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                  <text>•

Bethel Worship.Center
hosts Biker Sunday, A2
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 20,

www.mydailysentinel.com

Mets beat Reds in
extra innings, Bt

2006

I

Festival to benefit Stuart's Opera House
'

NELSONVILLE - The
second annuu l Nclsom·ille
Art &amp; Music Festival will
take pla.:e from .4 p.m. to
midnight on Satut:day. July
c9. on the east bank of the
Hocking River. in a field
adja.:ent ro the Nelsonville
Scenic Railway Depot on
U.S 3.1
Newly-added performers
to this year's lineup include
Austin
of
Cincinnati.
Graham Weber, Megan
Palmer and The Hopefuls,
from Columbus, and the
Athens-based Paranormals.
Featured at thi; year's
festival ·will be "the most
non-famous
famous ·
American musician." Leon
Redbone, in addition to
singer-songwri ter
Todd
Snider. Wrapping up the
evening
is
America's
favoriJe party band. the
Grammy Award-winning
Combo.
from
Brave
Denton. Texas.
In addition to the great
music, folk s will have the
opportunity to patronize
regional artists and craftspeople,
including
the ·
Nelsonville Hi sto ri c Art
District merchants: who
will have booths set up to
se ll their work while enjoying cuisine from local food

Leon Redbone

vendors.
Festival -goers may also
choose to cool off with a
coh.l beverages in the shade
of the Sycamort&lt; trees: It is
'uggested that those attending take along their own
blankets and chairs.
All proceeds from this
event will benefit Stuart'·s
Opera House. Tim Peacock,
of Swart's Opera House
and organizer of the festival says, '·We feel this
e~~ent

large weekend festival.
with the focus always
being great music and great
art."
.
Tickets are available at
the Stuart's Opera House·
box office and Blue Eagle
Music in Athens. Advance
tickets are avai !able for
$10 through July 21 and
$15 beginning July 22.
Tickets and more inrormation are available at
740-753-1924 or www.stucan grow into a very artsoperahouse.org.

PORTSMOUTH
Portsmouth native ;opratlo
Kathleen Balllc. whose
voice has been called ·• ...
without qualitkation. one of
the mo-t beautiful in the
world,'' lry the Wa,hington
Post. will rerforrn at 7:.\0
. . on Sept. 27 at Shawnee
University (SSU) in
the Vcm Riffe Center for the
Arts.
"Baule i.s at the top of her
profession and receives
praise from around the
world as one of the finest
sopranos of our time," said
Carl Daehler, executive
director of the Center. "We
feel blessed to be able to
bring Ms. Battle back to
Portsmouth to perform for
the first time ~t the Vern
Riffe Center. This will be a
magical evening for all."
Battle has appeared on
many stages of the world's
leading opera houses including Vienna, San Francisco,
Loridon, Chicago and Paris.
She has performed with the
world's great symphony
orchestras including the
New York Philharmonic,

Kathleen Battle

Chicago
Symphony
Boston
Orchestra,
Symphony
Orchestra,
Cleveland
Orchestra,
Philadelphia Orchestra, and
the Vienna Philharmonic.
She has loured extensively
'throughout
the United
South
States, Canada,
America, Europe. and the
Far East. ·
Tickets range from $10 to
$41 and will go on sale
Aug. 28. The concert is also
i.ncluded as part of the
2006-2007 Performing Arts

Subscription Series presented by the Southern · Ohio
Performing Arts Association
(SOPAA) and SSU. For
information on purchasing
tickets or other concerts presented at the VRCFA. call
the McKinley Box Offrce at
(740) 351-3600. Box office
hours are I0 a.m. to 6 p.m.,
Monday through Friday.
Battle. who earned both
her bachelor 's and master's
degrees from the College
Conservatory of Music at
the University of Cincinnati,
has received six honorary
doctorates from American
universities and in 1999 the
National Association for the
Advancement of Colored
People (NAACP) inducted
Battle into the Hall of Fame.
Battle has recorded with
Sony Classical throughout
her career.
Her latest
"Classic
recording,
Kat)lleen Battle: A Portrait,''
showcases her with some of
the top names in classical
and jazz, such as Christian
McBride, Jessye Norman,
Andre Previn, Vangel is, and _
the Vienna Philharmonic. ·

e
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

SPORTS
• Woods starts strong
at Open. See Page 81

FAC to host Summer Salon

Eddie Kirkland . the Butler
Twins. Willie D. Warren
and Uncle Jesse White. •
Influenced by the music
of Junior Wells. Jimmy
Reed and Little Walter, as
we ll as Motor City harmonica
players
Lazy
Lester. Johnny "Yarddog"
Jones, Clarence Butler and
Lillie Sonny, Shah has
forged his own ·no-holdsbarred sound: gravelly
vol:als, jagged harp lines
and raw guitar accompaniment. all with a tough edge
that is uniquely Detroit.
A prolific songwriter,
Shah's recordings have
engaged blues fans around
the world: he has toured
Europe, Russia. Japan and
Australia, in add ition to

appearances
at almost
every blues club and festival in the U.S.
Shah considers his latest
CD. "Listen At Me Good"
(Eiectro-Fi) to be his best
release to date. Eight-time
W.C. Handy Award winning drummer Willie "Big
Eyes" Smith guests on six
songs, and blues guitar
master Mel Brown appeals
on four tunes.
Songs in~lude "Dirty and
Greasy Work," "B ullets
Don't Care," "Lonesome
Graveyard Blues" and ")
Wish A Thief Would Steal
All My Burdens and Pain."
Reviewers credit Shah
with creating a blues sound
that can only be described
as Motor City Mojo.

GALLIPOLIS The
American Bass Anglers arc
flooding into Gallipolis
again ror another One-Day
on
Super Tournament
Sunday, July 23.
The event is pre,ented by
the
Gallia
· County
Convention and · Visitor~
Bureau and sponsored by
AEP Gavin Plant , the city
of Gallipolis, and the
French Art Colony.
The pre-registration meeting which includes a reception and special entertainment will be held for the
visiting
anglers
on
Saturday. July 22 from 5
p.m. to 8 p.m. at the French
Art Colony.
According to Bob Hoou.
executive dir~cror .or the

Con\'ention and Visitors
Bureau; around 75 anglers
are expected to compete for
the first place prize of
s1,000.
The "shoot off' will
begin at 6 a.m. on Sunday
and weigh-in will be
around 3 p.m. The public is
encouraged to attend the
weigh-in. which will be
located at the Public Access
Area located on First
Avenue.
The
American .Bass
Anglers was formed in
1975 by military bass
an glers and was originally
named the Military Bass
Anglers Association. The
tournament trail was limited
to military personnel until
the early '9Qs. In 2000,

Morris Sheehan bought the
organization and renamed it
American Bas's Anglers.
·
American Bass Anglers is
the largest tournament trail
dedicated to' the weekend
angler, according 'to the
organization's
website
www.americanbassanglers.c
om.
The entry fee is $55. For
more information contact
.Barry Davis at (6 14) 8552206 or at bdavis @americanba ssa ng ll:'rs .com.
Information can also be
found . by calling the ABA
national headquarters at
(888) 203-6222.
This tournament is an
ABA, qualifying event and
sanctioned Triton Gold
event.

See Page A5

Please see Call. AS

• At the right time,
yes .... but until then.
See Page A2
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Local Briefs.

Ohio Festivals and Events
COLUMBUS (API Union
County
Fair,
Here is a list of current and Marywille.
upcoming Ol1io festiv:tls and
Through July 31
events:
Seneca County Fair, Titlin.
Through July 26
Quilt Display a.nd Sale,
Topic:
Flight'
COS! Craft Bam. Bob Evans Farm,
Columbu,. W. Broad St., Rio Grande.
Columbus.
Stonehenge Quilt Show:
Through July 28
Exploring
Lake
Erie,
Clark
County
Fair, Stonehenge Estate, Langram
Springfrelu.
Rd .. South Bass Island . ·
Through July 2&lt;)
Through Aug. 6
Knox County Fair. Mr.
The Great Lakes Medieval
Vernon.
Fairc. Rock Creek. Geneva.
Butler
County. Fair,
Fenton Att Glass Annual
Hamiltun
Tem Event, Caroline Avenue,
Clermolll Countv Fuir. Williamstown. W.Va.
Owenwille.
'
Cowan Pottery: Shining
Vinton
Cnuntv
Fair. Design Exhibit. Zanesville
McArthur.
Art Center, Military Rd.,
Fayelle County
Fair. Zanesville.
Washington CH.
~ Through Aug. 13
Lancaster Festival. various
Blue Jackel, Caesar's Ford
site~ in Lanca\'itcr.
Amphitheatre. S. Stringtown
Through Jul~ 3fl
Rd .. Xenia.
Summit County Fair.
Ex hihit : Extreme TextilesTallmadge.
De;igning
for
High
LLtcas
County
Fair. Performance, Wexner Center
Maumee.
for the Arts. N. High St. ,
Shelby
Coumy
Fair. Columbu,,
Sidney.
Through Aug. 14

National Rifle &amp; Pistol
Matches, . Camp
Perry
Training Site, Port Clinton.
Through Aug. 27
Exhibit: Best of 2006,
Ohio Craft Museum. W.
Fifth Ave., Columbus.
Through Sept. l
Wate~;color
National
Society Traveling Exhibition,
'Zanesvi lle
Art
Center.
Military Rd., Zanesville.
Through Sept. 3 . b
Art
Exhibition-Russell
Wright: Living with Good
Design, Decorative Arts
Center of Ohio, E. Main St.,
Lancaster.
Through Sept. 4
Exhibit:· Kid Stuff-Great
Toys From Our Childhood,
Ohio Historical Center/Ohio
Village,
Velma
Ave. ,
Columbus.
Bead International '06 &amp;
Basketry lntemational, Dairy
Barn Southeastern Ohio Arts
Center, Dairy Ln., Athens.
Blooms and Butterflies,
Franklin Park Conservatory,
E. Broad St., Columbus .

See Page AS

'

Entertainment briefs
Wreath laying
set Saturday

Library hosts
book signing

PORTLAND
The
Ohio Department of the
Sons of Union Veterans of
the Civil War will. be ho.lding the first annual wreath
·laying ceremony to honor
those veterans who fought at
the Battle of Buffington
Island. The ceremony will
be Saturday, July 22 at I
p.m . at the Buffington
Island State Park in
Portland.
The ceremony will feature
the · new
Ohio
Departm,ent commander,
Ken Freshley. as we11 as the
National Commander Don
Darby with other department members assisting.
Refreshments · wi II
be
served after the ceremony
by the Portland Community
Center, with a preview tour
of the future Buffington
Island Battlefield Museum
to follow .
For further information
or · questions about the
event, contact Scott Britton
of the Benjamin Fearing
Camp No. 2 SUVCW of
Marietta at (740) 376-0323
or Jame s Oiler of the CadotBlessing ca mp No. 126
suvcw at (740) 245-0134.

GALLIPOLIS - Local
author Dr. Danny Fulks
will
be
at
Bossard
Memorial .Library
on
Sunday, July 23 from 2 to 4
p.m. for a book signing of
hi s latest book, "Tick
Ridge Faces the South:
True Stories, Memories .
Photos
from
Rare
the
Appalachia · and
South."
·
He· will be bringing several copies of hi s new book
with him to sell and auto ~
graph. Danny will also be
sharing some down home
country sto,ries and music
with those attending.
.
Fulb is a native of
Gallia County. .
He has written 30 stories
on Appalachia and the
South for selected journals, 'some of which have
been published in Ohio
Hi storiCal Society's publication. Timeline. He has
written three previously
published
books:
"Appalachia
Love
Stories,'' "Ta les Along the
Appalachian Plateau" and
"Tragedy
on
Greasy
Ridge."
Call the library at 446-

· READ for more information.

• For the Record.

See Page AS
• Youth events.

See Page AS
. See Page AS
· • Miscellaneous
results posted.

See PaS!e AS

PORTLAND
The
Ponland Community Center
will be busy ·once again
when the latest Ohio River
Producers ' (.fFA alumni)
Horse Fun Show returns to
the show ring tomorrow.
Exhibitions begin at I 0
a.m . at the horse \how rim!

behind the center. The ;rctLi':.
a! show heein.s at II a.m .
with both youth and adult
claS&lt;es.
The
Portland
Community Ccmer \\'ill he
~elling conces:.;ion~.

4-H Projects ranging from
Thi;; will he tl]e fourth
woodworking to model rock- horse show held at !lie'
etry, creative wrrting to
Portland show rin~ this\ car
lau ndry, interior desrgn to
and Bruce McKel~·ey of the
first aid were judged
Ohio Ril'er Produc·ers ]l(lpc•s
Wednesday in preparation
it won't be the last.
for the display of the pro'"The ~bow~ arc l.!oinL!.
jects at next month's Meigs great." McKeh·ey ,;rid~"\\'~
County Fair. Miscellaneous
still ha1·en't reached our full
project judging took place,
potcHtial yet \\'!til thi s and
for the first time, in the
we·r~ :-.till improv ing ."
Thompson-Roush Building
McKdvcy hope; the next
addition to the shu\\' rill ':.!
at the Rocksprings
will be 11utdoor li ~hh r,,l·
fairgrounds. 4-H'ers lined
ni~hllimc shm\s. He ;rd&lt;bl
·up with their projects and
thir t the Ohio Ri' cr
story boards, waiting for
Prodw.:cr:-.. ~~nonprofit urt!a·
the turn before the judge,
as parents warted patiently. nintt ion. j.., \\'LlJlin~ hard lo
make this happen. '
Here, Zack Newell discussMcKl'11·cy audcd tllilt the
es his self-determined 4-H
shows thpnseh·es h;IJ.'I"'n ·
project. a nitro and alcoholthanks
to \'olumccr; and
fueled remote control car,
local
bu
... iue ..,:-.e:-. '"~~~~ -., upwith Karen Werry, one of
port
them
. in Lu..:t ma11\
the volunteer judges. His
businesses and indi l'iduis
project earned an honor·
spon"or
the ·indi' idu,LI . .
able mention. Judging
classes
that
the riders c'lllll·
results appear rhSide
pete in. The sh&lt;nls arL
today's edition.
meant to huild an interc'sl it~
Br1an J. Reed/photos
Please see Show, A5

NEWS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.CO M

WEATHER

WILKESVILLE
Wilkesville
Volunteer
Firemen's Association will
host its annual fish fry on
Saturday, July 29 from II
a.m. until I 0 p.m.
The fish fry takes place ,
on · the
square
in
Wilkesville .

Bluegrass
Jamboree
KANAUGA
A
Bluegrass Jamboree will be
held at the AM VETS Lodge
in Kanauga at 7 p.m.
Saturday, featuring the
Sound of Bl~egrass.
Callers are Don McCoy.
Dale Delaney. Howard
Meadows, Ken Turley, Jim
Brown, Bill Oshe, Fred
Millhorn . Bob Harrison.
Don Shaw, Veri in Smith and
guest.
,
For information , contact
Dave McCoy at (866) 2957942 or Don McCoy al
(740) 682-6903.

Proud to be ~part of your life.·
•
The Dally Sentinel • Subscribe today • 992-2155 • www.mydailysentinel.com

· Details on Page AS

.

INDEX
2 SECfHlNS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

A6

.Classifi eds
Comics
.Dear Abby

B2-4

Bs
A6

Editorials

A4

Faith • Values
Movies
NASCAR
•
Obituaries
Sports
Weather

A2-3

As
\ B6

As
B Section

© :.mo6 Ohiu Vullc)· PubliNhinK Co.

POMEROY- Beginning
with the Sunday TimesSentinel of July 23, Ohio
Valley
Publishing Co.
newspapers will be featuring the advice column
Annie's Mailbox by former
Ann Landers column editors Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar.
Annie's Mailbox will
replace the Dear Abby c'olumn on a daily basis. OVP
publishes the The Daily
Sentinel, Gallipolis Daily
Tribune and the Point
Pleasant Register.
Annie's Mailbox is distributed by Chicago-based
Creators Syndicate.
In 2002, the nation bid
farewell to a beloved icon
in Ann Landers. Today .
Annie's Mailbox fills the
void left by the ·loss of
readers' favorite advice
giver, mother figure and
confidante.
·
Those are no small shoes
to fill . Yet. immediately
after Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar began writing
Annie's Mailbox on July.28,
2002, the letters came pouring in. Because of the
increase in e-mail, Annie's
Mailbox now receives as
much mail weekly I0.000 letters and e-mails
- as Ann Landers did, and

Please see Annie, As
t

Horse Fun
Show returns
·to Portland,
previous show
results posted
BY BETH SERGENT

STAFF&gt; REPORT

Wilkesville
fish fry

30-minutc illlcrview with
Qualb · at the ~eig;
County Courthouse. In a
June 2~ letter to the court.
,h~ s;riJ Qualls "is neither
mentally ill nor mentally
retarded. but ha s a history
of chronic· and se\'crc
alcohnlisrn ...
"Tile dcfc ndalll is able to
a.., ~ ist in hi:-. own defen~e. "
'he saiu.

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Annie's Mailbox
makes debutin
OVPpapers
this weekend

• Church events.

dant evidenced irrat innal
behavior during several
interviews, . anU cannul
answer even themost simple questions regarding
himself or the all eged
crime."
At the same time, Qualb
entered a plea of "not guil ty
by reason of i~sanity."
Voyten based her find ing of competence llll a

Projects ludged

• Local Stocks.

INSIDE

Summer Salon, series 1 is being held at the French Art Colon y this Friday, July 21 at 6:30
p.m. Thi$ annual event promotes both visual and performing arts and all proceeds benefit
programs at the Ariel-Dater Theatre and the French Art Colony. Series 1 will be the chamber
music genre. and include performances by Lora Snow (oboe). Cheryl Jarvis (piano), Ryan
Duffy (guitar) and Kaiti Dovyak (violin). Light hors d'oevres and refreshments will be served,
and the galleries will be open for view. Tickets are $10 per person, and can be purchased
at the French Art Colony, 530 First Ave, Gallipolis. For more information, call 446-3834.

evaluation completed by dence. A police report of the
Karla K. Voyten, Ph.D., to incident states that Qualls
rule that Dwayne Qualls, and Fraley had been drinkPOMEROY Meigs 46, is competent to stand ing whiskey and Qualls
County Common Pleas trial on the charge of felo- "became belligerent."
Court Judge Fred W. Crow niou s assault. The trial is
Following Qualls' indictIll has determined that a scheduled for Aug. 24 .
ment on the charge. hi&gt;
Pomeroy man is competent
Qualls is accused or stab- attorney.
Christopher
to stand trial on a charge he . bing Rick Fraley on the left Tenoglia, asked that his
stabbed a man in February.
wrist and right hand follow- mental competence be evalCrow relied on the ing an altercation .on Feb. 15 uated. At that time.
results of a psychiatric at a Butternut Avenue resi- Tenoglia said, "the def.,n-

POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Police Department
can get dozens of calls on
any give n night but yesterday morning around 12:43
a.m. they received one classified as a possible domestic
at 125 Spring Aven., problem is. there is no 125
Spring Ave .
The incident report states
a caller identifying himself
as Johnny Jones said his
wife punched him in the
nose, he also gave the fictitious address and then the
line went dead.
Pomeroy Assistant Chief
of Police Alan Queen along
with Patrolmen Shannon
Smith and Eric Augenstein
were dispatched to the fictitious location, thinking they
had a possible domestic situation. After waking several
residents in the area during
their search, the officers
detennined there was no 125
Spring Avenue and returned
to the police department.
·
Verizon was then contacted to trace the phone number from where the call
allegedly
originated.

• Allan Gibson, 56
• Gale Green, 78
• Vicki Johnson, 56
• Ruth Mildred Tuttle, 82

Submitted photo

.-

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH SERGENT

Page AS

"'"".on~ ot,oi I~"' "' i ""' ..,..,,

:! t , :!ooh

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

OBITUARIES

American Bass Anglers tournament set for Gallipolis

n , .11 11.'

Qualls competent to stand trial in assault

Prank

'Harnwnica' Shah to wrap up Rhythm series
POMEROY -- Seward
"Harmonica" Shah. one or
the re'maining living links
to the classic deep blues of
Detroit. and his band will
present thi s year's final
concert in the Rh ythm on
the River series at 8 p.m.
Friday in the . Pomeroy
riverside amphitheater.
The Blues Bash. finale or
the Pomeroy Blues and
Jazz Society's summer
mu sic program, will be
held on July 28 and 29.
Shah grew up in· Texas.
moved to Detroit in 196 7
and perfected hi' craft
through years of constant
playing with many of the
classic
bluesmen
of
Detroit. His musical compatriots were Bobo Jenkins.

1'1~ II I

;;o ('I .NTS • \' ul. ;;:;. N u. :! ;IX

Legion gives memorial tribute to longtime member
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A memorial tribute to Frank A.
Vaughan, a member of
Drew Webster Post 39 of
the American Legion for
many years. and long
associated wit!J, Buckeye
Boy~ State, htghlighted
this week's meeting of
legionnaires .
In tribute to Vaughan hi s
picture along with a plaque
from the 8th District in
recognition of his outstanding service were
placed on the Wall of
l:ionor at the post home.
Several family members
were there to accept individual
cilat.ions
from
Legion member Joe Struble
assisted by Tom Anderson.
The sons and daughters present were Andy Vaughan,
Vicki Williams, Larry
Marshall, Pam Murphy and
Pat Vaughan.
In hi s tribute to Vaughan
who died on Dec . .II ,
2005, Struble spoke of the
many contributions the
honoree has made to the ·
post, the district. and
Buckeye Boys State. '' It is

Charlene Hoefllch/ photo

Joe Struble, assisted by Tom Anderson, presented citations of recognition from the
American Legion in tribute to the late Frank A. Va~ghan to his sons and daughters. from
the left, Andy Vaughan, Vicki Williams. Larry M.arshall. Pam Murphy and Pat Vaughan. A picture of Vaughan and a plaque were placed on the Wa ll of Honor at the post home .
filling that at this meeting
there are three Meigs
County boys who th is year
attended Buckeye Boys
State," said Struble.

He noted that Vau~han "FrCink t.leYuted \'Cars to this
was active with Boys State pn,1gram and it i:-. ~oo d tllat
for 30 years. serving u:-. a
u·u,te.e fur 2~ uf tho'c year,, we rc~..:~)~nit.e one of our
and president in 2001-02 .
Please see Legion. AS

�•

PageA2

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 21,

Friday, July 21, 2006

Rev.

Jonathan
Noble
PASTOR,

TRIN ITY CHURC H

We are clearly taught in
Scripture that "heaven and
earth will pass away." This is
an inescapable fact, of.
course, but just as indisputable is the truth that "of
that day and hour no one
knows, not even the angels of
heaven," but God alone . (See
Matthew 24.35-36. NKJV)
· We are clearly taught in
Scripture that Jesus will come
again. (For example, see Acts
I. II ) This is an aweinspiring
promise and one to which all
believers should say, "Amen!
Come.
Lord
Jesus!"
(Revelation 22.20b, HCSB)
Yet ·'it is not for us to know
times or seasons which the
Father has put in His own
aulhority." (Acts 1.7, NKJV)
We are clearly taught in
Scripture that as believers we
can expect fiery trials and
painful persecution. Indeed,
thousands upon thousands of
Christians m other pans of
the world are presently suffering horrendous atrocities
for the sake of the Gospel. At
the same iime our Lord Jesus
Christ says, "Be of good
cheer, I have overcome the
world.'' (John !6.33b, NKJV)
As rogue nations arm themselves with nuclear weapons,
terrorist groups launch deadly
attacks killing innocent people, and Islamic zealots openly invite LI S to commence the
Third World War ... little wonder some are ready to check

out and tly off to their home
in heaven. And, unfortunately,
none-too-few charlatans
a good profit pointing to signs
and selling timelines.
However, we have our
orders from heaven, from "the
blessed and only Sovereign,
the King of kings and Lord of
lords," and this ought to be our
primary concern. " Do what
you were commanded to do ...
"Now that is fairly simple and
straightforward.
Put away the charts and
the timelines and the nonsense. Instead, "put on the
full armour of Ood, so that
when the day of evil comes.
you may be able to stand
your ground. and after you
have done everything. to
stand." (Ephesians 6.13, NM
Stand firm . and "tight the
good fi!\ht of the faith. Take
hold of the eternal life to
which you were called and
about which you made the
good confession in the presence of many witnesses." (I
Timothy 6.12, ESV ) There
is no place in the battle plan
of Christ for retreat and surrender. No, we are called to
"contend for the faith once
for all delivered to the
saints." (Jude 3b, ESV)
We are charged by our
Lord and Saviour to be salt
and light in this dark world.
(See Mathew 5.13-14) And
as such, we have been com-

tum

missioned to go out into this
world and ~·make disciples
of all the nations, baptizing
them in the name of the
Father and of the Son and' of
the Holy ·Spirit, teaching
them to observe all things ...
commanded" by our Lord.
(Matthew 28.19-20a, NKJV)
Gloom and doom may be
the order of the day in some
eire les- unfortunately even
in some churches - and we
may see the gunfire and hear
the bomb blasts. Indeed, we
may very 'well suffer for the
Faith, but "what then shall
we say to these things? If
God is for us, who is against
us?" (Romans 8.3 I, NASB)
With sin and death finally
defeated on Cal vary and the
forces of Hell laid low in the
empty tomb of the risen
Christ, what remains to fear?
What hand can . stay the
advancing armies of the Lord?
What conflict will prove too
fierce, what price too high for
the sons and daughters of the
Most High King, the children
of God? "In all these things
we overwhelmingly conquer
through Him who loved us."
(Romans 8.37, NASB)
One day shall certainly be
the last day, that day when
our Lord returns. "God will
make that happen at the right
time," but until then "do what
you were commanded to do."
h'And "may the God of rieace,
who brought back from the
dead our Lord Jesus, tl)e great
Shepherd of the sheep,
though the blood of an eternal
covenant, make you perfect
in all goodness so that you
may do his will. And may he
create in us what is pleasing
to him, through Jesus Christ,
to whom be glory forever and
ever' Amen." (Hebrews
13.20-21, REB)

Bethel Worship Center hosts Biker Sunday
BY CHARLENE

HomiCH

HOEFLlCH@MYDAJLYSENTINEL.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS - Biker Sunday will
be observed at the Bethel Worship Center at
10 a..m,. Sunday with guest speaker Barry
Mayson telling the story of life from "Hell's
Angel to Heaven's Saint."
The service will get underway with a contemporary praise and worship service followed by a stirring testimony message from
Mayson, a rider with Hell's Angels in the
1960s and I 970s.
The native of Charleston, S.C. has no recol·
lection of a father althougli he learned as a
teenager that his father was in prison for murder. Reared by a Christian mother, he made a
profession of father in Christ at nine, graduated
from high school, started at a small Baptist college, dropped out, joined the army and married.
After seeing the movie, "Hell's Angels on
Wheels" he began to ride with a small Atlanta
motorcycle club and after a few years trying
several clubs he met Hell's Angels and joined
the East Coast group. His life revolyed around

drinking, drugs, power, prostitution and stolen goods, along
with terrorist-type activities.
His mother's constant concern and a vision she related
to him about being a child of
God began to change his life
and brought to him a recogniBarry and tion that the life he was leadFran Mayson ing did not spell freedom but
had become enslavement.
At age 33 as a new man he went to Bible
college in Florida, was ordained a minister
of the gospel, and returned to South
Carolina to stan a youth and prison ministry
called Heaven's Saints Motorcycle Ministry.
Following Sunday services at Bethel
Worship Center the group will proceed to
Forked Run State Park for food. music and
·fellowship to which all bikers are welcome.
The Worship Center is located 112 mile past
Eastern School on the right coming from
Pomeroy up Route 7 and about one mile from
Tuppers Plains on the left coming down Route
7. For more infonnation call740-667-6793.

•

Fellowship
Apostolfc
To say that Jesus lived out
the days of His earthly life
always in the midst of controversy and conflict would
be a huge under~tatcment.
People never seemed to quite
know how to take Him and
were constantly trying to
"figure Him out." They
seemed to thiitk that if they
could just get inside Hi s head
or could neatly categorize
Him as maybe just a teacher,
a prophet, a lunatic or even a
demon-possessed man, they
then could move on and conveniently go on living their
lives as they wanted.
But Jesus could not be and
can not be easily understood
or tritely explained away. His
authority over the physical
universe wasn't, for instance,
someone's repertoire of
sleight-of-hand tricks akin to
Las Vegas magic shows. He
didn't feed thousands of people mimculously with a few
loaves and fishes merely by
using mirrors. His liberating
men and women from their
bondage to evil spirits or diseases and crippling disabilities was not sta)l;ed with actors
and la~er lights but with folks
who had been widely known
as suffcri.ng very real and
overpowering afflictions.
Nor we~ His motives open
to psychoanalysis as if His
message of grace, His call to
holiness and His lifestyle of
self-denial were the results of
unresolved fixations left over
from His childhood. Thus, as
much a mystery as "how" He
did what He did was "why."
One thing that we can be certain of is that He did not
come to earth to cOddle the
self-righteousness of those
who had failed in their charge
of connecting people to God.
Nor was He interested in
spending His priceless time
in endless attempts to convinCe the unconvincible.
"The
Pharisees and
Sadducees came to Jesus
· and tested Him by asking
Him to show them a sign
from heaven. He replied,
'When evening comes, you
say, 'It will be fair weather,
for the sky is red,' and in the
morning. 'Today it will be
stormy, for the sky is red
and overcast.' You know
how to interpret the appearance of the sky, but you cannot interpret the signs of the
times. A wicked and adulterous generation looks for
a miraculous sign, but none
will be given it except . the
sign of Jonah. : Jesus then
left them and went away"
(Matthew 16:1-4 NIY).
Did Jesus seem concerned
that there were leaders who
remained rooted in doubt?
No, He simply proceeded

Pastor

Thorn
Mollohan

with His mission of hope to
those whose hearts were tender, to those.who weren't paralyzed by their longing to
hold on to the power, prestige
and possessions that their status as leaders gave them.
Those who have dined on the
fat of their own accomplishments yearn ever for the
empty calories that future
ambitions provide them. But
to those w)!o hunger for
something more, for something that isn't just a "sugary"
mixture of short-term pleasures, He Himself will provide bread but will nourish us
and p,roduce lastin!\ fruit.
Do you feel hke something is lacking in your life'?
A sense of peace with God
and freedom from the tyranny of sm'! A hope for something beyond the grave and
an assurance that your eternity is secure? YoQur goal
may perhaps be to dine at the
'table of self-indulgence,'
but you'll still feel famished,
starving for real meaning
and purpose. Maybe you've
drunk the intoxicatmg ''wine
of pride," but tinct that you
are still parched for the cool
and clear waters of peace
that only Jesus can give.
Maybe you've breathed the
fumes and fogs of confu~ion
and doubt long enough. but
now crave the fresh airs of
God's presence, sweetly arid
gently perfumed by His love
and grace. In the event that
you want to believe in this
message of hope but have
trouble fathoming the fact
that He offers you an invitation to know Him personally
and receive the gift of eternal
life, consider the depth and
breadth of His compassion
for those who are hungry."
Great crowds came to
(Jesus), bringing the lame,
the blind, the crippled, the
mute and many others, and
laid them at His feet; and He
healed them. The people
were amazed when they saw
the mute speaking, the crippled made well, the lame
walking and the blind seeing.
And they praised the God of
Israel. Jesus called His disciples to Him and said, 'I have
compassion for these people;
they have already been with
Me three days and have nothing to eat. I do not want to
send them away hungry, or

they may collapse on the
way.' His disciples answered,
'Where could we get enough
bread in this remote place to
feed such a crowd ?' 'How
many loaves do you have''
Jesus asked. 'Seven,' they
replied. 'and a few small
fish.· He told the crowd to sit
dov., n on the ground. Then He
took the seven loaves and the
fish. and when He had ·given
thanks. He broke them and
gave them to the disciples,
and they in tum 10 the people.
· They all ate and were saristied. Afterward the disciples
picked up seven basketfuls of
broken pieces that were left
over. The number of those •
who ate was four thousand,
besides women and children"
(Matthew 15:30-38 NIV).
In that day and age, Jesus
had great compassion for
those who were hungry
physically but even more so
for those who hunger spiritually. He still has today great
compassion for those are
hungry. Not only that, He has
the power and the provision
in this wide, wide universe to
meet our hungers with bread
that sustains. Are you hungry
for God's love? Jesus has
offered you an open door to
receive His forg1veness and
grace . Are you thirsty for
hope and ·peace? Jesus
Himself is a spring thaPcannot run dry and wi II quench
your thirst for new life."
Jesus declared, 'I am the
bread of life. He who comes
to Me will never go hungry,
and he who believes in Me
will never be thirsty ... All
that the Father gives Me will
come to Me, and whoever
comes to Me I will never
drive away. For I have come
down from heaven not to do
My will but to do the will of
Him WHo sent Me. And this
is the will of Him who sent
Me, that I shall lose none of
all that He has given Me, but
raise them up at the last day.
For My Father's will is that
everyone who· looks to the
Son and believes in Him shall
have eternal life, and I will
raise him up at the last day'"
(John 6:35, 37-40 NIY).
Come to Jesus and let
your famished spirit be
filled with the bread of His
forgiveness. Come to Jesus
and let Him quench your
thirsty soul with His love.
(Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past 11
years. He is the pastor of
Path way
Community
Church which meets on
Sunday mornings at the Ariel
Theatre. He may be reached
for comments or question.~ by
e-mail at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com).

HJ.i&lt;i J.m..
Pa,lm. Dt111

Chun; h ur J eMIS ( " h rl~l \pu&lt;.IIIIIC
VanZ.mJt and \V,m.l Rl.l P.1~tn1 ]artlo:\
Meller 4)und;c~ Sl11ool
IU10am.
E1·emnf · "1·.111 p m
Kl\ cr \'all ~y
R11r r \',11lr1 Aj'lll'tuhc Wur-.l11p Cr:nt.-r.
K7' S \rd
AH· Middlt:p&lt;•M. Rt:l
Midu1rl Hrudh}rJ. i'd.t••r. Sund~!. 10 ~11
••Ill Tue1 6 :\1) pra}&lt;'r V.ed 7 pm H1hk
"tUd)

f1 (.)()

p 111.

Rutland F'ree Will Baptist
St . Pa~tor. Jam1e Fnnner. Sunday
~..:-holll
10 am, benmg - 7 p nt
"r:dltesda&gt; Servtce\ 7 p.m
Sttond IJaplist Church
Ru\·ens~~o·ntx! . W\'. Sundu) Sc hool 10 am. Mommg worshtp \ I am E1 enmg . 7 pm
"ednesdny 7 p m

.

Emmanuel i\ptl'i.lolic Tu ~ rn acl r Inc.
Loop ltd ,111 No:\.\ L•mu Rd RutiJnd.
Sen 1cr:" Su n 10 00 ~ .m &lt;10: 7 'O 11m .
fhur~ 7lXl p_m, P.l,tor M•• ny R Jlunon

Assembly of God

Church of Christ

Baptist
Pa gcvllle FrN'will Rnrtisl Church
Pa~ t o r M1 k~ ll.tnnnn Su nrlay Schl)ol
9 .~ll tn w' ;o am W(11\l11p "-·r~~~l 10 ,llJ
In II ()() um Wed J.l rC,idllng h pm
CH rpenh•r _B:~plist l '"hUI'('h
Sunda} l.i..:hc•nl
lJ \ll,ml, 1 1-~,~~; h m g
Ser\'KC
10 \ll,un . henulg
Snviu•
7 O.lpm. Wl·dnc~J,~\ !Mol~ Stull) 7 00 pm,
lntcmn Pll',~~;·ho:r · Fho!J RIM
C hc~ hi~

Baptis1 Chu rch
Pa ~lor St~Vl' Lillie Su nda&gt; Schonl li ~ ~
am Murning \Vor'hlp
IO·JO 11111
Wedn~.,d.t) R1hle Stud~ f1 ~(}p i ll . chmr
pr.Jmce 7 ;o: &gt;•1 lllh :md H1blc l:lud, h c~
6 10 p 111 T )111r~ I pm hur&gt;l.. ,llld)
Hopr Unpli~t Churt"h (SOulh1-rn l
•
i70 Grant St . Mtt!J iepc_•rt. Sund&lt;Jj ,~·h•IOI
-IJ·Jllam Wol"hlp-ll,,n, andhpm.
\\ ednc .. J.t~· s~n ·~e . 7 p m 1'.1\IOr Gary
Ell I~
Rutlund t irs! U11ptist rhurch
Sunda) School · 9 JO ~ m . \\'m,h •p ·
10-1-~am

Pomeroy Fir§l IJaptist
Pastur Jun BnxJ..~:rt Ea"t Ma m St .
Sunday Sch 9 30 am, Wo10lt ip 10.30 alit

First South~rn Baptist
41872 Pomcru} P• ~ ~ P~~tor E Lamar
O' Bryant. Su nd &lt;~) S•·ht•ol 9 ~0 am.
Worshi p - II IS a m.. !J·4S am&amp; 7:00 p m.
\VednesillJy S~n I C(.'~ 7 00 p m
First Rapllst fhu~h
Pas tor Bill} 7u~ p a n 6th und Pnlincr St
M1 ddkp\1rt . Sun duy Sch\l&lt;Jl · Q 15 am
Wnr sh1p · 10 I 5 a 111 7 00 p m •
Wednc~day S~r&gt;t~·e· N:HJ p m

West~ idt

Churth of Christ

ll2~fl Children~

Home Rd.

Pnm.:m~.

llrmk112k GrrM Chri stian Churth
LJrry Bmwn Wur~ h1p · q .\IJ
~ 111 Sunda) School · 10 30 am. B1hlc
Scud} · 7 p.111

·'

''

Silver Run Baptist
Sundh} Schoo l ·
lOa m , Wnr\lllp - lld .m , 7.00 p.m
.Wedne~du; $cn1n:~ 7.00 p m.

P. 1 ~ 1 ur . J ~h n ~wa n so1 1.

MI. Union Baplisl
Pa ~w r Denm s Weaver Sun day School 1) 4 ~ am . E~en tn g
6- .; o p m .
Wednesday Serv1ces fi 30p m

Bc1hlt'hem Baptist Chun;h

GrcJ t lk nd R&lt;.Jutc 124, R.t.: me

01~

Pa~t ur

EJ Carter. SunJ ay Scho&lt;.J I · ll 30
am. Su nday Worship · IO•JO am.
Wed nesday B1blr: Stude · 7 00 p m

Old Btthel Free Willllapllst Church
28601 St Rt 7. ~hddl r: pvn . Sund a;
St'!nilc · 10 a. m . 60ll pm , Tht'!M.iay
SeJ 1 •~c~ ·h 00

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Baptist Church
Sr R.t 14'1 JUS I oft' Rl 7 r .•~tor . Rei
James R Ac·ree. Sr. S un d~y lin tiled
Scrv1c~· Wo.r'ihqJ
lfl 10 u m. 6 p m
Wed no:\d:l} Ser\ 1rc·~ :; p 111

i'

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

"_::,~:.,:9~~!~-~3.~!l3.".

or between name s and the persons ur tlung ~ be mg named. For cxample , in the Gcnes 1 ~
account 111crcau on. God cremes h ~· mere di vme uucmncc He say ... "Let there be hght ,"
and th ere 1!) hght L1k ewtse. when God g iv e~ A d &lt;~tn the honor o f naming the ammals. he
1s all owtng Adam to cstabh ~h lhm tdenltl}' on~,;c and fm :.~ I I. Or cu nsHJcr thl! stury 111 the
27th chapter of Genes1s where thinking 1hat Jacoh '" 10 fac t Esau. Isaac mi sw kenl y
gives Esau 's ftrstbom birthright to Jacob. And. even when Isaac reah zes the mi stake,
and sees that he has been tnck.ed . he cannot stmpl y undo what he has satd The
uttenmct: of the bl es:-.tng 1s the hlc s~ing, in the ~am c wuy
that God 's dt vine utterance created the world. ConHnumg
in the Ne w Teslament, ""e see
1h1s ~tro n g ronnectmn
hetwcc n words and thin gs.
In lhc prologue to the
Gospel of John. we are
told that "In the
beginmng was the
Word. and the Word
wa~ -with God. and
the Word was God."
(John 1 1) In mode m
ttmes a lihough we haw
so mcho~ lust thr s V tl a l ~.:onne ctto n
to Our language. we al l know
that words are doubl e-edged
swords whrch can heal a.\
well as they can hur1. offen ng hoth
J;;Omfort and solac e, as well as pain .

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

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio

Located less than 30 minutes from
Alhens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-740-667-3156
"Still small enough to care,;

Michelle Kennedy,
Admissions and Marketing
Director
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center
"A Celebration of We"

@

333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Mtddleoort OH Fax (740\992·7406
Hou rs
6 am -8 pm

Wa nn Friend(,

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

740-949-221 0
"A Home Bank for
Home
(740) 992-6451

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

P.O Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

740.:949-2217

Atmn ~phe re

:Mi[fie's ~estaurarit

VIctory Baptist Independent
~25 N 1ntl St M1J dkpon P ~ \ t or J umc~
L. Kec&lt;;o.:e. Wvr~htp · IU,1 111 7 p m
Wedm:sda&gt; Ser&gt;. ICCS • "l p 111
Faith Huptis1Churrh
Ra1 lnoud Sl., ,\.1,h tlll . Sund.l) Se houl · 10
a m . Wur,lllp
I I am . 0 p m
Wedne~tla~ ~nice~ i p.m
l&lt;urt'S1 H.un Baptist- Jlonu.! ro)
R.:• JtN·ph Wno,b Su nU.t ~ Sd10ol
a m . Wor~ tu p . l l '0 u 111

l'omeroJ Chu rch of Chri st

1•omero) Wt·stslth: Church of Chns1
31220 C"luldrc n·) H•llll C RJ liund,Jy
Sdltltll - II a 11 ~ . Wtm htp · IOa.m 6 p m.
Wrthl~\da;o Sl'T\ \c'C~ . 1 r m
\liddlrport Churl"h of C hri~1
5th ,md \1 ,1111 P,t&gt;. tnr AI ll Mt~ tm .
Chi ldrl'll\ .Dirt:C!nr Sh.1ron S&lt;ty rt' . Teen
Dtrcl t&lt;ll DoJger Viill)!han Sunda~ Sch,llll
· 'l JO ~m. WUJshlp· !:1 1.5.10 :\001m 7
pIll . Wed n e~da) Scr&gt;.' lce~ · 7 p m
K~no l 'hurch uf l'hrisl
Wlor,lup · g JO am, Sund~v S~ohl'lll ·
10 JO ~ m , Pastur-J ~Ifrn V.allact'!. I~~ and
ln.l Su ni. l .. y

\

Ht!ur"allo" Ridge Church or Christ
Pu~tor. B ru~c lern. Sunday Scholl\ -9.30
am
Worship
10 .~0 am. 6 30 p.m.
Wcdne'id~y Sl!r\ tees - 6 30 p.m
Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy Harmonv ll le Rd . tR t. l43).
Pa5tor · Roger Watson Su n d~:· Sc· honl 9·30 .tm . Wmsh1p · 10 ' O a m , 7·00
p m Wcd nesd~) Scr-. ll"C• - 7 p m
Tuppers Plain Church of Christ
Worsh 1p Sen•\Cr: - 9 a m
Cnmnwn1o n . \0 a m . Sundav .Sl hool lll1 5nm. You lh ·~ ~!l pm Su ndu}. H1b k
Stud~ Wed n ~sday 7 pm
Llradbury Cllurch of Christ
Mumtet. T&lt;.Jm Run ~ on. 3Y55K BraUbli T}
Koad . Midd1ei}Qrl Su nd ay Sc hool - ~ . 30
a.m
Wor~l11 p · 10 JU a Ill

Rutland Church of Chri.st
Su nJJy Schm1l . 9.3lt am . Worship .md
C'um mu n10n · lll30 " m . Boll J Werry.
.\1utbter
Bradrord Church or Christ
C~ m ~ r nf St H.t I :::!4 &amp; Bradhur; Rd .
'-'i~ n t ste r Dnug Shamblin , Ynuth M1n 1~ ter
B11l A m be rg~r. Sunduy Sc hool · 9 30 .1m.
Worsh ip · K"liO am, 10 30 am 7(1')
p m .Wednesd~y SerVICe~ · 7·00 p m ~,
Hickory Hill~ Chun:h of Christ
1\t ppc:rs Plams . Pustur Mtke M(1ure. B•llk
d a ~~. Y a.m. Suni..l a~, wo n il1p 10 am
Sunr.ldy, woroh1p 6..m pm Sund&lt;~). B•l&gt;le
d;t'S 7 pm Wt:d

;\11 . \ loriah R11p tis1

l Clurth &amp; M.11n St. M1ddkpon . Pa\Tnr
Itt I Gdh~rt C'r. 1 1~. Jt . Sun J a~ Slhnol ·
9 .~0 ,1m, \\u!' lllp 10 ol~ u 111

Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meals&amp;: Daily SpecuJls

Open 7 days a week
740-992-7713

If 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

7. 40-985-3561
992-1550

Sunday

Au1iquit'' H a pti ~ l
.• I./ ,&lt;U a m . Wur •htp

s~·hul)l

works aud ~ l or ify '

IF,othc·r in heav~ n ."

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

Middleport, OH

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies.
Ia ues t-shirts and more

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

KEBLER

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 .(it)
(740) 992-3279
._!!J..
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

BUSINESS SERVIq:S,
An Accounting &amp;
Financial Services Firm
•
(, 18 E. Mai n Strecl • Pomeroy

992-7270

Sum!~)

·

Dcx1cr Chun.'h or Christ
•.t:hno l !; '0 am Sunduy 1\llr.;hip

IO ·&gt;Oo~ m

The Church
. of ('hri~l or Pnmrmt.
lnto:h~c11o n I ~n d 12-1 W Evangdisr
[lo:nm' Saq~c· nt . Sund.iy H1h1 c Siudy ·
q ~0 u m Wor,hlp IU 'O am :md h &lt;1 1
p.m , \\ledue.du) 1:\ibk· StuJ~ · 7 p m

llurtfnrd Churrh &lt;~f t:hrist In
Cl1ristlun llnion
Hartfnrd. W Va , Pu't.1r Da\ tll Grel'r
Su n d~; Scht'IIJI
IJ ,l(l am .. \\1onh1p
10 ·~ 0 am . 7 !W IJ m , Wednc,d.1y
Ser'•~~ s -/tlOpm

Church of God
M•k lh ll Rd . Ratlnt' . P01&gt;1JJr JJmc,
S11tCrfitld. Sund,1y Schntll ll -1-~ a'm

Pomeroy Church of tht N11n1rrnt
Pastor. Jan La•rndt'!r, Sunda) S(houl
9 30 lol.m, Wors h1p · 10 JO am and 6
p.m , Wednesday Serv1ce~ 7 p m

OJ Wh1trRd ulfSt Rt I&amp;O, P!!.Stor PJ
Chapman. SundOJ) "S..:hool · 10 am
Wor5hip. II am. Wedne~y St: ( VJCe~. 7
pm

Congregational
.T rinit y Chun:h
Sc&gt;rund &amp; L)nn, Pumcru). Pa&gt;lor. Rev
1\•lhlthan Nohle, IA•or.;hip 10.25 am.
Suniliry Sdwol9 l'i ~.m .

Episcqpal
Gr ace EP'scopBI Churfh
.l2fl E. Main St . Pomeroy. Sunday School
and Holy Eucham t 1\ 00 :1m Rev
Edv.:ml Pa) ne

Holiness
Comnmnlty ChuKh
Paswr Steve Tnmck. Mam Suo:et,
Rm land, Sunday Wonh1p- IO00 a m ,
S un da~ Ser.'lte-7 p m.
Holmrss Church
11m7 ~ate R oUic ~25. Lan~s,•lle. 'Pastor
v•~·tor Rou&gt; h. Sllnda) school- q .IU d.m ..
S un da ~ wunh •p · 10 3tl .1 111 &amp; 7 p m ,
W~:dl'lo."sd~t y prave r ~r:mce · 7 p.m.
Dan v ilh~

l'a l,ary

Pil~trim

Chapt'l
H &lt;~.rriMJilVJ I\c
Ro~d.
Pustor. C h arl~~
Mc K ~liL I ~ . Su nda} School 9 m ti m ..
\Vor.;h•p · I I :.t m . 7 00 p m . Wednesday
Sel"l'll"e 7.00 p m
Rose or Shuron Holiness Church
l..ead mg Creek Rd .. Rutl.md Pastor· Re ~
Dew~y Kmg. Sunday !&gt;C h n~J I · 1) 30 a m .
Sundn) worsh1p 7 p m , We dnt'~day
p r U)CI meeti ng- 7 p m
Pine Grove Rible Holi.ness Churcb
112 m• \c &lt;.Jff Rt 321\, Pastor· Rev O'Dell
\ 1anlt'y. Sunday SchOOl - 9 ) 0 a m .
Worshtp - lll 30 am. 7 JO p m,
Wednesday Sc!tv1ce. 7 30 p m
Wesleyan Ulblr Hollnus Church
75 Pearl St .. M1ddleport . Pa~ tor . R1ck
Bourne , Su nday Sdool • 10 a.m Worshtp
-10 4S p.m, Sunda) Eve . 7 00 p.m .,
Wednesday Servt~e . 7.30 p.m.
H)M!II Run Community Church
Pa~tor Re v Larry Lemley. Sundcly Sc hool
" 9 JO a m.. Worshtp - 10 45 a.m.. 7 p m ..
Thur~da y Btble Study 3nd Youth 7 p.m

Laurel Clift' Free \lllhodlst Chul'C!h
P n~wr· Glenn Rowe, Sundny School 9 30 n m.. Wo r ~hip . 10·30 n m and 6
p m .Wednesday Sem ce · 7 00 p m

Latter-Day Saints
Thr Church of Jesus
Christ or Laner·Day SaJnt5
St Rt 161), 446-624 7 or 446 -;] 486.
Su mlay School \0 20- 11 11 m . Rehel
So u~ t yi P nes th oo d
II 05-12 00 noon.
Salrame nl Sen·~er: 9-10. 15 am ,
H0mem:tk.mg meet1ng. 1 ~1 Thurs.- 7,P m.

Lutheran
St. John Luthtnn Chul"(h
P in~ Grove, Worship - 9 00 a m . Su oday
Schuo l · I0.00 u 'm. Pastor: James P
Br.tdv
•

Our Suluur Lutheran Chu~h
Wul nut und Henry Sts , RaveMwood
W Vn . Pastor Davtd Russe ll , Sun day
School I OOOam. Wo r~ht p - ll am
St. Pnull .ullwl'lln Churoeh
Co rn ~ r Syca more &amp; Second St , l'omero) .
s~n Sch(Kll - 9 -l'i a m Worshi p . I I a m

United Methodist
Graham UnitOO Methodist
Worsh1p • II a.m. Pa ~ tor Kllhnrd Neas~
Bechlel United Methodist
Ne" H,1vcn. Ru;harU Nease, Pastor.
SundtJ.} ~ ur&lt;&gt;hip 9 3U' a m. Tue~ 6 30
p1 &lt;1yt J and B1blc Study
:\It, OliVt' United Methodl.~t
Off 12-1- behmd Wtl kesvJII ~ Pastor: Rev
Ralph S p • r~S. S,unday Schoo l · 9 30 3 m •
Wrm h1p · 10 30 n m 7 p.m. Th ur~ay
Se rvt cc ~ - 7 p m

Long Bottom
Sunday School - 1f:]O a m , 'W orshtp •
10 30 a.m
Ruds•illt
Worship 9:30 a.m . Sunday School 10.30 am. F1m SundBy of Mo nth • HlO
p.m stl"l'iCC

Thppers rtailt!l St. Paul
l'a.ror Jane Rea"1t'. Sunda) School - 9
am . Wor§hlp- 10 am, Tut'~day Sen· ~ers
· 730pm
Ctntral {'Jusltr
Asbury (Syracuse), l-'astor. Bob Rob inson,
Sunday School · 9 45 am, WorShip · II
a.m.. Wedae~day Se1"1'1ce~ · 7 3() p.m

Che§ter
Hea111e. Wor,h1p · 9 am ..
Sunda\ Schot11 · lU a.m , Thursday
Serv il e' · 7 p m
I'J~lur

J an~

Bill Quickel

992-6677

Pn~mrs·

Bob and K~y Marshall, ·
Sunday Service. 2 p m

HEath tMiddleporU
Pasto r Bn an Dun ham. Sunday Schoo l .
9 30 a.m. Worship. I I 00 ~ m

'

Q

l'earl Chaprl
Sul'lday Schoo l ·~ :1 m .. Worshi p . 10 a.m
Pomero)
Pastor Bna n Du nham, Wo 11oh1p · 9.JO
· 01 m, Sunday Schoo l- 10 35 a m
Rock Spring~
Pastor Keith RJder, Sunda) School · 9 15
am, Wun h1p
10 a.m , Youth
Fellowshi p, Sunday - 6 p m.

Rutland
.Pastor R1ck Bourne, Sund ay School .
9.30 a m , Worshtp - 10 30 a m, Tlum.day
Serv1ces · 7 p m
Salem Center
Pastor W111iam K Marshall , Sunday
Schonl- 10 15 am , Wor.;h1p · 915 a m,
B•ble Study- Monday i 00 pm
SnowvUle
Sunday School · I0 a m . Worst·up - 9 a m
Bethany
Pas1or John G•lmon:, Sunday School · Ill
a m , Worship · Y am., Wednesday
Semces- 10 am

Amazing Gract CommuniiJ Church
Pa~ tor Wayne Du nlup , State Rt 681
Turpers Pla1n.. Sun \\nl"\hip 10 am &amp;
6 30 pm,. Wed R1hle Stuc,ly 7•1)1 p m

Since 1858

9 Fifth Street
Coolvt.lle , o' hl'o

IH

~,,,, s1.,,. 1•0 11,, 2111
s.. ""'"·"''' mos

J. - - H. 'nd-,·n.Lkense&lt;l Funml ~;"''"'

. - " "·-

Blessed are the pure
in heart,·fior they
shall see God.
Matthew 5

Cah ary Bible Church
PomerO) P t~c. Co Rd. P a~tor Rev
Blacl"ood. Sunda) School · 9 30 a.m.,
Wo r-sh 1p 10: 30 am
7.30 p m.
Wedue$dllJ- Stf\lte · 7 30 p m.

Oasis Christian t-"ellowship
(Non-denomtnattonal fe llnv.sh1p\
Meeting in the old Amencan Li:g1on Hall
Sou th Fou nh AI enuc. M 1 ddl~pon
Pastor Chns Stew an IU00 am Sundii~
01ht'r meetmgs 111 home~

Sll\ l'rn ille Community Aposlolk
Church
1-'J~tor Wa}fll' R Jr:well. Sunda) wunh1p
· 6 (i(] p m . W~d ne~tl~y- 6 00 p m. B1ble
Study

Communi!} of Chrlsl
Portla nd-Racme Kd . P~stor Jnn Prulflll
Sunda)' Scho&lt;.J I - lJ :.:10 a.m . Wur~ h 1p \U 30 am , Wed n e~ d ll} Scmces · 7 00
p m.
Bethel Worship Center
3qi82 S R 7. Reedo• •lle, OH -1 5772. 1.'2
mile nonh of ~~s t e m Sch(lOhi on SR 7 A
Full Gospd Church. Pa§tor Rob Barber
Assoc1ah! Paswr Karyn Davts . Youth
Panor Suz1e Franos Su nda) SCI"\ ' tce~
10.00 am wonh1p . 6 [)() pm r amtly Ltfc
Classes Wed H o m ~ C~ll G rou p ~ 7.00
p m.. Ou ter Lumt s Ce ll Gro up at !he
church 6 30 pm 10 8 30 pm

Rejoicing Lift Chul"(h
500 N. 2mJ Ave. Midd!epon. Pastor.
M1ke Foreman. Puswr Emeruus Lawrence
Foreman. Wor:.h1p- 10 00 om
Wedne:;day Servt~es · 7 p m
Clihon"Tabernade Church
Chf10n WVu. Su n d~y Slhool - 10 n m..
Worsh1p · 7 p m , Wedn esday Sen ic1= - 7

pm
Sew Life \'kiory Center
J773 George&gt;. Creek. Road Galhpo11s OH
Pastor· 8!1 1 Staten. Su nday Scmcc~- 10
.t m &amp; 7 p m · WedncS da) · 7 p m &amp;
Youth 7 pm

Ash Street Church
398 1\Sh St . M1ddlepon Pastor Jeff Smlth
Sun da&gt; S..:- hool () J fl ~ m , Mormn g
10 JO am &amp; 7 00 pm
Wors hip
Wednesday S ~"r\'ice · H)() p m , Yoluth
Se rv1ce- -r 00 p m
AJ&amp;pe Lire Center
"Full -Gospel Church''. Paston John &amp;
Pauy Wade, 60 3 Second A~·e . Maso n, 7735017. Serv1ce tlme Sunday 10·30 a m .
Wedn~sday 7 pm

Full Gospel Church
of the Living Savior
Rt J38. Ant1qUtl}. Pastor Je,\C Morr.JS.
Servt ce5 S atur(L1 ~ 2·00 p m
Salem Community Church
Back of West Cc lumb1a. W Va om L1eVmg
Road . Pastor Charles Rous h \304) 6752288 , Sunday Sc hool 9 30 am , Sund ay
e ventn g servJce 7.00 pm , B1bl ) Study
Wednesda) semce 7:00 pm

Abundanl Gratt R.F. I.
923 S Third St , Mtddleport , PaMorlert'sa
Davu, Sunday §ervlc e , 10 am .
Wednesday ier&gt;.Jce, 7 p.m

Hobson~l'hrisUan Fellowship Church
PaStor . Henc ht l WhJIC, Sunday Sc hool·
10 am, Sunday Church servtct · 6. 30 pm
Wednt'!sday 7 pm

Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Botto m, Pastor Ste ve Reed, Sunday
School · 9.30 a.m. Wors h1p . I) 30 a m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m , Friday·
fel\u.wsh1p serv•ce 7 p m

Carmei-Suttoo
Carmel &amp; Ba5han Rds . Racine; Oh to,
Paotor. John Gilmore , Sunday Schoo\ ·
9.30 a m.. Worship · 10.4S a.m. , 81ble
Study Wed 7 00 p.m.

H11rrlsonvHII~ Communlly Chul"(h
Pauor: Theron Durham . Sunday· 9 JO
a.m and 7 p m.. Wednesday · 7 p m.

Morning Slar
Pastor. John Gtl more. Sunday
a.m ., Wor:; htp - 10 a.m.

Middleport Community Chun:h
575 Pearl St , Middle pon . Pastor Sam
Andmon. Su nd ay School 10 am
E'.1ening - 7.30 p.m .. Wednesday Sei"\'ICI ·
7 30p m.

s ~hoo l

· lI

Lancnme Christian Church
Ful l G o~ p e l Pau or Robert Mu sser.
Sunda) SGbonl q-]0 am.. Worship_!O·]Q
· am - i 00 pm Wed Se r.1 e~ 7 00 pm

Ptntec-oslal Assembly
51 Rt _124. Ractne , Tornado Rd Sundoy

Pa stor Bill Marshall Sunday School ·
9am , Worship - \0 am , 1st Sunday
every month evening ~ e1"1' 1Ce 7 00 p m ,
Wedne sday - 7 p m

Faith Valle) Tabemacle Cburrh
Bailey Run R(l ad. Pastor· Re\ Emmett
Raw son , Sund ay E1·e ning 7 p m ,
Thursday Serv1ce · 7 p m

Racine
Pas1or Kerry Wood, Sunday School - 10
a m . Won h1p -l l a m

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bndgeman St . Syracuse Sunda ~
Sc hool • 10 a m, Ev~n•ng · 6 p.m
WedneMl ay Semce. 7 p.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pastor: Helen Kh ne, Cool v1lle Church ,
Mam &amp; F1fl h St , Su n. School· 10 a m..
Worsh1p · 9 a m.. l ues Se!"l'ices · 7 p.m
Bethel Church
TownshJp Rd .. 468C, Sunday Schoo l · 9
a.m. Wors hip · 10 am . Wcdne~ da&gt;
Ser\lces · 10 a.m.
Hockingport Church
Gmnd Street Sunduy Schoo l . 9:30 a.m
Worsh1 p . IO:JOa.m .. Pastor Phillip B ~ ll

Hazel Community Cbun:h
Off Rt 124, Pastor Ed se l H11rt. Su nday
Schoo l · 9 30 a m , Wursh1p · 10.30 am ..
7. 30 p m.
Dyes,.11\e Community Cburcb
Suntlny School · 9.JO a m , Worsh1p
!OJOa m .7p.m

Nazarene

faith Gospel Church
long Bouom. Su nday School · ~ ::10 am,
Worshtf · 10 -1- 5 am , 7 ~ 0 p m
W~ dnesda y 7.JU p m
Mt. Olh·e Community Churrh
Pastor Lawrenct' 8ush. Sunday Sc hool ·
Y 30 a m.. E,·enmg • 6 30 p m . Wt'dneda)
Sef\'ICC • 7 p.m
t•ull Gospel Ll~:hthou!jf
Hila ni..l Road, Pomeru). P~~tl!r Ro)
Hunte r. Sun d a~ School- 10,1 rn Evcmnll
7 30 p m , Tue~uy &amp; Thu r ~ 7.:&lt;0 p m
3.~045

Reeds,ille Fellowship

of the N:uarene, Paolur , SunJ,i}

School· 9 JO a.m·, Worsh1p · 10 45 a m..
7 p. m Wl:l-l n~ bdu) Se mce~ 7 p.m
SyracliSt ChurTh or the Nazarene
Pastor Mtl.:e 1\ dlun~. Sun day School · Y :m
3m Worsh1p · \0 JO a m b p.m ,

Presbyterian
Harriitlnvlllr Presbyterian Church
Pastor · Robert Crow Wor'&gt;h1p 9 am
Mlddleporl Presbyterian
Pastor Jame§ Sn}der. Sunday Schuol 10
am . "' tlf§h lp sen tee I Jam

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se,venlh·Oa, Ad,enJI§t
Mulberr)' H1s. Rd, Pomeru) . Pastol
Be nne tt Luck1ts h. Saturday Sen •~e~
Sabbalh S&lt;.:hou l · 2 p m.. Worship · ~ p m

:'111. Hermon United Brethren

Sunday sc hool . 10om. Warshtp. II
11 m . Wedne'&gt;da) Serv ice· 7 p m

Midd\eporl Church of tbt Nazarene
Pastor .Allen M1dcap. Sunday School ·
9 30a m.,Worsh•p -1030a.m 630p m.
Wednesday Se rvJces · 7 p m , Pastor
All en /1.-fldcap

Sc hool . 10 a m , E\·e nmg • 7 p m ,
Wedn esday Serv ~ees · 7 p.m

United Brethren

Morse Chapel Church

Torch Churth
Co Rd 6), Su nday Sch11ol · 9·30 am.
Wursh•p . 10·30 a m

Chur~h

Reslorathm Chrhtlan Fellmubip
9365 Hoo pe r Road. Athens. Pastor
Lonme Coars. Sunday Worsh1p 10:00 am.
Wedne sda~ 7 pm

Pentecostal

Eiqt l.elurt

in Christ Church
Comm unuy 364 1I Wi ckham Rd.
Pastor. Peter Martindale Sunday Schoo l ·
9 30 a m . Worsh1 p 10 30 om. 7 I)(J
p m . We dn esd~y Sen 1ce:&gt; 7 00 p m
Youth group meeting 2nd &amp; 4th Sunda)"
Te~ as

7pm

f.den United Brethren In Chtist
Stare Route 124 betwee n ReedHil lc &amp;
Hod: mgpM. Sunday Sehoul · Ht am.
~und ay Worship· 11·00 am W(dne-.1al'
Ser' tees · 7 00 p m . Pastor- M . &gt;\dam
Wil l

c:xlttendJ3Aarclt

, Snlllh Heibel Community ChuKh
Sd l·cr R1d ge· P a~tor L 111 d~ Da me -w ood
Sunda}' Schoo l · 9 a m.. Wor.h1p Sa\iC~
' 10 am 2nd and 4th Sunda)
Curleton lnterdenomin11tlonal Church

ROCKSPRINGS
Let ynur light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that they may see your
The care you deserve , close lo home good works and glorify .\'Our
148-192-5141
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
ltiCIL-·IIIICIJr
Fath er 111 hem•en. "
499 Richland Avcr1ue, Ath('ns
5901111---......... 45189
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Mattheu· 5: 16
7411-594-6.1]3
t-1«1045 t -9806
148-982·5444
740·992-6606

White Funeral Home

faiM'I rw Bible Chul'('h
Letan. W Va Rt I . Pa• tor Bnan May,
Sunday School- 'I 30 h m • Worsh1p - 7 00
p m , \\rdnt'sday B1hle Study· 7 00 p m.
F11ilh frllowshlp Crusade for Chri§t
Pa-.tm Rt'l Frankhn DJCJ.:ens Sen•,..:-e
Fr1da) 7 p m

A Nrw Beginning

ZMIMIICIIIIIII.•I.....-n,ll
45JIItl

If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
words abide in you , ye sllall INSURANCE
SERVICES
ask what ye will, and it slwll
214 E. Main
be done unto .vo11.
992-5130
}olin 15:7
Pomeroy

Whit e's Chapel Wesleyan
Road P~~tor Rev . Phtlhp
Rtdenour. Su nda) School · 9·30 am
Wor:.hlp 10 ~0 am Wcdllt'o;day Semce
. 7 pm
Co(ll~tlle

"I Full Gospel Church! Ham&gt;on11lle.

· ForYSI Run
Pas tor. Bub Robin!&gt;Dn. Sunday School- 10
am .. Worshlp-9am

1\l.:igs Cooptr•ulvt Pat'lsh

N.. r1 h ea~ l Cl u ~ t t'r. Alfred. Pastor Ja ne
Br,lllie. Su nd a~ School · ll m a m .
WoNh 1p - l l am .h~Op m

Flftdom Gosptl Mission
Bald Knob. an Co Rd 3 1. Pastor Rt'\
Roger Willford. Sund01y S.:huul 9 JO
am Worshtp- 7 p.m

Other Churches

Enterprise
Pas tor. Arland Kmg. Sunday S~hool ·
10 3ll a 111 , Wor:.h1p · 9 30 J.m Btble
Slud) Wed 7.30
Fh1twoods
Pas tor. Ke11h Rader, Su nda} School · 10
a.rn , WQrsh1p - II a.m

Minersville
'P••~tn r· Rnt'l Rnh1nson S u ~day Sc ho.1l ·
am . Wo~&gt;h • p· lOa m

pm

Chester ChurTh ur !he Naz.~rene
P11s1or. Rev. Herbert Gr.ne. Su nday $choul
· 9 ~0 a. m , Worship· 11 a.m 6 pm.
Wedneiiday Sem~~ · 7 p.m
Ruthmd Cbun:h ul the Swtrrne
Sunday Sc hool · 9 30 11 m . Worship
10·30 a. m.. 6 30 p m.. Wedne'ilhy
· Servtce~ · 7 pm Rev Mtke Clark

jfisuer jfuueral j!\lome

Mall hew 5· t

Sales: Sarvlce • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

fhun.:h urChri.~l
Pa~ t or . Ph1l1p Sturm . .Sunda) School. 9.30
a.m Wurshtp Ser1'1&lt;.:e : 10 JO .t m Rtlllc
S111Uy Wed n~~da). (l 30 p.m

:\ft . \lorilth fhurch uf God

Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The flppliance man

Rl't'd s vill~

Christian Union
1\J

Syrll('u.w First ChuKh of God
Apple nnd Seco nd Sh P ~s1or Re\' Dav1d
Ru~sdl. Sunday Sdool und ,V.tl~h l p- IU
am Evl·tung ~n1ce~ - 0 JU p.m ..
Wedne)'.I&lt;J} Sen JCC'- 6 JO p m.

M nu~lcr

212 W M.u n Si . Su11t.lu) s~ll!ll•l · 'J. io
:~m .• \VliT~hl p · 1(1 . l•J ol lll , 6 pm ..
Wl·dnest.la~ St:l"\'iCe\ . 7 p m

Joppa
Paswr· Bob Randolph. Worsh1p · 9 30
am. Su nday School· 10 30 am'

pm

Co n t.1 ~1

lnstrum~mal.

Kactne First Baptist
Pas111f Joseph liod\.l,m . mtenm pastur
Su nda; Sc h&lt;lol · Y.3(1 a.m , Worsh1p 10.40 a.m , 7 UO p nr, \\oedne~d ay
Serv1cc~ - 7 00 p m.

Rutlund Chun·h or GOO
Pa~1or Ron Hcarh. Sunday Wor~h•p
10
~ m. 6
p.m .. W~d n esday Serv1ces . 7

nH

740-4..! 1- l.:!llb SunJay 11wrnw~,:
J{)·0\1. Sun morning l:l1hle 'tll(l)
full uw•.nl! ~~our~h1p, Sun ~:1e 6 00 pm.
Wed bible ~t udy 7 pm

K1ng'ibur&gt; Rrn&amp;d. Pa~tor : Robert \':~nl·e
Sunday School - 9 30 am , Wor~h•p
Sen t ~e 10:30 a.m.. bentng Su\ice 6

pm

Church of God ol' Prophecy

Catholic
Sacrtd Heart Catholic (;hurch
lfil Mulherr) Al'c . Pom~roy IJ'-l2 - ~IN!i
Pa,tor Rr:\ W.. lter f' Hemt S,!l (on
-1- 4Vi I ~p m . M ~~ v II 30 p m . Sun
Con - H4~lJ·[~,lm .. Sml Ma~.._ . q 10
a.m, Dn1 ly Ma)s • !HO am

of (; ud
PO Bu~ 4ft. r&gt;ut!Um)! L.mr ' M •.,nn
W. \1:~ .. l'w.tur
~ell Tenn,ml
S u mll~)
SeT'\ tee• - IO. !~J tt m ami 7 p rn'

·I

l:ven1ng

Wal~er

Sal~·n•

Lihcrl ~ ,\ s.&lt;itm lJI ~

I

Sur.d~)

llill ~ lde

i'

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP .GOD~ THIS WEEK

2006

At the right time, yes~ ...but until then
"Do what \ 'O U n•ere commanded to · do walw ut
wron g or blame umil our
Lo rd Jesus Christ com es
again. God will make that
!rappen at the right time. He
is th e blessed and only
Ruler. tire King of all kings
and the Lord of all lords. " (I
Timothv 6.14-15, NCV)

www.mydallysentlnel.com

francis Florist
County's Oldest Flon!-.t
EastMain
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Pomeroy. Oh

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740·992·2644 740-992·6298

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so lm·ed the world
PHARMACY
he ga ve his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbi'I/O't/en SOli. .,
Prescriptions
John 3: 16
992-2955
Pomeroy

MY erace is sufficient
for thee: for my
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.

"So I strive always to keep

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

my eon science clear before
God and man ."

ACIS 24 : 16

" ''""'"f'mifJMr
rrotu.l your family•

s"PP"""'" •

- . '"

11, N 2

Extmguoshm •Spnnkl'·"
. Secunty
I A M.ddl
OH
ve .

I

eport .

0

11 Cor. 12:9

&amp;.-.7-4•0•-•6•6•7•·•3•1•1•0---·l!•.;dji;s~·'"d""''· l·orethour,htFuneraiPion:nl:ngl----;;,;;,;;,;,;;,;,:.~~J----------.J~~·~l5~1~-0~8~3l;,.:;F~a.;;:.:,;:~~i::J~---.:;.;·:;;:,;.:,____•

�•

•

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley PubHshing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 110 laru respecting an
establishmmt.of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercis~ thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Govemment for a redress of grievances.-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Jul y 21. the 202nd day of 2006. There
are 16:1 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
On July 21 , IRo I. the first Battle of Bull Run was
fought m Manassas. Va .. resulting in a Confederate victo·ry.
'
On this date:
In 1831 , Belgium hecame independent as Leopold I
was proclaimed King of the Belgians.
.
In 1899. author Ernest Hemingway was born in Oak
Park. lll.: poet Hart Crane was born in Garrettsville, Ohio.
In 1925. the so-called "Monkey Trial" ended in Dayton,
Tenn ., with John T: Scopes convicted of violating state
law for teaching Darwin's Theory of Evolution. (The conviction was later ovenumed.)
In 1944. American forces landed on Guam during
World War 11.
In 1949. the U.S. Senate ratified the North Atlantic
Treaty.
In 1954, the Geneva Ac&lt;:orus divided Vietnam into
nonhern and &gt;.nuthern entities.
.
In 1955, during the Geneva summit, President
Eisenhower presented his "open skies" proposal under
which the U.S. and the Soviet Union would trade in for- .
mat ion on· each other's military facilities.
In 1961, Capt. Virgii "Gus" Grissom became the second
American to rocket into a suborbital pattern around the
Earth. !lying aboard the Libeny Bell 7.
In 1969, Apollo II astronauts Neil Armstrong and
Edwin "Buzz" Aldrin blasted off from the moon aboard
•
the lunar module. .
.
. .
. 1\:
In 19RO, draft reg1stratton began 111 the Umted States tor
19- and 20-year-old m~n .
Five years ago: Street battles raged for a second day in
G~noa, Italy. site of ll Group of Eight meeting, despite
pleas for calm from protest leaders ·and global summit
leaders alike.
Today's Birthdays: Jazz musician-critic Billy Taylor is
85. Singer Kay Starr is 84. Movie director Norman
Jewison is 80. Actor Paul Burke is 80. Former Attorney
General Janet Reno is 68. Actress Patricia Elliott is 64.
Actor David Downing is 63 . Actor Edward Herrmann is
63. Actor 'Leigh Lawson is 61. Actor Wendell Burton is
59. Actor An Hindle is 58 . Singer Yusuf Islam (formerly
Cat Stevens) is 58. Canoonist Garry Trudeau is 58.
Comedian-actor Robin Williams is 55. Comedian Jon
Lovitz is 49. Actor Lance Guest is 46. Actor Matt
Mulhern is 46. Comedian Greg Behrendt is 43. Rock
musician Koen Lieckens (K 's Choice) is 40. Rock singer
Emerson Hart (Tonic) is 37. Country singer Paul Brandt
is 34. Actress ·Ali Landry is 3.1. Actor Josh Hannett is 28.
Country singer Brad Males (Emerson Drive) is 28.
Actress Vanessa Lengies is 21. Actor Jamie Waylett
(''Harry Polter" films) is 17 .
Thought for Today: "There is no bigotry like that of
'free thought' run to seed ... - Horace Greeley, American
journalist (1811 - IHn).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

PageA4..

OPINION

Friday, July 2J, ·2006

Mats behind Kerkorian s push for a GM alliance?
BY RACHEL BECK

slumped below $19 each big idea: pair up OM with Gho ~ n has said he is n' t
the lowest level since 1982. th e French autnmaker ' inter~steu in that post.
Today, GM stock is trading Renault and
Japanc~e
There is al'o the possibil·
NEW YORK - When around $28 a share, much of automaker
Nissan .
In ity that Kerkorian cou!Jn 't
General Motors Corp.'s that climb coming as announcing the benetits of a care less ahnut th i' Jeal. but
CEO was off meeting with Kerkorian has been publi~ly potential alliance, Tm~inda JU'i wants to booq the stock
the head of Niss~n and prodding GM to change ..He said the existing Renault- price by placing the idea in
Renault last week about is now nearing break-even Nissan pannership has cre- the pul&gt;lic view. He could
possibly creating a mega- on his $1.7 billion invest- ated "tremendous engineerthen take his money, and
among
those ment.
alliance
ing, manufacturing and ru.n.
automakers,
billionaire
What's interesting is how marketing synergies. resultCntics or 1his potent ial
investor Kirk Kerkorian much the automaker's maning in substantial ben~l'its alliance s.tv that Ghosn 's
should already have been agement has listened to
and cost savings to both ...
supers tar p&lt;iwer hasn't res·
celebmting. ·
Kerkorian 's wishes. He
A
partnership
would
also
cued
Ihe automakcrs that he
That's because he has
wanted
the
dividend bring the boss of both . nnw heads. While they are
managed to rig a game of slashed, and GM halved it.
Renault and Nissan, Carlos profitable . Renault 's sales
chicken, corporate America
He
pressed
for
reductions
in
GHosn,
into the OM . mi x. .have heen ~ l iding as have
style, where he emerges vicexecutive pay, and GM cut He 's known for engineering !hose at NiS&gt;an, which also
torious, maybe not finanCEO Ri ck Wagoner's pay in quick. turnarounds.
ju&gt;l annoUill'ed twn major
cially just yet but certainly
half.
He
wanted
his
top
Kerkorian
has
gotten
both
reca ll s - une involving
as far as power trips are
aide,
Jerome
York,
to
be
on
·
to
sit
down
and
weigh
sides
nearly 20 I ,000 2003 Altima
concerned.
the
board,
and
he
was
electthe
alliance.
Last
week,
Sentra sedans to fix a
and
And while that alliance
ed
to
be
a
director.
Ghosn
met
with
Wagoner,
·
faulty
sensor that can cause
isn't even close to being a
Kerko~ian lobbied for
and
they
decided
to
proceed
the
engine
to shut down and
done deal, Kerkorian has
GM
drastic
change.
with a review of the poten- another
100.000 :W06
proved himself to be GM's
responded
by
embarking
on
tial
benefits
of
such
a
deal.
Altima
and
Sentra sedans
most influential stockholda
major
restructuring
plan
That
is
expected
to
take
to
e.xcessive
oil condue
er: He is at the wheel, conabout
aimed
at
cutting
c.osts
and
90
duys
.
sumption and reports of two
trolling speed and direction.
reviving
sales.
The
game
of
chicken.
doten
engine tires.
The
world's
largest
GM
has
had
some
good
whtl'h
hau
played
out
in
the
Will
a partnership with a
automaker has tumbled on
news
to
report.
The
compameuia
in
recent
weeks,
now
foreign auto company he
tough times. GM lost $10.6
billion in 2005, as it failed ny recently announced that is offic ially und er way. the right fix for GM '1 What·.
to boost declining sales 35,000 hourly workers Kerkorian ha s set up a does that . do to lower its
y;hile it wrestled with high- would retire or take btly - showdown of sor-ts. and costs? How will that help il
er labor costS" and tough outs, helping to reduce pro- now it is up to the automak- compete in the United ·
competition from Asian duction capacity and close ers to negot iate th e out- States or Europe') Wi II thi s
12 plans by 2008. It has come.
revive GM sooner than the
automakers.
There's no doubt th at GM current rest r~1ctu ri ng? ·
That slump has come slashed more than $8 billion
Only· Kerk orian knows
under Kerkorian's watch. in structural costs over the is feeling the heat, which is
last
12
to
14
months,
and
it
exactly
what
Kerkorian
wher~:.hi
s own interests lie,
Since he started building his
has
even
made
mo'
n
ey
in
the
·wants .
What
remain s which is something that the
G M stake 14 months ago- .
his Tracinda Corp. invest- first quarter of 2006, tally - unclear is what he considers rest of GM 's shareholders
the next step.
ment company now owns ing a $445 million profit.
shmdd be reminueu or. Hi s
mean
But
that
doesn't
Maybe he wants GM to goal for OM mi ght be one
56 million shares, or about
I0 percent of the company, GM' s problems are over. emerge from this as a better, that has notl1ing to do with
making him GM 's fourth- Just look at its recent sales healthier company over the what's best for an vu ne but
·
largest shareholder - the figures: year-to-date, GM 's long term. Thi s alliance himself.
automaker's business has sales have fallen 12.2 per- could broaden all the com( Rachel . Beck is till'
crumbled along with its cent, including a 13 percent panies ' global reach. He IWfiunal lm"\inn·s· ctJ/Itmnist
stock price.
drop for trucks and an II might also be eyeing Ghosn f'nr rile Assodart)d Pre.H.
"" During that time, he has percent dip for cars.
as a potential successor to Wril&lt;'
ro
her
(If
watched as GM 's shares
f;!ence Kerkorian 's next • Wagoner - even though rheck(or )oi'·'JIK)
AP BUSINESS WRITER

I'LL TRADE YOU A

BARRY ISONDS STEROID CARD
&amp; A TAX EVASION CARD

Friday, July 21, 2oo6

Obituaries

Local Weather

Allan D. Gibson

Friday... Mo~tly cloud\· in
the morning ... Then hccotntn!.!
panly cloudy A. chan&lt;:e of
POMEROY - Allan D. Gih,on. 56, husband of Sabra. showers and thunu~Nonm .
father of Grant and Drew, .and son of Virginia and the late Humid with highs in the
James Gib;on, passed away on July 8, 2006.
lower 80&gt;. Nonhwest wind'
Allan was a c8-year employee of Borden , Inc. and was
around 5 mph ... Becoming
currently controller at Tri -State Sterling Tru•·ks, Inc.
north around :; mph in the
A gathering of family an(l friends to celebrate Allan's life
afternoon. Chance of rain 40
will be held from I to 2 p.m. '"' Sunuay. July 23, 2001\. at percent.
the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisha f'uneral Home . from I to 2
Friday · nighl ... Partly
p.m .. with his Eulogy at 2 p.m .
·
cloudy. A cha nce of showers
Memorial contributions ma) he made to a charity of choi ce.
and thunuerstorms in til e
evenin.g ... Then a &lt;light
chance or 'huwers and
thunderstorm' afte r mid. POMEROY- Vicki Lynn Johnson. 56. Pomeroy. passed I night. Humid wi1h' lows in
the upper lith. Nor! hea .' t
away unexpectedly at her residence on July 19, 2006.
She was born on June 20. 1950. in Meigs County, daugh- wino' arounu :; moll.
ter of the late Robert J. Gale and Venora Maxine Rou sh Gale I - -- --------·She was a school teachn She was a resident of The Maples
and panicipated in actil . ·ies at the Senior Citizen Center.
She is survived by a d;t: ~ hter, Dawn Hill and John Chaney,
Pomeroy ; grandchildren: Marcus Hill, Hannah Hill , Haley
Hill, ·Kassidy Chaney. Tori Chaney and Christopher Chaney; ACt- 34.30
sisters: Ann (Lee) Burnem. Rutland. and Mary (Kenny) AEP .:....35.18
Birchfield, Patriot; a brother, Wayne Woody, Columbus; her Akzo- 52.27
stepfather. Don (Pat) Woody. Patriot; friends, Roger and ·Ashland Inc. :..... 65.38
BLI-15.97
Charlotte Johnson, Racine: several nieces and nephews.
Fnends may call from I to 3 p.m. on Friday at the Bob Evans- 27.08
Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. A memorial ser- BorgWamer- 57.80
CENX -32.10
vice will be held at a later date to be announced.
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneral- Champion - 6.96
Charming Shops - 10.37
homes.com.
City Holding- 36.34
Col- 53.90
DG -13.60
DuPont - 40.03
Federal Mogul - .40
USB -31.74
Gannett - 52.80
General Electric -32.48
GKNLY- 4.70
CROWN CITY - Gale W.' Green, 78, Crown City, died Harley Davidson - 53c29
Wednesday, July 19, 2006, at his 'residence.
JPM- 42.98
Hi s wife, Dorothy Ann Dillon Green, survives.
Service will be at I p.m . on Monday. July 24. 2006, at
Cremeens Funeral Chapel in Gallipolis with Pastors Jake
Fry, Elmer Hill and Eugene Johnson officiating. Burial will
be in Providence Cemetery. Friends may call from 6 to 9
p.m. on Sunday at the funeral chapel.

Vicki Johnson

Show

Chance of ro1111 ~U percent .
Saturday... \·1ostly cloudy
with a ,·h:mce or ' hov.er'
and thunder,tornl'. Highs in
ihe mill 70,. Northea~t
wind' 10 to !5 mph . Chance
or min so percent.
Saturda~ night ... Mnstly
clouuy with a cha nce or
showers and thunueNorms.
Lows in th e upper 5Ck
\Jorthwest wi nds 5 to I0
mph wi th gust&gt; up to 20
lll('h ChalH:~ of ruin 40 percent.
Sunday and Sunday
ni~:ht ... Pa1tly cloud y. Highs
111 th e lower :lOs. Low &gt;
around 60.

1Local Stocks ·

Deaths

Gale Green

Kroger - 22.66
Ltd. -' 24.45
_,
NSC- 47.62
Oak Hill Financial - 25.33
OVB- 25.15
BBT- 41.74
Peoples - 28.68
Pepsico - 62.48
Premier - 14.95
Rockwell- 67.26
Rocky Boots - 11.23
Sears- 139.55
Wai·Mart - 44.29
Wendy's - 98.72
Worthington- 19.81
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. closing quote~ of the
previous day's transactions,
provided by Smith Financial
Advisors of Hilliard Lyons In
Gallipolis.

·Ruth Mildred Tuttle
POMEROY - Ruth Mildred Tuttle, 82, Pomeroy, died
Thursday, July 20 at Riverside Methodist Hospital in Columbus.
Arrangements are under the direction of WhiteSchwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, and will be
announced when completed.

Local Briefs

FOR HIS ROOKIE CARD.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www. mydailysentinel.com

from PageA1
the community for people
who lm·e horses.
·
As for tomorrow 's ' ho\1
ribbons will be awarded in
each of the 16 cia('"'·
Those classes and entry fees
are as follows : Exhibition.
$ 1: flag race . lead-in. egg-n spoon. four corn ers. speed
11\lcl control , catalog rac e.
down and back. walk-trot.
western pleasure. youth
pol es, cones and barrek
pee-wee barrels ( ro anu
under). youth barrels (ages
11 - 18), 52 per each event:
open barrels (youth and
o~u ult s), open poles. S4 per
each event.
There is an go perce nt
payback for the first three
pla&lt;:es in lhe ope n pules and
open barrels even ts.
M&lt;:Kclvcy sai u the group
is charging entry fees simply to . recover the costs
assoc iated with puttin g on

the show.
Proper · foot 11lti re 1.'
requ ired for the show.
closed gale unle &gt;s' request·
ed. No preregi., tratiLln prior
to the day of the sho w i.,
required.
•
Re sults from the Ohio
Riv er Producer's June 24
Horse Fun Show are as fol lows:
.
Halter, Melissa Holsinge r.
first place. Erin Dunn. ~cc··
ond place, Ledeana Sin clair.
thiru place; Showmanship.
Erin Dunn . first place .
Lacee Arms. second place.
Ledeana Sinclair. thiru
place; Walk Trot. Chessa
Blower. first place. Melissa
Holsinger, second place .
Mallory Hill. third place:
Western Pleasure, Melissa
Holsinger,
first place,
Mallory Hill, second place.
Sieve Baldridge. third
place ; Egg and Spoon , Erin
Dunn , first place. Melissa
Hol singer, second place,
Chris Hammett, third place:
Four Cl;Jrners , Mallory Hill,

fir,l place. Ale:&gt; Sa) rc. seconu
place.
Counnq
Gintl1cr. third pl.1ce: Hat&gt;y
Bottle Race. I accc· 1\rms
and Erin Donn. fir'l pl.1cc.
Ste\e Balurid~c anu J11\dcn
Spituding. ~euH1J pbcc.
Whitne) Wnlk anu Scott
Blower. 1l1i rd place: Hu la
Hoop Race. Laccc Arms.
i'iN pl11ce. Tcdra Sa\fC. second place. James Langucll.
lhiru place: Catalog Race.
Cilri' ll;llnlllctt. first place,
Erin Dunn. scc·nnu place.
La&lt;:cc Arms. third place:
D"''n and Back t II an u
upr. M1dl urv Hi ll. fir&gt;t
place. i\lir;tnda McKcl\'cy.
"cconJ piau:. Angela Perry.
tiliru pl;l,·c: D"'' n ;1nd Back
! Ill ;111d under) Halley
Sigman. fjp,l place.. Ltn"en
\\'olfc. sc·c:onu plac·e. Drew ·
Bl m\CL lhiru plac·e: Flag
Race. :\nec la Pcrn. fir(t
place. lh..:\'-it H lu\\~r. \t:Cnnd pLil'c. "icole !I ill. third
piaL· ~..:: Ymn'h Puk_.,. Ma ll(1ry
Hill . i'i1 q plaL'c' . \Ldlo ry
Hi ll. scc&lt;~nd pl.tcc. Erin
Dunn . thiru plal·c·: Open
Pob. ~ b linn ll ill. firs t
plan:. r\n ~cl;r Po..'IT~. "cconU
pl arc. Sh.lllllntl Rnm n.
third plac·c. Speed and
(Oil(fO\. -\Jl ~L'\a r\.'fr\

place. i\ llcil:•llc S,l\1'~. &gt;Cc'·

un d

MinmUa McKL· lH'). :-.txond

place. Mallor) Hi ll. thiru
place: Pee \\ c,· B;mcb.
Alex Savre. Ha lle\ S"'llt an .
Ledeami Si1ic' ia'i r. ·Drew
Blower.
Au,lin
R11SC.
Jansen WPi k: Lclld- ln.
Nicole Hill. Bramlon Baer.
Ledean a S lll cl:~ir. Cierra
Turlev. Jansen
Wolfe.
Jayde'n T Spllulding. cU .
Roush . Au,tin Rose. Aamn
B~er. An n11 Re) 1Htld s.
day. Thi ~ c harge· i'i a fir..,t
degree .mi sdemeanor " ·ith a
S I,000 fine anu up to six
months in jail.
The Pomeru\' officers
were a l."~ o a ~-.. i~tcd hv Jn
unidentifi ed officer ·rro1n
the Middl eport
Pol ice
Department on the call. ·
The incident re main"
under in\'C~li [.!at ion .

from PageA1
Charlene Hoeftlch/photo

TUPPERS PLAINS -Anyone intere sted in working at
the Eastern Athletic Boosters fair booth or parking cars at
the fair is asked to call 667-3316.

For the Record
Dissolutions

from Page A1

POMEROY - Actions for dissolution of marriage were
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Robert
Adam Smith, Pomeroy, . and Tabitha Lynn Swearingen
Smith, Pomeroy ; Mark A , Brown , Syracuse, and Jessica R.
Brown, Lexington: and Kenneth Louis Crossman,
Chandler, Ariz., and Belinda Marie Crossman, Reedsville.

own who contributed so
much ," Strnble concluded.
The Boys State candidates, Cassey Richardson
anu Andy Garnes of Meigs
High School , and Tyler Lee

Divorces

Fire, or ice? ·

The New York Times's
Letters ro rlw ediror Ill&lt;' •re/('()me.' Thev should be less
than 300 H'on/s. All leiters are subjecr ro'editing, must be headline read, "America in
signed, ami include addre.1.1 wul telephone numbet: No Longest Warm Spell Since
unsigned letters 11';// be published. Letters should be in 1776; Temperature Line
good tas/e, addrnsing isstll'.\', nor personalities. Letters of Records a. 25-Year Rise."
thanks to organhllions and indi l' idua/.1' will not be accept- Well, what's so new about
William
ed.for publicarion.
·
that? The Times has been
Rusher
..- ·- - - - - : --, having an hi~toric fit abOut
global warming for years,
~asn't it?
·
Yes, but that particular
(USPS 213-960)
Reader Services
headline ran in the good increasingly apprehensive,
Ohio Valley Publishing
gray Times on March 27, for the weather aberrations
Co.
Correction Policy
1933 73 years ago. they are studying may be the
Our main conCern in all stories is to Publlshecl every afternoon, Monday
What 's more, the Times harbinger of another ice
th rough Fr1d ay, 111 Court ' Street,
be accurate. If you know of an error
changed its mind dramati- age." Today, of course, Time
Sec~;md-class
Pomeroy OhiO.
cally on the subject 42 years has' changed its mind again
in a story, can the newsroom at (740) postage pa 1d at Pomeroy.
later, in 1975, when it star- andjoined the global-warm992-2156.
Member: The A.ssoc1ated Press and
tled its readers on M,ay ,2 I' ing hysteria. On April 3 this
the Ohio Newspaper Assodat•on.
Postmaster: Send address correcwith "Scientists Ponder year, it announced that "By
Our main number Is
tioos to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
Why Wurld's Climate is Any Measure, Eanh is At ...
(740) 992·2156.
Street. Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Changing;
A Major. Cooling The Tipping Point. The cliDepartment extensions are:
Widely Considered to Be mate is crashing. and global
Subscription Rates
warming is to blame."
IQevitable."
By carrier or motor route
News
The last major attack of
Nor has the Times been
One month
'10.27
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich. Ext i 2
the only major periodical to hysteria, in the mid-1970s,
One year
'123.2~
Dally
50'
Rep'o rter : Br1an Reed. E)(t 14
blow hot and cold (if you focused on the peril of globSenior
Citizen
rates
will forgive me) on the sub- al cooling, and was "especialReporter : Beth Sergen t. Ext. i 3
On~ month
'9.2~
ject of the global climate. ly severe. Fonune magazine
· · One year
'103.90
On Jan;2, 19~ Time maga· ·declared in Febmary 1974
Advertising
Subscnbers shou~ rem! In advance
zine
announced
that that "As for the present
outside Sales: Dave Harri s. E~~:t . 15 direct to the Daily Sentinel. No sub ·
"Gaffers
who
claim
that cooling trend a number of
scnp!IOn by mail permitted in areas
Outside Sales : Brenda Dav1s, Exl 16 wher$ home ca rrier service is avail·
winters were harder when leading climatologists have
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ex1. 10
able.
they were boys are quite concluded that it is very bad
right ... weather men have news indeed. It is the root
Mail' Subscription
no doubt that the \llorld at cause of a lot of that
General Manager
Inside Melgo County
least
for the time being is unpleasant weather around
Charlene Hoeflich , E)(t 12
13 Weeks
'32.26
growing warmer." Yet Time the world and they warn that
26 Weeks
'64 .20
52
Weeks
'
127.
t1
scooped
The New York it carries the potential for
E·mall :
Times by nearly ~ a year human disasters of unprecenews@myda1lysentn1el.com
Outside Meigs County
magnitude ."
when, reversing Itself, it dented
13 Weeks
' 53.55
·warned
readers
on
June
24,
Fortune's
analysi
s was so
Web:
26 Weeks
' 107.10
1974 that, "Climatological impressive that it actually
52 Weeks
' 214 .2 1
www.myda11ysen11nel.corn
.......
-'
Cassandras are becoming won a "Science Writing

.------·-----

The Daily Sentinel

______

•

Award" from the American the present). The booklet
lnstiti1te of Physics .
can also be read for its sheer
But the prize for sheer ter- entertainmem value. (I parrorizing surely helonged to . ticularly likeu the ;mecuote
Lowell Ponte, whose 1976 about the pengt1in tound in .
book "The Cooling" (a pre- France in 192}. which was
decessor of AI Gore 's "A n widely viewed as an "i~:e ­
Inconvenient Truth.'' though age harbinger." thou gh
from the opposite point of wiser heaus concluued it had
view) asserted that "The probably escaped from the
cooling has already killed ship &lt;&gt;f Antmctic ex plorer ·
hundreds of thousands of Sir Ernest Shackleton.)
peopl e in poor nations.'' If
The booklet notes sensicountermeasures we~en't bly that " Most &gt;e iemist s do
taken. he warned .. it would agree that the earth has
lead to "world famine, warmed a little more thail a
world chaos, and probably dcgrc'c in the last 'I00 years
world war, and this could all . That doesn't mean scie ntists
come by the year 2000."
concur that mankind is to
;,.AIJ of the above quota- blame. Even if that' were·the
tions, and many more, can case. the impact of warming
be found in a wonderful new is unclear." And in it s wisest
booklet by R. Warren pan1graph it umcludes.
Anderson and Dan Gainor "This isn't a questio n of sciof the Busine'ss ·&amp; Media ence. It's a quesl'ion of
Institute , a Ji vision of the whether American' can trust
Media Re1earch Center in what the media tell them
Alexandri1i, Va. (Full disdo- about science ...
sure: I am the avuncular and
But if you're lno~in g for u
largely indolent board chair- new career. he r~\ a l1int:
man of the latter.) Entilleu "Global w;irming is a good
"Fire and Ice;'' it quotes business to be in for governalarmist predictions of both ment funuing. More · than
global warming and a new 99.5 percent of American
ice age dating, back to 1895. climate chan ge funding
The authors identify no h;ss comes from the government. ·
than four swings of sc ienti f- whi~:h spends $4 billion per
ic opinion. with consider- . year on rlimatc chtmgc
ah le overlapping. r~om g lob- rc~ed rc h .··
al cooling . (1~95 - 1932) to
. (\Villicllll Ru.1ha i•· "
gl'obal warming ( 1929- Dis tinguish~.! Fe /loll ' of' the
1969) to global cooling C/wnuom lnstilllle jr&gt;r the
( 1954- IIJ.76) and now back Study of' Srate.\'11/WI.I'hip and
to global warming ( 1981 to Pul i 1i cuI Phi IriWflh.l ·. )

This year's representatives to Buckeye Boys State report·
ed on their experiences there at this week's meeting of Post
39, American Legion. From the left they are Casey
Richardson, Andy Garnes. and Tyler Lee pictured with
legionnaire Mick Williams.
'

Legion

POMEROY - Divorce action s were tiled in Meigs
· County Common Pleas Court by Kimberly S. Lee, Pomeroy,
against Jimmy R. Lee, Pomeroy; Chrisie L. Gilbert, Racine .
against Fletcher Gilbert. address not provided.
A divorce was granted to Bradley A. Young from
Stephanie D .. Young.

Annie
from PageA1

surprisingly, '60 percent of it
is from men.
Clearly, reauers are still
looking for · se ns ible, creative answers to their everyday (and not so everyda y I
POMEROY - Vida J. "Joy'' Fields was sentenced in problem s, and Kathy and
Meigs County Common Pleas Court to a suspenped one- Marcy. the ' long time Ann
year sentence on a charge of possession of cocaine. She Landers editors, me givi ng
was ordered to perform 500 hours of community service them what thcv crave. ·
and forfeit $500 to the Middleport Police Department 's law
"They are the perfeu pair
enforcement trust fund .
·
to continue the tradition of'
She was oroered to serve 30 days of local confinement .
sound. &gt;parkling . tell-ill'ike:it-is advice ," said Ann
Landers· da ughter. Margo
Howard.
POMEROY - A foreclosure action was filed in Meig s . As the fourtll an niversary
County Common Pleas Court by J.P. Morgan Chase of Annie 's Mailbo.\ &lt;)raws
Bank , Cherry Hill , N.J. , against Edith Barnhou se. near, millions of Americans
start thei r·dity wi'th the col Coolville, and others.

Sentenced

Foreclosure

.

Verizon traced tl1e number
to a cell phone that allegedly belongs to Clifford
Thomas, Ill , 28, Pomeroy.
Thomas was located later
by
yesterday
morning
of Eastern High School,.
each spoke expressi ng their Pomeroy officers in a vehicle
appreciation to the Legion on Mechanic Street. He was
post. and the co-sponsors. then questioned by Queen.
Although Thomas was not
Farmers Bank and Peoples
Bank fur the opportunity 9f arrested and was released
the
Pomeroy
Poli ce
attending Boys State.
was
expected
to
Department
Legionnaire Bill Matlack
was recog nized on his 90th file a charge of making lal'c
birthday following a dinner alarms against Thoma s in
serve'd by the Legion cooks. Meigs County Court yesler.
'

umn . "We left All'I1ie's
Mailbox out of the Gazette
by accident. and re aders
complained,"
rea ll y
recounts Rosa!ie Earle.
m~naging editor 'of the
Charleston (W.Va.) Gazette .
''Boy. did we hear about it~ .,
The feature. whi&lt;:h appears
in more than 700 newspapers
with .60 million readers, is a
nationwide favorite of newspaper editors.
" Kathy Mit chell and
Marcy Sugar n'lake An n1c's
Mailbox an oa.1is of common sense. -;o und adv ice
and wit. It 's essential daily
reading." lauds Ri&lt;:k Kogan.
Ann Landers' former editor
at the Chicago Tribune.
He is not alone. Jim .
Giametta, executive euitor
. of th e Tyler. Texa s, CourierTimes .Te legrap h. agrees:

Teresa

p i&lt;. IL"L'.

McKel\·c). th1rd place:
C&lt;&gt;ncs 11nd I3 1!1Tcls. ~ l allon
Hi ll. i'iN place . Ma'llory
Hill. sccu nd p!a,·c. Michelle
Sayre. lhird place: Youth
Barrels.
. 'v1iranda
Mc·Kel \c')'. lir&gt;l plac·e.
M;dlor ) Hill. 'Cl'll nu place.
Court ney Gi1HI1cr. third
place;
Open
Barrel s.
Mallory !J ill. ! irsl pl;1cc.

Call

Seeking volunteers

SPRING VALLEY
446 4524

OlDAOUTEl~ WEST

121!4 JACII.SONPII(~

Box Office Opens @

6:00PM MON· TUES

WEDNESDAY THRU SUNDAY·
'STADIUM SEATING IS NOW
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MONSTER HOUSE (PG)
1:00 3:00. 7:00 &amp; 9:00
LADY IN THE WATER (PG13)
1.:15 3:30, 7: 15 &amp; 9:30
MY SUPER EX -GI RLFRIEND
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YOU, ME &amp; DUPREE (PGI3)
1:20 3:20.7:20 &amp; 9 :20
UTILE MAN (PG13)
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PIRATES OF THE

"Annie' s Mailbox follnw'
in the Ann Lander' tradition, but it has a fresh
approach to a proven successful column."
Perhaps Margo Hu waru
put it best when she said :
"Co mbin ing the ge nera·
tional diffe7·ence 111~d their
breadth of experience work ·
ing for my mother. Kath y
Mitchell and Marcv Sugar
meld the Ann Landers
approach with a ne\1 ·centu ry, modern sp in.''

'RAVENSWOOD
,
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER
Dr:~ K. )ls Heltkb

CHIROPRACTOR
Auto Accidents
Worker's Compensation
• Sports lnjurirs

• !'.bli..:atc

• Mos1ln ;u~Rncc"
• Same da;, ~ppl

316 Washington St

Many Local Musicians Under the
Direction of Mr. Roger Williams

DILES PARK
C hi rnpr~ctor ul tlt~ ~~ar

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Sunday, July 23rd 4:00PM

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Friflld!i, Cl1ifdrt11, UIM"TI Chair~. IJ/iwkel\ and E11juy a
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Fecne~-llt' nn c lt And

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Marriage license
POMEROY - A marriage license was issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Anthony Todd Wolfe, 34.
Syracuse, and Carrie Ann Wood. 32, Racine:.

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�-PageA6

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 21,

Youth events

Proud parents' 'kid talk' is not welcomed.by all
DEAR ABBY: I had to
write after read inc the letter
from ·'Baby O.D." about the
"proud daddy" who bring'
photos of his chi ld to work
weekly to show co-worker,.
l ha ve a co-worker who
does the same thing . She
brings photos. . storie,,
videotapes. you name it. of
her ch ild ren to work.
Usually the stories arc
mundane and go something
like th is: ''Mv chi ld nwde a
heart-shaped. paper at.
school today. She used I1cr
purpl e sciswr&gt; and smi led
at her teacher while doing it.
She's right- handed, just like
me. Last week. she made a
star-shaped paper," and on
and on .
I leamed to smile politely
and to exc use myself ·after
60 seconds. Others , feeling
obligmed. would stand and
listen to her dronin g even
though there was work to be
done .
Co-workers who are not
pare nts have contlded that
''diaper talks" between
mothers are ex tremely di sgusting to be subjected to
during lunchtime. For the
record. I' m a mother, bltt I
save my "kid talk" for atier
work . If the subj ect arises
during lunchtime, l make it
short so others have a chance

Dear
Abby

to tal k. too . ~ B~EN
THERE IN OREGON
DEAR BEEN THERE:
That's because you are someone with social sensitivity.
This isn't a problem that happens only with new parent,.
Grandparents can also be
guilty of it. Read on for a
sample of the comments that
letter generated because
some of them are a hoot.
DEAR ABE\Y: The letter
abo ut the "proud daddy'·
brmtght to mind a wonderfull y fu nny incident th at
occutTed a num ber of years
ago on a trip through central
As ia . We had a grand mother
on the trip who.at the slig htest inducement. would whip
out a veritable Jaco b's ladder of her grandchildren's
photos and show them to
anyone v,ho could not get
out of the way in time.
· One eve ning, while relaxing after a tetTific meal in

northern India. the grandmother turned to Bob. an
older hachelor 'eated next
to me. and Naid. "Bob. have
I ever 'bowed you photo' of
my grandchildren '&gt;" "No."
Bnb replied. "you have not.
And th;rnk you so mttch'"
- STILL LAUGHING IN
SAN DIEGO
DEAR ABOY: We solved
this issue in uur office by
converting nne v.:holc bul-

letin board into a "Sharing
Board" for mom s. dads.
grannies, aunties. etc. \lt.'e can
all look at it at our leisure {or
not), and the pictures can be
displayed for a longer period
of time as well. Mavbc
"O.D ... could sta11 up a hoard
in their oflice. We all like to
"show Off' OUr treasures I !-lAPP)' GRANNY IN

200&amp;

Inside
Braves acquire Wickman, B2
NASCAR, Page 86

Friday, July 21
RACINE
Parents
meeting for all Sout hern
High School football players. 7 p.m. , high sc hool
footba ll field .
Saturday, July 22
MIDDLEPORT - Big
Hend
Youth
Football
Leag ue and cheerleading
'ignups. 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
Middleport
Footba ll
Stadium. Cal l 742-2623 for
information.

CINCINNATI
answers. the teacher wil l ask
DEAR ABBY: My co- for the mother.
When fathers are present,
worker and I had the same
probl em. He talked about the· child benefits from an
his dogs too much; l talked increased sense of playfulahout my kid too much. It ness. improved communicatook a whi le. but now when tion skills. hi gher se lf-estee m
l go overboard . he starts (especially in girls). hi gh~r
talking about his dogs. and academic achievement and
vice versa. After a fe.w min- higher tlnancial security. l
utes, we just change the sub- say hats otf to fnthers who
jcct. It 's not co nfrontational arc 'o involved that they
~ and it works 1 - PRO UD proltdl y displa y pictures of
MOM, NAPA, CALIF
their ch ildren. ~ JANET D.,
. DEAR ABBY: Recent HUNTINGTON. W.VA.
research has identified the
Dear Abby is ·writ/en by
unique contribution offathers . Abigail .Van Burell, aim
in the development and· &gt;uc- known as j eanne Phillips ,
cess of ym111g chi ldren. and was founded by her
Mothers often receive sup- mother, Pauli11e Phillips.
port for parenting. but fathers Write Dear Abby at
are often left out of the pic- www.DearAbby.com
or
tut-e. Teachers often phone a P.O. Box 69440, Los
child's home and, if the father Angeles, CA 90069.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 21 , 2006

.Somerville takes commanding lead in senior league
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Church events
Saturday, July 22
MIDDLEPORT
Barbershop quartet. "River
at
Blend"
performs·
First
Middleport
Presbyterian Church. 3 p.m .
Love offering.

. Days Until
High School

Football
Season!!!

MASON; W.Va. - Paul
Somerville of Point Pleasant,
W.Va . has taken a commanding lead in the 2006 Riverside
Men's Senior Golf l,.eague .
· Somerville's total of 195.5
points
leads
Mick
Winebrenner by 17 points.
Clark Greene of Hurricane,
W.Va. holds down the third
position with 175.5 points for
his season totaL
Jack Maloney sits fourth

r--------------------,....-.,

with 161 points.. Ken Whited .
is tifth with I GO and Pat Riverside Senior Men's League Standings
Williamson· -(155 ..:' !, Harl ey
1. Paul Somerville 195.5:2. Mick Winebrenner 178.5; 3. Clark Greene 175.5; 4.
Rice (155), Jack Fox ( 152). Jack
Maloney 161; 5. Ken Whited 160; 6. Pat WIIUamson 155.5; 7. Harley Aice 155;
Jim Capehart (1 52) and Wes 8. (lie) Jack Fox and Jim Capehart 152 ; 10. Was Peterson 149.5; 11 . Don Waldie
12. (tie) Curtis Grubb and Ed Wilson 145; 14. (tie) Bll!Yoho and Gary Bates
Peterson ( 149.5) rou nd out 146.5;
139: 16. Don Fields 134; 17. Bill r=:tethel131 ; 18. Earl Johnson 129: 19. Dick Dugan
the top 10.
127.5; 20. Gemld Kelly 126; 21. {tie) Claude Proffitt, Kenny Greene, Chet Thcimas
A total of 64 players braved and Clyde Jarvis 123; 25. Jerry Arnold 122;'26. Russ Holland 120.5; 27. Ray Oliver
120; 28. Gary Minton 119.5; 29. Gene Gray t 19; 30. Bob Oliver 11 6: 31 . Jim
the I00 degree heat on Gordon
115.5; 32. Bill Winebrenner 110; 33. George Miller 108.5;. 34 . Bub Stivers
Tuesday to form 16 teams of 106.5; 35. Tom Nunnery 106; 36. Mike Bragg 105.5: 37. Paul Lanham 102.5; 38.
four players to make it possi- Hl;'rvey Blain 99.5; 39. (Ue) Russ Wood and Freet Bryant 99; 41. Nick Salem 97.5:
(tie) Dan Uttlefleld and Don Kay 96.5; 44. Haske! Jones 96: 45. Tom Fisher 95:
ble to collect 16 points with 42.
46. Phil Burton 94; 47. Cecil Minton 93
the winning score.
There was a four way tie included the team of Jim Charlie
Hargraves,
Ed
for first with identical scores Capehart , Mike Fetty and Wil son. Curtis Grubb and
of 61 at nine under par and Don Waldie. th e team of Gene Gray, the team of Gary·

.Mets
edge
Reds

Amotic&lt;on Logton Blisebllll
Dlttrlcl 8 Tournament
Sunday's results

(3) Feeney Bennett 11, (6) McArthur
1.-7 Innings
·
(4) Athens 4 . (5) Logan 3
..
(2) Pickerington 38, (7) GaiJipolls 1
-71nnings
Monday'o ra•utto
(3) feeney Bennen13,'(1) r.ancuter
11
(2) Pickerington 11, (4) :Athens 2

Wodneaday'a rtauno

Winners bra,ckll final.
(2) Pickerington a, (3) Feeney
Bennett 2
Losers brack61.
.

results posted

BY

Alex Amos. grand champion:
Daniel Buckley.. reserve
champion : [J icycle Adventure
1: Bccca ChadwelL grand
champion: Kirk Pullins,
reserve champion: Abigail
Houser, honorable mention:
Magic of Electricity: Justin
Morris, grand chatnpion :
Rope: Timothy Elam. grand
champion:
. Mirand a
McKelvey. reserve champion.
Crank It Up: Sarah Engle.
grand .:hampion: Warm It
Up: Sam uel ' Eva n&gt;. grand
champi on; Tun e It Up:
Eugene Patterson. gran d
champion: All Terrain
Vehicles: Ryan Amos. grand
champion: Wade Col lin s,
reserve champion; Michael
Scyoc , honorable mention . .'
Measuring · Up: David " ·
Frank, grand champion: Levi
Smith. ·reserve champion:
Andrew Ginther and .Joyce
Weddle. honorable mention;
Making the Cut: Kelsey
Myers. grand champion:
Eddie Hendricks. reserve
champion :
Na iling
It
Together: Kody Wolfe. grand
champion . Whitney Thoene,
reserve champion: Finishing
Up: Morgan Werry, grand
champion: Adventures with
Yoll r Camera
A: Kara
Osborne. grand champion:
Kelsey Turner. re&gt;erve champion;Tori Goble. and Kelsey
Myers. honorable mention:
Adventures wi th Adjustable
Cameras: Zachary Carson.
grand champion.
Creati ve Writing: Miranda
McKelvey, grand champion:
Samantha Cl ine. reserve
champion: Wade Collin' and
Katie Keller, honorabl e n)ention: An as Expression: Eric
Pierce . gmnd champion: Play
the Role: Summer Atkinsmi.
grand champion ; Let's
Explore the Outdoors 1:
Bccca Chad wel L grand
champiot) , Kirk Pullins.
reserve champion: Jonathan
Donohue . honorable mention.
Exploring Our forest:
Ti mothy Elam. grand champion: Corey Jarvi,, reserve
champion: Samh Engle. hon\&gt;rable menti on; Exploring
Ponds:
Jonath an
Ohio
Donohue. grand champion;
Ohio Birds: Gan-ett Rit(.'h ie.
grand champion: Fishing for
the Beginner: Ethan Steger.
gra nd champion: Sarah
Lawrence. reserve champion: Austin Miller. honorable
mention .
Fishi ng for Intermediates:
Joshua Ne l"&gt;n. grand champion: Jonath an Donohye.
re,erve cha~1pion: Safe Use
of Guns: Jt\rdan Koblentz.
gra nd champion: Jonathun
Hayman . reserve ch,imp ion:
Justin Morris. ho norable
mention: Archery: Matthew
Pierce, grand champion: ·
Samanth a Cline, reserve
champion: Cody Rayburn.
honorable mention: From
Seed to flower: Chelsea
Ho lter. grand champion:
Vegetable Gardening 1:
Kayla Hawthorne. grand
champion: Meredith Gaul.
reserve champion: Halcigh
Bush and Jo yce Weddl e.
honorabh: mention .

C INCIN NAT I The
National Leag ue's top team
opened th e second half with
a motto: Don't look back.
So far. it's work in g. No
one is eve n close to th e New
York Mcts .
End y Chavez's tiehreakin g double in the I Ot h
inning sent the Mets to a -+2 victory Thllfsday over the
Cincinnati Reds. kee pin g
the NL's best-pos itioned·

innings
(4) Athens 17, (6) McArthur 2 ~ 7
innings
Thvradey'• results

.

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'Lossrs bracket
(1) Lancaster 8, (5) logan 5
(11 Lancaster 10;(4) Alhens 9
. Friday's game
l.osBrs bracllet final ·

(3) F~eney Bennett.vs. (1} Lancaster
at Pickerlngto~ Centr~l, 5;30 p.m.

Saturday·• gomes ·
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FAIAPLAIN Interchange
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GALLIPOLIS Ohio
Valley Publi shing is currently
seeking stringer' to help
cover hi gh school football
games this faiL
· Understanding of the game
of football, passable writing
skills. ability to keep accurate
statistics and basic computer
word processing skills are
required.
No &lt;ravel outside the tricounty area (Gallia, Meios,
Mason) will bt: necessary for
this tetilporlf~Y position.
All those mterested should
contact Brad Shenmm, OVP
Sports Editor, at (740) 4462342 ext. 33. Ir there is no
answer. leave a message
along with your cotilact information.
·
Writing samples can be emailed to bshemlan @mydailytribune.ccim: faxed to 1740-446-3008; or dropped olf
at one or our three locations:
Gallipolis (825 3rd Ave.),
Point Pleasant {200 Main St.)
and Pomeroy (Ill Court St.).

Big Bend Youth
football/cheer
sign-ups set

Fax - 1-7 40-446-3008

Dea1ersn1p is
3 milas on leH

_E-mail -

Taxes, Jogs, title lees extra. Rebate Included In sole price of new vehicle listed where
applicable. On oppYoved credit. On sQlected models. See dealer for details. Not responsible for
typographical errors. Prices good July 18th through July 23rd.
·

sports@mydailysentlnel.com

5(lll.r.lli.Sll!l.f

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
Osherman@ mydailylnbune.com

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer

•

·· ·· ~•a.• •

Jeep

475 South Church Street, Ripley • Monday· Saturday 9 am· 9 pm • .Sunday lpm-.1-..
~ p~
.... _ •.

Please see Open, Bl

Please see Reds, Bl

AP photo
Tiger Woods of the United States drives from the 16th tee during the opening round of the British Open Golf Champion s hip
at the Royal Liverpool Golf Course in Hoylake, England Thursday.· Woods posted a 5-unde r par 67.

starts wall at Open
Bv

PAUL NEWBERRY

ASSOC IATED PRESS

HOYLAKE, England
Tiger Woods sprayed his
first drive into the wispy
rough, then missed a 2 l/2foot putt . He needed two
swings to escape one of
those feared pot bunkers. He
knocked his ball onto a
du sty p;tth along side the
fairway and wound up
behind a tall, wooden signpost.
Errant shot s as ide, Woods
positioned himself to contend for another British
Open championship.
No need to worry about
mi ssing the cut this time :
Woods, who fail ed to
make it to the weekend at
the U.S. Open, opened with
a 5-under~par 67 at Royal
Liverpool on Thursday. The
defending champion was
only one shot behind the surprising leader. Graeme
McDowell of Northern

MIDDLEPORT Big
Bend Youth foot ball and Ireland.
For mu ch of the day.
cheerleading sign-ups for all
schools and teams will be Woodsshowed-signsoffrusheld Saturday. Jul y 22, at the . tration. He jerked hi s club
Middlep()rt Footbull Stadium behind hi s head after one
wayward shot, stopping just
from I0 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Football/Cheer Camp will short of slamming it down .
He gritted hi s teeth , He mutbegin on Monday, July 31.
tered under his breath.
For more information call
But the endin g was pure
Roger at 742-2623, Angie ar
Tige r. He reached. the green
992-9059 or Chrissy at 992of the 565-yard hole with a
3183
coupl e of iron s hots, curled
in a 2s-1oot putt tor eagle
and plllnped hi s fist emphatically.
CoNTACfUS
''There's plenty of bi rdie
hole
s ou t !here," Woods
OVP Scoreline IS p.m.-1 a.m.)

on Route 21.

'WWW.tompeden~com

start, yanking hi s opening
shot into the rou gh despite using an iron for better control and mild conditions rarely seen on a seaside
links -, and missed a 2 1/2footer to save par.
"Just a terrible putt .'' he
said.
Overnight rain s softened
the browni sh. rock -hard
course. and the breeze oil
the Irish Sea didn't pick up
until late in the afte rnoon.
Even then. it hardl y felt like
a Briti sh Open.
For Woods, there were
more ugly shots to come
despite the relativel y benign
weather. His ball plugged in
the sand next to the green at
No.' I0, and hi s first aitempt
to get out caught the s'odde n
lip and ricocheted buck into
the dee p bunker. But he
knocked his second attempt
nex t to the hole and saved

Cl iff Floyd and Carlos
Delgado hit solo homers off
an otherwise tough Bronson
Arroyo, helping the Me&lt;take two of 1h ree in the
series . New York ha:-. won
six of its last eig ht overalL
improv ing th e league's besr
reco rd to 57-3H.
. Since June c~. the Met '
have enjoyed a double-di git
lead in th e NL East, prov iding a temptation to re lax
There\ no indication that
they're going to do it.
"It's important to start an!
hal f th is way:· said ciCN'r
Billy Wagn~r. who pilched a
perfect IOth to gel his 10th
save in 23 cha nces. " It pays
dividends for a team. You
continw: to have a good
fee ling.
" I also think that with the
lead we have. tbat vou want
to keep goi ng out there anJ
pushlrig. Today was one of
those wins where we real !)
overcame a lot:·
Cinci nn at i also has been
on an upswi ng since the AII Stur break. going 5-c whi le
reb uild rng
its bu ll pen
lhrou gh a pair of trades.
One of the newcomers let
th i ~ Olk' ge l a~'ay.
Right-hander
Ga rv
Majewsk i (3-~ ). acquired ii1
an eigh t-player deal with
Washi!lgton a. week earl ier.
gotve up do ubles to Xavier
Nadv and Cha,·eL in th e
lOth: lea\ing hi m wi th a

"If Pickerington loses Game 1

1-740-446·2342 ext 33
or 992-5287 (Meigs Co.)

Take. 1-77 to Ftlpley

team on an upswing .

. Game two, 3:30p.m.;

OVPseeks
football writers

(740) 446-2342, ext. 23
Owalters @mydailytrlbune com

Larry Crum, Sports Wrlter
(740)446·2342.

••t 33

Ierum@ mydailyreg1ster.cam

Joe KAY

ASSOCIATED PRESS

(5) Logan 14, (7) Gallipolis 4 · - a

POMEROY - Results of
the Meigs County 4-H
Miscellaneous
Jud ging,
held ·wednesday at the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds,
were:
Discovering 4-H l: Olivia
Schuler, grand · champion:
Jonathan Hayman , reserve
champion: Discovering 4-H
ll : Sarah Lawrence. grand
champion :
Exploring
Animals: Anthony Kopec.
grand champion: Chandler
Clark, reserve champion :
Exploring Me and My
Home : Kayle Lawrence,
grand champion.
You 're the Athlete: Josiah
Hayman , grand champion:
James Hill, reserve champion; Janae Boyles and
Harley Fox, honorable mention; Keeping Fit: Morgan
Werry, grand champion :
Mallory
Nicodemu s.
reserve champion; Rebe cc~
Donohue and Julia Lantz,
honorable mention.
First Aid: Bruce Davi s,
grand champion; Kayla
Hawthome, reserve champion; Abigail Houser. honorable
mention:
Alcohol
Decisions: Heaven Westfall. ·
· grand champion; Kimberly
Hawthom , reserve champion :
Tobacco ahd You: Audrionna
Pullins , grand champion:
Self-Determined: Zachary
Carson, grand champion:
Eric Pierce, reserve champion; Zack Newell and Haley
Perdas, honorable mention .
Scrapbooking:
Kat lyn
Sauvage , grand champion :
Whitney Thoene, reserve
chainpion,
Summer
Atkinson, Hannah Helgesen,
Nicole Moodispaugh. Kelsey
Myers and KiKi Osborne.
honorable mention: One-onOne: Kimberly Hawthorne ,
grand champion: 4-H Club
Teen Leadership: Audrionna
Pullins , grand champion :
Speak Out: Tina Drake.
grand champion; Leadership
Skills You Never Outgrow. l:
Brenna Holter, honorab le
mention.
Leadership Skills You
· Never Outgrow, II : Tina
Drake. grand champion:
Emily Davis, reserve champion: Leadership Skills You
· Never Outgrow. Ill : Haley
Perda?, honorable mention:
Growing On My Own :
Amanda Roush, grand champion: Family History Treasure
Hunt : Meredith Gaul. grand
champion:
Eric
Wood.
reserve champion: Erin
Patterson . honorable mention.
Becoming Money Wise :
Cass ie Hauber. honorabl e
mention: Adventures rn
Home Li ving: Shawnclla ·
Patterson. ·grand champ io n:
Shaelie Clark. reserve
champion ;
Cheye nne
Beaver, honorable mention :
Design ing Interi ors: Kristin
Fick. grand champion.
Your First H0111e Away
from Hom&lt;:: Autumn H;rltbcr.
champion:
_grand
Collectibles: Joshua Nebon.
grand champ ion; Brenna
Ho lter, reserve champion:
Ryan Tripp._honoruble mcn ti6n; Rockets Away (bte,):

Bates. Jim Gordon. George
Stewan and Paul Somen'ille
and the team of Don
Hollman . .Jim Spencer. Clyde
Sayre and Bub Astivers.
. The closes to the pin winno we re Jim Spencer on
hold No. 17 and Donnie
Field,
hole No. 14. There
has been a total or 12S different players to play at least one
week f(Jr the season and there
is Sl ill two fu ll months of play
remai ning ocfore the season
ending party on September
26.

~~i~g ';~o~~~~~e Jl~~dgd~nt~

very event. That's an espe- two par 5s. Still, it was an
cially grating drought for a encouraging start after the
group that has dominated the U.S. Open, where he made
U.S. in the Ryder Cup.
double' bogey on the linal
But it's too soon for any- hole when a par would have
one to think about clearing a been good enough for his
spot on the mantel for the third straight major title.
"I've got to execute betclaret jug. On a warm, sunny
day made for going low, the ter," Mickelson said. "The
crowded leaderboard fea - course is playing about as
tured an assortment of big nice as it could."
names and unknown s.
The most awaited group of
Phil Mickelson bounced the day teed otf in the afterback from the debacle at noon with Woods and threeWinged Foot to shoot a s~l id time winner Nick Fa! do.
69 that could have been even whose . sour relationship
better. One shot better than · warmed up a bit when they
Lefty was a large pack that shook hands on the practi ce
included 1002 champion range Wednesday.
Ernie Els , m;1jor winners . Their highly anticipated
Mike Weir and Jim Furvk. duel wasn't much of one.
U.S. Ryder Cup captain Tom Faldo shot 77 and will need
Lehman, and Sergio Garcia. a very low round Friday just
still see king his first major to f{lake it to the weekend.
title .
Since turning pro, Woods
Mickel son was 4 under at had never missed a cut in a
the turn but struggled a bit major until he shot back -todown the stretch, fa iling to back 76s at Winged Foot. He
take advantage of the last got off to another ominous

••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
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throw, any shot s away."
He was tied fQ r second
with Spain's Mig uel Angel
Jimenez, England's Anthony
Wall and Greg Owen. and

:
.:
•
•
:
•

of the Ieaderboard wou ld
like to be th e one to break
the. continent 's streak of
futi lit y in the ·majors.
Scolland's Paul Lawrie was
th e last Euro to win one.

:
•
•
•.
•
•
:

Jat'~~~~ ~e~~~~~nF~~k~~~ {~p
0

:

00~1J SO'F~'B~/.1. liOIJJ
. ~M~ME'NT

•

All proceeds benefit the Point Pleasant Gir(s Sojiba/1 /.eagll(: &amp; Pl'H foundation

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HARMON &amp; ORDNANCE FIE/.DS

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B'r:,.llilt1 AT 8#]0 A M
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f,.f,,~l ,_.,,,,._'AM ,.".' 0-!ILE ,;;l/MIIflf,:#.j~~-Jt!
• '"

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tur. AII,.IJ'
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llll'fiVn ,
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PLAYERS MUST IE /8 YEARS OF ACE &amp;OLDER
Co -sponsoredby:
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seven long years ago in this • • • • • • • • • • • • · ·• • • • • • ••• • • • ••• • • • • • ••• • • • • ••• • • •• •• • • • •• • • ·•• • • ••• • • •• ••

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�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 21, 2006

. www .mydailysentineJ.com

Friday, July 21, 2006

m:rthune- Sentinel-

U.S. hoops starts training camp Braves acquire veteran Wickman
LAS VEGAS (API
Don't call 11 a tryout. coach
Mike Krzyzewski inststs
Every playe.r at UNLV's
traming complex this week is
a member o the U.S. men \
national basketball ream, and
that won't change next week
when Krzyzewsk1 and his
staff select the 12 who w1ll be
m umfonn for the world
championshipS next month
The hantlful ot camp mvitees left stateside still w1ll be
contributors to the national
team before the1r three-year
commitment ends. That longterm togethemess - long
practiced by othe1 natiOns, but
shunned hy the star-dommated U.S Dream Teams - is
the pnmary change 111 the
Amencans' approach as they
attempt to reclaun dominance
over the world
'These aren 't tryouts, and
nobody IS ~ettm g cut,"
Krzyzewsk1 smd "That's the
thmg that's different about

what we're trymg to do. We're
m thJS for the long hau I
Everybody here " a part ol
v.hatever success v.c have"
Yet there's an undem&lt;~n'&lt;
spU'it of competition amoq
the 18 players vying for Jeiseys m thts week.long trammg
camp - the feel mg of a tryout
camp fo r gifted stars who
have n't tned out for anythmg
in years, perhaps never.
Only 15 players - at most
- will travel to Asia fo1
preparatory games m China
and Korea. and just 12 w1ll
play in the world championships m Japan, startmg Aug.
19 Eighteen of the 22 players
m the Las Vegas worl&lt;auts are
hoping to make the trip. so
somebody has to go.
"I know It's not a competi!lon. but 11 feels like 1t to me,"
Grlbert Arenas satd
A compelltive v1be IS obvious m the workouts. where the
players g1ve an effort bener
suited to a p1eseason Duke

·Reds

tied at 2 in the seventh
1nnmg. Reliever Chad
Bradford pitched out of the
threat, leavmg Glavme wtth
from Page Bl
his fourth no-deciSion m h1s
f1ve starts
blown save and a loss m lastRyan
Freel tted It with a
three appearances for the two-run double in the fifth .
Reds
lhe only mning that Gl avine
"Majewski is gomg to be later lamented. Freel had
big for us," manager Jerry three of Cincinnati's nine
Narron satd " It seems hke hils off the left-hander, who
every time out , something has been stuck on II wms
happens . He could have smce June 23.
easily been out· ot . that
"I felt good," Glavme
mmng."
sa1d "In my last couple of
Carlos Beltran completed games, I JUSt seem to have
the rally With a run -sconng that one mnmg or I wo
double off Kent Me1cker innings that become diffiPedro Feli c ~ano (4-2) cult, become the turmng
pitched the ninth to get the pomt m the game for me.
wm for New York , whtch It's not like the third time
leads the NL wtth a 30-20 through the lmeup I'm gettmg hammered. There's a
road record.
ground
ball , a bloop hit, and
The Reds were facmg one
thmgs
get
gomg."
of thetr toughest challenges
The
two-time
Cy Young
Thursday:
beat
Tom
winner was chosen for his
Glavme
The left-hander has domi- lOth All-Star team last
nated Cmcmna!I smce the week, but didn 't play. He
earliest days of Ius 19-year was overshadowed by
career He's 26-12 overall, Arroyo, who was picked for
the most times any current hts first All-Star team and
p1tcher has beaten the Reds, threw one mnmg m
and has lost only stx games Pittsburgh.
That high-profile appearm Cmcmnau dunng hts
ance
has become a tummg
career
Arroyo kept up with him, point for Arroyo, who was
turnmg tl mto a starters' m a 1-4 slump before the
break. He threw seven
draw.
shutout
·mnings
last
Glavine left with the
bases loaded and the score Saturday m the Reds· wm

workout than a midsummer
scnmmage among million aires.
Dunng
practice
on
Thursday. LeBron James
attempted a looping underhand shot that was goaltendea
by Shawn Manon When Kirk
Hiruich congratulated Marion
on a good block. James
howled: " It wasn'r no good
block '''
The players wore . smiles,
but they clearly take their task
senously. Whtle James and
Marion don 't have to worry
about bemg left home, players
such as Hmnch , Shane Battier.
Bruce Bowen, Luke Ridnour
and Antawn Jamison are
workmg to prove their wonh
to Krzyzewski and hts staff.
Krzyzewskt and Jerry
Colangelo, the club's managmg dtrector, purposely
shunned the All-Star approach
m choosmg this roster. mstead
selecting many of the NBA's
best complementary players

ATLANTA (AP)
Sensmg a playoff surge, the
Atlanta Braves traded for
proven
closer
Bob
Wickman , sending a mmor
leaguer to the Cleveland
Indians on Thursday to
address a lingenng weakness.
The 37-year-old Wickman
has been successful on 15 of
18 save chances thts season,
and lied for the AL lead last
year wtth 45 saves. To get
him , Atlanta traded Class A
catche1 Max Ranmez
"We had a need to bolster
our bullpen ," Braves general manager John Schuerholz
said
The Braves have won 14
straight divtslon titles, but
thetr chances looked to be in
doubt when they were 3346. Since then . Atlanta has
won 12 of 16 to get back
mto w1ld-card contention ,
f1 ve
games
behind
Cincinnati.
Atlanta 's
seven-game
over Colorado, and was on
top of his game agam wmning
streak
ended
agamst one of the NL's Wednesday night at St
highest-scoring offenses.
LoUis The Braves were off
Arroyo struck out eight Thursday, and play a weekand gave up only stx hits m end senes m Philadelphia.
eight mnings, mcluding the
Wickman earned his 15th
solo homers by Floyd and save Wednesday to help the
Delgado. He didn 't walk a Indians end a frve-game losbatter, throwmg a remark- mg streak. The nght-hander
able 80 strikes out of Ill IS 1-4 with a 4 18 ERA in 29
pitches.
games.
"I think It's kind of a feelCleveland has been a dising that we're never out of a appointment this season and
game ,"
Arroyo
said . fallen far back in the AL
"Usually when you 're down
two runs and Glavme's
pt!ching , you feel the game
is over. But we haven't felt
hke that since the All-Star
break."
fromPageBl
Notes: Delgado went 5for-26 slump on the Mets'
tnp .. .' Ken Gnf(ey Jr. was par.
At the II th, Woods
out of the Reds' lineup ,
drove
behind a signpost on
gettmg a day off after a
the right side of the fairni~l)t game t~at ended after
The
marshals
mtdntght. Gnffey has only way.
attempted
to
yank
it out of
one career homer off
Glavme, hitting
.273 the dirt, but it wouldn't
career. ... Fre~l filled in for come lose . So Woods simGnffey in center field and ply hit around it and put
had the three hits off the ball to 10 feet, sinkmg
Glavme - more than hts the b1rd1e putt.
He fmally found the fairprevious career total. He
had been 2-of-9 commg way at No. 16 - only it
mto the game .... 3B Rich was the adjacent one at 17 .
Aunha extended his hit- He still managed to reach
ting streak to 13 games , the edge of the green (the
matchmg his career high. 17th, that ts) and made a
He's done 11 four times, the two-putt birdie.
McDowell's six-birdie,
last time in 200 I

Open

Central and wild-card races .
Atlanta relievers have a
4 73 ERA and have blown
20 of 40 save opportumttes.
Chns Re1tsma , out for the
season followmg elbow
surgery, Jorge Sosa and
Kenny Ray have been used
as the closer.
Ray, who has five saves m
eight chances, had perhaps
the most success. but no.
reliever fared well enough
to hold the JOb.
The 'Braves also struggled
to close games last yeur.
wh en former closer John
Smaltz made hts return to
the startmg rotallon
Wickman has been a rehable closer despite often
allowmg base runners
It was no different
Wednesday when he gave
up a two-out double to
Orlando Cabrera before
striking out
Vladunu
Guerrero m a 6-4 win over
the Los Angeles Angel s. ·
Wickman , in his seventh
season With the Indians , is
the club's career saves
leader w1th 138. He has a
hfettme record of 60-55
With a 3.64 ERA and 229
saves in 14 seasons.
Last year, Wickman converted 45 of 50 save oppor!unities and made his second All-Star appearance. It
was Wickman's first full
season after havmg elbow
surgery that caused him to
miss the 2003 season and

the first half of 1004.
Wickman chose to sign a
one-year. $5 n\Illton contract m December after the
Indians were un, uccessful
in s ign ing B.J Ryan or
Trevor Hoffman .
The Braves are wellstocked ut catcher. Brian
McCann. at 22, made the
NL All-Star team this year
and Jarrod Saltalamacchia,
playmg
at
Double-A
Mississippi , IS regarded as atop prospect.
The 21-year-old Ramirez
was hlllmg .285 w1th mne
homers and 37 RBis in 80
games at Class A Rome. He
was picked for the South
Atlantic League All-Star
Game.
Wickman jomed the
Indians m 2000 , commg
over in a seve n-player deal
that sent Richie Sexson to
the Mdv.aukee Brewers.
Hard-throwmg
rookie
Fausto Carmona appears to
be the favonte to take over
the closer role for the
Indians, v.ho expected to be
contenders after wmmng 93
games last season.
Wickman was the most
ob,ious trade candidate for
the Indians , who entered
Thursday 21 games back m
the AL Central He could
have vetoed the trade
because he has more than 10
years m the league and at
least five with the same
team

no -bogey round set a
course record for the Open
at Royal L1 verpool. Of
course , this is the first time
smce 1967 that the oldest
of the four maJors has been
held near the hometown of
the Beatles.
Nevertheless, It was a
stunnmg performance by a
golfer who said he got a
swmg lip from a fan m a
local pub the mght before
- and tound that it actual ly worked.
"If you ' re watching ,"
McDowell quipped for TV
cameras , "I'll see you on
the range at 7 o'clock m
the mornmg."
Owen IS a PGA Tour regular hest known for blowmg a final-round lead at
Bay Hill this year. He
three-putted from 3 feet on

the next-to-last hole to
g1ve away a seemmgly
certam wm.
"It still hurts now even
thmkmg about It ,:' he said.
Wall IS playmg only his
second Open, having tied
for 46th at Royal St.
George 's m 2003, and his
lone European Tour victory came s1x years ago .
But the 31-year-old
Londoner has been playing
well this season wtth a few
runner-up finishes on the
European Tour. Afterward,
he munched on a baguette
and mststed he wasn 't all
that surpnsed to be near
the top of the leaderboard .
"I don't see why not," he
said. ''I've been playing
well. You need some luck.
That's the main thing. And
here I am "

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Bingo starts at 6:30

Starting July 1st
1st pack is $10.00
2nd Pack Free
All other packs is
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PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, July 22,
2006 at t 0:00 a.m., a
public sale will be
hold at 2tt W. Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company Is soiling
tor cash In hand or
certified check the
lollowlng collateral:
199t
Mltsubtshl
3000GT
JA3X054B I MY02153

7
The Farmers Bank
and
Slvtnga
Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, resarves 'he
right to bid at this
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral

prior to sale. Further,
Tho

Farmoro

and

Bank

Savings

Company
reaervoo
the right to reJect any
or all bids aubmiHed.
The above described
collateral wilt be oold
"as Is-where Is", with

no

expressed

Implied

gt ..n.

or

warranty

For further lnforma·
tlon, or for an'
appointment
to
lnopoct
collateral,
prior to sate date contact Cyndte, Stacy or
Randy at 992·2138.
{7) t9, 20, 2t
....,.,_

and

requests lor a public
moettng regarding a
proposed action may
be aubmiHecl within

30 days of notice of

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Public Notice
Public Notice
County: Meigs
The following appll·

cation• andlor veri·
lied complaints were
Ieeelved, and tho following draft, pro·
posed,
or
final
actions ware lasuad,
by
Tho
Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency
{OEPA) last woek
"Actions" Include tho
adoption, modtflca·
tlon, or repeal of
ordere {other than
emergency

orders);

the Issuance, denial,
moclnlcatton or revo-

the propooed action.
An adJudication hearIng may be held on a
proposed action If a

hearing requesl or
obJection to received
by the OEPA wHhtn 30
dayo of loouance of
tho propelled action
Written
comments,
requests for public
meetlngo, and adJudi-

cation

or

To (740) 44&amp;-aooe

hearing

requests muat be
sent
to:
Hearing
Clerk,
Ohio
Environmental
Protection Agency,
P.O.
Box
t 049,
Columbus,
Ohio
43216-1049
{Telephone: 614-644-

2129). " Final Actions:
Are actions of the
director which are

upon Issuance or a
alated effective date.
Pursuant to Ohio
Revised
Code
Section 3745.04, A
final action may be
appealed
to
the
Environmental
Review
Appeals
Commission (ERAC)
{Formerly know as
the
Environmental
Board of Review) by a
peraon who was a
party to a proceeding
before the director by
filing an appeal within
30 days of notice of
the
final
action.

Pursuant

to

Ohio

Revised
Code
Section 3745.07, A
Final Action toaulng,
denying, modifying,
revoking, or renewing
a permit, license, or
variance which Is not
preceded by a pro-

posed action, may be
appoeted to the ERAC
by filing an appeal
within 30 days of
tsauance of tho final
action ERAC appeals
mull be flied with:
-E nvlronmental
Review
Appeals
Commission,
309
South Fourth Street,
Room 222, Columbus,
Ohio 43215 A copy of
the appeal must be
served on the director within 3 days after
filing the appeal with
the ERAC .
Final Issuance of permit to Install
Ohio Department of
Transportation
State Route 7 North
Orange Twp., Oh
Action
Date ~
07/07/2006
Facility Dascrlptlon :
Wastewater
Identification
No.:
55t053
Thla final action not
preceded by proposed action and Ia
appealsbll'to ERAC.
Pump otatlon and
force main for the
Ohio Department of

Transportation
Coolville Outpost on
State Route 7 North
Final
Issuance of
Renewal of NPDES
Permit
Leading
Creek
Consrvy Dlat
State Ale I 24
Langavtlle, OH
Action
Date :

OB/Ot/2006
Receiving
Waters:
Little Parker Run
Facltlty Description:
Iron and MG Removal

WTP
Identification
No.:
OIY00023'DD
This final action not
preceded by proposed action and Is
appealable to ERAC.
17) 2t

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The
Meigs
Local
Board of Education
wishes to receive
blda for the following:

Bread/Bakery

and

Mllk/Oelry ~roducts.
All bids shall be
rec'lved In, arid bid
opectflcatlons may be
obtained from, TREASURER ' S
OFFICE,
41765 Pomeroy Pike,
Pomeroy, OH 45769,
on or before 10:00
a.m..
Thursday,
August 3, 2006
Tho
Meigs
Local
Board of Education
reserves lhe rJ'bht to
re)ect any and all
bids, and the submitling of any bid shall
lmposa no liability or
obligation upon the
IBid Board.
All envelopes must be
CLEARLY MARKED
according to the type
of bid.
Mark E . Rhonemus,
Treasurer/CEO
Matgs Local Board of
Education
P.O. Box 272
Pomeroy, OH 45769
{740) 992-5650
{7) 21, 27

-• -·--•

--'~-

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

Should Include These Items
To Help
Response ...

*POLICIES*
Ohio Valley

Publishing reserves
lila right to edll,
reject or cancel any
ad at any time
•Errors Must 8
Reported on the firs

ay of publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
egloler
will
b
esponslbla for n
ore than tl'le cost o
he space occupte
y the error and onl
he

first Insertion W

hall not be liable fo
ny loss or expens
hat results from th
ubUcatlon or omts
lon of an advertise
ant Corrections wil
made m the firs
vailable edltton.
Box number ads ar
!ways confidential

Current rate car
pplles
)All Real
Estat
dvertlsements ar
ub1ect to lhe Federa
au Houstng Act o

\'\'\01 '\(I \11 :\IS

rLw-------'
GIVEAWAY

• All ads

--,
1 5yr old Rotwe•ler mtx to
good home preierably m
country Good w/ktds and
other amrnals Needs room
to run (740)591 ·91 16

so

Ptke (740)446 3009

Free to good home good
watch dog but not good with
little chtldren Call (740)446·
4i77

r

r

Free kttlens to good home.
Calico and black one Call Lost 1n Middleport on Beech
Streel July 41h Small
(740)446·4177
Sh tlltzu Reward Go to 207
)We wtll not knowing
Free ktttens 2 1/2 mo old Beech Street or ca ll 740·
accept any adver
good mousers lnemlly diS· 992·1079
isement In vlolaUo
posthOn playiul energetic
I the law.
1740)742 i404
Lost
Black
Rottwetler
approx 1201bs last seen on
Smtth Rtdg e Road tn Long
Bottom (for lland area)
4x4's For Sale..... ..
..... ....... 725
FAM ILY PETt REWARD
Announcement. .. ... ...... . . ...... . . . 030
$200 001 740 843 5437
Antiques ......... .... ......... ....... . ................... 530
Apartmentg for Rent .•
. 440
~
YARDS\!£
Auction and Flea Market.... ...... ........ ... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......... .............. 760
Auto Repair.
... , ...... 770
Autos tor Sale.
. ...... ....... .... . ... 710
YARD SALE·
Boats &amp; Motors for .Sale ....................... ..... 750
GALLIPOLIS
Building Supplies. ...
. .... 550

r~

.. .................. 210

Camping Equipment.
.. ........................... 780
Cards of Thanks ... , ......
.. ... OtO
Chlld/Eidarly Care...........................
.. .... 190
Electricai/Refrlgeratl an ..... .. .. ...... ... .... .. . .. 840
Equipment for Rent.. . .•
480
Excavating ......... .......... .....
•..... 830
Farm Equipment ................................ 610
Farms for Rent......... .•...
430
Farms tor Sale .,................ ........... ....... 330
For lease....
..... ......... ........ .......... 490
For Sale..... ... .... ....... ..... .
585
For Sale or Trade.............
.. ............... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables .. ..
... . ............ 580
Furnished Rooms. . ...
..,.
.450
General Hauling............... . ........ ......... . .. 850
Giveaway ............ ....
.. ......... 040
Happy Ads ............. ......
.. .... . .....
. .. 050
Hay &amp; Grain .............................................. 640
Help Wanted. ..
... . . ...... .. ...... ,..... t10
Home Improvements...........
..... 810
Homes for Sale .. ............. ..................... 310
Household Goods . . ....
. .... .. .. ...... .. 5t0
Houses for Rent....... ......... . ....
410
In Mem&lt;IF!am.... .... .. ... .. ................ ...... 020
Insurance...... ..... . .• ..
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment .....
.. 660
Livestock .... .
.. ................................ 630
Lost and Found.. . .... ..... ...
..... .. .. 060

Lots &amp; Acreage......... ........ ......... .. .... 350
Miscellaneous
...... .. ....... ......... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise . ...... .. .... 540
Mobile Hpme Repair............. .. ...............
Mobile Homes for Rent ..... ..
...... .......
Mobile Homes fbr Sale ....
... ..
Money to loan . ................. .......... , .......
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
.. • .

860
420
320

220

740
Musical Instruments.. . .. ...... .. . ..
... . 570
Personals.. .
.. . ... ..... ..... ............ . 005
Pets for Sale ...
.. .... ... • ......
....• 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing.. . ...... . ... ......
.... 820
Professional Services ......
.................... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair....
...... ....... 160
Real Estate Wanted ................................. 360
Schools Instruction • .. .
..... ..•150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer ...
.. ....... 650
Situations Wanted ......... " . ...... .... .....
. 120
Space lor Rent............ ..
..... ....... .. .. 460
Sporting Goods......... ..... . .. .....
.. .
520
SUV'olor Sale. ....
.. .. .
.. ..................... 720
Trucks tor Sale........ . . .•
. .... t . . . 715
Upholstery
.. .. ... .... .. ...... ........ . . 870
Vans For Sale.....
.. ............ 730
Wanted to Buy ....... ........
.090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies ...........
.. 620
Wanted To Do ......... .....
.............. t80
Wanted to Rent............. ........... •
. . 470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis..
.. ... .. ..................072
Vard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle... ... .. .... .. .. 074
Yard Sate-PI Pleasant...... ......
.. 076

3 tam1ly yard sale Fn &amp; Sat
g.? Locust Str eet Btg mens
&amp; ktds clothes toys hnens.
4 1 game 1able, Hooked on
Phon1cs baskets mucll
more
81g sa le tst lilts year
Rodney Comm Center Fn,
Sat 7/2 1·7/22 Furmture
beddtng clothing, toys
F1ve iam•IY FrifSat July 21
22 B 30 4 30 19 Debbte
Onve (17mllesoutSR 141)
Materntty tn fa nt 2T tall
mens swts womens sz 20
old school desk set lwtn
beds old wood ktt chen
table clla1ls, lois of clothes
sweaters mtscellaneous fur
n11u1e household more'
- - - -- - -Movtng sale ElectnCibattery
tools lurntture clo lhtng
WID snow blower, lawn
mower, house hold more
Fnday 7121, 8·4, Saturday
7122 6 1 1100 Second Ave
- - - - - - - - - -- - - - Yard Sale 7 2(} 7-22 1833
Graham
School
Road
Gall1polts Furmture Elecntc
Weed Eater, Ktds Clolt1es,
And a few appliances
Yard Sale 7121 7/22 9am·
Spm 622 Jay Or Anttques
collecttbles books mtlk bot
ties ffi!SC Clollles

74

ScHOOll;

'

,ct:&gt;
....'•.

YARD SALEPO\ILROV/Mmm E

oJuly 21 22 (Bam 2pm)
Garage Sale (lee C1rcle)
Syracuse 0
Collecttbles
ant1ques adult clothing, new
Hoveround hospttal bed
Furmture
Longaberger

Yard Sale Across from
Mason Ftre Department
Ctotlles lurn1lure Kttchen
nems, Great for college stu
dents Fr1 July 21st and Sat
22nd 8 00·??
•

www.co 1cs com

Cross Creek AuctiOn Buffalo
tilts week Ron Pnce Atr
Cond1110ned Butldtng We
gladly accept Vtsa and
Master Ca rd (304)937·2118
or(304)550 1616
Ste hen Reed lit:~ 1639

~

CNC AND MANUAL
MACHINISTS
Immediate Day and Evenmg
sllttt posttlon for CNC and
Manual Mach1n1sts
Pay
ba sed on expenence and
qualtftcattons
Must have
own lland tools We offer
msu ra nce , VacatiOn, Pa1d
Holidays and Reltrement
PhOne 1·304-743· 1705

\VANI'I&lt;:U
10 Buv

Day Care Center accepltng

·------·
Absolute Top Dollar US
Stiver and Gold Cotns
Prootsets Gold Rtngs Pre
1935
US
Currency
So111atre Otamonds· M T S
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue, Gallipoli s 740 446·
2842

apphca110ns for par t 11me
chtld
care
workers
Appflcanls must have a htgh
school dtploma, at least 2
years expenence tn a chtld
care center or 011per1ence as
a home provtder licensed by
the state Qualified apph
cants please send resume
to Cara Halt Day Care INC
PO Box 393 Middleport, OH
Buytng Junk Cars &amp; Trucks
45760 NO PHONE CALLS
(304)773·5343 [304)773
PLEASE
5033

Oomtno s P1zza Now H1r1ng
Cash patd lor used d•sh net· Safe
Dnvers
Potnl
work &amp; cell phones Call
(
_
Pleasant
Gallipolis
&amp;'
8661860 0110
Pomeroy localtons Apply tn
I buy Junk Cars (304)773 Person
----..,---5004
c
- - - - - - - - Expenen ced Carpenter to
Wanted To Buy
Cllarles work: on mob1le llome
Dtckens Books
Phone·· Phone (740)446·7039
304-675 6499

-----=-----:::::-

I \11'1

(n \II

'I

'II{\ HI...,

li;o HELPW~ I
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble craft s
wood ttems
To $480/wk
Malenals pro11tded
Free mtorma110n pkg 24Hr
8Di 428-4649

--===---FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
S15 67 $26 19/hr "now htr·
mg For appllcatioo and free
governement JOb mfo, call
Amertcan Assoc of Labor 1
913 599 8042 24/hrs emp
serv
- --:-:::-::-:::-:--FILTER PRESS
OPERATORS NEEDED
FOR ENVIRONMENTAL
SERVICES COMPANY

- - - - - - - - Jom a stable and successful
An Excellent way lo earn sludge dewatertng company
money The New Avoh
Call Manfyn 304 882 2645
' Pay commensurate Wlth
AVON• All Areast To Buy or expenence
'Work tn Gallipolis Ferry WI/
Sell
Shtrley Spears 304
unlll Sep-06
~67~5-·1~42~9~-------, ' II w1lllng to !ravel, perm
1
r
empl avatl
'Mechantcal ,
Hydraulic,
SuperiJtsory Oredgtng back·
ground a plus
'Class A or B COL a plus
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY
'FULL TIME CUSSES
' COl TfVJ~ING
· FINniC NG AV ..IL.ABLE
• JOB f"uuoCEioiENl
• ENROLl I._G NON

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS

WY.THEVILLE VA

1-800·334-1203
Occupational
Certified
Asslslant
Therapy
at
ROCK·
Opentng
REHAB
SPRINGS
lnpattent,
Oulpallent
Ped1atncs
BEAUTIF.UL
Therapy gyml Call Jenntfer
Wetmer ·
800 -395·5000
x857B

Must have less than 6 potnts
on dr1vers lie for perm
employ
Call Bob at
800·860·7378
Metropolitan Enwonmental
Servtces Inc 5055 Nlke Dr
Htlliard, OH 43026
Fax 61 4· 771·2761
ot11ca@metenv1ro com
Healthcare Servtces Group
the nahon s largest proVIder
ol laundry and housekeep
1ng servtces lor long term
care IS cur rently seeking
laundry and llousekeeptng
managers 1n the GallipoliS
area If yoll warn ! lo grow
w1th an established publicly
treld company lax resume
to 614-577 ·01 25

Concealed Pistol Class
Ohio, WV Aug 5, 2006,
$75 00
9 OOam VFW
Mason wv Ph (740}8435555

Apphcatmn Deadline July
Part bme reta~ sales post· 31, 2006 The AMESC IS an
Opportuntty
tion evatlable at Ohto Valley Equal
Wtreless Pomeroy Contact Em~loyer/Provtder
740 992 2020 to schedule
mtervtew

"-------·
Car detailing mstde and out
Call for prtces and appomt
men1 304·895·8778

Ohto Valley Home Health
Inc hmng for Part nme and
Full Tt me CNA STNA
CH,HA PCA Compettttve
Wages and Beneftls tnclud
•ng health Insurance and
Mtleag e Apply at 1480
Jackson Ptke Gall tpoli s or
2415 Jackson Avenue, Potn1
Pleasant WV or phone loll
free 1 866·441 ·1393

--.LI----"Tr-

AUC'flONAND
FLEA MARKEl

The
Athens Me1gs
Educational Servtce Center
has a poSIIton open1ng tor
an
Educational
Otagnostt ctan to work: tn
Metgs County Schools lor
the 2006·2007 School Year
Appltcants must have a
Bachelors
Degree
EKperten ce and/or tra1n1ng
working With children m educatiOnfpsychology/mathe·
mattes IS preferred This
postlton IS a 10 month con
tract With Board approved
benefits
Salary will be
based on tratntng and ewpe
nence Submtlle11er ol mler
est to John D Costanzo
Supermtendertt
Athens
Metgs Educational Serv•ce
Cenler 320 1/2 Easl Mam
Street, Pomeroy OH 45769

OhiO Valley Home Health
Inc h1nn~ for Occupattonal
Theraptst
and Speech
Tlleraptst
Compellt1ve
Wages and Mtleage Apply
at 1480 Jackson P1ke
GallipoliS, or 2415 Jackson
Avenue Potn1 Pleasant WV
or p~one toll free 1·866·441·
1393

Free Ktttens 2545 Bulavtlle

Cat needs a home 8 year Three K1t1ens luzzyt 740
old female
declawed 742 2607
spaye d
bullerscotch &amp;
I.ClfiT .\Ml
white No trouble good pet
FOUN)J
wife has developed allergtes
Call (740)245 9035
--'--------~ Found Btcycle calllo 1dent1
Female Chow mtx very ty (304)675 2535
playful 2 yrs old (740)446
7525
Found Male smoky -colored
- - - - - - - - Tb rner m1x with a curled tatl
Free K11tens 10 a good
ontlle 100block of2ndAve
llome Call 7406961290
Call (740)645 7747

Business Opportunity .... ...

must be prepaid'

IN~TRUCllON

Approved
Home
only Full blooded Rat Tamer
Engltsh Coon Hound "Red pups 3 males &amp; 1 female
Tick' you ng ma le hunts Ca ll {740)245·9061
[304)675·5578
Ktttens approx 3 mo wtute.
Black lab pupp•es Free to
long llatred 1 Dlack i:tiSO
good llome CaU Amy at
mother &amp; lather ca ts
(740)949·3018 and leave
[740}446 7685
message

Business Training .•. ..... . • .•..
..... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ...................... 790

Bualn••• Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday: Dl•play : 1:00
Thur•day for Sund•y•

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added lo your classified ads
(. ~
fm
Borders$3.00/perad
l!iir1
Graphh;s 50¢ for small
SI .00 for large

GtVFAWAY

BfW male 1 Calico 8 weeks - - - - - ' - - - Full
blooded
Golden
old (304)675·53 13
Retnever and a Collte both
6 montll old Mtxed Boxer dogs have papers Ca lr
[740)645 32i2
female ?40·742·2380

..... 340

Qltplay Ads
AU Olaplay: l:Z. Noon 2

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

3 yellow and white kttlens Free to good home Black
htter tratned Free to good and
wllt le long
llan
home (740)446·6890
kt ttens(atso other co lors)
4 Ktttens 2 black males 1 740 742-2380

Business and Bulldmgs.......... ......

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

PtM.ICIES OhiO Vtllty Publllhlng rtMrv• It'll right IO l'dlt, rt)eet, 01' ctno.l tny ld liMy llmt Errorl mull btlrtipor!ad on the llr•t dty of
Trlbun&amp;-Sentlnti-Ragltttr wHI be re1ponalblt tar no mort thtn tl'lt cott Of lhl tptct occupied by tht error end only tht Urtt lnsenlon We
tny lou ar ewpentt thtl retultl from the pubiiCIIIOn or amltslon of tn tdvertltemtnL Corrtctlon will be made In tht flrtt avellablt &amp;dillon
trt alweyt conttcltnUal · Current rtlt ctrd tpplltt. · AM rul utMt tdvef11Mmtnlt trt
to the Federtl Fair Houtl ng Act ol 1968
tCC:tptl only help wtnttld tdt ~lng EOE tiJRdtnil Wt
I
I In violation ollht ltw

• Start your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbn~~vl•tlon&amp;
• Include Phone Number And Addreta Wh•n Needed
t Ads Should Run 7 DIYI

rI

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oeatt'tirM

Dally In-Column: 1 : 00 p . m.
Monday-Friday for In•ertlon
In Next Day ' • Paper
Sunday In-Column: :1.:00 p.m.
l'rh;av For Sund•y• Pap•r

CLASSIFIED INDEX

calion of licenses,
permits, leaaes, varl·
ancea, or certH!cates;
and the approval or
disapproval of plan•
and
specH!catlons.
"Draft Actions" are
wriHen statements of
the
director
of
Environmental
Protection's
{Director's)
Intent
with respect to the
Issuance, denial, etc.
of a permit, llcensa,
order, ate. Interested
persona may submit
written
permit,
llcenee, ord•, etc.
tntereeted peraona
may submit written
comments or requeet
a
public meeting
regarding
draft
actions. Comments
or public meeting
requeats must be
submitted within 30
days of notlc:e of the
draft
action.
"Propoeed Actions"
are
written
state·
menta of the diractor's
Intent
with
respect
to
the
laauance,
dental,
modHicatlon, revocation, or renewal of a
permit, license, or
variance.
Written

comments

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

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW IO
W§l;tf. 6f:t 6Q
ltiCcestu ds

l\egt~ter

Sentinel

Wprd Ads

&gt;This
newspape
ccepts only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standards

c

m:rthune

To Place

968

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

2006 by NEA. Inc.

Help Wanted Bartender &amp;
Wattress Contact Moose
Lodge 731" call (304)675
1880 or apply 1n Person
HIRING local tndrvtdual for
restdenllal
CONSTRUC·
TION.
Startmg
pay
$7 50/hr
TransportahOn
poss1bly ava1lable
416·
1771 Between 8 OOAM &amp;
5_DD_P_M_ _ ____,~,Jotn the Avon team Local
Corporate lratntng Call
(740)379 9422 10 start today
lor only $tO
---'-----,LABORER EARN AS YOU
LEARN Start buttdmg lor
your future now by JOintng
our ProfessJOnal Team arv:f
learn the skills to become a
Htgh Pressure Cleantng
Ma1n1enance Technician All
pOSitions reqUire weekly
TRAVEL outside ol Ollto
Company provtdes lodgtng
tra nsportation
and
PerDtem AVERAGE start·
1ng wage w11h cost of bene
f1ts tncluded ts $205 00 per
fteld day worked , wtlll a
chance to advance up lo
d
$263 00 per 1teld
ay
W
de
worked
e provt
pat d
tra1mng an d EXCELLENT
BENEFITS
Pre
Employment DRUG TEST
and a valtd Dnver's license
Is raqutred ClasS A COL tS
a plus, but not reqUired
Send work ll1story and day
ltme phone number to
TECHNICIAN TRAINEE
PO BOX 565, MARIETTA
OHIO 45750 EOE
-------Local conventence store
acceptmg applioattOJ1S for
Store
Manager
, Convenience store expert·
ence
prAferred
Send
resume to Resume 105 Alta
Street
MamJtla,
Ohto
-45_7_50--;----:---:Local EteCtncal Dlstrtbut or
seeklnn a part ttme driver,
t1
must be 21 years old wtth a
valid drrvers ltcense Send
resume to HR Dept 250
12th St West Hunllngton
WV
25704
-------Local fast paced business
needtng Offtce Manager
Must be tnendly and work
well with the publ1c Able IO
multi task ana manage
stress IB a must also muS1
have good telephone sk:ttls
and computer Knowledge
Send resume 10 CLA Box
~ . c/o Gathpohs Tribune
PO Box 469, Galhpohs, OH
4563i
MEDI HOME HEALTH
AGENCY
HAS OPENING FOR
"""PAN AN'S'""'
$28 PER HOURI
$42 PER VISIT
Call Judte Reese AN C
Cllmcal Manager at
(740}441· 1779 or 1·800·
481 6334

Parts Salesperson wanted
Computer experience and
knowledge of farm equtp·
ment preferred
Salary
negohable dependtng on
experience
Health
Insurance prov1ded Send
resume to CLA 8011 .5.9.9 c/o
Gallipolis Tnbune PO Box
469 GallipoliS, OH 45631
PoSitton avatlable mamta
nance supervtsor Baste AC.
heating
elec!rlcal anQ
plumbtng sktlls requtred
Salary 20k 25k to start
based on expenence Apply
m person Absollltely No
Phone calls Holtday Inn

R&amp;J TRUCKING
Lead1ng The Way
R&amp;J Truck 1ng now Hmng at
our New Haven wv
Termtnal For Regtonal
Hauls Dump Dtv 1 year
OTR
venltable exp
Call 1·800·462·9365 ask lor
Kent

The
A1hens Meigs
Educat1onal Servtce Center
has a positiOn opemng lor a
MD Teacher tor Southern
Elementary {Metgs County)
for the 2006·2007 School
Year Appltcants must be
cer t l lted i ltcens ed
lnterventton Spectallst or be
eligible
to
get
a
Supplementall•ce nse Th1s
pos1t1on IS a 9·mon1h con
tract w1th Board approved
benehts
Salary will be
based on expenence and
cer ttftcahon accordtng to
salary schedule Subm•t let·
ler of mterest to John D
Costanzo, Superintendent
Athens Me1gs EducaiiOnal
Servtce Center 320 112
East Ma1n Street Pomeroy
OH 45 769
ApplicatiOn
Deadline July 31 2006
The AMESC ts an Equal
Opportun t ty
-E-m-ploy_a&lt;_
IP-ro_"_de_r_ _ _

Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayt 740·446-4367,
1-BOO 214 0452
w.vw galhpol•st:areercoltoge com
Accrttdned Momcer Accrediting
CoLJOc•l for lr'ldependent eon~
and Scr.ools l274B
~;;,;;.;;;..;;;.;,_ _...,

r

70

MISCFLI~'EOUS

I

F01 Sale
Btg Mans
mechantcal
Llf1
Chatr
Phone 1_740 _367 _7294

reo
_

WANilD

To Do

Cerhlted
Chtld
Care
Provtder
Now
Has
Openmgsll Close to Metgs
Elementary Play Ground
Bail Court Large Rec
Room and Meals Provtded
Current Openmgs Seven
Daysfwk 740 992 2329
Cuts
tytes Mantcures
Serv
reas Belpre to Athens
tddteport &amp; m belween
all Jenny 740 378 6482
t:i"-8.c•~a~rs..:•::~'"e:_:r&gt;e::_n~
ce:;__,J
Melissa's Daycare now
enrolling ages one and up
large yard to play 1n meal's
provtde d seven days a
week 740 992 0070
Reliable &amp; 1rus1 worthy
llouse cleamng Excellent
references avatlable Free
esttmates (740)256 6147
11,\\(1\1

rlO ~TIT
r~==-~~~=~

The
Ath ens Metgs
Educattonal Servtce Center
•NOTIC[•
has a pos1110n opening for OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
an ED Teacher tor the SEMS
lNG CO recommends
"Aa_s_pon_so"bl-a." A"a-:-1,-b:le" c"h-:l
ld (Aiternattve School) tn that you do busmess w•th
Metgs County tor the 2006·
Care needed must Have 2007
School
Year
people you know and
References and transporla·
NOT to send money
Applicants must be certt
through the mat I until you
tton Call (304)674-4636
fled/license d
as
an
InterventiOn Spec~alist or be have mvesttgated the
offermg
The
Athens Meigs
ellgtble
lo
get
a
~~=:;:;::::::;:~
EducatiOnal Servtce Center Supplemental Ltcense Thts r.;
llas an openmg for a poSilton ·s a 9 montll con
~1ox •-'
Homeless
ltatson tCase tract v-11h Board approved
IU l..(H~
Manager PoSitton requtre
benefttson 9)(penence
Salary wtll and
IJe
ments htgll school dtoloma based
or eqw~·alent (degroe tn cerltftcalton accordtng lo
**~ Ol' ll'
educat1on, human serv1ce salary schedule Subm1t let
field or educational atde ter of mleresl 10 John
Borrow Smart Con ta ct
permtl preferred), good com- D
Cos1a.nzo
the OhiO DIVISIOn of
munlcalton &amp; computer
Supenntendent,
Atllens·
Ftnanctal
lnstll uhon s
sktlls expenence working
Me1gs Educe.\IOnal Service
of
Consumer
with SOCial agenctes and/or Center, 320 112 East Matn Olftce
Alfatrs BEFORE you ref1·
homeless famtlles 1n Me 1gs Street Pomeroy OH 45769
Co. reltable transportatiOn Appltcahon Deadline July nance your home or
obtain a loan BEWARE
2006 The AM ESC IS an
of reqtJesls for any large
::,t~~~~~eof ~~s~~~~= ~:d 31
Equal
OpporttJntty
advance payments ol
address/loca.11ons Thts Is a Employer/ProVIder
fees or Insurance Call the
grant funded posttton (32
Office
ot Consumer
hrs per week) with no bene
Affa1rs
toll
tree al 1·866
fits
Letter o1 tnleres1
278 0003 to learn 11 the
resume and re terences Truck Drivers
bro~er
or
b
d b 2 00 Ohto Based Small Truck1ng mortgage
must e recetve
Y1
Company
LOOking
for lender
IS
properly
noon July 31
Submit to
John
D
Costanzo T1actor Tratler drtvers wtth ltcensed \ThiS tS a public
Supenntendent
Athens flatbed el(pe11ence $600 to servtce announcernen1
I rum the Oh1o Valley
Metgs Educational Servtce $900 take home after taxes
Center, PO Box 684 320· Horne every v.eekend ano lloP;u~
~=·s~h•:ng:C:o:m:p:•n:y:)~
112 E Matn 51 , Pomeroy some weekdays deltvertn';) ~
QH
45769
Equal ]O OH, KY, VA &amp; wv
PROI'IX'&gt;10NAL
o p p 0 r t u n 1 1 y (330 )527 2789
~
SERVICES
Employer/Provider

r~======~

1::••·

i

_W_A_N-TE_D_ _ _F_
"_
ll--ilm
-e WANTED Poal110n avatTable
Ltcensad Practical Nurse lor
a community group home tor
people wltll MR/DD 1n
Bidwell Hours 9am·5pm M
F Current LPN Ltcense and
Pharmacology cerltltcatton
reqwred Salary $10 50/hr
Excellent beneftts package
tncludlng
Heallh/Denla l
Insurance and patd leave
t1me Pre employment drug
testing Sand resume to
Buckeye
Commun tly
Servtclls. PO Box 604
Jackson
OH
45640
Deadline lor applicatiOns
7/25106 Equal Opportumty
Employer

to asstsl tn dtvtduals wtth
mental re1arda1•on at a
group home tn Btdwell 35
hrs Bam-5pm Sun 2 1Opm
Mon!Tu!Wed Must have
htgh school dlptom&amp;/GEO
valid dnver's license and
lhree years good driving
expertence $7 25/hr Pre·
employment Drug Testmg
Send resume to Buckeye
Cummurllty Serv1ces PO
Box 604 Jackson OH
45640 or e matt to ~
sery@yahoa com Deadline
for applicants
7/26/06
Equal
Opportunity
Employer

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI7
No Fee Unless We Win I
i 888 582 3345
HI \I l ..., I\ 11
~:;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;..;.;....,
r;1 0
J{OM£S
·--FOiiiiiRIISii'iiil

~-_.1

116 SPark Dr 5br 2ba 2
story, b•·level deck above
ground pool call 304·67 5
7808 after/5pm
---:----:-:--Galltpolls Ferry 3 Bedroom,
1 112 Bath 2 Car Garage
Wood IIOOIS Ftreplace,
Maple Kt tchen (304)675·
2364

�Friday, July 21, 2006
ALLEY OOP

Friday, July 21, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS
NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
2 homes for sale, close to
town , city schools. 1· 3 bed·
room ranch , 2 baths. newly
remodeled, alec. heat, CIA.
City water.
1· older 3 l)edroom , 1 112
bath, large family room, gas

Al verlronl property for sale
by owner. 2 lois wi th 2 story
hOUI!! B, btJIII 1n 1880 &amp;
campB r. Located 1n vlllage of
Crown C1ty on 4 Main St.
$70,000 firm Call (740) 593·
8 153.

heat &amp; COOking, C!A
(740)446-3907, (419)565&lt;137.

ml!"":":'~--:":':~~
MOBil£ HOMES
FOR SALE

3 bedroom hous e 1n
16xBO trailer. 2bd rm , 2ba,
Pomeroy. Off ma1n road
dream k1tchen w/all appll·
R1ver view. $26.000. 1·740·
ances, t2x16
covared
992 -2593.
porch , plus shed Rented
3 bedroom, 2 bal h. w1111 l1re· land near Green .(740) 339·
Pla ce, 40x 60 ba rn R1o 3429
- - - - - - ----,
Grande area On 8 fie! aces. 1979 Bayvi ew, 38 A. w/ 1 112
Ba ths
and
Expando
$120,000. (740)709·tt66
4 bedroom , 2 bath. double Cu rrent lot rent $75 per
All app liances
garage , pool 2 acre s. month.
Included
$ 5.90010 80
Eastern Scho ol D1stnct
.
740·992·3465 after 5:00PM (304 )593· 1567 or (304)675·
5785
5 Room House w1th Bath. 3
t992 rnd1es. 3 bedroom, 2
lots,$35,000 l eon area
bath, 14x80 2 porches WID,
Phone (304 )674·0132
$12 ,000.
Mu st
move .
( 740) 645. 1e 1a or after Spm
(30 4) 576 .2892
2000 16x80 Clayton . Vinyl
Sid1ng. Shingle Root. Heat
Pump, New Carpet, 6 other
homes on Lot. Cell lor
Pn ci ng
(74o) 388 . 000
days.
(740)368·60H·
5 year old Colonial on 3 e"Jenlng s, (740 )794 _0460.
acres, approx. 1,900 sq ft . 3
bdr, 2 baths. 2 car garage. cell , (740)645·6150· cell.

o.

master bdr. is 28x24 w1lh a
1acuzz i tub. $125.000 Vie-w
on line
at
orvb corn
(7 40)446·7029.
.

'---- - -- -

2oo7 2ax80 w/ game room .
Only $59.995. Includes free
delllfery &amp; set up Call
(7401385•2434 .

Nice,
clean
Efficiency Boston Terriers, 2 males, 2
Apartment Ref &amp; Dep.req. temeles, 11 weeks Brindle
No Pels 304-875-5162
and white. $200 no papers.
(740)379 -2467.
Nonh 3rd Ave., Middleport,
2 bedroom , furnished. CKC Jack Russell puppies.
deposit &amp; prev-fous rental Six weeks cad Shots ar'ld
references required , No wormed, lalla docked, $125
0 1::
740
5·.,:1.:;
2·_;
0;.
185
• Payment could be the :P.:;
;,::;199
:.:.:
::__ _ eacl1 . 740.25e -3168
same as renl
Tara
Townhouse
Mortgage
Locators. Apartm.nta. Very Spacious,
2 Bedrooms, C/A, 1 112 I;I(C Miniature Plnacher, ,
(7-'0)367 ' 0000
CONSTRUCTION WORK· Bath , Adun Pool &amp; Baby Aeady to Go. BlacWran ,
EAS· 5 bedroom house for Pool, Pallo, Start S4251Mo. Red/Tan &amp; CrearruTan. CAll
rent In New Haven. $300.00 No Fteta, L,ase Plus (740)368·8788
month per peraon or Security Oeposn Aequlrtd,
Lost.
Female
Bluetlck
1740)367 7086 · - - -$100.00 per week . 304·882· '-'-.:.:::::::.·.:.::::::.
Coonhound In area of
_3_20
_0_.____ _ _ Twin Rivers Tower Ia accept· AVHS. $ 100 Reward. Call
House for rent
No Pets. lng applications for welting (740)446-2436
740·992·5858
flat for Hud·S~bslzed, t· br, - ' - - ' - - - - - - - -:---:---:--:--:----::- apartment, call 675·6679 •Chihuahua, male , tiny, all
House for rent Wlll be avail - Equal HOtJslng Opportunity
shols.
able July 15th. Newly reno·
• Teacup Yorkle Poo. female
Valley View Apartments
vated, nice quiet neighbor·
baby doll 1'-ce,
5 mo.
hood. Can show on notice Now ae&lt;:eptlng applications (740)446·9428.
The Tan Shak call (740)446·
lor 1 or 2 bedroom
7425 for an appt
apartments.
Apply at office
VEGETABUS
Middleport·-2 Bedroom
BOOSt At. 325,
$450. plus utililies 740·843·
Thurman. Ohio
Blado; Bernas call Jor Price
5264.
(419)526-0466.
and ~lfailabll i ty (304 )895·
New 2 bedrOom house In
TOD#f
~ 3930
14195260466 •
Gallipolis Clean and com·
For
Sale· Vine
Ripe
fortable Central air, laundry
Tomatoes
at
Yoder's
room. also New 1 Bedroom
SPACE
Gree[lhouse, tOm1. Wast of
House, Call lor details
FORRfNr
Gallipolis on SA 14,
(740)441·0194 or (740)441 ·
1184
I \tnt " t 1'1 '1 II "
.
Traiter space available at
,\ I I\ I " It H h.
Small house for , rent in Park Lane Mobile Home
Court.
Certain
restrictions
.
Middleport
$400 00/plus
dep. Call 740·992·3823. 740 446-3994.
Available August 1st.
AHentlonl
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs tor you to buy your
home Instead of renting .
• t OO% financing
• Less tha n perfect crudlt
accepled

of!o~

I

I~

r

Iii:---::~~--.,

L

REAl . F.-.;An:

WANI'Ell

Need lo sell your home?
late on payments. d1vorce.
job transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All cash
House for Sale in Syracuse. and QUICk closing. 740·416·
3130
two-bedroom with beth,
I~ I \ I \I ..,
anached, garage and base·
ment. An estate sale
$70 .000 Phon e (740)992·
10
3690.
HousE;;

2218.
-:------1 Bedroom Apartment, All
Utilities Included. $350
month near downtown Point
Pleasant (304)360·0163
1 BR aptlcabln, all utilities
paid. Call(740)441-0117.
1SA apt in Spring Valley
HUD/PAC
accepted. Call (740)446·
08341(740)339-0382

WID hookups

2 bedroom apt in Centenary,
all ut1lilles pd expect electric.
$325. Call(740)256-1135.
2 bedroom apt. Vine St.
Gallipolis (740)367-7886.

BEAUTIFUL
APART-.
IUR RINf
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
In PatriOt, 3 BA, new lo:llchen
PRICES AT JACKSON
cab1nets. new furnace/ AC.
new plumbing. large lot Call 2 Bd./1 Bath. Pomeroy. N1ce ESTATES, 52 Westwood
(740)446·0761 , or (304)675· condition. $450.00 740· Drive trom $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
843·5264 .
2329.
740-'446·2568.
Equal
Mason Co. Rebel A1dge Rd , 2·3 b edroom, Green· school Housing Opportunity.
? m1les from Hannan High dl stnct . large yard. no 1ns1de - - -"--'-'----'-School, 3 bed/2 bath, 3 car pets, tato; 1ng apphcat 1ons Brand new 2 Bedroom
garage.
liv1ng
AM I now. (740)44 6·6890 any· Apartments Washer/dryer
hookup, siove/refrigerator
Fireplace, 2 ac Land. lived ti me
included.
In 2 months. $20.000 down
2BA home· Vinton St. $375 Also a'v'8ilible units State
Owner
will
Fmance
mo. + sec. dep. You pay utili - Route 160. Call for' datails
(304 )562 -5840- (30 4 )552 ties Ga s heat (740)446· (740)44 1.o 19 4 or 1740)44 ,.
0756
3644.
1184.
-:-:----:-----:--Mason, 3rd Street , 2 BR, 1 2BA house- Garf1eld Ave.
Conetructlon Woril:t,.:
ba. great starter home or $460 rent &amp; sec dep. 38R 2 bedroom. tully furnished,
Investment
property. ho use· LeGrande Bl\ld. mcludlng Washer, Dryer,
Prudential Bunch Realtors. $600 ren t &amp; sec. dep. You Refrigerator &amp; Stove, all util·
Bobby
Munry. Realtor pay utilities Lease &amp; rater· ltles paid. occupante $
2
100
(740)709·0299 or (304}525·
ences required (740)446· per week. per person , 3
7761
3644 Ior applicati on
occupanls, $85 person per
New. Big 4 Bedroo m, Walk·
In Cl osets . Fireplace. Pantry.
Blacktop Drive Private 2+
acre s. 3 mmutes !rom
Holze1. town . or 35 MtJ st
Sell , Trad e or Best Offer
(740 )388-.8228
Nice, 3 bedroom. 2 bath. 1 5
story, gas hreplace. AC. mce
11 1. 1, wn. no1 QUI 1e an acre,
'
nice
covered porch. large
bul fdmg Included. that could
be used lor a busme-ss or
workshop Located 1 mtle
trom new Gallm Co local
schools (740)388·0301
NO ·DOWN PAYME.NT even
with les~ than perfect credit
IS ava 1lable on th1s 3 bed·
roo m 1 bath !lome m
Middleport Co rner lot. lo'inyl
siding, l1 rep1ace 1n lwing
oom good
11 fl
r
·
carpet, 1e oor
m kitchen French doors
open to master bedroOm,
jacuzz• tub, off street park·
ing. Payment around S550
per monm 740·367·7 129
Pnced to sell! Very nice
3BR, bath, upsta1rs. !ur
n1shed t BR apt downstairS
furn 1ture store 1n rear car lot
on side All on t f2 ac lot at
130 Bulaville P1ke. Gallipoli s
OH. Call to see (740)4413·
4782

2br, $275 plus utilities. no week m Point Pleasant
Pets
Ret &amp; Deposit :(3:0
:::4::)5::a3::·::35::4::2::-::--::-:-::=(304)675- 487&lt;
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT3 bedroom, 2 bath. 15 min·
utes
to
Gallipolis/Rio
Grande , no pets, $400/mo
wate r 1nclude d. {740)379·
g445
~------3 bedroom. 2 ba th, near
Holzer.
$650/m o
plus
depOSit. No pets no smolo:·
19n88gOln hOuse. (740)245·
· (740)645·3836.
.
BA
horne. Geo. Creek
34
Ad Non Smoking rental·
$£iOO i mo soc. dep. Call
1740144 6_3644

3 miles west of
Pomeniy,OH
on State Rt. 124

992-5682

EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
ancilor small houses FOR
RENT Calt (?40}441-1 111
lor application &amp; information.
Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp;
bath. upstairs, clean , no
pets . Rei/deposit reqwred .
(740)446·1519

Graciousliving. 1 and2bed·
room aparttnenls al VIllage
Manor
and · R1verstde
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295·$444 Call 740·
992·5064. Equal Housing
3bd HUD home! Buy lor OpporttJnitles.
'-'--------$15.900 1 For L1 s!lngs BOO· Immaculate 2 bedroom
391 ·5228 Jl'1709
- - - - -- - - - apartment In the country.
3br, 2ba on Bradberry Rd ., New carpet &amp; catJmels ,
tn Mid dlepor t
E)( cellenl freshly painted &amp; decorated,
condiiiOn
No
Pets. WI D hoolo:up Beautiful coonAererences
reqwed. try selling. Must see to
(304)675·3834
appreCiate
$399/ mo.
{614 )595 . 777 3 or 1·800·
48R house for rent on State 798 _4686
Route 7S $650/mo plu s
dep. Call (740)4 46·3644 for Large 1 bedroom apt, down :
tnfo
town Gallipolis, newly renovat ed. 2nd fl oor. $375/mo.
Rac1ne (m town ) 4 Br . 2 lull
plus uhiltiBS Call James ' at
baths. CIA. Water. Garbage
(7&lt;0)446-7889
mcluded
$500 deP.: ,
SSOO per Mon th. referenceS. MOdern 1 bedroom apt
740 9·19·22 17
Phone (740)446-0390

-~~r--,'

634\ Ea~t· M&lt;11n 'il
Pomeruy, Ort

~-IJSi

740-901-0121

'IQ 1098
t K Q J 10
&gt;lo A

Call Ahud For D~ll)' Specl •l' 992·6 121
Try Ou r Breakfut
Br&lt;r~tkf&lt;t st H ~ n1 &amp; Chnu B.de1 5 1.75
Bre1kfnt TGmld~• 2/$2.00
S.lusagt Bl ~~ ult$1. 75
S.ausagr IHsrulr w/Gravy 52.50
Donuts, TUrnovers &amp;; l.11t lce!
35a (Up of coffef.! 7·8am·
[RII &amp; B•k•ry
K'• hn't Unl ogna $3 d51b !I oney 1-hm S4 10 lb
TUrkey Urea'! 54 .85 !b
S wi" Chet&gt;n $4.05 tb
Fresh Mo.uarella $6.59 lb. Hummu! 55.59 lb .
Amish Putato Salad $3.45 lb. l'a1ta Sal ad $3 .50 lb.
"Orin• Thru for LOfll Tom1toes an d olh er Produce"
89r 2 liter of Pepsi. Diet Pt'psi 01 Mt. Dew
I W~II o §uppllool uU

Gravely
Traclor.
dual
wheels, Brush Hog, Sickle
Bar Mower, Rotary Plow.
extra motor. $800 lor all
(304)675-4514

GooJ~

jlOOSOnecks, dumps and u~llties. Your dealer lor Prostar

~7~do~~~~41;~au

Appliance

Warehouse

I ro

""T-~~--,
AUTQS

traile rs. ---.

FORSALE

.

L_

FORSALE

~

l'V~

ALwAYS JlJST
ASWM~l&gt;

/

OSTIZICH.

ulmul Old

t

•

2459 St. Rt. 160. Gallipolis
lL FOR fR E ESTI
I

John Deere Mim Ellcavator/ eng1ne. Runs great! Asking seats, towing package. ~;;~:~~~~~~~~~:;;;;~
Tractor Loader Backhoe/ $7,000. Call after 6pm Asking
$7 ,300.
Call •
(740)367 -0622.
STANLEY.TREE
Skid Steers. Carmichael 1740)992-1090

in Henderson, wv. Pre·
Equipment (740)446·2412
owned Apphances starting
.at $75 &amp; up all under New John Deere Compacls
. Uf'l 1
d 5000 Sones
''IV raeWarranty, also have recon· an
tors @0% Fixed for 36
dit1oned B1g Screen TV's
months
through
John
by Ron's TV (304)675·
Deere
'Credit.
CarmiChael
7999
Equipment (740)446·2412

96 Gao Metro automatic, SO

MPG. runs greal $1 ,800
080. (740)388-8228.
8o's Classic Cars
1988 24 Caval 1er convertible; 1993 AS Cavaher COO·
vert1ble. 1991 Ford Mustang
·Quality John Deere Hay s.o. VB converlible 1997
Olds Cull ass. 2001suzuki
Equlpmem for less-round
balers, square balers &amp; 250 street bike, 750 actual
mower condnioners @4 .7% m'es. Olhec to choose !rom.
F1xed lor 48 months through 174 01245-004 5.
call

Lu~ury

Van ,

Chevy,

Excellanl
con dl!ion.
mechamc ownod, travel In
'
style, must see1 $5,900 or
446
best offer
•9961

M&lt;Jil&gt;KC\'L1.J.&lt;:sl
4 WH.,.." "'"~

40

·~

New Sofa &amp; Loveseat, $400.
Sofa
&amp; Chair, $350:
2000 CR250R.
Great
Recliner. $200. Open 9am Shape , Gai-age Kepi New
Honda PiS!o nh ~ngs. New
3pm Sat., Mollohan's. 202
Clark Chapel Road, Porter.
Clu lch. Kbbvaluaof$2,600
Asking $1 ,900. Call 416 OhiO.
(740)388-0173; John
Deere
Credit. (740)208·0028.
(740)446-7444 .
Carmichael
Equipment
Rome Auto Sales
• 2620.
(740)446-2412
(740)441-9544
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
_ 01 Grand Pr~x GT 55 .200 2002 Yamah a Vstar 1100
Aepair-675-7388 . For sale,
Cla ss1c, 5.5 00 miles, black,
re-conditioned automatic
I ,IVFSfOtl(
1 98 Cadillac S81o'llle, 55800 naw cond1ti on. leatller bags.
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- '"~••••••••
97
50mpg, $5,000 (740) 245·
'
g7 Venture
F- t 5 4)($2.200
4 $4, 850
tors, gas and electriC
3 Horses, 18·yrs old. Reg. 98 S-10 $3,900
. 5934·
ranges. air conditioners, and
Standard
bred
Mare, 97 Cavalier $1,395
Harley
Davidson
wnnger washers. Will do
$1,000.
11yrs old reg . 97 Cavalier Z-24 $3,000
AnmversB.ry Wide
repairs on major · brands 1n
Quarter Mara, $1.200. 7yrs 79 CJ7 $2,000
.-9,500 miles, like new,many
shop or at ybur home.
Standard bred Mare, $800 OOAiero$3,200
extra's $16,000 (740)441 ·
Used FlJrniture Store, 130 (304)675-4514
99 Ranger 4)(4 $4,100
1187 {304)593 -5232
Bulaville Ptke Stop by
96 Blazer $2,600
BoA'rs &amp; Monms
(740)446-4782, Gallipolis. Oual1ty horse and livestock 97 Wrangler, ss900
trailers now available ill ~1:1!"'"...;~---...,
Jil)K SALE
iiO'lHi. H;,;r;;s;,;
. 1~1;,;-3;,;1:;;M;,;-F.,:I_ __,
Carmichael Eqwpment New
5
TRUCKS
•••iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.-,.1
SPOR11NG
dealer for Valley and ·
FOR SALE
~
Kieferbuilt
Horse
and L.,.••iliiiiiiiiiii._.l For sate· 2 man boat With
electric anchor used 3 times
Livestoclo: Trailers Many 1995 Ford Truck · StepSide. $400 4 5 HP gas engine,
Browning A-Bolt Medallion, options available· steel, alu· 1990 Sunbird S E, Sporty · tank anached $450. Phone
Model, 270 Caliber Rifle w1th minum. dressing foams, liv- Red . Call lor details 740· (740)441 ~2 99
·
·
Leopold, 3.5· 10x, Vari-X3 1ng quarters. (740)446·2412. 992-6396
Scope, very mea outf1t in
New 10FT John Boat
Registered
Charolais 2000 Dodge Dakota, 2
new conditiOn will sacrifice,
200 born wheel Dr. automatic all· w/Trailer, Johnson Motor.
Yearling
Bull,
$t
·
$600 calil304)773-5958
Troll10g
Motor, seve ral
6/22/05, great deposition
medlum frame size and power.sun·rool take over extra 's $1,850 (304)675·
Remington 1187 with scope
reB.dy for breeding contact monthly payments 304·937· 3353
fully riffled barrel. Black mot.
3 4B_a_~e_r_
5 pc.m_.- -Lany Leporl(304)675-2311 _3_
Fl::I"""-C~A-M~P-1-00
'
like new. Paid $960 will sell
or Tony Leport (304)675· 2004 Dodge Dakota 4)(4
J\1an.JR H&lt;ll\1m;
lor $500. (740)367-7574.
3105
26,000 m1les, $13,500
I I''\,\ (, \1, " \ 1 .,, II ' Dayt1me (740)645 ·4473 , 02 Wildcat 27ft. 5th :»"heel,
evening (740 )388·9804.
slide out. Loolo: and malo: e
Craftsman mower 18 HP
Kohler motor, 44 Inch cut 97 Chevy 4 WD ext. cab offer. Call (740 )245 ·9109,
Buy or sell. Riverine
$700.
(740)682·75 12 wl3rd door. Vortec 350 atJtO· (740)441 -7 632.
Anliques, 1124 East Main
matic very nice , runs good
on SA 124 E.,Pomeroy, 740·
$5,800 080 (217)316 ~ 1829 2003 Log cabui camper.
992· 2526. Russ MOore,
sleeps 6. Brand new
or (304)576-2 762
(740)446 -6783.
For Sate·
1987 Truck
"Lariat" F-15, 4 WHL. DA , Truck Camper. wlbath , AC .
Auto . Good Body, New TV Antenna on top $4.800.
Runs Good. 1 Asking (304-)675-3353
Parts,
$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS!
Female Boxer tor Sale
$2750.00.
740 -992-4025.
Cars!Trucks from $5001 For
$175.00 or Best Offer. listings 800-391·5227 x3901
Three Barrels of Kerosene
HOME
for sale. Call740·992-3457 02 Chevy Cavalier, 4 · dr
IMPROVEMENTS
auto, ,air, CO. good condi·
Good condition Kenmore lion, $4,500 (740)446·1663 1990 7.3 diesel 5 speed,
BASEMENT
Washer &amp; Dryer lor pair
4x4, 150,000 miles. $4,700.
WATERPROOFING
$100.00. F1ve foot vinyl nat· 1973 VW Super Beetle 95 % (740)388-8358.
Uncond1t1onat lifetime guarural coiOf Porch Swing with restored to original $6.500.
cushions and chains $50.00. Ph . (740)446·7616
1999 ChelfY Silverado 4WO antee. Local references fur·
740·949-2490.
P/U, 85,000 m1les. 53 VB. nlshed. Establi shed 1975 .
1993 Dodge Shadow, 4cyl. an options, short bed with Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
Gravely needs Tune Up 2.2L, automatic. May n~ed topper. Excellent Cond1t1on. 0870, Rogers Ba se ment
$250, Gas Fireplace Insert fuel pump Asktng $350 Catl $11.000. (740)645-0626.
Waterproofing.
with all trim. new In box (740)709·6722 please leave
1999 Dodge Dakota. 4 WD,
$400, Cheat Freezer, 20 cu. message.
V6 Magnum Auto, .92,500
ft. Frigidaire, good condition
$ 100· Cannlngjors&amp;equ·p
1 · 1998 Olds Delta 88,, high mites, , oaded, excellent con·
$2,500. (7,40)682 - dillon. $7.700 (304)882ment ma 11"e offer (304)882 • miles,
1
2655
75 2 ( evenl~gs)
2655
- - - - - - - - - - - - ' -- -'-'--'-- -2001 Dodge 4x4 Oi'esel
JET
1999 Geo Metro $2,900
AERATION MOTORS
1999Toy01a Corolla $4,200 73,'100 miles excellent con·
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In 1999Taurus $3,700
dillon $19,000. 740-339·
Stock. Call Ron Evans, t · 2001 StrattJs $4,900
0055
1997 S10 $2,900.
800·537-9528. .
We have
3 Saturns, 12003 Toyota 'Tacoma 4x4
- - - - - - - - - Sunflres, 2 Grand Ams, Extended cab, TAD SR5
Love seat &amp; 2 chairs, Celery Vans, 4x4 Chevy. 3 vehicles package . 44,000 m 1ies,
green, wlpink &amp; beige for $t ,600 ea ch, Fireblrd V6/5·speed, power door
(304 )675·6966
and ~ers
. 3 monlhs/3 ,000 loclo:s, windows. mirrors.
uu•
NEW AND USED STEEL mile warranty.
AMIFM ste reo with cassene
Steel Beam s, Pipe Rebar
Cook Molors
and co mpact disc , trip
For
Concrete ,
Angle ,
328 Jackson Pike,
odometer. tachom eter. air
Channel . Flat Bar, Steel
(74 0)446-01 03
conditioning, tilt steering
Grating
For
c lams,
wheel, cru1se cont rol, tinted
Driveways &amp; Walkways . L&amp;L 2000 Hyundia Sonata auto· glass, clock, interval wip6rs ,
Scrap Metals Open Monday, matic, CD player, 40·50 maps lights, step bumper,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; MPG Runs great $3,500 sh ding rea r' window, bed
Friday, Bam-4 :JOpm Closed 080 (740)388·8228.
liner, Mli·IOCk brakes,•dnver
and passenger s1 de a1r bag,
Thursdav.
Saturday
&amp; 2002 .Mercury Mountaineer.
airbag onloH switch, tool
Sunday. (740)446-7300
Loaded with only 48 ,000
miles.
bo~ . 2" receiver, 20+ MPG,
Queen SIZe ManressfBox
$16,900. (740)256-9034.
Spnngs, e~cell ent condition 2002 Ford Lighting F1 50
pick up 30 ,000 miles Call 95 Jeep Cherokee 4·Wheel.
$160 , 1940's Porcelain Top,
(740)256·1245
even1ngs new rubber one owner.
Table $40 (304)675-1431
and weekends
L1ke new electnc Hosp1ta l
PEn;
bed
(304 )675-6 132
2002 Monte Carlo pace ca r
FOR SALE
(304)675-6963
Excellent
con
d1
f1on.
loaded
~-------_.1
'
t 9B4 39 112 h. Ty Brook 99 Chevy S1 lverado e-xt end·
6 Min1ature Dachshunds lirst frametess dump trs 1ter 1983 ed cab 4x4 lS. Low mile age.
shots &amp; wormed read~ to go · D1 5 Dodge Ram p1 cku p. VB, excellent shape Aski ng
07- 22-06 304-593-3820
(740)446-6783
$ 10 200 .• Ph. (740)2455946 . Ce ll (740 )645-3743.
Beagle pups, full blooded, 9t Corsica 97,000 m11 es.
came from good stOCk, 8 Runs good, but needs work . For Sale 1994 Jeep Grand
weeks old.
price $35 Cold
AC.
$60010~ 0 Cherokee
197 9, Ford, F
1304)662-2583
(304)675·6206 aMer 5prn
150 . 7&lt;0-742-1 508

r

ROBERT
BISSEll

L-------.,J

co~~~~~~~NG

•

, Prompt
work

New Homes

&amp; quality
.

Aft d bl R

• Garages

•

• References
Aval·1a bl e

• Camp 1ete
Remodeling

• Free Estimates

J'•n
.u·992•18'11

"Insured"

••

1•.1&lt;.1:. 'IOU lt'\I'L'iiN'(;I
t't'\ BORIN&amp;? ~

Pj F Ll F£ WERE. /&gt;.. Bi\":l£.BI&gt;-L~

I""'iOV WOVlt&gt; BE Tl-\( IZt\lt-1

"1

OCLA'{ I

61\ME ...

Call Gal)' Stanley

740-742-2293
• Leave a

Stop &amp; Compore

bead

formation

4 Tee sizes
7 Cove1eo

44 Hush--hush
or g.
sports •
46 Lody
award
of Spain
10 Visa and
47 Ffasheo
passport
51 Club, briefly
11 Bunkhouse 52 Stron~ wind
items
53 Mo. neighbor
13 Gel dizzy
55 " Has 1001 .
14 Overly glib
15 General
56 Kind ol gin
vicinity
57 Ova
16 Ferber or
58 Candy
· Besl
shape
9 - dujour
17 Bi~ woolly 59 Seorch
12 Raj title
ammal
engine lind 13 Go over
19 Rampage
60 Hosp.
again
20 Checkout
employee
18 Flood

'I 2

37 Front tooth
40 Panlyhose
brand
41 Angora or
Manx

42

res idue

21 Skyscraper
part (hyph.)
23 Pinochle
combo
26 Snake
charmer's
snake
28 Miners dig it
29 Work out
30 Aphorism
34 Forgo
36 Found a
perch
38 Interruption
39 Ms. Burstyn

DOWN

·2
3
4
5
6
7
.8

22 Unruly kid
23 Cut down
Mover and
24 Pitcher 's
shaker
slat
Gouda
25 Luau
cousin
welcome
Is, in Madrid 27 Eye rudely
Rascal
29 Congeal
Aabal's
31 Famous
country
Khan
Lei II stand! 32 You ca.n
TV , radio.
step em it
etc.
33 Ecol. pollee
Rattler 's
35 Human
delense
herbivores

-nova

43 Bobby ol
Indy rame
45 Compulerchip maker
46 Apply a .
mudpack
48 Doozfe
49 NBA's
-Monroe
s o Stop dating
54 Cowboy
-Maynard

You hope th ai you have two discards to
make So. th row lirst the d1amond n1ne,
theil th e d1amond two, h1gh-low with a
doublet on, If partner is paying attention,
he will sh1tt to a diamond , wh1ch you w111
ruff to defeat the contfact. (If he's not
watching, get a new partner.)
Note that 11 pa rtner play s a fourth heart
a ltr ic ~ lour (presumably pl annmg for you
to ruff away dummy's heart queen).
declarer ruffs high. draws trumps, and
clai ms.
When a playe r open s with a th ree· or
four-level pre·empt, then leads a d1fter·
ent su1t against a trump contract. that
lead w111 (usuall y) be a s1ngteton. 11 he
leads his own long suil , ass ume he has
a Singl eton trum p.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebr•ty C1~1 cryptograms a1ec•eate&lt;! !&lt;om quotal iQ~o b~ 1 ~m"us ;nopl? pasl arK! Ofesefl!.

n 1~1:! Cl ~hlll sla•"Cs lor ~"OI~a~
Today s c'ue. Veatldls J

Esctlle!lfl

' "K'CG
LWIF

WAUWOV
ZHUO

RPHVS

HT

WUWO ."

-

TGAS

TXHB
SPWS

W

KT

OHJ

SPG

TGW X.

TGWX

PJRP

S PWS

OGC GX

RHGY

VW' IF8'110

PREVIOUS SOLUTI ON - ' llell off my petch 1Sorry lo d i s~epl everyone 's
plan s fu ll steam ahead I Ouch II" -InJured Roll ng Stone Ke1th A1chards

WORD

See
Ao.cky "RJ 1' .
·· Hupp ·

r

)

LISTEN, WINK, AS
LONG AS I 'VE GOT
YOU ON THE PHONE,
LET rtE LA'( THIS
SII(,GoEST!ON ON YOU:

Athens

~1L!Il.lL:'\~jl:!jCU:\!:1.9!::

Advertise
in this
space
for
ss4 per
month

,M:
All types of roofing:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutter
OownspotJt

FREE

m

(~L~~,;,!!~

!E ··· m

THROIOING ,IN A JOKE
NOW AND THEN? YOU
KNOW, DROP A LITTLE
HUMO~ IN THERE !

I

11EAN, RIGHT NOW
THE O~LY THiNG
FUNNY I'$0UT THE
NEWS IS THAT L/'o.ME
TOUrEE OF 'lOURS!

" THAT'S MY
REAL HAIR'.

GOOD

THEY
PROBABLY

DONT
TELL YOU

ABOU T
STU FF LIKE
T H I S IN
METEOROLO(,Y

ONE .

WINK~

S CH OO L

and Sons

~

"'our 'Birthday:
DURIN&amp; muR \o/EATHEP.
FORECASTS, flOW ABOUT

I:

H.L. Wrltesel

ESTIMATES

AstroGraph

BIG NATE

IMPORTS

'

~

I'

==~~==~,·~~~--~~~--~

PEANUTS

50 HERE I AM ,!.EFT TO
6liARD THE CAR WH ILE
THE FAMJL'( GOES SHOPPING ..

AN'(ONE WHO COMES NEAR
15 VEI.IICLE WILL MEET

A SNARLING

TORNADO~

ON THE OTHER HAN[),
FOR TWO COOKIES THE'{
CAN HAVE THE CAR

Conierstone
Construction

Residential • Commerclul • Gcnl'rul Contracliug
Pain ting • D1•ur ~ • Wl!ldow " • Dc,· k .~
• Siding • Koofing • Room Add 1tio11)&gt; • Remodeling
WV 038992
• Pl umbmg • Elcctncn l 740-367-0544
OH 38244
• A ccou ~ti&lt;-' Ceiling
740·339·3412

SUNSHINE CLUB
OH,iHb'i

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

(L)f,~~

AlLRatr ..
I

·Economy Beef $8.25
·Shade R1ver Beef $8.75
·Whole/Shell Corn $7.25/Bag
·Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag
··Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag ·
·Shade River Hog Feed $9.50
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

GARFIELD

sO, SH~ WON'f REMEMBER
SOY, ~e REAL-L-Y J:'Oee
IF SHE Are HER t;&gt;E!ISeRT OR
HAVE AMNESIA, GARFIEI-17.
WHAf ARe WE GONNA DO? ~~,::....A-.A..6..C::;:"'--- NOT...
DON'r eveN
AMNE51A, HUH? THINK ASOUf If

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-.18.11

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
I Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740~416-5547

•

... THE
YOUNG'S
NEWSPAZm:&gt;l ~M~AN.U.::LL.I.&amp;Ef.LI.IS,._. CARPENTER
HAS
.SELF STORAGE · RoomSERVICE
Addlllone &amp;
SOMETHING 97 Beech Street •Remodeling
New Gar ages
· Electr ical &amp; Pl umbing
FOR YOU!!
Middleport, OH
· Roofing &amp; Gutte rs

r

THE BORN LOSER

or a e ates

house
42TubHhaped

1 Air show

BenJamin Dis rael i. a Bntish Prime
M1n1ster. sa1d, "What we anticipate sel·
dom occurs: wha t we least ex pected
generally ha p pens ~
At the bndge table. wh at we ant1 c1pate
happen s more often than not: what we
d1d not antiCipate generally happens too.
In this de-a t, you (West) mu st ant1 c1pate
how the delense Will proceed, th en take
th9 apprqenate sleps l ook only at the
West M 'd Nort h hands. Ag a1nst four
spad es, ~ou lead your si ngleton heart
Par tner \'M s w1th h1s Jack and ca shes
the ace What would you d1scard?
East has an interesting b1ddtng decision
atter West opens three clubs end North
makes a takeout doubl e. East m1ght bid
three he.irts as a lead-dir ector, but usu·
ally tntroducmg a new SUit prom1ses at
least a si~ -bagger Or he might ra1se
club s. Here, bidding f1ve clubs might
push South mto calli ng l1ve spades. but
he probably should doubl e Sno col lect
300.
•

o

-s-&amp;::--

r

TRIMMING &amp;

CONSTRUCTION

-----

r

FIND SOME SUCKER
~'LL TRADE HIS
ORANGES FER 'EM !!

-'

East
Pa.o;s
Pass

Getting a ruff
needs anticipation

1 l&gt;ON'T ICNOw FO~ StJ~~ --·

41 Pedro's

scan

North
Obi.
Pass

Op ening l ead:

7w
4ww
Otlm4
. b.,.4ore6el&lt;oa9bin2etryQ.oom
Q

John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill 2002 Olds Alero leal green 99 Chevy Aslro ConversiOn
lor
rent.
Carmichael ' Awesome car •
Under Van . Excellent condition .
Equipment (740)446·2412 . 21.000 miles V6· 3.4l loaded, TVNCR. capta1ns

\Vest
34
Pass

4a

I Hardwood Cabinetry And FurnHure

VM5

li 5 3
!\ 7 ~

"' J 6

'East

rnro

... 7 4 3

Dealer: Wc:)t
Vulnerab le · ~eit her

\ II I&lt;! II \'\llhl

HOUSEIIOUJ

fl fi .'i :1

•

•
•

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
CQI't!

2f) 2
South

• Huspilal Beds

Locall ' owned. Wt

5

, ,\K J7 ~

' 4 A K 87 ~

740·446·0007 Toll Free 877·&amp;69-0007

Free Estimates

•

.KQ t U !fiiJ2

• Homenll
• Wheelchairs
• Nebulizers
Delivering Daily •one Stop Shop•
30 Yrs. Exp. · • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

E n~ t

South

&amp; MEDICAL EQU IPM[~'f
• Portable Oxygen · • CPAP

• Helios

W••s t
A f, :1 2

'•

'oXYGE?

Halfe some hauling to do?
Carmichael
Equipment~1""...,,...---..;;., yoUr source lor qualily

.,

· ·~....

0721 O!i

Q J ! 0 \l

•

(-;.('"- .,.,. :I. •

FOR LFAsE

r' 0

fiOO

Repair

r

Attention !
Great used 3BR home only
loca l company offering "NO $9,995 Will help .With dellv· 2 bedroom no pets, 8 m11es
from RIO. 5 ml from
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· ery Call (740)385·7671.
Centenary. (740)379·2540
grams for you to buy your LAND &amp; HOME PACK·
hOme 1nstead ot rent10g
AGES· 1st tim e buyers &amp; 2 bedroom waterllrash paid,
• 100% financing
FHA .
Midwest
Homes near Porter, NO PETS.
Reference. deposit required.
• less tha!J pe1tect credit (740) 828-2750
accept ed
- - - - - - - - - $3251mo.(740)388-1100.
• Payment could be th e Mobile Home lor sale. 14 X
same as rent
70 good condition. W111 sell 2BA. large livingroom, wash
Mor tgage
l m::a tors . on land contract 740·992 - room , porch w1th awr1mg,
storage building, A/C. very
(740)367-0000
5858
nice, no pets. In Gallipolis
Mob1le Home for Sale. 1988 (740)446 -2003, (740)446.
Mans1on, pnce reduced , 1409
new carpel. central air, all - - - - -- -..- electric, must be moved 3 Bd. and 2 Bd. Mobile
Homes, both 1 t/2 bath,
304·552-6754.
Pomeroy Area
Call 740·
A.ll real estate advertising
NEW 3 br doublewldes tram 243-5811.
In thls 'newsp:aper is
$269 mo. Midwest Homes -,---~----subject to the Federal
(740)828·2750
C1ty lim1ts Pri'tlale Mobile
Fair Housing Act of 1968
Home tot
$100 month.
which makes it Illegal to
NEW
SINGLEWIDE· S100 Damage Deposit
adver11se "any ·
$22 ,572 Midwest Home s (740)388-8128 or'(304}675preference. !imitation or
(740)82B-27p0
1996
discrimination based on
NEW
SINGLEWIDE· :F:-or_re_n:-t-:N:-,ce-:2-:bed-r_oo_m
race, color, reU9ion, sex
familial status or national
$22,572 Midwe st Homes mobile home in Country
origin, or any lntantion to
{740)828·2750
Homes. $325 + deposit.
make. any such
REPO'S &amp; USED !rom- (740)385-4019.
preference, limitation or
$1 ,900 down
Midwest Mob11e home s1tes for up to
discrimination,"
Homes (740)828· 2750
16x80 in Countr~ Homes.
This newspaper will not
(740)385-4019.
knOwingly accept
Mob1le Home Sites tor up to
advertlaements for real
16x80 1n Counlry Homes.
estate which Is In
\llolatlon ot the law. Our
(740)385·4019.
LEVEL LOT
readers are hereby
1.75 Acres Mason Co. WV
Informed that all
C1ty Water &amp; Se"" er
dwellings advartl!led In
Electnc and Gas Ava1labte
thla newspaper are
Great lot for Mob1le Home
available on an equal
1 and 2 bedroom aparl·
or New ConstructiOn
opportunity bases.
ments.
furnished and unlur·
$11 .000
nished.
secuflty deposit
(304)295-9090
reqwed , no pets, 740·992·

9146

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
74D-949-2217

~·urth

*"!Ul Y MONTHLY SPECIALS' *'

i

rl

r

Mobile Home or Bujldjog Lot
for Sale in Middleporl 66' X
11 T. Level lot w1th garage
located at South Third
Street
4t6-1 354 or 992·
3194

ROGER HYSELL :
GARAGE
Auto &amp; Truck

FRurrs&amp;

·------'
1500·2200 sq. ft. newly renovated
prime business
space on busy downtown
corner Gallipolis. (740)7091690.

By Owner 2 acres, new
ranch . 4 bdrms. 2 baths in
dry wan stage. Jess than 1 yr
!rom Gallipolis. $74.500
Owner Financing. (740)489·

H1ll 's Self
Storage

I•-""""

5bd FOREClOSURE! Mus! 91 Bre ezewood 14)(70 3 Very nice 2 &amp; 3 BR homes.
Sell $33 ,000! For hst ~ngs bedr oom. 1 bath. total alec- Attached garage, b"1g lawns.
800·391 -5228 eM! F254
tr1c. Call (740 )256-6687
no pets, ref. &amp; dep. Starting
a! $450. (740)446·2601.
AAA MODULAR ranch AAA MODULAR ranch
models S55 838. Midwest models $55,838. Midwest
MOIIILEFOR
Homes (740}828·2750
Homes (740)828·2750
___
au.~•u
.

COUNTRY LIVING

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

IOxiOxiOx20
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
Sell-Storage"

l- --------

GRIZZWELLS

Sa tu rday, Jul y 22 . 2006
B ~· Bern1 ce Bede Oso l
Th e year ahead may be e per1od when
you w11i f1nd 11 far eas1er to make lnends
and draw people to you tor bot h busmess
opportumt1es as wett as social ones Th1s
cycle w•ll ot!er many advant ages you
d•dn't enjOy previously
CANCE R (June 21 ·July 22) -G reater
success 1n you r endeavors can be SI.J b·
s!an!lally enhanced at lh1s po1nl 1n lime 1!
you start rely•ng more upon yourself and
tess upon others Establish your goal s
and set your own agenda
LEO (July 23·Aug 22) - An endeavor to
' whi ch you have already devo ted cons1d·
arable l1me and att ent1on, but never have
received th e typ es of returns tor whi ch
you had hoped may begin paymg oft
VIRG O (Au g 23·Se pt 22) - Evant s
may be SIJCh !hat yo u II be able lo make
some of those !ransformatlons 1n your
retat1 onsh1p s whi ch can make th mgs tar
more pl easan t for you. A better s~ t of val·
ues Will ensue.
LIB RA (Sept 23 ·0ct. 23) - 'r'ou w1lt be
tar more ollpcllve If you are able 10 operote rndopendonuy of others. Al! houg l1
you do well in pa,rtM rshlp SituatiOns.
they· should be put 1n 'abeyance at thiS
time
SCO RPIO (Oc! 24-Nolf. 22) - It yo u ve
wanted to taKe a tnp of some Kind, could
be a pe rfect time to slafl gattmring informatmn and starl ma K1ng some plans to
do so. Th e aspects favor gomg !o fa r
away places
SAGIT TARI US ( Nov 23 ·Dec 2 ! ) Some factors which nave bee n instru ·
men tal •n de\ermilll ll9 your cow se ot
ac t1on m an 1nt1ma te pe1 sona l re!at1on·
sh1p of wh1 ch you hav e been un aware
may surface helping to settle thin gs.
CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) Forces are at worlo; creating a perfe ct bal·
ance belween you and those Who mean
a lol to.vou II you're so u'1CI1ned , you'll be
abl e to e;o;pruss ycur affection and make
you1 feehngs cle ar
A6UAAIUS 1Jan. 20 ·Feb. 19) - You may
f1nd it necessa r\1 to subordi nate your
des1res tor amuse ment and co ncentrate
on the needs at hand, ye t you won't
mmd You'll handl e things well and be
mas! pleasanl about it.
PISCES (Feb. 20· March 20) - There are
strong poSSibilitieS• that yo u could meet
someone new who w111have a most pos··
1tive attect upon yo ur soc1a1 atla1rs Th1s
person will br~ng happy circumstance
int o be1ng
ARIES (March 21·Aprt l 19) - Major
a.tt erat1ons peruunlng to some persona l
developm ent9 !hat didn't live' up to your
present 8Mpectat1ons can be made The
adJuslment w111 maKe th1ngs a lot more
pleasant lor you .
TAURUS (Ap.ri l 20· May 20) - You're 1n a
brief cy cto of limo where cond1t1ons Will
bo npe lor mee ting and making new
tr lends and social contacts If yo u're looking to e~pand your circle , star t moving
about more
GEMIN i (May 2t ·Ju ne .20) -. Over the
nex t few . weeks th e genera l trends l!lnd
infl u ~nces which affect your matorlat we ll
being wi ll be qu1to favo rabl e lor you Sta rt
Oedicatlng your tim e and interests to

GUll

Ol!earrcnge

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several •·ays
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SCRAML~TS

ANSWERS - ; !loo"

Breed - l'oose - Peri o d - NEV ER USED
While glancmg throu gh o ur l ncal r lm i fled ad.~. I came
across th1s ad: '"Mmival ion Tapes Cheap' Like New'
They \\om NEVER \) SED, ..
Vulgar -

ARLO &amp; JANIS

J

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prolttable endeavors .

SOUP TO NUTZ
can

'l'o&lt;.J or.~e
Me To PR&lt;lCT,ce ?

McM

, I.JH&lt;,' Do You
Suf'l'bse Ttlf GooD

Gave os Two

· Vinvl Siding &amp; Painting
· Patio and Porch Dec ks
wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992 -6215
Pomeroy Oh io
25 Years l ocal Expcncncc
Tl

~I

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__ __
,

-- -

�Friday. July 21. 2006

www.mydaily sent inel.com

ALONG THE RIVER

LIVING

Meigs' economy goes
from underdog to favorite, Cl

Flavors of the Week:
How to defeat the barbecue doldrums, Dl

,
ON THE TUBE •

Ult

.,. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR Thrs Week. C/O The Ga ston Gazette,
OtliUlSMAN fftUCK

· ~nla500,

• Race : Penns)'lvan1a 500
• Whe,.. Pocono Raceway. Long
Pond. Pa. (2 5 1111les). 200

t'~ p.m., &amp;!nday

............
~ .. 250,

~:30 p.m .. Saturdal'

,' nlf

·II&gt; Some fans are upset at
fiiASCAA welcoming foreign driY.
in addition to the entry of
forl!iCn manufacturer Toyota ~
b&lt;rt, honestly, how could artyOne
bar the door to Juan Pablo Mor&gt;toye and others?
1&gt; ~isn't Wfllfll for a fan to hope
eomeone with his own bac!l·
~nd does well. Wbal't wrong
Is to limit the OO&lt;l11l8lltlon only to
those IMth the same bocl&lt;ground.

ers -

11&gt; NASCAA officials are, of

laps/500 m;les.

0

· '

• When: Sunday. July 23
• Last year's winner: Kurt Busch

• Qualifying record: Kasey Kahne.
Oodge.172.533 mph , June 11,
2004
• Race record: Rusly Wallace.
Ford. 144.892 mph . July 2\. 1996
• Last week: Kyle Busch won the
leno• 300 because he had a fast
car. and when the sun d1pped and
the laps began to wind down, not
very many could sa~ thm. A war Of
aHnhon? The latest Nextel Cup
race at New Hampshire lntematiofl·
al Spee&lt;t.vay was rnore hke a war ol
contrition . When 1t was over, most
of those m the garage area were
son y: sorry for w1ecking someone
else, sorry for mess1ng up, sorry for

runnmg ol.lt of gas and, 1n some
·Cases. just plain sorry. It wasn't
enough to be fast. Nm was it
enough not to make mtstakes. The
dnvers who made the mrsta keS cfe.
Clded thts race. drld the ones left at
the end were those luck)' enough
not 10 be on t he receivmg end of
those m1stakes. With 50 laps to go.
the highest-finishing former New
Hampshtre wmner was erghth-place
Jrmmre Johnson. With 71 taps r&amp;
rnatning. the from four consrsted of

Clint Bow,-er. ElliOtt Sadler. Jeremy
Mayfield and Scott Riggs, none of
whom had even carne close to winning a race thrs year. Th us did tt1~

race become Busch's for the picking. The comedy of errors forced
the race to run eight extra laps. No
Cup race has ever gone 0\/ertime

tt1at long smce the rule was implemented in 2004.

1 Race : Goody's 250
• Race: Power Srrc he
1 Where: Martrnslldle
200
(Va .i (.52G miles:. 250
• Where : lndi aoopolls
laps/ :1 ::s 1. 52 P1i1C~
R:'lceway Park, Cler
1\Yhen: S.:ltu'C:.:l), July 22 . nronl. Ind. (.686 mt.),
1 Last yea r·s winner:
200 laps/ 137.2 rn•les.
First "itrie5 rJ·~e rJI ; "1tS 1 When ; Fnday. Aug. 4 .
track since 199.1 .
a last ret1r'1 winner:
a~reconi :Jnnrny Oenms Setzer
Hensley. Buick. 92.77 4
• QualilyinC record : Joe
mph, Oct. 30. 1987
Ruttman , Doctge,
· • Race 18Cord: No pre- 111.843 mph. Aug. 2.
vious races al th is dis-

2000.

tance. Harry Gant averoged 78.637 mph in a
BuicK 1n a 20D-Iap race·
on Oct. 27, 1991.
al.a$t week : Carl Ed·

• Race record; Greg
61Hie. Ford, 88 .704
mph , Aug. 5. 1999.
a Laot - k: Jack
Sprague. in a Toyota.

wards, in a Ford. won

won for t he 26th t ime

the New England 200
at New Hampshire In·
ternational Speedway.

pl1 is Motorsports Park.

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio

• Lancaster eliminates
Post128. See Page B1

v

No. 5 KELLOGG'S CHEVROLET

E

Newman

• Third-place Jeff Burton JS pos1·
tiooed solidly to make the
Chase. and yet he still hasn't
won tt race this year. He and
John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

I

'

11&gt; k's certainly

polntsfor88
consecutive

races.

1&gt; Wloo'l not - Kurt Busch's
striMII of five straight top-10 fir&gt;
Ishee oame to an end .... T(lny •
Sl-rt has fallen from secood
to 11th In points in a span of

·-·

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives hi1 toke: ~ N ewman
sa1d h1s car was faster and Stewart
should've let him go. Stewart said
the same thing had been true in reverse earlier, anel Newman raced h!m
hard . The two sounded like kids argumg on a pl_ayground.~

·

,.. Lenox 300 winner Kyle Bttsch
moved from eighth to four th in
the standings. bU1 at thi s point.
the only two drivers wrth some
sense of postseason security
are Jimmie Johnson and Mat~
Kenseth .

has been in
the top 10 In

s

Kyle Busch, Shown here durtRg driver Introductions lor the Ne.ttel AII·Siar Challenge at Lowe's Motor Speedway near Charlotte, _N.C., Is.
showing signs ol maturity, even at age 21. He's In fourth place In the Nextel Cup points race.

The New Hampshire race was a
rally killer for Kurt Busch and
the two drtvers who fell four po
sitions in the points stand ings,
Stewart and Dale Earnhardt Jr.

races . ... Jimmie Johnson

in
Aluminum
plant
Ravenswood on day-to-day
contract extension s as
agreed to by the ~ompany
and union.
Thompson has suid that a
work stoppage would be
devastating to Cemury
Aluminum , which is tinall y
enJoyrng some success.
" ! sorely hope it does not
come to that," he said .
Thompson said that ihe
company had made a fair
offer to the union. whose

Despite victory, Busch knows checkered flag is months away
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
LO UDON , N.H. - Kyle Bu sch,
younger brother of a Nextcl Cup
champion , is becoming a star in his
own right. A victory in the Lenox 300
was the thit·d of Rusch's career, which
becomes quite a bit more impressive
when one fact or s in that Kyle only
turned 21 on May 2.
This young native of Las .Vegas
drives the No . S Kellogg's Chevrolet
for Hendrick Motorsports. The num ber has an impressive history. Busch's
predecessor, Terry Labonte. won a
championship in 1996. ·
The victory left Kyle fourth in the
Nextel Cup points standings, !ra iling
onl y tea mma te Jimmie Johnson, exchamp Matt Kenseth and Jeff Rur-

ton Demonstrating his maturity, . brother, who saw his own uphill rally
though, Kyle talked about how fleet- slow in New Hampshire. A 381h.pJace
ing success can be as drivers jockey finish left Kurt Busch ]4th in the
for position in the stretch drive lead- points standings, 206 out of the top 10
- ing up io the Chase for the Nextel and 319 behind his brother.
· Cup .
Success? Potential championship'
"The biggest thing with the win is, Kyle Busch takes it all in stride.
yes, it's great, it's cool and all that," he
"It's not too bad," he said. ''It's just
said, "but the difference between like I've raced anywhere else.
fourlh and l(Jth, I mean, is just so darn
"I've been able to work with a lot of
people
over the year{&gt;. It's all about
close that this week we went from
eighth to fourth, and next week we trying to learn and create a relation·
slrip with that other person.... I've
could go from fourth to J21h.
"We need to _just keep rolling like made some mistakes, but I'm willing
we arc here. The past three weeks to learn from those, and get over
we've had a third, a second anct ·a first. those and keep going down the road."
The road? Busch ho.pes it's the one
I guess I have to win to get a TV interview, so, hey, if that's what it takes, that leads to the championship.
that's what I'll do."
'
Contact Monte Dutton
Kyle Rusch likes a camera and amiat hmduttonSO@aol.com
· crophone almost as much as his older

FAN T I P S

·

'St. Dale' a fitting tribute
to sport's fallen hero
Sharyn McCrumb 's ' St. Dale'
!Kensington Books. $251 has been
aut since 2005, but
il's still on bookSM !ves and worth
read1ng if only for
Its msight 1nto the
devotiOn of NASCAR
fans. It's a novel
based an the gath'
ering together of a
group of fan s for a.
bus tour. the Dale
· Earnh ardt Memorial
Pilgrimage. Directly 1t's a fictional tale
of miracles and compassion . Indirect·
ly, 1t's a tribute to one of NASCAR 's
fallen heroes.

• YOUR TURN

·

· lETTERS fROM OUR READERS ·

Wllat In the world'la a
'Menard,' anyway?

I

am an avid NASCAR fan. 1 see a
sponsor called "Menards" on the
ca(S. I have been trying to figure out
what a '' Menard" is.

). Somei'MI
'ake Hopatcong, N.J.

• \ ol. -tO. :'l:o . :.!h

leaders contend it does not
adequately reflect soaring
pri ces in the aluminum
market.
The union objeds to wha!
they say are proposed cuts in
health. care. Thompson said
the company is requesting a
cha'nge that would allow
them to save $600.000 a year,
for a total of $2 .1 million
over the life of the contract.
The change would involve

Please see Century, Al

.Country,
gospel
highlight
fair shows

Stewart

The se two supposed friends
clashed on the track during the
lenox 300. ancl the result was costly
for Stewart, who fell aut of the tap 10
1n Nextel Cup points for the first tim e
si nce the fo urth race of the season.
"I've started l o learn to race him like
he races me," said Stewart, ·and he
doesn't give anybody a break so I
wasn't going to give him a break .~
Newman's react ion? ~ H e (St ewart)
got tne raw end of th e deal. It did n't
do us any favors, but he sure didn't
tiye up to what he preaches."

.., H&amp;re's the supreme irony, In
this great Tony Stewart fall fro ~n
grace, practically none of 1t is directly his fault. Everyth1ng that
went right for the re•gning champion in 2005 is going terribly
wrong in 2006.

In the top 15
In 13 straight

they wanted us to make
decisions for them," he said .
" It works a lot better that
way, and that right has been
taken away from them. "
Ballots have been mailed
from the international
United Steelworkers office
in Pittsburgh . Union members must return the ballot s
to .the Pittsburgh post ot1ice
by 9 a.m . July 28.
The votes will be counted
that day. Until then, work is
continuing at the Century

Ryan Newman
n. Tony Stewart

1&gt; Roush President Geoff Smith
tried to quantify the task facing
Montoya by lil&lt;ening the difference between Formula One and
NASCAR to the difference between a tractor and an F-16
fighter plane.

II&gt;Wioo'ohot

Manager Ron
Plant
Thompson said the workers
deserved the right to vote on
the contract offer.
"I am very pleased that our
people are going to have the
. opportunity to vote on their
futures," Thompson said.
Eli Morris, spokesman for
the Local 5668 negotiating
team, said the deci sion of
the mediator was an injustice to the union.
"The people elected this
negotiating team because

u

In e Jack Roush-owned Ford.
and noted Canadian road racer
. Petrick Camentier was In New
Hampshire looking for a Busch
Setift! ride.

. - Jeff Burton
has finished

BY TiM MALONEY

TMALONE Y@MYOAILYREGISTER .COM

s

herd, 19, made his Craftsman
Trucl&lt; Sarles debut at Memphis

WHO'S HOT
AND WHO ' S NOT

s 1. ;;o

Ballots-are in the mail at Century Aluminum •

R

1&gt; Cenedlen driver Peter 51\ep-

too soon for Stewartie panic . He's just 11 points
out of the top 10, and there are
seVen races until the Chase be·
gins.

l'onll· r·o~ • \l idtllqlln·t • (,:~Jiipoli' • . lui~ :!;I. :.!OOh

RAVENSWOOD, W.Va.
~ Voti-ng is under way at
the Century Aluminum
plant in Raven swood, much
to the chagrin of the union
and delight of management.
A federal mediator ruled
last week that a vote be held
among the 580 members of
Local 5568-04 on what the
company called its "last ,
best and final otfer."

in the senes at Mem-

arrival of MantO!". not to mention the potential arrival of Danica Petrick.

points has won a race th1s year.

\'aile~ l'uhJi,hiug l o.

SPORTS

course, &amp;iddy.at the Imminent

Merk Martin are the only wmless
driVers in the current top 10.
"No one oU1s1de the top 14 in

•

f'OCONO OAIA

· FEUD OF THE WEEK •

KYLE BUSCH

tm.e

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM

·,

OBITUARIES .
Page AS _
• Allan Gibson
• John E. Neuser
• Ernest E. Sheesley
• James W. Weeks

INSIDE
• 4-H annual style show
winners announced.
See PageA2
• For the Record.
•
Michelle Miller/ photo
SeePageA3
Work has begun on the new, 7.000 square foot restaurant behind the Super 8 Motet in Gallipolis. ·The owner. ·Dr. David K.
• Local Briefs.
Smith , expects the restaurant to be open by the end of this year.
·
See Page AS
• Slow recovery under
way in St. Louis area
after damaging
BY MICHELLE MtLLER
"We have traveled and sampled
The restaurant will have a bri ck
MMI
LLER@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
storms, triple-digit heal
many different restaurants and menus decor and stucco tinish.
and have not found the right fit for
The entire structure will be over
See Page AS
GALLIPOLIS ~ Steaks. according Gallipolis ." Smith said.
7.000 s4uare feet and will include the
• Village addresses
to Dr. David K. Smith, will be the spe"Either our market was not of the restaurant, an outdoor patio and a bancialty CJf his new restaurant which is correct size, our demographics did not quet room for meetings, reception s
school building
scheduled to open in the latter months fit, or th&lt;: company was not strong and other functions. The interior will
vandalism. See Page A6 · of
2006.
enough for me to pw:tner with ," he carry a sports theme in the bar area.
• Ohio and nation could
Work has begun on the restaurant, added. "Realizing this, I set out to ere- · Smith said he's put a Jot of time and
located behind the Super 8 Motel on ate what I think will be successful and thought ' into the type of restaurant,
· face shortage of
Upper River Road .
provide a · good family atmos.phere, what it will. serve and the decor to
substance abuse
The independent restaurant will offer serve good food and be a real asset to ensure it and Gallipolis are a fit.
counselors. See Page A6 a variety of American foods, including the community."
"Everyone has been very helpful

new

WEATIIER

\

HellO, Lalie Hop(i lcang! Mernuds is

a home Jmprovement;hardware
chain based in Eau Claire. Wis.

seafood and ribs, at a mid-range cost.
Currently. lunches are expected to
cost between $4 and· $8 and dinners
between $8 and $12.
Consultants from Cincinnati assi sted Smith in the design of the structure,
as well as the equipping of both the
restaurant and the kitchen.
A local team is preparing the menu
item s and design . •

Despite announcing the beginning
constntction. Smith will release the
restaurant's name at a later date.
Local restaurant managers David
Rice and Jeff Nelson have been working with Smith on the design. construction and operation of the restaurant and will carry over as parr of t-he
new restaurani 's managerial staff
when it open s.

and supportive and I would especially
like to thank the voters in the City
Precinct 5 and everyone on my team
as we continue to progress toward
having a nice restaurant in our community." Smith said.
A local option question to allow
liquor sale at the restaurant was
approved by the precinct 's voters last
November.

Coalition forms to fight juvenile drug -abuse
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

Details on Page A6

POMEROY ~

INDEX
4 SECfiONS- 24 PAGES

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Around Town
-..::' AJ
Celebrations
C4
Classifieds
D Section
insert
Comics
Editorials
A4
Movies
cs
Obituaries
As
Regional
A2
B Section
Sports
Weather
A6
'© aoo6 Ohio Valley Publl!!!hing Co.

After three meetings. the
Meigs County Community Coalition has
officially been christened to ti ght juvenile
dru g abuse and educate the public about
the probl em as well as any solution s.
Last week around 40 people took part in
a community forum at the Mulberry
' Community Center to discuss the impacl
of drugs on the youth of Meigs County.
At the meeting, Middleport Police Officer
Jeff Miller said gone are the days when officers only had to worry about the kid caught
with the occasional joint. Both Miller and
Pomeroy Police Chief Mark Proffitt said
that the current trend among young people
are prescription pill abuse and snle s.
Inhalants are also providing a cheap high.
Proffitt said his deuartment offers a five
panel dru g screen for parents who wish to
have thci'r children tested. The d'rug screen
Beth Sergent/photo · is free and can be confidentially obtained
Around 40 people discussed the problem of juvenile drug abuse in Meigs by callin g the Pomeroy Police Department
County and what can be done. Out of this meeting came the newly-formed at 992-6411 . .
Me igs County Community Coalition.
Please
Coalition,' Al

.'

------~-·-

•J

I

see

GALLIPOLIS
Country and gospel are two
musical styles that seem to
go along with the theme of a
fair: Both are well-represented in the line-up of
entertainment for the ·57th
annual Gallia County Junior
Fair that begins July 31.
Grammy Award-winning
Kentucky
Headhunters
will bring
their driving·
sound to the
fair's main
stage on the
fair's
last
evening on
Saturday,
Aug. 5, with
one show at
$:30 p.m.
Aaron Tippin brings his
country arti stry with him
when he appears Thursday,
Aug. 3 at 8:30 p.m.
Nationally-known gospel
stars the · Dove Brothers
Quartet take the stage at
8:30 p.m. Tuesday. Aug. I
for Religious and Senior
Citizens Night.
~
Rounding out the slate df
entertainers are Rhonda
Vincent on ·wednesday,
Aug. 2 at 8:30 p.m.,.and th~
Joe Freeman Band on
Friday. Aug. 4 at 8:30 p.m.

Please see Fair. Al

Sam Goody
closing jolts
staff, patrons
Bv Joy KocMouo
JKOCMOU D@MVDAILYTRIBUNE .COM •

GALLIPOLIS "It'S
really sad," said Brandy
Jeffery s, third key manager
at Sam Goody in Gallipolis,
as she packed boxes with
merchandise. "This is the
end of an era."
·
The ·store will close its
doors for good on Monday,
leaving patrons to shop else·
where for music, movies,
games and aci:essories.
·
After being purchased by
Transworld Entertainment
early thi s year. the business
continued to 'operate under
the Sam Goody name until
management was told July
I!i the store will close.
"We were on edge since
Chri stmas, becau se we
weren't sure of the state of
the company, or · where
things were going," said lim
McFarland. assistant mruiag·
er. "Then. when Transworld
bought it we all breathed a
sigh of relief. Now. just tl)ree
months later. out of the blue
they're closing the store."
"I went from having a
full -time joh to no job at

Please see Closlnc. Al

j

I

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