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                  <text>Consumer How-to
Guide inside
today's Sentinel

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

-.~·( l "\ 1""1•\~t l.}- '\n ~~~

IRII'\, _. Jl

Bv BfiiAH J. REm

• NBA Draft. See Pile Bl

BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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POMEROY - Fmancial
institutions fding foreclosure
actions in Common Pleas
Court will be required to pay
an additional $400 above
and beyond court costs,
beginning July I, to address
an increase in tbe foredo-

sures handled by the court.
Meeting Thursday, Meigs
County
Commissioners
established a new line item
in the general fund for a
"Special Projects Fee for
Foreclosure Actions," to be
paid by banks and other
· plaintiffs filing foreclosure
lawswts. · · .
Judge Fred W. Crow UI

'I

'""'n"d.llh . . t·n1lfu·J,n•n

:.!-.:.!ooH

has ordered the new fee "for
the efficieni operation of
this court in regards to the
extraordinary amount of
foreclosure actions."
Meigs County Clerk of
Courts Marlene Harrison
has ·received twice as many
foreclosure lawsuits~n the
ftrSt six months of 2008,
compared to the same time

frame in 2007. Last year,
the clerk's office filed 18
complaints in foreclosure
between January and I une,
and this year, has filed 35.
Funds collected by the
county treasurer under the
court order Crow signed
June 25 can only be di~­
bursed under Crow's order.
In other business, com-

missioners:
• Opened bids for bituminous materials for June
from Asphalt Materials,
Marietta, for consideration
by the county engineer.
• Approved appropriations adj1,1stments for county
departments.
• Recessed ~he meeting
for payment of bills. ·

Thornton
ordered
to serve
house arrest
Bv BRIAN J. Reeo
BREEODMYOAILVSENTINELCOM

POMEROY - County
Commissioner
Jeffrey
Thornton will begin serving
20 days under house arrest
on Monday, after appearing
on charges he failed to file
Ohio Ethics Commission
rer.orts for four years and
fat led to appear in court.
·
Thornton was a! so placed
on two· months probation,
and ordered to file the
required
reports with
the state for
2002, 2005 ,
2006, . and
2007.

Oorru~

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Clwtene Hoelllchlphoto

Vdie Schnuerer, manager, Post Office Operations, Columbus Division, conducts the swearing-iJ1 ceremany for Charles
~~~llllta.

new Pomeroy Postmaster. Holding the Bible is his nephew, Eric.

.

Meeks sworn in as Pomeroy postmaster
'ttY CtW" FIE ltoEFucH

Thursday ~ng.
Coming from Columbus
to conduct the ceremony
was Vickie Schnuerer, manager of Post Office
. Columbus
OJ'I:l'ations,
Dtvision.
For the sweaTing-in cere,
mony,
Meeks'
great

HOEFUCHOIIrMWLYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY- Charles L .
Meeks, who has been the
officer in charge at the
Pomeroy Post Office for the
past several months, was
sworn in as postmaster

Meigs Local
approves
fiscal fundfug

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nephew, Eric, held the
Bible. Schnuerer also presented to the new postmaster, a plaqne of recognition
from
the
Postmaster
General of the United
States.
.
Meeks was previously a
supervisor of customer ser-

vice in the Athens Post
Office. He started with the
Postal Service in 1995 and
has since held several
supervisory positions.
He holds a bachelor's
degree in accounting and a
master's degree in business
from Webster University.

....

BY Ctwu me ftoEfucH
HOEFUCHOMYOMYSENTINEL.COM

}

POMEROY- Temporary
appropriations for tbe Meigs

I..ocal School District's oper-

8oMI of
\

HOLZER
CLINIC ·,.
'

fiseaFycar.

Mcieling this week the
8oan1 ako approved the

•

INDEX
.

final

II!DOIW Of $27;765,411,
Also approved was the
.\nnfe's ~x A2 budget
resave, as required
bytbe
Obio
RcviaedCode, in
Calendars
A2
die amount of $296,906.
aaqifieds
85-6 These funds can only be used

·'

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for~ m1 fillle geotL:al

Comics .
t.ditorials
'
Faith
• Values
'

fund deficits. The wodra'S'
compensation group rating
risk~ pogr.uo at

Ci\179
will mnain
with
Gates-McDonald

a cost

Movies
.
.

~

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permanent

for fiscal year

~~)intbe

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They

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Health Plus as die Di!lrict's
Manard Care &lt;qaaWtioo.

kASCAR
Obituaries .

.

ExcellaJCe.'

~
'

Weather

focal Carin&amp;...

Everywhere
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il was decidrd
The lm!IIIIIU and wperinteodent wae llltboriud to

BSection
A2

o--v..,. ·u· .c.,
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obtain district property,
fleet, liability and Yioleoce

insw:anoe cover for the d.istrict, and the · Board
approved the vision inlll,ll'ance renewal with Vision
Plus · with there being no
ina r in what employees

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I

flnu . . MI'I:I AS

BSERGENTOMVOAILYSENTINEL.COM

PORTLAND Fr~e·
mammograms and other
preventative health screenings will be given during a
special women's health
clinic offered from 9:30
a.m.' 3 p.m .. Thursday. Aug.
·
21
at
the
Portland
Community Center.
The clinic is being
announced now so that
SUbmitted photo
appointments may be filled
Assistant Administrator Courtney Sim (center) will assume local Vital Statistics Registar for the mobile mammograduties on July 1. Here, Sim assists local Funeral Director James Anderson (left) of the phy unit which will be
Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home with the obtainment of certified copies of a death cer, parked at the community
lificate as Deputy Registrar-in-training Sandy Brumfield observes the transaction.
center. The unit is from The
Ohio State Uni versity's
James Cancer Center. With
the ri sing cost of fuel, the
the Ohio Revised Code.
in Meigs County and death clinic must have so many
STAFF REPORT
NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM
Bell has been C!Jlployed cenificates of people pro- appointments booked in
by the Meigs County He;llth nounced deceased m Meigs advance for the van to make.
'POMEROY- The Meigs Department for a IOta! of 21 County from 1909 through the trip from Columbus.
County Health ~~ years as nursing clerk then the present. Certified copies
The
Meigs
County
tece~~tl y
announced the was appointed as VS local of birth and death records Cancer Initiative "s "Think
retirement of.Vital Statistics registrar in Au~st 1998. are $20. each. Vital records Pink.. program will also
(VS)
Local
.Registrar Health Commiss1oner Larry can be obtained or accessed provide qualifying women
Edwina Bell which will be Marshall expressed appreci- by the public from 8 a.m. to with free mammograms and
· effective at 4 p.m., June 30 ation to Bell for her years of noon and I p.m. to 4 p.m..
a $20 gas card to help P!lY
' withAs~stantAdnrirustraocw
service and wishes her an Monday through Fnday, for their trip to the appoint·
Courtney Sim taking over enjoyable retirement on and until 6 p.m. on the ftrSt ment. lbe program offers
the position
July I.
behalf of the Meigs County Tuesday of each month.
free mammograms for qualIn
addition,
Sandra Board of Health .
. For more informa.rion, ifying
Meigs
County
"Sandy" Brumfield will be
The Meigs County Health contact Sim via tl.'lephonl.' at women ages 35-49. For
the Deputy Registrar which Department maintams birth 992-6626 or via email at
is a position mandated by certificates for people born csim@odh.ohio.gov.
M1111 . . Clllc.. AS

Change in health department personnel

oo

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'l1lorMGII., AS

Mammograms
offered at free
Portland clinic

toCal $25,154,258 nearly
$2,000,000 less than was
appropialed for tbe cwmrt ·

.D ' ' •JflllitAZ

c

Education~

Phew -

Bv BElli SERGENT

ation in 2008-2009 fiscal
year wm: approved by tbe

.,

·'

ap. peared
Wednesday
before Judge
Steven
L.
Story on two
counts of failure to 111e
financial disclosure statements and a count of failure
to appear. Story sentenced
Thornton to two 30-day jail
terms, to be served consecutively. Those sentences
were suspended in favor of
the 20-day term under electronically-inonitored house
arrest.
Story also fined Thornton
$250 on each of the two
counts of failure to file
financial statements, and .
suspended
the . fines.
Thornton was ordered to
pay $185 in filing fees to the
Ohio Ethics Commission,
and $140 in court costs.

•

�.· Friday, ,June 27, 2oo8

.PageA2
The Daily Sentinel

Monday, June 30

Wednesday, JUly 2
TUPPERS PLAINS Special meeting of Eastern
Local Board of Education,
5:25 p.m, to approve FY09.
budget and other business.

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Reunions .

Saturday, June 28
RACINE
- Cleland
Family Reunion, noon, Star
Mill Park, potluck.

W::. ~rfu~~u~f~~
thai

~y:ea:J f::cice to=~

·r.

If used to it, but it's very
betrayed is Kyle 's WI e.
..-'--·'thy. It's OK to gt've
you are concerned for wu~
Janice's emotional health, her a polite version of the
you should make her aware . truth - that you are sensiof your reservatimis re-rA. live to smoke and g~t
al 6~~ headaches when you are 10
ing . Kyle. You
so can a house where there are
encourage Kyle to get into s·mo'-e-. Say that you're
counseling and not lrife'ue
"' •o
other relationships w 1'Ie he so·rry you can't stay· at her
,·s · st1'll mam'ed. · However, place again, but she is we11 ' ct
Janl.ce ,·s an adult and come at yours.
e
1n .a ,
responsible for her own invite her .or a s eepover
dec•'s•'ons _good or bad. If . soon.
1
v •
she chooses to be with Kyle,
Dear Anne: ,ou ve
there isn't much you can do. printed several letters about
Dear Annie: I'm in mid- the stress of living with' an
. die school and P,ood friends elder parent. After five
with "Amanda.' Last week, years, my husband and! had
she· 1·0 v1'ted me ~or a sleep- to ask my mother-in-law to
over. As soon as I entered leave our horne.
.
her house. 1 started coughMy mother-in-law 1s a
d
,·ng. Her mothe.r and older wonderful person an we
a1
11
't
brother smoke a lot. No always got · ong we • so •
windows were open and the s'u rprised me that the
whole house reeked of ciga- arrangment didn't wort
·
rettes. When I left. my head out. ne of the greatest
hurt and my clothes and pil- stressors was the lack of pri.
low smelled of smoke.
vacy. And no matter ho\\!
I really like Amanda ~d kind, elder parents often
she is always welcome 10 treat the adult son or daul!h·
my house. But what should ter as a child, offenng
I do if she asks me to come unwelcome criticisms. The
over to her place again? I elder parent sees these as
don 't want to hurt her feel- ·he.lpful, loving gestures. but
ings, but I can't st.1y there. it .huilll£ rese~tment. And
-Can't Stand the.Smoke without meanmg to, an
Dear Can't Stand: And elder parent can become
you shouldn't have to. very demanding- wanting
Amanda's exposure to sec- to be driven to the mall to
ondhand smoke doesn't · shop, etc. For a busy mom
bother her because she's and dad who work, drive

Other events

Law left.. She is ~ving·Q'!'
m
'

her own an&lt;l domg weU.
My husband and I ~d to be
treated for depressfro•on and
are now estranged
m th,e .
t ded
family
M·
ex -:n
· . . Y
adv~ to. anyol)e thmking
about havmg
an Ide at
. . . e rp ent move m IS to cons1de
.
. .
r
other options first. -

.Reader can't self-diagnose anorexia

Yo,UQJ evenb

9

Church events

·

s lp

e

·Ex-Attorney General Dann aide pleads not guilty

Local Weather
Friday-.Partly
sunny
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 80s.. Soutliwest
winds to
mph. Olance
of rain 40 percent
Friday Dicbt...Mostly
cloudy. A chance of showers
and thunderstorms in the
evening...Then .a slight
· chance of showers and thunderstorms after midnight.
Lows in the upper (i()s.
South winds 5 to 10 mph.
Chance of rain 30 percent. ·
· ' Saturday-Mostly cloudy
with showers and thunderstorms likely. Highs in the
mid 80s. Southwest winds
'I 0 to 15 mph with gtasts up

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CliiJII?O~ ~run emmds all
day, itiSsiJJu!I.Yanothe
,,
rtas.k
lon21iSt.
on ·our hus'b
My hus anfs siblings,
I who :"ere DOl .m~lved iii
Moms care, didn t under;
stand the stress.. lbey alSI)
assum,ed we w~ after
M
b
Oil!ded
s money,
~mce
s. e
a1
fi
prov• . man~•. a~s·~tance w1th the livmg s1tua
.
·
bon
·
It has been almost three
ears since my mother

Family Medicine

to 25 mph. Chance of rain
60 percent.
Silturday Di&amp;IJt...Mostly
cloudy with sliowers and
th~ liely. Lows
in the mid 60s. Southwest
winds. 'S to 10 mph with
~sts up to 20 mph. Cbance
of rain 60 percent.

S!mday .... SundaJ

DELAWARE (AP) - A
woman
whose
sexual
harassment
complaint
helped prompt the downfall
of former Attorney General ·
Marc Dann has pleaded not
guilty to charges -of disorderly conduct .
Vanessa Stout, 26, was
arrested at 2:10 a.m..Sunday
outsi!le the Red Rock Cafe
in DeJa ware, north · of
Columbus, court officials

said. She was released from
jail and her attol.lley entered
a not guilty plea on
Wednesday in . Delaware
Municipal Cqun.
··
A court date has not~
set yet.
.
,
Stout was one of j:Wo
women in the anorney gebl;f- ·
al's office who accused top
Dann aide Anthony Guti~
of sexual harassment.
Gutierrez, supervisor of

l!~

services,· was fired
m May after an internal
investigation concluded he
violated the office's sexual
harassment policy.
Dann, a Democrat elected
in 2006, resigned two weeks
later after acknowblging an
extGIIllarillll affair with an
employee, fosterinj! bad
office behavior, hiring _
ill· ·
qualified friends and being
llllJll'CilRd to hold the office.

Local youth
· participate in

•

Is it frielJl]ship or shopping for new partner?

MethOdist Church, 2 p.m.
CHESlER - GosPel sing
BY KATHY MITCHELL
at the Olester Owrdi of the
AND MARCY SuGAR
N81lftne 6 p.m. with The
Bissell Boys and local groups.
CHEStER Fifth
Dc!ar ADDle: I am in my
Sunday hymn sing, 6 p.m., mid-30s and have a best
Chester Church of the friend 'the same age. I have
Nazarene. Bissell Brothers, mown "K~e" and his wife
Julia and Bruce Riffle, Jerry "eor a num r of years ' and
in many
and Di;ma Frederick, Brian we are· involved
h
1 a1
·so
and Family Connections activities toget er.
.
have
a
younger
sister,
and other groups.
"Janice" age 23.
·
Last year, Jamce met K y1e

along. Over the last few
· ·
1 ed
months , Kyle has mvo v
Sunday, June 29
Janice more and more in
·
f · nd
d 1d
HENDERSON, W.Va. my ne s an
o
Descendants ·of Sam and things
·
th er. Somellmes h'IS
toJle
Melvina Birchfield ann. w1fe comes along. someSaturday, June l8
TUPPERS PLAINS - · reunion at the Henderson times not.
· d'
Meeat
Well
Building.
VFW Post 9053 will have a Community
Recentl y, KyIe ha~ m
•·
Amlie's
Mllilllox
• · ·
cated that things are bumpy
• IS Will·
dinner at the hall, 6 p.m. for BasRt dinner at noon.
REEDSVILLE -Biram- 10
· h'1s mamage,
·
te• 6y S..,
Kid;, Io•..:-.
MikW U.
members and their spouses.
an d 1 can ' t
Mi
Hayman reunion, I p.m., help but worry that he has
Monday, June 30
flte1 r dN ~ ....- •
ton of · Allll 1 edm
POMEROY- OH-KAN Forked Run State Park shel- been laying the groundwork
Coin Club will meet at 7 ter #2. Bring covered dish to start up with my sister.
rollr~-. n.q ~ JOf1'
p.m. at the Pomeroy an~Jlawn chairs.
Maybe his motives are
f,..IU Ill Cll~llfiiiU·
Library. Dues payable, auc~
ptirely friendly, but if he's
~- dJo write
.lion to be held, visitors weiup to no good, do I have a
to: ~'s Mtril6or, P.O.
· come.
right to feel betrayed if my
lloi .U%N,· CltietJro, IL
'l'ue:sday, July 1
best friend and sister get
MlfU.;. '~ ~ ~
Friday, June 2'1: ·
POMEROY Ladies
together?
1
can
only
enviabHI-, ~M.;lbo.r,
MIDDLEPORT -Free
Auxiliary of Drew Webster community dinner, 4:30-6 sion this damaging both
W rMtl,/4
&amp;Jtotlu.r
Post 39, American Legion, p.m., Middleport Church of relationshiP!J. What should I
0 '"' S; .l i· '! lllfitm
2 p.m. at the Legion ball in Christ, ·Famify Life Center. do?- Big Brother
illl!f''Cilr'tl7a•Qfl, .uit ,ilu
old Salisbuiy school, rear Menu oflurUy hoc dogs with · Dear Brother: The perQ~;, S1•lrar·• We)
entrance. Members and oth-' sauce · and cheese, potato So n who should feel
,...,..~_.
ers interested in joining salad, cole slaw and dessert.
--------------------~~·~~~
· --~
asked to artend. ·
Sunday, June 29
MIDDLEPORT - Stated
'
POINT PLEASANT meeting of Middleport Gospel sing 6:30 p.m. at the
Masonic LOOge #363, 7:30 New Hope Bible Baptist
p.m. at the Middleport Church
~eaturing
The
Masonic Temple. Worlc in Lorosllll\IL "
Fellowcraft · Degree. All
{lW.don: I have begun to the current theories revolve ill.with a complication from imbalances and anemia.
members and Masons invitwonder if 1 have anorexia. I around self-image problems excessive weight loss. ·
Your level of self-aware,
·ed. Refreshments.
.
am jiiS( not interested in and family dysfunction.
· According
to
the ness in asking~}!luestion
Wednesday, July 2
· M...-...', JUDe 3o .
fOQd. MD~fY people. think I
Researchers are trying to American ·
Psychiatric · is to be comiDCilded. Sinc,e
POMEROY
-Meigs · POME'Rft/ _ Sunlmer am t()(l thm, but/ rhmkl am determine if there's a genetic .. Association, the four basic you have these concerns, I
COlllltY Board of . Health,
.
· Me·
j~ about the nght s1ze. I component to anorexia and criteria for diagnosis are
urge you to see your primaregular meeting, 5 p.m., ~ce for th~
•gs don't throw up after I eat. if it might be due to a chem• Refusal to maintain ry care physician .as soon as
conference room, Meigs
. ~ondaMarchinay
at
~gh· · How w~uld I know if I have ical imbalance in the brain. body weight at or above 85 possible and honestly disCounty Health Department bet: .....~~ 31 the to anorexw? .
· Your question seems quite percent of normal weight cuss them with him or her.
)
sc
· ... """":"
a.ll;l:
.Aaswec: Anorexia nervosa straightforward. You are sim- for age and height.
FamilJ Medieilu® is 11
noon. More !Jlformauon, is an eating disorder that is ply asking how the disorder is
• · Intense fear of gaining weekll colrurl-. To subMit
call To'1: .~ess, 992- · alsoapsychologicalproblem. diagnosed. Unfortunately, the weight · or becoming .fat, qt~nlilla, 'rrrite to Mlll1lui
Saturday, June l8
714! or 5 1-2 · ·
People with ano'.'Cxia !'fe ·answer is more convoluted even when underweight.
A. Si ~-- D.O;r._~·IJ.A.,
WILKESVII.l:E - The
o:..::.a:..a".. · ·
obsessed With Iosmg dian your question because
• . Self-pen:eption tha~ is Olrio ftlHnit;J 'Uiflqt of
Wilkesville Presbyterian
~J'S
t and dieting. It call . lhe diagnosis is not simple.
grossly distolttxl and weigm Osteop fr:ic Kl!f5eiM&gt; P.O.
Church will fieatme David
.-,starvation and death.
" First off, it's almost loss that is not acknowledged. Box. 110, Atlelu, Oltiq
Stiffier, Jr., singing gospel
People who need to be impossible to self-diagnose· . • FQI' women who have 45701, or riG r•,..U, iJ?
Suncl8y, Juae 29
music, 6 p.m. Public invitSYRACUSE -Virginia thin for their profession, anorexia. This is because started their menstrual relldel'fllfrlulltl•./fl.,dyed. For more information "Ginn.y" . Hedrick will like dancers and models, are one of the hallmarks of this cycle, missing as least three ~-::li.Mrdklll
call 669-6920.
observe her 86th birthday at greater risk for develop- disorder is a distorted body consecutive periods or only il!lfai1i,' 'd a ill. · eobutr11
· Sunday, June 29
today, cards may be sent to ing anorexia nervosa. Most image. You may think you having periods after being il•f/iim4«1 a · 1111 rdluiiCARPENTER The PO Box 424, Syracuse.
people with anorexia are are overweight .o r "JUSt given hormones.
liolllil rerrice o111J. It does
Master's Four Quartet of
Friday, July 4
female , and it usually right" but an objective
Some people with anorex- IIDt ~·111 of
Columbus will be in concert
SYRACUSE - · Elma begins in adolescence but observer may correctly see ia also vomit after eating :JOfU'
.
' iJiieUut,
at the Mt. U nioQ Baptist Weese will observe her 90th can even start in childhood. you as extremely thin and and use laxatives, but this wio
· ·), rwW 1111 to
Church, 6:30 p.m. Church birthday on July 4. Cards It is also more common in emaciated. Though your doesn't happen in .all cases. diaglune IIIII iero-nd
located at 39091 Carpenter may be sent to her at Box upper and middle socio- friends and relatives have Other symptoms of anorex- , . . , , for tiiiJ IHidiul
Hill Rd., two miles from 127, Syracuse, 45779.
economic classes.
noticed your thinness, this is ia are depression, irrit.1bili- comlilUJa. PIUI Cllhun11s
Carpenter. For more inforThesday, July 8
About 10 pc:rcent of . all not true in many cases.
· ty, fatigue, lack of cOncen- we a•llilllbk olllUJe 111
mahon call 742-2832. .
CHESTER
Mary adolescent g~rls have this . This is because many pea- tration, food obsession and www.famiiJMetliciaeRACINE
- Fourth Vll'ginia Kautz, formerly of problem. The cause is not pie try to hide their thinness perfectionism.
,
IUWI.DIJ.
Annual ShaU We Gather at Chester, will celebrate her known, but that doesn ' t with bulky clothing or by
Advanced anorexia leads
the River, ll a.m., SlaF Mill 90th birthday on July 8. keep us doctox:s from specu- pretending to eat Often _girls to starvation, which can
, Palt. worship service and Cards may he sent to her at lating. and developing many and young women with cause life-threatening heart
potluck to follow.
7786 Wethersfield Drive, theories to try to explain this anorexia are not diagnosed problems, stomach problems,
REEDSVU..LE
West Chester, Ohio 45069. comple1l disorder. Most of until they become medically osteoporosis,
electrolyte
Homemade ice cream and Her telephone number ·is
taraoke at Reedsville United 5J3c874-8790.

Clubs and
organizations

Obifuari~

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ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Community Calendar
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission, 9
a.m., 117 Memorial Drive.
RACINE .
- State
Planning
Financial
oSupervision Commission,
regular meeting, 10:30 a.m.,
Southern High School
media room.

The Daily Sentinel• Pq• As

www.mydailysenti.nel.com

Friday, June 27, 20o8
.

Pub6c meetinwo

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CF fund raiser

., COOLVILLE- Dollie Walton died June 24, 2008. after
IJattiin.g cancer since 1993. "She remained an inspiration of
strength, spirit, and faith for all." .
She was born April9, 1937, in Reedsville. She graduated
ilJ!9SS from Olive~e High School in Tuppers Plains.
:She moved to Columbus m 1955 to seek employment with
~)MAC. In 1979, she transferred to their Orlando, Aa.
.Pffice, where she retired in 1985.
·
. , In 1990, she moved to Little Hocking, where she lived
until moving to Shiloh to live with her son, Brian, a:nd his
wife, Kim.
.
., She was a member of the Church of Christ in Little
Jiockinj!.. ·
• She 1s survived by her husband of 51 years. Keith
~alton; her son, Brian Walton and his wife, Kim, of Shiloh;
stepchildren: Frank Walton of Columbus and Robert
:Watton of Galena; three sisters: Alice Dill of Jackson, Bea
Bailey of Sunbury, and Iris Randolph of Reedsville; four
hi-others: Bob Boring of Alrron, Max Boring of Columbus,
Paul Boring of Reedsville, and Asa Boring of Little
}locking; seven grandchildren; three great grandchildren;
niany meces and nephews.
·
.: A memorial service will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, June
28. 2008, at White-Schwarzel Funeral Horne in Coolville.
· Memorial donations may be made to Hospice of North
Central Ohio.

POMEROY - Ei~hl Meigs Higb
School musician joined the Battle:
Agaiust Cystic Fibrosis (BACF)
recently by participating in the
Burger King Marching Band Camp
held at the Ohio Valley University in
Vienna, W. Va.
The two-day camp WaS atte~
76 musicians from high school . ·
in Ohio and West Vi . • Going
from Meigs were o'~illncR.
Dusty Eads, Morgan Kennedy. Taylor'
Jones, Dawn Bissell, Olivia Bevm,
Chelsey Eads and Ian Bullington. .
The 2008 Burger King Band,
directed by Chris Foster and. Mike:
Fling, entertained at the BACF
Football Classic held at Warren Higb
School.
. Athletes representing 25 hi~
schools participated on the Ohio
(Scarlet &amp; Gray) and West Vuginia .
(Blue &amp; Gold) teams. The game was
called in the third quarter due to
inclement weather, with West Vuginia
leading by a score of 17-14.
The BACF is a non-profit organization raising money to fight Cystic
Fibrosis, the leading genetic killer
among young Americans. · The
Football Classic and BK Marching
Band Camp are annual events open to
all area youth.
·

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·

Local Briefs
..

Sub•-phato

·· .Southern volleyball camp set

· ~ RACINE- The Southern Volleyball Youth Camp for all
_girh entering fifth thmugh eighth grades in the fall will be
. held from . 9 a.m. to noon,. July 14-16 at Soulhern High
'School. The cost is $25 per student if pre-registered by July
':/ and $30 per student if registered the day of the camp. A
tamp T·shirt is included in the price. Contact Tonja Hunter
at 949-3088 for more information. The camp is meant to
teach passing, setting, hitting, skills, fundamentals:

Softball tournament set
CHESTER - A Days of Glory Co-Ed . Softball
Tournament has been set for Aug. 8 to 10 at the Chester
Ball Fields with all ~ to benefit the Chester Ball
Association and lhe Angela Eason Memorial fields.
The charge is $100 a team plus 2-12 inch 44 core balls. This
is slow pitch, .five male and five female on the field 8l all
IUnes; IIJen bat opposite hands, ages 21 and older, and slow
jii.leb bats only with double elimination, one hour games.
J Space is !united to 12 teams. For more information
call Angie Edwards, 740-416-6956 or Mandie Grueser;
140-416-0900.
.
.
·' On Aug. 9 thei'e will be a hog roast dinner at $6 per person, a home run derby at $5 per person with 50 percent of
lbe p:oc ee iiS going for first, second and third place prizes,
lind a variety of door prizes.
i •.

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TB clinic dosed

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:. POMEROY -The Meigs TB Clinic will be closed on
Xuly 4 and no tests will be given on July 2. Regular busi!I,CSS hours resume at 8 a.m. on Monday, July 7.
i.·

Benefit garden tour planned

:~ ATHENS -The annual.Athens County Humane Society
l8fden toUr will he held froniiO a.m. to 4 p.m. on Sunday.
/JJne 29. .·

.-· TICkets may only be purchased on the day of the tour
Atheas County Visitors and Convention Bureau,
M7 EISt State Street in Athens (located next to the City Pool

Meigs High School Burger King Band participants shown here are left to right,
front, Dusty Eads, trumpet; Morgan Kennedy, drums; Taylor Jones, drum, tan
Bullington, trumpet; back, Chelsey Eads, ftute ; Dar;by Gilmore, trombone, Dawn
Bissell, saxophone; and Olivia Bevan, darinet.
·

. Thornton rrom PageAI
Thornton has been free on
a personal recognizance
bond since he first 04Ppeared
on the charges and entered a
()lea of innocent last month.
Before appeating. Thornton
was taken into sheriff's custody on a bench warrant

allegedly failure to appear
on the two fourth-degree
misdemeanor counts, but
was transported to Holzer
Medical Center from the
county sheriff's department
before he could appear on
the charges.

Evening hours oft'ered ·
~POMEROY

-The

Meigs County Health Department
offer evening clinic hours. until 6 p.m. on Tuesday.
ices include childhood and adult immunization, blood
slire
checks, WIC, prenatal services, pregnancy testing,
(;
lice screenings; enviromnental health, vital statistics,
receipt of answer to general health-related questions.

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Meeting changed

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: GAlLIPOLIS -The July 21 meetin~ of the Gallia1ackson-Meigs Board of Alt:ohol, Drug Addiction and Mental
~ealth Services has been canceled. The next meeting will be
ot 7 p.m., Aug. 18 at the boanl office at 53 Shawnee Lane.

'

.!.Lodg~ holds food drive

lli&amp;IIL-MostiY cloudy with a

dcmoe of showers and thundrntonns. Highs in the lower .
80s. Lows in the lower 00&amp;.
cbanre of rain
M"""ay-Mo 1y cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in
~ upper 70s, Chance of
ram 30 pen:ent.

sostF-

Local Stocks
JIB (N\'IE)- 40.15
AlriD (N'M'Q)- .....

pay. Also approved was a Donna J. Stacy, bus drivers;
12-month contract renewal Delmar Pullins, substitute
with Sabo/Limbach for util- teacher; Amber Cox, al!!iity audit services in . the culture teacher; Jenn1fer
amount of $507 .
Wheaton. Spanish teacher;
The Board .authorized the Jennifer Henson, senior class
treasurer to advertise for advisor; and Eva Howard
quote s for bread/bakery. and Caroiyn Collins. aides. ·
Teachers hired on onemilk/dairy, and gas/fuel
contracts
were
products for the upcoming year
school year.
' Elizabelh A. Carfora, high
.school Spanish teacher, and
Personnel
Resignations were accept- Joan M. Powers, high
ed and supplemental con- school biology teacher.
Supplemental contracts
tracts awarded during the
awarded went to Ralph
meeting.
Resigning were Loi s J. Werry, high school cheeradvisor;
Judy
Wyant, Deloris Surface, and leader

-.
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those women 50 and older
who require a mamm&lt;igrdiD
there are ·other programs
available which provide
them free of charge, including thoSe given during the
OSU mobile van visit.
The "Think Pink" program attempts to do outreach clinics in rural areas
to service the uninsured ,
underinsured. insured or
those
with
a
high
deductible.
In addition, MCCI will be
holding the free women's
health clinic inside the co mmunity center fiiled with
hej!lth . screenings
free
which will include: hemoglobin, cholesterol and glucose screenings with on-site
results given; a nurse practi tioner providing · private
clinical breast e11ams; an
exercise physiologist will
provide body fat analysis
and exercise fitness information; the county extension office will provide
nutritional information on
healthy snacks; .kits to
screen for colon cancer will
be available along ( with
information on the di sease:
the Dex-a-Scan screening
for osteoporosis will be
available. Many other free
services wilt al so be
offered.

Door prizes will also be Medicare, insurance and
offered at the clinic with those that are self-pay are
one of the prizes being a eligible to schedule 04Ppointfree, two-week trial mem- ments for mammograms
bership to the Pomeroy · during the Portland clinic.
To schedule appointments
-Curves.
Annual income guidelines call Torres at 992c2161', ext.
for the "Think Pink" pro- 236 or Carolyn Grueser at
gram for women ages 35-49 992-3853. If no · one
include: a family of one can answers, leave a message
have an annual income of and your call w'ill be
up to $31 ,200; a family of returned within 24 hours. ·
If a woman who qualil'les
two, up to $42,000; a family
of three, up to $52,800; a for a "Think Pink" free
family · ·of four, up to mammogram but cannot
$63.600; a family of five, make the Portland event,
Holzer Clinic · Mei~s,
up to $74,400.
Memonal
MCCI also wishes to O'Bieness
stress
women
with Hospital in Athens arid

liRA"'D

...

SltQWIMS FOil

W.II.Loi' 1:1
-~1m' I I

INTO THE WQODS
June27 &amp;28
7:00pm

June 29th
3:00pm
Music &amp; Lyrics br
Stephen Sanddllilllll
Book br ~Lapine

Clwuplan~-...-

Box Ollic:e: 428 2nd Awe.
G Pip alia, OH (740) 441-ARTS

Eniov the 4th wilh vour family ill

'

I

implement an integrated..
pest management program
as qulndated by the Ohio ..
Deparunent of Health; and
an overnight field trip for
the M:~s High School
vocatio
agriculture pro. gram to artend the Ohio
FFA Camp Muskingum,
June 28-JuJy 2.
Also approved was a
courS;C offering at Meigs
High School of advanced
physical education, and
renewal of membership in
the Coalition of Rural and
APP,alachian Schools at a
cost of $300.

4&gt;

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7

UIPII fiOIIIIEVB.IIIIHOWia

12:30 Pll FOR
WEDTHRUSUN
MATINEES
TUES. IS ~~ARGUe MGH1'

....
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FAt. . .

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IUifC.UI
IS,'!-.;WI'[ Gl1ll' ~~ 1!1,W.l'll, . .
tllll.lii'DINC .,
tDIG KlrMGI 111:1 ,• •1:1,.

•••••
121,.

t!IWlA,

Doctors Hospillll in Athens
participate in the program
and honor the vouchers.
These women will also
receive. a $20 ga$ canl.

l'tl,a.

J(NS~I!rlli

.....

1141.M.Js,a

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Ill All) Ill:()ll' .,

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• Hilitorical Tour of Dcnmtown
Be&amp;im\iog at the Murai!Endln&amp;
- StoryteiUng by Donna Wilson at
- (;Qspel Sing By the River in Dave
~ Parade Line up in the Rejoicing Lire parld1111
~ - Middleport Fourth of July p11rade
1il!ll · Flag ceremony at Dave Diles part
·
·:zill- Karaoke Contest- Cash Prir.es $100, $7S, $51
-.ith K &amp; D Karaoke
- Enjo~· Sl.llnge Candy (" 'ilh" bluesy SOtJmd.l -"llU!..c;~ll

a.::.• lllope(IMJIJAQ)-

McCarthy, senior class advi. sor; Linda Lear, lead mentor
and Middle school newspaper advisor; Pamela Durst,.
Middle School yearbook
advisor; Dale E. Harrison.
girls assistant · volleyball
coach; Maria Drenner, girls
· Middle School volleyball
coach; Rick Blaettnar, Riel&gt;
Chancey, Derek Miller, varsity ass1stant football coaches; Brian Zirkle, Carson
'Ciuw, Eric Cullums, Eddie
Fife, Middle School football
·coaches.
In other business the
BQ3rd approved a policy to

Clinic from Page AI

COMES
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Commission repon discloses
sources of income and otbel'
fmancial information to help
protect against oont1icls of
mterest. The report must ~
filed annually by nearly all
elected officials and many
appointed officials.

.Meigs rrnm Page AI

w~ .tbc

and iii front of the Athens Community Center. Garden tour
tickds ·are $8 for adults, $5 for seniors and free for children.

Thornton suffers from a
chronic illness and is fre:
quently hospitaliwl. He has
not regularly artended
weekly
commissioners'
meetings since being reelected to a third term.
· The
Ohio
Ethics

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740-992-3600

�OPINION

.The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Coult Sb •, ·Pol-or. 0111o

(740) 992-2156• FAX (740} 992-2157

Ohio Valley Publishing Co,
Dan Good.--Jch
Publisher

.

Chartene Hoeftich .

General Manager-News Editor ·
ColttJU$ slt4ll lfUIIu ,., liJw RSJI«&lt;.i•t ,.. .
atdlisltfflnlt of rdip•, or prDhilliliBt dK

.fru uncise tlrneof; or urUiging th.fi• .,.,,.
.
•

of spuclt, or of tlu prt.ss; or tlu rigid of •
pe4Jph peacuWy to assnnllk, and to petidDa
tlu Go~~«~tmmt .for il mlrt.ss of~
- The Rrst Amendment to lhe U,S, Constlbdlon

READER'S

Page At

VIEW

0
~falls by uuyside
lhtu EtliiDr:
Decade after decade. more and more Americans choose
tO ignore the old and proven way of marriage in favor of
cobabitalion: In 1960, 439,000 couples were oobabitaling;
by 1980 Ibis had grown !'!. 1,589,000; in .2000 the figure
was 4,736,000 and today Mts 5,400,000 cOuples.
(Van Goethem, 35, McManus X U)
'
Aroordiog to Mike McManus, "Nearly half of all cmabiliug oouples break up before a JIWTiage eVCI' takes place. Even
when lhese couples do evenlually many, IWo-thinls will '
divoro: - which means four out of five of the 5.4 million
couples now oobabiting will not enjoy a lasting maniage. ff

.

Friday, .June 21. zoos

bean changed that day, nor
·did they in \he days to
come. But 1 did have that
family in mind as I wrote
back to the doctor and
thanked him for his e-mail.
Terry
... 1 said a prayer of my own
Mattingly _ that 1 might extend the
same presumption of good
faith to others !hat tbe doctor bad extended to me.~
Since the evangelical
After the Chicago meetmeot.
ing, online reports by Strang
BUt it's difficult to keep enrrepren~r bad read and others said !he leaders
Obama's answers off the Obama's ~Audacity of discussed a wide variely of
RlOOid. As soon· as the two- Hope~ ·memoir, be recog- issues. from the Iraq war to
nizedlhat the response came
hour meeting was over, from its ..Faitb" chapter.
same-sex marriage. from
some participants began
Thu~. it •s likely that the genocide io Darfur to relitaJkin•
and writing about presumptive Democratic gious liberty issues here at
-c
the questions they had nommee
·
retold the story home. A spokesman for lh.e .
asked
1&gt;f the University of Rev. Franklin Graham said
··1 was concerned after Chicago doctor who gen- that the head of the Billy
thn:e or four general ques, tly challenged a statement Graham
·Evangelistic
tions that we wouldn't ask on 3 U. S. Senate campaign Association asked whether
the most important ques- Web site pledging that Obama "thought Jesus was
tions," wrore Strang, .the Obama would fight "right- the way to God. or merely a
·founder
of
Charisma wing ideologues who want way" - but did not report
Magazine. "So I raiset1 my to take away a woman's the response.
· hand.... I ~ 'Senator, I right to choose.fl The doc,
There were conflicting
want to ask a question I'm tor's e-mail said be wasn't reports about whether
sure you are expecting ask.inll Obama to oppose Graham
and
Obama
reganliog your pOsition on. abortwn, but to begin exchanged a hug or a handabort.ion.
addressing "this issue in · sbak.e.
"I represent a segment of fair-minded words."
· But abortion remains a
the church where nearly · Obama told. his staff to bigh hurdle in an era when
~:veryone consider~ !]1e drop the offensive .Jan- sever.d U.S. Supreme Cowt
issue of suppolting life to guage, in recognition oT !he · justices are near retirement.
be the most important issue fact that many abortion
Is change possible? In
and where nearly everyone opponents want sincere, "lbe Audacity of Hope."'
would be opposed to abor- sober discussions instead of Obama noted that many
tion. I want to ask what more shouting. About that opponents of abortion are
your stand on abortion is time, a member of a polile, willing to "bend principle'·
and if you believe what I pro-life, family protesting in cases of.rape and incest.
think you believe, how you outside an Obama rally Meanwhile, the willingness
justify thai- with your called out "I will pray for of "even the most ardent" of
Christian faith."
you. I will pray that you pro-abortion-righls advoStrang
said
Obama bave a change of bean."
· cates to "accept some
offered a surprisingly "cenThus, Obama wrote: restrictions . on late-term
trisl," 15-minule answer.
"Neither my mind nor my abortion marks a recogni-

· You can't practice pennanence. It's DOl just a tryool, it's
:a sin. It's not love, because love ~s a committed covenant
relationship with no conditions. Cohabitating is "a performance-based relatiooship.ff Each pecson evaluates wbetber
the 01ber lives up to his or her eJ.pcrtations.
It is not a question of whether marriage will be good, for
wben God created sex it is the only time He said "It is very
good." Do we think we know better than God~ The data
·does oot show we are learning from our mistakes.
The Creator is being challen~e4 also in Mount Vernon.
·Obio pubfic sc:IJooJs where an
scimoe teaChec
·may lose his job for' having a
Bible on his desk in
plain view and challenging
theory of evolution with
creationism and intelligent design. Since it is DOl possible
to apply the scientific method to what God did and bow,
would it not serve a useful purpose to discuss all ideas
ralber than silence dissent?
We have been informed of a Saudi school in Vll'ginia
whose curriculum advocates violence. DOcs freedom of
religion encompass use of force 1
.
Will we try to solve o.ur problems by poking our fmger in
God's eye?

·

·

'7he Daily Sentinel

lion that a fetus is more than
a body part.~ ·
The key, stressed Strang.
was that the Chicago meeting even look ·place, allow.
ing frank _di~us~ion of such
binerly div1SJve ISsues.
Rather than merely lalking 10 the religious left.
Obama's staff offered bim a
chance to tilk and prny wilh
a variety of evangelical and
Pentecostal leadefi - such
as author Max Lucado of
San Antonio, Rich Ciz.ik of
lhe National Association of
. tical B.shop T.D .
Evange f ~ t and
Jakes o
many
others.
med
h
··Qbama seef
to ave
the support o at least half
.of lhe 43 Cl~ders who
·altended the hicago meeting,~ noted Strang. "In my
opinion, be 'made points"
with the resL ff
David Brody of the
Christian
Broadcasting
NeiWork was even more
blunt about the meeting's
political implications.
··folks, this is an important developmmC be 'said.
" It shows that the game bas
changed. Old rules don •t
apply. We're in unchaned
territory. John McCain's
religious outreach team has
to now step to the plate and
work hard for faith voters.'·
(Terry Matting/)' is dirv&gt;c·
tor o.f the Washington
Joumalism Center at the
Council for
Christian

0

Colleges and Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
ne11·s.)

YoUR POLL RES'ULTS ARE .
PostTIVE GIVEN REliGIOUS CONFLICT.

1bere was magic in his touch
He always wore a smile
And if be passed your way
It made your day worthwhile.

What I think of God

LettLrs lo 1M ediror are welcome. 17tey should be less
'lhan JOO wolds, AU kuers are swbj«t to ediJing, nw&amp;l be
sign«/, and incluik address and telephone IIIUrlber. No
·1111signed kllers wiU be published. Letters should be in
800t! ltlste, adtllrssing issues; not JH!rsonalit~s. Letters of
thanks ID orgllllizplions and irufividuals will not be accept.

·edfor pllblicotimr.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(USPS 213-1101

Olllo v-., Publlehllljj CO.

Carndlan Polley

in all stories is to Pubfilhed every aftetr10011, Monda~
. be ~. • ~ .._ o1 an em&gt;r thlough ~&lt;ld~y. 111 · Court Street:
In • .-y, .,.. .... ......,... at (7«l) pMt
" "•' -·
Oh&lt;&gt;. ~Pomeroy.

Our main

-ge

OOIK&amp;it

992-2156. . .

SF

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(741t IIHIII.
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Want to?

''

: Come. joip us at Bell Chapel Church
Come worsHip, sing and pray
Want to hliar a wonderful pastor
As he breaks the bread of life
, Want to bear an aqgel singing~
Then just listen to his wife]

Tbe Democrats now find
themselves in a thoroughly
uncomfortable
dilemma
over Iraq.
Back in the early days of
the American invasion,
when things were going relatively badly, Democratic
Senate majority leader
Harry Reid announced that
the war was "lost" and that
America's only recourse
was to pull out. (lbis. of
course. would have been an
absolute poitical disaster for
the .B ush administration. as
Reid no doubt knew and
I!Qpedit would be.) In the
subsequent months and
years, when i:hings there
have gone substantially better, Reid has never retracted
his highly premal:ure conclusion. but it is safe to .say
that it is now "inoperative."
According
to
such ,
sources as 1be New York
Times, which can hardly be
described as having been a
dlrledeaJ:Ia' for the attack,
ac A! Qllcda forces in Iraq
are now thoroughly on the
defensive, and the AI Maliki
~oVernmenl is strengthenlUg its grip on the country. It
fieems likely thai Bush will
achieve his goal of stepping
down as president with the
Iraq problem well on its
way to a solution.
That
leaves
the ·
Democrats in a bit of a pick-

also one of the most
volatile, by virtue of its ethnic and religious quarrels.
To abandon it would verge
on economic suicide.
It is not surprising, then,
'William
that at the moment lhere is
Rusher
no settled Democratic poli·cy on Iraq. If the Democrats
win in November•.the cooler beads in the party will
le. Whal, exactly. is their presumably prevail and
current policy in regard to endorse a policy not all that
Iraq? It would be out of the · ~ifferent _f~m Bush's question to insist in the I.e., sustammg the current
teeth of the good ~ws from , regimes. i.n Iraq 3!1d elseIraq, that the United States where lD the regton that
should adopt the former support U.S. policy. But
Democratic policy and sim- between now and Election
ply bug out. And, in purely ~Y the Democrats need a
political terms, it would be Middle East policy different
equally difficult for the from Bush's yet n01 obviDemocrats to admit they ously s~cidal - anc4 they
were wrong. reverse their JUSt don I bave one.
position and endorse tbe
For tbe moment. the
administration policy.
Democratic . , answer is
Is there some middle road silence. And I! s hard DOl lo
they could safely take? It's feel !Qat it is probably their
hard to envision what il best bet. Afmc all, Election
might be. Either ~ UJlited Day is. just four and a 'balf
States must insist on pre-- mon\hs away. and ·~ are
vailing, as it is cwrently plea.iy of other issues tbe
doing, or substantially Democrats can seize ·on to
abandon the region alto- emphasize their slwp dif!!ether. And it's bard to fen:nces
with
the
unagine any more disas- Republicans.
trous policy than the latter.
But the American people
The Middle East bas for , are hardly unaware of the
decades been both one of importance of · the Middle
the most critical ~ on Easl, and of America's stake
Earth, thanks to its indis- in that area. ADd they will
pen sable reserves of oil, an4; credit President Bush with

Want lo hear a beautiful choir
As God directs their every song?
Want to join them in singing
· Well, you· re welcome to join along

the wisdom to recognize
these and devise policies
·that take them into account.
Painful as American losses
- · any losses - in the
Middle East may be, they
pale in comparison to those
our country would suffer if
· it lost the capacity to' influence events there.
· We must ne\lec ~ that
there are individual &amp;spots.
and whole nations, in the
Middle East. who despise
· the United States and would
. gladly drive it out of the
region, and depriYe 'll!i of its
oil reserves, if only they
could. Keeping thai . from
happenin_g must be a cardi~ aim of U.S. foreign pol1cy and ougbtto be a matter
of bipartisan agreemen1.
That is wby, despite ~
~nderstandable distasle paF.
usao Oemoorats would fec!l
at having to endorse 11
~epublican policy, the baJt
p~est ,result for the UniU!d
States, and !be fOIIIIIIMt
lot:lg.,run . ooune for ~

Demncnllic Patty, IIIOIIId No
a

Demoa:atic

dec:isioo

'fb

endorse PR:sidliat Btnb~
polic~ 1;'1 IraQ.
'
··
(WtUram Rusller is

:

atJ

accomplislwl multor. fo,...

mer. _publisher of tM
National Review onJfonnq
via . chairma11 • of ~
~rrcan
Coirservatilll!
Uniott.)
t
:

,.,._
Rob Weychert is seeri near a 1884 portrait of Gregor Mendel on display at tne "Gregor Mendel:
Planting tne Seeds of Genetics" exilibit at the Academy of Natural Sciences in Ahiladelpbia June 11.
The 80th anniversaJY of the Mendel Medal, whidh ·is ·given by Villanova University to recognize the
~tibility scientific accomplishment and religious conviction is being mari&lt;ed in 2008. Vlllanova, a
Catholic university, has declared the lilpQOming school year to be "Year of Mender and is sponsoring ·
a tlave1ing exhibit on the genetics pioneer at the Academ_y of Natural SQienJ)es in Phi!~IJmja.

Bible. has attracted more !han
400,QOO visitors since it opened
a year ago.
~Mendel would be horrified to
see the way in which people are
being asked to make a choice
between God and science.ff
Collies said. "Thai's an ~mnec­
essary choice.~
Most people are inclined
both toward . a spiritual side of
human existence and to trust
science as well, said Collins,
author of "The Language of
God : A Scientist Presents
E:videnoe for Belief.ff
Catholics are more likely
than 'other Americans to believe
in evolution. A survey.conducted last year by the Pew Forum
on Religion and Public Life
found 58 percent of'Catholics
believed in evolution compared .
with 48 perc.ent for the nation
as a whole.
·
Influential Cardinal Christoph
Schoenborn of Vienna. who bas
been speaking about evolution
and faith, has affirmed that the
Catholic Church rejects ere-

ationism. Ill a 2007 speecli in
New Yon.. he said that "the first
page .of die Bible ·is not a cosmological treatise .about the
coming ·t o be of the world in six
days.~ He also said that "the
Catholic faith can accept~ the
possibility that God uses evolution as a tool. But he said science alone cannot explain the
origins of lihe Universe.
At Villanova, which serves
about 6.300 undergraduates in
suburban Philadelphia, a twoday symposium .on "Memdel in
the 21st Cen~W)'~ is set for
September. The school, which
already boasts the Mendel
Science Center, will also begin
a campus-wide sustainability
initiative.
In addition, Villanova is sponMendel:
soring ' "Gregor
Planting the Seeds of Genetics~
through Sept. 28 at the Academy
of
Natural
Sciences
in
Philadelphia. The national trav,
eling exhibit uses interactive displays to show how Mendel
determined the laws of heredity.

and where science pas gone
since then - from the discovery
of DNA to modem-day genetics.
Mendel's research literally
grew from 28,000 pea plants in '
the garden of his abbey in what
is now llhe· Czech Republic. His
glasses. microscope, slides,
joumals, gardening tools and his
own notated oopy of "On the
Origin ·Of Species" - the semi,
oal book on evolution by
Charles Darwin - are included
in the exhibit.
Mendel's work was not recognized until after he died and
many of . his personal effects
were . not saved. He presented
his findings, in I 865 but they
were largely overlooked until
other scientists essentially
replicated them at the turn . of
the century.
"The world wasn't guile
ready for what he had discovered," said Jacquie Genovesi,
senior diR:otor of education at
the Academy of Natural
Sciences. "What he discovered
was. pretty amazing."'

ality is a disorder and is a leader
in the campaign to persuade the
Legislature to prohibit same-sex
unions.

Demas said no decision had
been made on whether to
appeal the ruling , wbich she
said appears to push tbe charitable immunity law "to the
very limits.'·
Patterson suffered several
broken wrist bones when she
fell on ice in 2005 while picking
up her 17-year-old son from a
you¢ meeting. She sued, claiming llle church had failed to
maintain the driveway.

stated clerk of the PCUSA.
Opinions differ about the.
cause for the decline, including
controversies over homosexuality, low birth rates, an aging
white population and a societal
move away from instilutions in
general. Some congregations
also have lefi for a niore conservative Presbyterian denomi·
nation .

AI&amp;"UIC'

~ : Wam to be welcomed wilh open anns
c: By souls with loving heaJts today~

The Demo~ats' dilemma on Iraq

I .. I

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LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

r....

BY KATHY IIA11ESOH

.., Are · you feeling discontented and
:depressed?
~ Want to feel the tfoly Spirit~
' .Want to be fed wilh the Word~
~ This is the place to hear iL

. Today is Friday, June 27, the I 79th day of 2008. There
are 187 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in ~tory: On June 27. 1957, more
diM SOO people. wen: killed wben Hwricaoe Audrey
slammed through o6astal Louisiana and Texas.
.
. On this date: In 1844, Mormon leader Josepb Smilh and
bis llmther, Hyrum, were killed by a mob in Carthage, Ill.
Thougbl for Today: "'The highest pwpose is to have no purpose at all" -John Cage, American composer ( 1912-1992).

1

rum

·•'

TODAY IN HISTORY

I

Friday, J'~ 27, zoo8

,\SSOO\ATED PRESS WHfli'R

PHILADELPHIA As a
1911H:eotury Augustinian friar,
~t Christmas, all the ods
Gregor Mendel was expected to
Just loved to pass his place
pursue his groundbreak.ing
"The ligbtning Man's been busy~
genetics research with the same
lbey'd say with a smiling fare.
passion be reseived for his religious studies.
All those who knew him, loved
Combining those disciplines
For Harold was a friend
isn't popular today. Vdlaoova
To strangers as well as others
Univers1ty, an Augustinian
We're blessed to have lrnown him. .
Roman Catholic college, is hying to cban?e that by higbligbt,
Now, he liked to kid &lt;iround
ing Mendel s work. .
And tease you when he could
The school will declare the
He was like a big, jolly clown
"Year of Mendel~ slalting Ibis
His intentions were always good.
fall and is sponsoring an exhibit
on his work at the Academy of
We'll miss that smiling face
·
Natuml
Sciences
in
Behind the wheel of that white van
Philadelphia. The effort compleBut we' II never forget the kindness ·
ments an awaro Villanova bas
· Of our friend. the Lightning Mao.
given since 1928,
Mendel
Medal, to scientists wbo balance
When I see a stOliD cloud coming
religious coilYiction and scien,
Witb ligbtoing in the sky
tific progress.
I'll imagine that God chose Harold
usaint Augustine .t alked
To be the lightning guy.
about the pursuil of ... knowJ,
edge and truth," said the Rev.
And someday we ' ll meet again
Kail Ellis, dean of ViHanova 's
When we, too. cross Jordan's shore
College of Liberal Arts and
We'li see our dear friend Harold
Sciences. "Certainly the sciAnd rejoice with .him once more.
eooes (are) a key part of our
-Donna Backus
knowledge and our ability to
function in the world .~
Tbis year's medal Fec-ipient,
the Rev. George V. Coyne,
difected
the
Vatican
The sun is God smiling
Observatory for 28 years until
The moon is God sleeping
retiring in 2006. An astronomer
The rain is God crying for all
and astrophysicist, Coyne
The lightening is His voice, tough
pointed to the very existence of
But yet so sweet
the 'observatory as evidence
The lhunder is when He is angry with us. that the church sees faith and
science as compatible. ·
He tries so hard in His various ways
"The same God that created
TQ get us to live like Him
the universe that I study as a
He'd give us all a chance if we let him
scientist is the God who spoke
He gives us warnings in so many ways
to the Jewisb people of old."
Of how life would be without Him
he said.
And bow life would be with Him.
But shrill voices from both the
scientific and religious commu:,, Life withoul Jesus, how bleak and how nities have created a tense clijJreary
.
mate for researchers in the
· ~ Oh the thought of it fills me with fear
United States, ~aid Francis
;:, We need Jesus day and night
.
Coilins, outgoing director of the
;: And throu~ the year .
'National Human Genome
For if we bve fur Jesus, not Satan, Jesus Research lnstitule and recipient
:.wtll cheer.
. . of the Mendel Medal in 1998.
Extremes in the debaie can be
"~~ I think. of God as a ~t
Seen in recent ·books by atheists
•; Trying to teacb us nght from wrong
who exooriate faitb and in the
:: ¥k doa:t usually like it but if we listen new Creation ' Museum in
:.;: We wiU always eud up happy and·
Petersburg, Ky., CoDins said.
::: Singing a song.
The museum. which advoeates a
:• -Manila Panoas
literal interpretation of the
.~ D--'-~

BobW-ty

''

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~ ·

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L

M

Page As

FAITH • FAMILY

·Lightning Man

Obama impresses Jaith leaders'

Steve Slrang tnew the
ground rules for the recent
meeting · between Sen.
Band: Obama and a flock
of evangelical, Catholic and
liberal Proreslant leaders.
. The io¥itatioo to the
Chicago pthering stated,
""'bi.s is an off-the,record
(no media) time lOt' questiooing and listening, wi.th
oo e~oo of endorse-

.

Robert, the service leader, led by the
Lord
.
Pastors Skaggs and Woodyard, too
.. Wtll keep your eyes and ears wide open
. ·· As they bring the wold to you
This little church is so alive with the
spirit
You 'II feel it wben you enter in
"(ou 'II get so engrossed in the service
You 'II want to come again
Everyone is treated so nice
And welcomed warmly too
No hypocrites, and no judging
lbey'll sincerely welcome you

" So if your soul needs uplifting
And you're feeling down and blue
. . Think about stoP.ping .by sometime
We hope you will too

~

, Wanttn?

- 8ooaie Stepll
. QIUipelis

Religious Briefs
Archdiocese

intervenes
MINNEAPOUS (AP)
The Archdiocese of St. Paul
and Minneapolis has told a lib- ·
era! Roman Catholic church in
Minneapolis that it can't b&lt;ild
its annual gay pride prayer ser,
vice ·because the event goes
against the teachings of the
church .
St. Joan of Arc Church bas
held the prayer service for sevend years in conjunction with
the annual Twin Cities Pride
Celebration. The archdiocese,
however, suggested that the
church hold a upeace ff service
with no mention of rights for
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.
"That descriptor (LGBT) was
not possible on church property.
We suggested they shift . it,
change the nature of it a little
bit, and they did," archdiocese
spokesman Dennis McGrath
said. "The reason is quite simply because it was · a LGBT
pride prayer s«Vice, and that is
really inimical to the teachings
of the Catholic church.~ ·
Officials with the Catholic
Pastoral Committee on Sexual
Minorities, an · independent
coalition promoting acceptance
of .g ays in the C;uholic church,
said they consider the action an
attack by Arohbisbop John
Nienstedt, who took the belm of
the archdiocese in May.
Nienstedt bas said homosexu-

Non-members
can't sue
NEWARK. N.J. (APJ - . A
woman injured in a fall al a
church where her teenage son
was a member cannot sue
because she iJ;. still considered a
beneficiary ofits mission and as
a result the church is covered by
a state law protecting nonprofit
organizalions. an appellate
panel ruled.
The 2-0 decision reversed a
trial judge's ruling and ordered
that Joan Patterson's lawsuit
against a Somerset County
church be dismissed .
The appellate court said the
Liberty Corner Presbyterian
Church is protected from such a
negligence case by the state's
Charitable lmmunily Act even
though the mother was not a
church member. ,
'"In choosing to permit him to
attend Liberty Corner, she benefited from the religious. spiritual; moral, and ethical education that her son was receiv ing ," the panel decided.
"Therefore. for the purposes of
the act. Mrs. Patterson is a beneficiary under the language of
the statute, thu s making Liberty
Corner _im~un~. from liability
for her IDJunes. .
Patterson lawyer . Vivian

·Decline reported

Groups wiD
drop lawsuit
s:c.

LOUISVILLE. Ky. (APJ COLUMBIA.
(AP)
Presbyterian
Church Two groups that support
The
(U.S.A.) suffered its worst Christian students and organizaannual membership decline in tions al colleges say they will
decades last year.
drop a lawsuit against the
The Louisville-based denom- University of Soulh Carolina
ination reported 2.2 million over how it allocates student
active and confirmed members activity fees. .
·in 2007, a loss of 57 ,57 2 memThe Alliance ~fense Fund
bers and a 2.5 percent decrease · Center for Acaderruc Freedom
from 2006. It's the denomina- and the Christian. Legal Society
tion's largest membership loss say the university has agreed to
in terms of numbers since 198 I work. with them lo adopt new
·and the steepest percentage rules on dividing the fees. The
. loss since 1974. when it fell groups represented the uruversi·
2.7 percent. ..
. , .
ty"s Christian Legal Society
The church has steadily been chapter.
losing members since peaking
University spokesman Ru ss
at 4 .25 million in the mid- McKinney say s the school will
. 1960s.
not pay out any money until
"Any decline in membership the new guidelines are in
is a disappointment, to be sure. place.
. .
because .those numbers · repreThe universitv was sued in.
sent members we k.oow and love February. accus.ed of not givwho are no longer part of our ing religiou s groups their
co~gations," said the Rev. share of activity fees that are
Chfton Ktrlcpatnck. who 1s given to other studenl organicompleting a 12-year tenn as z~tion s.

�Ft'dDJ! June 27,2008

.PageA6

FAITH • VALUES
Every mometit matters.- -A Hunger For More
•. a
t-~
," ·'

The Daily Sentinel

. Dlvicllooes was in a hu:try.
He was running late to 'Pick
up llis daughter, and he did
aot want iller to · wait any
In ~cr than necessary. .He'd
oo r aU t!he way from
[cwiqana to Plano, Texas (a
iiii1Nib of Dallas) to get her
from his ell:-wiJe.
.
Orivijng down the six-lane
~ last Sunday morning .
die D:affic was light. It was
easy for DaWd ito nudge the
aooekrator p~ the 40-milefD'-Itoor postel3 speed Hmit.
He waved between cars,
!OiJig ·faster and faster as his
wgc:cocy drove him .. "Gotta get
my gU( 'Gotta get my gi:rl"
GIOed duoo.gh bis mind as be
raood die car d0wn the mad.
No QDe blows how fast
David w.as ·g oing when he
approached a major intersecilllun around ten minutes
lbefare I~ a.m. But the light
·t umed Fed. and David couldn't stop. There were cars in
two of the three lanes going
'h is direction already stopped
far the light. He swerved to
avoid them, but lost .control of
his rented ,Pontiac. The car
bounced up the curb of the
median, struck &lt;1_ fire l)ydrant
and went airborne.
The intersection in which
David lost control of his car
was Custer Road. Custer Road ·
, United Methodist Church sits
less than half a mile from that
interseellion. It was my family's home church before moving to Ohio six years ago.
CR.UMC is a large congregation - almost 2000 people
participate in worship on aver·
age every weekend - with
four worship services.
The middle service ended
around 10:30 a.m., and the
Hart family was headed home
after being at the church since
8 a.m. to attend both Sunday
SChool and worship. Geoff and
Christy Hart. their 12-year-old
daughter Rebe~, and two
foster children were iQ the
family van. They stopped for
the light .behind another car.
· When i.t turned green, they
went bMiod ilbe first Gar iotg
the imerse0l:!i0n.
·
AD five of their Jives ended
a few seconds later when
David .J ones' airbome Pontiac
slammed through the Hart's
van's side windows and sent
the van rolling. Witnesses
were horrified by what just
happened. Milton and Tonya
Mize were interViewed by the
Dallas newspaper, and Milton
said. ~lt was kind of like out of
a movie - a minivan flying at
you, end over erid."
'fonya Mire turned to her
children and said, "Close your .
eyes; don't look!"
Milton,
however,
was
trained --4D-Jemergency

.

~

•

...

'

..

'

........

o.rdl fl _,_ Cl:rllt ...,......
v..l.aodt and Want Rd.. Pastoc !_,
. MiUcr: Snday Sc:hool - 10:30 a.m ..
E~ - 7:30p.m.

-"'*'

F .
j AJ f M 'lilllrl!nu:de 'J ..
Loop 'Rd off Ne..- Lima Rd . Rutllllld;
'Setvioes.: Sun 10:00 am. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
tburt . 7:00 p.m.,Pa&amp;or Many R. Huttot

Assembly of God

N'

Lllcrty ,.
rl Gad
P.O. Box 467 , Dudding l...ane. MilliOn,
W.Va., Pastor: Neil Tennant, Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m. ·

Baptist
,..,...,F-llapliaiClowrdo

PUtor: Aoyd Ross ,Sooday School9:30to
10:30 am, Wursbip service 10:30 ro II :00
am. Wed. prell!:hing 6 pm

dte Seeds of GoocJne.

Bkssed are the pure
in heart; for they
shaJJ see God.
Matthew 5:8

1 5 1 MBapti1t Cllurth
Sunday School - 9:30am, Preaching
Service lO:fu, Ewening Scrvi~;e
1:00pm, w..t...day Bibk Study 7,{)() pm,
. Puwr.
.
~ ...... Ciooodo
Steve Little, Sunday School: 9:30

r-.:
llll, MorniJ:18

Wonhip: 10:30 am,
Wrochrsday Bible S~y 6:30pm: choir
pr8l:lice 7:30; youth ""' Bibk Buddies
'6:30p.m. nm. I pm book study
.......... Cioordo(,.,..)
570 Gntnt St., Mitldlopon, Sunday IC!tool
- 9:'30 am., Worship - 11 a.m. and 6 p.m..
'Wodne&amp;da)' Service! - 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
FJiii
·RodoadFintllopdstChun:lo
SUDday ~hoot • 9:30 a.m., Wriip 10:45 a.m.
r-roy Flnt lloplill .
~or Jon Bmc.kert, East MAi~ St.,
Suoday Scb. 9:30am. Worship 10:30 am

l'lnl Sotdllen ......
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Sunday School 9:30a.m., Worship-9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
WC!dncsdaf Scrvii."C's - 7:00 p.m.

flnt ....... Churd&gt;
Pastor: Billy Zuspa~~ 6th aDd Palmer St,,
·Middleport. Sunday Schoo! ~ 9:15 a.m ..
Worship - 10: 15 a.m., 7 :00 p.m ..
Wednesday Service-7:00p.m.

lloda&lt;l'lnllllpllll
Pastor: Ryan Eatoo , pa5tor , Sunday
School · 9:30 ~t .m .. Won;hip ~ 10:40 a.m ..
6:00 p.m .. Wednesday Scrviceli - 7:00
p.m .

- ••llaptiot

Pastor: John Swanwn. Sunday School lOa.m ., Worship .. 1!'1.m ., 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services-7:00p.m.
~ - U-Iloplilt

Pastor. Dennis Weaver Sunday School·
9:45 a.m., Evening•
6 :30 p.m.,
Wedoesday Services · 6:30p.m.

.,...c....a

a.m•
G~at Bend. Route 124. Racin~ . OH .
PasiOr: Ed Carter, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m ., Sund.ay Worship . lO:lO a.m ..&amp;. 7
pm; WeOne~y Bible Su.ldy · 7:00p.m.
Old.....,. Fne Wllllapdll Clltrdt
28601 St . Rr. 7. Middlepon. Sunday
Servir:c: - 10 a .m .. 6:00 p.m .. Tuesday
Scrvloes~,{)()

._..,...c.....,
St. Rt. 1-'3 just olf Rt . 7. Pastor: Rev.
• James R. Acree, Sr.. Sundly Unified
Service, .Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m.•
,Wednesday Scrvioes -7 p.m.

M!Jrill~~tfilllll ~lrlrli141Uf ll'OIWD j,;;,.lo 11« lbt world
Dm Jmit.t/11(/ etmi}Nl.!llifm lll'f lbt

·h it llll,{ol1rl~'. lbt 11101'/d i.m ysc -.,.

Vk.W-yllllpUIII 1 I

&amp;.11x

Railroad St.. Ma5011. Sunday School - 10
a.m ., Worsh ip • II a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wcdllcsday Services • 7 p.m
IF-

Jltco~Jt;lo!Pi!Woods.SuodaySdtODI , JO

,

: MI.--..

A Main St., Middlt:pon. SUoday
~ · \~--9:!0ua .• Wonhip- IOAS Lll.
I
lt&lt;v. Mi&lt;WJ L'lboq&gt;ooo, lr. _.

Members of the MLS and REALl'OA"
Pick up a color Brochure!
21 6-East Second St. • Pomeroy
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161 Mulberry Ave.. Pomeroy, 992-51198,
Pastor: Re\'. Waller E. HeiDZ. Sal. Coil.
4:45-S:I5p.m.: Mass- 5:30 p.m.• Sua.
Coo. -8:.t5-9:15 a.m.,. Sun. Mall - 9:30
a.m., Daily Mall - ·8:!0.a.m.

h .....

-

~: 30 a.m .. Wor*ip -

~ 7:30p.m .

' _ylServices · 7

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- C i o n l l ola.lol
33226 Cbildml's Homo Rd, .........,., 011
Cont11c1 74CJ.441- 1296 Suday .momina
10:00. Sun morDiDI Bible study:
following Wot'5bip, Sua. eve ·6:0C). pm,
Wed bible 1tudy 7 pm

-

31161!.- St.•~. S""!kY Sdloo1
llMy Budwist. II :00 a.m. ~t.;v.

'

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Pastoc Bob Robimoo , SUtldly School - I0
a.m., Worship- 9 a.m.

lidw;RIPayat

Holiness

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Sunda). Servke-7 p.m. .

M'

310S7 SIIOI: ~ 32S.~:aaatvlle. Puoc
Benjamin Crawford , Stmday acbool : 9:30

212 W. Main St., Suoday Scllool.- 9ol0
a.m., ·Worship· 10:'30 a.m., 6 p.m. ,
Wedae5day Services - 7 ,p.m.
.

Harrisonvillt Road. l'ioaoc . Cbarlol
McKenzie, Sunday · 5cltoo1 9:30 a'm .,
Wonbip - II a.m .• 7.00 p.m._, Wcdfieeday

. U'1C t i · ~atOirtll
5th and Main. Paitor: AI Hutaol,
Cbltdrens Director; Sharon ·s.yrc, Tem
Dilector: DOOger VauJban, Suaday School
· 9:30a.m., WorshiP., 8:15,10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m.. Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Senicc- 7:00 p.nL

Pa~:

___

p,..

__.,

'

-

7

·- c . .

Zioo~dl~

llylel

Sww••

-~

·-c

Suociay Sl;hooi· 10 a.m .. WOBhip - 9 a.m .

_,

· 9:30a.m., Wonhip • 10:45 a.m,. 7 p.m .,
Thundi.y Bibk: Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

7

Latter-Day Saints

,i r U 1 a.rsiiCIIrllt
Minincr: Tom ·Ruayon, 395.SI Btadblll')'
Road. Middlepon. Sunday Sohool · 1&gt;.30
· a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m .

PastOr: John Gilmort, Sunday School- 10
a.m., ·Worihip • 9 a.m., Wcdoelday ,
Services- 10 a.m.

" - UfeCAtoler
''Full-Ooiipel Church" , Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Setood Ave. Masoo , 7735017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesday 1 pm

CaUUIIIIf
B
Carmel &amp;:. Buhao R.ds. Racine. Ohio.
Pastor: John Gilll'l(:R , Sunday School 9:4S a.m., Worship - t-1 :00 a.m. , Bibk
Study Wed._7:30 p.m . .

A•..t• GrM:e R.F.I.
923 S. Third Sl., Middleport, Pastor lercsa
Davis, Sunday ser.,ice , 10 a.m ..
· Wednesday servlce. 7 p.m.

Paster. John Gilmore, Suftday Scboo1 - II

l.on&amp; Bonom, Pastor. Ste,·e Reed, Sunday

am., Worship~ 10 a.m.

Eoa1Le4alt

Scbool • 9:.30 a.m. Worship • 9:30 _•. m.
and 7 p.m., Wednc~y • 1 p.m.. Friday ·
fellowship service 7 p.m.

Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School 9a.m .• Worship - 10 a.m., lst Sunday
every month cweniric service 7:00p.m .;
Wedllelday- 7 p.m.

Pastor: Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 1 p.m ., Wednesday- 7 p.m

---

1.-ni.CIIFFntMt:d S! o.rdl
Pastor: Glenn Rowe , Sunday Scbool 9:30 a.m., Worsbip - 10:30 a .m. and 6
p.m..WedDesday Service 7:00pm.

'1"-&gt;PWIICioordoofCIIrW
Instrumental. W011ihip Service - 9 a.m.,
Communion - 10 a.m .. Sunday Scbool •
10:15 a.m .• Youth-' ':30 pal Suociay, Bible
StudyWedneoday7pm

ftoCionllfiiCIIrlol oll-.:Doy-

St. R.t. 160, 446 62-47 or 446-7486,
S.nclly School 10:20~11 a.m., Relief
SocietyiPriesthOod ll:OS-12':00 aooa,
Sac-rament Serwicc · 9-10:1.5 a.rl!'·•
7

F-MGooptiC-

-c~c­

-

~~.lst,_, • 7p.m.

-CionlloiCSunday Scbool - 9:30 a.m., Wunbip lmd
COmmunion - 10:30 a.m .. Bob J . Wen},
Minisaer

-7:00p.m .• Youth ~ice-7:00p .m .

"J OMa

.,_,.,He&gt;. Larry Lemley: Sunday Sohool

p.m .. Wednesday Ser'lces -,7 p.m.

AaiiSinet c..lrll
398 Ash St., Middleport-Pastors Marl:
Morrow &amp; Rodne;,o Walker Sunday
Scbool - 9:30 a.m .• Morning WOrship 10:30 ll.m. &amp;. 7:00 pm. Wednesday Service

William K. Marshall. Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m., Worsb.i.p • 9:15 a.m..
Bible Study: Monday 7:00 pro

r.sur.

75 Pad St., Middleport. ..,_, Doug
Cox, Sunday ScOOol - 10 am. Won~ · ·
10:45 p.m., Sul1ay Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wedlesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Puoeroy. Harrisonville Rd. (Rt.l43),
Pastor: Roger WatiOn;· Suflday School 9:30 a.m .. Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00

...._.w.......,cft1er

39782 St. Rt. 7, 2 mile&amp; south of Tuppers
Plains. OH . Non-denominational wirh ,
Col*mporary Pn.itie &amp;: Wonhip . P~tstor
Rob Batber, Anoc. Pastor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Betty Fulks . Sundll)'
services: JO am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
Ufe ClaSRs, Wed &amp; Thur night Life
Groups at 7 pm. Thurs morning ladies'
Life Group at 10. Outer Limits Youth Life
Group on Wed, C\'cning from 6:30 to 8:30.
V:sit us ooline at www.bett:elwc .org.

Putor: Rick 8011111C, SIUlday School 9:30 a.m ., Worship - 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
5enrices 7 p.m.

-y

w....,_ ....

"-

Brian Duabam, Worship - 9 :30

--liprilp

- -Gnft--~

lllllp Clooodo -~
Pastor:Bruce Teny, Sunday Scbool -9:30
a.m.
Wor&amp;hip - 10:30 a.m., 6 :30 p.m,
WC&lt;jneoday Servia:s - 6o30 pJ1) .

ct-"""1"•'

o1 cluilt
Portld-Racinc Rd ., Paslor; Jim Pruffitl.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., WoBhip ·
10:30 a.m., Wednesday Services - '7:00
pm.

Pastor: ·Dewayne Studer, $mJday Scbool . 9:00 a.m ., Wor&amp;bip - 10 a.m. , ·youth
. Fcllmwhip, Suac:lay - 6 p.m. ~y Suaday
worship 8 am lenni Dunham

112 mile off Rt. 32S, Pallor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Suaday Scbool. • 9 :30 a.m ..
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:l0 p.m ..
Service • 1:30 p.m.

.....

a6

a.m., Snday School- 10:35 a.m.

Leading Creek, Rd., Rudmd, Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King, SUI"!Cby lichool· 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday . worship -7 p.m., Wednesday
prayer IIJ!Ieting- 1 p.m.

ICoMC-ofOktiO
WorshiP • 9:30 a.m., S•odly Sobool •·
10:30 a.m.,Putor-Jcffrey Wallace, Inaod
. 3rd SUIIday

~~F-.t.ip

(Non-denominational fellowship)
Meetina: in the Meig:.; Middle Scbool
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewan
10:00 am - N0011 Sunday: lnfonnal
Worship , Children's ministry

Sunday Scbool · 9 a.m .. Worship- 10 a.m.

~...-a.,.~ ·

33226 Childreo's Home Rd .. Sunday
School - II a.m., Wunhip- IO..m.• 6 p.m.
-noldly Servm . 1

'I

I'WIC...,.

a.m., Sunday worJhip - ID-.30. a.m. a: 7
p.m., Wcdoesday prayer ecrvQ:- 7 p.m.

_..,._Cionll,~

Pastor: Waynr Dunlap. State Rt . 681 .
Thppen Plains, Sun. Wonhip: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm,. Wed . Bible SI:IJd.y 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Bob ltobin1011 , S•ftdly Scbool - 9
a.m., Worship- 10 a.m .

--~

, _ _ ola.lol

&amp;.u~oe~c--HyChur&lt;b

lltaOt (IV
I I)
Pastor: Brian Dunham, SUIIday School 9:10a.m., Wonbip ~ 11'!00 a.m.

Hya.dl

Puto&lt; s.... Tomek, Maio s.....
Rutlaod, SuOOay Worlhip-10:00 a.m ..

Minister: Lany Brown, Won:hip • 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:)0 a.m., Bible
Study -.7 p.m.

Mil M1 t.Camatulty Ch.r-ck
.575 Pearl St., Middlepon , Pasto~: Sam
Anderson . Suriday School 10 a.m ..
Evening- 7:30 p.m . . Wed~ y Service l :30p.m.

Putor. JCci,y Wood, Suaday School- 10

Lutheran

a.m.. Worihip - ll a.m.Wedaeriday
SenY:cs 6 pm: 1bur Bible Study 7 lllll

'IIL,.J II wa..rc.
· Piae Grove, WorWp 9:00 a.m., Su.:lay
Scbool - 10:00 a.m. Pastor:
7

ClonllofCIIrlot
Comer of St . Rt . 12-4 1: B.-.tbury Rd .,
Mini-lloog Sbambli,n,
Miai-.
Bill
Su.oday Scbool - 9:30a.m,
Worship • 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
. p.m .,Wednc:sday Services -7:00p.m.

Ambcr,cr.

c-..u..Men

Waluut aad Henry Sts., Ravenswood ,
W.Va .• Pastor: David RuueU, Suaday
Scbool - 10:00 a.m., Wonhqt - 11 aa,

_ , _ _ ,Otto!
claJS,' 9 a.m. Suaday: ,wonblp 10 a.m.

Sl. Pllll·' 1 wa.n:ll
Sygmooo 4t Seoood St. Pomcmy,
Suo. SdiooJ ~ 9-..45 ~.m., Worabfl· II a.m.

Sooday; worship 6:30 pm Suadl.y: Bible
cWs7pmWed.

Uaited Methodist
~ lhllllll M

hilly-? pa.

" ::a tCM!a

1 0'

-p

-y

c:;o. Rd. 63.

9o30 ..... Tues . 6:30
--BililoSiudy.

_ _ Ciooodo ...... - -

-Citao&gt;dC-

Row 689. Albany. Rev. Lloyd Grimm.
Suada~ Schoql 10 ·am; worhsip
iC'I'Vict II am,c:wcning iCJ'Vict 7 ~ · Wed .

Sund.ay school · 10 a.m .. Worship - II
a.m .. Wednesday Ser\-ice - 7 p.m.

,..ror.

. , , . 1 ta.n:tltl*t'

~~Cluster,

Alfn:d, Pastor: Jim
·C4nitt, SuDday -sdlool - 9:30 un.,
Wonltip- lla.m .. 6:30p.m.

...•,.....

9:30 a.m .•Wonhtp- 10:30 a.m .. 6:30 p.m ..
Wc-dneiday Sen-ices. 7 p.m .• .

~

Pastor:DI\'Id GNcr,

.-. IO:JO a.m ., '7:00 p.m., • · '
s.vm l:OO p.m.

I

PMmr. Jim Corbin, Wonbip - 9 a.m .• ·
Silldly Scbool - I 0
s.:wiFzl- 7 p.m.

;

0

~

a.m. • 'lbunday

Denz.il Null, Wonllip- 9:30a.m.

~CionllolllttNP

I

f

Humer. Sunday School- 10 a.m ~. Evening
7:30 p.m .. 'J'uesda)' a: Thurs. - 7:30p.m .

t

Martindale. Sondlly Sc:llool • 9:30a.m ..
WorshLp . 10:30 11.m .. Wedne!oday Scrvi~
7 p.m.
7

r"'"""' Bible c•urc~~
Letart . W.Va . Rt . 1. Pastor: Brian May.
S~nday School. 9:30a.m.. Wor!ibip - 7:00
p.m., W~dne!&gt;day Bible Study· 7:00p.m.
Faltb Felmnhip Crusade for CltrW
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens , Scrvicr:
Friday. 7 p.m.
Cal\'ary Bl.blr Cburdl

Pomeroy Pike . Co. Rd .. Pastor: Rev. '
Bl11cliwuod. Sund~ty School-9:30a.m_
Worship 10 : ~0 a.m .. 7:30 p.m .. '
Wed~ y Service - 7,:30 p.m.
Stiven\iltr Commuaity Cblll'dl
Sunda)' SchooiiO:O(I 11m. Sunda)' Worship .
11 :00 am , Wednesday 7:00pm Pastor:
Bry11n &amp; Mi~)' Dllile)'

Rt,Joldoa uteC!nm:ll
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middlepon. Pastor: •
MiL:~ Foreman . Pastor Emeritus Lawrence ,
Fcnman. Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesday Scrvic~~ - 7 pm.

cun.. ta-Cbtildl
Cliflon. W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m .. :
Worship • 7 p.m.. Wedne!iday ~itt - 7
p.m.
37~~ George s Creel; Road . Gallipolis. OH
Pllilor: Jamie Wireman. Sunday Sj::nrlces - ~
10 :30 a.m. Wedn~sday --7 p.m. Thursday :
Prayer &amp; Pra1SC" ill fi pm_ CIM~S for all ,
ages e\· ~r)' Sunday &amp;. Wednesday.·
www.thearkchurch .net

FuH Goapol Cbtudl
of ..e Livlq Savior

RtJ38 . Antiqui:y. Pastor: Jesse Morris,
Servicn: Sar.urdlty 2:00p.m.
~m COIIU'IHmity Cllurda

Back of West Columbia. W. Vlwm Lieving
Road. Pastor: C h~trle s Roush (304 ) 6752288. Sunday School 9:30 a.m . Sunday
evening service 7:00 pm. Bibly Study
Wednesday service 7:00 pm

HohitoltCitrislluFello._CIIuJo&lt;ll
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday Schoolto am. Sunday Church s-ervice - 6:30pm
Wednesdii y 7 pm
ltestontlott Cltristilll F - ,
936S Hooper rtoad. Athens. Pastor:
. Lonnlc Coats. Sunday Wmhip 10:00 am.
Wednesday: 7 prn

n..-viHeolioaMlolatries
St. Rt. 1U t.aq,Yille, 011
Full Gospel, Cl Pastors Roben &amp; Robena
Musser. Sunday School 9:30 am . .
Worship 10:30 am - 7:00 pm, Wed.
Service 7 :00 pm
Tea~~~ Jtlllli Mlailtries
Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Cenrer Gymnasium . Pastor Eddie Baer.
Service! -every Tuesday ~:30 pm

Pentecostal

............ """"bl'·

Pastor: SL Rt. 124. R!ICine-. Tornado Rd .
Sun.day School · 10 a.m .. E\•ening 7
p.m .. Wednesday Ser\'ices - 7 pm.
7

Presbyterian
Honiooovllle Prnbyteriae Clotrdo
P11stor: Robert Croll'. Worship · 9 a.m.

Pastor: James Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m .. worship servitt 11 am.

Seventh-Day Adventist ,
Se'-mth-~dVmtkt

Mulbc-rr)' Hts. Rd .. Pomrro~· - Saturda.~ ~
~n· i ces: Sabbath School - 2 p.m ., ,
Worship , 3 p.m.

United Brethren
Mt. Hermen United Breduft
Ia Chri5t Cllurc:h
Tu.l~ Com mumt~ 36411 Wickham Rd . ·
Pa~tor: ~~~r Mortindale. Sunday_School · :
9JO a.m.. Won-hip _- IOJO a.m.. 7:00 ;
p.m .• Wedne s da ~ Services - 7:00 p.m..
Youth .group meeting ~nd &amp; 4th Sundays :/
·
7 p.m.
Eden U~ Brethren in Cltrisr
"
Stale Route 1~J.. betv.-een R«d~'· i lle 4.: ·
Hocliingpon. Sunda~ Scllool · 10 .a.m .. :
Sundll.) WorshLp - I I :00 a.m. Wednesda ) •
Sen'LCt'~ • 1:00 p.m.. Pastor- M. Adam:
Will

Sih·er Rid~ - Pastor linda Datne'Wood.
Sunday Scbool • 9 a .rit .. Worship Se"·itt
10 a.m . 2ad and 4dl Sllftday

7

~- - 10o30u•.

·

F'. . Go9ti U(cl:ll

3304S Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy

Own:h of tbe Nar.am:c , Pas10r: Russell
Carson . SUDday Scbool - 9:30 a.m ..
Wcnbip 10:45 a.m .. 7 p.m., Wc1laday
Services ~ 7 p.m.
'

,_

·\·...-:o.~

cw

..,_, Lcooan1 PoweU. Sut&gt;day Sohool ·

~~

Suoday Scliool • 1&gt;.30 ...... WOnlip .-

Folllo Gooptl Cloordo
Lon,g 8~ Sunday ~~ - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7: 30 p.m .

pr&amp;)'Cf meetill8 7 pm

' ...,c ....-

.

~c
I;Qardl
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.. Worship ·
10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Nazarene

Mt..OMU...P'' 015
Oft' 124 bebiod W.U...vil~ . l'uol(o He&gt;.
IWpt! Spino, Suaday Sohool • 9ol0 am,
. Wonbip - 10:30 .a.m .• 7 p.m., nu.srtay
Srnioes - 7 p.m.

-·Cionllol~lo

W.va .•

School - 9:30a.m.• Wonbip - 1.0:30 a.m..
7:30p.m.

Toni.Cioordo
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .•
Wonltip- 10:30 aa.

New Haveu, Richard ~. Paat01.

Milaioo

Ha.: c
flit) Cln:rdl.
Off Rt. 124. Pastor: Edsd Hart . Sunday

Oraad Slftlel, SuOOay School-9:30a.m ..
W...hO&gt;- 10o30 am .. Pas1o&lt; Phillip Bell

7

. Cllrit1i•• Union ·
• .Hmforil,

Symaa~e

1411 Bridgemam. St., SyraL'Uie. Sunday
School · 10 a.m. Evening - 6 p.m .•
~y Service - 7 p.m,

SeMces - IP a.m.

' ._....,..,.,a:

- ..olt'llllll
Suftday iCbool 9:30a.m
Suuday worship
• 10:30 a.m.
no Clooodo oiCMIII " " liitersection 7 and 124 w, 'Eva'Dselist.:
Dennis S~r~cat, Sunday Bibk Stlldy ·
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10!30 a.m. ud 6:30

·h)..Jaillle

-c.m

Won1Up II a.m. Pukr. ltichard Neue

It 1 . . CUrdl ~Oriat
P"'or. l'llilip Slunn, S-y Sclloolo9o30
a.m .. Worship Savioe: 10:30 a.m .. Bible
Smdy. Wedllelday.6:l0p.m..

r•v..ey'laloonadeCBailey Run Road. Pas1or: Rev. Emmen
RawsoD. Sunday E\'ening 7 p.m ..
lbul'lday Servitt - 7 p.m.

TOW)Ubip Rd., 468C. Sunday School • 9
a.m, Wol'5bip - 10 a.m .. ~y

eo.-

J'-'&lt; Plain&amp;. ....... Mike Moono, Biblo

_p:a., W i

1' ......
Putor: Heleu Kline, Coolville Church,
M1iD A Fifth St., Swi. Sc:bool - 10 a.m ..
Wonhip - 9 a.m., Tiles. Serwices- 7 p.m.

O.Sraftlw i 5I • ~

Y-

..., Cttum~

" 'blk's Cb.lpel Wesley•

I

Pllltr. Oewayne Srunler, Sllllday School 10 a~ .. Wusbip- II ~.m .

7

c

2480 Second St .. Syracuse. OH .
SWl. SchoollO am. Sundy night 6:30pm
Pastor: Joe Owinn
ANew hal
I
(hi~ a.m.) Harrisonville .
Pastcmo Bob ""' Kay Morshall.
Sunday Scrvicc.2 p.m.

a.m., Wonbip · 10:30 a.m .. 33103 Hilaod
Rd. Pomcmy

EtNseotJII
a ,01rc11

QweQ

s~

Puto&lt; Arland Kirlg, S-y Scltool • 9:30

&lt;\,l p, ~.- .....
Bab\Wmaou6-;"""""!P 10:25 .....

Cooh·ille Road. Pastor: Rev. Cbarle5

Other Churches

II F'-

-

C-C-dldle-

9 :30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m .. 6:30
p.m .. Wednesda)' Scnrices- 7 p.m.

SUtldly Sohool • 9of5 a.m.. Wriip · II .
a.m., Wedl'lclday Services - 7:30 p.lll.

p.m .

Pastor: Rev. Cunis R.andolph . SundaY.
School - 9:30a.m .. Woohip - 10:30 a.m ..
Sunday ewening 6 pm
Pastor: George Stadler, Sunday School -

. 1\sNy (Syntulie). Pastor: Bob ltobiJuon.

a.m.,

C..W..lalu j • ......,... Cltllrda
Kingsbury Road. Pastor': Robert \'arlee.
Sunday School - ~:30 a .m.. Wcnhip
Sen·1ce 10 :30 a.m.. Evening Service 6
F-GoapolBtdd Koob . on Co . Rd. 31. Pastor: R~v .
~
Roger wmrord . Sunda y School - 9:30
un. W&lt;mhip- 7 p.Dl .

-C-vldleN~~

cmag.
pd.••'
·lli'IIIIJ.-

Cbwdl of Christ

B

Putor: Jim Corbin . Sunday School • 9

a.p1., Wonhip - 10 a.m., Tuetday Services

. 10

7

9:30 am ., Worship - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wedrinday Servicn- 1 p.m .

'!iw&lt;n- Sl.-

OJ. While &amp;a . ~ St ..l.t. 160, Ptlll:r. PJ.

.Wonbip·-u .......,.

~ CIMlrdl.tO.C Nu.arat
Paster. Jan Lavender, Sunday School

••

10:30 am .• Fim Sunday of Mondl - 7:00
p.m. 5CtYWe

... r '

s-,. -

I

Wonbip - 9:30 a.m., Sunday School •

dey Senioes - 6 :30 p.m ..

1

· J0:-45 IUD.. s-da.y Ewming - 6:00 p.m..

f

m

....... Milo:"'*""·SuodaJ Sdtool · 1&gt;.30

.740-992·7713

· If ye abilk ill Me, tul4 Illy
words abide ill )'IJK, ye sltall
ask what ye will, IIIUI it.sltall
be dolll! lUthi yo..
Job 15:7

'C tc 1

Matlbew

•..

(

Agelleylnc.

, .,.

190 N. Second St.

Middloi'ort,OH I
''1El'ICIES luc.
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l..oca111D!Jfile !lor ttophies,
t

r

.Je . , _ ill llle, .M 111
Full line of _ . , _ ill,.., }e , . ,
Insurance
Products.
. . .}e rrill,#lllllil . .
F'mancilll
Jllll.
Ser•kle8

lie_,._ ....

lk

I

good works and glorify your
FQ!Mr in heaven ."
Matthew 5:16

PomerOy, OH 45769

,,,011 7.-.m-sttt

7411 1121116

-&amp;LOII~E

God so lol'ed the world

Pill'"ICY

W.RIDodln'

•as••

.1-.1.5:7

...... '-

Ltt )IOM1' light so shine befort!
mm, tluJt they may see _
\'OUr

36759 Rocksprings Rd.

1,

214£.. .

Plat~

---

Of

he ga1•e his only
lbe~~otf•M sort...

John 3:16

PD!IIIIOJ

faaMtw tlw , n ~·So I strive always to keep ~

Since 1858
9 Fifth Staat
Coolville, OhiQ
740-667-311 0

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s,r-""' Qooclo oiGM
A,pple- Sealad s.... Putor. He&gt;. Do...
Rosooll, S....tay School .-1 Wonbip- 10
a.m. EweninJ: Services-' 6:30 p.m..

7

SlS N. 2nd St. Midd~port . P.a.~ tor : James
E. Keeiee, Wonhip • IO&amp;.m .. 7 p.m..
VI t rtay Services - ' p.m.

tl:e~ ••,

...... ~&lt;1-"W\'
Q........... JioptiJI)
$R 652 and~ St. Putor., Robm
Gndy, Sllllday """'I 10 am. MoniD&amp;
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a.m .. Wonllip - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Sundly School • 9:30 a.m., Wonhip 10:30 a.m.

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The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
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School - 10 i.m., Evmin1 - 1 p.Dl.,
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873 S. 3rd
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WORSlllP
WEEK
___..,... e.-..- GOD THIS
.__

Friday, June 27, zoo8

This week saw the release of a survey
Ill ttagedies involving fami- .@f 35,000 Americans, the U.S.
,~t;
llies Jike the Harts,- it's easy to 1 Religious Landscape Survey from The
cast jud~t against people Pew Forum on Religion &amp; Public Life.
like David Jones. His sclf«n- Now I don't know that l'in a cynical
Pastor
lercd thoughtlessness w~ person, but for soll)e reason 1 wasn't
Pntor
Thorn
diFeclly responsible.. for tihe surprised to read that large numbers of
Kerry
Mollohan
.accicle.ot that cost five innocent 'Ohristians do not believe that their faith
Wood
people their lives. ill's easy to is the only way to heaven.
Even among Evangelicals, t his
;get ang~y, to want justice, tCl&gt;
..
· proved to be true as 57· percent -of
w.ant
retri~ution
•
But can any of us reaTiy evangelical church attenders said they
detcimine what ,is gust in this :b elieve many religions can· lead to boundaries of safety. If one drinks
eternal life. Of course, surveys are
responst, so be got out 0f ithe sltuallion? DaVid's &lt;JWn Hfe · notoriously misleading., especially well water contaminated with lead or
C8 or DDT ('pick your poison), denycar to see what ·could be done. may SGOn 'b e gver. The 111atura1
when
semantics
are
in
doubt.
For
consequences
of
'his
'
a
ctions
ing that it is foul water does not alter
He was not alone . In the midst
example, by the word "faith" or "~eli­ the f.act of its presence nor 'quell its
'
h
ave
already
punished
him
of that horrifying event, be
gion,fl do responders· mean various capacity to harm those who unknowwi.tnessed numerous acts of severely. I da :not lknaw him,
rompassion. "lt was beautiful but ( can put mbe~ intQ his ' denominations within ChrisJianity who ingly drink it.
. late tO · differ on some things yet hold fast to
This is no less ,true of spWtual matTile amount . of poople gath- situatiGD. r'\&lt;e '
central
Christian
assertions
(e.g.,
justiretrieve
a
child
before.
r
v.e
ters.
And because this lS true, men and
ered, asking, 'Can l help?' And
tiication
by
faith
in
Jesus
Christ)?
Or
puShed
my
speed
be~ond the
women
everywhere are again and again
pe0ple started pl'llyiog, and
.
are
they
meaning
that
Christianity,
legal
iimits
at
llimes.
I've
even
confronted
with the challenge of Elijah
people started acting."
·
Hinduism,
Islam
and
African
run
.
a
09Uple
of
red
lights.
Nri.
,
on Mount CarmeL "Elijah went before
Another witness, Michelle
Armour. was one cf the l .am oot qualified to ju~e Animistic religions are all different the people and said, 'How long will
you waver between 1Wo -opinians? If
helpers. She rushed over to DaVid J0nes ·or anyone else m sides of the same egg?
But
I
suspect
that
the
Pew
Survey
1his
.Cl&gt;fdea1.
the
LORD is God, follow Him; but if
one of the · young girls who
isn
'
t
far
off
the
mark
(it's
very
efficient
Jesus
said
in
John
8:7:
''If
Baal is God, follow him.' But the peowere foster daughters of the
Hans. The violence of the any of you is without sin,' Jet as a rule). So if American ·Christianity ple. said nothing" (I Kings 18:21 NIV).
collision threw the girl from him be the first to throw a has become as convoluted its all that, J realize that making .claims about the
the . van even though she had stone." Can anyone of us what does it mean ? And does it matter? exclusivity of troth is unpopul!if, but
been wearing a seatbelt. " We throw ·that stone at David? No. Rabbi Gary Huber of the Congregation saying that all religions lead to God
What you and I can do is Beth Ttkvah in Worthington (Ohio) (aside from not even making sense) is a
turned her around and started
learn
(or better, RE-lEARN) says, "Nothing coulj:l be more American cop out.
doing CPR. We were praying
an incredibly · important les- than the idea that we each forge out 01,1r
Making a commitment to · follow
over her."
son:
.
e
very
moment
matters.
~_wn
path':
(reported
by
,Meredi~h
truth takes oyrage arul I wonder if
David Jones did not die in ·
the accident, but he was life- We never know when our lives Heagney of the Columbus Dispatch m folks aren ' t just a wee bit cowaFdly
lighted to a local hospital and may be over. 1 am sure the her article "Most Americans believe about following God. Well, I suppose
remains in critical condition. Harts were expecting decades many religions lead to heaven," June . that people can continue ·in their
ambivalence (at least for as long as
He never did make it to pick more of love, laughter and life. 23, 2008).
Even as Huber lauds open-minded- God continues to tolerate it in a season
Their foster daughters, Raven
up his daughter.
This tragic stoty carries Lucas (five years old) and ness and inclusiveness, it occurs to me of gracefully extending people an.
enough drama by itself; but it Kevinnesha Palmer (six) had that we've rendered moot the role of opportunity to accept His gift of sal vahas an even more personal only Jived with them since faith in the life of Americana if we tion). But truth is truth and if one has
impact on me and my family. March. Those girls were expl- can't possess it with any degree of placed himself at the feet of that truth,
The Harts were our good riencing a stable, loving home confidence and surety. And as you embracing it ana discovering as h~
friends. Geoff and Christy life for the first time in their might suppose, if one has no cQilvic- does so that. it has given him the only
were members of the same lives. They didn't ell:pect it to tion about what one believes, than the assurance for eternal life that can be
Sunday school class that we end. Up to their last tnoment, by-products of faith are eroded away had; then he is not only bound to that
were. We were there to cele- the Harts lived every moment as well . There is no anchor, for truth, ·but he is boond to share that
instance, for morality if it cannot be truth as welL
brate Rebekah's birth. Our two to the fullest.
moored to absolute truth: "right and
David
Jones
got
caught
UJY
This is why · my heart echoes the
younger kids stayed with the
Harts when my wife and I in the moiDt:nt, as well. But wrong" will drift anywhere popular words of. Joshua in Joshua 24:15, " ...
Choose for yourselves this day :whom
enjoyed a week together in he forgot that EVERY opinion takes them.
That same report says that 80 percent you will serve ... But as for me and mr,
Chicago.
·
· moment matters. The only
Even after moving to Ohio, moment that mattered to him of Americans believe that religion is household. we will serve the LORD. '
we stayed in touch. Tbe was when be arrived to pick ·somewhat important to their li:ves -but Obviously my hope is that each reader
Hart's annual Christmas letter up his daughter; but the the . question arises, "Why?" If it's of this article will surrender his or 'her
was a "must-read" for the moment be lost control of his merely because religion gives them heart to the love of the God, manifested
Wood family. The Harts were car, the moment with his some encouragement for every day or in His Son's layin~ down of His life. I
makes them feel good about them- · hope that you will consider trusting
incredibly other-oriented in daughter 11ever arrived ..
Michelle Armour ellpressed selves, why do they really · need reli- Him as your Lord and Savior. But, at
everything they did. Christy
worked part. time at the the truth: "It's like every day is gion? Why not get a dog? Or join a cof- the very least, don't play games. ifGod
church handling logistics for your [ast. I don't thi.rik'-,l an1 fee club? Or read a Robert Frost poem is God.- then follow Him. If you aren't
youth mission trips and choir ever going to forget this day." every night? Of course, it may be that interested in taking such a "raliical" or
Ecclesiastes •3: 11 says, those who believe that each religion is a "close-minded" stance, remember that
tours. Geoff was a board
member of Juntos Servimos, "God has made everything different way .to God ·are simply igno- everyone who sits on the fence is goiqg
a non-profit organization ihat beautiful in its time.. He has rant about the worldviews that they to be knocked off sooner or later onto
organizes mission trips to also set eternity into the espouse.
.
one side or the other. Instead, why don't
Mexican border communi- hearts of men; yet they cannot
"The findings can be taken ... as dis- you "choose this day" to receive Jesus
ti.es. Geoff also went on at. fathgm what 'God has done turbing evidence that Americans dis- as Lordofyourlife. "Jesus answered, 'I
least one mission trip every from beginning to end."
miss or don't know fundamental ani .the Way and the Truth and the Life.
year to help provide food,
I pray that you will take each teachings of their own faiths," said · No ·one comes to the father ellcept.
healthcare, education and moment of eternity that God Eric Gorski, Associated Press writer through Me"' (John 14:6 NIV).
·
housing to those who other- gi 11es you, and make it matter! (in his article ''Believers see more
(Thom Mollolum tuUI llis f,.ily
wise would not have any of
(Kerry BUacl ·is the ptlSior of than one way to eternal life" (June 23, lwve millistered ill solltiirr1 0/do die
those basic necessities of life. .lltlcilte UlliW Metltodist 2008). One can hardly deny that dis- past 1J years tut4 is dulllltlwr of "TTie
On her last birthday, Rebekah Clnmlc, .Bl$ Ellfl SUM in ni.issal of . a truth that we prefer to Fairy l'ale hrables." He il tile pii#OI'
ask.e d that instead of presents, llllciM. Siull«y ....,..,.. is at ignore does not in any way diminish of PathM!fly C01111r11111ity Cluud tUJ4·
she . wanted her friends to ll 11.111. ftA1tw Kerry ain be the fact that it is truth. Nor does igno- . IROJ be reached for comrnerfls or pesmake things for the local ani- rwu:W .a t mcillelllffC@siUf. ranee of truth remove its power ·over lions by e-lflllil at pastordunrl@pathmal shelter instead.
lklllinlc.rtd.)
one should one step too far beyond the waygallipolis.coltl ).

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

www.mydr'lyuntlnel.com

my conscieooe clear befcnl

illlletut; for /My

God and man."

rWfseec;od.

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Page Ail •,The Daily Sentinel
..
PD\HIIE!&amp;!L qw SlfQtAlt'"KiALNMRI'vtsro
FUJUHt

Friday, J~ 27, 2008 ·
Rll PWii"'Q !H w: J9B £YtliWI&gt; II&amp; ¢4ij(fj (ij 4WI

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(:lwdnftHLt;

Public now facing 48-hour cut off; clinical trial show~
participants lost weight wit9-out .adding exercise or diets ...

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Friday, June 27, 2008

J

•

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·oamand soars fOr 'fasficting' diet pill
,•
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J..oc.AL ScHEDULE

........
..oy_..._.......,.
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~POUEFIO't' -A ~tl ·I

1)MS - Thow!ands of callers .clogged
an Ohio company's phone lines trying
to get tl$ breakthrough diet pill.
The remarkable weight loss supplement that has dieters fro}D all
over the country calling is called
Apatrim"', and there are some very
good reasons why people want it.
.
You see, Apatrim starts workiDg on
yoor appetite within minutes after
taking it, dieters don't have to starve
or suffer through intense exercise
and its been ciinically shown to get
·great results.*
··
Participants lost an average of
5 times more weight than those
taking a placebo during the 4-week
clinicaL1 They got these results
taking Apatrim's active ingredient
as directed and without adding
exercise or diets to their daily
routine.*
And people that have Used this
weight loss supplement are singing
its prsises.
"All I did was take it shout 30 minutes before I was going to eat ilnd I
didn't feel bUDgry. It really works
great for me," said Erica Leve~'
Resear'chers believe that Apatrim
can suppress appetite wbich can
mean fewer calories are being CODsumed; this can lead to weight loss.•
Consumers should keep in mind
that there's no substitute for proper
diet and exercise when it comes to
loaiDg weight. Meaningful weight
loss requires consuming fewer
calories than the body burns.

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SPORTS BRIEFS .
.

2008 Meip Flag
.

· Regi~on is currently

open for the 2008 flag footlNlll season to boys and girls
in grades 1-6 beginJJing
*ith ·the 2008-09 school
year. The reglstralioa fee is
$40 per player ;mel $25 for

Los Angeles School of Medicine.

each additional sibling. ·
" The games will be! played
· in September on the
School practice
(ield, andthe final date for

~ill

hal'l! to change their lifestyle and tt starts working on their appetite just minUtes after taking it

#7,060,308. This process enables
Apatrim's manufacturer to put .the
plant's benefits into a pilL
SC!entlstl belieYe Apatrim'B active
ingredient works by blocking ·tlle
hunger signals that are aent from the
stomach to the brain; The brain then
thinks that the stomach is full, causing a reduction in appetite.*

HOW TO GET APATRDI
Initial shipments of Apatrim have
been rushed out to a few select
retail chaius across the country.
CVS!pharmacy and Rite Aid were
among the first stores to snap up the

entire initial production.
calls, ~'ve ~ more people ~ ~
The company hss also set up ~ (N'der .lines will be fully staffed, slid
National Order Hotline just rfo~ / Ken Geis the Manager of Call Center
Apatrim. This enables people thai- Operations.
·.
don't want to flgbt the crowds or run
"Even ~- ~ weren't able to
tlle risk of not llnding it at the store, to take all of the initial calls from people
get Apatrim delivered directly to their trying to get Apatrim we're ready
· homes.
now," said Geis.
Starting at 7:00 am today, Current supplies are Umited so coothe order line will only be open sumers that don't get through to the
for 48-hours. All consumers have . order line in the next 48-hoursor can't
to do is call l-800-7112-8750 and ..find Apatrim at the store will have to.
uk for Dept. API947; orders will be ' ltlait until inore inventory is produced
lllled on ftrst..come, llrst-served Ot more shipments reach the national
basis.
.
chains. •
·
"We're bracing for the nat surge of
www.....,llin.CIIIII

Southern's reserve~~
wins ~ over 'liimble,
Miller, River Valley, and
Eastern. Sophomore Taylor ·
Deem led the pitching oorps
with five wins (5.{1 ecoro)
while slriking out 44 batters
and walking just five. Kyle
'
.
tw~

Cumiingham .won three
games on the mound with 31
strikeouts and three walks,
while Greg Jenkins, also
doing .double-duty as catcher, won two gamesm and
Dustin Salser won one game
&lt;'n the mound. The entire
pitching fOC!ition was !ru!de

up of~.

Eric Buzzard and Dustin
Salser I~ the ·hitting with
over .500 batting averages.
Buzzard had 20 hits in 37 atbat~ for a .541 clip, and
Salser
.
hammered out 17· hits in
32 ttips to the plate for a
.531 clip. Blizzard had ~
.646 on-base percentage;
Salser was .634, and Taylor
Deem was at .617 with 15
hits and a team-high 14
walks. Deem batted .455
overall.
Cunningham batted .452,
Daneil Jenkins was .357,

while brother Greg Jenkins
hit well with an even .500
mark and .600 slugging percentage. Kris Klesiii was
. ~85 , Taylor Lemley, doing
t:me between varsity and
reserve, batted .489, Zach
Manuel was .438, Jessie
Ritchie .324, and Adam
Warden a hot .538.
· Southern defeated River
Valley 4-2 in the openerwith
Jessie Ritchie getting two
hits to lead the way. Next,
Southern defeated Trimble
25-5 as
four Southern players had
three hits apiece - Buzzard,
Deem, Daniel Jenkins, and
Dustin Salser. Jessie Ritchie
and Adam Warden had two
hits each.
Southern • blanked Miller
12-0 behind hard hitting
from Buzzard, Cunningham,
.and Salser with two hits
each. Kris Kleski drew three

BY 8llwl MAHoNrY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

0U baseball

~t

and&amp;:

~~w:!im~. ·o ~~.~ happen is kind of

~camp will begin with
regis!nlion at 8 a.m. at Bob
Wren Stadium and conclude

Five of the first seven .
players selected were freshmen, also an NBA record. It
~~m~k:!yli:~0
was also a big iright for the
Pac-1 0 Conference, which
fhldent·l!tbletes per camp, had five of the frrst 11 picks.
so pre-regiSiration is encourap. Cost is $205.
Rose led die Tiger;&gt; to_ the
.To pre-register, visit nation~ . champ1onsh1p
hap://ohiobobi:ats.cstv.eom/ game 10 his lone. college .
«;amp.s /ohio-camps.html. · season: The Bul!s opted for ,
For oiore information con- the pomt guard s playmaktact Brian Hoskinson at 7 40- ing ability over the scoring
593-1341
or and reboundling of Beasley,
boskinsb@obio.edu
who ranked in the top three
··
in the nation in both cate:
gories.
Rose is the Bulls' firSt No.
l overall selection since
they grabbed FJton Brand in
1999. He's the second

f·!f2

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«

TORONTO (AP) - Scott
Rolen- hit a two·run homer
off . &amp;Iinson Volquez, Jesse
Litsch · pitched eight sharp
innings and the Toronto Blue
. Jays beat the Cincinnati
Reds 7-1 on Thursday nigh .
Volquez (10-3) entered
with a major league-best
l. 7l ERA but was tagged for
a season-high seven runs.
five earned, and six hits in 4
1-3 innings, bi.s sho!:tesl start
of the seaspn. Volquez' s
ERA rose to 2.08.
Volquez allowed three
runs or less in each of his
previous 16 appearances this

wish to participate in dlea'lpding, foolball, golf, aoss
~. or volleyball must
~ lbe packet wi!h a
iiRat in Older to be eligible
io
a sport in the faiL
:lddibonally, all student~ must have a physi- .
911 oompleted and turned jn .
.. . to particiJ,~~te.
;. For more information,
Oontact Pam Douthitt at
fastem High School.

e

season.

"

t:oNrAcrus
,.
,I

. Rolen connected in the
second inning for his sixth
homer of the season and
third in four games. His RBI
double in the fifth made it 7-

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AP photo

Rolen homers otJVolquez·to help Jays beat Reds 7-1

. ~ 12th grade who

Of,··-~~
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.

NBA .commissioner David Stern. left, poses with number one draft pick Derrick Rose. who was picked by the Chicago Bulls,
during the first round. of the NBA basketball draft Thursday In New York.

lllltil 3:30 p.m. TheiiClay
tllrougb Friday.
: All shwleut-atbletes in 71h

. . . . .it.
.
•,..± I I 'k, tlllt's .. I
c.wa ~ llid Yetfl•w , . . ,
Diedclr &amp;&amp;
De: I ~
111B b- l'llt dHEAL111 the

'

wm over Meigs with
Busszrd and Lemley each
garnering three hils each.
Southern defe.ated Eastern
9-5 and 14-6. SHS hitters in
the first game were Daniel
Jenkins, Greg Jenkins,
Kleski, Lemley, Salser, and
Warden. · In the second
Eastern win, Tornado hitting
was led by Buzzard and
Deem with two hits each
and Salserwith Jhree including a hard-hit double.
Coach ·Cornell said. ''The
boys worked hard and did
what it takes to post a great
season. l am confident they
can step up their game to
become great players at the
next level. I hope they continue to work hard at
improving their skills in
preraration for varsity basebal . Things are a little faster
up there, but they have the
talent 10 succeed."

is July lst. · - - - - - - - - t'ayment must also be
NEW YORK - Derrick
lFeived by July lsi. A Rose is going home, and a ·
"'orkout/combine will be recoro crowd of freshmen
leld orduJy 26th at 9 a.m. . are following him to the
4t Mf.IS. All checks must be NBA.
Glade: out, to Meigs Flag
The Chicago Bulls se1ectlioothall league, .P.O. Box ed Rose, who grew up on
~51, ~· Ob!o 45769. the city's South Side, with
; "I:o re~ster online go to the No. l pick. in the NBA
www.';IIC•gsm.!=Om, and for · draft Thursday night, chooslbbore information call 740- ing the Memphis guard over
~ 1-1222.
Kansas . State
forward
Michael Beasley.
camps
Wtth Beasley going sec,
ond · to
Miami
and
A1lfENS - The Ohio Minnesota picking O.J.
\}Diversity baseball program Mayo at No. 3, college
!Viii ~ basting two prospect freshmen made up the first
qamps for 7009, 2010, and three picks for the firSt time
20U..IIi!b ~ aracb••tes in draft histoly.
1'be' lifi.~wiJJ ·be held
"We actually talked about
August 23, and the second is this earlier," Beasley .said.
ichednled for October 4.
"We sil grew up toge~r
:. The camps will give stu- and we sil grew up playmg
dent-addetes the opportuni- apinst each other and we
to showcase their skills in all made a pact together that
of college coaches we would sil be.bere. Just to
from .sll divisions
see it s11 fall into place and

Sales skyrocketing; news of
its amazing results spread.across the U.S. .~.
.

..

walks each in the Trimble
and Miller games, reaching
safely six consecutive times.
Lemley had doubles in both
games. In a 12-2 win over
Trimble, Deem and Salser
each walked three times as
Southern bats were held to
just three hits, a single by .
Ritchie, a Deem triple, and
Salser double.
Southern defeated River
Valley two more times at 96 and 8-0. Greg Jenkins had
a ttipie, double, and single
in the first win, while
Buzzard, ·
Cunningham,
Kleski,
Salser, and Warden all doubled. Buzzard had two singles in the next RV win .
Southern blasted D-11
Vinton County
23-10.
Taylor Deem had four hits
in the fiasco, and Salser had
three to pave the way to victory. Southern posted a 16-9

Bulls take Derrick Rose with No. 1 pi~k in NBA 4raft

~~egisV&amp;lion

a

thirst during times of '"mine and
drought.*
Until recenliy, the only way to get
these benefits wu to eat tlle plant.
But scientists have develoPed"1
proprietary method of extraction
that il protected by U.S•. Patent

Drug.stores load

· RACINE- Southern varsity baseball coach Ryan
Lemley is poised to reload
for next season,. After all, the
Southern Tqrnado reserve
baseball team went 11-0
under coach Joe Cornell.
Yes, Southern lost some
valuable seniors in Ryan
Chapman, Kreig Klesld,
Butch Marnhout, Wes Riffle,
Anthony Shamblin, Chris
Burkhammer, and Tnmton
RosebeiJ}'. But some new
young guns are on the horiZOII.

foOtball Registration
.

' ·I~

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

2

r

optimi... 8IIITOUIIIIing this weight native tribes in India for centuka ••11oLoment.
ries to reduce hunger and quench

The U.S. clinical study was conducted' in Los Angeles under the
dlreetion of Dr. Ronald M. Lawt@Ce.1
M.D., Ph.D. a former clinical profesaor .at the University of Caliilrnia'a

. BY Seem WOlFE
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT

tnr

l..eglon' :
""-'" ........ ,1!11 ( - ) . 1

their..,~ .,.
.• , .. ~...~.....,..'J!"'ltbeir-.a-\.:::r:···1"'"Tblt's where Apatrim comes in
Some participants ~
a1aee this i8 exactly what happened ineri!dible results, losing as much as
In the diniCal triaL
8 pounds illld up to 8 inches off their
"I took Apatrim and I felt fabulous. waistline ••
After eating dhmer I felt full and not HOW IT WOUS
deprived, I just went about lilY day
and didn't think about food or eat- The active ingredient in Apatrim
ing," said Lori Morrow.'
coines from a plant that grows in
All of this positive feedback India.
malres it easy to understand why . This 'miracle' plant Is Cara/IUIU
there is so much excitement and Fimbriau and it has been used by

a.INICAL U:SULTS

.......

Plenty of success had by undefeated Southern reserves

McAr1hur 111-11111, 6 p.m.

The study included healthy, overweight . individuals between the
ages of 31 snd 73. Their caloric intake and level of exercise was not
disclosed.
The participants were. instructed
not to change the food they were
eating and not to add any exercise;
in other words, no change&amp; to their
WHY SO MUCH EXCITEMENT? . daily routine. They were told to take
Apatrim contains an amazing com- Apatrim 30 minutes before lunch and
pound that has a known ability to dinner.
help control hunger pangs.*
An amazing 100% of ·the particiThis allows people to eat the foods psnts wbo took the active ir.g1edient
they want, they just eat leas.•
as instructed either lost weight or
Lcilpng weight is hard and ~ne inches oiJ their waistline during
that has~ 10th wei3bt 1111!@ _the. • week stu4I.*ln. ~ oalf,
will tell you that they would love to be one person takiQg the placebo lost
lillie to:...-wrif4 ~ e'Mnpj ' •eftlhtojulthelfarw'.andnotone

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• WORKS FAST: Apatrim"' is causing a buzz among dkiters since

Bl

The Daily Sentinel ·

~1*'-JilonatW!m........... 82

I.
"'-&gt;. litsch (8-4) allowed one
run and three hits to win for
the first time since beating
Oakland .on May 29, a span
of five starts.
Litsch retired the f:rst 10
batters he faced before
Toronto Blue Jays' S&lt;lott Rolen. left. and \1emon wens celebrate Toront 's 7-1 ~ory over Adam Dunn's one-out douthe Cincinnati Reds m a ~~ ganie in Toronto on Thursday. Rolen hit a two-run home ble in the fourth. Dunn went
run and an RBI double to lead the Jays to victory fof the second time in three games to third on a wild pitch and
apinst the Reds.
.
.
scored on a sacrifice fly by
I
...

,,._

Brandon Phillips.
Left-hander Brian Tallet
worked the ninth for
Toronto.
Slo
fielding
by
quez he
the Blue
Jays add to t ei lead in the
thtrd. With runn s at firs!
and second. AI x Rios
grounded back to th mound
but Volquez threw ·gh to
shortstop · Jerry Hairston.
whose relav was too late to
catch Rios."
Vernon Wells drove in a
run with a fielder" s choice
and Lyle Overbay tacked on
a two-rul") single to give the
Blue Jays a 5-0 lead.
The Red s are 15-27 in ·
road games tltis year. Ouly
Colorado (28) has lost more
often away from home .
Notes: K.en Griffey Jr..
who was the DH all three
games in Toronto. will play
the outfield Friday and
Saturday at Cleveland and
DH again Sunday. manager
Dusty Baker said. ... With
RHP Shaun Marcum !right
elbow) on the 15-day DL.
Toronto will promote LHP
John Parri sh from Triple-A
Syracuse to start again5t
Atlanta on Saturday.

"'

�Page Ba.• The Daily Sentinel

~.

Friday,.June :i.7, 2008
.

www.mydailysentinel.com

. . Fqday, June 27, aoo8

·Maria Sharapova, Aridy Roddick, James Blake all up$et a~ Wimbledon
seeking her'fifth Wimbledon
The
second-ranked
title, needed 26 points to win Sharapova won her third
a single game but eventually Grand Slam title at the
WIMBLEDON, England shook
stubborn
Anne Australian Open in January
- · Moments after Maria Keothavong of Britain, 7-5. but has experienced dismal .
defeats at two major events
Sharapova walked off the 6-2.
court ·in defeat, her father
Venus and · sister Serena this month. She blew a big
stomped away from the sta- also won their second-rou.n d lead in a fourth-round loss to
dium down a Wimbledon doubles match shortly after Dinara Safina at the French
walkway, spitting out words being named to the U.S: Open.
in Russian as he gestured to Olympic team.
Kudryavtseva, the daugha companion.
But 1999 Wimbledon ter of a world champion in
Upon climbing a stairway champion
Lirn;isay Greco-Roman wrestling, has
to the players'· patio, Yuri Davenport withdrew before been ranked as high as 59th.
Sharapov encountered the her second-round match She came within two points
father of two other former because of a lingering knee of upsetting Venus Williams
Wimbledon
champ~ns , injury. Davenport, back at in the first round last year. ·
Richard Williams. They Wimbledon for the flfSt time
"I was so close to winning,
·shook hands without a word, in three years after becom- and then just played a little
and Williams began to gig- ing a mother, said she stiU too passive in the end,"
gle at the seethin~ Sharapov, expects to play in the .Kudryavtseva said. ''So
·who couldn't resist cracking Olympics.
today I was like, 'There's no
a rare smile.
American men went 0-for- way I'm going to do the
They belong to an exclu- 3. The· elimination of same mistake again,' so I
sive club of dads who know Roddick, Jesse Levine and w.ent for .my shots."
what it's like to watch their Olympian James Blake left
In the final
game,
littte girl flop as the world the United States with one Sharapova shanked two
watches. Sharapov endured player in the third round of shots, then double-faulted to
the experience Thursday, gentlemen's singles: No. reach
match · · point.
when h1s daughter lost 6-2, I 02-ranked
Bobby Kudryavtseva fulfilled her
64 in the second round to Reynolds.
pledge to stay aggressive,
U.S. fans might want to smacking a forehand winner
Alla Kudryavtseva, a fellow
Russian ranked I 54th.
claim Kudryavtseva, ·who for the victory, then hopped
"There's only one winner was born in Moscow but backward toward the net
in the tournament, and lives in Boca Raton, Aa. She with glee.
•
·
everybody else is disap- sent Sharapova to her earli"She beat me, and it probpointed," Sharapova said: est exit at a Grand Slam ably made her tournament,"
"I'm one of them."
tournament since 2003.
Sharapova said.
Adding insult to the result,
Sharapova · walked off
While Sharapova never
~lly gave herselra.:hll!l~· Kudryavtseva traslm1 thi! wearing a frown ami not her
m1ssed
opponumues tuxedo-style ensemble worn tuxedo warm-up jacket,
doomed Andy Roddick.. The by Sharapova that had been which instead was tucked in
her bag. not to be seen again
two-time Wimbledon run- the talk nf the tournament.
ner-up went.O-for-8 conven"I don't like her outfit,"· in the tournament.
ing break points, squandered Kudryavtseva said. "It's a . Also gone for g~ is the
"This means t!:Je world to
three set points in the final little too much of every- s1xth-seeded Roddick, who me," Tipsarevic said. "I'm
set and lost tO · Janko thin~. ... It was one of. the failed three ti~es to put just glad that I won ;~.~~d
Tipsarevic 6-7 (5), 7-5, 6-4, motiVations to beat her."
returns in play whan he had Serbia will have
retnSpraying shots from the set points in the fourth set. s.entatives in the men's sin7-6 (4).
"Any chance I got, I
start, cover girl Sharapova When he chipped o~~:e of the gles draw."
The
elimination ·. of
. much just cho.k.ed it,' -disproved the ada~e that returns awkward~y 1nto the
Roddick said. "It's like you anybody looks good 10 a tux, net, he .cursed ~· and Roddick eases . the , path to
. w81,ll something so bad
The 2004 W101bledon cham- he was JUSt as self-c!'tlcal an tile final for Nadal, ~Iting
almost squeeze too tight.' · pion had eight double-faults, hour after TipsareYIC clo~ · to become . ihe 'first man
Other title contenders ·liiCiuding three in one game, out .the upset.
since Bjorn Borg in 1980 to
"I just didn't make any: win the French Open · and
gave their parents IIKHe to and wore the net out with her
·
thing happen out there,' Wimbledon back to back.
cheer about. No. 2-ranlced groundsuokes.
Rafael Nadal showed a rare
"!.guess·it wasn't my day,'' Roddick said. "Zero, zero,
Facing a tough secondflash of anger at a question- Sharapova said. "I was just zero."
able call in the opening set · pn::tty tentative."
Tipsarevic advanced one round opponent in the precobut regained his composure
..{nd why was that?
day after fellow Serbian cious Gulbis, a French OP,en
to beat 19-year-old Emests
"Not sure. Very good Novak Djokovic was upset quarterfinalist, Nadal looked
Gulbis 5-7,6-2,7-6 (2), 6-3. question. A question I'll be in the seconii round by unusually edgy early. He
Wtlliams' daughter, Venus, . asking myself later today."
Marat Saftn.
threw a brief tantrum at 5-all

pre!'r.
r,ou

'

..

. ...

'· ~ ;. ''f
'

~

' • ., •

Ami .

',

Roddick ' ·.·
with. a four, ·

.

in the first set when the chair
umpire awarded a point to
Gulbis, ruling the ball had
bounced twice before Nadal
hit it.
'~I say, 'That's unbelievable how you can't see
something like this,"' Nadal
said. "I said, 'Probably your
·fault I'm going to Jose the
set.'. But .. . 1 Jose the set
beCause 1 played terrible,
terrible next game."
There · was also a· tense
moment in the second set of
the Williams match. when
she
and
Keothavong
exchanged shots at pointblank range. Keothavong

•

304-675-1333
· www.mydailyregiterlOIII

•• f

'

ripped a backhand. that hit
Williams in the neck area.
"It hurt," Williams said,
"This is. tennis. You've got
to be ready for whatever.
I've hit s9me people; 100:
TJ!at's just how it got~
sometimes. I don't think. stie
was aiming for me. And If
she was, she didn't tell m¢
about it."
..
· It has been an · eventful
week for Williams, who was
attacked by a bumblebee iii
her · flfSt match. But she:s
into the third round 'witho~
any stings or bruises, so who
can blame her dad (or gig;
gling?

'•

•

•

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Ill laUtpolis lau, lriaut ·Joint J~uant lt~lttr
nw.mydailytrhu.

New York.

rank~d

set win.

•It

The Ddi Sentinel
740-Jil.llSS

·

draft
Thursday In

Tipsarevlc
of Serbia at
Wimbledon
on
••
Thursday. · ·
Tipsarevlc
upset the
No.6-

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first round
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Milwaukee
Bucks
during the

match

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'

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from ·Page in

selected
eighth
overall by
the

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during his .
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.t.SSOCIATED PRESS

more

.•
Joe

BY STEVD WtNI

The Daily Sentinel• Pap 83

www .mydailysentinel.com

AJI photo
.

(

Nets trade Richard Jefferson to Bucks
BY CouN FLY
ASSOCI.t.TED PRESS

· MILWAUKEE The
New Jersey Nets decided to
part ways with the· secondleading scorer in franchise
history, dealing Richard
Jeffersbn to Milwaukee
hours before the ··draft
.Thursday for forwards Yi
Jianlian · and
Bobby
Siinmons.
"We certainly gave up a
good player, but to get a
good player .YOU have to give
up a-good playerWitll Yi;
we ' feel · his upside is' very
up," Nets president Rod
Thorn said. "We feel strongly he's going to he a ' real
gPod player for us."
No · draft picks were
&amp;wapped in the trade.
,:, Milwaukee ~as been lookmg to rid itself of several
bloated contracts and decidild it was worth trading the
.rOOkie that former general
manager Larry Harris select~with the No. 6 pick last
y'e ar along. with the rest of
Simmons' contract.
. · But the Bucks had to add
.morethesalary
it, taking
QiJ
rest toofdo
· Jefferson's
lieal, three more years at
~2.4 million.
f
~
· 1
· ("We iitherited a htt e bit 0
lfos•l•rv predicament coming
int;;t'his job and really what
we've done today has. not
Changed anything we've
J.i,..,..
,. (c, ~ nexuwo sea~..
era1
IIODS,
·
new
gen
JOhn Hammond said.manager
"In the
ihird season, we will have an
tl&gt;sue to deal with, but I think
h¥ that time, we' 11 have
P.lenty of flexibility to move
'SOme pieces if necessary."
·· Harris was Jet go jn March
fl!ld Hammond is looking to
f)ll sev.eral spots as the teanl
·wmbled to a 26-56 fmish.
!lbe Bucloo selected versatile
"forward Joe Alexander with
ille No. 8 pick, and Jefferson
;provides veteran leadership
to a team desperately seekiJig winners m the locker
·
room.
\. "Richard . Jefferson is a
tMudworking,
proven,
dynamic performer at the
fOrward
position,"
Hammond said. "He' s an
(ggressive player with terrific credentials over his

r.

. career. He's been a winner, told the AP earlier this seahaving ·gone to. the playoffs
in six of his seven seasons,
and we're excited to bring
him to Milwaukee."
Jefferson, second in franchise scoring to Buck
Williams, gets a chance to
team with Michael Redd and
is not a ilefensive liability.
He's also a proven scorer,
averaging 22.6 points per
game last season. .
The Nets get long-term
cap relid after Simmons'
Con!faCt !;O!!lt)S . off the
books. Simmons has two
years and $20.4 million left
on his deal.
"It's virtually a wash /'
Thorn said. "Long term, yes,
because Richard's contract
is "longer."
The dealing of the 28year-old Jefferson marks an
end of an era. The move
continues the · rebuilding of
the franchise in the postJason Kidd era and puts
··
be
New Jersey in position to
a major player in 2010 offseason, which is expected to
include a bumper crop of
free agents that could
1'nclude LeBron James and
others
But ·.Thorn acknowledged
he wasn't sure what his new
tean1 would like without its
The N
veteran sta1warts.
ets,
who missed the playoffs for
the first time in seven years
by going 34-48, traded Kidd
to Dallas for Devin Harris
a·nd the Maveo'c· ks' f1'rstround draft pick, which they
used to
select
Ryan
Anderson.
I'Righ\,now,' it's a work in
prQgres~," Thorn said.
One ''ihing i~ for certain,
the Nets .g et Yi, who ,could
also develop into a powerful
presence and finally gets to
go to a major city with. a
large Chinese population
with.more marketing opportunities.
"My .feeling is wi~ Yi's
· upside 11 was somethmg we
had to look at. A 20-year old
kid with his skill set, we feel
he has a big future," Thorn
said.
If · he ' s indeed 20 .
Allegations have dogged Yi
(EE' ) that .he's up to three
years older, and he flatly

son· that he didn't want to
talk about it. · .
"I just fc;ellike there 's no
point in talking about it too
much," Yi said in December.
" If you look at my passport,
if you look at anything, it' s
got my birth date, so there's
really nothing I can say
more."
Yi, who will play for the
China in the Olympics, also
took his time signing with
Milwaukee · after being
selected in )ast ¥ear's Pillft
and wasn' t swayed to join
the Bucks until a contingent
that included · owner and
U.S. Sen. Herb Kohl traveled to China to complete
the deal. But Hammond
emphatically
denied
Thursday night that he W&lt;!S
forced to make a trade.
Yi made 49 starts and
played in 66 games, averaging · 8.6 points and 5.2
rebounds. H e vied with
·
Charlie Villanueva tor playing time.
Simmons never lived up to
a five-year, $47 million contract he signed in the offseason af ter be'mg Imnore d as
the NBA's Most Improved
Player in 2005 . After a tough
first year adju sting, he
missed all the 2006-07 sea·
·h
kl
d f'
son wll an e an
oot
injuries and averaged just
7.6 points in 70 games.
" He's greatly appreciative
of everything the · Bucks
have done .or
'
h'1m. Th ey
gave him a terrific contract,
a great opportunity. He 's had
some injuries, which have
been really unfortunate," .
Simmons' agent, Mark
Bartelstein, said. "In tough
times, you need fre sh start
to kind of change your
luck."
The Bucks' projected
starting lineup looks much
clearer now with Mo
Williams at the point ,
Michael Redd at shooting
guard,
Jefferson
and
Villanueva at forward and
Andrew Bogut, the No . I
. pick in 2005 . at center.

straight freshman taken
with the top pick, following
Portland's Greg Oden last
year.
The 6-foot-3 guard put
on a red Bulls cap, hugged
some supporters, including
Memphis coach
John
Calipari, and shook hands
with Beasley, .seated at a
nearby table,. before walk~
ing onto the stage to meet
NBA commissioner David
Stern.
"I was a little nervous
when they came back out,
but I always had that in
mind ihal I want to be No.
I ," Rose said. "So it was
great hearing my name and
being the No. I pick."
Rose should be an
upgrade over Kirk Hinrich,
who now could he traded,
and gives the Bulls another
option if they don't re-sign
guard Ben Gordon.
Expected to contend for a
division title, the Bulls
instead. stumbled to a 33-49
record and eventually
replaced two coaches. But
with just a I. 7 percent
chance, they won last
month's draft lottery, giving them a chance to quickly return to the playoffs.
" It feels great to go in
and compete," Rose said.
'.'I'm just blessed to be in
that position right now,
because a lot of people
aren't. And just knowing
thai we are a few pieces
away from really contending as.a team, it just makes
me happy."
Miami
settled
for
Beasley at No. 2, even
though he wasn' t sure if the
Heat would go for Mayo
instead. Beasley averaged
26.2 points, third in the
nation, and topped Division
I with 12.4 rebounds per
game. But with questions
about his size - he may be
2 inches shorter than the 6-

foot-10 he's listed at- the Associated Press about tbe
Bull~
may not have deal shortly after Rush wu
·
believed he could play the taken.
4 spot in the NBA.
·
The Pacers also ' luld a
After. Mayo's selection, proposed trade with tbe
UCLA guard
Russell Toronto RaJ?tors. Indiana
Westbrook was the first would se11d six-time Allnon-freshmen taken, going Star forward JermaiJie
fourth to the Seattle O'Neal to Toronto for T.J.
center
Rasbo
SuperSonics - with new ford,
teammate and reigning .Nesterovic, the 17th pick in
Rookie of the Year Kevin the draft and a player to be
Durant
standing
and determined.
Sacramento pulled a ·surapplauding the pick from
the back.
prise at No. 12 with Rider
Kevin Love gave UCLA forward Jason . Thompson.
consecutive picks, going to the Metro Atlantic Athletic
Memphis at No. 6 . The Conference player of
New York Knicks followed ' year and the first se.Uor
witb Italian forward Danilo taken.
Golden
State
Gallinari, whose father grabbed LSU forward
played witb new coach Anthony Randolph - yet
Mike D'Antoni overseas . another freshman - witb
Fans in Madison Square the 14th and fmal lottery
·
·
. Garden weren' t impressed, pick.
booing loudly.
·
Robin Lopez joined twin
"lfs part of the game, all brother Brook in the NBA
the players have got to hear
. this," Gallinari said. "Not when Phoenix chose him at
No. 15. That started a q~n
every time can you hear of big men in which
good things. It's normal."
Philadelphia took florida's
Indiana . guard
Eric Marreese Speights, Toronto
Gordon be£ame the fifth picked Roy Hibben of
. freshman taken, going to Georgetown at No. 17, and
the Los Angeles Clippers at Washington
drafted
No. 7. West Virgima's Joe Nevada 7· footer JaVale
Alexander, whose stock McGee with the 18th pick.
began to rise after a strong
After taking guards eal'li·
run at Madison Square er, Seattle and Charlotte
Garden in the Big East · both went big with their
1
tournament,
went
to
second first-round picks, 1
Milwaukee with the next
The' Bobcats
selecled 1
pick.
.·
·French
center Alexis
Charlotte gave
new
coach Larry Brown a point Aninea . at No. 20 and the ,
guard, taking D.J. Augustin .Sonics took Congo's Serge
of Texas . with the ninth Ibaka four picks later. .
Darrell Art11ur of Kansas
pick. New Jersey took
the final player in the
was
·Stanford center Brook·
Lopez at No. 10, and green room. lasting until
Arizona's Jerryd Bayless the 27th spot, where New
joined
fellow
Pac- I 0 Orleans. grabbed him. Tbe
guards
Mayo
and Hornets already agreed to
Westbrook by going 11th to send his rights to Portland
for cash in a deal that is
Indiana.
Bayless' rights were later awaiting league approval.
NBA champion Boston
traded to Portland along
· with Ike Diogo for the chose J.R. Giddens of New
rights to Brandon Rush, the Mexico with the 30th and
No. 13 pick from national final pick of the first round .
champion Kansas, Jarrett
Jack and Josh McRoberts . . AP Sports Writer Cliff
Rush's
agent,
Mark Brunt in Indianapolis conBartelstein,
told
The tributed to this refJO.rf·

me

a

· AP Sports Writer Tom
Canavan in East Rutheifo rd.
N.J.. contributed to this
repun.

Smilel Now you can own lhe picture of that unfoogetllble
moment captured in the newspaper. Photos become timeleas
when framed or printed on a mug or mouse pad.

Visit www.mydailysenti.nel.com and click lhe blue button. ·

1

Qlvs pick N.C. State's ffickson
• INDEPENDENCE (AP)
~ The Cleveland Cavaliers
~ .Y.ounger. Only time will
1¢l11f they're any better.
. :.Wllh the 19th pick in the
NBA draft, they took a 19year-old project.
• : Needing an injection of
~g . blood for their aging
frontcourt. the Cavs selected ·
Nol1h Carolina State's JJ.
ltickson, ·a '6-foot-9 forward
who played just one season
sif.oollege ball before turning

pro.

,. "He's kind of an uncarved
tilock," general manager
panny Feay said.
' Hickson averaged 14.8
i*Hnts and 8.5 rebounds in
Jiis only season with the
Wolfpack.. He led the
.;,.tJantic Coast Conference in
i}eld-goal peroentajle (.591 )
and rimked sixth m blocks
(1.5).
r . Ferry added experience to
Jis roster with a blockbuster
;tade in February. But with
Zydnmas Ogauskas (33), forwanl Joe Smith (33) and Ben
:\V.1llace (34) getting oldec, it.
[was time to infuse some
WJIUOg le$s up front.
k "Bringms a young big into
OW' group 1s important, conJi!dering the age of our bigs,"
Fmy ~d. "He's a guy we
· hlld ranked real high all year.
Me's a hard worker. He's one
of thoie guys who gets up at
q.a.m.to get to the gym. He's
.
kid with a great
and talent.
u
e will be a work in

~

progress. He has a lot to
learn. He's a young kid, and
it's our job to put him in the
best position to succeed over
the next 12 to 18 months."
Hickson .was one of eight
players with just one year of
college experience taken in
the flfSt 19 picks.
Coming off their first trip
to the NBA finals, the
Cavaliers finished 45-37 last
season. They, were ravaged
by injuries and then Ferry
overturned his roster at the
Feb. 21 trading•deadline by
dealing half of his active roster in two separate deals.
Still, the Cavs won two
playoff series and pushed the
Boston Celtics to seven
games before losing in the
Eastern Couference semifinals.
Cleveland' s timeline to
win an NBA title could be
narrowing. Superstar LeBron
James is eligible for free
agency following the 2010
season, and his possible
departure will hang over the
club .for the next.two seasons.
Earlier this week. Ferry
said this year's drati was
deep at power forward and
center. With Ohio State's
Kosta .Koufous and Kansas'
Darrell Arthur still on the
board, the Cav,s o pted for
Hickson.
· Tbe Cavaliers entered the
draft without a second-round
pick. They lr,lded that selection to the Phoenix Suns in
2002 for guard Milt Pa~~io.

Wbt ~allipolt' J)ailp Wribunt,
·Wbt Joint l}ltaiattt .l\egiittr
and The Daily Sentinel
have launched a new page every
Friday called "Faith and.Family".
If you have a testimonial story,
life-changing event about yourself
or even a poem that you would
like to share please email to:
·kkelly@mydailytribune.com ·
nfields@mydailyregister.com
· hOeftich@·mydailysentinel.com
Limit your story to
500-750 words.
Please include a phone number
· in your email.

�Page 114 • The Daily Sentinel

-Friday, June 27, 2008

Friday, June 27, 2008

www.mydallysentinel.com

www.mydallysentinel.com

.

'

Iraq disbands national soccer team after losS
.

'

strengthen it.~' Aluned' said. Jalal Talabani issued a stat~­
Officials did not rule out rnen~ encoura~ing the squad
AND SAMEER N. YACOUB
ASSOCIATED PRESS
keeping some of the current to WID • .•
Instead,
many
were
players.
BAGHDAD- It .was less . "Anyone who has skills angered by the team:s
than a year ago that Iraqis and is deemed appropriate unconvincing and weak. perpoured into the streets in a by the. .new coach can join formance. The team needed
rare show of unity and cele- the national team regardless only . a draw to reach the
bration after the national of his identity," said the final qualification, bot
soccer team won the presti- Iraqi Olympic Committee instead lost.to Qatar 1-0.
Saad Karim, a 24-year-old.
gious Asian Cup.
spokesma.n,
Jazier
atphysical education stude~t.
Celebratory gunfire roared Sahlani.
He also said the decision · noled that ;·the team and the
across Baghdad and other
cities. A beaming Prime wasn't entirely related to the coach • were treated as
·heroes" in previ~us wins: :
Minister Nouri ai-Maliki level of play.
.
"When they lost agamst
later .awarded each team
Al-Sahlani said Hamad
member a $10,000 · bonus also was.being punished. fqr Qatar, they were crucified. I
and held a homecoming eel- purportedl:y criticizing a think this decision is not fair
ebration filled with fanfare controversJal . government and illogical because t~e
-albeit limited to the U.S.- · decision to disband the pre- IFA also should shoulder
protected Green Zone.
vious
Iraqi
Olympic some responsibly for · t~e
:
But on Thursday, the Iraqi Committee because of cor- defeat." Karim sa1d.
Mohammed Haider, a 30Football Association said 11 ruption allegations. The
has dissolved the national International
Olympic year-old grocer store owner
soccer team and dismissed. Committee bad responded in Baghdad, said he agreed
the Iraqi coach ,four days by suspending Iraq's nation- with the decision to disband
after the team's loss to Qatar al Olympic body for "politi- the team.
· "The team ' needs new
ended the country's hopes of cal interference."
blood
though the IFA itsel:C,
"Hamad did not stick to
qualifying for the 2010
World Cup.
his technical job and he was not the team only, should
"It was decided to disband involved in politics," al- bear some of the blame;"
Haide.r said.
the team, with all its players Sahlani said.
The official
reaction
and coaching staff, mcludHamad could not immedievoked
memories
of
the far
ing (head . coach) Adnan ately be reached for comHamad," the association ment. He. was appointed to harsher treatment of athlet~s
said in a statement.
coach the national team in under Saddam Hussein ,
Tareq Ahmed, a senior February, taking over from whose son Odai was in
fedc:ration official, told The No!Wegian Egil Olsen after charge of Iraqi sports arid
Press
that another disappointing Iraqi p~nished poor performa~ces
Associated
Hamad "is no longer useful performance m World C up w1th torture or.mcarceratton.
In some · c·ases, Odai · was
to our team."
· qualifications .
said
to have forced playets
Ahmed said a new coach
The jubilation over the
- who was not named victorious run of the team ·who .missed. shots duri11g
would choose players for a last year gave Iraqis a wei- games to kick stone balls. ·
Iraq has not played a game
new national team. The come respite from the daily
at
home in years. Because of
statement did not single out · violence. · Revelers of all
any players, raising the pos- ages danced in the streets the kidnapping and killing
sibihty that some of the cur- after each win, despite fears of athletes m prious sports,
the squad trams and plays
.
rent team members could of attacks.
make the new roster.
Iraqi fans were poised for abroad, mostly in Persian
"We think that the team another round street celebra- Gulf nations such as t~e
needs new blood and that tions this year. · Before United Arab Emirates and
new young players· will Sunday's match, President Qatar.

BY KIM GAMEL

AP photo

Spain's David Silva, top, celebrates with his teammate Cesc Fabregas after Silva scored
his slde's · third goal during the semifinal match between Russia and Spain in Vienna,
Austria, Thursday at the Euro 2008 European Soccer ·championships in Austria and
Switzerland. Spain defeated Russia 3-0.

Spain beats Russia 3-0 to reach final
BY Roe MURRAY
ASSOCIATED PRESS

VIENNA, Austria
Spain scored three secondhalf j!Oals Thursday to beat
Russ1a 3-0 and reach the
European Championship
final, giving the team a
chance to shed its status as
one of soccer's biggest
underachievers . .
Xavi Hernandez, Dani
Guiza and David Silva each
sco~d to give the Spaniards
a ·shot at their second
European title when they
play Germany on Sunday 11t
Ernst Happel . Stadium. ·
Spain, which won the 19()11
European tournament. ended
its run of five quarterfinal
defeats by beating Italy 'in a
penalty shootoot Sunday. , It
confirmed its title aspira·
.tions with · a penetrating
passi~g attac~ on a. slick ~or­
face m pounng ram agamst
Russia.
The
Spaniards
and
Germans have not played a
competitive match since a l1 draw in the 1994 World
Cup. Overall, Germany has
won eight of 19 meetings,
with Spain taking five and
six draws. In competitive

games, it is 4-1-2 for into the net.
Germany.
Fabregas then slid a pass
Germany beat Turkey 3-2 through for an unmarked
on Thursday night and is Silva inside the box in the
seeking a record fourth Euro 82nd and he ended any hope
title.
·
for Russia.
Spain will face Germany
The Spaniards . didn ' t
without striker David YJ.Ila, seem distracted by reports
who was injured while tak- that Aragones was set to
ing \1 free kick in the first join
Turkish . · club
half. Villa, .the tournament's Fenerbahce as ·coach after
leading scorer with four Euro 2008. They .were pregoals, limped off the field cise with the ball and
and was replaced by Cesc staunch on defense all
Fabre$as in the 34th minute. through the game.
· Spam
coach
Luis
Spain, which beat the
Aragones said Villa will Soviet Union 2-1 in the
1964 final in Madrid, has
miss the final.
"It's no• ~rious," the never lost to Russia in five
coach ·said. "J!e has a pull." matches, including a 4-1
Xavl's goal came m the _win two weeks ago in the
50111 minute. He slid a ball ' ftrst round.
througlj for Andres lniesta, · Russia never got · its
who eluded' one defender speedy, creative attack on ·
before unleashing a shot track .
from just inside the box.
"It was their plan that they
Xavi followed to side-{oot were going to make us tired
the ball past goillkeeper Igor so we couldn't make a
Akinfeyev:
(good effort) of it in the secTwo Spanish substitutes ond half," said Dutch coach
combined to make it 2.0 in Guus Hiddink . •"However,
the 73rd. Fabregas flicked a we can be proud of reaching
ball over the top of the where we did and of coming
defense and Guiza finished third. We fa~ really strong
with the outside of his right opposition tolli.ght, and they
foot, putting the ball high · deserved to win."

Fan to sell Griffey's 600th IIR ball at auction
BYDM 5EWEU.

bidding reach $1~.000. , session of the ball to give to
ASSOCIATED PI!ESS
Scherer. a Marlms season Ken 9riffey. We just
ticketholder, called Griffey believe it's the right thing to
CINCINNATI The "a class act." He said by do," Zarco said.
Scherer said there' s no
Florida Marlins fan who phone from Florida ~at he
says he caught the bakball was exhilarated to have doubt in his mind that
that Ken Griffey Jr. hit for caught the ball, but decided Griffey's ball went from the
·his 600th career home .run that selling the milestone slugger's bat into his glove.
plans to sell it in an auction. ball at auction was the right
The right fielder joined
Bonds, Hank Aaron, Babe
Jce Scherer said Thursday action to take.
be decided to put the ball in· "I'm just doing what's . Ruth, Willie Mays and Sosa
the Aug. I auction after best for me right now," said as the only players with
consulting with other peo- Scherer, who said he's 51, 600. Griffey has hit two
pie, including family and. siqgle and a hospital worker home runs since,1Uid needs
friends, 'in the aftennath of in south FIBrida.
. seven more to tie Sosa. for
llle l une 9 game in Miami.
There is still a potential fifth place on the all-tin;te
r
ho
li
· Doug Allen, president of
Mastro Auctions in subur- obstacle. Another
an,
me run st.
ban Chicago, expects the Justin Kimball, claims the
Mastro Auctions last year
ball to attract substantial ball was ripped away from sold Bonds' 70th home run
bidding intere.st. He said the him. A lawsuit filed in ball, which had tied the sinCincinnati Reds star has Miami-Dade County court gle-season record at the
remained untainted by the asksforacourtorderblock- time, from 2001 for just
steroid era that has hurt the ing its sale and alleges civil $14,400 at auction after
value of memorabilia from theft and civil battery was selling it in 2002 for
milestones by Barty Bonds, used to take the ball from $60,375. Mastro said it sold
Sammy Sosa and other him.·
Bonds' 600th'\greer borne
~nt stars.
KimMJI bu said he run ball at auction in 2002
"I think people are look· would give tlie ball to for $46,303.
ing for somebOdy to kind of Griffey. His
attorney,
The Griffey ball will be
come out of the smoke, Robert
Zarco,
said part of • ijye auction in
• someone they can bold up Thursday that his Miami Chicago that also includes
, u a pure .player," ·Allen fum - Zarco, Einborn, items from early 20th
llict. ~lt'i gOJDg to be excit- Salkowsk:i, and Brito - Century stars Babe Ruth,
iq. Here's a guy who's a would bid on the ball in Lou Gehrig and Ho.nus
Ially lo~e:!f~yer."
auction as a last re"sort if Wagner. Vintage memora: Allen ·
the ball will they can' t block its sale. ·
bilia from suCh players is
:IICIJ for at !,east $SO,OOO and "It will be . for the sole still appreciating in value,
'"M"h'tlle llitpriaed~&amp;ee ' J*fPOSe of obtaining pos- Allen said. t1

'

tEribune - Sentinel CLASSIFIED

.

Gallia
County
OH

.

-·

E·mall
classified@ mydailytribune.com

bunches for Keokuk and
ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cedar Rapids in Iowa's
Three-1 League as his career
Baseball
stole
Art was winding down in the
Pennington' s future. The mid-1950s.
Cedar River washed away
His own favorite stories
were about the time he
his past
His house, his car, his homered off the great Dizzy
clothes, nearly all his pic- Dean when their paths
tures, even · one of his two crossed on separate .barndogs - it was all lost to the storming tours - about the
Midwest floods. "Every only chance black ballplaydamn thing I had just floated ers got to measure themdown the river," he said.
selves against the whi'te stars
He is hardly alone: There of .the major leagues. And
are 10,000 or so others total- the first time he faced
ing up their losses just in Satchel Paige, issuing his
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, perhaps staitdard warning- "Throw
10 times as m;my across the it and duck!" - only to
waterlogged region. But strike out three straight
possessions can be replaced. times.
"A big part of mY life is
"I could hold 'my own
against anybody, except
gone for good;" he said.
His skin color cost Satch, maybe, and he was
Pennington a shot at the the onliest man that made a
major .leagues as a ymmg fool out me. But I played
man. He flourished instead against the best - Josh
in the Negro, Cuban.: Gibson and Buck Leonard,
Mexican and Venezuelan Larry
Doby,
. Jackie
·leagues m the 1940s and, Robinson-andnotjust the
when baseball in America black ballplayers. You could
finally opened_ the door to . ask Roger Maris, Harvey
blacks, m mmor leagues Kuenn and Sal Maglie. any
of those boys, too.
across the country.
Six decades later, the
"They'll tell you I should
water came ~d carried off have
been
there,"
nearly every bit of proof that Pennington added, " but I
~enmngton was the equal of understand why I wasn 't ...
t bo t
b d
h
JUS a u any o y w o My grandfather was white
played anywhere he went.
and . he told me life was
Newspaper clippings, pro- going to be tough all the
grams, autographed photos way so 1 always tried to be
from . Mickey Mantle, Sal tougher. When 1 was growMaghe and a dozen other ing up, my mother was sure
b1g leaguers who assu~ I'd get killed."
h1m he would play alongs1de
Wjth a. $5 gift from his
them someday, scrapbooks aunt to cover the trip he
that gave his living room the traveled from Arkansa.; to
look and feel of a baseball Memphis, Tenn., at 17 for a
museum.
tryout with the Negro
Last year, Billy Valencia, Leagut:'s Chicago American
Pennington's agent and his Giants. And he never looked
guardian angel, talked the back. He played every posiold man into letting him tion but catcher, played winscan some of the albums to ter ball most years in Latin
create a.digital archive. But America averaged about
that was just a small fraction .300 at e~ery stQJJ.
of what he had.
His last pro game was in
"He used to carry a cam- Modesto, Calif., in 1956,
e~ to Negro League ~et- , and he eveqtually found his
togetbers and be had pnce- way back to Cedar Rapids,
less videos of Cool Papa where he worked 23 years
Bell and some other guys, for an aerospace and defense
talking and laughing and firm and two years for the
horsing around, and now railroad before retiring in
they' re .all gone," Valencia 1985.
said.
He ran for sheriff and the
Now, a month past his town commission, "every85th birthday, Pennington thing but dog catcher,"
wonders where he'll find the Pennington laughed, "and
ca5h ()r ~ stren~ to begin that's probably the ·only
·picking up the p~«es.
office I could have been
"Wi14'n you get old, you elected to.
can't keep moving. You
"I dido 't care about losing.
have to star where people I was more interested in the
know you. I m not doing too chance to speak out against
good, but I'm lucky 'to have prejudice." he said.
a few good friends. Without
All the while, locals and
them," Pennington chuck- out-of-towners knocked on
led, " I' d really be up a his door to ask if he was
creek."
THE An Pennington, and
His neighbors remembeT often left with an autothe man who won a batting g~ap hed souvenir.
title and hit home runs in
He 4&lt;,ept many of his own.

of

Pennington hit one of tlie
longest home runs in the hii;tory of old Comiskey Patk
for the American Giants and
had im old brick from the
since-demolished ballpark,
but that was swept away,
too. So were · hats, jerseys
and baseballs used in' games.
Pennington does have :a
scrapbook and a glove in tile
Negro League exhibit at the
Baseball Hall of Fame in ·
Cooperstown. And three
bats were recovered from
the flood; two were given ~o
him by Henry Aaron -one
a "Remember me?'' gift far
the · time in the mid-' 50s
when
Pennington
and .
Hammerin' Hank tried to
walk through the front gate
of a spring training game In
florida together and we{"e
told they had to use the service entrance.
"The day they let us back
into Art's house . was the
worst," Valencia recalled.
"We'd start cleaning up arid
something would spark a
memory and 1 couldn't even ·
imagine what he was think:
·
1 kn
·
mg.
ow It would kill me
if I was good enough to play
in the major leagues and
never got the chance."
Pennington is staying now
with friends and neighbors.
Valencia helped him file a
claim with the Federal
Emergency Management
Agency and is seeking a ·
grant from MLI;l's Baseball
Assistance Team, which
helps aging ballplayers.
Valencia set up a MySpace
page where Pennington sells
autographed baseball cards
that Valencia helped design
and print. He also arranges
speaking engagements .. and
card-show appearances. .
Last weekend, th~ pau
.traveled to Kansas Caty for
the ~o~als' annual tribute to
surviVIng Negro League
players and helped pass the
hat seekin~ donatioos from
current maJor leaguers.
. And as word of his pligllt
nppled through the game,
some current major leaguers, among them the
Detroit
Tigers'
Curtis
Granderson. began exploring ways to . get teammates
and friends involved in raising money for Pennington..
Bui money will only
replace materilll things, like
the ret liners and TV s where
Pennington used to wa«;h
the Yankees or Cubs and
laugh out loud at an error by
sOme player making more
than he ever dreamed about
with half his skills.
"When you get up into
YOW: 80s, you forget a lot of
things." Penlli.ngton saic:l,
"and that's my bill,¥est
regret."
"

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1 rKikiTt,;&amp;~c;;iAi;i;RiLY;.L;;;E;;;;;t.;;;;t----------~r~.o.o-llnJ'-•w.•ANJH)-_..III;s

Kilt..... 7 old. liltor
trained ~12· 5160 '
fof inbrmation leading to
·
the arrest &amp; conviction of the
Losr -'NO
1hleving scum 1hat broke in1o
FouMI .

r

"~------·

anlhe

our
Bulavile
Pike
ard home
s1ole on
guns
&amp; jewelry.
Found on 1st Ave In town,
Please call Galia County
Slleritt's Office.
· medium male dog, black,
white,tan mixed breed. Call
There
will
be
no 446-0547
TrespaSSing, Dumping, or - - - - - -.Burning 011 K &amp;
Really Found on Roush t.an.e in
Property tn New Haven, VN Cheshire. Young mate OOQ_2(Formerly known as the 3 months old. Black w/ wt)ite
l'one!y)
feet. 367-&lt;1221

Llf:~~~~==:=ll r: ~WAY

Found· camera,

Galli~is

0
D

10 mon. old Mastiff mix pup, Found: Camera at Gallipolis
. WI fight blue eyes. to good Wai-Mart parking lot. Call
home 304-674-5338
304-638-5297 to identify it.

'

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3 Wilen Paw Kiltano Gold.

Mate Australian Shepherd
on Bulaville Pk, close to 1 ·
· br"""
•·-1
&amp;wl&lt; okl kitten, soUd •..-n::~
•""V""· 111
UUVII runnng
~2
=7 "150
fr
blue/nray
coiOf. 74~1 - _-::-..
_~_m
...,on
__
•·~-~•
..:;01..:;45:..·---~-- Small dog tound June 20 on
ews old Gray &amp; White male Graham School Rd. Call to
.
·
·
"identify 740-446-4979

740-9112·7566.

304- ·

r.
v~'-1

~;w:w:w:.co="':i:c•:.:c o:m::;~;:=====::;-®;.:2008~====::,
"
u .... w:..-·
.:.~..""!!!! ll·1.l0_____
IJnp \\'ANtDJ_.11110
.
~

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Wrap Ring with 4 round dia-

Yellow
Gold,
Couch &amp; Chair. Fill dirl ffil.!S't moods,
[Mamond Solftaire Ring,
haul ~wa~. 7~591-()082.
Vetlow Gokl, ~76-2,54 __

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Full·
Great
P""'mese dog. wn~e. good
wl kids 304-743-5753
Weimaraner
OCOerman Mix 5 .112 month
old pup dOdted tail.740-992-

Giveawau,

6702

r
r "•-"'"-

YAIID SALE

I

.

CLASSIFIED INDEX

. · 4x4'l For 5ele ......................... ,.................... 725
Announoement ....._.....................................030
Alnllq

rn ....................................................,... 530

. • ,.,.........,.. for Aenl ................................... 440
Auction •nd Flee ...-ut............... - ...........080
Aula Parts &amp; ACCIII C'"l'le1 .......................... 760
Auto Aepelr ............__,_.,_..........- ............770

· ~-for sale--·-·-:-·-·..... - ..........- ........... 710
. - lola •~~otoretor sale ..........- ................; 750
:· Building SuppliH •.••--.. ~................- ...~ ....... 550

.net lulldl ................................ 340

::r:: ~::::::::::.:::::::::::.':.::::~:
B.....,...

c.n.pera&amp;Motorltanlaa ...................... _... 790
,.__....,
_
, ........ ,..................... _... 780
-....... Equ ,
......
._"'
C.-de of n.nb ....
~
010
1
Cl I -1 LVt f
....................................... •to
: · Blc~rigeratlon ...............................l40

c...

--u......-................. ......

,
·'
·
'

JEcp ... m.ntforAMlt...................:•• :. ...............410
Excll¥1111ng .·.................................................. 830
F.,. Ecf11pment ..........................................l10
. F- torn___.
_,L ........:...................................-· F - tor SAle ............................................. 330
far~ ........ - ...................:........- ............ 480
' ForSile .................. - ........ - ........_ ..........- ••515
For lila or Trwde ......·-·····---········- ..---510 .
Frub &amp; YIIM'6tk ·-·-............................. _580
" Furnllf-.i AOorns ........................................450
'' GenM'III Haullng...........................................aso

, Q.J
41 1

r I.LA lYJ.UtU.T

Cross Creek Auction Buffajo
• AUction Saturday Spin
Building is full used

POSTAL JOBS

I

. $28

· ..., I Gntln ..................................................l40

Help WMted .................._ ....................- ....... 110

. - . knproYIIrnenta .................................. .810
"""'- for Slll ......................................... - 310
·.• HouMrhald Gaoda ....................................... 510
:, tloueee for Renl .-............ ........................... 410
In Mlnlaltam ............................................. _ 020
..
~- ................................................... • 30
Uwn &amp; o.rdln EqulpiiWilt ........................l60
Uu tl ctr ..............---·-·-·····--······--····•······--·130
U..:..-ctFound ......... -............................. _ 010

t.ota•Aclwege........... _..................--......... ~:

h"

serv.

Merc~an.....se.. Starting lo ' Full-time Pharmacy Cashier
sell hrgh quality knrves such position aval~ble at the
Family Yard Sa.le first brick as Case, Sucl&lt; &amp; Mossy Poinr
Pleasant
Fruth
:=~~r~ng allay on ~:· ~~e~ oV: Pharmacy. A.pply in person
1 •
•
(
St phe at 2501 Jackson 4ve. NO
)
304 550 1616
0
3 faml~ ya&gt;O ale, WB1son Reedy
~
n PHONE CALLS PLEASE.
Grove Ad, Cheshire. Sat
_
Also;
'&amp;'28 starts at 8am. A little
WANIID
Fruth Pharmacy In Pomt
bi1
of
everything.
ro Bur
Pleasant has a Part· Trme
batP; 1 toddtef stuff adult &amp; -Cleanrng Position avarlable
plus size ~s. Cheap Absolute Top Dollar _ sil- Ho.urs Monday • Frid~y
pnces
ver/gold
coins.
· any B:OOa~ - 12:00pm. Apply •n
.
KI Kn8K go6d jewelry, person at 2501 Jackson
10 14
Th•s Sat. 1Oa·? Teen, dental gold, pre ~
US Ave. NO PHONE CALLS
935
women,
clothe$. currency, proof/mint sets, PLEASE.
Shoe&amp;SS · ~seDite":'s&amp;S~re. diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
Gall'lpol"&gt;s. Home Heallh Care South
Val"' een1e r m pnng 151 2nd A·-ue.
'"'='"
Y
446-2842.
East Ohio is currently hiri ng
Thur-Fri June 26-28, 9,8 - - - - - - - - Home Health Aides for
Spites Rd. (SA 160 Nortt14 Junk cars with or wlthou1 Meigs Co. Must be ce nified
mites past Korner Store to titles. 740-38908&amp;4
.or currentl~haveooeyear's
M
cente Ad Go 1
experience. Toll Ffee call·1·
organ
r
·
tl6e-368-1100
inile lo Spires Ad, 1 mile to
"i;;;ii-inr.;i:::""=~
ya&gt;O sale.) Soy lnfant·1od· iir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .,
dler, girl toddler- clothing,
3
u..,. _ u r
oo-sleep&amp;r, baby safety rail ,
ur.L.r "AN'Im
bouncer. travel bassinets. ..,_ _ _ _ _ _...
call Aosala&amp; Unrue a
misc. 9a·5p.
·
304 213 .2969
Y. S,w:..
AA &amp;&lt;:ellent W8tj to earn
ARD
money. The~ Avon.
KVC
ror..wJM-..E . call Uarityn ao.-882-2S4S lehnknl tte.llhC8rw
Coufltr Office
Basement sale· new baby AVON! AH Areas! To Buy or
dot\01, ....,rything priced to Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· --...... applicants must
s.._...,......
67 1429
sell, Rt. ~24. Rutland,
·
have a Master's degree in
Thursday-Satufday
Bennett' H f &amp; Cooll
Counseling, Psychology or
------- .
h~
.
eafotng
~
Social Work. You mu'st be
Basement sale- new baby 11 now mng r a ooup18
WVSW or LPC lioensat:Me in
clothes, everything priced to !•bore~ tor help In 1he WV.
Salaru starts at
At
A
nAallabon &amp; service ~s
~
~~raday~~~ utland. ~nd up keep around the $28 ,000
- - - - - - - bUsiness. Experienoe not
.l.rly 1•3, Qam-1 , comer of needed
but
helpful. KVC provides in-home and
t.3uberry &amp; Bunemut (old lndividualsmusthaveavalid loiter care services to chi l·
license bureau
drMH'tllk:enee with a clean dren and fam•lies. KVC
driving record. Please no offers training and benefits.
lafi"'A Ga...wuo 5ale July 1 &amp;
Send resumes to HR Dept.,
·w~
·-phone calls, applications
2.Noble Summin Rd. Mldd..
200
BradfOfd
St.,
Rail or shine liiiOOl&amp;lhlnn 1or can befripic:Md up Monday Charleston , WV 25301 .
.
" "'"'
thru
·oay 9am-5pm a1
everyone f :OO AM·??
School Rd. Call
1-SQ0-835·5277.
1391 Sa"··d
·~
E 1"7
F
(304)347
MovlnWY&amp;rd sale- July 15t Galiipolfs, Ohio.
9~8£. or a)l
-~
8a •
48328 y
do,
. Cl
C em~(
m~pm.
,orna
cgral1y kvc prgKV
rs
~~.......~f'OI(HIII
·. h1~-~. fnearomr ~N~~~~ ~nor•w522h7irlng Equal Opportunity Employer
All

- - - - - .-~.
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....on

-·-· = --::--::---::

• II'¥ '
'1 ...- ........................................
11-IK
11 ._.:.'!..,oil~.. _..............
.--... •....-.r........................... -.......
....O....Ior Rent ...... _....................... ~
·' Mobile iionwt kM' 5ale ................................320
ltloney' to LoM
... =.:.:.:;.:::::·················-·.. ;···220
740
Mu8k:altnatnnenta ................................... 570
~ ---............................................. _... 005
e ..._
510
Pel:llor ~................................................
Plumbing &amp; HI P"tg ...........r ...... ~ .................. l20.
P;olatlloRIII
.230

-le

~

.

$17.89· 27mL, now Ifing. For application and free
govemement job info. can
American Assoc. of Labor 1913·599·8226, 24/hrs. emp.

*f-............................- ..........---·-··(MO . . ,;.

; Gh
.
: . Hlppr AdL......................:•• ~ ..................... .oso

LPN [)M!Md

FEDERAL

Merchandise ' Prod uce,
... ....., o3AU!I"
wate~melon, corn &amp; ect.,
.
· G~
. Used consignments consist·
ing of tree 51ands. hunting
1678 Mil! Creek Rd, 1 mi supplies, old double bolt,
Go Cou
F l&amp;Sal:
past
If
rse. r
. galvanized tubs, furniture
clothes, PSE bow, video fishing poles. All good clean

----.,.---'Giveaway-, Black &amp;1 Calico
ia;itlensSwk old. 2 b1ac* Lab
~--~
·
aft
•
,
•
P~PPIM1 7 2. ·2486 er 5 · game&amp;Jsystem, futon, etc.

,.----:=-:-~===::-:::-:-:::-::~--,

-yclel&amp;'--•·..........................

s.rva-.............-.................

, - . 1 V &amp;CB ...,....
.......... -.............. - .......- ... -110
. - - W -..................................... • 1r:t1oo1e _
_................................... 150
~- ,&amp; Fe11111Dr .............................. 650

:·1:.:=.::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

• Sporting Goode ............................................ 520
Sl.nra tors.ll..........................._................. 720

• Tnoc:U tors. ....._..............-.................... 715

~ ...............- ........... - ..........- ....... 170
•• Yirte For ~............................................... 730
-·•orllo lilly ............- ......... - ................... 010
Wa;lldto8uy~f-.nS4tpplll:l .................. 620

. WarlldtoDo ...................................~ ......... 1•

·: W•:lllllo Aer;t .....................~...................,70
. • Y.-cll ..... G..nlp cUc .....................- .............072
Yn toto Porr•O)J111~1111 .................. -... - 074
Yerd ......,._
07t

'Ph•!f"' .. _....- ...................

·

o:JUULIIUl! l

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"

Dorcas Church, newer Com.mu""'•
•-•on
Longaborgor ba-s Ohio
""' ~"

Is -··• .
~
·'
'tog laborer(&amp;) tor the
River Sooro, · bed- crow. Pr ding, Chril1maB decoration, 1hOOo wl1h general knowl·

_ _.....:..._ _ _ _
LICENSED SOCIAL WORK·
EA naed for a non-profn
agency serving in&lt;IMduals
In SE Chi&lt;&gt; Prefer experi·

~~/yeat. ne~tlable

TVs &amp; much fTlO(e.
edged home repair, insula· enoe In the MR/00 field .
Multi tamlty sale in Hemlock tion, etc. Send or deliver
Gf01181!Sjdl dglbastpYs,Bea r~ and refere':'~ Eas Rent~~=~ ·
-.Futon.lllll!ll !HI. Cl M . attention
ad Ofti ·
worf&lt;boots. July 2nd &amp; 3rd!l Edward&gt;, 8010 N. State in Jack
~eq~
~
Route 7, Cheshire , Ohio
son. e~-·". · 45620 by 7-03-08. GMCM drug 1esting. Send resume
__ Pt.~•
. lsanEOE.
to · Buckeye Communily
----...,,- - - Serv1oes. P.O. Box 604 .
Ya&gt;O Sale Sat June 2B1h RT 35 Mu" Video &amp; Book Jackson,
OH
45640 .
Only Flltroc:k;, Waahinglon's Stofe need M9dn9"rt Oert Oeac::Hine for applicants.:
L~. girls. womons full "' part lime 304·937· 718/08. Equal bppO&lt;tunrty
II-?
i
4900
E~.

r

s.w-...

Office 4dministrator need· Gllllipolll C..... College 3 Br.. ' Acre.Barringer Rdg.
ad . MUST HAVE -nsivo (Careers Close To Home) Ad ..Por11and.Many updates
worl&lt;ing knoMedge of MS can Today! 7&lt;10-446-4367, including wiring &amp; plt.rnbing.
Excel Program, strong
1·80().214-0452
Cal1Appi:.740-522-26 19J330..
accounting skilled and pay-Qto"iltpolitt;.llreerc:ollege.edo
2!364-=
3'-'11.,5.~---roH experi9ft08. Posttlon is in .'.ccr..:lil.cl Member kcr~itil1g • bedroom. 2 112 bath k)g
the Bidwell, &lt;?H area. M·f 9- ~
~ ~~ 111 Cd~ home, 34286 New Crew
5, no benefits, pay ~enRd.. Pomeroy, tg. pole builddant upon expenence.
MRE.JANFx)us
ing &amp; OU1 building on 6 aaes
1• w/pond , (816)668.0758
1•
Leaw a message. .
74j)-4.41-7360
.
Pet Cremat10116. Can. 740Au.ntlonl
01110 Valley Home Heal1h, 446- 3745
Local COil1I&gt;OflY offering "NO
Inc. hrnng LPN for an offrce
OO~N PAYMENT".. pro·
10
schedulrng!ak:le supervrsor
W.\N1Nl
grams tor you to bu~ )lOUr
posrtiOn. Appl~ at 1480 ,
1b Do
home Instead of rentrng.
Jackson Pike. Gall~lis. or
• 100% financing
phon~
441-1393. All Types Masonry. Brick. • Less than perfect credH
Competitive Wages and BIOQ!;, Stone. Free Es11mate. accepted
.
benefits including heal1h (740)416-7305· 304·593· • Ftaymenl could be the
insurance.
642,.
·
same as renl.
Mortgage
Locators.
~io Valleu Home Heatth,
Have room in my home to · (740)367-CIOOO
"""'
'
Inc. hiring STNA, CNA, care for 1 elderly lady. Total ' - - ' - - - - - Home Health· Aides &amp; care' provided! Private pay By Owner. 3br. House. full
~rsonal Care Aides. Full. only. Call Priscilla ,QoOritl. basement. anactledGarage.
Part Time &amp; Per otem posi- 740.388-8193
At 62 Midway, 6 miles from
lions available . Apply at
Toyota Plant 304·586-4858
1480
Jack&amp;on
Pike. Housekeeping
weekly,
Gallipotis or phone 441· monthly
or
once.
1393. Competitive Wages. Reasonable rates. Celli 741&gt;mileage reimbursement and 446-4620

1'

WaiMart lot, call to ID,
(304)6311-5297
.

litter trained,
'"::."::':.0~~~ kitten,
:;~e_:::.PmeS68Qe

r~

1

116

e

1-

·

• Start Your Ads With A ~ • Jndude Comp&amp;eb!
Del olptlon • Include A l'fta! • A'fOkl AbbreviatloM
• lndudli Phone N~~mber And Add.- W._.. NeiMMd

Su«enful Ads
·Sit9uld Include Thi!SI! Items
To Help Get Respon"H...

\\'\(1' \1 I

Oea.rltire.s-

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Busln.s• Days Prior To

Monday thru Friday
00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. ·

Flood washes away Negro League star's memori~
BY JIM LITKE

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD
ONLINE

I

S:.1ravo1 .

.~

I

High G

1

o1her benefits Including - - .- - - - - health insurance.
Magrc Years Day care center
Positions with
Sode:w:o
OiMing ServiCes kx:aled at
The Universi1y of Rio
Grande. COOt-starting wage
of 59.30. Food Service
Worker· s1arting wage of
58 .50 . On call part time
catering staff· starting W8"""
of $7.50. "Experience pr"':;

"Putting children fi rs1'
state
~icenses ,
link'
approved, openings available · ages 2·9, M·F 7:305:30 675·5847 limited·
space

All--od~

in thla new·p·pn, la
. . _ . ...... , .....1
Folr 11ouo1ng Act of 11A
--hlllop!ID

as
tldvertlel " any
Pnces Hurt&gt;ng Your Budget?
.,. ........... IMnillltlon or
Work ~ocally &amp; Get Ahea_
d.
Will do Babysitting· in my
lntervrew Are N ow Beng
Home. Unk Certi1•···
1
rn~ 20vrs
,
rece, color, religion, ...
Conducted
For
A
mtperienee 304-593-6812
P 1 551. 1
LPN
fMNBII a11tUa or Rltlon8l
2
0
~ ~ ona
.
ferred but not necessary.
origin, or any inWitlori m
M•d~•ghts, 2 Evemngs. Please apply in perwn at m;:;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
AppliCants. Must Possess A The Universi1y of Rio
o.,.._,......,..
, . . . .. . tel, llmltM!on or
Team Spirit With
Gran•-·s cateter,·a. No te'·
~-·
dlocrimlnlllon.~
~
VITVKI u,..,
The Ability To Interact i1h phone calls please.
Elderly Residents &amp; Their
·
Thh
per wiH noll
Families.
Medications
POST OFFICE NOW
Brand New Res1auran1 for
knowlnglyBackground &amp; Supervisory
HIRING
Lease AT 2 good location,
edwni...,.,-.ta for ,_1
Mtlll which Ia In
S~ills A Plus But Not
Avg. Pay S20/hr or
Owner has other lmerestli
violation ol the law. OUr
Required. Benefits Include:
$57K/yr, includes
call304·549·5696 Aftwtl•
Competillve Wages, Paid
Federal Benetno, OT.,
infDAnld tMt all
Vacation, Paid Meals.
Placed by adSouroe, not
•NOTICE•
ctw.llinga .tWil6iiid in
Available
Insurance, offered wi USPS who hires. OHIO VA.L.LEV PUBLISH·
lhlanew 1 1•• . .
Discounts &amp;
1-866--403-2582
lNG CO. recommends
•WIIIIIbte on .n equl
More
•
Interested Reglonltl Dump Drivera
that Y'Ol! do business with
Professionals. May Call Or R&amp;J Trucking is seeking people you know. and
Stop By Monday-Sun. 9-4.
lified CDL-A d .
NOT to send money
1
1113 Washington St .. qua
.
nvers 0 through the mail until you HUD Homesl 3 bed, only
Ravenswood. WV 273-5893, op~rate semr-dumps for have mv,estigatep the $15.300! for listings BOO·

-ml--00

=:..::...._____

-----

r10

w

'*" ;

_,....lly-.

References Required E.O.E.

MANAGEMENT
OPPORTUNmES

~~;:~,

t:~.= :offe::r:ing:·:;:===~

r;::.
and
dental
insurance.
401 (k). vacation. bonus· pay.
and safety awards. Qualified
applicants must be over 23
yrs .. have a minimum Of 1
year of COmmerlcat 'dfivint;J
e~~:perience &amp; clean MVR .

p.

·

wiltl

i

MoNE\'

TO • ~AN

I

~=:;:~;....,;~~
4Hi7
••NOTICE•• - - - - - - -

New Haven, 3 br., 2 bath. 4 .
acres. hot tub. gas log fire-

·

nor expenence
semi· Bo-o.. Smart. Contact
dumps and roll·otfs is help·
..
We see~ camer oriented
lui. Contac1 Kent at 800 _ the Ohi,b Division of
Individuals who will strive to
_
or fill out applica· Financial
Institution's
462 9365
ach.eve the "'Best" in
Office of Consume
Customer Satisfaction and liorl at www.rjtrucking .com Affafrs BEFORE you refi..
team wortt. lf you ha~~e a
EOE
nance your home or
Oesire to succeed with 8
The
Athens-Meigs obtain a loan. BEWARE
goal driven. tea m oriented Ed1JC8tional Service Center of requesli fo 1 any large
and grOwing company, we has a posit10ri openu-.g for a advance pa~ments of
. otter:
PreschOO J:ducational Aide tees or insurance. Gall the
Health. dental and life
at Southern Elementary Office · of Consumer
insurance. prescription
School in Meigs County .tor
card, bonus program, paid the 2008-2009 School Year
vacation. management
Applicants must meet para·
apparel, advancement from professional requirements
· h.
~
wit •n .
the
and be licensed by the Vttio
Apply in person at
Department of Education.
Burger ~ing Restaurant
Applicants must also haW!
65 Upper River Aoad or
the ability to work well with
maitresumeto·
~aft, studen~ and the pubBurger King
lte, must provrde own trans~ BoK 2407
portation . ~~lar.y will be
Huntington, WV 25725
base~ qualiflcatt~ns and
or fax resume to
ew"""'ri80Ce. Submit letter of
..,....
740-446-3400 or
1nterest, resume, and refer·
304-529-0055
enoe to John D. Costanzo.
EOE
Superintendent,
Athen&amp;·
------Middleton Estates is accept· Meigs Educational service
ing annlicatlons lor a Cen1er, 320·112 E. Main 81..
~"'"
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
Medical Coordinator/Home Applications
mus.t
b.e
Superv1sor Position. Will be
responSible for coordination received by Monday, July 7.
of--~-•
.
fo 12:00 p.m. The AMESC &gt;S
"~ appointments r
35 adu"s in MMJD an Equal . Opportun~y
PN Employer"'-·
Aoou!ential Sefting. l

s_2_.0-4_946
__
ex_R_o_19_ __
Mtddleport in town .3 Br.
ranch.2 112 bath .2 fire
places,hot water heat,cen·
tral air.2 garages.740-992·

Affairs loll free at 1-866278-QOOJ to learn .if the
mortgage broker or
lender
is
properly
·
d (Th' 1
bl'
license .
IS 5 a pu 1c
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley

place. great view. 13041&amp;82·
3021, $53,000
Very nice 4br. 2 ba on
Kineon Dr in Gallipolis. Quite
neighborhood on dead end
street. Large 2 car gara~
and finished basement 7402~ ~ 109

r

'

T
Restaurant MG . poslt.lon
available a1 ~ay of Pt.
Pleasant
estoural)l.
E.perience helpful. A{lpfy in
Porson botweM1 1:30-5:00
M·F fl&lt;&gt; Phone Calls Please

customer service experi·
enoe preten'ed. Must be will·
1ng to ""'' any shill Apply
in person ar tho Gallipolis
Holiday lm. No phone calls

ploaoo .

N AJ

IN THE
.
CLASSIFIEDS

~

~

I

.

16X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
Vinyl Siding. Shingle Roof.
$230 per month. 740·385·
9948

x80 Cfayton bed
_
2 2006 16
3
bath.
2000 tS11: 70
2
Fleetwood
bed
bath .
2
2
Fortu 3 bed 2 bath
. Daytime 38':-0000. e'ol8rling

r ,____, 11999
:P;u~bl~
ishi~·n~g~C~om~pe
~n~y~
)~
r~~
NlL

L.~--•.,...iiiii'rii~
iiii-_.1·
TURNED DOWH ON
SOCIAL SECURfTY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Winl

9213
24 5-----2008 3 bedroom 2 bath sec·
,,~·1
home S279 per month
.........
740.385-767 1

1-888·582·3345

-Br---3bed--2bath---

..,

lw------

and new
on
llr--:::-----,·
+ • half acre m Pt. Pleasant
rtd
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL-

lbB

JiORSA.I..E .

ABLE. 74(1-446-3570
F
F
--~
~
odollll unrls jus1 ret2712 L - lwe. 3br. 1ba, lo&lt; Lond Owners. No - ·
with detoched """' sized
ing and ZERO DOWN•
1
:!rovemen':.
JO.t-'s75-6757, 304..S10· &amp; Bad Credit OK. 2, 3, • and · ;
1313 or Assist 2 Sale 304· s bedrooms ave.Kable. 740755·2980
440-3384
_
Ne
_w_3_Bedroom
_ _ _homes
__
fn&gt;m_
2br House on River In
Muon. wv 304·488· 7946 $214 .36 per month. lnCI.many 1.4)gr8Qes, delivery&amp;.
:~. 2~-os!~~~~d o~6 :et·up. (7:0)385-2!3(
Pleasant. wl washer, dryer,

~~~~es':~da:u= =~ ~o:*lit=: ~;~~~ :~~iva7;d ~ ~~:

apply at 820&lt;4 Carla Drive.
Gallipolis. Ohio or by t-maK
to: mamsonO.resco,..com,
An
Equal
Opportuni1y
EmplOyer

r.~S~

.gerator
1 167~~

:Sh~he~

~ Bar*~:

I

I

•

•

SHOP
CLASSIFIED$

�-Fr'.cll'f, .... %7, 20iia

'

Pllge B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.f1¥1811J••Atlnel.com

~YOOP

The Daily Sentinel• Page B7

NEA Cro11word Puasl•

BRIDGE

,...,

1br
$375/month.
3br 01 • l ual Uving 1 and 2 MEW AND USED STEEL
lam&gt; wl pond, Wate&lt;1oo, OH $500/monlh
in SyraQ~M . Bodr-'l Apls. al Village steel Beams, Pipe A-

asking $185,900 cal (740)

s;i92. 7-'0-992·5064. Equal Grating

t;;;;;;-.;;;;;;t;-;;;:
Hwsing Opportunily.
tor n&gt;nl,

Scrap·-

'
no poll, (740)992-5858
large, charming, unfur,
100 aOfos. GaDia , Co. 2_3 bodo
.
'"""Y
·3 bodooom apt.. 2nd
2
Su~oble for 1-omosile, groal LA FA ';,'~.:;"":' ....
LA. DR. ~
hunting area. 419-23G-T.l46 .,.;,. ~.
~. .......,f&gt;B,rl&lt; R~own

Tuesday, Wednetday &amp;
Friday, 8am-4;30pm. Oloood
Thursday, · Salurday &amp;
Sunda)&lt;. (740)446-7300
o~ronoos
.

S _.,
oewaile- 1

j

bad&lt;yanl. - .,.......
26 acres. Mason Couni)'- S600 onoroiH!' 740-388-0044 ~ no pols. seoonil)'
GaMipolis Forry area. , very
depooit. $600 per monlt1.
poivalo. $39,000. 740-709- or 31l4-59:H616
Call U&amp;t~ or 446-3936
1166
4BA avalaba 1st week in

Thursday- Pool Toumament 7:30
l=riday- Karaoke w/K&amp;D 9-1
Saturday· Band "Tuff Enufl" 9-1

'--------MOBILE HOME LOT FOR
RENT, 1031 Geo&lt;ges Creek
Rd, 441-1111

Mizway
SA 143 Pomeroy

i

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

I

rogislored
puppies.
old, vet
304-675" ·

7946 or 304-675-&lt;l699

YOUNC S

r

-~------

--

pelS.

$500/renl +

.

deposit. 2BR, N::-,_ Fri&lt;!Qe, Range,

Call-'41.0110 or 591 ·5174

W!O

iurn•s~.

5375

month + deposit, no

~~

Pets, '"

Centenary. 7~5

Security Deposit Required ,·

rlf,iiloF;.;.;.:F~-...;;,...;;...;;,

2bo, Expando, Gallipolis (740)367-ll547.
Forry. $400 + $400 doposit Twin AI-. Tower is aooapt·
Office 74o-441-993f
ing spplications'lo&lt; waning

!N THE COURT OF
COIIIION PLEAS
IIEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
jlltaffttllank
J'lllnllfl
W

IJertrucle Rntew aka
Gertrude M. F1n1aw
{llocnud),ehl
O&amp;fud lis

eo.
No. oe cv 067
Unkn!&gt;wn belro, tho

EQUIP!IIEN!'

2br. References and deposil list for Hud-subsidized, 1-br ESY, INTEGRITY, KIEFER
required. 367..()632
. apartment
tor
the BUILT,
VALLEY
- - ' - - - - - - - - eldonyldisabled. call 675· H0 AS E I L IVE S T 0 C K
3 Bedroom, Rio Gran&lt;!e
6679
TI~AILEAS, LOAD MAX

NOTICES

~~ep~it . $400~~ 0•

.

~~-

•

.

EQUIPMENT

I

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ADDfing&amp;Gutlilra
Vinyl Sldi"11 &amp; Pointing

·Complete
Remodeling

P,lrtio and Pordl Dec:b

V C YO UNG Ill
. . ~2"~·:
'
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'
. '
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Hours

7:00 All- 8:00 Pll

)

Guttering

!Ia·

Herb Elliolt El&lt;dridan Cer1lllal iD OH
Ohio Certlfleadon 114874

Seamless Gutters
Roofing , Siding, Gutters

Phone: 744J..742-2233 •Insured
· Specialidng In Home

Insured &amp; BonrJed
740-653-9657

I NT

WttAT'5 tlltllt I&gt;Oit~G1.

Stanley Tree-

/

Trimming
&amp; Removal
*Prom pi and Quality
Wor\;

IVT 'OU£.Pt1'T 6fT It ~m
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T~ ST"t:.IT .OUT ~~
VIITIL TOMOifltOW•.
"-27

DOWN

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25 Aetound

2 Decide
3 Allum

27--no

31

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17 Phony

19 Suppolte&lt;s 46 llolotP
21 - · 47 candyatrtpar
22 -Chuct
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cry

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35

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26 -lilian

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34Tal ....... 6 The
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3&amp; Gutlo
31 Culling tool 7

in-..

rood up

24 Wdeol

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C'!...t
out

32 .... .,..,

Clear the way
to your winners

55 """'-

-

9 11omnway 37 Go!-

This io aoolhoroptinis1
folio assuming BII01)'Itio og . . be tor
1he best in 1he best " . . _...,
IILIOr'ki&amp;. But the pestimilt
or wodd
you preler 'realial"'' - out ._ 10
0¥81001116 acl\lersity.

100 are n three no-lrWf4'. Weot leods
his ~11rH' club. How wouid you

piorllhe pla)o?

North, will a balooloed hand, 10 hlglt-

po;ms and one - poinl tor his
ftlh-.
haea-l'lileiO
canl

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hllncts are opposite uch

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C8IDetry
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IT TO E!'II'II'(ONE'S

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TRAILERS.COM 740·4463825

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WWW .CARMI CHAE L·

FRESH

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tit rrT ttr5 TOt16Uf

58::?•
58 TKOotllclal
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Opening lead: • 6

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

CDGitr
STY-

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16F.-

9 U6

SouPb
Vulnerable; Both

. J AND M ELECTRICAL .

52 . . . . . . . .
5&amp; Cllrut

CHIP
fSE-*'!J

Dealer;

1/1ol/1

devl-,
legllless,
...:·- - - -- -eucutoro. edmlnlotra.Have )'Ou prioed a John
lOre, and aaelgna of
Deere larely? YoU'll be surGertrude FlniiW, 1nd
prised! Check out our used
the
unknown
inventory
al
gUIRIIant of · mlnor
WWW . CABEO . COM
· and/or
lncomJNilenl
Carmichael Equipment. 741).
heirw of
Gertrude U.S. Route 33, passing express their views ~!:t;it~"\vw~~O:r:~: · Moving· ~= Amish made .:.446-~2;.41;,;2;...._ _ __,
Flnlaw, will nollce a highway bridge and comments on the
!hoi on April 18, 2008, approach gullld post Village'•
proposed . dose 10 hosp~al. Call 740- oak corner hulch 38 inch,
, - .~
-HFI-f
339.0362
sofa-fioral cream and blue. 3
J.Al'.-Ait.A..A
MldFirot Bank flied Its Ill 1~.8- for refar. CDBG appllallllon. Call
piece sot ooffee and end " - - - - - - - '
Coma 'rht In the Court ence; thence Soultl 38 the Ct.erk/Treasurer tBR studio . downto:t-'n table
t
1 1
of Common Pleas. degrese 30 minutes David Spencer, Ill (740) includes new appl .. laminate
• w g ass ops. 3 horses for sale call for 1
Ohio 740-247-2019
u.a..
antiques, chairs . and library nrices 304-895-3943
__,, County, Ohio, East 189.2 IJiel along 949·2296 whh any floonng,waler-&amp;trash labje. Cali446-1210or339· c."'---,--.,----CIM No. oe cv 067. the centeOine of question• regarding $375 mo + dep 740-709' 3834
Angus Cow CaH pairs, 2nd
Cell: 740-416-5047
The object of and COunty Road 2tl, Old this nollce.
1690 (ref req).
- - - - - - - can 304-675-6323
Owners:
demand for relief In, U.S. Rou1e 33, to the (6)27
SectionaiSofaand olherfurenllll:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
2 bedroom apartment for n~uro pieces. Call446-1423
r ~ ~, ......... ,.,11~ 1 '1111\
the Complaint lo to place of beginning,
--~-1n1
0 64
- - - - - - - - rent in Middleport, no pets, aft 6 30pm
Paul Rowe
fo rae.,..
I
lhe lien of ~·~
ng . acres,
=a•~r;;';.;;;;,;·- - - - ,
40 992 5858
AUTOS
plaintiffs
mortgage more or lesa, axcopl· __P_u_b_U_c_N_ot_lc_e__ .:.
17.:.
:.ci '.:.:.:c:.__ _ _
r.'~
lUll SAl£
,_dad upon lhe ""'' lng all legal rights of
212 3rd Ave. 3 rooms and
ANI1QI.m&lt;N
,
detcri-- way.
.
PUBLICNOTICE
bath , furnished, no pets. L,~------•
and In which pllllnllfl The ' beartngs In the Sutton Twp. Truateeo Rent+Dep. 740-441-ll245
1991 Chry~e•FifihAvenoe.
llllagealllatthe forag&lt;&gt;- above description are Year 2009 Budgal 2SA apl. CIA. [740) 441 _ Antiques-&lt;Olleclions,glass Good Condnion. Phone 740lng defer- hat or magnetic on a Hearing llonday, July . 0194
a
I
.
I 441-5378or740-&lt;1 6-6292.
- t o - an Inter· aurvey ·lly Homer 7111, 2008 at 7;00 p.m. - - - - - - - klnds,tounl&lt;s,cloclls,ponoble . -------~
ell:
Hraell,
Registered It SrriCUH Vlle.Qe 28R efficiency apt. very eleclfic pianos,ve"ndlng.
1997 Grand Marqu'is. low
Situated
In
the Surveror No. 2274, Hall., Regular montht}' rice, completely fumlshed . madllna,organs,olllamps, mileage 25,000, 1 owner
7 4432
, Townahlp o1 5 II t H'J, survey
doled ..-!ng will follow. .
TV linens, "'ll&gt; .. fum .. $800 t:l~~~~o 304-6 5
County olllelgt, Ohio: September 2, 1965. Kenneth Wiggins
per moorth $500 deposit
1999 Ponliac Sunliro, 2dr, ll'lir--""!::~--.,
THE WINOOW
The following real Being a Jllirl of the""'' (740) 992-5002
Aleo, 1BR ap1 ulilmos includauiO, 90,000 miles. $3000. ....
SUVs
Close-Oul Sale
lADY
allullled In the Estate convoyed to (&amp;) 27
ed $500 per monltl $500,
Call 64s-e190
·
S.U:
10" hanging Baskels
1"'-""'..,;I'Oioiiiiiiiiiil-rl ·
20 yean; nperience
Towhthlp of Salltbury, Henry G. Amold and
!leposit. For applicalions 2
57.75
County ol llelgt and Barbara Amold, by - - - - - - - - stop 811743 COntenary Rd, -lightod watnul show cases Police Impounds! ea,. from '·'
, 4'' Geraniums .60¢ .
· in sewing
Sta111 o1 Ohio; being In deed recorded In
. Publ!c Notice
Ga~s. Oh or call 740- Victorian
glass
from $500!, Hondas. Chevys. 98 Ford Expedition Eddie
Section
16,
ll'ld VOlume 225, .,_.2(11,
446·9595 or 740-339·2490 M~rquee ,collections
of Jeeps, Fords. &amp; tnore! ' for Bauer Edition 150K, $4,900
Bedding Plants
Drapes, Sheers, Rod
•._
mosc
48 per flm $6.00
delerlbed .. follows: Melge County Deed NOTICE OF CHANGE
.... .
.
listings 800·620·4876 " v&lt;Js 304-675-6323 or 30«174Pocket !&gt;rape•.
"-in-•- In the
R n1
IN CONTROL OF A 2br,
$460,
.:lbf. SS40 heavy duly battery charger,
S130
Vegelable plants
Swags, Valances,
..... ·-..
cen- eco ••
month, same Oeposfi plus largetrunks,col&lt;e sign,toys r15
'I'RtJCXS
1
$2. 50 per dozen
._ ol lllal8 Highway The defendant nemed BANK HOLDING COM·
· llr--:o:---"'1
Roman Shade• and
No 33
County IIbov0 i1
ulred lo PANY
electric, wa&amp;her, dryer scales,ck:ICJ(s.Musical items
FOK SALE .
v~
Hrs M-F 7: ~0 . 5:00.
M
·
·
' ""'
·
p
.
No
Po:•. 304-674- Call741l-992-4197.
,
·
oroBcdskins
...
Road 20 fallowing the -111!1 Complain1 ·Yh•
Reed
Family
FOKSM.E
' Sat. 8: 30- 4:JOSun. l-5
Plus Pillow,
0023
304
1
l'lllclc:rion ol Stille within
~4ight' Control
Group
(
or
-6 0-ll77S
Edge·Tuner1orF1SO. 04-lla 01 DodgeDak01aCiubCab.
Ed'sGreenhousos
TableCoven;&amp;Table
ltll'l118Y No. 33, .'a tll)e (28) days...., .... last Theodore T. - · Ill, Apls. 81-**ton 4.6 Uler or 5.41n box, never 4' 4· Exc. Cond.. New 94 Dodge caravan • wheel
Noble Summit Rd.
Runnen
Southweet comer of I publication of tills _Pomeroy, Ohio; Kathy e....... 52 WestWOOd used. $250. 740·992·1053 tiresfbrakes, always serv·· drive, leather Int. new
Middleport.. OH
·CALL SANDY
1.81 ICI'e Jot of Roy lepi~Auguat15, M. R~. Pornet'Oy', DriVe, from $365 to $560.
iced , .great gAS ,mileage. brakes, in good condition
[BetweenBradbury i"RutlandJ
HGme:'740-f92..3Zlt
G . - and Herold 2001. Tille legal notice Ohio; Bruce J. Reed, 740·446-2566.
Equal Flower Flats, $3.50, A&amp;k!ng below KBB price. (740) 4466-967 call after 7
748-992-7%41
Ceii:740-41WJ44 .
Bledwton. NCOnlad in will be publllhed once Pari a, Tenfi8H88; Rita 'Housing Oppor1unity. This Geraniums,
3/S, .oo~ Only $8250 obo .. 446-0795
'::~;;;::::~;:==::;;:==~
Died Book 218, P9 a "week lor •x eucces-- J.
Reed,
Paril, institution is an Equal Elephant Ears, Cannas, or 44 1·797 1
Large Kenmore cnest type f
151 Deed Recorde ol - - ·
Tennesseo; Paul lot. Opponunily Pro•ider and Also have Goldfish . . Koi. -20_0_1_D_od_g_e_D_a_k_
ot-a,- 5 deepfoeeze$100.1995 Ford
lllelp County. Ohio; (6) 13, 2tl, 27, (7) 4, 11, Reed,
Mldclleport, :-Eoroployer:-':'·====-:-::-:-:-::- Pond Plants. 17401446-1576 · speed, 4, 4, Regular Cab, Van,aulo,N:-,runs asking
thence
South
76 11
Ohio; Laurie F. - · CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· (740)645-1361
Shoo Bed, $4800 060. $1500. runs good 992-2272
dogrno 57 minute•
lolld&lt;'lepart, Ohio; Kllllo ED .. Afi'DRIIABLEI
JET
(740)256-1964
'
Mulol«.Yws'
East 74.5 along
Reed,
'Middleport, •
h
rt
I
AERATION MOTORS
~ line o1 -Public Notice .
Ohio," Krls Jenklne, lind/or
.own ouse
ape mens,
4 WIIEEI..ERS
.... e-.
ovuu•
u..
small houses
FOR Repaired , New &amp; Rebuln In 2002 """"e
'"'"'"'111 Ram t 500. 2
Slid 1.11 acre lot.
G o ·o d lei t 1 y I If e ,
Stock:
Call
Ron
Evans,
1·
wheel
drive,
low
mileage,
6
1111
t..ud by Uteel mine Village ol Racine
Ten-;
RENT Gall 17401441 '
800·537-9628.
cylinder 304-675-2767 or 2004 Kymco Mongoose 90
...I
I ft(JQ . . . . . .
1'1111 ~ Soulll 17 405 Main Street, Parla, T - - ; Dru for application &amp; information.
304-674-3295
ATV, fully aulomalic, floor·
. . . fU-•U.•
dogr•.. 47 minute• Racine, Ollio 45n1
Reed, Pon60J, Ohio;
Ellm View
Large solid oherry office LSlNs
boards, very low hi5, like
90.8 11181; thence NOTICE OF PUBUC Juolln - · Paris,
Apartments
'
shaped desk $500 firm . Call
FOil SALE
new. $1000 740-441-ll866
. .- ·•7'" , . •'53
Baulh
degoeee
HEARING n
Tenneoseo;
Jorden
~
·

=

KIMI

• Q10963

II

·~­
'«fa•k:k
SO Huge

14~ol

• AK7
9 A IS 2
t 76 I
• A 51

TR~I~ERS,' *Reasonable Rates

r

10 7

... 5
9KQO
•• 2 '
•K9761

•NeW Homes '

CARGO EXPRESS &amp; *Insured
H 0 ME S T E A0 E R
CARGO/CONCESSION *E&lt;perienced
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE- References A\'ailable !
NECK
HITCHES. Call Gary Slanley @
CARMICHAEL
EOUIP740-~91 -8044
MENT7CAAMICHAEL
TRAILERS SALES &amp; SER- L~:.:;;;.;.;.;:;:::;:::.~
VICE. SPECIAL 20FT
GOOSENECK FLATBED
s3999 . VIEW OUR ENTIRE
,TRAILER INVENTORY AT

W-/Toash Paicl, (740)2455671
2tl1 Deed llec:ont, of Village
lolunlciJIIII 3llf Washer/ Dryer, with a - - -- - -Meigs County, Ohio,. BuHclng iocaled Ill 405 Deck, in Glenwood, big Unfurnisloed 1 bedroom apt.
said poln1 of beginning Mtln Street, Al!l:lnt,
2nd floor, corner of SOcond
INIIng llllfktcl lly I Ollla tO OIYI CIIIZIIII i!l.,l!lwn~,--.-iiooi-l!il
....-""' I M ~~!l~- - !1!0 P.OII,
"PK" nel, thence North an adequate opporiU•
APAimiENrs
Referenoes' ' . required.
49 degreet OS minutes nlly to revW. and coniI'OiibM'
SOourity !leP&lt;&gt;sit. $275 per
East 266.4 feel to lA men! on lhe Village's ~
month, waler included. Call
Iron pipe, I ohg·
propaeed
CDBO 1 and 2 bedroom apart-, 446 4425 or 446·3936
Iron pipe 81 17.8 feel Application to maka """"s, fumishedandunfur·
set for referencei Improvements to the nished, and houses in
thence ' H79 ' water system before Pomer&lt;l'l and Middleport,
IJoo;m(liJ)
degren 30 minutes tho ~ o u - Its
,.. ___,
00
Wul 108.9 11181 to an oppllcallon to lhe Ohio securily depooi1 required,
"""""'
Iron pipe: !hence .Deplll'lmlinl
of pels, 741).992-2216 ·
,
South 73 ~ 00 Development.
1br all utfl~ies pd. also 2 br Borl&gt;er Carpet $5.95 yard
minutes West 209.~ Cttizan1 •• encout· all utiti1tes pd. near down- Aeminents $40 &amp; up,
feel Ia a "PK" nell to aged to llllend lhlo town Poinl Pleasant. 304- Mollohan Carpel 2212
the centerline
of meeting · on July 7, 360-ll163
Eastern Ave Gallipolis Oh
County Road 2tl, Old 2008 et 7:00 p.m. to
446-7444

r

Weol .

1r---::":"::":":
__,
H&amp;H

~. Very ·Spacious, be great fo4' someone to take
2 BeOrooms, CIA, 1 1!2 piano lessons. $300. 740Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Babv 446-6990
f \ i{ \I 'I I 'I ' II ~
Pool, Patio. Start $425/Mo.
No Pets
Lease Plus
,\ I I\ I .. I• II '"'

Of 593-8127

•o

"II F -

I K Q Ill 9
• Q Ill

EI tlwl &amp; Jltumbing

aoo-

2Bij 111 town, Ga!lipolis. No

•

C/\RPENTER
SE RV ICE

Niooqo&gt;ei28R apt and 2BA
'
$400 mon1t1 $4Cl1J c1epoa11 house. , Referenoos
&amp;
ML!i!CAL
199/mo! 3 bed, 2 bath, Bani&lt; (740)367-7025
depooi1 ,....;rod. No Pels.
INsrRUMI'NI'S
Repol (5% Qown, 20 years,
446-127l,. 709·1657
~
•
· l!"k APR! tor liS1inQs
2000 14xro 3BR 2BA tor ---~---620-4946 •~ R027
ninllland con1rae1 675-7911 Tara.
Townhouse Black Wurfi1zer Piano, would

~~~~~

5-for

• J 4 I

WV038725

old,
furnished
apartment.
no Schnauzer pop, 9 pets, deposil
&amp; references,
salt &amp; pepper, gre;n with
(740)992-ll165
kids. $200. 740-379-9063
please 1eave a message.

41 ..........
Olllinlra

11 Sl&gt;cwa1

Roolll!i I Ulloc•.
Rei 'll'W

2 adoraltle AKC
Yori(ie Terrier
males, 13 wks
checked $500

N. :kdA~.. Middlo!)or1 2 bf

RJR ~
c ;;::=::===~
.
riO FOil
lllllss
.
o-2 BR 2 BA Rio Grande area
1
1.,--oioiiiii.ii....,..iiiio;,.'.,J. no pelS, mferenoeo -~

SALE

FOil

July • . Addison PlkB • Middlo!)or1, Beech 51., 2 ,bf.
$6501""" • $65Qisac clap • fur- apartment, utilities
NO PETS. Call446-3644 tor paid, doposit &amp; rolerences,
moroinlo.
nopets,(740)992-ll165

~~

Pns

·

,_.,

Alder'

Drains, •

Driveways &amp; Wall&lt;ways. L&amp;L
Open Mondov.

2 bodioom house

lr.lsh pd. -

For

....
......
... .._

-·
·P- -

=7~~~ ::.,...:.~::::-=: ~nol~~·a./=
740-591~

..___iiiiiiiiliiiiiio"""rl

'

-- ~~;

I 0

~&lt;

~·

Jim O'Brien

• ,:·

~'

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Lilla Cll.,s

'

tamous ~. patniP1N111
.·;.. cablf~afi*ii•"•are!JIII.:I
·• ·,· ' .,.. _ _..frtrnqldalalliby
_ _ ........
·
T~y's Clue: YequalS J

.,'

"CW£ ~ • .A.YHP EVV TNEWF. HI, GIE

E. ~··Z f , WI H

G F F C H V C K A E Z FE 8 W FA

'D WfZI' ' L ' wNJFC'E GFFC NGHF EV

'.

j

'

lei's ...... &amp;ot . . . 1o 1he heirt
nine. lludo 1lis 1rick. win 1he - · and
play a club to foioo Y,.. ~ into h
&lt;bmoy.
~ walch yow entries.

CABBAGE

·

K F E II . Y VG .

" ·

P N J L P I N Z I II. V

PREVIOUS SOU.iTION - "I'mQ1alelul that I had the opponunily to woo1&lt; wil 1
L.eAnn Rimes, of Eddy Amold

t lnJ8 g'-'1 ln«r indiiBI!y.' -

Fann Lelllrt Falls

740-247-2113

I'.N

.

riil

Tyler-·

II

37

t.t;
-

Ealll
59.17
South
17
dog-• 17 minute•
~- thenCe
EM! 11.3 ,_;
Baulh 45 dagreet 3D

"*-Eaot103.2Ill 1118 Hqr1ll lkle of
0* '-;lhenc:e South
. , dll • • OS minulloa
&amp;II 111 11181; thence
· Soulll 18 deg""'a 12
- E a s t fOS.2or 1111118 South line of
Lewlt Grueeer land;
a - South 4V
dog-• OS minute•
Woot 214.8 11181 along
Jill Saullt - ol Lnts
Qn 1

to tt.. -

ofCountyRoad2ti, Oid
... No. 33;
filii- following the
can111t 11M ol County
Road 20, Old Stille
~ No. 33 to the
.,._ 01 beginning.
- 1 I . . 2.» - ·
_.,. .. legal rights

Of wey.
and axcepl the

e.w.

fOlio 1ng - • ..•
n d on the Soulll
.,.., and conweytd lo
DaNa L Arnold . end
IS I ad E. Arnold, by
dead ......, dad In
'~:IY M 2A3, Page 817
..... Count,. Deed
....,....,
end
d1 tliO d .. - :
lllloolld
In
the
11o ..._. ol Ballo~ 11ry,
Coo ., ol llelgo and
.... o1 Ohto; INing In
It ct1 n 11, Town 2
, ...... 13 If ()fila Cuss piiJ)'a
.... C~JIO, and being
I 1 tllrd .. fGM - • J
1n 1118 cen•oiCnntr Road 20,

*•

Gill U.S. llcMt 13, II

. . . . . . .1tcornrlf'of
1 Ul-lol ol Henry

Q..,.....
Alonrld,

llild .........

ncardad In
.......... 225, Page

.. ..,........ .

BIG NATE
KE"' THERE. KfJ) 1
~ &amp;&lt;.1'1' "~'~
1\ti.T ·PRINi llo'(
't'OlJRS TltUL'1'.
NATE WRIGHT?~-

·THIS ISN'T " PRINT!

--of

rtiiS IS JUST 1\
PHOniC.OI'Y ! r S+«UP
KIIOW, I LE.&lt;.RNEP ...U.

aw--o.o~ ·
8eca•eee1rial and error t.s ·ta~ wluable ~. you
now capable in the

AIIOUT PRINT~Nc;

11&lt;1 AAT CL"SS!

I

I

1}81.erali) required to be 14h

RManJ:.r.'•
a eyeI. ng.

·-

"'

-

•

...... '..o:.8dro-

on

fEillo\APS IMt4 WAS
IS'ER.MEANT RXIUTOPI~
AI rrs IN Ol:i NATtiE
TO Tll(6l All&gt; IECAI.JSE
WE Will. ALWAYS
TMIIZST fOI! TME "APPLE'
THAT IS KNOWLEDGE,
WE CAN NEVER
LIVE IW 'EDEN.'

PSI CONSTRUCTIO N

-end...,....-

000

·~

a

Is -niiO y&lt;&gt;U .

.t.OUARIUS (Jan. 20-!'9b. 19) - You
-ordinarily happy within your hokl. Your t.mily 1owt you u you are.
PISCES (Feb. 20·Mtlroh 20) - In your
caN, aocill actlvltielara llkety to be ;Us!
u muctl fun whether ~ llmil your par_ . . , to a fotw or mirllllo wfth

a ..-d. \llur hOppv-gorlucl&lt;y OIIHudo

_, onylhlng opooloil.
ARIEB (March 21 -Aprll19)- 1MN 1o a

p
1 Illy flat you PNd de!M tome
kind ol prolll
Of frlond
d tn. laml4r' at 1hll trne. Keep aH )JOUr
op1lona apon and ba NOd)o 10 , . . . on

th""""' •-

---tflov-

T&lt;IURUS (April 204My 20) - )IOU'
,. .,. qul01 typa ·or mote :OUigOing,
)'IOU ,..... a gill "po- . )'IOU-'" "·")IOU - - thing lfOU - " to - · thla lo ...

--

QEMINI (Mit' 21-J,.,. 2 0 ) - .......,. """" from .,. . _ t . , . _

hMto

-·-·
whO , . . -

auah • -

ihlo limo. Do

IllER . . . .

...

740-985-4141

'

',.

•

- tor·and

)IOU'-

juot

you at
toootlelr .. .. - r

m1g10 oocur

80UPTONUTZ

.(740) 992-2155

(304) 675-1333

"

UIL:O-

"unc;

m
' a ... ;.ma 10001 I

I

e
8

""

... ~

~

~

,.

beanJ OtiC gent
"Doclorii IIJII )a

IIIINT N\.fm:Rro lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

!'i)'eiJ are

NND3boolooi
I'

I'

I'

1

IIIIIl

UN~AMBI.E ABOVE tmERS.

TO GET "NSW£R

!bat,

I' ,.

. Dutlm ANSWBS 6/rliM

ARLO&amp;JANIS

wHI

won't ha~ to dp' anythlng ~-just
be youtHn - in order to make 1hln0&amp;

Advertise
in this space for
$64 r month

..

your tt.rt, t"MNid and tand5 In order to
onhaoooyour-&lt;IMI........ IIy
_ , . , ... 10101ly o1your being. • -

1he -

you chcxJw to UH II. you

DAY!

l\egister

.,

0C1aYe- Riplo- Obae - Budget- GIV'fS UP
Gnmps alqys told me lhallhe bes1 time lo bold on is "Wten you
J.d. t11e p11ce where die average person GIVES UP

you've

chariema ht rnMet ~ appealtng to
me""'111 ol the opposite gender. You
may deckle to use II wtth eonMK:lllt who

The Daily Sentinel .

l:lolnt

'

respond in weva more pr.aou. "than
money or jewell.
SAGITTARIUS (NaY. 23-0ec. 21) -You
naed produe1lw lnwlYoirierl1l 1hal buay

t.-a ............ .,.an )'DU .....
CAPRICORN (Dooc. 22-Jon. 19)- Whon

MAKE·
SOMEONE'S

(740) 446-2342 ·

-in

adopt a c::ooperatiYe epirtt. It coukl tum
out to be one cJf your graa.taa1 usets.

)IOU

r'o IMIW~

cialltpolis mailp 'Otrlbune

•r.

geous in more WIIVI than one.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Noo&gt;. 22) - If you
-

,.wt.......

_.......

worthwh.._

anything

could prove to be helpful and advanta-

and BOY

d"'na.

.....

U with
tn Mfe.

LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0cl. 23) - Tlolo mlghl '
be one of thoH tlmn when who you
Know 11 just as ~ •• what you
know• .Being with people you actmlre

iii

I

DI LV I

Ih '
you•,. ll&lt;.e~ 10 focuo more on
tho Iormor- h latler.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt 22) ~ \llu're a '

M

end

,.

f'C!Illlt:
r
~~~~~ .., . ,. ,l'"'Tf-"'Tt-".,r ~s.,l--11 ~~~:!~
~
.... .le..k

mo.t

PEANUTS

The
Reed,
2&amp;3BRWID
opiS.
$385 and...,,
BajaWldetire·minibike,new
OhioVIllage
lnl8ndto1toRacine,
.apply Tennesseo;
andParle,
Ben C/".
Hookup,
Tenanl ~~erw:::a~n;:a~;e~~ ,2007 Jeep Wrangler X, 4x4. cond
$350.00. Go cart new
..
to
lhe
Ohio Reed,
Middleport, pays electric. EHO
F' 1 73 1
6
speed,
hard
top,
AC,
cond.
$300 .00 304-675·
• •
4
DeJllirtment
msh,
12""W,7
2 Deep,
cruise $18,500 obo. ,Call 6866
ICIII'tr
of Olllo, Intend to apply
(304)182-3017
79"H
$500 (
4
0)446-6565
1..
_
Development for fund- to the Federal Aourve
, ,
.
381!-0813 or 441-4211
l'lr~~~---o:--,
lng under the comnou- Boanl for ..ion
nHy
Development to 27.76 peocent
.
.
Block Grant (CDBG) of lhe aharell and
,
RICK PRICE
Small CHieo Program, !hereby control of
1991 21' Jamboree Motor
New
Homes,
Room
Atldldoi., a..
e federally funded pro. Formero Banceharee,
Home Food angine 41 ,000
. Metal &amp;
Roofs,
Dod~,
gram admlnlateoed by Inc., PomerC!y, Ohio.
miles. 740-992-3842.
Balhroom
the Stele of Ohio. The Farmere lllincehareo,
1996 lnsbrook Slh wheel ,
Village o1 Racine It el~ Inc.. OOIIIrole Farmere
super slide. lol 19 Krodel
glble for $500,000 o1 Bank
&amp;
Sevlnge
. Park.
Great C'ondition
Flocal Year 2008 CDBG ComJIIiny, Pomeroy,
$10,000
OBO
219-405-3405
funding, pnWkllng the Ohio. The Fedlrll
-·t..tyfw
or 567-855-8174
Village . - o apptica- Reeenre conaldero a
IIMftllll or I 111111
Construction
ble progr8m require- n u - of fiiCtoro In
RV Sentice at CarmiChael
Vinyl Sieling
menlo. On June 24, deciding -her to
. . . . . .,.. Cllll Trailers 740-446-3825
Roofing, Siding,
Rep!-'
2001 the Village con- approve t h e -·
tllllwldiiJrud
Soffit, Decks, ·
dueled be first public You are invlttcllo tubWlndowe
Doors,
Windows,
lldl•tewllh
hearing to Inform cHI- mil c o m - In writ·
Roofing
Electric,
Plumbing,
zeno about the CDBG lng on lhla nolic:e to
•Deckl
program, how H may the Federal ~-·•
•Garages
HlpPJ II II dllf, .
be uled, Whet activ~ Bank of Cleveland,
• Pole Bulldlnge
tleo re eligible, and 1455 En! Sixth 9lrMI,
BASEMENT
• Room Acklblonti
WATERPROOFING
other lmporten1 pro- Clneland, Ohio 4411t. ·
Local CutibactDi
You.MIIpllaan
gram requl......m.
The CllftiiiiiH1t period
Uncoftditional lifetime guarOwner;
740-317-o544
Be led on both citizen , wlfl 1101
belora July
ad ..,. M•••ili'('
antee. Local references fur·
J_K_H .
Input and local offi· 4, 2008~ and may be
nished. Establi shed t 975.
qf • loved 0111.
742-2332
C811 24 Hrs. "{740) 446·
cilllt' ltMttmtnl of -longer. The
0870
,
Rogers
Basemeril
the Ylllaga'a - . t h o Board'e .,.-u... for
Waterproofing.
_
Village lo propoeing to prooeeelng eppll.:.,
For Remoclelillg and Ntw House BcNmc ·
undorlaka lhe loliow- !lone may be louncl at
General Contractor 35.Years
Call: MARCUM CONSTRUCfiON
lng CDBG ac1irity for 12 C.F .A. Part 2tz.25.
Expenence. No~. Hom...
Flecal Year 2008: To oblaln a copy of tho
r..IOIIfoVaiiiJ
Remodeling &amp; Hoine Repair.
• Room Additions • Garages • Vmyl
Vlllaop OJI Aaclna W- Federal •
R-vo
Licensed
and
Insured
WV
Plllllslt' I ollke.
Une
AlflfiCI,..it Boerd'a procec:tura. or
and Wood Siding • Roofing • Pole
03031 8 304-458·1 568 (Hi
Projecl, wlllcll will ban- H you need more lnlor·
304·511 ·0759 (C)
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks
etll 51% Of' low- illl1llon ilbout hoW to
and-modeoate Income lltlbmbyour~
.,.._, In the VIllage
tho notice, contact
47239 Riebel Road. Long Bouom, OH
OJI Rlclno. The Allen
M.
Brown,'
lng It tho lnllclpaled Banking Slii*•leor,
projacl budgat;
at (211) 571-3011 . The
Total Project Cool
F-al llaMIYti will
Cell: 740-41 6-1834
1
1131,500
conelder your com·
25+ yean experie~~~:t Fnt E~s
CDBG(Gr8nt)l!l1i,750
jiPiiOI"C"'an Aagionel iota public -'"II ar
~ 1aeion (Grant) formal'-~ the
....,,
notice If u-r .,.
~leasant
Ohio
Wlllar .-vall In wr1llng by
DlualcpmetltAuthority the Aeu: ... Bfnll on
(1..-.) 111,750
or belora IIIII '-1 cloy
A MCOild public hear· ol tt.. CiH11611 peri·
lng will be held July 7, od.
·
2008 :"' 7:00 p.m. altho (8) 27

........

C NAKK

you 1101111e chance.
·
LEO (Joly 23-Aug. 22)- A oorrobina1lon
o1
n;... _ .... Is

o..-• 'II•
•
L------_.1 ---;------- ~-~:~~~~·~~~!F~:f~-~
15.1 ..
• ....
•....

I""' ~~~ I

-

lhiP·-

9

r

•re

being wry1U00011Sfulwith
the same objective~ 1ha1 wwtre denied
pnwloualy. Go •fter whit you realty want
, CANCER (J..,. 21-Ju~ 221- Someone
you reoentty Milt is eager to get to know
you, but thll pereon might be_a bit lh)'.
Don'l ·.hei!Mie .to encourage a ntlallon-

�·.

..

•

Page 88 •The Daily Sentinel

Friday.l~~~~~: 21, ~

•

HJGII . . . I .. 1111• 4lf 1 Cll II 11t, Wille: NASCAR This Week, C/0

•

The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538; Gastonia, NC 28053

:eaan

'SpdlltCip
by.., laps). The Sprint Cup
points leader won lor 111e first

1W..: l.eno•lnduSirial Tools
301
• ..,...: New Hampshire Motor Speedway, Loudon (1.058

• ..-. eamprc Wor1d 200

·-Saturday,

chanceS at victory in an ace• ·
dent on 1l1e 105th lap. Busch
led on the lap-108 restart. but
another lncldent, ~
Stewait. Scott l'ruett and Peony Hamlin, sent the race into
!Mlrtime. Ihat left Busch to.
hold off a career-llesl showi~
by l1lrd driver David Gilliland.
Clint So¥. casey Mears and
Juan Pablo Mofllola rounded
out the top five on the 1.99mile course.

F1lrd,117.134 mph, July 13,
1997.
•1 •LMt_.: K,yte Busch's victnry at lnflneon Raceway, a
~ road course In Sonoma, Cal~.•
filled In wnat had heen a gapi~ hOle in his Sprint Cup resume. Busch led 78 of the
112 laps (a gree!WI1ite-dleek·
ered finish eldended the race

'

•

• ..-.o·~200

l'lesenled by RVS.oom
· -: MailjiliS (TeM.)
.....: New Hampshire . Mub:w,....ts PMc (.75
mUes), 200 laps/150 miles.
Mila Speedway, loudon
(1.058 miles), 200
· -: Sab.rilaJ, June 28.
•LMt ,_.. illllllr: Tlllllis
llp!V2U.6 mileS.
June 28. K\4llpil, (:Oril.
. . . ,.... wllllllr: Kevin aQ &amp;;I
Greg
Biftle, f0rd.·84.204 mph,
HIMdl. Chevrolet.
,.. 7,1999.
•Q r;~~e..-.:~n
HaM:k. Chevrolet. 130.716 • " - .....-: Ttawis Kvamph. .
pil, f1lnl. 91.806 mph; June
30, 2007 . .
Bobby
Hamilton Jr., Fold, 110.368 ........ Johnny Benmph, May u, 2002.
·
son oolecled the 10111 •ic. . . . . .: Series chamIDry of his career at the Mi~
pion Ca~ Edwards came up waul&lt;ee Mile 1n West ~lis,
with his first viCtory of the
l'fls.
sea9011 at the Milwaukee
Mile, hold ire o11 Joey
Logano. the previous week's

time on a road COLJSe lind the
fifth time this season. The TQI'~ miles), 300 laps/317.4 miles. o1a/Save Mart 350 mar1led
the ninth ViciDrw of the 23• -: Sund~J1, June 29.
year&lt;lld Buscll's career. Tony
.. II.Mt ,....~ ~Jenr¥.
Hamlin, CheYro1et
Stewart. Mevin Harvick lll1!l
IQ W,tte.....,:RyanNew- Jamie Mcto\tJm!r squandeoed

man, Dodge,133.357 mph,
Sept 12. 2003.
.~ • " - , . . .: Jeff Burton,

·~ta

c....-:

.w-e....-.

winner.

•

ld 'f.H! §Po'ill§l}ff

MATT ·KEN SETH

v

No. 17 DEWALT fORD.

SPRINT CuP SERIES

E
R

s.
u

.....

s

'

. . . . .1111

&gt;

•' .' ..........., ."'l

.. '. Harviell. 1lnOe a road-cour.llt """' .,

.ner. finished mat lnfineon Rlilce-· '

way, and the. winner, Busoll, ·WIS ·~
PI' aiJoul it. llulch bjamed IIIMct •
for the aash thllt also .elimlnlled •
Jamie McM'IfiBY and TOll S'-t ·:
from conll!rlticin, calll!'f;M ..a burniher.
deal." Busch .cracked, ' Eve!)tlody :
!TIIII&lt;es miStakes sometimes, but ,. ·•
wt~enliinllel&lt; comes up 10 me and •
nms his mouth ... ·like &amp; Michilllifl,
he sort of stuc:1&lt; ~ rChl back in his
mouth llere this weekend, so that •

~~;~~~;
--qualified

was good to see.'

made quite an
42nd,
Gealtlol pcoble1ns
- M from behind just as
_ .. . . . . . . sidelined ..

IIAICARJiila w.ll'w.....
•
Ollllillll(lw.lill ....: "It sounds • •
. wlheresaiOt of'hillorYin this·~-:
fi·.Neither IS prone to hide hiS~ \
• ,.iOn&amp;,.tither:
•· '~

:

sewentll

for most of
!1~::;::::·10
Mlrt350.

.,... .

:• fiiMd Gillillnd isn~ a career

.

was the best ol

:~:1*CUpc:aeertodate.
'

,, ,

1

JOhn Clarl\fNASCAR Thla -

,

llllll' ·rallls-lti'ICII•a ·: :' 1\.111_ ....... ~ .•

,_ ... 112111.

..

The' ~-chllmlliOn in '&gt; ·
NASCAA bistory- at tt1e top ieYil, .
!hat Is- was Bill Re&gt;lofd, .00 wls•
23 when he
tto! Grand National .
championship Jn 1950.

won

.

'~*lluleh .OO'S lWn nine Cup

'.!·• ••

.I #§!'. ]~.:.till

.

Lbil! .•
·t ~·
"ttw_,.. ... _ ....

I

,;ofOiil ·'*lir. but he's experienced
r;:,atte•1;6Wl b:eWI)·, where he ·
. ll.aed :In M other stock-car se~; t1elonl!is way to NASCAR. His
;.&lt;--up·ftnilh

&gt;
~

231ha5 alteady won

' (II\~ ewry·tind of track.

Jfl Qanlan,1111! most successful
' '1111111 iiiOer in NASCAR hiSIDry,
. '· Mid he - amlllllll Busch

..........,.

'IIDIAddriwe as he dil without ·

.-

" , , &amp;b IIAICAII

nmir«Oif. -. .

.... 1q latl!,'the reign~ Na. liaftwlde Series champion, Car1
, ,,fMdl. won for the first time
,... .,..in lhlt series. He held

':t."f Jibay .~ at ihe MHJ.au.;" ';lole, lllenilttec! baclc 10

ifquwlli'flnllh .ninth in Cup.
•

•·

,·

I

.

... 111M a few questions ~

ing ~ numbers. Woul~ NASCAR
own the fi&amp;ht&amp; to numbers? Do

It's way too early to count::out former champion this sea50n ·
•

1y Mlnte Dlltt 1 1 . •,

oiJ.

·

·

NASCAR This Week
Mart Twain famously quipped !bat
rumors of bis demise had been greatly

eXaggerated.
In other words, at the time, Twain
was still alive. So is Matt Kenseth, in
terms of the Sprint Cup champi·
onship.
The methodical Kenseth, who won
the championship in 2003, finished
eighth in the Thyot&amp;ISave Mart 350 at
lnfineon Raceway, and it lifted him to
12th in the point standings. Six races
ago, he was 22Dd. Critics were calling
for last rites on·Kenseth even making
the Chase for the Sprint Cup.
Ten races remain in the~ sea·
son, and Kensetb is in position to
make it, and if be makes the Chase,

.~ H '

he'll have l.~t c:hanee at ·becom·
ing a two-time champiOn of stock-car
Ial:ing's p~r series. ·
.
Ml definitely feel like we're getting ·
better," said Kenseth. Ml mean, we had
a string of miserable finicbes there ...
(and now) things .have.defiDitely been
on the upswing."
Wbat goes around, comes around.
Few 1re as adept atKen.setb of mak·
ing the best of what he has or at ad·
vancing up through the pad: as a race
progresaes.
.
"If you bring fast em to tbe track
every week, and they're CO!Dpetitive
and fast, and they can rua in tbe top
five l!ld rUD in the top·to, you know
you'll hopefully 11tker your points
and win some races .-et or later,"
Kensetb said.
What's more, it's unfair to claim tbat

KaJ&amp;eth, who is from Cambridge, WIS.,
sad'ifices riCing to win in the interest

of CGDSistenc:y. After all, he's won 16
races and a championship. He..,. five
times in 2002 .and four times in 2006.
M[t ·changes over timet sai4
Kenseth. ·•r me111, your goals change
and, maybe, bow you feel about it
changes and all that stuff.
"But, !.think. after we won a cham·
pionsbip, I think our goal every year
is to win a championship. You want to
get into c;lwnpionship form, you want
to be tbe best 111d you want to be able
to win ra~:ea, and you want to be able
to do;alltllat Jtuff, so, really, that ioal
never clr-.es." ·
.. .

Read more from Monte Dutton at
WIIIW.gastongazette.com

teams request certain numbers. or '
would NASCAR assq, them to the
·wrious teams. Would RCR own the
No. 3, or can another team use it?
How did .Dale (Earnhardt) Jr. get No.
88 aw8J from Yates Racirw? Is thefe.
atool! ~· scimelhi~ on whO had Mil'·
iOus llUMbets over the yeais of-..
.
NASCAA? . ;,
lllrt ......

. '· '

4'n. Ont.

l~~~ NASCAI! owns then~ '
cr~. . .!lil·fnlbnnaily, QfiOws tea11111 to

ftin !he rigllts. The lfO: 3 doesnt
teohnically belong to Rlcliarll Cltlt.
dillS Racing, llut NASCAR lsnt likely i
to B/fllard ~to another team. just as • •
lsn~ 1/kelytoi'Snt rights 1o No. 43 to,
any team other !han l'e!Jy £nterprls- •
es. Eamharrlt Jr. managed 1o secure '
NIJ. 88 from ~ because -IIIJ/n,
Informally, and Willi ·!he .tPI)nllll/ of :
NASCAR - ils former teem. Whetlier '
by courtesy or other cooslllerJ!Ioos, ,

allowed IL To our k• ~.there /so
nl a book solely cieYoted to numbers
of NASCAR cars, but thele""' many .
booics, not to menfJOn ,WeiJ s/ll!S, In
wtlicli !he subjeCt Is aadm 1e~-

The ·Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH

I

1

r rJ rV"'1 rJ r 1 v ,.-

a.u aa••-•.....,.
I \. ' •

•·

Let's Go Racin!!

"S nstlli£' ,.,;11M·
NGWMIIIng:
• ·Ford I llatarcnlift IWfil

• e.~g~~-. ,...,...;c.. a~.
• AIMfwwlllt AI~ 8IIMt lletlll CO-OIMN11S
• For All .. 1111 at v•lcln

(740) 992-2155

Hoi.ZER CLiNic

'

June 27, 2808

G ASpecial Supplement T~

.

.

Tile G·P\&gt;1111 baily Tribune. Point ~~nt Register &amp; 11le ~y ~tinel

~]M' ptxbll£; e.crMA, ~,my~.rom. ~.m~
.... ..., ... . .,,.
.
" . ....
..
·~ · ,...
~

.. -

'

" ... • .. .. • •

.. •

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