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•

.·.Page B6- The Daily
' Sentinel

Thwsday. October 2; 2008

www.mydailysentioel.com

Palin, Bideit spar on
Iraq, economic crisis, A3

Nazarene Day, A2

•

There "IS" Such A Thing As
flFree Lunch!

•

Entl!r Here For A

Sodexo Dinning
Services

$30 Gift Certificate

Rio Gr1111de'• eampui In F. van

To One Of These Great Restaura11ts
. Drawing Each Week! ·

~led 1111

The \lnlvenolty of

and Elizabeth J)avlll!nlvmlty
Center Invites you to our
Sunday brunch buffet. We
· havt many ltemM to ehllO!ie·from
lncludtn~r: made to order
omelet., putricit, qJad har,
b~ktast and luneh, destrt,
· lee cream bar, aoup, pizza,
and much mare.

Printed on IOU%
Recyded Newsprint

.•

Name:·----~------------------/~

I •

a

DV .

SPORTS

'' ~
~ .~beals Bud&lt;eyes .
in four; See Page Bl

Ph~na#__~~~~--~----------MaU .Io: ·Free Lunch
GalHpolls Dally Tribune
1125 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, Off 45631
,,

BY BAlAN

J.

REED

BR~OMYDAILYSENTINEI..COM

POMEROY -

Funds

from ·a state grant will help
protect sheriff's deputies on

•

the· road in rural Meigs
Coljllty, improving their
oormnunications with the dispaJch desk and other officeiS.
1be new system is like
that used by Ohio State
Highway Patrol, and is
expected to serve the sheriff's deJ!rtment for 20 years.
Slienff Robert Beegle

Our brunch houl'!i are
11 a.m. to I p.m.

Bring your famlly and join us.
'

$7.95 for Rdulls and we otTer
diMCounted rates for children.

received a $93.500 grant , Beegle said, will allow offi- .
Commul)ity
Oriented cers to activate repeaters ,
Policing Servi~s grant to allowing . officers ·to compurchasetheradiosandother municate . with the office
equipment, He discussed lhe dispatcher while out of the
new grant with County vehicle.
Commissioners
during
"When officers are in a
Thursday's regular meeting. house out in .the county,
B~gle will purchase 13 they cannot directly talk to
MARC system radios and the office," Beegle told ·
13 mobile repeaters for commissioners, "This will
department cruisers, a base enable ·us to communicate
station, two handheld radios like the State Patrol: handand reprogramming for . held to repeater to cruiser to
existing handheld radios. mobile in cruiser to the
Reprogrl!ffiming
them, . sheriff's office,"

-Ohio MARC Director
Darryl AndersQn will assist
Beegle in implementing the
system.
·
.
The ·current system will
remain in cruisers to allow
deputies contact with other
local departments, Beegle
said, but the new system
will even allow deputies to
contact other sheriff's
offices across the state.
Deputies can now only com·
municate in Meigs County.
The grant program was
only available to certain

·Southern Homecoining tonight .

departme~lls

in the state. .
Commtsstoners autho- ·
rized a pavement marking
project and agreed to cooperate in its completion
through' federal aid funds:
Engineer Eugene Triplett
was authorized to execute
contracts for the projects.
Commissioners also:
• Approved payment of
bills, in the amount of
$60,150.35 .
• Approved an animal
, daim of $150 for Gordon
Winebrenner, Racine.

Local churches
celebrate ,World
Communion Sunday
this .weekend
STAFF. REPORT
NEWSO MY.OAILYSENTINEL.COM

0BmJARIFS

..· PageA3

· • Mary Mahan, 84
•

) •"J.;

.

~... ._...;,.·~·-·.

•

228 W Main, Pomeroy .
992-5432

'

~§m~
: •.· fiSh "¥ lund-raiser
slated at W~kesville.

. S&amp;i Paae A2

• Judge rejects Ohio
killer's obesity claim.

There UJSV Such A Thing As
A Free Lunch!
,

Enter Here For A

Tlumk You

$30 Gift Certificate

to Our Many
Customers
JOYearsin

To.One (Jf These Great Restaurants

Gallipoli.'&gt;.

Drawing Each Week!

SeePageA3
• Fools rush in.
See Page A6
, • A Hunger For More.
.; See Page A6
i • Memories of school
; days. See Page A7
: •. PreaChing clinic
: coining to region.
: See Page A7
: • Going in with no
!
~ fear. See Page A7
;

.
WEATIIER
...
,.'
••
' I

Name: _____________,_____________

,.
'

I

Phone#__~----------------~--­
Mail .to: Free Lunch
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
825 3rd Ave. Gallipolis, OH 45~31

Detalll

on ..... A2

.a SEC11CINS -

16 PAGES

POMEROY ~ On the first
·sunday · in October, this Sunday.
churches from around the world.
including those in Pomeroy, will
celebrate World Communion
Sunday and the sacrament that
Jesus has given to all his followers
to remember him and his sacrifice
on the cross for all people.
Churches in the Pomeroy area have
been coming together for six or seven
years · to celebrate their unity in
Christ. This Sunday the churches will
be canceling nonnal morning wor- .
ship services Wld instead will worship
'togethet atlllt rlverfrom am!llilthe1
ater, and aecording to P.astor Brian
Dunham of Pomeroy/Enterprise
United Methodist
Church ,
will"enjoy God's creation and the
beauty he ·brings when 'God's people
live together in unity' (Psalm 133: 1)."
.Coffee and donuts will be available at 10:30 a.m. at the riverfront,
followed by worship at 11 a.m. The
,
~h~ienl~h•~o• churches participating this year are
First Baptist Church of Pomeror,
The SOuthern Tornadoes will celebrate homecoming festivities when a new homecoming queen is crowned half· Grace
Episcopal, St. Paul s
time during tonight's home football game·against the Miller Falcons. Homecoming queen candidates, in front, and Lutheran, Trinity Congregational,
their escorts, in back, are from left, Metri Collins, daughter of Beverly Collins with esco_rt Jordan Pickens, son of &amp;lterprise/Pomeroy
United .
Eber Pickens Jr. and Velessa Hunnel; Tiffanie Deem, daughter of Tim and Stephanie Deem, with escort Kyle Methodist, and Common Grounds .
Goode, son of Susan Goode and~J!Iff Hayes; Chelsea Pape, daughter of Allen and Kelly Pape an~ Carol Pape, Special music will be shared by
with escort Chris Holter, son of Stanley Holter and Tanya Holter; Emma Hunter, daughter of Doug and Tonja Dennis Moore, and a combined
Hunter, with escort Weston Roberts, son of Mike and Rhonda Roberts; Samantha Patterson, daughter of Jim choir from the churches, under the
Pl;ltterson and Barb Johnson, with escort JD Whittington, son of Melissa Downing and Dean Whittington; and direction of Dixie Sayre, will share
Rashell Boso, daughter ofTom Boso and Teresa Barber, with escort Bryan Harris, son of Paul and Kristine Harris. a rendition of "This Little Light of
Mille." Rev. Leslie Flemming from
Grace Episcopal. wi[l bring the
morning message, and everyone
Also pictured (front row) crown will be invited to share in open
communion with the option oJ
bearer Matthew Hall, son of
grape juice or wine. In case of
James and Tracy Hall, and
flower girl Abigail Riser, daugh· inclement weather, the sefVice will
be held at Trinity Congregational
tar of James and Melissa
Church.
,
Riser. Second row (from
Dunham
added,
"even
though
ow:
left) Ethan Martin, freshman ·
traditions are different, the richness
escort, son of Jeff and Lou
of
those traditions can more fully
Martin, Cyle ·Rees, junior
· speak to ·our experience in follow·
escort, son of Jay and Tina
ing Christ as we come together in
Rees, Cody Tucker,
him . We celebrate our diversity,
sophomore escort, son of
made in God's image but looking
· Rusty and Connie Tucker. Third and
acting in many different ways
row (from left) Katelyn Hill,
as parts of the body of Christ,"
·
freshman attendant, daughter
The churches invite anyone who
of Jarrod and Leigh Hill,
desires to come together ,in this
·ereanna Taylor, junior allen·
spirit of worship, to come and enjoy
dant, daughter of Greg .and
the Lord's presence. As Dunham
Patty Taylor, Tiffany Cundiff,
said, the day is about churches eel- .
sophomore attendant, daughter ebrating the unity they have· in
of David and Karen Cundiff.
Christ as they recognize there i&amp;
. "one Lord, one faith, one baptism:•
(Ephesians 4:5). ·

'

.

Annie's
Mailbox
,
Puckeye Edition
'Calendars ·
'
.
.
PJ,&amp;ssifieds
'
Comics
·
,.

All

crediJ cards accepted

A2

Walk to raise awareness
'!bout Down Syndrome·

Finding little resources in
Southeastern Ohio tO help ·
their family understand ju~t
POMEROY - Many what Gianna was up against,
people have heard the term the two decided to educate ·
88 Down Syndrome but don't themselves and planned to
know exactly what it means raise as much local aware·
A3 for those living with the ness about Down Syndrome
'
B Section birth defect which is what a as possible. ·
~ports
'A2 special event hopes to
Enter
the , .Down
change
this
Sunday
on
the
"Syndrome
Assoc1at10n
of
:Weather
Pomeroy Parking Lot.
• Sout~eastern · .
. Oh1o
C oool Ohio Volley Publlohlna co.
In 2007, Dave and Lisa (DS~SSO) wh1ch wtll ben·
Averion of Pomeroy wei- efif"from the walk to rruse
comed the birth of daughter a~areness th1s weekend _and
Gianna who was diagnosed will k~p dollars raised
• with Down Syndrome.
PleaH- Wille. AJ

Editorials
'
:Faith
• Values
•
Movies
~AS CAR
Obituaries
'
2208 ..Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant,WV
304-675-5427

AS

.,

BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTOMYCAII.YSENTINEL.COM

•

"(From left) "
Brianne Crisp,
Gianna Averlon ,
and Garrett
Howard are all :
local faces of :
those living with ..
Down Syndrome:
. and will be hop· :
lng to raise
awareness
.
about their lives·.
and the lives- of &gt;
others during a ';
Down Syndrome:
. Awareness Walk·
· on Sunday in th&amp;
Pomeroy
·
Parking Lot
Stall photo

'

�--

- -- .. . . ,

'
•
'

the Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

BYTHEBEND

FJi¥y, Odober 3, 2008

Frlday,~ober3,2oo8

The 'Daily Sentinel• Pa&amp;e..\3

www.mydailysentinel.com

, Qbi~

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
BY J111 Ku-EHN

Time to block out
crazy phone calls
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

.

Dear Annie: For at least
five years, my mother-inlaw has been receiving
nasty haras~ing telephone
calls from my sister-in-law,
"Cruella." These call6 usuaJly perclin to Cruel! a's distoned belief that Mom
doesn't accept her as a war· ·
thy daughter-in-law.
.
Cmella
misconstrues
innocuous comment&gt; a., c.:riticisms. S.hc refuses to see a
counsdor, believing that the
problem isn't hers . She also
becomes quite angry and
threatening to anyone who
sug$ests she needs help.
Durmg one of her emotional
fants, Cruella actuall y
wished that my mother-inlaw would die . Cruel! a·,
husband briefly saw a counselor, but found the se;sions
(0 be ineffective. He deals
with his domestic strife by
getting drunk.
, My mother-in-law is 89
years old. and these telephone calls.upsel her greatly. causing her to break into
tears and sending her blood
pressure skvrocketing. The
rest of the family feel helpless to stop the harassmem.
l don't want Cruel Ia to push
my mother-in-.Jaw iNa an
early grave. Is there any
way to protect an elderly
)"oman from being victimlzed by a vicious shrew' :...
Desperate for Help ·
Dear Desperate: Cruella
sounds mentally ill, and her
husband is a coward for hidiJig behind a boule iiistead
of doing what's right for
both his wife and his mother. Mom can talk to the
police about the harassment
and find out if a restraining
order applies. She also can
discuss the problem with
~omeone at the phone company to see whether
Cruel!&amp; 's calls could be
!&gt;locked or intercepted.
·. Dear Annie: I am a 16year-old girl and have been
dating the love of my life
for over a year. Even before
we started dating, we con~idered
ourselves best
friends .
About two months ago,
we decided to lose our virginity and I have no regrets.
My question is, how do I ·
ask my mom to get me birth
control-? We only used a
condom, and I want to be
safer the next time.
I don't want my parents.
thinking I'm a skank or
s-omething ..but I'd also prefer not to ~et birth control
behind thetr backs. Please
help. - Needing EKtra
Protection
·_Dear Needing: Your par~nts may alre'ady have an

inkling that you are having
sex, and we agree it should" 't be a secret from them .
Find a quiet, private time to
talk to your mother. Explain ·
that you and your boyfriend
are in a committed relationship and have already taken
the next step. Tell her you
want to be responsible, ·and
ask her to make an appoimment for you ·to see a gynecologist. Howeve.r disappointed she may be, Mom
wi II want you to be healthy
and safe.. We hope you. will
keep in mind that at 16, love
dQ\!sn 't always last as long
as you assume it will. Sex
can be emotionally binding,
especially · for girls, so
please discuss all the repercussions with your mom.
She can help you make the
best choices.
Dear Annie: You recently
printed a letter .from
"Worried in Hawaii ," whose
mother can no longer live
alone, but isn't prepared to
live anywhere else, either.
I would like to make your
readers aware of the services a geriatric care manager can provide in helping ·
families navigate care for
their aging relatives. A geriatric . care manager (GCM)
is a professional with specialized . knowledge and
expertise in senior care
issues. Ideally, a GCM
holds an advanced degree in
nursing, gerontology, social
work. psychology or arelated health and human services field . GCMs.will eval uate your situation, identify
solutions and work with you
to design a plan for maximizing . your elder's independence and well-being.
More information on the
services can be found on the
national "GCM website a(
caremanager.org.
- .
Barbara Kolonay, RN,
BSN,
MS,
CCM,
Pittsburgh
Dear Barbara ·Kolonay:
Thank you. for the detailed .
information . We have , in
fact. recommended geriatric
care managers many times
in this space and are always
happy to do so again for
those readers who can
afford the services.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy MitciJ.ell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Lander!·
column. Please e-mail your
qu11stions to anniesmail-.
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box ll8190, Chicago, IL
60611, To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Crealors SyndicaJe writers
a'nd cartoonists, visit tire
Creators Syndicate Web
page al www.creators.com.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~~ary Mahan, 84, of Gallipolis, passed away Wednesday. .ST.
LOUIS
I, 2008, at the Holzer Senior Care Center.
Rerublican vice . presiden-

; She was born Marcb 10, 1924, in Gama County, daugb!er.of the late Steve and Hazel Womeldorff Burlile.
· Mary was married to Frank N. Mahan, and he preceded
• ·
. .
, ller in death on M,ay 15, 2007.
; She was a homemaker, a melt!ber of Calvary Baptist
Church and a member of Eastern Star in Vinton.
t Sh.e i~ survived by a daughter; Judy· Beckley of
[lalhpohs; three sons, Steve (Donna) Mahan of Alexandria,
~a., .and. Jerry Mahan and Scott (Becky) Maltj!p; both of
, Galhpolis; three granddaughters, Megan Mahan ,. Heather
M~ ~d Sara Beckley; a sister-in-law. Wanda Burlile of
Oalhpohs; se~eral nieces and nephews; and a host of
·
fnends at Gallia Manor.
I In addition to her parents and husband, Frank Mahan, she
· ._,as preceded in death by her brother. John Burlile .
' Services will be I p.m . Saturday. Oct. 4. 2008, at the
. ~ill is F~nenl;l Home, with the Rev..Junior Preston officiatme. Burial will follow at Calvary Cemetery in Rio Grande.
fnends may call at the funeral home on Saturday from II
~.m. to I p.m., prior to the funeral.
..
~ Her nephews will se_ry.e as pallbearers.
1 Please v1s1t www.wtlhsfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
eondolences.

•

·• .
'·:

.

'Rama Lama' writer
lGeorge 'Wydell' Jones dies
'

I

Local Stocks
{NYSE) - 36.67
Akzo {NASDAQ) - 47.60
,_,ahland Inc. (NYSE) - 27.30
Big lots {NYSE)- 27.t9
!Job l:vans (NASDAQ) j!5.73
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 28.50
Century Aluminum (NA50AQ)- 22.55
j:hamplon {NASDAQ) - 3.94
j:hannlng Sh~s (NASDAQ)
~EP

•.

..!.. 4.68

City Holding (NASDAQ) .1.86
.

i:outna (NYSE) - 44.69
PuPont {NYSE) - 38.79
US Bank (NYSE) - 38.31
Pannell (NYSE) - 16.28
General Electric {NYSE) ~.15
.
flarley•Oavldson {NYSE) 83.92
.
:Jp Morgan {NYSE) - 49.85
!(roger (NYSE) - 27.78
'Limited Brands {NYSE) '6.09

'

tlorfolk Southern {NYSE) ••
•

.

'~ YOUNGSTOWN

(AP)

~ George "Wydell" Jones,

~ho wrote the. doo-wop hit
~Rama Lama Ding Dong"

Fisb·fry fund-raiser ·slated· ~t Wilkesville·
WILKESVILLE -A fish
fry dinner will be held at the
Community ·
Wilkesville
Cenret on Saturday from
noon to 4 p.m. All proceeds
from the dinner w~ll go
towar?s a payment on the
new ftre truck..
The menu will consist of
fish dinners , which include
two pieces of fish, cole
slaw, potato . salad, baked

beans, a slice of bread and donation~ toward~ the
your choice of coffe~. tea, Wilkesville ' Township
and lemonade. There will VQiunteet ·
· · F!re
also be hot dogs, sloppy Dep.artment's new. fue
joes. fish sandwiches, truck, llllhieh,arrlved at .the
desserts, po.p. ~nd water. . . Department, ' in ·,January
The public tS encouraged . 2007, :, .· , . · . · .
to come out .md support .the
Th~ W!lli:esvllle :rown,lhi,l?
Wilkesv i)ie
Township Volunteer '
Fireman s
Volunteer
Fireman's . Association Inc. is an· orgaAssociation Inc. The associ- ni'i:ation fanned by tile fireation will be accepting fighters ana their wives, to

Community Calendar .

and performed it as a memLer of the Edsels, has died
Jfter battling cancer.
: Jones, who was 71, 'died
fl home Saturday, according
lo his son, Steffan Jones.
' "Rama Lama" peaked at
No. 21 .on the Billboard Hot
· WO chart in 1961. The
1'oungstown, Ohio-based
l!((sels also included Jimmy
Reynolds, Harry Green,
Marshall Sewell and Larry.
Green.
·
: During their heyday, the
Edsels performed at the
· Apollo Theater in New York
and appeared on "American

.

Ban!lstand ."
Jones . was born in
Richmond, Va., and as a
child
moved
to
Youngstown, · where his
father worked in a steel
mill. After high school.
Jones joined the Air Force,
l"here he sang in a vocal
group with other servicemen and wrote "Rama
Lama."
Jones is survived' by his
wife, six children, 16 grandchildren and 17 greatgrandchildren.
A funeral home said services would be Saturday at
Shiloh Baptist Church in
nearby Campbell, Ohio .
with mterment at the Tod
Homestead Cemetery.

help provide services to ·the
Wilkesville Volunteer Fin::
Depanment. It is a 50l(c)}
organization, so any dona~
tion made is tax deductible.:
To make a donation, make:
your check paya,ble . to~
Wilkesville. Volllllteer 'firei
Fireman's Association, Inc:
P.O. Box 180, Wilkesvillej
Ohio 45695, c/o Don
Newsom, treasurer.
'

..,

-------------------------------~·~
· --------------~------------------------------~'

.

7
p.m.;
ular meeting. Refreshments.
POMEROY
- The Wednesday,
Wallaces will be in con- Middleport First Baptis!
Bring pie or ice cream.
cen at 7 p.m., Bradford Church. Message by Rev:
TUesday, Oct. 7
Monday, Oct. 6
Church of Christ, 3820 Bob Thompson. Special
POMEROY
~ Meigs
RUTLAND - Regular
music: Truly Saved TriQ
BradbUrJ Rd.
Hi~h
School
Band
meeting
of
Rutland
POMEROY
Sunday;
church musicians
Township Trustees, 5 p.m., · Boosters, 6 p.l)l., bandroom, Homecoming at the South Monday; Eanhen Vessels
all band parents are urged to
Rutland Fire Station.
Elam ·
attend
to discuss and plan to Bethel Community Church Tuesday i Keith
LETART FALLS
on
Silver
Ridge
across
from
Wednesday.
,
Letart Township Trustees. 5 meet the financial needs of Eastern schools. Sunday
Tuesday, Oct. 7
the band.
p.m .. office building.
school at 9 a.m., worship
POMEROY - Revi~al
MIDDLEPORT
SYRACUSE - Sutton
service, 10 a.m., dinner at begins at Calvary Pilgrim
Tov. n' hip Trustees, 7 p.m. , Middleport Masonic Lodge 12 noon . The afternoon ser- Chapel, through Sunday, 7
#363 meets at Middlepon·
Syracuse Village Hall.
Ma,onic Temple. All mem- vice will begln at 1:30p.m. p.m. Ja!JleS Southerland
Tuesday, Oct.?
with special music Lisa and speaker,
and
special
ALFRED
- Orange be[s and Masons invited. Jerry Queen, Tommy Syocc, smging. Questions to Pastor
Township Trustees regular Refreshments at 6:30 p.m .. and local singers. Pastor Charles McKenzie, 992"
meeting , 7:30p.m., home of Lodge at 7:30.
·Linda bamewood invites 2952.
Wednesday, Oct. 8
Fiscal Officer Osie Follrod.
the public.
HARRISONVILLE ·Thursday, Oct. 9
POMEROY . · - World
matrons
of
POMEROY . - Meigs Past
Communion .Sunday serSaturday night...Mostly County
Commissioners Hurrisonville Order of vices, II a.m .. Pomeroy
Saturday, Qct. 4
clear., Lows in the upper meet at II a.m .. due to Eustcrn Star· Chapter 255, Amphitheater, celebrated by
12:30
p.m.,
Wild·
Horse
.
RACINE - The John R.
40s.
Nonheast
winds scheduling conflict . ··
Pomeroy and Enterprise Dill
Cafe.
reunion will be 'held a1
around 5 mph.
United Methodi.t. First the home
TUesday,
Oct.
!I
of Howard and
Sunday
through
Baptist Church of Pomeroy, Sally Ervin, 29753 0~
CHESTER
Shade
Wednesday.. .Mostly clear.
River Lodge 453, regular St. Paul's Lutheran, Grace Grove Road, Racine. The
Highs in the upper 70s .
'.
Trinity
stated meeting, 7 p.m. Episcopal,
meal
will
be
at
S
p.m.
Take
Lows around 50.
Congregational, Common
Refreshments follow.
Wednesday night ...Panl y
Saturday, Oct. 4
Grounds Churches. ln case a covered dish. All relatives
cloudy. Lows in the lower
SALEM CENTER
of rain. the event will be and friends welcome.
50s.
·
Star Grange #778 and Star
held at Trinity Congregation
'
Thursday...Panly sunny. Junior Grange #878 meet in
Church.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Saturday; Oct. 4 · .
POMEROY -;- Outdoor
regular session, with a ·
Friday, Oct. 3
RACINE - Men's prayer celebration of Blessing of
pdtluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
breakfast
of
'
Southern
th~
Animals,
2
p.m.,
Grace
POMEROY
- Coins aJJd
followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m . Final plans for chicken Charge. United Methodist Epi&amp;~opal . Church, with the old photo collection of
barbecue and meet the can- Church, 8 a.m., Bethany Rev. Leslie Aemming. All Bob Graham will be on dis:
'are welcome with their pets. play in the lobby of Farme~
didates to be held on United Methodist Church.
POINT ROCK - Point Bank from 8:30 to 3 ~.m\
Sunday, Oct. 5
56.64
October 5 will be made.
HaM LOCK GROVE - 1 Rock . Church of the for t.he ~ublic to VIew.
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
Monday, Oct. -6
{NASDAQ) - 2t.20
. POMEROY
- Meigs Homecoming at Hemlock Nazatene, Ohio 689. will Graham Will be displaying a
BBT (NYSE) - 37.55
·County Cancer Initiative, Grove : christian Church. celebrate IOOth anniversary 1959 picture puzzle of a
Peeples (NASDAQ) - 22.19' regular . meeting, n·oon, Worship at 9:30a.m .• dinner of founding of the Church Pomeroy scene.
Pepsico (NYSE) - 70.91
Saturday, Oct. 4
. Meigs County Health at Grange Hall at 12:30 p.m . . of the Nazarene. Rev. Olan
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.19
Afternoon
program
at
2
Harvey
to
speak,
10
a.m.
POMEROY
- MulbelTJI
Department.
Rockwt!ll (NYSE) - 33.69
Community
Center,
6:30
Racine p.m. will feature Forgiven Dinner following.
RACINE
Rocky BO!Jis {NASDAQ) p.m., bluegrass gospel
MIDDLEPORT
Chapter 134, . Order · of Again Trio, with other read3.24
music.
through
ings
and
m~sic.
Reviv
al
Eastem Star, 7:30 p.m., regRoyal Dutch Shell -.. 55.25
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) •
87.61
•
Wai·Mart {NYSE) - 58.85
Taking Applications
Wendy's (NYSI!) - 4.71
WesBanco (NYSE) .- 25.25
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.78
HUD Subsidized
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes
Efflclency/1 Bedroom
of transactions lor Oct. 2,
SOyrs or qualifying disability
2008, provided by Edwaro
Low Income priority
Jones financial advisors
740.992-7022
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Silverheels
Marrero In Point Pleasant
A Realty Comp~ny-EHO
at (304)' 674.0174. Member
•
SIPC.
.
[..]:;.iiiiiiii!~

Public meetings

Local Weather
· Frida~ ... Most!y sunny.
High; in the upper 60s.
West wmd; around 5 mph.
Friday
ni~ht...Part1y
~loudy . Lows in the lower
40s. North wind; around 5
mph
in
the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable.
: Saturday ... Mostly
~unny. Highs in the lm.ver
70s. North winds around 5
!iJph .

Democratic
vice presiden-

tJ&lt;.."l.

Reunions

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Other events .

The Maple.s

•

I

..,

.
.
.Stall phoio
VInci! Reiber (far left) of the Meigs County Department of
~ob and Family Services presents the Down Syndrome
Association of Southeastern Ohio with a check from . the
bJFS charitable foundation.

tia candidate Satah Palin
accused Barack Obl\llla of
voting against funding for
U.S . troops in combat
Thursday · night in her
much-anticipated debate
with Obama 's · running
mate, Joe Biden, whom she
chastised for defending the
move, "especially with your
son in the National Guard"
and headed for Iraq .
"John McCain voted
against funding for the
troops," as . well, Biden
countered, adding that the
Republican
presidential
candidate had been "dead
wrong on the fundamental
issues relating to the conduct of the war."
Biden did not immediately reply to Palin's mention
of his son, Beau , the once supported McCain's · familiar terms, saying
.Delaware attorney general, view of the war, and noted "betcha" rather than "bet
who is scheduled to fly to that he had once said of you" and "gonna" rather
Iraq with his National Obama that he wasn't ready than "going to."
Guard soon.
to be commander in chief ... · She also spoke to the home
Palin has a young son who "and I know again that you folks. "Here's a shout-out" to
is in Iraq with the Alaska &lt;;Jpposed the move that he third graders at Gladys Wood
National Guard , although made to try to cut off fund- Elementary
S.chool
in
she did not refe'r to it.
ing for the . troops and I Alaska. She said they would
The exchange over Iraq · respect you for that .:•
all receive extra credit for
was easily the most person"I' don't know how ·you watching the debate.
al, and among the most can defend that position
"Can I .call you Joe?" she
·pointed, as the two running now but - I know that you asked Biden as they shook
mates debated across 90 know, especially with your hands befQre taking their ·
minutes on a stage at son in the National Guard." places behind identical
Washington University.
As for Obama, she said, lecterns.
They also clashed over "Another story there.
He readily agreed she
energy, the economy, global Anyone I think who can cut could - and she used it to
wanning and more in their off funding for the troops effect more than an hour
only debate, with linle more after promising "not to later. "Say it ain't so, Joe,"
than one month remaining that's another story."
she said as she smilingly
in the campaign and
Biden's reply was in criticized him at one point
McCain struggltng to regain clipped
tones.
"John for focusing his comments
his footing.
· McCain voted to cut off on the Bush administration
Republican offic'ials dis- funding for the troops. Let rather than the future.
closed earlier in the day that me say that a)!ain. John
She made only one obvihe was conceding the battle- McCain voted against an ous stumble. wh~n she
ground state of Michigal) to amendment containing $1 twice referred to tl{e top
Obama. The state voted · billion, 600 million dollars" U.S. general in Afghanistan
Democratic. four years ago, for protective equipment as "Gen. McClellan ." In
but McCain had spent mil- that IS "protecting the gov- fact, his name is David
lions trying to place it in his ernor's son and, pray God, McKiernan. ·
Biden's burden was not
my son and a, lot of other
column.
Biden was scathin? in his sons and dau~hters. He nearly as fundamental.
criticism of McCain s posi- ·voted against it.'
. Althou!lh he has long had a
lion on the Iraq war, calling
Palin, who has been gov- . repnta!lon for long-winded. him the "odd man out" for . ernor of her state less than ness, he is a veteran of more
his refusal to accept a time- two years, was under than 35 years in the Senate,
line for the withdrawal of intense pressure to demon- with a strong knowledge of
U.S. troops·. .
strate a strong grasp of the foreign policy as well as
But PaTin countered that a issues as she stepped onto domestic issues.
For much of the evening,
timetable was tantamount to the stage. Polls sbow the
"a white flag of surrender in public has become increas- the debate unfolded in tradiIraq;· and at a moment mgly skeptical of:her readi- tional vice presidential fashwhen victory was "within ness for high public office.
ion - the running mates
.sight."
As is her custom· on the praising their own presidenShe also said Biden had campaign, she. spoke in tial candidate and denigrat-

Alaska Gov.
Sarah Palin
shake hands

following a
vice presiden-tial debate at
Washington ·.

University in
St Louis, Mo., .
Thursday.

'

AP photo
, •.

ing the other.
.
Palin said Obama had
voted to ·raise taxes 94 times
- an allegation that Sidell'
disputed and then countered . By the same reckon~
ing, he said, McCain voted ·
"477 times to raise taxes." ·
They &lt;;lashed over energy
policy, as well, when Palin
said Obama's vote for a
Bush administration-backed
bill granted breaks to the oil
industry. By contrast, she'
said that as governor, shE:
had stood up to the same
industry, and noted that
McCain had voted againsi
the bill Obama supponed. ·
, Biden said that m the past
decade, McCain had voted
"20 times against funding
alternative energy sources
;md thinks, I guess, the only
answer is drill, drill, drill."
"The chant is, 'drill, baby.
drill," Palin countered
quickly, unwilling to yield
to Biden on that issue - or.
any other.
·
· On the environment, Palirr
declined to attribute · the
cause of climate change to
man-made activities alone.
"There is something to .bi:
said also for ·man's activities, but also for the cyclical
temperature changes on out
planet," she said, adding
that she didn't want to argue
about the causes.
Biden said the cause was
clearly man-made, and
added, "If you don't under·
stand what the cause is, it's
virtually impossible to ·
come up with a solution."

.,j

l .

...'

Judge rejects Ohio killer's obesity claim
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
ASSOCIATEO PRESSWAITER

COLUMBUS - Options
are dwindling for a condemn~d killer who argues
' WalktromPageAl
he's too fat to be executed
humanely under the state's
plose to nome. The father. Individuals with the lethal injection process.
DSASEO's nuss1on state- . mdst common form of
A judge has dismissed
ment is to strive to build .Down syndrome; trisomy the obesity claim made by
community awareness and 21, have an extra 21st chro- Richard · Cooey, who ..is
acceptance of people with mosome.
to die Oct. i4 in
The mosi common foim · scheduled
Down Syndrorne by providwhat
would
be the first
ing educational resources to of Down Syndrome is often execution in Ohio in more
21"
"trisomy
families, professionals and called
than a year.
the
communities
of because individuals · with
Cooey appealed the ruling
Southeastern
Ohio. this condition have three to the 6th·U.S. Circuit Coun
· DSASEO believes. with copies of the 21st chromoThose of Appeals in Cincinnati.
ilppropridte support and ser- some. . •
V1ces, indiv1duals with who share their livt;S with 1-lis other legal challenge is
Down Syndrome will be· those with Down Syndrome pending in Franklin County
productive members of the often call this 21st cbromo- Common Pleas Court where
some the· "love gene" he is seeking to have lethal
tommunity.
: · A complete list of.activi- because of the gentle, lov .. injection declared unconstities include 12:30 - 1:30 ing nature of those"who live tutional.
Cooey. cpnvicted of
p.m., w.alk registration (reg- productive lives desp·ite
killing two University of
tstralion fee $10 per person the birth defect.
or $20 pet familY,), the first · DQwn· Syndrome is actu- Akrop students in 1986,
I00 reg1stered will receive a ally one of the mQst com- also is ·awaiting a decision
free T-shirt; I :30-2 p.m., mon birth defects. Usually, on clemency from Gov. Te9
welcome; 2 p.m•• balloon children born with the con- . Strickland.
U.S. Disttict Court Judge
launch and · open walk dition have SQI)1e degree of
Gregory
Frost on Tuesday
begins; 3-4 p.m., singer mental retardation, as well
Paul Doeffinger perfonns; as characteris.tic physical rejected Cooey 's contention
3:30 p.m., comhole tourna- features. Each year in the that he can' t be executed
plent with $300 payout United States, approximate(must register by 2:30); ly one in every 800 to I ,000
has
Down
4:30-5:30 p.m., Christian newborns
band Oasis · performs; 5 Syndrome. This translates
p.m ., meatball eating con- to approximately 5,000
• test; 5:30 p.m., closing and children. In the United
States
toda~.
Down
special recognitions.
COLUMBUS (AP) .,..
· The walk is an "open Syndrome affects approxiPolice say two women in a
walk," meaning if people mately 350,000 people.
sport-utility
vehicle died
In addition to the events
wish to walk they may do so
after
a
collision
with a
:at _their own pace. The already listed for Sunday,
)aunch of 21 balloons and children wi II be treated to school bus that flipped the
the 21-meatball eating con- visits from Scooby Doo and SUV and tore off the front
~st symbolizes the · 21st the Scoobie gang as well of the bus:
The bus driver and three
chromosome. Nonnally, plenty of ans/craft activities
each cell in the hl!man body to keep them busy. students were taken to hosO:ontains 23 pairs of chro- However, in the middle of pitals with minor injuries
mosomes, which · contain all this hustle ·and bustle. after the Thursday morning
·
. )he genetic material that will be the act of educating crash.
Columbus
schools
determines all our inherited ·people on Down syndrome
characteristics. We receive and how those who live. spokesman Jeff Warner says
l)alf of each chromosome . with it can live productive 'the bus driver. 43-year-old
'pair from our mother and lives and already are a pan Steven Jtllius, works for
.contractor W.C. Brun~. The
the other half from our of the community.
'

tial candidate
Sen. Joe
Biden, D-Del., ·
·left, and
Republi9&amp;0
candidate

humanely because. he has
poor veins, a problem exacerbated by his obesity.
CooeY' had also ar~ued a
drug ·he takes for m1graine
headaches, Topamax, would
. interfere with the injection
chemicals.
Frost said Cooey missed a
deadline . for filing his
claims.
Cooey argued that as long
ago as -July 2003, when he
avoided execution after a
federal judge gave him a
last-minute reprieve, a
prison nurse had detected
problems with his veins.
That problem has only been
made worse by his weight
gain, Cooey argued.
Cooey is 5-foot, 7 inches
tall and weighs 267 jlOUnds.
Frost said this argument
begs the question why
Cooey didn't file a lawsuit
· over his veins within the
two-year window allowed
under law.
· "The fact that there may
be less access today does
not mitigate the fact that
Cooey still . Rnew of and
could have filed suit over
vein access prior to July
2005," Frost wrote .

Cooey missed the filing
deadline, "Regardless of
· any possible. merit to his
vem access claim," Frost
concluded. '
The
State
Public ·
Defender says Cooey still
deserves a hearing on the
merit of his argument.
Cooey has sued &lt;wer the
constitutionaVty, of lethal
injection based on a ruling
by Judge James Burge of
·Lorain County Common ·
Pleas Court.
Burge ruled in June that
Ohio's method of putting
prisoners to death is un€onstitutional because two of
three drugs used in lethal
injection can cause pain.
"It's distressing that
we've got a court out there
saying you can't ki II people
' 'I' 'II
II "T
1 ' .~l '"1
;
'

. .

.

.

7

•
•

• FME. Z4l7 T~ lwppoft
• ~nsWW MMygng -•
~ t~uc»J 111t1
• 10 .me~ ~WitlnWII
• Q,Motn Start Pt(lil· f\1111 . ......... &amp; rmrt1

Two die in Ohio crash
between school bus, suy·
bus was carrying about 25
students to the district 's
Centennial High School. ·
Police Sgt. Rich Weiner
says the bus and SUV
crashed as the bus turned .
left inro an intersection.
Witnesses told police the
SUV ran a red light.
Police say the driver. of a
third ·vehicle was slightly
injured when her car was hit
by the SUV and a battery
ejected from one ·of the
other vehicles.
,
. Police did. not identify the
women who died.

this way, it's not constitu-,
tiona!, and evidently that.
doesn't apply to Mr.
Cooey," . said
Kelly
Schneider, an assistant state
public defender.
.
Auomey General Nancy
Rogers Hardin will continue
to argue Cooey missed his
filing
deadline,
said
spokesman Jim Gravelle.
Cooey argued last month
he deserved a new sentencing hearing since he wai;
originally sentenced to die
by electrocution when lethal
injection wasn't an option.
A panel of three Akron
judges on Monday rejected
that argument.
,
The Ohio Parole Board
last month unanimously
rejected Cooey's request for
Clemency.

Z:a

C

H

,..,w_.)
.......

. Swfvplo6X
~----

J

'\

ltgn Up Onllrwt www.Loc.tMtt.-..
call Todlyt.S.V.I

,

~~~es Of
·TRENTON J.
CLELAND

tfl\t L!!D

0

•

140-992-1101
t11

t/2 W 2nd St., Pomeroy. OH 45769

• Criminal Defense
• Divorce/Family Law
• Persona! Injury
• Real Estate

• Wills &amp; Ettates
E-mail:
tcleland2l@yahoo.&lt;om
ww.Ijcleland.com

'

.

�--

- -- .. . . ,

'
•
'

the Daily Sentinel

Page.A2

BYTHEBEND

FJi¥y, Odober 3, 2008

Frlday,~ober3,2oo8

The 'Daily Sentinel• Pa&amp;e..\3

www.mydailysentinel.com

, Qbi~

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
BY J111 Ku-EHN

Time to block out
crazy phone calls
Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

.

Dear Annie: For at least
five years, my mother-inlaw has been receiving
nasty haras~ing telephone
calls from my sister-in-law,
"Cruella." These call6 usuaJly perclin to Cruel! a's distoned belief that Mom
doesn't accept her as a war· ·
thy daughter-in-law.
.
Cmella
misconstrues
innocuous comment&gt; a., c.:riticisms. S.hc refuses to see a
counsdor, believing that the
problem isn't hers . She also
becomes quite angry and
threatening to anyone who
sug$ests she needs help.
Durmg one of her emotional
fants, Cruella actuall y
wished that my mother-inlaw would die . Cruel! a·,
husband briefly saw a counselor, but found the se;sions
(0 be ineffective. He deals
with his domestic strife by
getting drunk.
, My mother-in-law is 89
years old. and these telephone calls.upsel her greatly. causing her to break into
tears and sending her blood
pressure skvrocketing. The
rest of the family feel helpless to stop the harassmem.
l don't want Cruel Ia to push
my mother-in-.Jaw iNa an
early grave. Is there any
way to protect an elderly
)"oman from being victimlzed by a vicious shrew' :...
Desperate for Help ·
Dear Desperate: Cruella
sounds mentally ill, and her
husband is a coward for hidiJig behind a boule iiistead
of doing what's right for
both his wife and his mother. Mom can talk to the
police about the harassment
and find out if a restraining
order applies. She also can
discuss the problem with
~omeone at the phone company to see whether
Cruel!&amp; 's calls could be
!&gt;locked or intercepted.
·. Dear Annie: I am a 16year-old girl and have been
dating the love of my life
for over a year. Even before
we started dating, we con~idered
ourselves best
friends .
About two months ago,
we decided to lose our virginity and I have no regrets.
My question is, how do I ·
ask my mom to get me birth
control-? We only used a
condom, and I want to be
safer the next time.
I don't want my parents.
thinking I'm a skank or
s-omething ..but I'd also prefer not to ~et birth control
behind thetr backs. Please
help. - Needing EKtra
Protection
·_Dear Needing: Your par~nts may alre'ady have an

inkling that you are having
sex, and we agree it should" 't be a secret from them .
Find a quiet, private time to
talk to your mother. Explain ·
that you and your boyfriend
are in a committed relationship and have already taken
the next step. Tell her you
want to be responsible, ·and
ask her to make an appoimment for you ·to see a gynecologist. Howeve.r disappointed she may be, Mom
wi II want you to be healthy
and safe.. We hope you. will
keep in mind that at 16, love
dQ\!sn 't always last as long
as you assume it will. Sex
can be emotionally binding,
especially · for girls, so
please discuss all the repercussions with your mom.
She can help you make the
best choices.
Dear Annie: You recently
printed a letter .from
"Worried in Hawaii ," whose
mother can no longer live
alone, but isn't prepared to
live anywhere else, either.
I would like to make your
readers aware of the services a geriatric care manager can provide in helping ·
families navigate care for
their aging relatives. A geriatric . care manager (GCM)
is a professional with specialized . knowledge and
expertise in senior care
issues. Ideally, a GCM
holds an advanced degree in
nursing, gerontology, social
work. psychology or arelated health and human services field . GCMs.will eval uate your situation, identify
solutions and work with you
to design a plan for maximizing . your elder's independence and well-being.
More information on the
services can be found on the
national "GCM website a(
caremanager.org.
- .
Barbara Kolonay, RN,
BSN,
MS,
CCM,
Pittsburgh
Dear Barbara ·Kolonay:
Thank you. for the detailed .
information . We have , in
fact. recommended geriatric
care managers many times
in this space and are always
happy to do so again for
those readers who can
afford the services.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy MitciJ.ell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors of the Ann Lander!·
column. Please e-mail your
qu11stions to anniesmail-.
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box ll8190, Chicago, IL
60611, To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Crealors SyndicaJe writers
a'nd cartoonists, visit tire
Creators Syndicate Web
page al www.creators.com.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

~~ary Mahan, 84, of Gallipolis, passed away Wednesday. .ST.
LOUIS
I, 2008, at the Holzer Senior Care Center.
Rerublican vice . presiden-

; She was born Marcb 10, 1924, in Gama County, daugb!er.of the late Steve and Hazel Womeldorff Burlile.
· Mary was married to Frank N. Mahan, and he preceded
• ·
. .
, ller in death on M,ay 15, 2007.
; She was a homemaker, a melt!ber of Calvary Baptist
Church and a member of Eastern Star in Vinton.
t Sh.e i~ survived by a daughter; Judy· Beckley of
[lalhpohs; three sons, Steve (Donna) Mahan of Alexandria,
~a., .and. Jerry Mahan and Scott (Becky) Maltj!p; both of
, Galhpolis; three granddaughters, Megan Mahan ,. Heather
M~ ~d Sara Beckley; a sister-in-law. Wanda Burlile of
Oalhpohs; se~eral nieces and nephews; and a host of
·
fnends at Gallia Manor.
I In addition to her parents and husband, Frank Mahan, she
· ._,as preceded in death by her brother. John Burlile .
' Services will be I p.m . Saturday. Oct. 4. 2008, at the
. ~ill is F~nenl;l Home, with the Rev..Junior Preston officiatme. Burial will follow at Calvary Cemetery in Rio Grande.
fnends may call at the funeral home on Saturday from II
~.m. to I p.m., prior to the funeral.
..
~ Her nephews will se_ry.e as pallbearers.
1 Please v1s1t www.wtlhsfuneralhome.com to send e-mail
eondolences.

•

·• .
'·:

.

'Rama Lama' writer
lGeorge 'Wydell' Jones dies
'

I

Local Stocks
{NYSE) - 36.67
Akzo {NASDAQ) - 47.60
,_,ahland Inc. (NYSE) - 27.30
Big lots {NYSE)- 27.t9
!Job l:vans (NASDAQ) j!5.73
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 28.50
Century Aluminum (NA50AQ)- 22.55
j:hamplon {NASDAQ) - 3.94
j:hannlng Sh~s (NASDAQ)
~EP

•.

..!.. 4.68

City Holding (NASDAQ) .1.86
.

i:outna (NYSE) - 44.69
PuPont {NYSE) - 38.79
US Bank (NYSE) - 38.31
Pannell (NYSE) - 16.28
General Electric {NYSE) ~.15
.
flarley•Oavldson {NYSE) 83.92
.
:Jp Morgan {NYSE) - 49.85
!(roger (NYSE) - 27.78
'Limited Brands {NYSE) '6.09

'

tlorfolk Southern {NYSE) ••
•

.

'~ YOUNGSTOWN

(AP)

~ George "Wydell" Jones,

~ho wrote the. doo-wop hit
~Rama Lama Ding Dong"

Fisb·fry fund-raiser ·slated· ~t Wilkesville·
WILKESVILLE -A fish
fry dinner will be held at the
Community ·
Wilkesville
Cenret on Saturday from
noon to 4 p.m. All proceeds
from the dinner w~ll go
towar?s a payment on the
new ftre truck..
The menu will consist of
fish dinners , which include
two pieces of fish, cole
slaw, potato . salad, baked

beans, a slice of bread and donation~ toward~ the
your choice of coffe~. tea, Wilkesville ' Township
and lemonade. There will VQiunteet ·
· · F!re
also be hot dogs, sloppy Dep.artment's new. fue
joes. fish sandwiches, truck, llllhieh,arrlved at .the
desserts, po.p. ~nd water. . . Department, ' in ·,January
The public tS encouraged . 2007, :, .· , . · . · .
to come out .md support .the
Th~ W!lli:esvllle :rown,lhi,l?
Wilkesv i)ie
Township Volunteer '
Fireman s
Volunteer
Fireman's . Association Inc. is an· orgaAssociation Inc. The associ- ni'i:ation fanned by tile fireation will be accepting fighters ana their wives, to

Community Calendar .

and performed it as a memLer of the Edsels, has died
Jfter battling cancer.
: Jones, who was 71, 'died
fl home Saturday, according
lo his son, Steffan Jones.
' "Rama Lama" peaked at
No. 21 .on the Billboard Hot
· WO chart in 1961. The
1'oungstown, Ohio-based
l!((sels also included Jimmy
Reynolds, Harry Green,
Marshall Sewell and Larry.
Green.
·
: During their heyday, the
Edsels performed at the
· Apollo Theater in New York
and appeared on "American

.

Ban!lstand ."
Jones . was born in
Richmond, Va., and as a
child
moved
to
Youngstown, · where his
father worked in a steel
mill. After high school.
Jones joined the Air Force,
l"here he sang in a vocal
group with other servicemen and wrote "Rama
Lama."
Jones is survived' by his
wife, six children, 16 grandchildren and 17 greatgrandchildren.
A funeral home said services would be Saturday at
Shiloh Baptist Church in
nearby Campbell, Ohio .
with mterment at the Tod
Homestead Cemetery.

help provide services to ·the
Wilkesville Volunteer Fin::
Depanment. It is a 50l(c)}
organization, so any dona~
tion made is tax deductible.:
To make a donation, make:
your check paya,ble . to~
Wilkesville. Volllllteer 'firei
Fireman's Association, Inc:
P.O. Box 180, Wilkesvillej
Ohio 45695, c/o Don
Newsom, treasurer.
'

..,

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· --------------~------------------------------~'

.

7
p.m.;
ular meeting. Refreshments.
POMEROY
- The Wednesday,
Wallaces will be in con- Middleport First Baptis!
Bring pie or ice cream.
cen at 7 p.m., Bradford Church. Message by Rev:
TUesday, Oct. 7
Monday, Oct. 6
Church of Christ, 3820 Bob Thompson. Special
POMEROY
~ Meigs
RUTLAND - Regular
music: Truly Saved TriQ
BradbUrJ Rd.
Hi~h
School
Band
meeting
of
Rutland
POMEROY
Sunday;
church musicians
Township Trustees, 5 p.m., · Boosters, 6 p.l)l., bandroom, Homecoming at the South Monday; Eanhen Vessels
all band parents are urged to
Rutland Fire Station.
Elam ·
attend
to discuss and plan to Bethel Community Church Tuesday i Keith
LETART FALLS
on
Silver
Ridge
across
from
Wednesday.
,
Letart Township Trustees. 5 meet the financial needs of Eastern schools. Sunday
Tuesday, Oct. 7
the band.
p.m .. office building.
school at 9 a.m., worship
POMEROY - Revi~al
MIDDLEPORT
SYRACUSE - Sutton
service, 10 a.m., dinner at begins at Calvary Pilgrim
Tov. n' hip Trustees, 7 p.m. , Middleport Masonic Lodge 12 noon . The afternoon ser- Chapel, through Sunday, 7
#363 meets at Middlepon·
Syracuse Village Hall.
Ma,onic Temple. All mem- vice will begln at 1:30p.m. p.m. Ja!JleS Southerland
Tuesday, Oct.?
with special music Lisa and speaker,
and
special
ALFRED
- Orange be[s and Masons invited. Jerry Queen, Tommy Syocc, smging. Questions to Pastor
Township Trustees regular Refreshments at 6:30 p.m .. and local singers. Pastor Charles McKenzie, 992"
meeting , 7:30p.m., home of Lodge at 7:30.
·Linda bamewood invites 2952.
Wednesday, Oct. 8
Fiscal Officer Osie Follrod.
the public.
HARRISONVILLE ·Thursday, Oct. 9
POMEROY . · - World
matrons
of
POMEROY . - Meigs Past
Communion .Sunday serSaturday night...Mostly County
Commissioners Hurrisonville Order of vices, II a.m .. Pomeroy
Saturday, Qct. 4
clear., Lows in the upper meet at II a.m .. due to Eustcrn Star· Chapter 255, Amphitheater, celebrated by
12:30
p.m.,
Wild·
Horse
.
RACINE - The John R.
40s.
Nonheast
winds scheduling conflict . ··
Pomeroy and Enterprise Dill
Cafe.
reunion will be 'held a1
around 5 mph.
United Methodi.t. First the home
TUesday,
Oct.
!I
of Howard and
Sunday
through
Baptist Church of Pomeroy, Sally Ervin, 29753 0~
CHESTER
Shade
Wednesday.. .Mostly clear.
River Lodge 453, regular St. Paul's Lutheran, Grace Grove Road, Racine. The
Highs in the upper 70s .
'.
Trinity
stated meeting, 7 p.m. Episcopal,
meal
will
be
at
S
p.m.
Take
Lows around 50.
Congregational, Common
Refreshments follow.
Wednesday night ...Panl y
Saturday, Oct. 4
Grounds Churches. ln case a covered dish. All relatives
cloudy. Lows in the lower
SALEM CENTER
of rain. the event will be and friends welcome.
50s.
·
Star Grange #778 and Star
held at Trinity Congregation
'
Thursday...Panly sunny. Junior Grange #878 meet in
Church.
Highs in the mid 70s.
Saturday; Oct. 4 · .
POMEROY -;- Outdoor
regular session, with a ·
Friday, Oct. 3
RACINE - Men's prayer celebration of Blessing of
pdtluck supper at 6:30 p.m.
breakfast
of
'
Southern
th~
Animals,
2
p.m.,
Grace
POMEROY
- Coins aJJd
followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m . Final plans for chicken Charge. United Methodist Epi&amp;~opal . Church, with the old photo collection of
barbecue and meet the can- Church, 8 a.m., Bethany Rev. Leslie Aemming. All Bob Graham will be on dis:
'are welcome with their pets. play in the lobby of Farme~
didates to be held on United Methodist Church.
POINT ROCK - Point Bank from 8:30 to 3 ~.m\
Sunday, Oct. 5
56.64
October 5 will be made.
HaM LOCK GROVE - 1 Rock . Church of the for t.he ~ublic to VIew.
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
Monday, Oct. -6
{NASDAQ) - 2t.20
. POMEROY
- Meigs Homecoming at Hemlock Nazatene, Ohio 689. will Graham Will be displaying a
BBT (NYSE) - 37.55
·County Cancer Initiative, Grove : christian Church. celebrate IOOth anniversary 1959 picture puzzle of a
Peeples (NASDAQ) - 22.19' regular . meeting, n·oon, Worship at 9:30a.m .• dinner of founding of the Church Pomeroy scene.
Pepsico (NYSE) - 70.91
Saturday, Oct. 4
. Meigs County Health at Grange Hall at 12:30 p.m . . of the Nazarene. Rev. Olan
Premier (NASDAQ) - 9.19
Afternoon
program
at
2
Harvey
to
speak,
10
a.m.
POMEROY
- MulbelTJI
Department.
Rockwt!ll (NYSE) - 33.69
Community
Center,
6:30
Racine p.m. will feature Forgiven Dinner following.
RACINE
Rocky BO!Jis {NASDAQ) p.m., bluegrass gospel
MIDDLEPORT
Chapter 134, . Order · of Again Trio, with other read3.24
music.
through
ings
and
m~sic.
Reviv
al
Eastem Star, 7:30 p.m., regRoyal Dutch Shell -.. 55.25
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) •
87.61
•
Wai·Mart {NYSE) - 58.85
Taking Applications
Wendy's (NYSI!) - 4.71
WesBanco (NYSE) .- 25.25
Worthington (NYSE) - 13.78
HUD Subsidized
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes
Efflclency/1 Bedroom
of transactions lor Oct. 2,
SOyrs or qualifying disability
2008, provided by Edwaro
Low Income priority
Jones financial advisors
740.992-7022
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Silverheels
Marrero In Point Pleasant
A Realty Comp~ny-EHO
at (304)' 674.0174. Member
•
SIPC.
.
[..]:;.iiiiiiii!~

Public meetings

Local Weather
· Frida~ ... Most!y sunny.
High; in the upper 60s.
West wmd; around 5 mph.
Friday
ni~ht...Part1y
~loudy . Lows in the lower
40s. North wind; around 5
mph
in
the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable.
: Saturday ... Mostly
~unny. Highs in the lm.ver
70s. North winds around 5
!iJph .

Democratic
vice presiden-

tJ&lt;.."l.

Reunions

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Other events .

The Maple.s

•

I

..,

.
.
.Stall phoio
VInci! Reiber (far left) of the Meigs County Department of
~ob and Family Services presents the Down Syndrome
Association of Southeastern Ohio with a check from . the
bJFS charitable foundation.

tia candidate Satah Palin
accused Barack Obl\llla of
voting against funding for
U.S . troops in combat
Thursday · night in her
much-anticipated debate
with Obama 's · running
mate, Joe Biden, whom she
chastised for defending the
move, "especially with your
son in the National Guard"
and headed for Iraq .
"John McCain voted
against funding for the
troops," as . well, Biden
countered, adding that the
Republican
presidential
candidate had been "dead
wrong on the fundamental
issues relating to the conduct of the war."
Biden did not immediately reply to Palin's mention
of his son, Beau , the once supported McCain's · familiar terms, saying
.Delaware attorney general, view of the war, and noted "betcha" rather than "bet
who is scheduled to fly to that he had once said of you" and "gonna" rather
Iraq with his National Obama that he wasn't ready than "going to."
Guard soon.
to be commander in chief ... · She also spoke to the home
Palin has a young son who "and I know again that you folks. "Here's a shout-out" to
is in Iraq with the Alaska &lt;;Jpposed the move that he third graders at Gladys Wood
National Guard , although made to try to cut off fund- Elementary
S.chool
in
she did not refe'r to it.
ing for the . troops and I Alaska. She said they would
The exchange over Iraq · respect you for that .:•
all receive extra credit for
was easily the most person"I' don't know how ·you watching the debate.
al, and among the most can defend that position
"Can I .call you Joe?" she
·pointed, as the two running now but - I know that you asked Biden as they shook
mates debated across 90 know, especially with your hands befQre taking their ·
minutes on a stage at son in the National Guard." places behind identical
Washington University.
As for Obama, she said, lecterns.
They also clashed over "Another story there.
He readily agreed she
energy, the economy, global Anyone I think who can cut could - and she used it to
wanning and more in their off funding for the troops effect more than an hour
only debate, with linle more after promising "not to later. "Say it ain't so, Joe,"
than one month remaining that's another story."
she said as she smilingly
in the campaign and
Biden's reply was in criticized him at one point
McCain struggltng to regain clipped
tones.
"John for focusing his comments
his footing.
· McCain voted to cut off on the Bush administration
Republican offic'ials dis- funding for the troops. Let rather than the future.
closed earlier in the day that me say that a)!ain. John
She made only one obvihe was conceding the battle- McCain voted against an ous stumble. wh~n she
ground state of Michigal) to amendment containing $1 twice referred to tl{e top
Obama. The state voted · billion, 600 million dollars" U.S. general in Afghanistan
Democratic. four years ago, for protective equipment as "Gen. McClellan ." In
but McCain had spent mil- that IS "protecting the gov- fact, his name is David
lions trying to place it in his ernor's son and, pray God, McKiernan. ·
Biden's burden was not
my son and a, lot of other
column.
Biden was scathin? in his sons and dau~hters. He nearly as fundamental.
criticism of McCain s posi- ·voted against it.'
. Althou!lh he has long had a
lion on the Iraq war, calling
Palin, who has been gov- . repnta!lon for long-winded. him the "odd man out" for . ernor of her state less than ness, he is a veteran of more
his refusal to accept a time- two years, was under than 35 years in the Senate,
line for the withdrawal of intense pressure to demon- with a strong knowledge of
U.S. troops·. .
strate a strong grasp of the foreign policy as well as
But PaTin countered that a issues as she stepped onto domestic issues.
For much of the evening,
timetable was tantamount to the stage. Polls sbow the
"a white flag of surrender in public has become increas- the debate unfolded in tradiIraq;· and at a moment mgly skeptical of:her readi- tional vice presidential fashwhen victory was "within ness for high public office.
ion - the running mates
.sight."
As is her custom· on the praising their own presidenShe also said Biden had campaign, she. spoke in tial candidate and denigrat-

Alaska Gov.
Sarah Palin
shake hands

following a
vice presiden-tial debate at
Washington ·.

University in
St Louis, Mo., .
Thursday.

'

AP photo
, •.

ing the other.
.
Palin said Obama had
voted to ·raise taxes 94 times
- an allegation that Sidell'
disputed and then countered . By the same reckon~
ing, he said, McCain voted ·
"477 times to raise taxes." ·
They &lt;;lashed over energy
policy, as well, when Palin
said Obama's vote for a
Bush administration-backed
bill granted breaks to the oil
industry. By contrast, she'
said that as governor, shE:
had stood up to the same
industry, and noted that
McCain had voted againsi
the bill Obama supponed. ·
, Biden said that m the past
decade, McCain had voted
"20 times against funding
alternative energy sources
;md thinks, I guess, the only
answer is drill, drill, drill."
"The chant is, 'drill, baby.
drill," Palin countered
quickly, unwilling to yield
to Biden on that issue - or.
any other.
·
· On the environment, Palirr
declined to attribute · the
cause of climate change to
man-made activities alone.
"There is something to .bi:
said also for ·man's activities, but also for the cyclical
temperature changes on out
planet," she said, adding
that she didn't want to argue
about the causes.
Biden said the cause was
clearly man-made, and
added, "If you don't under·
stand what the cause is, it's
virtually impossible to ·
come up with a solution."

.,j

l .

...'

Judge rejects Ohio killer's obesity claim
BY ANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS
ASSOCIATEO PRESSWAITER

COLUMBUS - Options
are dwindling for a condemn~d killer who argues
' WalktromPageAl
he's too fat to be executed
humanely under the state's
plose to nome. The father. Individuals with the lethal injection process.
DSASEO's nuss1on state- . mdst common form of
A judge has dismissed
ment is to strive to build .Down syndrome; trisomy the obesity claim made by
community awareness and 21, have an extra 21st chro- Richard · Cooey, who ..is
acceptance of people with mosome.
to die Oct. i4 in
The mosi common foim · scheduled
Down Syndrorne by providwhat
would
be the first
ing educational resources to of Down Syndrome is often execution in Ohio in more
21"
"trisomy
families, professionals and called
than a year.
the
communities
of because individuals · with
Cooey appealed the ruling
Southeastern
Ohio. this condition have three to the 6th·U.S. Circuit Coun
· DSASEO believes. with copies of the 21st chromoThose of Appeals in Cincinnati.
ilppropridte support and ser- some. . •
V1ces, indiv1duals with who share their livt;S with 1-lis other legal challenge is
Down Syndrome will be· those with Down Syndrome pending in Franklin County
productive members of the often call this 21st cbromo- Common Pleas Court where
some the· "love gene" he is seeking to have lethal
tommunity.
: · A complete list of.activi- because of the gentle, lov .. injection declared unconstities include 12:30 - 1:30 ing nature of those"who live tutional.
Cooey. cpnvicted of
p.m., w.alk registration (reg- productive lives desp·ite
killing two University of
tstralion fee $10 per person the birth defect.
or $20 pet familY,), the first · DQwn· Syndrome is actu- Akrop students in 1986,
I00 reg1stered will receive a ally one of the mQst com- also is ·awaiting a decision
free T-shirt; I :30-2 p.m., mon birth defects. Usually, on clemency from Gov. Te9
welcome; 2 p.m•• balloon children born with the con- . Strickland.
U.S. Disttict Court Judge
launch and · open walk dition have SQI)1e degree of
Gregory
Frost on Tuesday
begins; 3-4 p.m., singer mental retardation, as well
Paul Doeffinger perfonns; as characteris.tic physical rejected Cooey 's contention
3:30 p.m., comhole tourna- features. Each year in the that he can' t be executed
plent with $300 payout United States, approximate(must register by 2:30); ly one in every 800 to I ,000
has
Down
4:30-5:30 p.m., Christian newborns
band Oasis · performs; 5 Syndrome. This translates
p.m ., meatball eating con- to approximately 5,000
• test; 5:30 p.m., closing and children. In the United
States
toda~.
Down
special recognitions.
COLUMBUS (AP) .,..
· The walk is an "open Syndrome affects approxiPolice say two women in a
walk," meaning if people mately 350,000 people.
sport-utility
vehicle died
In addition to the events
wish to walk they may do so
after
a
collision
with a
:at _their own pace. The already listed for Sunday,
)aunch of 21 balloons and children wi II be treated to school bus that flipped the
the 21-meatball eating con- visits from Scooby Doo and SUV and tore off the front
~st symbolizes the · 21st the Scoobie gang as well of the bus:
The bus driver and three
chromosome. Nonnally, plenty of ans/craft activities
each cell in the hl!man body to keep them busy. students were taken to hosO:ontains 23 pairs of chro- However, in the middle of pitals with minor injuries
mosomes, which · contain all this hustle ·and bustle. after the Thursday morning
·
. )he genetic material that will be the act of educating crash.
Columbus
schools
determines all our inherited ·people on Down syndrome
characteristics. We receive and how those who live. spokesman Jeff Warner says
l)alf of each chromosome . with it can live productive 'the bus driver. 43-year-old
'pair from our mother and lives and already are a pan Steven Jtllius, works for
.contractor W.C. Brun~. The
the other half from our of the community.
'

tial candidate
Sen. Joe
Biden, D-Del., ·
·left, and
Republi9&amp;0
candidate

humanely because. he has
poor veins, a problem exacerbated by his obesity.
CooeY' had also ar~ued a
drug ·he takes for m1graine
headaches, Topamax, would
. interfere with the injection
chemicals.
Frost said Cooey missed a
deadline . for filing his
claims.
Cooey argued that as long
ago as -July 2003, when he
avoided execution after a
federal judge gave him a
last-minute reprieve, a
prison nurse had detected
problems with his veins.
That problem has only been
made worse by his weight
gain, Cooey argued.
Cooey is 5-foot, 7 inches
tall and weighs 267 jlOUnds.
Frost said this argument
begs the question why
Cooey didn't file a lawsuit
· over his veins within the
two-year window allowed
under law.
· "The fact that there may
be less access today does
not mitigate the fact that
Cooey still . Rnew of and
could have filed suit over
vein access prior to July
2005," Frost wrote .

Cooey missed the filing
deadline, "Regardless of
· any possible. merit to his
vem access claim," Frost
concluded. '
The
State
Public ·
Defender says Cooey still
deserves a hearing on the
merit of his argument.
Cooey has sued &lt;wer the
constitutionaVty, of lethal
injection based on a ruling
by Judge James Burge of
·Lorain County Common ·
Pleas Court.
Burge ruled in June that
Ohio's method of putting
prisoners to death is un€onstitutional because two of
three drugs used in lethal
injection can cause pain.
"It's distressing that
we've got a court out there
saying you can't ki II people
' 'I' 'II
II "T
1 ' .~l '"1
;
'

. .

.

.

7

•
•

• FME. Z4l7 T~ lwppoft
• ~nsWW MMygng -•
~ t~uc»J 111t1
• 10 .me~ ~WitlnWII
• Q,Motn Start Pt(lil· f\1111 . ......... &amp; rmrt1

Two die in Ohio crash
between school bus, suy·
bus was carrying about 25
students to the district 's
Centennial High School. ·
Police Sgt. Rich Weiner
says the bus and SUV
crashed as the bus turned .
left inro an intersection.
Witnesses told police the
SUV ran a red light.
Police say the driver. of a
third ·vehicle was slightly
injured when her car was hit
by the SUV and a battery
ejected from one ·of the
other vehicles.
,
. Police did. not identify the
women who died.

this way, it's not constitu-,
tiona!, and evidently that.
doesn't apply to Mr.
Cooey," . said
Kelly
Schneider, an assistant state
public defender.
.
Auomey General Nancy
Rogers Hardin will continue
to argue Cooey missed his
filing
deadline,
said
spokesman Jim Gravelle.
Cooey argued last month
he deserved a new sentencing hearing since he wai;
originally sentenced to die
by electrocution when lethal
injection wasn't an option.
A panel of three Akron
judges on Monday rejected
that argument.
,
The Ohio Parole Board
last month unanimously
rejected Cooey's request for
Clemency.

Z:a

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,..,w_.)
.......

. Swfvplo6X
~----

J

'\

ltgn Up Onllrwt www.Loc.tMtt.-..
call Todlyt.S.V.I

,

~~~es Of
·TRENTON J.
CLELAND

tfl\t L!!D

0

•

140-992-1101
t11

t/2 W 2nd St., Pomeroy. OH 45769

• Criminal Defense
• Divorce/Family Law
• Persona! Injury
• Real Estate

• Wills &amp; Ettates
E-mail:
tcleland2l@yahoo.&lt;om
ww.Ijcleland.com

'

.

�-.
"

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 3,

Friday, OctQber 3, 2008

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
.

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoefrleh
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall nuJke no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Oct. 3, the 277th day of 2008. 'f!!ere are
89 days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History: On O&lt;.:t. 3, 1863 , President
Lincoln proclaimed the last .Thursday in November
Thanksgiving Day.
1
.
On this date: In 1226, St. Francis of Assisi , founder of the .
Franciscan order. died ; he was canonized in 1228 ."
·In 1929, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes formally changed its name to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
In 1941. Adolf Hitler declared in a speech in Berlin that
Russia had been "broken" and would "never rise again."
In 1951, the New York Giants captured the National
League pennant as Bobby Thomson hita three-jUn homer
off the Brooklyn Dodgers' Ralph Branca in the "shot heard
'round the world."
In 1952, Britain conducted its first atomic test as it detonated a 25-kiloton device in the Monte Bello Islands off
Australia.
In 1'962, astronaut Wally Schirra, blasted off from Cape
Canaveral; Fla .. aboard the Sigma 7 on a nine-hour flight.
In 1968, American Independent Party presidential candidate George Wallace tapped retired Air Force Gen. Curtis
E. LeMay to be his running mate.
In 1968, the Howard Sackler play "The Great White
Hope," starring James Earl Jones and Jane Alexander,
opened on Broadway.
,
In 1988, Lebanese kidnappers released Indian educator
Mithileshwar Singh, who'd been held captive with three
Americans for more than 20 months.
·
In 1995 , the jury in the O.J. Simpson murder trial found
the fohner football star not guilty of the 1994 slayings of his
former wife Nic'o le Brown Si'mpson and Ronald Goldman.
(However, Simpson was later foun&lt;j liable in a civil trial).
Today's Birthdays: Author Gore Vidal is 83. Composer
Steve Reich is 72 : Rock 'n' roll star Chubby Checker is 67.
Actor Alan Rachins is 66. Magician Roy Horn· is 64. Jazz
musician Ronnie Laws is 58. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Dave
Winfield is 57. Actor Peter Frechette is 52. Rock musician
Tommy Lee is 46. Actor Clive Owen is 44. Singer Gwen
Stefani (No Doubt) is 39. Pop si£$~L-~~yin Richardson is
37. Actress Neve Campbell is 35.,S•.nger lndia.Arie is 33 .
Rapper Talib Kweli is 33. Actor Seann Willi. 'll Scott is 32.
Actress Shannyn Sossamon is 30. Actor ErL-. Von Detten is
26. Actress-singer Ashlee Simpson-Wentz is 24.
Thought for Today: "The worst disease in the world is the
plague of vengeance." - Dr. Karl Menninger, American
psychiatrist (1893-1990).

fights. an aging population adults and single-parent
and other factors.
families. In 2005, a
Now, sobering statistics ,University of Virginia
are showing up elsewhere . . researcher fou~d that 32
The
Southern
Baptist · percent of mamed men ~nd
. Convention, for example, 38 percent of marned
has seen a steady decline in women are churchgoers .
baptisms. While the nation 's But only 15 percent of smlar~est non-Catholic flock · gle men and 23 percent of
clatms 16 million members, single women go to church.
Duin noted that its 2007
.There's another reality
report indicates that about that is hard to put into statis6 .1 million people attend tics, said Duin.
worship services regularly.
Many behevers have
Gallup polls keep show- ·grown tire9 of &lt;JUickie sering church attendance hov- vices , PowerPomt answers
ering at roughly 40 percent and pop lyrics. Many "quitof the l!.S. population . ters" she interviewed were
However, Duin noted that yearning for intimate,
two other studies from 2005· down-to-earth
churches .
cut that number down to 18 where pastors and people
percent to 20 percent.
knew their names. They'd
What's happening? Duin been born again. Now they
shows evidence of parallel wanted to know how to face
and even clashing trends. the doubts and pains of
Many people say they're daily life . They wanted real
t(}Q busy, some are burned spiritual growth.
out, and others are mournMany candid believers,
ing the loss of great church- said Duin , "are perplexed
es they knew in their past.
and disappointed
with
There are paradoxes in this . God," and they found that
story, too. In recenr decades, when they asked tough
thriving megachurches have questions, they "were not
dominated the landscape ,' ge!ting meaningful answers
offering media-friendly ser- from their churches. In fact ,
vices and chatty sermons in - they were encouraged not to
gigantic sanctuaries that give· talk about their pain ....
· seekers ·a cushion of
'The big questions are not
anonymity. But in 2007 , the g()ing away, and the
influential Willow Creek answers can no longer be
Community Church near put off."
Chicago found that many
(Terry Mattingly is direc·
older members said they are tor of the Washington
now spiritually "stalled" or Journalism Center at the
"dissati~fied.''
Council for
Christian
Duin is convinced many Colleges and Universities
evangelical churches are and
leads
the
also struggling to deal with GetReligion.org project to
rising numbers of single study religion and the news.) _

Sunda~·. 10)0

Catholic

Emmanuel Apostolk Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland,

Sltl.nd Ht&gt;aM Calholk Churcb
101 Mulberry 1\'\'e., Pomt"roy. q.,l2.~1l 9K ,
Pa sto r: Rc\ . Waller E. Hdn:t. Sat. Con
4:45 -:'i.I.Sp.m.: Mm - 5:30 p m.. Sun

.XT\·kcs: Su n 10:00 a.m. &amp;. 7:30 p.m ..
ThUB . 7:00 p.m.. Pa$lor Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God

Con . . 1) . ~5-~: 1~ a.m ... Sun. Mass- 9:.l0
a.m.. Daily Ma."~ - 8:30a.m.

Llba1y Assembly oF God
P.O. Box 467 , Dudding .Lane. Mason.

Church of Christ

W.Va.. Pastor: Neil Tennant. Sullday
Srrvicc:s-.10:00 a.m.IUid 7 p.m.

Baptist
i'agfl'llle Frttwlll Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Aoyd Ross. Sunday Schoo19:30 to .
· 10:30 am. Worship ~r.·icc 10:30 to 1J :00
am. Wed. ,maching 6 pm
Carpoter lndependenl Rapthll CbUJTh
Sunday School - 9:30am. P~achmg
Service !0:30am, E\'eni ng Service
1:00pm. Wedne_sday Bihle Study 7:00p m,
Pastor:

Cheshire Raplt51 Church
Pas10r. Steve Linle, Sundlly School \UO
am. Morning Worship· -10:30 am.
Wedne sday Bible Study 6:30pm. cho1r
pr.actice 7:.10; y~uth and Dible ~uddie~
6:.ID p.m. Thur ~. I pm book ~tud}

a.m .. Sunday Worship - :30 a.m..&amp; 7
pm: Wed!Je5duy Bible Smdy - ·7:00p.m.
Old Bethtllo'ree Will Huptlsl Churth
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport , Sunday
Service L 10 a.m .. 6:00 p.m.• 1\lesdny
Services ·6:00

Hillside Baptlsl Church
·St. Rt. 143 just off Rt . 7. Paster: Rev.
R. Acree. Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service. Wor5hip - 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m .•
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

J~mes

Victory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon. Pastor: lllmes
E. Keesee. Worship - !Oa.m .. 1 p.m..
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.
Faith Baptbt Church
Railroad St .. Mason. Sunday Sc~ool - 10
a.m .. Worship • 11 a.m., 6 p.m ,'
Wednesday Serv"ices · 7 p.m.

,

......

..........

dently that we will win in
Iraq. Obama replied that he
had opposed ·the attack on
Iraq from the start, and he
believes we should cut back
our efforts there and concentrate on finishing our
military
operation
in
Afghanistan .
·
McCain countered that
.Obama
had ' opposed ·
President Bush's dectsion to
launch a ''surge" in Iraq,
contending that it wouldn't
work, when in fact it has
worked remarkably well.
And so the evening went,
with each debater seemingly well prepared for the
other's thrusts . There is no
space, in this column, to .
list all of the attacks .made
and all of the rebuttals
offered, but I can't honestly say that, when it was
over, I felt that either
debater was massively
ahead on points.
There are two other
debates ahead, and it may
well be that one debater or
the other will clearly stand
out as the winner of one or
both .. At the moment, bowever, after the first debate,
it seems to rne that the protagonists are still · pretty
close to even.

Of course, it is fair to ask
just how much these
debates matter. lf the voters
clearly•prefer one candidate
over the other, that preference may simply overwhelm any benefits his
·adversary may gain by
doing better in the debates.
But the polls seem to show
the race as extremely close
so far, with the candidates
almost exactly tied. In that
situation, a good showing in
the debates is going to be
important and, quite possi:
bly, decisive.
So the remaining debates
are going · to be worth
watching. One may wonder
whether it is entirely fair for
so much to depend on
which candidate has the
smoother delivery. There
are-, after all, other attributes
at Jeast as important in a
president. But this is, for
better or wo~e. a democracy, and how well a candidate can put his case is a
pretty fair test of the man.
(William Rusher is an
accomplished author, former publisher of the
National Review and former
vice chairman of the
American
Conservative
Union .)

•

Foml Run Bapllst- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sui'Kia~ School - 10
a.m .. Worship- 11:30 a.m.
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St.. Middleport . Sunday
School - 9:30a.m ., Worship- J0:45 a.m.
Pllstor: Rev. M i dl~l L Thom~on. 1r.
A.ntlqldly Baptist
Suml"ay School - 9;30 a.m., Worshi p •
1.0:45 a.m ., Sunday Evcnin~ - 6 :00 p.m.,
PaStor: Don \Yalker

your light so shine beft&gt;re.l
men , thai they may see
works and gloriry .
•rau11:r in heaven."
Matthew 5:1

Sunday School - "' :30

p .m. ~rviu

.l'uppm Pbdni St. Pul
Pastor: J1m Corbitt, Sunday School • 9
.a.m.. Worshtp - JU a.m.. Tue!.day Services
· 7:30p.m.,

Ct:ntr.J Clusttr
Asbury (Syracu-.e). fl'o~tor: Bob Robinson,
Sunday School - 9:45 a_m .. Wo,...htp . I l
a.m .. Wednesday Servicc-s- 7:30p.m.

p.m.

Congregational

tlalwood.~

PaYor: Dewayne Sru"ler. Sunday School.
10 a.m .. Worship - l l a.m .

P&lt;~stor:

FCH"at Run
Pasloi": Bob Robinson. Sunday Schon! - 10
a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m.

Episcopal

' PomtrO)' Churda or Christ
212 W. Main S1 .." Sund&amp;)" School . 9:30
a.m.. Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m .
Weiinesday Se r\'ices - 7 p.m

Danvllll' Holln&amp; Cllurth
3)1)5/ State Route 325, Langsvlle. Pastor:
Brian Bailey. Sunday schoo l - 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m. ,
Wednesday prayer sel'\'ice - 7 p.m.

Heath (Middlepon )
Pastor: Bri;.m Dunham. Sunday School 9:30a.m., w.,nship - 11 :00 a.m .

Holiness

BearwaiiM~-· Ridge Church of Christ
Pa-.tor:Rrucc Terry. Sunday School -9:30'
a.m.
Worship - ' 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedne-sday Servkc~- (l:_lO p.m.

Zion Church of Chrisl
Pomcro). Harrisonville Rd {Rt.14J ),
Pa ~tor: Roger Watson . Sunduy School 9:30 a.m ., Wors hip . 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Scl"\·ices- 7 p.m .

Tuppers Plain Church of Christ
lnmumemal. Wurship Sen·ke - 9 a.m ..
_Communion - 10 U.m .. Sunday School ·
10:15 a.m.. Youth-5: 30pm Sunday. Bible
S1udy Wednesday 7"pm
Bradbury Church vf Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon. 39558 Bradbur)·
Road. Middlepon . Sunday School . ~ :30
a.m.
Won;hip - 10:30 a.m:

or

Rullautd Cbun:h Chrlsl
Sund-.y S~: hool -9:30a.m .. Worship 11nd
Communion - 10:30 a .m .• David
Wisemar1, Mini~ ter
Br•dford Chunh of C hrlllt
Curner of St. Rt , 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..

ROSt ol Sharon lloUness Chun:h
Leading Cro!-k Ad .. Rutland. Pastur: Re\'.
Dewl")' King. . Sunday s'hoo l- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunduy WOiship -7 p.m., Wednesday
prJyer meeting- 1 p.111.
Pint Gro\'t' Bible Holiness Chunil
1!2 mile off Rt . 325, Pa~ tor : Re\'. O'Dell
~anley. Su nday School - 9:.'0 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 · a.m.. 6:00 p.m ..
Wcdn~sdity &amp;rvite. 7:00p.m.

Wrsley&amp;n Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport . Pastor.' Doug
(ox : SLindJY, School· IO _a.m. Worsh ip.. 10:45 p.m., Sunday E\'e. 6:&lt;KJ p.m ..
Wedne$day S,_.rvice ·7:00 p.m .

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor: Rev. U.ury Lemley: Sunday School
-9:30a.m.. Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m ..
Thursday Bible Study And Youth . 7 p.m.
Laurel Cllff"Frtt Mrthodlsl Church
Pastor· Glen ' McCi ung, Sunda)' School·
()'JQ a. m., Wor ~hip - IO:JO a.m. ~n d 6
p.m.,Wednesday Service · 7:~ p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Thf Church nf Jesll"
Christ nf Latter-Day Saint.!i
St. Rt .. 160, 4~6-6247 or· ~46-7486.
Sunday School 10:20- 11 n.m., Relief
Societ)r/Priest hnod 11 :0.5-)2:00 noon ,
Sacrament Service- 9- 10: 15 a.m ..
Homemaking meeling, lst Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lulhenn Chun:h
Pine Grovl, Worshi p- 9:00a .m.. Sunday
School- 10 :00 a.m. fla)(ur:

Mini ster: Doug Shamhlin, Youth Min ish:1:
Bill Amberger, Sunda)· School · 9:30a.m,
Wor~hip - 8:00 a.m . .- 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m..Wedne sday Sen.·1 ce~ ·7:00 p.m.

Our Saviour Luthtrlut Cbun:h
Walnut a~td Henry St~ .. Ravenswoud ,
\\f.Va .• Pastor: David Russe ll, Sunday
School. IOJXJ un., Worship - II a.m.

Hickory Hlllll t.:hurch of Christ
Tuppers Pi ui n~. Pastor Mile Moore. Bible
clas5, 9 a.m. Su ndny: won;hip .IU a. m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pn1 Sunday;_Bible
dan 7 pm Wed .

St. Pa.ul Luthuan Church
Comer Sycamo~ &amp; Second Sl., Pomeroy.
Sun. School - 9:45a.m .. Worsh ip - I I a. m.

Reedsville Church of Christ
~astor: Philip Slurm, Sun&lt;4y School: 9:30
a.m.. Wors hip S..:rvice: 10:.\0 a.m .. Bible
Study, Wednt'sday, 6:]0 p.m.

· ·Outer Church of Chri"t
Sunday school 9:JO n.m., Smtday ~orship
- 10:30 a.m .
Tht Church nf Chris! of Pomeroy
Jnt~rscction 1 nnQ 124 W. Evonge-tist:
Denni$ Sargent, Sunday Bible Study 9:30. n.m .. Woohip: 10:30 a.m. and rdO
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Sn~y - 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Chun:h or ChriSt hi
Chi-lsiian UDion
Hartford , W.Va., Pastor:David Gre~r.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10 :30 a'. m, 7:00 .p.m., Wednesday
Services-7:00 p.m .

Church of God
Mt. Murlah Church ol' God

United Methodist
Graham United Mttbodist
Worship - 1! a.m. !'astor: Ricluu-J Nt&gt;a!IC
'
Bechtrl United Mttbodlst
New Haven . Richard Nease. Pa stor.
Sunday wonhip 9:30 ll .m. Thes, 6:30
prayer and Bihle Shtdy.

Mt. Ollv~ UnUM Methodist
Off 124 hehind Wilke sv ille, l'ostnr: Rev.
Ralph Spires, SUnday Schnol · 9:.ID o.m ..
Wor~hip . 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m., Thursday
Sel"\'ices - 7 p.m
Mtigs Cooperative Porl'ih
Cluster. Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt. Sunday School
9:JO a.m..
Worship · I I u.m.. 0:30 p.m.
Nonhea~t

Chester
Pastor: Jim Corb iu . Worship - 9 a.m.,
S~nday School - 10 a.m .. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: " Den~il Null. Won;hip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sc~onl · 10:30 a.m .

i!nbmio~n.~=~

.tunrral Jl;lome
Middleport, OH 740-992-5141

JomesAnderson,Adam Mrhanitl-

499 Richland Avenue, Alhens .

..

740-594-6333

1-800-451-9806

lilill
AND ERSON
f'UN ERAL HOME

Minersville
Paitor: Bob Robinsun, Sunday School ·
a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m.

Diroc:tors

Pom«oy,OH 740-992-5444

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

~

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

. Pomeroy
Pastor· Brian Dunham. ~orsh1p · 9:25
11.m .. Sunday School- 10:45 a.m.

Culn1ry Pilgrim Cb.aptl ·
Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. Sunduy SchtXll 9:30 a.m ., ·
WurM1ip - II a.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service-7:00p.m .
Harrison~· ille

m , Worshtp -

Wur~hip - 9:30 a.m . Sund~} .li~hool 10.30 a.m., FirM Sunday of Month - HMI

. Church"vt GOO ot Proph«y
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 16(1, Pastor: PJ .··
Chap man, Sunday School - 10 11.m ..
Won;hip - 11 a.m.. Wednesday Sel"\'icts - 7

Trinlt)· Chun:h
Second &amp; Lynn . Pomeroy.
Wor~hip 10:25 a.m., .

11

Sunda) School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship
s.~rvicc 10:30 ~.m., EveninG Servtce 6
p.m

Pomeroy Cblll"("h of the- Nuarmr

lO:lO~tm.

Apple .and Second Sts .. Pastor: Rt\ . Dtmd
RusSt ll . Sunday School artd Wor!ihip- 10
a.m. Eve-ning Services- 6 :JO p.nt ..
Wedne~a)' Servkrs- 6.30 p.m.

Community Churth
,Pastor: Ste\'e. Tomek. Main Street.
Rutland. Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m..
Sunday Service-7 p.m

Davla·Oulckal Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My
Full line of
InSurance words abide in you, ye slla/1
Products+
what ye will, and iJ shall
f Financial
be done unto you.
ENC!ES Inc. Services
John 15:7

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Cool\lille, Ohio
. 740~667-311 0

L61i&amp;Roltom

First Churth Df God

Hemlock Grove Chrisllan Chun:h
Minister: larry Brown. Wor~ h i p • 11:3Q
a.m. Sunday School · 10:.~0 a.m .. Uibl,t:
Srud&gt; - 7 p.m .

Keno Chun:h of Christ
Worship · 9:."\0 a.m.. Sund;~y S~hool 10:~0 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, l st and
3rd Suncta~

First Southea:n Baptist
41872 Pomero)" Pike. Sunday School"9:30 a.m., Worsbip · 9:4~ ~m &amp; 7:00 p.m.,
We&lt;!ne~dny SerVices-7 :00p.m.

SyrK~t~e

GrKt J.:plscopal Chutch
32!"1 E. Main St .. Pomeroy.
HOly'
Eucha~ist 1UO a.m Sunday &amp; 5:30 pm
Wed. Rev. Le:s!Je Rcmmin8;

Mlddltport Chun:h ot Chri.'it
5th and Main, Pastor : AI f-lartsun .
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre, Teen
0ii"C'Ctor: Doo.lgrr Vau.1,1hun, Sunday S'hool
-9:30 o.m .. Worship- 8:15. 10:30 a. m.. 7
p.m., Wed11esday Scrvii:~s - 7 p.m. ·

I

Evening . 6 p.m ., Wetlne§day Si"r.Jces. 7
p.m.
Rudand Churd11 ot God
Pastor: Ron Heath , Sunda~ Wor~hif . 10
a.m., 6 p.m . Wednesday Ser\'1.:e~ - 7
p.m.

Wcst&amp;lde Chun:b of Christ
J.U26 Children·~ Home Rd, Pomeroy. OH
Contact '14{)-4~ 1- 1296 Sunday morning
10:01"1. Sun mt•rnin@ Bible ~tudy:
foll(lwiny w or~hip, Sun C\'e 6:00 pt11 .
Wed bib)e stud) 7 prn

Pomero:y WesL,.ide Church of Christ
.t\226. Children 's Home Rd .. Sundny
S'hool - II a. m.. Worship - iOa .'!' .. 6 p.m.
~'rdnesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hope Bapll~t Churc:h ,tSouthernf
570 Gtant St .. Middleport. Sunday school
-9:30a.m., Worship · II a. m. and 6 p.m..
Wednesday Stn•ice . 7 p.m Pastor: Gar~
Ellis
Rutland First Bapllst Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m.. Worship 10:43 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Bapllst
Pastor Jon Brocken. East Mai n St ..
Sunday Sch. 9: JO am. Worshtp 10:30 am

Bdhlrhrm Baptist Chun-h

•
•

Michael B .d'rord. Pastor.

a.m . The!; . 6:30 prayer. Wrd . 1 pm Bible
Stud)'

Great Bend, Route 124 . Raci ne, OH,
Panor: &amp;i Caner, Sunday School - 9:30

_The·Daily Sentinel

.

Ave .; Midd lepon. Re\ ,

MI. Union Raptl5t
Pastor: Dennis Wt!aver Sunday School9:45 a.m .. Everting - 6: JO p.m.,
Wednesday Servil'es- 6:30p.m.

The first debate

00

River Valley Apos101ic Worsh1p Center.

SDver RUn Baptist
Pa.'itor: John Swan~n. Sunday School !On .m ., Worship . -.· I !a.m., 7:00. p m
.W~dnt:sday Service.~- 7:00p.m.

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject /lJ editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
The
first
televised
debate
between
John
thanks tn organization.\· and individuals will not be acceptMcCain
and
Barack
ed for publication . ·
Obama probably came out
evenly enough to enable ·
both sides to claim victory
William
- which is. of course ,
exactly what they did.
Rusher
· Reader Services ·· (UsPs 213-960)
Certainly, neither man
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Polley
was
obviously and over.Our main concern 1n all stories is to Published ever't afternoon. Monday
whelmingly
the . winner.
through Friday, 11 1 Court Street.
be accurate, 11 you know of an error Pomeroy,
Both were in command of
Ohio. Second-class postage
"regulation," which is the
J, a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid al Pomeroy.
their
material and ably usual liberal mantra on that
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
defended their views .
subject. McCain followed
the Ohio Newspaper Associalion.
Several people to whom I with a sharp attack on
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correcspoke after the debate men- excessive
Uons to The Daily Sentinel: 111 Court
government
(740) 992·2156.
tioned that McCain had not "spending," which is the
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769.
Department extensions are:
looked directly at Obama, conventional conservative
Subscription Rates '
whereas Obama did speak complaint on that issue .
By carrier or motor route
News
directly
\O
...McCain. Thus far, both debaters
One month .•.... • ..•. .'10.27
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, E)(t. 12
hadn't
noticed were hewing · faithfully to
Personally.!
One year ...
'115.84
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
this, but I am sure the positions with which their
Dally ....
50'
Reportor: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
observation ts correct. supporters are familiar and
Seillor Citizen rates
One month ••••. • • .'.• : .'10.27
Whether it matters is feel comfortable.
One year .............'103.90
another question . McCain
Advertising
McCain, following up his
Subscribers shouk:t remit in actwnce
was no doubt mindful of attack on the evils of spendOutalde S.le1: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 dired ~ lhe DaMy Sentinel'No sub scripthe huge audience of mil- ing, then called for a
Outolde S.tn: Brenda Davis. Ext 16 tion ~ mail permitted in areas where
lions of television viewers "spending freeze," and
home earner service is available.
C11111Circ.: Judy Clark, 'Ext 10
who were listening and was Obama neatly changed the
Malt Subscription
anxious to engage them subject hy suggesting that
lnolde Metgo County
General Manager
directly. But, of course, the we "save on· Iraq" - i.e. ,
13 Weeks ............. '32.26
Charlene Hoeflich, EKt. 12
direct
object of his remarks cut expenditures by elimi•
26 Weeks ............. '64.20
52 Weeks
...... ' 127.11
was
Obama
.
nating the heavy cost of the
E•m111i:
One
of
Obama
's
early
Iraq
war. That brought up
newsOmydailysSntlnel.com
Outalde Molgt County
comments
on
the
subject
of
the
whole
issue of lraq, to
13 Weeks ............. '53.55
the economy sounded criti- which the debate now
26 Weeks
· . ...' 107. 10
Web:
cal
of '' th'e market" and inevitably shifted.
52
Weeks
.
·
...........
'214.21
www.mydailysenlinel.com
implicitly favorable to
McCain declared confi00

RJv,.- Valley

RKlnt ·F in I Baptist

LETTERS TO THE
. EDITOR

•

Evening-7:30pm.

P1stor: Ryan Eaton. pastor . Su nday ·
· School· ~:30 am ., Worshi p - 10:40 a.m ..
6:00 p.m .. Wednesday Ser\'ices - 7:00
p.m

Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 l'lection are welcome and
will be accepted up umi/5 p.m. Oil Friday, Oct. 24. Letters
received after that deadline ~t · i/1 not be published. Letters
should be 300 words in length or less and must address
issues, not personalities . Letters endoding local or national candidates, or containing personal attacks, will not be
accepted.

00

VmZandt and Ward Rd., Palitur . Jamts
Milln". Sunday School • IIUO a.m ..

Rultud Fret Will BapiUI
SHltm St .. Pa_~l\lr:.,Pd Barney . Sunduy
School . 10'
. e~tning • 7 P-tn ,
Wed~~ Serv1 4~~. 7 p.m.
• SK-ond Bllpilie Church
Ra\l"ns~toood. WV. Sunday School 10 am, Mommg worsh1p l I am Evening - 7 pm.
We.;tnesda)' 1 p m.
First Baptist Church of M•soa. WV
£Independent Baptist)
SM. 652 and Anderson S1. Pastor: R1•bl:rt
Grady, Sunday ~..:hoo l 10 am, Mornin~
chun:h II am. Sunt!ay e\·ening 6 pm, Wed.
Billie Study 7 pm

l .m:,

·y
~. ;·

First Baptist Churcb
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St ..
,\ iiddleport, Sunday School · ':J:I5 a.m ..
Worship · 10: 15 a.m.. 7:{10 p.m ..
Wednesdaj Service-7:00p.m.

Elections letters advisory

/

Fellowship
Apostolic
Chun:h ol Jesus Christ"ApeQolic:

873 S . ~ 3rd

The Dally Sentinel ··Page AS

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

2008

New
book
examines
why
so
many
a~~ quitting church
The Daily Sentinel
At the last church she
attended before dropping
out, Julia Duin was not
impressed with · the service
opportunities available to
her as a single woman.
Terry
She could do child-care
Mattingly
work, greet people at the
door or join the women in
the altar guild. However,
since her journalism work ·
required frequent travel,
Many believers , she ·said.
Duin sought more flexible are sad or mad - or both .
commitments. Perhaps she ''They say, 'Listen, I've
c&lt;;&gt;uld pia): harp befon: ser- done everything. Now I'm
vtces? Ftll an occastonal in the middle of a mid-life
teaching role, using her 1 crisis, and I'm not. getting
seminary training or materi- any answers.' These are the
al frum her books?
people who are saying, 'I'm
After several frustrating out of here.'"
years, she quit going to
The result of her research
church.
is a new book, "Quitting
Soon she discovered that Church," that pours painful
she wasn't alone, which experience over a foundacaused the Washington . lion of troubling statistics.
Times religion-beat specialIt's important to stress
ist to do what reporters tend that Duin focused on active
to do. She started listening, churchgoers, not the "backreading and connecting sliders, the slackers and the
dots . What she found was, complainers" most church
as one researcher put it, a leaders think would quit.
"spiritual brain drain" out of
Also, this is not another
churches today . .
volume about the fall of the
"I found that a lot of peo- ' "seven sisters" of liberal
ple who were leaving were Protestantism
the
not necessarily new believ- Episcopal Church, ·the
ers. They were the Baby . United Methodist Church·.
Boomers who had been the .Presbyterian Church
involved in all of this for 20. (U.S.A.), the United Church
years," said Duin, speaking of Christ,. the Evangelical
at the recent national Lutheran
Church
in
Religion
Newswriters America, the American
Association meetings in Baptists and · the Christian
Washington , D.C. These Church (Disciples). In
active, committed laypeople recent decades, their memhad "been there and done bership totals have declined
that .... So you couldn't just · 20 .percent or more - a
say to them, 'Oh just try trend shaped by falling
this. Oh just try that."'
birthrates, · bitter doctrinal

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Rock Sprtngs

Pastor: Dcwnyne Stutler. Sunda)· School t):fl{) u.m .• Wo t~hip - 10 a.m., ' Yooth
Fellowship. SundRy - 6 p.m. Early Sunday
Worship B amJen111DunhBm
Rutland
Pastor: John Chepman, Sund:~y School 9:30 n.m.. Wo~hi p - 10:30 a.m ., Thursd11 y
Services - 7 p.m_
Salem Cnter
Pastor:t William K. Mar..ha ll, Sunda9
School - 10:13 ~.m .. WoN&gt;hip - 9:1 5a.m..
Bib!~ Study: Mondl/y 7:00pm
SnoW,·IIIe
Sunday School - 10 a.m .. Worship - I} a. m.
.
Bethany
,
~
P..t stor: John Gilmore, Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Worship .- 9 a.m .. Wedn~sday
Se:rvices- 10 a.m.
Cannel-Sutton
Cannel &amp; Bas han 'Rds . Racine. Ohio.
Pa ~lur: John Gilmore. Sunda}' School ·
9:45 a.m., Worship - I I :00 a.m . , Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.

Morning Star
Pastor: John Gilmore ,Sunday School · 11
a.m .. Worship- 10 a.m.
Ea!ijl Letart
Pa~tor : Hill Marshall Sunday School 9a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m., 111 Sunday
every month evening serv1ce 7:00 p.m.;
Wedne_~ay - 7 p.m

Racine
Pastor: Kerr)' Wood, Sunday School • 10
• a.m., Worship • II a.m:Wedne Sday
Services ll pm : Thur Bib k Study 7 pm

Coolville United M~thodlst Pari~h
Pastor: Helen Kline. Coolville· ChUrch.
Main &amp; Fifth St .• Sun. School - 10 a.rJ ..
WorShip- 9 a.m. , Tues. Services - 7 p.m
Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C, Sunday School - 9
u.m. Worshi"p - 10 a .m ., Wednesday
Services- IOe.m.
HOl"klllllport Chun:h
Kathryn Wiley, Sundu.y School - 9JO
a.m.. Worship - 10:.10 a.m., Pastor Phillip
6&lt;11
.Torch Church

. Pa~lor: Jar~ Lavender. Sunda~ School ·
9:30 am., Wonhip · 10:3U a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednt:Sday S"l"mce~ · 7 p.m.
Chtolter Chtll"dl of tht- Nu.arent
Pastor: Rev. Curtis Randolph . Sunda )
School - 9:30 am. Worship · 10:30 .i.-:'1 ··
Sunday 1.':\'ening 6 pm
Rudand Churdl oC IN N1urtne
Pastor: George Stadler, Sunday School 9:30a.m.• Wo~h ip- 10:30 am .. 6 : ~0
p.m.. Wedne~ay Services - 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Point Rock Churtb of·tbe Nazarene
Route 689, Albanr. Re\1 . Lloyd Grimm,
pastor, Sunday School 10 am: worhsip
service II am, evening service 7 pm. Wed.
·prayer meeting 7 pm

Middleport Church of ~he Nuartne
Pastor: Leonard Powell, Sondny School 9:30 a.m ..Wo~hip · 10:30_a.m .. 6:30 p.m..
Wedne!&gt;d.ay SerVices- 7 p.m ..
Reed!ivtllf •'dlowshlp
Church nr"the Nazarene. Pastor: Ru~sell
Carson , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
W~mhip- 10:45-a.m .. 7 p.m .. Wednesday
Ser\'ices · 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church oC the Naunme
Pastor Mike Adkins. Sunday S,hOOI '- 9:30
a.m.• Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wednesday Serv;ces- 7 p.m.

'
Wtute'1 Chapd \\'Kkyan
COOI\' ille Road. Pa ~to r : Rev. Charles
Man1ndale. ~unday School . 9:30a .m..
Wor~hip • IU:3U a.m.. Wednesda)'· ~rvice
- 7p .m.

fail"i'ie•· Bi.ble Cbun:b

Other Churches

Leturt . 't',Va Rt. ·! . Pastor: Brian May.
Sun&amp;} School -9:30a .m .. Worship -7:00

. SyfiK"VSt ('nmmunily Chur.rb
24BO Serond St ... SyracuSI".OH
Sun . School !0 llffi. Sundy night6 :30 pm
Paslor: Joe Gwinn
A N~w BtgiQninl
(full Gospd Cbun:h) HarriM)nville,
Pastol"i: Bob and Kay Manhall,
Sunday 51"1"\"ICI".l p.m .

p.m.. WediK'&gt;day Bible Smdy · 7:00 p.ntFatth Fellowship CrtlSitde ror Ckrist
Pastor: Rev . Franklin Dicken~ . Serv1ce:
Friday. 7 p.m.

Cah·ary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .. Pastor: Re v.
Blackwood. Su n~ay School - 9:~ a.m ..
Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wedne!&gt;day Service- 7:30 p:m.

Amazing Grate Communi!)"Church
Pa~tor: Wayne Dunlap, Stale Rt. 681.
Tuppers Plain§. Sun. Won.hip: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm., Wed. Rib.le Study 7:QO p.m.

..

Sti\•crsviUe Comm~lty Church ·· ·
Sunday Schooi!O:UU am ..Sunday Won;hip
11 :00 am. Wedne~day 7:00pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp; MiSS)' Dailey

Oisls Chrisllan F~llowship
(Non-dellOffil!lational fellowship\
Meeting in rhe_ M~i gs Middle School
O:tfrteria P3stor: Chns S1e~~o·ar1
10:00 am- Noon Sunday: Informal
Wonohip. ChiiCren ·~ min is~·

R~joidng ur~

Communitl ofChrilit
Portland-Racine Rd .. Panor: J1m Pwffin, ..
Sllnday· School - 9:30 a. m.. Worship . JO :JO a.m ., Wedne sday Services . 7:00
p.m.
· Bdhel Wonhlp Center
39182 St. Rt. 7. 1 mi les south nt",Tuppers
Pllltn!l, {)H Non-denominatiOnal "With
COntemporary Praise &amp; Worship. Pa~tnr
· Rob Barber. Assoc. Pastor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Beny Fulks. Sunda}
services: 10 am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family•
Life Classes, Wtd &amp; Thur night Life
Groups at 7 pn1, Thurs morning ladies·
Life Group nt 10. Outer Limits Voulh Life
Group on Wed. evening from 6:30 to 8:30.
Visit us unline at www.bethelwc.org.
Ash Strtet Chun:h
398 Al&gt;h St., Middil:port -P&lt;~ stors Ma rk
Mohow &amp; Rodnty Walker Sunday
Schovl - 9:30 a.m., Mo"ming WorShip ·
IO: .m ~.m. &amp; 7:00pm, Wednesday Service
-7:00 p.m., YOuth Service-7:00p .m.
Appe Ufe Center
"Full-Gospel Church"', Past~rs John &amp;
Patty Wade. 61.13 Second "Ave. Mawn . 7735017, Servlcl" time: Sunday \0:30a.m ..
Wednesday 7 pm,

Syrac:use Mission
1411 Bridgeman St .. Syrt~cuse, Sundll)'
School · 10 a.m, Ev..:ning - 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Hazel Communily Church
Off R1. 124, Pastor: Edsel H ~1. Sunday
School-9:30a.m .. Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m ..
'7:30p.m

Dycs,·llle Community Chun:h
Sundoy School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Morse Chapd Chun:h
Sunday khool - 10 a.m ., Worship - II
a.m ., Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Faith ~pel Churdt
Long Bo\lom. S~rulay School -9: 30 a.m ..
Worship - 10;45 a.m .• 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7;30 p.m.
Full Gospel UgllthoUJI'
.13045 Hiland Road. Pome roy. Pastor: Roy
Hunter. Sunday School - \0 a.m .. Eventng
7:30 p .m.~ Tuesday &amp; Thurs . · 7:30p.m.
South Belhel Cooununity Clturch
Silver Ridge ' Pastor Linda Damewood.
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worsh1p Service
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

hll G011pel Churth
of Ihe Living sa~·lor
RUJ8 . Antiqutty. Pastor: Jesse MorriS,
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m .

Hobson Christian Fello"·ship Chut'th
Herschel Wh ite . Stmday School10 am. S!lndny Ch urch !'of'r\"ice (dO pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Pa~1or :

Harrisonville Community Church
Pa stor: Theron Durham. Sunda~· - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m

Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Baile y Run Road . Pastor: Re v. Emmttt
Rawson, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thursday Service· 7 p.m

Clifton Tahematle Church
Clifton. W.Va Sunday School· 10 a.m .,
Worship - 7 p.m.. Wednesda ~ Service - 7 ~
p.m.
The 1\rk church
377J Gt&gt;oq;eS Creek ROOd . Gallipolis . OH
Paslor: lnm ie Wireman. Sunday Servicl!s IOJO a.m . Wednesday - 7 p.m. Thursday
Prayer &amp; Pra is~ at 6 pm. Classes for all
ages every s~nda)' &amp; Wednesday.
wwv.-.thearh:hurch.net

Salem Community Chun:h

Faith Full Gospel Churrh
Long Bouom. Pa5tor: Ste\·e Reed. Su nday
Schon! - 9:30 11.m. Wor~hip - 9:30 n.m
and 1 p.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday fellowship sel"\·ice 7 p.m.

M'lddl~port Community Church
575 Pearl St., MiddlepOrt , Pa51or: Sam
Anderson, Sunday School 10 a.m ..
Evening-7:30p.m. 1 Wed0esday Service ·
7:30p.m.

Chun:b

500 N 2nd Ave .. Middleport. Pastor:
Mike Foreman. Pastor EmeniUs Lawrence
Fol"l:'man. Wnrship- 10{.10 am
Wednesday Sl'rvice•. 7 p.m

Back of West COlumbia. W.Va.om L1eving ·
Ro3d , Pastor: Charle~ Roush (30.4 ) 675- .
22KB, Su~;~day School 9:30 am. Sunday
~ve ning service 7.:00 pm. Bibly Study·
Wednesday service" 7:00 pm

Abundant Grace R.F.I.
92J S. Third St., Middleport. PastorTere~a
Dav 1s. Sunday strvic.-. 10 u.m ..
Wedne sday ser\'ice. 7 p.m.

Co. Rd. 63, Sunda y School • '1:30 a.m..
Worship - ·10:30 a.m.

Bald Knob , on Cu. Rd . 31. Pllstur: Rc\
Roger Willfmd. Sunda) School - 9;30
a.m . Wor~h1p- 7 p m.

Restoration Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Rllad. Athens. Pastor :
Lonnie Coots. Sunday Worship 10:00 am.
Wednesday: 7 pm

HouSt of He11lln_g MJnbtries
St. Rt.l24lan&amp;~VJIIe,OH
Full Gospel. (] Pastor) Robert &amp; Robena
Musser. Sunda)· School 9:30 am, ,
Worship 10;30 am - 7:00 pm. Wed :
Sen,.u:e 7:00 pnl
·
Tram Jesus Minislrks
Meeting JJJ t-kchanic Street, Pomeroy,
OH . Pa~tor Bdd1e Bae r. Service &lt;."very
Sunda~· 10:00 a.m

Pentecostal
Ptnttro5tal ~ssembly
Pastor: St. Rl . 124, Racine. Tornado Rd .'
Sunday School · !0 a _m .. E\'ening • 1
p.m.. Wednesday Services- 7 p.n1.

Presbyterian
llarrlson,·Uif Presbyterian Church
Pastor; Rob&lt;en Marshall, Worship - 9:00
a.m. Sunday
Middleport l"l'e5byt~rian
Pastor: Jam ~s Snyder. Sunda y S..:hool 10
a.m.• worship o;,ervice 11 am .

Seventh-Day Adventist ·
Mnnth-Day Adventlsr
Mulhcrry Ht ~. Rd .. PnmerO)'. Saturday .
Ser\"IC e~ : Sahhath School - 2 p.m.,
Worshtp · ·' p.m

United Brethren
Mt ~

Hermon United Brtthren
in Chrisl Churth
Tcx.as Communlly 36411 W1.:kham Rd.
Pastor: Peter Martindale, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Wor•hip - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.. We"dnesday Service~ - 7:00 p.m
Youth group m~eting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7p.m
Eden United Brtth~n in Christ
Sti11l' Route \~-1-. between Reeds,•ille &amp; ·
H~kingport , Sunday School - 10 a.m .. •
Suod:ly Worship - 11:00 a.m. WerlneMJay
Services - HIO p.m.. Pastor· M..&lt;\dam
II

CarleiOII lntenknomlnatloJJal Church
Kingsbury Road. Pastor: Roben Vance.

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so _shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men , that they may see your

ARCADIA NURSING

Thtcare you destrvr, close to home good works and glorify your

Coolville, Ohio

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomer6y, OH 45769
74Q-992-6606

Father in heaven. "
Matthew 5:16

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so loved the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbe!Wl'ten son ... .
Prescriptioils
John 3:16
992-2955
Pomeroy.

CENTER
l;ocated less than 30 minutes from~
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1·740·667-3156 .
"Still small
ro rare"

Mll arace is sufficient
for thee: fQr Mll
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakne~.

.

II Cor. 12:9

.I

�-.
"

PageA4

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 3,

Friday, OctQber 3, 2008

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
.

Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoefrleh
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall nuJke no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Oct. 3, the 277th day of 2008. 'f!!ere are
89 days left in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History: On O&lt;.:t. 3, 1863 , President
Lincoln proclaimed the last .Thursday in November
Thanksgiving Day.
1
.
On this date: In 1226, St. Francis of Assisi , founder of the .
Franciscan order. died ; he was canonized in 1228 ."
·In 1929, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes formally changed its name to the Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
In 1941. Adolf Hitler declared in a speech in Berlin that
Russia had been "broken" and would "never rise again."
In 1951, the New York Giants captured the National
League pennant as Bobby Thomson hita three-jUn homer
off the Brooklyn Dodgers' Ralph Branca in the "shot heard
'round the world."
In 1952, Britain conducted its first atomic test as it detonated a 25-kiloton device in the Monte Bello Islands off
Australia.
In 1'962, astronaut Wally Schirra, blasted off from Cape
Canaveral; Fla .. aboard the Sigma 7 on a nine-hour flight.
In 1968, American Independent Party presidential candidate George Wallace tapped retired Air Force Gen. Curtis
E. LeMay to be his running mate.
In 1968, the Howard Sackler play "The Great White
Hope," starring James Earl Jones and Jane Alexander,
opened on Broadway.
,
In 1988, Lebanese kidnappers released Indian educator
Mithileshwar Singh, who'd been held captive with three
Americans for more than 20 months.
·
In 1995 , the jury in the O.J. Simpson murder trial found
the fohner football star not guilty of the 1994 slayings of his
former wife Nic'o le Brown Si'mpson and Ronald Goldman.
(However, Simpson was later foun&lt;j liable in a civil trial).
Today's Birthdays: Author Gore Vidal is 83. Composer
Steve Reich is 72 : Rock 'n' roll star Chubby Checker is 67.
Actor Alan Rachins is 66. Magician Roy Horn· is 64. Jazz
musician Ronnie Laws is 58. Baseball Hall-of-Farner Dave
Winfield is 57. Actor Peter Frechette is 52. Rock musician
Tommy Lee is 46. Actor Clive Owen is 44. Singer Gwen
Stefani (No Doubt) is 39. Pop si£$~L-~~yin Richardson is
37. Actress Neve Campbell is 35.,S•.nger lndia.Arie is 33 .
Rapper Talib Kweli is 33. Actor Seann Willi. 'll Scott is 32.
Actress Shannyn Sossamon is 30. Actor ErL-. Von Detten is
26. Actress-singer Ashlee Simpson-Wentz is 24.
Thought for Today: "The worst disease in the world is the
plague of vengeance." - Dr. Karl Menninger, American
psychiatrist (1893-1990).

fights. an aging population adults and single-parent
and other factors.
families. In 2005, a
Now, sobering statistics ,University of Virginia
are showing up elsewhere . . researcher fou~d that 32
The
Southern
Baptist · percent of mamed men ~nd
. Convention, for example, 38 percent of marned
has seen a steady decline in women are churchgoers .
baptisms. While the nation 's But only 15 percent of smlar~est non-Catholic flock · gle men and 23 percent of
clatms 16 million members, single women go to church.
Duin noted that its 2007
.There's another reality
report indicates that about that is hard to put into statis6 .1 million people attend tics, said Duin.
worship services regularly.
Many behevers have
Gallup polls keep show- ·grown tire9 of &lt;JUickie sering church attendance hov- vices , PowerPomt answers
ering at roughly 40 percent and pop lyrics. Many "quitof the l!.S. population . ters" she interviewed were
However, Duin noted that yearning for intimate,
two other studies from 2005· down-to-earth
churches .
cut that number down to 18 where pastors and people
percent to 20 percent.
knew their names. They'd
What's happening? Duin been born again. Now they
shows evidence of parallel wanted to know how to face
and even clashing trends. the doubts and pains of
Many people say they're daily life . They wanted real
t(}Q busy, some are burned spiritual growth.
out, and others are mournMany candid believers,
ing the loss of great church- said Duin , "are perplexed
es they knew in their past.
and disappointed
with
There are paradoxes in this . God," and they found that
story, too. In recenr decades, when they asked tough
thriving megachurches have questions, they "were not
dominated the landscape ,' ge!ting meaningful answers
offering media-friendly ser- from their churches. In fact ,
vices and chatty sermons in - they were encouraged not to
gigantic sanctuaries that give· talk about their pain ....
· seekers ·a cushion of
'The big questions are not
anonymity. But in 2007 , the g()ing away, and the
influential Willow Creek answers can no longer be
Community Church near put off."
Chicago found that many
(Terry Mattingly is direc·
older members said they are tor of the Washington
now spiritually "stalled" or Journalism Center at the
"dissati~fied.''
Council for
Christian
Duin is convinced many Colleges and Universities
evangelical churches are and
leads
the
also struggling to deal with GetReligion.org project to
rising numbers of single study religion and the news.) _

Sunda~·. 10)0

Catholic

Emmanuel Apostolk Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rutland,

Sltl.nd Ht&gt;aM Calholk Churcb
101 Mulberry 1\'\'e., Pomt"roy. q.,l2.~1l 9K ,
Pa sto r: Rc\ . Waller E. Hdn:t. Sat. Con
4:45 -:'i.I.Sp.m.: Mm - 5:30 p m.. Sun

.XT\·kcs: Su n 10:00 a.m. &amp;. 7:30 p.m ..
ThUB . 7:00 p.m.. Pa$lor Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God

Con . . 1) . ~5-~: 1~ a.m ... Sun. Mass- 9:.l0
a.m.. Daily Ma."~ - 8:30a.m.

Llba1y Assembly oF God
P.O. Box 467 , Dudding .Lane. Mason.

Church of Christ

W.Va.. Pastor: Neil Tennant. Sullday
Srrvicc:s-.10:00 a.m.IUid 7 p.m.

Baptist
i'agfl'llle Frttwlll Baptist Chun:h
Pastor: Aoyd Ross. Sunday Schoo19:30 to .
· 10:30 am. Worship ~r.·icc 10:30 to 1J :00
am. Wed. ,maching 6 pm
Carpoter lndependenl Rapthll CbUJTh
Sunday School - 9:30am. P~achmg
Service !0:30am, E\'eni ng Service
1:00pm. Wedne_sday Bihle Study 7:00p m,
Pastor:

Cheshire Raplt51 Church
Pas10r. Steve Linle, Sundlly School \UO
am. Morning Worship· -10:30 am.
Wedne sday Bible Study 6:30pm. cho1r
pr.actice 7:.10; y~uth and Dible ~uddie~
6:.ID p.m. Thur ~. I pm book ~tud}

a.m .. Sunday Worship - :30 a.m..&amp; 7
pm: Wed!Je5duy Bible Smdy - ·7:00p.m.
Old Bethtllo'ree Will Huptlsl Churth
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middleport , Sunday
Service L 10 a.m .. 6:00 p.m.• 1\lesdny
Services ·6:00

Hillside Baptlsl Church
·St. Rt. 143 just off Rt . 7. Paster: Rev.
R. Acree. Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service. Wor5hip - 10:30 a.m .. 6 p.m .•
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

J~mes

Victory Baptist Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middlepon. Pastor: lllmes
E. Keesee. Worship - !Oa.m .. 1 p.m..
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m.
Faith Baptbt Church
Railroad St .. Mason. Sunday Sc~ool - 10
a.m .. Worship • 11 a.m., 6 p.m ,'
Wednesday Serv"ices · 7 p.m.

,

......

..........

dently that we will win in
Iraq. Obama replied that he
had opposed ·the attack on
Iraq from the start, and he
believes we should cut back
our efforts there and concentrate on finishing our
military
operation
in
Afghanistan .
·
McCain countered that
.Obama
had ' opposed ·
President Bush's dectsion to
launch a ''surge" in Iraq,
contending that it wouldn't
work, when in fact it has
worked remarkably well.
And so the evening went,
with each debater seemingly well prepared for the
other's thrusts . There is no
space, in this column, to .
list all of the attacks .made
and all of the rebuttals
offered, but I can't honestly say that, when it was
over, I felt that either
debater was massively
ahead on points.
There are two other
debates ahead, and it may
well be that one debater or
the other will clearly stand
out as the winner of one or
both .. At the moment, bowever, after the first debate,
it seems to rne that the protagonists are still · pretty
close to even.

Of course, it is fair to ask
just how much these
debates matter. lf the voters
clearly•prefer one candidate
over the other, that preference may simply overwhelm any benefits his
·adversary may gain by
doing better in the debates.
But the polls seem to show
the race as extremely close
so far, with the candidates
almost exactly tied. In that
situation, a good showing in
the debates is going to be
important and, quite possi:
bly, decisive.
So the remaining debates
are going · to be worth
watching. One may wonder
whether it is entirely fair for
so much to depend on
which candidate has the
smoother delivery. There
are-, after all, other attributes
at Jeast as important in a
president. But this is, for
better or wo~e. a democracy, and how well a candidate can put his case is a
pretty fair test of the man.
(William Rusher is an
accomplished author, former publisher of the
National Review and former
vice chairman of the
American
Conservative
Union .)

•

Foml Run Bapllst- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sui'Kia~ School - 10
a.m .. Worship- 11:30 a.m.
Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main St.. Middleport . Sunday
School - 9:30a.m ., Worship- J0:45 a.m.
Pllstor: Rev. M i dl~l L Thom~on. 1r.
A.ntlqldly Baptist
Suml"ay School - 9;30 a.m., Worshi p •
1.0:45 a.m ., Sunday Evcnin~ - 6 :00 p.m.,
PaStor: Don \Yalker

your light so shine beft&gt;re.l
men , thai they may see
works and gloriry .
•rau11:r in heaven."
Matthew 5:1

Sunday School - "' :30

p .m. ~rviu

.l'uppm Pbdni St. Pul
Pastor: J1m Corbitt, Sunday School • 9
.a.m.. Worshtp - JU a.m.. Tue!.day Services
· 7:30p.m.,

Ct:ntr.J Clusttr
Asbury (Syracu-.e). fl'o~tor: Bob Robinson,
Sunday School - 9:45 a_m .. Wo,...htp . I l
a.m .. Wednesday Servicc-s- 7:30p.m.

p.m.

Congregational

tlalwood.~

PaYor: Dewayne Sru"ler. Sunday School.
10 a.m .. Worship - l l a.m .

P&lt;~stor:

FCH"at Run
Pasloi": Bob Robinson. Sunday Schon! - 10
a.m.. Worship - 9 a.m.

Episcopal

' PomtrO)' Churda or Christ
212 W. Main S1 .." Sund&amp;)" School . 9:30
a.m.. Worship- 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m .
Weiinesday Se r\'ices - 7 p.m

Danvllll' Holln&amp; Cllurth
3)1)5/ State Route 325, Langsvlle. Pastor:
Brian Bailey. Sunday schoo l - 9:30 a.m ..
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 1 p.m. ,
Wednesday prayer sel'\'ice - 7 p.m.

Heath (Middlepon )
Pastor: Bri;.m Dunham. Sunday School 9:30a.m., w.,nship - 11 :00 a.m .

Holiness

BearwaiiM~-· Ridge Church of Christ
Pa-.tor:Rrucc Terry. Sunday School -9:30'
a.m.
Worship - ' 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wedne-sday Servkc~- (l:_lO p.m.

Zion Church of Chrisl
Pomcro). Harrisonville Rd {Rt.14J ),
Pa ~tor: Roger Watson . Sunduy School 9:30 a.m ., Wors hip . 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Scl"\·ices- 7 p.m .

Tuppers Plain Church of Christ
lnmumemal. Wurship Sen·ke - 9 a.m ..
_Communion - 10 U.m .. Sunday School ·
10:15 a.m.. Youth-5: 30pm Sunday. Bible
S1udy Wednesday 7"pm
Bradbury Church vf Christ
Minister: Tom Runyon. 39558 Bradbur)·
Road. Middlepon . Sunday School . ~ :30
a.m.
Won;hip - 10:30 a.m:

or

Rullautd Cbun:h Chrlsl
Sund-.y S~: hool -9:30a.m .. Worship 11nd
Communion - 10:30 a .m .• David
Wisemar1, Mini~ ter
Br•dford Chunh of C hrlllt
Curner of St. Rt , 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..

ROSt ol Sharon lloUness Chun:h
Leading Cro!-k Ad .. Rutland. Pastur: Re\'.
Dewl")' King. . Sunday s'hoo l- 9:30 a.m ..
Sunduy WOiship -7 p.m., Wednesday
prJyer meeting- 1 p.111.
Pint Gro\'t' Bible Holiness Chunil
1!2 mile off Rt . 325, Pa~ tor : Re\'. O'Dell
~anley. Su nday School - 9:.'0 a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 · a.m.. 6:00 p.m ..
Wcdn~sdity &amp;rvite. 7:00p.m.

Wrsley&amp;n Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St., Middleport . Pastor.' Doug
(ox : SLindJY, School· IO _a.m. Worsh ip.. 10:45 p.m., Sunday E\'e. 6:&lt;KJ p.m ..
Wedne$day S,_.rvice ·7:00 p.m .

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor: Rev. U.ury Lemley: Sunday School
-9:30a.m.. Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m ..
Thursday Bible Study And Youth . 7 p.m.
Laurel Cllff"Frtt Mrthodlsl Church
Pastor· Glen ' McCi ung, Sunda)' School·
()'JQ a. m., Wor ~hip - IO:JO a.m. ~n d 6
p.m.,Wednesday Service · 7:~ p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Thf Church nf Jesll"
Christ nf Latter-Day Saint.!i
St. Rt .. 160, 4~6-6247 or· ~46-7486.
Sunday School 10:20- 11 n.m., Relief
Societ)r/Priest hnod 11 :0.5-)2:00 noon ,
Sacrament Service- 9- 10: 15 a.m ..
Homemaking meeling, lst Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lulhenn Chun:h
Pine Grovl, Worshi p- 9:00a .m.. Sunday
School- 10 :00 a.m. fla)(ur:

Mini ster: Doug Shamhlin, Youth Min ish:1:
Bill Amberger, Sunda)· School · 9:30a.m,
Wor~hip - 8:00 a.m . .- 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m..Wedne sday Sen.·1 ce~ ·7:00 p.m.

Our Saviour Luthtrlut Cbun:h
Walnut a~td Henry St~ .. Ravenswoud ,
\\f.Va .• Pastor: David Russe ll, Sunday
School. IOJXJ un., Worship - II a.m.

Hickory Hlllll t.:hurch of Christ
Tuppers Pi ui n~. Pastor Mile Moore. Bible
clas5, 9 a.m. Su ndny: won;hip .IU a. m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pn1 Sunday;_Bible
dan 7 pm Wed .

St. Pa.ul Luthuan Church
Comer Sycamo~ &amp; Second Sl., Pomeroy.
Sun. School - 9:45a.m .. Worsh ip - I I a. m.

Reedsville Church of Christ
~astor: Philip Slurm, Sun&lt;4y School: 9:30
a.m.. Wors hip S..:rvice: 10:.\0 a.m .. Bible
Study, Wednt'sday, 6:]0 p.m.

· ·Outer Church of Chri"t
Sunday school 9:JO n.m., Smtday ~orship
- 10:30 a.m .
Tht Church nf Chris! of Pomeroy
Jnt~rscction 1 nnQ 124 W. Evonge-tist:
Denni$ Sargent, Sunday Bible Study 9:30. n.m .. Woohip: 10:30 a.m. and rdO
p.m.. Wednesday Bible Sn~y - 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Chun:h or ChriSt hi
Chi-lsiian UDion
Hartford , W.Va., Pastor:David Gre~r.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10 :30 a'. m, 7:00 .p.m., Wednesday
Services-7:00 p.m .

Church of God
Mt. Murlah Church ol' God

United Methodist
Graham United Mttbodist
Worship - 1! a.m. !'astor: Ricluu-J Nt&gt;a!IC
'
Bechtrl United Mttbodlst
New Haven . Richard Nease. Pa stor.
Sunday wonhip 9:30 ll .m. Thes, 6:30
prayer and Bihle Shtdy.

Mt. Ollv~ UnUM Methodist
Off 124 hehind Wilke sv ille, l'ostnr: Rev.
Ralph Spires, SUnday Schnol · 9:.ID o.m ..
Wor~hip . 10:30 a.m.. 7 p.m., Thursday
Sel"\'ices - 7 p.m
Mtigs Cooperative Porl'ih
Cluster. Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt. Sunday School
9:JO a.m..
Worship · I I u.m.. 0:30 p.m.
Nonhea~t

Chester
Pastor: Jim Corb iu . Worship - 9 a.m.,
S~nday School - 10 a.m .. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: " Den~il Null. Won;hip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sc~onl · 10:30 a.m .

i!nbmio~n.~=~

.tunrral Jl;lome
Middleport, OH 740-992-5141

JomesAnderson,Adam Mrhanitl-

499 Richland Avenue, Alhens .

..

740-594-6333

1-800-451-9806

lilill
AND ERSON
f'UN ERAL HOME

Minersville
Paitor: Bob Robinsun, Sunday School ·
a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m.

Diroc:tors

Pom«oy,OH 740-992-5444

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

~

Pearl Chapel
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

. Pomeroy
Pastor· Brian Dunham. ~orsh1p · 9:25
11.m .. Sunday School- 10:45 a.m.

Culn1ry Pilgrim Cb.aptl ·
Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. Sunduy SchtXll 9:30 a.m ., ·
WurM1ip - II a.m., 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Service-7:00p.m .
Harrison~· ille

m , Worshtp -

Wur~hip - 9:30 a.m . Sund~} .li~hool 10.30 a.m., FirM Sunday of Month - HMI

. Church"vt GOO ot Proph«y
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 16(1, Pastor: PJ .··
Chap man, Sunday School - 10 11.m ..
Won;hip - 11 a.m.. Wednesday Sel"\'icts - 7

Trinlt)· Chun:h
Second &amp; Lynn . Pomeroy.
Wor~hip 10:25 a.m., .

11

Sunda) School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship
s.~rvicc 10:30 ~.m., EveninG Servtce 6
p.m

Pomeroy Cblll"("h of the- Nuarmr

lO:lO~tm.

Apple .and Second Sts .. Pastor: Rt\ . Dtmd
RusSt ll . Sunday School artd Wor!ihip- 10
a.m. Eve-ning Services- 6 :JO p.nt ..
Wedne~a)' Servkrs- 6.30 p.m.

Community Churth
,Pastor: Ste\'e. Tomek. Main Street.
Rutland. Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m..
Sunday Service-7 p.m

Davla·Oulckal Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My
Full line of
InSurance words abide in you, ye slla/1
Products+
what ye will, and iJ shall
f Financial
be done unto you.
ENC!ES Inc. Services
John 15:7

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Cool\lille, Ohio
. 740~667-311 0

L61i&amp;Roltom

First Churth Df God

Hemlock Grove Chrisllan Chun:h
Minister: larry Brown. Wor~ h i p • 11:3Q
a.m. Sunday School · 10:.~0 a.m .. Uibl,t:
Srud&gt; - 7 p.m .

Keno Chun:h of Christ
Worship · 9:."\0 a.m.. Sund;~y S~hool 10:~0 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, l st and
3rd Suncta~

First Southea:n Baptist
41872 Pomero)" Pike. Sunday School"9:30 a.m., Worsbip · 9:4~ ~m &amp; 7:00 p.m.,
We&lt;!ne~dny SerVices-7 :00p.m.

SyrK~t~e

GrKt J.:plscopal Chutch
32!"1 E. Main St .. Pomeroy.
HOly'
Eucha~ist 1UO a.m Sunday &amp; 5:30 pm
Wed. Rev. Le:s!Je Rcmmin8;

Mlddltport Chun:h ot Chri.'it
5th and Main, Pastor : AI f-lartsun .
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre, Teen
0ii"C'Ctor: Doo.lgrr Vau.1,1hun, Sunday S'hool
-9:30 o.m .. Worship- 8:15. 10:30 a. m.. 7
p.m., Wed11esday Scrvii:~s - 7 p.m. ·

I

Evening . 6 p.m ., Wetlne§day Si"r.Jces. 7
p.m.
Rudand Churd11 ot God
Pastor: Ron Heath , Sunda~ Wor~hif . 10
a.m., 6 p.m . Wednesday Ser\'1.:e~ - 7
p.m.

Wcst&amp;lde Chun:b of Christ
J.U26 Children·~ Home Rd, Pomeroy. OH
Contact '14{)-4~ 1- 1296 Sunday morning
10:01"1. Sun mt•rnin@ Bible ~tudy:
foll(lwiny w or~hip, Sun C\'e 6:00 pt11 .
Wed bib)e stud) 7 prn

Pomero:y WesL,.ide Church of Christ
.t\226. Children 's Home Rd .. Sundny
S'hool - II a. m.. Worship - iOa .'!' .. 6 p.m.
~'rdnesday Services - 7 p.m.

Hope Bapll~t Churc:h ,tSouthernf
570 Gtant St .. Middleport. Sunday school
-9:30a.m., Worship · II a. m. and 6 p.m..
Wednesday Stn•ice . 7 p.m Pastor: Gar~
Ellis
Rutland First Bapllst Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a. m.. Worship 10:43 a.m.
Pomeroy Flnt Bapllst
Pastor Jon Brocken. East Mai n St ..
Sunday Sch. 9: JO am. Worshtp 10:30 am

Bdhlrhrm Baptist Chun-h

•
•

Michael B .d'rord. Pastor.

a.m . The!; . 6:30 prayer. Wrd . 1 pm Bible
Stud)'

Great Bend, Route 124 . Raci ne, OH,
Panor: &amp;i Caner, Sunday School - 9:30

_The·Daily Sentinel

.

Ave .; Midd lepon. Re\ ,

MI. Union Raptl5t
Pastor: Dennis Wt!aver Sunday School9:45 a.m .. Everting - 6: JO p.m.,
Wednesday Servil'es- 6:30p.m.

The first debate

00

River Valley Apos101ic Worsh1p Center.

SDver RUn Baptist
Pa.'itor: John Swan~n. Sunday School !On .m ., Worship . -.· I !a.m., 7:00. p m
.W~dnt:sday Service.~- 7:00p.m.

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject /lJ editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of
The
first
televised
debate
between
John
thanks tn organization.\· and individuals will not be acceptMcCain
and
Barack
ed for publication . ·
Obama probably came out
evenly enough to enable ·
both sides to claim victory
William
- which is. of course ,
exactly what they did.
Rusher
· Reader Services ·· (UsPs 213-960)
Certainly, neither man
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Correction Polley
was
obviously and over.Our main concern 1n all stories is to Published ever't afternoon. Monday
whelmingly
the . winner.
through Friday, 11 1 Court Street.
be accurate, 11 you know of an error Pomeroy,
Both were in command of
Ohio. Second-class postage
"regulation," which is the
J, a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid al Pomeroy.
their
material and ably usual liberal mantra on that
992-2156.
Member: The Associated Press and
defended their views .
subject. McCain followed
the Ohio Newspaper Associalion.
Several people to whom I with a sharp attack on
Our main number Is
Postmaster: Send address correcspoke after the debate men- excessive
Uons to The Daily Sentinel: 111 Court
government
(740) 992·2156.
tioned that McCain had not "spending," which is the
Street. Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769.
Department extensions are:
looked directly at Obama, conventional conservative
Subscription Rates '
whereas Obama did speak complaint on that issue .
By carrier or motor route
News
directly
\O
...McCain. Thus far, both debaters
One month .•.... • ..•. .'10.27
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, E)(t. 12
hadn't
noticed were hewing · faithfully to
Personally.!
One year ...
'115.84
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
this, but I am sure the positions with which their
Dally ....
50'
Reportor: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
observation ts correct. supporters are familiar and
Seillor Citizen rates
One month ••••. • • .'.• : .'10.27
Whether it matters is feel comfortable.
One year .............'103.90
another question . McCain
Advertising
McCain, following up his
Subscribers shouk:t remit in actwnce
was no doubt mindful of attack on the evils of spendOutalde S.le1: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 dired ~ lhe DaMy Sentinel'No sub scripthe huge audience of mil- ing, then called for a
Outolde S.tn: Brenda Davis. Ext 16 tion ~ mail permitted in areas where
lions of television viewers "spending freeze," and
home earner service is available.
C11111Circ.: Judy Clark, 'Ext 10
who were listening and was Obama neatly changed the
Malt Subscription
anxious to engage them subject hy suggesting that
lnolde Metgo County
General Manager
directly. But, of course, the we "save on· Iraq" - i.e. ,
13 Weeks ............. '32.26
Charlene Hoeflich, EKt. 12
direct
object of his remarks cut expenditures by elimi•
26 Weeks ............. '64.20
52 Weeks
...... ' 127.11
was
Obama
.
nating the heavy cost of the
E•m111i:
One
of
Obama
's
early
Iraq
war. That brought up
newsOmydailysSntlnel.com
Outalde Molgt County
comments
on
the
subject
of
the
whole
issue of lraq, to
13 Weeks ............. '53.55
the economy sounded criti- which the debate now
26 Weeks
· . ...' 107. 10
Web:
cal
of '' th'e market" and inevitably shifted.
52
Weeks
.
·
...........
'214.21
www.mydailysenlinel.com
implicitly favorable to
McCain declared confi00

RJv,.- Valley

RKlnt ·F in I Baptist

LETTERS TO THE
. EDITOR

•

Evening-7:30pm.

P1stor: Ryan Eaton. pastor . Su nday ·
· School· ~:30 am ., Worshi p - 10:40 a.m ..
6:00 p.m .. Wednesday Ser\'ices - 7:00
p.m

Letters dealing with the Nov. 4 l'lection are welcome and
will be accepted up umi/5 p.m. Oil Friday, Oct. 24. Letters
received after that deadline ~t · i/1 not be published. Letters
should be 300 words in length or less and must address
issues, not personalities . Letters endoding local or national candidates, or containing personal attacks, will not be
accepted.

00

VmZandt and Ward Rd., Palitur . Jamts
Milln". Sunday School • IIUO a.m ..

Rultud Fret Will BapiUI
SHltm St .. Pa_~l\lr:.,Pd Barney . Sunduy
School . 10'
. e~tning • 7 P-tn ,
Wed~~ Serv1 4~~. 7 p.m.
• SK-ond Bllpilie Church
Ra\l"ns~toood. WV. Sunday School 10 am, Mommg worsh1p l I am Evening - 7 pm.
We.;tnesda)' 1 p m.
First Baptist Church of M•soa. WV
£Independent Baptist)
SM. 652 and Anderson S1. Pastor: R1•bl:rt
Grady, Sunday ~..:hoo l 10 am, Mornin~
chun:h II am. Sunt!ay e\·ening 6 pm, Wed.
Billie Study 7 pm

l .m:,

·y
~. ;·

First Baptist Churcb
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St ..
,\ iiddleport, Sunday School · ':J:I5 a.m ..
Worship · 10: 15 a.m.. 7:{10 p.m ..
Wednesdaj Service-7:00p.m.

Elections letters advisory

/

Fellowship
Apostolic
Chun:h ol Jesus Christ"ApeQolic:

873 S . ~ 3rd

The Dally Sentinel ··Page AS

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

2008

New
book
examines
why
so
many
a~~ quitting church
The Daily Sentinel
At the last church she
attended before dropping
out, Julia Duin was not
impressed with · the service
opportunities available to
her as a single woman.
Terry
She could do child-care
Mattingly
work, greet people at the
door or join the women in
the altar guild. However,
since her journalism work ·
required frequent travel,
Many believers , she ·said.
Duin sought more flexible are sad or mad - or both .
commitments. Perhaps she ''They say, 'Listen, I've
c&lt;;&gt;uld pia): harp befon: ser- done everything. Now I'm
vtces? Ftll an occastonal in the middle of a mid-life
teaching role, using her 1 crisis, and I'm not. getting
seminary training or materi- any answers.' These are the
al frum her books?
people who are saying, 'I'm
After several frustrating out of here.'"
years, she quit going to
The result of her research
church.
is a new book, "Quitting
Soon she discovered that Church," that pours painful
she wasn't alone, which experience over a foundacaused the Washington . lion of troubling statistics.
Times religion-beat specialIt's important to stress
ist to do what reporters tend that Duin focused on active
to do. She started listening, churchgoers, not the "backreading and connecting sliders, the slackers and the
dots . What she found was, complainers" most church
as one researcher put it, a leaders think would quit.
"spiritual brain drain" out of
Also, this is not another
churches today . .
volume about the fall of the
"I found that a lot of peo- ' "seven sisters" of liberal
ple who were leaving were Protestantism
the
not necessarily new believ- Episcopal Church, ·the
ers. They were the Baby . United Methodist Church·.
Boomers who had been the .Presbyterian Church
involved in all of this for 20. (U.S.A.), the United Church
years," said Duin, speaking of Christ,. the Evangelical
at the recent national Lutheran
Church
in
Religion
Newswriters America, the American
Association meetings in Baptists and · the Christian
Washington , D.C. These Church (Disciples). In
active, committed laypeople recent decades, their memhad "been there and done bership totals have declined
that .... So you couldn't just · 20 .percent or more - a
say to them, 'Oh just try trend shaped by falling
this. Oh just try that."'
birthrates, · bitter doctrinal

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Rock Sprtngs

Pastor: Dcwnyne Stutler. Sunda)· School t):fl{) u.m .• Wo t~hip - 10 a.m., ' Yooth
Fellowship. SundRy - 6 p.m. Early Sunday
Worship B amJen111DunhBm
Rutland
Pastor: John Chepman, Sund:~y School 9:30 n.m.. Wo~hi p - 10:30 a.m ., Thursd11 y
Services - 7 p.m_
Salem Cnter
Pastor:t William K. Mar..ha ll, Sunda9
School - 10:13 ~.m .. WoN&gt;hip - 9:1 5a.m..
Bib!~ Study: Mondl/y 7:00pm
SnoW,·IIIe
Sunday School - 10 a.m .. Worship - I} a. m.
.
Bethany
,
~
P..t stor: John Gilmore, Sunday School - 10
a.m .. Worship .- 9 a.m .. Wedn~sday
Se:rvices- 10 a.m.
Cannel-Sutton
Cannel &amp; Bas han 'Rds . Racine. Ohio.
Pa ~lur: John Gilmore. Sunda}' School ·
9:45 a.m., Worship - I I :00 a.m . , Bible
Study Wed. 7:30p.m.

Morning Star
Pastor: John Gilmore ,Sunday School · 11
a.m .. Worship- 10 a.m.
Ea!ijl Letart
Pa~tor : Hill Marshall Sunday School 9a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m., 111 Sunday
every month evening serv1ce 7:00 p.m.;
Wedne_~ay - 7 p.m

Racine
Pastor: Kerr)' Wood, Sunday School • 10
• a.m., Worship • II a.m:Wedne Sday
Services ll pm : Thur Bib k Study 7 pm

Coolville United M~thodlst Pari~h
Pastor: Helen Kline. Coolville· ChUrch.
Main &amp; Fifth St .• Sun. School - 10 a.rJ ..
WorShip- 9 a.m. , Tues. Services - 7 p.m
Bethel Church
Township Rd .. 468C, Sunday School - 9
u.m. Worshi"p - 10 a .m ., Wednesday
Services- IOe.m.
HOl"klllllport Chun:h
Kathryn Wiley, Sundu.y School - 9JO
a.m.. Worship - 10:.10 a.m., Pastor Phillip
6&lt;11
.Torch Church

. Pa~lor: Jar~ Lavender. Sunda~ School ·
9:30 am., Wonhip · 10:3U a.m. and 6
p.m.. Wednt:Sday S"l"mce~ · 7 p.m.
Chtolter Chtll"dl of tht- Nu.arent
Pastor: Rev. Curtis Randolph . Sunda )
School - 9:30 am. Worship · 10:30 .i.-:'1 ··
Sunday 1.':\'ening 6 pm
Rudand Churdl oC IN N1urtne
Pastor: George Stadler, Sunday School 9:30a.m.• Wo~h ip- 10:30 am .. 6 : ~0
p.m.. Wedne~ay Services - 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Point Rock Churtb of·tbe Nazarene
Route 689, Albanr. Re\1 . Lloyd Grimm,
pastor, Sunday School 10 am: worhsip
service II am, evening service 7 pm. Wed.
·prayer meeting 7 pm

Middleport Church of ~he Nuartne
Pastor: Leonard Powell, Sondny School 9:30 a.m ..Wo~hip · 10:30_a.m .. 6:30 p.m..
Wedne!&gt;d.ay SerVices- 7 p.m ..
Reed!ivtllf •'dlowshlp
Church nr"the Nazarene. Pastor: Ru~sell
Carson , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m..
W~mhip- 10:45-a.m .. 7 p.m .. Wednesday
Ser\'ices · 7 p.m.
Syracuse Church oC the Naunme
Pastor Mike Adkins. Sunday S,hOOI '- 9:30
a.m.• Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m..
Wednesday Serv;ces- 7 p.m.

'
Wtute'1 Chapd \\'Kkyan
COOI\' ille Road. Pa ~to r : Rev. Charles
Man1ndale. ~unday School . 9:30a .m..
Wor~hip • IU:3U a.m.. Wednesda)'· ~rvice
- 7p .m.

fail"i'ie•· Bi.ble Cbun:b

Other Churches

Leturt . 't',Va Rt. ·! . Pastor: Brian May.
Sun&amp;} School -9:30a .m .. Worship -7:00

. SyfiK"VSt ('nmmunily Chur.rb
24BO Serond St ... SyracuSI".OH
Sun . School !0 llffi. Sundy night6 :30 pm
Paslor: Joe Gwinn
A N~w BtgiQninl
(full Gospd Cbun:h) HarriM)nville,
Pastol"i: Bob and Kay Manhall,
Sunday 51"1"\"ICI".l p.m .

p.m.. WediK'&gt;day Bible Smdy · 7:00 p.ntFatth Fellowship CrtlSitde ror Ckrist
Pastor: Rev . Franklin Dicken~ . Serv1ce:
Friday. 7 p.m.

Cah·ary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd .. Pastor: Re v.
Blackwood. Su n~ay School - 9:~ a.m ..
Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7:30 p.m ..
Wedne!&gt;day Service- 7:30 p:m.

Amazing Grate Communi!)"Church
Pa~tor: Wayne Dunlap, Stale Rt. 681.
Tuppers Plain§. Sun. Won.hip: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm., Wed. Rib.le Study 7:QO p.m.

..

Sti\•crsviUe Comm~lty Church ·· ·
Sunday Schooi!O:UU am ..Sunday Won;hip
11 :00 am. Wedne~day 7:00pm Pastor:
Bryan &amp; MiSS)' Dailey

Oisls Chrisllan F~llowship
(Non-dellOffil!lational fellowship\
Meeting in rhe_ M~i gs Middle School
O:tfrteria P3stor: Chns S1e~~o·ar1
10:00 am- Noon Sunday: Informal
Wonohip. ChiiCren ·~ min is~·

R~joidng ur~

Communitl ofChrilit
Portland-Racine Rd .. Panor: J1m Pwffin, ..
Sllnday· School - 9:30 a. m.. Worship . JO :JO a.m ., Wedne sday Services . 7:00
p.m.
· Bdhel Wonhlp Center
39182 St. Rt. 7. 1 mi les south nt",Tuppers
Pllltn!l, {)H Non-denominatiOnal "With
COntemporary Praise &amp; Worship. Pa~tnr
· Rob Barber. Assoc. Pastor Karyn Davis.
Youth Director Beny Fulks. Sunda}
services: 10 am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family•
Life Classes, Wtd &amp; Thur night Life
Groups at 7 pn1, Thurs morning ladies·
Life Group nt 10. Outer Limits Voulh Life
Group on Wed. evening from 6:30 to 8:30.
Visit us unline at www.bethelwc.org.
Ash Strtet Chun:h
398 Al&gt;h St., Middil:port -P&lt;~ stors Ma rk
Mohow &amp; Rodnty Walker Sunday
Schovl - 9:30 a.m., Mo"ming WorShip ·
IO: .m ~.m. &amp; 7:00pm, Wednesday Service
-7:00 p.m., YOuth Service-7:00p .m.
Appe Ufe Center
"Full-Gospel Church"', Past~rs John &amp;
Patty Wade. 61.13 Second "Ave. Mawn . 7735017, Servlcl" time: Sunday \0:30a.m ..
Wednesday 7 pm,

Syrac:use Mission
1411 Bridgeman St .. Syrt~cuse, Sundll)'
School · 10 a.m, Ev..:ning - 6 p.m ,
Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Hazel Communily Church
Off R1. 124, Pastor: Edsel H ~1. Sunday
School-9:30a.m .. Worsh ip - 10:30 a.m ..
'7:30p.m

Dycs,·llle Community Chun:h
Sundoy School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
Morse Chapd Chun:h
Sunday khool - 10 a.m ., Worship - II
a.m ., Wednesday Service- 7 p.m.
Faith ~pel Churdt
Long Bo\lom. S~rulay School -9: 30 a.m ..
Worship - 10;45 a.m .• 7:30 p.m ..
Wednesday 7;30 p.m.
Full Gospel UgllthoUJI'
.13045 Hiland Road. Pome roy. Pastor: Roy
Hunter. Sunday School - \0 a.m .. Eventng
7:30 p .m.~ Tuesday &amp; Thurs . · 7:30p.m.
South Belhel Cooununity Clturch
Silver Ridge ' Pastor Linda Damewood.
Sunday School - 9 a.m., Worsh1p Service
10 a.m. 2nd and 4th Sunday

hll G011pel Churth
of Ihe Living sa~·lor
RUJ8 . Antiqutty. Pastor: Jesse MorriS,
Services: Saturday 2:00p.m .

Hobson Christian Fello"·ship Chut'th
Herschel Wh ite . Stmday School10 am. S!lndny Ch urch !'of'r\"ice (dO pm
Wednesday 7 pm
Pa~1or :

Harrisonville Community Church
Pa stor: Theron Durham. Sunda~· - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m

Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Baile y Run Road . Pastor: Re v. Emmttt
Rawson, Sunday Evening 7 p.m.,
Thursday Service· 7 p.m

Clifton Tahematle Church
Clifton. W.Va Sunday School· 10 a.m .,
Worship - 7 p.m.. Wednesda ~ Service - 7 ~
p.m.
The 1\rk church
377J Gt&gt;oq;eS Creek ROOd . Gallipolis . OH
Paslor: lnm ie Wireman. Sunday Servicl!s IOJO a.m . Wednesday - 7 p.m. Thursday
Prayer &amp; Pra is~ at 6 pm. Classes for all
ages every s~nda)' &amp; Wednesday.
wwv.-.thearh:hurch.net

Salem Community Chun:h

Faith Full Gospel Churrh
Long Bouom. Pa5tor: Ste\·e Reed. Su nday
Schon! - 9:30 11.m. Wor~hip - 9:30 n.m
and 1 p.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday fellowship sel"\·ice 7 p.m.

M'lddl~port Community Church
575 Pearl St., MiddlepOrt , Pa51or: Sam
Anderson, Sunday School 10 a.m ..
Evening-7:30p.m. 1 Wed0esday Service ·
7:30p.m.

Chun:b

500 N 2nd Ave .. Middleport. Pastor:
Mike Foreman. Pastor EmeniUs Lawrence
Fol"l:'man. Wnrship- 10{.10 am
Wednesday Sl'rvice•. 7 p.m

Back of West COlumbia. W.Va.om L1eving ·
Ro3d , Pastor: Charle~ Roush (30.4 ) 675- .
22KB, Su~;~day School 9:30 am. Sunday
~ve ning service 7.:00 pm. Bibly Study·
Wednesday service" 7:00 pm

Abundant Grace R.F.I.
92J S. Third St., Middleport. PastorTere~a
Dav 1s. Sunday strvic.-. 10 u.m ..
Wedne sday ser\'ice. 7 p.m.

Co. Rd. 63, Sunda y School • '1:30 a.m..
Worship - ·10:30 a.m.

Bald Knob , on Cu. Rd . 31. Pllstur: Rc\
Roger Willfmd. Sunda) School - 9;30
a.m . Wor~h1p- 7 p m.

Restoration Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Rllad. Athens. Pastor :
Lonnie Coots. Sunday Worship 10:00 am.
Wednesday: 7 pm

HouSt of He11lln_g MJnbtries
St. Rt.l24lan&amp;~VJIIe,OH
Full Gospel. (] Pastor) Robert &amp; Robena
Musser. Sunda)· School 9:30 am, ,
Worship 10;30 am - 7:00 pm. Wed :
Sen,.u:e 7:00 pnl
·
Tram Jesus Minislrks
Meeting JJJ t-kchanic Street, Pomeroy,
OH . Pa~tor Bdd1e Bae r. Service &lt;."very
Sunda~· 10:00 a.m

Pentecostal
Ptnttro5tal ~ssembly
Pastor: St. Rl . 124, Racine. Tornado Rd .'
Sunday School · !0 a _m .. E\'ening • 1
p.m.. Wednesday Services- 7 p.n1.

Presbyterian
llarrlson,·Uif Presbyterian Church
Pastor; Rob&lt;en Marshall, Worship - 9:00
a.m. Sunday
Middleport l"l'e5byt~rian
Pastor: Jam ~s Snyder. Sunda y S..:hool 10
a.m.• worship o;,ervice 11 am .

Seventh-Day Adventist ·
Mnnth-Day Adventlsr
Mulhcrry Ht ~. Rd .. PnmerO)'. Saturday .
Ser\"IC e~ : Sahhath School - 2 p.m.,
Worshtp · ·' p.m

United Brethren
Mt ~

Hermon United Brtthren
in Chrisl Churth
Tcx.as Communlly 36411 W1.:kham Rd.
Pastor: Peter Martindale, Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Wor•hip - 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.. We"dnesday Service~ - 7:00 p.m
Youth group m~eting 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7p.m
Eden United Brtth~n in Christ
Sti11l' Route \~-1-. between Reeds,•ille &amp; ·
H~kingport , Sunday School - 10 a.m .. •
Suod:ly Worship - 11:00 a.m. WerlneMJay
Services - HIO p.m.. Pastor· M..&lt;\dam
II

CarleiOII lntenknomlnatloJJal Church
Kingsbury Road. Pastor: Roben Vance.

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so _shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men , that they may see your

ARCADIA NURSING

Thtcare you destrvr, close to home good works and glorify your

Coolville, Ohio

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomer6y, OH 45769
74Q-992-6606

Father in heaven. "
Matthew 5:16

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
God so loved the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
We Fill Doctors'
lbe!Wl'ten son ... .
Prescriptioils
John 3:16
992-2955
Pomeroy.

CENTER
l;ocated less than 30 minutes from~
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1·740·667-3156 .
"Still small
ro rare"

Mll arace is sufficient
for thee: fQr Mll
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakne~.

.

II Cor. 12:9

.I

�..
.

•

FAITH • VALUES

:rhe Daily Sentinel

Fools rush in

My wife and I wenr to a
major depm1ment store last
week to look at new bath
iowels. This is an errand that
I complete only every dec·ade
tlr so. W.hen I buy bath towt!ls. I like to buy the reall y
good ones so that they wil l
}JISTa rea ll y long time
;· As we came otT the escalati,r. we were surrounded h )
CHRI STMAS! Christmas
trees. Christmas angels.
Santa Clauses. snm•mcn if it was Christmas· rdated . it
11 '" on display (e.\cept for

PageA6
Friday, October 3,

2008.

·wood

MEMORIES OF SCHOOL DAYS
BY ANYCE F:RY MILAM

didn't wish to look foolish to
A man who was both very ..successful and widely
them. And he wasn' t sure tha~
admired was approached by his young daughte~. Allison,
he was quite ready to give up.
during a brief (and all too rare) moment between his vigcontrol of his direction to.
orous business trips. She climbed into his lap and hugged
anyone. He passed the exiL
him with the earnestness that only a small and adoring
Pastor
sign.
Suddenly the road
child can effortlessly muster.
·
Thorn
ended. He was alone' and sur-. .
"Daddy." she bcgan,.hcr large brown eyes searching her
father 's face . "You traYel so much, I'm afraid you won 't
Mollohan rounded by nothing at all:
come home one day. If something happened ... to you I
• •--•except gloom and an eene,
silence broken only by the,
mean . wo.uld you go to heaven?"' For a moment he hesifaint echo of mocking laughtated. Caught off guard like that, he was suddenly aw.are
ter from a shadow that ha&lt;! .
that he didn't really know the answer to that question
"Well sure. honey. I'd go to heaven," he finally replied , hidden in liis back seat all along, urging him along this
trying to be reassuring, but inwardly feeling a twinge of path to destruction and away from the safety that the gllld-.
guilt as if he were lying. He knew he wasn "t a bad person ing hands would have granted him had he only yielded. :
He wanted to blame the shadow for encouraging him along
as people go. but he also knew that there were places in
his heart with corresponding moments in his past that had · the path that he had chosen. He wanted to blame the other.
left a stain that he wasn't sure God could overlook if that drive~ for trapping him in the lane away from the extts. He.
moment were to arrive.
wanted to blame those who had taken the safer road for not
. "Yes, .I'd go to heaven ," he said again . "That's a relief, warning him soon enough or loud enough. He wanted to
daddy." Allison chirped. She hugged him, climbed ' down blame the hands alxive him for not grabbing control and wk~
and ran away to play. Her father stood up and quietly ing him to safety. He wanted ,to and even tried to. But he
began packing for hi's next trip, profoundly disturbed . knew down deep inside that he was the one to blame. He was
That night, in his hotel room, he found ·~ Bible. He opened - the one who had made the choice to remain on the wide and
it and began reading. his eyes finally running across easy way. The darlrness intensified until it was an inky black-,
Jesus· parable in Luke 20 about a rich man who had big ness. It surrounded him and began to smother him in painful.
plans . When he read verse 12. his heart skipped a beat.
tentacles !)f regret and grief. He realized that he was alone,
"But God said to him, 'You foo1 1 This very night your · unerly and inescapably alone and would always be so forev-.
life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what er after. He cried out in ·despair. He awoke screaming. His
you have prepared for yourself?'" He lay in his bed that eyes opened and he sat straight up in bed. He looked at the
night finding it difficult to sleep. Eventually, drowsiness alarm clock. One thought flashed through his mind.
;
overtook him and his eyes closed in slumber. Then he
''I can still get off that road," he thought.
i
began to dream . He dreamed that he was traveling along a
He remembered the cross of Jesus Christ and realized.
highway with many lanes of traffic all moving in the same that he had found
exit ramp. He yanked the covers off
direction'. At first the sky seemed clear but the farther he himself, knelt down eside the bed·and began to pray. "J
traveled \he darker and gloomier it became. He looked to don't really know ho to pray," he said aloud , clenching_
the right of the highway and occasionally saw exit signs his eyes shut. "But know that You can hear me. I've
which seemed to. indicate a safer road to travel to a surer avoided Yo all my · ife, trying to do what I thought besf
destination. Every so often he could see people taking such on my terms .
ght I could put You off or that maybe
air exit tothat surer road. At first , he laughed at them and somehow I could measure up on my own merits . I know
thought them foolish for missing out on allJhe opportuni- now that J was wrong, that I was rejecting You and what
ties thanhe fast-paced and well-traveled road offered.
You did for me as You died on the cross. Please forgive
He glanced around him and felt reassured that he was me and be Lord of my life now."
,.
not alone. but was surrounded by countless others all travHe stopped and took a deep breath. He opened his eyes
eling as he was. He noticed that those around him were and glanced up at the bed side table on which he had
ac~elerating and so he too began to speed up as he strived placed the Bible the night before. He picked it up and
to keep up with the others. But distant voices seemed to opened it to a verse that he had read earlier. "Yet to all who
call to him, appealing to him to leave the road he was on. received Him, to those who believed in His name. He gave
and to take the exit to the safe road. He ignor&lt;;d them , hut the right to become children of God" (John I: 12 NIV).
noticed that the exits were becoming fewer and instincHe glanced at the alarm clock. It glowed 7: 15 in bright
tively felt that the other drivers about him were deter- red numbers. He smiled and picked up the phone and
mined that he remain in their midst. His car sped up more dialed his home. "Good morning, honey," he said when .
· and was then forced to the lane farthest from the exit his wife answert;d . "Yes, I know it's a bit early but I wantramps. Many of the drivers around him who had told him ed to let you know that I just switched roads." He chuckthat he was wise in choosing the broad, well - travel~d way led at the sounds of confusion on the other end of the .
now laughed openly at him, while a few others seemed to phone . "No , I'm in my hotel room. I just mean that I've
be as trapped and as frightened as he felt.
given my life to Jesus ... Yes, I'm serious. Thank you for
He noticed that the voices from the other road seemed being patient with me .... and for your prayers. Will you
either to be growing fainter or were being drowned out by tell Allison when she wakes up? Tell her that I know for.
the roar of cars charging along on the broad way. His eyes sure that one day I'll definitely be going to heaven." ·
caught. sight ofa_il~ther exit ramp and .he reali~ed that he . (Thom Mollohan and his family have ministered in
could JUSt make rt tf.he would only turn. A patr ot hat\ds southern Ohio the past 13 years and is the author oj
floated above him ready to take control and guide him to "The Fairy Tale Parables." He i.1 tire pa.1tor of Pathway
safety if he would simply release control to them . But he Community Church and may be reached for comments
hesitated. After all, most of the other drivers were still or questions by email at pastorthom@pathwajgallipo.
traveling the broad path apparently without worry and he ·lis.com). •
·

kids looked at it and curled up
their noses even before ta'ting
it. Their rmh to judgment
worked out \veil for me. I
though
the meal tasted delicious
~ativity ~Ct!llCl'l. 'but · that'~
and
there was more for ine!
illlC&gt;ther column) .
But rush ing to judgment can
I looked at nw wife and also be severely damaging : We
:,skqJ 11 we had "imehow lost sec someone who looks differ,
,.t.;ix weeks l11 a timc-\varp as Wt'
en(, and immediately decide
c·ame LIP the escalator. II watch that person is unlikable. We see
a 101 of Star Trek. and much a house that looks more invit&lt;tnm!icr things hm·c happened ing to raccoons than people
to Kirk. Picard. and Janeway.) and decide whoever lives there
My wi rc rca"urcd me that I must be bad. Or o/e see some!,.,;s stillwu:horcd in real ity one's palatial hnme and decide
;1ell. that rmry he somewhat that person must be good .
debatable - &lt;utd thai tile store
Rushing is truly a foolish
ilad simply rushed '" into the thing. We rush when we do not
Chri-.trna." huvin~ rrell/V.
take~the time to do things right.
We al'o ":·c n'i t~l t1. major thoroughly. or completely.
home im provement ,,_.·arc- Rushing . leads to mistakes.
lm usc store and tht•y had Rush the curing of concrete and
\- hriwttas stuff nut. too ' It it will crack. Rush the complesee ms that retailers can't get tkm of homework and carele&gt;;s
u~ into thin~ing a\)Dut bu v~1 g mistakes lower the grade.
i'trr Christmas' &gt;Olln enougll. · The opposite of rushing is·
·Ami 'so thcv rush into the 'ea- not procrastination ur lazi~0 11. even before thi: last days. ness. The true opposite of
"f Se ptembe r arc behinr.lus.
rushing is pacing. Making
Frank Sinatra "i() Hg a S(Hlg decis ions with careful consid~t hnut fou b ru shinf! into eration: following processes
.things. "Foob rush .iJl where in a timely fashion . Here's
:mgels fear to trcar.l . And so I how the Apostle Paul put it: ·
I...'OillL' to yo u my love . my
."Here's what I want you to
he an ahtJVt.~ mv heaU.''
do. While I'm locked up here . a
. Frank's rushing had to do prisoner for the Master, I want
wi th romantic love - hut we you ro get out there and walk ru;h tndav . into EVERY · better yet, iun! - on the, road
THING ...
God called you to travel. I don't
, PiL·ki ng on retailers for want any of you sitting .around
r.ushing Chri stmas is easy. on vour hands. I don "t want
:r11q arc so vi&gt;ible in their anyone strolling off, down
!·ush ing - too blatant for some path that goes nowhere.
.u htlety. But what about the And mark that you do this with
nr.sh to thi s presi dential ele~ ­ humility and discipline - not
Jion season? How long has in lit" and starts. but steadi_ly,
the ~O O llca mpa ign gone on'! pouring yourselves out for each
It seems we've heard from other in acts of 'love. alett at
and about McCain and Obama ·noticing differences anr.l. quick
1a11d Clinton and Romncv. and at mend in ~ fences." (Ephesians
,,IJ the other wanna-be's) s ine~ 4:1-:1 "The Message Bible')
the day "fter the last presidenOnly fools · rush. in . As
ti&lt;ll clecti(Hl.
Chri stians. we are called to
Ami how about the finan- wisdom - and we have the
cial bail-out bill? That $700 One most Wise to guide us.
billion package was rushed to So even if you see jingle bells
Cl.Higres~ :,o fast that most or in July , remember that Jesus
u~ were ~t ill trying to figure
is more than a season of shopAUSTIN. Texas (AP) - Four State to more· lawsuits. The e-mail was sent
Mark · Chancey, ' chairman · of
nut what it was. mw.:h less ping. and the political and
Board
of
Education
members
are
proby
board
members
Terri
Leo
of
Spring.
Sout.hern
Methodist University's
wh) it was nccr.led.
financial crises of the moment
Ru shing also happens on a will noi defeat Him - or us' moting a public school Bible curricu- Barbara Cargill of The Woodlands, department of religious studies, said
more personal level. We rush
(Kerry Wood is 11ow asso- lum that has been criticized as favor- Cynthia Dunbar of Richmond and Gail the national council 's curriculum
to school. nrsh to work. rush ciate pastor at Grace United . ing conservative Protestant views and Lowe of Lampasas.
"reflects a .bias toward conservative
til judgment. · Whoops' Methodist
Churdr
in has already landed some districts in
"We recognize ... that the curricu- Protestant perspeCtives of tne Bible at
M" yhe I rushed, to that last Perrysbrrfg, Ohio after serv· court. .
·
,
lum provided by the National Council the expense of other perspectives." · ·
category. Let me repeat it i11g Racine U11ited Methodist
An e-mail to Texas school districts On Bible .Curriculum In Public
Lowe said the e-mail was an effort
aga in : we rush to judgment . C/uirclt for three years. He, encouraged local control in deciding- Schools has been implemented sue- to "inform and reaffirm that this cur"
Sometimes it's over.relatively can be reached through his which Bible courses to adopt, but went cessfully in numerous school districts riculum has been around (or anumharmless lllings. My wife tried . website: lrttp:llpursuelwli· on to recommend · a curriculum that within the state of Texas for years," ber of years and has always satisfied"·
a new recipe tor dinner. My 11ess .blog.1pot.com) ..
some officials are predicting will lead they wrote in the e-mail.
the state's requirements for electives ..

Texas eel board members recommend lawsuit-prone Bible curriculum

·r

i'

r r ·r ·r ·r r

·r

i'

r r r

r

r r

r

·r

·r

r

r r

r

r

r

The spon~ors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Be Lightto the World
'

l11&lt;·re i1 an nld 1tnr~ abnul a dbdplc ~ho asked his teacher whether tlw ble~sings
that :nuuc tn an indi1 idu:rl'' gond deeds can he dh i&lt;:k&gt;d amongst his feilow
dL1d ph ·nw teacher n"p&lt;mded "ith a parable ;rlrmrt a
1 illage 11hrrc a 1in~le lamp b lit. 'Inc villagers
nr:11 ;hare in the "amnh :md li;:ht of-this lamp,
and may even li)iin their o"1t hunps
froru this single llam&lt;'. thus creating
nmltiplc llamc" 11 here thm ~11.1
onl1 one, and without in anr wav
diminishing the Qriginal !lame. lltc
lesson nl tltis p:rrJhle l1 that goodness
L1 like a lamp from "hich others
dra11 11amnh and light, and from
which tht1 canli~ln their ~wn hmrJl'(
without drlr.rcting from thc'nrif:inal
·Jiamt•. In mmty ~:~ys.our ~ood d(\'\ls
:~re indee.llikr lamps frum ~ hich others
deril~ inunt'!liale bcnelits. and when we
share the credit .lor.uur ~ood dt\'lis :md
accomplishment•. the bk"inw- spre:~d
and mulii1&gt;l'; 11 ilhout &lt;liminishin gour
blis;. ~o. •r should share our hlt~sln~
""'nerousl1, ancl ea~erly share the cn-dit lor ·
our n~htenusJt&lt;~. renrcmhrring always
th~tl tlud b the ultimate son~ uf go&lt;xlnes-;.

•

!.rl_1rmr light so sbi1w /JejiJI~ me~r. thai they IIIIIJ' see )!lrtr good
U'fff"k.f fllld giiC /IWT)! /0 )'illlr ftlt/Jt'l' U'IJO is ill h&lt;'tlll!lt.
'

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1/,J. V. .lfallhetl'

~.16

FAt'I'H • FAMILY

Friday, October 3,
'

- - - A Hunger For More

Pastor
Kerry

The Daily Sentinel

.PageA7

209 Third

Racine, OH

740-949-2210
"A Home Bank for

Home People"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

As a first grader in a oneroom schoolhouse. I can
only remember playing with
other children in the yard .
behind it. Gage School was
in sight of our farm so I
could. walk to ·school. In
second grade, I rode the bus
to Cadmus, because my sister (Helen) attended high
school there.
We were driven to school
in a made-over truck with
seats down the side and a
bench down the middle of the
truck. Reganlless of its crude
assembly, it got us to school
imd back, safely each day.
I do not remember any of
my second grade or the
teacher. My third grade
teacher was Dale Saunders.
In the fourth grade, my
teacher (M~ry Burnett)
taught penmanship and it
made a great impression on
me. I remember the circles
and bars that we practiced on
the blackboard and tablets to
improve our writing skills.
Many years later, I obtained
her address and wrote her
iny thanks for teaching penmanship. I still enjoy a large
stylized writing and when I
cross a T, it sometimes cov-

ers the enti~ envelope.
· were playing with- and I still hoped your !x&gt;yfriend would
In fifth 800 sixth grades, have them. I have 80 marbles buy your pie. Sometimes,
my teacher (Clarence ina vintage candy jar that sits other boys ran the price up
on them, just for fun .
Luman) also left a great on a shelf in my kitchen.
Our school basketball team
impression , as he taugbt me
I remember most of the
competed with other high
a love for reading·and histo- boys who provided them 1)'. We now had a better. bus Chad Carter, Paul Stewart, schools in the county. A bus
system and each bus ran Harold Salisbury, Vernon would wke the team to the
two routes, so we had extra Wagner and two Howard gllll).e. Sometimes, students
study time at either the brothers, whose first names would atcompany them .to
morning or afternoon ses- I can't recall. There is an old cheer them on. Stopping in
,sions. Mr. Luman used that saying, 'They've lost their . Gallipolis on the way home
time to ~d us the classics. marbles," but, I still have was a big occasion.
In history. Mr. Luman mine in acandy jar.
, Another trip 'that was
taught us to recite the names
I had many g9&lt;J&lt;! teachers enjpyed " was going to
of our presidents in order of in high school and bec:arne Columbus to a football
their service For many interested in music at that · game prior to the start of
years, I was able to recite time. During the summers , World War TI. OSU invited
them from memory.
my neighbor friend (Ruth schools around the state to
We have a small collee- . Anna) and I took private help fill up their stadium .
tion of school hand bells. piano lessons ·from Sylvia Wt; probably got reduced
Each time I look at them, I Burnett in her home. I have tickets, which were 75
can see Mr. Luman, standing enjoyed playing the piano. ·cents. On the way home, we
would stop in Chillicothe to
at the top of the fire escape ever since.
.
steps, ringing his bell to let
Mrs. Burnett taught me to eat. Some of the students
us know that lunch or recess improvise my playing with would sneak off to a movie
time was over.
my long fingers. She ta.ught but, our smart principal
My seventh grade teacher me to play a rolling tenth (Luther Shelton) always
(Jake Miller) was a stickler chord with my left hand. I knew where to find them .
When I graduated in
for English. He knew it well- sfill use it today.
but; I was not able to retain . · We had pie suppers to 1943, we still had a bacon
it as I should have.
raise extra money for the calaureate service
Some time around the end school. Participants would Sunday evening and the
of grade school or earlier, I bake a pie, put it in a box, commencement was on a
became interested in the and decorate it elaborately week night. The number of
boys' marbles games. I either · with crepe paper. These · graduates were I 8.
(Anyce Fry Milam
asked for or they gave me ~ere aucti~med off to the
some of the marbles that they htgbest btdder and you resides in Columbus.) ·

P~el
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande Chaplaincy of the
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
will be sponsoring a discussion/presentation
titled,
· "Who Is My Neighbor?" on
Thursday. Oct. 9.
"Who Is My Neighbor?"
and it will be held at 7 p.in.
in Room 216 in Bob Evans

discussion set o~ campus

Farms Hall.
This panel discussion is
being held as a response to
the tragic incidents on college campuses such as
Virginia Tech . Added secu,
rity is being brought onto
college campuses · around
the country and inio .everyday life. and more people
use new precautions when

they are in unfamiliar
places. At the same time,
though, many people don't
pay attention to !he people
around them.
This panel discussion will
feature professionals who
will be talking about how
people can stay safe, and ·
· will also talk about how to
watch for danger in your

surroundings and in the
people around you.
Each panelis'l will present
information and answer
questions, and audience
members will also be invited to offer comments and
ask questions.
· For mrre information,
call Marshall Kimmel at
(800) 282-7201.

·Ohio man helps inmates stay sober

2008

.

Preaching clinic
•
•
co-JnJng to reg~on
SCOTI DEPOT, W.Va. - The second
annual West Virginia Transdenominational
Preaching Clinic kicks-off at .6 p.m . on
· Friday, Oct. 10 at the Teays Valley Church
of God, 4430 Teays Valley Rbad. Sc.on

DeJ:~ Pastor Mitchell Burch will s~rve

as the clinic director.
Dr. David L. Sebastian, dean of the
Anderson University School of Theology,
Anderson, Ind., will be the keynote and
Dr. Davl.d L .·
featured speaker for the clinic.
Sebastian
He received his baccalaureate degree
m Bible and Christian education from Warner Southern
College, his master's degree from Anderson University
School of Theology and from Fuller Theological Seminary
and his doctor of ministry degree from Fuller Theological
Seminary; While pastoring a large church in the Dayton.
Ohio, area he accepted the mvitation to become the dean of
the Anderson School of'fheology in July 1995 .
In his keynote address at 6 p.m., Sebastian will open
the clinic speaking on "The Pursuit of Preaching." He
speaks on "The Purity of Preaching" ' at 9 a.m. on
Saturday, Oct. II . He will speak again at I :30 p.m. about
"The Provision of Preaching." Sebast;lin will also be the
pulpit guest at 10:15 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 12 . at the Teays
·
Valley Church of God .
All participants in the clinic will be placed in one of
three study groups and will participate in all six Teaching
Tracks. An outstanding array of skilled pr~achers and
teachers will be feading all these group_sessions. They
include Dr. James Wright, Pastor A. Wayne Burch, Dr;
Calvin Roy Evans, Pastor Vondie Cook II. the Rev. Roy
Hamilton and Pastor Mitch Burch.
Lunch will be provided at the church at 12:30 p.m . 011
Saturday. The clinic will .close by 5 p.m . The registration
fee is just $40' per person. You may register by sending
your $40 check to: West Virginia Ministries. 52 Sherwood
Circle, Hurricane, W.Va. 25526. You may also call Mrtch
Burch
at:
(304)
757-1052
or
email:
mitchell_burch@msn.com and pay at the door.
·
Dr. Melissa Pratt. host pastor, will be leading a special
conference for those who help lead worship . Worship leaders, choir directors, vocalists and instmmentalist will discuss such subjects as "The Theology of Worship ,"
"Effective Worship Planning," "The Right Balance in
Worship" and 'The Arts in Worship,''
..
Pratt is a nationally known music and worship leader,
having earned her doctorate in those academic disciplines . ·
Those coming to the clinic this year will come from
throughout West Virginia, many other states 'and from the
nearby Tri-State area of West Virginia , Ohio and Kentucky.

Going in with no fear ·

from weighing 210 pounds · encountered difficult . times didn't like Fresh Start at
in his work and family life. first, mainly because he diddown to a trim 165.
So many times I've been in need ,
.. "People often come up to That's when addiction got n't know what to expect .
"The longer I was there, · To have an angel to watch over me.
MONTPELIER (AP) nie and ask me to speak at the upper hand.
I've been in places no one should go,
Close to 10 years ago, differentengagements . lfmy
"!lost my job, my family, the more I realized I was not
.
Places where only sin could grow.
alone
in
trying
to
beat
my
' Thomas Trejo needed to hear .schedule allows me to, I try and eventually I lost myself,"
Situations that put me in danger,
addietion." His fellow Fresh
a caring voice that could and make them. I like to help . he says. "But I didn't care."
No love or compassion, only hate and anger.
give him hope in his strug~le people. I love God and ~ant
That min~set · invaria~ly · Starters became like a fami·
Many times no care for anyone's life, ~
to overcome. alcohol addtc- to do His work ~ not mme." led to a stnng of )1Jn-ms ly all working together
Only
darkness,
hopelessness,
despair
and
strife.
toward the same goal suption. Today a changed man, , "Join the Voices for with the law.
Satan's army owns this domain,
.
he is that caring voice shar- Recovery: Real People, Real
"I didn't trust anyone, nor porting each other.
·
His sister and brother-in- · Murderers, thieves, the criminally insane.
ing his experiences o~nly if Recovery" is the theme for did I want anyone around
But
God
called
me
and
_
put
me
to
the
test,
law
also
played
an
imporonly to cllange t)Ial one lif~. : the 2008. celebration of me . I wasn't really ~ure
To put my trust in Him and put on my ve~t.
"I w.eni lfurrt· wanting· 'to "N;Uional Alcohol op1d Drug about a whole lot of things tant role in his tum around.
To go int() these places so that tliey could see,
commi\ suicide', to' wllllfutg :Addic~n Recovery Month." back then, not even God. "They had a strong faith in
Of all the miracles He's done in me.
to helP ' pthers turn ftoni
· The Ohio. Department of Doors started closing up on God and took me m to live
Telling me there's no need to fear,
.
with
them
when
others
told
:. their destnJctive behavior," · ,AlcohOl · · and · Drug me. No one wanted to help."
That
with
my
faith
He
will
always
be
near.
.. · ,A!ldic~on Services recently He fell into a deep deJlres- them not to."
,says ~re~. , . . .
Because I'm willing to go in and do His will.
Says Trejo, the one thing
He is mvqlved m Katros joined .. with . Gov. Ted sion, and attempted smctd~.
That ~will protect me and even better still,
Prison . Mimstries, helping Strickland 'In highlighting
"That was the lowest pomt that was missing in his life
I can
'v these demons that I'm not scared,
during
those
tumultuous
guide those who are incar- ·- this\ nationwide celebration in my life," he confides.
6a
kill me if they want because I'm prepared.
They
While recovering i!'. the years besides· obedience to
cerated to sobriety through ofpeopl!!likeTrejo in longAnd
maybe
when they see this passion in me ,
the narrow channel of reli- . term recovery froin alco- hospttal, he had a spmtual God, was responsibility.
They will want the same and begin to see.
Once he began to accept
gious faith. His face is on 'holism and"drug abuse. The . awakening .
That sin will damn them, send them to hell,
that
·and
do
what
is
right,
he
billl&gt;oards an" he has" his effQrt also recogniZes fami"I was told that it was not
To stop believing all the lies that Satan will tell
own TV commercial.
lies affected' by aildiction's my time to go, that I had gained himself back and his
To repent, believe and make this the day.
.
"I want everyone to know· impact llll~ ~ ~livery sup- work to do. ptis w~ my rm:!' life sprung anew: the former
That
they
live
for
God
and
ride
with
the
CMA:
.:
one
dried
up
and
fell
away
my story, to give them hope port . provtders' Wilg .help.. actual ~xpenence wtth God_.
- Bill Davis, Mason, W.Va., member of the Chrlstla'!
to never .~ive up tr)'ing to ~m achieye real ).'eCOV~
Prev1ous to t~en, . TreJo like scales.
Motorcyclist's
Association
"I no lon~er go to the bars
get clean, says TreJO.
. and lasting sobrietY,.
.,.
says he· never had a ghmmer
He lives in Montpelier, . Trejo is not 'one \o"fOrget of hppe of getting cle!ln , let or hit the btg parties. I don't
having moved there from where he comes from; alco- aloite the .oJlpol'tumty to allow any type of subArchbold in 2005 after mar- holism runs in his family.
give soin,ethmg back. to stances into my home . I
rying his wife, · Rita.
·His addiction was always · society. He tecaUsone mght hayJl to take care -oLmyself
When you got out of bed this morning.
Together, they have .a mixed there, he says, like a hidden he ~as arreste~ by Arch~old and m~ addic.tion.
"[
know
what'
addiction
Did you give thanks for another day?
family of· four children: disease, He took his first pohce
offtcer · Jatme
And did you ask for His guidance
Ryan and Chelsea Trejo and drink of alcohol before he Rodriguez, who talked to has done for me in the past
To
help you along the way?
.
and
I
know
where
it
will
Gunner and Jessica Hellard. · was JO and began drinking him abput recovery and
take
me
again
if
I
allow
it."
"I feel healthy again and he:avily thereafter.
·Fresh Start, a substance
Did you remember to praise Him and thank Him.
Reco~ery is never-ending,
enjoy things that I never did ·· The extent of his addic" abuse treatment semce.
For who He is and all He has done?
"Jt was the first time that I he says.
befllrt," says Trejo about tion waS · not fully- discovIt's
like
he
tells
new
Fresh
But
wait, did you say you don't need God .
jlis treatment. "I no longer .ered until his emotional felt someone cared," he
That
you've accomplished success on your own?
Starters
from
day
one,
"Once
take things for granted."
resistance was down when relates.
an
addjct,
always
an
addict."
· On top of all that, he went in his · adult yeim he
Like a lot of addicts, Trejo
You say that life is just not ~air,
There are wars and sickness and strife.
Even nature has bad a hand
In upsetting our way of life.
WASHINGTON (AP) -'Council .member 'Harry !i?nckculatedillthecommu- b~'Tho"?as said . .
Life here on earth is not perfect ,
A.s _, parishioners pack Thomas Jr. 1ntroduced a biiJ.. m~, .
:
_Restdents m Shaw, Logan
And it never "as meant to be,
Washingtot). churches every last week that' woyld create
'We hOpe ~!Its can be a CI!Cie and other. areas have
••
Ever
since Adam and Eve brought sin
SWiday, area residents com- · !leighborhood-c~ntere~ park- model for not JUSt the traffic satd ~ose attendmg chm:ch..
·By eating the fruit of the tree.
.
plain that worshil'pers are . mg plans alloca(\ng diagonal patterns we hav~ . on es With large congregattons
.
'•
clogging city streets with · residential spaces to church- Sundays around rehg10us come from Maryland and
You know this life is not the end,
their parked cars. .
goers. Local advisory neigh- institutions, but also l_ook- double-park on neighborThere is eternity we must face.
But some are hopeful that borhood commissions would ing at our business COIT!dors hood streets. They say that
And I pray that you will spend yours
~ measure before the D.C. have to approve the plans, ~d how we c~ more effi- prevents them from movmg,
With
me in a heavenly place.
Council could help ease that which also would have to be ·Ctently put vehtcles m those and swallows. up the few
Marilyn
Weaver
weekly friction .
included in a supporting peti- corridors on a ,temporary avatlagle parking spaces ..
Bv. ANGELA ASSAF
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•

FAITH • VALUES

:rhe Daily Sentinel

Fools rush in

My wife and I wenr to a
major depm1ment store last
week to look at new bath
iowels. This is an errand that
I complete only every dec·ade
tlr so. W.hen I buy bath towt!ls. I like to buy the reall y
good ones so that they wil l
}JISTa rea ll y long time
;· As we came otT the escalati,r. we were surrounded h )
CHRI STMAS! Christmas
trees. Christmas angels.
Santa Clauses. snm•mcn if it was Christmas· rdated . it
11 '" on display (e.\cept for

PageA6
Friday, October 3,

2008.

·wood

MEMORIES OF SCHOOL DAYS
BY ANYCE F:RY MILAM

didn't wish to look foolish to
A man who was both very ..successful and widely
them. And he wasn' t sure tha~
admired was approached by his young daughte~. Allison,
he was quite ready to give up.
during a brief (and all too rare) moment between his vigcontrol of his direction to.
orous business trips. She climbed into his lap and hugged
anyone. He passed the exiL
him with the earnestness that only a small and adoring
Pastor
sign.
Suddenly the road
child can effortlessly muster.
·
Thorn
ended. He was alone' and sur-. .
"Daddy." she bcgan,.hcr large brown eyes searching her
father 's face . "You traYel so much, I'm afraid you won 't
Mollohan rounded by nothing at all:
come home one day. If something happened ... to you I
• •--•except gloom and an eene,
silence broken only by the,
mean . wo.uld you go to heaven?"' For a moment he hesifaint echo of mocking laughtated. Caught off guard like that, he was suddenly aw.are
ter from a shadow that ha&lt;! .
that he didn't really know the answer to that question
"Well sure. honey. I'd go to heaven," he finally replied , hidden in liis back seat all along, urging him along this
trying to be reassuring, but inwardly feeling a twinge of path to destruction and away from the safety that the gllld-.
guilt as if he were lying. He knew he wasn "t a bad person ing hands would have granted him had he only yielded. :
He wanted to blame the shadow for encouraging him along
as people go. but he also knew that there were places in
his heart with corresponding moments in his past that had · the path that he had chosen. He wanted to blame the other.
left a stain that he wasn't sure God could overlook if that drive~ for trapping him in the lane away from the extts. He.
moment were to arrive.
wanted to blame those who had taken the safer road for not
. "Yes, .I'd go to heaven ," he said again . "That's a relief, warning him soon enough or loud enough. He wanted to
daddy." Allison chirped. She hugged him, climbed ' down blame the hands alxive him for not grabbing control and wk~
and ran away to play. Her father stood up and quietly ing him to safety. He wanted ,to and even tried to. But he
began packing for hi's next trip, profoundly disturbed . knew down deep inside that he was the one to blame. He was
That night, in his hotel room, he found ·~ Bible. He opened - the one who had made the choice to remain on the wide and
it and began reading. his eyes finally running across easy way. The darlrness intensified until it was an inky black-,
Jesus· parable in Luke 20 about a rich man who had big ness. It surrounded him and began to smother him in painful.
plans . When he read verse 12. his heart skipped a beat.
tentacles !)f regret and grief. He realized that he was alone,
"But God said to him, 'You foo1 1 This very night your · unerly and inescapably alone and would always be so forev-.
life will be demanded from you. Then who will get what er after. He cried out in ·despair. He awoke screaming. His
you have prepared for yourself?'" He lay in his bed that eyes opened and he sat straight up in bed. He looked at the
night finding it difficult to sleep. Eventually, drowsiness alarm clock. One thought flashed through his mind.
;
overtook him and his eyes closed in slumber. Then he
''I can still get off that road," he thought.
i
began to dream . He dreamed that he was traveling along a
He remembered the cross of Jesus Christ and realized.
highway with many lanes of traffic all moving in the same that he had found
exit ramp. He yanked the covers off
direction'. At first the sky seemed clear but the farther he himself, knelt down eside the bed·and began to pray. "J
traveled \he darker and gloomier it became. He looked to don't really know ho to pray," he said aloud , clenching_
the right of the highway and occasionally saw exit signs his eyes shut. "But know that You can hear me. I've
which seemed to. indicate a safer road to travel to a surer avoided Yo all my · ife, trying to do what I thought besf
destination. Every so often he could see people taking such on my terms .
ght I could put You off or that maybe
air exit tothat surer road. At first , he laughed at them and somehow I could measure up on my own merits . I know
thought them foolish for missing out on allJhe opportuni- now that J was wrong, that I was rejecting You and what
ties thanhe fast-paced and well-traveled road offered.
You did for me as You died on the cross. Please forgive
He glanced around him and felt reassured that he was me and be Lord of my life now."
,.
not alone. but was surrounded by countless others all travHe stopped and took a deep breath. He opened his eyes
eling as he was. He noticed that those around him were and glanced up at the bed side table on which he had
ac~elerating and so he too began to speed up as he strived placed the Bible the night before. He picked it up and
to keep up with the others. But distant voices seemed to opened it to a verse that he had read earlier. "Yet to all who
call to him, appealing to him to leave the road he was on. received Him, to those who believed in His name. He gave
and to take the exit to the safe road. He ignor&lt;;d them , hut the right to become children of God" (John I: 12 NIV).
noticed that the exits were becoming fewer and instincHe glanced at the alarm clock. It glowed 7: 15 in bright
tively felt that the other drivers about him were deter- red numbers. He smiled and picked up the phone and
mined that he remain in their midst. His car sped up more dialed his home. "Good morning, honey," he said when .
· and was then forced to the lane farthest from the exit his wife answert;d . "Yes, I know it's a bit early but I wantramps. Many of the drivers around him who had told him ed to let you know that I just switched roads." He chuckthat he was wise in choosing the broad, well - travel~d way led at the sounds of confusion on the other end of the .
now laughed openly at him, while a few others seemed to phone . "No , I'm in my hotel room. I just mean that I've
be as trapped and as frightened as he felt.
given my life to Jesus ... Yes, I'm serious. Thank you for
He noticed that the voices from the other road seemed being patient with me .... and for your prayers. Will you
either to be growing fainter or were being drowned out by tell Allison when she wakes up? Tell her that I know for.
the roar of cars charging along on the broad way. His eyes sure that one day I'll definitely be going to heaven." ·
caught. sight ofa_il~ther exit ramp and .he reali~ed that he . (Thom Mollohan and his family have ministered in
could JUSt make rt tf.he would only turn. A patr ot hat\ds southern Ohio the past 13 years and is the author oj
floated above him ready to take control and guide him to "The Fairy Tale Parables." He i.1 tire pa.1tor of Pathway
safety if he would simply release control to them . But he Community Church and may be reached for comments
hesitated. After all, most of the other drivers were still or questions by email at pastorthom@pathwajgallipo.
traveling the broad path apparently without worry and he ·lis.com). •
·

kids looked at it and curled up
their noses even before ta'ting
it. Their rmh to judgment
worked out \veil for me. I
though
the meal tasted delicious
~ativity ~Ct!llCl'l. 'but · that'~
and
there was more for ine!
illlC&gt;ther column) .
But rush ing to judgment can
I looked at nw wife and also be severely damaging : We
:,skqJ 11 we had "imehow lost sec someone who looks differ,
,.t.;ix weeks l11 a timc-\varp as Wt'
en(, and immediately decide
c·ame LIP the escalator. II watch that person is unlikable. We see
a 101 of Star Trek. and much a house that looks more invit&lt;tnm!icr things hm·c happened ing to raccoons than people
to Kirk. Picard. and Janeway.) and decide whoever lives there
My wi rc rca"urcd me that I must be bad. Or o/e see some!,.,;s stillwu:horcd in real ity one's palatial hnme and decide
;1ell. that rmry he somewhat that person must be good .
debatable - &lt;utd thai tile store
Rushing is truly a foolish
ilad simply rushed '" into the thing. We rush when we do not
Chri-.trna." huvin~ rrell/V.
take~the time to do things right.
We al'o ":·c n'i t~l t1. major thoroughly. or completely.
home im provement ,,_.·arc- Rushing . leads to mistakes.
lm usc store and tht•y had Rush the curing of concrete and
\- hriwttas stuff nut. too ' It it will crack. Rush the complesee ms that retailers can't get tkm of homework and carele&gt;;s
u~ into thin~ing a\)Dut bu v~1 g mistakes lower the grade.
i'trr Christmas' &gt;Olln enougll. · The opposite of rushing is·
·Ami 'so thcv rush into the 'ea- not procrastination ur lazi~0 11. even before thi: last days. ness. The true opposite of
"f Se ptembe r arc behinr.lus.
rushing is pacing. Making
Frank Sinatra "i() Hg a S(Hlg decis ions with careful consid~t hnut fou b ru shinf! into eration: following processes
.things. "Foob rush .iJl where in a timely fashion . Here's
:mgels fear to trcar.l . And so I how the Apostle Paul put it: ·
I...'OillL' to yo u my love . my
."Here's what I want you to
he an ahtJVt.~ mv heaU.''
do. While I'm locked up here . a
. Frank's rushing had to do prisoner for the Master, I want
wi th romantic love - hut we you ro get out there and walk ru;h tndav . into EVERY · better yet, iun! - on the, road
THING ...
God called you to travel. I don't
, PiL·ki ng on retailers for want any of you sitting .around
r.ushing Chri stmas is easy. on vour hands. I don "t want
:r11q arc so vi&gt;ible in their anyone strolling off, down
!·ush ing - too blatant for some path that goes nowhere.
.u htlety. But what about the And mark that you do this with
nr.sh to thi s presi dential ele~ ­ humility and discipline - not
Jion season? How long has in lit" and starts. but steadi_ly,
the ~O O llca mpa ign gone on'! pouring yourselves out for each
It seems we've heard from other in acts of 'love. alett at
and about McCain and Obama ·noticing differences anr.l. quick
1a11d Clinton and Romncv. and at mend in ~ fences." (Ephesians
,,IJ the other wanna-be's) s ine~ 4:1-:1 "The Message Bible')
the day "fter the last presidenOnly fools · rush. in . As
ti&lt;ll clecti(Hl.
Chri stians. we are called to
Ami how about the finan- wisdom - and we have the
cial bail-out bill? That $700 One most Wise to guide us.
billion package was rushed to So even if you see jingle bells
Cl.Higres~ :,o fast that most or in July , remember that Jesus
u~ were ~t ill trying to figure
is more than a season of shopAUSTIN. Texas (AP) - Four State to more· lawsuits. The e-mail was sent
Mark · Chancey, ' chairman · of
nut what it was. mw.:h less ping. and the political and
Board
of
Education
members
are
proby
board
members
Terri
Leo
of
Spring.
Sout.hern
Methodist University's
wh) it was nccr.led.
financial crises of the moment
Ru shing also happens on a will noi defeat Him - or us' moting a public school Bible curricu- Barbara Cargill of The Woodlands, department of religious studies, said
more personal level. We rush
(Kerry Wood is 11ow asso- lum that has been criticized as favor- Cynthia Dunbar of Richmond and Gail the national council 's curriculum
to school. nrsh to work. rush ciate pastor at Grace United . ing conservative Protestant views and Lowe of Lampasas.
"reflects a .bias toward conservative
til judgment. · Whoops' Methodist
Churdr
in has already landed some districts in
"We recognize ... that the curricu- Protestant perspeCtives of tne Bible at
M" yhe I rushed, to that last Perrysbrrfg, Ohio after serv· court. .
·
,
lum provided by the National Council the expense of other perspectives." · ·
category. Let me repeat it i11g Racine U11ited Methodist
An e-mail to Texas school districts On Bible .Curriculum In Public
Lowe said the e-mail was an effort
aga in : we rush to judgment . C/uirclt for three years. He, encouraged local control in deciding- Schools has been implemented sue- to "inform and reaffirm that this cur"
Sometimes it's over.relatively can be reached through his which Bible courses to adopt, but went cessfully in numerous school districts riculum has been around (or anumharmless lllings. My wife tried . website: lrttp:llpursuelwli· on to recommend · a curriculum that within the state of Texas for years," ber of years and has always satisfied"·
a new recipe tor dinner. My 11ess .blog.1pot.com) ..
some officials are predicting will lead they wrote in the e-mail.
the state's requirements for electives ..

Texas eel board members recommend lawsuit-prone Bible curriculum

·r

i'

r r ·r ·r ·r r

·r

i'

r r r

r

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r

·r

·r

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The spon~ors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

Be Lightto the World
'

l11&lt;·re i1 an nld 1tnr~ abnul a dbdplc ~ho asked his teacher whether tlw ble~sings
that :nuuc tn an indi1 idu:rl'' gond deeds can he dh i&lt;:k&gt;d amongst his feilow
dL1d ph ·nw teacher n"p&lt;mded "ith a parable ;rlrmrt a
1 illage 11hrrc a 1in~le lamp b lit. 'Inc villagers
nr:11 ;hare in the "amnh :md li;:ht of-this lamp,
and may even li)iin their o"1t hunps
froru this single llam&lt;'. thus creating
nmltiplc llamc" 11 here thm ~11.1
onl1 one, and without in anr wav
diminishing the Qriginal !lame. lltc
lesson nl tltis p:rrJhle l1 that goodness
L1 like a lamp from "hich others
dra11 11amnh and light, and from
which tht1 canli~ln their ~wn hmrJl'(
without drlr.rcting from thc'nrif:inal
·Jiamt•. In mmty ~:~ys.our ~ood d(\'\ls
:~re indee.llikr lamps frum ~ hich others
deril~ inunt'!liale bcnelits. and when we
share the credit .lor.uur ~ood dt\'lis :md
accomplishment•. the bk"inw- spre:~d
and mulii1&gt;l'; 11 ilhout &lt;liminishin gour
blis;. ~o. •r should share our hlt~sln~
""'nerousl1, ancl ea~erly share the cn-dit lor ·
our n~htenusJt&lt;~. renrcmhrring always
th~tl tlud b the ultimate son~ uf go&lt;xlnes-;.

•

!.rl_1rmr light so sbi1w /JejiJI~ me~r. thai they IIIIIJ' see )!lrtr good
U'fff"k.f fllld giiC /IWT)! /0 )'illlr ftlt/Jt'l' U'IJO is ill h&lt;'tlll!lt.
'

.

1/,J. V. .lfallhetl'

~.16

FAt'I'H • FAMILY

Friday, October 3,
'

- - - A Hunger For More

Pastor
Kerry

The Daily Sentinel

.PageA7

209 Third

Racine, OH

740-949-2210
"A Home Bank for

Home People"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

As a first grader in a oneroom schoolhouse. I can
only remember playing with
other children in the yard .
behind it. Gage School was
in sight of our farm so I
could. walk to ·school. In
second grade, I rode the bus
to Cadmus, because my sister (Helen) attended high
school there.
We were driven to school
in a made-over truck with
seats down the side and a
bench down the middle of the
truck. Reganlless of its crude
assembly, it got us to school
imd back, safely each day.
I do not remember any of
my second grade or the
teacher. My third grade
teacher was Dale Saunders.
In the fourth grade, my
teacher (M~ry Burnett)
taught penmanship and it
made a great impression on
me. I remember the circles
and bars that we practiced on
the blackboard and tablets to
improve our writing skills.
Many years later, I obtained
her address and wrote her
iny thanks for teaching penmanship. I still enjoy a large
stylized writing and when I
cross a T, it sometimes cov-

ers the enti~ envelope.
· were playing with- and I still hoped your !x&gt;yfriend would
In fifth 800 sixth grades, have them. I have 80 marbles buy your pie. Sometimes,
my teacher (Clarence ina vintage candy jar that sits other boys ran the price up
on them, just for fun .
Luman) also left a great on a shelf in my kitchen.
Our school basketball team
impression , as he taugbt me
I remember most of the
competed with other high
a love for reading·and histo- boys who provided them 1)'. We now had a better. bus Chad Carter, Paul Stewart, schools in the county. A bus
system and each bus ran Harold Salisbury, Vernon would wke the team to the
two routes, so we had extra Wagner and two Howard gllll).e. Sometimes, students
study time at either the brothers, whose first names would atcompany them .to
morning or afternoon ses- I can't recall. There is an old cheer them on. Stopping in
,sions. Mr. Luman used that saying, 'They've lost their . Gallipolis on the way home
time to ~d us the classics. marbles," but, I still have was a big occasion.
In history. Mr. Luman mine in acandy jar.
, Another trip 'that was
taught us to recite the names
I had many g9&lt;J&lt;! teachers enjpyed " was going to
of our presidents in order of in high school and bec:arne Columbus to a football
their service For many interested in music at that · game prior to the start of
years, I was able to recite time. During the summers , World War TI. OSU invited
them from memory.
my neighbor friend (Ruth schools around the state to
We have a small collee- . Anna) and I took private help fill up their stadium .
tion of school hand bells. piano lessons ·from Sylvia Wt; probably got reduced
Each time I look at them, I Burnett in her home. I have tickets, which were 75
can see Mr. Luman, standing enjoyed playing the piano. ·cents. On the way home, we
would stop in Chillicothe to
at the top of the fire escape ever since.
.
steps, ringing his bell to let
Mrs. Burnett taught me to eat. Some of the students
us know that lunch or recess improvise my playing with would sneak off to a movie
time was over.
my long fingers. She ta.ught but, our smart principal
My seventh grade teacher me to play a rolling tenth (Luther Shelton) always
(Jake Miller) was a stickler chord with my left hand. I knew where to find them .
When I graduated in
for English. He knew it well- sfill use it today.
but; I was not able to retain . · We had pie suppers to 1943, we still had a bacon
it as I should have.
raise extra money for the calaureate service
Some time around the end school. Participants would Sunday evening and the
of grade school or earlier, I bake a pie, put it in a box, commencement was on a
became interested in the and decorate it elaborately week night. The number of
boys' marbles games. I either · with crepe paper. These · graduates were I 8.
(Anyce Fry Milam
asked for or they gave me ~ere aucti~med off to the
some of the marbles that they htgbest btdder and you resides in Columbus.) ·

P~el
RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande Chaplaincy of the
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
will be sponsoring a discussion/presentation
titled,
· "Who Is My Neighbor?" on
Thursday. Oct. 9.
"Who Is My Neighbor?"
and it will be held at 7 p.in.
in Room 216 in Bob Evans

discussion set o~ campus

Farms Hall.
This panel discussion is
being held as a response to
the tragic incidents on college campuses such as
Virginia Tech . Added secu,
rity is being brought onto
college campuses · around
the country and inio .everyday life. and more people
use new precautions when

they are in unfamiliar
places. At the same time,
though, many people don't
pay attention to !he people
around them.
This panel discussion will
feature professionals who
will be talking about how
people can stay safe, and ·
· will also talk about how to
watch for danger in your

surroundings and in the
people around you.
Each panelis'l will present
information and answer
questions, and audience
members will also be invited to offer comments and
ask questions.
· For mrre information,
call Marshall Kimmel at
(800) 282-7201.

·Ohio man helps inmates stay sober

2008

.

Preaching clinic
•
•
co-JnJng to reg~on
SCOTI DEPOT, W.Va. - The second
annual West Virginia Transdenominational
Preaching Clinic kicks-off at .6 p.m . on
· Friday, Oct. 10 at the Teays Valley Church
of God, 4430 Teays Valley Rbad. Sc.on

DeJ:~ Pastor Mitchell Burch will s~rve

as the clinic director.
Dr. David L. Sebastian, dean of the
Anderson University School of Theology,
Anderson, Ind., will be the keynote and
Dr. Davl.d L .·
featured speaker for the clinic.
Sebastian
He received his baccalaureate degree
m Bible and Christian education from Warner Southern
College, his master's degree from Anderson University
School of Theology and from Fuller Theological Seminary
and his doctor of ministry degree from Fuller Theological
Seminary; While pastoring a large church in the Dayton.
Ohio, area he accepted the mvitation to become the dean of
the Anderson School of'fheology in July 1995 .
In his keynote address at 6 p.m., Sebastian will open
the clinic speaking on "The Pursuit of Preaching." He
speaks on "The Purity of Preaching" ' at 9 a.m. on
Saturday, Oct. II . He will speak again at I :30 p.m. about
"The Provision of Preaching." Sebast;lin will also be the
pulpit guest at 10:15 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 12 . at the Teays
·
Valley Church of God .
All participants in the clinic will be placed in one of
three study groups and will participate in all six Teaching
Tracks. An outstanding array of skilled pr~achers and
teachers will be feading all these group_sessions. They
include Dr. James Wright, Pastor A. Wayne Burch, Dr;
Calvin Roy Evans, Pastor Vondie Cook II. the Rev. Roy
Hamilton and Pastor Mitch Burch.
Lunch will be provided at the church at 12:30 p.m . 011
Saturday. The clinic will .close by 5 p.m . The registration
fee is just $40' per person. You may register by sending
your $40 check to: West Virginia Ministries. 52 Sherwood
Circle, Hurricane, W.Va. 25526. You may also call Mrtch
Burch
at:
(304)
757-1052
or
email:
mitchell_burch@msn.com and pay at the door.
·
Dr. Melissa Pratt. host pastor, will be leading a special
conference for those who help lead worship . Worship leaders, choir directors, vocalists and instmmentalist will discuss such subjects as "The Theology of Worship ,"
"Effective Worship Planning," "The Right Balance in
Worship" and 'The Arts in Worship,''
..
Pratt is a nationally known music and worship leader,
having earned her doctorate in those academic disciplines . ·
Those coming to the clinic this year will come from
throughout West Virginia, many other states 'and from the
nearby Tri-State area of West Virginia , Ohio and Kentucky.

Going in with no fear ·

from weighing 210 pounds · encountered difficult . times didn't like Fresh Start at
in his work and family life. first, mainly because he diddown to a trim 165.
So many times I've been in need ,
.. "People often come up to That's when addiction got n't know what to expect .
"The longer I was there, · To have an angel to watch over me.
MONTPELIER (AP) nie and ask me to speak at the upper hand.
I've been in places no one should go,
Close to 10 years ago, differentengagements . lfmy
"!lost my job, my family, the more I realized I was not
.
Places where only sin could grow.
alone
in
trying
to
beat
my
' Thomas Trejo needed to hear .schedule allows me to, I try and eventually I lost myself,"
Situations that put me in danger,
addietion." His fellow Fresh
a caring voice that could and make them. I like to help . he says. "But I didn't care."
No love or compassion, only hate and anger.
give him hope in his strug~le people. I love God and ~ant
That min~set · invaria~ly · Starters became like a fami·
Many times no care for anyone's life, ~
to overcome. alcohol addtc- to do His work ~ not mme." led to a stnng of )1Jn-ms ly all working together
Only
darkness,
hopelessness,
despair
and
strife.
toward the same goal suption. Today a changed man, , "Join the Voices for with the law.
Satan's army owns this domain,
.
he is that caring voice shar- Recovery: Real People, Real
"I didn't trust anyone, nor porting each other.
·
His sister and brother-in- · Murderers, thieves, the criminally insane.
ing his experiences o~nly if Recovery" is the theme for did I want anyone around
But
God
called
me
and
_
put
me
to
the
test,
law
also
played
an
imporonly to cllange t)Ial one lif~. : the 2008. celebration of me . I wasn't really ~ure
To put my trust in Him and put on my ve~t.
"I w.eni lfurrt· wanting· 'to "N;Uional Alcohol op1d Drug about a whole lot of things tant role in his tum around.
To go int() these places so that tliey could see,
commi\ suicide', to' wllllfutg :Addic~n Recovery Month." back then, not even God. "They had a strong faith in
Of all the miracles He's done in me.
to helP ' pthers turn ftoni
· The Ohio. Department of Doors started closing up on God and took me m to live
Telling me there's no need to fear,
.
with
them
when
others
told
:. their destnJctive behavior," · ,AlcohOl · · and · Drug me. No one wanted to help."
That
with
my
faith
He
will
always
be
near.
.. · ,A!ldic~on Services recently He fell into a deep deJlres- them not to."
,says ~re~. , . . .
Because I'm willing to go in and do His will.
Says Trejo, the one thing
He is mvqlved m Katros joined .. with . Gov. Ted sion, and attempted smctd~.
That ~will protect me and even better still,
Prison . Mimstries, helping Strickland 'In highlighting
"That was the lowest pomt that was missing in his life
I can
'v these demons that I'm not scared,
during
those
tumultuous
guide those who are incar- ·- this\ nationwide celebration in my life," he confides.
6a
kill me if they want because I'm prepared.
They
While recovering i!'. the years besides· obedience to
cerated to sobriety through ofpeopl!!likeTrejo in longAnd
maybe
when they see this passion in me ,
the narrow channel of reli- . term recovery froin alco- hospttal, he had a spmtual God, was responsibility.
They will want the same and begin to see.
Once he began to accept
gious faith. His face is on 'holism and"drug abuse. The . awakening .
That sin will damn them, send them to hell,
that
·and
do
what
is
right,
he
billl&gt;oards an" he has" his effQrt also recogniZes fami"I was told that it was not
To stop believing all the lies that Satan will tell
own TV commercial.
lies affected' by aildiction's my time to go, that I had gained himself back and his
To repent, believe and make this the day.
.
"I want everyone to know· impact llll~ ~ ~livery sup- work to do. ptis w~ my rm:!' life sprung anew: the former
That
they
live
for
God
and
ride
with
the
CMA:
.:
one
dried
up
and
fell
away
my story, to give them hope port . provtders' Wilg .help.. actual ~xpenence wtth God_.
- Bill Davis, Mason, W.Va., member of the Chrlstla'!
to never .~ive up tr)'ing to ~m achieye real ).'eCOV~
Prev1ous to t~en, . TreJo like scales.
Motorcyclist's
Association
"I no lon~er go to the bars
get clean, says TreJO.
. and lasting sobrietY,.
.,.
says he· never had a ghmmer
He lives in Montpelier, . Trejo is not 'one \o"fOrget of hppe of getting cle!ln , let or hit the btg parties. I don't
having moved there from where he comes from; alco- aloite the .oJlpol'tumty to allow any type of subArchbold in 2005 after mar- holism runs in his family.
give soin,ethmg back. to stances into my home . I
rying his wife, · Rita.
·His addiction was always · society. He tecaUsone mght hayJl to take care -oLmyself
When you got out of bed this morning.
Together, they have .a mixed there, he says, like a hidden he ~as arreste~ by Arch~old and m~ addic.tion.
"[
know
what'
addiction
Did you give thanks for another day?
family of· four children: disease, He took his first pohce
offtcer · Jatme
And did you ask for His guidance
Ryan and Chelsea Trejo and drink of alcohol before he Rodriguez, who talked to has done for me in the past
To
help you along the way?
.
and
I
know
where
it
will
Gunner and Jessica Hellard. · was JO and began drinking him abput recovery and
take
me
again
if
I
allow
it."
"I feel healthy again and he:avily thereafter.
·Fresh Start, a substance
Did you remember to praise Him and thank Him.
Reco~ery is never-ending,
enjoy things that I never did ·· The extent of his addic" abuse treatment semce.
For who He is and all He has done?
"Jt was the first time that I he says.
befllrt," says Trejo about tion waS · not fully- discovIt's
like
he
tells
new
Fresh
But
wait, did you say you don't need God .
jlis treatment. "I no longer .ered until his emotional felt someone cared," he
That
you've accomplished success on your own?
Starters
from
day
one,
"Once
take things for granted."
resistance was down when relates.
an
addjct,
always
an
addict."
· On top of all that, he went in his · adult yeim he
Like a lot of addicts, Trejo
You say that life is just not ~air,
There are wars and sickness and strife.
Even nature has bad a hand
In upsetting our way of life.
WASHINGTON (AP) -'Council .member 'Harry !i?nckculatedillthecommu- b~'Tho"?as said . .
Life here on earth is not perfect ,
A.s _, parishioners pack Thomas Jr. 1ntroduced a biiJ.. m~, .
:
_Restdents m Shaw, Logan
And it never "as meant to be,
Washingtot). churches every last week that' woyld create
'We hOpe ~!Its can be a CI!Cie and other. areas have
••
Ever
since Adam and Eve brought sin
SWiday, area residents com- · !leighborhood-c~ntere~ park- model for not JUSt the traffic satd ~ose attendmg chm:ch..
·By eating the fruit of the tree.
.
plain that worshil'pers are . mg plans alloca(\ng diagonal patterns we hav~ . on es With large congregattons
.
'•
clogging city streets with · residential spaces to church- Sundays around rehg10us come from Maryland and
You know this life is not the end,
their parked cars. .
goers. Local advisory neigh- institutions, but also l_ook- double-park on neighborThere is eternity we must face.
But some are hopeful that borhood commissions would ing at our business COIT!dors hood streets. They say that
And I pray that you will spend yours
~ measure before the D.C. have to approve the plans, ~d how we c~ more effi- prevents them from movmg,
With
me in a heavenly place.
Council could help ease that which also would have to be ·Ctently put vehtcles m those and swallows. up the few
Marilyn
Weaver
weekly friction .
included in a supporting peti- corridors on a ,temporary avatlagle parking spaces ..
Bv. ANGELA ASSAF
THE (DEFIANCE I CRESCENT-NEWS

Untitled

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Open 7 days a week

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

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I

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The RppUance man
•

-

740·985·3561
992·1550
Sales • Service • Parts
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. · MIDDLEPORT
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t 90 N. Second St.

Middleport, OH

.740-992-6128
. Local source for trophies,
Ia ues t-shirt

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S07 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~- ·
(740) 992-3279 .
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Pomero Ollio 45769-0683

·'

�.- .

·,·

•
Page AS • The Daily sentinel

Friday. October 3, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Inside

Bt:..

The Daily Sentinel

~.Rays pick up wins, Page BJ
'
~ IIIII!I'Y after ~oss, Pace B4 ·

.....
=
ldloal

Nerd::

em

l'em State

1
1

1

;Michlpn St.
' Mlcl1ipn

1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0

;PIJnlue

Iowa
Illinois
Indiana

~ 1\f

•
~K Sports Cia~ lleld set, Page B4

.......
w
w
L
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
1
1
1

o-.11
L
5 0
5 0
4 1
4 1
2
2
4

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•

Friday, October 3, 2008,

2
2

:z,.

2
2

So~, Beanie, the Heisman

2 • 2

llf!IJI\ I ·.LAM I',

Ohio Stalilat';,licollllli, 8 p.m.
Indiana at MinnesOta, noon
Iowa at Michiglln State, noon
Penn State at Purdue, noon

Illinois at Michiglln, 3:30 p.m.

Ill I; 1114 -;II\ I ";
RIISHING OFFENSE
Penn State .................... 267 .6
·.lni!iiiM ......... :................249.0
Wisconsin ........................ 218.5
Illinois ............................215.8
Michigan State .............. 203.4
PQSING OFFENSE

Purdue ..........................278.2
Penn State ...................... 247.6
Minnesota ...'........:.......... 230.8
:Illinois .....:......................228.8
·Northwestern .........•.....•..213.6

An inside look at this week's game

·rt..Uma-..-..

1
1.

3
3

COLUMBUS- Earlier this
week, Ohio State running back
Chris "Beanie" Well8 saiq he
hasn't given up on the idea of
winning the Heisman Trophy
this year.
Most people scratched WellS
off their list of Heisman contendeni after he missed three
games because of a foot ~ury.
The leaders of the pack for the
Heisman af this point are four
quarterbacks.
Oklahoma QBSam Bradford
has already thrown for 1,293
yards and 16 touchdowns.
Chase Daniel, of Missouri, has
-

The Uma News

jnaveau@limanews.com
419·993·2087

oompleted 76 percent of his
pesses for 1,412 yards and 12
TDs. Texas' Colt McCoy has
thrown for 1,018 yards and 14
touchdowns. And, of oourse,
last year's winner, Florida QB
Tim T.ebow, is still around.
WeDs probably isn't even the
leading Heisman candidate

&lt;

-

-

- -

-

-

Ohio State ...................... 251.8
Penn State ...................... 252.2
Iowa .............................. 282.4
Wisconsin ........................305.5
. Michigan ........................309.2
1114~

It N Ill\ Ill II";

RUSHING YAROS

Javon Ringer, 1'4SU ..............897
Shonn Greene, Iowa ............ 665
Evan Royster, Purdue .......... 518
Tyrell Sutton, Northwestern .. 464
P.J. Hill, WisconSin ................449
PQSING YAROS

Adam Weber, Minnesota .... 1154
Curtis Painter, Purdue ........ 1113
C.J. Bacher, Northwestern .. 1042
Brian Hoyer, MSU .............. 961
. Juice Williams, Illinois .. ...... 905
RECEMNGYARDS ....
·. Eli(: llecl&lt;er. Miooesota ·-···'·506
: Mark Dell, MSU .: ................ 425
Desmond Tardy, Purdue .:....366
Jordan Norwood, PSU ..........318
Greg Orton, Purdue ............. :2s7

.i
.

--.

-

0!:11 I t/IJitlt ;;
·MSSINGYARDS

Todd Boeckman ..................446
RUSHING YARDS
Terrene Pryor ......................292
·RECEIVING YARDS

Brian Robisllie ....................203
TOUCHDOWNS

. Brian Robiskie ........................ .4
'TACKL£S

James Laurinaitis .................. 47
SACKS
. Martus Freeman .................... 2
Thaddeus Gibson ..................... 2
FIELD GOALS

Ryan Pretorius ....... ............... 7/9
'PUNTING

A.J. Trapasso ................ 21/44.2
TACKL£S FOR LOSSES

Doug Worthington.,........... :...... 3
KICKOFF RETliRNS
B·randon Saine .................. 19. 7
."

.

Hlr!R

ll~, I

101 lit 1.. 11 ~

AuF.30
Sept 6

ltunii'\OVIII State W, 43-0

Sept ·13

~ 35-3 .
W, 28·10
Minnesota
W, 34·21 .
@lp.m.
Purdue
3:30 p.m.

Sept 20
Sept27
Oct.4
Qct.11 .

'Oct. 18
Oct. 25
Nco;. 8
Nco;. 15
Nov.22

011i0

@usc

w. 26-14

Troy

@ Michi!flln St.

Penn State
@ Nortlw.&lt;!stem
• @ Illinois

Mlchi!flln

TBA
8 p.m.
TBA
TBA
TBA

Content &lt;Xllr!liled by JimN....eau and
desi!Jl by Ross BisMff • ThO Uma NeY.s

Co!¥18f1t ~ 2008 The Uma N&lt;w.s. Repro-

duction of aNor any POitiOn of !hiS matelial
iS prollibited ~'$out- consent

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SATURDAY'S

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·

that's the way it would be. Troj,hy with 924 yards rush·
But winning a Heisman Tro- ing. It might have worked in
phy without dazzling num· 1955 when Howard "Hopahers is a thing of the distant long" Cassady won the Buckpast, except maybe for eyes' third Heisman by rushCharles Woodson's 1997 Heis· ing for 958 yards.
Maybe the best oomparison
man win.
Even if Wells tivei-ages 150 would be in 1957 when Texas
yards rushing the rest of the ·A&amp;M's John David Crow
season; he would have around played only seven games !Je1,200 yards. .
cause of an ~ury, rushed for
Wells probably was born sev· just 562 yards and still won the
'eral decades too late to claim a Heisman.
But that was a longtime ago,
HeisJhan with those numbers.
It might have worked in• long before 24-hour sports
1944, when Lea Horvath won channels, instant analysis and
Ohio State's first Heil!man weekly Heisman watches.
--.
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OPPONI~ N'T:

Alooll at some of the key match ups in the
game between No. 14 Ohio State (4·1, 1·0
Big Ten) ana No. 18 Wisconsin (3·1. 0·1 Big
Ten) on Saturday at Camp Randall Stadium:

Qulrteltlaclw
One team has a running quartertlack and
it's not Wisconsin's Allan Evridge, who has

rushed 12 times for negative 18 yards.
Evridge, a f&lt;,ansas state transfer, is a filllt·
year starter for the Badgers. He has th!O\vri
for 752 yards and four touchdowns in four
games, lhou!'fl his best receiver, ti!'flt end
TriMs Beckum, has missed 11\U games.
000 State freshman Terrene Pip \\ill get his
third start, but the first in a big·g;Jme situation.
PI)« leads Ohio State in rushing 1\ith 292
yards and has completed 63 percent of his
passes for 296 y!lds and fM!touchdoY.fls.
Pryor's speed can be deceptive, as Wis. cor)Sin defensive end Mike Newkir11 noticed.
"He didn't look like he was moving very fast
(on tape), but there wasn't anyone catching
him,~ Newkirk told The Capital Times of
Madison, WIS.
..
·
......... .1: 01!10 $talll

llllllllnc backs
Tailback Chris "Beanie" Wells showed why
he is Ohio State's most valuable player when
he returned after missing three games 1\ith
a foot injury when OSU beat Minnesota 34·
211a~ Saturday. tt wasn't just his produc·
tion (106 yards), but the possibilities he
opened up for the rest of the offense. Wells
says he doesn't expect his Injured foot to be

100 pertent the rest of the season but says
he will play throu!'flthe pain.
·
Wisconsin's P.J. Hill, a 5-foot, 11·inch,
236-pound junior, has gained 449 yards
and scored four touchdowns. Hill, who
gained 1,236 yard last season, did not
play because of a leg injury when·Ohio
State beat Wisconsin 38-17 last season. Freshman John Clay has gained
191 yards and scored four TOs.

2007 openeragainst'rilung;tooMl State and
it was the first time he caug,t 11\U tolJchdooM1
passts in a game since last year against WIS·
consin. Tigllt end Rory Nicol is out.after
spraining an ankle against Minnesota.
. WISCO!lsin's Beckum, who often lines up as
a wide receiver, has battled a sore hamstring
all season. He sat outt\\U gal)'leS and played
only the last 10 minutes against MichU!n last
Saturday. Beckum has 6 catChes for 68
yards after having 75 catches last season.
lheBadgersothertightend, Garrett Graham
(11 catches, 154 yards), missed the Michig;Jn g;Jme because of afoot injury.
Advantage: Ohio State

Offensive line

toc.u.

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WISCONSIN

ckeyes ·

leg injury ag;Jinst Ohio State last season.
Adva'ttalll: Ellen

"'*"''

!Blllla . ~=
at

Ohio State's often·criticiled linemen got a
post-game iO'Bde of "solid" from coach Jim
Tressel, but theweekly Jim Parker Award to
the lineman who played the best was not
awarded. The big quest!9n for Ohio State is
WSteve Rehling will return from a foot injury
and how that will affect the distribution of
playing time. Fre6hman Mike ,Brewster has
played center the last 11\U lfllmes and-Jim
Cordle has moved from center to the spot
Rehring was filling.
The Buckeyes have allowed a Big Tenv.orst12quarterbacksai:ksand,at47per·
cent. are the only Big Ten team to score
touchdo'Mls on fewer than half their pes·
session inside an opponent's 20·yard line.
Wisconsin's inability to score touchdowns in
the so-called "RedZone"wascostly in ils2725 loss to Michigan last week when rt kicked
four field goals and scored only one touch·
down while building a 19·0 lead.
Guaid Kraig Urbik is a four-year starter
and tackle Eric Vanden Heuvel has
•
started for three seasons for
Wisconsin Vanden
Heuvel 5uttered a Ohio State
season-ending

..

3

Chllllco1he, 7:30p.m.

Al:adom{

~tem at Federal f!ocklng, 7:30 p.m.
J.tiller 11 Southern. 7:30p.m.
l'eiDs at VInton County, 7:30 p.m..
fairland al Rlwr Valley, 7:30 p.m.
at Soutl\ Gallla. 7:30 p.m.
Pleaaanlat Wayne, 7:30p.m.

=-

lJbarty Raleigh at WBhama, 7:30 p.m.

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!lailla Academy,
r,Mte, 10 a.m.

·.

it

......_on:tro
'Joleyball
lgo at EM1orn, 8 p.m. ·
th GaiHa at Coal Grove, 5:30p.m.
r Valley ot Gallla Acedemy, 5 p.m.
11annan al Soutl\em. 8 p:m.
pvGS a1 Chesapeake. 5:30 p.m.
kivar Valley =C~BA
~

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'Dlncln Oc:tO'!tr 7
bollia Academv al Q\/CS, 5:30 p.m.
,,
.
Vol~
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
~ed HQck al Elllern. 6 p.m.
Millo&lt; a1 Soumern. 6 p.m.
arace Chriattan at South Gatlla, 5;30

~ Hill a1~1Yet Valley, 5:30 p.m.

' 'f :

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l·

·:, FRIDAYNlGKf

, FOOmAu.
ytEEK 7 GAMES

Defensive backs

Donald Washington, who sat out Ohio
DefenaiN lne
State's first 11\U games because of a discipli·
Wisconsin's defensive front line was dom· nary suspension, produced a big playv.ilh his·
inant in the first ha~ against Michigan, allow· first interception of the season against Min·
ing 21 yards total offense, but then gave up neso1a. osu has eight interoeptions after haY·
scoring drives of 85 yards, 80 yards and 77 ing only 11 all of last season.
yards in the second ha~. End Matt Shaugh- Safety Shane Carter, the brother of former
nessy and tackles Jason Chapman and Mike OSU receiver Cris Carter, leads Wisconsin
Newkirk are returning starters. O'Brien with 11\U interteptions. Aaron Henry, a re· ·
Schofield leads the Badgers \lith 11\U sacks. turning starter .at cornerback, is probably:
Ohio State ranks first in the Big Ten in c:Mlf- out for the season after having 11\U off-sea·
all defense and third in rush defense (95.2 son knee surgeries.
yaids a game). The rna.oe of athletic end Advantage: Ohio State .
Cameron Heyward to defensive tackle might Special teams
,
have ramped up OSU's pressure, bull\ith
Wisconsin freshman kicker Phillip Welch
only one sack against Minnesota.lhe Buck· kicll!d
field goals, incloding a 52-yarder
eyes continue to rankonespotfromthebot· againstfour
Michigan.
He is 8 of 10 for the seatom in the Big Ten In that category.
son. Brad Nortrnan is averaging 42.3 yards
Ad-o&amp; I' • :Wisconsin
a punt. Ohio State's Ryan Pretorius is~ of
Uneltackera
12 on field goals. A.J. Trapasso isaveragJng
J
McFadden leads the Badgers · tack 44.2 yards a punt. .
aew
.
., - Advantage: Even
les v.ilh 47. D'An&lt;!llllll'ly has fivrl tac~ for
tosses.llvee-year sta~ .loljatl1lln Gasi1111s
hashadai'OUjtlseason, missingthefirstt\\U
games with a strained. knee l1gament after
being cited for drunk drMng on h1s rooped .
dunngthesummer.
, ..
OSU linebackers James Launnaitis,
Marcus Freeman and Ross Homan
all rank 1n the top 25 1n the B1g
Ten 1n total tackles. Some have
questioned ~Butkus Award Wtnner Laurinaitis has piayed as
well this season as he did as
a JUnl~ ButTressel says
he IS definitely plaYing
as well as he has ever
played."
Advantage:

Prep Volleyball Roundup

ScHEDULE

· }PoMEROY - A IIOhtdUit of upcoming h!vh
J!:hool varsity aportl!lg
involving
plm. from Melgl and Gallla counties.

is out of reach

await

Penn State ....................515.2
lndiana ............................ 453.q
IllinOiS ............. ,..........;... 444.5
Wisconsin ......................... 413.5
Purdue .......................... 404.0
lOTALDEFENSE

wnong Big Ten running b8cks
right now. Michigan State's
Jamn Ringer has gained 897
yards in his first five games.
)3ut Wells insists he's not
done yet. "There are a lot of
great athletes out there, bUt I
like to think the Heisman is
not out of my reach," he said.
''A lot oftimes people get to
thinking the Heisman is all
about numbers and a team's
record. But when it all comes
down tO it, it's who is the best
player in college football, plain
Wid simple ..
In a penect world, maybe

Jim
Naveau

.lOTAL OFFENSE

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logan at Marlena
, Oallla Academy at Chllllcolha
J•ckeQn at lro!'lton
Port1mouth It·Warren '
· i:attorn 11 Fodor~l Hocking
..
' Miller at Southern
Watlir'lord at Trimble
,Aie~~:eftder •• Nela.onvllle' Yortc:

·\ . " Y!'!l, 1on

at Alheni

!Mig~ tt Vlntor ~ountr

Zanalvlllo ~l.~t, Chal loa ·

l11 01pro ·•t Unailvlllo Roaocrona

::r ·'River Valieytal Fairland

South Point at Coal Grove
Cllotlpoak'o al Rock Hill
0r1tn at S~uth Gallla
·Point Pltallnl a1 Wayne .
Llbolt}o Ratol.gh 11 Wahama
f'loa~~(C.un1y

'f
}P

al Slaaonvllle.,

·' 'l&lt;flntlold at ChapmoiiYIIIo
·: .l!oc. •I Htfbori Hoover•
·!' · I •

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..fJQlrr~t;!,YS
1-74().446-2942 ext. 33
Fu _ I·740;448-3008

Ladv

rauders beat
Nelsonville-York in lour
.

~astern picks up big Victories against Gallia Academy and

MASON , W.Va. - Mick
Winebrenner of Racine has
won the 2008 championshi(!
of the Riverside Seniqr
Men's Golf
League. ::
W i n. e :~
brenneT
scored
d
total of 324
. points to
defeat run:
ner-up Paul
Somerville
who had
Winebrenner 3 12 points:
· The
twQ
came in to the final week of
play tied in the standings. ::
In third place was Carl .
Stone with a total of .29).~
points, fqllowed by the reSt
of the top I 0 of Jim Gres~
(265), Ken Whited (260.5);
Kenny Greene (256.5)·
Curtis Grubb (246) , Haske.!
Jones (245), Gary Mintori
(242) and Don Waldi~

ROCKSPRINGS .
Meigs volleyball got back
on the winning track
Thursday night following a
four-game 25-19,22-25 , zs10, 25-1~ victory over visitNelsonville-York during
a Tri-Valley
Conference
0 h i 0
Division
contest at
Larry
R.
Morrison
Gymnasiurfi.,
Tile Lady
Marauders
(15-3, 8·2
· TVC Ohio)
- fresh off
their first
I 0 S· s
(Athens)
over their
last eight
matches rebounded
Pluse - GoH, Bl .
nicely
Thursday,
p ·osting
Walker
team totals
of 37 kills, 32 assists and
two blocks while going 89- ,
. 1. Mlck =:~~~.';'"':!!
of-96 at the service line for
Bryan Waltoralphoto
2. Paul Somerville 312.0
93 perceni. MHS also The starting six for the Meigs volleyball team (from left) Emalee Glass, Tricia Smith, Catie ~: ~~~:~:':
~~:~
remams in a second-place tie Wolfe, Shellie Bailey, Chandra Stanley and Morgan Howard give a collective stare at their 5. Ken WMed
260.5
wth'thhAth~nlsoAI- bdoth bof opponents during Thursday's TVC Ohio contest against Nelsonville-York.
;: ~:zg~~·
~::~
W IC
lrat
exan er Y
8. Haskel Jones
245.0
two games.
,
the finale .
.. and Morgan Howard con- improved to 10-1 overall at 9. Gary Minton
242.0
After falling behind oneShellie Bailey led t~ tributed one point.
home this season.
.
10.0onWOI&lt;IIe
236.0
'th
B
·1
I
I
d
th
t
M
.
I
I
.
d
11.11obHIK
235.5
.
'
.
k
M
.game-to-none , the Lady
etgs_ .serv1ce attac w_1
at ey a so e
e ne
. e1gs a so c atme an 12.Ear1Johnson
235 _5
Buckeyes (5-6 TVC Ohio) 19 pomts - 14 of wh1ch attack with a dozen kills. fol- evening sweep with a 25-12 , 13.Cecll Minton
231 .5
rallied back to win Game 2 came cons~uttvely tn Game ·towed by Wolfe with 10 and 25-11 victory in the junior 14. Jock Maloney 22S.5
. ht. Howard varstty
.
15. em Winebrenner 222.0
by a three-point margin - , 3 .. Tricia Smith was next Stan Iey wtt. h etg
contest. Th e JV.
22 , 0
18. Bull s11vers
knotting thmgs up .a t one ~tth IS pomts and a team- also had seven kills in the Marauders are now 14-4 17.EICbHysen
220.0
'
II
db
trt·um~.
Glass
added
a
overall
and
7-3
in
TVC
Ohio
18.
Clari&lt;
Greene
apiece. The Maroon and h tgh seven aces, 1o owe Y
19. Paul Maynard . 220.0
218.5
Gold, llo:wever1 quicldy. :6~\ee ,. Oiass. .,~ilh .. Di,nf . J~am- 'gh ZO l!ssists a.nd . play.
·
w.R&lt;ckNortiiUp· .. •c.l!&gt;s,o., .regained momentum in Catte Wolfe and Vale_ne Smith also chipped in a
Meigs returns to action ~: == ~~~-g
Game 3 to win by 15 points, C~nde both .ad?ed ftve dozenrassists. Stanley had Monday when it travels to · 2a. EdWIIson
. 212.5
i
then closed the ni$ht out pomts to the wmmng cause, both blocks for the hosts.
24. BOO Ollvar
· :!oll.5

I'

Riverside Senior:
Golf League . -

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_
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Michigan vs.
Ohio State

- OSU recei-.er Brl,an Robiskie about the fans at WISCon~in 's Camp Randall Stadium

, Buckeye Brain Busten ·
'

days until kickoff

,-----~~-----------~----~

Speelal Notes
AP photo

Chicago Cubs s~ng pitcher Carlos ~mb{llno reaCts before
being taken Out of the game during selienth Inning baseball
~n In Game 2 of the National League division series
~galnst the

2: Why was Wisi:on- , 3: How many touch·

sin's backup in the
dOIWl passes did this ·
wtlen the Badgers ended OSU's ·2003 g;Jme, which the quarterback throw In his
19-g;Jme wiMing streak In 2003? Badgers won 17·15? career at Wisconsin?
Alwl •IS 1. Matt Schaber!; 2. Starter Jim Scr!ll ~the game after being cllO!&lt;ed by OSU's
Robert Reynolds; 3. Schabert had three 1D passes as a Badger.

' :

t

Say what?
"I'm excited about the game. I'm not
going to be l®klng Into the stands to
watch people iu"'p around~"

1: Who was the Wisconsin backup
QB who threw the winning lD

STAFF REPORT

$TAFF REPORT

OSU's Brian Robiskie had his
biggest game since last season when
he had eigtlt catches for 90 yards
and two touchdOVI11S against Min·
nesota. His ei!'flt catches were the
most he'd had in a game since the

HOMETOWN: Castle Shannon, Pa.
'
'
OHIO STATE YEARS: 1973· 76 ·
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS: Three·time
All-American punter. He led the coun·
try with an average of 46.7 yanjs per.
punt as a Junior. He also was the Buckeyes' place kickerfort\\U seasons and
holds the school record 1\ith a 59-yard field ~I at llli·
nois in 1975.
.. AFTER OHIO STATE: He played five seasons for
the Detroit Lions and was named AII·Pro twice. He
owns Skladany Enterprises, a·printing business In
Columbus.

Miller Senior League:~

SPORTSOMYOAilYSENTINEL.COM

Reeetw•s

NAME: Tom Skladany

wins Riversid~:.
SPOATSOMYOAILYSENTINELCOU:

Advantage: Ohio State

Where are they now? ·

Winebrenner ··.

Los Angeles Dodgers on Thursday In Chicage.P

Cub flub: Manny, ~
podgers take 2-0 lead
;

~ CHICAGO

.

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.

(AP)
- · ·But unless the· Cubs can
anny Ramirez and the show some semblance of the
gers look ready to run team·that won 97 games this
shalcy Chicago Culls out season, they're headed to
the playoffs . early Wid another disappointing finish.
~xtend thetr ,championship Each infielder made an error
.-ought to 100 years. . · during the game and the
: Raittjrez hi~ a mammoth Dodgers
scored
four '
fiOin.er to increase his post- unearned runs in· the second
~ason
record, Russell inning to jump ahead 5-0.
MIU'Iin had a three-ron Qou- · "It wasn't good baseball.
(lie a.nd the Lo~ Angeles In fact, the last .two days,
Dodgers took advantage of that's probably been the two
four errors by the clumsy woJ;St ~ames we've played
Cubs in a 10-3 victory all year," frustrated manager
:J'hursday night that gave Lou Piniella said. "It wasn't
them a 2..0 lead in the best· fun to watch, I'll tell you
of-five NL'division series.
that."
·
~ "We're going to_L.A., 't"e
Chicago became the 23rd
need one more wm. We re major league team to lose
not th~re yet," Ramirez sai?. ·the first two games at home
"They're the best team m in a best-of-five · playoff
!he National League ,and
PIMII'IH Cubs. U
• · anything could happen.

•

Compttltorlln dMI Gooklt
dMtkm 1ft flllcld:co J'I'O\'Idl I
blk«'l dozen. PlfiN - " I
rtGipl wldl tiCih tntry 10 dlty
. - "' lnksudtd In • cookbook
111M wJII bt ortalfd tfttr liM
eompltltlon. PIIUclputt Iff
.tlowtcl to llltlr II man)' IWNf
trtall .. dMiy will!. !Jtvml fomtl
GMIN utt4.1f nHdtd. All tnf$f
In die ~lflon btcomt fhf
Jlft'Pf'lt' ot P1taHnt.Valif)'
Hotplflllll4 will bt 10ld at &amp;he
lftll ot dMI ohlllfnJt, AU tiM
tom ~ \'tty ij~~elll
IVtnl'frillp to Ulltl WottMft
Mo .. 1Jiallnt brtllt oaric«ln
ourkNIJ.,..,

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.PouddldiiMI!lllrffi ptellt • up • ool!lpto..il fmn • tilt 1
I PVHVt'fllnt.w Cuuttornii,(304)01MJ40. 1~ mo, M 1

.proc•••

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Proudly'Apomored by:
·PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
•PVHAwdU
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If)'
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·,·

•
Page AS • The Daily sentinel

Friday. October 3, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Inside

Bt:..

The Daily Sentinel

~.Rays pick up wins, Page BJ
'
~ IIIII!I'Y after ~oss, Pace B4 ·

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=
ldloal

Nerd::

em

l'em State

1
1

1

;Michlpn St.
' Mlcl1ipn

1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0

;PIJnlue

Iowa
Illinois
Indiana

~ 1\f

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~K Sports Cia~ lleld set, Page B4

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w
L
0
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L
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Friday, October 3, 2008,

2
2

:z,.

2
2

So~, Beanie, the Heisman

2 • 2

llf!IJI\ I ·.LAM I',

Ohio Stalilat';,licollllli, 8 p.m.
Indiana at MinnesOta, noon
Iowa at Michiglln State, noon
Penn State at Purdue, noon

Illinois at Michiglln, 3:30 p.m.

Ill I; 1114 -;II\ I ";
RIISHING OFFENSE
Penn State .................... 267 .6
·.lni!iiiM ......... :................249.0
Wisconsin ........................ 218.5
Illinois ............................215.8
Michigan State .............. 203.4
PQSING OFFENSE

Purdue ..........................278.2
Penn State ...................... 247.6
Minnesota ...'........:.......... 230.8
:Illinois .....:......................228.8
·Northwestern .........•.....•..213.6

An inside look at this week's game

·rt..Uma-..-..

1
1.

3
3

COLUMBUS- Earlier this
week, Ohio State running back
Chris "Beanie" Well8 saiq he
hasn't given up on the idea of
winning the Heisman Trophy
this year.
Most people scratched WellS
off their list of Heisman contendeni after he missed three
games because of a foot ~ury.
The leaders of the pack for the
Heisman af this point are four
quarterbacks.
Oklahoma QBSam Bradford
has already thrown for 1,293
yards and 16 touchdowns.
Chase Daniel, of Missouri, has
-

The Uma News

jnaveau@limanews.com
419·993·2087

oompleted 76 percent of his
pesses for 1,412 yards and 12
TDs. Texas' Colt McCoy has
thrown for 1,018 yards and 14
touchdowns. And, of oourse,
last year's winner, Florida QB
Tim T.ebow, is still around.
WeDs probably isn't even the
leading Heisman candidate

&lt;

-

-

- -

-

-

Ohio State ...................... 251.8
Penn State ...................... 252.2
Iowa .............................. 282.4
Wisconsin ........................305.5
. Michigan ........................309.2
1114~

It N Ill\ Ill II";

RUSHING YAROS

Javon Ringer, 1'4SU ..............897
Shonn Greene, Iowa ............ 665
Evan Royster, Purdue .......... 518
Tyrell Sutton, Northwestern .. 464
P.J. Hill, WisconSin ................449
PQSING YAROS

Adam Weber, Minnesota .... 1154
Curtis Painter, Purdue ........ 1113
C.J. Bacher, Northwestern .. 1042
Brian Hoyer, MSU .............. 961
. Juice Williams, Illinois .. ...... 905
RECEMNGYARDS ....
·. Eli(: llecl&lt;er. Miooesota ·-···'·506
: Mark Dell, MSU .: ................ 425
Desmond Tardy, Purdue .:....366
Jordan Norwood, PSU ..........318
Greg Orton, Purdue ............. :2s7

.i
.

--.

-

0!:11 I t/IJitlt ;;
·MSSINGYARDS

Todd Boeckman ..................446
RUSHING YARDS
Terrene Pryor ......................292
·RECEIVING YARDS

Brian Robisllie ....................203
TOUCHDOWNS

. Brian Robiskie ........................ .4
'TACKL£S

James Laurinaitis .................. 47
SACKS
. Martus Freeman .................... 2
Thaddeus Gibson ..................... 2
FIELD GOALS

Ryan Pretorius ....... ............... 7/9
'PUNTING

A.J. Trapasso ................ 21/44.2
TACKL£S FOR LOSSES

Doug Worthington.,........... :...... 3
KICKOFF RETliRNS
B·randon Saine .................. 19. 7
."

.

Hlr!R

ll~, I

101 lit 1.. 11 ~

AuF.30
Sept 6

ltunii'\OVIII State W, 43-0

Sept ·13

~ 35-3 .
W, 28·10
Minnesota
W, 34·21 .
@lp.m.
Purdue
3:30 p.m.

Sept 20
Sept27
Oct.4
Qct.11 .

'Oct. 18
Oct. 25
Nco;. 8
Nco;. 15
Nov.22

011i0

@usc

w. 26-14

Troy

@ Michi!flln St.

Penn State
@ Nortlw.&lt;!stem
• @ Illinois

Mlchi!flln

TBA
8 p.m.
TBA
TBA
TBA

Content &lt;Xllr!liled by JimN....eau and
desi!Jl by Ross BisMff • ThO Uma NeY.s

Co!¥18f1t ~ 2008 The Uma N&lt;w.s. Repro-

duction of aNor any POitiOn of !hiS matelial
iS prollibited ~'$out- consent

-

SATURDAY'S

"

•

-

·

that's the way it would be. Troj,hy with 924 yards rush·
But winning a Heisman Tro- ing. It might have worked in
phy without dazzling num· 1955 when Howard "Hopahers is a thing of the distant long" Cassady won the Buckpast, except maybe for eyes' third Heisman by rushCharles Woodson's 1997 Heis· ing for 958 yards.
Maybe the best oomparison
man win.
Even if Wells tivei-ages 150 would be in 1957 when Texas
yards rushing the rest of the ·A&amp;M's John David Crow
season; he would have around played only seven games !Je1,200 yards. .
cause of an ~ury, rushed for
Wells probably was born sev· just 562 yards and still won the
'eral decades too late to claim a Heisman.
But that was a longtime ago,
HeisJhan with those numbers.
It might have worked in• long before 24-hour sports
1944, when Lea Horvath won channels, instant analysis and
Ohio State's first Heil!man weekly Heisman watches.
--.
-

OPPONI~ N'T:

Alooll at some of the key match ups in the
game between No. 14 Ohio State (4·1, 1·0
Big Ten) ana No. 18 Wisconsin (3·1. 0·1 Big
Ten) on Saturday at Camp Randall Stadium:

Qulrteltlaclw
One team has a running quartertlack and
it's not Wisconsin's Allan Evridge, who has

rushed 12 times for negative 18 yards.
Evridge, a f&lt;,ansas state transfer, is a filllt·
year starter for the Badgers. He has th!O\vri
for 752 yards and four touchdowns in four
games, lhou!'fl his best receiver, ti!'flt end
TriMs Beckum, has missed 11\U games.
000 State freshman Terrene Pip \\ill get his
third start, but the first in a big·g;Jme situation.
PI)« leads Ohio State in rushing 1\ith 292
yards and has completed 63 percent of his
passes for 296 y!lds and fM!touchdoY.fls.
Pryor's speed can be deceptive, as Wis. cor)Sin defensive end Mike Newkir11 noticed.
"He didn't look like he was moving very fast
(on tape), but there wasn't anyone catching
him,~ Newkirk told The Capital Times of
Madison, WIS.
..
·
......... .1: 01!10 $talll

llllllllnc backs
Tailback Chris "Beanie" Wells showed why
he is Ohio State's most valuable player when
he returned after missing three games 1\ith
a foot injury when OSU beat Minnesota 34·
211a~ Saturday. tt wasn't just his produc·
tion (106 yards), but the possibilities he
opened up for the rest of the offense. Wells
says he doesn't expect his Injured foot to be

100 pertent the rest of the season but says
he will play throu!'flthe pain.
·
Wisconsin's P.J. Hill, a 5-foot, 11·inch,
236-pound junior, has gained 449 yards
and scored four touchdowns. Hill, who
gained 1,236 yard last season, did not
play because of a leg injury when·Ohio
State beat Wisconsin 38-17 last season. Freshman John Clay has gained
191 yards and scored four TOs.

2007 openeragainst'rilung;tooMl State and
it was the first time he caug,t 11\U tolJchdooM1
passts in a game since last year against WIS·
consin. Tigllt end Rory Nicol is out.after
spraining an ankle against Minnesota.
. WISCO!lsin's Beckum, who often lines up as
a wide receiver, has battled a sore hamstring
all season. He sat outt\\U gal)'leS and played
only the last 10 minutes against MichU!n last
Saturday. Beckum has 6 catChes for 68
yards after having 75 catches last season.
lheBadgersothertightend, Garrett Graham
(11 catches, 154 yards), missed the Michig;Jn g;Jme because of afoot injury.
Advantage: Ohio State

Offensive line

toc.u.

--

-

•

~

-

-

-

WISCONSIN

ckeyes ·

leg injury ag;Jinst Ohio State last season.
Adva'ttalll: Ellen

"'*"''

!Blllla . ~=
at

Ohio State's often·criticiled linemen got a
post-game iO'Bde of "solid" from coach Jim
Tressel, but theweekly Jim Parker Award to
the lineman who played the best was not
awarded. The big quest!9n for Ohio State is
WSteve Rehling will return from a foot injury
and how that will affect the distribution of
playing time. Fre6hman Mike ,Brewster has
played center the last 11\U lfllmes and-Jim
Cordle has moved from center to the spot
Rehring was filling.
The Buckeyes have allowed a Big Tenv.orst12quarterbacksai:ksand,at47per·
cent. are the only Big Ten team to score
touchdo'Mls on fewer than half their pes·
session inside an opponent's 20·yard line.
Wisconsin's inability to score touchdowns in
the so-called "RedZone"wascostly in ils2725 loss to Michigan last week when rt kicked
four field goals and scored only one touch·
down while building a 19·0 lead.
Guaid Kraig Urbik is a four-year starter
and tackle Eric Vanden Heuvel has
•
started for three seasons for
Wisconsin Vanden
Heuvel 5uttered a Ohio State
season-ending

..

3

Chllllco1he, 7:30p.m.

Al:adom{

~tem at Federal f!ocklng, 7:30 p.m.
J.tiller 11 Southern. 7:30p.m.
l'eiDs at VInton County, 7:30 p.m..
fairland al Rlwr Valley, 7:30 p.m.
at Soutl\ Gallla. 7:30 p.m.
Pleaaanlat Wayne, 7:30p.m.

=-

lJbarty Raleigh at WBhama, 7:30 p.m.

.

~-

•

~

!lailla Academy,
r,Mte, 10 a.m.

·.

it

......_on:tro
'Joleyball
lgo at EM1orn, 8 p.m. ·
th GaiHa at Coal Grove, 5:30p.m.
r Valley ot Gallla Acedemy, 5 p.m.
11annan al Soutl\em. 8 p:m.
pvGS a1 Chesapeake. 5:30 p.m.
kivar Valley =C~BA
~

-

'Dlncln Oc:tO'!tr 7
bollia Academv al Q\/CS, 5:30 p.m.
,,
.
Vol~
Alexander at Meigs, 6 p.m.
~ed HQck al Elllern. 6 p.m.
Millo&lt; a1 Soumern. 6 p.m.
arace Chriattan at South Gatlla, 5;30

~ Hill a1~1Yet Valley, 5:30 p.m.

' 'f :

·'f

'

' '

l·

·:, FRIDAYNlGKf

, FOOmAu.
ytEEK 7 GAMES

Defensive backs

Donald Washington, who sat out Ohio
DefenaiN lne
State's first 11\U games because of a discipli·
Wisconsin's defensive front line was dom· nary suspension, produced a big playv.ilh his·
inant in the first ha~ against Michigan, allow· first interception of the season against Min·
ing 21 yards total offense, but then gave up neso1a. osu has eight interoeptions after haY·
scoring drives of 85 yards, 80 yards and 77 ing only 11 all of last season.
yards in the second ha~. End Matt Shaugh- Safety Shane Carter, the brother of former
nessy and tackles Jason Chapman and Mike OSU receiver Cris Carter, leads Wisconsin
Newkirk are returning starters. O'Brien with 11\U interteptions. Aaron Henry, a re· ·
Schofield leads the Badgers \lith 11\U sacks. turning starter .at cornerback, is probably:
Ohio State ranks first in the Big Ten in c:Mlf- out for the season after having 11\U off-sea·
all defense and third in rush defense (95.2 son knee surgeries.
yaids a game). The rna.oe of athletic end Advantage: Ohio State .
Cameron Heyward to defensive tackle might Special teams
,
have ramped up OSU's pressure, bull\ith
Wisconsin freshman kicker Phillip Welch
only one sack against Minnesota.lhe Buck· kicll!d
field goals, incloding a 52-yarder
eyes continue to rankonespotfromthebot· againstfour
Michigan.
He is 8 of 10 for the seatom in the Big Ten In that category.
son. Brad Nortrnan is averaging 42.3 yards
Ad-o&amp; I' • :Wisconsin
a punt. Ohio State's Ryan Pretorius is~ of
Uneltackera
12 on field goals. A.J. Trapasso isaveragJng
J
McFadden leads the Badgers · tack 44.2 yards a punt. .
aew
.
., - Advantage: Even
les v.ilh 47. D'An&lt;!llllll'ly has fivrl tac~ for
tosses.llvee-year sta~ .loljatl1lln Gasi1111s
hashadai'OUjtlseason, missingthefirstt\\U
games with a strained. knee l1gament after
being cited for drunk drMng on h1s rooped .
dunngthesummer.
, ..
OSU linebackers James Launnaitis,
Marcus Freeman and Ross Homan
all rank 1n the top 25 1n the B1g
Ten 1n total tackles. Some have
questioned ~Butkus Award Wtnner Laurinaitis has piayed as
well this season as he did as
a JUnl~ ButTressel says
he IS definitely plaYing
as well as he has ever
played."
Advantage:

Prep Volleyball Roundup

ScHEDULE

· }PoMEROY - A IIOhtdUit of upcoming h!vh
J!:hool varsity aportl!lg
involving
plm. from Melgl and Gallla counties.

is out of reach

await

Penn State ....................515.2
lndiana ............................ 453.q
IllinOiS ............. ,..........;... 444.5
Wisconsin ......................... 413.5
Purdue .......................... 404.0
lOTALDEFENSE

wnong Big Ten running b8cks
right now. Michigan State's
Jamn Ringer has gained 897
yards in his first five games.
)3ut Wells insists he's not
done yet. "There are a lot of
great athletes out there, bUt I
like to think the Heisman is
not out of my reach," he said.
''A lot oftimes people get to
thinking the Heisman is all
about numbers and a team's
record. But when it all comes
down tO it, it's who is the best
player in college football, plain
Wid simple ..
In a penect world, maybe

Jim
Naveau

.lOTAL OFFENSE

•

.
·.
'

logan at Marlena
, Oallla Academy at Chllllcolha
J•ckeQn at lro!'lton
Port1mouth It·Warren '
· i:attorn 11 Fodor~l Hocking
..
' Miller at Southern
Watlir'lord at Trimble
,Aie~~:eftder •• Nela.onvllle' Yortc:

·\ . " Y!'!l, 1on

at Alheni

!Mig~ tt Vlntor ~ountr

Zanalvlllo ~l.~t, Chal loa ·

l11 01pro ·•t Unailvlllo Roaocrona

::r ·'River Valieytal Fairland

South Point at Coal Grove
Cllotlpoak'o al Rock Hill
0r1tn at S~uth Gallla
·Point Pltallnl a1 Wayne .
Llbolt}o Ratol.gh 11 Wahama
f'loa~~(C.un1y

'f
}P

al Slaaonvllle.,

·' 'l&lt;flntlold at ChapmoiiYIIIo
·: .l!oc. •I Htfbori Hoover•
·!' · I •

'

'

..fJQlrr~t;!,YS
1-74().446-2942 ext. 33
Fu _ I·740;448-3008

Ladv

rauders beat
Nelsonville-York in lour
.

~astern picks up big Victories against Gallia Academy and

MASON , W.Va. - Mick
Winebrenner of Racine has
won the 2008 championshi(!
of the Riverside Seniqr
Men's Golf
League. ::
W i n. e :~
brenneT
scored
d
total of 324
. points to
defeat run:
ner-up Paul
Somerville
who had
Winebrenner 3 12 points:
· The
twQ
came in to the final week of
play tied in the standings. ::
In third place was Carl .
Stone with a total of .29).~
points, fqllowed by the reSt
of the top I 0 of Jim Gres~
(265), Ken Whited (260.5);
Kenny Greene (256.5)·
Curtis Grubb (246) , Haske.!
Jones (245), Gary Mintori
(242) and Don Waldi~

ROCKSPRINGS .
Meigs volleyball got back
on the winning track
Thursday night following a
four-game 25-19,22-25 , zs10, 25-1~ victory over visitNelsonville-York during
a Tri-Valley
Conference
0 h i 0
Division
contest at
Larry
R.
Morrison
Gymnasiurfi.,
Tile Lady
Marauders
(15-3, 8·2
· TVC Ohio)
- fresh off
their first
I 0 S· s
(Athens)
over their
last eight
matches rebounded
Pluse - GoH, Bl .
nicely
Thursday,
p ·osting
Walker
team totals
of 37 kills, 32 assists and
two blocks while going 89- ,
. 1. Mlck =:~~~.';'"':!!
of-96 at the service line for
Bryan Waltoralphoto
2. Paul Somerville 312.0
93 perceni. MHS also The starting six for the Meigs volleyball team (from left) Emalee Glass, Tricia Smith, Catie ~: ~~~:~:':
~~:~
remams in a second-place tie Wolfe, Shellie Bailey, Chandra Stanley and Morgan Howard give a collective stare at their 5. Ken WMed
260.5
wth'thhAth~nlsoAI- bdoth bof opponents during Thursday's TVC Ohio contest against Nelsonville-York.
;: ~:zg~~·
~::~
W IC
lrat
exan er Y
8. Haskel Jones
245.0
two games.
,
the finale .
.. and Morgan Howard con- improved to 10-1 overall at 9. Gary Minton
242.0
After falling behind oneShellie Bailey led t~ tributed one point.
home this season.
.
10.0onWOI&lt;IIe
236.0
'th
B
·1
I
I
d
th
t
M
.
I
I
.
d
11.11obHIK
235.5
.
'
.
k
M
.game-to-none , the Lady
etgs_ .serv1ce attac w_1
at ey a so e
e ne
. e1gs a so c atme an 12.Ear1Johnson
235 _5
Buckeyes (5-6 TVC Ohio) 19 pomts - 14 of wh1ch attack with a dozen kills. fol- evening sweep with a 25-12 , 13.Cecll Minton
231 .5
rallied back to win Game 2 came cons~uttvely tn Game ·towed by Wolfe with 10 and 25-11 victory in the junior 14. Jock Maloney 22S.5
. ht. Howard varstty
.
15. em Winebrenner 222.0
by a three-point margin - , 3 .. Tricia Smith was next Stan Iey wtt. h etg
contest. Th e JV.
22 , 0
18. Bull s11vers
knotting thmgs up .a t one ~tth IS pomts and a team- also had seven kills in the Marauders are now 14-4 17.EICbHysen
220.0
'
II
db
trt·um~.
Glass
added
a
overall
and
7-3
in
TVC
Ohio
18.
Clari&lt;
Greene
apiece. The Maroon and h tgh seven aces, 1o owe Y
19. Paul Maynard . 220.0
218.5
Gold, llo:wever1 quicldy. :6~\ee ,. Oiass. .,~ilh .. Di,nf . J~am- 'gh ZO l!ssists a.nd . play.
·
w.R&lt;ckNortiiUp· .. •c.l!&gt;s,o., .regained momentum in Catte Wolfe and Vale_ne Smith also chipped in a
Meigs returns to action ~: == ~~~-g
Game 3 to win by 15 points, C~nde both .ad?ed ftve dozenrassists. Stanley had Monday when it travels to · 2a. EdWIIson
. 212.5
i
then closed the ni$ht out pomts to the wmmng cause, both blocks for the hosts.
24. BOO Ollvar
· :!oll.5

I'

Riverside Senior:
Golf League . -

e__
_
.- -_-""~-•..,mydal--ly&amp;entl--ne-t_cam_-,-w_ith_a_s_i_x-_po_i_n_t_dec_ts_i_on_in ;C:han:d;ra:.;S;ta:n;le~y•h=a:d;.;th;re;e~.T~he~·..:L;a;d~y-M~a~ra;u;d;er~s-Piea-•H•I•H•Vo•ll•eyba.;..I.I,•B•l~.:.25ii·HiiaiirleyiiRiilceiiiiiiiiii203iiii.siiii~

£ooldn' Up .t\ CUI'e
Pie, Cookie &amp; Cake

Challenge 2008

Pddty. ~ 17, 2001· OPIN TOTHB PUBUCI
t Judglns beplt1t Noon · PVH'Maln Lobby
1

• $5 for rat cariy (ple-repuatlon)
$3 for each ICidltiona1 entry (Jne·ttgil~don)
• Stme4y repttadon it aVAilable aran additloilal $2 per carry
. • Pr~ ~it Tuetday, Oetobcr1412008
.
'
• Entdetlhould be brought ro the PVH Main Lobby rwo houn ptior to jud~na
t Wil1llcn receive awdt for top 1ix pld ln cadi careaory
~
t For more information pleaN etll PVH Community lld&amp;liont, (304) 675-4340, Ext, ll26

Michigan vs.
Ohio State

- OSU recei-.er Brl,an Robiskie about the fans at WISCon~in 's Camp Randall Stadium

, Buckeye Brain Busten ·
'

days until kickoff

,-----~~-----------~----~

Speelal Notes
AP photo

Chicago Cubs s~ng pitcher Carlos ~mb{llno reaCts before
being taken Out of the game during selienth Inning baseball
~n In Game 2 of the National League division series
~galnst the

2: Why was Wisi:on- , 3: How many touch·

sin's backup in the
dOIWl passes did this ·
wtlen the Badgers ended OSU's ·2003 g;Jme, which the quarterback throw In his
19-g;Jme wiMing streak In 2003? Badgers won 17·15? career at Wisconsin?
Alwl •IS 1. Matt Schaber!; 2. Starter Jim Scr!ll ~the game after being cllO!&lt;ed by OSU's
Robert Reynolds; 3. Schabert had three 1D passes as a Badger.

' :

t

Say what?
"I'm excited about the game. I'm not
going to be l®klng Into the stands to
watch people iu"'p around~"

1: Who was the Wisconsin backup
QB who threw the winning lD

STAFF REPORT

$TAFF REPORT

OSU's Brian Robiskie had his
biggest game since last season when
he had eigtlt catches for 90 yards
and two touchdOVI11S against Min·
nesota. His ei!'flt catches were the
most he'd had in a game since the

HOMETOWN: Castle Shannon, Pa.
'
'
OHIO STATE YEARS: 1973· 76 ·
CAREER HIGHLIGHTS: Three·time
All-American punter. He led the coun·
try with an average of 46.7 yanjs per.
punt as a Junior. He also was the Buckeyes' place kickerfort\\U seasons and
holds the school record 1\ith a 59-yard field ~I at llli·
nois in 1975.
.. AFTER OHIO STATE: He played five seasons for
the Detroit Lions and was named AII·Pro twice. He
owns Skladany Enterprises, a·printing business In
Columbus.

Miller Senior League:~

SPORTSOMYOAilYSENTINEL.COM

Reeetw•s

NAME: Tom Skladany

wins Riversid~:.
SPOATSOMYOAILYSENTINELCOU:

Advantage: Ohio State

Where are they now? ·

Winebrenner ··.

Los Angeles Dodgers on Thursday In Chicage.P

Cub flub: Manny, ~
podgers take 2-0 lead
;

~ CHICAGO

.

~

.

(AP)
- · ·But unless the· Cubs can
anny Ramirez and the show some semblance of the
gers look ready to run team·that won 97 games this
shalcy Chicago Culls out season, they're headed to
the playoffs . early Wid another disappointing finish.
~xtend thetr ,championship Each infielder made an error
.-ought to 100 years. . · during the game and the
: Raittjrez hi~ a mammoth Dodgers
scored
four '
fiOin.er to increase his post- unearned runs in· the second
~ason
record, Russell inning to jump ahead 5-0.
MIU'Iin had a three-ron Qou- · "It wasn't good baseball.
(lie a.nd the Lo~ Angeles In fact, the last .two days,
Dodgers took advantage of that's probably been the two
four errors by the clumsy woJ;St ~ames we've played
Cubs in a 10-3 victory all year," frustrated manager
:J'hursday night that gave Lou Piniella said. "It wasn't
them a 2..0 lead in the best· fun to watch, I'll tell you
of-five NL'division series.
that."
·
~ "We're going to_L.A., 't"e
Chicago became the 23rd
need one more wm. We re major league team to lose
not th~re yet," Ramirez sai?. ·the first two games at home
"They're the best team m in a best-of-five · playoff
!he National League ,and
PIMII'IH Cubs. U
• · anything could happen.

•

Compttltorlln dMI Gooklt
dMtkm 1ft flllcld:co J'I'O\'Idl I
blk«'l dozen. PlfiN - " I
rtGipl wldl tiCih tntry 10 dlty
. - "' lnksudtd In • cookbook
111M wJII bt ortalfd tfttr liM
eompltltlon. PIIUclputt Iff
.tlowtcl to llltlr II man)' IWNf
trtall .. dMiy will!. !Jtvml fomtl
GMIN utt4.1f nHdtd. All tnf$f
In die ~lflon btcomt fhf
Jlft'Pf'lt' ot P1taHnt.Valif)'
Hotplflllll4 will bt 10ld at &amp;he
lftll ot dMI ohlllfnJt, AU tiM
tom ~ \'tty ij~~elll
IVtnl'frillp to Ulltl WottMft
Mo .. 1Jiallnt brtllt oaric«ln
ourkNIJ.,..,

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c.;tokl•'··lJp A ~are 1

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~.
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I.
.
I ,_ MiJJitlt foJm. dlflihlllld ,.._with ;.y,..to

1
I
I
I
I PLIAIM4T V.4U&amp;V HOIPITAL COOICIN' UPA CURl, I
Aftftl ~ty Ulliont. 2!20VIllty Drtw, Point,._,
II WV 2f!IO. AU tliialu
. lhouJ4 Nltlldt&lt;OIIf fO PVH fo~dllklll.l
.PouddldiiMI!lllrffi ptellt • up • ool!lpto..il fmn • tilt 1
I PVHVt'fllnt.w Cuuttornii,(304)01MJ40. 1~ mo, M 1

.proc•••

~-----------------------~
Proudly'Apomored by:
·PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
•PVHAwdU
•
If)'
t

L
••

J

\

�•

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

.

.

Friday, October 3,_2oo8

.

':"'l'T.olleyball '

I .
I

•

· Friday,
.
. October 3, 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com ·

- heartbreakers to Chillicothe,
nine points to eight points to
Eastern and Jackson - will
l
three points in each of the ·
look to get back to its winthree . games .. Waterford.
ning ways Monday when it
: · from Page Bl
however, wilhstood the
hosts River Valley on Senior
•
charge and is now one
Night . The junior varsity con'
league win away from
:ruppers Plains to take on clinching a share of the
test will begin at 5:30 p.m.
Eastern in a TVC non-divi. kional matchup. The JV 2008 TVC Hocking crown.
RAIDERS MOVE TO 8-0
The Purple and Gold were
Fntest will begin ar 6 p.m. led at the serving line by
tNOVC
! EASTERN DOWNS MILLER Ashley Walker with eight
PROCTORVILLE
•
points, followed by Emma
River Valley moved on step
: CORNING _ Eastern Hunter· with five points ..
closer
to clinching i.ts seventh
~olleyball kept its league Walker, Chelsea Pape and
straight
Ohio
Valley
Rashell Bosp also added
1jtle hOJ?CS alive _ as well
Conference
title
·With
.
lis won Its third straight con- two aces apie&lt;;e to the losstraight
sets
victory
over
d
ing cause.
.
est - Thursday ni gh t urKelsey Holsinger led the
South Point Thursday night
24
26
25
in Proctorville.
'
ng a four-game - · • net attack with five kills,
3, 18-25, 25-21 victory
The
Raiders
won
25-18,
bver host Miller during a· followed by Boso, Katie
25-19 and 24-21 over the
Tri-Valley . Conference Woods and Stephanie
Pointers· to move to 8.{1 on
i:Jocking Division matchup Shamblin with two kills
the season in conference play
In Perry County.
. each. Boso and Breanna
and 12-6 overall with three
: The Lady Eagles ( 15 . 4, 6_ Ta,Ylor also had a block
games left in the regular sea·
., TVC Hocking) rebounded afuece. Hunter led SHS with
son. !;.&gt;
.
tmne assists as well.
River
Valley
claimed
the
rlicely after an emotional
Collec.tively, Southern
live-game epic victory the
win thanks to a very balanced
~ight before with Gallia finished the night with· a
night among all of the Silver
1'\cademy, even· though it passing percentage of 86
and . Black players. Aubrie
took the guests some time to and a serving effort of 94
Rice led the way in · scoring
~arm up.
. percent:·
with II points but Kayhi
! · The Green and White WHS managed an
.Smith was just behind witli
evening sweep with a 25eight points. Diana Corfias
ptruggled out of the gate and 16 . 25 _9 victory in the
was next with seven pointS •
eventually won Game I by
lhe minimal two points, junior varsity contest.
while Mackenzie Cluxton
Bryan Walters/photo
~hen found their stride in Emily Ash led the lV Meigs junior Tricia Smith (9) digs up a spike attempt during Thursday's TVC Ohio volley- grabbed six points and
Game 2 with a convincing Tornadoes with four points. ball contest against Nelsonville-York at Larry A. Morrison Gymnasium in Rocksprings·. Meri Jacqueline Jacobs and Linsey
,
Southern returns to action
Stover rounded out the scor,
~:;-point decision for a two- Monday . when· it hosts VanMeter (5) is pictured in the background.
~ames-to-none advantage.
Hannan in a non-conference Maxson added eight service August in Mercerville games. And for the third ing with five points apiece. :
led the kill catega;
• The Lady Falcons ( 1-7.
Ch 1
w·· poinis, and the duo of where South Gallia jumped time in as many contests. ry Corfias
with nine kills, while
!rvc
Hocking) battled back contest at
ares
,
Hayman Gymnasium . The Morgan Burt and Karissa put !O a two game lead and the Blue Angels ' efforts Smith added five, J&lt;~eobs had
. &lt;O win Game 3 by seven JV contest .will · start at 6' Connolly chipped in two SOL!thern battled back to went without reward as host · three', Stover . two and
paints , but EHS sealed the
points apiece to the winning take the final .three games Jackson claimed a season Cluxton one kill on the night.
- ~e!ll in Game 4 with a four- p.m.
.
.mid the win.
.
sweep with a.25-17, 25-15, Ja~;obs led the way on
point triumph. Eastern com- EASTERN DOWNS GAIN 5 cause.
8urt
and
Maxson.
also
had
The
pair
of
contests
easily
18-25, 22-25, 15-13 viciory defense with three blocks
bined for team number' of
seven
kills
each
,
while'
ranks
as
one
of
the
lop
during
a Southeastern Ohio while Cortias came away
1!1 digs , 34 kills .29 assists
TUPPERS PLAINS ~
Connolly led the pa ss ing matchups of the 2008 vol- Athletic League South with two.
~d five blocks to go along w
South Point was led by
with 38 assists. leyball season.
Division matchup .•
:ovith a serving effort_of 86g~iy a palindrome would attack
Maxson also had· 23 digs
The Lady Rebels ( 15-4)
The Blue Angels ( 12-7', 6- Courtney Korikos with severi
of-91 for just under 95 per- be fitting to describe the and Wilfong chipped in 21. were led in the instant clas- 6 SEOAL South) fell behind points and Allison Mitchell
~ent.
back-and-forthness
disHannah Cunningham led sic by Natasha Adkins who two-games-to-none, then with six markers.
' Brittany Casto led the serIn the reserve contest River
. !vice attack with 14 points, played during Wednesday the GAHS serving attack had 14 points and an ace rallied for two straight wins
Valley
again claimed the win
followed b)' Katie Wilfong night's non-league volley- with 13 points, followed by while \&lt;\lisa Johnson and to force a race to 15 in the
ball contest between Gallia Amy Noe wjth 10 and the Chandra Canaday added 13 finale. The lronladies (15-3~ in three sets 25-9, 22-25 and
~ith 11 and Tresa Swatzel Academy and host Eastern duo of Caroline .Baxter and points apiece. Canaday also 8-3) and GAHS battled 25-17. Tasha 'Alexander led
~ith 10. Beverly Maxson _ with the Lady Eagles Amanda McGhee with nine had five aces while Johnson through 10 different ties the Raiders with a dozen
~as next with nme points ,
·h
after the hosts jumped out to points and Ciara Bostic had
Karissa Connolly added coming away . Wit
a .points apiece. Alexi's Geiger had one.
Next on the scoring chart an early 2-1 lead. Tied atl3 10 points.
five, and the duo of .Morgan thrilling . five,game 26-28, chipped in eight points and
River Valley will return to
iBurt and Britany Morrison 25 ·IS; •25 -23 · 21 -25 • 15· 9 Kac1 Shoemaker had six was Tayler Duncan with a all, JHS ran off the next tw,l'l' action Monday at Qallia
· dozen markers , Rachel points - securing the mini~ach chipped in four points. VI~~?Lady Eagles 04-4) pomls.
Mollie Blake 'ed the net · Merry had seven points and ·mum two-point decision for Academy.
:Sami Cummins also had won their fifth consecutive attack "with 14 kl !~&lt; and nine four aces. Hailec Swain had the match win.
~ne point in the win.
match against the Blue blocks, fo llowed by_Qeiger five points and a pair of aces
HANNAN DROPS A PAIR ··
Jackson also ~on the pre•. Swatzelled the net charge
h 1
f
\Yith 16 kills, followed by Angels in t e ast our with 10. kills and two and Chrissie Tirpak provid- vious two meetin"s between
ASHTON W V.
. Is ed pro ba bl y the b'1ggest I hese sc hoo. Is th".
b
' · · a.didn't
Fasto with six kills. Both years, as well as increased bl oc ks. Morgan Danm
. IS year Y Hannan 's evening
~
their current winning streak also had nine kills and six point of the night for the scores of 25-20, 23-25, 11- start well Thursday night_
l:'watzel and Casto also had to two matches in the
. matching team-highs of two process. GAHS ( 12-6) blocks in the setback, while Rebels, scoring the game 25, 18-25 and 19-25 , 14-25, and it didn't end well either,
Megun Foster added seven winner in Game 4. .
25-21, 14-25.
Hannan lost both of its
~locks .
•
:- Wilfong and Burt each dropped it second straight kills and three blocks. Noe
Adkins also led her team
Morgan · l;&gt;aniels led the games Thursda1 in a tri•
..:;...®\:! four kills to the win- decision in as many days also had eight .kills.
defepsively with seven kills ·. service attack for GAHS.. mateh that 'pitted- the •bady
,.u·
with the setback.
·
Shoemaker
led
the
Angels
and
six blocks, Johnson had with 15 points and five aces, 'Cats against both Calvary
~ng cause , with Jamie
The c.ontest was clearly
24
digs
and four blocks and two kills, -followed by Amy Noe and Baptist and Huntington St.
Swatzel adding a pair of battle.of wills, with the Blue with
Cunningham
added
another
Swain had four kills and Hannah -Cunningham with Joe. Calvary won the first
kills as well. Burt also had and White ju&amp;ping out to an 16 digs. Geiger also had a · Canaday
had five kills.
10 points apiece. Brittany matchup 25-11 and 25-14
bne block.
early 1-0 lead after the min- team-high 13 assists , with
For Southern (6-12) . Hively·
· and
Kacie and then turned around and
;' Connolly led EHS with imum two-point win in Brit!Hny Hively contribut- Ashley Walker and Emma Sho~maker were next with took down St. Joe.2,:i.•J7 and
4 assists . Tresa Swatzel Game I . The Green and .
ing seven assists.
Hunter led the way. Walker four 'points apiece, followed '26-24 before Hahnan arid
ad a team-best 19 digs, fol- White rallied to take the
Gallia Academy did sal- had 14 points including by_Alexis Geiger with ·!hree ·'me Lady Iri~h iJ)et in the
wed by Casto, Maxson next two games for a ·two- v;1ge a split on the evening · seven aces while Hunter pomts and tbe ~uo of • night cap, with St.:' Joe
~nd Burt with 10 digs games-to-one advantage,
with a 26-28, 25 -23, 25-22 provided 13 points, 15 Amanda:McGhee 1111d Urea pulling out :a· l_~·25 f·25-2~
l!piece , Eastern also won the but the guests responded triumph in the junior varsity assists and was 94 percent Close w1th two each. · ·
and 25-14 v1ctory :rh~y
jiinior varsity contest in with a four-point win in contest. '
serving.
.
.
Geiger le,d the . net. attack night in Ashton." ·';.· i:':i .. ,
itraight games.
Game 4 to tie things at two
Courtney Thomas led her with_ 14 kills, follo~ed: ·~Y·
After struggJing· il'l ·th.~
· Eastern returns to action apiece - setting up the race
REBELS BEAT SOUTHERN
team with 10 assi sts whil~ ~an1els and Noe Wtth ,,~IX ,.firstgameofThilrsday'stn•
Monday when it ·hosts to 15.
·
the kill category was led by kills ea~h. ,Daruels also had a match, fallin~ 25-11 and· ~~
~eigs in a TVC non-diviIn tlmt pivotal fifth g~me,
RACINE .- South Gallia Kelsey Holsinger with 10. team-h1kh 13 bloc.ks m the 14 to visaing Calvacy
sional match up. The JV Eastern erased an early; 4-0 continued to build on its S{ephanie Shamblin and setback. Geiger also· had four Baptist, the .Lady 'Cats (4•
contest will begin at 6 p.m. deficit by outscoring the school
best
record Katie Woods tacked on five blocks and seven assi~ts. 12) looked poised to. tulii
;
guests 15-5 the rest of the Wednesday nil\ht ~ but kill.&gt; apiece and Rashell Molli~ Blak\l added five kills things around ' in the :~e
:•WATERFORD ROLLS PAST
·evening - allowing the Southern sure dtdn't make it Boso and Breanna Taylor and stx blocks, ~htle Megan With aquick;!Z5-~9 wiqover
' SOUTHERN IN 4
Lady Eagles to claim the tri- easy.
had three kills each.
Foster·had.four kills.
Huntington St: ,Joel: in- the
umph .
The Tornadoes jumped
. Shoema)!:er
and first set.
· . . ·.· ~
: WATERFORD
Eastern - as a team As a team Southern pro- ·Cunnitighamalso had'' respecBut. th'e stubbdni ;:Lail·y
out to a two game lead over
21 dinks. ·
Southern ,
volleyball posted numbers of 44 kills, South Gallia 25- 13 and 26- 'duced
In the reserve contest tive dig totals of 28 and 18, Iris!] would no! back dawll',
aropped its sixth straight 43 assists. one block and 24 in the non -league South Galli a claimed a win with HeU~her Ward contribut- jumping out to an·eady lt:a4
pecision Thursday night also went 100-of-107 at .the matchup, severely threatening II digs as ,well. Hively . and hold.in!l on for a ~w
(juring a straight game 16- service .line for 93 percent.
ing the Lady Rebels seven in three 25-10, 18-25 and also had a team.bigh 15 ~5-23wm tp the seco1J.d ·set
.45, 17-25, 22-25 setback to Senior Tresa Swatzel had game win streak, but the 25-17. Southern was led in assists.
bef6re turmng ·aroond ·.lJnd.
!lost Waterford during a Tri - a monster evening for the Red and Gold didn't give up that contest by Emily Ash
Morgan . Mullins led absolutely dominati~g tile
:Valley Conference Hocking victors. leading the way and battled back. takin g the with eightpoints.
Jackson at the m!t with 18 final set of the evemng 25•
Division
matchup
in with team-highs of 2 1 final three sets 25- 14, 2-6-24
kills, followed by Sharissa 14 thanks t~ a 'big night
Washington County. ·
points, 14 kills. 25 digs and and 15-3 to extend their win JACKSON SWEEPS ANGELS Cooper with 13. Emileigh from Stepha~te Sang:. .•',
: The Lady Tornadoes (6- the Lady Eagles' lone block. streak to eight straight with
Cooper led the service attack
Hannan Will Of\~ ag~
B , 1-7 TVC Hocking) put
Brittany Cal;to was next three games remaining in
JACKSON - For the with .12 points, while Kelsey · square off at hom~ ':"ltQ
up a. formidable fight with 14 point s and II kills. the regular season.
· third time in as many nights, Martin had a team-high 37 · Calvary Baptist on , Fn~y
against the league-leading followed by Katie Wilfong
Wednesday's matchup' Gallia Academy volleyball assists.
·
before hLttmg the i-dad to
j..ady Wildcats (7-1), clos- and Sami Cummins with equals the thriller put on by scratched and clawed its
Gallia Academy - which take on Southern Monday
ing the margin gap from nine points apiece. Beverly the two temm back in way through fi·v,e grueling h:is dropped three straight evening.

Fruth Pharmacy hol4s 17th annual
Scholarship Golf Tournament
STAFF REPORT
.SPORTS OMYO,t,ILYSENTINEL.COM

, POINT
PLEASANT,
.W.Va. - Fruth Pharmacy
held its Seventeenth Annual
Scholarship ,w .
Golf
Tournament AUJ!USt 7, 2008,
at the Greenhtlls Country
Club in Ravenswood, W.Va.
There were 132 golfers
which included fifty-eight
"'endors
and
Fruth

l

fromPageBl
(236) ..
The final day of play
drew 72 players to make up
18 teams of four players and
l8 points possible to the
l.vinner. The low score for
the day was 60 and was shot
by the team of Chuck
Stanley, Jim Lawrence, Jack
Maloney and I;&gt;on Waldie.
·· Jri second place ·with a
~ore of 61 was the team of
Bill Yoho, Chet Thomas ,
'road Phalin and Jack Fox.
There was a two-way tie for
third with scores of 62
between the teams of Mick
Winebrenner,
Mac
McCarty, Russ Wood and
J-larley Rice and . Tom
Nunnery, Ed Wilson, Dick
Dugan and Clark Greene .
,. The closest to the pin
winners were Donnie Fields
Gn the ninth hole and Steve
Safford on hole No. 14.
· Immediately following
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OUT.ON OI:IR
.

MONE~:fAVl

COUPOI!I$3
.
. .... ..... ':~&gt;:
THI$
WEE"
~1
'
IN$IDE.
'$UNDA' Y'j'PAPERII
.
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Cubs·

Meanwhile, the four Cubs
shortstop
Ryan
errors by . Chicago tied a Theriot, who was headed to
division series record.
the . bag, couldn't reach
"This is a tough field. James Loney's bouncer.
fromPageBl
. .
.
You're probably noi going The single went off
to see as man,)' mistakes at Theriot's bare hand and into
series, according to the Dodger Stadmm because left field, putting runners at
Elias Sports Bureau. Only the playing surface is so the comers.
une has come back to win good," said Martin , who
With the crowd chanting
·'- the 200~ New York · capped the .second-inning "Let's Go Z," Zambrano got
· 'Yankees against Oakland.
rally with three-run double. a third strike past Matt
Of course, .that Yankees . "The playing surface is the Kemp for the first out.
· team was manag~ by Joe same for both teams. We Blake DeWitt hit a hard
;rorre, now in the podgers' just didn't make · as many grounder to second that was
•dugout.·
,
mistakes as them'."
made .for a double play, but ·
"When you give extra·
Billingsley · allowed five DeRosa tumbled it - the
buts, chances are they're hits and a run in 6 2-3 error allowing Ethier to
going to be capitalized on, innings against the Cubs, score and. putting runners at
and that's what. we were wbo-haveu't played like the first and second.
'able to do," Torre said.
team with the NL's best · Next, Lee muffed Casey
The series switches to record or one that went 55- Blake's grounder to first for
.Dodger Stadiumfor Game 3 26 this season in its home another error, loading the
on · Saiurday night. · Rich Park
•
bases before Billingsley
llardett will face Hiraki · · After losing 7-'2 in struck out. But Rafael
'Kuroda, who pitched a four- Wednesday night's opener Furcal dra~ged a bunt past
J.tit shutout against the Cubs when
Ryan the pitcher s mound' toward
starter
~n Los Angeles on June 6,
Dempster walked seven, second and beat DeRosa's
;- "We're going to come out · they played tight - even · throw for an RBI single and
Smd try .to jump on them with aee Carlos Z;!mbrano a 2.{1 lead. '
;llgai~ itt ho_m~ . .That w.ould on the mound. Chicago '· With the bases still
&lt;be mce,'.' B1llmgsley satd. · droppet!' its eighth straight loaded, Martin drove a
Just a few days ago, Cubs playoff game overall. .
three-run double· to lefttans wete excited about the
Billingsley said it "kind center and a crow&lt;! of
;team's ·chancc;s of winning of' looks as though the 42, 13; at Wtigley Field fell
its ftrst World Series title Cubs are pressing.
silent as L.A. went ah~ad 5since 1908. But suddenly,
'Tm not surprised. but 0.
Chicago is on the brink of I'm in shock," Zambrano
"It allowed me to be more
elimination. The Cubs must said ·about his teammates' aggressive," Billingsley
win t\vo consecutive games wobbly defense. "We have a said. "I didn't have to be
in Los Angeles to . get the good fielding team ." . . too fine -and I was still
Consecutive errors by attacking hitters and keepseries back to Wrigley. .
ing them off balance. That
Billin~sley shut down normally reliable Mark
Chicago s slumping lineup DeRosa and three-time was a big thing $or me to
'and Ramirez's 26th postsea- Gold Glove winner Derrek get the off-speed across.'~
. $on home run landed on the Lee led to the DOdgers' · Chicago's third error, this
TOof of the batter's eye club five-run second.
,
one. o'n third baseman
:in center. at least 450 feet
. Andre Ethier hit a leadoff Aramis Ramirez, allowed
away..It was his secondjaw- single an(l when he took off Billingsley to reach .in the
.d~~ping shot in two nights, for second on a hit-amd-run, fourth. •
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Plans are already under
way for next year's event. A
special thanks ·goes out to
all participants, sponsors
and. volul\teers who helped
to make this event a great
. success.
Fruth Pharmacy has been
servin~ Southwestern West
Virgima and Southern Ohio
- since 1952 . For more information,
log
on
to
www.fruthpharmacy.corn.

· : PHILADELPHIA (AP) One more loss to the l'hillies,
'and CC Sabathia and the
Milwaukee Brewers will .
have
all.winter to rest.
'
Brett
Myers rankled
Sabathia with a pesky at-bat
)IIIII dominated the rest of the
JJrewers from the mound, and
Philadelphia beat Mil waukee
S-2 on Thursday behind
Shane Victorino'&amp; grand slam
for a 2.{1 lead in their best-of. five NL playoff series.
. Myers allowed two runs
and two}Jits in seven innings,
pulling the Phillies within one
win of the NL championship
$cries.
· Ryan Madson and J,C.
Romero worked the eighth,
and Brad Lidge had a suspense-free ninth for a change.
· Pitching on three days' rest
for the fourth consecutive
titart, Sabathia had his worst
AP photo
· outing since joining the Philadelphia Phi Illes' Shane Victorino, right, celebrates with teammates Jimmy Rollins (11)
Brewers in a trade with and Pedro Feliz (7) after hitting a grand slam .against the Milwaukee Brewers during secCleveland on July 7.
ond-inning baseball action In Game 2 of. the National League dlvlsiqn series on Thursday
• Th¢ burly left-bander ln Philadelphia.
·
allowed five runs and six hits
- all extra bases - in 3 2-3 threat. Utley couldn't touch father watching in the stands. But Rollins lined out to end
The sellout · crowd of the' threat.
innings. He walked four, his Sabathia's off-speed stuff and
se~ond-highest total of the Howard had no chance 46,208 - the largest in the
The Brewers missed an
season.
against a 96 mph fastball.
five-year history of Citizens opportunity to break it open
· Now, Sabathia n\ight have
Sabathia was uncharacter- Bank Park - went wild, in the first after Myers
to wait si,x months for his istically erratic in the second wa1ing their "Fightin' Phils" walked in a run with one out.
Myers threw thr~e strais.hr
next start. And, that might be and the Phillies took advan- rally tow~ls and bringing
in a different uniform. The tage. Jayson Werth lined a Victorino out of the dugout called strikes to Mtke
Cameron to· start the game,
28-year-old will be one of the one-out double to left-center for a curtain calL
most sought-after free agents and Pedro Feliz followed
Myers , who batted .059 (4- but quickly lost his control.
at the.end of the season.
with an RBI double down the for-58) this season with four He walked Ray Durham on
. walks, made Sabathia throw four pitches and Ryan Braun
, The Phillies need one vic- left-field line to tie it at I.
tory to advance· to the NLCS
After Carlos Ruiz grounded 10 pitches his second time up. followed with a double off
. fet;~i&amp; -~: ·· -oo~, Myers kept the inning During the at-bat, a fan the wall in left-center. After
Game ·3 is Saturday night in goin!l by working a wal". reached over the miling down Prince Fielder was intentionMilwaukee, with •45-year-old Diggm~ in, choking up and the right-field line and caught . ally walked to load the bases;
laniie Moyer (16-7) pitching crouchmg, Myers drew a foul ball with his cap. The Myers walked JJ. Hardy to
for the NL East champions cheers for fouling off a 1-2 guy got a standing ovation. force 111 a run.
But Myers escaped further
llgainst .Dave Bush (9-10).
pitch after Wildly missing the So dtd Myers after he flied
out.
trouble
by getting Corey Hart
• S~athia was, 11-2 ~i~ a first two pitches.
It was that good a night for to hit into a home-to-first
•1.65 ERA in 17 statts for
He fouled off two more
Milwaukee, almost sinJ!le- durin~ the at-bat aild earned a tile Phillies and their champi- double play on a bouncer to
handedly ieading the wild- standing ovation from an onship-starved fans, who the mound.
card arewers to their ftrst . appreciative crowd • that haven't celebrated .a title . Ryan Braun doubled and
postseason berth since 1982. understood the importance of since the NBA's 76ers.won it scored on Craig Counsell's
RBI groundout to cut it to 5-2
But Sabathia S!ruJ!gled in making Sabathia throw more all in 1983.
The
Phi llies
chased in the seventh. '
the playoffs '- agam. He's pitches. Sab~thia then walked
Fielder was the tying run
lost his last three postseason Jimmy Rolhns on four pitch- Sabathia in the fourth. Rollins
doubled with . two outs and when he came up against
starts,. including two against es to load the bases.
Boston in .last :tear's ALCS.
That brought up Victorino, Victorino was intentionally Romero in the eighth, but he
·Overall, Sabathta is 2-3 with who had a career-high 14 walked . Utley walked to Ipad shattered his bat on a weak
a 7.92 ERA in the playoffs. · homers this season. Victorino the bases, ending Sabathia 's grounder to second base.
Lidge, 41-for-41 in save
• Sabathia had all his pitches fell behind 1-2 before driving night. Mitch Stetter came in
worlting in the (irst. Victorino a hanging curve into the seats and struck out Howard look- chances this season, allowed
'
one run and had the tying run
doubled with one out ~ in left to give the ~billies a_ 5- mg.
Myers lined a two-out sin- on second base in Game I
stole · third but · Sabath1a I lead. The Fl_ym Hawauan
struck out Chase Utley and raised his ann m the air as he gle to right off Seth McClung before strikin!l out Hart to
,Ryan Howard to end the circl~ the bases with hts to load the bases in the fifth. secure a 3-1 wm.

DC &gt;N'~~.Ml~

.

"Laddie"
Burdette,
President. .
Scholarships funded from
this event include, Marshall
University, West Virginia
University, University of
Rio Grande and University
of Charleston School of
Pharmacy. Krysta Jenkins
and Jennifer Roush were
this years recipients for the
Marshall
University
Scholarships.

. Meigs baskethall golf

·sabathia
stumbles, Phillies·take 2-0 series lead
.

·'

Golf

Pharmacy associates that
participated in · this year's
event to h~lp raise more
than $24,000. The proceeds
from this tournament are
used to fund the Fruth
Scholarship Program for
Fruth· Employees and their
families. One of Jack E.
Fruth's greatest emphases
was always toward education and giving back to the
.community stated Charles

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The Daily Sentinel • Pace 83

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Tuesday's rounds the play- .
ers took part .in the 2.008
Senior Shoot-out with all of
the closest to the pin win- .
n~rs for the season getting a
chance to win prizes.
All three winners were
from Point Pleasant led by
first place winner Steve ·
Safford, run'ner-up Paul
Somerville and third place
Paul Maynard .
The 2008 season ended
with a weekly average of 66
players per . week. Four ,
weeks of 40 players or less
kept the average just under
70 participants. A grand
total of 135 different players played at least one week
during the year.
·
The daily record for players was broken this year
with 86 players taking part
early in the season. The low
score for the season was 55.
Following Tuesd;ly's· season finale the teams were ,
'tie'at~d •.'io breakfast imd
door prizes.
Ne)(t season's play will
start the first Tuesday in
April.

www.mydaifysentinel.com

Manny Ramirez hit a solo
shot in the fifth and Kemp
had an RBI double off Ne.al
Colts in the seventh to
make it 7-0 . .
Zambrano worked· 6 1-3
innings, giving up seven
runs - three earned with seven strikeouts.
In the fifth, Ramirez
leaned· into the ivy-coven;d
wall in left field to catch
Jim Edmonds' · fly. He
flipped the ball to center
fielder Kemp, who playful·
ly slapped Ramirez on the
shoulder.
. Furcal and Ramirez each
had an RBI single in the
eighth.
The Cubs' postseason
losing streak dates to the
2003 NLCS. They squandered a 3- 1 lead against
Florida, losi ng Game 6
when they w.ere five outs
from the World Series.
Chicago dropped three
straight to Anzona in tlie
first round last year and
now is in jeopardy of being
swept agam.
Chicago ended
the
shutout bid in the seventh
·when
DeRosa
and
Edmonds hit consecutive
two-out doubles . After
Geovany Soto singfed to
make it first and third. Cory
Wade came in to retire
Kosuke Fukudome.
DeRosa added a two-run
double in the ninth. ·
Notes: The gametime
was
56
temperature
degrees, but the cool conditions didn't bother the
warm-weather Dodgei-s for·
the secqnd :.yaig~ t night.

Chili dinner before Fairbuitl
· ,. River Valley f90tball
•

.., '

4.

..

•

,...

game
'

'

~ Mi!ias~Gallia-Mason
•_ch~pt~Jtolding
tailgate
.
;,

'···,;. ·,~·-

·'~·-

.;

Will....,,_,_.
;·

· 'CHEStflRE- The River Valley boosters
i!l$ an lij),~ou-can-eat chili dinner from ,5-7
friday's River Valley fooJball game agat1181

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.. ltUNTINGTON - The Big Green
F'o.undati~would like to invif!l MOMCiu1pte,l
Members io bring a friend. to a pregame
ICiincimulti football game on Friday, Octob&lt;lr -'?.;-"!'!
a11d 7:30 p.m.
tai\gate will be located betwee,~n;:u,;;;
the W~st ·side of Joan C. Edwards :)
1All&lt;_-"" off at 8
·
The . ·
tailgate is $I 5 for ooe
fo-r two
and includes a
mu.sJ. l:le made
the Big Green 0· &gt;ffic:e IUc:lU&lt;"-'
304-696-2483. .

photci

Tampa Bay Rays' Evan Longoria hits an RBI single against
the Chicago White Sox during lifth-inning baseball action in ·
Game 1 of the American League division series baseball
game in St. Petersburg, Fla. on Thursday.

Longoria's 2 homers. lead
Rays over White Sox 6-4
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla .•
(AP) - Evan Longoria and
the Tampa Bay Rays 'looked
perfectly at home in the playoffs.
The rookie homered in his
first two at-bats and the surprising AL East champions
were a big hit in their postseason debut, beating the
Chicago White Sox 6-4
Thursday in their AL playoff
opener.
After 10 seasons as baseball's doormat, Tampa Bay
took the division with the
best home record in the
majors . .And there were no
October jttters as the young
Rays kept winning ·at
Tropicana .Field behind
James Shields' effective start
and Grant Balfour 's testy,
bases-loaded escape.
Tampa Bay ranked near the
bottom of the attendance
charts this year; yet was
cheered on by a sellout crowd
of 35 041. Rays season-!icket
holde~ Dick V'itale waved a
"We .Love Longoria" placard
from his first-row seat next .to
the visitor's dugout.
..
Game 2 is Friday, when
Tampa Bay's Scott Kazmir
(12-8) faces Mark Buehrle
( 15-12). .
·
"We want to win boili of
them now. We have such an
advantage
at
home,"
Longoria said.
Chicago beat Minnesota in
the AL Central tiebrea:ker
Thesday, and took a 3-1 lead
on Dewayne Wise's three-run
homer in the third inning. But
Javier Vazquez, wh6 . has .a
history of floppmg m b1g
games, could not hold it. ·
Longoria became tht -second player to homer in his
first two postseason at-bats,

joining Gary Gaetti from
1987 . .
.
Lon~ona started the year llJ
the mmors and became an
All-Star third ba§eman -in th~;
majors . He hit 27 homers
despite missing 30 games
witl1 a broken right wrist. ·
He homered on his very
first postseason pitch, a leadoff drive in the second. He
p!.K Tampa Bay ahe~ 4-3
wLth another solo shot m the
third, a homer off one of the
infamous. catwalks that support the roof at Tropicana.
"I was just looking for a
pitch ou~, over the p_late I ·
could htt, Longona satd.
He also had a RBI sinJ!le
and finished 3-for-3 With
three RBis.
Shields allowed three runs
and six hits in 6 1-3 innings:
Balfour struck out both batters he faced and J.P. Howell
worked a perfect eighth.
:
Dan Wheeler gave up a
so)o home run to Paul
Konerko in finishing for a
save. Wheeler is filling in for
closer Troy Percival, who has
been slowed by injuries and
was left off the playoff roster.
Tampa Bay slugger Carlos
Pena left the game after the
sect&gt;nd inning with slightly ,,
blurred vision in his left eye, 1
The Rays, who never won
more than 70 game~ in a season before this year, entered
their playoff debut on three
days' rest, expecting tfleir
youth and speed to be ari
advantage against the more
experienced White Sox, who
have Slrujlllled on artificial
surface thts year.
Longoria 1s RBI sinJ!Ie in.
the fifth smgle made tt 5-3
and ended Vazquez's ~­
n~n .

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Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

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Friday, October 3,_2oo8

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':"'l'T.olleyball '

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· Friday,
.
. October 3, 2008

www .mydailysentinel.com ·

- heartbreakers to Chillicothe,
nine points to eight points to
Eastern and Jackson - will
l
three points in each of the ·
look to get back to its winthree . games .. Waterford.
ning ways Monday when it
: · from Page Bl
however, wilhstood the
hosts River Valley on Senior
•
charge and is now one
Night . The junior varsity con'
league win away from
:ruppers Plains to take on clinching a share of the
test will begin at 5:30 p.m.
Eastern in a TVC non-divi. kional matchup. The JV 2008 TVC Hocking crown.
RAIDERS MOVE TO 8-0
The Purple and Gold were
Fntest will begin ar 6 p.m. led at the serving line by
tNOVC
! EASTERN DOWNS MILLER Ashley Walker with eight
PROCTORVILLE
•
points, followed by Emma
River Valley moved on step
: CORNING _ Eastern Hunter· with five points ..
closer
to clinching i.ts seventh
~olleyball kept its league Walker, Chelsea Pape and
straight
Ohio
Valley
Rashell Bosp also added
1jtle hOJ?CS alive _ as well
Conference
title
·With
.
lis won Its third straight con- two aces apie&lt;;e to the losstraight
sets
victory
over
d
ing cause.
.
est - Thursday ni gh t urKelsey Holsinger led the
South Point Thursday night
24
26
25
in Proctorville.
'
ng a four-game - · • net attack with five kills,
3, 18-25, 25-21 victory
The
Raiders
won
25-18,
bver host Miller during a· followed by Boso, Katie
25-19 and 24-21 over the
Tri-Valley . Conference Woods and Stephanie
Pointers· to move to 8.{1 on
i:Jocking Division matchup Shamblin with two kills
the season in conference play
In Perry County.
. each. Boso and Breanna
and 12-6 overall with three
: The Lady Eagles ( 15 . 4, 6_ Ta,Ylor also had a block
games left in the regular sea·
., TVC Hocking) rebounded afuece. Hunter led SHS with
son. !;.&gt;
.
tmne assists as well.
River
Valley
claimed
the
rlicely after an emotional
Collec.tively, Southern
live-game epic victory the
win thanks to a very balanced
~ight before with Gallia finished the night with· a
night among all of the Silver
1'\cademy, even· though it passing percentage of 86
and . Black players. Aubrie
took the guests some time to and a serving effort of 94
Rice led the way in · scoring
~arm up.
. percent:·
with II points but Kayhi
! · The Green and White WHS managed an
.Smith was just behind witli
evening sweep with a 25eight points. Diana Corfias
ptruggled out of the gate and 16 . 25 _9 victory in the
was next with seven pointS •
eventually won Game I by
lhe minimal two points, junior varsity contest.
while Mackenzie Cluxton
Bryan Walters/photo
~hen found their stride in Emily Ash led the lV Meigs junior Tricia Smith (9) digs up a spike attempt during Thursday's TVC Ohio volley- grabbed six points and
Game 2 with a convincing Tornadoes with four points. ball contest against Nelsonville-York at Larry A. Morrison Gymnasium in Rocksprings·. Meri Jacqueline Jacobs and Linsey
,
Southern returns to action
Stover rounded out the scor,
~:;-point decision for a two- Monday . when· it hosts VanMeter (5) is pictured in the background.
~ames-to-none advantage.
Hannan in a non-conference Maxson added eight service August in Mercerville games. And for the third ing with five points apiece. :
led the kill catega;
• The Lady Falcons ( 1-7.
Ch 1
w·· poinis, and the duo of where South Gallia jumped time in as many contests. ry Corfias
with nine kills, while
!rvc
Hocking) battled back contest at
ares
,
Hayman Gymnasium . The Morgan Burt and Karissa put !O a two game lead and the Blue Angels ' efforts Smith added five, J&lt;~eobs had
. &lt;O win Game 3 by seven JV contest .will · start at 6' Connolly chipped in two SOL!thern battled back to went without reward as host · three', Stover . two and
paints , but EHS sealed the
points apiece to the winning take the final .three games Jackson claimed a season Cluxton one kill on the night.
- ~e!ll in Game 4 with a four- p.m.
.
.mid the win.
.
sweep with a.25-17, 25-15, Ja~;obs led the way on
point triumph. Eastern com- EASTERN DOWNS GAIN 5 cause.
8urt
and
Maxson.
also
had
The
pair
of
contests
easily
18-25, 22-25, 15-13 viciory defense with three blocks
bined for team number' of
seven
kills
each
,
while'
ranks
as
one
of
the
lop
during
a Southeastern Ohio while Cortias came away
1!1 digs , 34 kills .29 assists
TUPPERS PLAINS ~
Connolly led the pa ss ing matchups of the 2008 vol- Athletic League South with two.
~d five blocks to go along w
South Point was led by
with 38 assists. leyball season.
Division matchup .•
:ovith a serving effort_of 86g~iy a palindrome would attack
Maxson also had· 23 digs
The Lady Rebels ( 15-4)
The Blue Angels ( 12-7', 6- Courtney Korikos with severi
of-91 for just under 95 per- be fitting to describe the and Wilfong chipped in 21. were led in the instant clas- 6 SEOAL South) fell behind points and Allison Mitchell
~ent.
back-and-forthness
disHannah Cunningham led sic by Natasha Adkins who two-games-to-none, then with six markers.
' Brittany Casto led the serIn the reserve contest River
. !vice attack with 14 points, played during Wednesday the GAHS serving attack had 14 points and an ace rallied for two straight wins
Valley
again claimed the win
followed b)' Katie Wilfong night's non-league volley- with 13 points, followed by while \&lt;\lisa Johnson and to force a race to 15 in the
ball contest between Gallia Amy Noe wjth 10 and the Chandra Canaday added 13 finale. The lronladies (15-3~ in three sets 25-9, 22-25 and
~ith 11 and Tresa Swatzel Academy and host Eastern duo of Caroline .Baxter and points apiece. Canaday also 8-3) and GAHS battled 25-17. Tasha 'Alexander led
~ith 10. Beverly Maxson _ with the Lady Eagles Amanda McGhee with nine had five aces while Johnson through 10 different ties the Raiders with a dozen
~as next with nme points ,
·h
after the hosts jumped out to points and Ciara Bostic had
Karissa Connolly added coming away . Wit
a .points apiece. Alexi's Geiger had one.
Next on the scoring chart an early 2-1 lead. Tied atl3 10 points.
five, and the duo of .Morgan thrilling . five,game 26-28, chipped in eight points and
River Valley will return to
iBurt and Britany Morrison 25 ·IS; •25 -23 · 21 -25 • 15· 9 Kac1 Shoemaker had six was Tayler Duncan with a all, JHS ran off the next tw,l'l' action Monday at Qallia
· dozen markers , Rachel points - securing the mini~ach chipped in four points. VI~~?Lady Eagles 04-4) pomls.
Mollie Blake 'ed the net · Merry had seven points and ·mum two-point decision for Academy.
:Sami Cummins also had won their fifth consecutive attack "with 14 kl !~&lt; and nine four aces. Hailec Swain had the match win.
~ne point in the win.
match against the Blue blocks, fo llowed by_Qeiger five points and a pair of aces
HANNAN DROPS A PAIR ··
Jackson also ~on the pre•. Swatzelled the net charge
h 1
f
\Yith 16 kills, followed by Angels in t e ast our with 10. kills and two and Chrissie Tirpak provid- vious two meetin"s between
ASHTON W V.
. Is ed pro ba bl y the b'1ggest I hese sc hoo. Is th".
b
' · · a.didn't
Fasto with six kills. Both years, as well as increased bl oc ks. Morgan Danm
. IS year Y Hannan 's evening
~
their current winning streak also had nine kills and six point of the night for the scores of 25-20, 23-25, 11- start well Thursday night_
l:'watzel and Casto also had to two matches in the
. matching team-highs of two process. GAHS ( 12-6) blocks in the setback, while Rebels, scoring the game 25, 18-25 and 19-25 , 14-25, and it didn't end well either,
Megun Foster added seven winner in Game 4. .
25-21, 14-25.
Hannan lost both of its
~locks .
•
:- Wilfong and Burt each dropped it second straight kills and three blocks. Noe
Adkins also led her team
Morgan · l;&gt;aniels led the games Thursda1 in a tri•
..:;...®\:! four kills to the win- decision in as many days also had eight .kills.
defepsively with seven kills ·. service attack for GAHS.. mateh that 'pitted- the •bady
,.u·
with the setback.
·
Shoemaker
led
the
Angels
and
six blocks, Johnson had with 15 points and five aces, 'Cats against both Calvary
~ng cause , with Jamie
The c.ontest was clearly
24
digs
and four blocks and two kills, -followed by Amy Noe and Baptist and Huntington St.
Swatzel adding a pair of battle.of wills, with the Blue with
Cunningham
added
another
Swain had four kills and Hannah -Cunningham with Joe. Calvary won the first
kills as well. Burt also had and White ju&amp;ping out to an 16 digs. Geiger also had a · Canaday
had five kills.
10 points apiece. Brittany matchup 25-11 and 25-14
bne block.
early 1-0 lead after the min- team-high 13 assists , with
For Southern (6-12) . Hively·
· and
Kacie and then turned around and
;' Connolly led EHS with imum two-point win in Brit!Hny Hively contribut- Ashley Walker and Emma Sho~maker were next with took down St. Joe.2,:i.•J7 and
4 assists . Tresa Swatzel Game I . The Green and .
ing seven assists.
Hunter led the way. Walker four 'points apiece, followed '26-24 before Hahnan arid
ad a team-best 19 digs, fol- White rallied to take the
Gallia Academy did sal- had 14 points including by_Alexis Geiger with ·!hree ·'me Lady Iri~h iJ)et in the
wed by Casto, Maxson next two games for a ·two- v;1ge a split on the evening · seven aces while Hunter pomts and tbe ~uo of • night cap, with St.:' Joe
~nd Burt with 10 digs games-to-one advantage,
with a 26-28, 25 -23, 25-22 provided 13 points, 15 Amanda:McGhee 1111d Urea pulling out :a· l_~·25 f·25-2~
l!piece , Eastern also won the but the guests responded triumph in the junior varsity assists and was 94 percent Close w1th two each. · ·
and 25-14 v1ctory :rh~y
jiinior varsity contest in with a four-point win in contest. '
serving.
.
.
Geiger le,d the . net. attack night in Ashton." ·';.· i:':i .. ,
itraight games.
Game 4 to tie things at two
Courtney Thomas led her with_ 14 kills, follo~ed: ·~Y·
After struggJing· il'l ·th.~
· Eastern returns to action apiece - setting up the race
REBELS BEAT SOUTHERN
team with 10 assi sts whil~ ~an1els and Noe Wtth ,,~IX ,.firstgameofThilrsday'stn•
Monday when it ·hosts to 15.
·
the kill category was led by kills ea~h. ,Daruels also had a match, fallin~ 25-11 and· ~~
~eigs in a TVC non-diviIn tlmt pivotal fifth g~me,
RACINE .- South Gallia Kelsey Holsinger with 10. team-h1kh 13 bloc.ks m the 14 to visaing Calvacy
sional match up. The JV Eastern erased an early; 4-0 continued to build on its S{ephanie Shamblin and setback. Geiger also· had four Baptist, the .Lady 'Cats (4•
contest will begin at 6 p.m. deficit by outscoring the school
best
record Katie Woods tacked on five blocks and seven assi~ts. 12) looked poised to. tulii
;
guests 15-5 the rest of the Wednesday nil\ht ~ but kill.&gt; apiece and Rashell Molli~ Blak\l added five kills things around ' in the :~e
:•WATERFORD ROLLS PAST
·evening - allowing the Southern sure dtdn't make it Boso and Breanna Taylor and stx blocks, ~htle Megan With aquick;!Z5-~9 wiqover
' SOUTHERN IN 4
Lady Eagles to claim the tri- easy.
had three kills each.
Foster·had.four kills.
Huntington St: ,Joel: in- the
umph .
The Tornadoes jumped
. Shoema)!:er
and first set.
· . . ·.· ~
: WATERFORD
Eastern - as a team As a team Southern pro- ·Cunnitighamalso had'' respecBut. th'e stubbdni ;:Lail·y
out to a two game lead over
21 dinks. ·
Southern ,
volleyball posted numbers of 44 kills, South Gallia 25- 13 and 26- 'duced
In the reserve contest tive dig totals of 28 and 18, Iris!] would no! back dawll',
aropped its sixth straight 43 assists. one block and 24 in the non -league South Galli a claimed a win with HeU~her Ward contribut- jumping out to an·eady lt:a4
pecision Thursday night also went 100-of-107 at .the matchup, severely threatening II digs as ,well. Hively . and hold.in!l on for a ~w
(juring a straight game 16- service .line for 93 percent.
ing the Lady Rebels seven in three 25-10, 18-25 and also had a team.bigh 15 ~5-23wm tp the seco1J.d ·set
.45, 17-25, 22-25 setback to Senior Tresa Swatzel had game win streak, but the 25-17. Southern was led in assists.
bef6re turmng ·aroond ·.lJnd.
!lost Waterford during a Tri - a monster evening for the Red and Gold didn't give up that contest by Emily Ash
Morgan . Mullins led absolutely dominati~g tile
:Valley Conference Hocking victors. leading the way and battled back. takin g the with eightpoints.
Jackson at the m!t with 18 final set of the evemng 25•
Division
matchup
in with team-highs of 2 1 final three sets 25- 14, 2-6-24
kills, followed by Sharissa 14 thanks t~ a 'big night
Washington County. ·
points, 14 kills. 25 digs and and 15-3 to extend their win JACKSON SWEEPS ANGELS Cooper with 13. Emileigh from Stepha~te Sang:. .•',
: The Lady Tornadoes (6- the Lady Eagles' lone block. streak to eight straight with
Cooper led the service attack
Hannan Will Of\~ ag~
B , 1-7 TVC Hocking) put
Brittany Cal;to was next three games remaining in
JACKSON - For the with .12 points, while Kelsey · square off at hom~ ':"ltQ
up a. formidable fight with 14 point s and II kills. the regular season.
· third time in as many nights, Martin had a team-high 37 · Calvary Baptist on , Fn~y
against the league-leading followed by Katie Wilfong
Wednesday's matchup' Gallia Academy volleyball assists.
·
before hLttmg the i-dad to
j..ady Wildcats (7-1), clos- and Sami Cummins with equals the thriller put on by scratched and clawed its
Gallia Academy - which take on Southern Monday
ing the margin gap from nine points apiece. Beverly the two temm back in way through fi·v,e grueling h:is dropped three straight evening.

Fruth Pharmacy hol4s 17th annual
Scholarship Golf Tournament
STAFF REPORT
.SPORTS OMYO,t,ILYSENTINEL.COM

, POINT
PLEASANT,
.W.Va. - Fruth Pharmacy
held its Seventeenth Annual
Scholarship ,w .
Golf
Tournament AUJ!USt 7, 2008,
at the Greenhtlls Country
Club in Ravenswood, W.Va.
There were 132 golfers
which included fifty-eight
"'endors
and
Fruth

l

fromPageBl
(236) ..
The final day of play
drew 72 players to make up
18 teams of four players and
l8 points possible to the
l.vinner. The low score for
the day was 60 and was shot
by the team of Chuck
Stanley, Jim Lawrence, Jack
Maloney and I;&gt;on Waldie.
·· Jri second place ·with a
~ore of 61 was the team of
Bill Yoho, Chet Thomas ,
'road Phalin and Jack Fox.
There was a two-way tie for
third with scores of 62
between the teams of Mick
Winebrenner,
Mac
McCarty, Russ Wood and
J-larley Rice and . Tom
Nunnery, Ed Wilson, Dick
Dugan and Clark Greene .
,. The closest to the pin
winners were Donnie Fields
Gn the ninth hole and Steve
Safford on hole No. 14.
· Immediately following
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OUT.ON OI:IR
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MONE~:fAVl

COUPOI!I$3
.
. .... ..... ':~&gt;:
THI$
WEE"
~1
'
IN$IDE.
'$UNDA' Y'j'PAPERII
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Cubs·

Meanwhile, the four Cubs
shortstop
Ryan
errors by . Chicago tied a Theriot, who was headed to
division series record.
the . bag, couldn't reach
"This is a tough field. James Loney's bouncer.
fromPageBl
. .
.
You're probably noi going The single went off
to see as man,)' mistakes at Theriot's bare hand and into
series, according to the Dodger Stadmm because left field, putting runners at
Elias Sports Bureau. Only the playing surface is so the comers.
une has come back to win good," said Martin , who
With the crowd chanting
·'- the 200~ New York · capped the .second-inning "Let's Go Z," Zambrano got
· 'Yankees against Oakland.
rally with three-run double. a third strike past Matt
Of course, .that Yankees . "The playing surface is the Kemp for the first out.
· team was manag~ by Joe same for both teams. We Blake DeWitt hit a hard
;rorre, now in the podgers' just didn't make · as many grounder to second that was
•dugout.·
,
mistakes as them'."
made .for a double play, but ·
"When you give extra·
Billingsley · allowed five DeRosa tumbled it - the
buts, chances are they're hits and a run in 6 2-3 error allowing Ethier to
going to be capitalized on, innings against the Cubs, score and. putting runners at
and that's what. we were wbo-haveu't played like the first and second.
'able to do," Torre said.
team with the NL's best · Next, Lee muffed Casey
The series switches to record or one that went 55- Blake's grounder to first for
.Dodger Stadiumfor Game 3 26 this season in its home another error, loading the
on · Saiurday night. · Rich Park
•
bases before Billingsley
llardett will face Hiraki · · After losing 7-'2 in struck out. But Rafael
'Kuroda, who pitched a four- Wednesday night's opener Furcal dra~ged a bunt past
J.tit shutout against the Cubs when
Ryan the pitcher s mound' toward
starter
~n Los Angeles on June 6,
Dempster walked seven, second and beat DeRosa's
;- "We're going to come out · they played tight - even · throw for an RBI single and
Smd try .to jump on them with aee Carlos Z;!mbrano a 2.{1 lead. '
;llgai~ itt ho_m~ . .That w.ould on the mound. Chicago '· With the bases still
&lt;be mce,'.' B1llmgsley satd. · droppet!' its eighth straight loaded, Martin drove a
Just a few days ago, Cubs playoff game overall. .
three-run double· to lefttans wete excited about the
Billingsley said it "kind center and a crow&lt;! of
;team's ·chancc;s of winning of' looks as though the 42, 13; at Wtigley Field fell
its ftrst World Series title Cubs are pressing.
silent as L.A. went ah~ad 5since 1908. But suddenly,
'Tm not surprised. but 0.
Chicago is on the brink of I'm in shock," Zambrano
"It allowed me to be more
elimination. The Cubs must said ·about his teammates' aggressive," Billingsley
win t\vo consecutive games wobbly defense. "We have a said. "I didn't have to be
in Los Angeles to . get the good fielding team ." . . too fine -and I was still
Consecutive errors by attacking hitters and keepseries back to Wrigley. .
ing them off balance. That
Billin~sley shut down normally reliable Mark
Chicago s slumping lineup DeRosa and three-time was a big thing $or me to
'and Ramirez's 26th postsea- Gold Glove winner Derrek get the off-speed across.'~
. $on home run landed on the Lee led to the DOdgers' · Chicago's third error, this
TOof of the batter's eye club five-run second.
,
one. o'n third baseman
:in center. at least 450 feet
. Andre Ethier hit a leadoff Aramis Ramirez, allowed
away..It was his secondjaw- single an(l when he took off Billingsley to reach .in the
.d~~ping shot in two nights, for second on a hit-amd-run, fourth. •
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Plans are already under
way for next year's event. A
special thanks ·goes out to
all participants, sponsors
and. volul\teers who helped
to make this event a great
. success.
Fruth Pharmacy has been
servin~ Southwestern West
Virgima and Southern Ohio
- since 1952 . For more information,
log
on
to
www.fruthpharmacy.corn.

· : PHILADELPHIA (AP) One more loss to the l'hillies,
'and CC Sabathia and the
Milwaukee Brewers will .
have
all.winter to rest.
'
Brett
Myers rankled
Sabathia with a pesky at-bat
)IIIII dominated the rest of the
JJrewers from the mound, and
Philadelphia beat Mil waukee
S-2 on Thursday behind
Shane Victorino'&amp; grand slam
for a 2.{1 lead in their best-of. five NL playoff series.
. Myers allowed two runs
and two}Jits in seven innings,
pulling the Phillies within one
win of the NL championship
$cries.
· Ryan Madson and J,C.
Romero worked the eighth,
and Brad Lidge had a suspense-free ninth for a change.
· Pitching on three days' rest
for the fourth consecutive
titart, Sabathia had his worst
AP photo
· outing since joining the Philadelphia Phi Illes' Shane Victorino, right, celebrates with teammates Jimmy Rollins (11)
Brewers in a trade with and Pedro Feliz (7) after hitting a grand slam .against the Milwaukee Brewers during secCleveland on July 7.
ond-inning baseball action In Game 2 of. the National League dlvlsiqn series on Thursday
• Th¢ burly left-bander ln Philadelphia.
·
allowed five runs and six hits
- all extra bases - in 3 2-3 threat. Utley couldn't touch father watching in the stands. But Rollins lined out to end
The sellout · crowd of the' threat.
innings. He walked four, his Sabathia's off-speed stuff and
se~ond-highest total of the Howard had no chance 46,208 - the largest in the
The Brewers missed an
season.
against a 96 mph fastball.
five-year history of Citizens opportunity to break it open
· Now, Sabathia n\ight have
Sabathia was uncharacter- Bank Park - went wild, in the first after Myers
to wait si,x months for his istically erratic in the second wa1ing their "Fightin' Phils" walked in a run with one out.
Myers threw thr~e strais.hr
next start. And, that might be and the Phillies took advan- rally tow~ls and bringing
in a different uniform. The tage. Jayson Werth lined a Victorino out of the dugout called strikes to Mtke
Cameron to· start the game,
28-year-old will be one of the one-out double to left-center for a curtain calL
most sought-after free agents and Pedro Feliz followed
Myers , who batted .059 (4- but quickly lost his control.
at the.end of the season.
with an RBI double down the for-58) this season with four He walked Ray Durham on
. walks, made Sabathia throw four pitches and Ryan Braun
, The Phillies need one vic- left-field line to tie it at I.
tory to advance· to the NLCS
After Carlos Ruiz grounded 10 pitches his second time up. followed with a double off
. fet;~i&amp; -~: ·· -oo~, Myers kept the inning During the at-bat, a fan the wall in left-center. After
Game ·3 is Saturday night in goin!l by working a wal". reached over the miling down Prince Fielder was intentionMilwaukee, with •45-year-old Diggm~ in, choking up and the right-field line and caught . ally walked to load the bases;
laniie Moyer (16-7) pitching crouchmg, Myers drew a foul ball with his cap. The Myers walked JJ. Hardy to
for the NL East champions cheers for fouling off a 1-2 guy got a standing ovation. force 111 a run.
But Myers escaped further
llgainst .Dave Bush (9-10).
pitch after Wildly missing the So dtd Myers after he flied
out.
trouble
by getting Corey Hart
• S~athia was, 11-2 ~i~ a first two pitches.
It was that good a night for to hit into a home-to-first
•1.65 ERA in 17 statts for
He fouled off two more
Milwaukee, almost sinJ!le- durin~ the at-bat aild earned a tile Phillies and their champi- double play on a bouncer to
handedly ieading the wild- standing ovation from an onship-starved fans, who the mound.
card arewers to their ftrst . appreciative crowd • that haven't celebrated .a title . Ryan Braun doubled and
postseason berth since 1982. understood the importance of since the NBA's 76ers.won it scored on Craig Counsell's
RBI groundout to cut it to 5-2
But Sabathia S!ruJ!gled in making Sabathia throw more all in 1983.
The
Phi llies
chased in the seventh. '
the playoffs '- agam. He's pitches. Sab~thia then walked
Fielder was the tying run
lost his last three postseason Jimmy Rolhns on four pitch- Sabathia in the fourth. Rollins
doubled with . two outs and when he came up against
starts,. including two against es to load the bases.
Boston in .last :tear's ALCS.
That brought up Victorino, Victorino was intentionally Romero in the eighth, but he
·Overall, Sabathta is 2-3 with who had a career-high 14 walked . Utley walked to Ipad shattered his bat on a weak
a 7.92 ERA in the playoffs. · homers this season. Victorino the bases, ending Sabathia 's grounder to second base.
Lidge, 41-for-41 in save
• Sabathia had all his pitches fell behind 1-2 before driving night. Mitch Stetter came in
worlting in the (irst. Victorino a hanging curve into the seats and struck out Howard look- chances this season, allowed
'
one run and had the tying run
doubled with one out ~ in left to give the ~billies a_ 5- mg.
Myers lined a two-out sin- on second base in Game I
stole · third but · Sabath1a I lead. The Fl_ym Hawauan
struck out Chase Utley and raised his ann m the air as he gle to right off Seth McClung before strikin!l out Hart to
,Ryan Howard to end the circl~ the bases with hts to load the bases in the fifth. secure a 3-1 wm.

DC &gt;N'~~.Ml~

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"Laddie"
Burdette,
President. .
Scholarships funded from
this event include, Marshall
University, West Virginia
University, University of
Rio Grande and University
of Charleston School of
Pharmacy. Krysta Jenkins
and Jennifer Roush were
this years recipients for the
Marshall
University
Scholarships.

. Meigs baskethall golf

·sabathia
stumbles, Phillies·take 2-0 series lead
.

·'

Golf

Pharmacy associates that
participated in · this year's
event to h~lp raise more
than $24,000. The proceeds
from this tournament are
used to fund the Fruth
Scholarship Program for
Fruth· Employees and their
families. One of Jack E.
Fruth's greatest emphases
was always toward education and giving back to the
.community stated Charles

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The Daily Sentinel • Pace 83

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Tuesday's rounds the play- .
ers took part .in the 2.008
Senior Shoot-out with all of
the closest to the pin win- .
n~rs for the season getting a
chance to win prizes.
All three winners were
from Point Pleasant led by
first place winner Steve ·
Safford, run'ner-up Paul
Somerville and third place
Paul Maynard .
The 2008 season ended
with a weekly average of 66
players per . week. Four ,
weeks of 40 players or less
kept the average just under
70 participants. A grand
total of 135 different players played at least one week
during the year.
·
The daily record for players was broken this year
with 86 players taking part
early in the season. The low
score for the season was 55.
Following Tuesd;ly's· season finale the teams were ,
'tie'at~d •.'io breakfast imd
door prizes.
Ne)(t season's play will
start the first Tuesday in
April.

www.mydaifysentinel.com

Manny Ramirez hit a solo
shot in the fifth and Kemp
had an RBI double off Ne.al
Colts in the seventh to
make it 7-0 . .
Zambrano worked· 6 1-3
innings, giving up seven
runs - three earned with seven strikeouts.
In the fifth, Ramirez
leaned· into the ivy-coven;d
wall in left field to catch
Jim Edmonds' · fly. He
flipped the ball to center
fielder Kemp, who playful·
ly slapped Ramirez on the
shoulder.
. Furcal and Ramirez each
had an RBI single in the
eighth.
The Cubs' postseason
losing streak dates to the
2003 NLCS. They squandered a 3- 1 lead against
Florida, losi ng Game 6
when they w.ere five outs
from the World Series.
Chicago dropped three
straight to Anzona in tlie
first round last year and
now is in jeopardy of being
swept agam.
Chicago ended
the
shutout bid in the seventh
·when
DeRosa
and
Edmonds hit consecutive
two-out doubles . After
Geovany Soto singfed to
make it first and third. Cory
Wade came in to retire
Kosuke Fukudome.
DeRosa added a two-run
double in the ninth. ·
Notes: The gametime
was
56
temperature
degrees, but the cool conditions didn't bother the
warm-weather Dodgei-s for·
the secqnd :.yaig~ t night.

Chili dinner before Fairbuitl
· ,. River Valley f90tball
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~ Mi!ias~Gallia-Mason
•_ch~pt~Jtolding
tailgate
.
;,

'···,;. ·,~·-

·'~·-

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Will....,,_,_.
;·

· 'CHEStflRE- The River Valley boosters
i!l$ an lij),~ou-can-eat chili dinner from ,5-7
friday's River Valley fooJball game agat1181

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.. ltUNTINGTON - The Big Green
F'o.undati~would like to invif!l MOMCiu1pte,l
Members io bring a friend. to a pregame
ICiincimulti football game on Friday, Octob&lt;lr -'?.;-"!'!
a11d 7:30 p.m.
tai\gate will be located betwee,~n;:u,;;;
the W~st ·side of Joan C. Edwards :)
1All&lt;_-"" off at 8
·
The . ·
tailgate is $I 5 for ooe
fo-r two
and includes a
mu.sJ. l:le made
the Big Green 0· &gt;ffic:e IUc:lU&lt;"-'
304-696-2483. .

photci

Tampa Bay Rays' Evan Longoria hits an RBI single against
the Chicago White Sox during lifth-inning baseball action in ·
Game 1 of the American League division series baseball
game in St. Petersburg, Fla. on Thursday.

Longoria's 2 homers. lead
Rays over White Sox 6-4
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla .•
(AP) - Evan Longoria and
the Tampa Bay Rays 'looked
perfectly at home in the playoffs.
The rookie homered in his
first two at-bats and the surprising AL East champions
were a big hit in their postseason debut, beating the
Chicago White Sox 6-4
Thursday in their AL playoff
opener.
After 10 seasons as baseball's doormat, Tampa Bay
took the division with the
best home record in the
majors . .And there were no
October jttters as the young
Rays kept winning ·at
Tropicana .Field behind
James Shields' effective start
and Grant Balfour 's testy,
bases-loaded escape.
Tampa Bay ranked near the
bottom of the attendance
charts this year; yet was
cheered on by a sellout crowd
of 35 041. Rays season-!icket
holde~ Dick V'itale waved a
"We .Love Longoria" placard
from his first-row seat next .to
the visitor's dugout.
..
Game 2 is Friday, when
Tampa Bay's Scott Kazmir
(12-8) faces Mark Buehrle
( 15-12). .
·
"We want to win boili of
them now. We have such an
advantage
at
home,"
Longoria said.
Chicago beat Minnesota in
the AL Central tiebrea:ker
Thesday, and took a 3-1 lead
on Dewayne Wise's three-run
homer in the third inning. But
Javier Vazquez, wh6 . has .a
history of floppmg m b1g
games, could not hold it. ·
Longoria became tht -second player to homer in his
first two postseason at-bats,

joining Gary Gaetti from
1987 . .
.
Lon~ona started the year llJ
the mmors and became an
All-Star third ba§eman -in th~;
majors . He hit 27 homers
despite missing 30 games
witl1 a broken right wrist. ·
He homered on his very
first postseason pitch, a leadoff drive in the second. He
p!.K Tampa Bay ahe~ 4-3
wLth another solo shot m the
third, a homer off one of the
infamous. catwalks that support the roof at Tropicana.
"I was just looking for a
pitch ou~, over the p_late I ·
could htt, Longona satd.
He also had a RBI sinJ!le
and finished 3-for-3 With
three RBis.
Shields allowed three runs
and six hits in 6 1-3 innings:
Balfour struck out both batters he faced and J.P. Howell
worked a perfect eighth.
:
Dan Wheeler gave up a
so)o home run to Paul
Konerko in finishing for a
save. Wheeler is filling in for
closer Troy Percival, who has
been slowed by injuries and
was left off the playoff roster.
Tampa Bay slugger Carlos
Pena left the game after the
sect&gt;nd inning with slightly ,,
blurred vision in his left eye, 1
The Rays, who never won
more than 70 game~ in a season before this year, entered
their playoff debut on three
days' rest, expecting tfleir
youth and speed to be ari
advantage against the more
experienced White Sox, who
have Slrujlllled on artificial
surface thts year.
Longoria 1s RBI sinJ!Ie in.
the fifth smgle made tt 5-3
and ended Vazquez's ~­
n~n .

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www.mydallysentinel.com

· Pa1e B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Frld,ay, October 3, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Cincinn~ti QB ~ game-time decision
HUNTINGTON. W.Va. he's got enough in the mental
(AP) - The Cincinnati ~.nd .o(.thing_~ that he can St!CBearcats could use some help ceed. And'the same thtng wllh
behind center right about now. Chazz. He's a very smart kid.
Injuries have cost the He knows the offense very
Bearcat~ (3-1) their starting well. All he needs is the
and backup quarterbacks, so opportunity.
coach Brian Kelly must give
"They're e;oing to get the
redshin freshmen Zach opportunity.'
Collaros or Chazz Anderson · Whoever that is, Marshall
their first.' college start on coach Mark Snyder is asking
Friday night at Marshall (3-2). Thundering Herd fans to rattle
"I'm very confident in the him. The school is handing
guys that we've got that we out 7,500 wliite T-shirts and
can win with them," Kelly . I,000 wqite rally towels prior
said.
to kickoff.
.
The season began with for"We would jove for it ... I&lt;)
mer starter Ben Mauk be as loud as possible and use
exhausting his ap~als for an that home-field advantage,"
extra year of ehgtbility from Snyder said.
the . NCAA, and Dustin 'Snyder is more concerned
Grutza is out indefinitely with about getting his own defense
a broken leg suffered in a loss on track. The Thundering
at Oklahoma·.
Herd rank near the bottom
Tony Pike started the next · nationally in total defense,
two games but broke his left surrendering 440 yards per
forearm in last' week's 17-15 g11me. Last week West
.
.
'
~~
· t(,Uchigancornerback Morgan Trent (14) pulls down Wisconsin receiver Kyle Jefferson win over Akron and he's Virginia amassed 319-rushing
.
7) during the second quarter of an NCAA coltege football game in Ann Arbor, Mich:, expected to .miss up to a yards in a 27-3 win.
month. Collaros played thl!
On offense Marshall could~st Saturday.
•
. ·
rest of the·game·, completing n't get ,its top playmakers
•
1-of-4 passes for 2 yards. His going, turned the ball over
7-yard run on third down set three times and was limited to
up Jake Rogers' go-ahead 158 total yards, inclu.ding 39
field
goal with 7:45 left.
· on the ground .
. COLUMBUS (AP) - The for, that they still could win bark a little more, the players
Anderson
has
yet
to
attempt
Cincinnati's pass defense is
game at Wisconsin was their fourth straight Big Ten watch more film and· the
jllready going to be difficult title and an unprecedented practices sometimes become a pass this seasan. so Collaros just as brittle as Marshall's, so
. enou~h for Ohio State. Then third consecutive outright open warfare between team- would be the odds~on choice. the opportunity is there' for
from
mates. Everybody substitutes Kelly said he will make a improvement
Michtgan had to go and beat championship.
g_
a
me-time
decision
on
his
Thundering
Herd
redshirt
lbe Badgers, making them
Since then, they've won hard work for the ache of
freshman Mark Cann, who
even more . dangerous by games over · Troy .. and defeat. And the sting of the starter.
"The ftrst thing in evaluat- threw an interception, lost a
!;lacking them into a comer.
Minnesota. They know they loss passes with time.
ing
a quarterback is: Can he fumble and .had his string of
"When you're playing a
·. Now the 14th-ranked can 'l afford another slip-up.
handle
of the · three consecutive 200-yard
Buckeyes are expecting the
"Basically, we can't lose good team that didn't play as moment?theCanpressure
he
go
in
passing games snapped
No. 18 Badgers to be angry, · another one to accomplish all well as they could the week and succeed?" Kelly there
said.
against
the Mountaineers.
inspired and desperate to the goals that we set for our- before, you're going to (play "Zach's.very flfS! start was in
Wide receiver Darius
avoid ·an 0-2 start m the Big selves," tailback , Chris against) a better team than the fourth 9,uarter on the road Passmore,
ti~ht end Cody
maybe you would have (had
Ten.
"Beanie" Wells said.
down.
That
s
not
the
ideal
sitSlate
and
runmng
back Darius
The Buckeyes speak from
Wisconsin coach Bret it won)," Ohio State coach nation to put somebody in, but Marshall are looking to
~;xpenence.
Bielema said it was difficult Jim Tressel said. "That's the
: ''I definitely know that's watching the -films trom his way life is. It's our instinct to
want'·to do better when we
how we came out after the
lJSC game. Things were a lot team's 27-25 loss at didn't do as well." •
more intense in practice that Michigan last week. The
Ohio State knows if it loses
PRINCETON, NJ. (AP) - . next ~ay.
entire week. I would imagine Badgers (3-1, 0-1) led 19-0 another game. the chances of
Duke,
UCLA, Michigan arid · The Carbondale, Ill. region~
their coaches would do the before the Wolverines spun going to a third consecutive
Southern
Illinois will serve as aJ will begin Nov. 11 with
exact same thing for them," off the next 27 points. A late Bowl Championship Series
Ohio State safety Anderson Wisconsin
touchdown title game are almost nil. the regional hosts for the. 2K Arkansas·Monticello playing
Russell said in the days lead- brought the Badgers close, With Penn State and Sports Classic benefiting Massachusetts and California,
Pa. meeting SolJthern Illinois .
.ing up to Saturday's game at but a successful two-point Northwestern still unbeaten, a Coaches vs. Cancer. .
The
winners
of
the
four
The
winners meet Nov. 12.
Camp Randall Stadium. "Our conversion pass was disal- loss would put a severe crimp four-team
tournaments
At
Ann Arbor, Mich.,
team really came out with a lowed by a penalty.
in any Big Ten championship advance to the semifinals and IUPUI plays Northeastern and
chip on our shoulder. I would ."You know, in my three plans as well.
finals at New York's Madison Michigan
Tech
faces
i_magine they're goin~ to years of being here, we've
Wisconsin also risks a lot in SquareGardenonNov.20-2l. Michigan on Nov. II with the
come out the same way.'
only had to endure a loss six Saturday's
game.
The
The pairings for the region- winners playing the next day.
The Buckeyes (4-1, . l-0) times," Bielema said. "This is Bad~ers cannot afford anoih- a! rounds, which will be held
The -Los Angeles regional
·.were hurting for the first 24 the sixth time. It's not easy. er Btg Ten loss or else many Nov. 10-13, were announced starts Nov. 12 with Weber
hours.after .their 35-3, beating It's nothing that I want to ever of their team goals - playing Thursday.
·
State meeting Miami, Ohio
,at Southern California on get used to.lt's a very painful for a conference title, making
At the Durham, N.C. and Prairie View A&amp;M play•Sept. 13, then gradually experience, but it's something it into a major bowl game - . regional on Nov. 10, Georgia ing UCLA, which has n:ached
turned that disappointment you have to endure.''
might already have evaporat- Southern will play Houston the NCM tournament's Final
Teams endure by rededicat- ed even before the weather and Presbyterian faces Duke. Four the last three years. The
into motivation. They vowed
.that they still had·a lot to play ing themselves. The coaches ·has turned cold.
The winners will meet the winners play on Nov. 13.

f

}Jadgers angry after disappointing loss

rebound from a quiet showing
at West . Vtrgima. Passmore
was held to a season-low 39
receivin&amp;,yar~ and _will get a
challenge Fnda~ .IUght from ·
Cincinnati cornerbacks Mike
Mickens and DeAngelo
Smith.
.
"It's an opportunity for
him," Snyder said. ''These
guys are being looked at by
every NFL seout." ·
:
Last year against Marshall,
Mickens' interception and
fumble recovery set up
Cincinnati's ftrst two touchdowns. and the Bearcais won
40-14.
·With its inexperience a~
quarterback
this
time;,
Cincinnati will need to get its
ground game going and
Snyder envisions a heavy
dose of quarterback runs. The
Bearcats have yet to produce
a 100-yard rusher this season:.
Cincinnati's offensive lint)!,
which hasn't allowed a sack
in two games, wtll also be
tested.
·
•
, "We're confident," .said
Bearcats right guard Trevor
Canfield. "We're moving the
ball with any quarterbac~
back there. Our offensive line
is confident in keeping bini
clean. No offense to coacl\
Kelly. but you could put
coach Kelly back there and
we'll be all right."
.
The game will feature twQ
of the nation's top kick return•
ers and receivers. Cincinnati's
Marshwan Gi !yard leads the
nation at 36 yards per kickoff
return, one yard more than
Darius Marshall. And like
Passmore.• Gilyard has three
I00-yard receiving games. ·

E·mall
·classified@mydailytribune.com

'&lt;lr:ribune

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ca~r;~::;
.

. Or Fax To

NOTICES
:PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
glven thai on Saturday,
.October 4, 2008 at
'0:00 a.m., a public
ute wttl be held at 211
J1
Second
St.,
l'omeroy, Ohio. The
Farmere Bank and Sav·
lngo Compan~ Is selllng lor caoh In hand or
.certHied check the fol·
lowlllg collateral:
2000 Chevrolet S10
1GCCS1949Y8132948
1998 Ford Wlndatar SW
2FMDA5149WBA36687

Public Noli&lt;l! i'n New!:pipers.
Your Rightlo Kaow, Deli~r!d R~·l tn V1mrlloor.

serves the right to bid
atthiSBale, and to wHhdraw the above cotlatoral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
rlghtto reject any or all
bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be· oold
"as ls·where Is", with
,no axprasaed ·or lm·
plied warranty given.
For further lnformetlon,
or lor an appointment
to "inspect collateral,

LlghHoot, an Incompetent.
Unless exceptions .are
flled thereto, said ac·
count will be set for

hearing before said
Court on the 4th day of
November,

2008,

at

which time said account will be consld·
ered and continued
from day to day until 11-

nally disposed ot.
Any person Interested
may file wriHen excep-

tion to said account or
to matters pertaining to
The Farmers Bank and prior to sale date con- the execution of the
Savings
Company, tact Cyndle or Ken at trust, not leas than five
days prior to the date
Pomeroy, Ohio r• 740-992·2136.
(10j1,2,3
set for hearing.
J S Powell
Card of Thanks
Judge
. .
Pubilc Notice
Common Pleas ,Court,
Probate Division
IN THE COMMON Meigs Coonty, Ohio
The Family of
PLEAS COURT, PI;IO· (10) 3
.
the late
BATE DIVISION MEIGS
Re~·a L. Vaughan
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
on
wrslr ro thank a!I
SETTLEMENT OF .AC·
SAVINGS
rcfarives. friend.\
COUNTS, PROBATE
Wid neit:llbor~ for
COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
rhe numy ki11d
Accounts and vouchM
e."({!'t'ssions of
ers ot the following
.vympathy, cards
· named fiduciary has
been flied In the Prow1d dunalw1r s to
bate Court, Metga
chamy recei ved
County, Ohio lor ap:during our scul
·proval 8nd settlement.
ESTATENO. 32502- The
frJSS ~ ,
1
I
1 ~~'
Third Account of John
::Special th(mh to
D. LtghHoot, guardian
' ,.
the Ovetbrook
,.
of
ea· 1
tatethe
of person
Francis and
Delbert
: ~~~~~~~
" R~hallilitatir"n

Cemer. Dr.
DougiaJ Hrmter
F(ltnily Practice,
O'Bft11ess
Hospital Staff. '

Holzer Hospice,
Cremeens Funeral
Home. Rev. Brian
Dunham/or is his
comforting '
thoughts. and to
rilL many friends
. able to anend the
burial service.

Happy Ad

Happy Ad

HEY DAVE. ..
DRUMMlN'
TO THE TUNE
OF THE "BIG 50,
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
.
LUV, Sts·
.

t Advancid Charcoal Art .
Four Total Classes (One night per
week &amp; art materials)
Thursdays (6 p.m. lo 8 p.m.)
Bll!linning October 9, 2008 ,
$tOO/person

CITY
GETAWAY
October 10, 2008
to October 12, 2008
Weekend Tripi
Tropicana Resort &amp; Casino
Beachlront &amp; Boardwalk
$249/person (double occupancy)
Private jet transportation lrom
Charleston, WV
Must be 21 years of age · ·
Gladly accept cash, check,
money order and credit cards
Please contact
PVH Community Relations
to make reserVations,

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326
LIMITED SEATS!

Mizway Tavern
lues- Corn Hole Tour. 7 pm
Thurs- PoQI Tournament B pm
Friday- Karaoke 9-1
Sat· Band Vertical Reign 9-1

Coin Show
October 5th
9am '3 pm
1Holtdav Inn -Gallipolis, Ohio
Oh·Kan Coin Club

Broad.Run Gun Club
Factory, Slug &amp; Seeped Rim Fire
Sunday 12-noon
Meeting &amp; Election of Officers at

Ham

I Introduction to Chlrcoat Art
Four Total Classes (One·nighl per
week &amp; art materials) ·
Tuesdays (6 p.m. to 8 p.m.)
Beginning October 14, 2008
$100/person
I Beginner Youth Art
.
Four Total Classes (One n1ghl per
week &amp; art materials)
,
Pastel, waterc~or &amp; oil instruction
Ages 8 to 18 years ol age
·
Saturdays (1 p.m. to 3 p.m.)
Beginning Octobet11, 2008
$140/person
I Introduction to Stained Gtaas Art
November 1, 2008
One day only
. 9:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.
$155/person (incluqes stained
starter kit &amp; instruction)
II you a)ready rn.ve a starter kil, ·
then insttUCtlon is $75.
All classes will be held at

409 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV.
Plellt cell (304) 812·4625
to reserve a seat in the class. Some
of the classes have limited seating.

FLU Sf:tOT.
CLINIC
Saturday, October 4
9 • 11 am
Holzer Clinic
Meigs
BB East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy~ Ohio

of

Memory of

Nellie West
on her hirtlrday
·oct. 4th.

You are thought of
'often and missed
greatly by your
firiettds at the

I '

Senior Center.

Hardly a day goes
by that I dmtl
thmk ofyol4 and ·
remember good

You were
one of a kind.

limes.

Y-our Friend,
~

}. }. Handley
You went away
one year ago
roday,
and did not say
good bye. ··
We know you are
at home in ·
heaven pn high.

Should .I nclude These Items
To Help Get Response •••

Ohio Valley

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and oraphics
~
added to your classified ads
.fa~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
E!!
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for Iaroe

Djsplay Ads

Dally ln·Column: 9:00a.m.

All Dlspl•y: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day'lii Paper

Bu•ln••• Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday In-Column: 9:00 a.m.
For Sulld•v• Pape:r

Sunday Dlsplav: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

POLICIES: OhiO Vlll.y Publllhlng re..vesthe right to edit, ra)ect. or ctncel•y 1d It any time. Errore mu1t be reported on the aret dly of puDIICMion end thl
Trtbori&amp;-SentiMI-flegltter wHI be reapof.
' lblelor no morelhln the coal of thfl 1~1 occupied by lhe error and only the flrllinMrtJon, We thlll nGt bt lllble lor
any lOP or upentre thai reault1 from t a publlcatton or,omltslon ot an advertiHmanl. CarrectiGn will tMI madtln thl llrlt avallabla ~ltlon. ·Box number Ida
are atwayt confldanllel. ·Current rate card tppllee ·All reel eiiMe edwerlllementt are aubject to tha Federal Fair Houalng Act or 1968. • Thla newapaP.r
accepts only http wanted ada meeting EOE staildllfdi.. we Will not knowll'lgly acCept any aclvertlalng In vlolatlol'l or the lew. wm not bt rtaponalbM tor any
.rrot"lln an ad taken ow..- flit phone.

I

l

jkii,;;;;;;iYi,~;;.;;;;;;;t;;;i__________..___

Basement

tho ~ghtlo odl~

Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee Local references fum1shed. Established 1975. Call 24 Hrs
740-446-o870, Rogers
Basenient Waterproofing.

Loot &amp; Found

reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must
~oportod on tho

4 small dogs found in
NOTICE Borrow Smart
Crown City area 3 wllh.
Contact the Ohio Oivlcollars, 2 white, 2 ~lack,
sion of Financial lnstrtu2 look like they ha\le
lions Office of ConsUmer
poodle
in
them.
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
740-256·6515
Superior . Home Mainte- nance your home or oD·
nance
~ Carpentry, taln a loan. BEWARE of
Noticea ,
Plumbing,
Electrical , requests for any'' large
Rentals, No Job to Small advance
payments
of
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY Reasonable
Prices. fees or msuranCe. Call
PUBLISHING CO. rae-.. 339·3442 or 446-2805
ihe Office of Consumer
ommends that you 9o
Aff1ars
toll
free
at
Ousiness wit(l people you
Other Services
1-866-278-0003 to learn
know, and NOT 10 send ::-"""'~=~=•c:-! 1f the mortgage broker or
~
h lhe · mal·1 Pet
Cremations.
money 111roug
lender , Is properly li.1
h
1
11
t
74().446·3745
1
un 1 you ave nves ga censed. (This Is a public
. lng the offerif"lg.
George's ~ Portable saw- . service
announcement
mill ; don 1t haul. your Logs from the Ohio Valley
to ~e Mill . JUSt call Publishing Company)
304·675·1957

Prof.uionol S.tW:eo

0
0
t!
0

'

TURNI;D DOWN ON

auiin... &amp; Trode
School

CNA'S &amp; ,RESIDENT AS- SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
SISTANTS.Interviews
No Fee Unless We Win!
Are Now Be1ng COn• ..~-• For CNA &amp; Res!·· ~
C!"-1·,;,66;,;6~·56,;,.2·.33;,.4,;,5~"'
uu..mu
dent Ass1stan1 Positions. A!l types home remodel-

•

H You Are A Caring, En- 1ng from leaK., taucats. to

1

Othtlrr ,Benefits. Ravens-

r---:==-=---,
r·

R

Required. E.O.E.
.
CLASSIFIED INDEX
H ...

N ..............................................

lolt&amp; Found ...............................................215

MtmorjmtankYou .....
l-'"'"'"flo
Notlcos .................: ................................... 225
~son~rs ................................................... 230
wanted ...........,_......,.................................. 235
M ..................

Collages and.Schools 12748

SHOP
CL.ASSIFIEDS

j~~§~~~-w~ood~~C1e:re~Cejn:te:r,:t:t:t3J~~io::';~~~~J
BARGAINS
n ..

College

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayr 740 _446 _4367
,_800.214 _0452
gelliPfll 1scareercollege.edu
Aceredltad MamberAccreditl"gCouncll!orlndependent

new construction; t5+yrs
experience call Matt@
M·N·S
Construction,
(740,)992·3437
- or
740.444·1308-

Wash1ngton St., Ravenswood, WV, References

Llglla'................................·.. J............... 100
, AMounComettll .................................... 200
, Blrl!tday/Annlvonory................................205
' Hippy Adt....
210

Galllpaii&amp;Carear

Recreatlona1Vehlcltl ...............................1000

ATY ........................................................... 1005
Blcyclet ...................................................1010
Bolls/Acceiaortel ...................................-1015
ClilperiRVs &amp; Trailers ....., .....................,10,20
Motoreyclet ...............................................1D25

Other .............:....................................., .....1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotlve .................:..............................2000

1

www.cOmics.com
&lt;a&gt;2008 by
Inc
&amp;-:::.::::.::::::.;;.:;::;::;,:_
________..::.:::::::..,:::!.,:;:.:.:.;::;:;,J·

fann.Equlpment
Mitcallaneous
_;;...,iiiii;iai~~~;; ;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;,;;;;;;;
INTEGRITY, Berber Carpet $6.95 yd.
40 00
I
:t:
KIEFERBUit.:'
carpet remnans $ .
VALLEY
HORSE/UVE- &amp; up. Mollohan cap,et
STOCK
TRAILERS. 2")12 Easte,m Ave. Galli-

EBY,

MAX

f-

EQUIP- pol ~. Ohoo 741)-446·7444
TR.AILERS
SS
' Jet Aeration Motors repaired, new
rebuilt h"l
stock. Call Ron Evans.
&amp;
·
'
,:;1·;:80:;,0:;;;
·5::,37:,;·9::;528:;;::;,._ _ _
H&amp;R Single Barrel, 20
GA. Spo"sman "Loog
''
Range" 32" Barrel, Rare,
$195; Also have 12 Stl·
ver
'
Dollars ·
(740)533-3870

HOMEStEADER

:~er

;;.;;;;on New

Real Eltlle Rtntale..............,.................... asoo
• .........._..
342 A
~~
"~
PtoiiiHn•·~·-·...~ .. -.......................
partma•-•OWnhouses ......................... ;J;~W
~lro .................................................M! CGntmtrelll ..........:.................... ..............3510
ROoflng...........:.............................................346 Cotl:lomlnlums..........................................3515

i
: Slcurlty.:......................................... ............. 348

HoUitl for Rtnt ........................................3520

' Tu/Accoun11ng ........................................ 350

land(Acmgej ..................................... .3525

1

1

TraveLI'Entertllnmtnt ........:......................... 352 Storege ...............................................

3S35

, Anancltl... ............................."""""'"'"'"'"'400 WllnttoAent ........., .......~....
3540
: RnanclaiSer\llctl ........................................ ManutacturtdHoulfng .............................4000
' ~~nceto, :::~....................~....................... :~~ LoiiMov......................." ......................................~tO
, _,IU7 """'"'"' """'"'""'"""""''"""""" ';... •
...................................................... ,.w
H

M ·. .. . . . .

................ , ; ...

: Educetlon.................................................... 500 R.entlllt .......:............................................... 4015
: Buolneu&amp;TrodeSdtool .......................... 505
' lnstNCtlon&amp;Tralnlng .. - ................ ,_....... 510

Salet .........................................................4C20
Suppllel .......:............................................. 4025

\ lllloni..........:..............................................St5 WtntJQ Buy .......................................:....... 4030
i Ptrl0nii .......................................................S20 RIIIHI Proparty ...........................- ............ 5000
: Anl1111la .....................................................800 RMO~ Property lor &amp;ilt.......................... 5025
~
·
6115 A--·•
' Ani n I Suppl'".........................................
_, Prope rty lor renI ........................... 60611 ·
: Horlel.... - ... - .............. ~ ..................,. ..........,610 Employment................\..............................&amp;000
' LIYeltOCk......................................................:: Ac~ntlntflnanc:lal ................................: :

: Ptts. ..................1''"''""''''''""'''R'''"" '"'"'" "

::;:..,~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::
705

Adm nlttrattvWProfatlonal.....................

·~=~~~:: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ·

Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
Young cuning orcha~d grass ffil)( for
Concrele
A:ngle,
cat. 4x5 •
rolls
inside. ghet~nel.f Fl~ ~r, ;~eel
740·446·2075
ra ng or ralfls,
ve_ _ _ _;,....__ ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Hay for sale 800 lb. cost Scrap Metals Open Mon.
9 wk. old puppies,free to $35 per bales, ~2001b Tue.
Wed
&amp; . Fn,
good home, 2 lemale &amp; t cost $50 per bales. Call sem·4·30pm
Cloeed
r;nale will make good 446 _19470r 794 _1151
Thurs.
Sat
&amp;
sun.
iallll dogs 304-6 12.-0183
f74:::0;::
·4;::46:;:·7~3::;oo:,.,...,._!""'--..;;;;;;W~o~n;;:.IO;To~Buy;;:_= Pole Bam 30x40xtO only
- - - -.....:--_, ;;;
$6,995, o.ther SIZOS, Free
AKC German Shepherd Firewood tor sale call Delivery an.773 _8356 .
Pllps, 6 left from liner of 446-1947or794-1t51
11, only . 3 males . Dam
Remrngton
Model
f 11
and 1re are amy
pets. wanted to Bu'f' .Paw 11·12ga. $~. Remlng9 wks oldc reduced to Paw&amp;.
Bleck
Walnuts, ·ton
Model
tt46·12ga.
$350.304-773-6062
Gall740-698-6060
$275. Both have 30 ln .
:;:::::,;,;:::;;:,:;~;;;;;...,...,.., full choke, nice guns.
~---~~~~~":
740-379·2860, II no an·
CKC Registered Mini
swer leave message
Dachshunds
2
long'
haired females $350 and
·want To~~
4$
_ shoFrlil~at ""sdhots.maalndes
;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;....
,.,
iii
Buy1ng tools seU or trade
wormed.
Please
call Antique Flea Market, Pt. mechaf'lic-carpenter lawn
74b·386·8445
' or Pleasant , WV et the &amp; garden power tools.
740.645-2396 may leave West VIrginia State Farm Call 740-388-1515 or cell
a message..
Museum, October 4th &amp; 740-208-&lt;&gt;320
·
5th hours:9-4, Actvertis·
Sto
re M'lk Bot Absolute Top Dollat
sil
•
•
•
tree to good home, baby mg.
new~ • 1
kittens ·
S04-8B _
tie\ Collect!bles, Free \lerlgold
coins, ' any
2 2385 adr:mssion &amp; appraisalS, •10KI14KI16K gold ;ewleave message.
Dealer Space Available, elry, dental gold, pre
.,.,.--~~-~~1 COntact Charlie , Perry, 1935
US
currency,
Give
away.
gray/white
tom
740 _446•7348

s

300

hom~.

~,.... ..... ... .... ...................... .......

-~

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

Free·

• Merchandloe ............................................. 900 EmploymentA-itt........................... .61120

'• Antlqutl............... ............. ....... ....................905

.......

Food Senllceo ............................: .........6024

: Bargain 811emtnf .......................... '"""""'920
' ColltCIItHes .................................................. 92:S
' Com-930
I
t""' ___,, .....-........................ ..............
• EquijlmlntiSuppllet.................................. 935
: Floof·~ lllrbtl
,....... ~:..·;~·:~· ............................. : ·

Htlp anted- Gtntrll...................... - ... ,..... 6028
Law Enforcemenl ......................................6030
Msnunoiii"G'I.Aime111~...........
I ...., ...... .,.. ......
6032
....... ...........

'
I

ltn:\lllia

'
I

'
'
;

011
~vniiiii\I'V4HI ·.......................... ..
Fumlturt ...................................................... 950
ltobby.!lunt I Spon..................,................955
KldlsComer .........:.......................................HO
WMisctllaneoybu............ ~................................961705
ant.to Y-~................................................
Vard Sale ............. .. ., ......... ...... .............
UW'I

m

•
Potbelly , piglet,

housebroken, hes shots
&amp;cag8 (740)992-4148

Enttrtalnment ............................................ 6022

• ~ ................- ..............................910
AucUons~ ....................................................i1S

. 1

_..

GOYtrMitnt6 Fedef11Jobt ............:....... 6026

Manogemeni/Supervloory .....................:.61134
~•.n 1ca .....,.....,......................
~

•

Fann Equlpm,m·

1 '"""""'""""""""'" ' "'""'""' "'"'" '"V~HV
H . . . . . . . . . .. ...

Mualctl................... ....................................6040
Part-llme-Temporarles .......................... II042
Rutauranll ..........................,.................... 6044
Salea ....................................................... ~... 6048
Technleal Tradti .......................... ,............ 60SO
Ttltllalll'actory ... ............................ r ...... 61l5l

per~-

,

Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
rlsedl Ch k
~~~
lnve~o~OU1 . ~;
www CAAEQ com
Car
mlc~el · · eQutpmen~
. s-24t2
740 44

Hllge Yard Sale · something for ~veryone in
Ches~ire ~lgh.S mile.s0 ·out
554 r01n
I on xyer
Rd. house on hill. StartlnQ Oct. 3 thru ? Omi1
Sunday.

-..=M;;i-'laneou;;;;;=
.=•';;;;;;;;;

f&lt;t

1800
miles,
$7600. 388·8380

blacl&lt;;

~!""'----~~=
Ka-saki
NlnJO.
250 under.... 1500 miles

"'2007

watch for signs

2007
Kawasaki
Ninja
250 under 1500 miles
Sat Oct 3-4 741 Adams· red helmet and tank beg
v1He Rd. Mason. WV. $2,800.740-645-1912
Bedroom suites, Hull &amp;
Other
McCoy PoHery. Depres·
s1on
Glass,
Fostoria, For sale 1986 Honda
Bltnko and fenton, other scooter Elite 250. 10K
glassware and crocks, miles, call (·740)949·2220
Household
furniture,
some antiques. office
equipmenVmedicat

~~n~doo-r"=E~sl~at~eSa~l~e,;F~11~&amp;

;;;;;;=='-";i;;;;;=.=

;'::'"':~~- m~~~~~:"',!;

Stra~utoma~BO~

place, jewerty, t925 8&amp;0 :
Aallroad
lamp, tools, 256-1652 or256-1233

==:~·s. m2n~
,

0~;

~~~-=-~~=

':::":
items. All Sale Ffnal Not 2007 Honda VTX 1300R
Responsible
tor
Accl- 1800 miles black $7800~
dents
388-8380

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

4 fam!ly, Thurs-Sat. be- L.arge Garage Sa.le. 113 97 Chrysler LHS autos1pe Me•gs Ce!p&lt;ll, Mid· Gartield HIS.· F11 &amp; Set metic, a11. $1600 OBO.
~dl~epo~rt,~Oh":":"-:-~~:":' 9am -4pm,
Household, 256·6002 or 256·1233
5-Family Yard Sale. Oct. Kids, Tools, • Ptaltzgraff ,_....----~
96 Caviler 2 door 4 cyl. 5
3 &amp; 4 . Rain or Shine. Village.
2534 Georges Ck. Ad. Movrng Sale 2702 Third speed with rear spoiler &amp;
St
5 yra&lt;;use., · 101 · sun roof, AIC, CO. Extra
Ladies 3 thru pluS, mens · .,
lg. thru 2x. Infant boy, girt 4th-6th.lumiture.houseclean lpoks and runs
ld
d loth 1
great" with a 3 monltl
9- 18 mo; 8- 10 clothing. ho goo s,c es, oys
warranty $2500.
&amp; S
Curtains, Queen bed set. Moving sale Oct. 3rd-4th, Auto
Sales
rock
casseHes, west· toam-5pm Vance Rd, 740·669-4605 . cell any·
ems , lots of mi:,;c. •
signs, will be posted, 3 tim
._
At.
,
Friday
fam•ly, n1ce ' clean miSC. ~·~~"":"'~~~~
124
51146 5
&amp;
Saturday, items. '(740)992-6833
Q2 Honda Accord E'&lt;, 4
(740)590-3542
Saturday, Home Decor, door,
auto.
lOaded,
;;,.;;~~;..,;;,~~~ nice
women's
clothes 92,000 miles. 245·5526
9 families, Oc1 . 5-7. (
9am-5pm,
(985·3929) . 16· 26 1·
mens,
baby Pomeroy Pot1ce Dept.will
next to Eastern School, 4 items, 23 SouthPark
be a.uc1ioning off off a
wheeler, tires, car ramps, Saturd~y- october 4th. 2000 Jeep Grand Cherotractor w/snowoblade, OJ 2008,
9iim-4pm,
·
1 b ty shop 33932 Beshan Ad kee on Oct. 11 .0801
eQutpmen · eau
· 1O:OOAM al .Pomeroy Vii·
station, furn iture,· clothes ~ Trussell r~dence exit
tage Haii.Starttng bid will
tbys. Rawleigh Prodllcts. at R8cine exit ol1
be $1500.Contact Chief
lots of m1sc.
Rt.33, 1hen left 4 mHes
Marl&lt;. Proffitt lor details.
to Bashan, top of the

s

~~1~bh;:o~ram!7n " ;a?~

proof/mint
sets,
dia·
moods, MTS Coin Shop. Parkmg Lot ot lhe Ma~~n
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· J
Vi d St Pt Pleas
pons. 446-2842
ar,
an
..., ·
ant. Plus size clou,es.
A~lod, restofToemtavdmoihiRred, lo·o~
Yard Sale
household goods, baby
•ca e on
· . " --=~i;i;;i.i;;;=;;;;;;;; clothes, 1t~ms , children
At
33
Recrne •
•
1456 Jackson Pike • Fri clothes of all sizes, deco(Pari&lt;&amp;Aide)
e,.-it, &amp; Sat, Oct. 3&amp;4 from rations , Home Interior. &amp;
74().949·2246
9· 4pm . Fumlture\ build -· more, more, mnre.
Furniture
ing . suppli~s ,
exercise . Friday, Saturday &amp; Mon·
equip. tann.ng bed, · pr~ d
Ed~ Adk'
56
11"
AHen
· Hllda,
ay. . ·gam-?,
tns.
Ethan
ClaSSIC ana, .to'fS, books, mo VI8S
Glasstop
Manor dtning table and and much more.
, tables,
Llb&lt;ary
tebte,
four chairs,Queen Anne
Fam,·•· Yerd Sale E. toys bqcleS
2
fr01n 1970's. $450,
'1
;;.;..--..:..,-:-~~~
Main Street. Pomeroy. Garage Sale. 593 Deb·
Oct tthruOct 4 Wed.·Sat
bie Dr. Oct 41h. 9am. 2
Yard Sale Oct. 4·6 Knick Blue
cu~ured marble
~
Knacks
Cllnalns
bed- vanity tops tor 60~ base.
Stand-up
tanning
beO spreads etc 199 Hem· sewing machine, house$1200. 74Q-367·7762
lock
out Eve'llreen
wares , clothing , m1sc.

-_,.--.,=.,..

' ~~~~10:.::: ........................................... 125 e•a~~al pt""u"m"'blng'"''"''''"'"'"'''""''''""''""''611t8

' n••

;;;i;;i;;;;=;;;;

Free to good
Jee- (740)992-5066,
gle 1/2 Beagle 112 Jack cola@sucldenlink net
Russell. 8 wks old, 1 (F)
left. 740-367-0141
GIBBS
ANTIQUES-

C~I ...................,.........,......................... 60~D
1 Gtrcten1Pnxluct.......................................7f0 Conltrudlon .................,,,;,,,1, ...... .... .. ....... 6012
• Hay,Ftld,Seed1 Graln ...............................715 Drtvers6DeUvery ............................,;....... 6014
'
•' ·nd
720 Ed
ion
.
611t6

: FarmEqulpmtnt ..........................................

--..=.;An;;,;6;;cp;;;uu;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

'

o-

bllrner,gas
'neating
stove, decorative wall fire

deh~-

h11t. gas range,
m1difier, plush recliners. dressers, ottrer
fumiture.
tableS1
chairs,
small
appliances, cloth!ng, baskets, o~ high chalt,
collectibles, fuM . set · Of
dinnerware. &amp; much
morel (740)949-2660
Screws. nails . elect, sup·
plies. tools• &amp; more, Oct.
3-4 . 9am-3pm, 45555 SR
124 Rac1ne Oh
S
Winter
Garage
a'le
Sat.Oc t. 4,9:00Caldwell's ,
VrneSt.Racine.coats ,kid'

We have quality SUV's
w1th warranty. Pnced to
Sell. Blazer. . Satt)m Vue,
Buick AemHtZ\IOUS. Visit
us
at
(gocookmotors.com).
Stop
or
call
740-446.()103, 326 Jackson Pike
C~KMOTORS

T-.-'1

~

~;,;;;;;~;;;i;i--==·

1966 Chevy t ton dump
truck 4WD crew cab 460
engine call after 4PM
441-0568 or 709-174-4.

Ward To au,

••,:::clo~the:.:;:s·;:;:",:::•n::;s~'""!'~ =:;;;,;;;;;""'!;;;;;;~;0;;;~

Yard Sale 2925 Maple Want to buy Junk Cars,
Ave Sat Oct 4th 8·~
caii74Q-;l88-Q884

-

f

TrailerS

~74:0:·4~46~·3=82=5~~==

1
red helmet and lank bag
clothes, Ahtlques, guns, S2,8oo.r4 645 _1912
namebrand
Jr
g
rl's
tumlture &amp; lots ol miSc ..

Whi~~

:~~=.~::::::·~·.:~:·.:·.~~·.:~::·.::::~·.::-_:::·.:~~:·.:::: ::~:~~.~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ .,.,.------- Hay sq. bales. 1st &amp; 3rd

! Plumbtnt'£~....,................................ 340

Garage Sale 2118 St At.
141 Oct 2 3 4 M
· ' ' · ens
wrnter
J&amp;Cket,
suils,
sweaters, tee shirts. MiHtary clothing, boots. Antique
furniture.
Harley
DavidsOn leather 1ackets,
shirts,
helmets.
Com·
puter desks, sweeper,
misc.

.2

Commarc11VIndustrlal .............................. 2020

1

iiiYS~6;;;t"!l.!;i;;;;ou;;;t0.J;;;e,;;;ry;;;s~R~un

Items, counter stoOls, Ia· chael

11 1

' Bulldlhg Materllls ....................................... 306

, l"""lnco .................................................. 332 HouMOforSala...................................... 3025
• 1.11!11 Senlco ...........................,,,,,,,,,,,,.334 Unci (Ac-)..,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.. 3030
; ~ ....................................336 l.qtt ............................................................ 3035
, Othlr'Swvfct1 ............_:............................. 338 wanttobuy................................................3040

4th

"""'""'""'""'""'""'"" ble &amp; chair'S , computer
Yard Sale
items,
krtchen
1tems,
~~""!;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;~= charcoal grill, mise 1tems
2 familY yard sale. and
f .1 yard sa1e.
B d's 1n oor 3 am1y
II
N sea
Xqmasues,. Lonagaber,rger,oyH.H, Oct 3-:4, 6:30·4, Red
R
G
h
Ti
items,
Terl)'
McGuire · ose
reen ouse, . ornado Ad (off New Hrgh
40720 Laurel Cliff Rd.,
. ,
,.
F" &amp; Sot'? ·
way)
AIK&gt;ne,
mens,
IIIUrs., II.
':r
women's, . boys
:H·6T.

CARGO
EXPRE
&amp;
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
"'"99. v1=• OUR EN·
call JR 740256·6160 or ~·
""
304-751·6672
TIRE TRAILER ,INVEN·
TOfiYAT
~~":":"-.-:-'::""::"""~ WWW.CARMICHAEL·
Polled Hereford Bulls &amp; TRAILERS.COM
Haters, 4 to 5 ' months 740-446-3825
old. Call304·862·2n4
, . . , . . , ; . , . , . , . , , Hot Tub, 6 person; Like ~M":::"~'"'::y~s"""::s-=:t~Oct~
New· with cover, Must
u I· am. . . a
.
Pels
Garden &amp; Produce Sell· Moving. $1600. 4· Npm 602 Center·
~74:::0;,::·64:;::5~-33~33~·--- potnt Rd . Just off At. 279
FREE!!!
Adult
mother Kiwi Just E. of Syracuse House Shutters. various ~~!~~~a:! te;nen~ez~~t
124
60
;;9,.Rt,.. . , ,, •'
$ ·
clothes,
purses.
baby
Bul!
do9
pups. =H
F-C• •--• Gral o3•04~·6::;75;:;;·50~15"""="""- items, hunting &amp; house
740.669-4206
~171~·~-~·:;.·;;-~:;.·
AND USED STEEL
-:ho-ld.it•~o-:ms• .~:":"~....,..

:~:~R~.~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :;,~ -~ PP':; a:~m~~= ).'f;,; 40; ,;19;,;9; ,~:; ;•74 ;

Flntnclal.......................................................322 CtmeltfyPiot&amp; .......................................... 30DS
lfoltlh ........................................................ 326 Comman:lal......................................, ........30t0
HHting&amp;.Coollng....................................... 328 Condomlnluma .......................................... 3015
Homelmprowmonll3311
. ForSalebyOwner .....................................3020

Oct

Garage Sale, Rain or
qpcreilti Oni\1
Shine, Oct. 3 &amp; 4. Home 1000
Veh1cles
Decor, Americana, clothIng, toys, ·DV.D's. VHS,
lots of misc. 650 Trails · '!!!
"""''• .
End Rd (Co. Ad 444) ( '
"'"
mile off Buckeye Hills •4;;;;;W;;;he;;;e;;;le;;;r,;;;H;;;o;;;n;;;da""'!F;;;;;o~
Rd.
Thurman,
Follow
man ES, shift. excellent .
Signs.
condrtion 304 -812-5105
Garage Sale, Sat. · Oct.
4th
Only
9am-3pm
Boah/·~•
Home DeCOf, toys, name
brand . clothes, 11006 Sl 1969 Stra1os Bass bOat ·
Rt 7, Gallipolis. Aarn or w/100hp_ 6:v1nrude outboard,
good
shape,
Shine.
$3750
OBO,
Garage sale , Sat! Oct 4 (740)992-2892
at 45 Porterbrook Lane ;,;;;~;;;;..,.,..,.,,.,
off Centenaf'l Rd. Name
Campen / RVo &amp; ·
brand ladies, men and litTrailers
lie gi~s 'clothing, home ~=-"a"'-="""'
decor, dinene set, other RV
kitchen items, toys, misc. Serv~ce
at Carmichaer
:c!llt::;m::,·?:.-.:-:---~":':" Trailers
"Garage/Moving
·Sale- 740:446·3825
'·
Fifth &amp; Cedar. Oct. 1·5. ':'
--:':'~~--.-::-~
9am-6pm.
Chrtstmas AV Service at Carmt

"""'""'""'""'""'""'""
""""'""'""'""'""'""'"

::.,":;·~:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Chlkt'EiderlyCire ...................................".312 Truct&lt;s ........................:................................ 203.
Computers ...."""'"''""'""•""""""''"''"'""'"'314 1Jt11ltyTraD&amp;r&amp; ........,................................... 204Q
Contractors......................................;...........316 Vans ...................................................:........ 2045
Domattk:IIJanttorial ................................... 311 Want to bUy ............................................... 2050
Electrfcll .....................................................320 Flea1EstateSales .......... ;............................ 3000

10 .. 1&gt;

~,.

LOAD
ENT
M

Livulock
"'='""'a~==•
ii
:~~kh~~~ br;,;~ Ll:~~~

Yard Sole

Sale

sale,

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

::~1M 1 1011

500

Yord
Garage

Boys s1ze 6-Syrs, mliDs Rd. Apple Grove Oct 2-4
&amp; womens , follow stgns. 9-7 Lot of Misc. ttem$
33546 Bailey Run Ad
Rose Leonard 576-2635 .

Money To Lond,

311

Public Notice

!SHOP CLASSIFIED.Sl

'

Oear111irM

tlnnounce~wnts

200

Pubilohlng r o -

.

The Melgf County Budget Commission has
completed Ito apportionment ol Undivided
Local Government Revenue Fund for 2009
These revenues are baNd on projections
trom the Ohio . Department of Taxllllon
Revenue Accounting Dlvteton and are only
estlmotaa ol ·the amount of revenue that
could be received by Melga County.
Tho following Ia a complete breakdown of
the projected revenue.
Percent
Loco!
Government
Revenue
. $303,040.12
County
40.00%
Townships
30.00%
$227,280.08
VIllages
30.00%
$227,280.08
tOO.OO%
$757,800.28
Total
VILLAGES:
38.7448%
Middleport
$88,059.21
Pomeroy ·
30.1873%
$88,584.26
Recine
11.4470%
$28,018.75
6.1531%
$13,984.78
Rutland
13.4878%
$30,655.08
SyracuH
100.00%
$227,280.08 •
Total
TOWNSHIPS
$19,987.91
8.7856%
Bedford
t:f.5074%
$21,428.82
Chester
$17,003.74
7.4. 14%
Columbia
$23,513.114
·10.3458%
Lebanon.
$11,386.98.
5.0101%
Letart
$23,428:26
10.3081%
Olive ,
$16,891.01
7.43t8%
Orange
$11,357.19
8.0769%
RUtland
$19,548.36
8.8010%
Salem
$15,370.73
8.7629%
Salta bury
S1a,n&amp;.74
8.2615%
Scipio
$14,808.43
6.4275%
Sutton
S:W,280.08
100.00%
Total
Mary T. Syer-HIII
Melga County Auditor
(10)3

Or F'ax To (304) 675-5234

992-2157

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Jackie White ~ .

Public Notice ·

l\egister

• All ads must be prepaid'

' Aut01110Uva ........... ,........,............................. 804 Claaalc/An,Uques .......................................2015

Mij·sed by,
Jack Jr. &amp;
Brandy
Jack &amp; Joyce

Or Fax To

• Start Your Ada With A Kerword • Indude Camplete
Oetetlptlan t Include A Price • Avokt Abbrevlat,ona
• Indude Phone Number And Address When Needed
· • Ads Should Run 7 Days

CNA Wages, Pau:l Vaca-

lnL~ving

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Monday thru Friday
·oo a.m. to S:OQ p.m.

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Websites:
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Person, Then We Want
You To Join Ollr Team.
BIWiiPIPooJI
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Did!
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In Lovinx Memory

*

(74o&gt; 446·2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

lions, Paid Meals, Many

~lasses:

'

Meigs County, OH

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For fast _results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
is now offering the following

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•

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
US
R AD

To Place

Four Division II teams ArkansasMonticello, California, Pa.
and Michigan Tech - are in
the field. , ·
A total of 10 games in the
tournament will be televised
on the ESPN family of networks, including the four in,
NewYork.
'
Coaches vs. Cancer is a collaboration between · the
American Cancer Society and ·
National Association of
Basketball Coaches. Since ·
1996, the tournament has
raised more than $4 million
for the benefit of Coaches vs.
Cancer.

The GALLERY AT 409

'

"'

C LASS I F I E.D

Presbyt~;rian,

In Memory

I

mrtbune.- ·Sentinel - l\e

Duke, UCLA ·highlight 2K Sports.Classic field

In Memory

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

1

�'

..
'

•

Friday, October 3, 2008

www.mydallysentinel.com

· Pa1e B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Frld,ay, October 3, 2008

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Cincinn~ti QB ~ game-time decision
HUNTINGTON. W.Va. he's got enough in the mental
(AP) - The Cincinnati ~.nd .o(.thing_~ that he can St!CBearcats could use some help ceed. And'the same thtng wllh
behind center right about now. Chazz. He's a very smart kid.
Injuries have cost the He knows the offense very
Bearcat~ (3-1) their starting well. All he needs is the
and backup quarterbacks, so opportunity.
coach Brian Kelly must give
"They're e;oing to get the
redshin freshmen Zach opportunity.'
Collaros or Chazz Anderson · Whoever that is, Marshall
their first.' college start on coach Mark Snyder is asking
Friday night at Marshall (3-2). Thundering Herd fans to rattle
"I'm very confident in the him. The school is handing
guys that we've got that we out 7,500 wliite T-shirts and
can win with them," Kelly . I,000 wqite rally towels prior
said.
to kickoff.
.
The season began with for"We would jove for it ... I&lt;)
mer starter Ben Mauk be as loud as possible and use
exhausting his ap~als for an that home-field advantage,"
extra year of ehgtbility from Snyder said.
the . NCAA, and Dustin 'Snyder is more concerned
Grutza is out indefinitely with about getting his own defense
a broken leg suffered in a loss on track. The Thundering
at Oklahoma·.
Herd rank near the bottom
Tony Pike started the next · nationally in total defense,
two games but broke his left surrendering 440 yards per
forearm in last' week's 17-15 g11me. Last week West
.
.
'
~~
· t(,Uchigancornerback Morgan Trent (14) pulls down Wisconsin receiver Kyle Jefferson win over Akron and he's Virginia amassed 319-rushing
.
7) during the second quarter of an NCAA coltege football game in Ann Arbor, Mich:, expected to .miss up to a yards in a 27-3 win.
month. Collaros played thl!
On offense Marshall could~st Saturday.
•
. ·
rest of the·game·, completing n't get ,its top playmakers
•
1-of-4 passes for 2 yards. His going, turned the ball over
7-yard run on third down set three times and was limited to
up Jake Rogers' go-ahead 158 total yards, inclu.ding 39
field
goal with 7:45 left.
· on the ground .
. COLUMBUS (AP) - The for, that they still could win bark a little more, the players
Anderson
has
yet
to
attempt
Cincinnati's pass defense is
game at Wisconsin was their fourth straight Big Ten watch more film and· the
jllready going to be difficult title and an unprecedented practices sometimes become a pass this seasan. so Collaros just as brittle as Marshall's, so
. enou~h for Ohio State. Then third consecutive outright open warfare between team- would be the odds~on choice. the opportunity is there' for
from
mates. Everybody substitutes Kelly said he will make a improvement
Michtgan had to go and beat championship.
g_
a
me-time
decision
on
his
Thundering
Herd
redshirt
lbe Badgers, making them
Since then, they've won hard work for the ache of
freshman Mark Cann, who
even more . dangerous by games over · Troy .. and defeat. And the sting of the starter.
"The ftrst thing in evaluat- threw an interception, lost a
!;lacking them into a comer.
Minnesota. They know they loss passes with time.
ing
a quarterback is: Can he fumble and .had his string of
"When you're playing a
·. Now the 14th-ranked can 'l afford another slip-up.
handle
of the · three consecutive 200-yard
Buckeyes are expecting the
"Basically, we can't lose good team that didn't play as moment?theCanpressure
he
go
in
passing games snapped
No. 18 Badgers to be angry, · another one to accomplish all well as they could the week and succeed?" Kelly there
said.
against
the Mountaineers.
inspired and desperate to the goals that we set for our- before, you're going to (play "Zach's.very flfS! start was in
Wide receiver Darius
avoid ·an 0-2 start m the Big selves," tailback , Chris against) a better team than the fourth 9,uarter on the road Passmore,
ti~ht end Cody
maybe you would have (had
Ten.
"Beanie" Wells said.
down.
That
s
not
the
ideal
sitSlate
and
runmng
back Darius
The Buckeyes speak from
Wisconsin coach Bret it won)," Ohio State coach nation to put somebody in, but Marshall are looking to
~;xpenence.
Bielema said it was difficult Jim Tressel said. "That's the
: ''I definitely know that's watching the -films trom his way life is. It's our instinct to
want'·to do better when we
how we came out after the
lJSC game. Things were a lot team's 27-25 loss at didn't do as well." •
more intense in practice that Michigan last week. The
Ohio State knows if it loses
PRINCETON, NJ. (AP) - . next ~ay.
entire week. I would imagine Badgers (3-1, 0-1) led 19-0 another game. the chances of
Duke,
UCLA, Michigan arid · The Carbondale, Ill. region~
their coaches would do the before the Wolverines spun going to a third consecutive
Southern
Illinois will serve as aJ will begin Nov. 11 with
exact same thing for them," off the next 27 points. A late Bowl Championship Series
Ohio State safety Anderson Wisconsin
touchdown title game are almost nil. the regional hosts for the. 2K Arkansas·Monticello playing
Russell said in the days lead- brought the Badgers close, With Penn State and Sports Classic benefiting Massachusetts and California,
Pa. meeting SolJthern Illinois .
.ing up to Saturday's game at but a successful two-point Northwestern still unbeaten, a Coaches vs. Cancer. .
The
winners
of
the
four
The
winners meet Nov. 12.
Camp Randall Stadium. "Our conversion pass was disal- loss would put a severe crimp four-team
tournaments
At
Ann Arbor, Mich.,
team really came out with a lowed by a penalty.
in any Big Ten championship advance to the semifinals and IUPUI plays Northeastern and
chip on our shoulder. I would ."You know, in my three plans as well.
finals at New York's Madison Michigan
Tech
faces
i_magine they're goin~ to years of being here, we've
Wisconsin also risks a lot in SquareGardenonNov.20-2l. Michigan on Nov. II with the
come out the same way.'
only had to endure a loss six Saturday's
game.
The
The pairings for the region- winners playing the next day.
The Buckeyes (4-1, . l-0) times," Bielema said. "This is Bad~ers cannot afford anoih- a! rounds, which will be held
The -Los Angeles regional
·.were hurting for the first 24 the sixth time. It's not easy. er Btg Ten loss or else many Nov. 10-13, were announced starts Nov. 12 with Weber
hours.after .their 35-3, beating It's nothing that I want to ever of their team goals - playing Thursday.
·
State meeting Miami, Ohio
,at Southern California on get used to.lt's a very painful for a conference title, making
At the Durham, N.C. and Prairie View A&amp;M play•Sept. 13, then gradually experience, but it's something it into a major bowl game - . regional on Nov. 10, Georgia ing UCLA, which has n:ached
turned that disappointment you have to endure.''
might already have evaporat- Southern will play Houston the NCM tournament's Final
Teams endure by rededicat- ed even before the weather and Presbyterian faces Duke. Four the last three years. The
into motivation. They vowed
.that they still had·a lot to play ing themselves. The coaches ·has turned cold.
The winners will meet the winners play on Nov. 13.

f

}Jadgers angry after disappointing loss

rebound from a quiet showing
at West . Vtrgima. Passmore
was held to a season-low 39
receivin&amp;,yar~ and _will get a
challenge Fnda~ .IUght from ·
Cincinnati cornerbacks Mike
Mickens and DeAngelo
Smith.
.
"It's an opportunity for
him," Snyder said. ''These
guys are being looked at by
every NFL seout." ·
:
Last year against Marshall,
Mickens' interception and
fumble recovery set up
Cincinnati's ftrst two touchdowns. and the Bearcais won
40-14.
·With its inexperience a~
quarterback
this
time;,
Cincinnati will need to get its
ground game going and
Snyder envisions a heavy
dose of quarterback runs. The
Bearcats have yet to produce
a 100-yard rusher this season:.
Cincinnati's offensive lint)!,
which hasn't allowed a sack
in two games, wtll also be
tested.
·
•
, "We're confident," .said
Bearcats right guard Trevor
Canfield. "We're moving the
ball with any quarterbac~
back there. Our offensive line
is confident in keeping bini
clean. No offense to coacl\
Kelly. but you could put
coach Kelly back there and
we'll be all right."
.
The game will feature twQ
of the nation's top kick return•
ers and receivers. Cincinnati's
Marshwan Gi !yard leads the
nation at 36 yards per kickoff
return, one yard more than
Darius Marshall. And like
Passmore.• Gilyard has three
I00-yard receiving games. ·

E·mall
·classified@mydailytribune.com

'&lt;lr:ribune

..

ca~r;~::;
.

. Or Fax To

NOTICES
:PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
glven thai on Saturday,
.October 4, 2008 at
'0:00 a.m., a public
ute wttl be held at 211
J1
Second
St.,
l'omeroy, Ohio. The
Farmere Bank and Sav·
lngo Compan~ Is selllng lor caoh In hand or
.certHied check the fol·
lowlllg collateral:
2000 Chevrolet S10
1GCCS1949Y8132948
1998 Ford Wlndatar SW
2FMDA5149WBA36687

Public Noli&lt;l! i'n New!:pipers.
Your Rightlo Kaow, Deli~r!d R~·l tn V1mrlloor.

serves the right to bid
atthiSBale, and to wHhdraw the above cotlatoral prior to sale.
Further, The Farmers
Bank and Savings
Company reserves the
rlghtto reject any or all
bids submitted.
The above described
collateral will be· oold
"as ls·where Is", with
,no axprasaed ·or lm·
plied warranty given.
For further lnformetlon,
or lor an appointment
to "inspect collateral,

LlghHoot, an Incompetent.
Unless exceptions .are
flled thereto, said ac·
count will be set for

hearing before said
Court on the 4th day of
November,

2008,

at

which time said account will be consld·
ered and continued
from day to day until 11-

nally disposed ot.
Any person Interested
may file wriHen excep-

tion to said account or
to matters pertaining to
The Farmers Bank and prior to sale date con- the execution of the
Savings
Company, tact Cyndle or Ken at trust, not leas than five
days prior to the date
Pomeroy, Ohio r• 740-992·2136.
(10j1,2,3
set for hearing.
J S Powell
Card of Thanks
Judge
. .
Pubilc Notice
Common Pleas ,Court,
Probate Division
IN THE COMMON Meigs Coonty, Ohio
The Family of
PLEAS COURT, PI;IO· (10) 3
.
the late
BATE DIVISION MEIGS
Re~·a L. Vaughan
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
on
wrslr ro thank a!I
SETTLEMENT OF .AC·
SAVINGS
rcfarives. friend.\
COUNTS, PROBATE
Wid neit:llbor~ for
COURT
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
rhe numy ki11d
Accounts and vouchM
e."({!'t'ssions of
ers ot the following
.vympathy, cards
· named fiduciary has
been flied In the Prow1d dunalw1r s to
bate Court, Metga
chamy recei ved
County, Ohio lor ap:during our scul
·proval 8nd settlement.
ESTATENO. 32502- The
frJSS ~ ,
1
I
1 ~~'
Third Account of John
::Special th(mh to
D. LtghHoot, guardian
' ,.
the Ovetbrook
,.
of
ea· 1
tatethe
of person
Francis and
Delbert
: ~~~~~~~
" R~hallilitatir"n

Cemer. Dr.
DougiaJ Hrmter
F(ltnily Practice,
O'Bft11ess
Hospital Staff. '

Holzer Hospice,
Cremeens Funeral
Home. Rev. Brian
Dunham/or is his
comforting '
thoughts. and to
rilL many friends
. able to anend the
burial service.

Happy Ad

Happy Ad

HEY DAVE. ..
DRUMMlN'
TO THE TUNE
OF THE "BIG 50,
HAPPY BIRTHDAY
.
LUV, Sts·
.

t Advancid Charcoal Art .
Four Total Classes (One night per
week &amp; art materials)
Thursdays (6 p.m. lo 8 p.m.)
Bll!linning October 9, 2008 ,
$tOO/person

CITY
GETAWAY
October 10, 2008
to October 12, 2008
Weekend Tripi
Tropicana Resort &amp; Casino
Beachlront &amp; Boardwalk
$249/person (double occupancy)
Private jet transportation lrom
Charleston, WV
Must be 21 years of age · ·
Gladly accept cash, check,
money order and credit cards
Please contact
PVH Community Relations
to make reserVations,

(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326
LIMITED SEATS!

Mizway Tavern
lues- Corn Hole Tour. 7 pm
Thurs- PoQI Tournament B pm
Friday- Karaoke 9-1
Sat· Band Vertical Reign 9-1

Coin Show
October 5th
9am '3 pm
1Holtdav Inn -Gallipolis, Ohio
Oh·Kan Coin Club

Broad.Run Gun Club
Factory, Slug &amp; Seeped Rim Fire
Sunday 12-noon
Meeting &amp; Election of Officers at

Ham

I Introduction to Chlrcoat Art
Four Total Classes (One·nighl per
week &amp; art materials) ·
Tuesdays (6 p.m. to 8 p.m.)
Beginning October 14, 2008
$100/person
I Beginner Youth Art
.
Four Total Classes (One n1ghl per
week &amp; art materials)
,
Pastel, waterc~or &amp; oil instruction
Ages 8 to 18 years ol age
·
Saturdays (1 p.m. to 3 p.m.)
Beginning Octobet11, 2008
$140/person
I Introduction to Stained Gtaas Art
November 1, 2008
One day only
. 9:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.
$155/person (incluqes stained
starter kit &amp; instruction)
II you a)ready rn.ve a starter kil, ·
then insttUCtlon is $75.
All classes will be held at

409 Main Street, Point Pleasant, WV.
Plellt cell (304) 812·4625
to reserve a seat in the class. Some
of the classes have limited seating.

FLU Sf:tOT.
CLINIC
Saturday, October 4
9 • 11 am
Holzer Clinic
Meigs
BB East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy~ Ohio

of

Memory of

Nellie West
on her hirtlrday
·oct. 4th.

You are thought of
'often and missed
greatly by your
firiettds at the

I '

Senior Center.

Hardly a day goes
by that I dmtl
thmk ofyol4 and ·
remember good

You were
one of a kind.

limes.

Y-our Friend,
~

}. }. Handley
You went away
one year ago
roday,
and did not say
good bye. ··
We know you are
at home in ·
heaven pn high.

Should .I nclude These Items
To Help Get Response •••

Ohio Valley

YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED
Now you can have borders and oraphics
~
added to your classified ads
.fa~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
E!!
Graphics SOC for small
$1.00 for Iaroe

Djsplay Ads

Dally ln·Column: 9:00a.m.

All Dlspl•y: 12 Noon 2

Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day'lii Paper

Bu•ln••• Days Prior To
Publication

Sunday In-Column: 9:00 a.m.
For Sulld•v• Pape:r

Sunday Dlsplav: 1:00
Thursday for Sundays

POLICIES: OhiO Vlll.y Publllhlng re..vesthe right to edit, ra)ect. or ctncel•y 1d It any time. Errore mu1t be reported on the aret dly of puDIICMion end thl
Trtbori&amp;-SentiMI-flegltter wHI be reapof.
' lblelor no morelhln the coal of thfl 1~1 occupied by lhe error and only the flrllinMrtJon, We thlll nGt bt lllble lor
any lOP or upentre thai reault1 from t a publlcatton or,omltslon ot an advertiHmanl. CarrectiGn will tMI madtln thl llrlt avallabla ~ltlon. ·Box number Ida
are atwayt confldanllel. ·Current rate card tppllee ·All reel eiiMe edwerlllementt are aubject to tha Federal Fair Houalng Act or 1968. • Thla newapaP.r
accepts only http wanted ada meeting EOE staildllfdi.. we Will not knowll'lgly acCept any aclvertlalng In vlolatlol'l or the lew. wm not bt rtaponalbM tor any
.rrot"lln an ad taken ow..- flit phone.

I

l

jkii,;;;;;;iYi,~;;.;;;;;;;t;;;i__________..___

Basement

tho ~ghtlo odl~

Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee Local references fum1shed. Established 1975. Call 24 Hrs
740-446-o870, Rogers
Basenient Waterproofing.

Loot &amp; Found

reject or cancel any
ad at any time.
Errors Must
~oportod on tho

4 small dogs found in
NOTICE Borrow Smart
Crown City area 3 wllh.
Contact the Ohio Oivlcollars, 2 white, 2 ~lack,
sion of Financial lnstrtu2 look like they ha\le
lions Office of ConsUmer
poodle
in
them.
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
740-256·6515
Superior . Home Mainte- nance your home or oD·
nance
~ Carpentry, taln a loan. BEWARE of
Noticea ,
Plumbing,
Electrical , requests for any'' large
Rentals, No Job to Small advance
payments
of
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY Reasonable
Prices. fees or msuranCe. Call
PUBLISHING CO. rae-.. 339·3442 or 446-2805
ihe Office of Consumer
ommends that you 9o
Aff1ars
toll
free
at
Ousiness wit(l people you
Other Services
1-866-278-0003 to learn
know, and NOT 10 send ::-"""'~=~=•c:-! 1f the mortgage broker or
~
h lhe · mal·1 Pet
Cremations.
money 111roug
lender , Is properly li.1
h
1
11
t
74().446·3745
1
un 1 you ave nves ga censed. (This Is a public
. lng the offerif"lg.
George's ~ Portable saw- . service
announcement
mill ; don 1t haul. your Logs from the Ohio Valley
to ~e Mill . JUSt call Publishing Company)
304·675·1957

Prof.uionol S.tW:eo

0
0
t!
0

'

TURNI;D DOWN ON

auiin... &amp; Trode
School

CNA'S &amp; ,RESIDENT AS- SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
SISTANTS.Interviews
No Fee Unless We Win!
Are Now Be1ng COn• ..~-• For CNA &amp; Res!·· ~
C!"-1·,;,66;,;6~·56,;,.2·.33;,.4,;,5~"'
uu..mu
dent Ass1stan1 Positions. A!l types home remodel-

•

H You Are A Caring, En- 1ng from leaK., taucats. to

1

Othtlrr ,Benefits. Ravens-

r---:==-=---,
r·

R

Required. E.O.E.
.
CLASSIFIED INDEX
H ...

N ..............................................

lolt&amp; Found ...............................................215

MtmorjmtankYou .....
l-'"'"'"flo
Notlcos .................: ................................... 225
~son~rs ................................................... 230
wanted ...........,_......,.................................. 235
M ..................

Collages and.Schools 12748

SHOP
CL.ASSIFIEDS

j~~§~~~-w~ood~~C1e:re~Cejn:te:r,:t:t:t3J~~io::';~~~~J
BARGAINS
n ..

College

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayr 740 _446 _4367
,_800.214 _0452
gelliPfll 1scareercollege.edu
Aceredltad MamberAccreditl"gCouncll!orlndependent

new construction; t5+yrs
experience call Matt@
M·N·S
Construction,
(740,)992·3437
- or
740.444·1308-

Wash1ngton St., Ravenswood, WV, References

Llglla'................................·.. J............... 100
, AMounComettll .................................... 200
, Blrl!tday/Annlvonory................................205
' Hippy Adt....
210

Galllpaii&amp;Carear

Recreatlona1Vehlcltl ...............................1000

ATY ........................................................... 1005
Blcyclet ...................................................1010
Bolls/Acceiaortel ...................................-1015
ClilperiRVs &amp; Trailers ....., .....................,10,20
Motoreyclet ...............................................1D25

Other .............:....................................., .....1030
Want to buy ...............................................1035
Automotlve .................:..............................2000

1

www.cOmics.com
&lt;a&gt;2008 by
Inc
&amp;-:::.::::.::::::.;;.:;::;::;,:_
________..::.:::::::..,:::!.,:;:.:.:.;::;:;,J·

fann.Equlpment
Mitcallaneous
_;;...,iiiii;iai~~~;; ;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;~;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;,;;;;;;;
INTEGRITY, Berber Carpet $6.95 yd.
40 00
I
:t:
KIEFERBUit.:'
carpet remnans $ .
VALLEY
HORSE/UVE- &amp; up. Mollohan cap,et
STOCK
TRAILERS. 2")12 Easte,m Ave. Galli-

EBY,

MAX

f-

EQUIP- pol ~. Ohoo 741)-446·7444
TR.AILERS
SS
' Jet Aeration Motors repaired, new
rebuilt h"l
stock. Call Ron Evans.
&amp;
·
'
,:;1·;:80:;,0:;;;
·5::,37:,;·9::;528:;;::;,._ _ _
H&amp;R Single Barrel, 20
GA. Spo"sman "Loog
''
Range" 32" Barrel, Rare,
$195; Also have 12 Stl·
ver
'
Dollars ·
(740)533-3870

HOMEStEADER

:~er

;;.;;;;on New

Real Eltlle Rtntale..............,.................... asoo
• .........._..
342 A
~~
"~
PtoiiiHn•·~·-·...~ .. -.......................
partma•-•OWnhouses ......................... ;J;~W
~lro .................................................M! CGntmtrelll ..........:.................... ..............3510
ROoflng...........:.............................................346 Cotl:lomlnlums..........................................3515

i
: Slcurlty.:......................................... ............. 348

HoUitl for Rtnt ........................................3520

' Tu/Accoun11ng ........................................ 350

land(Acmgej ..................................... .3525

1

1

TraveLI'Entertllnmtnt ........:......................... 352 Storege ...............................................

3S35

, Anancltl... ............................."""""'"'"'"'"'400 WllnttoAent ........., .......~....
3540
: RnanclaiSer\llctl ........................................ ManutacturtdHoulfng .............................4000
' ~~nceto, :::~....................~....................... :~~ LoiiMov......................." ......................................~tO
, _,IU7 """'"'"' """'"'""'"""""''"""""" ';... •
...................................................... ,.w
H

M ·. .. . . . .

................ , ; ...

: Educetlon.................................................... 500 R.entlllt .......:............................................... 4015
: Buolneu&amp;TrodeSdtool .......................... 505
' lnstNCtlon&amp;Tralnlng .. - ................ ,_....... 510

Salet .........................................................4C20
Suppllel .......:............................................. 4025

\ lllloni..........:..............................................St5 WtntJQ Buy .......................................:....... 4030
i Ptrl0nii .......................................................S20 RIIIHI Proparty ...........................- ............ 5000
: Anl1111la .....................................................800 RMO~ Property lor &amp;ilt.......................... 5025
~
·
6115 A--·•
' Ani n I Suppl'".........................................
_, Prope rty lor renI ........................... 60611 ·
: Horlel.... - ... - .............. ~ ..................,. ..........,610 Employment................\..............................&amp;000
' LIYeltOCk......................................................:: Ac~ntlntflnanc:lal ................................: :

: Ptts. ..................1''"''""''''''""'''R'''"" '"'"'" "

::;:..,~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::
705

Adm nlttrattvWProfatlonal.....................

·~=~~~:: :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ·

Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar
Young cuning orcha~d grass ffil)( for
Concrele
A:ngle,
cat. 4x5 •
rolls
inside. ghet~nel.f Fl~ ~r, ;~eel
740·446·2075
ra ng or ralfls,
ve_ _ _ _;,....__ ways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Hay for sale 800 lb. cost Scrap Metals Open Mon.
9 wk. old puppies,free to $35 per bales, ~2001b Tue.
Wed
&amp; . Fn,
good home, 2 lemale &amp; t cost $50 per bales. Call sem·4·30pm
Cloeed
r;nale will make good 446 _19470r 794 _1151
Thurs.
Sat
&amp;
sun.
iallll dogs 304-6 12.-0183
f74:::0;::
·4;::46:;:·7~3::;oo:,.,...,._!""'--..;;;;;;W~o~n;;:.IO;To~Buy;;:_= Pole Bam 30x40xtO only
- - - -.....:--_, ;;;
$6,995, o.ther SIZOS, Free
AKC German Shepherd Firewood tor sale call Delivery an.773 _8356 .
Pllps, 6 left from liner of 446-1947or794-1t51
11, only . 3 males . Dam
Remrngton
Model
f 11
and 1re are amy
pets. wanted to Bu'f' .Paw 11·12ga. $~. Remlng9 wks oldc reduced to Paw&amp;.
Bleck
Walnuts, ·ton
Model
tt46·12ga.
$350.304-773-6062
Gall740-698-6060
$275. Both have 30 ln .
:;:::::,;,;:::;;:,:;~;;;;;...,...,.., full choke, nice guns.
~---~~~~~":
740-379·2860, II no an·
CKC Registered Mini
swer leave message
Dachshunds
2
long'
haired females $350 and
·want To~~
4$
_ shoFrlil~at ""sdhots.maalndes
;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;....
,.,
iii
Buy1ng tools seU or trade
wormed.
Please
call Antique Flea Market, Pt. mechaf'lic-carpenter lawn
74b·386·8445
' or Pleasant , WV et the &amp; garden power tools.
740.645-2396 may leave West VIrginia State Farm Call 740-388-1515 or cell
a message..
Museum, October 4th &amp; 740-208-&lt;&gt;320
·
5th hours:9-4, Actvertis·
Sto
re M'lk Bot Absolute Top Dollat
sil
•
•
•
tree to good home, baby mg.
new~ • 1
kittens ·
S04-8B _
tie\ Collect!bles, Free \lerlgold
coins, ' any
2 2385 adr:mssion &amp; appraisalS, •10KI14KI16K gold ;ewleave message.
Dealer Space Available, elry, dental gold, pre
.,.,.--~~-~~1 COntact Charlie , Perry, 1935
US
currency,
Give
away.
gray/white
tom
740 _446•7348

s

300

hom~.

~,.... ..... ... .... ...................... .......

-~

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

Free·

• Merchandloe ............................................. 900 EmploymentA-itt........................... .61120

'• Antlqutl............... ............. ....... ....................905

.......

Food Senllceo ............................: .........6024

: Bargain 811emtnf .......................... '"""""'920
' ColltCIItHes .................................................. 92:S
' Com-930
I
t""' ___,, .....-........................ ..............
• EquijlmlntiSuppllet.................................. 935
: Floof·~ lllrbtl
,....... ~:..·;~·:~· ............................. : ·

Htlp anted- Gtntrll...................... - ... ,..... 6028
Law Enforcemenl ......................................6030
Msnunoiii"G'I.Aime111~...........
I ...., ...... .,.. ......
6032
....... ...........

'
I

ltn:\lllia

'
I

'
'
;

011
~vniiiii\I'V4HI ·.......................... ..
Fumlturt ...................................................... 950
ltobby.!lunt I Spon..................,................955
KldlsComer .........:.......................................HO
WMisctllaneoybu............ ~................................961705
ant.to Y-~................................................
Vard Sale ............. .. ., ......... ...... .............
UW'I

m

•
Potbelly , piglet,

housebroken, hes shots
&amp;cag8 (740)992-4148

Enttrtalnment ............................................ 6022

• ~ ................- ..............................910
AucUons~ ....................................................i1S

. 1

_..

GOYtrMitnt6 Fedef11Jobt ............:....... 6026

Manogemeni/Supervloory .....................:.61134
~•.n 1ca .....,.....,......................
~

•

Fann Equlpm,m·

1 '"""""'""""""""'" ' "'""'""' "'"'" '"V~HV
H . . . . . . . . . .. ...

Mualctl................... ....................................6040
Part-llme-Temporarles .......................... II042
Rutauranll ..........................,.................... 6044
Salea ....................................................... ~... 6048
Technleal Tradti .......................... ,............ 60SO
Ttltllalll'actory ... ............................ r ...... 61l5l

per~-

,

Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
rlsedl Ch k
~~~
lnve~o~OU1 . ~;
www CAAEQ com
Car
mlc~el · · eQutpmen~
. s-24t2
740 44

Hllge Yard Sale · something for ~veryone in
Ches~ire ~lgh.S mile.s0 ·out
554 r01n
I on xyer
Rd. house on hill. StartlnQ Oct. 3 thru ? Omi1
Sunday.

-..=M;;i-'laneou;;;;;=
.=•';;;;;;;;;

f&lt;t

1800
miles,
$7600. 388·8380

blacl&lt;;

~!""'----~~=
Ka-saki
NlnJO.
250 under.... 1500 miles

"'2007

watch for signs

2007
Kawasaki
Ninja
250 under 1500 miles
Sat Oct 3-4 741 Adams· red helmet and tank beg
v1He Rd. Mason. WV. $2,800.740-645-1912
Bedroom suites, Hull &amp;
Other
McCoy PoHery. Depres·
s1on
Glass,
Fostoria, For sale 1986 Honda
Bltnko and fenton, other scooter Elite 250. 10K
glassware and crocks, miles, call (·740)949·2220
Household
furniture,
some antiques. office
equipmenVmedicat

~~n~doo-r"=E~sl~at~eSa~l~e,;F~11~&amp;

;;;;;;=='-";i;;;;;=.=

;'::'"':~~- m~~~~~:"',!;

Stra~utoma~BO~

place, jewerty, t925 8&amp;0 :
Aallroad
lamp, tools, 256-1652 or256-1233

==:~·s. m2n~
,

0~;

~~~-=-~~=

':::":
items. All Sale Ffnal Not 2007 Honda VTX 1300R
Responsible
tor
Accl- 1800 miles black $7800~
dents
388-8380

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

4 fam!ly, Thurs-Sat. be- L.arge Garage Sa.le. 113 97 Chrysler LHS autos1pe Me•gs Ce!p&lt;ll, Mid· Gartield HIS.· F11 &amp; Set metic, a11. $1600 OBO.
~dl~epo~rt,~Oh":":"-:-~~:":' 9am -4pm,
Household, 256·6002 or 256·1233
5-Family Yard Sale. Oct. Kids, Tools, • Ptaltzgraff ,_....----~
96 Caviler 2 door 4 cyl. 5
3 &amp; 4 . Rain or Shine. Village.
2534 Georges Ck. Ad. Movrng Sale 2702 Third speed with rear spoiler &amp;
St
5 yra&lt;;use., · 101 · sun roof, AIC, CO. Extra
Ladies 3 thru pluS, mens · .,
lg. thru 2x. Infant boy, girt 4th-6th.lumiture.houseclean lpoks and runs
ld
d loth 1
great" with a 3 monltl
9- 18 mo; 8- 10 clothing. ho goo s,c es, oys
warranty $2500.
&amp; S
Curtains, Queen bed set. Moving sale Oct. 3rd-4th, Auto
Sales
rock
casseHes, west· toam-5pm Vance Rd, 740·669-4605 . cell any·
ems , lots of mi:,;c. •
signs, will be posted, 3 tim
._
At.
,
Friday
fam•ly, n1ce ' clean miSC. ~·~~"":"'~~~~
124
51146 5
&amp;
Saturday, items. '(740)992-6833
Q2 Honda Accord E'&lt;, 4
(740)590-3542
Saturday, Home Decor, door,
auto.
lOaded,
;;,.;;~~;..,;;,~~~ nice
women's
clothes 92,000 miles. 245·5526
9 families, Oc1 . 5-7. (
9am-5pm,
(985·3929) . 16· 26 1·
mens,
baby Pomeroy Pot1ce Dept.will
next to Eastern School, 4 items, 23 SouthPark
be a.uc1ioning off off a
wheeler, tires, car ramps, Saturd~y- october 4th. 2000 Jeep Grand Cherotractor w/snowoblade, OJ 2008,
9iim-4pm,
·
1 b ty shop 33932 Beshan Ad kee on Oct. 11 .0801
eQutpmen · eau
· 1O:OOAM al .Pomeroy Vii·
station, furn iture,· clothes ~ Trussell r~dence exit
tage Haii.Starttng bid will
tbys. Rawleigh Prodllcts. at R8cine exit ol1
be $1500.Contact Chief
lots of m1sc.
Rt.33, 1hen left 4 mHes
Marl&lt;. Proffitt lor details.
to Bashan, top of the

s

~~1~bh;:o~ram!7n " ;a?~

proof/mint
sets,
dia·
moods, MTS Coin Shop. Parkmg Lot ot lhe Ma~~n
151 2nd Avenue, Galli· J
Vi d St Pt Pleas
pons. 446-2842
ar,
an
..., ·
ant. Plus size clou,es.
A~lod, restofToemtavdmoihiRred, lo·o~
Yard Sale
household goods, baby
•ca e on
· . " --=~i;i;;i.i;;;=;;;;;;;; clothes, 1t~ms , children
At
33
Recrne •
•
1456 Jackson Pike • Fri clothes of all sizes, deco(Pari&lt;&amp;Aide)
e,.-it, &amp; Sat, Oct. 3&amp;4 from rations , Home Interior. &amp;
74().949·2246
9· 4pm . Fumlture\ build -· more, more, mnre.
Furniture
ing . suppli~s ,
exercise . Friday, Saturday &amp; Mon·
equip. tann.ng bed, · pr~ d
Ed~ Adk'
56
11"
AHen
· Hllda,
ay. . ·gam-?,
tns.
Ethan
ClaSSIC ana, .to'fS, books, mo VI8S
Glasstop
Manor dtning table and and much more.
, tables,
Llb&lt;ary
tebte,
four chairs,Queen Anne
Fam,·•· Yerd Sale E. toys bqcleS
2
fr01n 1970's. $450,
'1
;;.;..--..:..,-:-~~~
Main Street. Pomeroy. Garage Sale. 593 Deb·
Oct tthruOct 4 Wed.·Sat
bie Dr. Oct 41h. 9am. 2
Yard Sale Oct. 4·6 Knick Blue
cu~ured marble
~
Knacks
Cllnalns
bed- vanity tops tor 60~ base.
Stand-up
tanning
beO spreads etc 199 Hem· sewing machine, house$1200. 74Q-367·7762
lock
out Eve'llreen
wares , clothing , m1sc.

-_,.--.,=.,..

' ~~~~10:.::: ........................................... 125 e•a~~al pt""u"m"'blng'"''"''''"'"'"'''""''''""''""''611t8

' n••

;;;i;;i;;;;=;;;;

Free to good
Jee- (740)992-5066,
gle 1/2 Beagle 112 Jack cola@sucldenlink net
Russell. 8 wks old, 1 (F)
left. 740-367-0141
GIBBS
ANTIQUES-

C~I ...................,.........,......................... 60~D
1 Gtrcten1Pnxluct.......................................7f0 Conltrudlon .................,,,;,,,1, ...... .... .. ....... 6012
• Hay,Ftld,Seed1 Graln ...............................715 Drtvers6DeUvery ............................,;....... 6014
'
•' ·nd
720 Ed
ion
.
611t6

: FarmEqulpmtnt ..........................................

--..=.;An;;,;6;;cp;;;uu;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

'

o-

bllrner,gas
'neating
stove, decorative wall fire

deh~-

h11t. gas range,
m1difier, plush recliners. dressers, ottrer
fumiture.
tableS1
chairs,
small
appliances, cloth!ng, baskets, o~ high chalt,
collectibles, fuM . set · Of
dinnerware. &amp; much
morel (740)949-2660
Screws. nails . elect, sup·
plies. tools• &amp; more, Oct.
3-4 . 9am-3pm, 45555 SR
124 Rac1ne Oh
S
Winter
Garage
a'le
Sat.Oc t. 4,9:00Caldwell's ,
VrneSt.Racine.coats ,kid'

We have quality SUV's
w1th warranty. Pnced to
Sell. Blazer. . Satt)m Vue,
Buick AemHtZ\IOUS. Visit
us
at
(gocookmotors.com).
Stop
or
call
740-446.()103, 326 Jackson Pike
C~KMOTORS

T-.-'1

~

~;,;;;;;~;;;i;i--==·

1966 Chevy t ton dump
truck 4WD crew cab 460
engine call after 4PM
441-0568 or 709-174-4.

Ward To au,

••,:::clo~the:.:;:s·;:;:",:::•n::;s~'""!'~ =:;;;,;;;;;""'!;;;;;;~;0;;;~

Yard Sale 2925 Maple Want to buy Junk Cars,
Ave Sat Oct 4th 8·~
caii74Q-;l88-Q884

-

f

TrailerS

~74:0:·4~46~·3=82=5~~==

1
red helmet and lank bag
clothes, Ahtlques, guns, S2,8oo.r4 645 _1912
namebrand
Jr
g
rl's
tumlture &amp; lots ol miSc ..

Whi~~

:~~=.~::::::·~·.:~:·.:·.~~·.:~::·.::::~·.::-_:::·.:~~:·.:::: ::~:~~.~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~ .,.,.------- Hay sq. bales. 1st &amp; 3rd

! Plumbtnt'£~....,................................ 340

Garage Sale 2118 St At.
141 Oct 2 3 4 M
· ' ' · ens
wrnter
J&amp;Cket,
suils,
sweaters, tee shirts. MiHtary clothing, boots. Antique
furniture.
Harley
DavidsOn leather 1ackets,
shirts,
helmets.
Com·
puter desks, sweeper,
misc.

.2

Commarc11VIndustrlal .............................. 2020

1

iiiYS~6;;;t"!l.!;i;;;;ou;;;t0.J;;;e,;;;ry;;;s~R~un

Items, counter stoOls, Ia· chael

11 1

' Bulldlhg Materllls ....................................... 306

, l"""lnco .................................................. 332 HouMOforSala...................................... 3025
• 1.11!11 Senlco ...........................,,,,,,,,,,,,.334 Unci (Ac-)..,,,,,,,,,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.. 3030
; ~ ....................................336 l.qtt ............................................................ 3035
, Othlr'Swvfct1 ............_:............................. 338 wanttobuy................................................3040

4th

"""'""'""'""'""'""'"" ble &amp; chair'S , computer
Yard Sale
items,
krtchen
1tems,
~~""!;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;~= charcoal grill, mise 1tems
2 familY yard sale. and
f .1 yard sa1e.
B d's 1n oor 3 am1y
II
N sea
Xqmasues,. Lonagaber,rger,oyH.H, Oct 3-:4, 6:30·4, Red
R
G
h
Ti
items,
Terl)'
McGuire · ose
reen ouse, . ornado Ad (off New Hrgh
40720 Laurel Cliff Rd.,
. ,
,.
F" &amp; Sot'? ·
way)
AIK&gt;ne,
mens,
IIIUrs., II.
':r
women's, . boys
:H·6T.

CARGO
EXPRE
&amp;
CARGO/CONCESSION
TRAILERS.
B+W
GOOSENECK FLATBED
"'"99. v1=• OUR EN·
call JR 740256·6160 or ~·
""
304-751·6672
TIRE TRAILER ,INVEN·
TOfiYAT
~~":":"-.-:-'::""::"""~ WWW.CARMICHAEL·
Polled Hereford Bulls &amp; TRAILERS.COM
Haters, 4 to 5 ' months 740-446-3825
old. Call304·862·2n4
, . . , . . , ; . , . , . , . , , Hot Tub, 6 person; Like ~M":::"~'"'::y~s"""::s-=:t~Oct~
New· with cover, Must
u I· am. . . a
.
Pels
Garden &amp; Produce Sell· Moving. $1600. 4· Npm 602 Center·
~74:::0;,::·64:;::5~-33~33~·--- potnt Rd . Just off At. 279
FREE!!!
Adult
mother Kiwi Just E. of Syracuse House Shutters. various ~~!~~~a:! te;nen~ez~~t
124
60
;;9,.Rt,.. . , ,, •'
$ ·
clothes,
purses.
baby
Bul!
do9
pups. =H
F-C• •--• Gral o3•04~·6::;75;:;;·50~15"""="""- items, hunting &amp; house
740.669-4206
~171~·~-~·:;.·;;-~:;.·
AND USED STEEL
-:ho-ld.it•~o-:ms• .~:":"~....,..

:~:~R~.~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :;,~ -~ PP':; a:~m~~= ).'f;,; 40; ,;19;,;9; ,~:; ;•74 ;

Flntnclal.......................................................322 CtmeltfyPiot&amp; .......................................... 30DS
lfoltlh ........................................................ 326 Comman:lal......................................, ........30t0
HHting&amp;.Coollng....................................... 328 Condomlnluma .......................................... 3015
Homelmprowmonll3311
. ForSalebyOwner .....................................3020

Oct

Garage Sale, Rain or
qpcreilti Oni\1
Shine, Oct. 3 &amp; 4. Home 1000
Veh1cles
Decor, Americana, clothIng, toys, ·DV.D's. VHS,
lots of misc. 650 Trails · '!!!
"""''• .
End Rd (Co. Ad 444) ( '
"'"
mile off Buckeye Hills •4;;;;;W;;;he;;;e;;;le;;;r,;;;H;;;o;;;n;;;da""'!F;;;;;o~
Rd.
Thurman,
Follow
man ES, shift. excellent .
Signs.
condrtion 304 -812-5105
Garage Sale, Sat. · Oct.
4th
Only
9am-3pm
Boah/·~•
Home DeCOf, toys, name
brand . clothes, 11006 Sl 1969 Stra1os Bass bOat ·
Rt 7, Gallipolis. Aarn or w/100hp_ 6:v1nrude outboard,
good
shape,
Shine.
$3750
OBO,
Garage sale , Sat! Oct 4 (740)992-2892
at 45 Porterbrook Lane ;,;;;~;;;;..,.,..,.,,.,
off Centenaf'l Rd. Name
Campen / RVo &amp; ·
brand ladies, men and litTrailers
lie gi~s 'clothing, home ~=-"a"'-="""'
decor, dinene set, other RV
kitchen items, toys, misc. Serv~ce
at Carmichaer
:c!llt::;m::,·?:.-.:-:---~":':" Trailers
"Garage/Moving
·Sale- 740:446·3825
'·
Fifth &amp; Cedar. Oct. 1·5. ':'
--:':'~~--.-::-~
9am-6pm.
Chrtstmas AV Service at Carmt

"""'""'""'""'""'""'""
""""'""'""'""'""'""'"

::.,":;·~:::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Chlkt'EiderlyCire ...................................".312 Truct&lt;s ........................:................................ 203.
Computers ...."""'"''""'""•""""""''"''"'""'"'314 1Jt11ltyTraD&amp;r&amp; ........,................................... 204Q
Contractors......................................;...........316 Vans ...................................................:........ 2045
Domattk:IIJanttorial ................................... 311 Want to bUy ............................................... 2050
Electrfcll .....................................................320 Flea1EstateSales .......... ;............................ 3000

10 .. 1&gt;

~,.

LOAD
ENT
M

Livulock
"'='""'a~==•
ii
:~~kh~~~ br;,;~ Ll:~~~

Yard Sole

Sale

sale,

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

::~1M 1 1011

500

Yord
Garage

Boys s1ze 6-Syrs, mliDs Rd. Apple Grove Oct 2-4
&amp; womens , follow stgns. 9-7 Lot of Misc. ttem$
33546 Bailey Run Ad
Rose Leonard 576-2635 .

Money To Lond,

311

Public Notice

!SHOP CLASSIFIED.Sl

'

Oear111irM

tlnnounce~wnts

200

Pubilohlng r o -

.

The Melgf County Budget Commission has
completed Ito apportionment ol Undivided
Local Government Revenue Fund for 2009
These revenues are baNd on projections
trom the Ohio . Department of Taxllllon
Revenue Accounting Dlvteton and are only
estlmotaa ol ·the amount of revenue that
could be received by Melga County.
Tho following Ia a complete breakdown of
the projected revenue.
Percent
Loco!
Government
Revenue
. $303,040.12
County
40.00%
Townships
30.00%
$227,280.08
VIllages
30.00%
$227,280.08
tOO.OO%
$757,800.28
Total
VILLAGES:
38.7448%
Middleport
$88,059.21
Pomeroy ·
30.1873%
$88,584.26
Recine
11.4470%
$28,018.75
6.1531%
$13,984.78
Rutland
13.4878%
$30,655.08
SyracuH
100.00%
$227,280.08 •
Total
TOWNSHIPS
$19,987.91
8.7856%
Bedford
t:f.5074%
$21,428.82
Chester
$17,003.74
7.4. 14%
Columbia
$23,513.114
·10.3458%
Lebanon.
$11,386.98.
5.0101%
Letart
$23,428:26
10.3081%
Olive ,
$16,891.01
7.43t8%
Orange
$11,357.19
8.0769%
RUtland
$19,548.36
8.8010%
Salem
$15,370.73
8.7629%
Salta bury
S1a,n&amp;.74
8.2615%
Scipio
$14,808.43
6.4275%
Sutton
S:W,280.08
100.00%
Total
Mary T. Syer-HIII
Melga County Auditor
(10)3

Or F'ax To (304) 675-5234

992-2157

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Jackie White ~ .

Public Notice ·

l\egister

• All ads must be prepaid'

' Aut01110Uva ........... ,........,............................. 804 Claaalc/An,Uques .......................................2015

Mij·sed by,
Jack Jr. &amp;
Brandy
Jack &amp; Joyce

Or Fax To

• Start Your Ada With A Kerword • Indude Camplete
Oetetlptlan t Include A Price • Avokt Abbrevlat,ona
• Indude Phone Number And Address When Needed
· • Ads Should Run 7 Days

CNA Wages, Pau:l Vaca-

lnL~ving

44s.3008

Monday thru Friday
·oo a.m. to S:OQ p.m.

Hpw iUccesu
m WJijlldsAti AR

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

Sentinel

Wprd Ads

: thuslastlc,
Dependable
Person, Then We Want
You To Join Ollr Team.
BIWiiPIPooJI
.
Come On oVer &amp; Check
'
Us .Outl You'll Be Glad
You
Did!
Competitive

In Lovinx Memory

*

(74o&gt; 446·2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

lions, Paid Meals, Many

~lasses:

'

Meigs County, OH

'

For fast _results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
is now offering the following

i

•

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
US
R AD

To Place

Four Division II teams ArkansasMonticello, California, Pa.
and Michigan Tech - are in
the field. , ·
A total of 10 games in the
tournament will be televised
on the ESPN family of networks, including the four in,
NewYork.
'
Coaches vs. Cancer is a collaboration between · the
American Cancer Society and ·
National Association of
Basketball Coaches. Since ·
1996, the tournament has
raised more than $4 million
for the benefit of Coaches vs.
Cancer.

The GALLERY AT 409

'

"'

C LASS I F I E.D

Presbyt~;rian,

In Memory

I

mrtbune.- ·Sentinel - l\e

Duke, UCLA ·highlight 2K Sports.Classic field

In Memory

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

1

�Aea: Estate
Sales

3000

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
!!!

Commercial

USED

~""'~""'""'""'~""
For
sale
or
tease

CARS WITH

NOTHING 10 HIDE!

offi'ce/warehouse/storage
grsat location 1n Gallipolis.
1800
sq
· ft .
$400!month . Call Wayne
404-4513·3802

,.•.

011 your rell
~

J11t text flte stock IIJIIhr to

42355

Rentals

Apartments/

Tow.\houtea

3br, M-Home on Gun
CONVENI ENTLY
LO· Club Ad . New Haven.
CATEO
&amp;
AFFOAO- $400 • month, $250 deABLE! Townhouse apart- posit 304·882-3121
ments.
and/or
small ~"""!~~--"""!~
houses lor rent Call 3br. $425 a mo., 1br.
740-441 -1111
for appli- $295 a mo. plus dep .,
cation &amp; information.
utilities &amp; references, 3rd
.,.,.,.,_.,...,.........,._ St.,
Racine,
FREE RENT SPECIAL (740)247·4292

Salt

&amp; 4Dr Available No Pets,
Tenant Responsible for
186 North Park Dr. ca ll Rant
&amp;
Electric
304·675·5640
or 304-67 4-0023
,. or
304·593-1204 will sen on 304-6 10-0776
Land Contract or Out
Rent
·Specialllt
Right. , Also a Wellingto{l Free
Piano cal[ for appoint- 2&amp;3BR. and up, Cerrtral
A1r, WlD hookup, tenant
ment to see them both ..
pays elect~c. EHO Elm
New 2BA 2 t&gt;Bth on 3. ac. View
Apts.
new rafrlg, range &amp; · dish- ~~3~0..:41.;,88;,;2..:
·3~
0.;.
17.,..--washer included $75,000 Twin Rivers Tower Is ac740 446 7029
;.;;;.;.
· ;.;,::,·~~.,..,-- cepling applicS:tions for
1 Yr old SA 588 for more waiti ng list lor l:iUD subinfo arid pich•res go to sidized , 1-BA apa~m8nt
www.orvb.com
I.D. for the elderly/disabled,
Browning 740-446·7204
call675-6679
~--~--J·a-ck·
1 Yr old SR 588 for more Beautiful Apta. at .....

Scenic

location, convenlent to town and afford·
able, 2 &amp; 3. bedrooms
aiJailable
~II
(740)992-5839

Sat.

·

;;;~~~"";;~~

person

ing · practices In natural
resources : forestry
Is·
sues: natural resource
education
proQrams.
PrBfer associate/ technical degree in forestry.
wildlife,
natural
re·
sources, education. Bl,l:
sic computer sk ills re-"
qu"ired.
Excellent
oral
and written . communicauon ski lls required. Startlng salary depends upon

""

04 Hondo Civ&lt; Hybrid I&amp;IIUIJI,pi

11,999
OHanla&lt; Grand AM ""'!0011- ""·l7t.lo
11,999
OSC~ Imll® m1~111.,. .. .. .... 10,999
05 Cl-.')' CObok 10111~1. n llhloo . . • . 10,999
O!C"!!IJ1ooi!Coollip11Ml'.;..Jll,., . 14,999
0! fa~ f llO &lt;oill~'"· •"~· lho• . .
19,999
07 K&lt;l~ sx .,.,,lilA. 11.,m•• . . ... : 12,999
07 for~focu•ZXlS•Iti~UAAl, "' . ...·. 13,999
07loo Spo&lt;11o lX ~!11~~ olm. l!loa .. 13,999
07 K10 Sportogo Ll '~'~"''·"' Ill•
lA 999
. 07 Hyunda• Act!nl •018001. ""· !llol, .... 14:999
07 ~ndo• Sonolo GIS liltto7il! ,,m• 15,999
07 ~ndoi luoon st "'mrw..,.~ n-. 15,999
07 Hyundoi Ek.iro S! O!!l!W" '1'1 llolo ... ~.999
07 Hyundai !biro S! IHiliiWA."' 341olo .... 16 999
07 Hyundai San~a GIS.rnat!ll,.to,t.to ..... .. 17,999
07 Hyund01 Aira S!
19,999
08 Hyumlo' Acconhl!•l• olio.l&lt;olo . .... . 12,999
..

'"'MA "'lll"' ...

08.Chevr Mal~u Clonic

- ·""111"' .... 1~,999

Tri-levet bncklcedar · on
.98 acres, Rutland, Oh,
priva)e
setting,
eat-in
Kitt: l1 e11 . 3 br. . 2 full
baths, lg. livingroqm, tg .
family room, out of flood
plain, . (740)742-2404 or
740 ·949·2930

'lond (Acreage)

IW
+I·
on
. IW 200ac.
Gallia/Meigs
Co. ,
OH
179 . border.. Great hunting
179
$2 10 ,000 neg
259 land.
304·593-5280 .
l9 ':"'"'_"::-_...;."::"'"'219
Appro11 . 25 acres m/1 re rough
access
239 mote,
239 $40K, Buyer .must -S ur2l9 vey , Call after 5pm
·
2l9 304· 895·339P '

279
279 .

m
m
19

59

219

259

Clerical
Clerical &amp; office positions
·available, paid .training
starts
lmm(ldiatety,
no
experience needed, no
·
sales,
call
1·888·61 0-6953 ·
· Conatnidion
Laborer/C arpenteriAoofe
r,
local
work,"
740 -992-7943

Government &amp; Federal
J-LUCH

FEDERAL
POST'AL JOBS
$17.89-$28.27/HA..,
IJl&gt;W
For
application
"hking.
and free govemment Job
info, call American As-

'=',..---~-,..-.., soc.

o1

...

"'"'"«.
07 Chevy !mpo'olT

~6t.'it.U b~ ra ,,~fl

..

aJ Ch"J' l:o.cioo• :S j'IIJ """'o' "'' lll !"" ..

'J;"'

07C~ery .~ali. ll•r•
g&lt;il~"" ....
•l7lnevr Cabell c &lt;liWA« ., ~~ - ..
07 Chevr HH~ ll•olill&gt; "'111,;,
fJl Forti focu~ !.0 S~~~;;•:~o~,u, W.,11~•
07

OONWOOD"
CHEVROIR FONnAC
11914 n IOIJTI"" iDIII( UIMI•I•*.mt

DONWOOD''"·
AUTOMOTIV~

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• R(IOm AcldJtlonl I
Remodeling
• N.w Gar~~gu
• Ettctrlcal I Jliumblng
• Roofing 6 Guttors
• Ylnyt SldtnG 6 Palntl~
• Petio and Porctl Dtcka .

WY036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-b?1 s
Ohr&lt;J

PurTII'IIl'o'

l'j Y('l''&gt; L IL,d [ XJll'tll'll,•

Rea : E~tl' P
Re'lti'lls

3500

required. Call
tor more Into.

446-36~4

~

~·

::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; . Commercial "prornrty ~
over 1 a.;:re, large gaVol&amp;d TOP I;IVE !lest
Apartmentl/
rage, display area and
to Worl&lt; In Ohio
Townhouaea
office. Upper At: 7 beside new Hampton ·tnn
'"' 2111171
COIIHIS.OWhy
ove-n pee a
$850 mo. plus sac. dep.
Clip this AD and take it
441 -5062 or 379-2923
No Sales! No
w1 th you when '{O U visit
Commerical
Space lor
Collections! RecrUit
c.ur community to get
Rent. Main St. Pt. Pleas.
volunteers for nori·profit
"this special discoUnt:
organizations that help
$400/mo.
~000
~qlff
Move-1n "i1l Oct and get
save lives and prevent
703·501-4808
. $100.00 off your 2~R
diseaSes sUch as cancer,
. Apl: in Nov. Currently
lung and heart disease!
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR Units
Get paid to make a
Spacious iloor plans,
2 BR house in Gallipolis,
differe~cel .·
ranch &amp; townhome style
WID
conn .
$415/mo
•
living, playg1o1md &amp;
$150/dep. Y9u pay all
Full and Part-t1me
basketball cou rt , on-si te
utilities. No section 8 ()(
Positiofls
laundry facility, 24 h1 ,
HUD.
Call
Wayne
Day and Evening ·
erp ergency mamte404·456·3802
Shifts
nance quiercountry loFlrofesslonal Work
·
3
Bd.
house
in
Pomeroy
catiOn dose to maJor
Environm~t"t!
1400 dep. $400. a M.
medical
facilities .
Medical, Dental,
must have gOod referpharmacies,,grocery
EAP, 401~!
ences.740-7421903
store ... just m1nutes ·
On-site Doctor
away ·from other major
2BA house for ren"t $400
Weekly Pay and
shoppmg in the area
. rent
$400
deposit. '
Bonus Incentives!
Honeysuckle Hills
256-6408 or 441 ~0583 in
Apanmenla .
Eureka.
Call TODAY/
266 CoJon1al Oril.'e 1!1 \ 3.
3 Bedroom 2 bath fu ll
Interview
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
basement. in Mercerville.
• TOMORROW/I
740·446-3344
.256·8 132
Worlr NEXT Wf'EKIII
Oll1ce Hours M. W, F
New 2BA 2 · bath your
9AM · 5PM
your tutum GMIJIIr In
choice of renting com.waiting hir woom ,..
pletely furnished &amp; all
utilities paid or you pro1-ea&amp;-IMC-PAYU
V,iding lurn~ure &amp; utilities.
Ext. 1901
NO LEASE 446·7029
ht'pi11jobl.lnfocHion.COM
f,~ilnuiactured

care
provider
in my home,
!!!!
must be non-smoker, de·
lob :
pendable &amp; honest with
""""'""'~"'-=--;;;;;; · reHable
transportation.
1 mile from lawn . on SA Also be able to work
141.
Water .tumished. varfing shifts. Pay nego·
$17Simo.l (740~46·0761 •· liable Clepending on ex·
or (304)675 -2329 ·
. pe•ience. Must provide
raterences upon request.
Rontala
Call 740-256-8189. Ask
for MISty
, _ _ _ _ _ __
2 br. mob1le home 111 ~_.,
h0ci~ll1g

·, BR Apt, WID hookups,
sa1e1tite TV Incl. ·wfrent,
close 1o hosp ilal. ca n
740·339-0362
,· 2 bedroom Apartment &amp;
2 bedroom House on 5th
Sl. .304·8 12-4350 ask tor

Don
2BR APT
441 -0194

CiA.

(7 40)

Chlld

needed

~

Racine, $325 per mo.. Delivery/Warehouse per·
3 rooms and batn up- $325 ciep..
yrs. lease, son needed, tull r~m'e . 1msta irs··. Completely
1Ur- sao non-relund8Qie wa- mediate opening, must
noM
d' . g
nished with W/0
No ter dep. , no pel s, "no calls h
ave ~
nvm
r~pets. Ret. Aeq . 4.41 -0245
atter
9pm. cord. Apply -lifestyle Fur·
niture 656 Third Ave .
.Apanment available now (740)992-5097
. Alverbend
Ap!s
New
1-ja\tell WV. Now accept lng
applications
for
HUD-subsldlzed,
one
Bedroom ~ Apts. \mlllles

lnclu~ . Ba ~ed on 30"10
of acttus~rod 1ncome .. Call
304-882-.J 121 '
available
lor Senior and Dis.abl~
people .
~~

No

closing cost
ZEAO DOWN! Will ,do
land
· impr~;~vements.
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
OK. 2, 3 _ 4 and 5 bSdrooms
available.
74 0-446 _3384 £7
~

3BA iocaled on Bulaville
Pike.
$4 751rent
7762
740
367
N~w Haven. · one bed·
•
•
roOm apartment, deposit 3br, . 2ba, Pt. Ple ~:&amp;sant
&amp;
references. area
304-273·6622
Or
740·992·0 165
30{674-6204

J.!i

tax to 740-446·9104 ··
Spo~·rl~
,....... ...

· TllS Ohio Valley Publish·
.· lng Co, Is seeking moti·
vated , people-oriented
lndlvtdual11 flll a vacancy
in the news dept. as a
Sportswriter. The successful candidate will
cover higll school athlet- •
ics in the area for the
daily edition of the newspaper, as well as assist
with the production of
spons pages. Excellent
writing and English ~lis ,
phol"!lraphy skills and
"lmowe:tge of desktop
publishing are sought.
The position is lull time.
40 hours a week. with
benefits. Interested parties can send resumes to
Kevin Kelly, Managing
Editor, Ohio Valley. Pub·
fiShing Co., 825 Third
Ave.1 Gallipolis, Ohio
456 31 Ol·kkellyO my- .
dailytrlb.une.com. No
. phone calls please.

• Garages
• Complete
RemC&gt;Pe1ing

r iiZ8i ~~o~\.,
'•

Hours

'l•o •1&amp; 11·64

-=-..,

S8rvice

Ill . .

.

Complete Tree Care

ln•uN&lt;~ ·F,..Esumatu
ul)..t4t-m7

20~.,. ..~

L-.;.•;.&lt;:;;":;::7.:::;:'~%,::'":..:::;':..,...1

•

17

Ea
a':s2

~=========:;;;.:====~

-

SNUFF'&lt;, AIN'T
COSGROVE I&lt; .' SMIF
'&lt;ORE CUZZIN ?

Ha1'4,100d Cablllt1ry Aid f'llnliUI'I
"'W'W'W'.tlarterertlkcahbletry.oem

THAT STUCK -UP,
SMARTY PANTS
8 .AG ()'WIND ...

HE'S

repair.
We service and .
winterize boats and

. RV 's

.ocr-

4 :)0 pm

Sat. R:OO am· 12

THI;

We appreciBte your

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019

l'tFI~I'I'IO~

~ J.\lG!-1·

w?

()1;.\f&gt;.l L.S,IJI

em~ll:

Jon·Van Mater &amp;
Paul

TI/'S PlC.'I'URIS IS 50 .
t&gt;- Sfi.(I...RP

Call: 74(1,.41~5047

Owners:

LOSER

I""GOobtoiE.~!&gt; 6Rfo.C.IOV5! 'i'OV;- "WIIW\&gt;11&gt;'&lt;00 W'&lt;

business

23 'Cheyenne

4 A8 74

26 Hardut
to lind
28 RN's group
29 Lowost high
tide ..
31 Stem's end

North Ew.'it
1\11 pass

lead: ?'

. (.OI..Qil..')

!

Rowe

'Wt 1)1

Quality Seamless

Gutters
Maintenance Plus
Commerc iol &amp;

Free Estimated

· ·a

Ma~

THAN..

Insured &amp; Bond9d

PEANUTS .

Manlav••
Racycl•na

............ .
...............
,.......
.............
' '--'

•• ••rutarue••••
PIYIIIiiTIPPIICIS • .
............. li '

•

COW and BOY

PSI CONSTRUCTION

VASTLY INADECIJ.6.TE

SWITCHING PLACES
WITH YOU,COW.

RICK PRICE

-----~M~·=~~~~~~--~
Home Heal111
hiring

STNA's.

CNA~. and PCA"s. Flex!·

FIND
AJOB .
OR ANEW .
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

DOWN

shoo

residue
41 Foosll

reelnt
'43 Nal urtlan
44

Close
companion

45 Tholollllon~
Fino powder 22 Pool
Huneh
lengths
46 Flu pia110
47 Caloao - .
lntartere
23 Bradbury
33 Arizona el1y
In an audl·
bf oe141
48Spol
35 L.eanlng
bla voice
24 Hoavy bur· 49 Date
regularly
Towertown 5 Whore Anna · den
37 Hot tub
·•
taught
25 Molatanlng 52 . Byron worll
38Added
6 Devotee'a
26 Pollee bust
elnnemon . aulllx
27 Maoklng 40 Surgical
" 7 More rapidly 30 Dueler's
1
2
3
4

8 Take back

tool

weapon

Homes, Room.Addilions, RemodeliiJII,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Sldlag, Deeks,
llatl&gt;room ~:!!!2!~!&amp;,Licensed &amp; Insured

• Replacement

YOUDIONT.

....

· Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Wlndows1
Electric~ Plumbing,

MYRNA, THAT li!Rt.
I TOOK .OIJT ONCI! I' .
. 1 NEVeR PIP
FINI' MY KIWS
fiiAf NIGHT

• 'Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing,• Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

GRIZZWELLS
DID )bU

.IIEW.IIIIII,-D

~~~1?

47239 Rieb&lt;l Road. Long Bonom, OH

740-985-4141

2

1 1 I I I:

I

THICP

, 1 1~ 1

. II
II
r-....,...,...,.,....,---..., .
~. .,1f"ll':-rEI7/"T·,-T -11 0(;~~~"
E N 1 R+1L ~

!

.

m':,

.

.

''T.r1

Advertise
in this space f~r
$64 per month
'

While watthing n u.,,cc show
o.q,;rv my husband joked.
·~e people say dancing is iJJ
!heir biQOd, IIXl bad it isn't in
the chuckle quoted

by filllog lo the milling word!
YCll:l develop from Jtep No. 3 below .

IIIII I Il l. I
· SCRAMBLEST ANSWERS 1012108
Haunch - Twang - Vocal - Whiten - THOUGHT
Afamous politician once said, "Too often we enjoy the
.. comfort of opinion withoul the discomfort of THOUOGHT.''
ARLO&amp;JANIS

. •

ARIES (March 21·1\pril 191 first and then talk about your accom plishments. II you reverse that procedure
and discover you can't live up to your
daims, "it will be embaiT!lssing for you .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- "would be
oiee if we could believe everything' a
salesman tells us, but. sadly, in today's
world, this iSil't the case. You'll find this
out quiekty should you naively accept a
Sly 901os pitch .
.
GEMINI (May 2hJooe 20)- Be careful
don't confuse t~ with hOw you
that
feel about someone. If you let emotion
override logic, how yo~o~ perceive SOO'lltone or a Situation may be loolhercty
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Whether
It i~ you .who doesn't taka Instruction well
or someone else to whOm you're gtiting
direction, in either case, II can spell troubte. Clarity all briefings befOre acting on
anythinll important.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 - Just bGCaUI;O
soniething big recently came Be&amp;iy to
you, don~ 111ink IM!rythlng wilt slmpy be
handad to you. It you're.loOking Jor tree
rkle again, ~·n be woefully disappoint:
od.
VIRGO !Aug. l!3-Sep1. 22) - Should
·reetrictive conditions be · 1~ . ~u ·
would onlv make matters wore it ~u
read in an unbeCOming m&amp;nner. Retain
a cool head, and· keep all unkind comments to yourself.

SOUP TO NUTZ
'
INI"1. .,

25+ yeaN experience Frte J1slimlll~~

_

,.E,

'lflio« 1; M
f&lt;o'.IEIC'o'··

fotJST

C ell: 740-416- 1834

rI

vou

GARFIELD
'.
.
I 170YOOR~R

can: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

1

I!

I

FERSUE

Porto""

FOUR STOMACHS. ·)

Construction
·VInyl Siding

t

· By Bernice~ Oeol
If you want to-elevate your achievements
in the year ahead, shoot tor the moon
instead of the streetlights. Raising your
expectations will hel~ V01.1 realize accomplishments you never thought possible.
LIBRA. (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - ln81ead Of
·_bombarding your~ with ell klncts of
of"88.Sons why you beliiMI !JJlnQs dl.l'1't be
accomplished, fill your mind wfth reasons
whY they can. Try thts· tact , and· watch
how differently thingS tum out
.
SCOAPK) (Oct, 24-Nov.' 22) .- Ther6 Is
on~ among. your frtendB wt}o Is always
asking for more but Is. never glvtng anything back Jn return . Avoid this Individual.
or be prepared lor more being asked of
you:
.
SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-0ec. ?:1) 7
Allhough your potential for success iS
reasonably strong , you , might maiCe
1hings harcler on yourseH than need be. If
you run into difficulties, stop and take
stock of your methods.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-,an. 19) - It's
wondertul that your imagination Is so
prolific, but make certain that you use it
only for positive projettions. Negative
"thinkif)g will negate this marvelous lrait .
and cause unhappiness instead.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - II you
plan to pumhase something quite large ·
for the first time (n vour life, chedc. with
solll8 experts and th.en take ample time
to re-evaluate the entire matter.
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) - For once
6n your life, don't be shy about challen!Jing someone who always gets his or tl&amp;r
way. F9rce th!s person to comply or com·
I)I"Oml$8.

FOR SOMEONE WITH

New

SupeMIIOfY
bte Scheduling. Monlhly • Wln~tows
"'j~;;~;;~:F Bonus. and Coverage •Roofing
•Decks
· pmoorty Management
Pay Opportuni1ies. Local
•Garages
P.T. Community Man·
· cqverage
area .
Doo1
ager needed tor local."
miss your chance to win
• P!!le Bullillngs
apanment community 1~
·a Gas Card. ·If interested ' ·Room Addlllona
Local Contractor
cared in Gallipolis, Ohio.
call740-441 -13n.
.
OWner:
740-367.0544
Ideal candidate will have
JltnUKHSHII
FreeEattprevious experience in
740-367.()536 .
742·2332
property·.management at
a Aural Development
prQpeny, excellent comFor Remodeling and New House Bulldiog
munlcation and org8niza tional skills and be de·
.
.
pendable. Health insur-

8f1Ce &amp; 401k available/
Satart dependent upon
experience. Submit resume &amp; salary require. menIs 1O: Galt·...;..)·
1..,.,.1s c -M ,,

AND I'M I..EAIINING THAT
.INDOOR PLU/r\SING IS

rMREALLY
LEI\RNJNG AI.OT BY

Pomeroy,. Ohio
~;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:~

.
C It
(740)379·9083
Mon-Fn Local
between 9a"m·3pm
Agency

;;;,;"";;t;::::"!'"""
1

MUtH

C!..~-'RER

Roofing, Siding, Guuers

Vinyl

Domosstic

penence.

C-'N'T

1'\At&lt;.E IT

Seamless GuUers

Re.~idr:mlaf

MaintwnaiiCOI/
Pan-time
maintenance
worker,
25·30hrs
per
week, Pay·· based on eX-

,ou

e

or ' v

shelter

~oonon;t iettors of lht .
. . four &amp;erambled word• bolow ta form four almple Words ..

SatUfday,CHd.4,2008

WEI..!...

H&amp;H
Guttering

* Experienced
Re fer ences Available!
C all Gary Stanley @
7 40-59! -.8 044

74~444-5152

IU18 Cllek-on
ilem
20 Dressy

TltlTIWLT Cl~'O .&amp;'\"" .(- I):C ~de WORD
......,Juuua
:o~ ~&lt;IU WJ.. ~ P"'&lt;,;;_r_.,__
o,_t~~_,
_ _ _;...._ Wiled by tl.A Y ~. PCU•N ,;o

*Insured

TREE WORK
Topped, Take Down
&amp; Removal
Affordable,
Reasonable Price

59 Animal

.

39 Hearth

t Fit-1/t..LL'( C.OT ~

740-653-965 7

leave messa

blue

11 Roast beet

dance

. M'v FAV'RITE

;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;=;;;;;::;

Please

enhancer
Colonial

event

!~;;~~~~~

Rates

58

9 Holror·film 32 Oiatanl
··
servanl
34 Verdi opera
1D Feeling
36 S1yptlc·

by

Mon-Fri ."

* Rea sonable

Alva&lt; ··

22 Wlrtedepaelts

• 52
t AK

West
Obi.

57

CELEBRITY CIPHER

(740) 992-5344

Quality

eaten

defenH
21 Type of PC

a weak two-bid; you double; your left·
· hand opponent rai ses to fou r Spades;
TH' NEW
ALWA'YS WUZ
and your-partner's double ~passed out.
What would you lead ih each case?
.)El)Ge
Perhaps you are asking: 'What is my
CUZZIN !!
hand?" A.lso, they sound like such different questions, but they are not. In both
cases, without even looking at the rest of
your hand, lead a trump. And If you are
wid in trumps. steal one !rom the other
deck on the table !
When partner passe~ a low·level takeout
double, turntng it Into a penalty double,
he promises long !lind strong trump~.
Luis Campos
•
load one and aKpect him to draw trumps
Celetrity Cipher ayplog-ams are crtialed trom q"oo1a1tons b, larno·JS peop!e. past anc ~ resent
sooner rather than later.
E~ l!ltlfll '"the c'phe' ~ds for arother
Ul.::.;::.,, In a higher-level contract, from ·Where
Toelay 's clue: Gequals K
will 1ho opponants. who have 1oW high·
card potn1s, gat tricks? Thalr trumps. So
" K ZTS TU BRTBZR KOG YR PNRX H
t&gt;l(flead one tO minimize those tricks.
·
"'q
In .today's deal, East has an acceptabla
IT K OSLXS, 'OKFGHR, KMR VTL
MOU~I:&gt;
pass Over one spaQe doubled. (If nervOFF ~E. X,I:!W\.
ous, he should jump, to two no-trUmp, ' 0 F K M R I ? .' . T U ·F T L M 0 R H ' Y 0 F K M R t I
· which would rn8ke .) Buf if you do no1
lead a lrl!mp; declarer gats two club rUffs
H'Y Xr'S OLBRMYKX." • OKFGHR
on the board and can collect an over~
FNKX
trick. HoweYer•. after a trump .to East:s
ace and 'another trump, South Is held to
· PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'Oh what lies lurk in kisses '' ·Heinrich He1ne
~' l1lcks.
"But maybe half a lie Is worse tnan a real li_
e." - Ullian Hellman

C IRCI)IT

complete seriJ.ice o ii

* Prompt and
Work .

56 Ready to be

Arena

19 Rc.e's

r-----~---...---....:..---~-.:~

changes. small engine

Stanley Tree•
Trimming
&amp; Removal

-

Stephen LeacoCk, a Carladian writer
and eCoilomist, said1 "Advertising" may
be described as tile science of arresting
the human intelligence tong enough to
get money from it."
AI the bridge 1able, never. arrest your
inte lligence - keep thinking.
For the final column in this series on
takeout "doubles. let me sav something,
strange as 1t might sound, about opening
· leads. Here are two auctions. (1)Soulh
opens one spade, you make a takeout
double, and it goes all pass. {2)Your
right-hand opponent opens two spade~ ·

E-man: captblll65@yahoo;com
.
WWW.8UCtlonzfp.COm
#5548

Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Polnos)

8JIO am ·.

~

11101'8111

If partner passes,
lead correctly

•

44087 Wlpple

alignmenos . light
mechanic work,

16 Loud noise 55 Mo. Fotber

O~ning

L &amp; L Tire Bar11

N eW &amp; Used Ti res,
.We buy used tire s,
computer Wheel

4AQ J109

South
1•

·

.-~-.....
Johnsonls
Tree

12 Simpoon
kid
51 SuHen
13 Freud taple 53 Pove
14 Not new
tho way
15 Foedbag
54 CoHee

Dealerc South
Vulnerable: Both

•

hoaclong
50 Yoe in
Yollohama

East

111 411 mo. pd

EARNESt

atty
Falla

• 2
• Q J 10 9
• . Q J 10 9
4 K Q J 10

Stop &amp; Compare

·

46

tuno)

4K876 3

auctioneer:·

44 Rtd Son~

West

J40·912·1m

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

43 Su91rci111
p&lt;oduct

r

1 4 Goi ,..,
t2 well:)
8 ~... or
11 ""-Y -"

Sou1h

BIIIV RG0bl1 Jr.

·expenenced
welder.
. EOE
Hours between 8-4 Ca ll _ _ __::_.:__ __:==-=====~
740-992-3020
rAesCare Home Care is
accepting
applications
!Qr . Support As.'\OCiate&amp;,
CNA &amp; . STNA. MR!DD
exp. preterred. Apply at
8204 Carta Drive, ·Galli·
~11s ,
Mon • Fri. e-..
Email resume to: rharrl·
son@ rescare .co m

• New Homes.

740-94!1-2217

. ._ • .,
741·992·5882

Siding/Replacement
Windows/Re modeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740,992-1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell '

Galll~olls , 9:30-5:00 No Gorsuch Mgt., P.O . Bqx
Ph~ Calls
. ,
i90, Lancaster OH
.,..;..._...._ _ _ _ · 43 1~" 1 90orema •' tto·
and Pomeroy Business need kda:U~oembarqmalt.~

Federal F"unds just . released for land Owners .

CIISllltmlll

45771

~· ,l910',JJ30'/~ ]!

t8&amp;53 2
43
.

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

~ ·~ ·\ ""'" •~"'"'

~e

$250 Sign on Bonus!
No experience required!

RIIERT
BISSEU

291570 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio

Jtl-il.HlB

• '4
· • A7643

An1._, to Prnlout Pam:M

doitcomo

.•

POST
OFFICE
NOW
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr ::--:-~----~or
%57Kiyr,
Includes Serv!C&lt;l Manager &amp; Serv·
Lob
Fed .Bon. OT. Place by
Techn&lt;lan posi1ions
available. Heallh care &amp;
mpers
&amp;
Motor
adSource,
not
affiliated
A
..
Ca
C&lt;Mftme.dal
wi1h USPS , who htres.
e1iremant plans avail·
Homes lots tor Rent year ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;; __ -4 _
able. Please Send re1 866 03 2582
hook
up 2 bay service stalion
sume
, to
round
304-675-6908
Jackson
Pike. . Lease Holp WanN&lt;f. Genenll LLC@CAREQ.COM
or

6.;&gt;--,;,..===dl :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

·

have an ability to listen
and lead people In the
tight direction. ! ·need
people who want to W()(k
and will show" up for
work. If you are a recent
college grad and, cannot
find emploument
and feel
'
that you are qualified ,
give us a.chance until a
job in your career path
becomes available. Call
Pal Hill, New Car Man·
ager for an lntervi;&amp;w at
446-9.800.

. Labor

playground , (trash, sewage,
• waler
pd.)
$425/renl,
$425/sec.
nep. Ca lt 740·367·0547

4000

Clo" "'O:ll &lt;.ilo!.!l-..
00
01 Ponloc Fir~rd &lt;mll!. ,..,.,lhlto ..
02 Suboru l'1"'Y Gllld. •cli!I'UIW .. .
OHard fllO f!l •m•"·'" Iii . .. ..
OWtvy lrolhlo""''""' w"' .
OlHom"" !11 PJII&lt;!J ,.., JU.., ....
05 Che.y Malibo Oank •1111l, olio. l1l""' .
05 Che.y lr&lt;iL~z11lS •'l711~"' "'!h!o ..· , ,,,"
05ri1Jl G.ondO.OO.iWD ~'Q"' 49i"' .
05 Jeop Gran&lt;! Chlrol" .,.;,;.""' :~ ""·
01 CI-.'Y C~ba~ IS lnlllo ,.,!l\ •o .. .
. 01 ford filiOA SE tlll'f&gt;.l.o,..,, "" ...
01 fonlf llO PIWU S.,. fo "'
07 Chevr CalbollS •rnoorc "''
. .
01 Hy;nclai E~ GIS mmu ., lflo.\ . ·
~7 f~ac Grond Prh onmct. ··~ ~'~""
07 (~ lmp&lt;Jo ll lll171UI, ... l&lt;l "" .
07 ioH luaomt CXlm•~w. _ ,, "''
0) laya~ laMa ill llmOIU ""''l""'
~· Chtoy E'l!iw• 11 mm..1 ..,. ..o 111 ••
07 Ch"Y'~1..-.do OllllOU , .... jll""'
08 Che.y CalhaHS mf!liJ ,., . ..
08 1o0iJX Vibo on"'"'· '*"'olll,;,

Direct Care Staff In resi·
dentlal ·youth
program.
Must be 21 years of age.
Pay based on experience.
. Call
(740)379-9083
Mon·Fri
9am·3pm . .l..
;;;;;;;.;;:;;;;;;..;;;;._.,._ _
I need to find (2) peopl~
needing a full time job .
You need to be hOnest. a
p'erson of in~rlty, with
......~
nood people skills. ~o·u
lit
also need to be able to
follow instr~ctionS and

Tara
Townhouse 1-913·599·8226,
~4/hrs.
Apartments • 2BA , 1 . 5.~ emp ..serv.
bath, ·back patio , pool, ,_.__________

P,_.

01 Nll!On Xle~o xt ~Iii I!!!, ""·"' .
02 Dodge Dok01a m ""~'il
02 fordfoCI.II t~r ~~ 11..-.
Ol !"P liberty &gt;115&lt;'" ...,
.... .
0. Chevr lm!l&lt;la 1!81~11 .., ll•j., .. .... .
0. a..y Till~~ IWO""""· ,,, "'o1o ..
a. fo.! fllO Xll•ar~l••. ,.. .. .. ......
05 HyundoiSor.la fe oJIH!ll "" "~•.., •..
05 fardf 150m...,,., .. ·~...""
07 (b"J' lrcilblaz• lS • 1197.., h&lt;,llhlo
07 Mazda 15 " ""'' .., Ja,., ..
.07 Mazda MZ6 11'''''"'~ ~. ~,,.. ..
OJ fold mo Cargo VaiJI lf(I~IOR!, lllolo .. '
07 ~a Sporlugo [.(
kl'llolo . .. I::• '"

304-88212645
AVON! All Areas!
To
Buy
or
Sell
Shirley
Spe~rs 304 -6751429
• ..,.;--_,...,._ __
Commarclaf Cleaners
tmmedlata Openings
Buffalo. ·· Full·1ime, • MuSI
haVf driver's lie. &amp; pass
backgroun d
check .
304-788-6309
. EOE

Hill s Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

42 McClurg

(Buttea

North

lan"ru••·•f

Three Bedroom house
At# 2 North, Two Bedroom
Mobile
Home .
Camp
Conley
304-895-3129

luitl RogalLS IXI~I~ ..... ll'&lt;olo .. . ~,999 139
Ponl~ Grand Prix GT lll'lOilJA ..,. . • 8999 139
02 ford f0011 ~~ l&lt;llllf;;., UK... .. . .. . ,125 89

{

o:-~~~!"'"~-Agricultural Englne.QI' po-

·
3br, 1 bath, Needs some Equal Ho'using Opponubed 2 bath, 200 16x70 Via the jn1ernet. Send resu rne to Gallia Jobs and
Work~ large lot. $25,000 nity. T.his institution( is an Fleetvlood 2 bed 1 bath ,
848
00
8 2 2686
1:'.-lual Opporlunily Pro- 1999 Fonune 3 bed 2 Family
Services,
:::~~4~·;;;B;;,·6A.
~~~-&gt;
Third Avenue , Gallipolis •
Many up· vider arlu Employer
bath. We deliver block OH 45631 or . tax to
2
grades. 5 minu teS from Eflleiency Apt
1.624 level ahd anchor. We 740 -446-8942. .
1he
new
GAHS. Ch'a1ham
Avec . (rear). ca.n do 1he footers also.
$325 (water, sewer . &amp; Daytime
740-388-0000 . An. Excellent way 'to earn
$139,000. 740-245·5707
or 74()..388 851 3
Eve money. The New AVon.
, garbage
included).
3BA.2BA, 2 car gar 740-446 _4234
or nirigs 740 -388-8017 or Call
Marilyn

Now accepting
applications at:
Valley. View Apartm ents
800 State Route 325
Tnurman, OhiQ 45685
74G-.245..g110
1-2 Bedroom Apartments
·
with appliances furnished
,
On site laundry facility,
Call for details or pick up
B.pplicallon at "rental
office
Possibility of rental
assistance. ·
Equal Housing
Opportunity
TDD# 419 _526 _0466
. 'Th'1s·institution is·an
Equal Opportunity
. Provider and Employer"

ACROSS

Eastern AVenue , Gallipotis, OH

~tion
opening.
Have
knowledge ol · ttnglneer-

NEA Crou:word Puzzle

BRIDGE

Alder

11.111.124""-•

House with 2 ·acres in SA
160. Will conSider land
contract.
441 -5002
or.
379-2923

..

at 2150

Home 14x70, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 outbuildings -•concrete noor. 19.2
acres/Good Hurtling. Ten
Miie
A.
Leon,
WV
education
and
experi304-458- 1077
ence "with benefit pack-·
~~~~~~--- age includect. A valid
1996, 16x60 Clayton mo- driver's
license
along
bilE! home, total e 1'?C. , with
·federal
security
needs . minor
repa ir, ctearance requ•re
· d · For

740 _208 _7861
patio, DA/FR. Reloca tin g
740-245·9213.
$11 5,000.
740-4.46 -08 17
;;;le;.av;.;•;.;m;.s;;:g~---~ Gracious Living 1 and 2 Bra~d new 3bed . 2balh
.For sale by owner. 312 Bedroom Apts . at Village on + -half acre in Pl.
Manor
and - Riverside Pleasant. OWNER
Fl·
tiome on 1/2 acre level
Apts . in Mkidleport, from NANCE
AVAILABLE .
lot Lpcated at 3089 Bu$327
1o
$592. (740)446-3570
~~~~-~-Iaviiie Pike Attached ga- 740·992·5064 .
\ Equal ·!'I
rage.
"Appraised Housing Opponunity.
, New 3. Bedroom homes
$110,000 .
Aski ng
.
frorh $2,14.36 per month,
$98,500.
Call Modern 1BA apt . Call includes IJ't~ny upgrades~
:..
74;;0~-4;;4~
6·.;,49;;1._;0~~~~ ·740-446-0390
dellve!Y
&amp;
se1.,.p.
House for ,sale In Ches- Nice ·
Clean . Ground 740·385·2434
ter, 3 Dr., separa te ga- Floor, 2br, W/0 hookup,
rage,
contact ReferencesiOepositiNo
(740)985-4131
Pots 304-675- 5162

. The Daily S~ntinel • Page 87

Phillip

1nfo and pi&lt;:1ures ·go to son Estates. 52 Wesl- $3000
OBO, more,· information on thiS
740·591&gt;-0164
lo
h k
1h
LQ. wood Dr.. lrom $365 .to
poSI' n c ec
on
e
Browning 740-446-7-204
S560.
740-446·2.568. 2 2006 16x80 Clayton 3 SCOTI labor e.lCc~ange

3BA. _

.www.mydailysentlnel~com

-~v.

. MANUFAC·
TUAEA Is lal&lt;lng appl~alions tor EXfiEBIENCED
Mig Welders. Please ap-

www.o~vb.com

01
01

~JIIFQ..YTA:t ~tc a&amp;.T 1t.1

A . LOCAL

ply 1n

•

."

r.- .... ~&gt;CA»o&amp;o . .-

Holp Wam.d. G.neral

JOf'dan Landing 2br, 3b(
HOUIII for

1111 ""'''
history
report

Friday, October 3, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 3, 2008
ALLEYOOP

'

�Aea: Estate
Sales

3000

=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
!!!

Commercial

USED

~""'~""'""'""'~""
For
sale
or
tease

CARS WITH

NOTHING 10 HIDE!

offi'ce/warehouse/storage
grsat location 1n Gallipolis.
1800
sq
· ft .
$400!month . Call Wayne
404-4513·3802

,.•.

011 your rell
~

J11t text flte stock IIJIIhr to

42355

Rentals

Apartments/

Tow.\houtea

3br, M-Home on Gun
CONVENI ENTLY
LO· Club Ad . New Haven.
CATEO
&amp;
AFFOAO- $400 • month, $250 deABLE! Townhouse apart- posit 304·882-3121
ments.
and/or
small ~"""!~~--"""!~
houses lor rent Call 3br. $425 a mo., 1br.
740-441 -1111
for appli- $295 a mo. plus dep .,
cation &amp; information.
utilities &amp; references, 3rd
.,.,.,.,_.,...,.........,._ St.,
Racine,
FREE RENT SPECIAL (740)247·4292

Salt

&amp; 4Dr Available No Pets,
Tenant Responsible for
186 North Park Dr. ca ll Rant
&amp;
Electric
304·675·5640
or 304-67 4-0023
,. or
304·593-1204 will sen on 304-6 10-0776
Land Contract or Out
Rent
·Specialllt
Right. , Also a Wellingto{l Free
Piano cal[ for appoint- 2&amp;3BR. and up, Cerrtral
A1r, WlD hookup, tenant
ment to see them both ..
pays elect~c. EHO Elm
New 2BA 2 t&gt;Bth on 3. ac. View
Apts.
new rafrlg, range &amp; · dish- ~~3~0..:41.;,88;,;2..:
·3~
0.;.
17.,..--washer included $75,000 Twin Rivers Tower Is ac740 446 7029
;.;;;.;.
· ;.;,::,·~~.,..,-- cepling applicS:tions for
1 Yr old SA 588 for more waiti ng list lor l:iUD subinfo arid pich•res go to sidized , 1-BA apa~m8nt
www.orvb.com
I.D. for the elderly/disabled,
Browning 740-446·7204
call675-6679
~--~--J·a-ck·
1 Yr old SR 588 for more Beautiful Apta. at .....

Scenic

location, convenlent to town and afford·
able, 2 &amp; 3. bedrooms
aiJailable
~II
(740)992-5839

Sat.

·

;;;~~~"";;~~

person

ing · practices In natural
resources : forestry
Is·
sues: natural resource
education
proQrams.
PrBfer associate/ technical degree in forestry.
wildlife,
natural
re·
sources, education. Bl,l:
sic computer sk ills re-"
qu"ired.
Excellent
oral
and written . communicauon ski lls required. Startlng salary depends upon

""

04 Hondo Civ&lt; Hybrid I&amp;IIUIJI,pi

11,999
OHanla&lt; Grand AM ""'!0011- ""·l7t.lo
11,999
OSC~ Imll® m1~111.,. .. .. .... 10,999
05 Cl-.')' CObok 10111~1. n llhloo . . • . 10,999
O!C"!!IJ1ooi!Coollip11Ml'.;..Jll,., . 14,999
0! fa~ f llO &lt;oill~'"· •"~· lho• . .
19,999
07 K&lt;l~ sx .,.,,lilA. 11.,m•• . . ... : 12,999
07 for~focu•ZXlS•Iti~UAAl, "' . ...·. 13,999
07loo Spo&lt;11o lX ~!11~~ olm. l!loa .. 13,999
07 K10 Sportogo Ll '~'~"''·"' Ill•
lA 999
. 07 Hyunda• Act!nl •018001. ""· !llol, .... 14:999
07 ~ndo• Sonolo GIS liltto7il! ,,m• 15,999
07 ~ndoi luoon st "'mrw..,.~ n-. 15,999
07 Hyundoi Ek.iro S! O!!l!W" '1'1 llolo ... ~.999
07 Hyundai !biro S! IHiliiWA."' 341olo .... 16 999
07 Hyundai San~a GIS.rnat!ll,.to,t.to ..... .. 17,999
07 Hyund01 Aira S!
19,999
08 Hyumlo' Acconhl!•l• olio.l&lt;olo . .... . 12,999
..

'"'MA "'lll"' ...

08.Chevr Mal~u Clonic

- ·""111"' .... 1~,999

Tri-levet bncklcedar · on
.98 acres, Rutland, Oh,
priva)e
setting,
eat-in
Kitt: l1 e11 . 3 br. . 2 full
baths, lg. livingroqm, tg .
family room, out of flood
plain, . (740)742-2404 or
740 ·949·2930

'lond (Acreage)

IW
+I·
on
. IW 200ac.
Gallia/Meigs
Co. ,
OH
179 . border.. Great hunting
179
$2 10 ,000 neg
259 land.
304·593-5280 .
l9 ':"'"'_"::-_...;."::"'"'219
Appro11 . 25 acres m/1 re rough
access
239 mote,
239 $40K, Buyer .must -S ur2l9 vey , Call after 5pm
·
2l9 304· 895·339P '

279
279 .

m
m
19

59

219

259

Clerical
Clerical &amp; office positions
·available, paid .training
starts
lmm(ldiatety,
no
experience needed, no
·
sales,
call
1·888·61 0-6953 ·
· Conatnidion
Laborer/C arpenteriAoofe
r,
local
work,"
740 -992-7943

Government &amp; Federal
J-LUCH

FEDERAL
POST'AL JOBS
$17.89-$28.27/HA..,
IJl&gt;W
For
application
"hking.
and free govemment Job
info, call American As-

'=',..---~-,..-.., soc.

o1

...

"'"'"«.
07 Chevy !mpo'olT

~6t.'it.U b~ ra ,,~fl

..

aJ Ch"J' l:o.cioo• :S j'IIJ """'o' "'' lll !"" ..

'J;"'

07C~ery .~ali. ll•r•
g&lt;il~"" ....
•l7lnevr Cabell c &lt;liWA« ., ~~ - ..
07 Chevr HH~ ll•olill&gt; "'111,;,
fJl Forti focu~ !.0 S~~~;;•:~o~,u, W.,11~•
07

OONWOOD"
CHEVROIR FONnAC
11914 n IOIJTI"" iDIII( UIMI•I•*.mt

DONWOOD''"·
AUTOMOTIV~

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• R(IOm AcldJtlonl I
Remodeling
• N.w Gar~~gu
• Ettctrlcal I Jliumblng
• Roofing 6 Guttors
• Ylnyt SldtnG 6 Palntl~
• Petio and Porctl Dtcka .

WY036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-b?1 s
Ohr&lt;J

PurTII'IIl'o'

l'j Y('l''&gt; L IL,d [ XJll'tll'll,•

Rea : E~tl' P
Re'lti'lls

3500

required. Call
tor more Into.

446-36~4

~

~·

::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; . Commercial "prornrty ~
over 1 a.;:re, large gaVol&amp;d TOP I;IVE !lest
Apartmentl/
rage, display area and
to Worl&lt; In Ohio
Townhouaea
office. Upper At: 7 beside new Hampton ·tnn
'"' 2111171
COIIHIS.OWhy
ove-n pee a
$850 mo. plus sac. dep.
Clip this AD and take it
441 -5062 or 379-2923
No Sales! No
w1 th you when '{O U visit
Commerical
Space lor
Collections! RecrUit
c.ur community to get
Rent. Main St. Pt. Pleas.
volunteers for nori·profit
"this special discoUnt:
organizations that help
$400/mo.
~000
~qlff
Move-1n "i1l Oct and get
save lives and prevent
703·501-4808
. $100.00 off your 2~R
diseaSes sUch as cancer,
. Apl: in Nov. Currently
lung and heart disease!
renting 1 &amp; 2 BR Units
Get paid to make a
Spacious iloor plans,
2 BR house in Gallipolis,
differe~cel .·
ranch &amp; townhome style
WID
conn .
$415/mo
•
living, playg1o1md &amp;
$150/dep. Y9u pay all
Full and Part-t1me
basketball cou rt , on-si te
utilities. No section 8 ()(
Positiofls
laundry facility, 24 h1 ,
HUD.
Call
Wayne
Day and Evening ·
erp ergency mamte404·456·3802
Shifts
nance quiercountry loFlrofesslonal Work
·
3
Bd.
house
in
Pomeroy
catiOn dose to maJor
Environm~t"t!
1400 dep. $400. a M.
medical
facilities .
Medical, Dental,
must have gOod referpharmacies,,grocery
EAP, 401~!
ences.740-7421903
store ... just m1nutes ·
On-site Doctor
away ·from other major
2BA house for ren"t $400
Weekly Pay and
shoppmg in the area
. rent
$400
deposit. '
Bonus Incentives!
Honeysuckle Hills
256-6408 or 441 ~0583 in
Apanmenla .
Eureka.
Call TODAY/
266 CoJon1al Oril.'e 1!1 \ 3.
3 Bedroom 2 bath fu ll
Interview
Bidwell, Ohio 45614
basement. in Mercerville.
• TOMORROW/I
740·446-3344
.256·8 132
Worlr NEXT Wf'EKIII
Oll1ce Hours M. W, F
New 2BA 2 · bath your
9AM · 5PM
your tutum GMIJIIr In
choice of renting com.waiting hir woom ,..
pletely furnished &amp; all
utilities paid or you pro1-ea&amp;-IMC-PAYU
V,iding lurn~ure &amp; utilities.
Ext. 1901
NO LEASE 446·7029
ht'pi11jobl.lnfocHion.COM
f,~ilnuiactured

care
provider
in my home,
!!!!
must be non-smoker, de·
lob :
pendable &amp; honest with
""""'""'~"'-=--;;;;;; · reHable
transportation.
1 mile from lawn . on SA Also be able to work
141.
Water .tumished. varfing shifts. Pay nego·
$17Simo.l (740~46·0761 •· liable Clepending on ex·
or (304)675 -2329 ·
. pe•ience. Must provide
raterences upon request.
Rontala
Call 740-256-8189. Ask
for MISty
, _ _ _ _ _ __
2 br. mob1le home 111 ~_.,
h0ci~ll1g

·, BR Apt, WID hookups,
sa1e1tite TV Incl. ·wfrent,
close 1o hosp ilal. ca n
740·339-0362
,· 2 bedroom Apartment &amp;
2 bedroom House on 5th
Sl. .304·8 12-4350 ask tor

Don
2BR APT
441 -0194

CiA.

(7 40)

Chlld

needed

~

Racine, $325 per mo.. Delivery/Warehouse per·
3 rooms and batn up- $325 ciep..
yrs. lease, son needed, tull r~m'e . 1msta irs··. Completely
1Ur- sao non-relund8Qie wa- mediate opening, must
noM
d' . g
nished with W/0
No ter dep. , no pel s, "no calls h
ave ~
nvm
r~pets. Ret. Aeq . 4.41 -0245
atter
9pm. cord. Apply -lifestyle Fur·
niture 656 Third Ave .
.Apanment available now (740)992-5097
. Alverbend
Ap!s
New
1-ja\tell WV. Now accept lng
applications
for
HUD-subsldlzed,
one
Bedroom ~ Apts. \mlllles

lnclu~ . Ba ~ed on 30"10
of acttus~rod 1ncome .. Call
304-882-.J 121 '
available
lor Senior and Dis.abl~
people .
~~

No

closing cost
ZEAO DOWN! Will ,do
land
· impr~;~vements.
Bankruptcy &amp; Bad Credit
OK. 2, 3 _ 4 and 5 bSdrooms
available.
74 0-446 _3384 £7
~

3BA iocaled on Bulaville
Pike.
$4 751rent
7762
740
367
N~w Haven. · one bed·
•
•
roOm apartment, deposit 3br, . 2ba, Pt. Ple ~:&amp;sant
&amp;
references. area
304-273·6622
Or
740·992·0 165
30{674-6204

J.!i

tax to 740-446·9104 ··
Spo~·rl~
,....... ...

· TllS Ohio Valley Publish·
.· lng Co, Is seeking moti·
vated , people-oriented
lndlvtdual11 flll a vacancy
in the news dept. as a
Sportswriter. The successful candidate will
cover higll school athlet- •
ics in the area for the
daily edition of the newspaper, as well as assist
with the production of
spons pages. Excellent
writing and English ~lis ,
phol"!lraphy skills and
"lmowe:tge of desktop
publishing are sought.
The position is lull time.
40 hours a week. with
benefits. Interested parties can send resumes to
Kevin Kelly, Managing
Editor, Ohio Valley. Pub·
fiShing Co., 825 Third
Ave.1 Gallipolis, Ohio
456 31 Ol·kkellyO my- .
dailytrlb.une.com. No
. phone calls please.

• Garages
• Complete
RemC&gt;Pe1ing

r iiZ8i ~~o~\.,
'•

Hours

'l•o •1&amp; 11·64

-=-..,

S8rvice

Ill . .

.

Complete Tree Care

ln•uN&lt;~ ·F,..Esumatu
ul)..t4t-m7

20~.,. ..~

L-.;.•;.&lt;:;;":;::7.:::;:'~%,::'":..:::;':..,...1

•

17

Ea
a':s2

~=========:;;;.:====~

-

SNUFF'&lt;, AIN'T
COSGROVE I&lt; .' SMIF
'&lt;ORE CUZZIN ?

Ha1'4,100d Cablllt1ry Aid f'llnliUI'I
"'W'W'W'.tlarterertlkcahbletry.oem

THAT STUCK -UP,
SMARTY PANTS
8 .AG ()'WIND ...

HE'S

repair.
We service and .
winterize boats and

. RV 's

.ocr-

4 :)0 pm

Sat. R:OO am· 12

THI;

We appreciBte your

Racine, Ohio 740-247·2019

l'tFI~I'I'IO~

~ J.\lG!-1·

w?

()1;.\f&gt;.l L.S,IJI

em~ll:

Jon·Van Mater &amp;
Paul

TI/'S PlC.'I'URIS IS 50 .
t&gt;- Sfi.(I...RP

Call: 74(1,.41~5047

Owners:

LOSER

I""GOobtoiE.~!&gt; 6Rfo.C.IOV5! 'i'OV;- "WIIW\&gt;11&gt;'&lt;00 W'&lt;

business

23 'Cheyenne

4 A8 74

26 Hardut
to lind
28 RN's group
29 Lowost high
tide ..
31 Stem's end

North Ew.'it
1\11 pass

lead: ?'

. (.OI..Qil..')

!

Rowe

'Wt 1)1

Quality Seamless

Gutters
Maintenance Plus
Commerc iol &amp;

Free Estimated

· ·a

Ma~

THAN..

Insured &amp; Bond9d

PEANUTS .

Manlav••
Racycl•na

............ .
...............
,.......
.............
' '--'

•• ••rutarue••••
PIYIIIiiTIPPIICIS • .
............. li '

•

COW and BOY

PSI CONSTRUCTION

VASTLY INADECIJ.6.TE

SWITCHING PLACES
WITH YOU,COW.

RICK PRICE

-----~M~·=~~~~~~--~
Home Heal111
hiring

STNA's.

CNA~. and PCA"s. Flex!·

FIND
AJOB .
OR ANEW .
CAREER
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

DOWN

shoo

residue
41 Foosll

reelnt
'43 Nal urtlan
44

Close
companion

45 Tholollllon~
Fino powder 22 Pool
Huneh
lengths
46 Flu pia110
47 Caloao - .
lntartere
23 Bradbury
33 Arizona el1y
In an audl·
bf oe141
48Spol
35 L.eanlng
bla voice
24 Hoavy bur· 49 Date
regularly
Towertown 5 Whore Anna · den
37 Hot tub
·•
taught
25 Molatanlng 52 . Byron worll
38Added
6 Devotee'a
26 Pollee bust
elnnemon . aulllx
27 Maoklng 40 Surgical
" 7 More rapidly 30 Dueler's
1
2
3
4

8 Take back

tool

weapon

Homes, Room.Addilions, RemodeliiJII,
Metal &amp; Shingle Roofs, Sldlag, Deeks,
llatl&gt;room ~:!!!2!~!&amp;,Licensed &amp; Insured

• Replacement

YOUDIONT.

....

· Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Wlndows1
Electric~ Plumbing,

MYRNA, THAT li!Rt.
I TOOK .OIJT ONCI! I' .
. 1 NEVeR PIP
FINI' MY KIWS
fiiAf NIGHT

• 'Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing,• Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Decks

GRIZZWELLS
DID )bU

.IIEW.IIIIII,-D

~~~1?

47239 Rieb&lt;l Road. Long Bonom, OH

740-985-4141

2

1 1 I I I:

I

THICP

, 1 1~ 1

. II
II
r-....,...,...,.,....,---..., .
~. .,1f"ll':-rEI7/"T·,-T -11 0(;~~~"
E N 1 R+1L ~

!

.

m':,

.

.

''T.r1

Advertise
in this space f~r
$64 per month
'

While watthing n u.,,cc show
o.q,;rv my husband joked.
·~e people say dancing is iJJ
!heir biQOd, IIXl bad it isn't in
the chuckle quoted

by filllog lo the milling word!
YCll:l develop from Jtep No. 3 below .

IIIII I Il l. I
· SCRAMBLEST ANSWERS 1012108
Haunch - Twang - Vocal - Whiten - THOUGHT
Afamous politician once said, "Too often we enjoy the
.. comfort of opinion withoul the discomfort of THOUOGHT.''
ARLO&amp;JANIS

. •

ARIES (March 21·1\pril 191 first and then talk about your accom plishments. II you reverse that procedure
and discover you can't live up to your
daims, "it will be embaiT!lssing for you .
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)- "would be
oiee if we could believe everything' a
salesman tells us, but. sadly, in today's
world, this iSil't the case. You'll find this
out quiekty should you naively accept a
Sly 901os pitch .
.
GEMINI (May 2hJooe 20)- Be careful
don't confuse t~ with hOw you
that
feel about someone. If you let emotion
override logic, how yo~o~ perceive SOO'lltone or a Situation may be loolhercty
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Whether
It i~ you .who doesn't taka Instruction well
or someone else to whOm you're gtiting
direction, in either case, II can spell troubte. Clarity all briefings befOre acting on
anythinll important.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 - Just bGCaUI;O
soniething big recently came Be&amp;iy to
you, don~ 111ink IM!rythlng wilt slmpy be
handad to you. It you're.loOking Jor tree
rkle again, ~·n be woefully disappoint:
od.
VIRGO !Aug. l!3-Sep1. 22) - Should
·reetrictive conditions be · 1~ . ~u ·
would onlv make matters wore it ~u
read in an unbeCOming m&amp;nner. Retain
a cool head, and· keep all unkind comments to yourself.

SOUP TO NUTZ
'
INI"1. .,

25+ yeaN experience Frte J1slimlll~~

_

,.E,

'lflio« 1; M
f&lt;o'.IEIC'o'··

fotJST

C ell: 740-416- 1834

rI

vou

GARFIELD
'.
.
I 170YOOR~R

can: MARCUM CONSTRUCTION

1

I!

I

FERSUE

Porto""

FOUR STOMACHS. ·)

Construction
·VInyl Siding

t

· By Bernice~ Oeol
If you want to-elevate your achievements
in the year ahead, shoot tor the moon
instead of the streetlights. Raising your
expectations will hel~ V01.1 realize accomplishments you never thought possible.
LIBRA. (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - ln81ead Of
·_bombarding your~ with ell klncts of
of"88.Sons why you beliiMI !JJlnQs dl.l'1't be
accomplished, fill your mind wfth reasons
whY they can. Try thts· tact , and· watch
how differently thingS tum out
.
SCOAPK) (Oct, 24-Nov.' 22) .- Ther6 Is
on~ among. your frtendB wt}o Is always
asking for more but Is. never glvtng anything back Jn return . Avoid this Individual.
or be prepared lor more being asked of
you:
.
SAGITTARIUS {Nov. 23-0ec. ?:1) 7
Allhough your potential for success iS
reasonably strong , you , might maiCe
1hings harcler on yourseH than need be. If
you run into difficulties, stop and take
stock of your methods.
CAPRICORN IDee. 22-,an. 19) - It's
wondertul that your imagination Is so
prolific, but make certain that you use it
only for positive projettions. Negative
"thinkif)g will negate this marvelous lrait .
and cause unhappiness instead.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 19) - II you
plan to pumhase something quite large ·
for the first time (n vour life, chedc. with
solll8 experts and th.en take ample time
to re-evaluate the entire matter.
PISCES (Feb. 20.March 20) - For once
6n your life, don't be shy about challen!Jing someone who always gets his or tl&amp;r
way. F9rce th!s person to comply or com·
I)I"Oml$8.

FOR SOMEONE WITH

New

SupeMIIOfY
bte Scheduling. Monlhly • Wln~tows
"'j~;;~;;~:F Bonus. and Coverage •Roofing
•Decks
· pmoorty Management
Pay Opportuni1ies. Local
•Garages
P.T. Community Man·
· cqverage
area .
Doo1
ager needed tor local."
miss your chance to win
• P!!le Bullillngs
apanment community 1~
·a Gas Card. ·If interested ' ·Room Addlllona
Local Contractor
cared in Gallipolis, Ohio.
call740-441 -13n.
.
OWner:
740-367.0544
Ideal candidate will have
JltnUKHSHII
FreeEattprevious experience in
740-367.()536 .
742·2332
property·.management at
a Aural Development
prQpeny, excellent comFor Remodeling and New House Bulldiog
munlcation and org8niza tional skills and be de·
.
.
pendable. Health insur-

8f1Ce &amp; 401k available/
Satart dependent upon
experience. Submit resume &amp; salary require. menIs 1O: Galt·...;..)·
1..,.,.1s c -M ,,

AND I'M I..EAIINING THAT
.INDOOR PLU/r\SING IS

rMREALLY
LEI\RNJNG AI.OT BY

Pomeroy,. Ohio
~;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:~

.
C It
(740)379·9083
Mon-Fn Local
between 9a"m·3pm
Agency

;;;,;"";;t;::::"!'"""
1

MUtH

C!..~-'RER

Roofing, Siding, Guuers

Vinyl

Domosstic

penence.

C-'N'T

1'\At&lt;.E IT

Seamless GuUers

Re.~idr:mlaf

MaintwnaiiCOI/
Pan-time
maintenance
worker,
25·30hrs
per
week, Pay·· based on eX-

,ou

e

or ' v

shelter

~oonon;t iettors of lht .
. . four &amp;erambled word• bolow ta form four almple Words ..

SatUfday,CHd.4,2008

WEI..!...

H&amp;H
Guttering

* Experienced
Re fer ences Available!
C all Gary Stanley @
7 40-59! -.8 044

74~444-5152

IU18 Cllek-on
ilem
20 Dressy

TltlTIWLT Cl~'O .&amp;'\"" .(- I):C ~de WORD
......,Juuua
:o~ ~&lt;IU WJ.. ~ P"'&lt;,;;_r_.,__
o,_t~~_,
_ _ _;...._ Wiled by tl.A Y ~. PCU•N ,;o

*Insured

TREE WORK
Topped, Take Down
&amp; Removal
Affordable,
Reasonable Price

59 Animal

.

39 Hearth

t Fit-1/t..LL'( C.OT ~

740-653-965 7

leave messa

blue

11 Roast beet

dance

. M'v FAV'RITE

;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;=;;;;;::;

Please

enhancer
Colonial

event

!~;;~~~~~

Rates

58

9 Holror·film 32 Oiatanl
··
servanl
34 Verdi opera
1D Feeling
36 S1yptlc·

by

Mon-Fri ."

* Rea sonable

Alva&lt; ··

22 Wlrtedepaelts

• 52
t AK

West
Obi.

57

CELEBRITY CIPHER

(740) 992-5344

Quality

eaten

defenH
21 Type of PC

a weak two-bid; you double; your left·
· hand opponent rai ses to fou r Spades;
TH' NEW
ALWA'YS WUZ
and your-partner's double ~passed out.
What would you lead ih each case?
.)El)Ge
Perhaps you are asking: 'What is my
CUZZIN !!
hand?" A.lso, they sound like such different questions, but they are not. In both
cases, without even looking at the rest of
your hand, lead a trump. And If you are
wid in trumps. steal one !rom the other
deck on the table !
When partner passe~ a low·level takeout
double, turntng it Into a penalty double,
he promises long !lind strong trump~.
Luis Campos
•
load one and aKpect him to draw trumps
Celetrity Cipher ayplog-ams are crtialed trom q"oo1a1tons b, larno·JS peop!e. past anc ~ resent
sooner rather than later.
E~ l!ltlfll '"the c'phe' ~ds for arother
Ul.::.;::.,, In a higher-level contract, from ·Where
Toelay 's clue: Gequals K
will 1ho opponants. who have 1oW high·
card potn1s, gat tricks? Thalr trumps. So
" K ZTS TU BRTBZR KOG YR PNRX H
t&gt;l(flead one tO minimize those tricks.
·
"'q
In .today's deal, East has an acceptabla
IT K OSLXS, 'OKFGHR, KMR VTL
MOU~I:&gt;
pass Over one spaQe doubled. (If nervOFF ~E. X,I:!W\.
ous, he should jump, to two no-trUmp, ' 0 F K M R I ? .' . T U ·F T L M 0 R H ' Y 0 F K M R t I
· which would rn8ke .) Buf if you do no1
lead a lrl!mp; declarer gats two club rUffs
H'Y Xr'S OLBRMYKX." • OKFGHR
on the board and can collect an over~
FNKX
trick. HoweYer•. after a trump .to East:s
ace and 'another trump, South Is held to
· PREVIOUS SOLUTION- 'Oh what lies lurk in kisses '' ·Heinrich He1ne
~' l1lcks.
"But maybe half a lie Is worse tnan a real li_
e." - Ullian Hellman

C IRCI)IT

complete seriJ.ice o ii

* Prompt and
Work .

56 Ready to be

Arena

19 Rc.e's

r-----~---...---....:..---~-.:~

changes. small engine

Stanley Tree•
Trimming
&amp; Removal

-

Stephen LeacoCk, a Carladian writer
and eCoilomist, said1 "Advertising" may
be described as tile science of arresting
the human intelligence tong enough to
get money from it."
AI the bridge 1able, never. arrest your
inte lligence - keep thinking.
For the final column in this series on
takeout "doubles. let me sav something,
strange as 1t might sound, about opening
· leads. Here are two auctions. (1)Soulh
opens one spade, you make a takeout
double, and it goes all pass. {2)Your
right-hand opponent opens two spade~ ·

E-man: captblll65@yahoo;com
.
WWW.8UCtlonzfp.COm
#5548

Rd.
Pomeroy,OH
(5 Polnos)

8JIO am ·.

~

11101'8111

If partner passes,
lead correctly

•

44087 Wlpple

alignmenos . light
mechanic work,

16 Loud noise 55 Mo. Fotber

O~ning

L &amp; L Tire Bar11

N eW &amp; Used Ti res,
.We buy used tire s,
computer Wheel

4AQ J109

South
1•

·

.-~-.....
Johnsonls
Tree

12 Simpoon
kid
51 SuHen
13 Freud taple 53 Pove
14 Not new
tho way
15 Foedbag
54 CoHee

Dealerc South
Vulnerable: Both

•

hoaclong
50 Yoe in
Yollohama

East

111 411 mo. pd

EARNESt

atty
Falla

• 2
• Q J 10 9
• . Q J 10 9
4 K Q J 10

Stop &amp; Compare

·

46

tuno)

4K876 3

auctioneer:·

44 Rtd Son~

West

J40·912·1m

7:00 AM • 8:00 PM

43 Su91rci111
p&lt;oduct

r

1 4 Goi ,..,
t2 well:)
8 ~... or
11 ""-Y -"

Sou1h

BIIIV RG0bl1 Jr.

·expenenced
welder.
. EOE
Hours between 8-4 Ca ll _ _ __::_.:__ __:==-=====~
740-992-3020
rAesCare Home Care is
accepting
applications
!Qr . Support As.'\OCiate&amp;,
CNA &amp; . STNA. MR!DD
exp. preterred. Apply at
8204 Carta Drive, ·Galli·
~11s ,
Mon • Fri. e-..
Email resume to: rharrl·
son@ rescare .co m

• New Homes.

740-94!1-2217

. ._ • .,
741·992·5882

Siding/Replacement
Windows/Re modeling
Bonded &amp; Insured
740,992-1493 Office
740-416-8339 Cell '

Galll~olls , 9:30-5:00 No Gorsuch Mgt., P.O . Bqx
Ph~ Calls
. ,
i90, Lancaster OH
.,..;..._...._ _ _ _ · 43 1~" 1 90orema •' tto·
and Pomeroy Business need kda:U~oembarqmalt.~

Federal F"unds just . released for land Owners .

CIISllltmlll

45771

~· ,l910',JJ30'/~ ]!

t8&amp;53 2
43
.

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

~ ·~ ·\ ""'" •~"'"'

~e

$250 Sign on Bonus!
No experience required!

RIIERT
BISSEU

291570 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio

Jtl-il.HlB

• '4
· • A7643

An1._, to Prnlout Pam:M

doitcomo

.•

POST
OFFICE
NOW
HIRING avg. Pay $20/hr ::--:-~----~or
%57Kiyr,
Includes Serv!C&lt;l Manager &amp; Serv·
Lob
Fed .Bon. OT. Place by
Techn&lt;lan posi1ions
available. Heallh care &amp;
mpers
&amp;
Motor
adSource,
not
affiliated
A
..
Ca
C&lt;Mftme.dal
wi1h USPS , who htres.
e1iremant plans avail·
Homes lots tor Rent year ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;; __ -4 _
able. Please Send re1 866 03 2582
hook
up 2 bay service stalion
sume
, to
round
304-675-6908
Jackson
Pike. . Lease Holp WanN&lt;f. Genenll LLC@CAREQ.COM
or

6.;&gt;--,;,..===dl :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

·

have an ability to listen
and lead people In the
tight direction. ! ·need
people who want to W()(k
and will show" up for
work. If you are a recent
college grad and, cannot
find emploument
and feel
'
that you are qualified ,
give us a.chance until a
job in your career path
becomes available. Call
Pal Hill, New Car Man·
ager for an lntervi;&amp;w at
446-9.800.

. Labor

playground , (trash, sewage,
• waler
pd.)
$425/renl,
$425/sec.
nep. Ca lt 740·367·0547

4000

Clo" "'O:ll &lt;.ilo!.!l-..
00
01 Ponloc Fir~rd &lt;mll!. ,..,.,lhlto ..
02 Suboru l'1"'Y Gllld. •cli!I'UIW .. .
OHard fllO f!l •m•"·'" Iii . .. ..
OWtvy lrolhlo""''""' w"' .
OlHom"" !11 PJII&lt;!J ,.., JU.., ....
05 Che.y Malibo Oank •1111l, olio. l1l""' .
05 Che.y lr&lt;iL~z11lS •'l711~"' "'!h!o ..· , ,,,"
05ri1Jl G.ondO.OO.iWD ~'Q"' 49i"' .
05 Jeop Gran&lt;! Chlrol" .,.;,;.""' :~ ""·
01 CI-.'Y C~ba~ IS lnlllo ,.,!l\ •o .. .
. 01 ford filiOA SE tlll'f&gt;.l.o,..,, "" ...
01 fonlf llO PIWU S.,. fo "'
07 Chevr CalbollS •rnoorc "''
. .
01 Hy;nclai E~ GIS mmu ., lflo.\ . ·
~7 f~ac Grond Prh onmct. ··~ ~'~""
07 (~ lmp&lt;Jo ll lll171UI, ... l&lt;l "" .
07 ioH luaomt CXlm•~w. _ ,, "''
0) laya~ laMa ill llmOIU ""''l""'
~· Chtoy E'l!iw• 11 mm..1 ..,. ..o 111 ••
07 Ch"Y'~1..-.do OllllOU , .... jll""'
08 Che.y CalhaHS mf!liJ ,., . ..
08 1o0iJX Vibo on"'"'· '*"'olll,;,

Direct Care Staff In resi·
dentlal ·youth
program.
Must be 21 years of age.
Pay based on experience.
. Call
(740)379-9083
Mon·Fri
9am·3pm . .l..
;;;;;;;.;;:;;;;;;..;;;;._.,._ _
I need to find (2) peopl~
needing a full time job .
You need to be hOnest. a
p'erson of in~rlty, with
......~
nood people skills. ~o·u
lit
also need to be able to
follow instr~ctionS and

Tara
Townhouse 1-913·599·8226,
~4/hrs.
Apartments • 2BA , 1 . 5.~ emp ..serv.
bath, ·back patio , pool, ,_.__________

P,_.

01 Nll!On Xle~o xt ~Iii I!!!, ""·"' .
02 Dodge Dok01a m ""~'il
02 fordfoCI.II t~r ~~ 11..-.
Ol !"P liberty &gt;115&lt;'" ...,
.... .
0. Chevr lm!l&lt;la 1!81~11 .., ll•j., .. .... .
0. a..y Till~~ IWO""""· ,,, "'o1o ..
a. fo.! fllO Xll•ar~l••. ,.. .. .. ......
05 HyundoiSor.la fe oJIH!ll "" "~•.., •..
05 fardf 150m...,,., .. ·~...""
07 (b"J' lrcilblaz• lS • 1197.., h&lt;,llhlo
07 Mazda 15 " ""'' .., Ja,., ..
.07 Mazda MZ6 11'''''"'~ ~. ~,,.. ..
OJ fold mo Cargo VaiJI lf(I~IOR!, lllolo .. '
07 ~a Sporlugo [.(
kl'llolo . .. I::• '"

304-88212645
AVON! All Areas!
To
Buy
or
Sell
Shirley
Spe~rs 304 -6751429
• ..,.;--_,...,._ __
Commarclaf Cleaners
tmmedlata Openings
Buffalo. ·· Full·1ime, • MuSI
haVf driver's lie. &amp; pass
backgroun d
check .
304-788-6309
. EOE

Hill s Self
Storage

YOUNG'S

42 McClurg

(Buttea

North

lan"ru••·•f

Three Bedroom house
At# 2 North, Two Bedroom
Mobile
Home .
Camp
Conley
304-895-3129

luitl RogalLS IXI~I~ ..... ll'&lt;olo .. . ~,999 139
Ponl~ Grand Prix GT lll'lOilJA ..,. . • 8999 139
02 ford f0011 ~~ l&lt;llllf;;., UK... .. . .. . ,125 89

{

o:-~~~!"'"~-Agricultural Englne.QI' po-

·
3br, 1 bath, Needs some Equal Ho'using Opponubed 2 bath, 200 16x70 Via the jn1ernet. Send resu rne to Gallia Jobs and
Work~ large lot. $25,000 nity. T.his institution( is an Fleetvlood 2 bed 1 bath ,
848
00
8 2 2686
1:'.-lual Opporlunily Pro- 1999 Fonune 3 bed 2 Family
Services,
:::~~4~·;;;B;;,·6A.
~~~-&gt;
Third Avenue , Gallipolis •
Many up· vider arlu Employer
bath. We deliver block OH 45631 or . tax to
2
grades. 5 minu teS from Eflleiency Apt
1.624 level ahd anchor. We 740 -446-8942. .
1he
new
GAHS. Ch'a1ham
Avec . (rear). ca.n do 1he footers also.
$325 (water, sewer . &amp; Daytime
740-388-0000 . An. Excellent way 'to earn
$139,000. 740-245·5707
or 74()..388 851 3
Eve money. The New AVon.
, garbage
included).
3BA.2BA, 2 car gar 740-446 _4234
or nirigs 740 -388-8017 or Call
Marilyn

Now accepting
applications at:
Valley. View Apartm ents
800 State Route 325
Tnurman, OhiQ 45685
74G-.245..g110
1-2 Bedroom Apartments
·
with appliances furnished
,
On site laundry facility,
Call for details or pick up
B.pplicallon at "rental
office
Possibility of rental
assistance. ·
Equal Housing
Opportunity
TDD# 419 _526 _0466
. 'Th'1s·institution is·an
Equal Opportunity
. Provider and Employer"

ACROSS

Eastern AVenue , Gallipotis, OH

~tion
opening.
Have
knowledge ol · ttnglneer-

NEA Crou:word Puzzle

BRIDGE

Alder

11.111.124""-•

House with 2 ·acres in SA
160. Will conSider land
contract.
441 -5002
or.
379-2923

..

at 2150

Home 14x70, 2 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 outbuildings -•concrete noor. 19.2
acres/Good Hurtling. Ten
Miie
A.
Leon,
WV
education
and
experi304-458- 1077
ence "with benefit pack-·
~~~~~~--- age includect. A valid
1996, 16x60 Clayton mo- driver's
license
along
bilE! home, total e 1'?C. , with
·federal
security
needs . minor
repa ir, ctearance requ•re
· d · For

740 _208 _7861
patio, DA/FR. Reloca tin g
740-245·9213.
$11 5,000.
740-4.46 -08 17
;;;le;.av;.;•;.;m;.s;;:g~---~ Gracious Living 1 and 2 Bra~d new 3bed . 2balh
.For sale by owner. 312 Bedroom Apts . at Village on + -half acre in Pl.
Manor
and - Riverside Pleasant. OWNER
Fl·
tiome on 1/2 acre level
Apts . in Mkidleport, from NANCE
AVAILABLE .
lot Lpcated at 3089 Bu$327
1o
$592. (740)446-3570
~~~~-~-Iaviiie Pike Attached ga- 740·992·5064 .
\ Equal ·!'I
rage.
"Appraised Housing Opponunity.
, New 3. Bedroom homes
$110,000 .
Aski ng
.
frorh $2,14.36 per month,
$98,500.
Call Modern 1BA apt . Call includes IJ't~ny upgrades~
:..
74;;0~-4;;4~
6·.;,49;;1._;0~~~~ ·740-446-0390
dellve!Y
&amp;
se1.,.p.
House for ,sale In Ches- Nice ·
Clean . Ground 740·385·2434
ter, 3 Dr., separa te ga- Floor, 2br, W/0 hookup,
rage,
contact ReferencesiOepositiNo
(740)985-4131
Pots 304-675- 5162

. The Daily S~ntinel • Page 87

Phillip

1nfo and pi&lt;:1ures ·go to son Estates. 52 Wesl- $3000
OBO, more,· information on thiS
740·591&gt;-0164
lo
h k
1h
LQ. wood Dr.. lrom $365 .to
poSI' n c ec
on
e
Browning 740-446-7-204
S560.
740-446·2.568. 2 2006 16x80 Clayton 3 SCOTI labor e.lCc~ange

3BA. _

.www.mydailysentlnel~com

-~v.

. MANUFAC·
TUAEA Is lal&lt;lng appl~alions tor EXfiEBIENCED
Mig Welders. Please ap-

www.o~vb.com

01
01

~JIIFQ..YTA:t ~tc a&amp;.T 1t.1

A . LOCAL

ply 1n

•

."

r.- .... ~&gt;CA»o&amp;o . .-

Holp Wam.d. G.neral

JOf'dan Landing 2br, 3b(
HOUIII for

1111 ""'''
history
report

Friday, October 3, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, October 3, 2008
ALLEYOOP

'

�"
www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • The' Daily 51:ntinel

•

Friday. October 3, 2008
'

ALONG THE RIVER

LMNG

Looking back: Bacon's photos
capture mid-century Pomeroy, Cl

House of the Week: Well crafted, 01

I
• 11 you have 1 question or a comment, wrlt.e: NASCAR This Week. r:,io The Gaston Gazette. P.O. Box 1538, (iastonia, NC 28053

Sprint CUp

......
·'

. Mountain Dew 250,
3:30 p.m.; Satuntay

""""""""·Ed-

''

\
1II
~

,,'

•
~

By the stalldalds of the pre.&gt;
ousfoolChasis.thetillecon. tendets are dootn to _,_ After
the first thnle Chase - of
2006; Jimmie Jollnson traill!d
• Jeff BIJrton ~ 165 points. At

Clint
8owl'er tlalls Jollnson bf 184.
~ , Loo!-.ire to mal&lt;e history are
p;esent,. ~

• "-' Amp Enelgy 500
turns of the final lap. In a spec• -Talladega (Ala.) Super- · tacu1ar, last-ditdl
wards' Ford roared underneath
=.li:l:).188
:lolmson's Che.y on the final lap.
• -=Sunday, Oct 5.
He couldn't drive into the third
11.11t ,_..-Jeff Gor·
tum that hard, ttlo!4!h· witl1ol!t
doo , Che\rolet
sliding up the track. His Ford'
1 Qr "J~C NCOid: Bill Elliott,
brushed the wall- "I ~ Iwas
Ford. 212.809 mph, April30,
going to hit,~ I didn't know rt
1987.
'
was going to slow-me down that

-•
..
11

Dale·Earnhardt Jr. (·190) and
• Matt Hen-seth (-192).
.. ~ The Joe Gibbs Racing drivers
might as well be named GErne,

1

DALE EARNHARDT JR.

-=

'

94 laps/250.04 miles.

f &gt;l11n \

When: Satur~. Oct. 4
1 Lat YM"'I wtniw: Todd

'
Mark
Martin, Ford, 182.320 mpih,
Oct. 6, 2006.
1 Reee reconl: Marl&lt; Mar·
tin, Ford, 138.207 mp/1,
Oct.. 7;2006.
1 Lat .-: Toyota driver
Mike Skinner's 25111 career
victory, in Las Vegas, was
just his first of the current'
I Quiii~C -.1:

,,

· • High school football
. action. See Page Bl

this for some time," Callia.
County · Veterans Servi_ce
_.:.:..::.::..:....::==-------. . Officer Keith Jeffers satd.
. GALLIPOLIS - Effotts "We thought at one time we
to establish a local outpa- might get the VA home but
tient clinic for veterans are that went to Georgetown,
·progressing and representa- and at another' time. 11
tives
of
the
U.S. looked like we were gomg
Department of Veterans to get a clinic, hut then the
Affairs are checking out · budget was frozen.
.
"Thi~ year, everythmg's
existing sites in Gallipolis.
"We had been, working on been positjve," he added.
Bv KEVIN KELLY

season.

.

'

'

• .'

t. r

Bv BRIAN

The I:Ml had three separate incidents ai pit road. Then SleY.art ran into

:
Vickers on the track. Intentional? If so, ·
tt was counterproductive. Stewart ended ;•
up in 40111 jllace,
NASCAR TNt w.ek~ Monte Dulloll

. . •like: "The alleged reason for
the incident on the track was that Vick· ·

ers had to lift and Stewart was closing ,
too fast. Stewart's been known to think ,
payback. What's most surprising was
that ~ was the one dolrg the splmng. ·
Pemaps tt was an accident."

• Fl
.
..iJ 'f])J£
. ,,'

Ughter race for
13th right now than there Is in
the Chase. DaVid Ragan leads'
Kasey·Kahne ~ seven points.
~ Dodge debuted rts new R61'8
engine ~getting its usual three
manufacturer points. Ellkltt
Sadler finished 10th.
~ The rapidly
disappearing
roo~ie class
had another
big week.
Highest-finishing rookie
Patrick Carpen~er, looking for a ride
at yea(s end,
crossed the
line 29th.
• The rookies? Gone already are
Jacques Yllleneuve and Dario
Ffanchittl. Michael McDowell
failed to make the Kansas field.
Regan Smrth and Sam Hamish Jr.
conUnue to struggle.'
t
,1 ..
II.

.. Wllo'lllol -

Jimmie John· ,
son's past
three finishes:
4, 2, 1. ... Carl
Edwards' corresponding
numbers are:

3,3,2.

.. Will~ natThe Joe Gibbs

. Racing juggernaut now occupies the Chase
cellar: Denny

Hamlin ~Oth.

Torr; Stewart
11th and ~le
.Busch 12111.

-VIcltDryP,KiianiiiC :

. C.. biiiC - I n Kll F

;

' nie:seconc:t Vlctor)':Mlction Gang ;
~'fot ,si;!l au~ ~~t~ tli!-~·
ed in ~City, Kan., on a 71-aae
trac! 'II\ \WandOite County. The first
Pl1otos by John Clari&lt;,INASCAR This Yleek
D. Earnhardt Jr. returned to the Chase thll Jllr liter 11lssln&amp;lt last 8881011. He his one win, .It Mlclllpn, aiGng 111111 nine top.llves
and 14 top. lOs.

In prime of his career, Earnhardt Jr. still wants title
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Dale Earnhardt J r,, the most popu·
lar driver in NASCAR, has much for
which he can be thankful. He's had
what, by any standards other than
those of Jimmie Johnson, Carl Ed·
wards and (until recently) Kyle
Busch, is a fine year.
.
· But Earnhardt's only won once, and
after returning to the Chase for the
Sprint Cup this year with high hopes
of a championship, times have turned
tough.
The third·generation star will turn
34 on Oct. 10. He's in the prime of his
career, and he yearns for the championship that, once again, is unlikely to
come.
His Chase finishes so far are fifth,
24th and 13th. He trails Jimmie John-

son bY 190 points, and no one has won
the championship after trailing by
more than 165 after three races.
Before the Camping World 400 at
Kansas Speedway, Earnhardt said he
thought it was possible for Busch, still
the season's biggest winner, to enter ·
the final race "feasibly, mathematical·
ly still alive." Busch was. then 210
points behind, though he lost 101 more
points and basically ended the "math·
ematical feasibility."
Now it's Earnhardt who finds him·.
self in almost the same position.
The pressure shows in Earnhardt
when he's on the track, trying to fight
off a recurring theme of his No. 88
Chevrolet being better at the begin·
ning and middle of rares than at ·the.
end. Several weeks go, he launched
Into a tirade that received Widespread
attention: The relationship between

Earnhardt and his first cousin, crew
chief Tony Eury Jr., is volatile at
times, but Earnhardt insists that they
have known each other all their lives
and don't take arguments personally.
He has remained adamant that Eury
continue calling the shots.
·~
"I would love to be calmer under
those types of situations, I would,"
said Earnhardt Jr., "and I was when I
first started, I was . Then I got called
lackadaisical.
.
"I got compared to my father and
his determination. I got questioned
about if I quit partying so much and
focused and this, that and the other.
"So now I am on the chip and want it'
more than anybody else and I'm get·
ting hell for- getting too excited."
.
What's the son of a seven·time
champion to do?
.
It comes wit_h the territory,

camp, founded 17)1
K)ie and Pattie ~.

1

'

0BITUARIFS
: Page AS
· • Charles Allbright, 18
: • Ernest Borden Jr., 60
• • : • PI'IUIIp R:Qobbins, _42
,. ·~ :A. .GibQs., lll, 61
1•.WHH8in OliJ)hant1 87
•• Ch~ A. Thom,as. _89

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INSID

Is in Randleman, N.C.

"Victoly Junction has

been blesSed ~the
support receM!d thus
far, not only fRlm
. donors and interest·
ed volunteers but
from are;l hospitals
as well; said Pattie
Petty. "To glOW this new facility, tt Is 1m
perative to have the nght partners to
pr!Mde the neoessary funds to operate,
to send qualified children to our camp
and to pniv;de the I'Oiunteer rT18f1lOWIIf
to meet our children's needs.•

Molt Pa!ll In Drlvw Aw.d .
fans ffiill' vote in the NMPII. Cllex, ·
Mosll'llpular
Driver COil'ljletitlon 171
istering 81 www.chexmostpopularclitYer.com,butthesponsorisofleri1111 '
additiOnal Incentive to YOIB!1: a p-q,
prize trip for tv.o to the 2009 Daytona
500. Enby In the sweepstakes Is automate lortllose who I'Ote for the most '

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papular driver, and that CO&lt;npetltlon Is.

· open un~l ilkl'l.17.

cWi JU om ml.t..Jtl•
Galdoilwlllellt Norlll
C•lllnllptldwllf In U.
On NOY. 1, 1998, N&lt;&gt;1l1 carolina
SpeB(ttla; in Rockingham hosted the
32nd and next-to-last race of what \\liS
then the Winstoil Cup season. Jeff Gordoo won for~ 12th ~file that season,
and he would also .-n the ftna race at ·
Allanta Motor Speed,wy. 11\o drivers
who finished In the top ~o. slxthj)lace ·
E!ol:lcy Hamilton and nlntlljjace Dale
Earnhardt, are now deCeased. On~
three.:.. Gordon , Mark Martin and Jeff
Burton -are stll active.

• Bush signs historic
· bailout bill. See Page A2
• Officials proclaim
· October Breast Cancer
Awareness Month.
:SeePageA3
• Local Briefs.
SeePage AS
, • Consumer Counsel
· · plans electric rates public
· forum. See Page A6
• Gravesite dedications
scheduled for Oct. 11 .
· See Page A6 · .
; • Adoptabte dogs.
· See Page A6
: • OU planning switch
' to semester system,
:See PageA6

WEATHER

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy, OH
(740) 992-2155

/ ,'_ i ,'

AU 'TOIVIOTIVr

CUSIIJC: CAll RES'IOIATION a PU1S

.

• 4 SEcnONS -

Let's Go Racin!!

Me.,.~ ,-·1fed~
'
Now eelllng:

AJS

A3

Celebrations. .
Classifieds

C4
D3-5

insert

Editorials

A4

Movies ·

cs

Obituaries

As

Sports

HOLZER ·CLINIC

24 PAGES

Around Town

~omics

• Ford &amp; Motorcrelt Parta
• Engine~, Tranaler Caeea &amp; Tr•namllllona.
• Aflermerket Replacement Sheet Metal &amp; COfi!POnants
• For All M,akH of Vehicle•

POMEROY - Meigs
County's telephone line
charge for E-911. is generating more money than county_ commissioners anticipated, and probably more than
will be req11ired to operate
the system.
In November 2006, voters
approved a 50-cent monthly
telephone line charge to
finance the 911 service. At
that time, commissioners
expected it would generate
around
to
· ·pay" the' ·,
for
inll wages · for
litrlity costs
other
· expenses:Collections began
in March, :1007, and so far,
total $70,000,
·
The county's 911
based on that of Vinton
County, where the service is
operated from the county
sheriff's office. Mei~s
County's 911 system wtll
operate from the EMS
office, 'and, if a legal opin~
ion allows, will use EMS
dispatchers to answer calls.
The Public Utilities
Commission of. Ohio continues to hold $100,000 in
escrow for Meigs County's
Enhanced 911 system, fees
paid by wireless telephone
customers. Those funds will
be available once the system is operating, and it must
be o"perating no later than
January, 2009 . .
Local villages and townships are now in the process
PIHse see til, Al

8Y EUZABETH RIGEL
ERIGELCMVOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

INDEX
•
I

:\'o.

:c-

from that medical oenler has
l)een to Gallipoli s to check
out the e1ght or nme locations property owners. have ,
offered for the clinic .
·
Requirements for the
clinic site have changed ,
at first calling for a 4.000
square foot facility with
SO parking space s and

Ple•se see Clinic, Al

Bv HOPE RousH
HAOUSH@MYDAILYAEGIST6A.COM

J. REED

Rockets over.
Rio slated for
FaimFest

.'

Detalla on Page

·.

..J.:.!.

Delta Queen
plans final
visit in area

BAEEOCMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

..... VIcliln

• '!here's a

I
,). ,; . \-.&lt;....

The move was hailed by
Galli a's Veterans Service
· CommiSSIOn as a budgetsaver since the . VSC
presently transports local
veterans to appomtments al
VA _med1cal centers m
Ch1ll_1cothe
and
Huntmgton_. W.Va.
..
The Hunlmgt'?n . ~A fac1hty w1U be the clamc s parent
facility. A representative

contmues
to build

-lta:u:lst Yt.

ished a career-best nintll
in what was
apparently his
final race at .
Team Red
Bull.

,

· An outpatient clinic for
G:illia Co~nty - the on,ly
one m Oh10 among 44 to •oe
established iq 21 states ~
was announced by the V(\
and U.S. Rep . Ch~rhe
\Yilson on June 27 . A~~~~l!ne of 10 months was 1m11~1~ scheduled to set up the
chmc 111 Galhpohs and
ser~e veterans m Galha ,
Meigs and Mason counlles.

911 fund
•

VIckers

say, "Take
that" He fin

· r

SI. ,)O • \ 'ol.

•

Ma,tJe the end of his title hopes
will bode well for ~- His
best Chase was 2006, v.l1en he
wasn't In It He v.on three of the
final10 races. When he won the
Chase in 2005, he didn't win arr;.
~ Jeff Gordon finished rourth de
spite wal&lt;ing up sick on race
mom~. He actually seemed to
mean tt wllen he said it might be
good to be sick more often.
~ A.J. Allmendinger had a prOduc. Uve way to

!' I
f ' ' '
i • j · ',
.f.

\Jiddlquul • ( •. tllipoli ... • &lt;ktoht"l' ,) . :!OOX

KKELLYOMYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM

~

*h · ;t

•

VA moving forward on outpatient clinic

SPORTS

'Bodine, Toyota.

· Set an&lt;1 Maitdl. Oenrr; Hamnn
, tlalls by 243, Tony Stewart~
255 and Kyle Busch ~ 311.

{

PoHll'l'll~

.1lh' l'ul dl ... h l l l:-: ( o .

1

JJ 1 •nJ! 2.!:P a·nn.u n
SPRINT. CUP
No. 88 AMP/NATIONAL GuARD CHEvROLET
.

·•

Hometown.News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

bee: Mountain Dew 250
WileN: Talladega (Ala.)
Supetspee&lt;May (2.66 mi.),

1
1

WileN: Lowe's Motor

Speedway, Concord, N.C.
(1.5 mi.), 200 laP&amp;/300
miles.
• Wilen: Friday, Oct. 10.
Jeff
1 Uit YM"'I
Burton, Chevrolet.
1 Qull..,.._ .-.r: Jimmie
Johnson, Chevrclet.
1 " - NCGnl: Marl&lt; Martin,
much; Edwards explained after- 187.735 mph, Oct 14,
Ford, 188.354 mp/1, Mill' 10,
ward -and Jollnson.was - to 2005.
1997. '
get back in front as the t'Ml
1 R- record: Marl&lt; Mar11at WIOk: Jimmie Jot]nson
roall!d into the tri&lt;Jval. Asked his · tin, rurd,
~ 155.799 m,.,,
"'"
v.on the Camping World 400 at ~ts in tl1ose tense final mo- May 25 ' 1996 .
Kansas ~. but rt was his ments, Johnson said, "Where did 1 Lilt WIOk: Denny Hamlin
rival tor the Sprint Cup cnamp;. ., he come frcm?" For Johnson,~ won at Kansas, clinching
onshilf. ea~ Edwards, who laid n was victory No. 5 of the season . the manufacturer cham pion the line. Against lor1l odds - and the tllird ~me he won after
onship for Toyota.
he was tllr%&lt;iuarters of a secstarti~ on the poie. He took a
10-point lead a.e&lt; Edwards in the
ond bel\ind with five laps to go
- E&lt;Wiards baCked down John Chese for the Sprint Cup, pulling
son and took the lead for a seo ahead~ the same maJWn he
ond 0&lt; so in the tllird and fourth balled entering the race.

c

Craftsmlll Truck

'
1 R-: Dollar General 300

tme~

a

.

'

.

Weather

B Section
A6

@ :aoo8 Ohio V.Uey Publ~hlna Co.

RIO GRANDE - . In an
effort to bring entertainment to as many people as
possible, the second annual
· Roc'kets Over Rio Fall
Fireworks Extravaganza
has been scheduled to coincide with the Bob Evans
Farm
Festival
this
Saturday, Oct. II,
The village · of Rio
Grande, in conjunction with
the University of Rio
Grande/Rio ·
Grande
Community CoUege, is hostbig the event in the Bqb
Evans Farm Hall 'parking lot .
The 38th annual Bob
Evans Farm Festival is Oct.
10-12.
The festivities will start
early with the Rio Grande
Volunteer Fire Department
selling concessions during
three Red Storm soccer
games, scheduled to begin
at3 p.m:, 5 p.m., and 7 p.m.
Firefighlers will be serving
vegetable soup cooked over
a fire along with hotdogs,
other concession's, and nonalcoholic beverages. They
"

1

Pl..se see Fireworks, ~

.. .

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - Local residents
have one more chance to.
see the Delta Queen before ·
it is permanently docked.
This Tuesday will mark ·
the historic steamboat's
final visit lo Point Pleasant,
and in honor of the boat's
last stop in the area,_
Majestic America Line is
encouraging the community
to pay tribute to the Delt&lt;i
Queen by celebrating its
final season.
The event will welcome
eight representatives selected by the City of Point
Pleasant' to board the Delta:
Queen ~t J I a.in. for lu_nch·
l , ,~.f.&lt;t;!•,tou{ of-the vessel. The

.

1'

EliZabeth RlgeVpholo
From left, Gallia County Commissioners President. Justin Fallon introduces. Ohio
. Democratic Party Chairman Chris Redfern to elected officials, Democratic &lt;iindidates, and
members of the community on Friday afternoon at the DemocratiC headquarters 1n downtown Gallipolis. Redlern, a Toledo-afea native, is a former student at the University of Rio
Grande/Rio Grande 'Community College. .

Ca•npaign rolls on
State Democratic chair makes case for ticket

·

'

'('iiie•en trlb'Uti" tf1j

officially kick off' at noon
with a song on the boat's
steam-powered calliope .
According to a news·
release-;'Citizens of the community are welcome to the
Point Pleasant Riverfront
Park to enjoy the event.
Della Queen historian Bill
Wiemuth will open the ceremony with an overview of
the boat's exemption status
and the reason behind the
event. The Delta Queen 's
captain then will make a special presentation. ln addition . the Delta Queen Band
and singers will perform.
Wiemuth. along with the·
vessel's Discovery Guide ,
then will deliver a historical
summary of the · Delta
Queen's career. A special
calliope concert will close
the ,event prior to the boat's
final departure from Point
'Pleasant at I p.m.
During the tribute , ,Quilts
'N Things will hosl a quilt
show at the riverfront. Club
members encouraged everyone to attend the event. If it
rains. the show will be.
moved to the former
Workingman 's Store on
Main Streel.
The Delta Queen already ·
has made nine stops in the
area ihis year. The boat i&amp;

'"You can't call ytJurself a
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community
College. ma;;erick or a reformer if
acknowledged that south- you agree with the policies
GALLIPOLIS - . Ohio eastern Ohio had . been 'that have driven this state
Democratic Party Chairman largely forgotten by candi- down since day one. 90 perChris Redfern visited the dates in the past, until Gqv, cent of the tiine," he said .
Democratic headquarters in Ted Strickla'nd won 72 Ohio
According to Redfern,
downtown Gallipolis Friday counties in 2.006, due in part Ohio has lost 65 jobs per
afternoon to encourage sup- because he showed up when day on average sihce ·Bush
port for Sens. Barack others had not.
became president.
.
Obama and Joe Biden.
He then listed some core
He then turned the focus
He met with elected offi- issues that President Bush onto Obama and Biden and
cials, Democratic candi- has failed improv,e includ- urged those present not to
dates' and members of the ing the economy, health- get lost in the distractions
community, making Gallia care, Iraq and education.and thrown
out
by
the
the 17th county he has visit· the direction the last eight Republican party.
ed in Ohiowuth ofl-70 dur- years has taken America,
"You've got to talk to votreiterating the belief that ers and you've got 10 find
~ng the last two weeks. ·
' Redfern, a former stud-ent John McCain will be more
Plu~e see c.m,.lp. Al
at the University of Rio of the same.
Pluse see Delta Queen. Al'
Bv ELIZABETH RIGEL

EAIGELCIMYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM

.

'

'

ROYALTY
Emma Hunter,
eighth from l~ft, was
crowned 2008
Homecoming Queen
during Friday's
·
homecoming cere· :
monies at Southern :
High School. Also
pictured with Hunter
is the homecoming
court, from left,
Jordan Pickens,
Merri Collins, Kyle ·
Goocle, Tiflanie
Deem, Bryan Harris,
Rashell Boso,
Westpn Roberts,
Hunter, Chelsea
· Pape, Chris Holter,
Samantha Patterson
ancl J.D. Whittington.
Photo courtesy
o1 Don Dudding

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