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Page B8 •

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, July to,

2008
--~ --~

-,_,....

Reds·

who reached on shortstop
Aramis Ramirez's one-out
error in the first. He was
thrown out trying to steal
from PageBl
second as Griffey struck
out.
ed.
Ramirez hit Johnny
"Tonight he was really,
.
C
ueto's
first pitch in the
really good," Dunn said.
the sixth into the
bottom
of
"The pitch I hit was probably the only mistake he bleachers in left center for
made the entire game. his 16th homer to break a 1That's probably the best 1 tie.
Cueto (7-9) gave up eight
I've seen him .in a long
and· five runs, four
hits
time."
in 6 2-3 innings.
earned,
But things got ' shaky for
the Cubs after Zambrano The Cubs added three runs
with tw9 outs in the seventh
left the game.
Marmo! relieved to start when Kosuke Fukudome hit
the ninth and gave up a two- · an RBI double on a fly. ball
out single to Jay Bruce that that went over Dunn's head
went off first baseman near the wall in left and Lee
Derrek Lee's ·glove, then delivered an RBI single that
walked Jeff Keppinger and finished Cueto. Ramirez
Ken Griffey Jr. to load the greeted reliever David
Weathers with an RBI doubases.
Kerry Wood relieved and ble.
. ent Rr.ndnn Phillip~ to foul . "You can tell the way he
out to first to earn his 23rd did against Zambr&lt;!no how
badly he wanted to win this
save .in 28 chances. .
Other than Dunn's 23rd game," Reds manager
homer. the only Reds Dusty Baker said of Cueto.
baserunner
against "Boy, it's tough, especially
Zambrano was Keppinger, the way he was competing."

Columbus
. Blue Jackets
head coach
Ken
Hitchcock
speaks during
a news
conference to
·announce his
three-year
contract
extension
· with the
· hockey team
Wednesday in
Columbus.

AP photo

Ttie Cubs tied it in the
second with an unearned
run as Geovany Soto doubled and raced home when
shortstop Keppinger mishandled Mark DeRosa's
grounder for an error and
the ball ended up in short
left center.
Notes: Zambrano is 13-9
in his career against the
Reds, including 3-0 this season.... Marmo! was limping
·after covering first base and
beating Paul Bako to the
bag in the ninth, but said
after the game he was OK.
... Rich Harden and Chad
Gaudin, acquired in a trade
from Oakland on Tuesday,
joined the Cubs before the
game. Harden will make his
Cubs' debut against the
Giants on Saturday at
Wrigley Field .... Rj:ds IF
Jalbert Cabrera was sent to
Class A Daytona far a rehabilitation assignment. He's
· been on the DL since June
2 I when he dislocated his
left index finger sliding
head first into second
against the Yankees.

Gospel quartet ·
coming to Pomery's
amphitheater, As

Middleport~ Pomeroy1 Ohio
50 CENTS • Vol. ;;8, No.

• Reds hit 7 homers
against Cubs.
SeePage Bl

'

of Rin' Grande/Community
College.
During the meeting sevPOMEROY
The era! personnel matters
Meigs Local Board of were handled . Michael
Education has rejected all Barnett, special education
bids on the consiruction of teacher at Meigs Middle
the high school sewage school was granted a one- ·
treatment facility and will year leave of absence for
educational
purposes,
now rebid the project.
Action to reject the bids · Michael Kennedy was
was taken at this week's . hired as cross country
meeting of the Board after·i.t coach at the high school,
was announced that all of Matthew W. Knopp was
the bids exceeded the pro- employed as a vocational
jected cost. Plans are for agriculture tea~her on a
the new sewage system to one-year contract for the
treat not only waste from corriing school year, and
the high school but t.he new Ronald Vlasik was given
Meigs Branch, University an additional 20 day s for
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

HOEFLICHIIMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.

.

Hitchcock said. "But when
the gears of the season got
ratcheted up, we weren ' t
good enough. But we're in ·
that area now .wlfere we canplay with anybody."
·
· He stopped short of predicting the Blue .Jackets
would make the .playoffs,
however.
"Making the playoffs
means pushing estabhshed
teams out. They · are not
going to go away easy. You
are going to need to stick a
stake right through them to
push them out," he said. ''I
cap 't sit here and say we're
going to get in the playoffs.
But I know o·ne thing, right
now when our team plays to
the top level and another
team plays to the top level
we can compete against anybody every night now."

BY RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

One acquisition the Blue
Jackets had yet to make was
a first- or second-line center.
Umberger figures to center
the fi~st Jine bt'lween cap.mi'n
Rick Nash and Huselius, but
the second line was missing
a triggerman to fit in with
Torres and Fredrik Modin.
Howson said holdover
center Michael Peca was
close to signing a one-year
contract that could fill that
hole.
· "Michael Peca 's signing is
imminent," Howson said.
"He has the contract in his '
hands now. It was agreed to
yesterday. As soon as we get
11 back and signed, we'll
make that announcement."
Peca had eight goals an\1
.
AP photo
26 .assists last year, thirdbest on the team with · 34 Cincinnati Reds pitcher Johnny Cueto walks to the du~out after being pulled d·urltig the seVenth inning of a baseball game against the Chicago Cubs on Wednesday in Chicago.
points.
,

• COLUMBUS - Coach
Ken Hitchcock signed a
three-year contract exten~ion with the Blue Jackets
on Wednesday, saying he
welcomes the chance to tum
' the only team not to make
the playoffs into winners.
" "This is a challenge I want
badly," . said Hitchcock,
whose new deal will kee.p
him behind the bench
through the 2011-2012
team. "I want to be the
coach that takes this team to
the highest lev~!."
. The
56-year-old
Hitchcock has a career NHL
fecord of 470-3 I4- I 17 at
Dallas, Philadelphia and
Columbus. His Stars won
the Stanley Cup in 1999.
He said this is the first
time he's come into a job
where the team wasn't
~readymade" · and poised to
hiake a run at a title.
\ An elec'tronk version of the ap- with copies of the application:
under Scl.1ion 4561.341 of the Re: "I don't just want to be a Name and Description ol tile Pro.
•\ plication can be found at the Ollio Public Utilities Commission of vised Cole;
coach who hops on the (108ed Fadllty
Power Siting Board's Web site ut Ohio
· • The facility will serve the public
bandwagon of a team that's
I
already emerged. 1 want to American Municipal_ Power-Ohio
http://opsb.ohio.gov. To retrieve the Ohio Department of Agriculture
interest. convenience. and neces-;
1
l application, search under "Current Ohio Department of Development sity;
,
tle on the building side of (AMP-~nol ~ I~ ~-onslniCt
I
things, from the ground an electnc tr.tnsmtss1on hne and a.&lt;Cases"
for
case
number
06-1357Ohio
Department
of
Health
•
Thefacility's
impact
on
the
viabil•
I
EL-BTX.
'
.Ohio Department (If Natuml Re- ity as agricullllralland of any land iri
boor up," he said. "We're · soc1ated mtercoonet11on swucbyunl
sources
an existing agricultural district COS:
really looking forward to located ml..ctan Townshtp and SotPursuant to Rule 4906-5-06 of the Ohio Department ofTransportlltion tablished under Chapter 929·of the
what's going to take place tonTow?shtp,MelgsCounty,OhUJ.
he "
Th1s proJC.."t ts known as the AMPOhio Administrative Code, the fol- Ohio Environmental Protection ·Revised Code that is located .withiti
. re. . . .
.
GS Transmission Line. A' required
lowing local government officials Age"")'
the site of the proposed m'\ior utilitY,
. In hts fmt full season by the Ohio Revised Code Chapter
.._,. in Meigs Coonty have been served Ohio Historical Society
facility; and
.
lx:hmd the, Columbus bench, 4906, AMP-Ohio seel• a Certifiwith a copy of the application:
• The facility incorporates maxi·
Httchc_ock s Blue Jackets set cate of Environmental CompatibilCriteria Used to Review the Ap- mum feasible water conservatiml
franchtse re~ords for wms · ily and Public Need fiom the State
Meigs County Commissioners
plication
proc1ices as determined by tho
t3~) and pomts (80) whtle of Ohio's Power Siting Board.
Mr. Michael Davenport. President
Board. considering available tech;
gomg 34-36-12 m 2007-8.
100 East Second Street
The following eight criteria are set nnlogy and the nature and econom:
, General manager Scott Date, Tillie and Loadlon or Pubo
Pomeroy. Ohio45769
forth in Section 4906.10 (A) of the ics of the various alternatives.
Howson said it was impor- lkHearln&amp;
Revised Code and will be used. Section 4906.07 of the Revised
tant for the Blue Jackets to
,I:' . !
Meigs County Health Department along with i.dditional inFormation, Code provides that:
·
lock up Hitchcock to contin- The Ohio Power Siting Board will AMPGS project, and is not being Mr. Larry Marshall, Health Com- , by the Bo.1rd in the reviewing of (A) Upon the receipt of an apue the franchise's develop- ~ holdin~ hearing.\ where the pub- undertaken on a stand-alone basis. missioner
.
.
the application for a cen_ificate to plication complying with Section
lnent. Terms of the deal were he IS tnv1ted to prov1de wntten or
.
112 East Memonal Drive
•'Onstruot, operate and mamtain the 4906.06 of the Revised Code, the
hot disclosed.
oral comments ~garding this pro· The application for a Certificate of Pomeroy, Ohio 45771
AMPGS Tmnsmission Line:
Power Siting Board shaU promptly
·: " I don't think there's any- posed transtnlsston ltne. A oon-nd- Envimnmerual Compatibitily and
.
.
· --~ fix a date for a publtc heanng there.t&gt;ne in the hockey industry judicatory hearing will be held on Public Need is now pending be- Mr. Robert Morris
'The basis of tile need tO. the fa- on. not less than sixty nor more than
who wouldn't have Hitch at September 17. 2008, at 6 p.m. at fore the Slltle of Ohio Power Siting Letart Township Trustee
cility. In the case of a major utility ninety days after such re.:eipt, and
the top or near the top of the Meigs High SciKxu, 42~1 Pome- Board. Thisapplil:atiun has been as· 49435 Lighthouse Road
facility described in division (B)( I) shall conclude the proceeding as exJist of coaches," Howson my Pike, Pomemy. Ohio, 45769.
signed Case Number 06-1357 -EL- Racine, Ohio 45771
of St:ction 4906.01 of the Revised peditiously a.• prlll:ticable.
~aid. "This is a really critical
BTX. This number should be inCode. the S.1atd shall pll:Sume the
. . . .
.
hearin•
will
be
1
ded
·
11
·
·
,
h
Meigs
County
Disttict
Library
need
lbr
the
facility
as
that
need
is
(B)
On
an
appl•cat1on
lor
an
amendstep for us, to have some. sta- An •adiudicat&lt;""
'
.. ,
c
. .
c u m a commun~eanons wn
.
·
t· . ·fi , he B rd sh II ·
Ms. Knsti Eb6n. Director
stated in an application pursuant to ment o a certt cate. I
oa
a
bihty and credibility at the held SeP4'mber 22, 2~. begmnmg respect to this proceedin . .
at
IOa.m.
attheofficeSofthePublic
g
216
West
Main
Street
division
(Al(3)
of
Section
4906.06
hold
a
heafln~
1n
the.same
ma~ner
head coaching position. It's
·
depicts th Pomemy Ohio45769
of the Revised Code·
as a heanng" held on an apphcn·
f1 great day for us to know Utilities Commission of Ohio· 180 The accompanymg
map
e·
•probable envi· non ,or
' a cent·ficnte ·r
~~-'
East
Broad·
Street,
Columbus.
Ohio,
JSed
and
.
Th
•
The
nature
of
the
t the P•"~"""-u
that Hitch is going to be here
1
re::r!:'.~~ntye Meigs SWCD .
ronmental impact of the prnposed ~hange in th~ f~thty w&lt;?Uid result
:With us as we . seek to 43215-3793, Hearing Room IIC. :r~ is
Oh.
hould
be
riOted
tha
d
'
Mr.
Joo
Bohn,
Challman
facility·
m.any matenal tncrea.e m any enf:lecome a playoff team and
1
The
deadline
for
filing
a
petition
to
the
~~ed
scale
and
limi~
d~~~
33101
Hiland
Road
•
Whether
the
facility
represents
v~ronment~l impact of the facili~ or
then a Stanley Cup team."
interVene
as
established
by
the
ndth.
should
be
used
.
Pumeroy,
Ohlo45769
the
minimum
adverse
envm)nmena
substantial change tn the locat1on
1
The Blue Jackets have
law J··-'ge is within 30 IS map! ide. c · f theon y aul T
PI .
talimpact con.•ideting the state of of all or a portion of such a facility
been active in the past niinistrative
• •
...., . ·
genera gu
op1es o
aCI!Ja uppers ams.
•
·
h th·
'd-" · h ~ •
·
·
days
ol
the
pubhcahon
of
thts
no·
·Jud.
·'fi
Ches
W
Di
.
avatlable
technology, the nature and ot er an as pli)Vt "" m t e wter·
·
.
0
1
1
1
1
inonth, making major trades . .
..
d be ••.._.•__. ' n~ app lea t~m,mc tn)l ~ c
ter ater stnct
·. , · .
·
nates set torth in the a bcation.
&lt;MAD..,.,... details of Iocat1on and construction, Mr. O..mald
Poole, Operations Gen- economics ut vanous altemttuves,
PP
at brought center/winger ace. Pel!bo_ns ~
to
the.
Pubbc
Uohttes
Comm1sston
are
available
for
public
inspection
at
era!
Manager
and
other
pentnent
C&lt;;OSideraoon~;
(C)
The
ChaJnnan
of
the Power
.J .
Umberger
from
of
Ohto,
IRI_l
East
Broad
Street,
Cothe
following
locations:
Holly
Lane
•_
In
the
case
of
electnc
ttansm1sston
Siting
Board
shall
cause
each np39561
, hiladelphia, forwar~ Raffi
·
. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
hoes. that the facthty ts cons1st~t plication filed with the Board to be
:rorres from Edmonton and lumbus. Ohto43215-3793.
.
.
.
.
.
Meigs
County
District
Librllf)'
.
wtth regJOnal plans for _expansron investigated and shall. nolle.'-' than
Hefensemen Fedor Tyutin
18
Meigs County Office of Economic of .the ~·~ 1 Jll~wer grid ~I eloc- fitleen days prior to the date of any
and Christian Backman Th•s nottce the first oobce pub- Ms. Krisli Eblin Director
and WOO&lt;foroe Development
InC systems servtng this Slate and application is set for hearing, submit
from the New York Rangers, lished regn!ding this project and the 216 West Main Street
project's
respective
hea~ng
dates.
·
Pomemy,
Ohio
45769
Mr.
Perry
Varnadoe,
Executive
Ditn~nnected utility systems, and. a wrinen report to the Board and to
along with the free-agent
.
.
.
,
(740)
992-5813
rector
the
f~lhty wtll serve the tntere.'\1.\ ·~f the applicant. A copy of such report
l;ignings of forward Kristian
The
JlfUJC1.1 lllcludes construction
238
West
Main
Street
elec_tr1c
system e&lt;:onomy and reh- shall be made available to·any per·
}-luselius and defenseman
an approximatelr ~-mile long Ohio Power Siting Board
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
ablhty; . .
.
. . son upon request Such report shall
f.iike Commodore. The club of
345 klkwolt transmtssiOII hne and Public Utilities Commission of
' The faclhty Will comply wtth set forth the lllttuie of the investigatraded away inconsistent related facilities n«eSSSII)' to trans- Ohio
Meigs County Engineer
·Chaptm 3704. 3734, and 6.111 of tion,andshnllcontainrccommendOO
imd disappointing young mi! the electricity generated by a 180 East Broad Street
·
Mr. Eugene Triplett
the Revised.Ctlde and all rules and findings with regartl Ul division (A)
f&gt;layers Gilbert
BJ;Uie, proposed 960 Megawan net electric Columbus Ohio 43213-3793
106 Holly Lane
standards ndc.ljlled .under those chap- or sec1ion 4906.10 of the Revised
fl/ikolai Zherdev and Dan 'generation facility, COIIsisting of (866) 270-6772
Pomeroy. Ohio45769
tc:rs and under SectiOns 1501.33, Code and shall become part of the
Fritsche.
.
two 480 MW net electri&lt;; generat1501.34, and 4561.32 of the Re- record and served upon all parties to
; The Blue Jackets finished ing unill1 .. to be btiHt. i~ the vicin!ty American Munkipal Power-Ohio ·Sutton Township Ttllstee
VIsed Code. In determtnmg whether the pnx:ecding
ll points out of the eighth ofLetartf:alls, M~1ga r.ounty, O~to. Kent Carson. Director of Commu- Mr. Larry Ebersbach
tbe facility will comply wit~ •~I rules
·
lind final playoff spot in the To honor tts publte ~wer f~"~· nications
P.O. Bo~ 147
and standard.· adopted unde-r Soc·
Am~:rican Municipal
~estern Conference a year the proposed gcmatlun facd~~ IS 2600 Airpo&lt;1 Drive
Syr;~L..l~. Ohio 45779
tion 45ti1.32 of the Revised Cnde.
-~
Power-Ohio
ago.
named the Amencan Munte1pal Columbus Ohio 432l9
the Board shall consult with the of.
2600 AirpOPtDrivc
: "Last year I was really Power Clcnerating Station ("AMP- (614) 337.6222
The Ohio Power Siting Board ha.~ fice~faviationof~edivlsionof thc
Columbus , Ohio 4~219
f&gt;roud of our team because OS"). The trall.'lmission proje..1 is
seived the followinl Slate agencies multt-modal planmng and progmms AMP &lt;614) 337 -6222
WW\.Y .ami'H&gt;hio.org
1111
inextricable
component
of
the
·
of the Depanment of Transponat km
~e maxed out a lot,"

1oca!t

~

I(

~

.'

""" ·"')&lt;hlil)"·ntinl'l.nml

provicle instruction/assis - program involves long-time issue which he claims will
tance to the vocational teachers mentoring and bring savings to not only
agricUlture students.
assisting entry level teach- sc hool
districts
but
The Board voted to renew ers which come into the di s- employees. The benefit ttl
the district's membership in trict.
Meig s Local . according to
the Oho coalition for equity
Meeting with the Board information provid ed by
and Adequacy of School was Bob Smillie who was Smiddie.
would
be
Funding for the 2008-09 there to talk about Senate $2, 105.700. under ta x plan
year at a cost of 50 cents per and Hou se Bills 186 and an
pupil. Approval of the stu- initiative petition regarding . B, but even hi gher under
dent handbooks for Meigs health care coventge in the ·plan A. two action 011 the
Primary, Intermediate and State of Ohio . H.e said that matter was taken by the
Middle Schools was post- . passage of the bill would Board .
Attending the meeting
poned pending further result in reduction of costs
for health care in surance in were Roger Abbot\, Ron
review.
Logan, Barbara Mu sser,
Al so approved was the ·school districts.
Smiddie said that the Larry Tucker and Scott
revised entry year teacher
program policy and proce- group supporting ihe J.eg- Walton, Board members . .
dures as submitted by the islation is circulating peti- and Superintendent William
advisory -committee. The tions in an effort to get the Buckley.

Eastern board
tables buildinr
plans until (09
0

· Bv BRIAN

.OBITuARIES

REED

Edee Starcher
' (second from left)
.of Marietta, displays one of her
handmade quilts
which will be on
display during The
Fabric Shop's
"Christmas in July"
event to celebrate
the store's 49 years
in business.

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern Local School
District will wait a year
before it considers pursuit
of state funding for an addition
to the
Eastern
Elementary School.
At its most recent meetIng, the ,board of education
voted to defer participation
in the Ohio School Facilities Commission's
facilities assistance program
until July, 2008. Earlier this
year, Superintendent Rick
Edwards· said the board is
waiting for the outcome of
proposed legislation and
possible changes in the
OSCF's guidelines before
proceeding with any further
plans. The board's action
will place plans on hold.
Faculty and administrators in the district worked
for several months with the
OSFC to · determine the
needs of the district in terms
of future facilities. In the
end, the district qualified for
funding assistance for an

.PageA3
• Charldine Alkire, 62
• Ada Congrove, 85

INSIDE

·.

J.

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

- - - ~·.-~... ,~ · I ...~· ' •

Notice of Proposed Major l Jtility Pacility

"'

FRIDAY, Jl' l.Y 1 t , 2008

t

Meigs school board rejects bids on sewage plant

SPORTS

Columbus
gives coach 3-year extension
.
.

-· .

.~ Triplets celebrate
birthday. See Page A3
• Annual memorial
ceremony set at
Portland. ·See Page A3
• A Hunger For More.
See Page AS

Beth Sergentlphotoo

Unique quiltsfeatured
during anniversary
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - It's indeed· a unique feat to be in business
for 49 years and The Fabric Shop is celebrating that
anniversary with a unique "Christmas in July" event July ·

Please see Eastern, AJ ·

I2- I9.

Racine;
Southern to
enter purchase
agreement

WEATHER

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE
Racine
Village Council and the
Southern Local Board of
Education have tentatively
Detalla on Page A2
agreed to a purchase agreement involving the old
Racine Junior High School
.
lot.
At its most recent meeting, co4ncil approved a pur2 SEcnoNs- 16 PAGES
chase agreement drafted by
Village Solicitor Douglas
Annie's Mailbox
A2 Little which would transfer
oaie'ndars
A2 the deed to . the property
"'
from Southern to Racine
Classifieds
Bs- 6 Village. The purchase price
will be no leSs than 5J cents
Comics
B? a square foot which breaks
down into 2/3 . rds of the
Editorials
A4 appraised value or $22,988
'
'
. an acre Jess expenses.
· Faith • Values
A5-7 · · No funds are due
'·
Southern until Racine
Movies
A3 receives funds from the ulti. mate purchaser of each part
NASGAR .
B8 of the property whkh is to
Obituaries
A,
be sold for commercial
"""' developmen1. Racine is
Sports
B Section working
with
the
•
Community Improvement
Weather
A2 Corporation to bring commercial business into the
© aoo8 Ohio Valley PubllshliiR Co. . village and will be selling
the Jots through the CIC for
the purpose of "conveying
deed." If the CIC and village

..

INDEX

•

'

'·

' Pl•se ... Radne. Al

••

Marjorie Rogers (left) of Henderson, W.Va. explains how
she completed this difficult Dear Jane quilt pattern. Rogers'
quilts will also be on display during The Fabric Shop's
anniversary event featuring a variety of quilting styles.

During the event, the,shop will be displaying a wide variety of locally made quilts that range from traditional to
modern styles.
Mary Arn Schoultz. employee at the shop, said even if
someone isn't a quitter, the unique quilts are something to
stop in and apprec'iate. Many people consider quilt making
an art form that's become lost in J world of instant everything, There is nothing_in~tant about a handmade quilt.
Qui1ter Eaee Starcher of Marietta said one of her quilts
began with an idea in July and it was completed ih
December. Starcher combines traditional and modern
threading techniques and several pieces of her work will he
on display during "Christmas in July." On one quilt she
took hand-painted thread and created forest animals while
on an an quilt she wove fabric strips to create a tret trunk.
"You do what the fabric tell s you tq do," Quilter Marjorie
Rogers of Henderson, W.Va. said about where the ideas for
quilt designs come from .
Rogers' work will also be displayed during ·:christmas in
July." Rogers has quilted everything from the difficult Dear
Jane pattern to a quilt with the state flowers of all 50 states
hand embroidered onto the fabric .
Both Starcher and Rogers agree quilts are almost&lt; too special to part with, even for a few days. Starcher, who has
only been quilting for three years says she can't bring her-

Please see Quilts, AJ

Court supplements county postage fund
fund, which receives fees be served by certified mail.
collected • from parties and a local court rule
appearing in the court. Story requires that those comPOMEROY -The case· issued a coun order allow- plaints be served by restrictload of civil . collections ing the funds to be appropri- ed delivery, so defendunts
cases has nearly doubled in ated into the county's themselves must sign for
Meigs County Court in Uie postage line.
the s11mmons and other
Most of the increase in the court documents. Those letlast year. Meeting Thursday,
Meigs
County court's civil docket · and ters cost $9 each to mail.
Commissioners approved a mailing costs is the result of · In other business, com$10,000 appropriation from more civil judgment suits missioners:
• Increased the county 's
the court to supplement the being fil.ed in the court.
Examples are collections mileage reimbursement rate
county's postage budget.
According to County cases alleging consumer for employees from 40
Court Judge Steven L. · credit default, such as credit cents to 50 cents.
Story, the appropriation was card accounts, Story said.
• Approved daycare conmade available through the
Ohio statutes require tracts with the Department
court's special projects defendanls in those cases to ; of Job and Family Services
BY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED II MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

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with OESG Tiny Tots,
Albany, and William and
Mary Kiddie Academy,
Wellston.
• Approved payment of
bills in · the amount of
$397,1 83 .,69, of which
$19,152.76 was paid from
the general fund .
• Approved appropriation
adjustments as requested by
the Soil
and
Water
Conservation District.
Present
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
and Clerk Glorift Kloes.

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Friday, July u , 2008

.B THE

· "The Daily Senfih
.- e....--... . ,. .,
ANNIE 'S MAILBOX

PageA2·

ND

Friday, July u, 2ooA

'Make it work'
may not work

Public
meetings
t
.

Bv KATHY

you give them enough to
pay for the cost of your
meal so they are not out-ofDear Annie: I have been pocket on .anything. You are
married to " Ja~k" for 35 informed that it is $125years . In the beginning , it $ 150 a plate. and by the
was OK and I thoueht that way. they invited 250 peowas good enough '
pie .
Jack.'s· parents struggled
I would appreciate knowto support · their family. ing what the prottoco&gt; is so
whereas rny parents were we can end our family arguvery well otf. Jack has often ment.
Broke in
told people. " I married her Connecticut
Dear Broke: Nice slmkefor the money." This is a
very painful thing io hear, down gofng nn. You are not
yet he continues to say it obligated to give a gift from
and people continue to tell .. a registry. It is onl y a recme when he does.
o mmendati on. You are
We have two children and never obligated to give a
he is a wonderful father, but wedd ing gift that is more
he definitely Jacks in the than you can afford . nor are
hu sband department. He , you su pposed to pay for the
often tells me I am stupid or cost of your meal. Weddmgignores me: and when we . expenses are whatever the
have 'disaercc mcnls. he calls bnde and groom deCJCie to
me not ve ry nice names. pay for. and guests give
Sex· is almost nonexistent. whatever they choose ..
I'm pretty sure he has some- Period .
,
Dear Annie: I read the
one else on the side because
let.ter from "Redding,
he's had affairs in the past.
My friends tell me this is Calif.." Whose 60-year-old
emotional abuse and 1 husband has befri ended a
should not have to live this "lovely young woman" who
way. 1 have a friend named contides in him , cries on his
"Mike." Right now . ..ye are shoulder and even has him
just friends. We talk and drive her to doctor appointenjoy each other's compa- ments. He claims to be a
ny. He has been my rock for father fi gure to her. . but he
several years. 1 di scovered was never so involved in his
several months ago that children's li ves. Thank you
· Mike is in love with me and fur saying lie shuut&amp;·kuud.wants me to divorce Jack. it off.
.
On seve ral occasions. he
I had a ve ry simil ar expehas hinted so to Jack , which - rience with my husband . He
only causes more problems befriended a much younger
that 1 don 't need . The thing woman who had · a pretty
is , I've fallen in Jove' with bad life and he helped her
Mike . He respects me and out a' lot. I thought he was
loves me. and being with being a good guy and had
him is much better than OK . no problem with it . He is
I believe he 1s my soul mate . now married to her. h' ld ·11 b Indianapolis
M 0 ld
y
est c 1 WI
e
Annie's Mailbox is writvery angry with both her
father and me if we di vorce. ten by Kathy Mitchell and
She knows how miserable Marcy Sugar, longtime ediwe are but doesn't care. She tors of the Ann Landers
.wants us to stay together no. column. Please e-mail your
matter what. "Make it questions to anniesmail" h
1 d • box@comcast.net, or write
wor k , s e says.
nn t
A . , M 'lb
P.O
want to upset my children, to: nme s a1 ox, . .
but they are adults. Isn't it Box 118190, Chicago, ' JL
time for me to Iiave happi- 60611 . To find out more
ness?
Lost and abont Annie's Mailbox,
Confused
and read features by other
Dear Lost: Whether or · Cr11ators Syndicate writers
not to stay with y.our hus- and cartoonists, visit the
band is not a deci sion for Creators Syndicate Web
your children to make . page at www.crealors.com.
However,' if you want to
have no regrets, we strongly
urge you to get counseling,
with or without Jack, so ·
both you and your children
will know you tried your
best to "make it work."
Dfar Annie: Please settle
an argument about shower
and wedding gifts. Some
• FREE 2tll7 Tic:hnlal Support
brides register for shower
•
lnatanl MesSilgin!J· keep ,.wr bud~ list!
gifts that are equivalent to a
• 10 &amp;-mall addriSS&amp;!i ~th WeOmail!
Wedding gift ($150 and up) .
: (;ijstom Start Page · 1'1£1\YS , weather &amp;morel
Then when We receive the
wedding invitation , the cou(:;;:;·~ 6X/usltasMrO
lJn~
ple doesn't want a gift. they
llgn Up Online! www.LocaiNet.com
want money.
These couples are having . :.!:. . 4it.,
Call Today &amp; Sa~e !
large , elaborate weddings
when they have no money LocofNef
. to pay for it and request that
MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Tuesday, July IS
RUTLAND - Rutland
Village Council. rescheduled regu lar meeting. 7
p.m., civic center.
· Friday, July 18
LETART FALLS
Annual budget meeting of
Leta1t Township Trustees. 9
a.m .. office building .

Reunions
Saturday, July 12
RACINE - Reunion of
Charles and Fannie Beaver
fami ly w;rh lun~.-h at noun .
Star Mill Park. FrienJs anJ
relati ves in vi ted. Bring covered dish .
POM EROY - Blak eReed reunion . 12:30 p.m at
the Zion Church of Christ.
Route 143. Potluck dinner.
ham and tab le service provided . Take items and ge nea logy material for di splay
table. Includes all relatives
;mq descendmus of Edgar
and Addie Reed Bl ake
More information. call

•

John &gt;o n,

992 -

Sunday, July 13
RACINE - 17th annual
Theiss reunion , Star Mill
Park . Racine . Potluck at I
p.m. and pig in a poke auction. Rain or shine. '
POMEROY - Lovett
reunion. I p.m. at the Zion
church of Christ. Lovett
fami ly reunion, quit depicting
family
members,
reunion eve nt s and th ose
attending. Potluck dinner.

.Saturday, July 12
RACINE
Pomeroy/Racine Masonic
Lodge 164 and the Racine
Eastern Star Chapter 134
picn,ic , 2 p.m., with food
served at 4 p.m., at Lodge in
. Racine. on Saturday 07-12. 2008 at the Masonic Lodge
· in Racine. Games and entertainment for children. Bring
covered dish. Call Randy
Smith .508-08 16 with questions.
SALEM CENTER Star Grange 778 and Star
Junior Grange 878, potluck
supper 6:30 p.m. followed
by meeting at 7 p.m .. bring

meat , ro ll s beverages al)d
table service provided.
Monday, July 14
POMEROY Meigs
County Republican Party,
7:30 p.m. at the . Meigs
County Courthouse.
Thesday, July IS
CHESTER - Chester
Council 323. Daughters of
Americ. 6:30p.m. picnic adt
the ha!J. meeting adt 7:3p
· p.m. Take covered dish.
Thursday, July 17
POMEROY
Th~
American Cancer Society
Meigs County Advi sory

Sunday, July 20
CHESTER - Runion .o f items fur food buuk. ·
dece ndents of GllY and Hemlock Grange wi ll ·be the
!Ova singer, 12:30 p .m. guests .
Ma sDnic · Lodge, Chester.
T&lt;1ke covered dish. 1
ROCKSPRINGS
Shade River Coon Club:
regular meeting, 6 p.m. ,
club building .

ment confere nce room at
Pomeroy Library , new
members welcome. lunch
provided, 992-6626 to
RSVP.

Sunday, July 13
Friday, July II
POMEROY
HEMLOCK G ROVE
Burlingham C~ mp 723 picMei gs Count y Pomon a . nic, Route 33 roadside Park
Grange. 7:30 p.m .. at the going north , 12 :30 p .m.
Grange hall , election of Modern Woodmen and famofli cers held .
ilies. Take covered di sh;

Saturday, July 12
MIDDLEPORT
Coleen Dunfee will observe
her 8Jst birthday on July 12,
Cards may be sent to her at
979 Hysell St.. Middleport.
Ohio 45760.
· .

Clubs and
· organizations

Local Weather·
Friday ... Sunn y. Highs
Sunday and Sunday
around 90. Light and .vari- night ... Mostl y cloudy with
abl e winds ... Becoming a chance of showers and
southwest around 5 mph in thunderstorms. Highs in the
the afternoon .'
mid 80s. Lows in the mid
t 'riday night. .. Mostl y 60s. Chance ofra in 50 per~
clear. Lows in the mid 60s. cent .
Southeast winds around 5
Monday ...Mostly cloudy
mph
in
the in the morning ...Then
evening ... Becoming ligiH . becoming partly sunny.
and variable . .
Highs in the lower 80s.
Satm'day ...Mostly sunny.
Monday night...Partly
Hot with highs around 90. cloudy in the evening ...Then
South winds 5 to 10 mph.
becom ing rriostly clear.
Saturday night...Mostly Lows in the lower 60s.
cloudy with a chance of
Thesday
through
showers imd thunderstorms . Wednesday night ...Mostly
Low s in the· upper 60s. clear. Highs in the mid 80s·.
Chance of ra.in 50 percent .
Lows in the lower 60s .

BuanJ nu:ctiug, noon, base-

Birthdays

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 40.81
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 65.30
Ashland Inc. (NVSE) - 47.41
Big Lots (NVSE) - 31.18
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 27.68
BorgWarner (NVSE) - 39.8!J
·C'enfury AlUminum (N'ASuAQi
- ·'62.55
Champion (NASDAQ) - 4.67
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 4.51
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 38.36
Collins (NVSE) - 51.46
DuPont (NVSE) - 41.51
US Bank (NVSE) - 26.22
Gannett (NYSE) - t 8.45
General Etactrlc (NVSE) - 27.64
Harley-Davidson (NVSE) - 33.70
·JP Morgan (NVSE)- 34.51
Kroger (NVSE) - 29.33
Limit~ Brands (NVSE) - 15.37
Norfolk Southern (NVSE) - 62.31
Ohio Valley Bane Corp. (NAS-

DAQ)- 24.50
BBT (NVSE) - 22.53
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 19.51
Pepsico (NYSE) - 65.59
Premier (NASDAQ) - 10.17
Rockwell (NVSE) - 42.47 '
iiocily tioois (NA5uAQi - 4.4/
Royal Dutch Shell - 77.30
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 71.71
.
Wet-Mart (NVSE)- 57.21 ·
Wendy's (NYSE) - 24.18
WesBanco (NVSE)..;. 16.13 ,
Worthlng!on (NVSE) - 19.27
Dally stock reporia are the 4 .
p.m. ET closing quotes of trans~
acJipns tor July 10, 2008, provided by Edward Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills In
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 anQ
Lesley Marrero In Point
Pleasant at (304) 674-0174.
Member SIPC.

, . REEDSVILLE - ·Ada Doris Congrove 85 of
Rc~dsv ille , 'passed away Wednesday. Jul y 9.' 200'8 at
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
She was horn Dec. 25, 1922 in Meigs County, daughter
of the late Horace and Susie Kibble. She was a beloved
mother, grandmother, wife. daughter. and sister. She
worked at the American Viscose in Parkersburg, W.Va .. and
when she was younger, she attended Eden United Brethren
Church in Reed s~ ille . She liked taking care of her flo wers.
crochetmg, cookmg and baking for her family.
. She I S surv1ved by her daughter and son-in-Jaw, Pamela
and Rnger Chaney of Tuppers Plain s: two granddaugh ters
~nd a grandson-in-law, Angela and Kei th Brock of Belpre
and Kayla Chaney of Tuppers Plains; a great granddaughter, Ashley Brock ; two sisters, Hazel Barton and Fairy Bell
Foster! and several nieces and nephews and . friends at
Arcad1a Nursing Center.
.. Besides her parents, she is preceded in death by her husl)and of 37 years, William &lt;;:ongrove; a daughter, Cam illa
Congrove; _ a brother, August Kibble; and two sisters,
M•ldred Ktbble and Forrest Kibble.
'
·
. Serv!ce will be held at II a.m., Saturday, July 12, 2008.
at Whtte-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville. with Rev.
CHESTER -Calla. Gwendolyn and Audra Nichol s, daughters of Mark and Courtney
~obert May officiating. t;luri al will be in the 'Eden
Ntchols
at Vand[11ia. celebrated the1r second btrthdays recently.
.
t;:emetery, Reedsville.
Attendm
g the celebration were their grandmother. Wanda Wolfe of Chester; grandparFriends may call from 6-8 p.m. Friday at the fun eral
home . You can sign the online guestbook at www.white- ent s John and Brenda Nichols of Vincent, aunts, Mega n Balaban of Mentor and Carol
Vance and her so n. 'Nathaniel Vance of Baltimore. ·
schwarzelfuneralhome .com.

Triplets celebrate birthday

Charldine Alkire
-: POMEROY - Charidine Rose Alkire, 62, of Pomeroy
pa sse~ a~ay Wednesday, July 9, 2008 , at Pleasant Valley
I;Josp1talm Pomt Pleasant, W. Vi!. ·
· She was born on April 26, 1946 to the . late Charles
Chester and Rosalie (Carr) King in Pomeroy. She was a
nomemaker, a member of the Bradbury Church of Christ.
and 40 year Member of the Harrisonville Order of the
Easter Star #255.
Mrs . Alkire is survived by her husband, Roger Alkire,
Pomeroy ; a son, Christopher (Amanda) Alkire, Pomeroy; a
daughter, Deborah Sparkman, Pomeroy; grandchildren:
Josh~a Spa~kman , Joey and · !acob Bender, Tyler Dyal,
Gabnel_Alkire, and Jenny Alktre; brothers: Chester King,
Zanesvtlle, and Dano and Joan _King, Pomeroy; brother-in!

,aw;

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William and Naomi King, Middleport; several niece s and
nephews.
She was preceded in death by her parents.-a sister, Anna
Shuler, and son-in-law, Gerald Sparkman.
Service will be held at II a.m. on Saturday, July 12,2008
at Anderson-McDaniel Funeral Home with the Rev. Tom
Runyon officiating. Burial will follow at the Meigs
Memory Gardens..
· ·
. Visitation will be held from 4-8 p.m. on Friday at the
funeral home. Order of the Eastern Star service will be conducted at 7 p.m. the evening of vi sitation . ·
Donations may be made in Mrs . Alkire's name to the
Bradbury Church of Christ, Building , and Maintenance
Fund, 39558 Bradbury Rd . Middleport, Ohio 45760.
r Online
registry
is
available
at
~ww. andersonmcdaniel.com.

local Briefs
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Hog roast to benefit ballfield

GCC lists spring quarter graduates
GAL.LIPOLJ S The
Gallipolis &lt;;:arccr College has
announced its 2008 spring
quarter graUualcs.
·
Thev are Kri sti Cremean s.
assuc{lte of applied bu siness in computer application s technology. usso~.:iate

of applied business in technical support spec iali st;
Shawna Davis. associate of
appli ed busi ness in medical
ofnce administration. diplo"'"' ;,., ~ •d n'i tJi.;;.: fl·: , ti \'"" ·l s~o: i ..-:_
tam: Bcs:;ic Fisher. associate of appli ed business in
H ..&lt;. ~

X'P'~

' ' ' '

' · -'·~•

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accounting.
Marie Gilbert, diploma in
medical administrative assistant; Donna Gorslene, associate .of applied business in
medical office administration;
Michelle Jarrell, associate of
applied business in medical
office
administration;
Amanda Lucas, diploma in
administrative
assistant ;·
· Anginette Rippey, associate
of applied busmess in medical
~ffice :ldmini-stFJticn.
Beth Roc&lt;:hi , associate of
applied business in medical

uftice administration; Julie
Sargent, associate of applied
business in accounting, associate of applied business in
business administration; Lisa
Stone, associate of applied
business in accounting; and
Derek Wilson. associate of
applied business in technical
support specialist.
For information about
classes or programs offered at
GCC, call 446-4367, 800'I
A 04&lt;1
~ .,.-~
./._ ,

..;,;, '/" ...
www. galljpoliscareercol-

._

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fought for the Union (i.e.
Nonh) in the Civil War.
The ceremony is open to
the public. The Ladies of
the G.A.R. invite all local
civic, hereditary, fraternal,
go vernmental , and other ·
organizations to place a
wreath at the event. There is
no advance reg'istration
required to participate and
wreathes may be reclaimed
after the ceremony if
desired. This is the only recognized ceremony by the
Meigs County Commission
for the battlefield.

~ - CHESTER -. A hog roast dinner will be held July 19 at
thester in conjunction with Chester-Shade Days to raise
)lloney for the ballfields at the Angela Eason Membriat ·
~k. Dinners
be $6.

will

r.

lege.edu

That same day at noon the
Ohio Hi storical Society will
be re-dedicating the bronze
informational plaques for
the monuments after spending several thousands of
dollars to restore them.
The. battle was the only
Civil War battle fought on
Ohio soil. There will be
light refreshments provided '
afterwards for participants '
of the ceremony. For further
information, . phone 9927874. .

~
Catfish tournament set
L SYRACUSE -The . Ohio River Producers

and the
Racine Southero FFA will hold a catfish tournament from 6
Km. - 1 p.m . tomorrow at the Syracuse Levy. The cost to
nter is $20 per person and registration fees will be taken
hroughout the di!Y· The loll owing prizes will be awarded:
irst place, $50, second place, $25,.third place, $15.

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Immunization clinic set

: POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department
will conduct a childhood immunization clinic from 9- 11
ft.m. and 1-3 p.m . on Tuesday. Bring child's shot records
hnd medical card if applicable. A $7 donation appreciated
· ~ut not required for service.
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il..'iS ~O~, ,~hiJtl~ to 'fShiJi(,,&amp;f, 6!!P'

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A Special supplement to highlight babies,
Ages newborn to four years old.

.. Ir----------------------,
Baby's Name
·
1
1
1

Parents
.

I

I Address
1 Phone

Your Baby's
Age
Parents Names Here
I

Simply send your baby's
1 photograph along with the coupon
1 to the left with your payment of
I
I $10.00, and we'll do the rest. · ·
I
I

I Age

1
I

I Address wiU not be published I The Daily
L----------------------~ Se'htinel
Mail or deliver to:
,JlABIES! The Daily Sentinel
Box 729, Ill Court Street
Pom~roy, OH 45769
Deadline for submission,
Friday, July 18

., HARRISONVILLE -The Fourth Annual Co-ed
:rournament hosted by the Harrisonville Youth League will
J&gt;e held Aug. 2-3. Double elimination, $100 entry fee and
~.44 core b_
alls. Winners will receive T-shirts. For registra!Jon or detruls call Sarah at 698-4054 or Regina at 698-2804.

••

:,:-• In the Daily Sentinel

I
I

Harrisonville Youth League

111 Court St. Pomeroy, OH

Racine rrom Page At
officials find a purchaser(s),
that money goes into a fund,
then goes to the Meigs
c;ounty Auditor's Office for
transfer back to Southern.
In .relation to this purchase
agreement which has yet to be
tinalized. ·council had and
approved its second reading
of an ordinance which will
establish a · Commercial
Development Group for the
village. This !,rroup will formulate a plan for developing
this property to be useu as a
business district for the citizens of Racine. Sitting on the
development group will be
the mayor, clerk treasurer and
two appointed council members as outl ined in the Ohio
- Revised Code.
In the purchase agreement,
Racine will have complete
discretion as to how and when
the real estate will he sold and
divided. Each time there is a

Eastern from Page AI

· ~ I,000 square-toot addition, mostly students living in the last year, when the OSFC was
!'!eluding ten 900 square-foot Meigs, Southern and Federal asked to evaluate the district's ·
j:lassrooms iri the nine year- Hocking Local School dis- present and future needs.
The building is also in need ·
~ld elementary building.
• tricts. The district also antici• ,In May, Edwards said the P.ates an increase in new fam- of minor renovations and
bhio General Assembly is Ilies moving into the district code upgrades, Edwards said.
No cost estimates or a time
~xpected to consider new leg- · in the years ahead.
The process of plann ing . frame for construction has
islation increasing the state's
jlortion of new consbllction building expansion heg&lt;\n late been set.
~osts for local school districts.
Under the current funding
formula, the state provides 80
percent of the oost of new
Classroom construction.
When you insure your car and home or
Changes "in the works"
mobile home with us, thf.ou'g h Auto-Owners
tould increase the state's porInsuran ce Company, we'll sa\'e you money
with~their muhi-rmlicy discount!
tion to 93 percent, Edwards
Ma,ture policyholders c_an earn even greater
said, after the OSFC presented its assessment of the dis- savings. Conlacl our agency today !
lfict's needs.
toM u.OlsuUWJ.II
u ••ec
~ ·The hoard has identi tied a
HDr'ne c.
i\J'llluWI..........
'
peed for additional classroom
'pace in the primary wing of
the building, due to an
Reed &amp; Baur Insurance Agency
2ncrease in open enrollment
220 East Main Street
~d growth within the district.
l-ast school year, Eastern
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
local saw an increase of 50 ·
740-992-3600
'tudents attending its schools
l!n'ough open enrollment,

Save money with our multi-policy discount! ·

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sale, Southern will receive
payment. Racine will also be
allowed to establish streets
and alleys as it determines
necessary for the systematic
development of that real
estate.
At this time council has
made no announcements of
any new business moving
into the area though the village does have the right to sell
the property as one lump site
or in sections for more than
one business.
As for the CIC, ·it' s
described by members as a
private, nonprofit group that
•

works with public entities and
began in 1995 with assets of
$5,000. Those assets have
now grown to $6 million in.
the organization's attempt to .
become the economic development arm of the county.
Members clarify the CIC
works with the government
but is not part of il .

DIRECTORS

P'rttJttd:r~ Ftt111rtd

Middlepon
992-5141

Stnlu•

Ptlincroy

992-5444
WW'w.andtrsonm&lt;!daniel.com

SBJ8522

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SHDWTIMES FOR FRi. 7ft t/08

1:11,4:11,
1:11 tAL
GOLD£NARMY' IIG·lll
1:1, 4:1, 7.,1:1.
MEn DAVE' iCI
JOmNEY 1'0 00 O:tim
1.. 1S,
Ill, !A
Of TilE Ullll' t!G·Ill
JI[JJ,B()l' l:

~""'sm 'MCDanie(
Punera( '1fomt
AdiUll McDilni~l
&amp; James Anderson

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THE INCR!lliBLE HULI•IG-lli
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1:1 4JJ, 1~1.
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GFf SMART !lll·Uo
INDIANA J0NtS li!G·I~ 1~~ 4:15,7:1,1:11.

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.-

rinn ~ tinn

-'· ~·-·· - -

toward
hi s
National
Convention
expenses.
Donations 'were made to
the youth, junior fund and
family activities funds.
Several members paricipated in the draping of the
charter
ceremony
in
remembrance of Dale
Kautz.
,
Mary Yost. Racine, presented the program using
lndepencence Day as her
theme. She noted that on
July
4, . 1776
the
Declaration
of
Independence was signed
and adopted, and then conducted a short quiz on
·independence Day. She
told some funny stories
and then concluded with a
poem, "Farm of the
Future."
:t-~.'.'::!5, liUlll.{\t!nc'_.ed th~~ th~

~ I '.)0 I IC rf•"(:'ll
..J.. ,Hir;- '·~

Annual memorial ceremony set at Portland
PORTL AND
The
annual wreath-lay,ing ceremony to honor the memory
of the over 1200 combatants
of the I KliTC ivil War Battle
of Buffington Js!.,nd will
take place at II a.m .
Saturday, Jul y 19, at the
BuffingtOil Island Park at
Portland .
The event is sponsored by
the Major Dani el McCook
Circle No. I04 of the Ladies
of the Grand Army of the
Republic of Middleport.
The circle is composed of
women whose ancestors

POMEROY Helen
Quivey. family activities
director~ announced
to
Hemlock Grange members
that judging of contests
would take place at the
August meeting.
· Rosalie Story conducted
the meeting with Roy
Grueser, legislative chairman .
discussing
the ,
Northwest United States ·
use of wasps to hunt for the
insect Emerald Ash Bore
that is killing Ash trees.
Plans were discussed for
the booth at the Meigs
County Fair with setup
being
announced
for
Friday. Aug, 8, at 6 p.m.
Carson Yost thanked the

vr

1-

Hey Moms and Dads, Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...

•

Grange contests
set for judging ·

Ada Congrove

740·992·6260

Edition '08
be published
___J, July 25

....

.Obituaries

Community Calendar
Kathryn
5195.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

-··

~

"""""'

www .mydailysentinel.com

August meeting wiJ-1 be
pr~ceded by a ham loaf
dinner. Several members
of Racine Grange came for
visitation.

Quilts
from Page At
self to sell one of her quilts.
"It 's hard to leave them,"
Rogers said with a smile as
if talking about a child she
was leaving at The Fabric
Shop for a few days. ·
The Fabric Shop is open
from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. ,
Monday-Saturday. The
"Christmas in July" event,
in addition to the unique
quilt displays, will also con:
sist of sales throughout the
store and door prizes.

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The Daily Sentinel

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111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich

.

Publisher
.
General Manager-News Editor

•

Congress shall make .no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
fr.ee exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
·of speech, or of the press; or the right of tile ·
peopie peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances.
-

The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, July II , the 193rd day of2008 . There are
173 days left in the year.
Today 's Highlight in Hi story :. 01i July II , 1804, Vice President Aaron Burr mortall y
wounded former Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton
during a pistol duel in Weehawken, N.J.
On this date:
In 1767. John Quincy Adams, the sixth president ·of the
United States, was born in Braintree, Mass.
In 1798, the U.S. Marine Corps was formally re-establi shed by a congressional act that also created the U.S.
Marine Band.
In 1864, ·confederate forces led by Gen. Jubal Early
began an abonive invasion of Washingt0n, D.C., turning
back the next day.
In 1934, President Franklin D. Roosevelt became the first
Incumbent chief executive to travel thro11gh the Panama
Canal.
In 1952, the Republican National Convention , meetin g in
Chicago, nominated Dwight D. Eisenhower for president
and Richard M. Nixon for vice president.
In 1955, the U.S. Air Force Academy swore in its fi rst
class of cadets at its temporary quarters. Lgwry Air Force
Base in Colorado .
·
· In 1978, 216 people were . immediately killed when a
tanker truck overfilled with propylene gas exploded on a
coastal highway south of Tarragona, Spain .
In 1979, the abandoned U.S. space station Sky lab made a
· ;spectacular return to Earth, burning up in the atmosphere
:and showering debri s over the Indian -Ocean and Australia.
: In 1988, nine people were killed when five Palestinian
·gunmen attacked hundreds of tourists aboard a Greek
.cruise ship, the City of P~ro s, which was steaming toward
·a marina in suburban Athens.
: In 1995, the United State s normalized relations with
:Vietnam.
: Ten years ago: Air Force Lt. Michael Blassie, a casualty
:of the Vietnam War, was laid to rest near his Missouri
:home, after the positive identification of his remains, which
had beeri enshrined at the Tomb of the Unknowns in
Arlington, Va.
Today 's Birthdays: Actor Mark Lester is 50. Jazz mu si:cian Kirk Whalum is 50. Singer Suzanm; -Vega is 49. Rock
:guitarist Richie Sambora (Bon Jbvi) is 49. Actress Li sa
:Rinna is 45 . Rock musician Scott S)lriner (Weezer) is 43.
Actress Debbe Dunning is 42. Actor Greg Grunberg is 42.
Wildlife expert JetfCorwin is 41. Actor Justin Chambers is
38. Actor Michael Rosenbaum is 36. Country singer Scotty
Emerick is 35. Rapper Lil' Kim is 33. Rock singer Ben
,Gibbard is 32. Rapper Lil' Zane is 26. Pop-jazz singer:musician Peter Cincotti is 25. Actor David Henrie is 19.
Thought for Today: "False democracy shouts Every man
down to the level of the average . True democracy cries All
men up' to the height of their fullest capacity for service and
,achievement." - Nicholas Murray Butler, American edu- .
:cator ( 1862-1947) .

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

Ask Southern Baptists to
name their religion and
most of them wi II simp! y
say, "I' m a Baptist."
Ask Romin Catholics the
same question and most wi ll
say, ''I'm Catho lic."
Odds are good that most
Lutheran s, Episcopali ans,
Presbyterians and occupants
of ot her name- brand pews
will take the same ap pro ~ch.
However. some of these
believers may choose to
define their religion more
broadly and say. "'I'm a
Chri stian ." A re searcher
would cert ainl y hear that
re sponse in scores of independent eva ngel ic al· and
charismatic churches across
Amerka.
This may sound like nitpicking , but it 's not.
Confusio n over defining the
word "religion"' almost certainl y helped shape the most
controversial results from
th e new U.S. Religious
Landscape Survey produced
by the Pew Forum on
Rel igion &amp; Public Life.
In one of several questions probing 1he rol e of
dogmatism iri American
life. int erviewe rs asked
adults which of two statements better fit their beliefs:
"My reli gion is the one, true
faith leading to eiernal life"
or "many rel igions can lead
to etern al life."
The results leaped into
national headlines , with 70
percent of those affiliated
with a rcligi'on or denomination saying that many
re li g ion .~ can brin g eternal

Terry
MaHingly

salvation.
In fact , 83 percent of
those in liberal Protestant
denominations affirmed that
belief. along , with 79 percent of Catholics, 59 percent of those from hi storicall y black churches and a
swnning 57 percent of
believers in evange lical
pews. In other world religions. 1.\9 percent of Hindu s
polled said many religion s
co uld bring eternal life.
along with 86 percent of
Buddhi., ts , 82 perce nt 9f
Jews and 56 percen t of
Musl ims.
But there's the rub . It 's
impossible. based on a
straightforward reading of
I he Pew Forum research . to
know how indi vidu al partie·
ipants defined the word
"re ligion"
wl1en
they
answered .
"We didn ' t have a set of
intervi ew guidelines or talk·
ing points that we used
when a&gt;king that question,"
said Greg Smith, a Pew
research fellow. "The interviewers didn ' t sav. ' Well.
that means someone who is
a member of a diffe rent
denomination than yours· or
'that means someone in a

~-

_The .Daily
Sentinel
'

completely dillerent reli - now be lieve th at Jesus wa·s
mistaken when he said, as
gion than your rel ig ion .'
"So people may have quoted in the Gospel of
an,.,wered that in Ll ifferent John , "I am the Way. the
Tru th and the Li fe. No one
ways .
There is no wav - based comes to the Father except
on this round of research- through me."
,
to know precise ly how
In fac t, a new survey by
many beli evers have dec id- the
Southern
Bapti st
ed 10 reject what their fai ths Conve nti on's , Life Wa ~
teach. if thme faiths make Research team speci ti call y
exclusive truth claims about as ked Protestants whether
salvation . and eternal li fe. they believed people can
Thus. sa id Sm ith , the Pew find eternal life th rough
Forul)) is pl;jnning follow- " re ligions
other
than
up work.
Chri stianity," and only 31
For example. it 's one thing percent agreed "strongly'' or
for evangeli cal&gt; to say they ''somew hat ."
believe salvati on can be
"The probl em is that all
found th rough reli gio ns such religions make mutually
as Catholicism, Lutherani sm, exclusive truth claims,"
Pent~cu~ia l i:'&gt;. lli . or
olht:r noted evangelical activist
forms of Christianity. It 's Charles Colson , in a radio
somethin g else to say a commentary criticizing the
majority of American evan- Pew Forum survey. "What
gelicals now believe that sal- Christians, Muslims. Jews
vation can be fou nd through and Hindus say about the
Islam, Buudhism. Hinduism. person and work of Jesus
Wicca and variou s non- Christ cannot be reconc'iled.
Christian relig.ions.
They may all be fa lse, but
Meanwhile: many tradi- the y cannot all be true.
tional
Chri st ians
may
''It 's ca ll ed the law of
believe that all peop le will non.contradiction. It goes
- somehow, in this life or back to Ari stotle. If proposithe nex t - face some kind tion A is true - that is, if it
of spiritual dec ision to conforms to reality - then
accept · or reject Jes us. proposition B. making a
However. when asked ·if contrary claim . cannot be
that mean s that only true as well.''
Chri stians will "be saved,"
(Terry Mattingly is direc•
these believers may say that tor of the Washington
only God can know that. ]oumali~·m Center at the
The Rev. Billy Graham has Council for Christian ·
given this ki!1d ur answer on Colleges and Universities
many occasions.
·and
leads
the
The bollom line: It 's hard GetReligion .org project to
to write a question that will study religion and the
reveal how many Christians news.)

CONSERVATIVEADVOCATE:]esse Helms R.I.p

.

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FAI

. l f i ,.

·•
Friday, July

11,

2oo8

A Hunger For More - -

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The Daily Sentinel

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Page As

,...,TT a

E

veryday
else?" one might say. "Well . we ARE govof vour
erned by the mle of survival of the tittest!" or
life 'i s a
"Someone raped someone')'' one might heaL
day in which
"Ah. well it IS natural, you know."
1fOU
must
If we are only one species among many.
Pastor
weig h _ the
than
all that we call good is no noblerthan the
Thom
messa9cs that
cravi ng a dung beetle has for i!s food source.
Mollohan You cou ld never truly be unique or possess a
rain
down
upon
you .
wonder that is yours alone. Even an E'Coli
While many
bacterium would be as important a' you .
of those ' ig·
And thi s. of course. leads us to the olher
nals are simRIY lost in the infor mational dei - supposed " perk" of the world view of natu!Jge, there are a great number that reinforce or rali sm. that the re is an incredible array ot:
~ubt l y erode the convictions tha t drive you wonder over-arc hing and surroundin g us in
and guide you in the choice' yo u make as ym1 which we are ourse lves an intricate pan .
navtgate \lie . Never think for a moment thai
But aga in . when we dive· into this concept's
your convictions ar~ an immutable substa'nce dee per waters. we lind that whatever wonder
• that cannot be to uched by outside forces or we might have enjoyed in the "wonder" is also
that they compos~ a st ructure that can never
:rail in upon itself. Ther~ ~re suppon beams haunted by a shroud of prQfound dread. When .
for instar1ce, we ask the question. "What does
~on s tantly being erected or knock ed down in
it all mean?" , we're met with silence for we
the house that is yo ur "world view.''
:u-e
:ifter n!l asking either nothing (if"nothing''
I was very keen ly re1ninded of th is as I
us) or we're trying to ta:lk to a "'god"
created
recently li stened to a di &gt;cuss ion on a publ i~
rad1o stat1011 between the r:1dio show's host · who pays us no more heed than if we were
lind Karen Kin gsol ve1'. author of The pond scum . If such a worldview is right, then
Poisonwood Bible. The novel de,cribes a sup- all of rea li ty is an exercise in futility. Why do
posed missionary family. but Kingwlver is anything'' Why care for anyone else' Why
clearly not ac.quainted with a bibl ical lmder- bother t1yii1g to do "good deeds" if all that is
standing of Chri sti anity as she concludes that "good'' is just an illusion anyway1
But clearly. the idea of a god who "roots'' for
humani ty is simply one animal amo11g many
1
i1icrobes
as much :L' he roots for people is
and that God is root ing not only for the "dol.lies" (meaning human boys anu girls) but al so inconsistent with what the Bible says about me .
for the various varieties of llesh-eatin g nature of the world, humanity. and God's att imicroorgani sms that dwell unseen in the dusty tude towards us. First off. out of all the beings
lloor of the African savannah (after a character that God created. humanity alone was shaped
In the book watches dreadfu l di setL~es wither in God's own image and ·into humanity alone
w:L~ breathed the breath of God mat they would
and waste ·away little boys and girls).
. ''We think we're· so smart." the author · become "living soul s'' {Genesis 2:7). The Bible
sniilely remarks. "top-heavy hom inid s who declares mat the scope of creation was placed.
are animal s indeed ." But then her voice turns so to speak, into the hands of humanity
cheery and says, "But I happen to be on~ of (Genesis I :28-30) so that men and women
those who think that's a wonderful thing."
might be stewmds under God of the world that
. Say what" One might strive to unravel the He had created, executing His will and authorrnysterious conundnrm raised by the world- ity in their governance of me physical world:
view of the author but: unless one lingers met", Secondiy , the Bibie acknowleU gt:~ Ji~~a:-.e,
ly in the. shallow water~ of her last statement, violence. and sorrow. describing these as the
:· ... I mink that's &lt;l wonderful thing." one will fruits of the human inc! ination In choose to
inevitably wade out itlto the deep waters of the try to live independently of God (see Genesis
statement 's implication. There are two prind - 3: 14-19) . Christianity is therefore not a
pal "perks'' for being "one anim\1! among '· Pollyanna" religion. It 'is a grim-laced state- .
many:·• The tirst is that one may consider him ment of truth With hope in its wings. Yes, it
or herself "free ." Free of moral responsibility: is true that much is not what it should be and
if man is merely an animal. he's no more moral that bad things do happen to all of us. But
or ethical than a rattlesnake or a sea anemone God reall y is rooting for humanity after all in
(morals and ethics being merely a biological ways that the rest of creation can only be
illusion). Free of divine accountability: if man jealous. Wh'at did God 's Son come to do? To
evolved or was created with a spiritual ranking die for you and me. Wl] y would He die lor
no pigher than an amdvark or a frill-necked yo u and me? Because you and I were creatli zard , how could God justly hold us accountable for what comes "naturall y?" . After all , ed in God's image that we might forever
we'd simply be driven by the Darwin 's so- enjoy fellowship with Him forever an.d only
Hi s sacrificial death could bridge the gap
called law, "survival of the tittest."
Well , it tums out that some folks like this created by our sin. Why does ev il continue
worldview because they helieve that it makes still then, after He died and rose again '' So
them free. But it is in realitv a most serious mat we might hunger for more than what we
and dastardly form of sla"very because it possess in this natural .world and look forplaces upon humanity an unbearable yoke of ward to a day wherein we are united combiological fatalism. First. eve1ytl;ting one does pletely with the Creator of all that is.
In a world that tries to make sense of itself
is rendered nothing more thartan insignificant
without
God , remember that it makes no
!luke of blind forces streaking towards oblivsense
at
all without God. So consider well
ion. As one animal in a world teeming with
countless hordes of creatures. yo u WOLIId ha ve the messages you heed and remember that
no more value or worth than an amoeba or you are priceless in the eyes of the One Who
paramecium. And second , your life is just' made you. Anti nothing can take that away.
(Tiwm Molloha11 and his family have .minanother pat1 of an incessant string of biologi·
·i:al glitches. Your choices, dreams, and values, istered in southern Ohio the past 13 years
:as well as the relationships that you hold dear. and is the autll(}r of Tile Fairy Tale Parables.
although not predetem1ined in the precise He is the pastor of Pathway Community
sense, are still "preprogrammed" by the ChurcH and may be reached for commer~ts
unsympathetic "powers that be" that we call or questions by email at pastorthom@patll·
genetic coding. '·Someone mugged someone waygal/ip(}lis.com).

Down East Boys

Gospel quartet coming to
Pomeroy's amphitheater
POMEROY
T he ninth annual
"Singing on the Ri ver" concert sponsored
by the Southern Baptist Church of
Pomeroy. will be presented at 7 p.m . on
July i7 in the Pomeroy Riverfront
Amphitheater.
The concert will feature 'the nmiu11ol
recording a11ists Down East Boy and Mark
Lanier, former baritoi1e for Perfect Heart
and Poet Voices. A free will offering will be
taken.
•
The Down East Boys represent a rich tradition that began nearl y two dccaues ago
while carrying on a legacy Southern gospel
which began nearl y a cen tury ago . The first
gospel quanet was organized in the early
1900s and has·evol.ved to encompass many
varying musical groups. But few have stood
the test of time to continue the rich tradition

began by James D. Vaughan. The Down
t::ast Boys is one 4Uartet which has stood
that lest of time and continues to enjoy success
They released their firs t national hit .
"Beautiful Valley" which peaked in the top
ti vc on ail 1ne-nat1ona1 radi&lt;&gt; charts and
haven "t stopped since. They had enjoyed a
string of popular releases over the past I~
years including three Top 20 hits from their
Mercy record'ing. The group 's brand new
recording :The Cross Still Stands'' has generated even more success for the popular
qua net.
Making up the group are Ricky Garden.
manager and \caLl voca lis t; Stuart Cary. bass
singer; Jason Runnels. songwriter as well as
vocalist. and Daryl Paschel.

Chnrth Calendar
Friday, Jtdy 11
LONG BOTTOM - Gospel sing
with Dave and Debbie Dailey , 7 p.m.,
Faith Full Gospel Church.

Food Pantry. Admission is a can of fruit ·
or vegetables.

Saturday, July 12
RUTLAND - Chuck Compton will
be in gospel concert at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church. 7 p.m . Pastor
Ed Barney invites public.

Sunday, July 13
RACINE - Racine United Methodist
Church, 12:30 p.m., potluck and farewell
for Pastor KelTY Wood and faniil'y.

Monday, July 21
.
POMEROY - Vacation Bible School
REEDSVILLE
- "Singing for at First Southern Bapti st Church , 41872
Jesus," with Godsmen and Delivered , 5 Pomeroy Pike, 6 ' to 9 p.m. For more
p.m ., Fellowship . Church of the infortnation call Rachael Needs. 949Nazarene, to benefit Golden Harvest 1325.

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

Letters to the editor afe welcome. Th ey should be less
:than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing. must be ·
Former Sen. Jesse Helms.
:signed, and include address and telephone numbet: No · who died last Friday at 86 ,
:1msigned leiters will be published. Letrers should be in was one of the true giants of
· ·good taste, addressing is:sue~. 110t personalities. Letters of conservatism during his 30 ·
thanks to organizations and indil'iduals will not be accept.- years in the U.S. Senate.
ed for publication.
Many
a
politician
William
becomes identified with one
Rusher
political viewpoint or another, which he or she serves
---loyally during decades in
· Reader Services
(USPs 213-s&amp;ol
public office. But only a few
Correction Polley
Ohto Valley Publishing Co.
mannge to put their mark on eventuall y to win both the
Our main concem in all stories is to Published every afternoon. Monday
major aspects of public pol i- nomination and the elect ion
tArough Friday, 111 Court Street.
be accura te. If you know of an error
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Pomeroy, Ohio. Second·&lt;;lass postage
: in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pomeroy.
And certainly Helms's
arc hi storically identified .
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1976, after Reagan had suf- Nicaraguan contras. to take
26 Weeks ............. '64.20
fered a series of defeats at just one example, was prob52 Weeks . ...........'127 .11
E-1111111:
ind ispensable
in
the hands of incumbent · ably
news@mydailysentlnel .com
Outoide Meigs County
President Gerald Ford. enabling Reagan to back
· 13 Weeks ........ .. ..· .'53.55
Helms enabled Reagan to them effectively.
26 Weeks . .' .... .. ....' 107.10
Web:
For ;lll his power. Helm ~
remain
a
force
in
52 Weeks ......... . . .'214.21
www.mydailysentinel.com
.in
person was '\ warm and
Republican politics, and

~·

·--:·' Friday, July 11, 2ou8

,.

ON RELIGION: Dfjining religio-n

The Daily Sentinel·

Charlene Hoeflich

0PJNION

.'

PageA4

fr tend ly man - almost the
archetype of the Southern
g~ntleman . He never lacked
a kind word for his fri ends. I
will always remember fond ly the time when he told a
group at my birthday party
, that '' I had a nodding
acquaintance with Bill
Rusher before I even met
him' ' - and then added with ,
a twinkle, "''d hear him on
television . and I'd nod."
Helms didn't mind exasperating his Senate colleagues in what he considered a good cause. The
Senate rul es re quire unanimous consent for all sorts of
pro~edural
time-savin g
steps, and when Helms
wanted to block a particular
action he would sometimes
give vent to a lo ud "No 1"
even if he was the only
objector. This earned him
the sobriq uet "Senator No,"
which he. typicully. regarded as ,n badge of ho'nor.
Needless to say. such a
personality generates both
devoted friends and undying
enemi es. Helms had plenty
of both. ~ .ut the Senate
needs - suc h types. quite
regardless of whether their ·
p rsonal politics happen to
be liberal or conservative. It
is all very well to serve

one 's principles quietly, a~
one of an obedient herd. B41
it is . the mavericks like
Helm s that give priceless
zest to a body like , the
Senate , and it would soon
die of boredom with01il
mem.
.
After three decades in the
Senate. and in declining
health , Helms knew it was
time to go. So in January
2003 . determined not tv
overstay his welcome, as
many senators do, he
stepped down . The last time
I saw him he was in a wheetchair, and he was.well awar~
that his career was ending.
Thereafter,
hi s
hea lth
declined further, and on the
Fourth of Jul y, 2008 -· was
th at a tina! patriotic ges ture'
- he died.
One doesn't have to be a(l
ad mirer of Helms's politic~
to honor his patriotism an~
his adherence to principle,_
America needs men like
him, and. we are dimini sheil
by his loss.
'
(William Rusher is aR
accomplished author, fot'r
m er publisher of . tht
National Review. and fot'~
mer vice chairma11 of thf
American
ConservatiVf
Union.)

sc

DON'T DRIVE, BE SILENT
AND STOP SPENDING.

Blessed are the pure
Long Term, Short Term and
in heart; for they
Respite Care Al'ailable
shall see God. ~ _ _
Call today to schedule a four
Matthew 5:8 333 Page SlreeJ (740) 992·6472

.

1\lll'llls uw l;t;t tim• "·t •~nt a whohlar witlRJut lxing iu acar, on 1thou1~liking. or ewn
•itl10utslxwing' ~ltlil of us do lix.,. tiling; on a dallyba:;j,;, and c-~1 hard! I' imagine life ~ith­
out a motorillld whiclc , talkin~ or b1~·ing smK1hing.I!OIItwr. ~c Ill'\) want«&gt; II')' going a day
or m)) without dn&lt;ing cmr car,"itlxun L1lki&lt;~&amp; en withml
bu1ing an11hin~. :~rd ahhuu~h tlll'"' Ulin)ll :w not inht:r·
, emlyb:;d, "~ maysee ~ome good OOilSf&lt;Jl~ from taking
a lrnlpor.ll') bre-.rk from~ Ulill!."i- ~benefiti ng
!rom "~ l klng. not driling acar ma)' be a good "111' for
~~ 10 slow dOIIn and sn'dl tl1e lk~ltm&lt;. l.ife ar 1
mile; jlt'r ho11r is nlot ~11&gt;1w tll:lll ar W

mile; rx:r hm1r, !llld ~~ ma) be plt.-.lsnntly
sul'jlrised at dre ditfemllthil~ ~~nOtice
~ll&lt;'ll we are walking or riding our bikt&gt;.As
for beingsilent. thi&lt; ma) giw us adtlnct
to really lisk'fl lo dn;e around us. and if
~~t're a big !alki-r.our friends arrd f.unily
may t'Otl!lidt&gt;r our slletlCI' a1\tlcoolCil
chanrefnrthemkl gl'l a•unl ur11m in.
Hut tlw real gilt nra)•bt·to tti, in the funn &lt;t
a flCl\Cdul silence arrd dw dranre to really '
htw ~l1at is going on around..- flnally, by
nothu)i"~ an)1hing. •e it~1 might l&gt;.'f tlllll
~u., Men r~U011alizl' abc)Jit d~e thingnhar .
·""llllllt ~· !ll)ing that •• rrullhen~ "~'
in fact~~t 1ll'lll wry Ullle to malic it thnxrgh
d~e da)~ We 111ay "'~want to Cllll'iid&lt;r gi1ing the llliJne)' •• !IIW on llil' and sllQJIPirlg to a&lt;f1ar.
lty rr to 9Jflle0Jle who really does 1ll'lll it N¥1.our silence might also be ll.lm&lt;.'d into the gilt ci
listening 1o 5nneare 11m is londy or 11l'f0k an attenlilt ear.
}iw t~Jerylhing lhert Is a st11.10n, tllld a lime/11f' e1:ery m111kr
nndtr lmlt-en ...a llmt kilt.eep .1·ilenu, ar~d a lime lo speak.

R.S. V. f:Ccle.r#t.fW$ J: 1, 7

••
.

.

'

Middleport OH

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

Pick up a color Brochure !
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

740·992·3325
. www.teafordreatestate.net

Fax (740)992·7406

Warm frit'111J/r

209 Third

Racine, OH

Armmf'fl f'rc

H o ur ~

' () am - S pm

Mil[ie's 1(estaurant

740-949-221 0

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

"A Home Bank for
Home People" .

Open 7 da ys a week

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

lltm1 e CofJked Meals&amp;: Dai(•' Specials

740·992·7713

If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in yo~, ye shall
ask what ye will, and if shall
be done Ulrto you.
]olrn/5:7

Sizes available Sx tO to 10 x 20

•

The Hppliance man
740·985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON 'BAILES, OD
507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 I'Ai:'.
(740) 992-3279
'-.!!V
Tol Free 1-877-51!3·2433

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

'Middleport. OH

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
ia ues t-shirts and more
uardrail, Fence &amp; ,
si~n

1740) 992-6451

erection

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769·0683

�P!ae A8 • The Dally Sentinel

.

www.mydailysentlnel.com

WORSHIP-GOD THIS ~WEEK

-·

Rutland fn-t Will U..ptt-.1

S~lem

St P.a~\IIT Ed Uarnq
Sr hool • 10 ~ m F\en•ng

•

Cbun:h ol Jesus Christ Apostolic

•
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•

VanZandt and Want Rd • Pa~tur Jan'K!~

Mtlkr

Sun..tay

S~.:hool

10 JO ,, rn

Wedn t!,doy Str\ , ,e ~ 1 p m
S«ond Bapt ist Church
R iill.'llW•I"-Xl W\' Sumla1 Sdll&gt;l'l 10 ,.un

~

£mmaoutl ApostBiic TaberiUic:k: lor.
Loop Rd off New l1ma Rd Rut la11d
Serv11:ts Sun 1000 am &amp; 730 pm .
Thun 7 00 p m Pilslur Mart) R Huuun

Assembly of God
PO Bm. 467, Ol¢img Lane Ma'O!Jn
W Va , Pastor Ne1l Tenn~t Sunday
Semces- 10 00 R m and 7 p m

.,

Baptist
PageviUe Frttwlll Baptist Clmrth

••'

Wur~hlpsef'\a.:e 1030to II 00
am Wed preachmg 6 pm

10 30am

Carpenter lndependenl Baptlst Church

9 30nm. Preach1ng
Sunday School
Serv1ce 10 30am, Even mg SeTII!ce
7 OOpm Wedm:sday B1ble S!Ully 7 00 pm.

'

Pastor

.'''

Cheshirt Baplisl Church
Pastor Ste\e Lmle Sunda) S(hool 9 lO
am Mummg Worship 10 )0 am
Wt-dn~sday Btble Study 6 30pm, dJoJr
prncllcr 7 JO vouth and B1ble BurJdie~
6 30 p m Thurs I pm !:look slud v

•

l l nde~ndcm

Bupti'&gt;IJ
SR 6~~ ami Ander..on S1 Pa~tor Rt)bcn
Grad\ Sund&lt;~i ·~huu l tp a111 Murmng

Catholic

.'•
.•

- 930Rm.Worship
Wrdnesday , Serv 1~~

! la m .mt.l 6pm ,

• 7 p m Pustor Gary

Ellis

l

Rutland Flr.~t Baptist Chun:h
Sunday School · 9 ~0 am Wor\hlp •
10 45 a m
Pomeroy First Raptlst
Pastor Jon Bwcken E:t1&gt;1 Ma 111 S1
Sunday Sch 9 ru am. Worsh1 p 10 Jll um

.'r•

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!,. -

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flt's t SUIIthei'rl"liapll\r - P1ke Sunday S( hool .
930am , Worshtp 945 am&amp;700pm
Wedn~~day Sen 1c~ s - 7 00 p m

t

41 872

.'r
'

Pom ero~

First Baptisl Church
Pastor B1lly Z u ~ pan fl th .md P.lllnl' r St
Maddlepon Sunday School 1) 15 u m
Wur~h 1p
10 15 am 700 pm
Wednesday Serv~~;e- 7 00 p m

l

Racinr First Bapll.'ll
Pastor Ryan Eaton
pastor

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•

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WL&lt;sts1dc ( hurth uf Ch rtst
31J20 Children s Htl lnl' RrJ Su nd&lt;Jy
S~hon l 11 am , Wor ~ lup . lOam 6 pm

•

•
•

Old •th~l Free WiU Baptist Chun:h
28601 St Rt 7 M1 ddlepM Sunday
Semce
10 R m • 6 00 p m Thc ~thl)
Str.Jces 6 00

..••'

Hillside Baptist &lt;;hurch
St Rt 143 JU~t u{f Rt 7, P~ ~tor R ~v
Jarru: s R Acree Sr , Sund&lt;Jy Un1r1ed
Serv.ce. Worsh1p - 10 30 11 111 . ti p m
Wednesday Semces 7 p m

••

Victory Bapllsllndeptndenl
525 N 2nd St Middleport PaStor hlme s
E Keesee Worsh1p - lOB m 7 p m .
Wednesday Serv1ces 7 p m

••

R~1lroud

i

Fa1lh Bapllst Chun:h
St . Mason. Sund ay School . 10

,1m , Wor sh•p ·

I I am

1:1

p m.

Wedne!4day Serv1ces · 7 p m
For~:st

Run Baptist· Pomeroy

Rev Joseph Woods S unllay" S~ hoo l
am , Worstup -l130am

.••
i

Mt. Moriah

'

10

Baptl~t

Founh &amp; Mam St , Middleport Sunday
School 9 30 a m • Worsh1p I0 45 a m
Paslur Rev M1chael L111ompM&gt;R Jr
Antiquity Baptist

•••'
••

Sunday Schoo! • 9 \0 a rn Wo r ~h1 p •
10 45 am . Sunday Evenmg 6 00 p m .

Pastor Don Walker

••

l\tldrlleporl Chur("h nf Chn~t
5t h ,mtJ 1\.1.1111 Pils tnr AI H tmon
DtreLlnr Sh.mm S ,l\!~ 1~'&lt;:11
DilL'( lor OOOgcr Vaugh.m h uml o~\ SLIIII&lt;'l
9JU.tm Wur,lllp 81&lt;i 10'\U,tm 7
p m. WeUnl ..J.1y s~r~ tl~ ~ 7 p 111

l k~A•

Kenn ChU rch ofChnst
Wors hip · II 10 1m Suntl.11 Scholl I .
Ill 'lOa m Pas t or·J ~nn:) Wt!l,,lt: h l.md
lrtl Suntla11

Wc~ lt·\atlllihlc

"m

&lt;_,,

Wnr ~ h1 p liJ ~ IJ .1m
h 111 pm
Wedne.,duy S~ t II In&gt;&gt; fJ 10 p 111

•

AGENCIES Inc

Products+
Financial
Serv1ces

IU .1m Wur~lup
pr n Su n d. 1~ E\'[ 71111 pm
\h due,d.t) Sl•n rce 7 l i I Jl m

Znm t: hun:h of Christ
Pur1u:r11~
ll arn \Oil ldk RJ (Rt 1-11),
P.titor Rn ~er W.tlmn Su nd 1y SLhon l
~ '110&lt;~m Wor,rur
\IJ'I0 ,1m 7 oo
p 111 WeJne\d,li Se t 1t ~ c .. 7 p m

twurl'l ClifT trel' ,\ l t&lt;lhodist Churr h
P.l\hl r Gknn
':1 ' ll ,1111

pm

J.l.u~A c.

S und &lt;~}

\\v1 •tup . 10

We dn ~~tt, J;

~0

s,huol .

,1m ,mJ b

Sentu· 7 011 r 111

Bradhury lhnrch or Christ

l'hc C hur~h uf Je~us

M1111 sler Tom Run ynn l45511 llr.1dhury

Christ or Laltcr·Da~ Sainh

M1ddlt'port Suml.1y Sdwu l IJ ~l

Rutland Church nfChnst
Sunday Schnul q ~~ fl am Wouh1p art d
Cmn mun1un 10 10 am Bnh .I Wcrr)
Mm1 stcr

Our Sp\lour tulhrnm Chur~h
}V,\I nut ,11\rJ lll·nr~ Sis R.t ~c n ,w uod
W Vu. Pns tnr J)H\Iul Ru "cll Sunt l.t )
St.: honl - Ill 00 ,llll \\lo ~ h1p I I .1 Ill

'

St. Puul Lulhcun Church
lnrncr SycaJllort! &amp; S c ~ o nd St Pum•'ruy
., Sun Schno t \/ 4 ~ ,1 11'1 Wor~h 1p - II ~ m

Gr11ham United Methodist
Wor,)up · II ~ m Pu~ t ur R1dJ.ut.l N~a&gt;e
He.:htel United Methodist
Ne~&lt; J1 ,111r n J.l. t~ h.t rU Nc.1 ~(· P.1~ t o r .
Sunda) Wtm hlJl ') ~0 II m Tun n 10
prava .md HJb)C" Stud~
'

• (hurrh of lhrlst
Reeds\lllc
Pa, tor Phtl ip Sturm Sunday Srhool 9 ~U
am, Wor ~ lup Sef'\1ce lO '\{)am l\ 1hl ~
Stully. Wcdnesllay, 6 30 p m
Uexler Churth of Christ
Sunday \C honi iJ \II 1m Sund.1y ~&lt; or, lup
If) 30 .1 111
Th~; Church ofChri~t or Pomeroy ,
lntcrht'llllln 7 and I ~4 W Ev mge h ~t
Dcn n1 • Sa(}lt nl Sun Uu y IJ1ble Stull)
1110 a m WQr ~ hlp 10 lU a 111 ,mJ IJ 1\J
p m Wc dn~ ~ day U1 bk Study- 7 p 111

Mt Ollvr UnilL-rl

;&gt;ie n tn· ~

10 3\l .1m 7 p m Thur-;tlny
7 Jl ll \

HartFurd C hu~h of Christ in
Ch rlstlwn Un11m
!l.,ttlflnl . W Va Pas tor D11111J G1ee r.
Sund.1 y Schnol 9 30 .1 m . Worship .
10 '0 ~ m 7 00 p m Wetl neWa)
Serv1ccs 7 00 p m

Chesttr
/'.1stor Jun Cor btlt . Wor~h1p - 9 ~ m .
Sundl ) SL hm•l
Ill ,, m . l hur..U:tv
Ser1 I {~~ 7 p m

Church of God

P.1~tur

Juppu
Dclllll Nu ll Wur~hlp • 9 1() a m

Sund,,y Sd101 'l · !0 10 ,, m

I!Oiilliritl~~~- mnberson ' jlkll!la Itt rl
jfunrral J)otttr
Middleport.OH 740-992-5141
James Andcrson.Adam l\1cUantel·

499 Richland Avenue, Athens

l&gt;tredors

1-800-451-9806

Pom&lt;rOy, Ott

740-992-5444

J11mn H. Anderson, I.Jcen5ed t unrrall&gt;•n'Ctor
Vlanning

Rejtm,.i ng life Chun:h
'iOO N ZnJ &lt;\11e. M1ddlepor1. Pastor
M1ke lor~ man P ~~ l o r Eme ntus Lawrence
hmtman Wo r~h1p- 10 00 am
WeJ ne~da~ Scr.1c~ s 7 p m

l',t,Wr

~o· ,, m

\\;'"~h 1p

W(·t.l nc,J&lt;J&gt; So:nlLC'

7 011

s~ huo l ·

Smi J.I}

The Ark Church

Ynuth D 1 1 ~1.tnr Bc111 hill.' 'lund";
10.1111 \\ tJP,hip &amp; 6 pm I .11111h
1 1k ( I.• ~•&lt;:' Wed &amp; fh u1 llll.!hl LdL
Gruup~ .11 7 pm fhur~ nmrnmg 1 .1 d1 e~
I lie Gwup ,u H1 Outrr l 11n1t' Ym uh I 1ft'
(11\&gt;Up 1111 \VcrJ ~ 1 c nm ~ h11111 (, 11) tu H ~()
\'"11 ll ~ O!ll lllt ,11 \\Yo\\ ~tlicl\1 L (II~
~t flll r ~

Full Gospel Church
oft he Living Savtor
Rt 1 'H. Aullljlltl y. Pa~t u r Je~se Morns .
Se1' l &lt;&gt;e~ S,tturda y 2 00 p m

1\.sh Strct&gt;t Chun: h

1!J 10 .1111 &amp; 7 Ut Jlnl V.hlnnli. l) $¢1\
7 00pm ' uLilhS•rlll~ 7 111J p m

JU.1111 . V..\liShlp 9.1111

St.'111~e'

lllam

ll~

-

Hoh sn n C hr~ s tlon Fellmhhlp Church
P a ~m r

I

~armei-Suthm

C.mncl &amp; B~ s h ,m J.l.rJ , Ra c1n~ Oh11J
P.t,lor J11h11 Gtlmor~ Su nd.1y s~huo l
9 4~ u,m Wor ~ h 1p · II OIJ .1m
H1hlc
Study Wed 7 ' IJ p m

' t\hundunt Cruce R.t". I
'1~1 S fhml St tvhddlcpmt Pa~torTcre~.l,
o ~I I S
SunJ a} \Cr\1 1 ~1: Ill 1111
\hJu ~~ J.i} \C r\ M 7 pIll

Foith •·un t.ospcl t:h11rch

wor~ h• r

II

• IU ,,m

Bono t ll.l'u~ tor

Long

s~IHlU l

Letart
P.1s1or B1ll Mmh.tll S u11d a~ Sdtnol
9a 111. Wur~ h1p · 10 a m J,t Su uJ1)
~-~f\ 111\lnth C\Cil l\1 ); \C f \I ICC 7 0Q pm
w~ lln e~ ddy

Res turallon Christian Fellowship
•n6S Hooper Road . Athens Pastor

Raemt•
Kerry WnuJ Sunday Sdwol 10
am . WUrsl11p · '11 a m Wcdne~ll~ v
Scr111cr' 6 pm 1hur R1hlc St ud~ 7 pm
Coolville Unittd ,Mtlhodl~t Pamh
Pa stm Hel en Kline f 1lOI111 ll e C hur~ h
Mam &amp; F1fth St Sun Schno l 10 am
'Wor~ hl p " II a 111 rue~ ServKC'- - 7 l' 111

fl'"

m Wot sh tp

WeJm:~Jny

Hurrt sunvillr Cornnmnily Church
Pa~tor f heron Durh am Su nd.1y 'J 3fl
. m t.l7pm . Wcd n e~d.ly

C hu~h

Middleport l'&lt;.~' tor Sam
i\n tl a ~o n
Sun da} Sc hoo l I (J :~ m
E1 cnmg 7 ~0 p m Wcdnc&gt;U .t) Srn 1 c~
7 11) pIll
Pearl St

huth Vall(•)' f~thermulc C hur~h
B. uley Run Ko.1d P.t\lor KL ~ Emmett
R 1\\ ~ n u Sund 1y E\!Cn lng 7 ]Jill
r~u NI IIy Ser.t~C 7 p 111

lldhd l ' hunh

Tnwn.. hlp Rd 46RC' Su ndny St hnol . IJ
.1111 Wur,lllp
10 u m W~dnc:;dn\
Sci\ Ill'~ I() ll 111

S)rP{USt'

IJ II IJ nJgem.tn St

S~ r.I C U M'

Grand St reet Sund1l) School • Q 30 am .
Worshi p · JO JO a m . Pastnr Phillip Rr ll

C. u

Tonh Churth
RJ 0 I. SunrJ.1y S~ h uol . 'I 30 am .

V.or~ hi Jl ·

IIi

\1)

.1m

Point Rock (hurd1ol the Namrtne
Routt (, HI) Al h,J.ny Rt:\ L 1uyd Gnmm
p.~&gt;tor S u nd .1v SLhuol 10 .1111 w~1h~ 1p
w i VI Lt II un li.CIIIng \C fii LC: I pm Wed

i\llddlcport (,: hurch of Ihi' Nazart•nr
Pao;tur Lcnn,trd P\J well Sund.l).' Sc~uol
I)

'Ill .t lfl .\Vor~ hlp

V.crJn~~da)

Ret&gt;dnllk- fello"!ihlp

Ch urcll of the Nuzarene Pu~tnr R u~~cll
C.n s!•n Sundny Schoo l 9 30 a m
V.oll lllJl • 10 4~ :t m 7 p m • Wed nes d~ v
Ser~tc ~~ · 7 p m
Syrut11St Church M the Nazarene
P.1 ~tor

Pentecostal
PeniMostal Assembly
J'a,Jflr St R! 124 Racme. Tornado Rd
Sunda) Schnnl • HI .t m Even mg · 7

:\llddleportl'rcsbyterlan
flJ~ t or

Unzt•l Community Chun:h

Jamts S11yder Sunday Schuu l 10

wn r~l1 1p

'Cr\'Jce 11 am

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seanlh·Day Adventbt
Hts Rd • Pome roy Saturday
~~ 111 ~ e ~ Sabb3th Sehoul - 2 p m . ,
Worsht p - J p m
Mulberr~

lhesvillr lommun11y Chnrt'h
Suntby Sdwor II 30 a m Wm~ h 1p 10 111,1 m, 7 p 111
'
Mur~ e Chupel Churfh
Su mlin. ·~ h'"'l · I !I .Jill \Vu 1•l11 p . I I
Wtdn~ ~d.l)

Presbyterian C hurch

Sund.111

OfT Rt 124 1•.1stor Edsel H.m Sund&lt;l}
Sl hUIJI Y 30 u m Wnr~lu p l0 JO ,1 m
7 Jn p m

a 111

7 pm

Presbyterian
Harnson~IUt'

JIll

,

\\edne sd ll~ SCTV!CCS

p Ill ,

6 pm

SLnlcc . 7 p 111

I ai th c,n-.rld c lmnh
Ltlll!; Hotllllll Sund.1y Sthou l 9 111 .1m
Wnr~h1p
10 &lt;l'i .1 111 1 lU p m
Wtd u u~ d.t y 7 ~(I p m

II) 1(1 ~ m 010 p m.

Sen IH'' 7 p 111

1eam Jtsus Minlstrle!i
Meetmg 311 MechanK Strtet Pomero}
OH Pa~tor Eddie Bacr Scr11 1 ~c every
Sunday 10 00 am

Puslllf Rohcrt Crow Worsh1p - 9 a m

rvu~slun

Sdmul - 10 r1 m t:: venmg
Wcdnc~dny Sen 1te • 7 p m

tlouse uf Healln11 Mlnlstrle!!i
St. Rt. Ilia Langsville, OH
l"ull Gmpcl Cl Pastor~ Ro~ rt &amp; Roherta ,
Mu ~~ er Sunday School 9 30 am .
'Wlmh lp I{) 30 am
7 00 pm. Wed
SeJVl\e 100 pm

7p m

i\llddleport Conuuunit~
·q~

Worsh1 p 1000 am.

7 pm

R ~cJ

Sund.t}
IJ 30 a IT1
7 p 111 rml:tv .

Stele

Coal ~ Sun du ~

\hJn ~~d.l )

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CHARLESTON. W.VA. - Former Metronews talk rad io personality Steph~n Reed has returned to broadcastmg with a new
podcast for Pn son Fellowship's BreakPomt Divtsion.
The ftfteen minute podcast 1s called "Discourse" and features
Reed and occas ional co-hosts mterv tewmg mtngumg Chrisuan
guests through the popular BreakPoint webstte at www bteakpoint .org
__
BreakPmnt ts the Chnstian worldview wing of Prison Fellowship , the ministry started in 1976 by Charles W. .. Chuck" Col son .
t~!l::er ~ ped2.l coos&amp;el to Pre:..ldcnr-RlchaFfr Nt-xon . r nso-tl-FeHvw- shtp 's headquarters is based in Lansdowne, Va , approxi matelv 30
miles from Washingtop , DC .
·
'
''Podcastmg has really taken ort and tor obvtous reasons.'' said
Reed , ~ho serves as the mmtstry 's Grants and Foundations Spectaltst . "People like the tdea of downloadmg a program and taking
It With them on thetr tPod whtle they exercise , shop, or just clean
the house They can listen to 11 on thetr schedule."
Reed's podcast wtll be a monthly look at the Christians who are
creating or covering contemporary culture. This month. his guest
is Heath Hardesty, a wnter and mustctan from Longmont, Co ..
whose new book. "To the Lion: The Christian in l'ension ," ts the
subject of their disc ussion. To hear the podcast, go lo :
http //www.breakpoint.org/medm .asp"IID=8 11 3
'This IS a book and an author with a great my sttque,'" sa1d Reed .
"Heath Hardesty ts a name to remember, as this first effort at ht s
challenges Christian believers of all stnpes , as well as the intellectually cunous person of any or no parttcular fatth background.lt 's
a real romp mto deep matenal but highly readable for evervone."
. "Hardesty's basic premt se is to not dismiss a paradox it1 ChnsIIatuty JUSt because you don 't automatically embrace 11 tlllttally,""
said Reed. "Maybe we aren't meant to understand a paradox completely, but that doesn 't mean we can 't apprecmte as"pects of 1t that
we might fooli shly -throw away."
Paradoxes like God"s mercy vs. God 's judgment and sovereignty vs free wtll are explored in the podcast; many more are
t!d~.;~~t:{··+h~book.
·-·'At BreakPoint, we have so many good writers with a nch tradition of taf;ing on "hatever cultural currents come our way as
Chnsttans." said Reed. "'We intend for " Discourse'" to sta~ within
that tradtiion , because 11 makes for hvely and thought-pro,okmg
broadcasting.''

• '""

V ' \..-f"Uid -

(IOnS for the rebu ildmg of the
ancient templ e on a di sputed rectangle in Jent s&lt;tlem sacred to both
Jews and Mu sli ms.
Jews call the stt e the Temple
Mount and ve ne ra te 11as their holiest place. The temple Itself was
destroyed by Roman leg ions two
millenma ago. For the past I ,300
years , the ~ i te has been home to
Islam's thtrd -hohest shnne. the
Noble ' Sanctuary_ including the
golden Dome of th e Rock and the
AI-Aq sa Mosq ue.
These conlltct111g danns lie at
the heart of the lsraelt -Palestinian
conflict, and past efforts to upset
the status quo have erupted into
violence.
The Temple In stitute has made
priestly garments in the past for
dt splay in the small museum tt runs
m the Jewish Quarter. but those
were hand-sewn and cost . upward
of $10,000 each. The institute
11

petfi'i i's-

siOn to beg m using sewmg
machines for the first time, bringmg the cost down and allowmg
them to produce dozens or hundreds of garments, dependmg on
how many orders come m.
If you are a descendant of the
Jewish pnestly class, a full outht,
mcluding an embrotdered belt 32
cubits (48 feet) long, can be yours
for about $800 .
"Before, the clothes we made
were to go on dtsplay. Now we're
engaged in the practical fulfillment
of the divme commandment," said
Yehuda Glick. the Temple Institute 's director. at a ceremony
marking the workshop 's openmg
last week .
The thread_ stx -pl y flax, "as purchased in India , and the dtamondpattet ned f.tbt ic was woven in
Israel. The blue dye, whtch the
Bible calls "tchelet," ts made from '
the secretions of a snatl found m
the Mediterranean Sea, and the red
color comes from an aphit'l found
on local trees.
The priests , made up of descendants of the Biblical figure Aaron ,
were an elite group entrusted with
the temple and its rituals, such as
sacnficmg animal s and makmg
other offerings to God . The memory of belongmg to that class has
been preserved by Jew s through
the centuries . Their most common
family name IS "Cohen," meamng
priest.
The Temple lnstttute and similarly mmded believers think those
modem priests will soon have to
resume the ntual s of thetr ancestors in a rebuilt temple, and that by
prepa11ng their garments they are
bringing that day closer.
"The h~ht of God is commg
back,' and tt's happening before our
eyes," Glick satd. By sewmg garments for the templ e priests, his
institute ts "contmumg a process
that was neglected for 2,000
years ," he said
The Temple lnstllute does not
advocate violent action and says its
activities are purely educatiOnal.
But groups like the mslltute , however marginal, have played on
Muslim fears that Jews plan to
destroy their holy sites to pave the
way for rebutlding the temple.
~ Adnan Hussemi, formerly the
4op Muslim official at the site and
)low an adviser on Jerusalem
nffairs to Palestinian President
Mahmoud Abbas , ca lled the work
of such groups a "provocation ."
' "If they talk about building the
· temple , what doe s it mean'

Fot-.ner WCHS
personality
launches podcast
BY ALICE CLICK

JERUSALEM
in a stuffy
basement off an Old C.ty alleyway in Jeru sale m, tmlors usmg
anctent texts as a bluepnnt have •
begun makm g a cu nous ltne of
clothing they hope wil l be wo rn
by pnests in a reconstructed Jew ish Temple .
The proJect. run by a Jerusal em
~roup called the Templ e Institute,
IS part of an td.:ology that advod ' "'~' " b

Page A/ '

Friday, July u , zooS

AP photo

Israeli ta1lor Avad Jerufi, left, and worker Haga1 Barash! admire a robe
designed for the Cohen 1m pnests made at a workshop of the Temple Institute m Je rusalem's Old C1ty, m thts photo taken Monday, June 30. In a
humid basement off an Old C1ty alleyway th1s week, tailors us1ng anc1ent
texts as a blueprint inijugurated a new effort to produce affordable outfits for the pnests of a Jewish temple they fervently hope to see rebUilt.
The Temple Institute , the group behind the proJect, has made pnestly garments in the past. but those were hand-sewn and cost upwards of
$10,000 each. But With workers now usmg sewmg machmes, the cost of
a full outfit, Including an embroidered belt 32 cu1;&gt;1ts tong, now go for
$800. The workers here believe their efforts bnng closer the construction
of the third temple.
It mean s they w1ll destroy the
Islamic mosques," Hu sse ini said
"' And tf they do, they wtll make
1.5 billion enemies. It ts God's
wtll that thts ts a place for Muslims tn • pray, and they must
respect that."
The hrst Jewtsh Temple was
de stroyed by the Babylonians
2,500 years ago. and the second
was leveled by the Roman s m the
year 70. Since then, the focus of
the religion has changed drastical ly, from a temple-centered ritual
of animal sacrifice led by priest;;
to a faith revolvmg around individual study and p1ety taught by
rabbis .
Most Orthodox Jews see the
rebuilding of the temple as a theoretical event to be undertaken by
God when the Jewish people are
deemed to deserve 11 and Judaism
has traditionally forbtdden mak mg practical preparations of this
kind.
But the small group in this basement , members of a hard Ime fn nge
among Israel's religious national Ists, see that thinking as an excuse
· for inaction .
"'From the moment we see we're
ready here, the ~ lathe s will be
ready and the prtests can get to
work when the time comes,"' said
Hagat Barashi , an assistant tatlor.
He wore a Biblical-lookmg robe,
long sidelocks, and a pair "of Nike
fl1 p· tlops.
The first member of the priestly
class who came to be measured
· was Nachman Kahana , a local rabbi . He removed his black jacket,
and tailor Avtad Jaruft , a small
man in a white robe and homrimmed glasses, took out his green
measunng tape. The priestly garments can't be sold off the rack Jewish law spec tfies that they must

be made to measure :
Y1 stael Attel , the tabbt who
tounded the Temple Institute , recited a tradttional blessing, thanking
God for "'keepmg us ahve, and sustaining us, and enabling us to reach
this ltme "
Anel, an expert on temple ritual
who was present as a soldier when
Israel captured the Old Clly from
Jordan in 1967, is associated with
the extreme flank of Israel's rehgtous settlement movement. In the
I980s,lte was the No 2 man on a
virulently anti-Arab parliamentary
hst that was eventually outlawed
for racism .
Hts mstttute ts dedtcated to
recreating the Implements used 111
the temple nt'it only as a historical
exercise but as a way to prepare for
its reconstruction and , if possible,
to speed up the process In tts 20
years of existence. the institute has
recreated a golden seven-branchetl
candelabra that cost $3 mtllion, as
well as harps , altars and containers
for mcense.
Many of the obJects are on display in the institute's museum ,
which also has a gift shop selhng
temple- themed souvenirs like puzzles, bal sa-wood model s and board
ga mes . There are also posters
depicting the temple in Jerusalem,
standmg where the Dome of the
Rock does now .
Many see the age nda as exploSIVe.
"'The more awareness you raise,
and the more you stress that
Ju&lt;jmsmtsn't real wtthout the temple , the tnore you're encouraging
conflict over holy space in
Jerusalem," satd Gershom Gorenberg , an Israeli historian and jour-·
nalist who wrote, "The End of
Days;· a book about the struggle
over the Temple Mount.

Inspiration comes
in many forms
Bv JuANITA WooD

GALLIPOLIS - When we lived on Mabelene Drive , one day I
watched from my kitchen window as a busy little wren decided to
build her nest m a pair of jeans hangmg on the dotheslme .
She would bring grasses and such, disappear inside the jeans
which were pinned at the watst , and a few seconds later appear
agam . Over and over she dtd thts unttl tmally 1t was tnne to
remove the jeans so she would build her nest somewhere else .
It was many years later when I renewed my acquamtance With
this perky little bird . My brother-in-law, after an accident and several stays m the hospttal, passed away suddenly the evening before
he was scheduled to go home .
My sister-in-law, a resident of Arbors , was in declining health .
Her only chtld lived m Florida so I had to be the one to visll and
take her things to tempt her appetite.
My husband who had Parkinson's Disease for over twenty years,
was a_lso now m Arbors after bemg in and out of the hospttal several times. I had· my own health problems, now walking with a
cane. but I pushed out daily to visit Harland and Etleen.
_In addition, my childless aunt, now in her mneues, was hvmg
wtth me. It became necessary for me to get a guardianship (over
her protests) as she was no longer capable of handhng her affmrs .
Needless to say, it became dtscouragmg as I faced the challenges
of each new day. I was starting to feel sorry for myself, wondering
how I would ever manage to see to everythmg, when an unusual
event grabbed my attentton.
Hanging on my back porch is a decorative pair of garden gloves
with a hole to make 11 look hke a bird house. It was in a postlion
where I could see it as I passed by on my way to the kitchen. One
mornmg a fluttering of wings caught my attention.
You guessed a! A pa1r of wren s were movmg in . I ivatched dai ly as nestin~ materials disappeared inside the gloves Later there
were three tmy eggs, and still later food was earned m to the three
baby wrens .
I couldn 'flrelp-b-m think of Matthew I 0:29 eacn morning. ThiS
verse states that our heavenly Father knows when even an insignificant little sparrow falls to the ground. This was a reminder that
God knew of my struggles and would provide what was needful to
keep me going. And he has. He will never leave me nor forsake me
as long as I am a faithful child of his (Heb . 13:5 .)
Encouraged by these little birds, my spints hfted I was not
alone . God was watching over me; he would prov1de the strength
needed to carry on . He sent these little messengers to remind me
at a time when problems were blotting out my knowledge of God's
presence .
Etleen' passed away on her birthday and Harland followed a
month later. My aunt IS now 94 years old. Her health is steadily
declining, and I am facing knee surgery. I continue to wonder what
each day will bring, and try to keep in mind that God cares .
The other morning I heard a bird singing at the top of her vmce.
Curiosity sent me to the door to see what was making this beauti ful song. I spotted her sitting on top of the lattice, and yes, 11 was
another perky little wren. Lest I forget, God. is still reminding me
of hts loving care .
·

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Bethlrhem BRptlst Chur(h
Greal Bend Roule 114 Rac111e 0 11
Pastor Ed Ca n~r. Sunday Schoo l Y 30
am . .Sunday Worsh1p HI 30 am .&amp; 7
pm , Wtdnesday B1ble Study 7 00 p m

am .

BCilJIInllll Crawford S unda~ &lt;&gt;c hl&lt;Ol '' 30
am. Suntla1 wor..,Jup JO '1 0 ,1m &amp; 7
I' 111 • Wcdnt'\d,w praHr &gt;t.;r\ K~ 7 l' 111

Pomc ro~

K(•b R11b 1n ~ Oit SuildU\1 Sdtoo l I\I

p 111

frrtdom G~pe l !\tls.&lt;ikln
Hald Knob. un Co Rd Jl Pastor Re1
Kn~t"r Willford Sunda) Sthool , 9 30
,1m Wo!'.l11 p 7 p m

1\.11 ~ll r, hill

SJIU ill} ';rn II

1:\llddll•pmtl
I' 1 ~ t nr Bn u1 Dunh 1111 SunJ.1\ Sdwol Y IO~m Wnr~htp 11 00 .1111

D11nville Holmess Church
31057 St.lle Rowe l25 La n g~\ lie C'1stor

W(•J n ~·d, l ) ~f\ICC' - 7 rIll

l'ul.'pers Plain Churrh 11r lhml
!n~trumemal Wnr ~ h1 p SL·rVIL&lt;'
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Mt. Union Raptl~t
Pastor Denm s Weaver Sunda) Schoo l·
9·45 am , Even1ng : 6 30 p m
Wedn~sJay Semce! · 6 30p m

Wo r~h1p 1000

SunJay
Se nl ~c - 7

pm

~l'~ ll ea:inni n ~:

l'1,lm • llnh md

u~ nt h

Stelle

Ru tl.mll
S1mday

Pomerov Church of ( hnst
1 12 W Mam Sl , SunJa, Sd iUol 9 1{1
o~ 111
Wur, Jup 10 ] 1) • m fJ IJ 111

Sc hoo l - 9 30 am . Worship 10 40.1 m
6 00 p m . Wednesday Sermes 7 00

l'&lt;~.~ l!lr

Cnmnmmly ChurCtr
rornek Mam Strcet

Pa ~t nr

.-\

1Y. ull C.u~pc l ( hur("h I

f-or,·\1 R1m

Holiness

Sundll }

Silnr Run Baptist
Pastot John Swlln!on. Sunday Sch.ool IOa m , Worsh1p
11am .700pm
.Wedne sday Serv1ces- 7 00 p m

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P,1,t111 De ~&lt; .1yuc Stullll r. S1111Ja\ S1 houl
IU .t m \Vui•hlp - 11 .1 111

126 E Mnm St Pomeroy Sundil) School
and Utlly Eu{h amt II ()() am Rl v
EJ..,.unf Pay nt

Heml01:k Gm\'e Chnshan ( hun.: h
Mm1 ster L~ 11 } Brnwu Wo1,l11 p 9 1()
am Sunda) School lU 30 am. U1Plt
Stud} - 7 p m

P a~ tor

RJ Pnmerm

Grart• f pi!il'opal Churrh

33226 Chil dren s Home Rd Pumeruy OH
Con ine! 7.Ul·441 - 129 fl Sunda~ morn111g
10 00 Sun mor nmg B1bk s tu dy
fD IInv.1n;: v.or ~ h1p Sun ~\e 6 00 pm
Wed l'u ble ~lmly 7 fl11l

larltlon Interdenominational Churdt
Km~,bllry R o~rJ Pa~tor Robert Vance
Stmda1 Sc hool
q 30 n m Wor.;h1p
Scn1~e 10 JOn m E1emng Sem ce 6

Other Churches

f nterpnst
f'a,tnr Arl.llld K111g Su111J.t) Sthoul .I) l()
.1m \~m,lup 10 ~!l am 111m lhl,md

Episcopal

\hsL\idl' Church nf Chml

l'a&gt;tlll 9•lh Rnhlmtlll
9 -15 u m Wm ,h1 p 1J

S c h t ~ll

li elil l'bJI\,"icl\lce' i l u p m

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Trtnity Church
Secund &amp; L)•nn . Pomeroy Pao;tur Re1
Bnb W.mn~., u l ll Wl.lf'h'Jl 10 25 .1 111.

Church of Christ

I)

lue\tla~Ser•l(&lt;.:~

.-

The Daily S'entinel

( hl&gt;!.lt'r Churt h nfth• 1\alnrt'n l'
R&lt;:'l ( llrth R,1ndnlph Sunda~
Sd11~•l · ~ 141 .1 111 \\o r~ lur
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Whltt&lt;'s Chupef Wesleyan
\uuJ 11 t•~ lllll )!. f, p111
Cvul1 dlc RoaJ Pa \tor Re11 Charle s
l&lt;utland lh urch ot thr Np zan:nt·
• Martmd;~ie Sunda} Schoo~ • 9 30 am
Wor\hlp , 10 10 ,1m Wed ne~(1 a ~ Serv1ce
f&gt;J,Jn! l• eorg~: Siad ler Sunda\ S. hnol
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pm w., r n~\J,,\ S1 n 1 t:c~ 7 I' n1
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L~tan W V,1 Rt I fl a~ to r Bn an r..ta)
SunJu, s~hool · ~ 30 am V.orsh1p • 7 00
:'li\rliC II\t' ( ommumh (. hunh
p m Wednc'&gt;da&gt; B1ble Study· 7 00 p m
:! 4~(1 Srul!Hl St ~}f•&lt;Lli'L OH
Faith t"e llo w~ hip Cru.'illdt for Christ
Sun ~ t h\)(1] li! .1m 'i1mrJ\ 111~ht 6 lfi l&gt;ll1
l'. 1 ~ !or Rc• Fru nk hn Dickens, Serv1ce
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11 m d m \V11l\l11p - HJ Ill .1 Ill HlrJ fl
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W1•1 •h1p · II a m • \\cdnt-,tJa \1 Set' ~ ~~s 7
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0 J Wh1tc Hd otl St Rt 160 P&lt;~. 'i tn r PJ

pm

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570 Gmnl St , Middleport, Sund.ty ~ch~11.:1

Wc•Unl,dlyS~r&gt; t •~'

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Wc&lt;.hk'~ll ay Sct\Jte~

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Apple mJ SL'&lt;:Und Sh ra~tor Rt'\ Dlllld
R u'~&lt;'ll Suml:t) S' htlnl .md \l.or ~lup 10
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Ra~tr Valley AposiOhc Wnrsh1p C[mer
873 S 3nl A11~ Middleport R e~
M1chae l Bradfunl , PaMor. Sund~y 10 )0
a.m Tues 6 30 prayer Wed 7 pm Bahle
Study

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E\en1ng fl p m Wrdne~da) Sef'\lll!S 7
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Pa •tor Run H e~ th Sum..l ;~y 'w\or\lup lO

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1 p Ill

Monn ng uur-.h1p I 11101 I::Hnm~ 7 pm

Evtmng 7 30 p m

•

Friday, July 11, 2008

.,
.......... '"f -

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Pag~ A8- The Daily Sentinel

-

www.mydailysentinel.com

,

Bl.

--- Th~ Daily .Sentinei

L11Sid~ · · _.
Sports briefs, Page 82
"aron returns home, Page 83

China crackdown targel.s critics,
Page 84

Friday, july 11, 2008
.

.

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY- A sche dule ol upcoming high
school \O arsity sporting evenls invoi&gt;Jing ·
teams from Meigs County

Keep Your Base Tan All Year, &amp; You Won't Have
To Work As Hard In The Spring To Get Your ·D arkest Tan ...
That Is The Secret!

BY ALAN ROBINSON

Friday. July 11

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Legion Baaeball

Post 128 at Portsmouth (doubleheader). 6 p.m.
S.,turdey Julv 12

Legion Baaeball

Parkersburg at Post 128 (doublehead1

er), 1 p .m .

.

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· Perms $35 &amp; Up

'

SPORTS BRIEFS

C"

A

Southern High
volleyball camp

.

RACINE
The
Southern Volleyball Youth
Camp for all girls entering
fifth through eighth grades
in the fall will be held from
9 a.m. to noon, July 14-16 at
Southern High School.
The cost is $30 per student. A camp T-shirt is
included in the price.
The camp is ineant to
teach passing, setting, hitting skills, and fundamentals.
Contact Tonja Hunter at
740-949-3088 for more
information.

--J

Rooney brother may decide Steelers ownership fight

PITTSBURGH
Pittsburgh Steelers chairman
Dan Rooney face s an uphill
climb in trying to acquire
majority control of one of
pro sports' be st-known franchises now , that his four
brothers have hired an
invcstrriciiL fir m lv f~dJ
I offers for their shares of the
club.
In · a curious twi st. A.rt
Rooney Jr., a Pro Football
Hall of Fame nominee for
his drafting skills who was
fired by Dan Rooney 2 I
years ago, may decide if the
team stays in the Rooney
family's control. · ·
Dan Rooney, widely
viewed as the NFL's most
influential owner, has spent

two years in an unsuccessful
attempt to buy out his four
younger brothers' stakes in
the five-time Super Bowl .
championship
franchi se.
Each brother owns 16 percent, or a total of 80 percent.
The other 20 percent is
owned 'by the family of the
late"Barney ,McGinley, who
helped Steelers founuer Art
Kooney Sr. real:quire the
Steeiers in the 1940s after
Rooney sold the team for a
brief ume . The McGinleys'
share is not believed to be
for sal'e.
To · prevent an outside
investor- most likely, bitlionaire
Stanley
Druckenmiller, a longtime
Steelers fan- from obtaining a majority stake. Dan
Rooney needs to persuade at
least one brother to sell to

him .
That would give him 32
percent of the team, enough
to satisfy the NFL's rNuirement that the primary owner
have at least a. 30 percent
share. If the McGinley s
don 't sell , no other inve stor
could own more than 48 percent. .
·
. Druckenmiller. the chairman oT Duquesne Capital
Management, acknowledged
Thursday for the first time
he is involved in trying to
buy into the team.
In
a
statement,
Druckenmiller said the
Rooneys are "working
through a number of complicated issues regarding the
ownership structure... I have
been involved in these discuss ions and am interested
in participating in ·a transac-

tion that builds on the legacy. about Steelers fUlmder Art
of this great franchise and Rooney Sr. and the family.
one that makes economic "What bothers ·me is I hear
sense to everyone involved." people say the out-of-town Dan Rooney wbuld con- ers (the Rooneys wh o don 't
tinue to run the Steelers even live in Pittsburgh) (ion 't love
if Druckenmiller buy s a the Steelers. They low the
majority share but, for the Steelers."
first time. would do so withStill, Art Jr. finds it ironic
our hi~ l~rnHy ~uJ li roll'ing he i11JY dc:dde if the Rooney
the ownershio.
fmnily keeps the St ~P \er&lt; ,
Art Jr. , wl1o helps run the gi ve n his falling out with
Rooney S' real estate hold- Dan.
ings. is the only other
Art Jr.. the only other
Rooney brother who lives in Rooney brother who worked
Pittsburgh. He said his three full time for the team. was so
out-of-town orothers are skilled as a scouting director
loyal Stcelers supporters that his drafts in the late
who dislike being part of 1960s and early 1970s were
any po·ssible disruption of . largely responsible for the
. the Rooney family ' s owner-· Steelers winning four Super
ship.
Bowls in six years.
"We bleed black and
His 1974 draft alone pro- ·
gold," Art Roo.ney Jr. said at
a signing for his new book Please see Steelers, Bl

Coloring $45 &amp; Up

l

J£HSl'olleybaU
conditioning

33105 Hiland Road •

TUPPERS PLAINS The Eastern High 'School
volleyball team will start .
conditioning for interested
players entering grades 9-12
on Monday, July 14 at 6
p.m. at the EHS gymnasium.
Players are reminded to
read through all information
contained in the studentathlete athletic packets and
mu.~h..li!Jn...in..&lt;ill required
forms to the athletic director
before they will be eligible
to participate.

Pomeroy~

OH
740-992-2200
·~·.

'

·Advertise
In This Space
Call Dave or Brenda At

740·992·2155

'

l

I

ASSOC IATED PRES S

Eagle SK Road
Race and Walk

AP photo .

Cincinnati Reds' Ken Griffey Jr. hits a three-run home run against the Chicago Cubs during the fourth inning of a baseball
game Thursday in Chicago.

'

'
..
'

July 12th - 19th

SIDfW.UK 5ALr ALL Wfi:K
Many Items Up To
50% OFF

Dally 8PI:CI..U.8!

McLouth
homer helps
Pirates top
Yankees4-2
BY ALAN ROBINSON

'

',

.

TUPPERS PLAINS The First Annual Eagle 5K
Road Race and Walk and I
Mile Fun Run will be held
S.aturday, August 2, at the
St. Paul United Methodist
Church: The eveht is sponBY RICK GANO
day and I've seen that ball
sored by the Eastern
AS~OCIATED PRESS
travel here on these kind of
Athletic Boosters and will
days big time. Anything that ·
begin at 9 a.m. ·
CHICAGO- David Ross was up in the air, you were
The race will start and end
and
the Cincinnati Reds felt always nervous," said Reds
at the St. Paul United
Methodist Church and will -right at home with the wind manager Dusty Baker, who
be run on the surrounding blowing out of Wrigley skippered the Cubs for four
years and knows all about
streets and roads. the top Field on Thursday.
The
Chicago
Cubs'
friendwild games at the neighborthree overall male and
female finishers in both the ly confines was even nicer to hood park. .
"That was big for the
· 5 K road race and fun run a visiting team, for once.
Ross
hit
two
of
offense
to break out like that
will receive awards. T-shirts
will be ~iven tothe first I00 Cincinnati's seven homers, a and keep scoring. In this
long-ball
barrage that ballpa(k you're never comwho regiSter.
included Ken~Griffey Jr.'s . fortable. I don't care what
· Age groups will be divid- 605th, and the Reds avoided the lead is, especially with
ed mto six groups: 14 years a sweep with a 12-7 victory. the offense that they . have
old and under, 15-18, 19-25,
It was only Chicago's II th over there."
.
26-35, 36-49, and 50 years home Joss this season.
Edwin
Encarnacion:
old and older.
"It was a hot and humid Brandon Phillips, Adam
Registration will be held
beginning at 7:30 a.m. . in
the parking lot of the
Cheaper Place across the
road from Subway. Pre-registration fee is $12, and regfBtration the day of the race
Is $15.· ·Checks should be
CLEVELAND (AP) - Indians lost II straight was
41ade payable to the Eastern The Indians snapped out of 1931 , on the way to a team~thleuc Boosters. and regof the worst losing record 12 consecutive lossj8tration forms should be one
es.
,ailed to Josh Fogle, 2038 streaks ·in franchise history
Francisco and David
by
beating
a
team
that
is
ampbell Street, Coolville,
each hit two-run
Dellucci
su~denly tryin~ to find
_, hio, 45723..
homers in a five-run fifth
answers of its 'own.
; For quesuons or more
against Andy Sonnanstine
Ben
Francisco
had
a
jnformation, c.&gt;ntact Josh career-high four RBis and (10-4). Blake hit a solo shot
!'Jogle at 740-667-9730.
hit bne of Cleveland's four in a seven-run· eighth off
home runs as the Indians Gary Glover.
•
''This was huge for all of
snapped a I0-game losing
'.
streak with a 13-2 victory us," said Dellucci, adding
,.
over
Tampa Bay that that a rather fiery pregame
r·
extended the Rays,: skid to talk to the. team by m11nager
' · · 1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
Eric Wedge gave him inspifour on Thursday night.
FIX- H4CJ.448.3000
"It feels pretty good - a ration.
~..mill - tportaO mydallysentlnel.com
"He got iight to the point
Jot better than what we had
'koadlll!
been doing. That stunk," while showing his faith in
Dellucci
said.
Eric Randolph, Sparta Writer said Casey Blake, who us,"
"
Afterwards,
we
felt
good
along with David Dellucci
(740) 446-23-12, oxt 33
eranc:fotph 0 myda\lysentlnel.com
also homered and had three about ourselves even though
we know where we are in
Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer RBis.
Cleveland last dropped I0 the standings."
(740) 446-23-12 , ext 33
Aaron Laffey (5-5) earned
bwaltors 0 mydailytribune.com
in a row in 1979 and avoidthe last-place Indians' fi rst
ed
its·
longest
streak
in
77
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
years by overcoming a 2-0
(740) 446-23-12 , ext 33
Pie••• see Indians, Bl
deficit
The last time the
'tcrurrrmydaltvregist8f.com

Reds rip Cubs with 7 homers
Dunn and Joey VottQ also
homered with · the wind
blowing out at 12 mph on a
muggy day. The Reds tied
their season high for homers
- they also had seven
against the Cubs at their
longball-friendly yard, Great
American Ball Park, on May

7.
Backup catcher Ross had
one homer all season before
hitting solo shots in the fifth
off Jon Lieber and seventh
off newly acquired Chad
Gaudin.
·
"I had a chance to play
today and made the most of
.1t, " Ross sa1'd. " I th'mk
everybody wants to hit when

the wind is blowing out
here. "

Griffey hit a three-run
drive off reliever Michael
Wuertz as Cincinnati scored
four times in the fourth to
take an 8-3 lead. He also had
a run-scoring double and
finished with four RBi s
"We were just trying to get
base hits. Sometimes you
get the ball in the ai r and it
can go ollt," Griffey said.
"The wind was blowing
out."
Griffey's 12th homer of
the season got him within
four of tying . Sammy Sos~
Please see Homers, B:S

PIITSBURGH - Many · ·
pitchers ~ish they could ·
redo a start against the New
York
Yankees. _ Paul
Maholm did. and couldn't
have been much happier
with the ~esult.
Nate McLouth got a second chance after messing up
a bunt attempt. and it turned
out much better. too.
McLouih hit a go-ahead
two-run homer in the seventh and Maholm allowed
two run s over eight innings
as the Pittsburgh Pirates rallied to beat t(le Yankees 4-2
on Thursday night.
.The last game of interleague play this season was
the makeup of a June 26
rainout. only with a much
different result for Maholm
(6-5). Then, he gijv e up
extra-.ba·se hits to the first
four batters as. the Yankees
went 5-of-12 while taking a
3-0 lead against the left hander, only to have the stati stics wiped out by a heavy
ram.
Given a chance to replay
that start - his turn in the
rotation coincident ally fell
on the mak etrp
Maholm got 17 of
outs by ground balls Qr
strikeout s. He gave up
seven hits and walked one
while lasting eight innings
Please see Pirates, Bl

Indians·snap 10-game slide
with 13-2 Win over Rays

1111111

on the river ·
SCRAPBOOK 8T@Rf.

102 W. lllln •l'oonlroJ, 011• "2-3ttt
Mon.
Tun.frt. 10~. Sat U

§

(latk'i Jetuelrp

ABIELRYTRADITION SICE
. . 1881

......

TO BAVBl RHIOI.D
~WittH;lWDt

A.VMNUATQ.AIOCS

~~~~

~~---~---~

ComAcrUs

The'Shoe Place
N. 2nd Ave· Middleport, OH

740-992·5627

1

AP photo

Cle.veland Indians' Kelly Shoppach , left, greets David Dellucci after scoring on De Iucci's ,
two-run home run off Tampa Bay Rays pitcher Andy Sonnanstine in the fifth inning of a
baseball game Thursday In Cleveland.

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel
~

,. J

.

,;;_

'

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---':--

SPORTS BRIEFS

,..._

•

·

own team . Only one pl&lt;tyer
.
with an under-! 0 handicap i,,
allowed per team wit h a total
team handi cap of 40 or
Southern Basketball above
.
To ente r. please co ntac t
Golf Scramble slt
coac h Jell Cald well at 740RACINE - The Southern 949-:1129.
13asketball program will
~o st a four-man golf scramble on Aug . 2 at Ri verside
Golf Club in M&lt;Mn. W.Va.
The scramble will be an
8:30 a.m. shotgun sta rt, and
·the format is bring-yourTUPPERS PLAINS -

EHS fall sports ·
athletic packets

Pirates
from PageBl
for a second successive
start.
"Wh¢n that game was
ra&gt;ned o.ut. everything got
\.vi\~
·r

~· ·~"~
"
..
~- ·· ..r

.... !

-··~

!,

··
·· r· ' l,!
.............

concentrate on the Red&gt; and
Brewers after that and I '""
able to throw good ag,iinst
them, " said Mahotrn . 4-0 in
his la st' eight starts. "To
come back in again st these
guys, and their stac ked tineup, I had the confidence to
-mix pitches and just gu after
them and not worry about
who's in the box."
Maholm had a fi ¥e- hit
shutout going with two outs
and none on in the seventh
before the Yankees tied it on
Bobby Abreu's two-run single. After McLouth hit hi s
18~h
homer
to
put
Pitt@_urgh bac k into the
lead, Mahotm came back
·with a scoreless eighth .
"That homer . was a big
relief for me." Maholm
said.
Oam.usn 1\il&lt;t~le fin i ~bed
fiirlus fourth save in six
opportunitie s. helping end
New York's five- game winning streak.
"When we mitde good
contact. it was right at
somebody." Abrett sai d.
"We had no lu ck. But he
pitched a pretty good
game."
The Pirates won two of
three from the Yankees in
ititerleagtte play. their first
two victories against them
·since the 1960 World Series
:and a turnaround from· past

·'·
'

Steelers
from PageBl
duced Hall of Famers Lynn
:Swann, JacK Lambert, John
:Stallworth
and
Mike
Webster and led to Art Jr.
be'ing nominated for the
:Hall of Fame. ,
·
· : After the Steelers drafted
:only two Pro Bowl players
.from 1978-86, Dan fired hi s
bother in 1987 as the scout:ing and player personnel
'Chiet. and .An Jr. has no t
been , involved in the
Steelers' football operations
:since.
: "How about that? I've
:become a big shot after
being .ex iled 20 years ago,"
An Jr. told KDKA-TV.
However, Art Jr. called
'the current ownership crisis
"sad," although he said his
:father would understand the
brothers' desires to be prop~dy compensated for their
shares.
A revamping o f the ownership group is needed
:because the Rooney fatnily
·runs race tracks in Florida
and New York that now
offer video slots and other
forms of gambling not per'
mitted of NFL owners.
: · A troubling sign for Dan
:Rooney is that his brothers
:- Art Jr:, Tim, Pat and
·John, all of whom wtll be at
:least 70 by _ next year 'retained Goldman, Sachs &amp;
·Co. to weigh offers. Their
·shares are likely worth more
:than Dan Rooney and son
;An II, the team president,
·could raise and still remain
.

.

....

Ath letic . packets tor the
2008 fa ll sports sea&gt;on are
current ly
avaih!bl e
at
Eas tern
High
School.
Packets can be picked lip in
the office from 8:30 a.m.
until 3:30 p.m. Tuesday
throu gh Fridfty.
- All st udent-athle tes in 7th ,
throu gh 12th ' grade who
wish to participate in fall
sports mu st complete the
packet with a parent in order
to be eligible hJ play a spurt
in the fall.

under the NFL's cei ling of in the Pro Football Hall of
$150 million in ownership Fame.
debt.
"The teague will continue
The brothers likely would to supeort the Rooneys in
not have retained Goldman , their efforts to retain control
Sachs if they felt they could of th e Steelcrs," NFL
soon work out a deal with spokesman Greg Aiello said
Dan Rooney."The move also Thursday.
· retlects their fears that sellDan Rooney does not
ing to D an Ro'oney, coupled necessarily need to own 50
with the ensuing taxes . percent or more of the club
could leave their chi ldren to continue to operate it.
and grandchildren with far Among his closest friends
less money than their shares are the Mara family. which
are worth .
runs the Super Bowl chamIf any of the brothers were pion New York Giants
tn die In the near future although it .&gt;hwe ' a 50-50
without a change i·n owner- ownership split with Steve
ship, their heirs wou ld face Ti sch, the son of form er coestate taxes of up to 45 per- owner Robert Ti sch.
cent of the shares' value.
Druckenmiller,· an avid
A year ago, Forbes golfer whose $500,000 gift
valued
the helped Oakmont Country
Magazine
Steeters at slightly less than Club in suburban Pittsburgh
$ t billion - quite a return land the 2007 U.S. Open,
on Art Rooney Sr.'s jnitial has long co veted th e
investment of $2.500. Each Steelers and first \fied to
· Rooney brother's stake is buy into them 10 years ago.
worth about $160 million. He is believed to want only
or less than Dan Rooney is fin ancial controL not daybdiev d to be offet in g.
to-day control of the club's
Dan Rooney has been operations.
working
with
Morgan
"One can only be in awe
Stanley and PNC Financial of the way thi s franchise has
Services to attempt to bring
in additional investors who been operated for many
might prop up his buyout decades," Druckenmiller
attempt. Rooney hopes that said ·in hi s statement .
former NFL commissioner
Peter Tagliabue, who is representing the league in the
matter, may help work out a
deal.
.
The ·NFL supports Dan
Rooney 's attempts to keep
the team in the Roon ey fam. ily, not surprising given
. how Art Sr. . and Dan
Rooney have been among
the most influential figures
in league ·history. Both are

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Indians
from PageBl

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win" si nce recently traded
CC Snbathia beat the
Cittci'nnati Reds 6-0 on June
27. La ffey allowed two runs
antl fo ur hits over six
innings, wi nning for the
lirst time in live starts since
June 12.
·'When we fell behind, it
W&lt;h like it was t 0-0 and you
felt it through the entire stadium." Laffey said. "But the
guy' came through against
the be&gt;t team in the big

Freddy Sanchez. the 2006
interleag ue resu lt s. The
NL
batting champioh who
Yankees, 10-8 agai nst the
NL th is season, are a major came into the game hillin g league~ .··
Tampa Bay came in w[th
league- best t 23-~7 si nce .226. drove in the Pirates '
interl eaguc . play -began in first two run s .with an RBI, baseball \ best record (55t 997 and the Pirates~ 6-9 single followi ng Wil son's 35). but lost for the lOth
this year again st the AL, double in the thi rd and a strai ght time in Cleveland.
own the worst record at 63- sacrifi ce fl y two innings Tampa Bay last won at the
later.
·
Ind ians ' home on Sept. 29,
103.
Mt P,.,. in :t di.Un't figure !n . 2005 . when Lou Piniel1u
Desp ite tlte Yan kees' loss .
the AL topped t he N L in the decis ion. failin g to get wa s manager. The Rays ' 26interleague play for u fifth 12. victories before the All- 56 record overall against
consecutive season. going Star break for the first tim e Cleve land is thei r worst
149-103.
since he was 12-3 in 2002. against any opponent.
Kelt y Shoppach got
Jack Wil son. who doubted He gave tip nine hit s and
and singled against Mi ke two runs in six innings. last- · Ctevelanu goi ng by poking
Mussina in his firs( two-bats ing at least six for the eighth a one-out single to right in
the fifth . Detlucci, in a 7as Piusburgh's No. 9 hitter, consec uti ve stc.1rt.
"1 didn't feel partic:ularl y fur,47 (. 14~) slump, fol. walked ahead of McLouth's
drive .into the right-fi eld sharp. but I can ' t complain a lo \ved with hi s se venth
seats on ' a ·o- t pi tc h by lm.· · Muss ina " You 've go_t homer - and first si nce
reliever Jose Veras .(2- 1).
to battle through thuse days. June 4.
'.' I tri etl to throw it out- too ... and ]' m happy with
"David gave us a shot of
my
first
half.''
energy,"
Wedge said. "Then
si&lt;;le. but the pitch moved
inside to hi s hands and he's
Notes: · The YankeeS' are we had real good at-bats up
got. qui c k hands.'' said playing in three cities in and down the lineup."
· Veras, whn had a 0.52 ERA three dttys, and in two counin hi ~ 16 most rece nt tries.
They
played
appearances. "He just got it , Wednesday at home and
that's alt."
will be in Toronto on Friday
McLouth unsuccess fully night. .. . Mussina 's two-out
tried to bunt on Veras ' first single in the fifth ·was hi s
pitch. on ly to homer on the first hit since June 23, 2002,
second.
"I messed up the h11nt the and the only hit by a
pjtch before "nrL. f,.t&lt;.:kil-.., Yankees pitcher this season.
got a pitch to hit the next ... kt!Te'O""iiliu ~ight Rtl is
pitch and didn' t mi ss it," ag&lt;~inst Pitt sburgh.... The
said McLouth, who is hit- crowd of 39,081 was the
ting .333 since be.in g named . third -largest since PNC
as the Pirates' lone All-Star. Park opened in 200 I. Three
"The inning before , they ·of the Pinttes' four home
mounted a rally and tied the sel louts thi s season we re
game up and looked to have against the Yankees .... The
ri10mentum on their side. so Pirates had lost fout· o f six.
... 1\Jaholm struck out three
to take it back was big."
McLouth also set up the times as the Pirates' No. 8
Pirates' run in the fifth by hitter, leaving three on base.
rc;aching on a force play, .. . New York stayed 6 t/2
steal ing second and moving ga mes back in the AL East
to third on catcher Jo·se as Tampa Bay lost its fourth
Molina's throwing error.
in a row, t 3-2 to Cleveland.

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AP

photo

.

..
·'

[&gt;.

~')~···· ·

'" ·*'
"

MEIGS

AP photo
Baron Davis poses with a Los 'Angeles Clippers jersey at a news conference to announce
his signing to a multiyear contract with 'the NBA basketball team in ~os Ange les Tttursday.

Davis back in hometown, joins Clippers
LOS ANGELES (AP) Angeles, but he took a fiveBaron Davis flashed his year deal for a reported $82
sparkling sense of humor million in Philadelphia .
often on his return to Los Corey
Ma~gette ,
Lo s
Angeles. He'll probably Angeles' leadmg scprer last
need,it since he's ~oing to be season, essentially swapped
places with Davi s, signing a
playing for the Clippers.
Arriving on the heels of 5-year deal with the
the depanure of Elton Brand Warriors for approximately
and Corey Mag~ette, Davis . $50 million.
will be involved m a' rebuildWhen Davis decided last
ing period for the perennial- week that he was going to
ly woeful Clippers.
join the Clippers, he
General manager Elgin believed Brantl was going to
Baylor introduced Davis at be his teammate, but Davis
news
conference
on insists he's gotten over any
Thursday . by saying he disappointment that they
would make his remarks won't be playing together.
brief · so Davis could say
"I'm signed, sealed and
hello.
delivered, so I'm not disapDavis stepped to the podi- pointed at all," he said. "And
urn and said, "Hello." Then he's signed and he 's comhe paused for a few mitted."
moments, as if that was all
Davi s had tried to sway
he was going to say, before Brand's decision.
"I talked to him, would
fhuckJing and breaking)nto
)Ji broad grin.
·
tell him, ' Hey, this is the
• Later, talking about his best place for you, .we can
lfriend Brand and their phone do great things.' But obvii::onversations leading up to ously he chose otherwi se."
:Davis' leaving the Golden Davis said. "I can't be mad
\State Warriors to play for his at him for that. I wish Elton
llometown team, and Brand · brand the best. 1-Je's a great
~hen
bolting
to
the guy, always going to a great
Philadelphia 76ers.
player and a .friend of mine .
; Asked when he last spoke He made a decision for the
Brand, Davis said it was future of his family.
~sterday, lau¥ffing and~'There 's no more Elton
~ding, "I can t tell you Brand in L.A . It 's my turn
,-;.rhat I said to him."
and a chance for the young
,.. Brand, who has averaged guys to step up. Get a couple
'ound 20 · points and 10 more free agent s and we' ll
tebounds a game, was be ready to go."
~pected to remain with Los . Davi s said he didn't con-

.6

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••'

,..~~

r:r,;

Homers
from Page Bl

~.

~r fifth on the career list
~ith

609.

r-; The

.

Reds chased Ted

•

~illy •(9-6) after 2 2-3

BERNARD V. FULTZ CENTER
FOR HIGHER EDUCATiON
42377 Charles Chancey Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

~r gave up six hits and four
irSins before he was removed
l!Y manager Lou Piniella. ·
~~"An ugl¥ inning," Lilly
~d of the third .•"I under~tand why Lou wanted to go
an a different directiO!l ." .
: Mike Fontenot homered
~r Chicago, which dropped
(O 35-11 at home.
outfielder
: All-Star
:Kosuke Fukudome fouled a
pall off his leg in the eighth
~nd was replaced in the
lfield in the ninth. Fukudome
~aid he was OK but playing
-every day could be wearing
on the Cubs' tirst-year play-

~nings, his shortest outing
~ the .season. The left-han-

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'#!f.He struck out three times

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t

"' ·r

•, J

--------

sider backing out of his deal
(five years. $65 million)
with . the · Clippers becau se
Brand wasn't going to be
around.
" It didn't really inaner,
once I made my .mind up.
I'm a man of my word ,"
Davis sa id. ''I committed to
the Clippers and they committed to me.''
.
. Team pres ident Andy
Roe ser .said the past few
days hale been tumultuous
for the Clippers, but "'the silver lin ing is that we now
have one of the best point
guards in the NBA ."
Coach Mike Dunleavy
believes the , Clippers have
the two key players neces-.
· sary for a contending team
in Davi s and center Chris
Kaman .
"The toughest two pieces
to find are a point guard lind
a ·center," Dunleavy sai(l .
" You look around, and . the
teams that win are ream s
with good point guards ."
The 29-year-old Davis. a .
former UCLA star who grew
up in Los Angeles, averaged
2 t .S points, 7.6 assist s, 4.7
rebounds and 2.33 steals
while playing Jill R2 games
last season for the Warriors.
A two-time All-Star, the 6foot -3. 2 t 5- pound point
guard ha s averaged 17 . t
points. 7.2 assists, 4. I
rebounds .and 1.95 steal s
during nine ye ars in the
league.

•

Ad]acelllto lite Meiss Middle School mrJ

""

David Stern was deep in
th e bowels of Staples
Center,
holding
an
impromptu press conference next to the loading
dock when he ·should have
been in a lu~ury suite
upstairs getting ready to
enjoy Game 3 of the NBA
finals.
His me ssage that day was
that Tim Donaghy was a
renegade qackpot and that
he wasn 't worried at all
about his allegations that
NBA referees conspired to
fix at lea st one playoff
series and may have intluenced even more.
''Why should I be worried?" Stern askec\.
Turns out Stern was worried , at tea&gt;! atwut the
grow ing public percepti on
that NfiA ntt1 ci als w~re
incompetent at best. crooks
at worst. Worried enough
that just a few weeks later
he hired a two-star general
to take charge of the
league's referees and make
sure whispers of impropri ety never overshadow
another
championship
serie s again.
·
The NFL saw .that general
·and raised a state police
chief this , week. Jeffrey
Miller is technically only a
colonel, but he's ·been given
broad powers to make sure
things like Spygate don ' t
cloutl another Super Bowl.
Again, it was a hire dri ven more by perception
than anything else . The preseason begin s· next month
and the last thin g Roger
Goodell wants is more.

'

Cleveland
.
Indians'
Aaron Laffe)'
pitches
against the .
Tampa Bay '
Rays in the '
first inning
of a basebal.l
game
Thursday in .
Cleveland.

.

......

,.,..

'

The NBA gds a general} and the. NFL a colonel

. I

.220 East Main Street
Pomeroy, 0 lo 5769

'

-

.A.";;cty M'trte the; singled. feeling."
l
The Rays have hit onl)!
went to third on a sing le by
Grady Sizemore and scored .182 (25-for-137) durin~
on a fielder 's c hoic·e . their Iosing streak, whicij
grounder by Jamey CarroU ties their longest of the sea~
to put Cleveland ahead. son. They lost four in a row
;
Francisco followed with hi s April 6-9.
··we
·
re
getting
int~
eighth homer.
Shit'l-Soo Choo ted off the swinginjl for the five-ruq
sixth with his third homer homer mstead of playin!!
and Blake connected for his offense," Rays manager 'Joe
ninth in the eighth to make Maddon said. ''We're no(
it 7-2. Francisco and Blake getting enough runners Of!
each had two- run singles base. I believe everybody is
trying to hit the ball out of
tater in the inning . · .
The Rays took a 2-0 lead . the ballpark. We have to gel
•
in the ihird. Willy Aybar hit away from that."
Notes:
The
Rays
are
try~
a leadoff single and Jonny
Gomes drove his seventh ing to be the fourth .team td
homer 6f the season deep be in fi rst place at the AIH
into the left-fi eld bleachers. Star break one year afte~
Gomes was in a 1-for-24 having the majors' worst
slump, with the only hit a record , joining the 1989
pinch homer June 28· at Orioles and 2001 Cubs an.\1
Phillies. ... The Indian~
Pittsburgh.
claimed
RHP
Bryi\fl
Sonnanstine gave up nine
hits and six runs o v~t 5 1-3 Btollingtuu, ihl' No. I piqk
innings. He had gone 4-0 tn ,tne 2uuL amateur dra., 1
and th'e Rays were 7-0 in hi s on watvers from the
previous seven starts since Pittsburgh and sold Tripti;
A INF Ryan Mulhern an4
May 27 .
RHP
Dan Retchert to the!
"Th is one is real fru strating for a number of re a- Pi rates. BullingtQn w~s
to
Triple-f';
so ns ," said Sonnan stine, ass igned
Buffalo.
...
The
Indian&amp;
·who grew up about40 mites
south of Cleveland in signed 2B Cord Phelps ;
Wad sworth, Ohio. " We ' d their third-round pick in last.,
lost the last (three) and I month's draft. ... Maddon
took at myself as a stopper. said RHP )'roy Percival
I had a lot of family and (s trained left hamstring)
friends in the stands . To get' wants to throw off ti(~
beat up like thi s in a mound before the All-Stat
blowout, it's not ·a good break.
&gt;

Reed &amp; ~aur Insurance Agency

.

The Daily 5entm.ef • Page B3

I

.

'

friday,_ July u, :mo&amp;

Friday, July 11, 2008

www.mydailyscntinel.com

average dropped to .282.
" It looks to me like he ·.s
swinging awfully tired ,''
Piniella said.
Chicago cut it to 8-5 on
Fontenot's two-run drive in
the fourth but Ross went
deep in the fifth and Dunn·,
long drive to right in the
sixth cleared the stadium
and landed on. the other side
of Sheffield Ave .
Piniella said he lost track
of how many homers the
Reds hit. "I know the one
Dunn hit co~nted for two,"
he cracked.
' Derrek Lee had an RBI
double in th·e first and Rya n
·Theriot .delivered a two-out,
two-run single in the ·second
to help the Cubs build a 3- 1
lead.
Notes: Cincinnati fin :
ished with 18 hits .... It was
Ross' eighth career multi homer game .... RHP , Rich
Harden, acqltfrcd by _th e
Cubs on. Tuesday from
Oakland. threw a li ght
on
bullpen
session
Thursday. Harden could be
I' .

I

on a pitch limit of about 100
when he makes hi s Cubs'
· tlebut on Saturtlay against
the Giant s.... Baker said the
team likely will recall RHP
Homer Bailey from Triple. A Louisville to start on
Sunday in place of Aaron
Harang, vvho had an MRI on
Thursday that · came back
normal. It showed he has a
strai ned right forearm . ...
INF Jolbert Cabrera (dislocated left index finger). currently on a minor leag ue
rehab assignment, is expected to return to the Reds
shortly after the All-Star
break.... In the bottom of
the sewnd. ·Litt y's line drive
foul ball struck a youngster
sitting in the .seats about 20
rows hehind the Cubs'
. du gout on · the .third base
side . The yo u.ngster was
carried out of the stands. A
first aid employee said the
youngs ter wu' taken to the
hospital and appeared to be
OK. Li ll y suid . he was
unaware the kid had bee n
struck .

.. h .-. .. t

"VV\,.ll

,.,hotho ..
n l l ... UI ... l

stealing signals may have
altered lhe uulcume of
games.
,
The stakes were so high
for both leagues that they
really didn ' t have a choice .
t hey each have only one
product, and if there's even
a perception th ai product is
tainted, they have a seriou s
issue .
The question is why it
took them so long to realize
how serious it could

repeated enough among
already skeptical fans, some
are goi ng to believe them.
The problem with both
league s is the arrogance
that comes from bein,g · too
fat for too long .
Goodell thought he could
declare the case closed
because the NFL is · the
NFL, untouchable because
become.
it is by far the c;ountry's
In the NFL's case, it has most popul ar ' sport . He
been nearly a year since Bill thought he didn 't have to
Beli chick
was
fined answer to anyone but his
$500,000 for taping signals owners, who are usually too
in violation of leag ue rules. bu sy counting their assorted
Goodell likely thought the billions to worry about
hefty fine woultl rnean the things like that.
As for Stern, all his talk
end of the scandal , but his
deci sion to de stroy the about transparency was
videotape and notes from · mostly just talk. While it's
his investigation not only true the NBA will tell you
led to more questions but to the exact penny what the
cvcn~&amp;G l! y di:::·w,. the uncii- new saiary cap is ($58.68 ·
tion of a U:S . senator from million), and the price uf
Jack Nicholson' s courtside
Pennsylvanta.
With Arlen Specter call- . seats ($2,500), it can't
ing for an independent explain why its referees
investigation· and threaten- have a pattern of favoring
ing a Senate hearing on the home team in playoffs
Spy gate, it wasn't going to ·or even what a foul really is
simply go · away. Even these days.
though Specter recently
There's a credibility crisis
backed off his call for a in sports right now, some- .
hearing , Goodell hired the thing Stern and Goodell are
top cop in Pennsylvania to apparently just now beginguard against any future ning to understand. We
Spy gates or other impropri - watch a 41 ~year-old mother
eties that might 1\arm the break a swimming record
league.
and immediately wonder if
The hiring came just a she's juiced, see bad fouls
few days . after Stern called in an NBA game and
brought in Ron Johnson to wonder if the referees are
bolster his league's credi- on the take , and watch footbility in the wake of charges ball wondering if the other
again st Donaghy and the team has stolen signals .
ones he has raised in court
So when the NFL

Tim
Dahlberg

fi lin gs . johnson

ha s no

~Ap~ i· ie~"rq:; ilt ~}J(ff c:utU 11V
back-ground with reft:fl..oes .
but his image as a no' nonsense Army general who
will tolerate no shenanigans
was what Stern was after.
Some of Donaghy's atlega t ions . - like the one
where the referees gave the
Lakers a playoff win
against Sacramento because
the league wanted the series
to go seven games - seem
preposterou s. But if they're

cit&gt;rhtrP..-i Snv~al~ dP.~rl

it

Wi:l~ll 'i. wh~"fi Su::rn ~aid
one rogue offi cial slmuSdn't
taint the league. it did.
· ·we've been burned too
much, seen too many things
we can't explain.
Unfortunately, it will take
more than a general and a
co lonel to change that.

Tim Dahlberg is a nation- .
a/ sports columnist for The
Associated Prel·s. Wrfte to
him arrdahlbergap.org

THI'NG HAPPENS
WHEN YOU .'DON'T
ADVERTISE.
NO ONE
NOTICES

YOU
ANYMORE

The Daily Sentinel
992'-2155

�Page B4 • The Daily ~tine!

'
Friday, July n , 2ooR

,~..• ~o'W'
.. "'·r
.....,,.,J.,.~I.,1 &amp;:! ,."t 'ne1 .... ~­
~ • • .iii &amp;,J ............. , U .....-.. •"' 1 •
ao '"' 'Oa.il.&amp;

.

China·· cracl{ ·own targets critics
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEIJING - Lu Jun, a
camp;ugner for the nghts of
mill1ons ol Chinese w1th
hepatitis B. seems an unlikely threat to the BeiJing
Oly!hp!CS
Butt he popular Web site he
ru ns was blocked in May
Th1s month. police dctamcd
lum tor four hou rs when he
returned to Chum f10m a
hepatitis conterence m Los
Angeles . They wanted to
know what he mtended to do
w1th a l &lt;~ rgc red banner he
·was carrymg that urged the
:government to prov1de support to people With hepatitis
B.

"Everyo ne believes It's
because of the Olvmo'
- c':·

.

Lu saH.l.

As B e ljl~ g enters lhe tina!
stretch betore the August 824 Olympics, ~he government 1s trymg to shut out
anyone it believes might mar
dll event meant to showcase
Chma as a rRodern nation.
AIDS activists have been-followed by police and beggars
rounded up
Th1s week, petitiOners m
tram the provmces to request
the gove rnment's intervention m local syuabbles were
being rounded up by police,
plamclothes officers or h1red
thugs,
who sometimes
packed them into waiting
vans to be sent back home.
"Now I can't stay in hotels.
have to live on· the streets
because •f I ever regiSter my
name the police w1ll kick me
out," said Wan~ L1jun, 37.
r.ervou sly' durchmg copies of
l... on ~"&gt;f'I'M", I -' -

' -• •--

--- ' ...1

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... , .... v ... y~tUilt t t u t;t :"1 auuu "1-V

or so petrt1oners Wednesday.
Wapg has traveled count-*
less times to Be1jmg, trying
to recoup unpatd penston
benehts for h1s father, a
World War II and Korean
War veteran later labeled a
political cnminal But m
recent months, Wang said,
ofl1cml s 111 hrs home m barren Shaanxi province and in
Beijing have tw1ce told h1m
not to travel to the capital
because oft he OlympiCS
BeiJ mg began tightening
its already strong squeeze on
political activists more tharl a
year ago, and since then has
targeted others regarded as
potential troublemakers. In
January. Be1jing Commumst

th .~ ..,»~t.

'"'"6._....,. lin.. P " ' ' )

..

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----

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the lengths the government JS
gomg to make sure no
protests dtsrupt an Olympics
It hopes will boost it s domest1c and rntematJonallegltunacy.
Lu, the hepatitiS B acUvJst.
has campatgned for awareness about the drsease, wh1ch
mfcets the liver and IS
endemic in Cbina, with an
esumated 120 mrllion sui ferers. They often face dismmi nation and a1e sometimes
demed JObs, even though rt
cannot be transmitted by
casual contact. HIS Web stte
has become a lively forum
attracting 300,000 members
and often a1ring critical statements.

A ••

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based grou p that works w1th
activists m Asm on human
nghts, the environment and
socral JUstice.
Wan Yanhai, an outspoken,
pioneering AIDS activrst,
plans to leave Beijing rn
August. He smcj authorities
ha ve put dozens of AIDS
activists under house arrest
or surveilldnce Since l&lt;~t e
May, he has bean repeatedly
followed by police c.Jrs,
sometunes 24 hours a day.
Two Web sites for people ·
w1th AIDS were temporanly
shut down in March and electronic bulletin boards for
sites dealing wrth HIV and
AIDS have also been closed
down , activi sts s.11d.

!',., .. \l /..,,.t
,...._.

•• .... ..H

BY PETER ENAV
ASSOC IATED PRESS

,,....-1 ..... ~\... ,.... .. --.:~-.- : -..

uuu Vlll.._.l

"'ooa
~

www.mydailysentinel.com

IIIIIIU11lJ

ethmc groups. who are tinding it difficult to get hotel
rooms
Zhang Shihe, a blogger
who has written extenSively
&lt;~bout the lrves of m1grant
1\0rkers m BeiJmg, sa1d that
Since March, local polr ce
have told ne1ghborhood resJdents' committees near the
Olympic &gt;enues not to prov1de accommodatiOn to peopie from Tibet, Inner
Mongolia and the Central
Asi&lt;m_border province of
Xinjiang.
"The whole thing shows
that the govenunent is very
1m mature," he sard. "It is not
people-oriented , and 1t's
harming the public."

TAIPEI. Taiwan - A
scmor Ta1wan oiT1cJal has
re1ccted Ch ina's attempts to
chan ge the name under
which the island Will compete 111 next montl1 's
Olympics. stnk1ng .1 discordant note to the two "des'
recentl y 1mproved relatiOn s.
Y1ce Cha1rman Lru Teshu n of the Mamland
Alf.urs Council 111 Ta rpei on
Thursday sa1d "Zhongg uo
Tarpe1" - a name 1n the
Ch inese language that
strongly suggests th at
Taiwan JS part of Ch111.1-

··i..,

not dCCcptltb lc to u, ...

A month from the Au~ ~
Olymprc open1ng ce re moni es, spe1kesman Yang Yi
of Chma's Taiwan Affairs
Office sa1d that "Zhongg uo
Tarpc1 " IS JUSt as valid as an
Olymprc desrgn.ltor '" the
previOus ly used "Zhonghua
Taipe1."
"Z hongg uo
T&lt;1ipe1"
means ''Taipei Chill·'" and
uses "Zhongg uo." the name
Chma c.tll s rtsel f, rmpl ymg
Tmpe1 1s a part of Chllld.
"Zhonghu .t Ta1per" uses
"Zhon ghuu"
a more
ambi guous
word · that
applie s to a deliberately
undefined Chinese nat ro n
The diSpute - arcane to
many outsrders - goes
nght to the heart of the battle over Tar wan's identity,
whJ(h has been fou ght over
by the side s Si nce they split
Ulll\0 CIVIi War Ill 1949. it
also cast~ ;1 sh::tclow over
recently improved cconom-

COunties Like
Noone
Elaecanl

'"· l!hr· s•
)SCOU PE

W ebs1tes

myda1l yreg1ster com

~----------~----------~O~r~F~ax~To
..
(740}446··R30•0r8~----~~0~r~F~a~x~T~o~~~9~9=2~-2~1=5~7--~-.,....._,/

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HOW '!Ucces:fuds
IO W§Jfi 6li

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Should Jnelude These Items
To Help Get Response .•.

\'\\01 '\(I \II\ IS

tPOLICIESt

ine error ana on

e ltrst Insertion.
hall not be liable fo
ny loss or expens
at results from th
ubllcatlon or omis
lon ot an advertis
ent Corre&gt;llons wil
made In the f1rs

WASHINGTON (AP)
·Secretary of State
Condoleczza Rtcc will attend the closing ceremonies of
the Beijing Olympic games in August.
State Department sp&lt;:~kesrnan Sean McCormack told
;eporters Thursday that Rice also looks forward to attend:
mg some ~"porting events dunng the games' closjng days'.
President Bush will attend the opening ceremonies.
Human rights groups had urged Bush to boycott the ceremonies to oppose China's crackdown on protesters in
Tibet.
"
The Bush administration argues that the Olympics are a
sportln~ event and that U.S. offictals will raise human
and rel1gious rights wah Chinese officials..
'
McCormack had no other details about Rice's travel
schedule.

Bor number ads ar
lways confidential.
Current rate car
pplles.

60UJ'7 ..

• Ads Should Run 7 Days

r

stole guns &amp; tewelry Please
call Gallm County Shertff s
Ofttce

guard dogs 304·395 5204

Building Supplies...........

·P-seQis,

tc cond,

f

CONVE I'H

I v#t&gt;tl&lt;
~

w,;:U n

..... .. .

... 710
750

.. 550

· Business and Buildings.... ..
340
: Business Opportunity.. ............................ 210
Business Training ...................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ... ....................... 790

CONVER T'

Camping Equlpmentc...... .. .. .................. 780
Cards of Thanks ................................ ....... 010
Child/Elderly Care ............ . .. ......... . 190

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, Point Ple-aSant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

Ele&lt;:trlc:aVRefrlgeratlon..
......•..••.•..
. .•. G40
Equlpmenl'for Rent...... ........................ . .. 480
', Excavating ..............•.................................. 830

. Farm Equipment ........... ,..................... ........ 610
·; Farms for Rent ............. ...............................430
, Farms for Sale . ............. .......................... 330
· · For

Lease .............................................. 490

.. For Sale ......................... ,........................... 585
For Sale or Trade........ .. ................... ..... 590
Fruits 1o Vegetables.... . ........ ..... .. ... 580
'

Furnished Rooms ..... .. .:... ....... .... .. . .....450
General Hauling ........ ,...................... . .....850
Giveaway .... . ............ ...................................040

Happy Ada.. . .. ....... .....................................050
. Hay &amp; Grain ... . .......................................... 640
• Help Wanted .......... ............................... 110

•' Home Improvements ................................ 810
• Homes for Sale .... ........
.......... ........... 310
Household Goods........... . .... ........ ...... 510
Houses for Rent
. ....... .. 410
In Memoriam .................. .

. ....•. .. . .....•020

Insurance .........................
. ........... .... 130
Lawn &amp;: Garden Equipment .............. 660

•JIIOK

Llvaatock ..................................................630
Loll and Found ...................................... .. 060
· Loti 1o Acreage ........................................... 350

REACH OVER
. 17,000 HOUSEHOLDS!

tiffed P ¥ 1
w (l

n&lt;ewveti."
55!;-

~be ~alltpolts j)Dailp ~rthune

740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com
SEDAN 10!1._. i mr. :.&gt;tk, LU.
)ll'tli SIV I S2S00.5$5.5SWSS5

:!1'1\.tG~ ~1~..'rtn'1~
I

· ~oint ~leasant legtster
30~·675-1333
www .mydailyr~ister.com

· • Mlacellaneous ......... . ................................. 170
.... Miscellaneous Merchandlaa....................... 540

Mobile Home Repair...

-

www.myooilysentineLcom

l -1'1!1. C.V 1,1 t ·AL..,.. i

-c~...

, ; t ~.,vr, 1 ·, t~l •

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

_;,::;_.:&gt;•n t'o. S.?09S.ooo. sss.ssS-55$$
1"$ COMPACT

.,

,...~,..

.,~

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ex&lt;

.. ......................... 860

Mobile Homes for Rent. . ............. .......... 420
Mobile Homes for Sale . ..............
....... 320
Money to Loan ............. ................ ......... 220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers...........
....... 740
Mutlcallnstrumenta ....... ..... ........ ... ... 570
Peraonala .... ... ............. ,,,,. ............... . .... 005
, Pet&amp; for Sale ..... .................. ........................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing ........................... ...... 820
Prolesalonal Servlces ................... , ............. 230
RadiO, TV lo CB Repalr ...............................160
Real Eatate Wanted ..................................... 360

Schoototnotructlon. ................................ t505ftd, Plant &amp; Fer1111zer .............................. 650
SHuallono Wanted ...................................... 120
,. Space for Rent ................ ........................460
' Sporting Goods ..... ........ ... ...... ......... .. ... 520
'SUV'a for Sale ................................. .......... 720
Trucks for Sale ............................... .......... 715
Upholotery ........................ ......................... 870
Vant For Sale ....................... .......................730
Wanted to Buy ............................................090
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllet ........... ..... 620
Wanted To Do ............................................ 180
· Wanted to Rent ........................................... 470
Yard Sole- Golltpolto..... ................ . . ..... 072
Vord Bol•Pomeray/Middle ........ :................074

The Daily Sentinel
740-992·2155

Y•rd Sale-Pt. Pleaaant ........................... ..... 076

eond,

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Garage Sa le July 12&amp;t3
Aeun or Shtrle at ~53 4
Georgei Ck Ad l ad tes 3
plus mens Lg ·2X girls 10·
14 boys ~r and mtam
clothes Bedsets, house
hold, 5hp Iiller and lots of
mtsc
Huge 5 family sa le on 850 at
the cross roads of 850 and
Kerr July 11 &amp; 12
July 1t &amp; 12 8 am 90
Graham St. Rodney Vtllage
II (last Street) Longaberger
Home IAier1or, mens btg and
taU stzes womens clothes.
turntture,
hou sewares,
Playstat10n &amp; games
July 11 &amp; 12 from 8·3 at 718
Porter
Ad
Household
goods car rtdtng mower
furnrture, etectron1cs
Men, womens clolhtng &amp;
mtsc 1tems July 12 at 299
Roush Lane , Cheshire,
Oh1o Ratn or Shtne
Mulll·fam1Jy sale Sat July
12
at
Bam
at
the
'cheer n a st• c s ! S OGf.
Budding behtnd Ponderosa
(The old skating nnk) The
proceeds w•ll beneltt the
Sout~ern Ohto GymnastiC&amp;
Academy Girls Gymnast1cs
Team
Multi·family
yard
sala
Saturday July 12 ats AM at
tl1e
Cheernast«:,;s/SOGA
BuHd1n~ behind Ponderosa.
(The old skat1ng rink) The
proceeds wtll bentfftt the
Southern OhiO Gymnastics
Academy
G1rls s
GymnastiCS Team
Silver Streaks 4-H bake
sale/yard sale Sat July 12
at 338 Atrhne Ad VJnton,
Otl Sam-?
Yard sale dose to Addtson
Townhou se Mtsc 11ems
cha1rs, coffee table Fr1 &amp; Sat
from 9·4

1

1

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Scuoor.~
lN&gt;TIIliCIION

Ho~ll.ll
~DR SALt.

Couoe~l lor

ndopondenl Coll&amp;giiS

and Schools t27.~B

ji1:;\70f"o:::::..:O::.::.----,
!\ItS( H.l ...\NEOll~
--Pet Cremattons Call 740 ·
446·3745

WANrt:O

2338

ld

1 ~ 11

© 2008

www comtcs.com
4

y ARll SAI .F.-

I'IlMEROY/MumtE
24 16lee Ctrcle Rus1lc H11ts
Syracuse , Oh Fn 6·4 Sat
8 12 new/used clo thes
tools ant•ques collectibles
4 famtly, Sat Jllly 12th, Old
Crew Ad behmd Me1gs
Fairgrounds, B 30-?? brand
name teen g1rls, mens plus
&amp; mfan t . clothrng Home
1nlenor Longaberger· eJec·
tromcs, relrt gerator much
more
--------Big yard sale- Baahan Rd,
Chesler side 1 mile from

248,

July

10,11 ,1121111

Corner ot 2nd &amp; lincoln,
Mldd 10th ,1112 Gtrls 10
thru Jr +Mens name brand
clothmg l ots of m•sc
Garage Sale Ratn or Shtne
Saturday Only July 12
Wipple Road Five Pts Area

~
Inc

by

NEA ,

T he
Athens -M eigs worked consistent ly tor the
Educattonal Serv ice Cen ter past 12 years tn1ury free m
has an avatlablo pOsitio n lor man hme 1ndustry 304 675
2_
01_7_ _ _ _ __
a
Multiple
Oisabtllt,es c
Teacher 1n Me1gs County
Intervention Spectallst cert1
ftca t•on IS reqUired Salary
based on ce rhf,cat1on and
expenence
Thi S pOSi hOn has Board
bene f1ts
approved
Applications wtJI be accept
ed until poSt!IOn IS f1lled
Send Letter of mteres t
resume, and references to
John
D
Costanzo
Supenntenden t
Ath ens
Metgs EducattoQal Serv tce

LPN Oealred Long D1stance
pnyes Hect)C Eowon men1s
&amp;J:t~s pnces Got You
Q.Qwn1
Work
10
Loca lly
tn• a JFamLiy
HFJ.t' WANTI-.tl
Atmosphere Where You Can
Feel
An Exce llent way to earn Gooo About Serv1ng Others
money The New Avon
Apphcattons Are Now Bemg
Call ManJyn 304 882 2645
Accepted For A Part T1me
POSS ible Fuii ·Ttme LPN 2
AVON1 AU Areas 1To Buy 01 Eve mngs
2 M1dntghts
Sell
Shirley Spears 304 EnJOY A Career Workmg
675·t429
Wtth The Elderly In A large Center 320· 112 E Matn St
Pome roy OH 45769 Equal
BENN1GAN'S now hinng Persona llyOwned l tcensed
Opportun1 t y
grtll cooks 304 675 5227
Home
Pleasant Employer/Provider
Envrronment. Can ng Staff
Execut1veA D1 rector pos1110n Patd vacatto n 01sco unts
for
Domesttc VIOlence Parllal
Patd
Insurance
Agency servmg three coun· Available, D1scounted Rent The
Athens-Metgs
lies of Southeln 01110 40 ht on ,Efficiency Apartment EducatiOnal Servtce Center
lnler ested IS seeking a HEAD STAAT
a week poSition .VIth some Available
overt 1me
,
needed Appli cants May Apply OatJy TEACHER for the Bradbury
Compensatory time provtd M·Sun
10·4
Ravens Lear ning Center
An
ad ~
Benellts-Health wood , WV 26164 (Across Assoctal e or Bachelors
Insurance, Patd Hol tdays , RitChie Bridge Turn Rtght degree rn Early Ctnldhood
Two weeks vacatiOn alter Very Last Bus •ness on EducatiOn IS reqwred ThiS
one year three weeks alter A hi " lh 681 R
posLtlon has Soard approved
8
t1ve years Staf1 1ng salary M•;y
To
beneftts
Subtntt letter of
$26,000 10 $28 000 Ml.lsl
A
tnterest
resume
and refer
A
1
23
e erence equlred ences to John 0 Costanzo
have CoJi ege Degree m ~ 0 6E

I

\11'111\111

\I
Sll{ \1\ I S

Be'~~~ed

( 3 0:)s~~3

Human Services or mrnor tn
Supe rmtendent
Athens
human serv 1ces held w 1th a
Mergs ESC 320 1/2 East
S"
p
OH
LPN /AN positiOns avatlabl e M
Huge Yard Sale Ram or
m1nor 1n admtn1stral10n At
am neet omeroy,
tor ped•atnc home health
A 1
Shmet Sa turday July 12
769
least two years ' eKpertence
45
PP lca tton
ONLY, 9am -4pm AU srzes ot worktng w th the ·publlc n a ca re rn Vinton area EJO:p 0 ea dl 1ne at noon on F"d
'' ay
1
1
w/vent/trach/g tube
pre· J 1 18 2008 Th 9 AMESC
women s name brand cloth
"''e
pos
rlton
Sen
d
D
PT
p
u
Y
·
S'
ferred
ays
I
AN
20
to
E
1ng, purses , shoes. books
•nd lhl ee reler
ts an
qu a1 0 pportunlty
resume ..
30 hrs pe r week Contact
p
Th
lamps, household goods
ences to Sea rch Commlltee Mtchele at PCNS 000 518 EmployerI rov•de r
e
Follow signs and ballom1s at PO Box 454 GaiJ poJs,
Athen s· Metgs Educattoflal
1 1 2273
Tu ppers Pla1ns to Alee Run Ohto 45631
Servtce Center tS seok1119 a
Road
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 'HEAD START TEACHER
Need :&gt;amGona to spray lor AlOE lor Mtll Craak Center
FEDERAL
Polson Ivy aroUnd ou t 111 Gall 1a County M1111mum
Yard
Sale·
Browns
mobtle home and VOid 446· of Htgb School graduate or
Taxtdermy, Pomeroy P1ke
$ 17 89·$28 27/hr now htr· 7039
GEO CDA or Associates
near Chester, July 11 · t2 9·
tng For appltcahon and hee
Degree rn Early Chtld hood IS
3 Jots of m1sc ram cancels
governeme nt JOb tnto call Oh1o Valley Home Health, preferred Th1 s posil10n has
Amencan Assoc or Labo r 1· Inc hmng STNA CNA
Board approved beneft ts
913·599·8226 24/hrs emp Home Health Atdas &amp; Submt t leit er of tnterest
se rv
Psrsona l Care Atdel:i Full, resume and references to
Part Ttme &amp; Per Dtem posiD
Costanzo
Yard Sale SatunJay July 12, Fresenlus Medical Care · tiOns available Apply at John
Supenntendent
Athens ·
Dtalysts servtces pos1tlon for
Jackson
Ptke . Metgs ESC. 320 112 East
7 ' 1(r Hawth orne l.anc registered nurse, 30 40 1480
GallipoliS or phOne 441 Matn Stroet Pomeroy OH
hchmd Nattnna l (;ua rd hours, 1 year med-surgery
1393 Compehttve Wages , 45769
~
Appl tcat ton
(r trl s clo th es s1zr 7· 8, elC.penence preferred, com· m1Jeage reimbursement and
Oeadhne
At
Noon,.
on Fr1day
pe 1111 ve wages great beneftl
t ovs, purc h ~wtn~. bed package patd on the JOb other bane tlts lncluctmg July
health msurance
18 2008 The AMESC IS an
Irame
tratntng, resume's requ~red
Equal
Opportumty
;;;;,:;;.~-----.. applications ava1labJe at 100
Sacunty Ofttcers must Employer/ProVIder
Au&lt;.110N ANIJ
Jackson Pike , Galhpolis
be able to pass drug test &amp;
OhiO 45631 , ca ll 740·441·
background check Send
resume to www lnloweare- Tr,atner Pos1t1on
Cross Creek Auction Full T1me Maintenance gonnagetem com or Ia,.; to Are you 1nterested 1n a
Buffalo
AuctiOn Satu rday ASSIStant needed $8 oo hr 740-441 9645
rewarding pos1t1on? PAJS IS
6pm
Building IS full used Must have valid drivers - - - - - - - - currently seekJng a part lime
Merc handtse
Local Used license and- transportatiOn to Patnottc Foods Jnc Jook1ng
staff for Mason WV proVtd·
Consignments
Cedar and !rom work BaCkground tor Route Sales Managers tng resldenltaJ/communtty
Cabin Bird Houses, check w1U be run Call 740· Paid 'rramlng 304·674·8683 sktll tratntng With lndlvtduats
or 304-812-0270
446·0t01 fmtnfo
w1th MR/00 Monday-Fnday
New Semt·load of Name
3 30pm·6 30pm
H1gh
local Law Otf1ce has open·
POST OFFICE NOW
Brand Cereal Large BaKes
school diploma or GE.O
1ng tor a legal secretary
S1artmg to sell h1gh quehty
requ1red No eKpenence
Ellpenenced
prefened
Avg Pay $20/hr or
kmves such as Case, Buck
necessary Crnmnal back·
Please send resume to CLA
$57Kiyr rncludes
&amp; Moss~ Oak BurJQ1ng ts A1r
ground check required MJ.Jst
12 c/o The Point PlettSI:Ittl
Federal Benefits OT
COnditiOned AcceptltlQ Vtsa
have reltable transportatiOn
Reg1ster 200 Ma1n St PI
and Master Card &amp; Debt!
Placed Dy actSource, not
and val1d auto 1nsu rance
Pleasant WV 25550
(304) 550 1616 Stephe n
offered w/ USPS who htres Patd tra1mng Hourly rate
1·866-403-2582
Reedv 1639
starltng at $7 -$8 00/hour
Part ltme merch8nd1ser help
W
wamed 1 to 2 days a waek - - - - - - - - Please call 1 304·373·1011
ANI'fl)
merehandlstno magaztnes AesCare Home Care IS or toll tree at 1 877-373
.,;.,.1 In the following area accepting appltcatrons for 1011
Gallipolis Average pay 1s Support Associates, CNA &amp;
Absolute Top Dollar • stl·
$9$10 per hr If Interested STNA MR /DD exp preverlgold
co1ns
any send us a postcard with , ferred Apply at ,8204 Carla Wanted IIVS·tn hOusekeeper
10K/14K/18K gold Jewelry,
note or resume 1ncJud1ng Drtve GaHtpolis, Mon. Frt Lady.no smok1r.g or dnnkmg
dental gold, pre 1935 US
Ema1l resume to
Own transportalton Call
..,.our phone number to the 8-4
currency proof/m1nt sets
News
Group
3755 rhamsonC!escare com
740·992·2460
d1amonds MTS Cotn Shop
In terchange Ad Columbus - - - - - - - 151 2nd Avenue Oalhpohs
OH 43204 or lriK 614 351- Truck
Onver
needed .
446 2842
SOhr UQderground
5283 or call 1·877·639·7477 Henderson, Wv based, COL WV
ext t t7 and loavc a mes- license &amp; 2 years expen· Mmer Class. starttng soon
Junk cars Wlth or WithOut sage Please spectfy the ence MVR required Call Whtl ·CO·TraJntng 304·372·
304·675· 7434
area you're caJUnglor
lilies 740·388·0684

POSTAL JOBS

Prr

FLEA MARKt:r

9300

Cedar Wishing Wells

Hll'&lt;l NG

r

"---TO-,:B;;Ulil:.'

8:!46

Brand new Never ltved tn
2br 2 bath wl whtrlpool tu bs,
large LA on 3 acres m/1
$80 ooo 740-446 7029

1-

I

~ -~

AT 35 Adult Video &amp; Book - - - - - - - - Store need Mldntght Clerk l ook1ng 101 part l •me work
tu)) Of pall lime 304 937 . 2nd JOb mtl1tary construe
!ton secunty food han·
4900 .
dl1nglcookmg an scaptng
pnor expenence and have

•

3br 2ba SecltOnal on .6
acre Roseberry Ad Pt
Pleasant wl ~~o~asher. dryer
dishwasher&amp;
refngerator
$65 000 (304)675 6628

I. ,.--•T';;,).no-.._.
IIIU

Contact t"..cm m COO
462-9365 or I 1U out applica
liOn at WWYI fjtiUCktng co m All types ot Home Aepa~rs
and Improvemen ts Call R1ck
EOE
740 992-2910 or 740 274

GAtJ.Imi.L~

Fr t &amp; Sat July 11 &amp; 12at554
Jay Dr Spnng VaJiey rnlant,
adult cloth1ng curta1ns bed
lmens &amp; large var 1ety of
tlems 9a-5p

d

du,~p;~;;d·~~"~off~",~ ..h~~~

YARIJ SAI.I:-

ly colored litter tratned to 4 fami ly July 11 &amp; 12 at 654
gOOd hOme only 304 675 Oebbte Or 9 30
?
7625 as for Mary
Chl1drens clothes house

Autos for Sale.... .........• . .•..•.......... ...
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale .....

* pt. R r; .,

M~~

Approx 6·8 wks old male
kitte n grey ttger litter box 3901 Jackson P1ke Fn &amp; Sat
Ktd clothes pressure wash·
tratn~id 256 6870
cr household 1tems. nusc
Female Cahco cat, beautifUl·

Auto Repair ............................................... 770

d

an
en a
Insurance
401 (k ) vacat1on bonus pay
and satety awards Oual1f1ed
applicants must be over 23
yrs have a m1n1mum ot 1
year of commencal dnvmg
expenence &amp; clean MVR

NoT

~~~?

Found on SA 141 , Swk old
S1amese k: JIIen Please call
740·645·8684 to tdenttfy

Antiques .............. ......... :.. .... ................ ...530

~
COUPE
1,3lk . S&lt;J '
OOC:ONV F
Ill, .¥211 ()I '

CM

Fou~u

n

150

Hf-11 1 WANnn

Reglohal Oump Orlvers
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
A&amp; J Truck1 ng 1s seekm~
qualtfte,J CDL A dr1vers to Call Today' 740 446·4367
operate se m1 dumps for
1 800 214 0452
regtona l routes We teature
www ga lhpohca r ~rcoll&amp;ge edu
e~cellent home t1me health Ao:rAdllltd Memb11' Ac cra d.tmg

Le&gt;f%., You 1&lt;.

Losl ANIJ

CLASSIFIED INDEX

tt· 471( .

!Ia

k•tncarlyle@comcast net

&gt;We will not knowrng
y accept any adver
lsement In viotatlo
the law.

* QLR '&gt;'

POLICI ES Ohio Vslley Publl shmg reserve11h1 right to edit reject o r canc1 11 n~ ad 11 any ttme
the tlrl t d&amp;V or p ubiiCitlon and the
Trlbun•S.ntlnel Regleter will be re•ponllbletor no more than the cott ot the t paee occupied bV the
1
lnHrtlon we shallnol be liable tor
any 1011 or lll(l)enle that retults fro m ths public atio n or omlsalon o f an advertlaemenl Correction will be
flrll • vell sbla sdlllon
Box number ads
sre 1lway1 c:ontldentlal
Current r•te c11rd 1pplle1
All ra10l ftl lll le 11d'fflrtlsement1 are sub}ecllo the Fed11n1l Fair Housin g Act of 1968 • Thll new1 p 1per
a~:c:epte on ly help w enled 1d1 mleting EOE 1tandurds We will not kn owl ngl~ scca pt any atiVertlslng In vlollltlon o ltlle law Will not be retponllble tor sny
error1 In sn ad taken over t he phone

GIVEAWA\

1r£ German ~ne p pard , ti
Old
dog
small
months old all shots &amp; l ost
Terrterffieagle muc on OJ
neutered 740·645 5909
Wh1te Ad and StAt 160 Call
5 ktltens 7 wks old, tncloor, 446 98t8
hiler tratned 1 Manx 2 long
ha1red Wtll pay $10 to wards
YARD SAl.!.
spay or neuter 367·7574

t.i wks old Hetnz 57 pupptes,
wtiJ be med stze good

All Dllilplay: 1:1 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sundlly Display : 1 : 00 p . m .
Thursday for Sundllylil Paper

ads must be prepaid'

1

GI~EAW.I\

IJ;.

Now you con have borders and graphics
"'"'-'
added to your classified ods
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

pjspjpy a;;;e

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

All Real Estat
dvertlsements
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o

:OUPE .
il'99 V in&gt;&lt;
(Oi r )
COUPE

• All

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete
Desc:rlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid AbbrevlaUons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed

F1rewood already cut, you hold tlems &amp; much more
load 304·675-1645
7 fa m•lies, July 12th from 9·
F1ve adorable Jov tng Kittens 3 Yellow house 31 4 m1los out
cute. cuddly litter tra1ned 7 Knn er Ad Housewares, 4
ar
elec·
weeks old 505 HoiJoway St wheeler b1kes
tron1cs dtvmg boa rd , exer·
Henderson 30 4·675·5391
c1se
machrne porch
Half wolf/German Shepherd Sw tng
968.
(F) looks mostly walt 5
months old She wtU be b1g 7/11 &amp; 7/12at 31330Pa•nter
Ridge Ad Vmton Tools,
I m movtng 740·418· 187"7
household •terns comput er
Kittens 6 weeks old 3 bob· desk, TV hutch YI{ID etc
ta1t. 3 not 446 0392
Fn &amp; Sat 900 ? at 19 14
Kittens· black &amp; blackJyel State Route 141 Ga llipOliS
low small Ternet mtJO:ed pup· 20" btcycJe scroll saw batt
piSS (740)742·2486
and d1sc sander 6 1 /2~ planer, 8' Dewalt Rad ial Arm
lovrng 3 legged lns1de cat
Syrs old to good hOme Saw hand tools co lor TV's,
preferably an elderly couple antique fold mg bed drop
leal lable upholstered chair,
hiler tra1ned 304 674·5336
baby crtb metal cnt ldrens
cha1 rs
l?tcnt c
baskets
kerosene Porlable heater,
Chrtslmas ttems computer
4x4's For Sale ....:.. .............
. 725
desk, dmmg room table
Announcement-... ............ . . ........... . . 030
Coca Cola ttems, clothes fOf
Apartments for Rent .................................. 440
all sizes toys , shop vac
Auction and Flea Market ......... ...................080
curtams,
baby
ttems ,
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ........................ 760
shears, sheet sets. sofa bed

.

Di~~IIY In -Column : 1:00 p.m .
Mond•v - Frlday for Inlilertlon
In Next Day 's Paper
sunday In - Column: 1:00 p . m .
Friday For Sunday• Paper

Tortotse She ll Calico tnstde
cat to good home litter
REWARD 5500 For mtorma· tra1ned 304 674·5338 ,
tton leadtng to the arrest &amp;
conviCiton ot the lhtevtng Two 30 tnch Whtte Bathroom
scum that broke 1nto our Van1ltes 1n good shape 304·,
home on Bulavtlle PtKe and 675 1645

r
J

Ads

~A.!orrl

Monday ~hru Friday
8:00 a.m. t:o 5:00 p.m.

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
the right to ed1t,
reject or cancel any
ad at any t1me.
~Errors
Must B
eported on the firs
yof publication an
he Tribune-Sentinel
Register w111
esponslble for n
ore than the cost o
he .space occ~pie~

--~~~~6_7~5-~5~23~4-------------------..

1.1

-vlflftee
lttJwe-.rvv

REACH 3 COUNTIES
'

Gallia
County,
OH

In One Week With Us
www myda1tytnbune com
E· mail
www
mydaJiysentlllel com
classrfled@ myda1lytnbune com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
www
LUS YOUR A N
LINE
To Place
\ltrihune
Sentinel
l.\.egister
CaYIIOI uTro d.Ad,
ay... (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1 ;J33
.

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

::OUPE .

Meigs County, OH

Melga, Gallla,
And Mason

1c lie s, ill the form of the
first direct .tlrghts between
the old foes in nearly SIX
decades.
Chma contrnues to claim
Taiwan as part of its territory and says 11 will attack 1f
the island moves to pj!rmanently break from the marnland .
Most Taiwanese oppose a
tormal declaralion of tndependence, something they
made clear tn March when
they reJected the candidate
of a pro-independence par1y
m prcSJdentlal elections
But they are also strongly
a~a in st a umon wtth the
n1amland, feanng it wou\d
put an end to the1r hardwon democratic freedom s;
In hi s com JIIe ilb U11
Wedne sday. Yang said that
Be1jmg's Olympic organizmg committee would contmue to use the ··zhonghtla
Taipe1" name first a g re~d
upon in 1989, but that other
Chrnese grpups could o~t
for "Zhongguo Taipei " rf
they w1shed to do so.
At that lime the two
agreed that Taiwan could
compete at the Olymprci s
under the name "C hinese
Tarpe!'' in English. and designated "Zhonghua Taipei"
as the Chinese language
translation for that term.
Liu rejected Yang 's assertion on Tmwan 's Olymp!C
name out of hand
"Zhonghua Taipei has
been in use for years, and
thrs will not change just
because n ts BeiJing whtcn
i.~ hn)rliJJg the Olympics thi s
year," he said.

Rice to attend Olympic ceremony:

1

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

\ltrih1rne - Sentinel : :Register
C.LASSIFIED
We c:"O'veri--J

change Olympic name

AP photo
.
.,
A petrtroncr hold&gt; up a protest banne r near a petrt1on offrce
111 Bt:iJtrl~ vv~Unt:~uay. ine s 1oga n reaas
une wona,
DrIferen t Fates ". a pay
1 on th e Beu1ng 01 ymptcs s 1ogan of
"One World, One Dream". As BeiJing enters the f1nal stretch
for the August 8-2 4 Olymp 1cs. the government 1s tr ylllg to lobbymg group International
shut out anyone 1t fee ls m1ght mar an event meant to show- Campaign for 'i!Jbet in Berlrn,"
but sa1d she had stayed away
case Ch1na as a modern nat1on. AIDS act1vrs ts have been from political activrtres 10
followed by pol1ce, beggars rounded up and pe.ople 1n from China
the province&gt; to request the government's mterven!lon rn
Chinese Foreign Mmrstry
local squabbles have been sent home.
spoke"lMn LJU J1anchao smd
Party Secretary Ltu Q1. "'ho
"This Web site deals w1th Thursd,ty that Pemb.1 was
also heads the Olympic orga- lots of discnmmauon and Involved 111 sepawllst actrvJnlllng comm1ttee. was quot- people cnucr ze the govern- t1es and was a part ot the
ed in state meum as sayrng ment These are negat1 ve T1betan Youth Congress, an
beggars and vagrants would thmgs and they don 't want to exrle group BeiJing accuses
be cleared away tor the _lose face dunng the of berng a terrori st organizagames.
Olymp1cs." said Lu
liOn Pemba demed the aileSporadic vrolence mvolvThe growtng police pres- gations, calling them "commg Muslim separatists 111 sure on some act1V1sts "dri- pletely baseless and fabncatChum's far west and a wrdc- Vlll(l some to leave Berjmg ed."
spread uprismg by Tibetans dunng the games. wh1le oth- , "I tlunk they 're very neragamst Chinese mle m early ers have been explicitly told vous on anythmg to do with
March have heightened to do so.
Tibet," she said
BeiJing's fears of d!Sruptrons
"Many people are keepmg
Ofticial worries are also
But targeting Chinese who tfterr he&lt;llls down." satd Sara making life &gt;lifficult for
have never o penly chat- Davis, exec utrve dJrectOJ of_ Tibetans, MUslims from the
].,...,,....., ,-1

1· ,. ,

-.

Taiwan'lrixes-~ove. to

' week, Dechen
ThiS past
Pemba. an ethmc Tibetan
who holds a Bntish passport,
sa1d she was detamed by
police as she was leavmg her
Bci;ing apartment They
searched her apartment, then
took her to the airport in a
convoy ot three black cars
and put her on a flight to
London
Pemba had a valid Chinese
work ' isa. but she said pollee
told her she had broken the
laws of the country, though
they d1d not spec rfy wh1ch
ones
Pemba rs a fnend of man y
Tibetans in Beijing, includmg Wocser, an author who
like many Tibetans goes by
one name. She has wntten
cntlcally ot Chma's rule m
Tibe! and wa~ recently under
police
surverllance.
Pemba
orice worked for the

BY HENRY SANDERSON

., ... ,..,,
~.. \IUIY
·-- ·
F.....

--

SuperiOr
Home
Maintenance
Carpentry
Plumbtng, Bathrooms No
Job to Small Call 339· 3442
We Will do your cleamng
and errands lor you Ia
Save you Prcc1ous 11mo1
Free esttmates
Reasonable pnces Quality
of Service tS EXCEPTION·
All Call Mtchele at (740·
)446-3681 Leave Message

All real estate adllertlslng
In thla r,ewspaper Ia
tubject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes II illegal to
edvertl!e ·any
preterence, limitatio n or
dltcrlmlnatlon bued on
race, col or, religion , SBK
tamutal status or national
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
preference , llmltatlon Of
discrimination "
Thlt newspaper will not
knowingly accapt
adver11semantt for real
aatete whh;;h Is In
violation of the lew Our
readers are hereby
tnformed that all
dwelling&amp; ad11ertlrsed In
this newspaper are
a11allable on an equal
opportunity bases

Foreclosure 4br 2ba only
$29 9001 Pn ced to Se ll! For
II\\\( I II
L1stlngs 600·620-4946 ex
;,;:;::;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
T462

10

BusJNt.SS

l

OPPORltiNHY

PRICE REDUCED $69 900
2712 Ltncoln Ave 3br t ba
Brarnl New Restaurant for w1th detached
garage
Lease AT 2 good Jocat1on mo tiVa ted seller 304·675·
Owner has other rnterests 6757 , 304·610 1313 or
ca ll 304 549·5696 AnvtJme Ass1st 2 Sale 304 755 2980

Monru. Ho'l~$

•NOTICE•
OHIO VA LLE Y PUBLI SH
lNG
recommends
tha t you do bus1ness wtlh
people you know and
NOT IO send money
th rough the ma rl until you
have lf'I VBS tlgat ed Ihe
altering

co

r

Mn~n
TTl LOAN

**i'iOTICt:u
Borrow Smart Contact
!he OhiO DIVISIOn of
F1nancm1
lnstlt Jtlon's
Consumer
Office
ol
Affairs BEFORE you reh
nance your home or
obtatn a Joan BEWARE
ol requests for any large
advance payments ol
fees or tnsu rance Call the
Off tee ol
Consumer
Af1 atrs toll free at 1·666·
278·0003 to learn 1f the
broker
mortgage
01
lender
prope rly
i1 censed (Thts ts a pubhc
serv1ca announcemen t
lrom !he OhiO Valley
Pubhsh1ng Company)

"

r

Plm~~:s~&gt;lONAl.

H&gt;RSAI ~

14x70 2 bedroom 2 bath m
V111ton area musl be moved
Good Co nd S4500 740
853· 1143 or 446·1648
14x70 wl e~20 expando 3
br 1 5 bath great cond
$5000 304 593 885t
t6X80 3 Bedroom 2 Bath
V1nyl Sid1ng Sh1ngJe Root
$230 per month 740 385

9948
t 974 2br 2 bath lamtnent
h;:.rdwnnrl tJonrs, c/a , $5000

Call 740·256·6382
t977 141170 2 bedroom
Fuqua Tra1ler furm6hed &amp;
Pellet Stove can be seen on
Brighton Ad 30 4-675·3697
1986 Holley Pa rk 14K70
2BA 2 bath S6500 obO ~45

5230

2006 Aedman t4 ~65 tn as
new cond1llon on rented lot
1n Apple Grove WV 304 ·
576 2000
2006 3 bedroom 2 ba th sec
!tonal home $279 per monrh
740·385 7671

SENVICE'l

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wtn•

1·888·582·3:!45

IU II lSI Ill

HOME"i

FOR SAI.F

92 Bayvtew C1mmeron
Mobtl8 Home 16x80 2br
2ba unt1erp1nnmg axles &amp;
whee ls
porch
ceme nt
sl aps, Out bUildings tnclud ·
ed $5 000 304·674 4689
Brand new 3bed 2bath on
+ · llalt acre tn Pt .Pieasant
OWNER FINANCE AVAIL
ABLE 740·446·3570

2br, W1D hookup. 81110 out
bU1Id1ng 2 lots m Clifton
Federal Funds JUSt released
$39 500 between 10amtor Land Owners No clos
9pm 304·773 9192
mg cost and ZERO DOWN•
Will
do
Land
:.!) t uld H ouse m Hal1ford ,
lmpro11ements Bankruptcy
1.900 sq ft 3 bedroom 2
3 Bad Credit OK 2, 3. 4 and
ba ths, Ent m KLtch("n ,
5 bedrooms a~o~arlabla 740·
r&gt;mmK Room, Den &amp; F.nmh
446
Rnom I.e' rl lot All .1pph
.mC't's wa~hrr Dr'l er &amp;
Wmdow drt&gt;ssltLJ.\ md udcd New 3 Bedroom homes from
$214 36 per month, Includes
:SQ3 500 304 882 2494
many upgrades delivery &amp;
3 bed, HUO Homes! onlv set-up (740)385 2434

3384

$10 OOOJ lor hs!lngs 800·
620 4946 ex A019

t

Lm&amp;

ACRF~IGE

3 br house for sale •n
MtddJeport on land contract MOBilE HOME LOT FOR
$3,000 down plus $400 per RENT 103 1 Georges Creek
mon th , {740)416- 1354
Ad, 441·1t11

�•

'
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 11, 2008 .

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

'

ld \I \1 -.

Al',&lt;RTli1FM£:JJ'Oii M!'itt:uANmuYJ I
. ., . m~J(JoNI
, .- .... .. MJl~&lt;.U'\I"'lUJ:&gt;i:l::::, .

j
_I
~~-------WJ~
LIVI&lt;sm c K ·

Friday, July 11 , 2008
·. ALLEY OOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Dai!•1• Sentinel • Paae 87 :tf

~s I'«1T AtNOTHfR GU'f 1 to.~
YCe.D ~ DOto4£, AU.

Tl4f,

'fME. $'!'UFF l AAVE...'

Newly remodeled house. 212 3rd Ave 3 rooms ana Honey Suckle H1lls currently NEW AND USED STEE~ Burrows Jo1 sale. 1 male and
3br, Gallia County $500frenr bath furnished. no pets taking appl1ca11on.; for 1 to 2 Steel Beams, P1pe Rebar 14 females. Call for more
$350/deposlt 740-388·9060 Rent + Dep. 740-441 -0245 BA units. laundry &amp; omer· For
Concrete , Angle. information. 740-643-2430
1'99/mol 3 bed. 2 bath, Bank
Repo1 (5% OOwn, 20 years.
8% APAI lor lislings 800·
620-4946 ex A027

28R apt CiA. (740) 4410194

· MOBILE HoM~:-;
tnBRThT

6 rooms and bath, 1angc &amp;
1br
5375/monlh
3br Applications now being fridge turn Clean. off street
SSOOtrnonth
in Syracuse .. accepted lor mobile home parking $400/rent + !lep &amp;
deposit Hud App. No Pl!ts. rentals tn Porn! Pleasant. utilities. 44 1-0596
(004)675-5332 weekends Call 304 -675· 3423
~40-591 ·0265

.

Double

wide

for

Rent.

2 bedroom house tor rent, Gallipolis Ferry, br3/2full
ba .. Ref. req .. $500/rent.
no pets. (740)992-5858

'$500/deposrt. ntce yard .
2br in Pt. Pleasant, $465 304-576-2296
month, Homestead Realty
AJ•AKJM~NI S
Broker Nancy 304-675-4024

FOKlUNf

or 304-675-0799

Apartment available now
Riverbend Apts New Haven
WV. Now accepting !'IPPilcations lor Hud-Subs1d1zed.
one Bedroom Apts. Utrlities - - - - - - - included Based on .3001" ,of. Middlepml N 4tll Ave 2
adjusted 1ncome. Call 304- room eff1C1ency Apt. util1hes
882-3121 , available for paid. no pets , dep. &amp; ref.,
Senior and Disabled people 740-992-0165.

3br house with nrce yard and 1 and 2 bedrOOI\1 apart pond On Bolaville Pike 740- ments, lurnrshed and unfur-

3:39-3186

I,

r

gency
maintenance.
Country livmg 5 mmutes
hom major shopping , medical etc. call today for addi·
tiona! mlo and to make
appointment 740-446-3344
t-:1onday, Wednesday. and
Friday t OA - 4P
,.

nished. and houses in
Pomeroy 'and Middleport,
3brl2bth house w/ central
security deposit required , no
AC, W/0, dishwasher in R1o
Bea!Jtlful Apls . at Jackson
pets. 740-992-2218.
Glando area. Ref. re q. Rent
Estates. 52 Westwood
+ dep. 645-729·6092
1BA Apt. WID hookups, Drive,. from $365 to $560.
satelhte TV mel. w/rent, 740-446-2568
Equal
4br. 2ba. HUD! only $317
close
to
hosp1
ta.1
Call
740Housing Opportunity. This
month! Great LoCation! (5%
339-0362
institution 19 an Equal
down, ?.Oyrs, 8%APR)
· P~ov1der
·
0 pportumty
and
Listings 800-620-4j:MF. A•
~mpl oyer.
T461
Domino's in Pl. Pleasa nt
CONVENlENILY LOCAT·
30 ~ _- 81~ 4350
Brick Muse in Gallipolis, - - - - - c - - - EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
3B.A, 1 1/2 balh, no pets, no 2 b~droom apaftment tor Townh9use apartments.
srn&lt;&gt;King. 5650/rent. 740- rent in Middleport. no pets, and/or small hoUses FOR
-9209
(740)992-5858
RENT Call (740)441- lllt
for applicallon &amp; mlormat1on.

Free Rent
Special!!!

Channel. Flat Bar. Steel
II&lt; \\SI'OIU \1111\
Grating
For
Dra1ns;
Duveways &amp; Wal~ways'. l&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Aum&gt;
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
tnRSAu; .
Friday, 8am-4.30pm. Closed
Thursday, Satu rday &amp; 1984 Chev Monte Carlo and
Sunday. (740)446-7300
1984 700 hionda NightMwk
call 304-674-0861 or 304I'J.:JS
674·0539
1;''
FUR SA.LE

'
r,_..,;,;;;;,--.,_

1994 Toyota 4 runner, ,
Bichon 2 males 8 months eng1ne needs fil!.ed or
old, .Shitzu 1 male 8 months replaced, body great. 740old. Must sale. $100 each. 446·9465
740-441 ·9510

Middleport, E}eech St., 2 13r CKC M1nature Pinscher 2
furnished apartment. utilities males. 4 mon _ old, ears
paid, depos1t &amp; 1eferences. cropped. tails docked, sho1s.
740-388-8788
no pets, (740)992-0165

2002 Ford Muslang white,
V6. automatic. PW/PLIPS.
crwse, 90.00I)miles, 90%
lire tread, second owner
56000 ..740-388·9673

Ave., Middleport 2 br
furn ished apartment, no
pets. deposit &amp; rele 1811ces,
(740 ) 9 92.0 165
- - - - - -- Twin Rive~ sTowe 1 1s acceptino aoot1call0ns lm wait1rig
11st lor Hud·SllbSidiZed, 1-br
l'!partment
fm
thR
~lderlyldisabled, call 675·
6679

=

""""'~ '

F

SI 1ACE

Hill R~;\T

Pug
pupp1es,
lawn,
Registered, wormed &amp; up to
date shots. Very sweet &amp; lovable Mason area 443-3504()=1~1-~~-~--,
C
F!::!!
1

Thursday - Pool Tournament
Friday- Karaoke • DJ Herb
Saturday- 7-12 Anniversary Party
DJ • K&amp;D &amp; Karaoke
Free Food - No Cover 9- t

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday July 13th
Factory/Scoped Rimiire
Meeting before Match
12 Noon

BINGO
Middleport American ·
Legion
Tue.sda.y, July 15th

1st pack free
$5.00 every pack after
Must buy 2nd pack .

Frenchtown Apartments,
.727 4th Ave, Gallipolis, 1s
now accepting app11cat1ons
lm waiting list for 1 bedroom.
USDA Rural Development.
Subsidized apartment ,lor
eIderly and handicapped.
740-446-4652.
Equal
Hous1ng0pp01tunity.
Furnlshed Apt. 2nd Ave 1n
Gallipolis upstairs. aU utili'

.'~"' no:~•·rl

9523

t

h r nn """
, AA',.,_

FRun~&amp;

V tJ. it:I'AUU'\.:

· Police lmpounds1CMs frnm

~ol••oiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiii
~_.l! ,$5001 , Hondas, C hevy ~.
Jeep.&lt;;• F(lrels, A moral lor
Home Grown sweet corn listings 800-620-4876 a~ V435
and veggies. Available July
TRUCKS
10th at McKean Farm and
ron SAI.E
William Ann Motel.
I \R\1 Sf 1'1'111 S
1968 Chevy Pic~ -u p . VB - 3
.\ 11\\ 'dO( ~
speed. long bed. $2500 Call
446-4999 or 446-6352
10
FARM
EQu n·M~~~

~JO

v.r.s

L

of 2nd and P1ne 51 $75 per BU ll T,
VAL:LEY
month . 446-4425 or 446- H 0 AS EIll VEST 0 C K
TRAILERS, LOAD "-lAX
3936
EQUIPMENT TRAILERS ,
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
~-~-----, H O M E S T E A D E A
10
HOUSEIIOI.B
CARGO fCONCESSION
"'
TRAILERS. B•W GOOSE·
Goo!
~-----~
---" NECK
HITCHES.
Berber Carpet $5 95 yard CARMICHAEL
EQUIP Remm ants $40 &amp; up, MENTICAAMICHAEL
Mollohan Carpet 22 12 TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA Eastern Ave Gallipolis Oh VICE . SPE CIAL 20FT
GOOSENECfS FLATBED
446 _7444
'"!:;;.:.::=-------;
::=
;:;;ss. 'v'i'E.'w'oJ UUM Ei-JTiHE
A~llQU~:&lt;;
TRAILER INVENTORY AT
WWW.CAHM1C'RAEL·
'
TRAILEA S,COM 740-446 GIBBS ANTIQUES Fr,·. &amp;
3825

•

rL-------_.1

Gallia
Manor
Apartments, 138
Bu hl Morton Rd.
~;;':',f. ! Gallipolis, rs now Sal. 10-5. Sun t-7 or by
accepting applicalions for appt Also. 1e~tore furmture.
Located on Tornado Ad. oft
wa1t1ng l1st tor :1 bedroom Al. J3, Rac,ne (Park
·d
ed
HUD· sub51 rz apartment &amp; Ride·' e•il. 740-949·.2246
for elderly and handicapped.
I;;J
740-446-4652.
1540 Mtst'EI.IANfo.XJL'S
Mt~l'IIANDL~t . '
Gracious Uvfng 1 and 2 "---iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiir.J
Bedroom Apts. at Villa ge
Manor and Riverside Apts. in Anhque organ el!.cellenl.
Middleport , from $327 to condition $300.00 ComP.Iete
bedsprea d and decor' for
$592 740-992-5,064. Equal
Housing Opportunity.
gnls bedroom $100.00
Antique dresser and couch.
Tara
Townhouse $100.00
Apar1ments, Very Specious, - - - - - - - 2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2
JEt .
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
AERATION MOTORS
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo. Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
No Pets, Lease Plus Stock. Call Ron Evans, ! Security Deposit Required, 800·537·9528.
(740)367-0547

}993 Ford 250 Cargo Van. 6
cyl., auto. $1450 446-4999
or 446-6352
--~-----

·96 Ford WmdStar 75 .000
miles in good shape $2.500
or trade for Truck of Equal
Value 304-675-1645
!:::~':":'----~

40 MmnRCYCUS
4WIIEE:IJ&lt;;RS
"-.0.0iiiiiiiiiiiiii--

Sltultad
In
tho
Townohlp of Sallobury,
County ol Molgo, Ohio :
The loltowlng real
Htata altuatad In tho
Townohlp of Salisbury,
County of Molga and
State of Ohio; being In
Sactlon
18,
and
duc~bed aa follows :
Beginning In tho center of State Highway
No. 33, now County
Rolld 20 following tho
relocation of State
Highway No. 33, at the
Southwnt comer of a
1.11 acre lot of Roy
GruaMr and Harold
BIKbton. rocordad In
Dud Book 218, Page
151 o.d Recorda of
llelgo County. Ohio;
thonce
South
78
HgrHi 57 minute•
&amp;1174.5 feat along tho
South ltne altho Nld
1.11 ocre lot, morkad
by a 11001 mtM rail
thence
South
17
degreeo 47 mlnutu
Welt 10.8 r.tj thenCe
South &amp;9 dog,_ 37
mlnullll Eaot 59.17
IHI; thence South 17
degrHI 17 mlnutel
liNt 11.3 IH!; thence

2000 Yamaha Roadstar
.
Motorcycle
(dressed)
1600cc, 8,000 miles $5.500
Have you priced a John 304·675-2793 Of 304-593Deere lately? You'll be sur· 4001
prised' Check· out our used
·
mv~antory
at 2005 Yamaha YFZ 450 4
·w W W · C A. R E 0 · C 0 M wheeler Pro-Am, race 1eady,
Carmichael Equipment. 740- S5500 Otlo. 740-379-9257 m
446-2412
740-645-6024 ,
- - , - - - - - - - - l'lliil"'"~~--~....,
JO # 48 End Loader qUid\ f79B
CAMPERS &amp;
h Hd
B .
Mal~ H~!c~
attac , y rautlc ucket
VI\
,,.. L )
$i ,300-neg 304-458- 18t7
1
1998 Burgundy Sebring,
0"!!:"~'•.m.•.•.•.;•g;.•_ _ __, fully
loaded, good condition
79,500 miles, $5.500 080
LivtSJOCK
304-895-3447

i

~~-------•

BUff Orphington pullets just
startmg to _lay for sale.For 92 Terry Fleetwood 29ft,
lllOfe information call 740· good condition . Ready to go
camping. Call Ron Sheets at
949·2237.
740-44 1-5239

South 45 degrees 30 ence; thence South 38 order, etc. interesled
mlnutea Eaat103.2 feet degrees 30 minutes persons may submll
to the North side of East 169.2 feel along written perm!~ llcensa,
Oak tree; thence South tho
centarllne
of order, etc. Interested
87 degrees 05 minutes County Road 20, Old persons may submit
East 116 feet; thence U.S. Route 33, to the written comments or
South 18 degrees 12 place of beginning, request a public meetminutes East 105.2 feet containing 0.64 acres, lng regarding draft
or to the South line of more or Jess, except· actions. Comments or
Lewis ·Grueser land ; lng all legal rights of public
meeting
thence
South
49 way.
requests must be subdegrees 05 minutes The bearinQs In 'the mitted within 30 days
West '264.6 feet along above description are of notice of the draft
the South line of Lewis magnetic based on ·a· action.
"Proposed
Gruaser to the center survey
by
Homer Actions " are written
of County Road 20, Old Hysell,
Registered slatements of I he
State Route No. 33; Surveyor No. 2274, sur- director's Intent with
thence following the vey dated Septamber respect
to
the
center line of County
2, 1965. Being a part _o f Issuance, denial, modiRoad 20, Old State the real Estate con- flcallon, revocation , or
Route No. 33 to the veyed· to Henry G. renewal of a permll,
place of ~aglnnlng. Arnold and Barbara license, or variance.
containing 2.26 acres. Arnold,
by
deed Written comments and
except alt lagal rights recorded In Volume requests for a public
of way.
225, Page 2D1, Meigs meeting regarding a
Save and except the Count)' Dw-Li Rucords, proposed action may
following raal estate The defendant named be submitted within 3D
aKuatad on the South above Is required to days of notice ot. tho
llde, and conveyed to answer the Complaint proposed action. An
Dorea L. Arnold and within
twenty-eight adludlcatlon hearing
Mlldrad E. Arnold, by (28) days aHer the last may be hatd on a pro·
deed
recorded
In publication of this posed ac11on If a hearVolume 243, Pega 817 tegat notice August15, lng request or oblec·
Meigs County Oead 2008. This legal notice tlon Is receivad tiy tha
Records,
and will be published once OEPA within 30 days of
described aa follows : a week for six oucces- issuance of the proSlluated
In
tha slve weeks.
posed ac11on. Wrlt1an
Township of Salisbury, (6) 13, 20, 27, (7) 4, 11, comments, requests
County of Meigs and 18
,
for public meetings,
State of Ohio ; being In
and adludlcatlon hear.Section 16, Town 2
· ing requests must be
North, Range 13 West
Public Notice
sent to: Heari ng Clerk,
of the Ohio Company's
Ohio
Environmental
Purchaae, and being Public Nollce ,
Protection
Agency,
described as follows: County : Meigs
P.a.
Box
1049,
Beginning In the cen- Tha following appllca- Columbus,
Ohio
tar ol County Road 20,' Ilona and/or verified 4 3 2 1 6 - 1 0 4 9
old U.S. Route 33, a1 complalnll
ware (Telephone : 614·644·
the Southerly corner of received, and the lol- 21 ~9): "final Actions:
a 2.26 acre lot of Henry lowing draft, proposed, Are actions of the
G. Arnot~ and Barbera or llnal actions were dlractor which are
Arnold, reco~ded In lasued, by Tha Ohio upon losuance or a
Deed . Book 225, Page En vIr o rime n t a I stated effective date.
201 Oead Records of Protection
Agency Pursuant to
Ohio
Meigs County, Ohio, (OEPA) last week. Revised Code Section
Mid point of beginning " Actions" Include the 3745.04, A final action
being marked by a adoption, modification, msy be appealed to the
"PK" nalt, thence North or repeal of orders Environmental Review
49 degrees 05 minutes (other lhan emorgancy Appeals Commlaalon
Eaot 266.4 feat to an ordore); the Issuance, {ERAC)
(Formerly
Iron pipe, passing an denial, modification 9r know
as
the
Iron pipe at t7.8 feet revocation of licenses, Environmental Board
oot
tor referenca ; permits, leaoos, vorl- of Review) by a person
thence
North
79 ances, or certificates ; who was a party to a
degrMI 30 mlnulas and the approval or proceeding before the
Wool 108.9 feet 1o an disapproval of plans director by llllng an
·Iron
pipe ; thance and
specifications . appeal within '30 days
South 13 degrees 00 " Draft Actions" are of notice of the final
mlnutoo West 209.2 written ltatements of action. Pursuant to
feet to a '"PK " naif to tho
director
of Ohio Revised Code
the
centerli ne
ot EnvIronment a I Section 3745 .07, A
County Road 20, Old P r o t e c I I o n ' a Final Action las ulng,
U.S. Route 33, pasalng (Director's) Intent with denying, modifying,
a highway
bridge respect • to
the revoking, or renewing
approach guard post at Issuance, denial, etc. a permit, license, or
105.8 feet for refer- ol a permit, 11eanoe, variance which Ia not

preceded by a proposed action, may be
·
appealad to the ERAC
by filing an appeal
within 30 days of·
.Issuance of the final ·
action. ERAC appeals,
accompanied by a $70
filing fee ·· which th
ecommlsslon In 11 discretlon may reduce If
by affidavit the appellant demonstrates that ·
payment of the full
amount of the fee
would cause extreme
hardship,
must be
flted
with :
Environmental Review
Appeals Commission,
309 South Fourth
Streel , Room 222,
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
A copy of the appeal
must be served on the
director within 3 days
aHer filing the appeal
wllllthe ERAC.
Final
lstuance of
Permit to Install
Syracuse
Racine
Regional
, Sower
District
E. of Racine Along
Yollowbush
Sutton Twp. OH
Actlqn
Date:
0613012008
Facility Description :
Wastawater
Identification
No.:
655889
This final action not
preceded by proposed
acllon and Is appealabla
to
ERAC .
Syracuao
Racine
Regional.
Sewer
District· Yellow Bush
Road Sewer Extension
(7) 11
. Publlc .Notlce
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Annual Financial
Report- Form 4502 of
the SoutHern Local
School District for the
fiscal year ended June
30, 2008 has baen
completed. Form 4502
Is available for public
lnapectlon In the !reasurer's office located
at ~20 Elm Street,
Racine, O,h lo 45"17 1
between the hours of
8:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Monday
through
Friday.
Roy W. Johnson, Jr.
(7) 11

· Ne~ Garag&amp;l

•Electrtcat

&amp; Plumbing
·Roofing &amp; Gultets
·Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

• Patio and P'orch Deck.a

wv 036725
V. C .

YOUNG

Ill

992-6215
Pomeroy OhiO
25 Years Local E•ptmence

I

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

tPrn nmT :md fl1 1:tfi1 v

Work,

..

ROBERT
BISSELL
COIIISTRUmON

29670 Bashan Road
Rac 1ne. Otlio
4577 1
740·949·2217

North
• J as
• AJ 7

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete ·
Remodeling

SiJes 5'x1 0'
to 10'x30'

WATERPROOFING
Uncondilional IKelime ouar-

•K I03
• Q 10 9 8
... J 10

Stop &amp; Compare

K Q 10 9

96

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Neither
South
2 NT

Seamless Gutters
Rool1ng . Siding, Gutters
lu~urt~u' &amp; Bonded

West . North
Po1ss 3 NT

Opening lead: •

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
~

ICNOC~. IUT

..

/

IT wAS

/..ANDLO!ll&gt;
NAILING AN

~VICTION I'IOTIC~

TO Tt-lf l&gt;OO/l.
. ,II' Jq •
,·.AJ'.·~
. .

Concrete Removal
and Re~lacement

.

.

••

BARNEY

Calllnetry And Furniture

I GOT El VINEY AN'
LUI&lt;EY TAL.I&lt;IN' AG'IN,
PAW!!
HOW 'D YA
'DO IT,
MAW?

www.timberereekcablfte'Cey'.eoa~

David Lewis
740-992·6971

Insured

WV0-42182 Free Estimates

~

1 Catch fat

opoadlng
4 Walk heavlty
B Shlp'a prow
1Unaect
., colony
12 Tiny speck
13 Groaat
14 Familiar
auth.
15 Debale side
16 Whimper
17 Mailing oul
19 Zaps
21 Environmenial
prefl1
22 James or
KeH
23 Smaller
than mini
26 Risky
ventures
28 Eggs, 10
Ovfd
29 Ibsen
hercHne
31 Enjoy
a hollub
:!3 S~iff

40 Mineral
analysla
42 lnopecltd
43 Wood ash
product
44 Uptight
46 Spreads
rumors
50 Ring champ
51 Musical
ensemble
53 Thre~
·oceana
touch It
54 Loud noise
55 Hold down
a lob
56 Shopping
center
57 Hang
loosely .
58 Tulip colors
59 - oul a
living

9 Hideous
monster
10 Reasons
11 Possesses
·18 Desklop
symbol
20 Sporty
vehicles
DOWN
22 Verv•
23 Callie call
1 Antler
24 A Karapronp
mazov
2 Bard • river 25 Lurching
3 Kind of ~las 26 Kukla :s
4 Billy Jw:'s
~~:~n d
lnstrumenl 27 - Lee
5 Not short
cakes
6 Baseball
30 Fel1grale1ul
graa1 Mel
32 Pocket
7 Exquislle
jangler
8. Cowboys
34 Reciles

m~vers

35 Vacuum

attachment
37 Unrellntd
meial
38 Spruce up

36 Dog orsal- .:
ad39 Wobble
41 Halvah
base
43 Raucous
divers
44 Youngsters
45 Mr. Kazan
46 Enclose
47. Ms . .
Dinesen
48 Slack
49 "My gar·

Ui ~J;VIIY
52- Dawn
Chong

Poet and criti9 Ezra Pound wrote. "Wilh
one day's reading a man may have the
key 11i h1s hands.~
We have been look1ng at key plays for
the third hand to make', particularly at
trick one. · '!~is .deal features ·another,·
which you will read in well ·under one
day. Against three no-trump, West leads
the heart four. After declarer calls for
dummy's seven, how should East plan ,
the delense?
South should not worry about his doll·
bleton heart. It is partner's responsibility
to cover a weak suit.
Eas1 should bear In mind two key.pnnci·
pies. First, that leading fourth highest In
an unbid su1t guarantees an honor in
that su1t And since East can see the
ace. 'kinQ. jack and 10 on the board and
in hiS hand, he knows that West must
have the queen. This should ma ~e it
easy to play the 10. finessing against
partner. as it is called.

Ttl~

I [\\IS

East
All pass

A key finesse
for third hand

·TtiOUGt-IT ~ t-IEA~l&gt; OPPO!lTUNITY

C O~CI([ II
C ON'&gt; ll(l'C 110"\

28 Years Experience

•

•

t A K 52

H&amp;H
Guttering

H~rdwood

763 2

• AKQ

Please leave mc.. sa c

All Types Of
Conciete Work

•

South

Rcfc rCJ) LCS. Av:1i lahlc!
Cal l Gary Sianley @
740-591 -X044

I TOLD 'EM TO GO
VISIT SOME

Wh~(}.Ees!.\~ 1hz f ~51 \~i0i, ~::: :::~~:::-.

THE BORN LOSER
"i.W., IT'~JU~T~O\ PO~~Ie.Li"

FRESH
HOME·GROWN
CABBAGE

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe '

Jim O'Brien
Farm Letart Falls

740-247-2113
love
the latest
looks?

Then look to Mary
~Y- You II find 1he

tips. A~k me how you

• BASEMENT

East

AI
Q8542
J 7
9J 4 3

,I

latest 011-trend colors
coord inateU fur you
with easy-to-apply

HOME
IMPROVEMINfS

West
•
•
•
•

740·992·1m

Hours
7:00AM· 8 :00PM
111411 mo pd

07 ·11-08

f 6 I 3
• B6 5 2

·"Rca!-.onahk l&lt;ah.'"
*Jn..,LucJ
"' E:-;pcrictll'cll

can ge t the holiest
look~ of the season-

and alw ay~ be in
style!

antoe. l ocal references furnished. Established 1975 ·
Call 24 Hrs. 1740 1 446 · · Juanita Gruescr
0870 · Ro~ers Basement Mary Kay
Independent Beauty
WaterproofHJg.
Consultant
WWI\'.11111ryka~· .Cttm/j grul!lll'r

General Contractor 35 Years
E ~ pe1ienca . New Homes.
Remodeling &amp; Home Repa1r,
licensed and Insured wv
030318 304-458-1668 (H)
304·511 -0759(CI

Shop Classilieds

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

l'IJE. ~E.IJE.R. I ~TRot&gt;UC£1&gt; YOU-&gt;~

FoR H\E:. II\II'ERIOI&lt;: TO ~1':.\/IIJ(

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:
irshadlrm@aol.com

IN \ 0\)1\'(:) BU~II\ItS)

101~·~~,

E=tj-;;:.,.---.

--....,p

liJ.I&gt;..IJ£
'I

MIKE MARCUM
I{OOtlr&gt;l, &amp; ill ~1111JI UNI, (II .

~

);

Rubbpr Roofing. Roo111 Addi liorts _Or•tks. St11nqiP"
Sidmq . Windows . Polo Bilrns . Gdr&lt;HjL'S
l n'.llrAilCI'

Close-Out Sale

10" h;mging Baskets
. $7.75 .
4" Geraniu ms .60¢
Bedding Plants
&lt;R per
$6.00
Vegetable plants
$2.50 per dot.cn
Hr-.; M-F 7:30- 5:()(1
Sat. X:JO -' 4:~ 0Sun l -5

THEY.~E

HAVI&gt;I6 F\Jtol,
THEY'RE LEARNING RE SPONSIBILITY , THEY'RE
E~F.RC15E ...
. ALL GOOD'

20 ycurs c~perie nc e
in sewing

l:d's Grrcnhouscs

740-992-7960

•

THE: WINDOW
LADY

Roman Shades aiuJ
More...
Pius Pillow, Bedskirts
Table Covers &amp; Table
Runners
CALL SANDY

ll r:odhul)' &amp; Rull otnd]

Swags, Valunces,

Home:740-992-3220
Ce11:740-416-6144

~?
\

July 12, 2008
By Bernice Bede Osol
Conditions look more favorable than
usual lor you in the year &lt;lhead, so make
the most out of the hand dealt lo you. For
most Cancer natives, 1t might mean generati ng a bener lifestyle - ~ neW
mmance, a better job or simply, a happier you.
·,
CANCER ~Ju ne 21·July 22) - Keep. an
open mind, because it's you~ t lckt~t lor
doing something new and different with
the family that everyone wltl enjoy. Don't
feel threatened by not following a normal
routrne
LEO (July 23- Aug . 22)- You're gifted at
uncove ring situations that could put
added income or resources into your
pocket. The ways and means may be·
do,ne in conjunctiOn with another, but 11

'

,.

PEANUTS .

Manley's
Recycling

T~INK IT'S TIME '(QU

AND I 14AD A SERIOUS

'(OU MEAN A L.ITTI.E
SACK AND FORTI-Ip!AL06UE?

SOMETHING
MO~~E

ALITTLE

ONE·51DED ..

III•IIIIHIItfriiiiii:IIO _.:.PI .
· · · -l:flla-12:11 . .

PAYIIIB TOP PIICES . .

11111111• Cia •M.-•WIIIIII

hiiiiUc eemrtn·-IMIII.........
IC.ftr Dlll•l fl1ciii

P51 CON5TRUCTION
RICK PRICE
Room Additions, Remodeling,
Roofs, Siding, Decks,

Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation
is currently accepting applications for fulltime and per diem LPN's. Long term care
experience preferred . . Must have ' WV
license . 12 hour shifts.
Please contact
Angie Cleland,
. Director of Nursing at (304) 675-52 50.

AA/EQ[
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Pharmacy Buyer
Pleasant Valley Hospital is currently
accepting
resumes
for
a full-time
Pharmacy Buyer. · State regi stration and
National certification as a Pharmacy Tech.
A minimum of 3 years as a hospital
pharmacy tech. Previou s Business and/or
purchasing/buying
experience
m
a
Pharmacy setting preferred.
Send resumes to:
Pleasant Valley Hospital
c/o Human Resou rces
2520 Valley Drive
25550
Point Pleasant,
(304). 675-4340
Fax: (304) 675-6975
or apply on-line at www.pvalley.org

wv

Licensed &amp; Insured

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

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local Contractor

COW and BOY
..Afll WHEN YOU INTQOIJUCE
Pf11VATE MONEY INTO AN INSTITUTION MEANT TO
SEI2VE THE PUBLIC, THE
DEEP POCKETS WILL WIN
EVE~Y TIME. 50 UNLESS
YOU HAVE APAATV .ET
BEHIND THAT BAQN
OF YOUQS, GOOD
LUCK GETTING
CONGRESS
TO LISTEN
TO YOU. \.../

THANKS
· FOII&gt;YOU~
CANDO~
SO~QY WE

WASTED
YOUQ
TIME.

WHATEVER
CAN I GO
NOW?

j

1 WHOA. WHOA. I

1

' .• WHON • ''

{

1\CTUA.LLY. I DID

.

HAVE ANOTHE~ MAYBE
OOESTION. HE'LL SPIN

BACK

1A '

~f

GARFIELD
l.tSf'5 5Ee. "THA"T'e ANOTHER
HOI.E IN ONtS FO~ Me •••

7 40-367·0544

AND ANOff.I6R HOLE iN ON6
FO~ YOU, fOO,(:otl,RFIELP

He'S &amp;TILL
CU~51NGI

our rHe
PLA5fER

FrM Estimates

PIRATe

7 40-367·0536 .

ON

fHIRfEEN
For
Call:

Remodeling and New House Building

MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

• Room Addition s •
and

Wood

Garages • Vinyl

Siding • Roofing • Pole

Barn s • Patio's, Po rches and Decks

MIKE W. MARCUM. OWNER

QRIZZWELLS

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bouom. OH

~~~~~~, S©tt(l~ -LGr.~s~ ~:~~
- - - - - - ldllod by CLAY R. POLtlN - - - - - - Olour
Reammga letlors of th&amp;
10rombled words bo·
low. to form four simple words.

I

VITEHE
1

1 I

2

I

I

1

EF0 NT
.------..., 0~

K I ML Y

I

might have to be kept quiet
VI AGO (Aug 23-Sept. 22)- Take a day
ott h om work and do something with
friends. Their happy-go-lucky outlook will
do.a groat deal toward rela;o~lng you and

CONVERSATION ..

503MIISL•Midtlt..rt.nWIII ,

'1bur 'lllrthcii\Y :

----~~~~~-·~~~
1

.

Saturday,

740-li82-31!M

Licensed Practical Nurses

Astro- ·
Graph

i ll Y.,, ;r ·,

Drapes. Sheers. Rod
Pocket Drapes,

l li &lt;'h&gt;c~n

~

f XJlf' l l['!ll'f'

nm

Noble Summi1 Rd.
Midcllepori. OH

ues w1th the heart king, thi higher of two
rRrnAinina r.P~tr1s, _::m r1 piRy.o; R third rnund _.
CElEBRITY CIPHER
to dislodge dummy's ace. West then gats
1n w1th his spade ace and cashes two
by Luis Campos
heart tricks for down one.
Celebr~ C•phet ayp!g.;,fams are r;realeJ lrom owlaloos by famiJIJs De":JCie oasl and o·esenl
Eaoo 1ener 1n Ihe c1~r stands lor ai'IOIIler
What if East could not be sure about the,
Today s clue. G equilJs 8
heart position? Here Is the 1,Quldeline:
Ignore the ace Hit is on the board. When
" VO NPTLKU KOIHR ST KMYO IRU
dummy has one lower honor, and third
hand holds the honor one _higher than
KTYO TLH ROMOP G TH N IN
dummy's, after dummy plays low, (nor·
mally) third hand saves t1is higher honor
T L H N 0 K Y 0 N B T H S P 0 N I X 0 T B A 0 I Z o·
when he can insert the eight or higher.
And when. as here, third hand's honor Is
IRU AHTOHONN ." . UIYMU FZZIKKLF
two hrgher than dummy's, (normally)
third hand saves tha1 honor when he can
PR EViOUS SOLUTION - 'Man will begin to recover the momenl he takes art
play the nine or higher. So East puts in
as seriously as physics, chemislry or moneY: · Ernsl Lei')'
his heart tO
·

•

Work . Rr::osirll"n li .11 1'. Co •T' Illf'rr lal
7·1[} 245 0·137

&amp; Bnndo · I
Froc [ sl r!'l ,llcs

Lin~n~l'd

740-949-3027

AA/EOE

helping you forget what ails you. You
need the menta l break
LIBRA (Sept. ' 23-0ct. 23) - Those with
whom you spend some time will have an
influence ovef your a11itude end outlook,
so sPend your day with optimistic types.
Don't pay heed to anyone whOis down in
tho mouth.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 24-Nav. 22)- Be carelui not to measure your worth by comparing your life to wHat is happening in
others'lr.,.es at this 11me. There are some
subtle changes happening inside you,
but thOy nrc normal.
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 23-Dec-: 21)·- You
might be asked to spend some priva te
t(me w1th someone who needS to get
thing s oH h1s or her chest. Tile closeness
you two enjoy will make it easter to find
tho anSwe rs.
CAPAICOAN (Doc . 22-Jan . 19) - You're
a good a.chi(Wer, but keep money out or
the pictur&amp; because It could cause you to
spend your time on things that only bring
material rewards, not the real joys ot tlle.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Truth
will make you see and real1le all the
good you're capable ot doing: However. it
can also cause you to \/lew yourself as
being Incomplete, wh1ch can bring you
down. Ignore the lal1er.
PISCES (Feb, 20-March 20)·- Although
you might recognize sorpe inadequacies
about yourself. don't let those influence
your feelings about your life . ,Win In the
tun wherever you find It and w1th whoever comes along .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll l9)- Your judgment In dealing with friends IS both accurate and lighthearted, so be the one to
offer suggestions to lhe group. You'll
know ju1t tHe rlghlthlngs to say that will
satllty everyone'll lnteretts.
TAURUS (Apfll 20-May :20) -Once you
sat your mind to something, outstanding
achle\lementa are palllbta. You wof\'t ba
unintplrect or too timid to try anything,
but you will, tn •II probabilitY, Piln 1ome·
thing qulta unuau•l.
GEMINI (May 21 •JUnl 20) - Yo~o~r beat
al11t 11 finding waya to uve or add to
your reaoun::e1 . You mlgt1t try 1 do·l1·
your.. lf proJ•at that the flm lly would
appractate and do lu•t 11 good •lob ••

SCRAMI£TS ANSWERS 711Ml8

Assign - Fully - Abhor - Redden· BY FRIENDS '
I'm always thankful when i cleWI up after a party. It means
I bJive been surrounded BY FRIENDS.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

%FALL~ FO~ lH~T Ol.lt
£VE.fiY TIME.!

I pr~IIIIIC:Inll ,

SOUP TO NUTZ

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-4 16- 1834

25+ years experienCe Free EstimQJes

Advertise
in this space· for
$64 per month
,.

I

•

• Room Addl11ons &amp;
Remodeling

Hill's Self
Storage

05 CBR 1000 RA, low m11es
"-"'- C~l!
- ~ ~"~
-·" flt:"
- 1068

10

oat:

CARPENTER
SERVICE

I

Mon
- . _,_0·

RV Service at Carmichael
Tmilers 740-446-3825
"il R\ J( I ...,

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
MidFirat Bank
Plaintiff
VI
Gortrude Flnlaw oka
Gtrtrucll M. Flnlaw
(deCIIeed), et al
~dllnto
,
CoM No. 08 CV 067
Unknown belra, the
clevi-s,
leg8tees,
amcutora. admlnletra, tort, and 111lgna of
Gertrude Flnlaw, and
the
unknown
guardians of minor
1ncUor
Incompetent
heirs ~ of
Gertrude
Flnlow, wilt talul notice
IIIII on Aprlt 18, 2008,
MldFirat Bank ftlad Ita
Complaint In the Court
of Common Pleas.
Mel;:: t;ounty, . Ohio,
CaM No. 08 CV 067.
Tho obloct ol and
demaftd for rallet In,
the Complaint Is to
foreclose tho lion of
plaintiffs
mortgage
recorded upon the real
Htate desc~bad below
ond In which plaintiff
altegn thafttoeforegotng delendant hal or
clolmo to have an Inter-

YOUNG 'S

79 Corvette T-Top, 350
erlgme. aulo trans. very
clean. 70,400 miles. 740388-0236

FORSAU:
2&amp;38A ap1s $385 and up, Approx. 900 sq.h Ideal for 855 New Holland Round "---ioii-iiiiiiiio_.l
olh
ce
or
retail
business.
Cebtral Air. W/D Hookup,
Baler $3500 255M-F Tractor 03 Kia Sedona. 6cyl: 58.500.
Tenant pays electnc EHO downtown Gallipolis. plenti- $6500. Call 367-7787
49,620 m1les call 304-675·
ful parking. 740-446·9209
2S50
Ellm View Apts. Garage lor rent at ttie corner EBY . INTEGRITY. KIEFER -::-:::-::-:~::-::---:

(304)882-3017

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

1r '

N. Jrd

BRIDGE

.

•

- ~ --

-~----------~----------~-~~--~----~~~- ·
NEA ·crossword P~zzle

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

�,.

Friday. July II. 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

#ON~-THE - H.IlZER

{

-

Middfe port "do01way to freedom"
to runaway slaves, Cl

'

Beating the rubber chicken blues, 01

,

It&gt; 11 you have a question or.a comment, write: NASCAR This Week , r:/o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053
,IJI Urnes Eastern
Sprtnt CUp
Uleloek.40Q,

6:30p.m., Saturday
rc.tlonwlde Sertn
DollarGeneral300,
7:30 p.m., Friday

e.

Sprint Cup
• Race: Lifelock.com 400
• ~here : Chicagotand Speed·
way, Joliet. Ill. (1.5 miles), 267
laps/ 400.5 miles.
• When: Saturday, July 12.
• Laot year's winner: Tony

IC=-"'11

... Stewart, Chevrolet.

'D'uek Sertes
Sui~ Fool Tough 225,
6:30p.m., July 19

tronic data. Busch's No. 18

was ahead when ~he yellow
nag waved. It was his sixth vic·

tory of the season and second
at a restrictor-plate track . The

• Race recorcl: Kevin Harvick.
Chav.viat. 136.832 111ph, juiy

point edge in the point stafldings. TnanKs to tne cnase for·
mat, the number isn't imi)Or·

iii

Uiit wnk: Kyle

Su~h

ltU

the Coke Zero 400 just tone
enough. On the back straight
:"!

to NASCAR"s review of etec· ,

• Qualifying rteord: Jimmie
Johnson. Chevrolet, 188.14 7
mph, July 8, 2005.
14, 2002.

"'Is there any misfortune that
hasn't visited Tony Stewart this
year. At Daytona, it wasn't a flat
tire or an empty gas tank. It was
the flu. We already knew Stewart could use some luck. Now
we know he could use some vi·
tamlns.
11&gt; J.J. Veley was able to relieve an
ailing Stewart (and finisl1 20th)
~use he failed to qualify tor
the third time in .fNe races.
Veley's results: DNQ, 40th, DNQ,
second, DNQ. The runner-up fin·
isl1 in New Hampshire sort of
sticks out, doesn't it?

out behin'd the leaders. Race
over. But who wOn? According

n.year·old Las Vegas. Nev.,
native has pulled out to a 182·

iani, but the SIX VICtOrieS are.
No one else has more than

three (EdWards). The Chase

of the final lap.- the ra ce was
already in overtime -Carl Ed-

standings will be set on the

wards' Ford ~as making a

regular season. Edwards fin.

charge alongside Busch's Toyota. Predictably, a crash broke

basis of victories during the

Nationwide

Craftsman Truck

Dollar General 400
• Where: Chicagotand
Speedway, Joliet. Ill. (1.5
miles). 200 taps/300 Miles
• When: Friday, July 11. ·
• Lall year's winner: Kevin .

• Race: Built Ford Tough
225
·
• Where: Kentucky Speed·
way. Sparta (1.5 mites), 150
taps/225 miles.
• When: Saturday, July 19.

Harvick., Chevrolet

• Laat year's winner: Mike ·

• Qualifying rocord: Ryan
Newman, Dodge. 186.438.
mph, Ju ly 9, 2005.

Skinner. Toyota.
• Qualifying record: Bill
L~ster, Toyota, 178.141

a Race:

• Race record: Kevin

] J .] -f

drove a Toyota to victory at
Daytona International
Speedway. It was Ha mlin's
third victory of the season.

e

Ohio \'alit'\ l 'uhlishiu~ Co.

. • Favre wants release
from Packers.
See Page Bl

BY BRIAN

.

leflCib of

. .
Mllei/IAP1: ..... 400 mt. •

No. 48

· ·

(

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v
LOWE'S CHEVROLET

E
R

s

OBITUARIES

u

.,. Mark Martin's firSt retirement

season was 2005. Now he's goIng to dnve full·time at Hendrick
Motorsports "one more time."
The plan is for Martin to split
time in 2010 with a young driv·
er, pemaps Brad Keselowski.
11&gt; Chip Ganassi pulled the plug

s

Gordon

Edwards

Jeff Gordon va.
C~~tl. ~ .

It looked as if Gordon might end
hJs dr~·

s~H

unti! his Chevy tangled ·

with Edwards"Ford at the white flag ·

on one of his thrAe te::~ms 1 !eav·

ish second, but Gordon's No. 24 slid
into the infield and wound up in 30th ·
place.

.,. Martin's departure leaves A.ric
Almirola with a full-time ride in

·

tittle
• Lanv' Foster Mi!ler
• Etlterson

.

INSIDE

gets·aggressive when the outcome
is in doubt. and Edwards is aggressive. He made·a quick move, Gordon .

thought there was room to block ...
ahd there wasn't."'
John Clark/NASCAR This Week

The first race of the 1963 sea·
son was actually contested on Nov.
4, 1962. which, oddly enough, was·
n't unusual in those days when seasons officially ran from November of

track's summertime race. D_ay-

one year to December of the next. It
was at Fairgrounds· Raceway, a half

tona 500 runner-up Kurt Busch
finished fourth. Kurt Busch has
never won at Daytona.
"' II seems more and mote likely
that Newman will leave Penske
Racing and that Stewart will
wind up acquiring at least a

share of ownership in the Haas
CNC team.
"' No one has pulled oft a Day·
tona season sweep since Bobby
· Allison In 1982.

"'WIM&gt;'IIIol

-Kyle
Busch, with
six IJictorles

already,
seems headed for double
digits .... Date
Earnhardt Jr.
moved up to
second In
the point standings.
"' WIM&gt;'I not - Jeff Burton's

last four finishes: 15, 13, 12,
37 .... KeVIn Harvick's last
four: 12, 30, 14, 12 . .

..

Last season, Jl11mle Johnson became NASCAR's first back·to-back Cup champion since his Hendrick Motorsports teammate, Jeff Gor·
don, In 1997-98. He's currently fifth In the points race;

• URG holds graduation
ceremony in China.
SeePageA2
· • Ohio leave~ million
:unused to feed needy
children. ·See Page A6

mile near Birmingham, Ala. , and the
winner was Jim Paschal in a Ply-

By normal standard~ Johnson faring well -... but he's not normal
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
By normal means of evaluation,
Jimmie Johnson is having a solid year.
. He is one of 10 drivers to have won
during the first half of the Sprint Cup
season ~nd .is in fifth place in the point
standings.
But, by the measure of Johnson's
success in 2006-07, he's having an off
year. Johnson became NASCAR's first
back-to-hack Cup champion since his
Hendrick Motorsports teammate, Jeff
Gordon, in 1997·98.
"I think hard work keeps you in the
game, said Johnson, "but there cer·
tainly are races where good luck sets
you apart.
"Certainly luck is a part of it. ... (It)
sets you apart on those few times a
year where it comes into play and you
need it."
Johnson, 32, won at Phoenix in the

season's eigbth race. He has four top·
10 finishes in the past six races,
though he could managed only 23rd in
the Coke Zero 400 at Daytona.
The full implementation of generic
cars has contributed to Johnson's ·
struggles this year.
"There's a lot we need to learn with
this car," he said. "I think the No . 48
· team itself is an example of how
things can change. We were success·
fullast year. We came into this ·year
on the big tracks and we've struggled.
We've made progress with this car on
the big tracks ... but I think everyone
has. And as we come back a second
time, I'm hopeful that the !.S-mile
stuff improves."
The El Cajon, Calif., native first
made a mark racing off-road vehicles
across desert courses. His back·
ground is similar to that of NASCAR
drivers Robby Gordon and Casey
Mears, though Johnson moved direct·

ly from off-road to stock-car racing
while the other two raced Indy cars
before migrating to stock cars.
. Like many others, Johnson is con·
cerned about the effect of a declining
national economy on the health of auto
racing.
"I hope the economy hits bottom
and turns around and comes back, and
we're able to get the attendance and
souvenir sales and all. the things that
make our sport thrive, said Johnson.
"When I think about that, I also think
about the sponsors who are involved
and how the economy needs to turn
around to help them out.
"When you're in a bad economy, it's
just tough on all the sponsors, and our
sport is driven by sponsors. So we're
fighting some elements as a sport that
are out of our control."

React more from Monte Dutton at
www.gastongazette.com

mOuth. Another Plymouth driver,
Richard Petty, finished second . fol·
towed byBuck Baker, Jimmy Pardue
and Daret Dieringer. The man who

WEATIIER

would win the champio!lShip, Joe

Weatherly, finished eighth in, yes,
car No.8.

c

J ,
rd)\!.Etr.;J

J 0 D ;~ -JD;_~j

C !ErfS~J fWJM rJOa

How about giving the
Truck drlveri their due
Ienjoy (NTW) in our newspaper
and look forward to reading it every
week but am very disappointed that
you never have anything about the
drivers In (the Craftsman Truc kSeries). Many of us are dedicated fans
of these drivers and would like you

to Include themin your articles, too.
I've heard ttie announcers ofihe
Truck Series say many times that

· some olthe best racing is in trucks.
and definitelyagree ....
Sherry Johnsan
Ludington: Mich.

Details on Page AS

INDEX
4 SECTIONS -

24 PAGES

A:3

Around Town

1

We also enjoy watching truck
races. If's hard to profile all .lhe Sprint
Cup drivers during the course of the
year, but we usually profile the aria·
sjona/ driver in both Nationwide and

Truck series at some point during the
year. We'll keep your remarks In mind.

Celebrations

C4
D Section

Classifieds
Comics

insert

A4

· Editorials
Movies

C6

Obituaries

As

Sports

B Section

Weather

A6

© 2008 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

· - , 1 / z.-_,. ·
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St."
Pomeroy, OH
(740) 992~2155

ALJ T

[JIV'I[JT~VF"

llA88JC CAt Rts'I'ORAftON 4 I'IIJI'l'S

Me. JTt;~ ~ 11«4

assis t Meig s County in its · the region's povert y ralc
lease/p urchase agreement ha s heen r 111 in h ~d!" { f!·~ ~~~
for eq ut pment for its new , 31 perce nt to 13 perce nt) .
E-9 11 sys tem, to be opera- the in fan t· morta li ty rate'
tiona l by the ·end of this ha s been reduced bv two ·
year.
thirds am! the percentage
Voi no vich said he is a of adu lt s with hi 2h sc hool
long-time supporter ·of the education has incl·e ased by
ARC and last year intr.o- over 70 percent.
duced vit al legi slation
During his first term in
reau tho rizing the commis- the Senate. Sen. Voin'ovich
sio n at $510.9 million auth ored the Appalachian
over five years. His pro- Regional
Developmen l
posed legislation create s Act of 2002 (5 . 1206 ).
the designation of eco- which was signed by the
nomically '.'at risk"' coun- pre sident on March 12.
ties and. provides · an 2002 . The bill reau th o·
ap propriate federal match- rized the econo mic develing rate for ARC -funded
projects in those co unti es.
Please see ARC. A5
Since ARC's inception ,

Bv BETH SERGENT

.,. Denny Hamlin's Nationwide Se-

ries victory was Joe Gibbs Rae·
lng's 100th in' three national ·
touring series. Kyle Busch's Cup
victory was No. 101 overall and
No. '65 in Cup.
11&gt; DB)tOna 500 winner Ryan Newman placed 36th in the Coke
Zero 400. NeYiman has never
finished better than 11th in the

Committee Friday. The .Voinovich said.
b!!! im·lu&lt;ies a $ 12 mi llion
"These funds are essenincrease over 2008 leveis tiai ii' we are going to
and a $20 million increas·e build upon the already
over the president 's 2009 treme ndous successes in
funding request.
Ohio and the other twelve
Voinovich said he led a . Appalachian stales ."
letter to the Energy and
ARC plays a key role in
Water
Apprnprialions fostering economic develSubcomm ittee's chai rman opment and improving
and ranking member earli- quality of life for the 23
er thi s year asking for $85 million people who live
million fund ing leveL
and work in Appalachia.
"Full fundin g of ARC is The ARC has funded a
a top prioriiy for me. I am number of local · projects
very pleased that my col- in Mei gs County, includleagues understand the ing funding for equipme nt
vital role ARC 'plays in for the new Federally
helping the Appalachian Qua li fied Health Care
reg iOn fully rea li ze its clin ic in Pomeroy. ARC
economic
potential," funds are also expec ted to

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

NASCAR This Waek's Monla
Dutton gives his take: "'Neither driv·
er saemed to angry about it, though
Gordon was understandably dis·
mayed by a really bad break. Raciog .

Dale Earnhardt Inc.'s No. 8
Chevrolet next year. Almirola
has been Martin's designated
driver and finished e1ghlh at
Bristol on March 16.
I&gt; Positions IH2 in the Sprint Cup
standings are separated by 32
points. lWelflh and 13th (Kevin
Harvick)are separated by two.

$1. 5 11 • Vol. 4:! , No. 25

Racine
rgplacing
water Unes

Page AS
• Sammy Lee Franks
• Willard Franklin Boyer

in Daytona. Edwards went on to fin- .

ing Indianapolis 500 winner and
IRL champion Dario Franchitti
without a Sprint Cup nde.

r.mA

POMEROY- A federal
program providing assistance to pu blic works projects i_n Appalachian .communtttes mcludmg Metgs
and Gallia counties has
been re-authorized.
The
U.S.
Senate'&gt;
Energy
and
Water
Development
Appropriations
bill
includes $85 million for
the Appalachian Regional
Comm ission .. U.S. Senator
George Voit\ovich, ROhio, said the funding was
passed out of the Senate
Appropriations

Last race: Ron Hornaday
drove a Chevrolet to victory
at Memphis Moto rsports
BanklrCln
· m"al

J. REED

BREED@MYDA ILYSE NTINEL

1

Pari&lt;, his third of the season
to date.

l'mm·t·o~ • Middkpot1 • (;allipolis • .lui~ t;l. :woX

ARC re-authorized with $85 million appropriation

SPORTS

mph , Ju!y 9. 2005 .

1 i"? o-.? r -f I Jr- 1 Jf
r.] __.
..:::.J
'..J
~ . ~J .r

SPRINT CuP

JIMMIE JOHNSON

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

vick. Chevrolet. 135.661
• Race rocord: Mike Bliss,
· mph, July14, 2007 .
. Chevrol~t , 143.515 mp~.
•Lui week: Denny Hamlin July 13, 200i

ished second, Matt Kenseth
third and Kurt Busch fourth.

(

Hr~r-

tme, ..

u

'

Let's Go Racin!!

. RACINE
Racine
Village Council recently
held the second public hearing on a water !me replacement project which is estimated to cost $695,500.
Financ ing, which is the
key to the project moving
forward ; was discussed by
Bob Allen of Ohio Rural
Community
Assistance
Program and that financing
breaks down as follow s:
The village ha~ applied for a
$347 ,750
Community
Development Block Grant
Ohio
through
the
Department
of ·
Development; the village is
. in the . pre -application
process for a $250,000 grant
from the Appalachian
Regional Commission ; the
village has submitted a low
interest loan application to
the
Ohio
Water
Development Authority for
$97,750.
.
The budget for the project
breaks down as follows:
Budget, $476,940; contin'
gency, $48,060; legal ,
accounting, permits, engineering, $160,500; CDBG
administration, $10,000.
Allen said the anticipated
grant award would be
September with bid adver.
tisement
po ssi bly
in
October and ·the. bid award
and construction star! date ·
in November. ·
The project will replace
water Jines within the cor. porations limits from Main
Street to Fifth Street to the
corporation limits; Vine
Street from Fifth Street to
the dead end: Fifth Street
from Main Street to Vine
Street; Sixlh Street from
Vine Street to Beegle's on
Sixth S!'reet; Broadway
from Mai n Street to the
dead end; Cherry Street
from Broadway .to the dead
end.
· ·
After the public meeting,
Racine Village Council
adjourned into regular session and the following
David Harris, photo
action was taken: .
Flames shooting high into the sky was the scene between
Approved a bid for Cole and Walnut Streets in Middleport early Saturday
Please see Rilclne, AS
morning .

Earlv morning fire
damages .properties
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HO.EFLICH@MVDAILYSENTINEL .COM

'
MIDDt;E"PORT - One two-fomil y apartmCJll
house
burned to the ground, while ,anot her apartment hot1se
and two one-family homes were heavily damaged in a
fire in Middleport earl y Saturday morning. All w~re
frame struc tures.
The Middleport Fire Department was called al 12:3 1
a.m. and was later joined by firemen and truck s from
Pomeroy. Rutl and, Mason and Syracuse. At 4 a.m. some
firemen were sti ll on the scene .
Mayor Mike Gerlach who was at the site Saturday
morning said that because of some line damage . tele·
phone serv ice was out in most parts uf the vill age. He
said he was advised that it woufd probably take 1wo
days to get the repairs made and service restored.
Another person advised that in the area betwee n Co le
and Walnut Streets and along North Third Street many
reside nt s were also without electri c service.
The names of the ow ners of the two apartment bui ldings and one of the houses have .not been re leased. The
house facing North Third Avenue which has extensive
damage to the back section is owned by Wayne Neff.
The Stat~ Fire Marshall was ·on the sce ne Saturday
and the fire remain s under investi gation .

'

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Now 1elllng:
• Ford a. Motorcratt Parts
' Englnea, Transfer Caaeil &amp; Transmissions.
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·

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HOLZER·CLINIC

08.()1·18S2T
'

WHERE GREAT
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HAPPENING!!

"..

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"'

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