008 Budget Meeting Mitchell,
deceased,
Excepllng ·therafrom Defendants.
This
will be received by the July 10, 2007 at the names and addresses the coal, oil, gas and action
has
been.
Meigs
County Pagevllle Town Hall at unknown.
other minerals under- assigned Case No. 07
Commissioners at the 6:30 P.m.
4. to: Creola Frost or lying the premises cv 063, and is pending
Meigs
j::ourthouse, (6) 28, 29
her assignees, last h e r e I n a b o v e In · the
court
of
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
known address: 556 described, which coal, Common ·Pleas of
until
1:00
p.m. - - - - - - - - Laurie Street, Eua oil, gas and other min- Meigs County, Ohio.
Thursday, July 5, 2007 .
Public Notice
Gallle, FL 32935, If ltv· eral rights were hereto- The object of the
and then at 1:15 P.M., - - - - - - - - lng, II clec:eased to the lore reserved lor and C!)mplalnt demands
at said office opened PUBLIC NOTICE
unknown heirs, next of conveyed to Rolph judgment against the
and read aloud for the The Chester Township kin,
administrators, Mllchsll, Waid Mitchell, Defendants,
The
.-----..,....,...,..----Perry Mitchell, and Unknown Heirs, Next
Kin, · Devisees,
Creola Frost and Opal of
Mitchell Smith, the L e g a I e e .s ,
grantors herein, In a AdmIn lot r ·a tors,
. certain warranty dsed Executors, Successors
recorded In Volume and Assigns of Randy
141, Page 218 of the K. Pyles, Deceased and
Meigs County Dead the Estate of Randy K.
Recorda, and reserv- Pylas, In the sum of
lng such easements $29,081 .68 with Inter·
and rights of way as est thereon at the rate
are necessary in order of $5.35914 per day
to use the coal, oil, gas until fully paid; In the
and mineral rights sum of $1,700.39 with
underlying the above Interest thereon at the
described premises. rate of $0.61369 per
The grantee herein · day until fiiiiY paid; and
reserves the right to in the sum of $2,666.67
prohibit the drilling of with Interest thereon at
wells lOr oil and gas the rate of . 12% per
within on.e hundred annum until fully paid,
feet of the farm house in order to foreclose
located on said prom- upon a mortgage upon
ises.
real estate located at
Grove
Road,
Reference
Deed: Oak
Volume 332, page 289, Racine,
OH~5771,
Meigs County . Deed being approximately
. 14.666 acr~s In Sutton
Records.
Auditor's . Parcel No. : Township and 4.288
18-01271 .000
acres In tho Village of
have declared the lot- Racine, Meigs County,
lowing mineral interest Ohio, which Is more
as baing abandoned fully described In deed
Ohio recorded In Volume
pursuant
to
Revised Code Section 219, Page 419, Meigs
5301.56.
County
Official
The mineral interest Records, and costs of
abandoned was an this action; that the
undivided 112 Interest mortgage be loreof oil and other mineral closed and that the
rights underlying the liens and/or Interests
above described real In or on said property,
·estate.
,
if any, be marshaled
This mlnorallnterast and the real estate title
was reserved and quieted and said real
excepted In a deed pre- property sold In the
sented lor record on lbractosura action and
amounts
due
October 15, 1935, all
which was recorded In Plaintiff be paid from
Volume 141 1Page 218, the proceeds of the
of the Meigs County sale.
I
'.1
J
.
Deed Records.
You are required to
Roy F. Van Mater and answer the CO!Rpialnt
Bonnie F. Van Mater within
twenty-eight
attest that the owners (28) days after the last
of said mineral interest publication of this
have done. nothing Notice, which will be
required
by
Ohio published once each
Revised Code Section week lor six (6) sue5301.26(B)(3) within cesslva weeks. The
the twenty years imme- last publication will be
diately preceding the made on the 3rd day of
date of the service of August, 2007, ·and the
thls notice, namely:
twenty-eight (2~) days
• The mineral !merest for answer will comhas not been the sub- monee on that date. In
ject of a tRio_transac- the case of your lailura
L:...:....::.:;~~=-.:t::.~-l.--:.:..-...:......:+:J.ll::::.l!J.:.~"'-:...:!...;.......J lion that has been filed to answer or otherwise

44 Brush off
46 Tinkers w~h
4 GUII!dhouse 50 Eatuary
8 Com throw· 51 By Jove!
away
53 Great Wall
11 Aloelocale
12 Eye
54 Fore
protector
opposne
13 Yea, to a
55 Resounded
matador
56 Beliefs
14 Coup d'- 57 Crusty
15 Kruger or
dessert
Preminger 58 Construction
16 Stain filler
..,.
17 Real
59. Society
19 Dieter
column
10 Edible root
· ofrhyme
word
11 - out
21 Curtain
(relax)
hanger
DOWN
18 Kappa pre22 Heat unns
ceder
23 Winter
1 Big
20 Litter memloracaat
celebration
bers
26 Scatter
2 Where
22 Wait a
28 Vast stretch
Tehran Is
while
of time
3 Inherent
23 Stage
29 Sleeping
character
scenery
31 Jagged tear 4 Having
24 Knowledge
33 Undeniable
llghl..:olored 25 Say clearly
35 Banjo
hair
26 Hockey
cousins
feint
5 Loan figure
37 Make do
6 Devotee's
27 Body
with
suffix
of water
38 Give power 10 7 Spooks
30 Daffodil
40 Cover girt
8 Became
starter
42 Grouchy
rough
32 Hair goop
paroon
9 Clay pot
34 Snakes
1 Surfer's
w.nlng

.~lder

see

•RENTALS SALES
SERVICE FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

I

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

TheDaily.

nbap·

...

·

I

I

•

East

• 7 52

• A
• 74 3 2
• 863
. 9 7541

• A6
• Q J 10 9
•AI08 ·3

r7amibj (e})1ij3:1

South
•KQJ6 3
• Q9
+ A5 I
• KQJ

70 Pine Street • Gallipoli s
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: East-West

Wise Concrete

-------Public Notice ·

6

West

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

see

•aUI»oli~ latr, 'rt&amp;Mt.
JQtnt f)leasa~t,ltmster

North
,..,...,
• .(0 9 8 4
• K J 10 8 5
+ K72

I

All types of con.crete
Owner- Ri ck Wise

740-992-5929
74041.6-1698

South

West

I•
4•

Pass 3 •
Pass · Pass

North

Opening lead: t

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
T~fS~ f~f5ti

vtGfTArH5
/ PlitNOf&lt;llfNAL! .

•

•

A~f

IT'S

...,. IJNGANI'IY!
-------Public Notice

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

*Prmnpl and Quality
Public Notice
County: Meigs
Work
The following applica- * Reasonable Rate s
lions and/or verified
complaints
were *Insured
received, and the lol- * bperienccd
lowing draft, propPsed, References Available!
or final actions were
Call Gary Stanley @
Issued, by The Ohio
740-742-2293
EnvIr on ment aI
Protection
Agency Please leave messa c
(OEPA) last week.
"Actions" include the
YOUNG'S
adoption, modlllcatlon,
or repeal of orders
(other than emergency
orders); the Issuance,
Room Additions &amp;
denial, modification or
Remodeling
revocation of licenses,
New Gnrages
permits, leases, variElectrical &amp; Plumbing
ances, or certificates ;
Roof ing &amp; Gutters
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
and the approval or
Patio and Porch Decks
dlsappro~al of plans
wv 036725
and
specifications.
"Draft Actions" are
V.C. YOUNG Ill
written statements of
992·6215
the
director
of
Pomeroy OhiO
E n v I r o n m e n t a I 25 Years Local Expenence
P r o 1 e c t i o n ' s 'I'
(Director's) Intent with
respect
to
the
issuance, denial, etc.
of a permit, license,
Construction
order, etc. Interested • Vinyl Siding
persons may submit , Replacement
written permit, license,
Windows
order, etc. Interested
persons may submit • Roofing
written comments or • Decks
request a public meet- • Garages
ing regarding drall , Pole Buildings
actions. Comments or
public
meeting ' Room Additions
requests must be subOwner:
milled within 30 days
James Keesee II
of notice of the draft ·
742·2332
action.
"Proposed ":======~
Actions" are written statements of the .
Public Notice
director's Intent with f:::ll-ed-:-----w-,l"'th-:
respect
to
the
Issuance, denial , modi- ~~~!~~m~~~m~:;;~~
fication, revocation , or 309 South Fourth
renewal ol a permit, Street, RoQm 222 ,
license, or . variance. Columbus, Ohio 43215 .
Written comments and A copy of the appeal
requests for a public must be served on the
meeting regarding a director within 3 days
proposed action may after filing the appeal
be submitted within 30 with the ERAC.
days of notice of the Final issuance
of
proposed action. An renewal of NPDES
adjudication hearing Permit
may be held on a pro- southren Ohi Coal co.
posad action If a hear- General
Office
lng request or objec- Building
lion Is received by the Rt. 3 and sate Rt 689
OEPA within 30 days of Point Rock, OH
Issuance of the pro- Action
· DAte:
posed action. Written o810 1/2oo7
comments, requests Receiving
Waters:
for public meetings, Unnamed Tributary to
and adjudication hear- Brush Fork
ing requests must be Facility Description :
sent to: Hearing Clerk, Industrial Sewage
Ohio Envlrqnmental lndentlllcation
No.:
Protection
Agency, OIM00003'ED
P.O.
Box
1049, This final action r\'Ql
Columbus,
Ohio preceded by .proposed
4 3 2 1 6 - 1 0 4 9 action and is appeal·
(Telephone: 614-644· able to ERAC.
2129). "Final Actions: Final Drinking water
Are actions of the source designation
director which are The Hot Spot
upon issuance or a 53160 New Beginning
stated eHective date. Rd.
Pursuant
to
Ohio Portland, Ohio 45770
Revised Code Section Action
Date:
3745.04, A final action 06/1812oo7
may be appealed to the Facility Description:
Environmental Review Non- Community water
Appeals Commission Identification No. :
(ERAC)
(Formerly 5331312
know
as
the This final action was
Environmental Board preceded by the same
of Review) by a person or substantially the
who was a party to a same proposed action.
proceeding before the Designation of ground
director by tiling an water.
appeal within 30 days (6) 29
of notice of the final
action. Pursuant to
Ohio Revised Code
Section 3745.07, A
Final Action iasulng,
denying, modifying,
revoking, or renewing
NO
a permit, license, or
WHAT YOUT.~I
variance which Is not
preceded by a proposed action, may be
appealed to the ERAC
by tiling an appeal
within 30 days of
issuance of the final
action. ERAC appeals,
accompanied. by a $70
... THE
filing fee which th
ecommission in It discrelion may red~ce if
by aHidavit the appellant demonstrates that
payment of the lull
amount .of the fee
would cause extreme
hardship,
!RUSt be

CARPENTER
SERVICE

J&amp;L

l!§

BARNEY

Hardwood hbln~ry And Furniture
www.u.nl&gt;a Cleekcabllletq.com

MY MAW SEZ THAT'S
WHAT LADIES WEAR
TO KEEP THAR HANDS
CLEAN!!

DIDJA ASK YORE MAW WHAT
LADIES WEAR TO KEEP i'HAR

. L.I'L. WHITE GI.OVES CL.EAN ?

BDPP AnD CENTER
St. Rt. 7, Tuppers Plains, OH

740-667-3177
Full Service Auto Repair ·
Oil Change, 1\Jne-Up, Engine
Diagnostics, Full Brake Service, Air
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Alignment, Custom Exhaust
Rocky Hupp-Owner

F"'~A..AAn:EROFFKT, YOV"'&lt;I

~UNI&gt; ~ """......'"'
T~l!&gt;

Jeff Bissell. Manager

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTIUCDON
·New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

MushrooRl Compost
$35 A Scoop
T-Post 6ft. $3.29
Wide Variety of
Lawn Seed, ·
Fertilizer and
Showmaster Show
Feeds

... HEY, WHAT$ THE
NAME OF THKr t;UY ·
T'OLO U.S

Ag S erv ice
Sl. I&lt; I 7
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.PEANUTS
Ill! M'&lt; NAME IS RERVN .. I'VE NEVER
BEEN TO T_,IS PLA'I'GROU"(D SEFORE ..

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446·0007

MIKE MARCUM
HoottN(,

&amp;

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Rubber Roof1Jly. Room Addil1ons. Df'r.ks. Shmg l e~
S idi ng. Windows. Pole B;uns. Gnrngcs.
Insurance Work. Rc~ 1 den t 1ill &amp; Cummerc1..ti
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Exp~rience

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
RaciQe, Ohio
4577 1
740·949·2217

Sizes 5'x1 0'

to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM • 8;00 PM

.'
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SUNSHINE CLUB

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Concrete Removal
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All Type• Of

Concrete Work
26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

111411 mo.pd

Insured :
Free Estimates •

Manlay•s .

Recycling
503 lUI Sl• Mlddllllllt OH 45180
740-992-anc

GARFIELD
GARFI!&lt;L.P, I
FEEL. POWN

Pl17 YOO &amp;AY HAPPt,&gt;
OR 5TUPIP?

•

......ltfllll.. 9:081111-5:00.11
SIIUnlllll:llllll-12:00 1m

PlYING TOP PIICES Fill

..............

111-IIICIIS •lniiiiiB-

CIIalvtlce.n.ten•C.IIr
ICIIIr. 111'1'111 l'rlclll

1i!~~~~!!_.:::::::::::=...J
.,.

. GRIZZWELLS

Q

lack thsm
36 Black mark
39 Cookie
cooks·
41 Get hold of
43 Push genii!
44 Decorate
gifts
45 Stereo
system
(hyph.)
46 Wheaze
47 Latin I verb
48 Icy coaling
49 Eur. airtlne
52 Moo goo
- pan

n.

AstroGraph
-

CELEBRITY CIPHER ·
by Luis Campos
Celebnty Cipha" cryplegams are creatlld !rom quoWJons by ramous people past and p-esent
Ead11Stertn the opher slaMs !Of another

Today's clue: VeqUals P

" MNL'SW
MNLH

COFGWSWX

UGWKX ZFWR

ZFWDFWH
ZNHJ

NH

ZFCO

YLDDWYY
MNL

MNL'HW

VKCM ."

GR

XNR ' O JRNZ
XNGRA

• ZCHHWR

GY

IWCOOM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION- ' The a1m ol art IS lo represenl not lhe outward
appearance ol things. but their inward significance .· · Anslolle

THlTOAILY
PUULIR

Clif'l'O ~h. ,(- f) "C. ~C,®
0~ 1.'-~ ~}. ~ ~&lt;/' r:J

WOlD
GAM!

ldlt•d by CV.Y R. POUAN

'lllrUtdl(y:

S.turday, Jun• 30, 2007
By Bemlce Bede Oaol
There Is a strong possibility that favor·
able changes could take place concern ·
ing your affairs. H9wever, be prepared for
the early stages to s.how signs of failure
instead of winning. Keep the faith and
keep plugging ahead .
CANCER {June 21-July 22)- VotJ may
move your funds around In a manner that
robe Peter to pay Paul and then kid yoursell into believing you 8re balancing your
budget. Unfortunately, it'U catch up with
you.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) - It would be
unwise to agree to something before you
know all lt1at is expected of you, regard·
less of who asks. Even if it turns out to be
disagreeable. once locked in. you won't
get out.
VIRGQ (Aug . 23•Se pt. 22) E\len
· !hough there may be a number of tasks
!hat require your attention. you might be
smar1 to postpone them if your heart Isn't
where it needs to be. You're likely to
bOtch up the jobs .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Lady Luck
could be a bit fickle, so it would be best
not to bank too heavily on chance and .
only upon corrimon sense. When you're
. up against taking a risk, you'd be wise
not to do so.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24· NOV. 22) -You usually enjoy people and welcome drop·ins.
However, if y_ou aren't in the mood for
guests, your Scorpio sting might be felt
by those JJ"Iwise enough to stop by your
place .
·
SA~ITIAA1US (Nov. 23·.Dec . 21) ShOuld you encounter someone whO is
antisocial and treats you impolitely. don't
lower your standards and respond in a
similar manner. Smother this person with
graciousness.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) - If you
make a llmmclal loan to a friend or fami ·
ty member, do so In a businesslike man ner. There Is a chance it'll never be satisfied and could cause ill will where once
there was lo\le.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20· Feb. 19) Ask
yourself if you're being honest witll
someone with whom you are closely
associated. 11 1t1e answer is "no.~ correct
this situation immediately or suffer
heartache when the truth is out.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - Be sure
to include yOur lo\led ones in your plans.
or your lhou!1'tlessness could easily hurt
them more than you ever .expected
Once the damage Is done, it'll be difficult
to mend.
ARIES (March 21 · April 19) Don't
· spend your energy circling around only
those people you believe to be the most
popular tor merely tnose reasons. You'll
put restrictions on your abilities to
expand.
TAURUS (April 20·Msy 20) -Your mode
of behavior wilt be wttnesaed and scrutl ·
nlzed by your peers. and If they find you
lacking In SQCia l graces or cominon cour·
tesy, It could tarnish your Image tor a
ton; time.
·
GEMINI (May 21 ·June 20) · Usually, you
. c:an got away wtth flowing with the vlele ·

Illude• of life and rnake a good lime out
of whatever comee along; however, It
waul" be m~o.~ch wlllr to makt 1olld plana

SOUPTO NUTZ

YUMI

Pass
Pass

You are the declarer in a suit contract .
when the dummy comeS down, you see
lhal you have one loser more than you
can afford.You cannot ruff it in the short·
er trump hand, but you can discard
Sasms simple enough - bul occasion·
al~ some care will bs required.
You reach lour spadss. West leads the
diamond queen. How VI'Ould you procoed? At. a side issue, what do you think
of partner's game·invitational three·
spade lim! raise?
Moving In reverse order, North is worth
·three spades. A lim! raise' shows 10-t2
support points and eight losers. North's
hand has seven high-card points and
three lor his sin{jeton club tO support
points. (You get tv.&lt;&gt; points for a singleton
when you have an eight-card lit.) Nor1h's
hand also contalls eighf klsers: three
spadss, two hearts, tWo diamonds and
ons club.
You have lour potential losers: one in
e8ch sun. You cannot avoid conceding
tricks to the three ace~ so you musl dis·
pose ol that diamond loser. You can sal
up your club suil, discarding dummy's
diamond klser on the second ·round of
clubs, then rutting your remaining low
dlomond on tho board.
But where must you win tnck one?
If you win n in your hand, you will drive
out the club ace lind lake trick lhree on
lhe board. You will bs stranded there,
unable to get to your hand for lhe ksy
pnch.
Win Irick one on the board.Then, aner a
club 10 Wosl's ace and a diamond back,
you take thai in your hand and can cash
a club winner for iha key diamond dis·
card.

and ltlck by them.

~ F\PRA''S

. 6dt' M~ ~A
91UPID Rl~
DIEi.

East

You need a.pitch,
but watch entries

G

BIG NATE

Shade River

740-992-1611

wt-..'&lt;, roo

43 Womdown .

A R FE

t~

~

P YZ P I

,,'
~

"Have you ever noticed," the
asked her friend, '1hat
the best p&lt;Ul of dinner is
dessert, when you're too lull to
woman

~

I

L E FE NI
eat ••. : .••'/"
~...,.:~6:..:;1~""1;:_~~·-;:.. ,.1--1 0 Ccm~!ete
.

.

.

"

.

by

·
·
the ''".kic quoted

hll1n9 h !~e ~·~tr.g word1

L-..L...JL-...1..-1-J._- yC)0 develop fro., ste~ Nc. 3 beloW.

j1 ,ji·-r, ·

f}

PRINi :~UMBf,~EV. LET ![~S
IN lf1 ,Sf SQ,,4..~ t5
,

e.

UNSCRAMBlf iJTiHS TO

4

~ Gfl ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS r, ··11 .. ; '!

Knight ~ Sadly - Query - Inward - WINun LIES
"To win i11at cl:~.~s el~ction I ~wu l d have made w stories about
myself," (complained . Gramps replied. " ll's b&lt;t~r tobi: defeated
on principle tlmn to WIN on LIES ··

ARLO &amp; JANIS

,,

••1..

IF Thl£V15l0!.15 HAD A

HO~e;

PAGE:., .All~ r.w&lt;,.O
"fUIWER CLA&amp;':&gt;IC /Af)llf,!J'

�Friday, June 29,2007

www .mydailysentinel .com

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

• If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. ·sox 1538, Gastonia , NC 28053

Lenox Industrial Tools

3oo, 1 p.m., Sunday

e

lulctl Series
. Ctmpi~ World 200,
2:30 p.m., Saturday

Truck Setlel
O'Reilly 200,
8:30p.m., Saturday

~

The real mystery In the latest
Hendrick Motorsports controversy - the cars of Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon were banished from qualifying at Sonoma
for having flared fenders that
NASCAR officials disallowed is why the teams would risk it.
It's not like they haven't been
dominating the season.

~

One would think the teams
chasing the Hendrick cars would
be the ones with an Incentive to
stretch the rules.

• Race: Lenox Industrial Tools 300
• Where: New Hampshire International Speedwciy, Loudon (1.058
, miles), 300 laps/317miles.
• When: Sunday, July 1
• Last year's winner: Kyle Busch
' • Qualifying record: Ryan Newman. Dodge, 133.357 mph,
·~ Sept. 12. 2003.
• Race record: Jeff Burton, Ford,
, 117.134 mph, July 13,1997.
• Last week: Somehow, Juan
Pablo Montoya's victory in the
first Nextel Cup road race of the
"' !?eason seemed inevitable. "It's
as big for me as anything I've
ever won: said Montoya. "It's as
' big to 'me as the Indy 500. It's
as big to me as the Grand Prix of
Monaco: There were moments
when it seemed improbable Montoya had only qualifled

• Race: Camping World
32nd, and no one had ever won
200
here after qualifying worse than
13th. Even though it seemed im- • Where: New Hampshire
International Speedway,
possible that Montoya, dueling
Loudon (1.058 miles),
with pole winner Jamie McMur300 laps/317miles.
ray, could make it to the e(ld of
• When: Saturday, June 30
the lnfineon Raceway event with·
• Last year's winner: Carl
out stopping for fuel. A lousy lap
Edwards
on Friday couldn't stop him.
• Qualifying record: Kevin
Small fuel tanks couldn't stop
Harvick, Chevrolet.
him. Nothing couid,stop him. A
130.716 mph, May 11.
steel'&lt; car? "It's very hard to
2001.
drive, but it's good for racing,"
• Race record: Bobby
said Montoy~. "lt's.not easy. You
Hamilton Jr.• Ford, 110.368
drift all over the place. But you
mph, May 11. 2002.
can pass PE!ople. The cars are
• Last week: Aric Almirola
really fun to drive. and they're
was officially the winner in
very responsive to small
· Milwaukee, but he only
changes." Kevin Harvick wound
drove the first 59 laps beup second, followed by Jeff Burton, Clint Bowyer and Greg ~itfle. fore turning his Chevy
over to Denny Hamlin.

c

J:r. ~ pe
;, Jjrt

1
'll

Jli ·--'.
$?'

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

CASEY MEARS

• Race: O'Reilly 200
• Where: Memphis Motorsports Park, Millington.
Tenn. (. 75 miles), 200
laps/150 miles.
• WIHfn: Saturday, June 30
• Last year's winner: Jack
Sprague
• Qualifying record: Greg
Biffle , Ford, 120.139
mph, May 7, 1999.
• Race record: Travis Kvapil, Chevrolet, 89.065
mph, June 22, ;!002.
• Last week: Johnny Benson drove a Toyota to victorY. at The Milwaukee
Mile, withstanding a late
rally by Chevrolet driver
Ron Hornaday Jr.

e

)

No.

25

v

NATIQNAL GuARD/ GMAC CHEVY

E

R

s

~On the

other·hand. NASCAR
brings a lot of this on itself.
From the rulebook: "Streamlini~ of~ contours of the car,
beyond that approved by the Series Director, will not be permitted." That's not exactly precise
wording.

ure

~ Take the reports of Budweiser

and Earnhardt Jr. splitting with a
grain of salt. Rick Hendrick has
hinted that all his sponsorships
are set. It wasn't too long ago
that he was hinting that all his
drivers were set, too.
~

Martin Truex Jr. is a different
person since he won his first
race. He's self-assured. witty,
easygoing ... as if a burden had .
been lifted from his shoulders.
Always a good guy, now he's a
confident guy.

~

The sudden improvements of
Truex and Casey Mears are evidence of just how much intangible considerations still matter,
even in a sport so focused o~
the technical and the commercial. Maybe the clicM actually
works: It is a people sport.

~

Perhaps the biggest disappointment in Sonoma was the
failure of Toyota driver A.J. Allmendinger to make the field. Allmendinger is from the area and
an experienced road racer. His
Team Red Bull mate Brian Vickers, who has produced Toyota's
only top-five finish this year. didn't make it either.

'

1

I

&gt;;,:;
/J']I• 41'
$' )

~Who's

os;44i
£ , ,.'{

hot

-Juan
Pablo Montoya won his
first race and
drove from
32nd place to
dolt. ... Greg
Biffle got a
lift from a
fifth-place
finish, tying his season best.
~

Who's not - Jamie McMurffri led 30 la!l and was sec-

ond until he ran out of gas.
The finish? 32nd .... Kyle Petty
proved he could announce and
race to a 39th-place finish at
the same time.

t"T ,

~: • · '· ·

:. , ·

Hum. CUP

1. Jeff Gordon

' 2.

DenniHamlin
Ji!!!IT1ie Johnson .
4. Matt Kenseth
I. Jeff Burton
TO!!): Stewart
7. Carl Edwards
8. Kevln Harvick
9. Clint Bowyer
10. K~e Busch
11. Martin Truex Jr.
S2. Dale Earnhardt Jr.

a.

••

~

2!538 .
. 271
- 366
-433
-454
- 480
. 519
-574·
-.604
- 633
- 675
• 723

IuscH SIRlES
1. Carl Edwards

2.

a.

...
s.
••7.

•

••9.
10.

David Reutimann
David Ragan •
Dave Blaney
Kevin Harvlck
Jason Leffler
Marcos Ambrose•
Bob~ Hamilton Jr.
Regan Smith
Ste~hen Leicht

2!686
- 776
- 846
.'853

- 888
- 918
-930
-933
. 942
-990

CRAFTIMAN TRUCK SERIES

1. Mike Skinner
2. Ron Hornaday Jr.

a.
4.
I.

Todd Bodine
ll"avis Kvap!l
Rick Crawford

• rookie

1,878
- 108
· 205
- 293
- 299

Mears discovers
winning can be a
cure-all for racers
'

(

.S

Green

Johnny Sauter
·va. Jeff Green
They're teammates, and yet
Green's Chevy rammed Sauter's on
pit road. "The situation shouldn't
have gotten to that point," said.
Green. "I had no idea Johnny was
coming ln. .. . It's the kind of mistakes a team trying to compete in
this series has to avoid."

~

The Assoclaled Press reported
that next year Dale Earnhardt
Jr.'s Chevy would be sponsored
• by Sony. Quite a scoop, other
than It being untrue. Junior's
deal is a personal endorsement
contract. Corrections were
made, but not before brush fires
broke out on the Internet.

u
Sauter

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

SONOMA, Calif. - It's hard to overstate what victory can do.
Casey Mears struggled after joining
Hendrick Motorsports this year. Succeeding Brian Vickers in the No. 25
National Guard/GMAC Chevy, Mears
had only a single lOth-place finish, at
Bristol, to show for the season's first
11 races.
Then, however, Mears won the
CQca-Cola 600, NASCAR's longest
race, and it made all the difference.
He proceeded to finish fourth at both
Pocono and Michigan. In a span of
four races, he improved from 35.th to
20th in the Nextel Cup points standings and set his sights on the Chase.
"I think that the team has just really
come together," said the 29~year-old
Mears. "We've had a lot of growing to
do early this year. A lot of changes
went on within the team and the organization.... We've had some really
. . good ca.rs come out of the shop lately.
It seems like the team is really startJohn Clark/NASCAR This Week
ing to jell. ·
Expectations
were
high
when
Casey
Mears
came
Into
stock-car
racing, beginning with
"I think (crew chief) Darian Grubb
and I are starting to communicate the 2003 Daytona 500. It took him 156 races,. though, to finally win one.
very well, and that's just starting to
show..... The cars were very fast, we to be here," he said. "Ym~ really need everything right? With a company like
were very competitive; we just to know that you can beat anybody out Hendrick Motorsports, you don't
weren't getting the results we needed. there. I think that I've alw.ar.s felt question that"
It's good now, and I feel fortunate that that, but I've always wondered what's
Mears' uncle, Rick Mears, is one of
some of that bad luck has kind of got- the missing link to getting myself to three men to win the Indianapolis 400
ten out ·of the way and we've been able that point
·
four times. His father, Roger, was an
to capitalize on the product that we
"My surroundings have just elevat- accomplished off-road racer who also
have."
.
ed. I know this equipment can win raced at Indy. In NASCAR, Casey is
Expectations were high when races. I think it takes the question out taking the family's motorsports herMears came into stock-car racing, be- .of your mind, maybe a little bit. itage in yet another direction.
ginning with the 2003 Daytona 500. It Where I've been in the past, there · As recent results attest, it's a positook him 156 races, though, to finally have always been good race cars, tiv~ one.
win one.
great race teams, good people, but be"I thirik that if you're here and cause nobody on the team had had a
Want to read more from Monte
you're questioning that you have the whole lot of success, you kind of quesDutton?9heck out http://www.gasability to be here, then you don't need tioned, in the back of your mind, ·is tongazette .comls~ctions/sports/nascar/

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: ".It's hard to
argue with Green's analysis, and his
team compounded the problem by
sending him back on the track,
where tfis car promptly caug~t on
fire. Haas CNC Racing has had better days."

'Provisional•' don't mean
the same thing every time
Could you please explain to me
what a "provisional pole" is? I know
that Ryan Newman got one at
Pocono and Robby Gordon Is getting
one this week.
· We are fairly new fans' of
NASCAR. and we need some of the
rules explained ....
Pat Hanlon
-Cheney, Wash.
In NASCAR, it just means that a
driver is fastest part of the way
through qualifying. In other words, if
Robby Gordon is fourth on the track,
and he's the fastest of those four,
he's referred to as being on the provisional pole. It's kind of like being
the leader in the clubhouse in golf.
Sometimes an announcer might call
a pole "provisional" when, say, qualifying is rained out and the points
leader ·;s given the first starting posi·tion, but that's really an incorrect usage. There a;e other forms of racing
where the term means more. In
some series, there are two qualifying
sessions. The provisional pole winner
is the driver who qualifies best in the
first session. He will lose that status
if someone else goes faster in the
later session. In NASCAR; it's reaQy
not a formal term. There 111ay be
some confusion with a provisional
spot In the starting field, which is given to a driver based on past performance, meaning that he has a
guaranteed spot in the field, even if
his car doesn't go fast enough in
qualifying.

Old·pals Martin, Kenseth still confide in each other
t

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
SONOMA, Calif. - Mark
Martin didn't ·compete at lnfineon Raceway - he had been
on call in case the birth of Jeff
Gordon's first child kept the
points leader otherwise occupied - but for former teammate Matt Kenseth, he's never
far away.
.
Martin was influential in
bringing Kenseth, the 2003
Winston Cup champion, to team
owner Jack Roush. Even
though Martin, now competing
in a limited schedule for Ginn
Racing, isn't with Roush Fenway Racing anymore, .his move
hasn't affected his personal relationship with h'is one-time
charge.
"It really hasn't changed at
all, to be honest with you," said
Ken seth. "If I need a piece of
advice, I still call him. More so
than just sharing informatwn
or doing teammate 'stuff, we've
become good friends. He's
been a mentor of mine, but after probably the first year or
two, and after working togeth-

,,
"

.......... .

.

..

~

t t!Jfrt~ ~~~JJ ]~

Z-':.i,.tff :.;- ') hot commodity since being let

go at Roush Fenway earlier
this year. Tryson has now been
named Kurt Busch's crew chief
at Penske, replacing Troy Raker.
Tryson, most noted for his
work with Martin, began the
season as Greg Biffle's crew
chief. Raker, who was in an interim role, is returning to the
Penske engineering department. Raker had been substituting for Roy McCauley, who
. has been dealing with family
concerns for some time.
"We've been knocking at the
door, and I think Pat can really
help take us to the next level,"
said Busch.

er a little bit in the Busch Series and all that stuff, more of
his advice and help is more on
everyday stuff that he can still
help me without being a teammate, whether it's business
stuff or the right thing to do on
the track or off the track driving-style-wise, or etiquettewise, or whatever.it could be; I
still try to model myself a lot
after his driving style and
some of the things he does and
doesn't do.
"I've never called him since
he left where he hasn't answered the phone or called me
back, so he's still real easy to
get a hold of and h'e•s always
there whenever you need advice."
Regan Smith competed here Two's good - Are two road
in the No. 01 Chevy most often courses enough? Too mahy?
driven by Martin. ·
"Do they need them? No. Are
they in a good market? Yes,"
said Ryan Newman. "Would it
be
nice to have a couple more?
I
Tryson resurfaces -. Most of Maybe so, but in the end, it's
the attention has been given to the way it's been for a long
drivers, but crew chief Pat time, and there's nothing really
Tryson has been considered a wrong with it."

•

•

SOMETHING DIFFERENT:
The nature of NASCAR's penalties to the teams of Jeff·Gordon and Jimmie Johnson was
very close to unprecedented.
Gordon and Johnson were
prevented from· being allowed
on the track during practice·
and qualifying. This meant that
both would start at the back of
the pack, a notable d.isadvantage on a road course. Whether
the two- first and third in the
current point standings- will
be allowed to practice today
was undetermined and apparently won't be until this rooming.
NASCAR spokesman Ramsey Poston, who then consulted
Nextel Cup Series director
John Darby, could not come up
with a-. specific precedent to
what was done to Johnson and
Gordon, though Darby reportedly said he thought something
like it might have happened in
the late 1990s.
What NASCAR found objectionable were "body modifications which we re found to be
outside the tolerance," according to Poston.
.

An allowable tolerance, a
term pertinent in previous
years, has been essentially
eliminated from consideration
Where the so-called Car of Tomorrow is concerned.
"In the inspection process,
violations involving the COT
will be .more severe than with
the previous car," said Poston,
who wouldn't speculate regarding penalties involving crew
chiefs Steve Letarte (Gordon)
and Chad Knaus (Johnson)."
I

•

Famous last words - Jimmie
Johnson, in a June 12 press
conference, painted what he
faced at Infineon·as an impossible task.
"More thari anything, I want
to make sure I'm competitive
and qualify well," he said.
"Road-course racing can· be
such ·a stressful experience. If
you have a bad qualifying effort, it just leads to a long
weekend and crazy strategy to
be competitive."
How about no qualifying effort at all?

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