<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="4399" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/4399?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-10T06:07:35+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="14326">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/524f7c0c7ace8d0c895473100962f386.pdf</src>
      <authentication>a27eea8b103b3710124945ea78a15911</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="15299">
                  <text>NBA,
BY NANCY ARMOUR .
ASSOCIATED PRESS

- - -- - - - - - · way obvious if you're .
doing that."
olfers and Price anaWhite NBA playon; benefit by
havingfewerfoulcallsagainst
· lyzed officiating crews,
,them by majority white officiating
based on boxscores, not
cnlws. accorangtoacontroversiat
individual referees. The
study. Black players are called /at
aboutlhesamerateregardlessof
NBA, after getting a draft .
crew's racial makeup.
copy of the paper last year,
Foul ratewHh referee crew,
did . its own study: Using
1991-921hrough2003·04
data from November 2004
seasons, by race'
to January 2007, the league
• Blacl&lt;ptayen; 1!!!1 WMe
reviewed some 148 ~000
5 023
4 045
·
calls along with which offi·
• ·
cia! made each calL
..·-329.
· '
"The fact is there is no
Majorttywh'e
Majorttyblack
evidence
of racial bias in
........ P6' 48 ........
"'• Fo&lt;Jscale&lt;l
""Y'.,,,. egan,
""""'""'"'""'...,.
foul calls made by NBA
•p
officials and that is based
SOUACE: Cornel University
,.,
andu,;,.,.r~yorPe""'~'";'
on a study conducted by
our experts who looked at
think any of them are racist data that was far more
in any way. They just call robust and current than the
the game. If it's a foul, it's · data relied upon by
a fouL If it's not, there's no Professor Wolfers," said
call.
Joel Litvin, president of
. "I don't think it's possi- league and basketball operble to really be biased in ations.
your calls because if (you
"The · short of it is
are), 1 think it would be Wolfers and Price ·only

14th annual
Meigs Football
Golf Tournament

ftNII plaJ;I

bias in.oni

studvon

d

Kobe' Bryant says he's
never noticed any evidence
of racial bias when it
.
comes to NBA officiating.
" I think I've gotten more
techs from black refs than
· white refs," the Los
. Angeles Lukers star joked
Wednesday.
"That's
reverse racism probably."
Bryant.
Cleveland
Cavaliers standout LeBron
James and four other NBA
players dismissed an acadernie study that found evidence of racial bias in referees ' calls, saying they 've
never experienced it.
According to an upcoming paper by a University
of Pennsylvania professor
and a Cornell graduate student, white referees called
fouls against bla1=k players
at a higher rate than they
did against white players.
Their study al so found
that black officials called
fouls on white players
more frequently than they
did against blacks, but the
disparity wasn't as great.
"We obviously discu ss
officiating and our fe'&lt;lings
toward 'it," said Utah Jazz
guard Derek Fisher, president of the NBA players'
association. "But I don't
ever recall it _being a racial.
ly motivated type of conversation where we 'felt like
there were certain guys that
had it out for me or him or
whoever just because of the
color of our skin .
"I don't know that I've
ever really felt that there
was a racial component to
officiating."
James put it this way :
"It's stupid."
Chicago Bulls · veteran
forward P.J . Brown said:
"Somebody 's got too much
time on their hands."
That ·misses the point,
said Justin Wolfers, an
assistant professor of business and public policy at
. the Wharton School and
co· author of the study.
"This is not a view that
one set of people hates
another set of people . This
is implicit, unconscious
biase s," said Wolfers, who
conducted the study with
Joseph Price, a graduate
student in economics at
Cornell.
.
..
"You see two pAtyers
(collide) · on the floor and
you have to call a block or
a charge . Doe.s the skin
color of the players somehow shape how you interpret the signals your brain
gives you?"
Analyzing NBA bo){
scores from a 13-season
span running through 2004,
the study found that black
players received fewer
fouls per 48 minutes than
. white players, 4.33 to 4.97.
· But it also found that fouls
on black players could
increase as much as 4 1-2
percent in that time period
"when the number of white
referees on a crew went
from zero to three."
Though the NBA is made
up of predominantly black
players, less than 40 percent of its officials are
black and they are randomly assigned to games in .
three·person crews.
·
" I don't think there's any
prejudice or racial stereotype ," the Bulls:\\ Chris
Duhon said. "I thinJt 1;111 our
officials are great. I don 't

Thursday, May 3, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page B8 • Th~ Daily Sentinel

w.

•,4.33'.

looked at calls made by find the things you're lookthree-man. · crews. Our ing for."
experts were able to. anaFormer NBA star Charles
lyze calls made by individ- Barkley said on TNT, "The
ual referees."
thing that · bothered me
But Wolfers said they most is these guys didn't
h
Th
analyzed calls made by all- even go to I e game. ey
white officiating crews and looked at box scores."
all-black officiating crews,
Union chief Billy Hunter
and the results were the hasn 't read the study, but
same. The study also didn't said he wasn't surprised by
verify the exact race of its results. There is bias
players and referees, say- everywhere in society,
ing, "We simply noted Hunter said, so why should
whether a player or referee the NBA be immune?
appeared black, or n9t."
But Hunter also said he's
But Wolfers said the sam- . never gotten any compie was large enough so plaints about discriminaJd ' b f
'
that wou n I e a actor.
t10n.
"That's a lot of diagnos"No, never heard, never
tic evidence," Lakers coach gotten one," he said. "1
Phil Jackson said. "If you know (commissioner David
have a conclusive evidence Stern) . wouldn't tolerate
you want to come out with, any conscious bias, racist
you can almost make statis- act by a referee or by anytics prove what you want to body else."
prove.
Stu Jackson, the . league's
"If you go in with that disciplinarian for on-court
it's about race, maybe you actions, agreed.

"I can say I've never
heard a coach or a player or
a team official reference
race as a reason why they
didn't approve of a ref's
performance," , Jackson
said.
· Wolfers and Price are to
present the paper at meetings of the Society of
Labor Economists on
Friday and the American
Law
and
Economics
Association on Sunday.
They hope it will eventually be published in an economic journal.
AP Basketball Writer
Brian Mahoney {n New
York and AP Sports Writers
Tom Withers in Cleveland,
Andrew
Seligman
in
Chicago, Doug Alden in
Salt Lake City and Bob
Baum in Phoenix contributed to this report.

to

British queen arrives
in VIrginia, A2

Southern present
·senior play, A3

.
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
:;o ( ' El\TS • Vnl . ;;6, "'n. I&lt;J:!

www.mydaily,cnlind.,·um

FRIDA\ . \I.\\ ,J . :.w o-

New public defender contract reflects cost increase

SPORTS
• Eastem sinks Lady
Vikings. See Page 81

PLAY COVE-RALL BINGO

WIN UPTO $1,000 !!!

J.

Sheets met with Michael · contract. Westfall handles
Westfall and John Alge of cases which present a conthe Athens regional office flict or which involve coPOMEROY Meigs of the Ohio Public defendants.
County
Commissioners Defender's Office, and
This year's contract will
approved a contract for pub- approved a contract for the cost the county $61,384.
lic defender services that upcoming fiscal year for The total cost of the conreflects an increase in ·costs contract services through tract is $84,378 before the
and a decrease in state reim- the state office. Two itttor- state reimburses the county
bursement.
neys, Charles Knight and for part of the cost. The
At Thursday 's regular Christopher Tenaglia of, state's reimbursement rate
meeting, Commissioners Pomeroy, represent indi- decreased thi s new contract
Mick Davenport and Jim gent defe'ndants through the year, from 28 percent to 25
BY BRIAN

REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Southern
honors

Employees, Independent Contractors, Vendors and their immediate famiily not eligible..

percent. It includes a threepercent increase in fees paid
to Knight and Tenoglia.
· According to Westfall ; the
total cost to the county represents a 2.8 percent
increase over last year, with
a seven percent increase to
the county when the lower
rate of reimbursement
approved by the Ohio
General Assembly and cost
increases are considered.

,.

announces
new jobs
to the area
BY

BY BETH SERGENT

S:rench City
J\nUque &amp; era~ .Mall
*Home Decor *Furniture
' Hand Puppets for
Children
•Antiques for the
Antique lover
Our t 9,000 square foot
store offers thousands
of gifts for the entire
family.
842 2nd Ave. a.lllpol.., OH

740-44&amp;-9o2o
Open Mon-Saii0-6; Sun 1-.5
w•w.fftnc=hdl mall.rorn

INSIDE

'•

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
675-4340

• Hair Car&lt;! 6.. Makeilp
• Nail Car" • Helix Cuts

• Facials &amp;. Waxing

• Massage· Bod)! Wraps
Spa Packagi!S • Ch&lt;!rnical T'e&lt;!ls
• MlcrOO..rm Abrasions

326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446·2933
' Hours:

M·f I Oam-Ciose

tiC.

Debra K.

, Agent
(304)675-7036

215 Sixth St. Pt. Pleasant, WV
(304) 675-7G36
riven:itiesins@suddenllnkmall.com

Auto/llomeJllusiR&lt;5S/Lifel
Heallh/Anulty
An independent Agency

TODAY'S
, NUMBER IS:

tf~~~~

Haar wllot othan ore ~"I about
OticonDolto.

1&gt;11 1.'&gt; Ill \I{ING
1
" }

( '1'\ILR

n.. ,m Our :f{t,mt' 'To ·l(Jrl rs"

cm~s+r.Tmtm

.GALLIPOLIS
435'/, Second Avenue

• O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital
honors volunteers.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• UMW hears report
See Page AS ·

WEATHER

Customer!
"Callus today and you

could be smiling too!"
~

2400 Eastem Aven"e
Gallipolis, Ohto
(740) 4&lt;16-1711
7Wf l

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTI NEL.COM

'

POMEROY - The 14th
annual Meigs Football
Golf Tournament will be
held at Pine Hills Golf
Course on May 12 with a
shotgun start beginning at
9 a.m.
Game setup will be a
four man scramble with
each team bringing their
own members. Included
with entry fees will be a
round of golf, cart, lunch
and beverages with prizes
for each team.
There will also be · a
skins game during the day.
For more information,
please
contact
Mike
Chancey at 992-2158 or
992-0064.

1122 Jad&lt;son Pike • GaUipolia
,1740)441-1t71 (800)434-4114

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

740·446-0007
COME JOIN THE FUN WITH
SUNNY 93.1
~ll/Rll4~ Mt1~ ~lit

ffAM·ZPM

[!}ffiij)]) .
Quad Cab 4x4, 21,000
miles, Factory Warranty

~IJJ)]J
Gallia Auto Sales
2147 Jacl&lt;aon Pike
Gelllpolla, OH

(740) 446-0724
o...td Mink- a..-

---------

..

Please .see Jobs, AS

Accident causes
power outage

CENTE/l

1f4 mile north of Pomeroy, Mason.
·
Mason. WV

Bdan J. Reed/ photo

• Oxygen
• Nebulizers
• C·PAP
• Portable Oxygen
Pulse Oximetry

~ ADVANCED HEA IIING

lnratw,u :

McNEM4R

POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. - In the coming
years, American Electric
Power's River Operations at
Lakin will expand productivity and will hire more
than I00 more people, said
Mark Knoy, president of
AEP River Operations.
Knoy addiessed the Mason
County Area Chamber of
Commerce this pa&gt;i Thursday
at the Moose Lodge, saying
AEP is very committed to this
community.
"Our commitment to the
local business community is
shown through our . new
office building project and
Meigs County's annual obser~
our new vessels, both of
vance of the National Day of
which will create more new
Prayer continued .Thursday
jobs
in the area," Knoy said.
with a community prayer serAEP
River Ope,rations at
vice on the steps of the Meigs
Lakin
will,
in the ne){t three
. County Courthouse. Local .
years, build I0 new 6,000
elected officials joined pastors horsepower vessels, and for
and memt&gt;ers of the Christian every three new boats, 70
community to pray for govern- new jobs will be created
ment leaders at the national ,
here. he said. The Lakin
state and local levels. The
operation currently employs
ot&gt;servance is organized by a
300 people.
local .comiJlittee, and has
The ,Lakin facility also
been an annual event for the
will build 150 new barges
past 13 years. Students at
this year, 50 more than each
Mid-Valley Christian School
of the previous two years,
were among those who perand a· new oftlce building
formed inspirational music at . will be built at the Lakin
the service, and Charles Mash operation. which will give a
dozen more jobs, Knoy said .
is pictured with a group of
"The great community
local pastors· as answered
here
gives us a lot of sup· prayer requests are burned. A
port,"
he said.
look at the history of the
Knoy
is also vice-presi·
National Day of Prayer and
dent
of
AEP's Fuel,
additional photos of this
and
Logistics
Emissions
year's observance will t&gt;e feaGroup,
and
he's
responsible
tured in Sunday's Along the
for MEMCO Barge Lines
River feature .

RACINE - "Dream ·the
Dream" was the theme for
the recent Southern Local
Academic Awards Banquet
where
the
academic
achievements of students
were both recog)lized and
honored. ·
Superintendent
Mark
Miller welcomed the guests
to the banquet while
Mallory Hill, this year's
valedictorian, led the audience in the Pledge of
Allegiance. Rev. Kerry
Wood then gave the invocation before dinner, which
was prepared by Southern
High School.
After dinner, featured
speakers included Raberta
Hill, attorney at law, Dr. .
Kelley ·Grueser, DVM, Dr.
Mason Fisher, MD. All
speakers are Southern High
School alumni. Hill, a 1993
graduate, went on to Kent
State University and Capital
University; Grueser; a 1986
graduate, went on to
Muskingum College and
The Ohio State University;
Fisher, a 1995 graduate,
went on
to .Miami
University and The Ohio
State University.
Recipients of $100 saV·
irigs bonds each from the
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Q.ub included Bobbi Harris,
Emma Powell; recipients of
$100 savings bonds each
from Robert and Nancy
Grueser included Natalie
Wood, Amber Hayman ;
recipients of a $100 savings

Please see Southem, AS

Another satisfied

IAN

IMCNEMAR&lt;I!&gt;MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

BSERGENT@MYDAI~YSENTINELCOM

Page AS
• Mary E. Leonard
• Rosemary Neutzling

Please see Contract. AS

National Day of Prayer AEP

academic
excellence

OBITUARIES

After the Ohio Public
Defender contributes funds
from a carryover from last
year, the county's cost will
increase 4.7 percent.
Westfall said representatives of the Ohio Public
Defender and the County
Commissioners Association
of Ohio plan .to meet with
legislative leaders in an

AT OUR GAlliPOliS STORf
HOT DOGS, lEMONADE
&amp; CHIPS
lXJOR PRIZES TOO!
~ltWi.Elli~r m"~t
ilFT FOR. MOlt .
--..~·'' '111/l;/

..·~~ .

MillMalt p
4411-3283
Pi. l'lasllllt 675-3400

POMEROY - · Yesterday
morning a traffic accident sent
one man to the hospital and disrupted power and telephone
service . in sections of down2 SECTIONS - 16 PAGES
town Pomeroy.
.
Paul
E.
Baker,
63
,
Raci ne
Annie's Mailbox
was · trave ling east on West
Main Street near Cashland
Calendars
· when ihe 1993 Ford Taurus he
Classifieds
was driving struck a utility
pole, according to Patrolman
Comics
Ronnie Spaun of the Pomeroy
Police Department. . .
Editorials·
Spaun said although the accident
remains under investigaFaith • Values
tion, according to witnesses
Baker may' ve "blacked ouf'
Movies
before hitting the utility .pole.
NASCAR
"Speed was not a factor,"
Spaun exJ?Iained, adding Baker
Obituaries ·
was not c1ted in the accident.
Baker was transported to
Sports
Holzer Medical ' Center by
SU!rpllilto
emergency personnel from
Weather
A8
Patrolmen Ro.nnie Spaun (left) and Adam Holcomb assess an accident scene where Meigs EMS for treatment of his
injuries. No other vehicles or
© ll0070hlo Valley PubllshiD&amp; Co. · a vehicle driven by a Racine man struck a utility pole on West Main Street. .

INDEX

•·

\,

~,.--"~---

-

...- - - - : - -- · - -

~----

---

passengers were involved in the
accident.
"The vehicle sustained heavy
damage," Spaun said. ·
Spaun said both air, bags -in
the veh'icle deployed from the
force of impact. The impact
also "moved" the utility pole.
dropping live· electti'cal and
pho!le lines a few feet from the
ground.
.
The accident. which happened arou nd I 0: 15 a.m.,
· snarled downtown traffic for
about an hour and left several
homes and ·businesses in the
dark. creating long lines at
some area restaurants during
the noon rush while others were
left waiting in the dark, unable
to serve customers. At one
point stalled traffic stretched
froin the accident scene, west
to the upper parking lot.
Both Spaun and Patrolman
Adam Holcomb investigated
the accident and were assisted
by emergency personnel from
Meigs · EMS and the Pomeroy
Volunteer Fire Department. ·

�I r

NATION • WORLD

The DaiJ.y Sentinel

BY BOB LEWIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BY ANNE GEARAN

s~hools.

AP photo

Queen Elizabeth II receives flowers from the crowd as she arrives at the Virginia State
Capitol in Richmond , Va .. Thursday.
·
for each person slain - in
the
school 's
colors,
maroon
and
orange.
Virginia Tech President
Charles W. Steger also presented the queen with a
school pin.
"My heart goes out to
the students, friend s and
families of those killed and
to the many oth!=rs who
have. been affected, some
of "!hom I shall be mee.ting shortly," the queen
said during the speech .
"On behalf of the people
of the United Kingdom, I
extend my deepest sympathies at this time of such
grief and sorrow."
The plane carrying the
81-year-old queen landed
mid-afternoon, and 20
minutes later she emerged
with her husband, Prince
Philip.
Hundreds of ·· people
stood in lines for hours in
a cool drizzle, some since
dawn, to enter the ·grounds
of the. freshly refurbished
219-year-old Capitol.
"How often do you get
to see the reigning
monarch, much less in
your own town?" said
Keith Gary, the first spectator through the gates.

Inside the Capitol , the ·
queen met briefly with the
lead construction worker
on a $105 million, twoyear Capitol renovation
project that was completed
Monday, with high school
student body leaders and
· with 100-year-old Oliver
W. Hill.
.
Hill is a civil rights
attorney whose litigation
helped bring about the
19S4 Supreme Court decision outlawing racial segregation in public schools.
Frail at 100 years old
and in a wheelchair, Hill
greeted the queen in the
rotunda of the·Capitol that
once Wli.S the seat of
Confederate government.
. He said later he was
pleased she noticed the
social changes he · helped
broker.
"It's not every day you
bump into royalty," Hill
said.
In the evening, the queen
arrived
in
Colonial
Williamsburg in an open
carriage, where she waved
a gloved hand at the severa! thousand people who
lined Duke of Gloucester
Street, the main street of
Virginia's restored 18th-

FDA inspectors checking food
manufacturers while pet food recall expands
Bv RANDOLPH
E. SCHMID
AP SCIENCE

WRIT~R

WASHINGTON
Government inspectors are
checking food makers who
use protein concentrates to
make sure none of the cont. aminated products found in
pet food have reached other
products, the Food and
Drug . Administration said
Thursday.
There is no evidence that
any ofthe two contaminated
batches of wheat gluten and
rice protein fro lll" China
ended up as an ingredient in
human food, "but it's prudent to look," said Dr.
David Acheson, assistant
FDA commissioner for food
protection.
Acheson said the inspections began this week, covering both human and pet
food manufacturers to raise
awareness of how important
it is to know their supply
chain and to make sure none
.of the contaminated products remain in stocL
The number of facilities
to be visited could be in the
range of hundreds, Acheson
said, based on knowler;!ge of
what ingredients go to
which manufacturer.
"This is going to go on
until we feel satisfied we· ve
got it covered. We' re not
setting the bar at 50 or I00
or 1,000. We're . going to
keep doing this until we' re
confident thai we' ve got our
arms around it," he said.
Protein concentrates are
used in a number of food
products such as baked
goods.
.
.The announcement came
as pet food manufacturer
Menu Foods expanded its
recall because of possible
eros s -contamination
between melamine-tainted

•

.

cross its border to join the
ranks of al-Qaida and other
insurgent or terrorist groups
SHARM · EL-SHEIK, in Iraq.
Egypt - In a diplomatic
Ahead of the meeting, a
turning point for the Bush U.S. military spokesman in
administration; Secretary of Baghdad said Syria had
State Condoleezza Rice met somewhat stemmed the flow
Thursday with Syria's for- of foreign fighters. "There
eign minister and expressed has been some movement by
U.S. concerns about the the Syrians." said Maj. Gen.
country's porous border with William Caldwell. "There
Iraq.
has been a reduction in the
"I didn't leciUre him and !low of foreign fighters into
he didn't lecture me,'' Rice Iraq" for more than a month.
said after the first CabinetThe administration has
level talks in years between said it worries that Syria will
the counuies.
use any contact with the U.S.
Prospects dimmed for a as leverage in a dispute over
more dramatic face-to-face alleged Syrian meddling in
discussion between Rice and fragile Lebanon. Rice said
Iran's forei gn minister. "We that subject did not come up
haven '!.planned and have not · Thursday.
asked for a bilateral meeting,
Rice 's meeting with
nor have they asked us," she Moallem marked the first
said.
such high-level talks since
The administration has the February 2005 assassinaresisted talks with Syria and tion of former Lebanese
Iran despite the recommen- Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
dations of allies, the Iraq The U.S. withdrew its
Study Group and U.S. law- amba~sador from Damascus
makers from both parties.
· in protest and has given a
"It's a stan;" Foreign cold shoulder to the Syrian
Minister Walid Moallem said government since. Syria
after the 30-minute session.
ilenies it had anything to do
The carefully orchestrated with the killing.
meeting overshadowed the
Moallem asked Rice to
modest initial accomplish- return an ambassador; she
ments from a SO-nation gath- made no promises.
ering devoted to improving
Rice said the talks were
Iraq's security and financial limited · to Iraqi security. "I
bottom line: Iraq's embattled made cleat we don't want to
prime minister was among have a difficult relationship
those leaning on the U.S. to with Syria, but we need to .
engage Syria and Iran, argu- have some basis for a better
ing they could help lessen the relationship." . .
violence in neighboring Iraq.
Only last month the White
Until now, Rice and House blistered House
President Bush had said Speaker Nancy Pelosi for a
Syria well knew what it diplomatiC uip to Damascus,
could do to help Iraq and administration officials
tighten its border - and did 'suggesied afterward that
not need the U.S. to point it Syrian · President Bashar
out. The U.S. claims Syria Assad had played the
looks the other way ,while California Democrat for a
fighters from many countries fool.
/If' DIPLOMATIC WRITER

RICHMOND, Va.. Queen Elizabeth II arrived
Thursd)ly for the commemoration
of
Jamestown 's
400th
anniversary and prajsed
the cultural changes that
have occurred since sh ~
last visited America's first
permanent Engli sh settlement SO years ago. '
The last time the quet!n
helped Virginia mark the
anniversary of its colonial
founding, it was an allwhite · affair in a . state
. whose government was 'in
open defiance of a 1954
Supreme Court order to
desegregate
public

•

Friday, May 4, 2()07

Rice raises issue of
porous borders with Iraq
in meeting with Syrian

snsses.

"Over the course of my
reig11 and certainly since I
' first visited Jamestown in
1957, my country lias
become a much more
diverse society just as the
commonwealth of Virginia
and the whole United
States of America have
also undergone a major
social change," the queen
said in speech to the
Virginia General Assembly
in Richmond, the first stop
on 'her visit.
"The
melting
pot
'""'tnetaphor captures one of
the great strengths of your
country and is an inspiration to others around the
world as we face the ~on ­
tinuing social challenges
ahead," she said.
Gov. Timothy M. Kaine
said the message couldn't
be more timely or appropriate.
"This is a moment that
brings Virginia together ...
in the aftermath of a hard
time," Kaine said at a
news conference, referring
. to the April 16 massacre at
Virginia Tech.
After the speech, the
queen met briefly with students and faculty from
Virginia Tech, including
three who were wounded.
Among them was Katelyn
. Carney, who was shot. in
the. hand during the mas.sacre and presented the
queen with a bracelet ·with
32 polished stones - one

PageA2

products and other foods
made in the same periocj.
Another
company,
SmartPak ,Canine
of
Plymouth, Mass., issued a
recall for all lots ·of its
LiveSmart Adult Lamb ·and
Brown Rice food, which it
said had tested positive for
the presenc,l! of melamine.
The food is shipped directly
to about 220.consumers and

is not available on store
she! ves, the company said
in a statement.
More than I00 brands of
pet food have been recalled
since March 16 because
fhey were contaminated
An
with
melamine.
unknown number of dogs
and cats have been sickened
· or died after eating chemi- ·
cal-laced pet food.

century capital.
She rode in ~ mustardyellow carriage called the
Landau , named for the
towri in Germany where
such ·carriages were made.
Two horses pulled the carriage less than a half-mile
down the tree-lined street,
past some original and
reconstructed 18th century
homes, stores and taverns.
Judy Stillman of Portola
Valley, Calif., timed a visit
to
her daughter in
Williamsburg specifically
so she could see the queen .
"She's our history," said
the 70-year-old Stillman .
"England started every-·
thing we have ·now: the
la·w, the wonderful Magna
Carta, democracy. We need
to know about England.
We need to knpw about the
,
queen.

. On Monday. May 28, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone put not ·
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample belo~:
you wish, sele&lt;:t one of the following F&amp;EE verses·below lo
Iaccompan:y your tribute.
·

I. We hold youin our ihoughiS and memoriesforever.
2. MayGod cradle you in Hisarms. now a_nd forever.
l Forever missed. never furgullen. MayGod holdyouin !he palm of

His hand.

David . Andrews ·
July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery slill

insptre usall. and !hememory ofyour
smilefillsus wilh joy and laughler.
7. Though ou\ of sighl, you'll forever be inmy hcarl and mmd.
8. Thedays may comeand go. buiihelimes we shared will always remain .
9. MayGod's angel~ guideyouand pr01ec1you1hroughou11ime.
\0. Youwere alight in our life!hat bums forever in our hetJrtS.
II . MayGod's graces shine over you for all lime.
12. Youarc in our !houghlsand prayers frotn morning10 nighl and from
year 10 year

Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews and
family

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED

lNG

Fill out the fom1 below and drop off to

'•

TI1e Dally Seutincl
Witb Fo~dest Memories
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

Voice your opinion by voting for
'
all your favorites!'

In The Tri-County
Gallia • Meigs
&amp;Mason ·

Your late
Counts!

~allipolts Jaatlp 1Eribune

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel

tloint ~leasant l\egister

Public meetings . and
Wachter from Forked Run
Burr Oak State Parks

the United in Christ Curch.
Potluck dinner, 4 pi .m. ,
lunch
catered
by
speaking,
progrm to follow, theme
Monday, May 7
Wendy
's
of
Pomeroy,
"Mother Goose." No gift
LETART FALLS
exchange. Sponsored by
Letart Township Trustees, RSVP at 992-5005.
POMEROY - The Big Enterprise
United
7 p.m., office building.
Bend Farm Antiques Club Methodi st Church . Call
will meet at 7:30 p.m. on 992-2604 by Friday for
Wednesday, May 9
POMEROY _ Meigs the secretary's office on the seating reservations.
TUPPERS PLAINS County Board of Heal!h, 5 Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Grace
p.m., conference room , Plans areB beding ~ade Afor Amazing
the
Big
en
Antique
g
.
C
H
alth
Community
Church
fun
Metgs
ounty
e
Days to be held at the fair- day, following Sunday
Department.
· grounds June 16-17 Linder mornipg service at the
sponsorship of the Antiques Tuppers Plains grade
Club and the Meigs County school, noon. Open to all
Fair Board.
yuoungsters. Basketball
GALLIPOLIS - French and other games featured.
Colony Chorus, a part of Food and drinks served. For
Friday, May 4
Sweet
Adeline s,
RACINE
- Meigs International. will practice more in formaton, call Chris
County Pomona Grange , at 7 p.m. at the Gallia Collins, 740--989-0611.
.7 :30 p.m., Racine Grange County Senior Center.
Hall. Junior and youth bak- Singers are welcome to parIng contests. ·
ticipate in the barbershop'
Monday, May 7
style, four-part harmony.
Saturday, May .S
POMEROY
- TB staff
For more information conSALEM CENTER
will
be
at
the
Pomeroy
tact Bev Alberchinski, 740Star Grange #778 and Star 446-2476, or Suzy Parker, Library S p.m. giving skin
Junior Grange #878 meet in 740-992-SSSS .
tests. Will return May 9 to
regular
session · with
read the tests.
potluck supper at 6:30p.m.
Wednesday, May 9
followed by meeting at
MIDDLEPORT . - The
7:30p.m.
Auxiliar·y
of Feeney•
Post
128 ,
Bennett
Sunday, May ·6
Monday, May 7
American Legion, will
CHESTER - An open
POMEROY Meigs have a picnic at the
house will be held on
County Cancer Initiative, Waterworks
Sunday, ·May 6 from I to 4
noon, in the conference of Minersville, . I p.m.Park,
All p.m. to celebrate the 80th
the ·Meigs County Senior members welcome .
birthday of Donald Mora at
Citizens Center. New mem~
the
Chester Courthouse.
bers welcome.
Friends and relatives are
RACINE
Racine
invited to aitend but it is
Chapter 134, O.E.S ., 7:30
requested · that they not
. p.m. !Pins to be given to 2S·
Sunday, May 6
and 30 year members. . SYRACUSE- Syracuse bring gifts.
Refreshments.
Community
Church,
Wednesday, May 9
Second Street, 6:30 p.m.
Thesday, May 8
with Sid Hayman speaking.
RACINE-Acard showPOMEROY Meigs
POMEROY - . Mother- er is plan.ned for Mattie
County , Chamber · of daughter banquet will be Beegle's 90th birthday May
Commerce, business-mind- . held at the Pomeroy Church 9. Cards may be sent to.her
ed
luncheon,
noon , of Christ, W.Main Street, at 48680 SR 124, Tornado
Pomeroy Library, Randy for all women and girls of Road, Racine, Ohio 4S77 i .

Clubs and
organizations

. Other events

..Birthdays

Church events

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Pays to be cautious in this relationship
vous about a guy who has you enjoy their company,
been married three times but not their out-of-control
and recently broke up after a · children.
Dear Annie: Please tell
· Dear Annie: I am an intel- four-year relationship. It
~igent, educated, attractive doesn't mean he · hasn't "California Charger" that he
:Woman, in good physical finally found Ms. Right in and his wife should take the
shape. and I like to cook and you, but it pays to be cau- "eight-hour Driver Safety
keep house. My daughte.r tious. We strongly recom- Program offered by' AARP.
always tells me, "You ' re mend couples counseling. The course is taught by
,hot, Mom. Anybody would Now.
trained volunteers all across
Dear Annie: A work the United States. The cost
,IJe happy with you."
: I left a 30-year marriage acquaintance recently had is $10 per person for a very
because I never felt fulfilled, my family over for dinner. useful workbook and lively
~nd then I experienced She and her husband are class .discussion (no tests are
empty-nest syndrome. After nice enough, but they pro- given). Once the course is
~onsiderable counseling by vide such minimal supervi- completed, insurance com'my pastor, I got a divorce sion for their two toddlers panies provide a discount on
that I don't regret. I dated a that I feared for the chi!,· auto insurance. The best
bit and am now living with dren 's safety the entire time part, however, is that those
"Andy." He's sweet, kind, we were there, ·
who participate learn many
.Joving, generous, thoughtful
I have heard her stories of defensive driving skills that
'jlnd a hard worker, and we their antics, such as climb- every driver needs these
-have wonderful ·conversa- ing to high places and get- days, regardless of age. I
:tions, share·the same taste in ting into things they should- have benefited for many
'everything and really enjoy n't, but I thought she must years from the information l
each other's company.
have exaggerated, because I learned during the classes.•
My problem is coming to could not believe any parent Contact www.aarp.org/drive
.ierms with the "baggage." could be so irresponsible. I or 1-888-AARP-NOW (!::Andy has been married three was wrong.
888-227-7669) for more
times and then had a rela- . As I mentioned, they are information and class schedtionship with a neighbor that nice people, but I don't fee l ! ules.. Online Grail,
'recently ended. However, could be witness to all this Memphi~, Tenn.
.
i;he kept coming over to bor- wild behavior again, in pubDear Memphis: Thanks
row things they had previ- lie or private. (I know the for reminding us. The AARP
'ously used together. I got children are allowed to roam course is available in person
:Upset and told him he need- freely through restaurants.) or online to drivers age 50
;J!d to set boundaries with How do I . politely decline and over. We hope ;~nyone
;her. He then told her I wasn't future invitations without who is interested will check
-comfortable with her and divulging the reason? - it out.
~hat their relationship was Baffied and Terrified ·
Annie's Mailbox is writover.
.
Dea.r Baffied: Parents ten by Kathy Mitchell and
: Now l wonder how long who think children don't Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
he ' ll last with me. Andy require supervision · are tors of the Ann Landers colclaims his last relationship deluding themselves, and if umn.' Please e-mail. your
was nothing like ours, but l a child were to be seriously questions to anniesmail·
'wonder why it took him four hurt, the parents could be box@comcast.net, or write
:years to find out. He says charged with neglect. If they · to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
tie 's looking for marriage invite you again, say, "Sorry, Box ll8190, Chicago, IL
ilnd that we have the ele- we can't make it." No rea- 606ll. To find out more
Irnents for a good one (which son is necessarY: At some about Annie's Mailbox, and
j agree with), but I am still point, however. you should .read features by other.
'Wondering. Nervous invite them to join you for Creators Syndicate writers
dinner, making ) t clear it's and cartoonists, visit the
Nellie
·
Dear · Nellie: We can "adults only." This will let Creators ,Syndicate Web
understand why you are ner- them kno.w, politely, that page ·at www.creators.com.
BY KATHY MITCHELL

Submitted photos

A cast photo from the Southern High School Senior Play "Mystery Manor Madness" performed at 7 p.m. tonight at the high school.

Southern to present senior play
RACIN E!
The
Southern High School
Senior Play, " My stery
Manor Madness" will be
performed 'fur..1he public at
7 p.m. tonight at the high
school. There is no admission charge but · donations
will be
·
accepted at the door.
"Mystery
Manor
Madness" is an original
play written and performed by Don Dudding 's
senior drama · class. The
full-len gth two-act comedy is set in a mansion and
features what Dudding
calls .the "hilariou.s antics
of the. mansion 's residents
including its ghosts, servants, and owners."

POMEROY - Area resi- · to identify trees.
tree ID book. .
dents can learn about
The afternoon portion ·Pre-regi stration
1s
chainsaw operation and get will be spent outside prac- required by June I.
tips on safety at a Southeast tieing .the identification Registrations are handled
Ohio Woodland Interest skill s that have been by the Ohio Woodlands
Group workshop to be held learned in the morning. Stewards Program located
at 7 p.m. on Monday at the The workshop will be held at the. Ohio State University
Athens County Extension on 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday, School of Environment and
June 8, in Logan (Hocking Natural
Office.
Resources
in
Presenter
Damo.n County) at the St. John Columbus. Registration can
Hart lev is an Ohio State Catholic Church Social be done directly on line at:
University Extension pro- Hall located at 351 North http://woodlandstewards.os
gram specialist in timber Market Street. Cost is $30 u.edu/classes/name.php.
harvesting located
in per person, which includes
For more information call
Piketon. He noted that the refreshments, lunch and a 740-S93-8555.
workshop will be a combination of indoor/outdoor
presentations and will
sMAR1
include a sawing demonstration along with safety
reminders.
HURRY IN THESE VALUES WONT LAST!
While a chainsaw can be
a labor saving management
L1fc happens. especially una earpct. l11at \
·why Mohawk crcut..:d Sm&lt;lr1 Stnll1dr'l .
tool, it also represents a
Sman strand II her with Dupont® Somna
work hazard, according to
pnlymar pnw idcs pcrnunr; nt stain
· prolcctiun thl. is buill -uno thl' tiht!r snit
the Interest Group, noting
ca n nc,·cr wash or wear off. Unusuall y
that everyone who operates
tough stains va nish with nothing mnrl' than
warm water and a little dl' tcrgcntlllaking
one should know how to
clea n up a breeze. So Ct\mc orl in today ar\d
properly adjust, maintain
sec the vari ety of ~auti fu l styles w..: ha\C
and run the saw. It was
un sale !
~ ··-~- -..__~ ............
pointed out that every oper~- ...
..
...
ator should be aware of the
potential dangers/risks of
using . a chainsaw · and
should know what safety'
precautions need .to be fol lowed.
For a limited time only s~ve 10%
Another upcoming proon select styles leaturing
gram is a "N arne That
SmartStrandTM made with
Tree" workshop for those
Depont1 M Sonona• polymer.
interested in tree identifica'\:.: '
tion . The workshop will
begin indoors with some
samples and a guide that
leads participants through
the process of using a key

THE SALE OF THE SEASON

-- --.,.·-··-

~~~· ·

The Tuppers Plains Fire.Department ·
Wishes To Thank Everyone Who Helped
Make Our Easter Egg Hunt A Huge Success

Monday.

.

28.

~Name of deeeased -------------...,-----,------!
Number of selected ver&gt;e - - -

JDate of birth

Dale of passi~g - - - - - -

1

1.

.

1Pnnt your name here

----------------'---,------1

IIAddress.
ICily

1

Phone number ---.,---.,--

late
Make Check Payable to THE DAILY S.ENTINEL

~

.

Zip - - - I t I

----------'

I

I

.

IRelationship to me

-,I
. I

r----..
I . . · --------------------------·--·-;...·--·.,
Please publish my tribute in the
Memo'ry Page on
May
specil\1

Cast rnembers (from left) Mallory Hi ll , Darin Teaford, Adelle
Rice rehearse for tonight's performance.

Workshop on chainsaw operatio.n and scifety qffored

.

I

Friday; May 4, 2007

.Community Calendar

• 1

DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 12 Noon

••

'

,

4. Thank youfor 1he wonderful days weshared 1oge1her. Myprayers
will he wilhyou unlit we mec1again.
·
5. The days weshared were sweet I long10see youagain in God's

PageA3

BYTHEBEND .

· AND MARCY SUGAR

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us. .

•

The Daily Sentinel

~

Chase Bank
•
Ridenour's
Kroger's of .Belpre
Anderson's Furniture
Peoples Bank
Seoems Station 2
Riverview Credit Union
.Steven L. Story-Attorney at·Law
Wai-Mart·of Vienna. Mason,
Gallipolis and Athens
Vaughan Agency
Swisher and Lohse
Making Memories
O' B~en &amp;O'Brien
Weaving Slitches
Gheen's
Beha Insurance
Amazing Grace Church
PDK
Dr. Douglas Hunter
Holzer Clinic
Coggeshall Simmons
Chris Tenoglia Attorney
Norris Northrup
Baum Lumber
Powell's

Lumber
Cleland Realty
Fisher Funeral Home
Cashland of Pomeroy
We-Can Fabrication
Karr Contracting
Mark florter
Oan's
Unique Antiques
Wag~er Insurance
Gloeckner's
Tuppers Plains Car Wash
Hupp's
Farmers Bank
Subway
TP Dollar General
G&amp;W Plastics·
Quality Furniture
TP Dairyette
BP of Tupper Plains
Parker Corporalion .
B&amp;D Market .
Ohio Valley Trailer Sates
Mountaineer Metal
Tri County Recycling

~

�I r

NATION • WORLD

The DaiJ.y Sentinel

BY BOB LEWIS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BY ANNE GEARAN

s~hools.

AP photo

Queen Elizabeth II receives flowers from the crowd as she arrives at the Virginia State
Capitol in Richmond , Va .. Thursday.
·
for each person slain - in
the
school 's
colors,
maroon
and
orange.
Virginia Tech President
Charles W. Steger also presented the queen with a
school pin.
"My heart goes out to
the students, friend s and
families of those killed and
to the many oth!=rs who
have. been affected, some
of "!hom I shall be mee.ting shortly," the queen
said during the speech .
"On behalf of the people
of the United Kingdom, I
extend my deepest sympathies at this time of such
grief and sorrow."
The plane carrying the
81-year-old queen landed
mid-afternoon, and 20
minutes later she emerged
with her husband, Prince
Philip.
Hundreds of ·· people
stood in lines for hours in
a cool drizzle, some since
dawn, to enter the ·grounds
of the. freshly refurbished
219-year-old Capitol.
"How often do you get
to see the reigning
monarch, much less in
your own town?" said
Keith Gary, the first spectator through the gates.

Inside the Capitol , the ·
queen met briefly with the
lead construction worker
on a $105 million, twoyear Capitol renovation
project that was completed
Monday, with high school
student body leaders and
· with 100-year-old Oliver
W. Hill.
.
Hill is a civil rights
attorney whose litigation
helped bring about the
19S4 Supreme Court decision outlawing racial segregation in public schools.
Frail at 100 years old
and in a wheelchair, Hill
greeted the queen in the
rotunda of the·Capitol that
once Wli.S the seat of
Confederate government.
. He said later he was
pleased she noticed the
social changes he · helped
broker.
"It's not every day you
bump into royalty," Hill
said.
In the evening, the queen
arrived
in
Colonial
Williamsburg in an open
carriage, where she waved
a gloved hand at the severa! thousand people who
lined Duke of Gloucester
Street, the main street of
Virginia's restored 18th-

FDA inspectors checking food
manufacturers while pet food recall expands
Bv RANDOLPH
E. SCHMID
AP SCIENCE

WRIT~R

WASHINGTON
Government inspectors are
checking food makers who
use protein concentrates to
make sure none of the cont. aminated products found in
pet food have reached other
products, the Food and
Drug . Administration said
Thursday.
There is no evidence that
any ofthe two contaminated
batches of wheat gluten and
rice protein fro lll" China
ended up as an ingredient in
human food, "but it's prudent to look," said Dr.
David Acheson, assistant
FDA commissioner for food
protection.
Acheson said the inspections began this week, covering both human and pet
food manufacturers to raise
awareness of how important
it is to know their supply
chain and to make sure none
.of the contaminated products remain in stocL
The number of facilities
to be visited could be in the
range of hundreds, Acheson
said, based on knowler;!ge of
what ingredients go to
which manufacturer.
"This is going to go on
until we feel satisfied we· ve
got it covered. We' re not
setting the bar at 50 or I00
or 1,000. We're . going to
keep doing this until we' re
confident thai we' ve got our
arms around it," he said.
Protein concentrates are
used in a number of food
products such as baked
goods.
.
.The announcement came
as pet food manufacturer
Menu Foods expanded its
recall because of possible
eros s -contamination
between melamine-tainted

•

.

cross its border to join the
ranks of al-Qaida and other
insurgent or terrorist groups
SHARM · EL-SHEIK, in Iraq.
Egypt - In a diplomatic
Ahead of the meeting, a
turning point for the Bush U.S. military spokesman in
administration; Secretary of Baghdad said Syria had
State Condoleezza Rice met somewhat stemmed the flow
Thursday with Syria's for- of foreign fighters. "There
eign minister and expressed has been some movement by
U.S. concerns about the the Syrians." said Maj. Gen.
country's porous border with William Caldwell. "There
Iraq.
has been a reduction in the
"I didn't leciUre him and !low of foreign fighters into
he didn't lecture me,'' Rice Iraq" for more than a month.
said after the first CabinetThe administration has
level talks in years between said it worries that Syria will
the counuies.
use any contact with the U.S.
Prospects dimmed for a as leverage in a dispute over
more dramatic face-to-face alleged Syrian meddling in
discussion between Rice and fragile Lebanon. Rice said
Iran's forei gn minister. "We that subject did not come up
haven '!.planned and have not · Thursday.
asked for a bilateral meeting,
Rice 's meeting with
nor have they asked us," she Moallem marked the first
said.
such high-level talks since
The administration has the February 2005 assassinaresisted talks with Syria and tion of former Lebanese
Iran despite the recommen- Prime Minister Rafik Hariri.
dations of allies, the Iraq The U.S. withdrew its
Study Group and U.S. law- amba~sador from Damascus
makers from both parties.
· in protest and has given a
"It's a stan;" Foreign cold shoulder to the Syrian
Minister Walid Moallem said government since. Syria
after the 30-minute session.
ilenies it had anything to do
The carefully orchestrated with the killing.
meeting overshadowed the
Moallem asked Rice to
modest initial accomplish- return an ambassador; she
ments from a SO-nation gath- made no promises.
ering devoted to improving
Rice said the talks were
Iraq's security and financial limited · to Iraqi security. "I
bottom line: Iraq's embattled made cleat we don't want to
prime minister was among have a difficult relationship
those leaning on the U.S. to with Syria, but we need to .
engage Syria and Iran, argu- have some basis for a better
ing they could help lessen the relationship." . .
violence in neighboring Iraq.
Only last month the White
Until now, Rice and House blistered House
President Bush had said Speaker Nancy Pelosi for a
Syria well knew what it diplomatiC uip to Damascus,
could do to help Iraq and administration officials
tighten its border - and did 'suggesied afterward that
not need the U.S. to point it Syrian · President Bashar
out. The U.S. claims Syria Assad had played the
looks the other way ,while California Democrat for a
fighters from many countries fool.
/If' DIPLOMATIC WRITER

RICHMOND, Va.. Queen Elizabeth II arrived
Thursd)ly for the commemoration
of
Jamestown 's
400th
anniversary and prajsed
the cultural changes that
have occurred since sh ~
last visited America's first
permanent Engli sh settlement SO years ago. '
The last time the quet!n
helped Virginia mark the
anniversary of its colonial
founding, it was an allwhite · affair in a . state
. whose government was 'in
open defiance of a 1954
Supreme Court order to
desegregate
public

•

Friday, May 4, 2()07

Rice raises issue of
porous borders with Iraq
in meeting with Syrian

snsses.

"Over the course of my
reig11 and certainly since I
' first visited Jamestown in
1957, my country lias
become a much more
diverse society just as the
commonwealth of Virginia
and the whole United
States of America have
also undergone a major
social change," the queen
said in speech to the
Virginia General Assembly
in Richmond, the first stop
on 'her visit.
"The
melting
pot
'""'tnetaphor captures one of
the great strengths of your
country and is an inspiration to others around the
world as we face the ~on ­
tinuing social challenges
ahead," she said.
Gov. Timothy M. Kaine
said the message couldn't
be more timely or appropriate.
"This is a moment that
brings Virginia together ...
in the aftermath of a hard
time," Kaine said at a
news conference, referring
. to the April 16 massacre at
Virginia Tech.
After the speech, the
queen met briefly with students and faculty from
Virginia Tech, including
three who were wounded.
Among them was Katelyn
. Carney, who was shot. in
the. hand during the mas.sacre and presented the
queen with a bracelet ·with
32 polished stones - one

PageA2

products and other foods
made in the same periocj.
Another
company,
SmartPak ,Canine
of
Plymouth, Mass., issued a
recall for all lots ·of its
LiveSmart Adult Lamb ·and
Brown Rice food, which it
said had tested positive for
the presenc,l! of melamine.
The food is shipped directly
to about 220.consumers and

is not available on store
she! ves, the company said
in a statement.
More than I00 brands of
pet food have been recalled
since March 16 because
fhey were contaminated
An
with
melamine.
unknown number of dogs
and cats have been sickened
· or died after eating chemi- ·
cal-laced pet food.

century capital.
She rode in ~ mustardyellow carriage called the
Landau , named for the
towri in Germany where
such ·carriages were made.
Two horses pulled the carriage less than a half-mile
down the tree-lined street,
past some original and
reconstructed 18th century
homes, stores and taverns.
Judy Stillman of Portola
Valley, Calif., timed a visit
to
her daughter in
Williamsburg specifically
so she could see the queen .
"She's our history," said
the 70-year-old Stillman .
"England started every-·
thing we have ·now: the
la·w, the wonderful Magna
Carta, democracy. We need
to know about England.
We need to knpw about the
,
queen.

. On Monday. May 28, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone put not ·
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample belo~:
you wish, sele&lt;:t one of the following F&amp;EE verses·below lo
Iaccompan:y your tribute.
·

I. We hold youin our ihoughiS and memoriesforever.
2. MayGod cradle you in Hisarms. now a_nd forever.
l Forever missed. never furgullen. MayGod holdyouin !he palm of

His hand.

David . Andrews ·
July 10, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.

heavenly glory.
6. Your courage and bravery slill

insptre usall. and !hememory ofyour
smilefillsus wilh joy and laughler.
7. Though ou\ of sighl, you'll forever be inmy hcarl and mmd.
8. Thedays may comeand go. buiihelimes we shared will always remain .
9. MayGod's angel~ guideyouand pr01ec1you1hroughou11ime.
\0. Youwere alight in our life!hat bums forever in our hetJrtS.
II . MayGod's graces shine over you for all lime.
12. Youarc in our !houghlsand prayers frotn morning10 nighl and from
year 10 year

Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews and
family

TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SEND $8.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED

lNG

Fill out the fom1 below and drop off to

'•

TI1e Dally Seutincl
Witb Fo~dest Memories
Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769

Voice your opinion by voting for
'
all your favorites!'

In The Tri-County
Gallia • Meigs
&amp;Mason ·

Your late
Counts!

~allipolts Jaatlp 1Eribune

Pomeroy Dally Sentinel

tloint ~leasant l\egister

Public meetings . and
Wachter from Forked Run
Burr Oak State Parks

the United in Christ Curch.
Potluck dinner, 4 pi .m. ,
lunch
catered
by
speaking,
progrm to follow, theme
Monday, May 7
Wendy
's
of
Pomeroy,
"Mother Goose." No gift
LETART FALLS
exchange. Sponsored by
Letart Township Trustees, RSVP at 992-5005.
POMEROY - The Big Enterprise
United
7 p.m., office building.
Bend Farm Antiques Club Methodi st Church . Call
will meet at 7:30 p.m. on 992-2604 by Friday for
Wednesday, May 9
POMEROY _ Meigs the secretary's office on the seating reservations.
TUPPERS PLAINS County Board of Heal!h, 5 Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Grace
p.m., conference room , Plans areB beding ~ade Afor Amazing
the
Big
en
Antique
g
.
C
H
alth
Community
Church
fun
Metgs
ounty
e
Days to be held at the fair- day, following Sunday
Department.
· grounds June 16-17 Linder mornipg service at the
sponsorship of the Antiques Tuppers Plains grade
Club and the Meigs County school, noon. Open to all
Fair Board.
yuoungsters. Basketball
GALLIPOLIS - French and other games featured.
Colony Chorus, a part of Food and drinks served. For
Friday, May 4
Sweet
Adeline s,
RACINE
- Meigs International. will practice more in formaton, call Chris
County Pomona Grange , at 7 p.m. at the Gallia Collins, 740--989-0611.
.7 :30 p.m., Racine Grange County Senior Center.
Hall. Junior and youth bak- Singers are welcome to parIng contests. ·
ticipate in the barbershop'
Monday, May 7
style, four-part harmony.
Saturday, May .S
POMEROY
- TB staff
For more information conSALEM CENTER
will
be
at
the
Pomeroy
tact Bev Alberchinski, 740Star Grange #778 and Star 446-2476, or Suzy Parker, Library S p.m. giving skin
Junior Grange #878 meet in 740-992-SSSS .
tests. Will return May 9 to
regular
session · with
read the tests.
potluck supper at 6:30p.m.
Wednesday, May 9
followed by meeting at
MIDDLEPORT . - The
7:30p.m.
Auxiliar·y
of Feeney•
Post
128 ,
Bennett
Sunday, May ·6
Monday, May 7
American Legion, will
CHESTER - An open
POMEROY Meigs have a picnic at the
house will be held on
County Cancer Initiative, Waterworks
Sunday, ·May 6 from I to 4
noon, in the conference of Minersville, . I p.m.Park,
All p.m. to celebrate the 80th
the ·Meigs County Senior members welcome .
birthday of Donald Mora at
Citizens Center. New mem~
the
Chester Courthouse.
bers welcome.
Friends and relatives are
RACINE
Racine
invited to aitend but it is
Chapter 134, O.E.S ., 7:30
requested · that they not
. p.m. !Pins to be given to 2S·
Sunday, May 6
and 30 year members. . SYRACUSE- Syracuse bring gifts.
Refreshments.
Community
Church,
Wednesday, May 9
Second Street, 6:30 p.m.
Thesday, May 8
with Sid Hayman speaking.
RACINE-Acard showPOMEROY Meigs
POMEROY - . Mother- er is plan.ned for Mattie
County , Chamber · of daughter banquet will be Beegle's 90th birthday May
Commerce, business-mind- . held at the Pomeroy Church 9. Cards may be sent to.her
ed
luncheon,
noon , of Christ, W.Main Street, at 48680 SR 124, Tornado
Pomeroy Library, Randy for all women and girls of Road, Racine, Ohio 4S77 i .

Clubs and
organizations

. Other events

..Birthdays

Church events

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Pays to be cautious in this relationship
vous about a guy who has you enjoy their company,
been married three times but not their out-of-control
and recently broke up after a · children.
Dear Annie: Please tell
· Dear Annie: I am an intel- four-year relationship. It
~igent, educated, attractive doesn't mean he · hasn't "California Charger" that he
:Woman, in good physical finally found Ms. Right in and his wife should take the
shape. and I like to cook and you, but it pays to be cau- "eight-hour Driver Safety
keep house. My daughte.r tious. We strongly recom- Program offered by' AARP.
always tells me, "You ' re mend couples counseling. The course is taught by
,hot, Mom. Anybody would Now.
trained volunteers all across
Dear Annie: A work the United States. The cost
,IJe happy with you."
: I left a 30-year marriage acquaintance recently had is $10 per person for a very
because I never felt fulfilled, my family over for dinner. useful workbook and lively
~nd then I experienced She and her husband are class .discussion (no tests are
empty-nest syndrome. After nice enough, but they pro- given). Once the course is
~onsiderable counseling by vide such minimal supervi- completed, insurance com'my pastor, I got a divorce sion for their two toddlers panies provide a discount on
that I don't regret. I dated a that I feared for the chi!,· auto insurance. The best
bit and am now living with dren 's safety the entire time part, however, is that those
"Andy." He's sweet, kind, we were there, ·
who participate learn many
.Joving, generous, thoughtful
I have heard her stories of defensive driving skills that
'jlnd a hard worker, and we their antics, such as climb- every driver needs these
-have wonderful ·conversa- ing to high places and get- days, regardless of age. I
:tions, share·the same taste in ting into things they should- have benefited for many
'everything and really enjoy n't, but I thought she must years from the information l
each other's company.
have exaggerated, because I learned during the classes.•
My problem is coming to could not believe any parent Contact www.aarp.org/drive
.ierms with the "baggage." could be so irresponsible. I or 1-888-AARP-NOW (!::Andy has been married three was wrong.
888-227-7669) for more
times and then had a rela- . As I mentioned, they are information and class schedtionship with a neighbor that nice people, but I don't fee l ! ules.. Online Grail,
'recently ended. However, could be witness to all this Memphi~, Tenn.
.
i;he kept coming over to bor- wild behavior again, in pubDear Memphis: Thanks
row things they had previ- lie or private. (I know the for reminding us. The AARP
'ously used together. I got children are allowed to roam course is available in person
:Upset and told him he need- freely through restaurants.) or online to drivers age 50
;J!d to set boundaries with How do I . politely decline and over. We hope ;~nyone
;her. He then told her I wasn't future invitations without who is interested will check
-comfortable with her and divulging the reason? - it out.
~hat their relationship was Baffied and Terrified ·
Annie's Mailbox is writover.
.
Dea.r Baffied: Parents ten by Kathy Mitchell and
: Now l wonder how long who think children don't Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
he ' ll last with me. Andy require supervision · are tors of the Ann Landers colclaims his last relationship deluding themselves, and if umn.' Please e-mail. your
was nothing like ours, but l a child were to be seriously questions to anniesmail·
'wonder why it took him four hurt, the parents could be box@comcast.net, or write
:years to find out. He says charged with neglect. If they · to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
tie 's looking for marriage invite you again, say, "Sorry, Box ll8190, Chicago, IL
ilnd that we have the ele- we can't make it." No rea- 606ll. To find out more
Irnents for a good one (which son is necessarY: At some about Annie's Mailbox, and
j agree with), but I am still point, however. you should .read features by other.
'Wondering. Nervous invite them to join you for Creators Syndicate writers
dinner, making ) t clear it's and cartoonists, visit the
Nellie
·
Dear · Nellie: We can "adults only." This will let Creators ,Syndicate Web
understand why you are ner- them kno.w, politely, that page ·at www.creators.com.
BY KATHY MITCHELL

Submitted photos

A cast photo from the Southern High School Senior Play "Mystery Manor Madness" performed at 7 p.m. tonight at the high school.

Southern to present senior play
RACIN E!
The
Southern High School
Senior Play, " My stery
Manor Madness" will be
performed 'fur..1he public at
7 p.m. tonight at the high
school. There is no admission charge but · donations
will be
·
accepted at the door.
"Mystery
Manor
Madness" is an original
play written and performed by Don Dudding 's
senior drama · class. The
full-len gth two-act comedy is set in a mansion and
features what Dudding
calls .the "hilariou.s antics
of the. mansion 's residents
including its ghosts, servants, and owners."

POMEROY - Area resi- · to identify trees.
tree ID book. .
dents can learn about
The afternoon portion ·Pre-regi stration
1s
chainsaw operation and get will be spent outside prac- required by June I.
tips on safety at a Southeast tieing .the identification Registrations are handled
Ohio Woodland Interest skill s that have been by the Ohio Woodlands
Group workshop to be held learned in the morning. Stewards Program located
at 7 p.m. on Monday at the The workshop will be held at the. Ohio State University
Athens County Extension on 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Friday, School of Environment and
June 8, in Logan (Hocking Natural
Office.
Resources
in
Presenter
Damo.n County) at the St. John Columbus. Registration can
Hart lev is an Ohio State Catholic Church Social be done directly on line at:
University Extension pro- Hall located at 351 North http://woodlandstewards.os
gram specialist in timber Market Street. Cost is $30 u.edu/classes/name.php.
harvesting located
in per person, which includes
For more information call
Piketon. He noted that the refreshments, lunch and a 740-S93-8555.
workshop will be a combination of indoor/outdoor
presentations and will
sMAR1
include a sawing demonstration along with safety
reminders.
HURRY IN THESE VALUES WONT LAST!
While a chainsaw can be
a labor saving management
L1fc happens. especially una earpct. l11at \
·why Mohawk crcut..:d Sm&lt;lr1 Stnll1dr'l .
tool, it also represents a
Sman strand II her with Dupont® Somna
work hazard, according to
pnlymar pnw idcs pcrnunr; nt stain
· prolcctiun thl. is buill -uno thl' tiht!r snit
the Interest Group, noting
ca n nc,·cr wash or wear off. Unusuall y
that everyone who operates
tough stains va nish with nothing mnrl' than
warm water and a little dl' tcrgcntlllaking
one should know how to
clea n up a breeze. So Ct\mc orl in today ar\d
properly adjust, maintain
sec the vari ety of ~auti fu l styles w..: ha\C
and run the saw. It was
un sale !
~ ··-~- -..__~ ............
pointed out that every oper~- ...
..
...
ator should be aware of the
potential dangers/risks of
using . a chainsaw · and
should know what safety'
precautions need .to be fol lowed.
For a limited time only s~ve 10%
Another upcoming proon select styles leaturing
gram is a "N arne That
SmartStrandTM made with
Tree" workshop for those
Depont1 M Sonona• polymer.
interested in tree identifica'\:.: '
tion . The workshop will
begin indoors with some
samples and a guide that
leads participants through
the process of using a key

THE SALE OF THE SEASON

-- --.,.·-··-

~~~· ·

The Tuppers Plains Fire.Department ·
Wishes To Thank Everyone Who Helped
Make Our Easter Egg Hunt A Huge Success

Monday.

.

28.

~Name of deeeased -------------...,-----,------!
Number of selected ver&gt;e - - -

JDate of birth

Dale of passi~g - - - - - -

1

1.

.

1Pnnt your name here

----------------'---,------1

IIAddress.
ICily

1

Phone number ---.,---.,--

late
Make Check Payable to THE DAILY S.ENTINEL

~

.

Zip - - - I t I

----------'

I

I

.

IRelationship to me

-,I
. I

r----..
I . . · --------------------------·--·-;...·--·.,
Please publish my tribute in the
Memo'ry Page on
May
specil\1

Cast rnembers (from left) Mallory Hi ll , Darin Teaford, Adelle
Rice rehearse for tonight's performance.

Workshop on chainsaw operatio.n and scifety qffored

.

I

Friday; May 4, 2007

.Community Calendar

• 1

DEADLINE: WEDNESDAY, MAY 23, 12 Noon

••

'

,

4. Thank youfor 1he wonderful days weshared 1oge1her. Myprayers
will he wilhyou unlit we mec1again.
·
5. The days weshared were sweet I long10see youagain in God's

PageA3

BYTHEBEND .

· AND MARCY SUGAR

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us. .

•

The Daily Sentinel

~

Chase Bank
•
Ridenour's
Kroger's of .Belpre
Anderson's Furniture
Peoples Bank
Seoems Station 2
Riverview Credit Union
.Steven L. Story-Attorney at·Law
Wai-Mart·of Vienna. Mason,
Gallipolis and Athens
Vaughan Agency
Swisher and Lohse
Making Memories
O' B~en &amp;O'Brien
Weaving Slitches
Gheen's
Beha Insurance
Amazing Grace Church
PDK
Dr. Douglas Hunter
Holzer Clinic
Coggeshall Simmons
Chris Tenoglia Attorney
Norris Northrup
Baum Lumber
Powell's

Lumber
Cleland Realty
Fisher Funeral Home
Cashland of Pomeroy
We-Can Fabrication
Karr Contracting
Mark florter
Oan's
Unique Antiques
Wag~er Insurance
Gloeckner's
Tuppers Plains Car Wash
Hupp's
Farmers Bank
Subway
TP Dollar General
G&amp;W Plastics·
Quality Furniture
TP Dairyette
BP of Tupper Plains
Parker Corporalion .
B&amp;D Market .
Ohio Valley Trailer Sates
Mountaineer Metal
Tri County Recycling

~

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

OPINION

i

Friday, M~y 4,

2007

Coming:
The
sequel
to
the
.buzz-worthy
rabbi
list
The Daily Sentinel
•

'

Friday, May 4,

~.mydailysentinel.com

2007

Meinbers hear review ~f 'Team of Rivals' ·

·Obituaries
\

\

Mary E. Leonard

•

111 Court Street • Pory~eroy, Ohio · '
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.·
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 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 of griev~nces.
- The First Amendment to the U.S; Constitution

TOOAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, May 4, the I24th day of 2007. There are
241 days .left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 4, 1945, during World War ll, German forces in
the Netherlands, Denmark and northwest Germany agreed
to surrender.
·
On this date:
In 1626, Dutch explorer Peter Minuit landed on presentday Manhattan Island.
In 1886, at Haymarket Square in Chicago, a labor
demonstration for an eight-hour work day turned into a riot
when a bomb exploded.
.
In 1916, responding to a demand from President Wilson,
(Jermany agreed to limit its submarine warfare, thereby
averting a diplomatic break with Washington. (However,
Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare the following year.)
In 1932, mobster AI Capone, convicted of income-tax
evasion, entered the federal penitentiary in Atlanta.
(Capone was later transferred to Alcatraz Island.)
In 1946, a two-day riot at Alcatraz prison in San
Francisco Bay ended, the violence having claimed five
lives.
In 1961, a group of "Freedom Riders" left Washil)gton
for New Orlea!ls to challenge racial segregation on interstate buses and in bus terminals.
In 1970, Ohio National Guardsmen opened tire on antiwar protesters at Kent State University, killing four students and wounding nine others.
In 1979, Conservative Party leader Margaret Thatcher
became Britain 'sfirst female prime minister as the Tories
ousted the incumbent Labour government in parliamentary
elections.
In 200 I, Bonny Lee Bakley, wife of actor Robert Blake,
was shot to death as she sat in a car in Los Angeles. (Blake,
· accused of the killing, was acquitted in a criminal trial but
was found liable by .a civil jury and ordered to pay damages.)
Ten years ago: IBM's Deep Blue computer defeated
world chess champion Garry Kasparov, evening their sixgame series at one game apiece. Cerefino Jimenez ·Malia
became the first Gypsy beatified in the history of the
Roman Catholic Church.
·
Five years ago: A Nigerian airliner crashed in the northern city of Kano just ~fter takeoff, killing a total of !54 people on the plal)e and the ground. War Emblem, a 20-to-1
shot, scored a wire-to-wire, four-length viCtory over Proud
Citizen in the Kentucky Derby.
·
.
One year ago: A federal judge sentenced Zacarias
Moussaoui to life in prison for his role in the 9111 attacks;
the convicted terrorist declared: "God save Osama bin
Laden - you will never get him." The U.S. military
released video footage of Abu Musab ai-Zarqawi in which
the al-Qaida leader was seen wearing American tennis
shoes and unable to operate his automatic rifle.
Thought for Today: "If you w.ant anything said, ask ,a
man; if you want anything done, ask a woman."
Margaret Thatcher, former British prime minister.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

For those marking their
with a I00-candidate shortcalendars far in advance,
list and its creators plan to
the next celebration of
cast their nets wider next
Passover will begin at sun- .
year. Feminists were upset
down on April 19, 2008.
that only five women made
This means well-conthe cut.
Terry
nected American Jews
The project's guiding
Mattingly principles can be seen in
have almost a full year to
lobby for their favorite
the I00-point system used
rabbi 'to make the unoffi to rank the rabbis.
cial, but totally buzz-worFirst they asked if the
thy, list of the nation's 50 When it comes to buzz, it rabbis were known around
top rabbis . The pre- didn ' t hurt that the list was the world, as well as in
Passover list in Newsweek created by Sanderson and Amenca . . (20 points) The
was such a hit that the two other top mass-media other questions: Do they
film-industry players who executives
Gary have media presence? (10
created it are already gear- Ginsberg of News Corp. points) Are they leaders in
ing up for the sequel.
ani! Sony Pictures CEO their own cities? (I 0
The goal was to jump- Michael Lynton -"--' rather points) Are they leaders
start di sc ussions about than by panel s of commu- · within their branches of
what · it means to be an nity leaders and scholars. · Judhism? (l 0 points) How
"influential'' rabbi today,
The result was an earth- many Jews, in one way or
said Jay Sanderson, head quake in the Jewish blo- another, follow them? (I 0
of the Jewish TV Network gosphere and wide cover- points) Do they have politand producer of the PBS age in tlie mainstream ical and social clout? (20
series
"The
Jewish press.
points) Have their careers
Americans." But it's hard
It also · didn 't hurt that had a major impact on
to talk about shepherds three of the top five picks Judaism ( I0 points) and
without discussing their , were from Los Angeles, the wider culture? (10
. flocks. That was the point. while the rabbi of the points) In the first list, 18
"The whole concept of largest congregation in of the top 50 were listed as
what it mean s to be an Washington, D.C., was Reform, 17 as Orthodox,
effective leader is chang- ranked No. l 0 and the . l 0· as Conservative, three
ing so fast and this is cer- leader of New York City's as Reconstructionist· and
tainly true for the Jews," largest congregation fell all two as "Jewish Renewal"
he said. "So some people the way to No. 23. The top rabbis. Next time, said
are talking about the fact : pick was Orthodox Rabbi Sanderson, the team will
that we didn ' t ask, ' Who is Marvin Hier of ·Los make a stronger effort to
the most learned rabbi?' or Angeles, founder of the identify rabbis with the
'Who has the most power- Simon Wiesenthal Center, various movements within
ful pulpit?' Instead, we the Museum of Tolerance that complex Orthodox
specifically asked, 'Who is and Moriah Films.
camp.
the most influential rabbi
The Top ·so list stressed
After all, the Orthodox
and what does that mean, that he is "one phone call rabbi whose selection drew
today?'...
away from almost every the most flack was Rabbi
"Some of our rabbis are world leader, journalist and Yehuda Berg at No. 4, of
preachingin what can only Hollywood studio head."
the Kabbalah Centre in Los
be called 'virtual pulpits.'
The 2007 edition began Angeles.

Another spectacular violation of the principle of
Letrers 10 the ediwr are welcome. They should be less "donor's intent" is in the ·
chan 300 words. .All leccers are subject to ediling, must be process of occurring at
signed, and include address and telephone number. No Tulane University, down in
unsigned letlers will be published. Letlers should be in sleepy old New Orleans.
good Caste, addressing issues. not personalities. Letlers of The principle in question is
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- the one that stresses the
importance, in administered for publication.
ing a charitable gift, of
making sure that the money
is spent in the way or ways
that the donor intended.
That is .surely· reasonable
Reader Services
cusPs 213-960)
enough. Otherwise the
Corraction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
trustees, once the donor has
Our main concem in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
pas'Sed on, could divert the
be accurate, If you know ol an error through Friday. 1t1 Court St~t .
money to all sorts of purPomeroy, Ohio. SIICOOd-dass postage
in a story, call the newsroom at (7-40) paid at Pomeroy.
poses that have no recog992·2156.
MombW: The Assocoated Press and
nizable relation to what the'
the Ohio Newspaper Assocoalioo.
donor wanted.
'
Poatn'\llster: Sand address correcOur main number Ia
That
seems
to
be
what
is
tions to The Daily 5eotinel; 111 Court
(740) 992-2156.
happening at Tulane. It 111l
Street. Pomeroy. Ohio &lt;5769.
Department extensions are:
began back in 1886. In that
· Subscription Rate•
year, and over the next 15,
By center or motor route
News
Josephine
Louise
One month . : . ..•••.• •'1 0.27
Editor: Chartene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
Newcomb
donated
One yur ..... .. . ·... .'115.84
Roporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
O.ity ..................50'
$3,626,551 to Tulane to
lleportef. Beth Sef9""t, Ext. 13
Senior Citizen rat..
advance "the cause of
One month ...........'10.27
female
education
in
Advertising
-~ -~ · ~··= Louisiana" by creating the
Outsldo Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 dil'ec:ttolloDoiys...aNo subscripH. Sophie , Newcomb
Outsldo Sales: Brenda DaVIs. Ext 16 tion l7t mail pemitteO in 8J8aS w11e1a
Memorial . College at
Clasi.JCirc.: Judy Clark; Ext. 10
home carrief seMc:e is avaiable.
Tulane, for the higher education of women. It was
Mall Subscription
ln-'de ....,. County
·General Manager
named in honot of Mrs.
13 Weeks .... . ........'32:26
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 1.2
Newcomb's daughter, who
26 Weeks ....... . ... . .'64.20
had
died in 1870 at the age
52 Weeks .... .. . .... .1127.11
E-moil:
of 15. (In today's dollars,
,_.Omydaitysentinel.com
Outside llelge County
the gifts would total more
13 Weeks .. ... ..... .. .'53.55
than $75 million.) Tulane
. 26 Weeks . . ..... .....'107.1b
Web:
accepted
both the money
52 Weeks ............~14.21
www.mydaitysentinet.com
and its tenns, and in 1887

The Daily Sentinel

::.=

He has become a cultu.ral
phenomenon by preaching
to
red-string
power
Madonna, Britney Spears
and many other trendsetters. Some Jewish leaders
contend that Berg is not
really a rabbi.
·
"Any list that has Yehuda
Berg on it is a list th~t do
not want to be on," s dan
anonymous rabbi w~o
made the list, but vented to
the Jerusalem · Post. "I
think his name up there cin
the top tells you all you
need to know about the
Jewish sophistication of
these folks."
Sanderson welcomes the
ongoing debate. The key,
he said, is that rabbis have
to deliver their various
takes on the ancient faith
directly to modern Jews where they are. ·
"Picture a young Jewish
woman on her treadmill
watching the Today Show,"
he said. "How do you talk
to her about 1udaism? The
answer is that you .have lo , ·
go on the Today Show,
because she isn't going to
be sitting in your congregation during the High
Holy Days. That's the reality, right there."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for . Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

· NEW JERSEY - Mary E. (nee McCallum) Leonard,
. 81, of Washington Township, NJ . entered into eternal rest
on April 29, 2007.
'
Bom in p,orneroy,_ Ohio, Mrs. Leonard graduated from
.the Umvers1ty of Oh1o with a bachelor of arts in education.
· She is survived by her beloved husband Martin J.
· Leonard, daughters Barbara Ann Guerin of Easton, Pa.,
Carol E. Kay and her husband Timothy of Lake Hiawatha,
. N.J .•. and her loving sister Margaret Harbrecht of Ohio.
· Fnends called on Wednesday May 2 from 2-4 and 7-9
.p._rn. at the C. C. Van Emburgh Funeral Home 306 E.
R1dgewood Ave. Ridgewood, N.J. 07450. ·A graveside ser.' yice took place on Thursday May 3 at II a.m. at St.
.· Gertrude's Cemetery in Colonia, N.J. Arrangements
· entrusted to Lh~ C.C. Van Emburgh Funeral Home
' Ridgewood. www.vanemburgh .com
'

Rosemary M. Neutzling
SARASOTA, Fla. - Rosemary Neutzling. 57, Sarasota,
Fla., died April 22, 2007.
Funeral s~rvices were held at Palms Funeral Home ln
Sarasota.
Surviving are her husband, Nick; son, Tanner; father and
' step- mother, George E. and Mary Elizabeth Morris; brother, George V Morris; and step-brothers: John (Joan)
Anderson , Jim (Becky) Anderson, and Don (Ben1adette)
Anderson.
.· Memorial contributions in remembrance may be made to
Pet Placement, c/o Animal M~dical Clinic, 23 16 Stickney
:Pomt Rd., Sarasota, Fla. 34231, American Cancer Society,
. 2801 Fruitville Rd., Sarasota, Fla. 34237. or Shriners
. Hospital for Childfen, Attn: Donations, 12502 Pine Dr..
. Tampa, Fla. 33612.

Local Briefs

POMEROY - The Meigs Co~pty Health · Department
will hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
.and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday: Bring child's shot records and
medical cards if applicable. A $5 appreciated but not
required for services.

ballfield, and Shelly Co.,
Thornville, in the amount 'of
$43,955, for street paving
projects in Pomeroy.
.
from PageA1
No bids were received for a
attempt to secure additional bid OIJCning scheduled yesterfunding for the program. · day for a CDBG Community
Substitute House Bin 119 Distress project, involving
kept in place Governor Ted replacement of sidewalks in
Village.
Strickland's proposed cuts Pomeroy
in state reimbursement for Commissioners will re-advertise for bids on the project.
indigent defense.
Commissioners also: ·
In other business, commis• Approved payment of
sioners approved bids opened
bills
in the · amount of
last week for Community
$90JI.209.
Development Block Grant
• Approved a second-half
projects. A bid was awarded
to Valley Lumber and Supply appropriation for the Meigs
of Middleport, .in the amount County' Soil and Water
of $43,955, for a fencing pro- Conservation .District in the
ject at the Scipio Township amount of $43,500.

Contract

•

·'

•.

'

·- ---- -·- - -

.

sury secretary. Most of them
had been seeking the presidency themselves and were
not his friends and several
o( them dido 't like each
other. But Linooln chose
them to be cabinet members
because he felt they were
the best qualified to serve
him and their country.
.Hackett said that early in
the book, it becomes apparent that all of the members
of President Lincoln's
administration were better
known, belieF educated and
had more experience in
public life than he; but Abe
Lincoln was the undisputed
captain of that unusual
group of men. His steadfastness of purpose inspired
subordinates to ·overcome

'

their petty rivalries. He passessed a superb sense ' of
timing and a sensitivity to
the pulse of public opinion
and had a talent for getting
along with people.
She said that Goodwin's
, book ·masterfully describes
how Lincoln forged a. team
that preserved a nation and
freed America from the curse
of slavery. Much of the information in "Team of Rivals"
is from primary sources such
as letters, diaries, etc. from
William Seward's family and
from the journals of Salmon
Chase.
By the end of the Civil
War, secretary' of war
Stanton had completely
reversed his former opinion
of Mr. Lincoln and had

come to admire and respect
him. · When
President
Lincoln died on the morning
of April 15, 1865; Secretary
of War Stanton was by his
side and spoke the memorable words: "Now he
belongs to the ages."
After the review, thirteen
members and two guests
answered roll call by naming a well-known American
who ran fo'l' President but
did not win . Delicious
refreshments of punch,
cakes, nuts and coffee were
served by the club president
Dana Kessinger. The closing event will be a luncheon •
and installation of officers
at the Mason Golf Course
Clubhouse at I p.m. on
Wednesday, May 9.

O'Bleness -Memorial Hospital honors volunteers

Submitted photo

The 2007 Excellence in
Service award was present'ed to. Harriet Carlson when
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
honored its volunteers at the
recent annual . Volunteer
Recognition Luncheon.

POMEROY- Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to James Willard Morris, Sr. , 46,
Albany, and Tamara Melinda Klein, 48, Hartford, W.Va.;
James Matthew Bable, 24, Pomeroy, and Melissa Marie
Brewer, 24, Pomeroy; Tracy Joe Ratcliff, 43, Syracuse, and
Rosa Norene Randolph, 37, Syracuse; Charles William
Perry II, 28, Pomeroy, and Chasity Renae Hess, 26,
Pomeroy ; David Scott Williams, 20, Racine, and Brandi .
Kay Michelle Vance, 20, Racine; Joseph William DaviS, Jr.,
27, Pomeroy, and Melanie Louise Blevins, 25. Pomeroy.

a

POMEROY - Phylli s .
Hackett reviewed 'Team of
Rivals: The Political Genius
of. Abraham Lincoln" by
Doris Kearns Goodwin
when
the
Middleport
Literary Club met recently
at the Pomeroy Library.
In
previous
books,
Goodwin has offered fresh
insights
into
Lyndon
Johnson, the Kennedys and
Franklin and
Eleanor
Roosevelt. In "Team of
Rival s" she explores the .
(elationships
between
Lincoln and the members of
his cabinet. They are:
Edward Bates, attorney general; William H. Seward,
secretary of slate; Edwin M.
Stanton, secretary of war;
and Salmon P. Chase, trea-

Immunization clinic

Marriage licenses

diplomas and student body. America, which collectiveIn its place appeared the H. ly receive more than $260
Newcomb billion a year in donations.
Sophie
Memorial College Institute, There are people all over
a paper organization with the place who itch to get
ilo dean, no degrees, no stu- their hands on money left
William
dent
body and not even a decades· ago by thousands
Rusher
campus. Needless to say, of donors, now safely dead,
Tulane's
Board
of . for purposes they deerri
Administrators redirected irrelevant. In the name of
Newcomb College's money sheer fairness, they must be!
Newcomb College became to the Institute, where it is stopped.
the first degree-granting now under Tulane's control.
In a way, I don't blame
"coordinate college" for
That was the point at Scott Cowen. He confront- .
women in the United · which two nieces of ed a real disaster' in the
States.
Josephine
· Louise aftennath of Hurricane
Everything went along Newcomb filed a lawsuit Katrina. The $45 million
merrily for nearly 120 seeking a preliminary and a endowment of Newcomb
·years, until Hurricane permanent
· injunction College was the chief supKatrina. Tulane suffered against Tulane, together port of an institution for the
considerable damage, and with declaratory relief. Tho higher education of wornim,
its president, Scott Cowen, judge denied the request for at a time when .women's
carne up with a "Plan of a preliminary injunction, colleges are temporarily out
Renewal," which has been but acknowledged that a of fashion. It must have
controversial, to say the "clear readi~g of Mrs . . been unbearably tempting
least. (For one thing, it Newcomb's w11l shows that to fold the college into
called for the firing of hun- · she intended for Tulane .. : Tulane its!!lf, arid pocket its
dreds of tenured faculty to use the b;llan.ce of her . money for the overall benemembers.) But, for present estate to maintain a fit of the University.
purposes, the key point that women's higher education
But don't Josephine
it also called for the llisso- college." Because of the Louise Newcomb's instruclution of Newcomb College . contradictory ruling and tions matter? She can no
and the seizure of its statement, the ruling has longer speak for herself, but
endowment, which at that been . appealed
to every generation has an
paint totaled a . hefty $45 Louisiana's Fourth Circuit obligation to respect its premillion. Tulane's Board of Court of Appeals, which decessors, where their
Administrators, shocked by has sclieduled onil argu- wishes · can reasonably be
the devastation of Katrina; rnents for May 8.
honored.
·
hastily approved the Cowen · Is this a dispute in which
(William Rushu is
plan.
~mtsiders o~ght to take an Distinguished Fellow of the
All
of a sudden mterest? It IS mdeed. ~~re Claremont /nscitllle for the
Newcomb College disap- are upwards of 1.3 rrulhon Study of Statesmanship and
peared - dean, degrees, nonprofit organizations .in Political Philosophy.)

I

,

For the Record

Tulane grabs the money

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

ATHENS - 0' Bleness regular duties as a volunteer Jody Moore for ~.000 hours
Memorial Hospital honored for O'Bleness. Currently 17 of service; Carol Crabtree,
its volunteers at the annual 0 ' Bleness volunteers are Shirley Strickmaker and
Volunteer
Recognition honored with a tree and a Freda Swearingen for 1,500
Luncheon held recently at plaque in 'the garden.
hours of service; A1me Marie
the Ohio University Inn.
The O!Bleness Volunteer Chonko, Nancy Kasler and
O'Bieness' in-hospital . Resources
Department Don Woodyard for 1,000
volunteers devoted more bestowed special recognition hours of service; Kim Brown,
than 21,500 hours of service on 29 in-service volunteers. . Audrey Dishong and Kevan
during 2006. The luncheon 0' Bleness
Volunteer Wagner for 500 hours of serwas held in observance of Resourt:es Manager Susan vice; and Caroline Barr,
National Volunteer Week.
Kozak recognized hospital Carolyn Calentine, Dana
The 2007 Excellence in volunteers
who
have McGraner, Pat Moorehead,
Service award was presented achieved service-hour mile- Krista Stanford, Harold Smi.th
to Harriet Carlson, the long- stones during the past year. and Hannah Young for 100
time treasurer of the Guild of Those honored include: Bob hours of service.
0' Bleness. Carlson will be Sympson for 8,500 hours of
O'Bleness Health System
· honored with a tree and service; Avanelle Conrath and president Ricli Castrop
plaque
in
O'Bleness'"' Ethel Pierce for 6,500 hours . commended the volunteers
Volunteer Honor Garden of service; Clayton Bolin for for their efforts. Volunteers
located along Riverside 5,500 hours of service; Jessie .donate their time and talent
Drive near the bike path. The Essex for 4,500 hours of sec- at O'Bleness to help
garden was made possible vice; Katie Devoe for 4,000 patients, visitors and staff in
by a generous gift from the hours of service; Helen many capacities throughout
Hocking Valley Bank, which Swaim and Judy Woolery for the hospital and the Castrop
sponsors trees in honor of 3,500 hours of service; AI Center. liS well as fundraisrecipients of the annual Leep for 3,000 hours of ser- ing activities.
award. The award is given to ·vice; Shirley Higgins and
Entertainment was provolunteers who provide ser- Amy Collins for 2,500 hpurs vided by Wayne J. Myles,
vice abov.e and beyond their of service; Bill Creighton and DO, who played the piano.

GOD'S NET reaching out to children in Mrica
POMEROY
-God's
NET is inviting the community to help reach out to families in Africa because of
what Dee Rader described as
a "terrible malaria outl;&gt;reak
that is taking the lives of
children." Rader, youth ministries coordinator at God's
NET, said I 00,000 infants

die annually from malaria
and someone dies every 30
seconds. Rader went on to
say for $10 a family of four
can be protected from the
malaria infected mosquitoes
with a special net. These nets
are treated with Artemisininbased combitionation therapies that will protect a fll;mi-

ly of four for four years.
Rader added the children of
God's NET , would like to
help other children in another country by sending a
donation to protect children
in Africa. For every $1 0, a
net can be purchased. If anyone has questions they can
call 992-0261 or send finan-

cial donations marked "nothing but nets" to God'~ NET,
P.O. box 171 Pomeroy,
45769.
Rader said this campaign
has also been acknowledged
by the Unite&lt;\ Methodist
Church and more information can be found ' at nothingbutnets.com.
·

Jobs

lower Mississippi River.
AEP is the second-largest
dry-bulk barge company on
the inland waterways.
West Virginia· m1nes produced almost 160 million
tons of coal last year,
employing 43,000 people
and making West Virginia
the largest coal-producing
sta.te east of the Mississippi,
Knoy ·said.
"My division of AEP is
responsible for gelling that
coal from your mines to our
power plants,''•he said, stating that AEP River
Operations is the largest

coal camer on the · inland
waterways.
The division moves more
than 63 million tons of dry
bulk product each year,
including coal, grain, steel,
ores and other bulk products.
On the national level ,
barge transportation of
goods is the single most
efficient, economical and
environmental choice for
transporting freight. More

than 900 trucks are replaced
. on the highway just by one
tow of barges on the inland
waterway system ..
AEP's commitment to
communities like Mason
Couniy is threatened by
aging infrastructure . on the
inland waterways, Knoy
said. In some cases, a sys- ·
tern of locks and ·dams are
50 to 60 years old and have
been neglected in terms of
regular maintenance.

from PageA1
and Elmwood Marine
Services, with seven' facilities in New Orleans:
AEP River Operations,
including Indiana and
Michigan's
River
Transportation Division,
· inci!Jdes a fleet of 2, 700
barges and 60 towboats ,along . with a full-service
shipyard and six barge repair
and cleaning facilities on the

A!!!~!·

:Southern

Bethany Theiss, Tristen
Ginther, Abigail Jenkins, Taylor, Kody Wolfe.
Kreig . Klenski, Krystle
Fifth grade: Abigail Wolfe, Cameron Yates. ·
Marler, Amber Norville, Atkins, Darien Diddle,
Third grade: Morgan
' .
Whitney Riffle, Kaylyn Brandon Grueser, Baylee Davis, Jeremy Dutton,
from PageA1
Spradling, Deidra Sprouse, Hupp, Lacey Hupp. Rikey· Tanner Grubb, Cameryn
Ashley Weddle.
Jones, Nathan Leamond, Harmon, Brynn Harris,
·' bonds each from Home
Sophomores:
Rashell
Hill,
Theron
. National Bank included Boso. Brody Flint, Kyle Jamie O'Brien, Casey Parker
Pickens,
Joe
Smith,
Allison
Johnson.
Dimitrious
Lamrn,
·Austin Hill, Gabriel Ritlle.
Goode. Bryan Harris. Alex Taylor.
Ashley
Lickliter,
Madison
·. · Southern Local stu- Hawley, Christepher Holter,
Fourth grade: Ashley Maynard, Joe Morris,
-dents/honorees attending Drew
Hoover, Emma B1lker, Jesse Connolly, Madeline Quillen, Sylvia
this. year's county academic Hunter, Tosha Jones,
. banquet are Tristen Wolfe, Chelsea Pape, Samantha Katelyn Hill, Jacob Hoback, Richards, Gabriel Riffle,
Bethany Theiss. Kody Patterson, Rachael Pickens, Caitlyn Holter, Bradley · Andrew Shockey, Cody
Wolfe, Tim~thy Elarn, Eric Weston Roberts, Jaime McCoy, Tyler Miller, Chais Shulaw, Elizabeth Teaford,
Rodriguez. Cassie Roush, Jansen Wolfe.
. Buzzard,, Zachary Manuel, Warner.
Emma Hunter, Rachel
Freshmen: Kris Klenski,
: Pickens, Amber Hill, Michael Manuel, John
Mallory
Hill,
Adam Powell, Dustin Salser,
Phillips. Phillips was also Breanna Taylor. Lynzee
.named the Franklin .B. Tucker, Mac Wood. Katie
Walter Scholar.
Richard Hill, president. of Woods.
,
~
Eighth Trevor
grade: Flint,
Eric
Mel~iCoun~
. the Southem Local Board of Buzzard,
.
.
.
. Edl!cation, presented the · Bobbi Harris, Michale Hill,
following students with acaManuel, Charley
.·. - c
.~ .
-~·
. dernic achievement awards: Zachary
Pyles, Tyler Wolfe.
,p
TP-'P
. Seniors: Nick Buck,
Seventh grade: Martina·
Chance · Coli ins. Randy Arms, . Emily Ash. Alison
Collins. Ryan Donaldson, Brown. Andrew Ginther,
· Amber Hill, Mallory Hill, Bobby · . Goo4e.. Sahara .
Jacob Hunter, · Nathan · Harmon. Amber Hayman,
· McClure,
Miranda Austin Hill. Katelyn Hilt
McKelvey, Jesse McKnight, Chelsea Holter, Kelsey
Adam Phillips, Adelle Rice, Holsinger, Emily ~anuel, ,
· A Great Program to Help
Bethany .Vance. Rachel Emma Powell, Andrew
Ch
· D'
Lo &amp; al_;_,_;_ Ul • hi
Roseberry. Olivia Searls. .
rome
ISetJSeS, se lftUHIHH#J nelg
Wood.
&amp; Meet New People
Junio,rs: Bonnie Allen • . Hope . Teaford, Abbie
. Morgan Brown, Teddy Williams, Natalie Wood.
Incentivt Given
Brown, Lindsey Buzzard,
Sixth grade: Christopher
Register 1M day of evtnt or pre-rrgister .
· Erin Chapman.
Ryan Chaney, Timothy Elarn,
Ill 740-991~6
· Chapman, Heather Cundiff, Jennifer McCoy, Jaclyn
U
lJinurtifitld
Co .4.ndy
Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah Mees. Shelby Pickens.
El-Dabaja,
Courtney · Stefanic Pyles. Cody • .___ _ _ _ _...F_or_M_o_,.,_,:_ ________,

F

I
_
a

a lk5

u_
n
Friday-May 11th .
4-7pm

Middleport Farmer's Market
fit.ellf!nt

Don't Miss...
The Sinatra Show

Featuring
The Joey Thomas
Big Ban~
Friday, May 11 at 8 pm
Tickets: 530 &amp; $25
Dinner Tickets $10
Have You Seen Our Ballrom
&amp; Banquet Hall?

MEET THE ROBINSONS (PG)

1:0063:20
FRACTURE (R).

Book Your Summer EVents Now!

The Ariel-Dater Hall

Ave. Gallipolis, ~H
· 740-446-ARTS. (2787

428 Sec.
.

-

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

OPINION

i

Friday, M~y 4,

2007

Coming:
The
sequel
to
the
.buzz-worthy
rabbi
list
The Daily Sentinel
•

'

Friday, May 4,

~.mydailysentinel.com

2007

Meinbers hear review ~f 'Team of Rivals' ·

·Obituaries
\

\

Mary E. Leonard

•

111 Court Street • Pory~eroy, Ohio · '
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.·
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make 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 of griev~nces.
- The First Amendment to the U.S; Constitution

TOOAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, May 4, the I24th day of 2007. There are
241 days .left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On May 4, 1945, during World War ll, German forces in
the Netherlands, Denmark and northwest Germany agreed
to surrender.
·
On this date:
In 1626, Dutch explorer Peter Minuit landed on presentday Manhattan Island.
In 1886, at Haymarket Square in Chicago, a labor
demonstration for an eight-hour work day turned into a riot
when a bomb exploded.
.
In 1916, responding to a demand from President Wilson,
(Jermany agreed to limit its submarine warfare, thereby
averting a diplomatic break with Washington. (However,
Germany resumed unrestricted submarine warfare the following year.)
In 1932, mobster AI Capone, convicted of income-tax
evasion, entered the federal penitentiary in Atlanta.
(Capone was later transferred to Alcatraz Island.)
In 1946, a two-day riot at Alcatraz prison in San
Francisco Bay ended, the violence having claimed five
lives.
In 1961, a group of "Freedom Riders" left Washil)gton
for New Orlea!ls to challenge racial segregation on interstate buses and in bus terminals.
In 1970, Ohio National Guardsmen opened tire on antiwar protesters at Kent State University, killing four students and wounding nine others.
In 1979, Conservative Party leader Margaret Thatcher
became Britain 'sfirst female prime minister as the Tories
ousted the incumbent Labour government in parliamentary
elections.
In 200 I, Bonny Lee Bakley, wife of actor Robert Blake,
was shot to death as she sat in a car in Los Angeles. (Blake,
· accused of the killing, was acquitted in a criminal trial but
was found liable by .a civil jury and ordered to pay damages.)
Ten years ago: IBM's Deep Blue computer defeated
world chess champion Garry Kasparov, evening their sixgame series at one game apiece. Cerefino Jimenez ·Malia
became the first Gypsy beatified in the history of the
Roman Catholic Church.
·
Five years ago: A Nigerian airliner crashed in the northern city of Kano just ~fter takeoff, killing a total of !54 people on the plal)e and the ground. War Emblem, a 20-to-1
shot, scored a wire-to-wire, four-length viCtory over Proud
Citizen in the Kentucky Derby.
·
.
One year ago: A federal judge sentenced Zacarias
Moussaoui to life in prison for his role in the 9111 attacks;
the convicted terrorist declared: "God save Osama bin
Laden - you will never get him." The U.S. military
released video footage of Abu Musab ai-Zarqawi in which
the al-Qaida leader was seen wearing American tennis
shoes and unable to operate his automatic rifle.
Thought for Today: "If you w.ant anything said, ask ,a
man; if you want anything done, ask a woman."
Margaret Thatcher, former British prime minister.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

For those marking their
with a I00-candidate shortcalendars far in advance,
list and its creators plan to
the next celebration of
cast their nets wider next
Passover will begin at sun- .
year. Feminists were upset
down on April 19, 2008.
that only five women made
This means well-conthe cut.
Terry
nected American Jews
The project's guiding
Mattingly principles can be seen in
have almost a full year to
lobby for their favorite
the I00-point system used
rabbi 'to make the unoffi to rank the rabbis.
cial, but totally buzz-worFirst they asked if the
thy, list of the nation's 50 When it comes to buzz, it rabbis were known around
top rabbis . The pre- didn ' t hurt that the list was the world, as well as in
Passover list in Newsweek created by Sanderson and Amenca . . (20 points) The
was such a hit that the two other top mass-media other questions: Do they
film-industry players who executives
Gary have media presence? (10
created it are already gear- Ginsberg of News Corp. points) Are they leaders in
ing up for the sequel.
ani! Sony Pictures CEO their own cities? (I 0
The goal was to jump- Michael Lynton -"--' rather points) Are they leaders
start di sc ussions about than by panel s of commu- · within their branches of
what · it means to be an nity leaders and scholars. · Judhism? (l 0 points) How
"influential'' rabbi today,
The result was an earth- many Jews, in one way or
said Jay Sanderson, head quake in the Jewish blo- another, follow them? (I 0
of the Jewish TV Network gosphere and wide cover- points) Do they have politand producer of the PBS age in tlie mainstream ical and social clout? (20
series
"The
Jewish press.
points) Have their careers
Americans." But it's hard
It also · didn 't hurt that had a major impact on
to talk about shepherds three of the top five picks Judaism ( I0 points) and
without discussing their , were from Los Angeles, the wider culture? (10
. flocks. That was the point. while the rabbi of the points) In the first list, 18
"The whole concept of largest congregation in of the top 50 were listed as
what it mean s to be an Washington, D.C., was Reform, 17 as Orthodox,
effective leader is chang- ranked No. l 0 and the . l 0· as Conservative, three
ing so fast and this is cer- leader of New York City's as Reconstructionist· and
tainly true for the Jews," largest congregation fell all two as "Jewish Renewal"
he said. "So some people the way to No. 23. The top rabbis. Next time, said
are talking about the fact : pick was Orthodox Rabbi Sanderson, the team will
that we didn ' t ask, ' Who is Marvin Hier of ·Los make a stronger effort to
the most learned rabbi?' or Angeles, founder of the identify rabbis with the
'Who has the most power- Simon Wiesenthal Center, various movements within
ful pulpit?' Instead, we the Museum of Tolerance that complex Orthodox
specifically asked, 'Who is and Moriah Films.
camp.
the most influential rabbi
The Top ·so list stressed
After all, the Orthodox
and what does that mean, that he is "one phone call rabbi whose selection drew
today?'...
away from almost every the most flack was Rabbi
"Some of our rabbis are world leader, journalist and Yehuda Berg at No. 4, of
preachingin what can only Hollywood studio head."
the Kabbalah Centre in Los
be called 'virtual pulpits.'
The 2007 edition began Angeles.

Another spectacular violation of the principle of
Letrers 10 the ediwr are welcome. They should be less "donor's intent" is in the ·
chan 300 words. .All leccers are subject to ediling, must be process of occurring at
signed, and include address and telephone number. No Tulane University, down in
unsigned letlers will be published. Letlers should be in sleepy old New Orleans.
good Caste, addressing issues. not personalities. Letlers of The principle in question is
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- the one that stresses the
importance, in administered for publication.
ing a charitable gift, of
making sure that the money
is spent in the way or ways
that the donor intended.
That is .surely· reasonable
Reader Services
cusPs 213-960)
enough. Otherwise the
Corraction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
trustees, once the donor has
Our main concem in all stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
pas'Sed on, could divert the
be accurate, If you know ol an error through Friday. 1t1 Court St~t .
money to all sorts of purPomeroy, Ohio. SIICOOd-dass postage
in a story, call the newsroom at (7-40) paid at Pomeroy.
poses that have no recog992·2156.
MombW: The Assocoated Press and
nizable relation to what the'
the Ohio Newspaper Assocoalioo.
donor wanted.
'
Poatn'\llster: Sand address correcOur main number Ia
That
seems
to
be
what
is
tions to The Daily 5eotinel; 111 Court
(740) 992-2156.
happening at Tulane. It 111l
Street. Pomeroy. Ohio &lt;5769.
Department extensions are:
began back in 1886. In that
· Subscription Rate•
year, and over the next 15,
By center or motor route
News
Josephine
Louise
One month . : . ..•••.• •'1 0.27
Editor: Chartene Hoeflich. Ext. 12
Newcomb
donated
One yur ..... .. . ·... .'115.84
Roporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
O.ity ..................50'
$3,626,551 to Tulane to
lleportef. Beth Sef9""t, Ext. 13
Senior Citizen rat..
advance "the cause of
One month ...........'10.27
female
education
in
Advertising
-~ -~ · ~··= Louisiana" by creating the
Outsldo Sales: Dave Harris, Ext. 15 dil'ec:ttolloDoiys...aNo subscripH. Sophie , Newcomb
Outsldo Sales: Brenda DaVIs. Ext 16 tion l7t mail pemitteO in 8J8aS w11e1a
Memorial . College at
Clasi.JCirc.: Judy Clark; Ext. 10
home carrief seMc:e is avaiable.
Tulane, for the higher education of women. It was
Mall Subscription
ln-'de ....,. County
·General Manager
named in honot of Mrs.
13 Weeks .... . ........'32:26
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 1.2
Newcomb's daughter, who
26 Weeks ....... . ... . .'64.20
had
died in 1870 at the age
52 Weeks .... .. . .... .1127.11
E-moil:
of 15. (In today's dollars,
,_.Omydaitysentinel.com
Outside llelge County
the gifts would total more
13 Weeks .. ... ..... .. .'53.55
than $75 million.) Tulane
. 26 Weeks . . ..... .....'107.1b
Web:
accepted
both the money
52 Weeks ............~14.21
www.mydaitysentinet.com
and its tenns, and in 1887

The Daily Sentinel

::.=

He has become a cultu.ral
phenomenon by preaching
to
red-string
power
Madonna, Britney Spears
and many other trendsetters. Some Jewish leaders
contend that Berg is not
really a rabbi.
·
"Any list that has Yehuda
Berg on it is a list th~t do
not want to be on," s dan
anonymous rabbi w~o
made the list, but vented to
the Jerusalem · Post. "I
think his name up there cin
the top tells you all you
need to know about the
Jewish sophistication of
these folks."
Sanderson welcomes the
ongoing debate. The key,
he said, is that rabbis have
to deliver their various
takes on the ancient faith
directly to modern Jews where they are. ·
"Picture a young Jewish
woman on her treadmill
watching the Today Show,"
he said. "How do you talk
to her about 1udaism? The
answer is that you .have lo , ·
go on the Today Show,
because she isn't going to
be sitting in your congregation during the High
Holy Days. That's the reality, right there."
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for . Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion.org project to
study religion and the
news.)

· NEW JERSEY - Mary E. (nee McCallum) Leonard,
. 81, of Washington Township, NJ . entered into eternal rest
on April 29, 2007.
'
Bom in p,orneroy,_ Ohio, Mrs. Leonard graduated from
.the Umvers1ty of Oh1o with a bachelor of arts in education.
· She is survived by her beloved husband Martin J.
· Leonard, daughters Barbara Ann Guerin of Easton, Pa.,
Carol E. Kay and her husband Timothy of Lake Hiawatha,
. N.J .•. and her loving sister Margaret Harbrecht of Ohio.
· Fnends called on Wednesday May 2 from 2-4 and 7-9
.p._rn. at the C. C. Van Emburgh Funeral Home 306 E.
R1dgewood Ave. Ridgewood, N.J. 07450. ·A graveside ser.' yice took place on Thursday May 3 at II a.m. at St.
.· Gertrude's Cemetery in Colonia, N.J. Arrangements
· entrusted to Lh~ C.C. Van Emburgh Funeral Home
' Ridgewood. www.vanemburgh .com
'

Rosemary M. Neutzling
SARASOTA, Fla. - Rosemary Neutzling. 57, Sarasota,
Fla., died April 22, 2007.
Funeral s~rvices were held at Palms Funeral Home ln
Sarasota.
Surviving are her husband, Nick; son, Tanner; father and
' step- mother, George E. and Mary Elizabeth Morris; brother, George V Morris; and step-brothers: John (Joan)
Anderson , Jim (Becky) Anderson, and Don (Ben1adette)
Anderson.
.· Memorial contributions in remembrance may be made to
Pet Placement, c/o Animal M~dical Clinic, 23 16 Stickney
:Pomt Rd., Sarasota, Fla. 34231, American Cancer Society,
. 2801 Fruitville Rd., Sarasota, Fla. 34237. or Shriners
. Hospital for Childfen, Attn: Donations, 12502 Pine Dr..
. Tampa, Fla. 33612.

Local Briefs

POMEROY - The Meigs Co~pty Health · Department
will hold a childhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
.and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesday: Bring child's shot records and
medical cards if applicable. A $5 appreciated but not
required for services.

ballfield, and Shelly Co.,
Thornville, in the amount 'of
$43,955, for street paving
projects in Pomeroy.
.
from PageA1
No bids were received for a
attempt to secure additional bid OIJCning scheduled yesterfunding for the program. · day for a CDBG Community
Substitute House Bin 119 Distress project, involving
kept in place Governor Ted replacement of sidewalks in
Village.
Strickland's proposed cuts Pomeroy
in state reimbursement for Commissioners will re-advertise for bids on the project.
indigent defense.
Commissioners also: ·
In other business, commis• Approved payment of
sioners approved bids opened
bills
in the · amount of
last week for Community
$90JI.209.
Development Block Grant
• Approved a second-half
projects. A bid was awarded
to Valley Lumber and Supply appropriation for the Meigs
of Middleport, .in the amount County' Soil and Water
of $43,955, for a fencing pro- Conservation .District in the
ject at the Scipio Township amount of $43,500.

Contract

•

·'

•.

'

·- ---- -·- - -

.

sury secretary. Most of them
had been seeking the presidency themselves and were
not his friends and several
o( them dido 't like each
other. But Linooln chose
them to be cabinet members
because he felt they were
the best qualified to serve
him and their country.
.Hackett said that early in
the book, it becomes apparent that all of the members
of President Lincoln's
administration were better
known, belieF educated and
had more experience in
public life than he; but Abe
Lincoln was the undisputed
captain of that unusual
group of men. His steadfastness of purpose inspired
subordinates to ·overcome

'

their petty rivalries. He passessed a superb sense ' of
timing and a sensitivity to
the pulse of public opinion
and had a talent for getting
along with people.
She said that Goodwin's
, book ·masterfully describes
how Lincoln forged a. team
that preserved a nation and
freed America from the curse
of slavery. Much of the information in "Team of Rivals"
is from primary sources such
as letters, diaries, etc. from
William Seward's family and
from the journals of Salmon
Chase.
By the end of the Civil
War, secretary' of war
Stanton had completely
reversed his former opinion
of Mr. Lincoln and had

come to admire and respect
him. · When
President
Lincoln died on the morning
of April 15, 1865; Secretary
of War Stanton was by his
side and spoke the memorable words: "Now he
belongs to the ages."
After the review, thirteen
members and two guests
answered roll call by naming a well-known American
who ran fo'l' President but
did not win . Delicious
refreshments of punch,
cakes, nuts and coffee were
served by the club president
Dana Kessinger. The closing event will be a luncheon •
and installation of officers
at the Mason Golf Course
Clubhouse at I p.m. on
Wednesday, May 9.

O'Bleness -Memorial Hospital honors volunteers

Submitted photo

The 2007 Excellence in
Service award was present'ed to. Harriet Carlson when
O'Bieness Memorial Hospital
honored its volunteers at the
recent annual . Volunteer
Recognition Luncheon.

POMEROY- Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to James Willard Morris, Sr. , 46,
Albany, and Tamara Melinda Klein, 48, Hartford, W.Va.;
James Matthew Bable, 24, Pomeroy, and Melissa Marie
Brewer, 24, Pomeroy; Tracy Joe Ratcliff, 43, Syracuse, and
Rosa Norene Randolph, 37, Syracuse; Charles William
Perry II, 28, Pomeroy, and Chasity Renae Hess, 26,
Pomeroy ; David Scott Williams, 20, Racine, and Brandi .
Kay Michelle Vance, 20, Racine; Joseph William DaviS, Jr.,
27, Pomeroy, and Melanie Louise Blevins, 25. Pomeroy.

a

POMEROY - Phylli s .
Hackett reviewed 'Team of
Rivals: The Political Genius
of. Abraham Lincoln" by
Doris Kearns Goodwin
when
the
Middleport
Literary Club met recently
at the Pomeroy Library.
In
previous
books,
Goodwin has offered fresh
insights
into
Lyndon
Johnson, the Kennedys and
Franklin and
Eleanor
Roosevelt. In "Team of
Rival s" she explores the .
(elationships
between
Lincoln and the members of
his cabinet. They are:
Edward Bates, attorney general; William H. Seward,
secretary of slate; Edwin M.
Stanton, secretary of war;
and Salmon P. Chase, trea-

Immunization clinic

Marriage licenses

diplomas and student body. America, which collectiveIn its place appeared the H. ly receive more than $260
Newcomb billion a year in donations.
Sophie
Memorial College Institute, There are people all over
a paper organization with the place who itch to get
ilo dean, no degrees, no stu- their hands on money left
William
dent
body and not even a decades· ago by thousands
Rusher
campus. Needless to say, of donors, now safely dead,
Tulane's
Board
of . for purposes they deerri
Administrators redirected irrelevant. In the name of
Newcomb College's money sheer fairness, they must be!
Newcomb College became to the Institute, where it is stopped.
the first degree-granting now under Tulane's control.
In a way, I don't blame
"coordinate college" for
That was the point at Scott Cowen. He confront- .
women in the United · which two nieces of ed a real disaster' in the
States.
Josephine
· Louise aftennath of Hurricane
Everything went along Newcomb filed a lawsuit Katrina. The $45 million
merrily for nearly 120 seeking a preliminary and a endowment of Newcomb
·years, until Hurricane permanent
· injunction College was the chief supKatrina. Tulane suffered against Tulane, together port of an institution for the
considerable damage, and with declaratory relief. Tho higher education of wornim,
its president, Scott Cowen, judge denied the request for at a time when .women's
carne up with a "Plan of a preliminary injunction, colleges are temporarily out
Renewal," which has been but acknowledged that a of fashion. It must have
controversial, to say the "clear readi~g of Mrs . . been unbearably tempting
least. (For one thing, it Newcomb's w11l shows that to fold the college into
called for the firing of hun- · she intended for Tulane .. : Tulane its!!lf, arid pocket its
dreds of tenured faculty to use the b;llan.ce of her . money for the overall benemembers.) But, for present estate to maintain a fit of the University.
purposes, the key point that women's higher education
But don't Josephine
it also called for the llisso- college." Because of the Louise Newcomb's instruclution of Newcomb College . contradictory ruling and tions matter? She can no
and the seizure of its statement, the ruling has longer speak for herself, but
endowment, which at that been . appealed
to every generation has an
paint totaled a . hefty $45 Louisiana's Fourth Circuit obligation to respect its premillion. Tulane's Board of Court of Appeals, which decessors, where their
Administrators, shocked by has sclieduled onil argu- wishes · can reasonably be
the devastation of Katrina; rnents for May 8.
honored.
·
hastily approved the Cowen · Is this a dispute in which
(William Rushu is
plan.
~mtsiders o~ght to take an Distinguished Fellow of the
All
of a sudden mterest? It IS mdeed. ~~re Claremont /nscitllle for the
Newcomb College disap- are upwards of 1.3 rrulhon Study of Statesmanship and
peared - dean, degrees, nonprofit organizations .in Political Philosophy.)

I

,

For the Record

Tulane grabs the money

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

ATHENS - 0' Bleness regular duties as a volunteer Jody Moore for ~.000 hours
Memorial Hospital honored for O'Bleness. Currently 17 of service; Carol Crabtree,
its volunteers at the annual 0 ' Bleness volunteers are Shirley Strickmaker and
Volunteer
Recognition honored with a tree and a Freda Swearingen for 1,500
Luncheon held recently at plaque in 'the garden.
hours of service; A1me Marie
the Ohio University Inn.
The O!Bleness Volunteer Chonko, Nancy Kasler and
O'Bieness' in-hospital . Resources
Department Don Woodyard for 1,000
volunteers devoted more bestowed special recognition hours of service; Kim Brown,
than 21,500 hours of service on 29 in-service volunteers. . Audrey Dishong and Kevan
during 2006. The luncheon 0' Bleness
Volunteer Wagner for 500 hours of serwas held in observance of Resourt:es Manager Susan vice; and Caroline Barr,
National Volunteer Week.
Kozak recognized hospital Carolyn Calentine, Dana
The 2007 Excellence in volunteers
who
have McGraner, Pat Moorehead,
Service award was presented achieved service-hour mile- Krista Stanford, Harold Smi.th
to Harriet Carlson, the long- stones during the past year. and Hannah Young for 100
time treasurer of the Guild of Those honored include: Bob hours of service.
0' Bleness. Carlson will be Sympson for 8,500 hours of
O'Bleness Health System
· honored with a tree and service; Avanelle Conrath and president Ricli Castrop
plaque
in
O'Bleness'"' Ethel Pierce for 6,500 hours . commended the volunteers
Volunteer Honor Garden of service; Clayton Bolin for for their efforts. Volunteers
located along Riverside 5,500 hours of service; Jessie .donate their time and talent
Drive near the bike path. The Essex for 4,500 hours of sec- at O'Bleness to help
garden was made possible vice; Katie Devoe for 4,000 patients, visitors and staff in
by a generous gift from the hours of service; Helen many capacities throughout
Hocking Valley Bank, which Swaim and Judy Woolery for the hospital and the Castrop
sponsors trees in honor of 3,500 hours of service; AI Center. liS well as fundraisrecipients of the annual Leep for 3,000 hours of ser- ing activities.
award. The award is given to ·vice; Shirley Higgins and
Entertainment was provolunteers who provide ser- Amy Collins for 2,500 hpurs vided by Wayne J. Myles,
vice abov.e and beyond their of service; Bill Creighton and DO, who played the piano.

GOD'S NET reaching out to children in Mrica
POMEROY
-God's
NET is inviting the community to help reach out to families in Africa because of
what Dee Rader described as
a "terrible malaria outl;&gt;reak
that is taking the lives of
children." Rader, youth ministries coordinator at God's
NET, said I 00,000 infants

die annually from malaria
and someone dies every 30
seconds. Rader went on to
say for $10 a family of four
can be protected from the
malaria infected mosquitoes
with a special net. These nets
are treated with Artemisininbased combitionation therapies that will protect a fll;mi-

ly of four for four years.
Rader added the children of
God's NET , would like to
help other children in another country by sending a
donation to protect children
in Africa. For every $1 0, a
net can be purchased. If anyone has questions they can
call 992-0261 or send finan-

cial donations marked "nothing but nets" to God'~ NET,
P.O. box 171 Pomeroy,
45769.
Rader said this campaign
has also been acknowledged
by the Unite&lt;\ Methodist
Church and more information can be found ' at nothingbutnets.com.
·

Jobs

lower Mississippi River.
AEP is the second-largest
dry-bulk barge company on
the inland waterways.
West Virginia· m1nes produced almost 160 million
tons of coal last year,
employing 43,000 people
and making West Virginia
the largest coal-producing
sta.te east of the Mississippi,
Knoy ·said.
"My division of AEP is
responsible for gelling that
coal from your mines to our
power plants,''•he said, stating that AEP River
Operations is the largest

coal camer on the · inland
waterways.
The division moves more
than 63 million tons of dry
bulk product each year,
including coal, grain, steel,
ores and other bulk products.
On the national level ,
barge transportation of
goods is the single most
efficient, economical and
environmental choice for
transporting freight. More

than 900 trucks are replaced
. on the highway just by one
tow of barges on the inland
waterway system ..
AEP's commitment to
communities like Mason
Couniy is threatened by
aging infrastructure . on the
inland waterways, Knoy
said. In some cases, a sys- ·
tern of locks and ·dams are
50 to 60 years old and have
been neglected in terms of
regular maintenance.

from PageA1
and Elmwood Marine
Services, with seven' facilities in New Orleans:
AEP River Operations,
including Indiana and
Michigan's
River
Transportation Division,
· inci!Jdes a fleet of 2, 700
barges and 60 towboats ,along . with a full-service
shipyard and six barge repair
and cleaning facilities on the

A!!!~!·

:Southern

Bethany Theiss, Tristen
Ginther, Abigail Jenkins, Taylor, Kody Wolfe.
Kreig . Klenski, Krystle
Fifth grade: Abigail Wolfe, Cameron Yates. ·
Marler, Amber Norville, Atkins, Darien Diddle,
Third grade: Morgan
' .
Whitney Riffle, Kaylyn Brandon Grueser, Baylee Davis, Jeremy Dutton,
from PageA1
Spradling, Deidra Sprouse, Hupp, Lacey Hupp. Rikey· Tanner Grubb, Cameryn
Ashley Weddle.
Jones, Nathan Leamond, Harmon, Brynn Harris,
·' bonds each from Home
Sophomores:
Rashell
Hill,
Theron
. National Bank included Boso. Brody Flint, Kyle Jamie O'Brien, Casey Parker
Pickens,
Joe
Smith,
Allison
Johnson.
Dimitrious
Lamrn,
·Austin Hill, Gabriel Ritlle.
Goode. Bryan Harris. Alex Taylor.
Ashley
Lickliter,
Madison
·. · Southern Local stu- Hawley, Christepher Holter,
Fourth grade: Ashley Maynard, Joe Morris,
-dents/honorees attending Drew
Hoover, Emma B1lker, Jesse Connolly, Madeline Quillen, Sylvia
this. year's county academic Hunter, Tosha Jones,
. banquet are Tristen Wolfe, Chelsea Pape, Samantha Katelyn Hill, Jacob Hoback, Richards, Gabriel Riffle,
Bethany Theiss. Kody Patterson, Rachael Pickens, Caitlyn Holter, Bradley · Andrew Shockey, Cody
Wolfe, Tim~thy Elarn, Eric Weston Roberts, Jaime McCoy, Tyler Miller, Chais Shulaw, Elizabeth Teaford,
Rodriguez. Cassie Roush, Jansen Wolfe.
. Buzzard,, Zachary Manuel, Warner.
Emma Hunter, Rachel
Freshmen: Kris Klenski,
: Pickens, Amber Hill, Michael Manuel, John
Mallory
Hill,
Adam Powell, Dustin Salser,
Phillips. Phillips was also Breanna Taylor. Lynzee
.named the Franklin .B. Tucker, Mac Wood. Katie
Walter Scholar.
Richard Hill, president. of Woods.
,
~
Eighth Trevor
grade: Flint,
Eric
Mel~iCoun~
. the Southem Local Board of Buzzard,
.
.
.
. Edl!cation, presented the · Bobbi Harris, Michale Hill,
following students with acaManuel, Charley
.·. - c
.~ .
-~·
. dernic achievement awards: Zachary
Pyles, Tyler Wolfe.
,p
TP-'P
. Seniors: Nick Buck,
Seventh grade: Martina·
Chance · Coli ins. Randy Arms, . Emily Ash. Alison
Collins. Ryan Donaldson, Brown. Andrew Ginther,
· Amber Hill, Mallory Hill, Bobby · . Goo4e.. Sahara .
Jacob Hunter, · Nathan · Harmon. Amber Hayman,
· McClure,
Miranda Austin Hill. Katelyn Hilt
McKelvey, Jesse McKnight, Chelsea Holter, Kelsey
Adam Phillips, Adelle Rice, Holsinger, Emily ~anuel, ,
· A Great Program to Help
Bethany .Vance. Rachel Emma Powell, Andrew
Ch
· D'
Lo &amp; al_;_,_;_ Ul • hi
Roseberry. Olivia Searls. .
rome
ISetJSeS, se lftUHIHH#J nelg
Wood.
&amp; Meet New People
Junio,rs: Bonnie Allen • . Hope . Teaford, Abbie
. Morgan Brown, Teddy Williams, Natalie Wood.
Incentivt Given
Brown, Lindsey Buzzard,
Sixth grade: Christopher
Register 1M day of evtnt or pre-rrgister .
· Erin Chapman.
Ryan Chaney, Timothy Elarn,
Ill 740-991~6
· Chapman, Heather Cundiff, Jennifer McCoy, Jaclyn
U
lJinurtifitld
Co .4.ndy
Stephanie Cundiff, Sarah Mees. Shelby Pickens.
El-Dabaja,
Courtney · Stefanic Pyles. Cody • .___ _ _ _ _...F_or_M_o_,.,_,:_ ________,

F

I
_
a

a lk5

u_
n
Friday-May 11th .
4-7pm

Middleport Farmer's Market
fit.ellf!nt

Don't Miss...
The Sinatra Show

Featuring
The Joey Thomas
Big Ban~
Friday, May 11 at 8 pm
Tickets: 530 &amp; $25
Dinner Tickets $10
Have You Seen Our Ballrom
&amp; Banquet Hall?

MEET THE ROBINSONS (PG)

1:0063:20
FRACTURE (R).

Book Your Summer EVents Now!

The Ariel-Dater Hall

Ave. Gallipolis, ~H
· 740-446-ARTS. (2787

428 Sec.
.

-

�'•

;

PageA6

FAITH • VALUES
Stand not alone - - -A Hunger For More -~~

The Daily Sentinel

"Then the Lord God said,.
' It is not good for the man to
be alone; I shall make a
partner (companion) suited
to him."' Genesi s 2.18
(REB w/amplification)
"As the Scriptures say, ' A
man leaves his father and
mother and is joined to his
wife, and the two are united
into one.' This is a great
mystery, but it is an illustration of the way Christ and
the church are one .."
Ephesians 5.31 -32 (NLT)
"For as in one body we
have many members, and
not all the members have the
same function, so we: who
are many, are one body in
Christ, and individuall y we
are members one of another." Romans 12.4-5 (NRSY)
Picking oneself up by the
bootstraps. Making something of your li fe. Sitting
tall in the saddle. Bravely
standing alone against the
forces and pressures of life.
Achievin,\l personal success
, and fu lfi llment. Me and
only me! By .myself.
And hello America
John Wayne . Superman.
High priest in our own temple. Survival of the fittest
and we 're told to be fit ... to
make it on our own. The
message is clear and simple:
If possible, it really is better
for man to be alone. And
relationships1 Pragmatic
necessities only.
The
19th· . century
Norwegian
dramatist,
Henrik Ibsen, claimed that
"the strongest man in the
world is he who stands most
alone.'' Perhaps, but he certai nly did not stand alone in
his idealistic vision of radical individuali sm.
The great American writer,
Ralph Waldo Emerson,
wrote much the same in one
of his famous essays: "It is ·
only as a man puts off all
. foreign support, and stands
alone, that I see him to be
strong and to prevail." And
our culture has been inundated with this insidious philosophy ever since.
·
And no.w, at the opening
of the 21 st· century, what is
the result of being told for
nearly 200 years to "stand
tall, walk alone, and make it
on your own?" Very si mple.
Isolation and loneliness.
Depression and ni1sery.
Anxiety
and
fear.
Despondency and despair.
The slow and agonizing
deterioration . of a society
largely founded . upon
Biblical principles.
But what does God say 1
. What has He always said,
from the beginning? · "It is
not good for the man to be
alone." Not good? No, not

Friday, May 4, 2007

There once was a young
orphan girl who ~as sent
word that the King wished
to
adopt her. Her name was
Rev.
Gilda
and. as one looked
Pastor
Jonathan upon her,
she seemed hardly
Noble
Thorn
more than a peasant, clothed
PASTOR ,
Mollohan
in her drab and gray raiment
TRINITY CHURCH
. along with her dirty countenance and hopeless glaze in .
her eyes.
But as the day for her
joining
the new · family black eyes. The bear lifted a
at all, and considering ·the
the King sent a paw towards· her and. to
approached.
fact that God himself is not
message
to
her
that she was Gilda's
a solitary being - He is
astonishment,
to
come
to
the
forest.
Gilda seemed to be gesturing her
Father and Son and Holy
Spirit - this makes perfect was afraid, but in the end towards the table. Gilda
se nse. Humans were, after ventured from the pointless took a deep breath ahd then
all, created in His image drudgery of her existence walked forward while the
into the shadows beneath. bear watched. As she came
according to His likeness. ·
The fact of the matter is the trees. She found that a to the table she could see all
we were made for each path had been prepared and three bowls very clearly, the
other. We were created for near the eave of the forest first had a card that simply
community, to be members, was a small signpost that said,
"Pleasurable
in fact , of an interdependent had words engraved upon it. Pursuits:" the second a card
community of genuine love, "To the one who receives that said, "Company of
· common purpose and shared Him, He gives the right to Others:" and on the card of
labor. We were created, in become a child o.f God," it the third was writte n,
other words, to reflect the said (from John I:12). She "Presence of the King."
life of the God whose image walked along musing over
The huge bear rai sed his
we bear and that inherently the message when she · massive head and gazed
means kinship, mutual sup- passed by another which into Gilda's eyes. A deep
· said, "If we hope for 'what grow ly. voice rumbl ed ·
port and cooperation.
.This is whv the Church is we do not yet have, we wait fro m his ches t and Gilda
not only ftindamentally nec- for it patiently" (from fe lt terrified. "'On.e bowl
essary but .also the obvious Romans 8:25). And then, was left here for you." he
outcome of being · recon- after awhile, she came upon said simply. "Can you tell
ci led to God. There is no a third sign whi ch read, which it is?"
such thing as "Lone "Our present sufferings are
Gilda looked at the bear,
Ranger" Chri stianity. No, not worth comparing with and then she looked at the
we cannot make it on our . the glory that will be bowls.
She
gi ngerly
own. We need God and we revealed in us" (from picked up a spoon and put
need each other in th'at Romans 8: 18).
a taste of the first bo wl to
The gloom under the her mouth. The steamy
divinely human community.
the Apostle refers.to as "the trees frightened Gilda, but spoonful burned her lips.
the signs strengthened her "It's to d hot," she sa id
Body of Christ."
. "We, who are many, are resolve. She continued timidly. She then tasted the
one body in Christ and indi- along the path wondering second bowl, but little ice
viduall y members one of where the path would take crystals crunched as her
another." · The man "who her next. And then, the mouth closed about the
stands most alone" is not the path came .to a sudden stop soon. "It's too cold," she
strongest; he is, in fact, the at a small , stone cottage. At said_ Then she tasted the
most vulnerable for "our lhe bottom step was anoth- third. The porridge, sweetenemy, the deYil, prowls er sign. As she drew near ened with brown sugar,
. around like a roaring lion to it, she could read the see med perfect to her.
seeking someone to devour." words written upon it, "If "This one is just right,"
(I Peter 5.8) Someone isolat- we are children, then we she said, ,although she felt
are heirs - heirs of God strange in talking to a bear.
ed. alone, defenseless.
As believers, followers of and co-heirs with Christ"
. The bear smiled in a bear
·Christ, we cannot afford to (from Romans 8: 17a).
kind of way and , in his
say to each other, I don't
Gilda cautiously climbed growly voice, said, "Always
need you. I don 't need the the steps and approached remember to find your
church. I can make it on my the heavy wooden door. refreshment in the presence
ow n." That is delusion, She listened carefully for a of your King, dear lady"
sheer nonsense. One might moment and thought, to her (see John 17:3). And with
as well cut off his arm and di smay, that. she could . that encouragement, GiIda
say, "I think it' ll do a fine almost hear the sound of ate iill the porridge in the
job on its own. After all, it's heavy brea thing. She slowly bowl. When she was done,
a good arm with fine muscle sw ung the door to peer she truly did feel refreshed.
tone, strong bones, ruddy inside and then drew her · When she had finished,
color.. ." Foolish, of course. breath in sharply. In the cen- the bear' motioned her. on
"We,· who arc many, are ter of a large room was a towards the next room, a
one body in Christ and indi- tall, wooden table with three large room in which sat
vidually members one of bowls sei upon it. The smell three chairs. A seco nd bear
another." Find your place of something sweet filled lay across the floor like a
and become an active. part Gilda's nostril s and her hun- huge rug, but she looked up
of the Body, then, an enthu- gry tummy growled. But as
Gilda
entered.
siastic participant in this What had caused her to gasp Somewhat smaller than the
interdependent community was the enormous form of first bear, thi s second bear
of genuine love, common . sl)aggy brown bear on the spoke with a somewhat less
purpose and shared labor. other side of the table, star- growly voice.· "One chai r
Stand not alone.
ing at her with piercing was left here for you," she

·r ·r r r r r r r

·r

r

r

r

r

r

said simply. "Can you tell
whi ch it is''"
Gilda looked at the first
chair and swallowed hard _h
was so high that she couldn't see its top reaching up
into the shadows near the
ceiling. At its base was a
stepstool with words carved
upon
it,
" My
Righteousness.''
She
stepped up onto the stool.
but although she reached
with outstretched finger&gt;
and stood on her tiptoes. she
could not reach the edge of
the seat to pull herself onto
it. "It's too high." she said
sadly. She climbed down
a·nd managed to easily
climb onto the second seal.
She sat there a moment but
then realized that the seat
was enormous. Beside her
was a ba~ket with a tag
attached to it that said, "My
Accomplishment,.''
She
opened it and began to pull
out all sorts uf pillows of
variou s shapes and sizes.
But although she unpacked
all that the basket held, the
seat stretched out around
her still leavi ng her feel ing
'mall and insignificant. "It's
too wide ... she .told the bear
and then climbed down.
Gilda d me to the third
chair and easi ly sal upon it.
It was amazingly comfortable and fit her perfectly. as
though it had been made for
her. A label on its armrest
said,
"The
King's
Purposes." "This one is .just
ri ght ... ' he reported to the
bear who had been watching her all along without
comment. "Of course," the
second bear replied. "It was
built wi th you in mind . You
weren't intended to rest in
your own righteousness or
ill:hievements, but only in
the purposes of your King,
dear one (see John 15: 16).
Gi lda sat a moment, rest in g, but then the bea r
shooed her on to the
upstairs room. "He's prepared even more for you,"
the bear said gen tly. And so
Gi lda climbed the steps
until she came to the landing on which stood three
separate doorways. A third
bear stood before them. In
the smallest voice of the
three bears (but still somewhat growly ). he said, "One
of these apartments has
been prepared for you. Can
you tell which one?"
Gilda looked through
each of the doorway s. · On
the other side of the first
one was a rough room,
scarcely furnished but with
one large bed in the center.
About it stood a weaver's
loom and a spinning wheel.
Beside the door was a small

r r r ·r ·r r ·r

sign that said, "Pointless
.Labor... Even through the
doorway. Gilda could see
· that the bed was /nothing
more than a splintery, old
plank . "That one is too
hard.'' she murmured softly
as she turned away._
Through the second doorway. over which were written the word,. "Fruitless
Ease ... there was a general
lack ofligl]t. ln the d~nness,
., he could see the plush
c ush~Jn s of easy living
whi le a lack of air and light
~manatcd from the room
with an obvious staleness
and stag nation thai threatened to choke her. She
sighed and turned away
again. "That one is too
soft," she said simply.
But then she looked
through the last doorway,
and smiled. Over ·this door
was written_ "The King's
Plans... She nodded and
said. "Let me guess... It
was built with me in mind.
Nut onl y am I to find my
refreshment on ly in the
presence ·of the King, my
rest only in the purposes of
the King. but I must also
reside daily in the' plans of
. my King ... She wrned to the
last bear. "Am I right ''" ·
The bear nodded hi s
head. '·You are rig ht, lady.
Enter into your re sidence,
re st. and be refreshed. You
are a daughter of the King
and this is the wi ll of your
new Father."
And so should we all heed
the counsel that God sends
us and take note that a difficult circumstance, altllough
it may be a "hear of a proble m... is the mean~ by wh ich
God would wake u-s up to
the invitation for eternal life
that He extends.'to all who
are wi lling to trust Him.
(Tiwm Mollohan a11d Iris
family have ministered in
soitther11 OJ,io the past
twelve years. He is the pastor of Pathway Commuitity
Church which meets 011
Stmday mornings at 455
Third Ave1111e, He may be
reached for commellls or
questions by email at pastortlrom@patlrwaygallipolis.com).

Keeping
·Meigs
County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today
992-2155

r ·r ·r -r

The sponsors 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 Jftur Best
C:dd

The Bihte tetts us ~ ••
ha&lt; given
each of us,different ,kifls and Jhat
He wants us to use Jhese gifl&lt; in
accordance with Jhe graco ihat He has
I
·'
·lieslowed upon us. \V~eq .we .lhiqk ahoul
.
.
\ . .:•. }&lt;·t........ .
Jhese specml gtf~ that iomeone may
possess. we naturatty Jhink ahoul greal
talent&lt; like those of a famous anist, or a
skilled surgeon. However, most of us
have more common everyday gifts that
we are required 10 use in our daily lives.
We should try to recognize and Jake
pride in the different gift&lt; and laleniS
. that our Heavenly Falher has given to
us. and we should use Jhese offerings for'
His glory. Whelher we are given Jhe gift
of being a parent a teacher. or a taxi
driver. we should try to do our very best
and we should always be appreciative of
God's caring love for us. Our Lord
want&lt; the besl for us. and our serving
other.;. ·refiects our love for Him. We should \"iltingly share our talents with
botlh• othe" and we should do. it generously.
....r''''" an ••arittits of We should work hard. and whenever we
-~. •r
Lord; and thtrt show kindness to. others, we should do it
. , ..n.tits fJj worA:ing, but it is lht
...., God who inspins thtm all in tJtry 'cheerfutty.

Ill'""'"'

·

ont.

Michelle Kenn~dy
Director of Markcling and

A i:l mi ~sion s

www.rnydallysentlnel.com

I

Pastor: Don Waller

Clun:b ol J...,. C~rlst Apos1o1k
VanZandt and Ward Rd .. Pastor: James
Miller. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m ..
E\·ening · 7:30 p.m.
Rivtr ~allty
Ri\'er Val ley Apos!olic Worship Cen1er.
K13 S. ) rd Ave :. Middleport . Ru .
Michat:l Bradford. Putor. Sunday. 10:30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 pn~)·er. Wed . 7 pm Bible
S1udy
Emmanuel Apostolk Tabmude' lbC.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rmland .
Suvices : Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp;: 1:30 p.m..
Thurs. 7:00p .m., PastoJ Mart}' R. Hutton

Assembly of God
Uberty As5nnbly ol God
P.O. Box 461 . Dudding Lane-. Mason .
W.Va .. Pas1or: ·Neil Tennanl. Sunday
Services· 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m .

Baptist
......... Fn&lt;will Bl))llst Cburtb
Paslor. Mike Hannon. Sunday School
9:30 to 10:30 am, Worship service 10:30
to II :00 am. We&lt;!. preaching 6 pm
C~nkr Baptist Churth
Sunday School - 9 :30am. Preaching
Ser\•ice 10:3 0am . Evening 'service
1:00pm . Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm ,
Interim Preac~r . Floyd' Ross

Clteshirt Baptis1 Church
Paslor: Steve Little, Sunday· School: 9:30
am . Morning Worship: 10:30 am .
Wc-dnc-Mlay Bible Study 6:30pm: ~;huir
practice 1:30: youth and Bible Buddies
6:30p .m. Thurs. I pm book s!udy

Hope Baptist Chu rc:h (Southern)
570 Grant St.. Mi&amp;llepott . Sunday school
· 9:30 a.m.. Woohip . 11 a.m. and 6 p.m..
We~dnesda)' Strvice · 7 p.m: Pastor: Cary
Ell i~

Ratland Firsl 811ptis1 Cburcb
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomen~y

•-nlapttst

Pastor Jon Brockert, East Main St..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am. Woohip 10:30 am
t"lrsl Soulht=rn lbptilil
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. L:miar
O' Bryant. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m..
Worship -8:15a.m.. 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wedne-sday Ser\'ices - 7:00p.m.
Flrsl Baptist Church
Pastor: Bill y.Zuspan 6th Wld Palmer St ..
Middlepon , Sunday School-9:15a.m. ,
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00 p .m..
Wednesday service· 7:00p.m.
Racine Fll'$1 B11plisl
Pastor: Ryan Eat9t1 · pastor . Sunday
School · 9:30a.m.• Worship . 10:40 a.m..
7:00 p .m., Wednesday .Servi ~ e s . 7:00
p.m.
SIIYer Nun Baptl.t!t

Pastor: JQhn Swanson, Sunday School ·
JOa .m .. Wors hip . lla .m., 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesday Services-7:00 p.m.
MI. Union Baptist
Pastor: Denn is We-aver Sunday .School9:45 a. m., Eve ning - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Baplisl Cburth
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine. OH,
Pnstor: Ed Caner..Sunday Schoo l . 9:30
a.m.. Sunday Worsh ip · 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday Bible S1udy · 7:00 p.m..
Old Bethel Fret WIU Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middh:port, Sum.lily
Serv ice - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m.. Tuesday
Scf\'kes -6:00
·

209 Third
Racine, OH

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

740-992•3325
www.teafordrealestate.net
Kart Kebter Ill
Cenifled Public Accountant
email: ldtebler@charter.net

6t8li. Main St,..l
, Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-991-7270

KEBLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

IJvfi[[ie 's j{estaurant
Open 7 !lay&gt; a week

740·992·7713

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740•949•2217 ·

6um· S pm

1/ome Cooked Meal.li &amp; /JailJ' Spi'ciafs

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

Members of the' MLS and REALTOR•

Hour-.

I

If ye abide i11 Me, a11d My
words abide in Y""• ye slrall .
ask wlrat ye 'will, a11d it shall
·be do11e lmtrJ yrm.
}oh11 15:7

Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

The Rppliance man
740-985-3561
9~2-1550

· Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Voun
MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohi9 45769

Iii&gt;.

(740) 992·3279
~.
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

,,

St. Middleport. 0~
740-992-61 28
Local source for troph·ies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more

190 N. Second

17-101'l92-6451

s.a.d U.... Calbolk Cbtudl
161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. 992-58'm.
Pastor: Re,·. Walter E. ·He inz. Sat. Con .
4:45.5:1Sp.m.: Mass- 5:30 p.m.. Sun .
Con . -8:45-9:15 ,a.m... Sun . Mass . 9:30
a.m .. Dail} Mass· 8:30a.m.

· Faith Baptist Church
Rai lroad S1.. Mason. Sunday School - !0
a.m. 1 Worship
J I a. m. , 6 p.m.
~ednesday Sef\lices -? p.m,
Forest Run Baptist- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Worship ~ 11:30 a.m.

!\11. Moriah Baplis:t
Fourth &amp; Main Sl .. Middlepon. Pas10 r:
Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.. Sunday School 9:30 a.~ .. Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Anliqulty Baptbt
Sunda:; School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:45 \Lm.. Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m ..

,

Forest Ru
Pastor. BobRobinson.Sunday School.• 10
a.m., Worship . 9a.m.

COIIUDlLDity Chnrdl
Pastor: Ste\'e Tomek. Main Slrect,
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.ni..,
Sunday Service-7 pm.

r ......, Cbardt "'Cluist
212 W. Main St.. SuiKlay School - 9:30
a.m., Worship- 10:30 a. m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

-

Mlddltport Cbardt ol Cllrlll
5th and Main, Pastor: AI Hartson,
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre, Teen
Direclor: Dodger Vaughan, Sunday School
· 9:30 a.m., ,Worsbip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1
p.m., Wednesday Servicea . 1 p.m.

Ke110 Churdl .t Christ
Worship · 9:30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace . I st and ·
lrd Sunday
•
Rearwallow Ridge Clrlul'l:h otCbrhl
Pa5tor:Bruce Teny. Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 6:30p.m.

MJoamllo
Pastor: Bob Robinson , Sunday School · 9
a.m., Worsllip . lO a m .
PauiCbtopol
Sunday School - 9 am·.. Wonh.ip · 10 a.m.

.._...,
Pastor. Brian Dunham, Worship - 9:30
a.m.. Sund.oy Sdtool- 10:3l un.
RockSpriop

Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School -1}.15
a.m., Worship • 10 a.m., Youth
Fellowship, Sunday· 6 P·~ ·

R o o t o i - - Cbutll
leading Creek Rd ., Rutland, Pastor: Rev.
Dtwey King , Smday sChool-· 9:30 a.m..
Sunday w~ ip ·1 p.m.. Wednesday
praytt meeting- 7 p.m.

·-

Pastor: Rick Bouf!~e , Sunday School 9:30am., Worship· 10:30 a.m., 'htwsday ·
Services. 7 p.m.
Saltm Ccottr
Pastor: William k . Marshall. SuDday
School· 10: 15 a.m .. Wmtup ·9: 15a.m.,
Bible Study: Monday 1:00 pm
Soo...W.
Sunday School • 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

Pine Gro,. Blbk Hollll&lt;ll Cbun:b
· In mile off Rt. 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Ma~ley, S~o~nday School -. 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wedrn:sday·Scnict ·7:30 p.m.

WOIIeyon Blbk Hollo"' C~un:b
75 Peul St.. Middleport. Pastor: Rkk
• Bou'mc, Su~day School · 10 a.m. Worship
· 10:45 p.m .. Sunday Eve . 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday Scn·ice ·7:30 p.m.

.Zloa ChtU&lt;b ol Chrid
Polneroy, Harr.isonville Rd. ·(Rt. l43),
Pastor: Roger Watsoa, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.• Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

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

HyiCII Run Community Chlll'dl
Pastor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
- 9:30a.m .. Worship - I O:~.S a.m., 7 p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

tuppers Pfain Cllureb ofCbrlll
Instrumental. Worship Service . 9 a.m..
Co rnmuniun • 10 a.m., Sunday School ·
10: IS a.m ., Youth-5:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wedn ~~Y 1 pm

c-

I
Laurel Clirf Fm: Mtlbodlst Cburtb
Pas!or: Glenn Rowe, Su nday School ·
9:30 a.m., .worship -. 10:30 a.m. and 6 ·
p.m..Wednesday Service: · 7:00 p.m .

Bradbury. Churdl or Cbrist
Minister: Tom Runyun . 39558 Bradbury
Roud. Midtllepon. Su ~d ay School · 9:30
a.m.
Wnnhip . 10:30 a.m .

Latter-Day Saints
The Chun:b or Jcsw
Christ of Latter-Day SaiDts
St. ~t . 160. 446-6247 or 446·7486,
Sund ay School 10:20- 11 a.1n ., Relief
Society/Priesthood I I :05-12:00 noon ,
Sac rament Service 9- 10: I 5 a.m ..
Homemaking meeting . Ist Thurs .• 7 p.m.

Rutland Church or Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship and
Communion. 1 0 ~30 a.m., Bob J. Werry.
Minister

Lutheran

Bradford Cllurcb or Christ
Com~:r of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Brudbury Rd .,
Minister: Doug Shamblin , Youth Mini ster:
Bill Amberger. Sunday School-9:30a.m.
. Worship • 8:00 a.m.• 10:30~ a.m.; 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

S!. Jobn Lutheran Churdl
Pine Grove, Worship · 9:00a.m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pastor:
Our S.ftour Lutheran Churdl
. Walnul and He nry Sts .. Ravenswood .
W.Va ., PaSI()r: David Russell , Sunday
School · 10:00 a.m., Worship · II a.m.

St. PaullAithrran Cburcb
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second S!., Pumeroy,
Sun. School - 9:45a.m ., Worship - II a.m.

United Methodist ·
Graham Unllrd Methodist
Wo~h i p - II a.m. Pastor: Richard Nea.\C
Btcbtel United Methodist
New Haven, Richard Nease, Pastor,
Sundaf worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

•

Otxler Church of Christ
Su nday schoo\9:30 a.m.• Sunday worship
• 10:30 a.m.
The Church or c •rlst of Pomeroy
Intersect ion 1 and 124 W, Evangelist
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study ·
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m.. Wednesday Bible S!udy • 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive UnJted Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville. Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires: Sunday School · 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m .. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

Christian Union

Meigs Cooperadve Parish
Nonheast Cluster. Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sun day School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship- II a.m .; 6:30 p.m.

Hartford Church of Christ In
Christlu Union
Hanford, W.VI.t ., Paslor:Dav id Greer,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10 :30 a.m .. 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Stn'ices. 7:00p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Ji m Corbitt . Worship · 9 a.m.,
Sunday Sc hoo l - 10 a .m.. . Thursday

...

(Middlopri)

•

Col•uy Pllpim Cbtopol
Hanison¥ille Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. Sullday School 9:30 a.m.,
Wmltip_- I I a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
~rvice - 7:00p.m.

Other Churches
s,....ca

Sun. SchooiiO 1m. Sundy aight6:30 pm
Undcrdtc dim:tioo of Out &amp; Faith
Hayman
ANewBPeh&amp;
IFol Gaopd Otudt) Hmiso&lt;l'me.
Pasun: Bob and Koy Mmhli1.
Sunday Service , 2 p.m.

l~,.,~.erin

heaven."

llnellllllllr-.....

. . 1111 ......... , _ .. . . .
499 Richland·Avenue, Athens
JQ-812-MU
·740-594-6333
1-800-45)-91106

Cahary Bible Chu.rdll
Pomeroy Pik(', Co. Rd ., Panor: Rev .
8lackv1ood. Sunday sChool - 9:30a.m.,
Worship 10 :)0 a .m.. 7:30 p .m ..
Wcdnc:~)' XrvK:e • 7.30 p.m .

... c-uiiJCbtlrdt
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap,State Rt . 681.
Tuppm. Plains, S~ - W~ip: 10 am .t:
6:30pm .. Wed. Bibk Study 7:00p.m .
Amubi~G

SUYcm111c Commuaity (butth
Pastor. Wayne R. lcwell . Sunday won.hip
· 6:00p.m .• Wednt:S«by - 6:00p.m . Bible
S!udy

Ca rmel &amp; Bashan Rds. RaCine, Ohio,
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School •
9:4!1 a.m., Worship • II :00 a.m . , Bible
Study Wed. 1:30 p.m. ~

MomloiStar
Pastor: JoM Gilmore, Su nday School - I I
a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m.

East Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School •
9a.m., Worship · 10 a.m., 1st Sunda}'
every month evening service 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday· 1 p.m.

Cll1hllu F-.Jp
(Noo.&lt;Jenomilllliooll fellowsltip 1
Meeting in tht Meigs MiddLe School
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewut
10:00 an1 - Noon Suoda.y; Informal
Wonh.ip , Cbildrcn's ministry

ReJoid"'l Ufe Cltun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport.

"'Clria

Pentecostal

7:30 p.m.

PentteOStal A55tmbly
Pastor: Gary &amp; Sharon Hughes. St. Rt.
124. Rat:ine. TomaOO Rd . Sunday ~lloo J ..
lei u.m., Evening · 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Services- 7 p.m.

Rocbte
Pastor. Kerry Wood, Sunday SChool • 10
a.m.. Worship • 11 a.m .Wednesday
Sen-icc5 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm
Coolville United Melboclbt hrbb
Pas1or: Helen Kline, Coolville Church.
Main&amp;. Fifth St., Sun . School - 10 a.m..
Worship· 9 a.m., l\Je5. Servil::es · 7 p.m.
' Jk.-.Cbor&lt;b
Township Rd ., 468C, Sunday School · 9
a.m, Wors hip • 10 a.m., Wednesday
Senitts · IOa.m.

Folllt Volley Tobemo&lt;le Churth
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Raw son, Sunday Evening 1 p.m .,
Thursday Service · 7 p.rn. .

Presbyterian

SyrKUJe Mlsaio•
!411 Bridgeman St .. Syracuse, Sunday
School • 10 a.m. Evenin g • 6 p.m.,
Wedne5da:y Service • 1 p.n1.
'

Harri§On\'llle Presbyterian Church
Pastor: Robert Crow. Worship • 9 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Pastor: Jame~ Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m., worship sen•icc II am .

Haul CommODity Cbun:b
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Elhel Hart, Sunday
School • 9:30a.m., Worship . 10:30 a.m ..
7:30 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Hodti1111J011 C~ur&lt;ll
Orand Street, Suaday School · 9:30.a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m., Pastor Phillip Bell

Torch Ch•n:h ' •
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Church of the Nuanae ·
Pastor: Alien Midcap , Sunday School · ·
9:30 a.m.,Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Sen·ices - 7 p.m., Paslor:
Allen Midcap
Rctdivllle Fellowship .
Church or the Nazarene, Paslor: Russell
Carron , Sunday Sdmol • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 ~. m ., 1 p.m., Wednesday
Senices • 7 p.m..

DyaviUe Community Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.• Worship •
10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Mone Chapel C~un:b
Sunday school • 10 a.m., Worship • II
a.m., WedncsQay Service ·1 p.m.
Folth Goopel Cburcll
Long Bottom, Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10 :45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wedne~ay7:30 p,m: .
Mt. Ollte Commu11ty Churtb
Pastor: L.awrem.:e B~sh, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Evenlng - 6:30p.m., Wed neday
Service - 7 p.m.
litll Gospel Lljlllbowe
33045 Hi.lahd Rood, Pomeroy, Pastor: Ro~
Hunrer. Sunday School · 10 a.m .. Eveninf!
7:30 p.m., :tUesday~ Thurs. · 7:30p.m.

South Bethel Commonlty Cbun:b
Syracuse Churth or the NIZU'ebe
Pastor"Milce Adkins. Sunday School • 9:30

The care you lkserve, clost to home good works and glorify your

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Pa~tor:

Mike Foreman , PaMor Emeri1us Lawrein:
Nnman, Worship-- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

c.ou...Jty
PortiMICI-Racioe Rd. , Pas!or: Jim Proffin.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Service' - 7:00
Clift011 T11btmade Chun:h
p.m .
Clifton. W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m.•
lletlld Wonblp Cat""
Worship - 1 P.m.. Wednesday Service - 1
39782 S.R. 7. Reedsville. OH 45172 . 1/2
p.m.
mile oorth of Eastem Schools on SR 7. A
New·Life Victory Center
Full Gospel Churth .. PI.stor Rob Barber.
3TI3 Geor}!es Creek Road.Gallipolis.OH
Auociate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youlh
Pallor Suzie Francis, Sunday services · Pastor: Bill Staten, Sunday ServiceS · 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.rrL Wednesday • 7 p.m. &amp;
10:00 un wonhip, 6:00 pm Family Life
Youth 7 p.m .
Classes, Wed . Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.111., Outer Limits Cell Group at the
Fpll Goopel Cbon:b
chun:ll 5:30 pm kJ 8o30 pm
ol the Urtoz Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse Morris,
.ub-Chun:b
Services: Saturday 2:00 p.in.
)98 Ash St., Middlepon+Pastor Jc:lf Smith
Sunday' School • 9:30 a.m .• Morning
Salan Community Cbun:b_
Worship • 10:30 a .m. &amp; 7:00 pm,
Bad of West Columbia, W.Va .orn Lieving
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p .m., Youth
Road . Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 675Service- 7:00p .m.
2288 , Sund ay School 9:30 am, Sunday
Appe Ll'e Ctatcr
evening service 7:00 pm . Bibly Sludy
"Full-Oospc: l Church". Pas~ors John &amp;.
Wednesday service 7:00pm
Pliny Wade ,603 Secood Ave. Mason, 771~17 . Service time: S~nday ·JO:JO a.m.,
Hoblotl Chrisdan Fellowship Clnardl
Wedlle!dayl pm
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday School10 am, Sunday Church senice ·6:30 pm
~-GnceR.F.I.
Wednesday 7 pm
923 S. Third St., Middleport, PutorTcre~a
. Davis, Sunday se rv ice, 10 a. m .•
RestonOon Chrlstltn FtUowUip
Wednesday service,1 p.m .
936S. Hooper Road , Aihens, Pastor:
lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 am .
Foltb F1tll Gaopd C.....,h
Wednesday: 7 pm
Long Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 am.
Howt of Healing Ministries
and 7 p.m., Wednesday . 7 p.m.. Friday •
St. Rl. 124 Langsville, OH
fel lowship service 1 p.m.
Full GosfM!I. Cl Pas1ors Robert &amp; Robetta
Muso:.er. Sunday School 9:30 a m,
l:larrhoavillt Commualty Churc:b
Worship !0:30 am · 7:00 pm , Wed.
Past&lt;lr: Theron Durham. Sunday · 9:30
Scf".·icc 7:01.1 pm
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednd Ua)· - 7 p.m .
Tfitm J esus Minlstrits
Metling in the Mulberry Community
~ttddltport Community Cb•rch
Cc nt(: r 6rmna~iurn . Pas1or Eddie Bac:r.
575 Pearl St., Middlepon . Pastor: Silll!
Service e1·ery Tuesday 6:30 pm ·
Anderson , Sunda)' School 10 a.m ..
Evening • 7:30 p.m .. Wednesday Service •

jfiSbtr jfuntral -omt
ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
nu•IICeliiiiii.•Mr'C•nn.• : REHABIUTATION CENTER men, that they may see your
14HI2-5MI

Folmew Blble Chwdo
Lt:tan . W.Va . Rt . I . Pastor: Brian May .
Sundly School · 9:30a.m .. Worship . 7:00
p.m ., Wed,nesday Bibk Study. 7:00p.m.
Fallb Ftllowsb.Jp C~ for C1ui11:
Pas!or: Re\'. Fra.nkl111 Dickens. Service:
Friday. 7 p.m.

nty~

2480 SaxnfSt., Syr.:wc, OH

~

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunday School •
9:30a.m., Worihip - II :00 a.m.

Daovllt llollnct5 Chu~
)1057 State Route 325, Langs\IUe. Pastor:
Benj.a~n'Crawfoot. SunW!y school · 9:30
a.m., Sunday WOJShip • 10:10 a.111. &amp; 1
p.m.. Wednesday prayer $CtVice- 7 p.m.

Pomtroy Watsldt Church oCCilrisl
33226 Chi ldren·~ Home Rd .. Sunday
School - I I a.m.. Worship · 10a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wedrtcsday Services· 7 p.m.

• Cattnl Clllltn'
Asbury (Syracuse). PasiQr: Bob Robinson.

t:ol&lt;rp1oo

Holiness

Mini"er:. Larry .Brown. Worship • 9:30
a.m. Sunday School · 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study • 7 p.m.

-7 p.m.

· Pastor: Arland King , Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Wonhip • 9:30 a.m.. Bible
Study Wed . 1:30
Flltwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday Scbool . 10
a.m.. Worship . II a.m.

Gn&lt;iJ:.-..-.

"''blk's Chapel We*yu
Coolvi lle Road . · Pastor: Rev. Charles
Manindale . SUnday School • 9:30 a.m ..
Woohip · 10:30 a.m.. Wednesday Service

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m .. worSrup . II
a.m., Wednesday Sen-ices · 7:30p.m.

Chtudl
326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m . Rev.
Edward Payne

lletniCK'k Gron Christian Church

a.-

l'II_.PIIIaiSI. hol
Pastor: Jim Corbin. Suaday School • 9
a.m .. Wonhip - 10 a.m.• Tuesday Services
- 7:30p.m.

· Episcopal

Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

740-992-6606

Sevenlh·Day Adventist
Mulbc:ny Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy. Saturd&amp;)'
Servi ~es: S:~b ba th School • 2 p.m..
Worship - l p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hmnon Ualted Brtthml
In Christ Church
Tuas Communiiy 36411 Wickham Rd,
Pastor: Peler Martindale. Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.
Youlh group rneel ing 2nd &amp; 4!h Sundays
7p.m.
Eden United Brethren In Christ
State Route 124. hetween Reedsville &amp;
Hockingport , . Sunday School · 10 a.m.,
Sunday Worship · II :00 a.m. Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p.m.. Pastor· M. Adam
Will

C)/ttemJ eml/lcll

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
A!hens, Pomeroy or Parkmburg

1-740-667-3156

"Still small

to care"

Agency Inc; If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall INSURANCE
SERVICES
·
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
,.
'
Financial
214 E. Main
SeiVices be done unto you.
.
AGENCIES Inc.
992-5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
Bill Oulckei
992-66n

SWISHER LOHSE
God so loved the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
we Fill Doctors'
lbt•goirten sun ...
· Prescriptions
John J: /6
992-2955
Pomeroy

l!race is
for thee: for m11
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

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

"So I strive always to keep ~
my conscience clear before ~ 'Llt OJIT~Mip
P"'""' 'I'"'~· .
God and man ."
Suppression • E~linguishen • Sprinklers
• Security

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

112 N. 2nd Ave. Middiepbrt, OH
353-0837 ·Fax:

992-6376

J!lli
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

Blessed are the pure
in heart; .for they
shall see God.
MatthewS:&amp;
'

,.

.........

f&lt;adomGoope!MillloD
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd . 31. Pastor: Rev .
Roger Willford . Sunday School - 9;30
a.m . Woohip- 1 p.m .

C... a.rdt of tile NllUI'ar
Putor. Rev. Herbtrl Grate. Sunday School
• 9:30 a.m., Worship • I I a.m., 6 p.m..
Wedoc:lday Serv,ices . 7 p.m .
C1ooudl llllbt N ~ lwc Sltope. So....,y Scltool - 9:30
am., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.• 6:30 p!_m ..

Wonhip - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School •
. 10:30 am., Farst Sunday of Month · 7:00
p.m . service

Trinity Cburdl
S«ond &amp;: lynn , Pomeroy. Pastoc R~.
Jonatha; NobLe, Worship 10:25 a.m ..
Sunday Sthool9:15 a.m.

Watsklt Cburdt or Christ
33226 ChildKn's Home Rd : Pomeroy. OH
C()nlacl 740-441 · 1296 Sunday morning
10:00. Su n morninc Bible study:
following wors hip. Sun. eve 6:00 pm ,
Wed bible study 7 pm

· Reecbvlle Church of Chrlsl
P11s1or: Philip StWln . Sunday School: 9;30
a.m., Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

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

.

Carldoa laterdtaomladoul Clturdl
Kingsbllry Road . Pastor: Robert V~.
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.. Wonhip
SerVice 10:30 a.m.. Evening Service 6
p.m.

........,CIIordtoltMNPasiOr: Jan •l.avCDder. Sunday School .
9:30 a.m .. Wonhip · 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednesday Strvicn . 7 p.m .

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.• Wonhip •
10:30 am.

Congregational

Church of Christ

10 a.m . 2nd and 4th Sunday

~

Pastor: Denitil Null, Worship· 9:30 a.m .
SUDday School · 10: ~ a.m.

Clourdt ol God oll'roploecy
OJ . White Rd. off St. Rt . 160. Pastor. PJ .
Chapman , Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
Worship· II a.m., Wednesday ~ices. 7
p.m .

Catholic

V1ctory Bapdstlndepc:ndtnl
525 N. 2nd SL Middleport, Pastor: Jumes
E. Keesee, Worship • IOu.m., 1 p.m.,
Wednesduy Servi(..'tS - 7 p.m.

Matthew 5: 1

MIDDlEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Bible Study 7 pm

Hkkory HUb c•un:b ofCbrlsl
Tuppers Plains, Pastor 'Mike Moore ~Bible
clau. 9 a.m. Sund ay; worship 10 a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
class 1 pm Wed,

Homemade Desserts Made Daily ·

740·949-221 0
We Sell Hqmes at

Warm F,.jmdlr
A1mo.1plrt•n,

0

a.m.• Wonbip . 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 pm .

Sctvtces -7 p.m.

MI. MoriaiiCII!IrdtoiGod
Mile Hill Rd .. Racine , Pastor: Jamc:s
Satterfield. Sunday School - 9:45 a.m..
l!ven.ing - 6 p.m .. Wednesday Services - 7 ·
pm .

Rullud Fru Willlbpdst
Salem St.. Paslor: Jamie Fortner. Sunday
School · 10 a.m., Eve nin&amp; - 7 p.m..
Wc:dnesday Services - 7 p.m .
Socoocl Baptist Chard!
Putor: Ron Heah. Sullday Wonhip . 10 '
Rlvenswood. WV. Sunday School 10 am·
a.m., 6 p.m.. Wednesday Serv:icn - 1
. Morning worship II am Evening - 7 pm •. t p.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
s,_... nnr Cllurdt oiGod
nnt Baptlol nun:b o1 Motoi., wv
Apple and Second•Sts., Pastor: Rev. David
(lndepoodont B..,.mJ
Russell. Sunday School and Wonhip- 10
SR 652 and Anderson St. Pastor Robert
a.m . Evening Services - 6 :30 p.m ..
Gpdy. Sunday school 10 am. Morning
~ednesday Services. 6:J£! p.m .
church II am. Sunday evening 6 pm. Wed.

. Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt 143'jm t off Rt. 7, Pa stor: Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr.• Su nday Unified
Service. Worship • 10:30 a.m ., &lt;J p.m.,
Wednesday Stf\lices . 7 p.m

/

333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middteoort OH Fax (740) 992•7406

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

WORSJHP GOD THIS WEEK

(

IRA S". Rollm·trs'\ S1ocks- Bond!.., Muwal
f1md.1·' . Amllliti~~ . Umg Trrm Curr
Karl Kehler.. Ill . CPA. Registertd
Rcprc:'sc: ntaiivc: of, H.D. Vc:stlnvestmcnt
Services)&gt;! Securities offered through H.D. Vest
lnve~• ment Sc:rvicc: s~,. . Member SIPC Advisory
services offered throogh H.l&gt;. Ve5t Alhiwry
Sef\lices~ 11 • Non-hank suhsidi~ries of Wells
Fugo &amp; Company. 6333 Nonh State HWY 161
. 41h t-l oor. lrving TX. 7503K (972) K7()..60011

R.S.V. 1 Corinthians 12:4-6

•

Friday, May 4, 2007

'

I

Acts 24:

�'•

;

PageA6

FAITH • VALUES
Stand not alone - - -A Hunger For More -~~

The Daily Sentinel

"Then the Lord God said,.
' It is not good for the man to
be alone; I shall make a
partner (companion) suited
to him."' Genesi s 2.18
(REB w/amplification)
"As the Scriptures say, ' A
man leaves his father and
mother and is joined to his
wife, and the two are united
into one.' This is a great
mystery, but it is an illustration of the way Christ and
the church are one .."
Ephesians 5.31 -32 (NLT)
"For as in one body we
have many members, and
not all the members have the
same function, so we: who
are many, are one body in
Christ, and individuall y we
are members one of another." Romans 12.4-5 (NRSY)
Picking oneself up by the
bootstraps. Making something of your li fe. Sitting
tall in the saddle. Bravely
standing alone against the
forces and pressures of life.
Achievin,\l personal success
, and fu lfi llment. Me and
only me! By .myself.
And hello America
John Wayne . Superman.
High priest in our own temple. Survival of the fittest
and we 're told to be fit ... to
make it on our own. The
message is clear and simple:
If possible, it really is better
for man to be alone. And
relationships1 Pragmatic
necessities only.
The
19th· . century
Norwegian
dramatist,
Henrik Ibsen, claimed that
"the strongest man in the
world is he who stands most
alone.'' Perhaps, but he certai nly did not stand alone in
his idealistic vision of radical individuali sm.
The great American writer,
Ralph Waldo Emerson,
wrote much the same in one
of his famous essays: "It is ·
only as a man puts off all
. foreign support, and stands
alone, that I see him to be
strong and to prevail." And
our culture has been inundated with this insidious philosophy ever since.
·
And no.w, at the opening
of the 21 st· century, what is
the result of being told for
nearly 200 years to "stand
tall, walk alone, and make it
on your own?" Very si mple.
Isolation and loneliness.
Depression and ni1sery.
Anxiety
and
fear.
Despondency and despair.
The slow and agonizing
deterioration . of a society
largely founded . upon
Biblical principles.
But what does God say 1
. What has He always said,
from the beginning? · "It is
not good for the man to be
alone." Not good? No, not

Friday, May 4, 2007

There once was a young
orphan girl who ~as sent
word that the King wished
to
adopt her. Her name was
Rev.
Gilda
and. as one looked
Pastor
Jonathan upon her,
she seemed hardly
Noble
Thorn
more than a peasant, clothed
PASTOR ,
Mollohan
in her drab and gray raiment
TRINITY CHURCH
. along with her dirty countenance and hopeless glaze in .
her eyes.
But as the day for her
joining
the new · family black eyes. The bear lifted a
at all, and considering ·the
the King sent a paw towards· her and. to
approached.
fact that God himself is not
message
to
her
that she was Gilda's
a solitary being - He is
astonishment,
to
come
to
the
forest.
Gilda seemed to be gesturing her
Father and Son and Holy
Spirit - this makes perfect was afraid, but in the end towards the table. Gilda
se nse. Humans were, after ventured from the pointless took a deep breath ahd then
all, created in His image drudgery of her existence walked forward while the
into the shadows beneath. bear watched. As she came
according to His likeness. ·
The fact of the matter is the trees. She found that a to the table she could see all
we were made for each path had been prepared and three bowls very clearly, the
other. We were created for near the eave of the forest first had a card that simply
community, to be members, was a small signpost that said,
"Pleasurable
in fact , of an interdependent had words engraved upon it. Pursuits:" the second a card
community of genuine love, "To the one who receives that said, "Company of
· common purpose and shared Him, He gives the right to Others:" and on the card of
labor. We were created, in become a child o.f God," it the third was writte n,
other words, to reflect the said (from John I:12). She "Presence of the King."
life of the God whose image walked along musing over
The huge bear rai sed his
we bear and that inherently the message when she · massive head and gazed
means kinship, mutual sup- passed by another which into Gilda's eyes. A deep
· said, "If we hope for 'what grow ly. voice rumbl ed ·
port and cooperation.
.This is whv the Church is we do not yet have, we wait fro m his ches t and Gilda
not only ftindamentally nec- for it patiently" (from fe lt terrified. "'On.e bowl
essary but .also the obvious Romans 8:25). And then, was left here for you." he
outcome of being · recon- after awhile, she came upon said simply. "Can you tell
ci led to God. There is no a third sign whi ch read, which it is?"
such thing as "Lone "Our present sufferings are
Gilda looked at the bear,
Ranger" Chri stianity. No, not worth comparing with and then she looked at the
we cannot make it on our . the glory that will be bowls.
She
gi ngerly
own. We need God and we revealed in us" (from picked up a spoon and put
need each other in th'at Romans 8: 18).
a taste of the first bo wl to
The gloom under the her mouth. The steamy
divinely human community.
the Apostle refers.to as "the trees frightened Gilda, but spoonful burned her lips.
the signs strengthened her "It's to d hot," she sa id
Body of Christ."
. "We, who are many, are resolve. She continued timidly. She then tasted the
one body in Christ and indi- along the path wondering second bowl, but little ice
viduall y members one of where the path would take crystals crunched as her
another." · The man "who her next. And then, the mouth closed about the
stands most alone" is not the path came .to a sudden stop soon. "It's too cold," she
strongest; he is, in fact, the at a small , stone cottage. At said_ Then she tasted the
most vulnerable for "our lhe bottom step was anoth- third. The porridge, sweetenemy, the deYil, prowls er sign. As she drew near ened with brown sugar,
. around like a roaring lion to it, she could read the see med perfect to her.
seeking someone to devour." words written upon it, "If "This one is just right,"
(I Peter 5.8) Someone isolat- we are children, then we she said, ,although she felt
are heirs - heirs of God strange in talking to a bear.
ed. alone, defenseless.
As believers, followers of and co-heirs with Christ"
. The bear smiled in a bear
·Christ, we cannot afford to (from Romans 8: 17a).
kind of way and , in his
say to each other, I don't
Gilda cautiously climbed growly voice, said, "Always
need you. I don 't need the the steps and approached remember to find your
church. I can make it on my the heavy wooden door. refreshment in the presence
ow n." That is delusion, She listened carefully for a of your King, dear lady"
sheer nonsense. One might moment and thought, to her (see John 17:3). And with
as well cut off his arm and di smay, that. she could . that encouragement, GiIda
say, "I think it' ll do a fine almost hear the sound of ate iill the porridge in the
job on its own. After all, it's heavy brea thing. She slowly bowl. When she was done,
a good arm with fine muscle sw ung the door to peer she truly did feel refreshed.
tone, strong bones, ruddy inside and then drew her · When she had finished,
color.. ." Foolish, of course. breath in sharply. In the cen- the bear' motioned her. on
"We,· who arc many, are ter of a large room was a towards the next room, a
one body in Christ and indi- tall, wooden table with three large room in which sat
vidually members one of bowls sei upon it. The smell three chairs. A seco nd bear
another." Find your place of something sweet filled lay across the floor like a
and become an active. part Gilda's nostril s and her hun- huge rug, but she looked up
of the Body, then, an enthu- gry tummy growled. But as
Gilda
entered.
siastic participant in this What had caused her to gasp Somewhat smaller than the
interdependent community was the enormous form of first bear, thi s second bear
of genuine love, common . sl)aggy brown bear on the spoke with a somewhat less
purpose and shared labor. other side of the table, star- growly voice.· "One chai r
Stand not alone.
ing at her with piercing was left here for you," she

·r ·r r r r r r r

·r

r

r

r

r

r

said simply. "Can you tell
whi ch it is''"
Gilda looked at the first
chair and swallowed hard _h
was so high that she couldn't see its top reaching up
into the shadows near the
ceiling. At its base was a
stepstool with words carved
upon
it,
" My
Righteousness.''
She
stepped up onto the stool.
but although she reached
with outstretched finger&gt;
and stood on her tiptoes. she
could not reach the edge of
the seat to pull herself onto
it. "It's too high." she said
sadly. She climbed down
a·nd managed to easily
climb onto the second seal.
She sat there a moment but
then realized that the seat
was enormous. Beside her
was a ba~ket with a tag
attached to it that said, "My
Accomplishment,.''
She
opened it and began to pull
out all sorts uf pillows of
variou s shapes and sizes.
But although she unpacked
all that the basket held, the
seat stretched out around
her still leavi ng her feel ing
'mall and insignificant. "It's
too wide ... she .told the bear
and then climbed down.
Gilda d me to the third
chair and easi ly sal upon it.
It was amazingly comfortable and fit her perfectly. as
though it had been made for
her. A label on its armrest
said,
"The
King's
Purposes." "This one is .just
ri ght ... ' he reported to the
bear who had been watching her all along without
comment. "Of course," the
second bear replied. "It was
built wi th you in mind . You
weren't intended to rest in
your own righteousness or
ill:hievements, but only in
the purposes of your King,
dear one (see John 15: 16).
Gi lda sat a moment, rest in g, but then the bea r
shooed her on to the
upstairs room. "He's prepared even more for you,"
the bear said gen tly. And so
Gi lda climbed the steps
until she came to the landing on which stood three
separate doorways. A third
bear stood before them. In
the smallest voice of the
three bears (but still somewhat growly ). he said, "One
of these apartments has
been prepared for you. Can
you tell which one?"
Gilda looked through
each of the doorway s. · On
the other side of the first
one was a rough room,
scarcely furnished but with
one large bed in the center.
About it stood a weaver's
loom and a spinning wheel.
Beside the door was a small

r r r ·r ·r r ·r

sign that said, "Pointless
.Labor... Even through the
doorway. Gilda could see
· that the bed was /nothing
more than a splintery, old
plank . "That one is too
hard.'' she murmured softly
as she turned away._
Through the second doorway. over which were written the word,. "Fruitless
Ease ... there was a general
lack ofligl]t. ln the d~nness,
., he could see the plush
c ush~Jn s of easy living
whi le a lack of air and light
~manatcd from the room
with an obvious staleness
and stag nation thai threatened to choke her. She
sighed and turned away
again. "That one is too
soft," she said simply.
But then she looked
through the last doorway,
and smiled. Over ·this door
was written_ "The King's
Plans... She nodded and
said. "Let me guess... It
was built with me in mind.
Nut onl y am I to find my
refreshment on ly in the
presence ·of the King, my
rest only in the purposes of
the King. but I must also
reside daily in the' plans of
. my King ... She wrned to the
last bear. "Am I right ''" ·
The bear nodded hi s
head. '·You are rig ht, lady.
Enter into your re sidence,
re st. and be refreshed. You
are a daughter of the King
and this is the wi ll of your
new Father."
And so should we all heed
the counsel that God sends
us and take note that a difficult circumstance, altllough
it may be a "hear of a proble m... is the mean~ by wh ich
God would wake u-s up to
the invitation for eternal life
that He extends.'to all who
are wi lling to trust Him.
(Tiwm Mollohan a11d Iris
family have ministered in
soitther11 OJ,io the past
twelve years. He is the pastor of Pathway Commuitity
Church which meets 011
Stmday mornings at 455
Third Ave1111e, He may be
reached for commellls or
questions by email at pastortlrom@patlrwaygallipolis.com).

Keeping
·Meigs
County
informed
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today
992-2155

r ·r ·r -r

The sponsors 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 Jftur Best
C:dd

The Bihte tetts us ~ ••
ha&lt; given
each of us,different ,kifls and Jhat
He wants us to use Jhese gifl&lt; in
accordance with Jhe graco ihat He has
I
·'
·lieslowed upon us. \V~eq .we .lhiqk ahoul
.
.
\ . .:•. }&lt;·t........ .
Jhese specml gtf~ that iomeone may
possess. we naturatty Jhink ahoul greal
talent&lt; like those of a famous anist, or a
skilled surgeon. However, most of us
have more common everyday gifts that
we are required 10 use in our daily lives.
We should try to recognize and Jake
pride in the different gift&lt; and laleniS
. that our Heavenly Falher has given to
us. and we should use Jhese offerings for'
His glory. Whelher we are given Jhe gift
of being a parent a teacher. or a taxi
driver. we should try to do our very best
and we should always be appreciative of
God's caring love for us. Our Lord
want&lt; the besl for us. and our serving
other.;. ·refiects our love for Him. We should \"iltingly share our talents with
botlh• othe" and we should do. it generously.
....r''''" an ••arittits of We should work hard. and whenever we
-~. •r
Lord; and thtrt show kindness to. others, we should do it
. , ..n.tits fJj worA:ing, but it is lht
...., God who inspins thtm all in tJtry 'cheerfutty.

Ill'""'"'

·

ont.

Michelle Kenn~dy
Director of Markcling and

A i:l mi ~sion s

www.rnydallysentlnel.com

I

Pastor: Don Waller

Clun:b ol J...,. C~rlst Apos1o1k
VanZandt and Ward Rd .. Pastor: James
Miller. Sunday School • 10:30 a.m ..
E\·ening · 7:30 p.m.
Rivtr ~allty
Ri\'er Val ley Apos!olic Worship Cen1er.
K13 S. ) rd Ave :. Middleport . Ru .
Michat:l Bradford. Putor. Sunday. 10:30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 pn~)·er. Wed . 7 pm Bible
S1udy
Emmanuel Apostolk Tabmude' lbC.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd . Rmland .
Suvices : Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp;: 1:30 p.m..
Thurs. 7:00p .m., PastoJ Mart}' R. Hutton

Assembly of God
Uberty As5nnbly ol God
P.O. Box 461 . Dudding Lane-. Mason .
W.Va .. Pas1or: ·Neil Tennanl. Sunday
Services· 10:00 a.m. and 1 p.m .

Baptist
......... Fn&lt;will Bl))llst Cburtb
Paslor. Mike Hannon. Sunday School
9:30 to 10:30 am, Worship service 10:30
to II :00 am. We&lt;!. preaching 6 pm
C~nkr Baptist Churth
Sunday School - 9 :30am. Preaching
Ser\•ice 10:3 0am . Evening 'service
1:00pm . Wednesday Bible Study 7:00pm ,
Interim Preac~r . Floyd' Ross

Clteshirt Baptis1 Church
Paslor: Steve Little, Sunday· School: 9:30
am . Morning Worship: 10:30 am .
Wc-dnc-Mlay Bible Study 6:30pm: ~;huir
practice 1:30: youth and Bible Buddies
6:30p .m. Thurs. I pm book s!udy

Hope Baptist Chu rc:h (Southern)
570 Grant St.. Mi&amp;llepott . Sunday school
· 9:30 a.m.. Woohip . 11 a.m. and 6 p.m..
We~dnesda)' Strvice · 7 p.m: Pastor: Cary
Ell i~

Ratland Firsl 811ptis1 Cburcb
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomen~y

•-nlapttst

Pastor Jon Brockert, East Main St..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am. Woohip 10:30 am
t"lrsl Soulht=rn lbptilil
41872 Pomeroy Pike. Pastor: E. L:miar
O' Bryant. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m..
Worship -8:15a.m.. 9:45am &amp; 7:00p.m ..
Wedne-sday Ser\'ices - 7:00p.m.
Flrsl Baptist Church
Pastor: Bill y.Zuspan 6th Wld Palmer St ..
Middlepon , Sunday School-9:15a.m. ,
Worship - 10:15 a.m., 7:00 p .m..
Wednesday service· 7:00p.m.
Racine Fll'$1 B11plisl
Pastor: Ryan Eat9t1 · pastor . Sunday
School · 9:30a.m.• Worship . 10:40 a.m..
7:00 p .m., Wednesday .Servi ~ e s . 7:00
p.m.
SIIYer Nun Baptl.t!t

Pastor: JQhn Swanson, Sunday School ·
JOa .m .. Wors hip . lla .m., 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesday Services-7:00 p.m.
MI. Union Baptist
Pastor: Denn is We-aver Sunday .School9:45 a. m., Eve ning - 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Bethlehem Baplisl Cburth
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine. OH,
Pnstor: Ed Caner..Sunday Schoo l . 9:30
a.m.. Sunday Worsh ip · 10:30 a.m.,
Wednesday Bible S1udy · 7:00 p.m..
Old Bethel Fret WIU Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7. Middh:port, Sum.lily
Serv ice - 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m.. Tuesday
Scf\'kes -6:00
·

209 Third
Racine, OH

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

740-992•3325
www.teafordrealestate.net
Kart Kebter Ill
Cenifled Public Accountant
email: ldtebler@charter.net

6t8li. Main St,..l
, Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-991-7270

KEBLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

IJvfi[[ie 's j{estaurant
Open 7 !lay&gt; a week

740·992·7713

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740•949•2217 ·

6um· S pm

1/ome Cooked Meal.li &amp; /JailJ' Spi'ciafs

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

Members of the' MLS and REALTOR•

Hour-.

I

If ye abide i11 Me, a11d My
words abide in Y""• ye slrall .
ask wlrat ye 'will, a11d it shall
·be do11e lmtrJ yrm.
}oh11 15:7

Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

The Rppliance man
740-985-3561
9~2-1550

· Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Voun
MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohi9 45769

Iii&gt;.

(740) 992·3279
~.
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

,,

St. Middleport. 0~
740-992-61 28
Local source for troph·ies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more

190 N. Second

17-101'l92-6451

s.a.d U.... Calbolk Cbtudl
161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. 992-58'm.
Pastor: Re,·. Walter E. ·He inz. Sat. Con .
4:45.5:1Sp.m.: Mass- 5:30 p.m.. Sun .
Con . -8:45-9:15 ,a.m... Sun . Mass . 9:30
a.m .. Dail} Mass· 8:30a.m.

· Faith Baptist Church
Rai lroad S1.. Mason. Sunday School - !0
a.m. 1 Worship
J I a. m. , 6 p.m.
~ednesday Sef\lices -? p.m,
Forest Run Baptist- Pomeroy
Rev. Joseph Woods, Sunday School · 10
a.m .. Worship ~ 11:30 a.m.

!\11. Moriah Baplis:t
Fourth &amp; Main Sl .. Middlepon. Pas10 r:
Rev. Gilbert Craig, Jr.. Sunday School 9:30 a.~ .. Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Anliqulty Baptbt
Sunda:; School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship 10:45 \Lm.. Sunday Evening· 6:00p.m ..

,

Forest Ru
Pastor. BobRobinson.Sunday School.• 10
a.m., Worship . 9a.m.

COIIUDlLDity Chnrdl
Pastor: Ste\'e Tomek. Main Slrect,
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.ni..,
Sunday Service-7 pm.

r ......, Cbardt "'Cluist
212 W. Main St.. SuiKlay School - 9:30
a.m., Worship- 10:30 a. m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

-

Mlddltport Cbardt ol Cllrlll
5th and Main, Pastor: AI Hartson,
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayre, Teen
Direclor: Dodger Vaughan, Sunday School
· 9:30 a.m., ,Worsbip- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 1
p.m., Wednesday Servicea . 1 p.m.

Ke110 Churdl .t Christ
Worship · 9:30 a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace . I st and ·
lrd Sunday
•
Rearwallow Ridge Clrlul'l:h otCbrhl
Pa5tor:Bruce Teny. Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 6:30p.m.

MJoamllo
Pastor: Bob Robinson , Sunday School · 9
a.m., Worsllip . lO a m .
PauiCbtopol
Sunday School - 9 am·.. Wonh.ip · 10 a.m.

.._...,
Pastor. Brian Dunham, Worship - 9:30
a.m.. Sund.oy Sdtool- 10:3l un.
RockSpriop

Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School -1}.15
a.m., Worship • 10 a.m., Youth
Fellowship, Sunday· 6 P·~ ·

R o o t o i - - Cbutll
leading Creek Rd ., Rutland, Pastor: Rev.
Dtwey King , Smday sChool-· 9:30 a.m..
Sunday w~ ip ·1 p.m.. Wednesday
praytt meeting- 7 p.m.

·-

Pastor: Rick Bouf!~e , Sunday School 9:30am., Worship· 10:30 a.m., 'htwsday ·
Services. 7 p.m.
Saltm Ccottr
Pastor: William k . Marshall. SuDday
School· 10: 15 a.m .. Wmtup ·9: 15a.m.,
Bible Study: Monday 1:00 pm
Soo...W.
Sunday School • 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

Pine Gro,. Blbk Hollll&lt;ll Cbun:b
· In mile off Rt. 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Ma~ley, S~o~nday School -. 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m.. 7:30 p.m..
Wedrn:sday·Scnict ·7:30 p.m.

WOIIeyon Blbk Hollo"' C~un:b
75 Peul St.. Middleport. Pastor: Rkk
• Bou'mc, Su~day School · 10 a.m. Worship
· 10:45 p.m .. Sunday Eve . 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday Scn·ice ·7:30 p.m.

.Zloa ChtU&lt;b ol Chrid
Polneroy, Harr.isonville Rd. ·(Rt. l43),
Pastor: Roger Watsoa, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Worship . 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.• Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

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

HyiCII Run Community Chlll'dl
Pastor: Rev. Larry Lemley; Sunday School
- 9:30a.m .. Worship - I O:~.S a.m., 7 p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study and Youth - 7 p.m.

tuppers Pfain Cllureb ofCbrlll
Instrumental. Worship Service . 9 a.m..
Co rnmuniun • 10 a.m., Sunday School ·
10: IS a.m ., Youth-5:30 pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wedn ~~Y 1 pm

c-

I
Laurel Clirf Fm: Mtlbodlst Cburtb
Pas!or: Glenn Rowe, Su nday School ·
9:30 a.m., .worship -. 10:30 a.m. and 6 ·
p.m..Wednesday Service: · 7:00 p.m .

Bradbury. Churdl or Cbrist
Minister: Tom Runyun . 39558 Bradbury
Roud. Midtllepon. Su ~d ay School · 9:30
a.m.
Wnnhip . 10:30 a.m .

Latter-Day Saints
The Chun:b or Jcsw
Christ of Latter-Day SaiDts
St. ~t . 160. 446-6247 or 446·7486,
Sund ay School 10:20- 11 a.1n ., Relief
Society/Priesthood I I :05-12:00 noon ,
Sac rament Service 9- 10: I 5 a.m ..
Homemaking meeting . Ist Thurs .• 7 p.m.

Rutland Church or Christ
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship and
Communion. 1 0 ~30 a.m., Bob J. Werry.
Minister

Lutheran

Bradford Cllurcb or Christ
Com~:r of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Brudbury Rd .,
Minister: Doug Shamblin , Youth Mini ster:
Bill Amberger. Sunday School-9:30a.m.
. Worship • 8:00 a.m.• 10:30~ a.m.; 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.

S!. Jobn Lutheran Churdl
Pine Grove, Worship · 9:00a.m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pastor:
Our S.ftour Lutheran Churdl
. Walnul and He nry Sts .. Ravenswood .
W.Va ., PaSI()r: David Russell , Sunday
School · 10:00 a.m., Worship · II a.m.

St. PaullAithrran Cburcb
Corner Sycamore &amp; Second S!., Pumeroy,
Sun. School - 9:45a.m ., Worship - II a.m.

United Methodist ·
Graham Unllrd Methodist
Wo~h i p - II a.m. Pastor: Richard Nea.\C
Btcbtel United Methodist
New Haven, Richard Nease, Pastor,
Sundaf worship 9:30 a.m. Tues. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

•

Otxler Church of Christ
Su nday schoo\9:30 a.m.• Sunday worship
• 10:30 a.m.
The Church or c •rlst of Pomeroy
Intersect ion 1 and 124 W, Evangelist
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study ·
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m.. Wednesday Bible S!udy • 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive UnJted Methodist
Off 124 behind Wilkesville. Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires: Sunday School · 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m .. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.

Christian Union

Meigs Cooperadve Parish
Nonheast Cluster. Alfred. Pastor: Jim
Corbitt, Sun day School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship- II a.m .; 6:30 p.m.

Hartford Church of Christ In
Christlu Union
Hanford, W.VI.t ., Paslor:Dav id Greer,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship ·
10 :30 a.m .. 7:00 p.m.. Wednesday
Stn'ices. 7:00p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Ji m Corbitt . Worship · 9 a.m.,
Sunday Sc hoo l - 10 a .m.. . Thursday

...

(Middlopri)

•

Col•uy Pllpim Cbtopol
Hanison¥ille Road, Pastor: Charles
McKenzie. Sullday School 9:30 a.m.,
Wmltip_- I I a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
~rvice - 7:00p.m.

Other Churches
s,....ca

Sun. SchooiiO 1m. Sundy aight6:30 pm
Undcrdtc dim:tioo of Out &amp; Faith
Hayman
ANewBPeh&amp;
IFol Gaopd Otudt) Hmiso&lt;l'me.
Pasun: Bob and Koy Mmhli1.
Sunday Service , 2 p.m.

l~,.,~.erin

heaven."

llnellllllllr-.....

. . 1111 ......... , _ .. . . .
499 Richland·Avenue, Athens
JQ-812-MU
·740-594-6333
1-800-45)-91106

Cahary Bible Chu.rdll
Pomeroy Pik(', Co. Rd ., Panor: Rev .
8lackv1ood. Sunday sChool - 9:30a.m.,
Worship 10 :)0 a .m.. 7:30 p .m ..
Wcdnc:~)' XrvK:e • 7.30 p.m .

... c-uiiJCbtlrdt
Pastor: Wayne Dunlap,State Rt . 681.
Tuppm. Plains, S~ - W~ip: 10 am .t:
6:30pm .. Wed. Bibk Study 7:00p.m .
Amubi~G

SUYcm111c Commuaity (butth
Pastor. Wayne R. lcwell . Sunday won.hip
· 6:00p.m .• Wednt:S«by - 6:00p.m . Bible
S!udy

Ca rmel &amp; Bashan Rds. RaCine, Ohio,
Pastor: John Gilmore. Sunday School •
9:4!1 a.m., Worship • II :00 a.m . , Bible
Study Wed. 1:30 p.m. ~

MomloiStar
Pastor: JoM Gilmore, Su nday School - I I
a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m.

East Letart
Pastor: Bill Marshall Sunday School •
9a.m., Worship · 10 a.m., 1st Sunda}'
every month evening service 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday· 1 p.m.

Cll1hllu F-.Jp
(Noo.&lt;Jenomilllliooll fellowsltip 1
Meeting in tht Meigs MiddLe School
Cafeteria Pastor: Chris Stewut
10:00 an1 - Noon Suoda.y; Informal
Wonh.ip , Cbildrcn's ministry

ReJoid"'l Ufe Cltun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport.

"'Clria

Pentecostal

7:30 p.m.

PentteOStal A55tmbly
Pastor: Gary &amp; Sharon Hughes. St. Rt.
124. Rat:ine. TomaOO Rd . Sunday ~lloo J ..
lei u.m., Evening · 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Services- 7 p.m.

Rocbte
Pastor. Kerry Wood, Sunday SChool • 10
a.m.. Worship • 11 a.m .Wednesday
Sen-icc5 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm
Coolville United Melboclbt hrbb
Pas1or: Helen Kline, Coolville Church.
Main&amp;. Fifth St., Sun . School - 10 a.m..
Worship· 9 a.m., l\Je5. Servil::es · 7 p.m.
' Jk.-.Cbor&lt;b
Township Rd ., 468C, Sunday School · 9
a.m, Wors hip • 10 a.m., Wednesday
Senitts · IOa.m.

Folllt Volley Tobemo&lt;le Churth
Bailey Run Road, Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Raw son, Sunday Evening 1 p.m .,
Thursday Service · 7 p.rn. .

Presbyterian

SyrKUJe Mlsaio•
!411 Bridgeman St .. Syracuse, Sunday
School • 10 a.m. Evenin g • 6 p.m.,
Wedne5da:y Service • 1 p.n1.
'

Harri§On\'llle Presbyterian Church
Pastor: Robert Crow. Worship • 9 a.m.
Middleport Presbyterian
Pastor: Jame~ Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m., worship sen•icc II am .

Haul CommODity Cbun:b
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Elhel Hart, Sunday
School • 9:30a.m., Worship . 10:30 a.m ..
7:30 p.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

Hodti1111J011 C~ur&lt;ll
Orand Street, Suaday School · 9:30.a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m., Pastor Phillip Bell

Torch Ch•n:h ' •
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship . 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Middleport Church of the Nuanae ·
Pastor: Alien Midcap , Sunday School · ·
9:30 a.m.,Worship - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.,
Wednesday Sen·ices - 7 p.m., Paslor:
Allen Midcap
Rctdivllle Fellowship .
Church or the Nazarene, Paslor: Russell
Carron , Sunday Sdmol • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10:45 ~. m ., 1 p.m., Wednesday
Senices • 7 p.m..

DyaviUe Community Church
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.• Worship •
10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m.
Mone Chapel C~un:b
Sunday school • 10 a.m., Worship • II
a.m., WedncsQay Service ·1 p.m.
Folth Goopel Cburcll
Long Bottom, Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 10 :45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wedne~ay7:30 p,m: .
Mt. Ollte Commu11ty Churtb
Pastor: L.awrem.:e B~sh, Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m., Evenlng - 6:30p.m., Wed neday
Service - 7 p.m.
litll Gospel Lljlllbowe
33045 Hi.lahd Rood, Pomeroy, Pastor: Ro~
Hunrer. Sunday School · 10 a.m .. Eveninf!
7:30 p.m., :tUesday~ Thurs. · 7:30p.m.

South Bethel Commonlty Cbun:b
Syracuse Churth or the NIZU'ebe
Pastor"Milce Adkins. Sunday School • 9:30

The care you lkserve, clost to home good works and glorify your

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Pa~tor:

Mike Foreman , PaMor Emeri1us Lawrein:
Nnman, Worship-- 10:00 am
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

c.ou...Jty
PortiMICI-Racioe Rd. , Pas!or: Jim Proffin.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Service' - 7:00
Clift011 T11btmade Chun:h
p.m .
Clifton. W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m.•
lletlld Wonblp Cat""
Worship - 1 P.m.. Wednesday Service - 1
39782 S.R. 7. Reedsville. OH 45172 . 1/2
p.m.
mile oorth of Eastem Schools on SR 7. A
New·Life Victory Center
Full Gospel Churth .. PI.stor Rob Barber.
3TI3 Geor}!es Creek Road.Gallipolis.OH
Auociate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youlh
Pallor Suzie Francis, Sunday services · Pastor: Bill Staten, Sunday ServiceS · 10
a.m. &amp; 7 p.rrL Wednesday • 7 p.m. &amp;
10:00 un wonhip, 6:00 pm Family Life
Youth 7 p.m .
Classes, Wed . Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.111., Outer Limits Cell Group at the
Fpll Goopel Cbon:b
chun:ll 5:30 pm kJ 8o30 pm
ol the Urtoz Savior
Rt.338, Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse Morris,
.ub-Chun:b
Services: Saturday 2:00 p.in.
)98 Ash St., Middlepon+Pastor Jc:lf Smith
Sunday' School • 9:30 a.m .• Morning
Salan Community Cbun:b_
Worship • 10:30 a .m. &amp; 7:00 pm,
Bad of West Columbia, W.Va .orn Lieving
Wednesday Service - 7:00 p .m., Youth
Road . Pastor: Charles Roush (304) 675Service- 7:00p .m.
2288 , Sund ay School 9:30 am, Sunday
Appe Ll'e Ctatcr
evening service 7:00 pm . Bibly Sludy
"Full-Oospc: l Church". Pas~ors John &amp;.
Wednesday service 7:00pm
Pliny Wade ,603 Secood Ave. Mason, 771~17 . Service time: S~nday ·JO:JO a.m.,
Hoblotl Chrisdan Fellowship Clnardl
Wedlle!dayl pm
Pastor: Herschel White. Sunday School10 am, Sunday Church senice ·6:30 pm
~-GnceR.F.I.
Wednesday 7 pm
923 S. Third St., Middleport, PutorTcre~a
. Davis, Sunday se rv ice, 10 a. m .•
RestonOon Chrlstltn FtUowUip
Wednesday service,1 p.m .
936S. Hooper Road , Aihens, Pastor:
lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 am .
Foltb F1tll Gaopd C.....,h
Wednesday: 7 pm
Long Bottom, Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m. Worship - 9:30 am.
Howt of Healing Ministries
and 7 p.m., Wednesday . 7 p.m.. Friday •
St. Rl. 124 Langsville, OH
fel lowship service 1 p.m.
Full GosfM!I. Cl Pas1ors Robert &amp; Robetta
Muso:.er. Sunday School 9:30 a m,
l:larrhoavillt Commualty Churc:b
Worship !0:30 am · 7:00 pm , Wed.
Past&lt;lr: Theron Durham. Sunday · 9:30
Scf".·icc 7:01.1 pm
a.m. and 7 p.m., Wednd Ua)· - 7 p.m .
Tfitm J esus Minlstrits
Metling in the Mulberry Community
~ttddltport Community Cb•rch
Cc nt(: r 6rmna~iurn . Pas1or Eddie Bac:r.
575 Pearl St., Middlepon . Pastor: Silll!
Service e1·ery Tuesday 6:30 pm ·
Anderson , Sunda)' School 10 a.m ..
Evening • 7:30 p.m .. Wednesday Service •

jfiSbtr jfuntral -omt
ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
nu•IICeliiiiii.•Mr'C•nn.• : REHABIUTATION CENTER men, that they may see your
14HI2-5MI

Folmew Blble Chwdo
Lt:tan . W.Va . Rt . I . Pastor: Brian May .
Sundly School · 9:30a.m .. Worship . 7:00
p.m ., Wed,nesday Bibk Study. 7:00p.m.
Fallb Ftllowsb.Jp C~ for C1ui11:
Pas!or: Re\'. Fra.nkl111 Dickens. Service:
Friday. 7 p.m.

nty~

2480 SaxnfSt., Syr.:wc, OH

~

Pastor: Brian Dunham, Sunday School •
9:30a.m., Worihip - II :00 a.m.

Daovllt llollnct5 Chu~
)1057 State Route 325, Langs\IUe. Pastor:
Benj.a~n'Crawfoot. SunW!y school · 9:30
a.m., Sunday WOJShip • 10:10 a.111. &amp; 1
p.m.. Wednesday prayer $CtVice- 7 p.m.

Pomtroy Watsldt Church oCCilrisl
33226 Chi ldren·~ Home Rd .. Sunday
School - I I a.m.. Worship · 10a.m .. 6 p.m.
Wedrtcsday Services· 7 p.m.

• Cattnl Clllltn'
Asbury (Syracuse). PasiQr: Bob Robinson.

t:ol&lt;rp1oo

Holiness

Mini"er:. Larry .Brown. Worship • 9:30
a.m. Sunday School · 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study • 7 p.m.

-7 p.m.

· Pastor: Arland King , Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Wonhip • 9:30 a.m.. Bible
Study Wed . 1:30
Flltwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday Scbool . 10
a.m.. Worship . II a.m.

Gn&lt;iJ:.-..-.

"''blk's Chapel We*yu
Coolvi lle Road . · Pastor: Rev. Charles
Manindale . SUnday School • 9:30 a.m ..
Woohip · 10:30 a.m.. Wednesday Service

Wednesday Services - 7 p.m .

Sunday School - 9:45 a.m .. worSrup . II
a.m., Wednesday Sen-ices · 7:30p.m.

Chtudl
326 E. Main St .. Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharist 11 :00 a.m . Rev.
Edward Payne

lletniCK'k Gron Christian Church

a.-

l'II_.PIIIaiSI. hol
Pastor: Jim Corbin. Suaday School • 9
a.m .. Wonhip - 10 a.m.• Tuesday Services
- 7:30p.m.

· Episcopal

Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

740-992-6606

Sevenlh·Day Adventist
Mulbc:ny Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy. Saturd&amp;)'
Servi ~es: S:~b ba th School • 2 p.m..
Worship - l p.m.

United Brethren
MI. Hmnon Ualted Brtthml
In Christ Church
Tuas Communiiy 36411 Wickham Rd,
Pastor: Peler Martindale. Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.
Youlh group rneel ing 2nd &amp; 4!h Sundays
7p.m.
Eden United Brethren In Christ
State Route 124. hetween Reedsville &amp;
Hockingport , . Sunday School · 10 a.m.,
Sunday Worship · II :00 a.m. Wednesday
Services - 7:00 p.m.. Pastor· M. Adam
Will

C)/ttemJ eml/lcll

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
A!hens, Pomeroy or Parkmburg

1-740-667-3156

"Still small

to care"

Agency Inc; If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall INSURANCE
SERVICES
·
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
,.
'
Financial
214 E. Main
SeiVices be done unto you.
.
AGENCIES Inc.
992-5130
John 15:7
Pomeroy
Bill Oulckei
992-66n

SWISHER LOHSE
God so loved the world
PHARMACY
he gave his only
we Fill Doctors'
lbt•goirten sun ...
· Prescriptions
John J: /6
992-2955
Pomeroy

l!race is
for thee: for m11
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

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

"So I strive always to keep ~
my conscience clear before ~ 'Llt OJIT~Mip
P"'""' 'I'"'~· .
God and man ."
Suppression • E~linguishen • Sprinklers
• Security

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

112 N. 2nd Ave. Middiepbrt, OH
353-0837 ·Fax:

992-6376

J!lli
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

Blessed are the pure
in heart; .for they
shall see God.
MatthewS:&amp;
'

,.

.........

f&lt;adomGoope!MillloD
Bald Knob. on Co. Rd . 31. Pastor: Rev .
Roger Willford . Sunday School - 9;30
a.m . Woohip- 1 p.m .

C... a.rdt of tile NllUI'ar
Putor. Rev. Herbtrl Grate. Sunday School
• 9:30 a.m., Worship • I I a.m., 6 p.m..
Wedoc:lday Serv,ices . 7 p.m .
C1ooudl llllbt N ~ lwc Sltope. So....,y Scltool - 9:30
am., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.• 6:30 p!_m ..

Wonhip - 9:30 a.m.. Sunday School •
. 10:30 am., Farst Sunday of Month · 7:00
p.m . service

Trinity Cburdl
S«ond &amp;: lynn , Pomeroy. Pastoc R~.
Jonatha; NobLe, Worship 10:25 a.m ..
Sunday Sthool9:15 a.m.

Watsklt Cburdt or Christ
33226 ChildKn's Home Rd : Pomeroy. OH
C()nlacl 740-441 · 1296 Sunday morning
10:00. Su n morninc Bible study:
following wors hip. Sun. eve 6:00 pm ,
Wed bible study 7 pm

· Reecbvlle Church of Chrlsl
P11s1or: Philip StWln . Sunday School: 9;30
a.m., Wonhip Service: 10:30 a.m., Bible
Study. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

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

.

Carldoa laterdtaomladoul Clturdl
Kingsbllry Road . Pastor: Robert V~.
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.. Wonhip
SerVice 10:30 a.m.. Evening Service 6
p.m.

........,CIIordtoltMNPasiOr: Jan •l.avCDder. Sunday School .
9:30 a.m .. Wonhip · 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednesday Strvicn . 7 p.m .

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.• Wonhip •
10:30 am.

Congregational

Church of Christ

10 a.m . 2nd and 4th Sunday

~

Pastor: Denitil Null, Worship· 9:30 a.m .
SUDday School · 10: ~ a.m.

Clourdt ol God oll'roploecy
OJ . White Rd. off St. Rt . 160. Pastor. PJ .
Chapman , Sunday School - 10 a.m ..
Worship· II a.m., Wednesday ~ices. 7
p.m .

Catholic

V1ctory Bapdstlndepc:ndtnl
525 N. 2nd SL Middleport, Pastor: Jumes
E. Keesee, Worship • IOu.m., 1 p.m.,
Wednesduy Servi(..'tS - 7 p.m.

Matthew 5: 1

MIDDlEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

Bible Study 7 pm

Hkkory HUb c•un:b ofCbrlsl
Tuppers Plains, Pastor 'Mike Moore ~Bible
clau. 9 a.m. Sund ay; worship 10 a.m.
Sunday; worship 6:30 pm Sunday; Bible
class 1 pm Wed,

Homemade Desserts Made Daily ·

740·949-221 0
We Sell Hqmes at

Warm F,.jmdlr
A1mo.1plrt•n,

0

a.m.• Wonbip . 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 7 pm .

Sctvtces -7 p.m.

MI. MoriaiiCII!IrdtoiGod
Mile Hill Rd .. Racine , Pastor: Jamc:s
Satterfield. Sunday School - 9:45 a.m..
l!ven.ing - 6 p.m .. Wednesday Services - 7 ·
pm .

Rullud Fru Willlbpdst
Salem St.. Paslor: Jamie Fortner. Sunday
School · 10 a.m., Eve nin&amp; - 7 p.m..
Wc:dnesday Services - 7 p.m .
Socoocl Baptist Chard!
Putor: Ron Heah. Sullday Wonhip . 10 '
Rlvenswood. WV. Sunday School 10 am·
a.m., 6 p.m.. Wednesday Serv:icn - 1
. Morning worship II am Evening - 7 pm •. t p.m.
Wednesday 7 p.m.
s,_... nnr Cllurdt oiGod
nnt Baptlol nun:b o1 Motoi., wv
Apple and Second•Sts., Pastor: Rev. David
(lndepoodont B..,.mJ
Russell. Sunday School and Wonhip- 10
SR 652 and Anderson St. Pastor Robert
a.m . Evening Services - 6 :30 p.m ..
Gpdy. Sunday school 10 am. Morning
~ednesday Services. 6:J£! p.m .
church II am. Sunday evening 6 pm. Wed.

. Hillside Baptist Church
St. Rt 143'jm t off Rt. 7, Pa stor: Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr.• Su nday Unified
Service. Worship • 10:30 a.m ., &lt;J p.m.,
Wednesday Stf\lices . 7 p.m

/

333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472
Middteoort OH Fax (740) 992•7406

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

WORSJHP GOD THIS WEEK

(

IRA S". Rollm·trs'\ S1ocks- Bond!.., Muwal
f1md.1·' . Amllliti~~ . Umg Trrm Curr
Karl Kehler.. Ill . CPA. Registertd
Rcprc:'sc: ntaiivc: of, H.D. Vc:stlnvestmcnt
Services)&gt;! Securities offered through H.D. Vest
lnve~• ment Sc:rvicc: s~,. . Member SIPC Advisory
services offered throogh H.l&gt;. Ve5t Alhiwry
Sef\lices~ 11 • Non-hank suhsidi~ries of Wells
Fugo &amp; Company. 6333 Nonh State HWY 161
. 41h t-l oor. lrving TX. 7503K (972) K7()..60011

R.S.V. 1 Corinthians 12:4-6

•

Friday, May 4, 2007

'

I

Acts 24:

�•

COMM

The Daily Se~tinel

Loml teen wins
cheerleading award
TUPPERS PLAJNS Hannah Lou Helgesen of
Tuppers Plains won the title of
Miss Cheerleader of America's
"T&lt;&gt;p Ten" for Ohio at the
Holiday Inn Worthington
Ballroom in Columbus in a
tw!Hiay scholarship selection
process.
Helgesen is an I lth gr&lt;l(ler
representing Eastern · High
School in Reedsville. As a state
winner, she won a tiara, certificate, State f'inalist plaque and
place certificate or plaque.
· Helgesen is the daughter of
Tawny and John Helgesen.
She was junior varsity co-eaptain her freshman year. varsity
co-captain her sophomore
year; and advanced to varsity
captain her junior year. She
also was on the varsity competition squad for the past three
years. Hannah plans to attend
The Ohio·University to pursue
a career in equine therapy, after
she graduates from high
school.
The Miss Cheerleader of
America program is offered to
female .high school cheerleaders, grades nine through 12.
The competition requires each
cheerleader to write an essay
and includes snon interviews
with professional trained
judges. It also includes an
evening gown selection. It was
noted that the judges are looking for an "all-American girl."
Eastern High School will
receive a plaque for display at
the school. The Miss
Cheerleader of America organization promotes education
through the gifting of tuition
scholarships. Acting as MC
was Natalie Wiesend, an early
childhood education major at
the University of Michigan,
Dearborn, who has cheered
from fourth through 12th
grades. Assisting her was Miss ·
Ohio Cheerleader of America
2005-2006 Johanna Lenefonte
of Boardman, who is in a prelaw progr.un at The Ohio State
University.
.
'This competition was
established to give high school
cheerleaders the recognition,
respect, and tuition assistance
they deserve," said Wiesend.

Local
stocks

•

Friday, May 4; ~007

0

ALFRED
Thelma Church in Koholsky to
Henderson gave'the mission make · needed repairs to
report on Ru ssia at the homes in the area. The
recent meeting of the Alfred church loaned tools to
United Methodist Women, members who traveled to
held at the church.
Moscow for the summer to
The mission report was find employment.
from "Response" magazine,
Along with economic
"Economic Development in · growth, the church has also
Rurual Russia." The Rural grown.
'
Chaplains
Association,
Cary Frith had the. prowhich · is related to the gram, "Lent and Easter,
Office of Town and Rise and Shine for Christ
Country Ministries of the has Risen!" She read a spirUnited Methodist General itual message, "Easter
Board of Global Ministries, Revisited,'' The focus stateis a voluntary association of ment was read by all memlaiy and clergy called to bers. Luke 24: 1-12 was
rural ministry.
read by Mary Jo Buckley.
During visits to rural Cary, Mary Jo Barringer
Russia, they saw the need and Mary Jo Buckley parfor economic development ticipatcd in the readings.
and began providing small The group read "Easter
grants for this. one example Vigil" to end the program.
was providing $2,000 for
Nine members and one
tools to . help the Holy guest attended. Henderson
Trinity United Methodist had prayer. before the meal

Inside

Bl

The.Daily Sentinel

Blue Angels beat Wellston, Page B2

.

'

UMW hears report from R1.1ssia Local weather

Warriors shock Mavericks, Page BJ

•

served by Janice Weber. · Ftiday...Mostly cioudy. A storms. Lows in the lower
Mary Jo Barringer conduct- chance of showers in the 50s. East winds around 5.
ed the meeting, which morning., .Then a slight mph. Chance of rain 20 peropened with the reading of chance of showers ih · the cent.
afternoon. Highs in the ·Sunday ... Mostly sunny.
The UMW Purpose.
Members reported 70 upper 60s. Southeast winds Highs in the mid 70s..
Sunday
night
and
friendship calls. Weber read 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
Monday
..
.
Mostly
clear.
the minutes and Treasurer 50 percent.
Friday
nighLMostly Lows in the upper 40s.
Osie Mae Follrod gave her
cloudy. A slight chance of Highs in the upper 70s.
report.
Monday .night ... Partly
Members signed the showers and ·thunderstorms
cloudy.
Lows in the ·lower
midnight.
Lows
in
the
after
prayer calendar birthday
50s.
card for Vickie Sigman of mid 50s. East winds around
Tuesday ... Sunny. Highs
mph
in
the
Winston/Salem, N.C., who 5
is involved· with specialized evening ... Becoming light around 80.
Tuesday night...Partly
ministries, church arid com- and variable. Chance of rain
cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
20 percent.
munity workers.
Wednesday
and
Saturday... Partly sunny
Follrod shared correspondence from Tom and with a chance ·of showers Wednesday night...Mostly
Sharon Crowe, retired mis- with a slight chance of thun- cloudy. Highs in the upper
sio naries to the Democratic derstorms. Highs in the 70s. Lows in the mid 50s.
Thursday ... Partly sunny.
lower - 70s. East winds
Republic of Congo.
Barringer, Buckley, Sarah around 5 mph. Chance of A chance· of showers and
thunderstorms in the afterCaldwell and Weber will rain 40 percent.
attend the spring retreat at
Saturday nlght...Mostly noon. Highs in · the upper
The
Plains
United cloudy with a slight chance 70s. Chance of rain 30 perof showers and thunder- cent.
Methodist Church.

The scoreboard, Page B4

Friday, May 4, 2007

.

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY -A &amp;d'ledule of ~ co118gB
h9J school varsity !pCHtng everts iMllvilg

.-.:1

teamo -

-

Coonty.
Todey'a P'WI'

Prep SOftball

,

Gatlia Academy at Eastern, 5 p.m.

PrOp BaHball
Gallia Academy al Eastern. 5 p.m.

Jutldav,

Mp 8

. Prep SOftball
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.

Prep Baaeball
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.

Track and Field
TVC

Championships

at

Vinton

CoiJnty High School, 4 p.m.
Jbu[lday. May 1Q
Tra~k and Field
TVC
Championships at
County High School, 4 p.m.

1VC

Vinton

STANDINGS

BASEBALL .

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

Vinton ·County stuns Eagles, 7~5
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MCARTHUR -· Eastern
baseball had a two- game
winning streak snapped
Thursday following a 7-5
road loss to Vinton County
in Tri-Valley Conference
non-divisional action.
The Eagles (11-9) led only
once in the contest ( 1-0)
Lynch
Buckley
after two-and-a-half innings
of play, but the Vikings rallied for two scores in the
VCHS added five more
third for a 2-1 advantage. runs in the fifth for a 7· I
The hosts never relinquished cushion, which proved t&lt;;&gt; be
the lead from there.
key after the Green and

White plated two runs in
eac h of the sixth and seventh
frames.
·
The Eagles managed only
four hits 'and three earned
runs off tbe Viking pitching
duo of Brozak and Coleman.
Brozak worked five innings,
allowing one run, one hit
and five walks. Brozak also
fanned five in picking up the
winning decision. Coleman
worked the final two innings
of relief, surrendering three
earned runs, three walks and
three hits in picking up the
save.
Titus Pierce was handed

the loss, lloing five innings
and allowmg seven runs, six
earned, eight hits and two
walks in the setback. Pierce
also fanned six and hit two
batters. · Daniel Buckley
worked the sixth, surrendering no runs and a hit in one
inning on the mound.
Joel Lynch, Ben ·Buckley,
Justin
Browning
and
Andrew Benedum had the
hits for Eastern. Lynclr and
Buckley also added an RBI
apiece to the c&amp;use, while
Pierce, Lynch, Browning,
Please

~ee

Stuns, BJ

Ohio Division
Alexander* 8-2
Meigs*
8-2
Wellston
7-2
Vinton Co 3.-7
Belpre
2-7
Nels-York · 1-9

WIN UP TO $1,000 '''
•••
Employees, Independent Contractors. Vendors and tlleir immediate famiily not eligible.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

THE PLAINS - Meigs
track and field continues to
be competitive this 2007
season, finishing runner,up
and third in the respective
girls and boys competitions
at
the
Bulldog
Relays on
Tuesday,
. April 24,
held
at
Athens
H i g h

SOFTBALL
Ohio Division
Wellston** 10-0
Belpre
7~3
Alexander 6-4
5-5
Meigs
. Vinton Co 2-8
Nels-York
0-10

£'

STOP BY BOB'S FOR
THE PERECT
MOTHER'S DAY Gtn

Icon • Delta

H- whot others .,. soyins obout
Olkon Dett&amp;

1&gt;11 I·" Ill \RING

Debra K.

2t5 Sixth St. Pl. Pleasont, WV
(304) 675-7036

GALLIPOLIS

rivercitlesiru @suddenllnkmall.com

•435'h Second Avenue
( Acro~s

, Agent

• -

(304}675-7036

( ·1 '\ I t-:1~

1/4 mite north of Pomeroy, Mason
Mason, WV

(740) 446-7619

n3-5721

r---.----.

oUncMd .._.. of IMgue title·

" - won -

title C&gt;Ull'tght.

HS SECTIONAL PAIRINGS
,BASEBALL

Auto/Home/Buslness/LIIe/
T"·o fm:arion s:

from Posl Office)

School.~

Hocking Division
Waterford** 9-0·
Trimble
6-4
Fed Hock 5-5
Southern .
5-5
Eastern : ·
4-5
MUller
0-10

~~ra~
Health/Anuily

Monday, May 7
02 - (7) Vinton County at (2) Meigs, 5

An Independent Agency

Re resentln Erie InSurance

p.m.

Thursday, May 10*

TO DAY'S
· NUMBER IS:

Jrench Ctty
.54ntlque &amp; Craft .Mall
*Home Decor *Furniture
*Hand Puppets for
Children
*Antiques for the
Antique lover
Our 19,000 squar.e foot
store offers thous~;~nds
of gifts for the entire
family.

FREE Ke1rno·va1
FREE Set-U p
FREE Delivery ·
S!TOP IN AND!!!;(; OUR N~W
2007 !:PRING AIR MAT'{RtSS
Gn GRtAT INTRODUCTORY
!:AL[ PRIC[!:I .

·:From Our Jfome •To ')"o urs•

Cor5m &amp;Snytkr1urniturt

842 2nd Ave. Gelllpotll, OH

••••

740·446-9020 .

lSI locol4 ..,.,. • """"' ON
.. _ ..UITII4oiN•IIlMtlfl•-

• Hair C.ue &amp;. Makeup
• Nail C.lre • Helix Cuts
• Facials &amp;. WaXIng
• Massage • Body Wraps
• Spa P~k.\ges • Chemic:.\1 Peels
• Microderm Abrasions

326 Second Avenue
. Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446·2933
Hours:

M-F l Oam-Ciose

~.

Mon-Satl~: Sua 1-S
www.Frtnchdtjmall.com

Open

COME JOIN THl FUN WITH
SUNNY 93.1
SATURDt1&gt;: MAY 5TH
ff AM· 2PM
AT OIJR GAlliPOliS STORE
HOT DOGS, lEMONADE ·
S'CHIPS
DOOR PRIZ{S TOO!
CHOOSE THAT spECIAl
0

•

f!f' FOR MOM

•~p~

-...:~,,\1 Ii//

One Stop Shop For
All Your
Respirntory Needs

Pleasant
Yalley
Hospital

• Oxygen
• Nebulizers
• C-PAP
• Portable Oxygen
• Pulse Oximetry

675-4340

Pt. Pleasant 675-3400

02 - Winner of VC ~ Meigs game ver·
sus winner of Chllllcothe-GA game at ,
.
· TBA, 5p.m.

04 - Winner of Waterford-SG game
at (1) Southern, 5 p.m.
04- Winnar ol (7) Trimble-(10) Miller
at (2) Eastern, 5 p.m.
SOFTBALL

Wednesday, May 9

02 - (5) Meigs al (4) Waverly,, 5 p.m.
Saturday, May 12•

. ·

04 - (5) Soulhem at (4) Eastem, 1
p.m.
02 - Winner of Meigs-Waverly game
versus winner of (1) Warren-(8) Vinton

County game at TBA, 5 p.m.

• - sectional final game; winner
advances to districts

SPORTS BRIEFS

14th annual
Meigs Football
Golf Tournament
POMEROY - The 14th
. annual Meigs Football Golf
Tournament will be held at
Pine 'Hills Golf Course on
May 12 with a shotgun stan
begmning at 9 a.m.
Game setup will be a four
man scramble with each
team bringing their own
members. Included with
entry fees will ·be a round of
goff, cart, lunch and beverages with prizes for each
team.
. .
There will aJso be a skins
game during the day.
For more infqrmation,
please contact Mike Chancey
at 992-2158 or 992-0064.

CoNTAcrtJs
OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.-1 e.m.)
1'740-446-2342 ext. 33

~

Another satisfied
·customer!

Green, 4 Dr.

"Call us today and you
could b~ smiling too!"

~j
Gallla Auto Sales

~

.

~ADVANCED HEARI/IIG

2t47 Jack110n Pike

CENTER

Gatllpolla, OH

(740) 446-0724

1122 JICiciOn Pille • Gllipolil
(IOQ)434-41M

(74CI)441·1~71

• David Mink- Owner

. .

-'
Fox- 1·740.446-3008

-

E·mall- sports@mydailysentinel.com
Soorta Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
bshermanOmydailytribune.com

Larry Cruni, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 23

lcnJmOmydallyregister.oom

Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
bwalters 0 mydailytribune.com

Lady
Marauders
second at
Bulldog
·Relays
Meigs third in
boys' competition

Hocking Division
Southern** 9-l
Fed Hock
8-2 ·
Eastern
6-3
Waterford
2-7
Miller
2-8
1rrlmble
2-8

Open Mon. - Thurs. 8:30-5pm

. AEP (NYSE) - 50.63
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 79.56
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)60.72
Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.SS
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 37.47
BorgWamer (NYSE)79.57
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)- 49.74
Champion (NASDAQ) 8.10
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-12.33
.
City Holding (NASDAQ) 39.52
Collins (NYSE) - 66.39
Dollar General (NYSE) 21.44
DuPont (NYSE) .....;··50.88
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.35
. Gannett (NYSE)- 58.20
General Electric (NYSE) . 37.34
Harley-Davidson ( NYSE) 63.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) 52.70
Krqger (NYSE) - 29.71
Umlted Brands (NYSE)28.08
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)
-53.72
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)- 22.77
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.43
Peoples (NASDAQ)25.98
Pepsico (NYSE)- 67.31
Premier (NASDAQ)15.50
,,
Rockwell (NYSE) - 61.55
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) .
11.32
Royal Dutch Shell '71.45
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
-188.32
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 46.36
Wendy's (NYSE)- 37.43.
Worthington (NYSE)22.36
.
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closlne quotes
· of transactions for May 3, ·
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point ,
Pleasant at ( 304) 6740174. Member SIPC;

Page AS

The Lady
Marauders,
were seeond only to

G a I I i a

Academy,
accumulating 69 team
point s
overall.
T
h e
·
.
·
·
Bryan Walters/photo ·
Maroon
The Eastern softball team huddles up before taking the field in the seventl) inning of Thursday's. TVC non-divisional
and Gold
matchup against Vinton County at McArthur. The Lady Eagles won 15-7.
also had
Richardson trio of firslp I a c e
efforts
from
Melissa
Grueser in the shot put,
Adrian Bolin in the 300BY BRYAN WALTERS
win of'the season.
lowed by Brittany Bissell , meter hurdles, and Devan
BWAtTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Collins lasted 3.1 iimings Kathryn
Bland,
Kate Soulsby in the 800m dash.
and allowed five runs, three Wilfong and Amber White
MHS also had five runMCARTHUR - Eastern
earned, five hits and two with one hit ea.ch.
ner-up
finishes in the gir1s'
softball got back .on the winwalk~ in' picking up the win .
Bissell,
Bland
and divi sion . Grueser was secning track Thursday followCummins allowed two runs, Wilfong 'each scored three ond in the discus, as was
ing a 15-7 victory over host
zero earned, one hit and six times in the triumph, with Bolin in the IOOm hurdles
Vinton County during a Triwalks over 3.2 frames · of Cummins adding a pair of and Kimi Swisher in the
Valley Conference non-diviwork.
Collins fanned one runs scored. Baker led the 1600m run. Meigs was also
sional contest. .
Cummins
struck out Lady Eagles with 3 RBis, . second in two relay events.
and
The La4y ,Eagles (9-13)
four.
Soulsby, Catie Wolfe,
fell behind 2-1 after one
while White · and Hannah
Baker
Holter
Eastern knocked out eight Pratt contributed two runs Meghan Clelland and 'Emily
inning and were all tied at
hits and three earned runs, batted in each.
two after two complete, then
Fields combi ned to finish
a four-run third gave the ance runs for a 15-7 advan- also · benefiting from 14 Tied at two after two, EHS second in the 4x200m relay,
walks from VCHS starter sent I0 batters to the plate in while Soulsby, Wolfe,
guests a lead that it would tage.
never relinquish.
Jones.
Jones ,worked seven the top-half of the third. An Clelland and Swisher took
Sami Cummins, who
The Green and White led entered in relief of Sasha innings in the circle and also error, three hits and four collectively placed second
9-7 after four frames, where Collins in the fourth, made struck out three.
runs later, the guests held a in the 4x800.
the scored remained until tile relative quick work of the
Alyssa Baker and Kelsey 6-2 edge.
C,asey · Smith was also
top of the seventh when the Lady Vikings in the seventh, Holter led the Lady Eagles
Please see Blasts, BJ
Please see Meigs, BJ
guests tacked on six insur- securing the team 's ninth with two hits apiec,e, fol-

a

Lady Eagles blast Vinton County, 15-7

·Wahama eliminated from tourney
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

HARTFORD, W.Va. During one of the best seasons in softball history at
Wahama High School, only
three teams managed to beat
the Lady Falcons during the
season.
Unfortunately, one of
those teams w·as Buffalo who did it four times.
Buffalo, who eliminated
· Hannan in round one action
of the Class A sectional tournament yesterday, found
Wahama up to the challenge
in game one in a narrow 4-0
victory, but once Buffalo got
the bats going it was tough
to stop as the Lady Bison
took game two 12-6 and in
doing so, moved on to the
regional tournament while
eliminating Wahama after a
memorable year.
·
The Lady Falcons (1~-8)
knew coming in to tliis
weeks Class A sectional
tournament that the · top
ranked Lady Bison (30-2),
whose two losses this season
have come to much bigger
Brad Sherman/photo Class AAA schools, would
Wahama's Kylie Riggs throws a pitch during the Class A be a tough challenge, but
high school softball sectional Thursday in Hart,ford. Buffalo WHS held out hope that it
could pull out an upset.
eliminated Wahama by scores of 4-Q and 12-6.
. ,, .._.

··---~--'---__;_

Sophomore pitcher Kylie game two as Buffalo
Riggs almost made that pos- claimed the 12-6 victory off
sible in game one, pitching a of a very strong start.
perfect game through three
The Lady Bison scored
innings in another incredible five runs in the first, but
performance. but a mistake Wahama answered with two
filled fourth gave . Buffalo of its own in. the second to
the lead it would never lose . close the gap to 5-2. In
The Lady Bison scored another outburst in the
three runs in the fourth on fourth, Buffalo doubled its
two hits, one walk and an score to take a 10-21ead.
error and followed that with
BHS pulled ahead 12 ~ 2
another run in the fifth, ali · with two in the fifth and
while holding the Lady looked poised to end this
Falcons scoreless. Wahama one early, but . Wahama
.also managed just ooe hit in rebounded with a trio of runs
the . first contest, while in the bottom half of ·the
Buffalo knocked down four.' · inning and ended the contest
- Despite being tabbed with with another run in the sevthe loss, Riggs threw three enth, but came up short in
strikeouts and only two .the six-run loss.
walks until defensive mis- · Riggs also started game
takes allowed the Lady two, throwi9g five strikeouts
Bison to edge ahead. Taylor and five walks before giving
Hysell managed the home way to Brooke Gabritsch in
teams lone hit.
'the fifth .• She threw two
Winter notched the pitch-- strikeouts and a walk.
ing triumph, throwing two
Wahama was ·also led on
strikeouts and two walks. offense by Riggs who went
She also provided to her 2-for-2 with a double. Haley
teams four hits, with Tucker, Davis had two hits includTony and Barnette adding ing a triple, Ashley Wolfe
the others. ·
had a pair of hits and Mary
But after a pitching duel in Kehler,
Kaula Young.
game one, the second con- Taylor Hysell and Amber
test was quite the opposite. . Tully had a hit each~
· The two teams combined
for 22 hits and 18 runs in

_____ _____
..__

...:.._..,
I

�•

COMM

The Daily Se~tinel

Loml teen wins
cheerleading award
TUPPERS PLAJNS Hannah Lou Helgesen of
Tuppers Plains won the title of
Miss Cheerleader of America's
"T&lt;&gt;p Ten" for Ohio at the
Holiday Inn Worthington
Ballroom in Columbus in a
tw!Hiay scholarship selection
process.
Helgesen is an I lth gr&lt;l(ler
representing Eastern · High
School in Reedsville. As a state
winner, she won a tiara, certificate, State f'inalist plaque and
place certificate or plaque.
· Helgesen is the daughter of
Tawny and John Helgesen.
She was junior varsity co-eaptain her freshman year. varsity
co-captain her sophomore
year; and advanced to varsity
captain her junior year. She
also was on the varsity competition squad for the past three
years. Hannah plans to attend
The Ohio·University to pursue
a career in equine therapy, after
she graduates from high
school.
The Miss Cheerleader of
America program is offered to
female .high school cheerleaders, grades nine through 12.
The competition requires each
cheerleader to write an essay
and includes snon interviews
with professional trained
judges. It also includes an
evening gown selection. It was
noted that the judges are looking for an "all-American girl."
Eastern High School will
receive a plaque for display at
the school. The Miss
Cheerleader of America organization promotes education
through the gifting of tuition
scholarships. Acting as MC
was Natalie Wiesend, an early
childhood education major at
the University of Michigan,
Dearborn, who has cheered
from fourth through 12th
grades. Assisting her was Miss ·
Ohio Cheerleader of America
2005-2006 Johanna Lenefonte
of Boardman, who is in a prelaw progr.un at The Ohio State
University.
.
'This competition was
established to give high school
cheerleaders the recognition,
respect, and tuition assistance
they deserve," said Wiesend.

Local
stocks

•

Friday, May 4; ~007

0

ALFRED
Thelma Church in Koholsky to
Henderson gave'the mission make · needed repairs to
report on Ru ssia at the homes in the area. The
recent meeting of the Alfred church loaned tools to
United Methodist Women, members who traveled to
held at the church.
Moscow for the summer to
The mission report was find employment.
from "Response" magazine,
Along with economic
"Economic Development in · growth, the church has also
Rurual Russia." The Rural grown.
'
Chaplains
Association,
Cary Frith had the. prowhich · is related to the gram, "Lent and Easter,
Office of Town and Rise and Shine for Christ
Country Ministries of the has Risen!" She read a spirUnited Methodist General itual message, "Easter
Board of Global Ministries, Revisited,'' The focus stateis a voluntary association of ment was read by all memlaiy and clergy called to bers. Luke 24: 1-12 was
rural ministry.
read by Mary Jo Buckley.
During visits to rural Cary, Mary Jo Barringer
Russia, they saw the need and Mary Jo Buckley parfor economic development ticipatcd in the readings.
and began providing small The group read "Easter
grants for this. one example Vigil" to end the program.
was providing $2,000 for
Nine members and one
tools to . help the Holy guest attended. Henderson
Trinity United Methodist had prayer. before the meal

Inside

Bl

The.Daily Sentinel

Blue Angels beat Wellston, Page B2

.

'

UMW hears report from R1.1ssia Local weather

Warriors shock Mavericks, Page BJ

•

served by Janice Weber. · Ftiday...Mostly cioudy. A storms. Lows in the lower
Mary Jo Barringer conduct- chance of showers in the 50s. East winds around 5.
ed the meeting, which morning., .Then a slight mph. Chance of rain 20 peropened with the reading of chance of showers ih · the cent.
afternoon. Highs in the ·Sunday ... Mostly sunny.
The UMW Purpose.
Members reported 70 upper 60s. Southeast winds Highs in the mid 70s..
Sunday
night
and
friendship calls. Weber read 5 to 10 mph. Chance of rain
Monday
..
.
Mostly
clear.
the minutes and Treasurer 50 percent.
Friday
nighLMostly Lows in the upper 40s.
Osie Mae Follrod gave her
cloudy. A slight chance of Highs in the upper 70s.
report.
Monday .night ... Partly
Members signed the showers and ·thunderstorms
cloudy.
Lows in the ·lower
midnight.
Lows
in
the
after
prayer calendar birthday
50s.
card for Vickie Sigman of mid 50s. East winds around
Tuesday ... Sunny. Highs
mph
in
the
Winston/Salem, N.C., who 5
is involved· with specialized evening ... Becoming light around 80.
Tuesday night...Partly
ministries, church arid com- and variable. Chance of rain
cloudy. Lows in the mid 50s.
20 percent.
munity workers.
Wednesday
and
Saturday... Partly sunny
Follrod shared correspondence from Tom and with a chance ·of showers Wednesday night...Mostly
Sharon Crowe, retired mis- with a slight chance of thun- cloudy. Highs in the upper
sio naries to the Democratic derstorms. Highs in the 70s. Lows in the mid 50s.
Thursday ... Partly sunny.
lower - 70s. East winds
Republic of Congo.
Barringer, Buckley, Sarah around 5 mph. Chance of A chance· of showers and
thunderstorms in the afterCaldwell and Weber will rain 40 percent.
attend the spring retreat at
Saturday nlght...Mostly noon. Highs in · the upper
The
Plains
United cloudy with a slight chance 70s. Chance of rain 30 perof showers and thunder- cent.
Methodist Church.

The scoreboard, Page B4

Friday, May 4, 2007

.

LocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY -A &amp;d'ledule of ~ co118gB
h9J school varsity !pCHtng everts iMllvilg

.-.:1

teamo -

-

Coonty.
Todey'a P'WI'

Prep SOftball

,

Gatlia Academy at Eastern, 5 p.m.

PrOp BaHball
Gallia Academy al Eastern. 5 p.m.

Jutldav,

Mp 8

. Prep SOftball
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.

Prep Baaeball
Eastern at Waterford, 5 p.m.

Track and Field
TVC

Championships

at

Vinton

CoiJnty High School, 4 p.m.
Jbu[lday. May 1Q
Tra~k and Field
TVC
Championships at
County High School, 4 p.m.

1VC

Vinton

STANDINGS

BASEBALL .

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

Vinton ·County stuns Eagles, 7~5
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

MCARTHUR -· Eastern
baseball had a two- game
winning streak snapped
Thursday following a 7-5
road loss to Vinton County
in Tri-Valley Conference
non-divisional action.
The Eagles (11-9) led only
once in the contest ( 1-0)
Lynch
Buckley
after two-and-a-half innings
of play, but the Vikings rallied for two scores in the
VCHS added five more
third for a 2-1 advantage. runs in the fifth for a 7· I
The hosts never relinquished cushion, which proved t&lt;;&gt; be
the lead from there.
key after the Green and

White plated two runs in
eac h of the sixth and seventh
frames.
·
The Eagles managed only
four hits 'and three earned
runs off tbe Viking pitching
duo of Brozak and Coleman.
Brozak worked five innings,
allowing one run, one hit
and five walks. Brozak also
fanned five in picking up the
winning decision. Coleman
worked the final two innings
of relief, surrendering three
earned runs, three walks and
three hits in picking up the
save.
Titus Pierce was handed

the loss, lloing five innings
and allowmg seven runs, six
earned, eight hits and two
walks in the setback. Pierce
also fanned six and hit two
batters. · Daniel Buckley
worked the sixth, surrendering no runs and a hit in one
inning on the mound.
Joel Lynch, Ben ·Buckley,
Justin
Browning
and
Andrew Benedum had the
hits for Eastern. Lynclr and
Buckley also added an RBI
apiece to the c&amp;use, while
Pierce, Lynch, Browning,
Please

~ee

Stuns, BJ

Ohio Division
Alexander* 8-2
Meigs*
8-2
Wellston
7-2
Vinton Co 3.-7
Belpre
2-7
Nels-York · 1-9

WIN UP TO $1,000 '''
•••
Employees, Independent Contractors. Vendors and tlleir immediate famiily not eligible.

STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CDM

THE PLAINS - Meigs
track and field continues to
be competitive this 2007
season, finishing runner,up
and third in the respective
girls and boys competitions
at
the
Bulldog
Relays on
Tuesday,
. April 24,
held
at
Athens
H i g h

SOFTBALL
Ohio Division
Wellston** 10-0
Belpre
7~3
Alexander 6-4
5-5
Meigs
. Vinton Co 2-8
Nels-York
0-10

£'

STOP BY BOB'S FOR
THE PERECT
MOTHER'S DAY Gtn

Icon • Delta

H- whot others .,. soyins obout
Olkon Dett&amp;

1&gt;11 I·" Ill \RING

Debra K.

2t5 Sixth St. Pl. Pleasont, WV
(304) 675-7036

GALLIPOLIS

rivercitlesiru @suddenllnkmall.com

•435'h Second Avenue
( Acro~s

, Agent

• -

(304}675-7036

( ·1 '\ I t-:1~

1/4 mite north of Pomeroy, Mason
Mason, WV

(740) 446-7619

n3-5721

r---.----.

oUncMd .._.. of IMgue title·

" - won -

title C&gt;Ull'tght.

HS SECTIONAL PAIRINGS
,BASEBALL

Auto/Home/Buslness/LIIe/
T"·o fm:arion s:

from Posl Office)

School.~

Hocking Division
Waterford** 9-0·
Trimble
6-4
Fed Hock 5-5
Southern .
5-5
Eastern : ·
4-5
MUller
0-10

~~ra~
Health/Anuily

Monday, May 7
02 - (7) Vinton County at (2) Meigs, 5

An Independent Agency

Re resentln Erie InSurance

p.m.

Thursday, May 10*

TO DAY'S
· NUMBER IS:

Jrench Ctty
.54ntlque &amp; Craft .Mall
*Home Decor *Furniture
*Hand Puppets for
Children
*Antiques for the
Antique lover
Our 19,000 squar.e foot
store offers thous~;~nds
of gifts for the entire
family.

FREE Ke1rno·va1
FREE Set-U p
FREE Delivery ·
S!TOP IN AND!!!;(; OUR N~W
2007 !:PRING AIR MAT'{RtSS
Gn GRtAT INTRODUCTORY
!:AL[ PRIC[!:I .

·:From Our Jfome •To ')"o urs•

Cor5m &amp;Snytkr1urniturt

842 2nd Ave. Gelllpotll, OH

••••

740·446-9020 .

lSI locol4 ..,.,. • """"' ON
.. _ ..UITII4oiN•IIlMtlfl•-

• Hair C.ue &amp;. Makeup
• Nail C.lre • Helix Cuts
• Facials &amp;. WaXIng
• Massage • Body Wraps
• Spa P~k.\ges • Chemic:.\1 Peels
• Microderm Abrasions

326 Second Avenue
. Gallipolis, OH 45631

(740) 446·2933
Hours:

M-F l Oam-Ciose

~.

Mon-Satl~: Sua 1-S
www.Frtnchdtjmall.com

Open

COME JOIN THl FUN WITH
SUNNY 93.1
SATURDt1&gt;: MAY 5TH
ff AM· 2PM
AT OIJR GAlliPOliS STORE
HOT DOGS, lEMONADE ·
S'CHIPS
DOOR PRIZ{S TOO!
CHOOSE THAT spECIAl
0

•

f!f' FOR MOM

•~p~

-...:~,,\1 Ii//

One Stop Shop For
All Your
Respirntory Needs

Pleasant
Yalley
Hospital

• Oxygen
• Nebulizers
• C-PAP
• Portable Oxygen
• Pulse Oximetry

675-4340

Pt. Pleasant 675-3400

02 - Winner of VC ~ Meigs game ver·
sus winner of Chllllcothe-GA game at ,
.
· TBA, 5p.m.

04 - Winner of Waterford-SG game
at (1) Southern, 5 p.m.
04- Winnar ol (7) Trimble-(10) Miller
at (2) Eastern, 5 p.m.
SOFTBALL

Wednesday, May 9

02 - (5) Meigs al (4) Waverly,, 5 p.m.
Saturday, May 12•

. ·

04 - (5) Soulhem at (4) Eastem, 1
p.m.
02 - Winner of Meigs-Waverly game
versus winner of (1) Warren-(8) Vinton

County game at TBA, 5 p.m.

• - sectional final game; winner
advances to districts

SPORTS BRIEFS

14th annual
Meigs Football
Golf Tournament
POMEROY - The 14th
. annual Meigs Football Golf
Tournament will be held at
Pine 'Hills Golf Course on
May 12 with a shotgun stan
begmning at 9 a.m.
Game setup will be a four
man scramble with each
team bringing their own
members. Included with
entry fees will ·be a round of
goff, cart, lunch and beverages with prizes for each
team.
. .
There will aJso be a skins
game during the day.
For more infqrmation,
please contact Mike Chancey
at 992-2158 or 992-0064.

CoNTAcrtJs
OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.-1 e.m.)
1'740-446-2342 ext. 33

~

Another satisfied
·customer!

Green, 4 Dr.

"Call us today and you
could b~ smiling too!"

~j
Gallla Auto Sales

~

.

~ADVANCED HEARI/IIG

2t47 Jack110n Pike

CENTER

Gatllpolla, OH

(740) 446-0724

1122 JICiciOn Pille • Gllipolil
(IOQ)434-41M

(74CI)441·1~71

• David Mink- Owner

. .

-'
Fox- 1·740.446-3008

-

E·mall- sports@mydailysentinel.com
Soorta Staff

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
bshermanOmydailytribune.com

Larry Cruni, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 23

lcnJmOmydallyregister.oom

Bryan Waltera, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342, ext 33
bwalters 0 mydailytribune.com

Lady
Marauders
second at
Bulldog
·Relays
Meigs third in
boys' competition

Hocking Division
Southern** 9-l
Fed Hock
8-2 ·
Eastern
6-3
Waterford
2-7
Miller
2-8
1rrlmble
2-8

Open Mon. - Thurs. 8:30-5pm

. AEP (NYSE) - 50.63
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 79.56
Ashland Inc. (NYSE)60.72
Big Lots (NYSE)- 32.SS
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 37.47
BorgWamer (NYSE)79.57
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)- 49.74
Champion (NASDAQ) 8.10
Charming Shops (NASDAQ)
-12.33
.
City Holding (NASDAQ) 39.52
Collins (NYSE) - 66.39
Dollar General (NYSE) 21.44
DuPont (NYSE) .....;··50.88
US Bank (NYSE) - 34.35
. Gannett (NYSE)- 58.20
General Electric (NYSE) . 37.34
Harley-Davidson ( NYSE) 63.35
JP Morgan (NYSE) 52.70
Krqger (NYSE) - 29.71
Umlted Brands (NYSE)28.08
Norfolk Southern (NYSE)
-53.72
Oak Hill Financial (NASDAQ)- 22.77
Ohio Valley Bane Corp.
(NASDAQ) - 25.25
BBT (NYSE) - 42.43
Peoples (NASDAQ)25.98
Pepsico (NYSE)- 67.31
Premier (NASDAQ)15.50
,,
Rockwell (NYSE) - 61.55
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) .
11.32
Royal Dutch Shell '71.45
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
-188.32
Wai-Mart (NYSE)- 46.36
Wendy's (NYSE)- 37.43.
Worthington (NYSE)22.36
.
Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closlne quotes
· of transactions for May 3, ·
2007, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors
Isaac Mills In Gallipolis at
(740) 441·9441 and
Lesley Marrero In Point ,
Pleasant at ( 304) 6740174. Member SIPC;

Page AS

The Lady
Marauders,
were seeond only to

G a I I i a

Academy,
accumulating 69 team
point s
overall.
T
h e
·
.
·
·
Bryan Walters/photo ·
Maroon
The Eastern softball team huddles up before taking the field in the seventl) inning of Thursday's. TVC non-divisional
and Gold
matchup against Vinton County at McArthur. The Lady Eagles won 15-7.
also had
Richardson trio of firslp I a c e
efforts
from
Melissa
Grueser in the shot put,
Adrian Bolin in the 300BY BRYAN WALTERS
win of'the season.
lowed by Brittany Bissell , meter hurdles, and Devan
BWAtTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
Collins lasted 3.1 iimings Kathryn
Bland,
Kate Soulsby in the 800m dash.
and allowed five runs, three Wilfong and Amber White
MHS also had five runMCARTHUR - Eastern
earned, five hits and two with one hit ea.ch.
ner-up
finishes in the gir1s'
softball got back .on the winwalk~ in' picking up the win .
Bissell,
Bland
and divi sion . Grueser was secning track Thursday followCummins allowed two runs, Wilfong 'each scored three ond in the discus, as was
ing a 15-7 victory over host
zero earned, one hit and six times in the triumph, with Bolin in the IOOm hurdles
Vinton County during a Triwalks over 3.2 frames · of Cummins adding a pair of and Kimi Swisher in the
Valley Conference non-diviwork.
Collins fanned one runs scored. Baker led the 1600m run. Meigs was also
sional contest. .
Cummins
struck out Lady Eagles with 3 RBis, . second in two relay events.
and
The La4y ,Eagles (9-13)
four.
Soulsby, Catie Wolfe,
fell behind 2-1 after one
while White · and Hannah
Baker
Holter
Eastern knocked out eight Pratt contributed two runs Meghan Clelland and 'Emily
inning and were all tied at
hits and three earned runs, batted in each.
two after two complete, then
Fields combi ned to finish
a four-run third gave the ance runs for a 15-7 advan- also · benefiting from 14 Tied at two after two, EHS second in the 4x200m relay,
walks from VCHS starter sent I0 batters to the plate in while Soulsby, Wolfe,
guests a lead that it would tage.
never relinquish.
Jones.
Jones ,worked seven the top-half of the third. An Clelland and Swisher took
Sami Cummins, who
The Green and White led entered in relief of Sasha innings in the circle and also error, three hits and four collectively placed second
9-7 after four frames, where Collins in the fourth, made struck out three.
runs later, the guests held a in the 4x800.
the scored remained until tile relative quick work of the
Alyssa Baker and Kelsey 6-2 edge.
C,asey · Smith was also
top of the seventh when the Lady Vikings in the seventh, Holter led the Lady Eagles
Please see Blasts, BJ
Please see Meigs, BJ
guests tacked on six insur- securing the team 's ninth with two hits apiec,e, fol-

a

Lady Eagles blast Vinton County, 15-7

·Wahama eliminated from tourney
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

HARTFORD, W.Va. During one of the best seasons in softball history at
Wahama High School, only
three teams managed to beat
the Lady Falcons during the
season.
Unfortunately, one of
those teams w·as Buffalo who did it four times.
Buffalo, who eliminated
· Hannan in round one action
of the Class A sectional tournament yesterday, found
Wahama up to the challenge
in game one in a narrow 4-0
victory, but once Buffalo got
the bats going it was tough
to stop as the Lady Bison
took game two 12-6 and in
doing so, moved on to the
regional tournament while
eliminating Wahama after a
memorable year.
·
The Lady Falcons (1~-8)
knew coming in to tliis
weeks Class A sectional
tournament that the · top
ranked Lady Bison (30-2),
whose two losses this season
have come to much bigger
Brad Sherman/photo Class AAA schools, would
Wahama's Kylie Riggs throws a pitch during the Class A be a tough challenge, but
high school softball sectional Thursday in Hart,ford. Buffalo WHS held out hope that it
could pull out an upset.
eliminated Wahama by scores of 4-Q and 12-6.
. ,, .._.

··---~--'---__;_

Sophomore pitcher Kylie game two as Buffalo
Riggs almost made that pos- claimed the 12-6 victory off
sible in game one, pitching a of a very strong start.
perfect game through three
The Lady Bison scored
innings in another incredible five runs in the first, but
performance. but a mistake Wahama answered with two
filled fourth gave . Buffalo of its own in. the second to
the lead it would never lose . close the gap to 5-2. In
The Lady Bison scored another outburst in the
three runs in the fourth on fourth, Buffalo doubled its
two hits, one walk and an score to take a 10-21ead.
error and followed that with
BHS pulled ahead 12 ~ 2
another run in the fifth, ali · with two in the fifth and
while holding the Lady looked poised to end this
Falcons scoreless. Wahama one early, but . Wahama
.also managed just ooe hit in rebounded with a trio of runs
the . first contest, while in the bottom half of ·the
Buffalo knocked down four.' · inning and ended the contest
- Despite being tabbed with with another run in the sevthe loss, Riggs threw three enth, but came up short in
strikeouts and only two .the six-run loss.
walks until defensive mis- · Riggs also started game
takes allowed the Lady two, throwi9g five strikeouts
Bison to edge ahead. Taylor and five walks before giving
Hysell managed the home way to Brooke Gabritsch in
teams lone hit.
'the fifth .• She threw two
Winter notched the pitch-- strikeouts and a walk.
ing triumph, throwing two
Wahama was ·also led on
strikeouts and two walks. offense by Riggs who went
She also provided to her 2-for-2 with a double. Haley
teams four hits, with Tucker, Davis had two hits includTony and Barnette adding ing a triple, Ashley Wolfe
the others. ·
had a pair of hits and Mary
But after a pitching duel in Kehler,
Kaula Young.
game one, the second con- Taylor Hysell and Amber
test was quite the opposite. . Tully had a hit each~
· The two teams combined
for 22 hits and 18 runs in

_____ _____
..__

...:.._..,
I

�I

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 4.

·www .mydailysentinel.com

2007

- llriday, May 4. :wo 7

w.ww .mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83
.

'

Astros rally back to beat Cincinnati

Zuspan, Falcons shut.down.rival Point Pleasant
looking tor.
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
It was the Big Blacks who
gained ·the early lead after
POINT ·
PLEASANT, scori ng a single tally in the
W.Va. - William Zuspan. opening fra me. James Casto
the Wahama White Falcons' si ngled to left and moved to
promising young fres hman third on a WHS fielding mispitcher, hurled a two hitter at · cue before later scoring what
Mason County rival Point would become the Big
Pleasant Thursday as the Blacks lone run of the
B~nd Area team scored six evening on a fi elder's choice.
times in the final two innings . Wahama tinally got on the
to escape with a 6-1 diamond board in the sixt h with Cody
victory under the lights on Gerlach getting things staned
the PPHS campus.
with a leadoff triple to extend
The win was the eighth in his consecutive game hitting
II decisions for coach Tom streak. Jone s got Garrett
Cullen's White Falcon d.ia- Underwood to pop out and
mond squad as the Bend Area induced Derek Veazey to hit
nine once again pulled to an intield pop-up. which was
within a game of the .500 dropped for an error as
mark on the spring. Point Ger)ach scored the tying run.
Pleasant continued its late
Veazey swiped second and
season slide in losing for the scored the go-ahead ru n on a
fifth straight time as coach single by Brenton Clark .
James Higginbotham's club Nathan Stafford walked with
fell to 9-14 on the·year.
Trevor Peters coming in to
Zuspan limited 'the );Jig run for the WHS catcher.
Blacks to one unearned run Zuspan bunted tryi ng to
on two hits while fanning six move the runners and the sacand walking three during his · rifice attempt was also misroute going performance. played for an error allowing
The young WHS right -han- Clark to race home. A Caleb
der emerged with the mound Roach single later in the
triumph after besting the Big frame chased home Peters to
Blacks Ashton Jones who give Wahama a shocking 4-1
had an equally impressive edge.
outing before faltering in the
The White Falcons were
sixth. Jones took a one-hitter . not finished yet as the Bend
and a 1-0 lead into the sixth Area team added a couple
before a couple of Point more unearned runs in the
Pleasant fielding errors gave seventh when Underwood
Wahama the opening it was smacked a one-out double to
BY GARY CLARK

left center and scored ·When
Veazey's ny ball was handled
for another Point Pleasant
error. Veazey later raced
home on a wild pitch to make
the final count 6-1.
Gerlach stroked a triple
and Underwood a double to
pace the White Falcons
offensively with Clark, Caleb
Roac h and Ferguson owing a
single each. Casto collected
th&lt;; lone two Big Blacks
safeties with a si ngle in the
first and th ird frames.
Zuspan was credited with.
the mound victory while
Jones was the hard-luck loser
despite giving ·up just OI;Je
earned run on four hits. Jones
struck out I0 and walked just
two in an impressive pitching
Point
performance · for
Pleasant. Cun Grimm came
on ro tin ish up on the hill for
the Bi~ Blacks allowing two
runs on one hit with two
strikeouts and one hit batter.
Wahama will once again
attempt to even its season
slate on Saturday when the
White Falcons conclude the
regular season with a visit to
Clay County. Point Pleasant
travels to Sissonville later
today before concluding
Saturday with a double-header a~ainst South Gallia.

AP photo

FALCONS 6; KNIGHTS 1
Wahama

000

004 2

-

6 5 '1

Point
100 000 0 - 1 2 5
William Zuspan and Nathan Stafford.
Ashton Jones, Curt Grimm (6) and D.W.

Herdman. WP - Zuspan: LP -

Jones.

· Larry Crum/photo

Point Pleasant's Ashton Jones pitches to Wahama's Brenton Clark during a high school
baseball game Thursday in Point Pleasant. Wahama won the contest 6-1.
·

Derby dream turned into nightmarish reality 50 years ago Blue Angels rally for
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
-teenth of a mi.le farther
133RD KENTUCKY ,DE.RBY
- The Kentucky Derby
toward the first turn than it
begins with 20 horses stamwas at other tracks in the
peding three-eighths of a ·
country,"
Shoemaker wrote.
Twenty 3·year-olds will stan the runing of the Kentuck,)'J)erby with
, mile . before squeezing
"And J hadn't had a .ride
Curlin in lhe No.2 post position as the slight 7·2 favorite.
through the first turn. No
over a track like that in a
pp
HORSE
JOCKEY
ODDS
matter how crazy Saturday's
year. The year before, my
Sedg~field
Julien Leparoux
50· 1
race starts, there's little
Derby horse had been
2.
Curlin
Robby Albarado
7·2
chance the finish will be as
Terrang and he finished
wild as it was 50 years ago.
3.
Zanjero
Shaun Bridgmohan
30·1
12th.
"I don 't think there was
4.
Storm In May
Juan Leyva
3Q-1
" When your horse finish...
ever that good a race," 94es
12th," he continued, "you
5.
lmawildandcrazyguy
Mark Guidry
50·1
year-old trainer John Nerud
hardly
· notice where the
6.
Cowlown Cat
Fern@ndo Jere
20·1
recalled . Thursday. ''I've
wire
is."
7.
Street Sense
Calvin .Borel
4·1
never seen that in my lifeShoemaker, who won in
time."
8.
Hard Spun
Mario Pino
15·1
1955 with Swaps, went on
The .1957 Kentucky
Liquidity
David Flores
30·1
to three more Derby victo..
Derby is remembered as
Teuflesberg
ries in his career. He died in
Stewart Elliott
30·1
horse racing's version of
2003.
Bwana Bull
Javier Castellano
50·1
baseball 's "Shot' Heard
Today, Hartack works as a
Nobiz
Like
Shobiz
Cor~elio
Velasquez
8·1
'Round the World," the dratrack steward in Louisiana.
SamP.
R~mon Dominguez
20·1
matics triggered by the late
He declined an interview
Bill Shoemaker, considered
Scat Daddy
Edgar Prado
10· 1
reques t.
.
the sport's greatest jockey.
Tiago
Mike Smith
15·1
Gallant Man turned out to
He was aboard Gallant Man
be Nerud's lone Derby
Circular Quay
JOhn Velazquez
8·1
and gaining on rival Bill
horse
in a Hall of Fame
Stormello
.
Kent Desormeau)(
30.'1
Hartack and Iron Liege as
career.
Furious at first , he
Any Given Saturday
Garrett Gomez
the two horses dueled down
·12·1
*
quickly
forgave Shoemaker.
the stretch.
Dominican
Rafael Bejarano
20·1
"I
forgot
about it the next
Upstairs in a club.ho.\lse
Great Hunter
Corev Naka1an1 .
15·1
day,"
he
said.
"If there's
,box, Nerud. slapped owner .
something
you
could . do
Ralph Lowe on the back
AP
it, you would. When
and said, "Go down to the said Nerud gave him the up the horse but, according about
you
can't,
you'll only
winner's circle and get your
confidence
to
stick
to
his
to
Nerud,
because
he
lied
aggravate
yourself.
You
roses and take them back to
own training theories and about
it
afterward. can't turn the clock back."
Texas."
helped
even
more
by
keepShoemaker
originally
Lowe
didn't
fault
Then, something incrediing
demanding
owners
off
claimed
the
horse
took
a
Shoemaker,
e·ither,
giving
ble happened.
bad step, but relenied after him $5,000 and a new car.
As the horses .passed the his back.
"He
taught
me
so
much,"
being
confronted by the Shoemaker proved himself
sixteenth pole, Shoemaker
Nafzger
said.
''You
ca
n
stewards.
The strange thing to be worth every penny
. inexplicably stood up in the
he
wasn
't even supposed five weeks ·later by winning
never
fail,
you
can
only
is
irons on Gallant Man, misjudging the finish line. It learn. That's the WilY I live." to be aboard Gallant Man in the Belmont Stakes, the
Street Sense is the early 4- the Derby.
final leg of the Triple
happened so quickly, hardly
I
second
choic'e
in
a
full
Nerud
insisted
that
John
Crown.
Nerud, too, went on
anyone noticed at first. In a
Choquette
should
ride
the
to
score
some big wins,
field
of
3-year-olds
entered
flash , Shoemaker bounced
for
Saturday's
race.
Curlin,
horse,
at
one
point
telling
most
notably
with 1967
back into the saddle and
the
7-2
favorite,
is
unbeaten
Lowe,
"You
want
another
Horse
of
the
Year,
Dr. Fager.
began riding hard again.
in
three
stans,
but
with
a
50
jockey,
you
can
get
another
And
he
's
still
part
of the
.. But Gallant Man couldn't
percent
chance
of
thundertrainer,
too."
racket,
training
horses
in
overhaul Hartack and Iron
storm
s
forecast,
thing
s
In
that
year's
pre-Derby
New·
York.
Liege, who won by a nose.
race,
Just don't expect him to
' 'I never ,fig ured out why could get interesting. Street Wood Memorial
he pulled up. He was one of Sense finished third in his Choquette rode Gallant'Man chase the Derby victory he
the greatest riders ever," only race on a sloppy track; and lost by a no,se to Bold was narrowly denied SO
Nerud said from his home Curlin has never raced in Ruler and Eddie Arcaro. years ago.
Shoemaker was in that race,
Chuckling, Nerud said,
in Long Island, N.Y. " I did- mud.
The
Churchill
Downs
too,
but
his
horse
hit
the
''I'm
trying to stay alive."
n 'i know what happened at
track
was
rated
"fast"
on
gate
and
was
injured,
leav·
the time until it was over."
Come Saturday, he ' ll be May 4, 1957. The night ing him without a Derby
Lowe
told mount.
watching the 133rd Derby before,
But after the Wood,
and cheering on Street Shoemaker that he dreamed
Sense, tra(ned by 65-year- a jockey on one of his hors- Choquette was suspend.ed
es misjudged the finish line for rough riding and in
old Carl Nafzger.
.
those days there were no
"Carl is one of my pre- and lost the race.
"Not me," Shoemaker · appeals. So Nerud called
leges,'' Nerud said. "Every
Shoemaker and asked him
one of them is my friend, replied.
But the very next day, to ride Gallant Man in the
but Carl, I kind · of put him
on the right track. I gave race day, he did just that.
Derby. TIM: jockey arrived .
him some horses that could
"I knew," Shoemaker at ChurchiTI Downs wanting
f!Jn about 25 years ago."
would write in · his 1988 to get a fee l for the track,
Nafzger won the 1990 biography, " I had made a but his agent couldn't book
Derby with Unbridled and oig boo-boo."
him a ride on the Derby Day
credits Nerud for much of
The blunder earned him a undercard.
his success. Besides sending 15-day suspension, not just
"The finish line at
him good horses, Nafzger because Shoemaker pulled Churchill Downs was a six-

Full nald set lor Churchill Downs

b•Ig WID
• ()Ver '''
,,euSton··

Jessica
Dingess
and
BSHERMAN®MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM
Brittan:y Miller also had
si ngles for the winners . .
Wellston managed five
' GALLIPOLIS
by
Peggy
Brittany Elliott hit a three- hits ,
led
run home run in the bottom Fleming 's two doubles.
of the sixth inning, lifting Ambe.r Lambert, Paige
the Gallia Acfldemy Blue Patterson and Charity
Angels to a big 6-2 high Exline had hits as well for
school softball victory over coach Ri~.:k Perdue.
the Wellston 'Lady Rocket s
The Lady Rockets scored
on Thursday.
their only two runs of the
Elliott's blli'st gave her game in the fifth inning
team back the lead for thariks to three co nsecutive
good after Wellston had singles from Patterson.
just go ne in front th e Exline and Lambert.
inning prior. In alf, Gallia
But the 2- 1 lead didn't
Academy scored five times last lon g, Gallipolis rallied
in the sixth to erase a 2- 1 for rive tallies in the botdeficit and go comfortably tom of the six th to gain (he
in front.
come-from-behind victory.
It was a huge win for the Chapinan and Davis started
Angels over a Wellston the rally with back-to-back
club that, ·at one tiine, had si ng'les
setting up
an incredible I 5-game ,win- Elliott 's homer. Dingess
·ning streak thi s season. The . and Cochran also logged
Lady Rockets (19-3) lost to hits in the hitting, with
unbeaten Rock Hill in the those two dri vin g in a run
season opener, then pro- eac h.
Kimber Davis worked
ceeded to win 19 of their
next 20 games. It .also th e final two innings in
snapped a brief two-game relief of starter Amy Noe to
slide for the Angels, · who annex the pitching victory.
improved to 15 - 10 overall. Erin Sturgill absorbed the
Overall, Gallia Academy loss for the Blue and Gold.
Gallia Academy goes to·
went 2-2 during a .brutal
four-game stretc h thi s Eastern today to wrap-up
week. Coach Jim Niday's the reg ular seaso n. The
team also beat Warren on Angels play host to
Monday before falling to Jackson in Division II secSoutheastern Ohto Ath!et!c tiona! .tournament play on
League champiOJl Manetta . Wednesday. It wi 11 be the
Tuesday and Rock Hill on fourth and final meetitio
Wednesday.
.
between the teams this sea~
Like Elliott, Lindsey .son.
Niday also homered for
Gallia Academy ...,..- the
ANGELS 6, ROCKETS 2
round tripper put th e Wettston
00.0 020 0 - 2 5 1
Angels up 1-0 in the sec- Gattipotis 01 0 005 )( - 6 a 1 ·
Eri n Sturgitt and Peggy Fteming. Amy
ond
frame .
Ashley Noe
and Li ndsay Ward. WP- Noe. lP
&lt;;hapman , Kimber Davi s, -Sturgill
Bv BRAD SHERMAN

Wahama

~

Game1

Welcomes

Winter. LP -

Gilme2
BISON 12, FALCONS 6
.. Buffalo

500 520 0

-

Wahama 020 030 0 -

12 12 2

5 10 4

Kylfe Riggs, Brooke Gabritsch (5) and

Mal)' KE!bter. Dingess and Williams. WP

Ban and the Chasers.
Saturdav, Mav 12th

Thursday. Ladies Night w/DJ

Monday- 50~ Draft
'Iuaaday- Karaoke w/Ron

Camp~ell

$1.00 Cover 9pm- 1am
Wac!nesday- Mens Night -Pool tournament
$5.00 entry Bpm - soc off all drinks
10pm- 2am

I

$1.00 cover 9pm- 2am
5~ off all drin~s · 10pm- 2am
EdliAv - OJ 9pm · 2am
Saturdav - Live Bands
Sunday , $1.00 Beer- $1 .25 Coronas .

ri~ht -ce nter,

wtth the ball
b o unci n.g
into
the
stands.
A a r o.n
· Fultz (3-0)
pitched . the
eighth, and Joi: Borowski
finished for his IOth · save
in II chances.
B.arfield was thrown out
at the plate in the fourth
when he ran standing up
into catcher Jason Phillips,
triggering players from
dugouts and bullpens to
run onto the field. No
punches were thrown and
no. one was ejected.
Lee, sidelined since
early in spring training
because of a pulled
abdominal mu sck·, was
activated before the game

and allowed five runs and
nine hits in six innings. He
struck out four, walked
one and threw 97 pitches.
Toronto starter Dustin
McGowan,
starting
because · Gustavo Chacin
went on the disabled li st
with a sore shoulder, gave
up five runs, six hits and
five walks in five innings
in his first start of the season.
Phillips' RBI double and
Man Stairs' run-scoring
grounder put Toronto
ahead in the second, and
Troy Glaus' two-run homer
made it 4-0 in the third.
Cleveland pulled within
a run in the bottom half on
RBI singles from Barfield
and Martinez around a runscoring wild pitch .
Barfield tried to score

from first base with two
outs in the fourlh when
center · fielder Alex Rios
dropped Sizemore's sinking line drive for an error.
David
Dellucci ,
the
Indians ' on-deck hitter,
and players ran onto the
field after that. A fan seated behind home plate arso
ran on the field and he
raced toward center field.
He took hi s shirt off,
attempted a back flip , went
prone on the field and put ·
his hands behind his back
before being arrested.
Martinez tied the game
with another RBI single in
the fifth , and Ryan Garko
put the Indians ahead 5-4
when he drove in a run
with his first career triple.
Phillips' RBI double retied
it in the sixth.

Stuns ·

No

___________........________
'

~._.--

CLEVELAND (AP) Grady Sizemore hit a
tiebreaking double in the
eighth inning, and the
Cleveland Indians rallied
from a four-run deficit to
beat the Toronto Blue Jays
6!5 Thursday night and
complete · a three-game
sweep.
Victor Martinez had four
hits for Cleveland, which
trailed 4-0 in the third
inning of Cliff Lee's first
start of the season but
came back for its lOth win
in II games following a 77 start.
Mike Rouse, who had
been 1-for-19 this season,
singled with two outs in
the. eighth against Jason
Frasor (1-1 ). Josh Barfield
singled Rouse to third and
Sizemore hit a 3-2 pitch to

Blasts

had a trio of silver medal
efforts at the the competition.
front Page 81
Brad Soulsby was second
·in the shot put and English
was runner-up in the IOOm
third in the I·OOm hurdle dash . The 4xl00m relay
event, as was the 4xl OOm team ;tlso placed second.
MHS also had four ·
relay squad. Wolfe and
Swisher were also founh- bronze medal finishes, half
place fini shers in the 400m . of which came from Brad
pash and 3200m run, Ramsburg in the IOOm and
. respectively. The 4x400ni 300~
hurdle
events.
Soulsby ·was also third in
relay team was also founh.
Meigs was third of five the discus and the 4x400m
teams with 59 points in the relay also took bronze,
boys competition, and a pair
Both the 4x200 and
of Marauders came away 4x800 relay teams . were
with a pair of gold medal fourth , as were Brandon
performances.
Hanning in the long jump
- Casey Richardson won and Andrew 0' Bryant in the
the discus event while 800m run.
Cornelius English took top
other results were
honors in the 200m dash. made available from the ·
The Maroon and Gold also . Bulldog Relays.

- Dingess. LP - Riggs.

........______________
1

Big eighth lifts Cleveland past Blue Jays, 6-5

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Baron Davis shook off a
strained hamstring to score 20 points, Stephen Jackson
. made a franchise playoff-record seven 3-pointers, and
Golden State became the first No . 8 se.ed to capture a
best-of-seven .playoff series with a 111-86 victory over
the NBA-best Dallas Mavericks in Game 6 on Thursday
night.
·
Coach Don Nelson's emotional qunch of castoffs beat ·
his old team by, holding likely league MVP Dirk
Nowitzki to eight points and 2-for-13 shooting, after he
saved the Mavs with 30 points in their six-point Game 5
win Tuesday. The Warriors, making their first playoff
appearance in 13 years, will open the second round
Monday night at either Houston or Utah.
Jackson - wtw avoided a suspension for Game 6 after
· two ejections in the series - hit four 3-pointers during
a deci sive 24-3 third-quarter run and finished with a
playoff career-high 33 points, while Davis also added I0
rebounds and six assists.
Josh Howard scored 20 points and Jerry Stackhouse
from Page Bl
had 14 of his 20 points in the first quarter for the 67-win
·Mavericks, who along with volatile owner Mark Cuban
The Maroon and Gray
had high hopes of going deep in the postseason after
.
pulled
back to within one
·their remarkable regular-season showing. .
(6-5)
after
three runs in the
The Warriors became only the third eighth seed to
bottom
of
the third, but
' upset the No. I and the first since the opening round
.Eastern
again
batted around
went from best-of-five to the current format. The Denver
in
its
half
of
the fourth .
·Nuggets (1994) and the New York Knicks (1999) are the
Sending
.
nine
batters
to the
only other teams to win a series.
plate,
the
visitors
scored
Jazz 94, .Rockets 82
three runs on four walks and
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - AJ;Jdrei Kirilenko had his . a hit. Baker's two-out RBI
·best game of the postseason with 14 points and five single made the contest 9-5
. blocks, and Utah forced a deciding game back in through four-and-a-half.
Houston in their first-round series.
Three walks and a fieldMehmet Okur added 19 points, including four 3-point- er's choice led to two scores
,ers, as the Jazz finally started hitting from beyond the for VCHS in the bottom of
arc.
the fourth, but the hosts
. Tracy McGrady finished with 26 points and I 0 never came closer.
rebounds for Houston. Yao Ming scored 25 points, but
EHS sent II more batters
·he also had ·eight turnovers - two , more than his · to the plate in the seventh,
rebound total - as Okur and rookie Paul Millsap con- scoring six runs on two hits,
stantly pressured the 7-foot-6 center.
three errors and three walks.
Carlos Boozer added 22 points for Utah, and h'e and
Eastern returns to action
Okur both pulled down ·nine rebo'unds. {)eron Williams today when it hosts Gallia
had 15 points and eight assists.
·
Academy in a non-league
matchup. Game time is ·
scheduled for 5 ·p .m.
provided a hit each as
EASTERN 15, VINTON COUNTY 7
well.
.
Eastern
114 300 6 - 1584
Eastern returns to action
Vinton Co 203 200 0 76 5
today when it hosts Gallia EHS (9·1.3) : Sasha Collins, Sami
Bryan WaKers/photo
from PageBl
(4) and Kathryn Btand
Academy in a non-league Cummins
Eastern
junior
Hannah
Pratt
lays
down
a
sacrifice
bunt
during
the
third
inning
of Thursday's
VCHS (nla): Jones and Hate
matchup. Game time is WP - Collins; LP - ~ones
TVC
non-divisional
softball
game
against
Vinton
County
in
McArthur.
"Benedum and Kyle Gordon scheduled for 5 p.m.
also scored once each.
,. The Vikes, who manVINTON COUNTY 7, EASTERN 5
Eastern 001 002 2 - 5 4 3
aged nine hits in the triVinton Co 002 050 x 796
umph,
rCfe ived
two EHS
(11·9): Titus Pierce, Daniel
~.
safeties
apiece
from Buckley (5) and Jake Lynch
Coleman, Derek Seymour VCHS (nla): Brozak. Coleman (6) and
Derek Seymour
and Andy Grillo. Mullins , WP
- Brozak; LP - Pierce ; S l3rowning and· Bentley Coleman

Mel•g·s

BISON' 4, FALCONS 0
Buffalo
000 310 0 ..,.. 4 4 :l
Wahama 000 000 D - o 1 2
Kylie RigQs and Mary Kabler. Winter
and Williams. WP Riggs.

Warriors shock
top-seeded Mavs

becoming the first ,Reds
pitcher to lose his . first five
starts since Joey Jay in 1963.
Griffey hit hi s second
homer in three days in the
first in11ing. Rodriguez
retired the next seven batters
and 15 of the next 17. At one
point, the 28-year-old struck
out five in a row. Griffey singled in the sixth before
Rodriguez struck out Conine
to end the inning.
Houston took a 3- 1 lead in
the first w])en Carlos Lee hit
a two-ran double and rookie
Hunter Pence had an RBI
si ngle. Morgan Ertsberg
added an RBI double in the
founh.
David
Ross
cut
Cincinnati 's deticit to 4-2
with an RBI double in the
seventh.
Notes: Houston reliever
Rick White, who. strained a
muscle in his left side while
warming up to pitch last
week , will make rehab
appearances on Saturday and
Monday at Double-A Corpus
Christi .... Houston's Adani
Everett is 0-for- IJ in the last
three games. ... Phillips
extended hi s hitting streak to
a season-high seven games.

·~ON'TMI$"$-

oodTimes

**********~*********

still .high with no seniors
on the team that the team
can impro ve on this years
success.
.

·Golden State Warriors' Baron Davis points after making a
.three-pointer against the Dallas Mavericks in the second
quarter of an NBA Western Conference first·round basketball playoff game in Oakland, Calif. Thursday.

Biggio followed with an RBI ting, Griffey stole second
double, his 2,957th hit.
and advanced to third on an
"It was good for confi- error · by catcher Brad
dencc;," Biggio said. "The Ausmus, who overthrew
way we have not been scor- second base . Conine foling a lot .of runs lately, to lowed with a sacrifice fl y:
lose a lead and ·then to be
The stolen base was
able to come back again was Griffey's first since April 18,
a good confidence boost for 2004. Griffey said he almost
us."
couldn't believe it when first
The Astros overcame Ken base coach Billy Hatcher
Griffey's 566th homer for sent him to second.
the win. Dan Wheeler got
"He said go. I did a double
three outs for his fifth save take,': Griffey said.
in six chances, induci ng · Rodri guez, 0-3 in .five
Griffey to ground into a starts, struck out a career'
game-ending double play high eight and allowed two
with two on.
runs, six hits and.no walks in
Stanton, who gave up seven innings.
three runs. for the seco·nd
"Wandy was outstanding,"
time in four appearances, Astros manager Phil Garner
said his performance was said. "''m so pleased with
"compl~tely disgusting."
. what he's doing."
"We battled back and
Rodriguez said he thought
there's no excuses," he said. this was the best outing of
"A major league pitcher is his career.
supposed to go QUI and get · "I threw the pitches I
the job done, and I just si m- needed to throw where I
ply didn ' t do it."
wanted to throw them," he
Chad Qualls (3-1) inherit- said in Spanish through an
ed a 4-2 lead in the eighth interpreter. .
from Wandy Rodri guez but
Reds staner . Eric Milton
walked Ryan Freel. then gave up four runs - three
allowed Brandon Phillips· earned - and seven hits in
triple and Griffey tying sin- five innings. Milton, who
gle . With Jeff Conine bat- h~s a 4.85 ERA, avoided

V•

Alii
Saturdav, Mav 5th

an end after a record season. Despite losing eight
games, the Lady Falcons
from PageBl
only lost to three teams:
two to Class AA power
Dingess was tabbed with Point Pleasant, a pair to
Man and four ' to Buffalo.
the pitching victory.
Of the 12 hits tallied by But unfortunately, those
Buffalo, Williams and last two to Buffalo came in
Blake led the way with the first round of the secthree hits apiece, while tional tournament.
But even though the
Winter had a pair of knocks.
With the loss, Wahama's Lady Falcons season came
remarkable season came to to an abrupt end, hopes are

HOUSTON (AP) - In
desperate need of a boost,
the Houston Astros found it
Thursday night in an emotional · come-from-behind
win over the Cincin{lati
Reds.
Luke Scott hit a go-ahead,
two-run double in a three-·
run eighth inning to give
Houston the 7-5 victory. The
Astros, losers of nine of their
previous 12, took two of
three for their first series win
since sweeping two games at
Cincinnati on April 18-19.
"There are, wins that can
be a little bit more motivaothers,"
tional
than
Houston 's Mark Loretta
said. 'Tonight when they
took the lead there was a little bit of a deflation for a
while. To come back and
snatch that game back is
good. It counts for one win
just like the others, but emotionally I think it's a little bit
bigger."
With the Reds ahead 5-4,
pinch-hitters Mike Lamb
and Loretta hit back -to-back
singles off Mike Stanton (II) with one out in the eighth,
and Scott doubled to leftcenter for a 6-5 lead. Craig

~

OUT:ON.OUR EX,T RA

~.

&lt; .

M 'b NEY 1:* VIR/Ci" ·

COUPON$ WOR1;H .

,·

\;S t2o.oo

I .

THI$WEE~

. .IN$1DE I

., IUNDA·Y'J:
.

.

'

. 'i

)

••

~

~unbap m:t , e~ ~enttnel

~

·-· ~ ~----------------- - - ---- -- --

�I

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 4.

·www .mydailysentinel.com

2007

- llriday, May 4. :wo 7

w.ww .mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83
.

'

Astros rally back to beat Cincinnati

Zuspan, Falcons shut.down.rival Point Pleasant
looking tor.
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT
It was the Big Blacks who
gained ·the early lead after
POINT ·
PLEASANT, scori ng a single tally in the
W.Va. - William Zuspan. opening fra me. James Casto
the Wahama White Falcons' si ngled to left and moved to
promising young fres hman third on a WHS fielding mispitcher, hurled a two hitter at · cue before later scoring what
Mason County rival Point would become the Big
Pleasant Thursday as the Blacks lone run of the
B~nd Area team scored six evening on a fi elder's choice.
times in the final two innings . Wahama tinally got on the
to escape with a 6-1 diamond board in the sixt h with Cody
victory under the lights on Gerlach getting things staned
the PPHS campus.
with a leadoff triple to extend
The win was the eighth in his consecutive game hitting
II decisions for coach Tom streak. Jone s got Garrett
Cullen's White Falcon d.ia- Underwood to pop out and
mond squad as the Bend Area induced Derek Veazey to hit
nine once again pulled to an intield pop-up. which was
within a game of the .500 dropped for an error as
mark on the spring. Point Ger)ach scored the tying run.
Pleasant continued its late
Veazey swiped second and
season slide in losing for the scored the go-ahead ru n on a
fifth straight time as coach single by Brenton Clark .
James Higginbotham's club Nathan Stafford walked with
fell to 9-14 on the·year.
Trevor Peters coming in to
Zuspan limited 'the );Jig run for the WHS catcher.
Blacks to one unearned run Zuspan bunted tryi ng to
on two hits while fanning six move the runners and the sacand walking three during his · rifice attempt was also misroute going performance. played for an error allowing
The young WHS right -han- Clark to race home. A Caleb
der emerged with the mound Roach single later in the
triumph after besting the Big frame chased home Peters to
Blacks Ashton Jones who give Wahama a shocking 4-1
had an equally impressive edge.
outing before faltering in the
The White Falcons were
sixth. Jones took a one-hitter . not finished yet as the Bend
and a 1-0 lead into the sixth Area team added a couple
before a couple of Point more unearned runs in the
Pleasant fielding errors gave seventh when Underwood
Wahama the opening it was smacked a one-out double to
BY GARY CLARK

left center and scored ·When
Veazey's ny ball was handled
for another Point Pleasant
error. Veazey later raced
home on a wild pitch to make
the final count 6-1.
Gerlach stroked a triple
and Underwood a double to
pace the White Falcons
offensively with Clark, Caleb
Roac h and Ferguson owing a
single each. Casto collected
th&lt;; lone two Big Blacks
safeties with a si ngle in the
first and th ird frames.
Zuspan was credited with.
the mound victory while
Jones was the hard-luck loser
despite giving ·up just OI;Je
earned run on four hits. Jones
struck out I0 and walked just
two in an impressive pitching
Point
performance · for
Pleasant. Cun Grimm came
on ro tin ish up on the hill for
the Bi~ Blacks allowing two
runs on one hit with two
strikeouts and one hit batter.
Wahama will once again
attempt to even its season
slate on Saturday when the
White Falcons conclude the
regular season with a visit to
Clay County. Point Pleasant
travels to Sissonville later
today before concluding
Saturday with a double-header a~ainst South Gallia.

AP photo

FALCONS 6; KNIGHTS 1
Wahama

000

004 2

-

6 5 '1

Point
100 000 0 - 1 2 5
William Zuspan and Nathan Stafford.
Ashton Jones, Curt Grimm (6) and D.W.

Herdman. WP - Zuspan: LP -

Jones.

· Larry Crum/photo

Point Pleasant's Ashton Jones pitches to Wahama's Brenton Clark during a high school
baseball game Thursday in Point Pleasant. Wahama won the contest 6-1.
·

Derby dream turned into nightmarish reality 50 years ago Blue Angels rally for
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
-teenth of a mi.le farther
133RD KENTUCKY ,DE.RBY
- The Kentucky Derby
toward the first turn than it
begins with 20 horses stamwas at other tracks in the
peding three-eighths of a ·
country,"
Shoemaker wrote.
Twenty 3·year-olds will stan the runing of the Kentuck,)'J)erby with
, mile . before squeezing
"And J hadn't had a .ride
Curlin in lhe No.2 post position as the slight 7·2 favorite.
through the first turn. No
over a track like that in a
pp
HORSE
JOCKEY
ODDS
matter how crazy Saturday's
year. The year before, my
Sedg~field
Julien Leparoux
50· 1
race starts, there's little
Derby horse had been
2.
Curlin
Robby Albarado
7·2
chance the finish will be as
Terrang and he finished
wild as it was 50 years ago.
3.
Zanjero
Shaun Bridgmohan
30·1
12th.
"I don 't think there was
4.
Storm In May
Juan Leyva
3Q-1
" When your horse finish...
ever that good a race," 94es
12th," he continued, "you
5.
lmawildandcrazyguy
Mark Guidry
50·1
year-old trainer John Nerud
hardly
· notice where the
6.
Cowlown Cat
Fern@ndo Jere
20·1
recalled . Thursday. ''I've
wire
is."
7.
Street Sense
Calvin .Borel
4·1
never seen that in my lifeShoemaker, who won in
time."
8.
Hard Spun
Mario Pino
15·1
1955 with Swaps, went on
The .1957 Kentucky
Liquidity
David Flores
30·1
to three more Derby victo..
Derby is remembered as
Teuflesberg
ries in his career. He died in
Stewart Elliott
30·1
horse racing's version of
2003.
Bwana Bull
Javier Castellano
50·1
baseball 's "Shot' Heard
Today, Hartack works as a
Nobiz
Like
Shobiz
Cor~elio
Velasquez
8·1
'Round the World," the dratrack steward in Louisiana.
SamP.
R~mon Dominguez
20·1
matics triggered by the late
He declined an interview
Bill Shoemaker, considered
Scat Daddy
Edgar Prado
10· 1
reques t.
.
the sport's greatest jockey.
Tiago
Mike Smith
15·1
Gallant Man turned out to
He was aboard Gallant Man
be Nerud's lone Derby
Circular Quay
JOhn Velazquez
8·1
and gaining on rival Bill
horse
in a Hall of Fame
Stormello
.
Kent Desormeau)(
30.'1
Hartack and Iron Liege as
career.
Furious at first , he
Any Given Saturday
Garrett Gomez
the two horses dueled down
·12·1
*
quickly
forgave Shoemaker.
the stretch.
Dominican
Rafael Bejarano
20·1
"I
forgot
about it the next
Upstairs in a club.ho.\lse
Great Hunter
Corev Naka1an1 .
15·1
day,"
he
said.
"If there's
,box, Nerud. slapped owner .
something
you
could . do
Ralph Lowe on the back
AP
it, you would. When
and said, "Go down to the said Nerud gave him the up the horse but, according about
you
can't,
you'll only
winner's circle and get your
confidence
to
stick
to
his
to
Nerud,
because
he
lied
aggravate
yourself.
You
roses and take them back to
own training theories and about
it
afterward. can't turn the clock back."
Texas."
helped
even
more
by
keepShoemaker
originally
Lowe
didn't
fault
Then, something incrediing
demanding
owners
off
claimed
the
horse
took
a
Shoemaker,
e·ither,
giving
ble happened.
bad step, but relenied after him $5,000 and a new car.
As the horses .passed the his back.
"He
taught
me
so
much,"
being
confronted by the Shoemaker proved himself
sixteenth pole, Shoemaker
Nafzger
said.
''You
ca
n
stewards.
The strange thing to be worth every penny
. inexplicably stood up in the
he
wasn
't even supposed five weeks ·later by winning
never
fail,
you
can
only
is
irons on Gallant Man, misjudging the finish line. It learn. That's the WilY I live." to be aboard Gallant Man in the Belmont Stakes, the
Street Sense is the early 4- the Derby.
final leg of the Triple
happened so quickly, hardly
I
second
choic'e
in
a
full
Nerud
insisted
that
John
Crown.
Nerud, too, went on
anyone noticed at first. In a
Choquette
should
ride
the
to
score
some big wins,
field
of
3-year-olds
entered
flash , Shoemaker bounced
for
Saturday's
race.
Curlin,
horse,
at
one
point
telling
most
notably
with 1967
back into the saddle and
the
7-2
favorite,
is
unbeaten
Lowe,
"You
want
another
Horse
of
the
Year,
Dr. Fager.
began riding hard again.
in
three
stans,
but
with
a
50
jockey,
you
can
get
another
And
he
's
still
part
of the
.. But Gallant Man couldn't
percent
chance
of
thundertrainer,
too."
racket,
training
horses
in
overhaul Hartack and Iron
storm
s
forecast,
thing
s
In
that
year's
pre-Derby
New·
York.
Liege, who won by a nose.
race,
Just don't expect him to
' 'I never ,fig ured out why could get interesting. Street Wood Memorial
he pulled up. He was one of Sense finished third in his Choquette rode Gallant'Man chase the Derby victory he
the greatest riders ever," only race on a sloppy track; and lost by a no,se to Bold was narrowly denied SO
Nerud said from his home Curlin has never raced in Ruler and Eddie Arcaro. years ago.
Shoemaker was in that race,
Chuckling, Nerud said,
in Long Island, N.Y. " I did- mud.
The
Churchill
Downs
too,
but
his
horse
hit
the
''I'm
trying to stay alive."
n 'i know what happened at
track
was
rated
"fast"
on
gate
and
was
injured,
leav·
the time until it was over."
Come Saturday, he ' ll be May 4, 1957. The night ing him without a Derby
Lowe
told mount.
watching the 133rd Derby before,
But after the Wood,
and cheering on Street Shoemaker that he dreamed
Sense, tra(ned by 65-year- a jockey on one of his hors- Choquette was suspend.ed
es misjudged the finish line for rough riding and in
old Carl Nafzger.
.
those days there were no
"Carl is one of my pre- and lost the race.
"Not me," Shoemaker · appeals. So Nerud called
leges,'' Nerud said. "Every
Shoemaker and asked him
one of them is my friend, replied.
But the very next day, to ride Gallant Man in the
but Carl, I kind · of put him
on the right track. I gave race day, he did just that.
Derby. TIM: jockey arrived .
him some horses that could
"I knew," Shoemaker at ChurchiTI Downs wanting
f!Jn about 25 years ago."
would write in · his 1988 to get a fee l for the track,
Nafzger won the 1990 biography, " I had made a but his agent couldn't book
Derby with Unbridled and oig boo-boo."
him a ride on the Derby Day
credits Nerud for much of
The blunder earned him a undercard.
his success. Besides sending 15-day suspension, not just
"The finish line at
him good horses, Nafzger because Shoemaker pulled Churchill Downs was a six-

Full nald set lor Churchill Downs

b•Ig WID
• ()Ver '''
,,euSton··

Jessica
Dingess
and
BSHERMAN®MYDAILVTRIBUNE.COM
Brittan:y Miller also had
si ngles for the winners . .
Wellston managed five
' GALLIPOLIS
by
Peggy
Brittany Elliott hit a three- hits ,
led
run home run in the bottom Fleming 's two doubles.
of the sixth inning, lifting Ambe.r Lambert, Paige
the Gallia Acfldemy Blue Patterson and Charity
Angels to a big 6-2 high Exline had hits as well for
school softball victory over coach Ri~.:k Perdue.
the Wellston 'Lady Rocket s
The Lady Rockets scored
on Thursday.
their only two runs of the
Elliott's blli'st gave her game in the fifth inning
team back the lead for thariks to three co nsecutive
good after Wellston had singles from Patterson.
just go ne in front th e Exline and Lambert.
inning prior. In alf, Gallia
But the 2- 1 lead didn't
Academy scored five times last lon g, Gallipolis rallied
in the sixth to erase a 2- 1 for rive tallies in the botdeficit and go comfortably tom of the six th to gain (he
in front.
come-from-behind victory.
It was a huge win for the Chapinan and Davis started
Angels over a Wellston the rally with back-to-back
club that, ·at one tiine, had si ng'les
setting up
an incredible I 5-game ,win- Elliott 's homer. Dingess
·ning streak thi s season. The . and Cochran also logged
Lady Rockets (19-3) lost to hits in the hitting, with
unbeaten Rock Hill in the those two dri vin g in a run
season opener, then pro- eac h.
Kimber Davis worked
ceeded to win 19 of their
next 20 games. It .also th e final two innings in
snapped a brief two-game relief of starter Amy Noe to
slide for the Angels, · who annex the pitching victory.
improved to 15 - 10 overall. Erin Sturgill absorbed the
Overall, Gallia Academy loss for the Blue and Gold.
Gallia Academy goes to·
went 2-2 during a .brutal
four-game stretc h thi s Eastern today to wrap-up
week. Coach Jim Niday's the reg ular seaso n. The
team also beat Warren on Angels play host to
Monday before falling to Jackson in Division II secSoutheastern Ohto Ath!et!c tiona! .tournament play on
League champiOJl Manetta . Wednesday. It wi 11 be the
Tuesday and Rock Hill on fourth and final meetitio
Wednesday.
.
between the teams this sea~
Like Elliott, Lindsey .son.
Niday also homered for
Gallia Academy ...,..- the
ANGELS 6, ROCKETS 2
round tripper put th e Wettston
00.0 020 0 - 2 5 1
Angels up 1-0 in the sec- Gattipotis 01 0 005 )( - 6 a 1 ·
Eri n Sturgitt and Peggy Fteming. Amy
ond
frame .
Ashley Noe
and Li ndsay Ward. WP- Noe. lP
&lt;;hapman , Kimber Davi s, -Sturgill
Bv BRAD SHERMAN

Wahama

~

Game1

Welcomes

Winter. LP -

Gilme2
BISON 12, FALCONS 6
.. Buffalo

500 520 0

-

Wahama 020 030 0 -

12 12 2

5 10 4

Kylfe Riggs, Brooke Gabritsch (5) and

Mal)' KE!bter. Dingess and Williams. WP

Ban and the Chasers.
Saturdav, Mav 12th

Thursday. Ladies Night w/DJ

Monday- 50~ Draft
'Iuaaday- Karaoke w/Ron

Camp~ell

$1.00 Cover 9pm- 1am
Wac!nesday- Mens Night -Pool tournament
$5.00 entry Bpm - soc off all drinks
10pm- 2am

I

$1.00 cover 9pm- 2am
5~ off all drin~s · 10pm- 2am
EdliAv - OJ 9pm · 2am
Saturdav - Live Bands
Sunday , $1.00 Beer- $1 .25 Coronas .

ri~ht -ce nter,

wtth the ball
b o unci n.g
into
the
stands.
A a r o.n
· Fultz (3-0)
pitched . the
eighth, and Joi: Borowski
finished for his IOth · save
in II chances.
B.arfield was thrown out
at the plate in the fourth
when he ran standing up
into catcher Jason Phillips,
triggering players from
dugouts and bullpens to
run onto the field. No
punches were thrown and
no. one was ejected.
Lee, sidelined since
early in spring training
because of a pulled
abdominal mu sck·, was
activated before the game

and allowed five runs and
nine hits in six innings. He
struck out four, walked
one and threw 97 pitches.
Toronto starter Dustin
McGowan,
starting
because · Gustavo Chacin
went on the disabled li st
with a sore shoulder, gave
up five runs, six hits and
five walks in five innings
in his first start of the season.
Phillips' RBI double and
Man Stairs' run-scoring
grounder put Toronto
ahead in the second, and
Troy Glaus' two-run homer
made it 4-0 in the third.
Cleveland pulled within
a run in the bottom half on
RBI singles from Barfield
and Martinez around a runscoring wild pitch .
Barfield tried to score

from first base with two
outs in the fourlh when
center · fielder Alex Rios
dropped Sizemore's sinking line drive for an error.
David
Dellucci ,
the
Indians ' on-deck hitter,
and players ran onto the
field after that. A fan seated behind home plate arso
ran on the field and he
raced toward center field.
He took hi s shirt off,
attempted a back flip , went
prone on the field and put ·
his hands behind his back
before being arrested.
Martinez tied the game
with another RBI single in
the fifth , and Ryan Garko
put the Indians ahead 5-4
when he drove in a run
with his first career triple.
Phillips' RBI double retied
it in the sixth.

Stuns ·

No

___________........________
'

~._.--

CLEVELAND (AP) Grady Sizemore hit a
tiebreaking double in the
eighth inning, and the
Cleveland Indians rallied
from a four-run deficit to
beat the Toronto Blue Jays
6!5 Thursday night and
complete · a three-game
sweep.
Victor Martinez had four
hits for Cleveland, which
trailed 4-0 in the third
inning of Cliff Lee's first
start of the season but
came back for its lOth win
in II games following a 77 start.
Mike Rouse, who had
been 1-for-19 this season,
singled with two outs in
the. eighth against Jason
Frasor (1-1 ). Josh Barfield
singled Rouse to third and
Sizemore hit a 3-2 pitch to

Blasts

had a trio of silver medal
efforts at the the competition.
front Page 81
Brad Soulsby was second
·in the shot put and English
was runner-up in the IOOm
third in the I·OOm hurdle dash . The 4xl00m relay
event, as was the 4xl OOm team ;tlso placed second.
MHS also had four ·
relay squad. Wolfe and
Swisher were also founh- bronze medal finishes, half
place fini shers in the 400m . of which came from Brad
pash and 3200m run, Ramsburg in the IOOm and
. respectively. The 4x400ni 300~
hurdle
events.
Soulsby ·was also third in
relay team was also founh.
Meigs was third of five the discus and the 4x400m
teams with 59 points in the relay also took bronze,
boys competition, and a pair
Both the 4x200 and
of Marauders came away 4x800 relay teams . were
with a pair of gold medal fourth , as were Brandon
performances.
Hanning in the long jump
- Casey Richardson won and Andrew 0' Bryant in the
the discus event while 800m run.
Cornelius English took top
other results were
honors in the 200m dash. made available from the ·
The Maroon and Gold also . Bulldog Relays.

- Dingess. LP - Riggs.

........______________
1

Big eighth lifts Cleveland past Blue Jays, 6-5

OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) - Baron Davis shook off a
strained hamstring to score 20 points, Stephen Jackson
. made a franchise playoff-record seven 3-pointers, and
Golden State became the first No . 8 se.ed to capture a
best-of-seven .playoff series with a 111-86 victory over
the NBA-best Dallas Mavericks in Game 6 on Thursday
night.
·
Coach Don Nelson's emotional qunch of castoffs beat ·
his old team by, holding likely league MVP Dirk
Nowitzki to eight points and 2-for-13 shooting, after he
saved the Mavs with 30 points in their six-point Game 5
win Tuesday. The Warriors, making their first playoff
appearance in 13 years, will open the second round
Monday night at either Houston or Utah.
Jackson - wtw avoided a suspension for Game 6 after
· two ejections in the series - hit four 3-pointers during
a deci sive 24-3 third-quarter run and finished with a
playoff career-high 33 points, while Davis also added I0
rebounds and six assists.
Josh Howard scored 20 points and Jerry Stackhouse
from Page Bl
had 14 of his 20 points in the first quarter for the 67-win
·Mavericks, who along with volatile owner Mark Cuban
The Maroon and Gray
had high hopes of going deep in the postseason after
.
pulled
back to within one
·their remarkable regular-season showing. .
(6-5)
after
three runs in the
The Warriors became only the third eighth seed to
bottom
of
the third, but
' upset the No. I and the first since the opening round
.Eastern
again
batted around
went from best-of-five to the current format. The Denver
in
its
half
of
the fourth .
·Nuggets (1994) and the New York Knicks (1999) are the
Sending
.
nine
batters
to the
only other teams to win a series.
plate,
the
visitors
scored
Jazz 94, .Rockets 82
three runs on four walks and
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - AJ;Jdrei Kirilenko had his . a hit. Baker's two-out RBI
·best game of the postseason with 14 points and five single made the contest 9-5
. blocks, and Utah forced a deciding game back in through four-and-a-half.
Houston in their first-round series.
Three walks and a fieldMehmet Okur added 19 points, including four 3-point- er's choice led to two scores
,ers, as the Jazz finally started hitting from beyond the for VCHS in the bottom of
arc.
the fourth, but the hosts
. Tracy McGrady finished with 26 points and I 0 never came closer.
rebounds for Houston. Yao Ming scored 25 points, but
EHS sent II more batters
·he also had ·eight turnovers - two , more than his · to the plate in the seventh,
rebound total - as Okur and rookie Paul Millsap con- scoring six runs on two hits,
stantly pressured the 7-foot-6 center.
three errors and three walks.
Carlos Boozer added 22 points for Utah, and h'e and
Eastern returns to action
Okur both pulled down ·nine rebo'unds. {)eron Williams today when it hosts Gallia
had 15 points and eight assists.
·
Academy in a non-league
matchup. Game time is ·
scheduled for 5 ·p .m.
provided a hit each as
EASTERN 15, VINTON COUNTY 7
well.
.
Eastern
114 300 6 - 1584
Eastern returns to action
Vinton Co 203 200 0 76 5
today when it hosts Gallia EHS (9·1.3) : Sasha Collins, Sami
Bryan WaKers/photo
from PageBl
(4) and Kathryn Btand
Academy in a non-league Cummins
Eastern
junior
Hannah
Pratt
lays
down
a
sacrifice
bunt
during
the
third
inning
of Thursday's
VCHS (nla): Jones and Hate
matchup. Game time is WP - Collins; LP - ~ones
TVC
non-divisional
softball
game
against
Vinton
County
in
McArthur.
"Benedum and Kyle Gordon scheduled for 5 p.m.
also scored once each.
,. The Vikes, who manVINTON COUNTY 7, EASTERN 5
Eastern 001 002 2 - 5 4 3
aged nine hits in the triVinton Co 002 050 x 796
umph,
rCfe ived
two EHS
(11·9): Titus Pierce, Daniel
~.
safeties
apiece
from Buckley (5) and Jake Lynch
Coleman, Derek Seymour VCHS (nla): Brozak. Coleman (6) and
Derek Seymour
and Andy Grillo. Mullins , WP
- Brozak; LP - Pierce ; S l3rowning and· Bentley Coleman

Mel•g·s

BISON' 4, FALCONS 0
Buffalo
000 310 0 ..,.. 4 4 :l
Wahama 000 000 D - o 1 2
Kylie RigQs and Mary Kabler. Winter
and Williams. WP Riggs.

Warriors shock
top-seeded Mavs

becoming the first ,Reds
pitcher to lose his . first five
starts since Joey Jay in 1963.
Griffey hit hi s second
homer in three days in the
first in11ing. Rodriguez
retired the next seven batters
and 15 of the next 17. At one
point, the 28-year-old struck
out five in a row. Griffey singled in the sixth before
Rodriguez struck out Conine
to end the inning.
Houston took a 3- 1 lead in
the first w])en Carlos Lee hit
a two-ran double and rookie
Hunter Pence had an RBI
si ngle. Morgan Ertsberg
added an RBI double in the
founh.
David
Ross
cut
Cincinnati 's deticit to 4-2
with an RBI double in the
seventh.
Notes: Houston reliever
Rick White, who. strained a
muscle in his left side while
warming up to pitch last
week , will make rehab
appearances on Saturday and
Monday at Double-A Corpus
Christi .... Houston's Adani
Everett is 0-for- IJ in the last
three games. ... Phillips
extended hi s hitting streak to
a season-high seven games.

·~ON'TMI$"$-

oodTimes

**********~*********

still .high with no seniors
on the team that the team
can impro ve on this years
success.
.

·Golden State Warriors' Baron Davis points after making a
.three-pointer against the Dallas Mavericks in the second
quarter of an NBA Western Conference first·round basketball playoff game in Oakland, Calif. Thursday.

Biggio followed with an RBI ting, Griffey stole second
double, his 2,957th hit.
and advanced to third on an
"It was good for confi- error · by catcher Brad
dencc;," Biggio said. "The Ausmus, who overthrew
way we have not been scor- second base . Conine foling a lot .of runs lately, to lowed with a sacrifice fl y:
lose a lead and ·then to be
The stolen base was
able to come back again was Griffey's first since April 18,
a good confidence boost for 2004. Griffey said he almost
us."
couldn't believe it when first
The Astros overcame Ken base coach Billy Hatcher
Griffey's 566th homer for sent him to second.
the win. Dan Wheeler got
"He said go. I did a double
three outs for his fifth save take,': Griffey said.
in six chances, induci ng · Rodri guez, 0-3 in .five
Griffey to ground into a starts, struck out a career'
game-ending double play high eight and allowed two
with two on.
runs, six hits and.no walks in
Stanton, who gave up seven innings.
three runs. for the seco·nd
"Wandy was outstanding,"
time in four appearances, Astros manager Phil Garner
said his performance was said. "''m so pleased with
"compl~tely disgusting."
. what he's doing."
"We battled back and
Rodriguez said he thought
there's no excuses," he said. this was the best outing of
"A major league pitcher is his career.
supposed to go QUI and get · "I threw the pitches I
the job done, and I just si m- needed to throw where I
ply didn ' t do it."
wanted to throw them," he
Chad Qualls (3-1) inherit- said in Spanish through an
ed a 4-2 lead in the eighth interpreter. .
from Wandy Rodri guez but
Reds staner . Eric Milton
walked Ryan Freel. then gave up four runs - three
allowed Brandon Phillips· earned - and seven hits in
triple and Griffey tying sin- five innings. Milton, who
gle . With Jeff Conine bat- h~s a 4.85 ERA, avoided

V•

Alii
Saturdav, Mav 5th

an end after a record season. Despite losing eight
games, the Lady Falcons
from PageBl
only lost to three teams:
two to Class AA power
Dingess was tabbed with Point Pleasant, a pair to
Man and four ' to Buffalo.
the pitching victory.
Of the 12 hits tallied by But unfortunately, those
Buffalo, Williams and last two to Buffalo came in
Blake led the way with the first round of the secthree hits apiece, while tional tournament.
But even though the
Winter had a pair of knocks.
With the loss, Wahama's Lady Falcons season came
remarkable season came to to an abrupt end, hopes are

HOUSTON (AP) - In
desperate need of a boost,
the Houston Astros found it
Thursday night in an emotional · come-from-behind
win over the Cincin{lati
Reds.
Luke Scott hit a go-ahead,
two-run double in a three-·
run eighth inning to give
Houston the 7-5 victory. The
Astros, losers of nine of their
previous 12, took two of
three for their first series win
since sweeping two games at
Cincinnati on April 18-19.
"There are, wins that can
be a little bit more motivaothers,"
tional
than
Houston 's Mark Loretta
said. 'Tonight when they
took the lead there was a little bit of a deflation for a
while. To come back and
snatch that game back is
good. It counts for one win
just like the others, but emotionally I think it's a little bit
bigger."
With the Reds ahead 5-4,
pinch-hitters Mike Lamb
and Loretta hit back -to-back
singles off Mike Stanton (II) with one out in the eighth,
and Scott doubled to leftcenter for a 6-5 lead. Craig

~

OUT:ON.OUR EX,T RA

~.

&lt; .

M 'b NEY 1:* VIR/Ci" ·

COUPON$ WOR1;H .

,·

\;S t2o.oo

I .

THI$WEE~

. .IN$1DE I

., IUNDA·Y'J:
.

.

'

. 'i

)

••

~

~unbap m:t , e~ ~enttnel

~

·-· ~ ~----------------- - - ---- -- --

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Colorado

PRO BASEBALL
W

L

Pet

Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
Texas

393

6

Wednesday's Games
Chtcago Cubs 8 Ptttsburgh 6 comp
of susp game
GB

Ch1cago Cubs 7 Ptttsburgh 1

Mtlwaukee 4 St lOUIS 0
N Y Mets 6 Flonda 3
l A Oodge.rs 2 Anzona 1
Atlanta 4 Philadelphia 3
Houston 3 Cmctnnah 1
San Otego 7 Washtngton 3
San Franctsco 5 Colorado 3
Thuraday a Games
Houston 7 Cmctnnalt 5
Pttlsburgh 4 Milwaukee 2
N Y Mets 9 Anzona 4
Phtladelphta 9 San FranCISCO 7
Friday 1 Games
Washmgton (Bergmann 0 2) at
Chtcago Cubs (Zambrano 2 2) 2 20
pm
San Otego (Maddux 2 2) at Flonda
(Wtlhs 5-1 ) 7 05 p m
Colorado (Htrsh 2 2) at Cmcmnalt
(Belisle 3 1) 7 10 p m
L A Dodgers (Tomko 0 2) at Atlanta
(Smollz 3 1) 7 35 p m
P1llsburgh
(Maholm
1 3)
al
Milwaukee (Vargas 2 0) 8 05 p m
Houston (Sampson 3 1) at St Lou1s
(Wa1nwnght 1 2) 8 10 p m
N Y Mats (Mame 4 0) at Anzona
(A Johnson 0 1) 9 40 p m
Ph1ladelph1a (Moyer 3 1) at San
Francisco (Morns 31) 1015 pm
Saturday 1 Games
Washtngton at Ch1cago Cubs 1 05
pm
Houston at St LOUIS 1 10 p m
Philadelphia at San Franc1sco 3 55
pm
San 01ego at Flonda 7OS p m
L A Dodgers at Atlanta 7 OS p m
P11tsburgh at Milwaukee 7 05 p m
Colorado at Cmcmnat1 7 10 p m
N Y Mats at Anzona 9 40 p m
Sunday's Games
San Otego at Flonda 1 05 p m
L A Dodgers at Atlanta l 05 p m
Pittsburgh at M•lwaukee 2 05 p m
Houston at St LOUIS 2 15 p m
Wastungton at Ch1cago Cubs 2 20
pm
Colorado at Ctnc1nnat1 3 15 p m
N Y Mats at Anzona 4 40 p m
Philadelphia at San Franc1sco 8 05
pm

61

S1
5 ~

6

1

Gil.
2
3,
5
9

W

L

Pet

GB

16
12
13
10

13
11
14
1B

552
522
481
357

I
2
5,

Wednesday s Games
N Y Yankees at TeKas ppd ram
Oetro1t 3 Baltimore 2
Seanle 3 Ctucago While Sox 2
Boston 6 Oakland 4
Cleveland 7 Toronto 6 11 1nmngs
Tampa Bay 4 M1nnesota 3 10
10n10gS
Kansas C1ty 3 l A Angels 1
Thursday s Games
Kansas C1ty 5 L A Angels 2
N Y Yankees 4 TeKas 3 1st game
N Y Yankees 5 TeKas 2 2nd game
Boston 8 Seattle 7
Cleveland 6 Toronto 5
Tampa Bay 6 Mmnesota 4
Friday a Games
SeaHie (Baek 0 01 al N Y Yankees
(lgawa 2 1) 705 pm
Cleve-land (Byrd 2 1) at Baltimore
(Bedard 3 2) 7 05 p m
Oakland (Haren 3 2) at Tampa Bay
(Fossum 2 2) 7 10 p m
Toronto (Ohka 2 2) at Texas
(McCar1hy 1 4) e 05 p m
Boston (Wakefield 2 3) at Mmnesota
(Silva 21 ) 810 pm
Detrmt (Verlander 1 1) at Kansas C1ty
(Bannister 0 1) 8 10 p m
Ch1cago White Sox (Contreras 2 2) at
LA Angels (Escobar 2 1) 10 05 p m
Saturday a Games
Seattle at N Y Yankees 3 55 p m
Ch1cago Wtu te Sox at LA Angels
3 55 p m
Cleveland at Baltimore 7 05 p m
Oakland al Tampa Bay 7 10 p m
Boston at Mmnesota 7 10 p m
DetrOit at Kansas C1ty 7 10 p m
Toronto at Texas 8 05 p m
Sunday's Games
Seattle at N Y Yankees 1 OS p m
Cleveland at Baltimore 1 35 p m
Oakland at Tampa Bay 1 40 p m
Boston at Mtnnesota 2 10 p m
DetrOit at Kansas C•ty 2 10 p m
Toronto at Texas 3 05 p m
Ch1cago White Sox at L A Angels
335 p m
National League
East Division
W L Pet
Atlanta
17 10 630
New York
17 10 630
13 14 481
Flonda
Ph1ladelph1a 13 15 464
Wash1ngton
9
19 321
Central Division
W l
Pet
Milwaukee
IB 10 643
P1ttsburgh
13 14 481
C•nc1nnat1
13 15 464
Ch1cago
12 14 462
Houston
12 15 444
Sl LOUIS
10 16 385
West Division
W L Pel
Los Angeles 17 11 607
t5 13 536
San D1ego
Anzona
16 14 533
SanFrancsco14 13 519

17

11

Friday, May 4, 2007

PlayoH Glance
2 Park (PP) 22 1, 3 Holzinger (5)
Ph1 l Hughes on the 15 day DL
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
22 2 4 Wtlllams (RV) 23 6, 5 (tie)
Recalled RHP Ch ns Br1t10n from
(Boot-ol-7)
Connely (E) and Harrison (R\1) 24 0
Scranton (IL) Actrvated RHP M•ke
2
EASTERN CONFERENCE
200 1 Amsbary (E) 31 9 •2
Fnday May 4 Toronto at New Jersey Mu ssma from the 15 day DL
BuHalo vo. New Vorl&lt; Rongoro
Chason (PP) 32 9 3 S1earns (P)&gt;)
8pm
OpiiOned Bntton to Scranton after the
Wednesday, April 25 Bullalo 5 N Y 33 2 4 McBealh (PP) 34 9, 5 Park
Sunday May 6 New Jersey at hrst game
OAKLAND ATHLETICS- AcqUired Rangers 2
(PP) 35 7 6 Rosebury (S) 35 9
Toronto 1 p m tl necessary
400 meter relay - 1 Eastern 51 5
OF Jack Cust from San D•ego for a
Fnday April 27 Buffalo 3 N Y
player to be named or cash cons•der
Miami va. Chicago
Rangers 2
2 Po1nt Pleasant 54 2 3 Southern
Saturday Apnl 21 Ch1cago 96
at1ons
57 4
Sunday Apnl 29 NY Rangers 2
1 Buffalo 1 20T
91
National League
BOO - 1 Eastern 1 48 5 2 Point
Tuesday Apnt 24 Ch1cago 107
ARIZONA
DIAMONDBACKSTuesday May 1 NY Rangers 2
Pleasant 1 58 5 3 Southern 1 59 &amp;
M1am1 89
ActiVated RHP M1cah Owmgs from Buffalo 1 semis t1ed 2 2
1600 _ 1 Eastern 4 13 5, 2 Point
Fnday Apnl 27 Ch1cago 104 M1am1 the 15 day DL Optioned 1NF Bnan
Fnday May 4 NY Rangers at Pleasal)l 4 23 6, 3 Southern 4 52 1
96
Buffalo 7 P m
4 RIVer Valley 6 02 o
Barden to Tucson (PCL)
Sunday Apul 29 Ch cago 92 M1am1
FLORIDA MAALINS-Sen1 AHP
Sunday May 6 Buflalo a1 N Y I Shol pul _ 1 Smith (R\1) 40-1 2
79 Ch1cago wins senes 4 o
Tenogha (E) 38-4 3 Matnery (SG)
Nate F1eld outrrght to Albuquerque Rangers 2 P m
(PCL)
Tuesday May 8 NY Rangers a1 1 36 10 5 4 Long (PP) 36-3 5
WESTERN CONFE!,!ENCE
Williams (PP) 35 0 8 Kilns (E) 31 5
NEW YORK METS- Des1gnaled Buflalo 7 p m 11 necessary
Dalla&amp; ya. Golden State
RHP Chan Ho Park for ass•gnment
New Jersey vs Ottawa
~
I Discus - 1 Long (PP) 12G-O 2
Purchased the contract of RHP Lmo
Sunday Apnl 22 Golden State 97
Thursday Apnl 26 Ottawa 5 New Smttn (AV) 108-1 3 Matnery (SG)
Urdaneta from New Orleans (PCL)
Dallas 85
PIRATES-Placed Jersey 4
1 102 8 4 Amos (E) 93-4, 5 Tenaglia
PITTSBURGH
Wednesday April 25 Dallas 112
RHP John Wasdm on the 15 day DL 1 Saturday April 28 New ~ersey 3
(E) 93 4 6 Manuel (S) 92 9
Golden State 99
Called up RHP Marty Mcleary from Ottawa 2 20T
H1gh Jump - 1 Pratt (E) 5·0 2
Fnday Apnt 27 Golden State 109
lnd1anapol1s (I L)
Monday Apnl 30 Ottawa 2 New Amsbary (E) 4 10 3 McBeath (P}»)
Dallas 91
SAN DIEGO PADRES- Achvated Jersey 0
1 4 B 4 Slearns (PP) 4 8 5 Park (PP)
SUnday Apnl 29 Golden State 103
INF Russell Branyan from the
Wednesday May 2 Ottawa 3 New 1 4 4
Dallas 99
Tuesday May 1 Dallas 118 Golden bereavement hst Sent C Pete Jersey 2 Ottawa leads senes 3 1
1 Long Jump - 1 Clagg {RV) 15·10, 2
Laloresl oulnghl 10 Por11and (PCL)
Sa1urday May 5 011awa al New 1 Blankenship (PP) 15 3 3 Preston
Slale 112
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Placed Jerssy 8 p m
(PP) 13 I 4 Slefany (E) 12-11, 5
Thursday May 3 Golden State 111
Dallas 86 Golden State wms senes 4
RHP Russ Orhz on the 15 day DL
Monday May 7 New Jersey at Hamson (RV) 12-8 6 Warden (S)
Recalled tNF Kevm Frandsen lroQ'l Ottawa 7 p m 1f necessary
12 1
2
Fresno (PCL)
Wednesday May 9 Ottawa at New
Phoenix vs. L A Lakers
BASKETBALL
Jersey 7 p m 1f necessary
Qlrll
Sunday Apnl 22 PhoemK 95 LA
National Basketball Association I
Team standmgs - 1 Point Pleasant
Lakers 87
WESTERN CONFERENCE
110 2 Eas1arn 98 3 River Vall&amp;y
NBA- F1ned Golden S1a1e s G Jason
Tuesday Apr~l 24 Phoemx 126 LA
Detroit ya. San Jolt
1 43 4 South GaiUa 39 5 Southe.rn
A•chardson $35 000 lor Improper
lakers 98
InteractiOn w1th a fan dunng a playoff
Thursday Apnl 26 San Jose 2
26 6 Ohio Valley Chr~s!lan 7
Thursday Apnl 26 L A lakers 95
game tn Dallas
Detroit 0
100 meter .run - 1 Hassan (PP)
Phoemx 89
FOOTBALL
Saturday April 28 Detroit 3 San 13 8 2 Jam•son (PP) 14 3 3 Pethel
Sunday Apnl 29 Phoen1x 11 3 LA
National Football League
Jose 2
(SG) 14 6 5
14 4 4 H
BUFFALO BILLS-S1gned RB Josh
Monday Apn l 30 San Jose 2
(PP}
ager
Lakers 100
Scobey WR Jematte Cornelius CB Detroit 1
Holter {E) 14 7 6 Ash {S) 15 3
Wednesday May 2 Phoenix 11 9 LA
200 1 Hesson (PP) 2g 0 2 •
Lakers 110 Phoentx wms senes 4 1
Regg•e Lew•s CB Duane Coleman
Wednesday May 2 Detro1t 3 San Duncan (SG) 31 2 3 Collins (E)
WR Aaron Brown WR Scott Mayle
Jose 2 OT senes t1ed 2-2
WA Johnny Quinn OL Corey Dav s I SaiUrday May 5 San Jose a1 31 5 4 Preece (PP) 32 2 5 Ash (S)
San AOJpn!o ys penyer
De1roll 2 p m
32 5 6 Wherry (PP) 32 7
Sunday Apnt 22 Denver 95 San 0L Chnsl1an GaddiS OL Zach Tubbs
AntoniO 89
DL La Ron Hams DL Corey Mace LB : Monday May 7 De1ro11 al San Jose
H~goer-(S~) D u~~a; ~SG~o;v!~ 8(~)
Wednesday Apnl 25 San Antomo 97
Thaddaeus Washmgton S Trevor 1 TBO
Hooper
S Stacey Thoma s and P 1 Wednesday May 9 San Jose at 1 12 3 4 Thomas (E) 1 15 5 5
Denver 88
Chns Jackson
Detro1t TBD 1f necessary
Preece (PP) 1 16 1 6 Groves (PP)
Saturday Apnl 28 San Anton1o 96
Denver 91
MINNESOTA VIKINGS- Agreed lo
1 16 6
1 Monday Apnl 30 San Antomo 96
Anaheim ys. Yancouyor
800 meter run 1 Ratltff {PP)
terms w1th OT Joe Anoa1 DT Conrad
Bolston DT Joe Bracttey S Jeremy
Wednesday Apnl 25 Anal;le1m 5
2 50 5, 2 Aanetead (E) 2 57 6 3
Denver 69
Wednesday May 2 San Antomo 93
Burnell OL Ky le Cook G Bnan Vancouver 1
Halfhtll (PP) 3 04 3 4 Lmgus (S)
Denver 78 San Antonio wtns senes 4
Danle\s OT Josh Day CB Serg1o
Friday April 27 Vancouver 2, 3 07 B 5 Spencer (PP) 3 12 8 6
1
G1ll1am LB George Hall LB Dav1d Anaheim 1 20T
Likens (PP) 3 17 6
Herro n OT Chase Johnson TE
Sunday Apnl 2g
Anaheim 3
1600 - 1 Pelgers (PP) 6 38 2
Utah ya Houston
Lmgus (S) 6 48 3 Collins (E) 7 14, f
Braden Jones Ol Dan Mazes P Alex j Vancouver 2
Saturday Apnl 21 'Houston 84 Utah Reyes and REi_ Arkee Whitlock
1 Tuesday
May
Anahe•m 3
Spencer (PP) 7 25 5 Ours (S) 8 40
75
PH I LADELP~IA EAGLES-Stgned 1 Vancouver 2 OT
100 meter hurdles 1 Jam1son
Monday ~Apnl 23 Houston 98 Utah DT tan Scott to a one year contract J Thursday
May 3 Anahe1m 2
(PP) 18 4 2 Connery (E) 19 2, 3
9Q
Released AS Antome Bagwell OB I Vancouver 1 20T, Anahe1m wms Bays (PP) 20 5 4 Haggar (SG) 20 7
Thursday Apt1l 26 Uta h 61 Houston Jeff Mroz and LB Greg Richmond
senes 4 1
5 Alexander (SG) 21 5 6 Brown (S)
67
TAMPA
BAY
BUCCANEERS23 5
Saturday Apnt 28 Utah 98 Houston Released DT Jon Bradley S gned LB
200 _ 1 Connery (E) 33 6 2
85
Sam Olatubutu DT Justm Fnck LB
Duncan (SG) 34 6, 3 Jamtaon (PP)
Monday Aprtl 30 Houston 96 Utah Jerry Mackey K Garrell Rivas T Jed
RIVER VALLEY TRACK MEET
36 0 4 Brown (S) 36 B 5 Alexander
92
~:~sr~~
a~:
F~e~7~e
~~o~~d;:n
Byron
1
Jr
HlgBh
Results
(SG)
37 4, 6 Bays (PP) 37 7
Thursday May 3 Utah 94 Houston
HOCKEY
oys
400 meier relay - 1 River Valley
82 senes t1ed 3 3
National Hockey League
Team standmgs - 1 Pomt Pleasant 57 5 2 Eastern 1 00 5 3 Point
Saturday May 5 Utah at Houston 7
CO LUMBUS BLUE JACKEiTS115 2 Eastern 86 3 A1ver Valley Pleasant 1 00 9 4 Southern 1 01 9
or930pm
Signed G Steve Mason
52 5 4 Southern 39 5 South Galha
eoo _ 1 Eastern 2 09 2, 2 Atver
COLLEGE
25 5 6 Oh10 Valley Chnst1an 0
Valley 2 09 9 3 Potnt Pleasant
GOSHEN-Announced 1he res1gna I 100 meier run - 1 Clagg (AV) 13 3
2 16 3 4 Sou1hern 2 33 5)
2 Buzz iS) 13 6 3 Bless (PP) 13 8
lion of Sian Daugherly men s baskel
1600 - 1 R1ver Valley 4 54 2
Thursday s Sports Transactions
ball coach assoc1ate athlet•c d1rector 4 (t•e) Holmes (SG) and Stefany (E) Eastern 5 05 7 3 Po1nt Pleasant
By The Associated Press
1396_ Amos(
50574S1hr556
ou e n
and pro Iessor ol h
p ys1cal ed ucat1on
W E)142 (PP)
BASEBALL
200
111 lams
26 7 2
LOUISVILLE-Signed R1ck P1t1no
I
V1
Shot put - 1 1 Putnam (E) 31 7 2
American League
C agg ( A l 26 g, 3 Baum IE) 26 9 4
Aober1s (RV) 27 1 3 Powell (E) 25
mens basketball coach lo a 1hree
1 Blankenship (PP) 27 4 5 K1mble
BOSTON RED SOX-Placed RHP
'
2 5 4 Smith (SG) 24 0 5 Wend10
year co ntract ex tens•on through I (RV) 28 0 6 Forester (S) 28
I M1ke T1mlm on the 15 day DL
9
400 1 Connery (E) 1 00 2
(E) 23 3 6 Roush (E) 23-2
Recalled RHP Davern Hansack from 2013
MON TANA TECH- Announced lhe Chason iPP) 1 04 9 3 Rosebury (S)
DISCUS - 1 Roberls (RV) 73 0, 2
Pawtucket (ll)
Roush (E) 72-8 3 Pulnam (E) 62-2
I CLEVELAND INDIANS-Ac11va1ed re s1gna11on ol Bnan Holsmger
1 07 3 4 Shellon (S) 1 14 0 5
womens basketball coach Named Rocchi (PP) 1 191 6 Wllltams (RV) 4 Bower (E) 58-11 5 Hams (S) 58~
1 LHP Cl1f1 Lee from the 15 day DL
5 6 Bower (E) 58 4
women s ass•stant basketball coach
Recalled LHP Rafa el Perez !rom
1 19 4
BOO meter run - 1 Raymond (PP)
Htgh Jump - 1 Holter (E) 4-4, 2
Ken Depell coach
1 ~~~~to a~~) gr~~ne~d ~:n~~~~~o s~~
NOTRE DAME- Signed Mike Brey 2 25 1 2 Pra11 (E) 2 28 3 3 Combs Owens (OVC) 4-2 3 Bays (PP) 3-10
mens baskelball coach 1o a lwo year (SG) 2 30 0 4 Matnery (SG) 2 31 0
4 Rall1fl (PP) 3 10 5 Adkms (PP) 3Bulfalo
10 6 Peck (PP) 3·8
LOS ANGELES ANGELS-Pla ced contract extens1on through 2012 13
1600 _ 1 Combs (SG) 6 03 7 2
I INF Ma1cer lztuns on the 15 day DL
I Buzzald (S) 6 04 g 3 Brown (RV)
Long 1ump - 1 Maxon (E) 1i8;..2
1 6 48 0 4 Freeman (PP) 6 53 0 5
1 retroactive to Apnl 3P Recalled INF
Hesson (PP) 12-4 3 Issac (RIIj'l 1Brandon Wood from Salt Lake (PCL)
BISsell (E) 7 13 3
g 4 F1elds (RV) 11 9 5 Pelhel (PP)
National Hockey League
1 Stearns (PP) 19 6
11 3 6 Owens (OVC) 11-3
1 110 hurdles 1 NEW YORK YANKEES-Placed RHP
Tuesday

May 1 Toronto 98

PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Asaoclatlon
PlayoH Glance
FIRST ROUND
(Boat of 7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Detroit ys. Orlando
Saturday Apnl 21 DetrOit 100
Orlando 92
Monday April 23 Detroit 98 Orlando
90
Thursday Apn t 26 Detrmt 93
Orlando 77
Saturday Apnl 28 Detroit ' 97
Orlando 93 DetrOit w1ns senes 4 0
Cleyelond VI. W11hlnqton
Sunday Apnl 22 Cleveland 97
Washmgton 62
Wednesday Aprrl 25 Cleveland 109
Washmgton 102
Sa1urday April 28 Cleveland g5
Washmgton 92
Monday April 30 Cleveland 97
Washmgton 90 Cleveland wms senes
40

GB

4
4 1~
8~

GB
4'12
5
5
5 1t
7

Toronto vs. New J•r11y

1 T~~~~~~a~ Apnl 21 New Jersey 96

I

GB
2
2
2}2

I

1

Tuesday April 24 Toron1o 89 New
Jersey 83
Fnday Apnl 27 New Jersey 102
Toronto 89
Sunday Apnl 29 New Jersey 102
Toronto 81

continued !rom day to
day until ftnally dtsposed ol
Any parson Interested
may !lie written exceplion to said account or
to matters pertaining
to the execution of the

adversely sHeeted by
past mining A copy ol
the certification Is
available !rom the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, Division of

CLASSIFIED

E-mail
classlfled@mydallytnbune com

I

1

I

PREP TRACK

I

TRANSACTIONS

l

I
I

PRO HOCKEY

The Syracuse Racine
Regional
Sewer
District has completed
the 2006 annual linenclal report and Is on
llle lor public lnspeclion at the Dlatrlct
OHice 405 Main Street,
Raclna between 8 am 1 pm M-~ A copy of the
report can be provided
upon request.
Jon! Fisher
District Clerk
949-2416
5 4
( )

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

Word Ads

H.QW IQ WRITE AN AD

*POLICIES*
OhloVsllsy
Publishing reserves
11te rlgh11o edl1,
reJect or cancel any
ad at OJlY time
Errore Must
sported on the firs
y of publication an
be Tribune-Sentinel
b
eglster
will
esponslble tor n
ore than the east o
he space occuple
the error and onl
e ffrst lnaertlon W
ball not be liable lo

Boardwalk

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual Financial
Report of the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water
Dtstrlct has been corn-

(:)'7

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

and Is located west of
the
village
of -------- -------Middleport In Section
Public Notice
29,
Salisbury
Township,
Meigs
Legal Notice
County, Ohio Project
construction Involves
Public Meeting
Installation
ol
an
Proposed Amen can Muruc1pal Power Generatmg Statton
underdraln end catch
basin system, con(AMPGS)
struction of a rock
Solid Waste Landfill
Public Notice
channel, and reatora)o'
Metgs County, Ohto
tlon of all dlaturbed
OFFICIAL NOTICE
areas This project Is
In accordance With Ohw's Sohd Waste requtrement s, noltce ts
Pursuant to THie IV of 100% federally funded
hereby giVen that Amencan Mumc1pal Power-Oh1o, Inc (AMPthe Surface Mining H you have any queaOhw) wdl hold a pubhc meetmg regardtng a Restdual Sol1d
Control
and tlons
or concerns
Reclamallon Act of about the
project,
Waste Landfill Penmt-1o-lnstall (PTI) application flied for the
1977, 30 U.S.C. 1201 et plene contact Mr
proposed AMPGS facthty The proposed s1te ts between the
seq,
the
Ohio Terry VanOHeren at the
Department of Natural Division's eddreaa list- lintersecltons of Htll Road and State Route 124 and Hdl Road
Rnourc:ea, Dlvlalon of ed above or at (614)
and East Letart Road, near Letart Falls The PTI appltcauon I S
Mineral
Re1ourc11 265-1094.
bemg
submttted to budd a new landfill Thts meetmg IS tnlen"ded
Management, hereby (5) 4
to
famtlianze
Citizens w1th the proposed landfill , operations, an~
gives notice of the
availability of a CATE• the Ohto PTI appltcat10n proce ss The meetmg wtll be held on
GORICAL EXCLUSION
June 4 , 2007 at 7 00 p m at the Southern Elementary School
CERTIFICATION tor 111
budding, 906 Elm Street, Racme , Ohm 45771 ,
Abandoned
Mined

&amp; Beachfmnt Property

W1th1n walk1ng d1stance of outlet
stores
$265/person
Based

Public Notice

&amp; Resort

on double occupancy

Must be

21

years of age

To make reservations please call
PVH Commumty Relations,

(304) 675-4340, Ext 1492
No refunds
Gladly accept cash, check, credit

After Ma•l 1n rebate when you buy 3 or more
cook1ng appliances dishwashers or
refngerators'

15% Cash Back
After mall m rebate when you buy 2 cooktng
appliances dishwashers or refngerators·

Back

10% Cash
After ma1t-m rebate when you buy 1
appliance dishwasher or refngerator•
'Of $399 or more each
or
12 Months No l~terest, No novlmAnl&lt;
on any appliance over $3g9 W1th
Sears Card
And Free Delivery alter ma1i-1n
on all appliances over $399
Plus save an addlttonal 10% when
purchase a laundry patd
2200 Eastern Ava. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-1546

cards and money orders
LIMITED SEATSI

Mercy Hands at
All About You

Broad Run Gun Club
Outlaw Slug Match
Sunday, May 6th
12- Noon

201 B 6th Street
Point Pleasant, WV
Mother's Day Spec1al

20% off

G1ve your loved one the g1ft of
health w~h a massage Call
Adk1ns licensed massage
therap1st at 675- I 411 The
pleasure that gets nd of the

r

I

740 245 9614

Box number ads ar
tways confidential
)&gt;Current rate ear
ppllea

All Real Estat
dv,rtlaements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o
968
newspape
ccepta only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standards

f
----------------'---------------- -- - - - ----"'"'

Dachshund 3 112 years old
spade all shots 161bs 304
675 5752

------------------~~--------- --·------

All Display· 12 Noon 2
Business Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1.00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must

be

prepaid'

POUCIES onto Veney Publlehlng reHn~ee the r~ht to edtt, re~ or uncal any ad at any time Errore mu•t be reported on the firet dey of
Trtbune-Sentln._Regleter witt be , ..porulble tor no more then the coet of the apace occupied by the error end only the fl ret lntel1ion We
any !on or u;penM thet reS\Ihe from the publkftion or omlealon of an actvertiMment Correction will be made in the fir1t avellable edition
ere alway• confidential •Current rate ~rd apptlea • All rul eatate advertlaemonte tre eubject to the Federal Fair Hou•lng Act of 1968
accept. only help wanted ad• meeUng EOE atend~rda We will not knowingly accept any advertl•lng in vlo~tlon of the law

r~--oi%iiiANfED.OBiiuv.__.~ll

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
1

Absotute Top Dollar U S
Stiver and Gold Cams
Proofsets Gqld Rings Pre
1935
US
Currency
Sollta1re D1amonds M T S
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gall polls 740 446
2842

Rf.f\1.1.:/z l!Nf You

E~GR'Iftll~
Nt::W7 K~Ci'ltJP

-fi'IIN\(..

I \l l't 0\\ 11 \ I

YARI&gt;SALE

r

'-I I 1&lt;\ II I

2 Fam1ly May 51h B ? 325
www comics com
M1lchell
Ad Clolh n9 lools
all shols grealtt"llh kids to Good
kn1ves lots of m1sc
Home 304 882 2659
"'ll!!"'""':':""'"":!:""'_ _,
YARil SALE2 - - - - - - - liio
Longha1red B•g black male
GigantiC Yard Sates 900 &amp; 1,--·
--tliitiiiiiiiiiiiiO;...,I
~;;at w/whlle paws very 911 Gage Ad In Patnot 6
GALLIII()LIS
fnendly 304 895 3590
Fami lies Furnture appll
_ _:_~----- ances and tons of great HUGE YARD SALE May 4th
Registered male black Lab stuff
&amp; 5th 8 OOam 5 OOpm 128
free to Good Home 740
B 1
27 1n
0 nve
2560 State Route 141
as 1an1
256 1379
,
TV/Sl d VCR 1i s/CD
8 30am 5 OOpm Gms baby
an
ape
s
House hOI"u
TV that Works 304675 clothes Lotsofm1sc Home Cl olh es
tnt May 3rd 4th &amp; 5th

5773

"-~

100WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood
11ems To $480/wk Matenals
provided Free 1nformat1on
pkg 24~r 801 428 464g

© 2007 by NEA, Inc

i

Irl!

3 Fam•"• Yard Sale 1991
•r
Graham School Ad May 4
m
6 Ba spm G1rts Baby &amp;
Toddler Clothes toys furnl
ture and othsr m1sc 1tems

4 Family May 3rd &amp; 4th 9 3
t183 Jackson Pk Baby &amp;
tw 1n bed highchair stroller
1nflatable slide clothes
ho_u_se_h_o_ld_l_oy:..s.:_m_,_sc__
5/4&amp;5 9 3 1105 Teodora
Boys 0 24mo baby 1tems
adult clothes DR set
longaberger baskets tram
polme

t.,--iiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiOi-,.1
GALLIPOI..l'i

616 4th Ave Sal May 51h
9 5 Furn~ture Beddmg
Glassware Good Clolhlng
loads of Mise Items

Movmg/Estate Sale Sat
5/5{07 Sam 1pm Antique
turmture clothes ndlng
814 4th Ave Adult Toddler mower chma etc 2406
&amp; Baby Clothes Baby bed Raccoon Rd
play pen &amp; toys plus house
hold Items and lots of other Multi Family
1853
stuff Fr &amp; Sat 9 ?
Neighborhood Rd Fn &amp;
Sat a 30 ? Lots of every
Across from R1o Elem Sat lhmg Pr1ced to sell
May 5th B 4 Name brand
clothing Pet1te Large
Sat May 5th 8 3 54
A bl id D 0 ff SA 160
m es e r
Garage Sale Fn4th &amp; Sat Toys baby Items house
5th 162 Woodsm1tt Ad hold miSC
B1dwell 2nd on nghl oH 554
9 5 Ra•n or Shme
Saturday May 5th 9 5
m1te out CenterVIlle at the
of
279
&amp;
Garage Sale May 41h 8 00 1uncton
5 00 85 Arnold Dr Casual &amp; Ce nlerpomt
Rd
dress maternity clothes gtrls Longaberger Baby Items
0 12 months boys 0 3T Couch Love Seat Aedmer
adult clothes apple dishes Home Intenor Brand Name
and decor play station lots Cl he 1i
H I
11
ot s oys un mg ems
of baby 11ems stroller tub Ect

Yard
Sale·
Matermly
Clo1hes Baby and T•"dler
·~

274 Ne 1 hborhood Rd
•f1'1S
9
Saturday May 5th

T

3 fam1ty

F'fl

&amp; Sat May 4 5

2 m• out Flatwoods Ad on
Smith Goegtetn Dr 9 4
Church wide yard sate 873
s 3rd Ave Middleport Fn &amp;
Sat 9 1 Freedom Center
M•mstnes
-------~
May 4 5 Mull• tam•ly turn•
ture antiques couches
refngerators
collectibles
(Longaberger F0nton) bed
d•ng clothing for everyone
computers books 1n lme
skates Don 1 pass this one
upl Please help us clean out
lhe garaget All proceeds
benefit grandchild !J)Ing to
Europe
Sm•tfi s
1691
Lo~ln Helgh1s
'""'
Muth fam•ly great stuff
home furmshmgs clothes
1nfant to adult Aatlroad
Street Chiton WV follow
Signs May 3rd 4th 9 5 May
5th 9 noon Aft Proceeds Q9
to Relay For Life
--..,...-----AACO ' T'AAD SALE Slar

Mill Park May 8&amp;9 9 00
Street Sale May 4th &amp; 5th 4 00 May 10 9 00 2 OQ.AII
9am ? Arnold Dnve m 11ems hall pnce clothing
Gigantic Yard Sale for
B1dw 8 11
$ 1 oo ba p
eds 10
go
a g.. roce
scnotarshiP Fund Thanks
Salley Chapel Church
Building Fund May 5th
Two Family Moving Yard FOf Your Supportllt
on parldng lot of Sale 120 Bastlana Dr Fnday - - - - - - - Gallipolis ChiropractiC &amp; Saturday Blm-3pm May Yard Sale J1m Vennan Park
• nd Avs
41h &amp; 51h
All11 and Fn May 4 Kd
Center, 990 ..
1s
home
mt
Donation for moat Item- Yard sale Sal Sun west 141 clothes
~low~p;.r1~cod~""'""'""'...!l across from Aunt Claras Longaberger stereo etc
Amish S1ore 9am 5pm
Yard sare DaVid Stout reSI
Huge Garage Sate May 5th
West College
&amp; 6th 7 OOam 2 OOpm, 540 Yard Sale 1 2 Miles Out dence
Green Valley Onve Bidwell Rout e 218 May 2nd thru Ad: Syracuse May 4th 5th
5th
9 00 1o 5 00
Ohm

bouncer cnb set
crafts lots of m1sc

toys

l!

Huge mov sale Everythmg
needed lor baby Toddler
men women 954 Kerr off
160 Sat Only 9 5 ra1n/shlne
Huge Multi Family Yard Sale~
baby 1tems fur~ lure clolh
mg 0 2T. boys and g~rls
adult stzes appliances
2000 Yamaha VFM 4 wheel
er 8 much more May 5 6
9am-4pm 18750 Sl Rl 279
4 m1les west of A•o Grande
follow srgns from US 35

Term Care Fac1fity Full t1me
employment offers an eden
s1ve benefit package 1nc:lud
1ng State c•v•l serv1ce ret~re
ment earn up to 15 days
vacaton per year 18 days
SICk leave and 12 plus pa1d
holidays health/life msur
ance IS ava1lable Lakm
Hosp1tal •s an EEO/AA
Employer Please contact
V1cky
Berkley
Actmg
Nursing Director at Laktn
Hospital lakm WV at {304)
675 0860 eKt 12§ Monday

s..

Part Time L.PN s 7P 7A &amp;
7A 7P Fuii T•meSTNAs 3A
3P &amp; 7A·7P Part Tim&amp;
2 Large Yard sates Sandhill STNAs 3P 3A &amp; 7P 7A
Ad Lelarl watch lor S~~"~ns Applicant s must be depend
.,
Thur 3 Frl 4 Sa1 5 B? able team players w•th pas
Dtnn~nn Canopy Computer 111ve attitudes to JOin us 10
desk •clothes for all szes provd~ngoutstandmg qual!
Lots of m1sc
ty care to our residents
- - - - - - - - Slop by and f1ll out an apph
41h &amp; Rollins New Haven catiOn or contact Holl1e
May 4th &amp; 5th Duncans Bumgarner
LPN
Staff
ReSidents
0 e v e I o p m e nt
Coordlnalor@740 992 6472
Big Garage Yard sate Fr1day
d
1o
"
an come see r yoursen
Salurday May 41h 51h on
the d1fference you can make
Belle Road 3 miles out
at Overbrook 1111 EOE &amp; A
Sandhill Road Sals of dish parttctpant oI The Drug Free
es cookware m1crowave
Workplace Program
~~~~0 de~ors~~~ ~~~~:~ A
A
ccept1ng PP 1•ca1•ons 1or
gnlt Wicker van1~ Harley hel lead man and roofers Must
mets clothmg many n1ce have e~epenence mall phas
1tems too numerous to hst es ol roofmn, Tiools and
tu.£

, __

-Ya_r_
d -Sal_e_3_1_3_M
_ c_C_o-rm_1_ck
Ad Baby clothes household
Items mise Sat May 5 and
Ins de Sate Clay Twp Man May 7
8U1Id1ng Clothing d1shes &amp;
lots ot m•sc May 3rd &amp; 4th
Yard Sale Rodney Village
9am 5pm
?
Fnday &amp; Saturday 8
YARD SALEMay 3 4 5 975 Add1son 01,4
-.
P1ke N1ce plus s1ze clothes 1
PoMEROY/MIDDLE
and uniforms XL Strd Cage
and lots of m1sc 1tems
-M-ay----;,.c.:,--:-- -:-: --:-ab-:-le-s 3 fam1ly yard sale Fr1 Mam
:&gt;tn 8 30 3 00 1
St Rutland mov1es v1deo
stands craft supplies d1sh
a m e s h 0 u s e h 0 1d
9
es stools qu1lts sewmg 1 t e m s 1a d 1e s &amp; J r
mach1
ne __
etc925
_
__
_4th
__ _ clolhes 965 4183
MOVING SALE Furniture
lreezer housello ld 1tems
books etc Fnday and
Saturday May 4th and 5th
2007 B 00 4 OOpm 111
North College AID Grande
d I
)
~bes• e ~re stat1on

Pr.PLEASANT

ca:':m"e"a"nd"""see,l:7""':'";";'i1 transportation a must Top
May 3rd &amp; Pay (740)379 9079

rrGarage Sale
7

4th 9am 5pm Under
Bartow Jones Brtdge
Henderson WV Locust
&amp; Ferry St Longaberger
(B k I
I
1 &amp;
as e s p acema s
chair pads (fruit)) yard
ornaments
cuShions
dolts lamps large cedar
chest 5 carousel horse

Ambrosra Machme Inc
Pomt Pleasant WV (304)
675 1722 (304)675 1723
fax Machm1st 5 years or
more expenence $8 $12 per
hour
On Hand Shop Foreman
Machme Shop &amp; Fabncahon
knowledge 10 years or mora
expenence $12 $15 per
hour

angels Avon good 1ew
etry, &amp; extra nice clothes
Huge 4 Fam Yard Sale 2317
Jefferson Ave Pt PI WV May
3 4 8 4Pans sk1llets glass
ware-crafts for VBS Clothes
S M L tots of 2&amp;3X Boys &amp;
gtrls clothes Antique bottles
etc lantern mate nat
Ribbon wreaths seasonal
decoratiOns Sheet sets all
Sizes-books Sunday school
matenallotsmore
Lg Garage Sale 3 tam1ly
antiques d•shes glassware
me nact&lt;s fum•ture 112 m•le
above lakm Valley Brook
Lane Thur Frl Sat
Multi fam•ly great stuff
home furmsnmgs clothes
tnfant lo adutt Ratlroad
Street1 Chfton WV follow
s•gns May 3rd-4th 9-S May
5th 9 noon Afl Proceeds go
_1o_A_elay_:__For_Uf_e_ __:.__
Sat ?am 1pm Furniture
clothes tots of stuff 45
Hawthorne
Lane
(Meadowland Esla1es)
Yard 5ale 3 112 mles

out

Sandh•tl Fn and Sat 8 5 2
Fam1~ lo1S ol good sluff

r

An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
CaK Manlyn 304 882 2645
AVONI A.ll Areast To Buy or
Sell Shtrley Spears 304
675 1429
COL Onver for trash truck
Knowledge of Gallla County
preferred. 2 years dr1v1ng top
Heavy trucks
needed
(740)388 9686
-------Oom•no s P•ua Now H•nng
Sale Dm"Brs &amp; Management
Point Pleasant GaU1pol1s &amp;
Pomeroy locattons Apply n
Person
DriVers Needed
COL
Dnvers Willing to dnve for
local ready m1x company
Expenence IS preferred but
not necessary Dnvers must
be willing to do pre m8lnte
nance on 1-·~'~ &amp; equipment yard work &amp; other m1s
cellaneous
ct'lmes
•~ne· "· operallng =•ip
E ~'""
,,_
ment &amp; extra skills such as
welding 8 plus
Call
(304)937 3410
- - - - -----,:Expenenced Auto Body
Repairman Also. Needed
Ev""nenced Person tn
"""
DelBJIIng 740..992 2316

I

Yard
Sale
Fri 560
t~~
Sycamore
M1ddleporl
rLUt.tnJu,~•
Class•cal records bOOks
tapes m1sc
AUCTlON Modular House
FEDERAL
and tools &amp; Equ1pment
Yard Sale May 4 &amp; 5 35
POStAL JOBS
A1verv1ew Or Middleport Buct&lt;eye
HillS
Career
Center RIO Grande OhiO T $16 53-$27 58hlr now hir
m1les pas1 Holzer Hospi1al 9 00 ?
&amp; E al 11 OO a m House al
off 160 1st house on left on
lllQ For apphcat100 and free
Balhel Church Ad May lsi
YARD SAlE1200 noon on May 52007 g&lt;M&gt;memen1 job 1nlo, call

Yard Sale Longabarger baskels diShes camping gear
t~s dothes
holidaY ~~ "J
~•1
1001
h
s oes
s collec1or UUI s
Pool lable Bar 4 s1ools
Lawn canopy CD s &amp;
mov1es &amp; much more 3

r

iii'UA'iANriiiiiiiiiii,;,r'
:.:.:::..::.=:..:.:.:__cc:...___ "'--oiPI:oi.
•
2nd &amp; 3rd 9am 5pm

Yard sale Sal May51h 9-5
850
Kruas Beck
Ad 1000s ciafts
supplies
Collect•ble Qolls household sewmg and other great
deals 4th Tra1ter ab&lt;M3 M&amp;G
Yard Sale Saturday May 5
clolhes&amp;manymore onSoulhR12Thur Fn Sa1
8a 1p 184 LeGrande Blvd

:::~:

Needed Dedicated HHA s
PCA s CNAs &amp; STNAs
Established
and
well
respected local home health
agency
Located
m
Gallipolis Dh1o has avatl
able full t1me and part 11me
cases If you have a des1re
to work as a respected
TEAM
member
call
(740)446 3808 for 1mmech
ate mterv1ew
-------Now accepting applications
lol Gnii/Fry Cook Apply 1n
person at 308 2nd Ave
GallipoliS
Now accepting applications
lor Servers Apply 1n person
at 308 2nd Ave Gallipolis
Off1ce Clerk Part I me up to
15 hours per week Some
benefits Qualifications nee·
essary are prof1c1ency 1n
computer use general off1ce
dut1es outgo•ng personality
a plus wtth good phone
skills
Send resume to
Tuppers Ptatns Regtonal
Sewer Oislrlct PO Box 175
Tuppers Platns Oh1o 45783

-'l'l"-~-"::"",;,._., - . -....- ....- - . , lowmg pos1t ons to JOin our thru Friday from 8 00 a m ~esume deadline May 4
YARD SALEYARD
vlnendly and dedlca1ed slaff 4 00 p m regardmg lhe AN No phone call please

Fumtshmgs Knick Knacks
and Much More

3 Family yard sale will have
baby thmgs 1863 Prospect
Church Ad May 3 4 &amp; 5

CelebratiOn
of
A
L1fe Overbrook Center
located at 333 Page Street
Middleport Oh1o IS pleased
to announce we are accept
mg applications for the fol

~

German ShepherdfColhe m1x
'mside only) spade housebroke

HEL.PW~'II'ED

Lakm Hosprtal currently has
pos1t1ons
available
for
Rogls1orod Nurses (RN)
Licensed Practical Nureee
(LPN), Certified Nursing
Assistants (CNA a), and
Houssksepors lor lull lime
and temporary (90 day)
work tn a 114 Bed Long

YARD SALE·
GAU II'OLIS

5-*

110

Homemakers needed 1n the
Ashton Mason Co area to
prov1de 1n home se!Vlces to
the Elderly/Disabled Part
t•me 25 hrs a week
Tra n•ng avatlable Please
Call 304 453 4992

Buy1ng Junk Cars Trucks &amp;
Wrecks Pay Cash J D
Salvage
(304)773 5343
(304)674 1374

188 Oak Or Salurday May
Female We1maraner to nght 5th 8 3 Recliner Glass Top
home
housebroken Pat o Table w/ 6 cha~rs
(740)446 7903
home clothes m•sc 1tems
(740)441 7098 cell
2 Fam1ly Yard Sale 2336
Free Ia good home 9 black Centenary Ad May 4&amp;5
lab puppies Born 3/15/07 Washer Dryer Furniture
Call 740 256 6181
Baby 11ems Clolhmg

Do............... ..... . .. .. . - .

•

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

r
"-------_.1

•

-

{304) 675-1333

DisPlay Ads

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC
OND ANNUAL REUNION
MOOSE LODGE MAY 26 Losl 1n VICinity of Crown
2007 B 1 00 ENTERTAIN Excavating Female Golden
MENT {304)675 4831 OR Ret never
(7 40)446 3488
Lost small black shaggy
Sues Green House 1n now puppy 6 mo old wlblack
open (740)949 3151
while coll ar Rockspr ngs
Hemlock Grove Area 992
2355 or 949 2575
GtVMWAY
'

Goods............ ..... ...........

'

l\egtster

Small Dog EngliSh
Court Area Call 304 593
6732 to lclenhly

6 puppms to Giveaway call
ion of an advertise
nt Corrections wll
made In the flra
vallable edition

'f~D

www myda1lyreg1ster com

1 FOUND

no

20% CASH BACK

Trop1cana Casmo

ANNOUNCEMINfS

4x4's For Sale. _ .. ..
725
Announcement
030
Antiques
530
Apartments lor Rent
440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessortes
760
Auto Repair.... •
Autos for Sale ....
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Building Supplies
550
Business and Buildings
340
Business Opportunity
.210
Business Training • •
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment.
780
Cards of Thanka..
.. 010
Child/Elderly Care...... .. • • .. •
.. 190
ElectrlcaVRefrlger6tlon. .. .. .. •
• 840
Equipment for Rent
480
Excavating... ............,. ... •
830
Farm Equipment ..... .. ... .. • •
.. .610
Farms for Rent
430
Farms for Sale
330
For Lease.... .... • .... • ... .. .. • •
490
For Sale.... ... .. ... .. • ..... ... .. •
585
For Sale or Trade ..... • • .... • ..
• ...... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables •
• •• 580
Furnlahed Rooms •
450
General Hauling. • •
850
' Giveaway.. • ... , •
040
Happy Ads ...
• 050
Hay &amp; Grain
640
Help Wanted ..
... 110
Home Improvements ... ... • .. • • •
.810
Homes tor Sale....
310
Household Goods
• _ 510
Houses for Rent.. •
410
In Memoriam. .. ................... -· ..... 020
Insurance... • • •
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment....
660
Llvastock.. ..
630
t..oat and Found ........ , • .... ..
060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................ 350
Miscellaneous... .. .. • • .... ... -·
• • 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise. • .. • •
• .540
Mobile Home Repair.. .. .....
860
Mobile Homes for Rent .. •
420
Mobile Homes for Sale • ..
• 320
Money to Loan
• • ... • ... ...
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
740
Mualcallnstrumenta .... • .. ... ..
570
Personals ............. -· ... ...... ...... • .. ••• 005
Pets for Sale.. .. ... .. .. ...... • • • .. ..
• 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating
... 820
Pro!Jaalonal Sarvlces • .. ... • ... ....
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
.. •• • • • ..
.. •160
Real Eatate wanted ..... - ... .. • .. ..
• 360
SchoOislnatructlon. ...... .. .. ... ..
... 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer...... .... •
..
650
Situations wanted .......... .................. -. 120
Space for Rent. ......... ·-· -· ...... -.. .. • 460
Spprtlng
520
SUV'a for Sale 720
Trucka for Sale .......... .... ....... ..... • .. 715
Upholatery.. ...... ...... • • .. ... • • .. ..
• 870
Vans For Sale .......... -· ....................730
Wanted to Buy •
090
wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies
620
' Wanted To
180
Wanted to Rent ............................ ·-. 470
' Yard Site- Galllpolla........ ·- -·- ............072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Niddle
074
Yard Site-PI Pleasant......... •
• 076

10% off Almost Everything*

May 24 2007 to May 26 2007

r

CLASSIFIED INDEX

E)(Ciudes electromcs Great Pnce ttems
and Kenmore Pro•

NEW COMPANY

r

\'\ '\111 \I I \ II \ I "--

www myda1lytnbune com

www myda11ysent1ne1 com

Oearl~lrM

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword a Include Complete
Description a Include A Priot! • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Ptlone Number And Address When Needed
a Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successf'd Ads
Should Indude These ltems
To
Get Response ...

Webs1tes

Sentinel

Dally In-Column• t : OO p m
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day•s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 00 p m
For Sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

accept any adver
eement In vlolatlo
ftht low

M9nday, May 7th

Atlantic City
Getaway!

\fi:rtbune

ca~f;~::;... (7~~~ ro44~:~~~2 (7!?a~ ro99~:~~5?6

)We will not knowing

One Day Only

Public Notice

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

To Place

I

until 8 pm Only!

':=======

Meigs County, OH

I

pleted and Is available
lor rev taw at tho
District's matn oftlce
IOj;ated at 39561 Bar 30
R'llad; Reedsville, OH
4
2
Mineral
Resources
•
Management,
2045
Morse Road, Bldg H-2,
Columbus,
Ohio
4322!Hi693.
The project covered
by this action Ia tilted
"Clonch" (•MG-Sb-60)

trust, not less than five
days prior to tho date
set lor hearing.
JS Powell
Judge
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division
t'llelgs County, Ohio
(5) 4

t~ter

I

Your Right t

account wtll be set lor
hearing before said
Court on the 4th day ol
June, 2007, at which
time said account will
be considered and

Daily Sentinel • Page 85

I

SEARS

Land reclamation projoct In the State of
Ohio The Division of
Mineral
Resources
Management prepared
and the OHice of
Surface
Mining
Reclamation
and
Enforcement, United
States Department of
the Interior concurred
that
the ' activities
being undertaken by
the proposed project
qualify as a category
olactlons which would
not have significant
effects on the environment, enher Individually or cumulatively. The
certlflcatton waa submltted by the Division
In application for Title
IV financial assistance
In
reclaiming
and
restoring land and
water
resources

1

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

New

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PROBATE DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouchers ol the following
named fiduciary has
been !tied In the
Probate Court, Meigs
County,
Ohio
for
approval and settlement
ESTATE NO 30482Annual account ol
Bernard V Fultz and
Mary Arnold (Long),
Co-Trustees of the
Trust Under the Will of
Elizabeth
Cutler,
Deceased
Unless exceptions are
Iliad
thereto, said

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Jersey 96 New Jersey leads sertes 3

American League
Eaat Division
Boston
16 9
667
13 15 464
Tampa'say
Toronto
13 15 464
NewYork
12 14 462
Balt•more
12 16 429
Central Division
W L Pet
Cleveland
17 8
680
Delro•t
16 11 593
Mmnesota
15 13 536
Chteago
12 13 480
Kansas City 10 19 345
West Division

PageB4

Friday, May 4, 2007

r74_D;;;
-2;;,4;;;
5;;5334;o..---;-;;,...., Amerx:an Assoc of Labor 1
913 599-8042 24mrs amp
serv

FIND A JOB
IN THE

-------He!p wanted at Darst Adutt

LPN and CNA pos111ons To
apply for a Housekeeping
postllon please contact Roy
Hay
SuperviSOr
Laktn
Hospital (304) 675 0860
b
he h
ext 156 etween I
ours
O
of 7 0 a m - 3 00 P m
d
Monday!hroug h Fflay

_:..__ __:__ __
A&amp;J Truck1ng Lead1ng The
Way A&amp;J Trucking now
Hlnng at our New Haven
WV Termmal For Regional
Hauls.Dump D1v 1 year
OTA verffiable exp Call 1
800 462 9365 ask for Kent

Ready for an 1ndependen1
Landscape
Laborers rewardmg and flexible
Wanted (304)634 8385
career In home health?
r-~"tt~lfR--l Local Home Health Agency
loolong for self motwated
TO DRIVE
nciv1duals lor a vanety of
ALLIANCE
shifts PCA CHHA CNA
STNA certif1ca11on We have
TRACTOR TRAILER
tra1nmg available and we
TRAINING CENTERS
ass1st With lob placement
• FULL TI"E CLASSES
"'
Applications are beu1g
FINA~~~~~~A~~LE"
accepted or ma 1to PO Box
JOe PLACEMENT"·
707 Gatt 1pohs Qh 45631
C.'-br•Uno 28 ve- tn 1ualne11 (740 )441 1377 or..lax 10
Wytheville Vlrgm1a
740 4411648
1 800 334 1203
(
)
,_al~anoellilctortraller com
Res1dentrat construction full
time laborer pos1tron avatl
LICENSED ~OCIAL WORK
able Phone (740)742 3411
ERS
Monday ttYough Friday 9am
to 7pm leave message
ATTENTION
LICENSED
SOCIAL WORKERS - Due Roofers Metal roofing Std
to rqp1d growth Fam1ly 1ng and EPDM Tq&gt; pay and
Options Provtders 1s now benel11« 724 229-!1020
seek.ng
Protess1onal
Independent • Contractmg Someone to do alterat1ons
Soc1al Workers lor Mason Apply 1n person Mon Fn
g 00 2 00
Duke
and Jackson Count1es lrom
ContractOfs should have a Cleaners 656 2nd Ave
Gallipolis Oh
desdule lollworkAWII!hblchllldren
an am1 es e 18 e rans Subst1tute RN!lPN wanted
portahon and proof of auto for
the
Carleton
mob le msurance requ1red Schoo11Me 1gs lndustnes
Best contract pay m the hours 9am 3pm Must have
area Interested Licensed cu"en1 RN license 1n lhe
',
Soc1al Workers should sutr Sate of Ohm Prefer e~epen
mit thetr resume and cover encelnpubhchealthnurs~ng
.1.
)
1
letter 1dentify1ng couuty(s o and/or work1ng with children
by 1
304 254
mterest
ax to
and adults 'Mth developmen
9099
or
ema•t
to tal diSBbtlittes Send resume
harold @ famt lyop tton~ byFndayMay18th2007to
sprov1ders com
Me1gs Coun1y Board of
Mental Retardation and
Local Home Health Agency Developmental Olsab httes
acc~ptmg applicatiOns for 1310 Car1eton Street PO
STNA CHHA PCA CNA BoK 307 Syracuse Oh
WIII mg t o I ra1n for Mergs 45 ng
Counly area Please call 1 - - - - - - - 80().592 2444
Super 8 Motel accepting
- -- - - - - - appllcaiiOns for breakfast
Local Home Health Agency bar attendant Must be an
Now acceptmg resumes for early mormng person with
SCheduler (Pan time) With great customer serv~ca
poss•ble FT EKpenence skills Apply tn person NO
Helpful but not necessary PHONE CALLS
PI ease ma1 I resume Io CLA
Box 568 c/o Galhpol1s Dally lisakmlg Appli cahons&amp; GK•mes
1 1
Tribune
PO Box 469
tee
nc st
eorwvge
Gall 1pol OH 45631
Street New Haven
IS
25265 NO PHONE CALLS
Medtcal Asstsant needed
part t•me or full ttme at
Doc!OfS Office expenence
prefe"ed Must be wlllmg to
work Evenings 3 11 pm
Benef1ts offered
Send
Aesumelo
TSC 5-1 cJo
OWl.
Poi 1PI
1A S1 200
n easan 09' er
Matn Street Pomt Pleasant
WV 25550

n--

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

Av$5g

7KPav_~~.or
w•~·,

lncl,mng Federal Benefi1s
andOl:Pai&lt;ITrtllnlng
Vacanons.fTIPT
m E1118923
1

CLASSIFIEDS ;r;"~ift~99~~ilting -8Q0-58(US~A

1 Threader
PoSitions
Operator 1 Welder
1
Maclune Operalor
-W--ed-Di-'-ed-SU
_ __
.:~s :o ove,:v;;:::
youth 1n a staff S80Jre res•
denhal env~ronment Must
pass
physical 1ram1ng
requ~remenl Pay based on
expenence Ca" (740)379
9083 be1ween 9-3 Mon Fn
Truck Dnvor lor Hauling
flled&lt;B T"!'7 C2DL 7Ciass A or
s 304~ 5 45

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

•

�SCOREBOARD

The Daily Sentinel
Colorado

PRO BASEBALL
W

L

Pet

Los Angeles
Seattle
Oakland
Texas

393

6

Wednesday's Games
Chtcago Cubs 8 Ptttsburgh 6 comp
of susp game
GB

Ch1cago Cubs 7 Ptttsburgh 1

Mtlwaukee 4 St lOUIS 0
N Y Mets 6 Flonda 3
l A Oodge.rs 2 Anzona 1
Atlanta 4 Philadelphia 3
Houston 3 Cmctnnah 1
San Otego 7 Washtngton 3
San Franctsco 5 Colorado 3
Thuraday a Games
Houston 7 Cmctnnalt 5
Pttlsburgh 4 Milwaukee 2
N Y Mets 9 Anzona 4
Phtladelphta 9 San FranCISCO 7
Friday 1 Games
Washmgton (Bergmann 0 2) at
Chtcago Cubs (Zambrano 2 2) 2 20
pm
San Otego (Maddux 2 2) at Flonda
(Wtlhs 5-1 ) 7 05 p m
Colorado (Htrsh 2 2) at Cmcmnalt
(Belisle 3 1) 7 10 p m
L A Dodgers (Tomko 0 2) at Atlanta
(Smollz 3 1) 7 35 p m
P1llsburgh
(Maholm
1 3)
al
Milwaukee (Vargas 2 0) 8 05 p m
Houston (Sampson 3 1) at St Lou1s
(Wa1nwnght 1 2) 8 10 p m
N Y Mats (Mame 4 0) at Anzona
(A Johnson 0 1) 9 40 p m
Ph1ladelph1a (Moyer 3 1) at San
Francisco (Morns 31) 1015 pm
Saturday 1 Games
Washtngton at Ch1cago Cubs 1 05
pm
Houston at St LOUIS 1 10 p m
Philadelphia at San Franc1sco 3 55
pm
San 01ego at Flonda 7OS p m
L A Dodgers at Atlanta 7 OS p m
P11tsburgh at Milwaukee 7 05 p m
Colorado at Cmcmnat1 7 10 p m
N Y Mats at Anzona 9 40 p m
Sunday's Games
San Otego at Flonda 1 05 p m
L A Dodgers at Atlanta l 05 p m
Pittsburgh at M•lwaukee 2 05 p m
Houston at St LOUIS 2 15 p m
Wastungton at Ch1cago Cubs 2 20
pm
Colorado at Ctnc1nnat1 3 15 p m
N Y Mats at Anzona 4 40 p m
Philadelphia at San Franc1sco 8 05
pm

61

S1
5 ~

6

1

Gil.
2
3,
5
9

W

L

Pet

GB

16
12
13
10

13
11
14
1B

552
522
481
357

I
2
5,

Wednesday s Games
N Y Yankees at TeKas ppd ram
Oetro1t 3 Baltimore 2
Seanle 3 Ctucago While Sox 2
Boston 6 Oakland 4
Cleveland 7 Toronto 6 11 1nmngs
Tampa Bay 4 M1nnesota 3 10
10n10gS
Kansas C1ty 3 l A Angels 1
Thursday s Games
Kansas C1ty 5 L A Angels 2
N Y Yankees 4 TeKas 3 1st game
N Y Yankees 5 TeKas 2 2nd game
Boston 8 Seattle 7
Cleveland 6 Toronto 5
Tampa Bay 6 Mmnesota 4
Friday a Games
SeaHie (Baek 0 01 al N Y Yankees
(lgawa 2 1) 705 pm
Cleve-land (Byrd 2 1) at Baltimore
(Bedard 3 2) 7 05 p m
Oakland (Haren 3 2) at Tampa Bay
(Fossum 2 2) 7 10 p m
Toronto (Ohka 2 2) at Texas
(McCar1hy 1 4) e 05 p m
Boston (Wakefield 2 3) at Mmnesota
(Silva 21 ) 810 pm
Detrmt (Verlander 1 1) at Kansas C1ty
(Bannister 0 1) 8 10 p m
Ch1cago White Sox (Contreras 2 2) at
LA Angels (Escobar 2 1) 10 05 p m
Saturday a Games
Seattle at N Y Yankees 3 55 p m
Ch1cago Wtu te Sox at LA Angels
3 55 p m
Cleveland at Baltimore 7 05 p m
Oakland al Tampa Bay 7 10 p m
Boston at Mmnesota 7 10 p m
DetrOit at Kansas C1ty 7 10 p m
Toronto at Texas 8 05 p m
Sunday's Games
Seattle at N Y Yankees 1 OS p m
Cleveland at Baltimore 1 35 p m
Oakland at Tampa Bay 1 40 p m
Boston at Mtnnesota 2 10 p m
DetrOit at Kansas C•ty 2 10 p m
Toronto at Texas 3 05 p m
Ch1cago White Sox at L A Angels
335 p m
National League
East Division
W L Pet
Atlanta
17 10 630
New York
17 10 630
13 14 481
Flonda
Ph1ladelph1a 13 15 464
Wash1ngton
9
19 321
Central Division
W l
Pet
Milwaukee
IB 10 643
P1ttsburgh
13 14 481
C•nc1nnat1
13 15 464
Ch1cago
12 14 462
Houston
12 15 444
Sl LOUIS
10 16 385
West Division
W L Pel
Los Angeles 17 11 607
t5 13 536
San D1ego
Anzona
16 14 533
SanFrancsco14 13 519

17

11

Friday, May 4, 2007

PlayoH Glance
2 Park (PP) 22 1, 3 Holzinger (5)
Ph1 l Hughes on the 15 day DL
CONFERENCE SEMIFINALS
22 2 4 Wtlllams (RV) 23 6, 5 (tie)
Recalled RHP Ch ns Br1t10n from
(Boot-ol-7)
Connely (E) and Harrison (R\1) 24 0
Scranton (IL) Actrvated RHP M•ke
2
EASTERN CONFERENCE
200 1 Amsbary (E) 31 9 •2
Fnday May 4 Toronto at New Jersey Mu ssma from the 15 day DL
BuHalo vo. New Vorl&lt; Rongoro
Chason (PP) 32 9 3 S1earns (P)&gt;)
8pm
OpiiOned Bntton to Scranton after the
Wednesday, April 25 Bullalo 5 N Y 33 2 4 McBealh (PP) 34 9, 5 Park
Sunday May 6 New Jersey at hrst game
OAKLAND ATHLETICS- AcqUired Rangers 2
(PP) 35 7 6 Rosebury (S) 35 9
Toronto 1 p m tl necessary
400 meter relay - 1 Eastern 51 5
OF Jack Cust from San D•ego for a
Fnday April 27 Buffalo 3 N Y
player to be named or cash cons•der
Miami va. Chicago
Rangers 2
2 Po1nt Pleasant 54 2 3 Southern
Saturday Apnl 21 Ch1cago 96
at1ons
57 4
Sunday Apnl 29 NY Rangers 2
1 Buffalo 1 20T
91
National League
BOO - 1 Eastern 1 48 5 2 Point
Tuesday Apnt 24 Ch1cago 107
ARIZONA
DIAMONDBACKSTuesday May 1 NY Rangers 2
Pleasant 1 58 5 3 Southern 1 59 &amp;
M1am1 89
ActiVated RHP M1cah Owmgs from Buffalo 1 semis t1ed 2 2
1600 _ 1 Eastern 4 13 5, 2 Point
Fnday Apnl 27 Ch1cago 104 M1am1 the 15 day DL Optioned 1NF Bnan
Fnday May 4 NY Rangers at Pleasal)l 4 23 6, 3 Southern 4 52 1
96
Buffalo 7 P m
4 RIVer Valley 6 02 o
Barden to Tucson (PCL)
Sunday Apul 29 Ch cago 92 M1am1
FLORIDA MAALINS-Sen1 AHP
Sunday May 6 Buflalo a1 N Y I Shol pul _ 1 Smith (R\1) 40-1 2
79 Ch1cago wins senes 4 o
Tenogha (E) 38-4 3 Matnery (SG)
Nate F1eld outrrght to Albuquerque Rangers 2 P m
(PCL)
Tuesday May 8 NY Rangers a1 1 36 10 5 4 Long (PP) 36-3 5
WESTERN CONFE!,!ENCE
Williams (PP) 35 0 8 Kilns (E) 31 5
NEW YORK METS- Des1gnaled Buflalo 7 p m 11 necessary
Dalla&amp; ya. Golden State
RHP Chan Ho Park for ass•gnment
New Jersey vs Ottawa
~
I Discus - 1 Long (PP) 12G-O 2
Purchased the contract of RHP Lmo
Sunday Apnl 22 Golden State 97
Thursday Apnl 26 Ottawa 5 New Smttn (AV) 108-1 3 Matnery (SG)
Urdaneta from New Orleans (PCL)
Dallas 85
PIRATES-Placed Jersey 4
1 102 8 4 Amos (E) 93-4, 5 Tenaglia
PITTSBURGH
Wednesday April 25 Dallas 112
RHP John Wasdm on the 15 day DL 1 Saturday April 28 New ~ersey 3
(E) 93 4 6 Manuel (S) 92 9
Golden State 99
Called up RHP Marty Mcleary from Ottawa 2 20T
H1gh Jump - 1 Pratt (E) 5·0 2
Fnday Apnt 27 Golden State 109
lnd1anapol1s (I L)
Monday Apnl 30 Ottawa 2 New Amsbary (E) 4 10 3 McBeath (P}»)
Dallas 91
SAN DIEGO PADRES- Achvated Jersey 0
1 4 B 4 Slearns (PP) 4 8 5 Park (PP)
SUnday Apnl 29 Golden State 103
INF Russell Branyan from the
Wednesday May 2 Ottawa 3 New 1 4 4
Dallas 99
Tuesday May 1 Dallas 118 Golden bereavement hst Sent C Pete Jersey 2 Ottawa leads senes 3 1
1 Long Jump - 1 Clagg {RV) 15·10, 2
Laloresl oulnghl 10 Por11and (PCL)
Sa1urday May 5 011awa al New 1 Blankenship (PP) 15 3 3 Preston
Slale 112
SAN FRANCISCO GIANTS-Placed Jerssy 8 p m
(PP) 13 I 4 Slefany (E) 12-11, 5
Thursday May 3 Golden State 111
Dallas 86 Golden State wms senes 4
RHP Russ Orhz on the 15 day DL
Monday May 7 New Jersey at Hamson (RV) 12-8 6 Warden (S)
Recalled tNF Kevm Frandsen lroQ'l Ottawa 7 p m 1f necessary
12 1
2
Fresno (PCL)
Wednesday May 9 Ottawa at New
Phoenix vs. L A Lakers
BASKETBALL
Jersey 7 p m 1f necessary
Qlrll
Sunday Apnl 22 PhoemK 95 LA
National Basketball Association I
Team standmgs - 1 Point Pleasant
Lakers 87
WESTERN CONFERENCE
110 2 Eas1arn 98 3 River Vall&amp;y
NBA- F1ned Golden S1a1e s G Jason
Tuesday Apr~l 24 Phoemx 126 LA
Detroit ya. San Jolt
1 43 4 South GaiUa 39 5 Southe.rn
A•chardson $35 000 lor Improper
lakers 98
InteractiOn w1th a fan dunng a playoff
Thursday Apnl 26 San Jose 2
26 6 Ohio Valley Chr~s!lan 7
Thursday Apnl 26 L A lakers 95
game tn Dallas
Detroit 0
100 meter .run - 1 Hassan (PP)
Phoemx 89
FOOTBALL
Saturday April 28 Detroit 3 San 13 8 2 Jam•son (PP) 14 3 3 Pethel
Sunday Apnl 29 Phoen1x 11 3 LA
National Football League
Jose 2
(SG) 14 6 5
14 4 4 H
BUFFALO BILLS-S1gned RB Josh
Monday Apn l 30 San Jose 2
(PP}
ager
Lakers 100
Scobey WR Jematte Cornelius CB Detroit 1
Holter {E) 14 7 6 Ash {S) 15 3
Wednesday May 2 Phoenix 11 9 LA
200 1 Hesson (PP) 2g 0 2 •
Lakers 110 Phoentx wms senes 4 1
Regg•e Lew•s CB Duane Coleman
Wednesday May 2 Detro1t 3 San Duncan (SG) 31 2 3 Collins (E)
WR Aaron Brown WR Scott Mayle
Jose 2 OT senes t1ed 2-2
WA Johnny Quinn OL Corey Dav s I SaiUrday May 5 San Jose a1 31 5 4 Preece (PP) 32 2 5 Ash (S)
San AOJpn!o ys penyer
De1roll 2 p m
32 5 6 Wherry (PP) 32 7
Sunday Apnt 22 Denver 95 San 0L Chnsl1an GaddiS OL Zach Tubbs
AntoniO 89
DL La Ron Hams DL Corey Mace LB : Monday May 7 De1ro11 al San Jose
H~goer-(S~) D u~~a; ~SG~o;v!~ 8(~)
Wednesday Apnl 25 San Antomo 97
Thaddaeus Washmgton S Trevor 1 TBO
Hooper
S Stacey Thoma s and P 1 Wednesday May 9 San Jose at 1 12 3 4 Thomas (E) 1 15 5 5
Denver 88
Chns Jackson
Detro1t TBD 1f necessary
Preece (PP) 1 16 1 6 Groves (PP)
Saturday Apnl 28 San Anton1o 96
Denver 91
MINNESOTA VIKINGS- Agreed lo
1 16 6
1 Monday Apnl 30 San Antomo 96
Anaheim ys. Yancouyor
800 meter run 1 Ratltff {PP)
terms w1th OT Joe Anoa1 DT Conrad
Bolston DT Joe Bracttey S Jeremy
Wednesday Apnl 25 Anal;le1m 5
2 50 5, 2 Aanetead (E) 2 57 6 3
Denver 69
Wednesday May 2 San Antomo 93
Burnell OL Ky le Cook G Bnan Vancouver 1
Halfhtll (PP) 3 04 3 4 Lmgus (S)
Denver 78 San Antonio wtns senes 4
Danle\s OT Josh Day CB Serg1o
Friday April 27 Vancouver 2, 3 07 B 5 Spencer (PP) 3 12 8 6
1
G1ll1am LB George Hall LB Dav1d Anaheim 1 20T
Likens (PP) 3 17 6
Herro n OT Chase Johnson TE
Sunday Apnl 2g
Anaheim 3
1600 - 1 Pelgers (PP) 6 38 2
Utah ya Houston
Lmgus (S) 6 48 3 Collins (E) 7 14, f
Braden Jones Ol Dan Mazes P Alex j Vancouver 2
Saturday Apnl 21 'Houston 84 Utah Reyes and REi_ Arkee Whitlock
1 Tuesday
May
Anahe•m 3
Spencer (PP) 7 25 5 Ours (S) 8 40
75
PH I LADELP~IA EAGLES-Stgned 1 Vancouver 2 OT
100 meter hurdles 1 Jam1son
Monday ~Apnl 23 Houston 98 Utah DT tan Scott to a one year contract J Thursday
May 3 Anahe1m 2
(PP) 18 4 2 Connery (E) 19 2, 3
9Q
Released AS Antome Bagwell OB I Vancouver 1 20T, Anahe1m wms Bays (PP) 20 5 4 Haggar (SG) 20 7
Thursday Apt1l 26 Uta h 61 Houston Jeff Mroz and LB Greg Richmond
senes 4 1
5 Alexander (SG) 21 5 6 Brown (S)
67
TAMPA
BAY
BUCCANEERS23 5
Saturday Apnt 28 Utah 98 Houston Released DT Jon Bradley S gned LB
200 _ 1 Connery (E) 33 6 2
85
Sam Olatubutu DT Justm Fnck LB
Duncan (SG) 34 6, 3 Jamtaon (PP)
Monday Aprtl 30 Houston 96 Utah Jerry Mackey K Garrell Rivas T Jed
RIVER VALLEY TRACK MEET
36 0 4 Brown (S) 36 B 5 Alexander
92
~:~sr~~
a~:
F~e~7~e
~~o~~d;:n
Byron
1
Jr
HlgBh
Results
(SG)
37 4, 6 Bays (PP) 37 7
Thursday May 3 Utah 94 Houston
HOCKEY
oys
400 meier relay - 1 River Valley
82 senes t1ed 3 3
National Hockey League
Team standmgs - 1 Pomt Pleasant 57 5 2 Eastern 1 00 5 3 Point
Saturday May 5 Utah at Houston 7
CO LUMBUS BLUE JACKEiTS115 2 Eastern 86 3 A1ver Valley Pleasant 1 00 9 4 Southern 1 01 9
or930pm
Signed G Steve Mason
52 5 4 Southern 39 5 South Galha
eoo _ 1 Eastern 2 09 2, 2 Atver
COLLEGE
25 5 6 Oh10 Valley Chnst1an 0
Valley 2 09 9 3 Potnt Pleasant
GOSHEN-Announced 1he res1gna I 100 meier run - 1 Clagg (AV) 13 3
2 16 3 4 Sou1hern 2 33 5)
2 Buzz iS) 13 6 3 Bless (PP) 13 8
lion of Sian Daugherly men s baskel
1600 - 1 R1ver Valley 4 54 2
Thursday s Sports Transactions
ball coach assoc1ate athlet•c d1rector 4 (t•e) Holmes (SG) and Stefany (E) Eastern 5 05 7 3 Po1nt Pleasant
By The Associated Press
1396_ Amos(
50574S1hr556
ou e n
and pro Iessor ol h
p ys1cal ed ucat1on
W E)142 (PP)
BASEBALL
200
111 lams
26 7 2
LOUISVILLE-Signed R1ck P1t1no
I
V1
Shot put - 1 1 Putnam (E) 31 7 2
American League
C agg ( A l 26 g, 3 Baum IE) 26 9 4
Aober1s (RV) 27 1 3 Powell (E) 25
mens basketball coach lo a 1hree
1 Blankenship (PP) 27 4 5 K1mble
BOSTON RED SOX-Placed RHP
'
2 5 4 Smith (SG) 24 0 5 Wend10
year co ntract ex tens•on through I (RV) 28 0 6 Forester (S) 28
I M1ke T1mlm on the 15 day DL
9
400 1 Connery (E) 1 00 2
(E) 23 3 6 Roush (E) 23-2
Recalled RHP Davern Hansack from 2013
MON TANA TECH- Announced lhe Chason iPP) 1 04 9 3 Rosebury (S)
DISCUS - 1 Roberls (RV) 73 0, 2
Pawtucket (ll)
Roush (E) 72-8 3 Pulnam (E) 62-2
I CLEVELAND INDIANS-Ac11va1ed re s1gna11on ol Bnan Holsmger
1 07 3 4 Shellon (S) 1 14 0 5
womens basketball coach Named Rocchi (PP) 1 191 6 Wllltams (RV) 4 Bower (E) 58-11 5 Hams (S) 58~
1 LHP Cl1f1 Lee from the 15 day DL
5 6 Bower (E) 58 4
women s ass•stant basketball coach
Recalled LHP Rafa el Perez !rom
1 19 4
BOO meter run - 1 Raymond (PP)
Htgh Jump - 1 Holter (E) 4-4, 2
Ken Depell coach
1 ~~~~to a~~) gr~~ne~d ~:n~~~~~o s~~
NOTRE DAME- Signed Mike Brey 2 25 1 2 Pra11 (E) 2 28 3 3 Combs Owens (OVC) 4-2 3 Bays (PP) 3-10
mens baskelball coach 1o a lwo year (SG) 2 30 0 4 Matnery (SG) 2 31 0
4 Rall1fl (PP) 3 10 5 Adkms (PP) 3Bulfalo
10 6 Peck (PP) 3·8
LOS ANGELES ANGELS-Pla ced contract extens1on through 2012 13
1600 _ 1 Combs (SG) 6 03 7 2
I INF Ma1cer lztuns on the 15 day DL
I Buzzald (S) 6 04 g 3 Brown (RV)
Long 1ump - 1 Maxon (E) 1i8;..2
1 6 48 0 4 Freeman (PP) 6 53 0 5
1 retroactive to Apnl 3P Recalled INF
Hesson (PP) 12-4 3 Issac (RIIj'l 1Brandon Wood from Salt Lake (PCL)
BISsell (E) 7 13 3
g 4 F1elds (RV) 11 9 5 Pelhel (PP)
National Hockey League
1 Stearns (PP) 19 6
11 3 6 Owens (OVC) 11-3
1 110 hurdles 1 NEW YORK YANKEES-Placed RHP
Tuesday

May 1 Toronto 98

PRO BASKETBALL
National Basketball Asaoclatlon
PlayoH Glance
FIRST ROUND
(Boat of 7)
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Detroit ys. Orlando
Saturday Apnl 21 DetrOit 100
Orlando 92
Monday April 23 Detroit 98 Orlando
90
Thursday Apn t 26 Detrmt 93
Orlando 77
Saturday Apnl 28 Detroit ' 97
Orlando 93 DetrOit w1ns senes 4 0
Cleyelond VI. W11hlnqton
Sunday Apnl 22 Cleveland 97
Washmgton 62
Wednesday Aprrl 25 Cleveland 109
Washmgton 102
Sa1urday April 28 Cleveland g5
Washmgton 92
Monday April 30 Cleveland 97
Washmgton 90 Cleveland wms senes
40

GB

4
4 1~
8~

GB
4'12
5
5
5 1t
7

Toronto vs. New J•r11y

1 T~~~~~~a~ Apnl 21 New Jersey 96

I

GB
2
2
2}2

I

1

Tuesday April 24 Toron1o 89 New
Jersey 83
Fnday Apnl 27 New Jersey 102
Toronto 89
Sunday Apnl 29 New Jersey 102
Toronto 81

continued !rom day to
day until ftnally dtsposed ol
Any parson Interested
may !lie written exceplion to said account or
to matters pertaining
to the execution of the

adversely sHeeted by
past mining A copy ol
the certification Is
available !rom the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, Division of

CLASSIFIED

E-mail
classlfled@mydallytnbune com

I

1

I

PREP TRACK

I

TRANSACTIONS

l

I
I

PRO HOCKEY

The Syracuse Racine
Regional
Sewer
District has completed
the 2006 annual linenclal report and Is on
llle lor public lnspeclion at the Dlatrlct
OHice 405 Main Street,
Raclna between 8 am 1 pm M-~ A copy of the
report can be provided
upon request.
Jon! Fisher
District Clerk
949-2416
5 4
( )

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

Word Ads

H.QW IQ WRITE AN AD

*POLICIES*
OhloVsllsy
Publishing reserves
11te rlgh11o edl1,
reJect or cancel any
ad at OJlY time
Errore Must
sported on the firs
y of publication an
be Tribune-Sentinel
b
eglster
will
esponslble tor n
ore than the east o
he space occuple
the error and onl
e ffrst lnaertlon W
ball not be liable lo

Boardwalk

PUBLIC NOTICE
The annual Financial
Report of the Tuppers
Plains-Chester Water
Dtstrlct has been corn-

(:)'7

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

and Is located west of
the
village
of -------- -------Middleport In Section
Public Notice
29,
Salisbury
Township,
Meigs
Legal Notice
County, Ohio Project
construction Involves
Public Meeting
Installation
ol
an
Proposed Amen can Muruc1pal Power Generatmg Statton
underdraln end catch
basin system, con(AMPGS)
struction of a rock
Solid Waste Landfill
Public Notice
channel, and reatora)o'
Metgs County, Ohto
tlon of all dlaturbed
OFFICIAL NOTICE
areas This project Is
In accordance With Ohw's Sohd Waste requtrement s, noltce ts
Pursuant to THie IV of 100% federally funded
hereby giVen that Amencan Mumc1pal Power-Oh1o, Inc (AMPthe Surface Mining H you have any queaOhw) wdl hold a pubhc meetmg regardtng a Restdual Sol1d
Control
and tlons
or concerns
Reclamallon Act of about the
project,
Waste Landfill Penmt-1o-lnstall (PTI) application flied for the
1977, 30 U.S.C. 1201 et plene contact Mr
proposed AMPGS facthty The proposed s1te ts between the
seq,
the
Ohio Terry VanOHeren at the
Department of Natural Division's eddreaa list- lintersecltons of Htll Road and State Route 124 and Hdl Road
Rnourc:ea, Dlvlalon of ed above or at (614)
and East Letart Road, near Letart Falls The PTI appltcauon I S
Mineral
Re1ourc11 265-1094.
bemg
submttted to budd a new landfill Thts meetmg IS tnlen"ded
Management, hereby (5) 4
to
famtlianze
Citizens w1th the proposed landfill , operations, an~
gives notice of the
availability of a CATE• the Ohto PTI appltcat10n proce ss The meetmg wtll be held on
GORICAL EXCLUSION
June 4 , 2007 at 7 00 p m at the Southern Elementary School
CERTIFICATION tor 111
budding, 906 Elm Street, Racme , Ohm 45771 ,
Abandoned
Mined

&amp; Beachfmnt Property

W1th1n walk1ng d1stance of outlet
stores
$265/person
Based

Public Notice

&amp; Resort

on double occupancy

Must be

21

years of age

To make reservations please call
PVH Commumty Relations,

(304) 675-4340, Ext 1492
No refunds
Gladly accept cash, check, credit

After Ma•l 1n rebate when you buy 3 or more
cook1ng appliances dishwashers or
refngerators'

15% Cash Back
After mall m rebate when you buy 2 cooktng
appliances dishwashers or refngerators·

Back

10% Cash
After ma1t-m rebate when you buy 1
appliance dishwasher or refngerator•
'Of $399 or more each
or
12 Months No l~terest, No novlmAnl&lt;
on any appliance over $3g9 W1th
Sears Card
And Free Delivery alter ma1i-1n
on all appliances over $399
Plus save an addlttonal 10% when
purchase a laundry patd
2200 Eastern Ava. Gallipolis, OH
740-446-1546

cards and money orders
LIMITED SEATSI

Mercy Hands at
All About You

Broad Run Gun Club
Outlaw Slug Match
Sunday, May 6th
12- Noon

201 B 6th Street
Point Pleasant, WV
Mother's Day Spec1al

20% off

G1ve your loved one the g1ft of
health w~h a massage Call
Adk1ns licensed massage
therap1st at 675- I 411 The
pleasure that gets nd of the

r

I

740 245 9614

Box number ads ar
tways confidential
)&gt;Current rate ear
ppllea

All Real Estat
dv,rtlaements ar
ubject to the Federa
air Housing Act o
968
newspape
ccepta only hel
anted ads meetln
OE standards

f
----------------'---------------- -- - - - ----"'"'

Dachshund 3 112 years old
spade all shots 161bs 304
675 5752

------------------~~--------- --·------

All Display· 12 Noon 2
Business Day• Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display: 1.00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must

be

prepaid'

POUCIES onto Veney Publlehlng reHn~ee the r~ht to edtt, re~ or uncal any ad at any time Errore mu•t be reported on the firet dey of
Trtbune-Sentln._Regleter witt be , ..porulble tor no more then the coet of the apace occupied by the error end only the fl ret lntel1ion We
any !on or u;penM thet reS\Ihe from the publkftion or omlealon of an actvertiMment Correction will be made in the fir1t avellable edition
ere alway• confidential •Current rate ~rd apptlea • All rul eatate advertlaemonte tre eubject to the Federal Fair Hou•lng Act of 1968
accept. only help wanted ad• meeUng EOE atend~rda We will not knowingly accept any advertl•lng in vlo~tlon of the law

r~--oi%iiiANfED.OBiiuv.__.~ll

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
1

Absotute Top Dollar U S
Stiver and Gold Cams
Proofsets Gqld Rings Pre
1935
US
Currency
Sollta1re D1amonds M T S
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gall polls 740 446
2842

Rf.f\1.1.:/z l!Nf You

E~GR'Iftll~
Nt::W7 K~Ci'ltJP

-fi'IIN\(..

I \l l't 0\\ 11 \ I

YARI&gt;SALE

r

'-I I 1&lt;\ II I

2 Fam1ly May 51h B ? 325
www comics com
M1lchell
Ad Clolh n9 lools
all shols grealtt"llh kids to Good
kn1ves lots of m1sc
Home 304 882 2659
"'ll!!"'""':':""'"":!:""'_ _,
YARil SALE2 - - - - - - - liio
Longha1red B•g black male
GigantiC Yard Sates 900 &amp; 1,--·
--tliitiiiiiiiiiiiiO;...,I
~;;at w/whlle paws very 911 Gage Ad In Patnot 6
GALLIII()LIS
fnendly 304 895 3590
Fami lies Furnture appll
_ _:_~----- ances and tons of great HUGE YARD SALE May 4th
Registered male black Lab stuff
&amp; 5th 8 OOam 5 OOpm 128
free to Good Home 740
B 1
27 1n
0 nve
2560 State Route 141
as 1an1
256 1379
,
TV/Sl d VCR 1i s/CD
8 30am 5 OOpm Gms baby
an
ape
s
House hOI"u
TV that Works 304675 clothes Lotsofm1sc Home Cl olh es
tnt May 3rd 4th &amp; 5th

5773

"-~

100WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood
11ems To $480/wk Matenals
provided Free 1nformat1on
pkg 24~r 801 428 464g

© 2007 by NEA, Inc

i

Irl!

3 Fam•"• Yard Sale 1991
•r
Graham School Ad May 4
m
6 Ba spm G1rts Baby &amp;
Toddler Clothes toys furnl
ture and othsr m1sc 1tems

4 Family May 3rd &amp; 4th 9 3
t183 Jackson Pk Baby &amp;
tw 1n bed highchair stroller
1nflatable slide clothes
ho_u_se_h_o_ld_l_oy:..s.:_m_,_sc__
5/4&amp;5 9 3 1105 Teodora
Boys 0 24mo baby 1tems
adult clothes DR set
longaberger baskets tram
polme

t.,--iiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiOi-,.1
GALLIPOI..l'i

616 4th Ave Sal May 51h
9 5 Furn~ture Beddmg
Glassware Good Clolhlng
loads of Mise Items

Movmg/Estate Sale Sat
5/5{07 Sam 1pm Antique
turmture clothes ndlng
814 4th Ave Adult Toddler mower chma etc 2406
&amp; Baby Clothes Baby bed Raccoon Rd
play pen &amp; toys plus house
hold Items and lots of other Multi Family
1853
stuff Fr &amp; Sat 9 ?
Neighborhood Rd Fn &amp;
Sat a 30 ? Lots of every
Across from R1o Elem Sat lhmg Pr1ced to sell
May 5th B 4 Name brand
clothing Pet1te Large
Sat May 5th 8 3 54
A bl id D 0 ff SA 160
m es e r
Garage Sale Fn4th &amp; Sat Toys baby Items house
5th 162 Woodsm1tt Ad hold miSC
B1dwell 2nd on nghl oH 554
9 5 Ra•n or Shme
Saturday May 5th 9 5
m1te out CenterVIlle at the
of
279
&amp;
Garage Sale May 41h 8 00 1uncton
5 00 85 Arnold Dr Casual &amp; Ce nlerpomt
Rd
dress maternity clothes gtrls Longaberger Baby Items
0 12 months boys 0 3T Couch Love Seat Aedmer
adult clothes apple dishes Home Intenor Brand Name
and decor play station lots Cl he 1i
H I
11
ot s oys un mg ems
of baby 11ems stroller tub Ect

Yard
Sale·
Matermly
Clo1hes Baby and T•"dler
·~

274 Ne 1 hborhood Rd
•f1'1S
9
Saturday May 5th

T

3 fam1ty

F'fl

&amp; Sat May 4 5

2 m• out Flatwoods Ad on
Smith Goegtetn Dr 9 4
Church wide yard sate 873
s 3rd Ave Middleport Fn &amp;
Sat 9 1 Freedom Center
M•mstnes
-------~
May 4 5 Mull• tam•ly turn•
ture antiques couches
refngerators
collectibles
(Longaberger F0nton) bed
d•ng clothing for everyone
computers books 1n lme
skates Don 1 pass this one
upl Please help us clean out
lhe garaget All proceeds
benefit grandchild !J)Ing to
Europe
Sm•tfi s
1691
Lo~ln Helgh1s
'""'
Muth fam•ly great stuff
home furmshmgs clothes
1nfant to adult Aatlroad
Street Chiton WV follow
Signs May 3rd 4th 9 5 May
5th 9 noon Aft Proceeds Q9
to Relay For Life
--..,...-----AACO ' T'AAD SALE Slar

Mill Park May 8&amp;9 9 00
Street Sale May 4th &amp; 5th 4 00 May 10 9 00 2 OQ.AII
9am ? Arnold Dnve m 11ems hall pnce clothing
Gigantic Yard Sale for
B1dw 8 11
$ 1 oo ba p
eds 10
go
a g.. roce
scnotarshiP Fund Thanks
Salley Chapel Church
Building Fund May 5th
Two Family Moving Yard FOf Your Supportllt
on parldng lot of Sale 120 Bastlana Dr Fnday - - - - - - - Gallipolis ChiropractiC &amp; Saturday Blm-3pm May Yard Sale J1m Vennan Park
• nd Avs
41h &amp; 51h
All11 and Fn May 4 Kd
Center, 990 ..
1s
home
mt
Donation for moat Item- Yard sale Sal Sun west 141 clothes
~low~p;.r1~cod~""'""'""'...!l across from Aunt Claras Longaberger stereo etc
Amish S1ore 9am 5pm
Yard sare DaVid Stout reSI
Huge Garage Sate May 5th
West College
&amp; 6th 7 OOam 2 OOpm, 540 Yard Sale 1 2 Miles Out dence
Green Valley Onve Bidwell Rout e 218 May 2nd thru Ad: Syracuse May 4th 5th
5th
9 00 1o 5 00
Ohm

bouncer cnb set
crafts lots of m1sc

toys

l!

Huge mov sale Everythmg
needed lor baby Toddler
men women 954 Kerr off
160 Sat Only 9 5 ra1n/shlne
Huge Multi Family Yard Sale~
baby 1tems fur~ lure clolh
mg 0 2T. boys and g~rls
adult stzes appliances
2000 Yamaha VFM 4 wheel
er 8 much more May 5 6
9am-4pm 18750 Sl Rl 279
4 m1les west of A•o Grande
follow srgns from US 35

Term Care Fac1fity Full t1me
employment offers an eden
s1ve benefit package 1nc:lud
1ng State c•v•l serv1ce ret~re
ment earn up to 15 days
vacaton per year 18 days
SICk leave and 12 plus pa1d
holidays health/life msur
ance IS ava1lable Lakm
Hosp1tal •s an EEO/AA
Employer Please contact
V1cky
Berkley
Actmg
Nursing Director at Laktn
Hospital lakm WV at {304)
675 0860 eKt 12§ Monday

s..

Part Time L.PN s 7P 7A &amp;
7A 7P Fuii T•meSTNAs 3A
3P &amp; 7A·7P Part Tim&amp;
2 Large Yard sates Sandhill STNAs 3P 3A &amp; 7P 7A
Ad Lelarl watch lor S~~"~ns Applicant s must be depend
.,
Thur 3 Frl 4 Sa1 5 B? able team players w•th pas
Dtnn~nn Canopy Computer 111ve attitudes to JOin us 10
desk •clothes for all szes provd~ngoutstandmg qual!
Lots of m1sc
ty care to our residents
- - - - - - - - Slop by and f1ll out an apph
41h &amp; Rollins New Haven catiOn or contact Holl1e
May 4th &amp; 5th Duncans Bumgarner
LPN
Staff
ReSidents
0 e v e I o p m e nt
Coordlnalor@740 992 6472
Big Garage Yard sate Fr1day
d
1o
"
an come see r yoursen
Salurday May 41h 51h on
the d1fference you can make
Belle Road 3 miles out
at Overbrook 1111 EOE &amp; A
Sandhill Road Sals of dish parttctpant oI The Drug Free
es cookware m1crowave
Workplace Program
~~~~0 de~ors~~~ ~~~~:~ A
A
ccept1ng PP 1•ca1•ons 1or
gnlt Wicker van1~ Harley hel lead man and roofers Must
mets clothmg many n1ce have e~epenence mall phas
1tems too numerous to hst es ol roofmn, Tiools and
tu.£

, __

-Ya_r_
d -Sal_e_3_1_3_M
_ c_C_o-rm_1_ck
Ad Baby clothes household
Items mise Sat May 5 and
Ins de Sate Clay Twp Man May 7
8U1Id1ng Clothing d1shes &amp;
lots ot m•sc May 3rd &amp; 4th
Yard Sale Rodney Village
9am 5pm
?
Fnday &amp; Saturday 8
YARD SALEMay 3 4 5 975 Add1son 01,4
-.
P1ke N1ce plus s1ze clothes 1
PoMEROY/MIDDLE
and uniforms XL Strd Cage
and lots of m1sc 1tems
-M-ay----;,.c.:,--:-- -:-: --:-ab-:-le-s 3 fam1ly yard sale Fr1 Mam
:&gt;tn 8 30 3 00 1
St Rutland mov1es v1deo
stands craft supplies d1sh
a m e s h 0 u s e h 0 1d
9
es stools qu1lts sewmg 1 t e m s 1a d 1e s &amp; J r
mach1
ne __
etc925
_
__
_4th
__ _ clolhes 965 4183
MOVING SALE Furniture
lreezer housello ld 1tems
books etc Fnday and
Saturday May 4th and 5th
2007 B 00 4 OOpm 111
North College AID Grande
d I
)
~bes• e ~re stat1on

Pr.PLEASANT

ca:':m"e"a"nd"""see,l:7""':'";";'i1 transportation a must Top
May 3rd &amp; Pay (740)379 9079

rrGarage Sale
7

4th 9am 5pm Under
Bartow Jones Brtdge
Henderson WV Locust
&amp; Ferry St Longaberger
(B k I
I
1 &amp;
as e s p acema s
chair pads (fruit)) yard
ornaments
cuShions
dolts lamps large cedar
chest 5 carousel horse

Ambrosra Machme Inc
Pomt Pleasant WV (304)
675 1722 (304)675 1723
fax Machm1st 5 years or
more expenence $8 $12 per
hour
On Hand Shop Foreman
Machme Shop &amp; Fabncahon
knowledge 10 years or mora
expenence $12 $15 per
hour

angels Avon good 1ew
etry, &amp; extra nice clothes
Huge 4 Fam Yard Sale 2317
Jefferson Ave Pt PI WV May
3 4 8 4Pans sk1llets glass
ware-crafts for VBS Clothes
S M L tots of 2&amp;3X Boys &amp;
gtrls clothes Antique bottles
etc lantern mate nat
Ribbon wreaths seasonal
decoratiOns Sheet sets all
Sizes-books Sunday school
matenallotsmore
Lg Garage Sale 3 tam1ly
antiques d•shes glassware
me nact&lt;s fum•ture 112 m•le
above lakm Valley Brook
Lane Thur Frl Sat
Multi fam•ly great stuff
home furmsnmgs clothes
tnfant lo adutt Ratlroad
Street1 Chfton WV follow
s•gns May 3rd-4th 9-S May
5th 9 noon Afl Proceeds go
_1o_A_elay_:__For_Uf_e_ __:.__
Sat ?am 1pm Furniture
clothes tots of stuff 45
Hawthorne
Lane
(Meadowland Esla1es)
Yard 5ale 3 112 mles

out

Sandh•tl Fn and Sat 8 5 2
Fam1~ lo1S ol good sluff

r

An Excellent way to earn
money The New Avon
CaK Manlyn 304 882 2645
AVONI A.ll Areast To Buy or
Sell Shtrley Spears 304
675 1429
COL Onver for trash truck
Knowledge of Gallla County
preferred. 2 years dr1v1ng top
Heavy trucks
needed
(740)388 9686
-------Oom•no s P•ua Now H•nng
Sale Dm"Brs &amp; Management
Point Pleasant GaU1pol1s &amp;
Pomeroy locattons Apply n
Person
DriVers Needed
COL
Dnvers Willing to dnve for
local ready m1x company
Expenence IS preferred but
not necessary Dnvers must
be willing to do pre m8lnte
nance on 1-·~'~ &amp; equipment yard work &amp; other m1s
cellaneous
ct'lmes
•~ne· "· operallng =•ip
E ~'""
,,_
ment &amp; extra skills such as
welding 8 plus
Call
(304)937 3410
- - - - -----,:Expenenced Auto Body
Repairman Also. Needed
Ev""nenced Person tn
"""
DelBJIIng 740..992 2316

I

Yard
Sale
Fri 560
t~~
Sycamore
M1ddleporl
rLUt.tnJu,~•
Class•cal records bOOks
tapes m1sc
AUCTlON Modular House
FEDERAL
and tools &amp; Equ1pment
Yard Sale May 4 &amp; 5 35
POStAL JOBS
A1verv1ew Or Middleport Buct&lt;eye
HillS
Career
Center RIO Grande OhiO T $16 53-$27 58hlr now hir
m1les pas1 Holzer Hospi1al 9 00 ?
&amp; E al 11 OO a m House al
off 160 1st house on left on
lllQ For apphcat100 and free
Balhel Church Ad May lsi
YARD SAlE1200 noon on May 52007 g&lt;M&gt;memen1 job 1nlo, call

Yard Sale Longabarger baskels diShes camping gear
t~s dothes
holidaY ~~ "J
~•1
1001
h
s oes
s collec1or UUI s
Pool lable Bar 4 s1ools
Lawn canopy CD s &amp;
mov1es &amp; much more 3

r

iii'UA'iANriiiiiiiiiii,;,r'
:.:.:::..::.=:..:.:.:__cc:...___ "'--oiPI:oi.
•
2nd &amp; 3rd 9am 5pm

Yard sale Sal May51h 9-5
850
Kruas Beck
Ad 1000s ciafts
supplies
Collect•ble Qolls household sewmg and other great
deals 4th Tra1ter ab&lt;M3 M&amp;G
Yard Sale Saturday May 5
clolhes&amp;manymore onSoulhR12Thur Fn Sa1
8a 1p 184 LeGrande Blvd

:::~:

Needed Dedicated HHA s
PCA s CNAs &amp; STNAs
Established
and
well
respected local home health
agency
Located
m
Gallipolis Dh1o has avatl
able full t1me and part 11me
cases If you have a des1re
to work as a respected
TEAM
member
call
(740)446 3808 for 1mmech
ate mterv1ew
-------Now accepting applications
lol Gnii/Fry Cook Apply 1n
person at 308 2nd Ave
GallipoliS
Now accepting applications
lor Servers Apply 1n person
at 308 2nd Ave Gallipolis
Off1ce Clerk Part I me up to
15 hours per week Some
benefits Qualifications nee·
essary are prof1c1ency 1n
computer use general off1ce
dut1es outgo•ng personality
a plus wtth good phone
skills
Send resume to
Tuppers Ptatns Regtonal
Sewer Oislrlct PO Box 175
Tuppers Platns Oh1o 45783

-'l'l"-~-"::"",;,._., - . -....- ....- - . , lowmg pos1t ons to JOin our thru Friday from 8 00 a m ~esume deadline May 4
YARD SALEYARD
vlnendly and dedlca1ed slaff 4 00 p m regardmg lhe AN No phone call please

Fumtshmgs Knick Knacks
and Much More

3 Family yard sale will have
baby thmgs 1863 Prospect
Church Ad May 3 4 &amp; 5

CelebratiOn
of
A
L1fe Overbrook Center
located at 333 Page Street
Middleport Oh1o IS pleased
to announce we are accept
mg applications for the fol

~

German ShepherdfColhe m1x
'mside only) spade housebroke

HEL.PW~'II'ED

Lakm Hosprtal currently has
pos1t1ons
available
for
Rogls1orod Nurses (RN)
Licensed Practical Nureee
(LPN), Certified Nursing
Assistants (CNA a), and
Houssksepors lor lull lime
and temporary (90 day)
work tn a 114 Bed Long

YARD SALE·
GAU II'OLIS

5-*

110

Homemakers needed 1n the
Ashton Mason Co area to
prov1de 1n home se!Vlces to
the Elderly/Disabled Part
t•me 25 hrs a week
Tra n•ng avatlable Please
Call 304 453 4992

Buy1ng Junk Cars Trucks &amp;
Wrecks Pay Cash J D
Salvage
(304)773 5343
(304)674 1374

188 Oak Or Salurday May
Female We1maraner to nght 5th 8 3 Recliner Glass Top
home
housebroken Pat o Table w/ 6 cha~rs
(740)446 7903
home clothes m•sc 1tems
(740)441 7098 cell
2 Fam1ly Yard Sale 2336
Free Ia good home 9 black Centenary Ad May 4&amp;5
lab puppies Born 3/15/07 Washer Dryer Furniture
Call 740 256 6181
Baby 11ems Clolhmg

Do............... ..... . .. .. . - .

•

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
""
Borders $3.00/per ad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

r
"-------_.1

•

-

{304) 675-1333

DisPlay Ads

ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC
OND ANNUAL REUNION
MOOSE LODGE MAY 26 Losl 1n VICinity of Crown
2007 B 1 00 ENTERTAIN Excavating Female Golden
MENT {304)675 4831 OR Ret never
(7 40)446 3488
Lost small black shaggy
Sues Green House 1n now puppy 6 mo old wlblack
open (740)949 3151
while coll ar Rockspr ngs
Hemlock Grove Area 992
2355 or 949 2575
GtVMWAY
'

Goods............ ..... ...........

'

l\egtster

Small Dog EngliSh
Court Area Call 304 593
6732 to lclenhly

6 puppms to Giveaway call
ion of an advertise
nt Corrections wll
made In the flra
vallable edition

'f~D

www myda1lyreg1ster com

1 FOUND

no

20% CASH BACK

Trop1cana Casmo

ANNOUNCEMINfS

4x4's For Sale. _ .. ..
725
Announcement
030
Antiques
530
Apartments lor Rent
440
Auction and Flea Market
080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessortes
760
Auto Repair.... •
Autos for Sale ....
710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale
750
Building Supplies
550
Business and Buildings
340
Business Opportunity
.210
Business Training • •
140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes
790
Camping Equipment.
780
Cards of Thanka..
.. 010
Child/Elderly Care...... .. • • .. •
.. 190
ElectrlcaVRefrlger6tlon. .. .. .. •
• 840
Equipment for Rent
480
Excavating... ............,. ... •
830
Farm Equipment ..... .. ... .. • •
.. .610
Farms for Rent
430
Farms for Sale
330
For Lease.... .... • .... • ... .. .. • •
490
For Sale.... ... .. ... .. • ..... ... .. •
585
For Sale or Trade ..... • • .... • ..
• ...... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables •
• •• 580
Furnlahed Rooms •
450
General Hauling. • •
850
' Giveaway.. • ... , •
040
Happy Ads ...
• 050
Hay &amp; Grain
640
Help Wanted ..
... 110
Home Improvements ... ... • .. • • •
.810
Homes tor Sale....
310
Household Goods
• _ 510
Houses for Rent.. •
410
In Memoriam. .. ................... -· ..... 020
Insurance... • • •
130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment....
660
Llvastock.. ..
630
t..oat and Found ........ , • .... ..
060
Lots &amp; Acreage ............................ 350
Miscellaneous... .. .. • • .... ... -·
• • 170
Miscellaneous Merchandise. • .. • •
• .540
Mobile Home Repair.. .. .....
860
Mobile Homes for Rent .. •
420
Mobile Homes for Sale • ..
• 320
Money to Loan
• • ... • ... ...
220
Motorcycles &amp; 4 Wheelers
740
Mualcallnstrumenta .... • .. ... ..
570
Personals ............. -· ... ...... ...... • .. ••• 005
Pets for Sale.. .. ... .. .. ...... • • • .. ..
• 560
Plumbing &amp; Heating
... 820
Pro!Jaalonal Sarvlces • .. ... • ... ....
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
.. •• • • • ..
.. •160
Real Eatate wanted ..... - ... .. • .. ..
• 360
SchoOislnatructlon. ...... .. .. ... ..
... 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer...... .... •
..
650
Situations wanted .......... .................. -. 120
Space for Rent. ......... ·-· -· ...... -.. .. • 460
Spprtlng
520
SUV'a for Sale 720
Trucka for Sale .......... .... ....... ..... • .. 715
Upholatery.. ...... ...... • • .. ... • • .. ..
• 870
Vans For Sale .......... -· ....................730
Wanted to Buy •
090
wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies
620
' Wanted To
180
Wanted to Rent ............................ ·-. 470
' Yard Site- Galllpolla........ ·- -·- ............072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Niddle
074
Yard Site-PI Pleasant......... •
• 076

10% off Almost Everything*

May 24 2007 to May 26 2007

r

CLASSIFIED INDEX

E)(Ciudes electromcs Great Pnce ttems
and Kenmore Pro•

NEW COMPANY

r

\'\ '\111 \I I \ II \ I "--

www myda1lytnbune com

www myda11ysent1ne1 com

Oearl~lrM

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword a Include Complete
Description a Include A Priot! • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Ptlone Number And Address When Needed
a Ads Should Run 7 Days

Successf'd Ads
Should Indude These ltems
To
Get Response ...

Webs1tes

Sentinel

Dally In-Column• t : OO p m
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day•s Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1 00 p m
For Sundays Paper

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

accept any adver
eement In vlolatlo
ftht low

M9nday, May 7th

Atlantic City
Getaway!

\fi:rtbune

ca~f;~::;... (7~~~ ro44~:~~~2 (7!?a~ ro99~:~~5?6

)We will not knowing

One Day Only

Public Notice

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

To Place

I

until 8 pm Only!

':=======

Meigs County, OH

I

pleted and Is available
lor rev taw at tho
District's matn oftlce
IOj;ated at 39561 Bar 30
R'llad; Reedsville, OH
4
2
Mineral
Resources
•
Management,
2045
Morse Road, Bldg H-2,
Columbus,
Ohio
4322!Hi693.
The project covered
by this action Ia tilted
"Clonch" (•MG-Sb-60)

trust, not less than five
days prior to tho date
set lor hearing.
JS Powell
Judge
Common Pleas Court,
Probate Division
t'llelgs County, Ohio
(5) 4

t~ter

I

Your Right t

account wtll be set lor
hearing before said
Court on the 4th day ol
June, 2007, at which
time said account will
be considered and

Daily Sentinel • Page 85

I

SEARS

Land reclamation projoct In the State of
Ohio The Division of
Mineral
Resources
Management prepared
and the OHice of
Surface
Mining
Reclamation
and
Enforcement, United
States Department of
the Interior concurred
that
the ' activities
being undertaken by
the proposed project
qualify as a category
olactlons which would
not have significant
effects on the environment, enher Individually or cumulatively. The
certlflcatton waa submltted by the Division
In application for Title
IV financial assistance
In
reclaiming
and
restoring land and
water
resources

1

m:rtbune - Sentinel - l\e

New

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

IN
THE
COMMON
PLEAS COURT, PROBATE DIVISION MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Accounts and vouchers ol the following
named fiduciary has
been !tied In the
Probate Court, Meigs
County,
Ohio
for
approval and settlement
ESTATE NO 30482Annual account ol
Bernard V Fultz and
Mary Arnold (Long),
Co-Trustees of the
Trust Under the Will of
Elizabeth
Cutler,
Deceased
Unless exceptions are
Iliad
thereto, said

www.mydailysentlnel.com

Jersey 96 New Jersey leads sertes 3

American League
Eaat Division
Boston
16 9
667
13 15 464
Tampa'say
Toronto
13 15 464
NewYork
12 14 462
Balt•more
12 16 429
Central Division
W L Pet
Cleveland
17 8
680
Delro•t
16 11 593
Mmnesota
15 13 536
Chteago
12 13 480
Kansas City 10 19 345
West Division

PageB4

Friday, May 4, 2007

r74_D;;;
-2;;,4;;;
5;;5334;o..---;-;;,...., Amerx:an Assoc of Labor 1
913 599-8042 24mrs amp
serv

FIND A JOB
IN THE

-------He!p wanted at Darst Adutt

LPN and CNA pos111ons To
apply for a Housekeeping
postllon please contact Roy
Hay
SuperviSOr
Laktn
Hospital (304) 675 0860
b
he h
ext 156 etween I
ours
O
of 7 0 a m - 3 00 P m
d
Monday!hroug h Fflay

_:..__ __:__ __
A&amp;J Truck1ng Lead1ng The
Way A&amp;J Trucking now
Hlnng at our New Haven
WV Termmal For Regional
Hauls.Dump D1v 1 year
OTA verffiable exp Call 1
800 462 9365 ask for Kent

Ready for an 1ndependen1
Landscape
Laborers rewardmg and flexible
Wanted (304)634 8385
career In home health?
r-~"tt~lfR--l Local Home Health Agency
loolong for self motwated
TO DRIVE
nciv1duals lor a vanety of
ALLIANCE
shifts PCA CHHA CNA
STNA certif1ca11on We have
TRACTOR TRAILER
tra1nmg available and we
TRAINING CENTERS
ass1st With lob placement
• FULL TI"E CLASSES
"'
Applications are beu1g
FINA~~~~~~A~~LE"
accepted or ma 1to PO Box
JOe PLACEMENT"·
707 Gatt 1pohs Qh 45631
C.'-br•Uno 28 ve- tn 1ualne11 (740 )441 1377 or..lax 10
Wytheville Vlrgm1a
740 4411648
1 800 334 1203
(
)
,_al~anoellilctortraller com
Res1dentrat construction full
time laborer pos1tron avatl
LICENSED ~OCIAL WORK
able Phone (740)742 3411
ERS
Monday ttYough Friday 9am
to 7pm leave message
ATTENTION
LICENSED
SOCIAL WORKERS - Due Roofers Metal roofing Std
to rqp1d growth Fam1ly 1ng and EPDM Tq&gt; pay and
Options Provtders 1s now benel11« 724 229-!1020
seek.ng
Protess1onal
Independent • Contractmg Someone to do alterat1ons
Soc1al Workers lor Mason Apply 1n person Mon Fn
g 00 2 00
Duke
and Jackson Count1es lrom
ContractOfs should have a Cleaners 656 2nd Ave
Gallipolis Oh
desdule lollworkAWII!hblchllldren
an am1 es e 18 e rans Subst1tute RN!lPN wanted
portahon and proof of auto for
the
Carleton
mob le msurance requ1red Schoo11Me 1gs lndustnes
Best contract pay m the hours 9am 3pm Must have
area Interested Licensed cu"en1 RN license 1n lhe
',
Soc1al Workers should sutr Sate of Ohm Prefer e~epen
mit thetr resume and cover encelnpubhchealthnurs~ng
.1.
)
1
letter 1dentify1ng couuty(s o and/or work1ng with children
by 1
304 254
mterest
ax to
and adults 'Mth developmen
9099
or
ema•t
to tal diSBbtlittes Send resume
harold @ famt lyop tton~ byFndayMay18th2007to
sprov1ders com
Me1gs Coun1y Board of
Mental Retardation and
Local Home Health Agency Developmental Olsab httes
acc~ptmg applicatiOns for 1310 Car1eton Street PO
STNA CHHA PCA CNA BoK 307 Syracuse Oh
WIII mg t o I ra1n for Mergs 45 ng
Counly area Please call 1 - - - - - - - 80().592 2444
Super 8 Motel accepting
- -- - - - - - appllcaiiOns for breakfast
Local Home Health Agency bar attendant Must be an
Now acceptmg resumes for early mormng person with
SCheduler (Pan time) With great customer serv~ca
poss•ble FT EKpenence skills Apply tn person NO
Helpful but not necessary PHONE CALLS
PI ease ma1 I resume Io CLA
Box 568 c/o Galhpol1s Dally lisakmlg Appli cahons&amp; GK•mes
1 1
Tribune
PO Box 469
tee
nc st
eorwvge
Gall 1pol OH 45631
Street New Haven
IS
25265 NO PHONE CALLS
Medtcal Asstsant needed
part t•me or full ttme at
Doc!OfS Office expenence
prefe"ed Must be wlllmg to
work Evenings 3 11 pm
Benef1ts offered
Send
Aesumelo
TSC 5-1 cJo
OWl.
Poi 1PI
1A S1 200
n easan 09' er
Matn Street Pomt Pleasant
WV 25550

n--

POST OFFICE NOW
HIRING

Av$5g

7KPav_~~.or
w•~·,

lncl,mng Federal Benefi1s
andOl:Pai&lt;ITrtllnlng
Vacanons.fTIPT
m E1118923
1

CLASSIFIEDS ;r;"~ift~99~~ilting -8Q0-58(US~A

1 Threader
PoSitions
Operator 1 Welder
1
Maclune Operalor
-W--ed-Di-'-ed-SU
_ __
.:~s :o ove,:v;;:::
youth 1n a staff S80Jre res•
denhal env~ronment Must
pass
physical 1ram1ng
requ~remenl Pay based on
expenence Ca" (740)379
9083 be1ween 9-3 Mon Fn
Truck Dnvor lor Hauling
flled&lt;B T"!'7 C2DL 7Ciass A or
s 304~ 5 45

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

•

�.'

Page 86 ~ The Daily Sentinel

It
•Tra1per Position

•

time staff for Mason, WV
providing residential/com ~muni ty skill
training with
&lt;ndi,lduals with MR/DD. We

:Bre also seeking ·a pail time
·employee io work in Point
WV
in

Monday:

· the
shift .

:Stternoonlevening
~ igh school diploma or
QED requi.red. No experi·
erx:e necessary.

roLoAN

,\ I I\ I ' '' ll f...

Criminal

Mu st have reliable trans ·

portation and valid
auto insurance. Pa1d tra1n·
ing. Hourly rate starting at
$7-$8.00/hour. Please cali f
304·373·1011 or toll free at
1·877·373·10 11 .

**NOTICE**
Ohio Division of
Financ•al
Institution's
Consume'r
b ffice
of
Affairs BEFORE you refinance you r home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
the

1

or

Srnoms

1.

INrnlucnoN

50

www.ga ~lpoli&amp;ea reef'COieoe .coin
Accredit&amp;d Member

Acc red~ i ng

CwncW lor lndependeri CoMege&amp;
ancl Schools 127AB.

rl6~1
Oil &amp; Gas Well Leases,
Addisor\I'Ch9shire Twps, 8
Berea· Wells comp w/ Pump
Jacks, Motors, Tanks &amp;
Sales Meters $56,000
Phone 740·934-2073
.

Child Care in my Home 304·
67H537
Lawn-care Service, Mowing
&amp; Trimming. Gall (740)441 ·
1333 or (740)645-()546

Bed

111111111741.m.ml
mymldwesttlome.com
Clea rance Sale. New Total
drywall homes.from $299 .63
per nlonth, Ca ll ( 74 0)38~ 2434

Company)

Drastically
R~duced ,
$25 .000. mu st relocate ,
older mobile home w/ t /2
acre in country, 4 bd.,
remodeled, semi furnished,
quiet area, close to school,
(304)882·2196

I'ROF!NiiONAL
SERVIll:S

TURNED OOWN ON ·
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI7
No Fee Unless We Win !
1·888-582-3345

For Sale 2000, 14x70 Trailer.
No calls after 9pm 304-6753927

IH \I 1""1 \II
HOMFS

FOR Sw:

Great uSed 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vinyl/shingle.
$269/mo! Buy GALLIPO- Must sell. Only $25.995 with
LIS FOreclosure! t -4 bed dati, ery. Call (740)385·4367
homes from 199/mo. 5% SPEC IAL FHA FINANCE
down, 20 yeaJa at 8%. Program $0 Down , If you
More homes available . For own Land or use Family
loca listings call 800.559· Land We own th e Bank your
4109 xF254
Approved 606-474·6380
perlect credit is available on
this 3 bedroom , 1 bath
home. Corner lot, fireplace,
modern kitchen. jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740·367·7129.
Tatum
Dr. Ne w
Haven.WV. 3bd/2ba. Ranch,
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. great
area. 0; 304·675·3637 E;
304-882·2334

24nHOME
STORE

~No

adv8rtlae "any
preference, llmlt.tlon or
dlacrimlnatlon baaed on ·
rKe, color, religion, HX
familial atetua or national
origin, or any Intention to
meke any auch
preference, llmitatton or
dlacrimlnation."

Thl1 newape.per wll not
knowingly llce..,t
ldvertiMments for rerrl
..tate which lain
violation of tt.e taw. Our
readers are hereby
informed ttm all
~---'It
u
- ng• advertlaed In
lhl
• newap.per ,,.
av1ilable on an:eqUII
-rtunlty buot.

r

eoo-

o

i.

FOR"~
-

I

{full),fenced yard,neighbor·
hood good.$550 plus ut &amp;
dep.,ref.req.,740-843-526-4.
Pomeroy, 2 or 3 BA.,
Nayters Run!Condof, No

pets. yards. sir; WID 0001&lt;up. References. Call 9926886.
- -- -- - -1970 Sheffield l raile&lt;, 3 bd.• Very ntce hom&amp; for rent in
1 1fl bath , natUral gas fur· Midd. 2 Br., 1 bath, sun
room . 7 rooms lola!, garage
nace. tHee!. hot water
bloct&lt;s tncfuded . $1.500 firm. &amp; basement. Available, Call
74D-992·9784.
call (740)367-7785

~

tar«.

1987-· 14X56- 2 Br.. 1 bath.
· all e~ric. Must move. 740696-1615. $6000.00

Shop
Clossifieds!

air. FUJnished w~ h couch, chai rs,

r

MOBIIEFORn~

I

row $375.00. Call 749-949·
2727

•

ln.vrftl o , , .. ftllm11t.1
U O·AAI -Q3117

.I om.•.., I n ·t: St.•n in
• Top • Removal
• Tri m • Stu mp
G ri nd in g • Bticket

Trud

insured
Scniur Cititc n
Fu ll

Di sco unt

740:367-0266/
1-800-950-3359
30 Yrs. Ex p. Ins.
Owner Ron nie Jones

Free E sti m ates

New 5'k8' 2 Wheel Farm
Trailer, Sturdy, 3" Angleiron,
Wood Floor, Sideboards,
Nice. $400 (740)379·2748

i

~

II \\IS

(()\(1{111
lO\Sif{L( 110\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

United States Notes Red
Seal Fi\18 Dolar and Two
Dollar-Bills. haw 16, S154:
Also have a rare 1928 Red
Seal One Dollar B•"ll. $125·.
Have 2 Wagner Skillets, #2
and #12, Very Clean, $165.
(740)533·3870
Used Toy&gt;. Over 1,000 Old

&amp; New, Under $100 for all.

Housing Opportunity. This
(740)256-6488
institution is an Equal
Opponunity Provider and Wheeler &amp; Wilson -older
Employer.
ode!
$
m
sewing machine 100
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- 304-458·2234
room apartments at Village 11:111"--~---.,

i

PETs

Manor
and
Riverside
FOR SAI.I:
Apartments in Middleport. ~
From $0 ·$592 . Call 740·
992 -5064 · Eq u .I HouSI·n9 2 Male Ponies for sale. ( 1/2
Opportunities.
Equal yr old, black with white face
Opportunity E,mployer
is Welsh Pinto, buff colored
Middleport! or 2 Br. apts., mate is Walsh Shetland.
Paid $1100 lor both. will sell
no pats, dep. &amp; rei. , 992- both for $450 . They are still
01
65
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ studs, partially broken. 740Middleport Beech Street, 2 388--8845
Br.. lurnished apt. ,'. utilities - -- -- - - ·d
pots dep &amp; f AKC Reg.Basset Pups.B
pal ' no
' · · re ., wks.otd , tricolor, lemon
992-Q165 .
-,--,----::--- - &amp;wh.,P.O.P.,$275 ea ., 740·
Modern 1 B~room Apt. , 667-6758..
•
Call (740)446-0390 ··
- - -- - - - - - - - ' - - - -- - AKC Smalt Vorkie male
Modern 1 BA Apt. Call 446• puppy, Blue/Gold, Parents
3736
on premises, Has shots,

Wise Concrete
All t ypes (l f concrete

New 2BR
apartments.
Washer/dryer
hool&lt;up.
itoveirelrigenltor induded.
A!so, units on SA 160. Pets
WeM:ome! (740)44Hl1-94.

New HIM!n, 1 Br., furnished.
no pets, dep.&amp;referenoes,
740-992-D1 65o
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications lor waiting
lis~ tor Hud-subsiz:ed, 1- br,

paper trained, (740)388·
9686
-------Dachshund puppies ready
to go 4-21-07 1st shots,
wonnod. vet ched&lt;ed $200
740-446-7331
- - - -- - - Indian Rirgneck Panot wrth
large cage. Approx . 12
years old $400.00. 740·742·
3304 after ?PM.

Hill's Self
Storage
' 45 771

74Q-949-2217
1995 Ford Mustang GT, V8,
auto, nice car. $4500. Also,
1997 Camara V6, auto, new
paint -black , shar'p car.
$4500 . Both cars carry 1
year warranty. KC Auto
Sales. 740-446-81 72

i

·Sizes s'l(1o;
,. ~
,. to 1O'x"30'
:"' ... '~ ""
. Hours

Gener~Conkacting
St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCDOI
• New Homes

2004 Stratus. $6000 OBO.
2000 Ford Mustang , $5000
OBO. 2000 Chery Cavalier.
$2800 OBO, 2002 Dodge
Stratus. 2 door. $5600 OBO.
(740)256·6169 . .

· • Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

140·992·1611

2006 Hyund8i Etantra, 67,000 mites. $13.1&gt;00; 2007
lincoln Navigator, 5,000
miles. . $55,000 ; · 2007
Thoroughbred by Palomino
camper. $25,000. (740)441· .
8204

Stop &amp; Compare

1988 Ford Ranger 4x4.
Runs good and body good.
$1500. 740·379-2860
1997 Ford XL F1 50 Reg.

97 Dodge 1500 ext cab,
auto/air. 4WD Short Bad.
318. S5800 Exc. Cond; 1981
Dodge 4WD 318 4spd.
$2'200 · Super Swampers.
(740)256-6543

VANS
t.,~--ttiFiiOiRiiiS..Uiii-Ei'_,.r

10 9 8 5

s

J 43
8 6s
A76 2
AQ4

g~~:C,
~"*'

Weol

North

Eul

2 NT

Pass

Obi.
Pass

Paso
Pass

t•

2004 Newmar Mountain Me
Motor
Home.
Chevy
Workhorse, 2 slides, 4 door,
trig/Freezer, ice maker, sotid
oak intenor, full body paint,
17K miles. $1 12.000. Call
(740)245·5468

fi!IC:"::-"--:-:-::--.,

I

(MPROVEMEIIlli

BASEMENT
17 Ft. 1980 Baytiner with 75
WATERPROOFING
HP OJt Board motor. $1.600 Unconditional lifetime -guar080. 740·742-2357.
antee. l ocal references furnish~d . Established 1975.
1998 18' Stratos, 150HP
Cat! 2&lt; Hrs. (740) 446·
Evenrude.. 80 hours on
0870, Rogers Basement
•ebu;td . S7800 . (740)256· Waterproofing.
1962

--~-----

I

43

-fide

~

44 Trln8PO!t

45 Big Dl'flllll'
bear

C

46 OUttr

r-

edgel
47 Canll
of 101111
48 Pelle
49 Ale libel
52 Enllllolder,
miybt

Arnold Palmer said, ·concentration
comes out of a combination of confidence and hu'nger."
Presumably he' meant ht~tger from a

BARNEY

I

wwwilrw!Mtll'tu om

~I I
i ~ '@~:=:-:--.~
Il "

Hubbard's Greenhouse

~~

Syracuse, Ohio

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $1-50
1O"Hanging Baskets $5.50-$6.50
4" Pots $1-25-$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95-$6-95
Open M-Saturday 10·5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

~~~i5a~~:LS~
THE BORN LOSER

P'"f-1"-PP'I l!&gt;lltlf.\t*.'(, 1&gt;\0t-\!

OLl&gt; AA£: 'IOU

f.IOJI

Tl\1~ '{~R1'

740·992·5776

Stop _in at
participating
Pomeroy
Merchants
. for our
Mother's
Day Gift
Basket
Giveaway

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

The key to this deal is the handling Of a
sun combination. How would_you play WI
two no-trump after WeSf leada the club
jack and East pull up the ~ng? What do
you lhink olthe auction?
Tllkilg the putt beb'e the Clive, the auction Is line. Will cipens with one cUI, of
oourse. Nollh has a clear-cut ta1taout
double, being ahorlln clubs and having
length in the other three eults. h Is parti;ularty to hiMt two tour-card
major&amp;. Soulh'a Jump 1o two no-trump
shows some 10-12 ~points and
. a daconl club hoking. Nor1h paaH
because he has only 12 points.
'tbu start with five top tricks (inltant winners): one lleart, two diamoncll and two
dubs I~ tr!d&lt; one). You need lhree ·
more tricks. Since the hearts are spilling
3·3, you cou_ld evenluafly get an extra
heart tr!d&lt; and two spade lridta, but you
do not have the time tor that 8f)pf08Ch.
Will will eatabiah and run his cUJ t~t~n.
laking one spade, two·hearts and tour
clubs.
·
lnslead, go lor lhnlt apade
tricks. This •
reqW&amp; a 3-3 break, but
you can also liUCC8ed. nWill has the
einglelon or doobteton ace. After taking
trick one, lead a low spade to dummy's
queen. When lhal holds (as you know H
will), retum to your hand with a diamond
and play anolhar Sjlada. Here, Wesl's
ace pops up and everything Is rosy.

AstroGrapb

*Prom pt and Quality
Work
* R eason ah lc

Rales

BIG NATE

*Insu red
References Avai lable!
Call Ga ry Stanley @
740-742-2293
Please leave mcssa e

THERE'S A "PIJOOLE OVER
THERE ... Al&lt;ll&gt; ALL
THESE ACORNS SEEM
SORT .OF .- .. YOU Ko.IOW ...

RAN

PEANUTS

I THINK .sNOOP'(

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

WOULD E~O't'

70 Pine Street ·• Gallipolis
.446-0007

LETTE~ ~ROM ~5

OBEDIENCE SCilOOL WAS A
WASTE OF TIME !

6ETTIN6 A

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions &amp;
Remo~eling

New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters

VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decita

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy 01110
25 YPars local Expenei'Ce

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

7 40-367·0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

,Manlay's
Recycling

GARFIELD

5111111 it• lllllle..n. II Wl8
140-992-aM

0·

II•IIIII•IJ-fi'IIIII 9:081111-5:111•
SMUIIIIV 9:08 •12:00 IM

0
0

PlYING TOP PIICES FUI

J
\----tJI-A~,.;;,;-i.
I

L~~~~...J!
GRIZZWELLS

WHAT YO•UJI.?I

i~

tb'lbU~
1\\\HKA~
4-m1~-~&amp; A

trom-byt""""-·po!lrd~.

Todlly's due: Pequals N

"DEOS SPNSPUSTK DEOS.

J T S II W II K . S P S T N Z . E W E K -G Z
KXSPUEPN

YPSKSDO

YPS

KMT MR

GSJYFSK TEJR."
GSTPRIITUW

PREVIOUS SOlUTION - 'Poetry is simply the most beautiful, impressive,
and widely effective mode Of saying things.• - Matthew Amold
Willi
tAM I

of

s.tunt.y, !loy 5, 2007

low lo fo&lt;11 f..r oli!IPfo Wl"ds.

BUBRYG

't rfii]
W0 L YL

..
D

3

~

H 0 B RE T

A philosophy profmor 011ct
told me that, "EYenu do 001 ·
come, they are there and we
encounter thew oo --· ~-."

I

&amp; PltN1 NUM&amp;RED lfllfRS tN
,

IHEIE &gt;QUARES

I

··

'
·' 0 ~;c:~':~~
lfi'ER~ 10 I·I

I' ll I'

I'

I

III

I

'

SCUM-lETS ANSWERS. 5 - 3 - o 1
Chosen - Bless - Quirk - SlnUid _:: BROTHER
"I would like to get out of my rut." the teen told his
· dad. "'RouHne is good_" the dad replied. ·•bul
boredom is its BROTHER."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

·

fair shant. -

SOUPTONUTZ

TAT1b0?

I

'

.

L......L....L-.L.--L---1--' you devJ)op from ~ep No. 3 below.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - You may
not rind the eaay answers you're -looking
for, 59 don'1 take the first explanations
you hear as fact ]uat becliJH you like
them. If they're wrong, it could hurt you In
great measure.
_
SAGITTARIUS !No,. 23-Doc. 21) Before genlng Involved In a new project
or venture, recheck every ramification
possible. Even then, don't think you've
covered everything. A surprlte Is Quite
possible.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jan. 19) - You
mtght foolishly be tempted to take rtak8
or bt,td( the odds In some manner that
will go against you, dooplte the lad that
.everything tells yoU not to do 10.
AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Fob. 19)- When n
comes to a lamHy matter of Importance,
be sure to conter wttn tile others before
acting on a decision. WhiU k:IOka r1ght at
first could In ttme be t0$811y the wrong
thing to do.
PISCES !Fob. 20-Morch 20) - You moy
b:e quite d8'11er In coming up wtth ways to
dodge your duties and even receive pe.ta
on the back to.- doing ao. How.ver, you'll
pay a heavy price In the end.
,
ARIES (Match 21 ·A)lril19) - H I/OU •••
not .u open and generoua \Mth your
frlenda u they are ¥loith you, you'll eome
off looking wry aelf·serving. When time
or money nHds to be aharad, ante up

.,

.

1--ri':'S-ri"'""TI-'11r-TI:6-I. li1
A C.,..;pleto 1ho chuckle quottd
by fill1"9 In tl&gt;t miuing _ .

. .. TilE
NEWSPAPER
l-IAS
.
S CM1E TI-IING
YOU!! .

·,

WRMW

Jo•on
tf.o
0 lootro~~g~
ocroonblod WO&lt;ds bo·

By Bomtce- 0oo1
One of the belt things you can dO tor
yourself Ia gain more knowtedge about
your chOaen field. By expanding upon
your education ancifor taking advantage
of new courses being offered, It'll bring
substantial benefits.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Although
you may make much effort to be a nice
guy or gal, there Is still a chance you
could come off aa being lmpoaslble to
please, etpeclally If a situation or person
you don't like enters the scene.
GEMINI (May 21.Juno 20) - Be a good
listener and don't hesitate to ask questions on anything you need clarm.ct. It
you pretend to understand or know
something, you could and up looki,ng
quit&amp; muddleheaded.
CANCER (June21-..illy 22)- There is a
good chance you could cater to your
whims of extravagant fancieS and end up
with little to show for It and 1181 In your
. wallet. Don't spend your hard-eamltd
funds foolishly.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Extra unex·
peeled effort might be required In ot"der

~r

SPSTNZ

fo•"

look bad.

Local Contractor

by Luis Campos

cetobrly~_... •• -.~
Eld'llltt.-in the aplllr Ulds for arolhef.

...,;._l~ko~

· Should unforeseen setbacks occur,
regroup and continue to strive hard for
what you want. •
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept 22) Uncharacteristically, you could careless·
ly react In a spiteful manner to someone
or something you believe has wronged
you. Unfortunately, It witt make you took
bad, not the other guy or gal.
ltBRA (Sept. 23-&lt;&gt;ct. 23) - Take care
when conducting buatHna, even with
trusted firms or persons. No one Ia llkety
to deliberately cheat you, but a mistake
could be made that will make all iiWOived

·SUNSHINE CLUB
YOUNG'S

CELEBRITY CIPHER

T~~=' $~~d.\~-l&amp;"b~s·
___
•r (LJoY L POLLioN

...... 'llrlhdltr:
T~E G.fV,SS
IS SOP.T OF PATCHY...

r HEAN.

* Ex perie nced

IIIIHimCHs•lllmlltlmWIIItll ·
CIIIIYUt CIINM't., • C.•
aa.t•enllil . .ll
ICIII ftr limit l'l1clll

20'x40'
Boathou!j;e
al _
Gallipolis
Boat
Club,
$1 4,000: 1994 21' Marada
305 Chev, 97 hrs, $6500.

:wN ::2~ ~~:nera

-lion

South

36 Cafe 11139 Brelldlll
fare
41 Sign.., for

1 VIICCine type 23 Meadow
2 Big laugh
28 Fflmenco
{hyph.)
24
lcant'a
lllout
3
cry
29 One oil
· denlll
25 Adjusted
f)lfr
4 Compere
the tires
31 llnnga
5 SCent
26 Role Jrull
ICIIOn
6 Andy
27 Horse
33 FltzGel'lld'e
Clpp'a wh
controller
poet
7 Money
30 Stir-fly
35 Gematone
hltndler
pans
37 Playful bite 8 Moat
32 Hot tub
38 TrouMrs
lmporlllnt 34 Gush

26 VIdeo atore

to act;..., your goats aild obfoclfvoo.

2000 Chrysler Town &amp;
Country, Power Windows &amp;
Door Locks, AMIFM/CD,
AJC, Cruise, lnterior/Ext9rlor
GOOd Shape. Runs Good, 1
owner, regular maintenance. 23ft 2004 KZ Coyote new
"'7i40~)'44~6-:;:0:;;5:;:00;:..._ _~ condition, rel rig, sto'e &amp;
f74J MOTORC\'~
oven, microwave. furnace,
4 WHF.flJ:.RS
air conditioning , water
J.,.eriirlioiiiiiiiliiiiiiio-_.J heater &amp; pump, king foldout
on front. lull foldout on each
06 350 Honda Rancher, 4x4; side. CO surround sound,
99 Honda Recon 250 . 2WD, sleeps 1o. $12.000 call 304·
(740)446·9177 . (740)645· 675·7934
2399
Camping Site for rent on
2003 V-Star Cla ssic 1100 .river. lull hook-up. 992·
Cruiser. like New, 6 ,000 5956
·
miles. Windshield, Bags &amp;
-..1 1{\ I( I "
extras. $6.000 .. 1740)446·
9278
10
HOME

1983 30· AV, 45,000 miles.
Sacrifice due to health,
$8,000 . (740)256·6395 or
( ~)544·0 ! 0 1.
- - - - - - -1985 24Ft CtassC Mot01
Home S4 .500 304 ·882·3237

•

• K

A combination
that requires what?

HOW'S '&lt;ORE APPETITE
BEEN

www.tlmbet ereokcabbletry.eom

r"jamilq .~~.,!'l:i"·~z'!!'al'!g!ft:"'•

Cab 6cyt, 5 speed 4x4, 8h
bed $4 ,500 304-773-6063

r

Hardwood Cablnei!'Y And FurnitUre

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

FOR SALE

10 9 8 6

• J 95

Opening lead: • J

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

We Deliver To You!

TRUCKS

•

.-ton

dasi'eto be successful, nol hunger from
a lack of food in one's stomach.

. 1/1411 mo. pd

2001 Mercury Cougar, V6,
auto, stJnroof, 80K, $7900.
740-339-2494

CU!PER'i &amp;
MOIOR HoMFS

Marcum Construction and

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

1998 Mustang GT. AT. AC.
PW. 64 .000 mites. (740)245·
5213

com~nt

44::...
46 Hldenny
. . 50 Son ol VII

age

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

15 yrs. Ex . Free Es 1 im~t cs

Racine, OhiO

r

•
•
t
•

70 Pine S treet • Ga llipo li s
740-446-01107 Toll Free 1177 -(oli9-0007

Additions
Garages
Vinyl Siding
Rooting
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4,141 OOicc
740-416-1834

43 Yq

14 Long ligha 53 While like'
15 Rapper Moe
Shlmu
Dee 54 Ellploit
16 Kennel
55 Objectivn
lellure
56 Leg, for one
17 Rlltlt
ST Actlonll
9 Grad
19 Ukerich
collie
10 Repudiate
1011
58 Pereh8nce 11 nc-toe
21 Chltrgtd
59 Sheltered
connector

Eul

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Mike W. Marcum, Owner

or

~~~~~~-

12 GrOundlen
and Alell
13 Malt ~~ever, 51 He dftcted

Soulb

Owner- Ri ck Wise
740-992-5929
740-416-1698

2967 0 BaShan Road

(740)44 1 ~9372

(jtunihj l•&gt;:i1tl41~

Insured
Free Estimates

r

BOATSFOR&amp;SA!J;:Maro
_ RS

West
• A7
• K Q tO
• QJ
• J 10 9 8 7 2

740-992-6971

Goats for Sate. Boer Goats,
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb,
2007. Call (740)256·9247

fOld

t K 4 3'
• 6 5

David Lewis

5460 for ' informa~on .

·="=

.......,

• A742

26 Years Experience

- -- - - - - Butcher pigs and feeder pigs
. available. Contact (740 )441·

r

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

Concrete Work

2 Hereford Bulls 16 months
old for sale. 740·643·2618

unit
4 Trwndy

Hartford
compel~

11 BUiboy'a
Nonb
• K Q 52

All Type&amp;Of

LIVI'SllX:K

1006 tnnsbrooke 5th wheel
29ft Camper. loaded 12ft
One 14X70 Trailer; One apartment,tor
the Yorkie Poo, tiny tea cup; slide wltlitctl $7,500 1996
1987·· 14X~2Br.• 1 bath. Trailer lot tor rent CAll elderly/disabled call 6 75· Chihuahuas,
(lpplehead; Dodge Sl! 4x4 ext cab.
all eJectric. Must move. 740-- 740·949-2237.
6679
Equal
Housing Poodla. tiny toy, quallly top Diesel TruCk $7 .500 304·
698· 18 15. $6000.00
()pponunlly
babies. (740)645-6987
576-2737 leave message
IIW'II

Top o Trim • Hauling • Slump
Grinding o B11tket Tnd

Reg Belgian Mare 4yrs old.
Above ground swimming $600. Belgian Gelding
pool, 18ft round-52in deep. 4yrs.old $300. Call740·446·
3yrs old. Buyer must take 0373
OOwn. Could use a new liner.
Comes with all accessories
and treated 8)!:1 0 deck.

r

"""l'l""'-:=-----,

M
.
olllu:

Mollohan Furn. 202 Clark
Chapel Rd. New turn, If you
like to save money, check us
out. Drive a little, Save alot !
388·0173

A HIDDEN TREASURE! Asking $475. Call 740·388·
8845
106 .acres on Leon Baden
Laurel
Commons ·
Rd. stream, pasture &amp; Apartments. largest in the -AI_m_o-st_n_e_w_•_in-d-us-.tr-ia-1,
woods. electric avail . call
area! Beautifully renovated portable bli nd hemmer.
Rand.all Braclford for direc304-206-6326. throughout including brand Great for draperies, pants
tions
new kitchen and bath . legs. sk irts . $200, (740)949·
Century
21
$125 .000
Starting at $405 . Call today! 2202
Runyan Assocaites Tim
{304)273-3344
~R-:-un:-'y-:-a_
n_B-:-ro_ka_r-:--:--­
Apartment available now For sale/Best oHers: over2 Mobile HomeLotlor rent
Riverbend Apts. New H3ven stuffed chair, 2 lamps, and
1 near Vinton, and 1 on
oak
doors,
WV. Now accepting applica- tables,
Georges Creek Rd. Call tion'S lor Hod -Subsidized , vanity/sink , ab tounger,
'(7_4_0)_44_1_·_11_1_1.__- _ _ one Bedroom Apts. Utilities palates machine. Call 992·
4521
.4 acre tot lor sate 1304)743· included. Based on 30% of
6323
·
Call
adjusted Income.
Hanging baskets, bedding
n~-:~-:~--., (304)862·3121 available for plants, p~ed plants, wave
REAL FsrATE
Senior and Disabled People.
petunias. Also Pomeranian
L--.iWtitANiillliilDiilrrr-,.t Equal Housing Opportunity puppies . Closed May 17 and
--Yoders
Apartm.ent lor rent, 1-2 Sundays.
Need to sell your home?
Bdrm., remodeled, new car- Greenhouse, 10 mites west
Late on payments, divorce,
pet, stove &amp; !rig., -.,ater; ol Gallipolis on S.A. 141
job transfer or a death? I
sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
JET
can buy your home. All cash
$425.00. No pets. Rei.
E
0
and quick closing. 740-416- required. 740·643·5264.
A RAT! N.MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
3130.
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1I&lt; I \ I \ I '
Estat... 52 Westwood . 800-537-9528.
Drive, from $365 to $560.
. Equal JUKI industrial straight stitch
740·446·2568.
Housing Opportunity. This sewing machine w/stand &amp;
. institution is an Equal motor. Good machine for
Opportunity Provider and alterations/hemming jeans.
$158/mol Buy 4bd hOme ErllJloyer.
Will sew lightweight to
HUD I 5% dn, 20yrs @ 6%. --'-'-"--'-------;- heavyweight fabrics. $2ciO,
.
For listings 800-559·41 09 CONYENIENTLV LOCA'r- (740)949·2202
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
X1709
Townhouse
apartments,
Never Used Kenmore Water
2br House, large living and/or small houses FOR
Softener. Paid $600, will sell
Room &amp; Kitchen, Garage for RENT. Call (740)441-1111
for $125 . 740·446·9606
stOrage, no Yard, no Pets, for application &amp; information.
$300/deposit $300/month
For Rent 1 BA $325 month NEW ANO USED STEEL
304-882·3652
Tracy's Apartments 3314 Steel Beams 1 Pipe Rebar
Concrete,
Angle,
3 Bedroom House in Franklin Avenutf Point For
Syracuse. ,$500/month + Pleasant, WV
304-675- Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
For
Drains ,
deposit No Pets. 1304)675· 1537 Bickground Check Grating
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
5332
Required
Scrap Metals Open Monday, ·
3br. 2 bth carpeted house, French Town Apartments, Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
dr/kitchen wfdw stove, refrig, 727 4th Ave, Gallipolis, is
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
LR heat pump. 123 Sunset now accepling applications
Thursday,
Satu rday
&amp;
Ln, oft Sandhill Ad ., Pt. for waiting list for 1 bedroom,
SUnday. (740)446-7300
Pteasant -$650 deposit, refs, USDA Aural Development,
required 304-675-2319
Subsidized apartment for
elderly and handicapped.
30% off Name Brand
3br.' 2ba, on 2 acres, deck.
740·446·4652 .
~quat
Clearance Shoes .
Mt Alto. WV
close to
20% off Sandals
Century
Aluminum
&amp; Housing 9pportunity.
Kip(ing Shoe Company
Mountaineer
Plant Gallia Manor Apartments,
300 2nd Aw.
$700/month plus deposit, 1 138 Buhl Morton Rd. ·
OH
Gallipolis,
year lease. Ref Req. 740· Gallipolis, is now accepting
740·441·9010
695-3082 cell614-747-1066 applications doe waiting list

0

4-foot. 3 point hitch disc har-

40

1 1\Hilllnee 42

Ald~r

USED Aolary til1e1s. 4', 5',
Used Furniture store, 130 6 ', 3 poi nt hitch . BIG
2 bedrooms, living room , k1tchen, Bulaville Pike. Gallipolis .• SELECTION. Jhifs Farm
1 bath, apartment have control
large s~lection of every- Equipment. 740·446·9777

1o acres located on Broad
Run Aqad, in New Haven
$38.500 (304)773·5881

Pro fe ssio n al
Offi ce / Hou sec tean i n g .
HUD HOMES! . 4 bedroom home instead of renting.
Rele1ences (304)675·2208 only $199/mo. 3 bedroom, • 100% financing
Will 'mow lawns. 740-24,5· $203/mo. More 1-~bed
less than perfect Cfedit
0467. Asl&lt; lor Tom
· homes available. 5% dn, 20 a(:Cepted
• P
ld be h
yrs @ 8%. For listings BOOayment cou
t e
559-4109 ext F144.
same as rent
kto
------~- Mortgage
Locators.
8tsiNm
Miniature farm . Unibuilt
740 367 0000
OPPolmJNny
home on 4 acres. on SA !
1 ·
160. 3BR . 18A. Peaches. HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom
berries, grapes. Swimming only $1 99/mo. 3 bedroorri,
pod . New appliarces. Wood $203/mo. More 1-4bed
oNOTICEo
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- "burner. $95 ,000. 740·388· hOmes available. 5% dn. 20
Y"
&amp;%. Fe. lis1ings
ING CO . re comm~ nds 0815
559-4109 ext F144 .
that you do business with
One acre along At 7 below '-"--'--'-'--'--'---'-- people . you know, and
NOT to send money Holiday IM ll Kanauga, OH. large 4 Bedroom house at
propeny. 86 Garfield, $575/mo plus
through the mail until you Commercial
deposit &amp; utihies. (740)446have investigated the (740)446-4782
25 15
offunw.
Syracuse;
bea utiful
4
bdrom, 2 bath house. MKJ(Jeport,3bdrm,basement

on
SAVINGS

2 Bedroom Apartment for
rent, Washer/Dryer Hookup,
appliances furnished. Rio
Gra nde/ Thurm an area,
Close to h os~tal. (740)286·
5789.

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
ACROSS

------'-- - -

3BR. LA, FB 2 bath on Chris lor 1 bedroom HUD, subsi·
Lane cfosa to new GAHS. d•~e&lt;hpertment lor elderly,
No Pets, $625/monlh. plus and handlcapped. 740-446·
24
24
3br, 2ba, with
x
ft utilities. depoSit &amp; refer- 46.52 · Equal_ Housing
garage, 9/10 of an acre
Opportunity. .
approx. 8 mites fiom Pt. ences required 740-245Pteasant on At 2 call for _590_9_______ GI'Kioua Uvlng 1 and 2
Appointment 304-675·5995
Attention!
Bedroom Apts. at Village
1
Local company offering "NO Manor and Riwrside Apts. in
House on land Contract DOWN PAYMENr pro· Middleport. from $327 to
Pomeroy. 740-992·5856.
grams lor you to buy your $592 . 74()-992·5064. Equal

seduded. yet close to
schools &amp; town. large above
ground pool w/deck, call
now won't la st long,
(740)992-2429

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7:

Phillip

r

ACREAGE

Midwest Homes .
mymldwesthome.com

Attention!
local company offering

· www.mydallysentlnel.com .
BRIDGE

(740)446·6865, (740)379· Comme rcial building wFor
2923.
Rent" 1600 square feet, off Fcird 641 Tractor $4000. Call
446·0373
Trailer tor rent. 3 Br., $350., street parking. Great location! 749 Third Avenue in
$300 deposit references.
3-16"break
International
Gallipo lis. Rent $400/mo.
HUD approved. 74 0-742·
away plow, Allis c~a lme rs 4
Cell Wayne 1404)456·3802
2896.
row air corn planter . many
pan s &amp; seed plates, many
Prime
commercial
space
for
APARI1\IDITS
parts new,neve r used,all
rent at Springvalley Plaza .
FORRENf .
garage kept good condi·
Call645-2 192.
tion,all roller chain driv·
Ill Ht II 1\1&gt;1'1
1 and 2 bedroom aparten.740-591-8560 .
ments, furnished and unfur- --::!'""-::~----,
. h d
d h
· "rto
HoUSEHow
Kiefer Built· va lley -Bison nl s e • an
ouses m
Pomeroy and Middleport,
G&lt;:xlll'i
Horse
and
livestock
security cteposit required , no
TrailersLoadmaxGooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
pets, 740-992-2218
Broyhill Dining Room Table Utility- Aluma Aluminum
1 BR · Apt W/D hookups. &amp; 6 Cha irs, all wood. 2 Trailers- B&amp;W Gooseneck
Trailer
Parts.
First Mon. rent $ 250 plus recliner ch81rs, Filing cabi- HitchesTra ilers.
dep. 740·441 ·9668 or 740· nets. (740 )446-7903 home , Carmichael
1740 )441-7098 ceiL
(740)446·241 2
339·0362

lms&amp;

4br, 2 1/2 bath, 2FP, 2 acres
AC, $149.500 (304)674·
5921 or (304)593·8871

i

SPACE
!bJvr
t.,~--·oiFORiiiiliiiii.ii-_.1

r

104

34575 Crew Rd.Ranch wnh
finished basement.
5
Bedrooms,
3.5
baths.
Hardwood floors', deck, fireplace, garage, 2.5 acres.
$149.500. 74()-416·4765
evenings.

.

Tara
Townhouse
Apar.tments, Very Spacious,

washer. dryer, siOve. microwave, thing . Home -Bu siness for
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE beds, dinning table and chairs sale. 740·446·4782
$400 deposit, $450 a month call
PROGRAM . $0 Down if you 304-882-2523 leave a message
MISl'FLIANEOlS
Own your Own land or Use and number if nat a,t heme
MERCHANDISE
Family Land. We own the
2
Br.
$295
a
month
plus
utilbank . Your approved. 606·
ities, plus dep. , no pets.3rd (3) B' and (1) 6' Anderson
474·6380.
Sliding Doors; Same Size
St. , Racine. 740-247-4292 .
Vertical Blinds; Drapes,
FARMS
3 and 4 room furnished apts. (740)446' 1731
FORSAJL ·
clean WID hookup. No pets.
Ref. and deposit required. 1 yr old 65 inch Big Screen
Brand new log home wnh 60 740-446-1519.
TV. HD ready $700 304·532acres MIL $180 .000 . Call
1383 or 740·859·3129
740 256·9247

0 Down even with toss than

WANrnJ
.., Do
~~~~~~~~
0
1•--tti'iiit'iltii'--,.J
- COUNTRY SET11NG
180

Nice, Clean, 2BA , 4 mi from
Holzers, $375~m o +sec.
deposit &amp; Ref. No Pets,

$49,98~

serv1ce announcement
from the Oh10 Valley

AI rHI aatlte ac:lvertlalng
h1 this nawapaper Ia
subJeCt to the Fectel'll
Fair HouaingAct of 1908
which m~~kn It illegel to

Gelllpolla Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446-4387,
Hl00-214.()452

NEW 2007 4

mortgage
broker or
lender
is
properly
licensed . (This is a publiC

· Wanted: Part-time available DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams lor you to buy your
to assist individuals with
home instead of renting.
mental retardation at a
• 100°/o financing
group home in Bidwell. 35
hrs/wk: 11p-8:30a Th!F/Sat. • Less than perfect credit
accepted
· '7p-9a Sun. Musty have high
* Payment could be the
school diplomaJGEO, valid
same as rent.
drivers license and three
Mortgage
Locators.
years good driving experi(740)367·0000
ence. $7.25/hr. Pre-employment drl!g testing . Send Brand new log home sitting
resume
to :
Buckeye ori approx. 1.44 acres,
Community Services , PO alfTlOSt ready to move ;nto.
BOX 604, Jackson. OH Custom Amish Kitchen with
45640. DeadNnes tor appli· splid surface counters, 3BR ,
cants:
5/10/07 .
Equal 2BA.
$142 ,000.
Call
Opportunity Employer
(740)256·9247
1

BEST BUY

advance payments of
fees or inSurance. Call the
Office
of
Consumer

Pub~shing

(

2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby 0% Fina"ncing- 36 Mos.
Pool. Patio. Start $425/Mo. available now on John
95 Horton 14K70. 2 BR, 2 Nice 2 BR mobile home. No Pets. lease .PIIJS
Deere Z Trak Zaro Turns &amp;
BA. Vinyi.Shlngle Cent. Heat AJC. Located at Johnson Security Deposit Reql.ired,
5.99% Fixed Rate on John
and Air. Part Fum Uk8 new. Mobile Home Park. 446· (740)367-7086.
Deere Gatora Carmichael
12. 900. 304~33-6536
2003
Equipment (740)446·24 12.

Borrow Smart. Contact

ZJ)

Wanted:
Administrative
Assistant. The Gej.llla Co.
Veterans Service office has
~n opening lor a part time
(34) hours per wee~
Administrative
Assistant .
Duties are to assist the
Veterans Service Office r in
daily office ope,rations. and
to provide general secretary
duties and other duties as
required . Applicant must be
a veteran with an honorable
discharge and a Gallia Co.
resident with a min1mum of a
high school diploma, and 1
year office experience. Must
be able to operate a comput·
er, word processor, fax,
copier and other office
equipment. Must be able to
communicate effectively in
verbal and in written form
and mairtain confidentiality.
Must have your own trans·
portation and a va lid drives
license. Applicant must be
personable and dependable.
The starting rate of pay will
be $8.00 to $11 .00 per hour
based on applicant qualifications and experience. This is
a part time position without
benefits but could lead to lull
time position with benefits.
The employee is subject to a
9 month probationary peri·
ad. If interested submit by
-mail or fax the following:
' Resume, DD214 , a copy
drivers license and proof of
Gama County residency to
the Gallia Co. Veterans
Service Office at 11 02
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis. OH
45631 , or lax the same information to 740·446·3915.
must
be
· Application
received no later than 3PM
on 511012007 or they will not
be considered. Must be able
to start work no later than
5/1412007.

1996 tndes t 4x72 Mobile 3 BR .. 2 BA. Doublewide, No
Home 2 bedroom. ~ bath Pets,
$4 75/mo.
$475
Must be moved Asking deposit. Close to RVH S.
$16.000 304·593·4046
(740)367-7025 .

Affairs toll free at 1·866·
278{)003 to learn if the

background check required.

Friday, May 7, 2007
ALLEYOOP

I \lnt 'I 1' 1'1 II "

.

Are you interested in a
,rewarding pos ~ ion? PAIS is
·'ttlrrently seeking a part

:Pleasant,
Friday

MONEY

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

�.'

Page 86 ~ The Daily Sentinel

It
•Tra1per Position

•

time staff for Mason, WV
providing residential/com ~muni ty skill
training with
&lt;ndi,lduals with MR/DD. We

:Bre also seeking ·a pail time
·employee io work in Point
WV
in

Monday:

· the
shift .

:Stternoonlevening
~ igh school diploma or
QED requi.red. No experi·
erx:e necessary.

roLoAN

,\ I I\ I ' '' ll f...

Criminal

Mu st have reliable trans ·

portation and valid
auto insurance. Pa1d tra1n·
ing. Hourly rate starting at
$7-$8.00/hour. Please cali f
304·373·1011 or toll free at
1·877·373·10 11 .

**NOTICE**
Ohio Division of
Financ•al
Institution's
Consume'r
b ffice
of
Affairs BEFORE you refinance you r home or
obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large
the

1

or

Srnoms

1.

INrnlucnoN

50

www.ga ~lpoli&amp;ea reef'COieoe .coin
Accredit&amp;d Member

Acc red~ i ng

CwncW lor lndependeri CoMege&amp;
ancl Schools 127AB.

rl6~1
Oil &amp; Gas Well Leases,
Addisor\I'Ch9shire Twps, 8
Berea· Wells comp w/ Pump
Jacks, Motors, Tanks &amp;
Sales Meters $56,000
Phone 740·934-2073
.

Child Care in my Home 304·
67H537
Lawn-care Service, Mowing
&amp; Trimming. Gall (740)441 ·
1333 or (740)645-()546

Bed

111111111741.m.ml
mymldwesttlome.com
Clea rance Sale. New Total
drywall homes.from $299 .63
per nlonth, Ca ll ( 74 0)38~ 2434

Company)

Drastically
R~duced ,
$25 .000. mu st relocate ,
older mobile home w/ t /2
acre in country, 4 bd.,
remodeled, semi furnished,
quiet area, close to school,
(304)882·2196

I'ROF!NiiONAL
SERVIll:S

TURNED OOWN ON ·
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI7
No Fee Unless We Win !
1·888-582-3345

For Sale 2000, 14x70 Trailer.
No calls after 9pm 304-6753927

IH \I 1""1 \II
HOMFS

FOR Sw:

Great uSed 2005 3 bedroom
16x80 with vinyl/shingle.
$269/mo! Buy GALLIPO- Must sell. Only $25.995 with
LIS FOreclosure! t -4 bed dati, ery. Call (740)385·4367
homes from 199/mo. 5% SPEC IAL FHA FINANCE
down, 20 yeaJa at 8%. Program $0 Down , If you
More homes available . For own Land or use Family
loca listings call 800.559· Land We own th e Bank your
4109 xF254
Approved 606-474·6380
perlect credit is available on
this 3 bedroom , 1 bath
home. Corner lot, fireplace,
modern kitchen. jacuzzi tub,
Payment around $550 per
month. 740·367·7129.
Tatum
Dr. Ne w
Haven.WV. 3bd/2ba. Ranch,
lg.sunroom, 2 car gar. great
area. 0; 304·675·3637 E;
304-882·2334

24nHOME
STORE

~No

adv8rtlae "any
preference, llmlt.tlon or
dlacrimlnatlon baaed on ·
rKe, color, religion, HX
familial atetua or national
origin, or any Intention to
meke any auch
preference, llmitatton or
dlacrimlnation."

Thl1 newape.per wll not
knowingly llce..,t
ldvertiMments for rerrl
..tate which lain
violation of tt.e taw. Our
readers are hereby
informed ttm all
~---'It
u
- ng• advertlaed In
lhl
• newap.per ,,.
av1ilable on an:eqUII
-rtunlty buot.

r

eoo-

o

i.

FOR"~
-

I

{full),fenced yard,neighbor·
hood good.$550 plus ut &amp;
dep.,ref.req.,740-843-526-4.
Pomeroy, 2 or 3 BA.,
Nayters Run!Condof, No

pets. yards. sir; WID 0001&lt;up. References. Call 9926886.
- -- -- - -1970 Sheffield l raile&lt;, 3 bd.• Very ntce hom&amp; for rent in
1 1fl bath , natUral gas fur· Midd. 2 Br., 1 bath, sun
room . 7 rooms lola!, garage
nace. tHee!. hot water
bloct&lt;s tncfuded . $1.500 firm. &amp; basement. Available, Call
74D-992·9784.
call (740)367-7785

~

tar«.

1987-· 14X56- 2 Br.. 1 bath.
· all e~ric. Must move. 740696-1615. $6000.00

Shop
Clossifieds!

air. FUJnished w~ h couch, chai rs,

r

MOBIIEFORn~

I

row $375.00. Call 749-949·
2727

•

ln.vrftl o , , .. ftllm11t.1
U O·AAI -Q3117

.I om.•.., I n ·t: St.•n in
• Top • Removal
• Tri m • Stu mp
G ri nd in g • Bticket

Trud

insured
Scniur Cititc n
Fu ll

Di sco unt

740:367-0266/
1-800-950-3359
30 Yrs. Ex p. Ins.
Owner Ron nie Jones

Free E sti m ates

New 5'k8' 2 Wheel Farm
Trailer, Sturdy, 3" Angleiron,
Wood Floor, Sideboards,
Nice. $400 (740)379·2748

i

~

II \\IS

(()\(1{111
lO\Sif{L( 110\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

United States Notes Red
Seal Fi\18 Dolar and Two
Dollar-Bills. haw 16, S154:
Also have a rare 1928 Red
Seal One Dollar B•"ll. $125·.
Have 2 Wagner Skillets, #2
and #12, Very Clean, $165.
(740)533·3870
Used Toy&gt;. Over 1,000 Old

&amp; New, Under $100 for all.

Housing Opportunity. This
(740)256-6488
institution is an Equal
Opponunity Provider and Wheeler &amp; Wilson -older
Employer.
ode!
$
m
sewing machine 100
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed- 304-458·2234
room apartments at Village 11:111"--~---.,

i

PETs

Manor
and
Riverside
FOR SAI.I:
Apartments in Middleport. ~
From $0 ·$592 . Call 740·
992 -5064 · Eq u .I HouSI·n9 2 Male Ponies for sale. ( 1/2
Opportunities.
Equal yr old, black with white face
Opportunity E,mployer
is Welsh Pinto, buff colored
Middleport! or 2 Br. apts., mate is Walsh Shetland.
Paid $1100 lor both. will sell
no pats, dep. &amp; rei. , 992- both for $450 . They are still
01
65
_ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ studs, partially broken. 740Middleport Beech Street, 2 388--8845
Br.. lurnished apt. ,'. utilities - -- -- - - ·d
pots dep &amp; f AKC Reg.Basset Pups.B
pal ' no
' · · re ., wks.otd , tricolor, lemon
992-Q165 .
-,--,----::--- - &amp;wh.,P.O.P.,$275 ea ., 740·
Modern 1 B~room Apt. , 667-6758..
•
Call (740)446-0390 ··
- - -- - - - - - - - ' - - - -- - AKC Smalt Vorkie male
Modern 1 BA Apt. Call 446• puppy, Blue/Gold, Parents
3736
on premises, Has shots,

Wise Concrete
All t ypes (l f concrete

New 2BR
apartments.
Washer/dryer
hool&lt;up.
itoveirelrigenltor induded.
A!so, units on SA 160. Pets
WeM:ome! (740)44Hl1-94.

New HIM!n, 1 Br., furnished.
no pets, dep.&amp;referenoes,
740-992-D1 65o
Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications lor waiting
lis~ tor Hud-subsiz:ed, 1- br,

paper trained, (740)388·
9686
-------Dachshund puppies ready
to go 4-21-07 1st shots,
wonnod. vet ched&lt;ed $200
740-446-7331
- - - -- - - Indian Rirgneck Panot wrth
large cage. Approx . 12
years old $400.00. 740·742·
3304 after ?PM.

Hill's Self
Storage
' 45 771

74Q-949-2217
1995 Ford Mustang GT, V8,
auto, nice car. $4500. Also,
1997 Camara V6, auto, new
paint -black , shar'p car.
$4500 . Both cars carry 1
year warranty. KC Auto
Sales. 740-446-81 72

i

·Sizes s'l(1o;
,. ~
,. to 1O'x"30'
:"' ... '~ ""
. Hours

Gener~Conkacting
St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio

ROBERT
BISSEll
COISTRUCDOI
• New Homes

2004 Stratus. $6000 OBO.
2000 Ford Mustang , $5000
OBO. 2000 Chery Cavalier.
$2800 OBO, 2002 Dodge
Stratus. 2 door. $5600 OBO.
(740)256·6169 . .

· • Garages

• Complete
Remodeling

140·992·1611

2006 Hyund8i Etantra, 67,000 mites. $13.1&gt;00; 2007
lincoln Navigator, 5,000
miles. . $55,000 ; · 2007
Thoroughbred by Palomino
camper. $25,000. (740)441· .
8204

Stop &amp; Compare

1988 Ford Ranger 4x4.
Runs good and body good.
$1500. 740·379-2860
1997 Ford XL F1 50 Reg.

97 Dodge 1500 ext cab,
auto/air. 4WD Short Bad.
318. S5800 Exc. Cond; 1981
Dodge 4WD 318 4spd.
$2'200 · Super Swampers.
(740)256-6543

VANS
t.,~--ttiFiiOiRiiiS..Uiii-Ei'_,.r

10 9 8 5

s

J 43
8 6s
A76 2
AQ4

g~~:C,
~"*'

Weol

North

Eul

2 NT

Pass

Obi.
Pass

Paso
Pass

t•

2004 Newmar Mountain Me
Motor
Home.
Chevy
Workhorse, 2 slides, 4 door,
trig/Freezer, ice maker, sotid
oak intenor, full body paint,
17K miles. $1 12.000. Call
(740)245·5468

fi!IC:"::-"--:-:-::--.,

I

(MPROVEMEIIlli

BASEMENT
17 Ft. 1980 Baytiner with 75
WATERPROOFING
HP OJt Board motor. $1.600 Unconditional lifetime -guar080. 740·742-2357.
antee. l ocal references furnish~d . Established 1975.
1998 18' Stratos, 150HP
Cat! 2&lt; Hrs. (740) 446·
Evenrude.. 80 hours on
0870, Rogers Basement
•ebu;td . S7800 . (740)256· Waterproofing.
1962

--~-----

I

43

-fide

~

44 Trln8PO!t

45 Big Dl'flllll'
bear

C

46 OUttr

r-

edgel
47 Canll
of 101111
48 Pelle
49 Ale libel
52 Enllllolder,
miybt

Arnold Palmer said, ·concentration
comes out of a combination of confidence and hu'nger."
Presumably he' meant ht~tger from a

BARNEY

I

wwwilrw!Mtll'tu om

~I I
i ~ '@~:=:-:--.~
Il "

Hubbard's Greenhouse

~~

Syracuse, Ohio

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $1-50
1O"Hanging Baskets $5.50-$6.50
4" Pots $1-25-$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95-$6-95
Open M-Saturday 10·5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

~~~i5a~~:LS~
THE BORN LOSER

P'"f-1"-PP'I l!&gt;lltlf.\t*.'(, 1&gt;\0t-\!

OLl&gt; AA£: 'IOU

f.IOJI

Tl\1~ '{~R1'

740·992·5776

Stop _in at
participating
Pomeroy
Merchants
. for our
Mother's
Day Gift
Basket
Giveaway

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

The key to this deal is the handling Of a
sun combination. How would_you play WI
two no-trump after WeSf leada the club
jack and East pull up the ~ng? What do
you lhink olthe auction?
Tllkilg the putt beb'e the Clive, the auction Is line. Will cipens with one cUI, of
oourse. Nollh has a clear-cut ta1taout
double, being ahorlln clubs and having
length in the other three eults. h Is parti;ularty to hiMt two tour-card
major&amp;. Soulh'a Jump 1o two no-trump
shows some 10-12 ~points and
. a daconl club hoking. Nor1h paaH
because he has only 12 points.
'tbu start with five top tricks (inltant winners): one lleart, two diamoncll and two
dubs I~ tr!d&lt; one). You need lhree ·
more tricks. Since the hearts are spilling
3·3, you cou_ld evenluafly get an extra
heart tr!d&lt; and two spade lridta, but you
do not have the time tor that 8f)pf08Ch.
Will will eatabiah and run his cUJ t~t~n.
laking one spade, two·hearts and tour
clubs.
·
lnslead, go lor lhnlt apade
tricks. This •
reqW&amp; a 3-3 break, but
you can also liUCC8ed. nWill has the
einglelon or doobteton ace. After taking
trick one, lead a low spade to dummy's
queen. When lhal holds (as you know H
will), retum to your hand with a diamond
and play anolhar Sjlada. Here, Wesl's
ace pops up and everything Is rosy.

AstroGrapb

*Prom pt and Quality
Work
* R eason ah lc

Rales

BIG NATE

*Insu red
References Avai lable!
Call Ga ry Stanley @
740-742-2293
Please leave mcssa e

THERE'S A "PIJOOLE OVER
THERE ... Al&lt;ll&gt; ALL
THESE ACORNS SEEM
SORT .OF .- .. YOU Ko.IOW ...

RAN

PEANUTS

I THINK .sNOOP'(

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

WOULD E~O't'

70 Pine Street ·• Gallipolis
.446-0007

LETTE~ ~ROM ~5

OBEDIENCE SCilOOL WAS A
WASTE OF TIME !

6ETTIN6 A

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Additions &amp;
Remo~eling

New Garages
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutters

VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch Decita

wv 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215
Pomeroy 01110
25 YPars local Expenei'Ce

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION
Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

7 40-367·0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

,Manlay's
Recycling

GARFIELD

5111111 it• lllllle..n. II Wl8
140-992-aM

0·

II•IIIII•IJ-fi'IIIII 9:081111-5:111•
SMUIIIIV 9:08 •12:00 IM

0
0

PlYING TOP PIICES FUI

J
\----tJI-A~,.;;,;-i.
I

L~~~~...J!
GRIZZWELLS

WHAT YO•UJI.?I

i~

tb'lbU~
1\\\HKA~
4-m1~-~&amp; A

trom-byt""""-·po!lrd~.

Todlly's due: Pequals N

"DEOS SPNSPUSTK DEOS.

J T S II W II K . S P S T N Z . E W E K -G Z
KXSPUEPN

YPSKSDO

YPS

KMT MR

GSJYFSK TEJR."
GSTPRIITUW

PREVIOUS SOlUTION - 'Poetry is simply the most beautiful, impressive,
and widely effective mode Of saying things.• - Matthew Amold
Willi
tAM I

of

s.tunt.y, !loy 5, 2007

low lo fo&lt;11 f..r oli!IPfo Wl"ds.

BUBRYG

't rfii]
W0 L YL

..
D

3

~

H 0 B RE T

A philosophy profmor 011ct
told me that, "EYenu do 001 ·
come, they are there and we
encounter thew oo --· ~-."

I

&amp; PltN1 NUM&amp;RED lfllfRS tN
,

IHEIE &gt;QUARES

I

··

'
·' 0 ~;c:~':~~
lfi'ER~ 10 I·I

I' ll I'

I'

I

III

I

'

SCUM-lETS ANSWERS. 5 - 3 - o 1
Chosen - Bless - Quirk - SlnUid _:: BROTHER
"I would like to get out of my rut." the teen told his
· dad. "'RouHne is good_" the dad replied. ·•bul
boredom is its BROTHER."

ARLO &amp; JANIS

·

fair shant. -

SOUPTONUTZ

TAT1b0?

I

'

.

L......L....L-.L.--L---1--' you devJ)op from ~ep No. 3 below.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - You may
not rind the eaay answers you're -looking
for, 59 don'1 take the first explanations
you hear as fact ]uat becliJH you like
them. If they're wrong, it could hurt you In
great measure.
_
SAGITTARIUS !No,. 23-Doc. 21) Before genlng Involved In a new project
or venture, recheck every ramification
possible. Even then, don't think you've
covered everything. A surprlte Is Quite
possible.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22.Jan. 19) - You
mtght foolishly be tempted to take rtak8
or bt,td( the odds In some manner that
will go against you, dooplte the lad that
.everything tells yoU not to do 10.
AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Fob. 19)- When n
comes to a lamHy matter of Importance,
be sure to conter wttn tile others before
acting on a decision. WhiU k:IOka r1ght at
first could In ttme be t0$811y the wrong
thing to do.
PISCES !Fob. 20-Morch 20) - You moy
b:e quite d8'11er In coming up wtth ways to
dodge your duties and even receive pe.ta
on the back to.- doing ao. How.ver, you'll
pay a heavy price In the end.
,
ARIES (Match 21 ·A)lril19) - H I/OU •••
not .u open and generoua \Mth your
frlenda u they are ¥loith you, you'll eome
off looking wry aelf·serving. When time
or money nHds to be aharad, ante up

.,

.

1--ri':'S-ri"'""TI-'11r-TI:6-I. li1
A C.,..;pleto 1ho chuckle quottd
by fill1"9 In tl&gt;t miuing _ .

. .. TilE
NEWSPAPER
l-IAS
.
S CM1E TI-IING
YOU!! .

·,

WRMW

Jo•on
tf.o
0 lootro~~g~
ocroonblod WO&lt;ds bo·

By Bomtce- 0oo1
One of the belt things you can dO tor
yourself Ia gain more knowtedge about
your chOaen field. By expanding upon
your education ancifor taking advantage
of new courses being offered, It'll bring
substantial benefits.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Although
you may make much effort to be a nice
guy or gal, there Is still a chance you
could come off aa being lmpoaslble to
please, etpeclally If a situation or person
you don't like enters the scene.
GEMINI (May 21.Juno 20) - Be a good
listener and don't hesitate to ask questions on anything you need clarm.ct. It
you pretend to understand or know
something, you could and up looki,ng
quit&amp; muddleheaded.
CANCER (June21-..illy 22)- There is a
good chance you could cater to your
whims of extravagant fancieS and end up
with little to show for It and 1181 In your
. wallet. Don't spend your hard-eamltd
funds foolishly.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Extra unex·
peeled effort might be required In ot"der

~r

SPSTNZ

fo•"

look bad.

Local Contractor

by Luis Campos

cetobrly~_... •• -.~
Eld'llltt.-in the aplllr Ulds for arolhef.

...,;._l~ko~

· Should unforeseen setbacks occur,
regroup and continue to strive hard for
what you want. •
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept 22) Uncharacteristically, you could careless·
ly react In a spiteful manner to someone
or something you believe has wronged
you. Unfortunately, It witt make you took
bad, not the other guy or gal.
ltBRA (Sept. 23-&lt;&gt;ct. 23) - Take care
when conducting buatHna, even with
trusted firms or persons. No one Ia llkety
to deliberately cheat you, but a mistake
could be made that will make all iiWOived

·SUNSHINE CLUB
YOUNG'S

CELEBRITY CIPHER

T~~=' $~~d.\~-l&amp;"b~s·
___
•r (LJoY L POLLioN

...... 'llrlhdltr:
T~E G.fV,SS
IS SOP.T OF PATCHY...

r HEAN.

* Ex perie nced

IIIIHimCHs•lllmlltlmWIIItll ·
CIIIIYUt CIINM't., • C.•
aa.t•enllil . .ll
ICIII ftr limit l'l1clll

20'x40'
Boathou!j;e
al _
Gallipolis
Boat
Club,
$1 4,000: 1994 21' Marada
305 Chev, 97 hrs, $6500.

:wN ::2~ ~~:nera

-lion

South

36 Cafe 11139 Brelldlll
fare
41 Sign.., for

1 VIICCine type 23 Meadow
2 Big laugh
28 Fflmenco
{hyph.)
24
lcant'a
lllout
3
cry
29 One oil
· denlll
25 Adjusted
f)lfr
4 Compere
the tires
31 llnnga
5 SCent
26 Role Jrull
ICIIOn
6 Andy
27 Horse
33 FltzGel'lld'e
Clpp'a wh
controller
poet
7 Money
30 Stir-fly
35 Gematone
hltndler
pans
37 Playful bite 8 Moat
32 Hot tub
38 TrouMrs
lmporlllnt 34 Gush

26 VIdeo atore

to act;..., your goats aild obfoclfvoo.

2000 Chrysler Town &amp;
Country, Power Windows &amp;
Door Locks, AMIFM/CD,
AJC, Cruise, lnterior/Ext9rlor
GOOd Shape. Runs Good, 1
owner, regular maintenance. 23ft 2004 KZ Coyote new
"'7i40~)'44~6-:;:0:;;5:;:00;:..._ _~ condition, rel rig, sto'e &amp;
f74J MOTORC\'~
oven, microwave. furnace,
4 WHF.flJ:.RS
air conditioning , water
J.,.eriirlioiiiiiiiliiiiiiio-_.J heater &amp; pump, king foldout
on front. lull foldout on each
06 350 Honda Rancher, 4x4; side. CO surround sound,
99 Honda Recon 250 . 2WD, sleeps 1o. $12.000 call 304·
(740)446·9177 . (740)645· 675·7934
2399
Camping Site for rent on
2003 V-Star Cla ssic 1100 .river. lull hook-up. 992·
Cruiser. like New, 6 ,000 5956
·
miles. Windshield, Bags &amp;
-..1 1{\ I( I "
extras. $6.000 .. 1740)446·
9278
10
HOME

1983 30· AV, 45,000 miles.
Sacrifice due to health,
$8,000 . (740)256·6395 or
( ~)544·0 ! 0 1.
- - - - - - -1985 24Ft CtassC Mot01
Home S4 .500 304 ·882·3237

•

• K

A combination
that requires what?

HOW'S '&lt;ORE APPETITE
BEEN

www.tlmbet ereokcabbletry.eom

r"jamilq .~~.,!'l:i"·~z'!!'al'!g!ft:"'•

Cab 6cyt, 5 speed 4x4, 8h
bed $4 ,500 304-773-6063

r

Hardwood Cablnei!'Y And FurnitUre

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System
• Helios System

FOR SALE

10 9 8 6

• J 95

Opening lead: • J

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

We Deliver To You!

TRUCKS

•

.-ton

dasi'eto be successful, nol hunger from
a lack of food in one's stomach.

. 1/1411 mo. pd

2001 Mercury Cougar, V6,
auto, stJnroof, 80K, $7900.
740-339-2494

CU!PER'i &amp;
MOIOR HoMFS

Marcum Construction and

7:00 AM - 8:00 PM

1998 Mustang GT. AT. AC.
PW. 64 .000 mites. (740)245·
5213

com~nt

44::...
46 Hldenny
. . 50 Son ol VII

age

Dealer: West
Vulnerable: Both

15 yrs. Ex . Free Es 1 im~t cs

Racine, OhiO

r

•
•
t
•

70 Pine S treet • Ga llipo li s
740-446-01107 Toll Free 1177 -(oli9-0007

Additions
Garages
Vinyl Siding
Rooting
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4,141 OOicc
740-416-1834

43 Yq

14 Long ligha 53 While like'
15 Rapper Moe
Shlmu
Dee 54 Ellploit
16 Kennel
55 Objectivn
lellure
56 Leg, for one
17 Rlltlt
ST Actlonll
9 Grad
19 Ukerich
collie
10 Repudiate
1011
58 Pereh8nce 11 nc-toe
21 Chltrgtd
59 Sheltered
connector

Eul

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Mike W. Marcum, Owner

or

~~~~~~-

12 GrOundlen
and Alell
13 Malt ~~ever, 51 He dftcted

Soulb

Owner- Ri ck Wise
740-992-5929
740-416-1698

2967 0 BaShan Road

(740)44 1 ~9372

(jtunihj l•&gt;:i1tl41~

Insured
Free Estimates

r

BOATSFOR&amp;SA!J;:Maro
_ RS

West
• A7
• K Q tO
• QJ
• J 10 9 8 7 2

740-992-6971

Goats for Sate. Boer Goats,
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb,
2007. Call (740)256·9247

fOld

t K 4 3'
• 6 5

David Lewis

5460 for ' informa~on .

·="=

.......,

• A742

26 Years Experience

- -- - - - - Butcher pigs and feeder pigs
. available. Contact (740 )441·

r

•RENTALS •SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS

Concrete Work

2 Hereford Bulls 16 months
old for sale. 740·643·2618

unit
4 Trwndy

Hartford
compel~

11 BUiboy'a
Nonb
• K Q 52

All Type&amp;Of

LIVI'SllX:K

1006 tnnsbrooke 5th wheel
29ft Camper. loaded 12ft
One 14X70 Trailer; One apartment,tor
the Yorkie Poo, tiny tea cup; slide wltlitctl $7,500 1996
1987·· 14X~2Br.• 1 bath. Trailer lot tor rent CAll elderly/disabled call 6 75· Chihuahuas,
(lpplehead; Dodge Sl! 4x4 ext cab.
all eJectric. Must move. 740-- 740·949-2237.
6679
Equal
Housing Poodla. tiny toy, quallly top Diesel TruCk $7 .500 304·
698· 18 15. $6000.00
()pponunlly
babies. (740)645-6987
576-2737 leave message
IIW'II

Top o Trim • Hauling • Slump
Grinding o B11tket Tnd

Reg Belgian Mare 4yrs old.
Above ground swimming $600. Belgian Gelding
pool, 18ft round-52in deep. 4yrs.old $300. Call740·446·
3yrs old. Buyer must take 0373
OOwn. Could use a new liner.
Comes with all accessories
and treated 8)!:1 0 deck.

r

"""l'l""'-:=-----,

M
.
olllu:

Mollohan Furn. 202 Clark
Chapel Rd. New turn, If you
like to save money, check us
out. Drive a little, Save alot !
388·0173

A HIDDEN TREASURE! Asking $475. Call 740·388·
8845
106 .acres on Leon Baden
Laurel
Commons ·
Rd. stream, pasture &amp; Apartments. largest in the -AI_m_o-st_n_e_w_•_in-d-us-.tr-ia-1,
woods. electric avail . call
area! Beautifully renovated portable bli nd hemmer.
Rand.all Braclford for direc304-206-6326. throughout including brand Great for draperies, pants
tions
new kitchen and bath . legs. sk irts . $200, (740)949·
Century
21
$125 .000
Starting at $405 . Call today! 2202
Runyan Assocaites Tim
{304)273-3344
~R-:-un:-'y-:-a_
n_B-:-ro_ka_r-:--:--­
Apartment available now For sale/Best oHers: over2 Mobile HomeLotlor rent
Riverbend Apts. New H3ven stuffed chair, 2 lamps, and
1 near Vinton, and 1 on
oak
doors,
WV. Now accepting applica- tables,
Georges Creek Rd. Call tion'S lor Hod -Subsidized , vanity/sink , ab tounger,
'(7_4_0)_44_1_·_11_1_1.__- _ _ one Bedroom Apts. Utilities palates machine. Call 992·
4521
.4 acre tot lor sate 1304)743· included. Based on 30% of
6323
·
Call
adjusted Income.
Hanging baskets, bedding
n~-:~-:~--., (304)862·3121 available for plants, p~ed plants, wave
REAL FsrATE
Senior and Disabled People.
petunias. Also Pomeranian
L--.iWtitANiillliilDiilrrr-,.t Equal Housing Opportunity puppies . Closed May 17 and
--Yoders
Apartm.ent lor rent, 1-2 Sundays.
Need to sell your home?
Bdrm., remodeled, new car- Greenhouse, 10 mites west
Late on payments, divorce,
pet, stove &amp; !rig., -.,ater; ol Gallipolis on S.A. 141
job transfer or a death? I
sewer, trash pd. Middleport.
JET
can buy your home. All cash
$425.00. No pets. Rei.
E
0
and quick closing. 740-416- required. 740·643·5264.
A RAT! N.MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In
3130.
Beautiful Apts. at Jackson Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1I&lt; I \ I \ I '
Estat... 52 Westwood . 800-537-9528.
Drive, from $365 to $560.
. Equal JUKI industrial straight stitch
740·446·2568.
Housing Opportunity. This sewing machine w/stand &amp;
. institution is an Equal motor. Good machine for
Opportunity Provider and alterations/hemming jeans.
$158/mol Buy 4bd hOme ErllJloyer.
Will sew lightweight to
HUD I 5% dn, 20yrs @ 6%. --'-'-"--'-------;- heavyweight fabrics. $2ciO,
.
For listings 800-559·41 09 CONYENIENTLV LOCA'r- (740)949·2202
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
X1709
Townhouse
apartments,
Never Used Kenmore Water
2br House, large living and/or small houses FOR
Softener. Paid $600, will sell
Room &amp; Kitchen, Garage for RENT. Call (740)441-1111
for $125 . 740·446·9606
stOrage, no Yard, no Pets, for application &amp; information.
$300/deposit $300/month
For Rent 1 BA $325 month NEW ANO USED STEEL
304-882·3652
Tracy's Apartments 3314 Steel Beams 1 Pipe Rebar
Concrete,
Angle,
3 Bedroom House in Franklin Avenutf Point For
Syracuse. ,$500/month + Pleasant, WV
304-675- Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
For
Drains ,
deposit No Pets. 1304)675· 1537 Bickground Check Grating
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;l
5332
Required
Scrap Metals Open Monday, ·
3br. 2 bth carpeted house, French Town Apartments, Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
dr/kitchen wfdw stove, refrig, 727 4th Ave, Gallipolis, is
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
LR heat pump. 123 Sunset now accepling applications
Thursday,
Satu rday
&amp;
Ln, oft Sandhill Ad ., Pt. for waiting list for 1 bedroom,
SUnday. (740)446-7300
Pteasant -$650 deposit, refs, USDA Aural Development,
required 304-675-2319
Subsidized apartment for
elderly and handicapped.
30% off Name Brand
3br.' 2ba, on 2 acres, deck.
740·446·4652 .
~quat
Clearance Shoes .
Mt Alto. WV
close to
20% off Sandals
Century
Aluminum
&amp; Housing 9pportunity.
Kip(ing Shoe Company
Mountaineer
Plant Gallia Manor Apartments,
300 2nd Aw.
$700/month plus deposit, 1 138 Buhl Morton Rd. ·
OH
Gallipolis,
year lease. Ref Req. 740· Gallipolis, is now accepting
740·441·9010
695-3082 cell614-747-1066 applications doe waiting list

0

4-foot. 3 point hitch disc har-

40

1 1\Hilllnee 42

Ald~r

USED Aolary til1e1s. 4', 5',
Used Furniture store, 130 6 ', 3 poi nt hitch . BIG
2 bedrooms, living room , k1tchen, Bulaville Pike. Gallipolis .• SELECTION. Jhifs Farm
1 bath, apartment have control
large s~lection of every- Equipment. 740·446·9777

1o acres located on Broad
Run Aqad, in New Haven
$38.500 (304)773·5881

Pro fe ssio n al
Offi ce / Hou sec tean i n g .
HUD HOMES! . 4 bedroom home instead of renting.
Rele1ences (304)675·2208 only $199/mo. 3 bedroom, • 100% financing
Will 'mow lawns. 740-24,5· $203/mo. More 1-~bed
less than perfect Cfedit
0467. Asl&lt; lor Tom
· homes available. 5% dn, 20 a(:Cepted
• P
ld be h
yrs @ 8%. For listings BOOayment cou
t e
559-4109 ext F144.
same as rent
kto
------~- Mortgage
Locators.
8tsiNm
Miniature farm . Unibuilt
740 367 0000
OPPolmJNny
home on 4 acres. on SA !
1 ·
160. 3BR . 18A. Peaches. HUD HOMES! 4 bedroom
berries, grapes. Swimming only $1 99/mo. 3 bedroorri,
pod . New appliarces. Wood $203/mo. More 1-4bed
oNOTICEo
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- "burner. $95 ,000. 740·388· hOmes available. 5% dn. 20
Y"
&amp;%. Fe. lis1ings
ING CO . re comm~ nds 0815
559-4109 ext F144 .
that you do business with
One acre along At 7 below '-"--'--'-'--'--'---'-- people . you know, and
NOT to send money Holiday IM ll Kanauga, OH. large 4 Bedroom house at
propeny. 86 Garfield, $575/mo plus
through the mail until you Commercial
deposit &amp; utihies. (740)446have investigated the (740)446-4782
25 15
offunw.
Syracuse;
bea utiful
4
bdrom, 2 bath house. MKJ(Jeport,3bdrm,basement

on
SAVINGS

2 Bedroom Apartment for
rent, Washer/Dryer Hookup,
appliances furnished. Rio
Gra nde/ Thurm an area,
Close to h os~tal. (740)286·
5789.

NEA Cro11word Puzzle
ACROSS

------'-- - -

3BR. LA, FB 2 bath on Chris lor 1 bedroom HUD, subsi·
Lane cfosa to new GAHS. d•~e&lt;hpertment lor elderly,
No Pets, $625/monlh. plus and handlcapped. 740-446·
24
24
3br, 2ba, with
x
ft utilities. depoSit &amp; refer- 46.52 · Equal_ Housing
garage, 9/10 of an acre
Opportunity. .
approx. 8 mites fiom Pt. ences required 740-245Pteasant on At 2 call for _590_9_______ GI'Kioua Uvlng 1 and 2
Appointment 304-675·5995
Attention!
Bedroom Apts. at Village
1
Local company offering "NO Manor and Riwrside Apts. in
House on land Contract DOWN PAYMENr pro· Middleport. from $327 to
Pomeroy. 740-992·5856.
grams lor you to buy your $592 . 74()-992·5064. Equal

seduded. yet close to
schools &amp; town. large above
ground pool w/deck, call
now won't la st long,
(740)992-2429

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7:

Phillip

r

ACREAGE

Midwest Homes .
mymldwesthome.com

Attention!
local company offering

· www.mydallysentlnel.com .
BRIDGE

(740)446·6865, (740)379· Comme rcial building wFor
2923.
Rent" 1600 square feet, off Fcird 641 Tractor $4000. Call
446·0373
Trailer tor rent. 3 Br., $350., street parking. Great location! 749 Third Avenue in
$300 deposit references.
3-16"break
International
Gallipo lis. Rent $400/mo.
HUD approved. 74 0-742·
away plow, Allis c~a lme rs 4
Cell Wayne 1404)456·3802
2896.
row air corn planter . many
pan s &amp; seed plates, many
Prime
commercial
space
for
APARI1\IDITS
parts new,neve r used,all
rent at Springvalley Plaza .
FORRENf .
garage kept good condi·
Call645-2 192.
tion,all roller chain driv·
Ill Ht II 1\1&gt;1'1
1 and 2 bedroom aparten.740-591-8560 .
ments, furnished and unfur- --::!'""-::~----,
. h d
d h
· "rto
HoUSEHow
Kiefer Built· va lley -Bison nl s e • an
ouses m
Pomeroy and Middleport,
G&lt;:xlll'i
Horse
and
livestock
security cteposit required , no
TrailersLoadmaxGooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
pets, 740-992-2218
Broyhill Dining Room Table Utility- Aluma Aluminum
1 BR · Apt W/D hookups. &amp; 6 Cha irs, all wood. 2 Trailers- B&amp;W Gooseneck
Trailer
Parts.
First Mon. rent $ 250 plus recliner ch81rs, Filing cabi- HitchesTra ilers.
dep. 740·441 ·9668 or 740· nets. (740 )446-7903 home , Carmichael
1740 )441-7098 ceiL
(740)446·241 2
339·0362

lms&amp;

4br, 2 1/2 bath, 2FP, 2 acres
AC, $149.500 (304)674·
5921 or (304)593·8871

i

SPACE
!bJvr
t.,~--·oiFORiiiiliiiii.ii-_.1

r

104

34575 Crew Rd.Ranch wnh
finished basement.
5
Bedrooms,
3.5
baths.
Hardwood floors', deck, fireplace, garage, 2.5 acres.
$149.500. 74()-416·4765
evenings.

.

Tara
Townhouse
Apar.tments, Very Spacious,

washer. dryer, siOve. microwave, thing . Home -Bu siness for
SPECIAL FHA FINANCE beds, dinning table and chairs sale. 740·446·4782
$400 deposit, $450 a month call
PROGRAM . $0 Down if you 304-882-2523 leave a message
MISl'FLIANEOlS
Own your Own land or Use and number if nat a,t heme
MERCHANDISE
Family Land. We own the
2
Br.
$295
a
month
plus
utilbank . Your approved. 606·
ities, plus dep. , no pets.3rd (3) B' and (1) 6' Anderson
474·6380.
Sliding Doors; Same Size
St. , Racine. 740-247-4292 .
Vertical Blinds; Drapes,
FARMS
3 and 4 room furnished apts. (740)446' 1731
FORSAJL ·
clean WID hookup. No pets.
Ref. and deposit required. 1 yr old 65 inch Big Screen
Brand new log home wnh 60 740-446-1519.
TV. HD ready $700 304·532acres MIL $180 .000 . Call
1383 or 740·859·3129
740 256·9247

0 Down even with toss than

WANrnJ
.., Do
~~~~~~~~
0
1•--tti'iiit'iltii'--,.J
- COUNTRY SET11NG
180

Nice, Clean, 2BA , 4 mi from
Holzers, $375~m o +sec.
deposit &amp; Ref. No Pets,

$49,98~

serv1ce announcement
from the Oh10 Valley

AI rHI aatlte ac:lvertlalng
h1 this nawapaper Ia
subJeCt to the Fectel'll
Fair HouaingAct of 1908
which m~~kn It illegel to

Gelllpolla Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Todayl 740-446-4387,
Hl00-214.()452

NEW 2007 4

mortgage
broker or
lender
is
properly
licensed . (This is a publiC

· Wanted: Part-time available DOWN PAYMENr pro·
grams lor you to buy your
to assist individuals with
home instead of renting.
mental retardation at a
• 100°/o financing
group home in Bidwell. 35
hrs/wk: 11p-8:30a Th!F/Sat. • Less than perfect credit
accepted
· '7p-9a Sun. Musty have high
* Payment could be the
school diplomaJGEO, valid
same as rent.
drivers license and three
Mortgage
Locators.
years good driving experi(740)367·0000
ence. $7.25/hr. Pre-employment drl!g testing . Send Brand new log home sitting
resume
to :
Buckeye ori approx. 1.44 acres,
Community Services , PO alfTlOSt ready to move ;nto.
BOX 604, Jackson. OH Custom Amish Kitchen with
45640. DeadNnes tor appli· splid surface counters, 3BR ,
cants:
5/10/07 .
Equal 2BA.
$142 ,000.
Call
Opportunity Employer
(740)256·9247
1

BEST BUY

advance payments of
fees or inSurance. Call the
Office
of
Consumer

Pub~shing

(

2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
Bath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby 0% Fina"ncing- 36 Mos.
Pool. Patio. Start $425/Mo. available now on John
95 Horton 14K70. 2 BR, 2 Nice 2 BR mobile home. No Pets. lease .PIIJS
Deere Z Trak Zaro Turns &amp;
BA. Vinyi.Shlngle Cent. Heat AJC. Located at Johnson Security Deposit Reql.ired,
5.99% Fixed Rate on John
and Air. Part Fum Uk8 new. Mobile Home Park. 446· (740)367-7086.
Deere Gatora Carmichael
12. 900. 304~33-6536
2003
Equipment (740)446·24 12.

Borrow Smart. Contact

ZJ)

Wanted:
Administrative
Assistant. The Gej.llla Co.
Veterans Service office has
~n opening lor a part time
(34) hours per wee~
Administrative
Assistant .
Duties are to assist the
Veterans Service Office r in
daily office ope,rations. and
to provide general secretary
duties and other duties as
required . Applicant must be
a veteran with an honorable
discharge and a Gallia Co.
resident with a min1mum of a
high school diploma, and 1
year office experience. Must
be able to operate a comput·
er, word processor, fax,
copier and other office
equipment. Must be able to
communicate effectively in
verbal and in written form
and mairtain confidentiality.
Must have your own trans·
portation and a va lid drives
license. Applicant must be
personable and dependable.
The starting rate of pay will
be $8.00 to $11 .00 per hour
based on applicant qualifications and experience. This is
a part time position without
benefits but could lead to lull
time position with benefits.
The employee is subject to a
9 month probationary peri·
ad. If interested submit by
-mail or fax the following:
' Resume, DD214 , a copy
drivers license and proof of
Gama County residency to
the Gallia Co. Veterans
Service Office at 11 02
Jackson Pike. Gallipolis. OH
45631 , or lax the same information to 740·446·3915.
must
be
· Application
received no later than 3PM
on 511012007 or they will not
be considered. Must be able
to start work no later than
5/1412007.

1996 tndes t 4x72 Mobile 3 BR .. 2 BA. Doublewide, No
Home 2 bedroom. ~ bath Pets,
$4 75/mo.
$475
Must be moved Asking deposit. Close to RVH S.
$16.000 304·593·4046
(740)367-7025 .

Affairs toll free at 1·866·
278{)003 to learn if the

background check required.

Friday, May 7, 2007
ALLEYOOP

I \lnt 'I 1' 1'1 II "

.

Are you interested in a
,rewarding pos ~ ion? PAIS is
·'ttlrrently seeking a part

:Pleasant,
Friday

MONEY

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

�4 7'0~ till America in Bloom

Friday, May 4, 2007

www.mydailysentinelccom

ALONG THE RlvhR
National Day of Prayer
obselvaJTice still growing, Cl

Spo11 sored

by

SMITfl

-

~

- :~,~..· ...

·..:{r.7,'

-

1900 Eastern Ave
. Gallipolis, 01:1
740-446-2282 toll
Free 1-877-446-2282

.. If you hava a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, liP The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538, Gastonia, NC 28053

....

• Race; Crown Royal Presents

the JimStewart 400

ning at Talladega Superspeedway
must have been for Gordon, ~

• Race: Funai 250
• -: Richmond (Va.)

• Where : Richinond (Va .) Inter-

was probably harder in the mam.

International Raceway

national Raceway (.75 mile),
400 laps/300 miles.
• Wilen: Saturday, May 5

shirt. Opinion on the 35-year..dd
Gordon's historic victory was

• Lalt ,..,.,winner: Dale Earn-

hardt Jr.
• QuallfYin&amp; record: Brian Vick·
ers. Chevrolet, 129.983 mph,
May 14, 2004.
• Race record: Dale Jarren,
Ford. 109.047 mph , Sept. 6,
1997.
•IJIIt : Je" Gordon, al·
~

mothgrandstands to wear his Twildly divided. Tile,Aaron's 499

at Talladega ended under cau..
tion . Precious little oLit was e ~er­
cised in the crowd. Afterward , the
scene got even more unique and
different Gordon drove into victory lane in a car dented not by the

field of battle but rather tt1e

slings and arrows - OK. mostly
they were beer cans - of outraready four times a champion of
geous fans. What Gordon and
NASCAR's premier series. won
Dale Earnhardt, whose 76 career
for the 77th time, sticking his
wins are now one fewer than Gor·
Chevrolet across the finish line
and in the face of a near-capacity don. have in common is great·
ness. Beyond that, it's a matter
crowd controlled b)' those who
despised him . ~ difficult as win-

• Race: Quaker Steak &amp;
Lube 200
•WileN: Lowe's Motor

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

Speedway, Concord, N.C.

(.75 mile), 250
laps/ 187.5 miles.
• Wilen: Fnday. May 4

• Wilen: Friday, May 18
•IMt year'• . -: Kyle

• Last ,...,, winner:

Kevin Harvick

• QuaiiiYin&amp; record: Kyle

Busch, Chevrolet,
129.348 mph. May 14,
2004.
• Race record: Dale Jarren, Ford. 104.928 mph,
'Sept. 8, 1995.
• lJIIt - : Bobb)'
Labonte outdueled Tony

Busch

. • QuollfytftC record: Mike

Skinner, Toyota, 183.051
mph, May 19, 2005.
• - record: Kyle
Busch, Chevrolet,
124.645 mph, May 19,

JJ J -rJ-J :e

·

and field
~ne-ups. See Page 81

•Lilt week: Ford driver

•

NQ.

07

••

=E'!Jr~ .,r
r l='r I"_
j ::? \JJ.--1
1/::? i?". •
r_.

v

JACK DANIEL'S CHEVROLET

E
R

Burton took great exception to
Stewart comparing NASCAR to professional wrestling. "I didn't agree
wrestling or with him say1ng NASCAR
didn't run a fair

said Burton.

~,

made the comparison. It was counterproductive rather than productive,
but Tony didn't mean any harm by it."
NASCAR Tblo -··Monte
Dutton ctves hlo IItke: "Overall, it

OBITUARIES
Page AS
o Delbert Roush

seemed as though Stewart's fellow

drivers were far less concerned than

NASCAR officials and the media. It's
almost as if the drivers don't d1s-.
agree with Stewart. They disagree
wM him talking about 1t."

In retrospeCt, Mark Martin's

decision to pass up Talladega

John Clark/NASCAR Tt1is Week

seems to have been an.exam-

way.

race,~

didn't agree with those things.... I
think Tony exaggerated when he

Clint Bowyer has benefttell from the experience of his teammatas, Kirlin Hanlck and JeH Burton, at Richard Children Racing• .

I

I

ISS In

ne'

I

BY

.• Local Briefs.
SeePageA2
• SHAM members
learn__,about ·ergonomics.
SeePageA3
o AEP helps support
the GEMS program
at Rio. See Page AS
• Occupational therapy
returns patient to normal
activities. See Page AS
• OVB gets jump
start on planting day.
SeePage AS

On the occasionof his 32nd birthday, Dodge driver Ell ion Sadler is
hOlding an online auction for his special Autism Awareness paint-scheme
helmet, which he wore in races at

Texas, Phoenix and Talladega. The
auction began on April 30 and con~in·

ues through May?. To bkl, fans can.
visit www.SadlerFoundation.org, with
proceeds benefiting the Hermie and
Ellion Sadler Charitable Foundation .

.

J-" Gordon
has won two straight races,
the most recent among his career's more significant. ... Jimmie Johnson Is still the sea-,
.•~p~'s bl&amp;·wtoner with three vlc'tories, and he managed to finish second at Talladega.

1&gt; Vil!o'lllol -

'~,,"·

Bowyer says it's
possible to avoid
multicar disasters
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week
TALLADEGA, Ala.
Clint
Bowyer's day at Talladega Superspeedway lasted only 8llaps, but at
least he wasn't involved in "the Big
One."
~'Big One" is stock-car lingo·for a
multicar crash, and Talladega is fa·
mous for them. A tire failure- it occurred shortly after Bowyer's Chevy
. brushed the wall- sent the second·
year driver spinning into the speed·
way's SAFER barrier. It was a bad
break, but it wasn't dangerous or

· roundings.
frightening.
"You've got to be conscious of your
· "You can do things to avoid those
·
surroundings.
You can't put yourself
big wrecks," said Bowyer. "It's.no difin
situations
and
be in a wreck. You
ferent than driving on the interstate.
If people are driving crazy or erratic, can control your destiny sometimes,
get away from them. Back out and get but sometimes you just can't. Someout of that situation. If they're putting times 10 cars in front of you get toyou three wide or four wide and gether and crash, and you're goin~ to
yoti're · not comfortable .with who be in the middle of it. There's JUSt
you're around and your surroundings, nowhere to go."
Bowyer, from Emporia, Kan·., has
well, you've got the wheel. Get out of
benefited from the advi~ and experithat situation.
·
"It comes a time at the end of the ence of his teammates, Kevin Harvick
race where you can't afford to back and Jeff Burton, at Richard.Childress
.
out. You can't afford to get back up Racing.
"I owe a lot to them," said Bowyer.
through there and get the run."
At 28, Bowyer is quite the voice of "They've been a really important part
reason, considering that his entire of my career, and my learning curve
Nextel Cup career consists of 46 is a lot further along as a result of beraces. He seems on the verge of win· ing able to work with drivers like
Kevin and Jeff. It's been a huge help."
ning for the first time.
"I think I'm a smarter driver," he
said. "l'think I understand a little bit
Contact Monte Dutton
better what I need to be doing and
at hmdutton50@aol.com
where I need to be at and my sur-

Umltlftll field to Amtlrlcans
II, well, un-AmeiiCM

... (An earlier letter) said
NASCAR woulil welcome Juan Pablo
Montoya (and) it will bring a new
generation of fans .
Isay it will be hard to find
three fans
empty seat in

an

these

WEATHER

NASCAR. Don't people remember

what foreigners did to open-wheel

racing? Look at all the 0mpty seats

at open-whee l events.
Americans root for Americans,
not for somebody we can't even pronounce their names.
·
Gone Shear

Leesburg, Fla.

Yes, most Americans root for
Americans, and that's as it probably
should be. But is it proper to keep
someone out just because he hap.
pens not to be American? What defines American? Birth? That would've
eliminated Mario Andretti, by the way.
It's fine to hope American drivers do
well. What 's wrong is to think the field should be limited onry_to Americans,
or any other group, for that matter.

.Details on Page A6

INDEX

~

4

Stewart penali~ed for skipping press conference
By Monte Dutton

NASCAR This Week

" J '••' -·

:1:.66'1
-433
' '·496

·534
·612
-616 ·
•.639
- ·6 48

-655
. 670
~~~ Tllucll SERa

Slcln(ler

a.

Todd Bodine

Rick Crawford
4. Ron Hornaday Jr.
I. Jacl&lt; Sptague
1.. Ted Musanwe

f. .iohnny Benson

I. Mike Crafton
I. T""'s Kvapll
10. Erik Darnell

• rool&lt;le

,_

·

905

· 108

. 128
· 154
• 171

-178
· 202
· 222
· 252
-254 .

TALLADEGA,
Ala.
NASCAR officials stipulated
last week that they didn't consider it proper to penalize driv'
ers for expressing their opinions. In a sense, the $10,000
fine assessed· Tony Stewart
seemed to contradict that policy, but not technically. ·
In fact , Stewart was fined
and placed on probation until
year's end for not expressing
his opinion. Stewart's fine was
for failing to attend a mandato·,
· ry press conference following
his runner-up finish in the r~ce
at Phoenix Intermitional Race·
way on the night of April21.
Stewart emerged from an
early-morning meeting with
NASCAR ' officials to recant
virtually every .comme'nt he
·made on his' Sirius Satellite Ra-'
dio show on April 24. Among
Stewart's contention&amp; was the
notion that appearing in such
press conferences was somehow an option. Stewart referred to post-race press con·
ferences as "a privilege."

Later, he admitted he had
been wrong.
"I do know for a fact (now)
that it's at the bottom of the en·
try (blank) that it is mandatory
to go to the media center. It's
not your choice to go," he said,
"and in my contract, it does say
that I'm obligated to go to the
media center.... You guys (the
media) have it 100 percent
right, and I was 100 p'ercent
wrong on that one."
·
·
Stewart's car was excluded
from the inspection process
until he met with NASCAR offi·
cials. The meeting that
changed everything occurred
at approximately 6 a.m., at
which point, presumably, Stew·
art re.ceived word of disciplinary action taken against him.

•
The lawsuit changes - Kentucky Speedway is no longer
demanding a Nextel Cup·date
in its lawsuit against NASCAR
and International Speedway
Corp.

Oh, no. The stakes are now
•
even higher.
The amended complaint,
It's the teams, stupid - To
originally filed in 2005, now Matt Kenseth's credit, he hascalls for "objective factors" in - n't once alleged that Chevrolets
NASCAR's awarding of Nextel have an unfair advantage, this
Cup dates. It also calls for the in spite of the fact that Chevy
France family to give up con- drivers have won seven of the
trol of either NASCAR or ISC eight races so far.
and for ISC to sell at least
Kenseth's California victory
eight of the 12 Cup tracks it in February is the 9nly victory
owns.
·
by Ford, or any other manufacAccording to the 41-page turer beside Chevrolet.
complaint, "Th~ illegal actions
"I'm glad I'm the race they
of NAS(:AR and ISC have didn't win, but we've just got to
harmed ~very aspect of stock get our stuff running better,"
car racing," and there are spe· said Kenseth. "I 'think all the
cific allegations involving rules are so close to the same, I
pressure allegedly exerted by really have a hard time believthe defendants in preventing ing that one manufacturer
Kentucky Spe~dway from buy- would have a big advantage or
ing other tracks in order to se- disadvantage over anybQdy else.
cure dates. New Hampshire, I think everybody is pretty close
Martinsville, Pocono and to the same; we just have to
Dover are all specifically cited, make our stuff better. We've
and the complaint also alleges just got to get running better as
that ISC .did not purchase Ken- a group and keep working on it."
tucky Speedway itself because
the track's owners "would not
•
sell to ISQat below-market val·
Think what you want -Jeff
ue."
.
NASCAR and ISC, naturally, Gordon:s flying of a No. 3 flag
dispute these claims.
after his Phoenix victory,

- .24 PAGES

Around Town
Calendars
Celebration's

meant as a tribute to Dale
Earnhardt, was taken by some
of his fans as an insult.
Gordon said he can't control
what the late driver's fans
think. He said he appreciated
the support and approv~l of
Dale Earnhardt Jr.
"I knew why I wanted to do
it," said Gordon, "and that's all
that really mattered. I knew
there would be people who took
it the right way and some who
would take it the· wrong way,
and those are the people that
I'm not going to be able to make
happy no matter what I do."

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

·' A3
A2-3
C2-4

. D3·5
insert

Al4

cs

As
A2, A6
B Section
A6

© 2007 Ohio Valley Publishing eo·.

POMEROY
U.S.
Senator George Voinovich
proposed development of a
strategic plan for energy
projects
in
Ohio's
Appalachian region during
a Friday visit to·Pomeroy.
Voinovich, who is the
main sponsor in the Senate
for re-authorization of the
Appalachian
Regional
Commission, said the "best
brains" at the state and federal levels of government
and in the energy industry
should develop a plan to
address the nation's changing energy needs while
improving the economy of

the Appalachian region.
Voinovich hosted a round·
table di scussion at the
Meigs County Economic
Development Office. which
included Meigs Coun1y
Commissioners
· Mi ck
Davenport and Jim Sheets.
Development
Director
Perry Varnadoe, ARC
Federal Co-chairman Ann
Pope, Fred Deel, Director of
the Governor 's Office of
Appalachia, Governor Ted
Strickland's energy advisor,
and representatives of
American
Municipal
Power-Ohio and American
Electric Power, which have
proposed construction of
clean-coal power plants in
southern Meigs County.

BETH

Members, of the Hope's
Helping Hands 4-H
group plant one of the
small stone planters in
t~e city park during the
Gallipolis in Bloom
pianting day on
Saturday. Several other
people showed up to
help the America in
Bloom committee pre·
pare for thi s year's
competition. inclucJing
residents of the
· Children 's Center of
Ohio boys home and
members of one of
Gallipolis' bridge clubs,
by taking on the
Municipal parking lot
and the Galli a County
Courthouse. Pictured
from left are 4-H
Advisor Catherine Gill,
Kimberly Hu rt. Hannah
Simpson , Blair Simpson
and Brylee Harder.

SERGENT

POMEROY - A house
bill recently introduced
into the Ohio Legislature
would ·abolish mayor's
court in municipalities of
less (han L600.
House Bill 154, sponsored
by Rep. Larr:Y Wolpert (RHilliard) would also modify
the
compensations
of
municipal court judges
in territories having a population of more than 50,000.
Syracuse Mayor Eric
Cunningham said he heard
about the bill through the
Ohio Municipal League
which began notifying their
memb1:rs of the threat to
mayor's
court and the
league's concern that small
police departments would
"go by the wayside" if the
bill passed. Under the bill, all
of Syracuse's court cases
would shift to Meigs County
Court with the village receiving SO percent of the fine.
Syracuse, with a populatfon of under 500, is a
prime · target of the. legislation as are the villages of
Rac ine and Rutland in
Meigs County.
Although income from
mayor ' s court fees isn't
the only source of income
in these small villages,
they are a source nonetheless in a time when small
municipalities are count·
ing eve ry penny.
Cunningham ~aid he has
contacted Rep. J imniy
Stewart (R-Meigs) aboul his
concerns and des ire to keep
mayor 's court alive in smaller villages like Syracuse .
Stewart said since the bill
was introduced two weeks
ago he has received numerou s calls from people
against it without one call
of support.
"I've heard from a lot of
people and I am not in favor
of it," Stewart said of the
legislation, adding he does
Please see court. Al

Please see Volnovlch, Al

Michelle Miller/ photo

Finding a new-home Gospel in the Park
returns this month
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@ MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Joy Kocmoud/plloto

Two year old Evan Whited examines a new puppy as his
brother, five year old Aaron looks on. The family looked at
several pets before deciding to take home the young pup.
Puppies and many other dogs are available for adoption at
the Gallia County An imal Shelter located on Shawnee Lane,
Hours are from 2·5 p.m. Monday through Friday. For niore
information call 441·0207_.

GALLIPOLIS - Southern
gospel music will once again
ring out from our beautiful
and historic city park in
downtown Gallipolis.
The concert series will
partner thi s year with Joy
FM 's Downhome Gospel
Program and will be called
the Downhome Gospel in
the Park Concert Serie s.
The committee which pro·
motes the sings. made up of
Carl Ward, Rick Towe. Randy
Parsons, and Rick Barcus.
invites area youth groups to
contact Pastor Barcus at 740367-7063 if they would like
to sell refreshments during. a
concert to raise money for
their charity.
There is al so an urgent
need for volunteers who can
make themsel ves available
t&lt;i set up the tent on
evenings when bad weather
is anticipated. Anyone who
can help is urged to contact
Pastor Barcus at the same
number ASAP.
The sings will take place

at 7 p.m. on most Fridays
thi s summe r. The groups
schedu led to. perform each
week will be announced in
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune
and on Joy FM .
Some of the groups and
soloists scheduled .for this
are:
Chuck
summer
Compton.Forgivell
Four.
While Oak Quartet, Gospel
Harmony
Boys.
The
Gracemen. Peculiar People.
Voices .of Faith, New
Southern
Harmony.
Gloryland Beli evers. Scon
Fraser. Goer s Amba&gt;sadors.
Eternity. Jackie Freeman.
Roush Family, Justitied.
Gospel Bluegrass Gentlemen.
Gospel Bluegrass Boys.
Mercy. Earthen Vessels.
Freed by Chrisl. Dayspring.
Mark Coleman and New Citv.
A wrap up concert will tie
held on September 6 at the
Ariel Theatre featuring the
Award winning national
recording arti sls the Dove
Brothers.
The first concert of th e
series is sc hed ul ed for
Please see Gospel, Al

No worries- Earnhardt Jr.
was almost completely uncon·
cerned by his lac.k of qualify·
ing speed. In his five career
Talladega victories, Earnhardt
Jr. has starred lOth, 13th twice,
fourth and sixth. This time he'll
start 36th.
"The car is (ast," he said ..
"We just qan't qualify good for
some reason .... It's set up for
drafting and for all those
things I need to do (today)."

---.-~---·-- -----~-----·-----· ·- --~------

--

.

r-.

1,)

In proposin g the plan 's
devclopmenl,1Voinovich said
it would all ow the local
communily and companies
interested in developing
energy facil itie:. in the region
to better access support for
infrastructu re anti worker
training. Pope committed
fundin g for development of
the plan lhrough the ARC,
"The ARC is interested in
energy in particular in terms
of economic development,''
Pope said. "We would like
Appalachi a to play a large
role in emerging energy
lechnology."
The AEP proposal to build
an Integrated Gasification
Combined Cycle plant in

I

......

.-.----

SECrtONS

REED

BSERGENT&lt;ii'MVDAilVSENTINEL. OM

INSIDE

....., ..ctlonlng off ....
helmetforclwtty

J.

Bill to
abolish
mayor's
court

with hls .comparison with the

miraculous victory in Talladega 's
Busch series race. passing his
ex·teammate, Stewart, at the
finish line.
·

($2,650,857), who's only ninth
In the point standir.gs. ADaytona 500 victory goes a long ·

stewart

s

Jeff Burton
¥1, Tony Ste.-t

i&gt; Bobby Labonte pulled off a

• The season leader iQ earnings,
however, is Ke\lin Harvick

U.S. Senator George Voinovich and Jane Harf, Director of
External Affairs for American Electric Power · Ohio discuss
development of a strategic energy plan for Appalachian
Ohio at · a roundtable discussion Voinovich called in
Pomeroy on Friday.

u

seventh in the point standings.

Gordon's share for winning w~s

'idanJ.Reed/~o

s
Burton

St.;;o • \ 'ol. .tt. :\o,

:wo-

BREEOOMVDAILVSENTlNEl.COM

I Erik Darnell won at
Aaron's 312 at Talladega Kansas Speedway for his
Superspeedway.
first career victory.

ruo a
:,., fllr niCe. all yoar•.Ohe can't help
;; \birt ~&lt;I« what Stewart
~ COUid'WI said at a pMSS cqnfer.
p et1C8 tll8t would have gqnen
t., !Jir!J In ll10rll trouble.
&lt;•
'
11:., 'IJIIIn, after being called to a 6
·~ a.m. meeUng wM NASCAR ofti. .
clals et Talladega, Stewart recanted everything t1e'd said.
There's no truth to the rumor,
· however, that he now thinks the
' world Is flat.
.• ,.,. Stewart received a $10,000
flne and probation for failing to
attend the mandatory Phoenix
press conference. It was a first
for NASCAR, whose spokesman,
Jim Hunter, said: "The standard
Is now set."
" Jamie McMurray, fifth at Talladega, continues to quietly·
walk the comeback trail. He ·s

$355,511.

BY BRIAN

o Track

2006 .

~F £.ri l.J ~1~ J-f

(o .

Voinovich proposes strategic planning at Friday roundtable

SPORTS

1

I

• 'liddll'por·t • &lt;.allipoli' • ""~

Stewart to capture the

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

'CLINT BOWYER

ple of remarkable good sense.·
1&gt; Tt1e top 21 Talladega fimshers
-and 27 drivers overall earned more than $100,000.

l'onw1 ·o~

( o.

of style.

c

111&gt;

l'uhli~hing

()hill\ alit·'

11.5 miles), 134
laps/ 201 miles.

,.

--------------~-- -~--------------------~-t

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="530">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9981">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="15301">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="15300">
              <text>May 4, 2007</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1458">
      <name>leonard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1331">
      <name>neutzling</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
