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Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel .

.

www .mydailysentinel.com.

Thursday, May 26, 2oos

Federal regulators: Pen-y
· nuclear plant safe but .
could be better, A8

Ohio State will expand random
Miami _charges past Pistons
drug and alcohol testing of athletes
BY

RusTY

MIUER

ASSOCIATED PRESS

COLUMBUS- Days af1er
dru~ charges were brought
agatnsl two football players.
.. Ohio S!ale coach Jim Tressel
said Wednesday lhat the ::nh. letic depanmenl .is expanding
i1s drug 1es1ing.
''When there's more lesling
(lhen! are) more opportunities
for a guy to slip up," Tressel
said al a new s conference al
Ihe learn 's practice facilily.
··Bul that's a good lhing.
Because it~ my mind, the
more highway patrolmen
there are along lhe intersiale.
Ihe more you' i'e going to
walch your speed' '
Several Buckeyes football
·players, h'owever, maintained
that they do not believe there
is a pervasive problem with
drug and alcohol .abuse in the
program. They said part of the
reason· the team members
have been charged is they are
under increased scrutiny
because lhey are football
players in a football-crazed
city.
All alhletes are current 1y
tested once a year for drugs
· and the university will
increase r;mdom tests and ·
double the amount ·of moneY •
OVP File
spent on the program from Ohio State coach Jim Tressel reacts on the sideline of last
$50,000 to $100.000. athlelic September's game against Marshall in Columbus.
officials said. The tests also
will be more co.mprehensive go on any longer." offensive behind the new policy.
to detect more 1ypes of drugs , lineman· Rob Sims said .
Tressel's players have had
including anabolic steroids.
Tressel and the players numerous run-in s with the
"The frequency of testing addressed reponers under a law since he took over in
and the investment is going to painted sign which contained Jat1uary of 2001, including
be significantly much, 1nuch a quole . from former Ohio several alcohol- and drugmore," said Tressel, who told Slate and NFL Hall of Fame related problems. A number
his team of the new policy on . coach Paul Brown which · of Ohio State fans have called
Tuesday . night. "The amount read: "'l/1/e · ve gol 10 be as for Tressel to lake a hard-line.
of counseling and support ser- good a football team as the stance .against Ihose breaking
vice will be enhanced a great CLASS of people we are."
1e~m rules, following the
deal."
"We've. had some guys who example of former Buckeyes
During a 60-minule round- .have been getting into the coach Woody Hayes who settable with reporters, several news and I think some people dom ,gave miscreants a sec- .
senior football players said are looking at il like, 'What 's ond or third chance.
they were embarrassed by the wrong with our program?"'
John . Conroy, a substilute
program 's sullied rep\ltation linebacker Anthony Schlegel offensive lineman, said he has
due to disciplinary and legal said. "'The sad part for me is heard people say that .Tressel
problems.
our program's not like that needs 10 gel tougher on tliose
In the span of eighl days and it just gets a bad perccp- who embarrass lhe program.
earlier this month, backup tion. We know thai something Conroy' s father, Jim, was a
· kicker Jonathan Skeete was has to be done aboul it and walk-on player at Ohio State
chiu:ged with marijuana traf- we•re taking' those measures." when Hayes was the head
Vince O'Brien, a trainer coach .
.
ficking and running back Erik
Haw was ciled after a univer- wilh the men's basketball pro"It's a different time right
sity pOlice officer said he saw gram, is heading up the new now thaf! when Woody Hayes
him smoking a marijuana cig- expanded drug and alcohol coached." he said. "You don't
arette while slanding outside testing program at Ohio State. see coaches acting like that
a dqrmitory. Last weekend,
"This was in. the works," he anymore and if you did they
defensive
lineman Tim said. "I don' t want anybody to wouldn'l be in the positions ·
Schafer was charged with dis- think il's a knee-jerk reaction they are ·now. It's a different
orderly conduct after police to anything that's happened in era. Anger just doesn't get it
said they twice had to break the last two weeks. This is done now. Blowitlg up al
up early . morning fights somelhing that's ongoing."
players does not achieve anybetween h1rn and another . Smith did not speak at the thing . You have· to work withman.
news conference, but O"Brien in, you can't isolate people
"Some ·ofthe things going said Ohio Stale's new athletic and get angry at them and
?n in ..the program, they can'l director was the driving force expect to achieve anything."

MIAMI (A P) - They call of Chauncey Billups ' 3- 10 points on a tip-in • .two
him "Flash," and . Dwyane point anempt to help the 14-footers, a drive into the
Wade certainly performed Heal hold off the defending lane and an alley-oop dunk,
like a superhero in Game 2 NBA champions.
the last of whtch put the
of the Easlern Conference
The
sene s. resumes . Heat ahead 78-76 wtth 5: 12
finals.
Sunday night, each team left. . . .
Miami' s up-and-coming having asserted itself once. · Detroll 1.1ed tt once more
superstar had yel another
Wade eclipsed 30 points before 0' Neal conyerted a
impressive poSISeason per- for the sixlh time this .p0s1- three:potnt play wtlh 3:59
formance Wednesday night. season Shaquille 0 Neal remammg 10 make tt 81.-78
rediscovering hi s agg res- added · t7 poinls and l 0 and pul the Heat ahead for
siveness and laking over in rebounds for Miami, and 'good.
.
Ihe fourth quart.er by scoring . Damon Jones had 14 poims.
After Alonzo ~ r ~ urnmg . ·
Richard Hamillon scored blocked a ShOt by Ben
20 of his 40 points as the
Heal defeated 1he Delroit 2·1 points and Tay shaun · Wallace, Wade converted a
Pislons 92-86 10 even the Prince had 17 for the fast-break layup for a fivebest -of-seven series.
PisiOn s. who came back poi nl lead . A baskel by
This was the 1ype of effort · from a 14-point deficit but Bi'llups and a miss by Wade
lhe Heal had grown accus- were helples ~ to slop Wade gave Detroit a chance to ~ie,
tomed to receivi n$ from lhe when he decided it .was time bul Wade came up behmd
23-year-old dunng . Iheir to take over.
Billups . and swaued away
''D.wyane has· always been his 3-point anempt- a play
consecutive sweers of New
Jersey and Washi-ngton in abte to p,ut thin~ s behind lhat led to a fast-break layup
the f1rst two rounds of the him and make adJUStmems. by Jones that made tt 87-80.
p.tayotTs. and Wade was able He's very mature, and he's
The Pistons scored the
to summon ano1her bursl of not going to get ·beat mental- next four poiltls and had one ·
brilliance to avoid having . ly," coach Stan Van Gundy more chance to tie, but
hi s team head to Detroit had predicted.
Rasheed.- Wallace missed a
down 2-0.
'
Wade 's fourth-qul!fter out- 3-pointer with 28 sec~nds
' Wade scored 14 of burst starled as he . opened. left - one of 14 mtsses
Miami"s first 16 points in the period with a bank shot from behind the arc for the
the final quarter, then raced and a driving dunk before Pistons on a night when they
in from behind and came up 0' Neal . hi I a jump hook . fell too much in love with
with a crucial blocked shot Wade scored Miami's next the long shol.

,u C I'\ I C.., • \ td .. • 1 '\. o .

I(J

11(11)\\

1

'\I\) :, ~,. :.! Of&gt;:-j

, ~o\ Yo h , .,_d ,d

Black wiih taupe leather. Power sunroof,
XM satellite radio; heated seats.

• Big Green Club
welcomes MarshalL
See Page 81

BY BETH SERGENT

....,

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

RACINE - The . Southern Lo~al
Board at ils meeting lhis week
hired Richard Stephens from
Alexander as Southern Hi gh·s new
varsity boy's hasketball coach.
Stephens was also hired on a oneyear limited contracl as a Vocafional
Agriculture teacher at Southern High
School at S1ep four, Bachelor's Degree
S~hool

plus -20. Also approved were 20 days supplemental,con'trat:tsfur the 2005-06
school year: Richard Cooksey. cross
of exlended time for the position.
The Board ~l so approved and signed country pending formalion of a leam;
a formal resolution of supp011 for the . Ang~la Mcquaid.J~niqr High cheercunstru,tion of a new. American le admg ad:tsor; Rtchard Stephens, ·
Electri~ Power plant localed · in the varStty boy _s bask.etball coach; Scolt
Southern Local"School District:
Wolle. varstly gtrl_ s basketball coach.;
A motion to accept a bid froin Allan Cnsp. athle11c dtrector.
.
Marielta Truck sales for a 71 passenThe Bo~rd al&gt;o approved lhe toloer school bus al ,·t "OSI
ot· S'-•.650
low1nu
leanhers
as ·su. mmer ·school
o
'
"'
.
o
'
died for lack of a secondc
· mslru ctprs at a ra te ot $20 an hour:
The Board approved the following Clint Spencer. Joy Neal, Vicki Hill.

•

Patti Struble. Donna Sayre .
The five-year linancial forecast was
approved as presented with G14eser
stating that. it &gt;howed "promise" and
thai he anticipated an even smaller
defi cit for the 2005-06 school year
due in part to the stabilization of the
districfs heahh care premiums.
The following motions were also .
approved:
Please see Southern, AS ·

Charleston
man killed
·in Mason
accident

4X4,' L4.:&gt;1JIU

Blue -Immaculate-We Sold New!

' 5 Grand Pri~
OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Elma I. Louks, 91
• Betty L. McKinley, 61

'04 Buick Park Hue

, , '' " ' I ·

Souther11 High School gets new bas~etball coach

SPORTS•

Peritneter security
improvements
underway, in jail
BY BRIAN

INSIDE
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Memorial Day barbecue
set. See Page AS

J. REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY DIANE PoTTORFF

MASON, W.Va. A
Charleston man was killed
and two others were taken
to a Huntington hospilal by
HealthNet following a twovehicle accident Wednesday
night.
Thomas L. Merritt, 42, was
a passenger in a 1978 Ford f150 driven by Cody L.
Parsons, 23, of Red House,
W.Va., who was driving south
on W.Va. 62 at a high rate of
speed, according lO a press
release from the Mason
Cha~ene Hoeftlch/photo
Coumy Sheriff's Department.
. According to witnesses, Lennie Jewell places a flag on a veteran's grave in Beech Grove Cemetery as Jim Fry and Mick
Parsons lost control of the Willi;;tms , commander of Drew Webster Post 39, American Leg1on, look on .' For more than 50
vehicle, .crossed the center years the post has been placing flags on the graves of veterans buried in the cemetery. Jewell
line and struck a 1997 Ford has been chairman of the project for the past 35 years!'A total of 468 flags were put out on
· F-250 driven · by Mark T. the graves Thursday evening.
·
•
Gilkey, 43 , of, Hartford.
The accident occurred at
around 9)0 p.m. on W.Va.
62 near Adamsville Road

Pomeroy Legion hosts ·
Memorial Day·obsetvance

.

Please see Accident. AS

Gallia approves
add on to Cheshire

BY CHARLENE HOEFLiCH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

deceased veterans of all wars
will be held. Commander
Mick Williams, a' past 81h
Dislri.cl commander, will give
the memorial tribute and will
also be the speaker for the
occasion.
The parade wilJ forin at 10
a.m. at the old P&lt;Jmeroy Junior
High School and Howard
Mullen. chairman, is urging
bands. ' walking _unit s, police,
fire and emergency . units.

antique vehicles. decorated
bicycles. floats, and others to
parti cipale . .He sugg~.s1ed thai
tloals carry a military theme .
in honor of the armed forces. ·
While no advance· registration
is required, Mullen asked 1hat
those planning to participate
call him al 992-3782.
Thursday night members
of ·1he post met at Beech

POMEROY - A parude
down Main Street in Pomeroy
.NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
WEATHER
at l 0)0 a.m. Monday will
kickoff the annual Memorial
GALLIPOLIS- After los- Day services of Drew Webster
ing all but a small fraction of Post 39, American Legion.
ils residems because of a land
Following the parade activbuyout deal three years ago, ities will move to the slage
the population of the village area on the upper parking lot
of Cheshire is about lO swelL where ceremonies honoring
Please see Legion, AS
Gallia County commissioners Thursday unanimously
approved an annexation petition lhat will add about 120
residents to lhe .20 who
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
remained in the town after
o.tallo on Paae AS
American Eleclric Power
POMEROY - Last year
bought most of the property
'
when
Keith Liltle noliced a
there in 2003.
"We are very happy,"
· small spot on his )eft noslri l
Cheshire Mayor Jim Rife
he brushed it off as a sore or a
2 Sl!CilONS -"1.6 PAGES
said after lhe vote. "ll's been
tempOrary blemish, but as the
a long, hard road."
:weeks went by the SpOt grew .
Calendars
Roush Lane resident Paul
slighlly larger. Liltle evenluClassifieds
Slinson filed. the petition with
ally wenl to see a dermalolo. the coumy. He submitted a
Comics
gist who di,agnosed the spot
signapetition
containing
76
as
malignant squamous carci.
pear Abby
lures of residents living in tile
noma, or skin cancer. .
Editorials
annexation area. The Gallia
Little , who has worked outCounty Auditor's Office veri· Faith•Values
doors most of his adult life, ·.
fied that 65 of those signawas told that repeated expoMovies .
tures were valid. The petiBrtan J. Reed/photo sure to the sun or a bad burn
tioner was required to have The Middleport Community Association has begun collecting from years ago likely cau~d
Obituaries
the signatures of 50 percenl donations for July 4 fireworks through collections canisters the conditioned.
NASCAR
of those residents.
The procedure 10 remove ·
placed in businesses in Middleport and Pomerqy. The first
Sports
B Section
The annexed ·area, which is' were placed at Family Dollar in l':vliddle port. Pictured are the cancer was not simply a
A8 393.7 acres; includes Ohio 7 Community Association Vice Presidimt Tom Dooley and VaH!rie freezing technique similar to
Weather
'
'
the removal of a wart. In only
© 1005 Dill&lt;? Volley Publlshin&amp; Co.
PleaH - Cheshire, AS · Gilkey, assistant store manager.
BY PAUL 0Af!ST

COLUMBUS (API - P1aye&lt;s and coaches

POMEROY Students
from the welding class at
Meigs High School installed
1wo heavy steel security
doors in the Meigs County
Jail on Thursday, as efforts to
re-open the facility continue.
The doors were free to the
county, conslructed by stu~
dents in Richard Fetty's
vocational welding class. The
heavy. steel mesh doors are
part of lhe requiremeMts for
meeting state Jail standards,
and were installed at the
entrance to the booking area
outside the jail's day area.
Sheriff Robert Beegle said a
keypad security system needed to further secure the
entrances to the jail will be
1nslalled soon, and a telephone
system has been ordered for
the visitor's area. A new window musl be cui out of the
steel wall in the existing jail
area. plexiglass installed, and
the lelephone communication
system put in place.
Additional work is also
needed in the jail area
itself. Beegle said, including new paint on the floor,
plti mbing repairs and new
lighting for individual cells
·
and lhe day area.
Beegle has collecled $7,532
in donalions from local residenls and organizations, and
those funds are .being combined with free labor and
donated materials to complete
the repairs necessary to reopen the jail. Community
Corrections participants have
worked on part of the repairs.
Please see Jail, AS

Protecting yourself against skin cancer

INDEX

•o3 Starcia GT

i"&lt;lme_,

n•

Middleport.; Pomeroy, Ohio

DPOTTORFF@MYDAI LYREGISTER .COM

..no have had legal or disciplinary problems

, ..

at

'03 Cheuy

OSU football legal, disciplinary problems under Tressel
Purdue and six days bet&gt;re the Michigan team . on the sidelineS but did not play
game, wide receiver Santonio Holmes and against Tell;as Tech. He rejoined the team br
OOr'ng Jim Trassel's tenure as Ot1io State's quarterback Troy Smith are charged witf'l practice the following week but did no.t play
heed coach (ctoes not include common lraf- misdemeanor dlsorderty conduct after a in the second game against Kent State.
ticollenSesl:
fight in a parking k&gt;t on campus. A window in Athletic director Andy Geiger later said
r.a.y 21, 2005---Defensive lineman Tim a car is kicked out and one INOman reported Vance's unspecified violation took. place the
Schafer is charged with disorderly conduct her jaw was broken.' At least one other previous winter. Vance' returned tor the third
after police twice had to break up earty_. pmminen1 8u::koye is at the scene. but is not game aoo ended up as the team's fourth··
morning figtrts between tlim and another charged. ~mes is held out of the starting leading receiver.
man. )'he 6-loot-5, 29&amp;-poond Schafer. who lineup ai Michigan but retums .to play most
J!,'ly 29, 2002-Wide receiver Angeio
star1ed fiw games as an offensive lineman of the game. Hoines also started in the Chartams is investigated for the alleged theft
laSt season, and the 5-8, ~und other Buckeyes' Fiesta Bowl game. He pleads Of a sat of golf clubs !rom a sport utility vehi·
marl were both bloody, had bite marks and
innocent to the disorderty cqnduct after the cle in West Carrolton: Prosecutors approve
smelled or alcohol.
·
team returns to Columb.Js. The disorderly but do not file a rtleft Charge, permitting
Mly 18, ~irtfreshman running conduct , charge is dismissed against Chattams to enroll in a progmin ror nonviobad&lt; Erik Haw was cited after a uriversity Holmes on March 30, 2004. Smith IS found lent, first-time offenders and 8\'tlid a charge.
policE! offl:er said he saw t1im smoKing a guMty of the charge.
He was excused from the team to deal with
marijuana dgarette while standing 0\,ltside a
Oct. 27, 2003-lrizarry is charged with the legal matter, then reinstated and played
dormilory. Haw, expected ro compete for the . three counts of llrst-degree mfsdemeanor in the season-opener. He does not play
starting tailback job, faces a court appear- assault after three people sustain minor again for the 81 deyes.
ance on Friday in Franklin County Municipal injuries during a fight in a Pari~. Hal! dorm
July 215, 2002 Police find Branden JoEl, a
Out. Ohio Sta1e officials said he would tOOITI. Irizarry is suspended twp days later. sopnomore fullback. asklep in a car on a
ente&lt; a drug O&lt;ilcalion PrtJ!1llffi and under· He Is lound glilty of one Charge each of highwciy ramp near caJlllUS. The police
go frequent testir9.
assault, negligent assault and disorderly report says he refused to take a .
lily 11 , .2005--Kicker Jonathan 9teete is conduct and pays S404 court~ and is Bteatharyzer test. He was .suspended br the
charged wilh marijuana tralfid&lt;ing. Sl&lt;eete. put on probation. He is lateneinstated to the three weeks of preseason camp and the
who was not expected to play !of the team and IS listed as the SEICQrlC:Heam tiglt team's season opener against Texas Tech,
S.Orsyes. was susperded from the team. end on :he 2004 spring deptt1 char1 before then returns 10 the team although hts playing
He- bound """ro a grand jury and was he iS suspended Indefinitely after the May 1. time is limited cv injuries.
l8tef released from jail on $1.0 ,000 bond .
2004, arrest.
April ZT, 200:2-linebacker Marro Co9Per
Feb. 16, 2005--0ttensive coon:inator Jim
April 2003 Running tiack Maurice Clarett •is arrested hours after the Buckeyes' anhual
Bollman is reprimanded by Ohio State lor . reports that a car he has Donuwed from a intrasquad scrimmage and charged with
trying to arrange b a car and a loan lor a local used-car dealer was broken into and 1e1ooy drug abiJse and carrying a concealed
recruil anc:l ror getting 1'1im a ,Mar. Tressel thousandS of dollars in cash, COs, Stereo weapon in his sportS-utility ~- Cooper
aaso received a letter of admonishment equipment and clothing was stOaen. The car pleadS glilty to two cl)arges in NoYembef
beCause he is Bollmatl's supervisof. Ohio was in the parking klt at the Woody ~ and is put on probation.
State-~ d'lat heipjng the recn.wt get
Athletic CEnter and Clarett calls police from
lhn:h 2. 2002-right erd Aodgie Arden is
a tutor b a coHege entmnce exam in 2002 a telephone in Tressel's ~- Clarett was arrested .on a charge of drunlu!n driving i1
was a secondary NCAA \'dation. Tressel tater cha&lt;IJOd wilh lying to police about tho his
ol konton. The redsllirt freshand tis Sl81f were~ a reprimand in 2001 value of the stoleniSems and is Charged witl'l
· found
illy nd · sentenced
br providing a JOfSOY ro a prospect,
misdemeanor falsffication of the police : : , ~ Jl ~ ~ ~- ~
Die. 20, 2004-0tuo State suspends report on the lhott Clatett pleads guilty 1&gt;1
tel ~ ~
he does
not parSl8r1ing quarotfbaek T«&gt;v &amp;riO'&gt; from the Jan. 14. 2(()4 , to the reckJced Charge of faiJ- • iudefiiiiJ ,....,, uto;r team,
Alaroo 8owj br accepting around $500 from L68 to akt a law enforcement officer. He is ticipate in summer 'Mll1couts beb'e the 20J2
team boo6ter Robert a. Baker. After a Ofdefed to pay the rnaximun fine cif $ t 00 seasm l:lut is reinstated before the start rl
2002 season """ played in 11 games.
longl'!y NCAA irNestiQation, &amp;riO'&gt; also is and S8I'WS no )all lime. The charge doeS not tho
He is a member ot the ~team and is list~
b'mdfO malrJ! restiturion ro a charity and sit appear on his oiminal recotd.
ed on the 1WO-Oeep roster 81 detensNe eoo
out the team's 2005 season opener-Etgainst
Oct. 13. 2002-linebadolr Fred Pagac Jr.
_ , (CJilo) .
.
IS d'\arged witt1 pers~ dsorderty conbeb"e he is beaten L4&gt; in an Augus1 f'91t 11
...... was arrested 81 3:45 am
W.Va., prEIY80ting him from joinOct 22. 201M-The alk100e strjl dul&gt; ruct. '~
""l:F"'
· · after Huntington,
lf'Vt the team .
.,
"""' Ptalinum files a complaint against Ohio police said he was intoxicated and had a ~ 'l!f
rOle in a fight 10VQ1ving two women ootside a
Nov. 15, 2001-0uarterback Steve
Slate tail&gt;ad&lt; Ll'(lell Ross !Of passong irH'Iouse currency-at me suburban cHJb a campus--area bar-.abOul 12 hourS after the Bellisari is arrested two dErjs babe the
Jew hours after the team lost its ttlil'd game Bud&lt;eyes' homecoming victpry over San . ltlinols game .lor aunken drMng. T!'86Sel
in a.row the previous Saturday at k:Ma ..No Jose State. Tl1e police report said an orficet suspends the· BIICkeyoes' three-year Slart8f'
... .tlJI: he
nnoed ,._,_
indemitsly and then reinstates him to the
chalgos are Ned, but Ross is suspended told •c....~to
stop
con
to •-y•L team three,-~.,...,
_,. later. A senior. he ptacticed
from 1he team lor !tie lndana game and is Pagac was su_.,ood lor tho team's , _
ctoppod on the. depth chart boljnd lresl&gt;- game at Wisconsin: Pagac pleaded lrll"li.&gt;- wrth the team klrthe Michigan game but did
cent In Dec:ember. befcfe !he team's nation- nor. play, thQn came oft rhoe benctt " P'aY
,., Tony F'it!man.
Ill¥ 1, '2011 s Jphon 1()(9 badcup:s louis a1 ct\ai'Tl)iOnStlip geme against MiMli in the mo:st of the_team's Outbedc. Bowl loss to
lri2any aro Ira Guilford are arrested ~ FIOSia Bow1 Pagac was _.nee in a ~ South Care&gt;,.. He tater oerwd a - . t
c:h8rg8d with rot:toery after a student IS ~
Aug. 17 200:!--0ofonsNe ineman Ouinn., - 2 1, 2001~ 00... Floss
assaiJted and 1'115 wallet IS staen at 3 am
·
chaf9BS ol cmng
wi1toot a
They .,. held in F!al1klin Coooty jailltlro&lt;ql P!tax:lc ,.•...,.__.
__ ..,.. with,...........,
__ ....,. dr1nl&lt;ingn
,.is """"'"&lt;1
andon_..._lalse
--~
hos
ol
Piqua.
He
~
suspondod
""""'
~-:--...
..~.
"'
.., Both mocent "' the rrom tne team for the three weeks of pr&amp;- police, ~., ing&gt;rrect name when pulled
.-ry charge. wi1" Guilbrd released ~a 525,000 110M lrtzany is MIO pend- · season workours. then wot1U!ct out with tne CMtr lor speeding. He was saiiBr ICed to 30
ing a -...g to
I he hal rolated team and ~ not held out ol any games. He days ." jail. He .is suspor'ded from Olio
his' probation rrom an eat1tef assautt OOO'VIC· pleaded no contest to a reduced charge of States 2001 spnng ~: then playBd
oonduct
most ol the 2001 """""'· klaci"'j the e;g
lion. He ~ ~ """ ~ • ~so.oerly
Aug. 24. 2002-flanker Chns Vance. the Ten in 1ntercepb0n5 and earning sec:clnd-11'11'98-)'881' prison sentence. Guib'd IS sentef1ced tD two )Wni probatiOn lor hiS role lt'l Bl.ldl.eyes· second-leading receiver tram team aiJ..conWEir(:e- hOnOrs. left team 10
lhe .-ry, pund1ong ... sn:-t """"' 2001 ,"•s suspended trom ~team bet:&gt;re r:naMt t1mself awilatie b' the NFL craft a
me seaSon opener Jor what Tressel callea a ' Yt*l' early.
lnzany lac* !he wallet
Nov. 111, !!IHM ~~ 3 a.m. after a Wln ovvr vli:Wabon olleam poliCY\/~ WBS With !he .Mn.. 1~ 2001-Tressel i5 hired.

Eastern baseball
heads to·regionals
today, Bt ·

Sleeps 4, Electric NC,
and heat

lhree monlhs time the cancer
had grown so large that it
required surgery. The surgery
removed a portion of Little's
nose large enough to stick a
pencil eraser through and was
followed by recons1ruc1ive
surgery to close the gap.
Little had his procedure
done at the Center for Surgical
Dermatolbgy in Columbus
and claimed that the waiting
room was packed with people
with similar conditions.
Little now tries to wear sunscreen when working outdoors .
which is recommended by the
American Cancer Sociely for
people of all skin types.
, Other ACS recommendations lu protect yourself
against skin cancer are:
Choose clothing 10 protect
PleaH see Cancer, AS

A etmple reminder about insurance discounts.
A Slturday morning ritual kind of reminder.
I

You need to lneure bolh your auto and your home\..so why
not save moiJ8Y in the process? Call your American l"amily
~nt toda)' for a free ,00-obli~tlon lOok at auto and home
dlii::ounts. SO you can .check it off your list, and off your mind.

.

J.C. Wood Agen~. Inc.
158J St Rt 160
Gallipolis. OH 4~31
(740) 446-0114

-mine

gwool@,mfam.com
.Mon. - Fri. 9:00am - S:OO m

-

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-- - - -

J.C. Wood Agen~. Inc. ·
225 Broadway St.
Jackson. OH 45640
(740) 286-4385
jwood@amfam.com
Mon. - Fri. 9;00 am • 5:00

AMERICAN FAMILY
INSURANCE

Alf your prottJCIJon Ul'lder one roof"
Ame rican Family Mutual Insurance Company and its
Subsidiaries
Amencan Standard Insurance Company ot Wisconsin

Homo Office · Macfison. WI 53783
American Family Insurance Company
,
Amencan Standard Insurance Company ot 01110

Home·Office - Columbus, OH 43240
"2005

-··.

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00~ •

901 2.o'Ce

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•

FAITH
A Hunger For More
.

There IS a plethora of
"churchy'' words that. when
mvoked, sounds hke hnle more
than rneanmgless jargon in the
ears of most people outstde nf
the church. On the other hand.
even inside the great family of
God there are some expressions
that have become so muddled
under layer\; of generational
over-fmmhan\y that the ongtnal convtcttons or spiritual
mstghts ,that they represented
have been lost m anuquity. •
The word "revival" may be
as 'good an example of thiS as
anv other word of whic h I can
think. Even in areas o'r among
populations where the word ts
wtdely used, its real stgntficance tS generally entire ly
overlooked Most of the tune,
when the word "revival"
comes up, we refer to a set of
meetings (usually running
about a week and otien featuring vano us singmg groups and
certainly fiery speakers). And
if we as Christians tend to mt ss
the pomt of the word.
"revival." 11 should come as no
s urpri~ that the world too can
have some funny tdeas about
what we mean when we throw
up our banners and adverttsements promoting them
The word "revival" itself stmply r:efers to the rcstoratton of
hfe. As Christians we use the
word to refer to God's restoring
His people to an excttmg and
satt sfymg relationshtp with
Himself after they had repented
from falling away from Him.
having been etther dtstracted or
enamored by other thmgs.
"Revtval" therefore does not
refer to a meetmg. Contrary to
some opimons. tl does not even
refer to a large number of people receiving the Lord Jesus as
their Sav10r and becoming
Christians. Such a response
can be a fruit of revtval but ts
not revtvalttself. After all. how
can one "RE-vive" somethmg
(that is to say "to bnng to hfe
again") when that somethmg
was only JUSt then teceivmg
life for the very lirstttme''
Today, as we look across the
sptntual and mom! waqeland
that be sets our viston, we
might wonder if the church has
a dtmim shmg ca pac uy to
make a dtfference in the world.
If so. tl ts because we need
revival. We are no longer hvmg wtth the power of Christ
Who, in His earthly ministry,
left people knowing that
somehow life would never be
the same for them because
they had been confronted with
the presence of God.
"When Jesus had finished
(teaching), the crowds were
amazed ... because He taught as
One Who had authority and not
as their teachers... " (Matthew
7:28-29 NN).

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Bv JoNATHAN !'IOBLE
PASTOR. TRIN ITY CHURCH

How stmple yet how powerfu l In the beauttful Song of
Songs we hear the tatr young
matden cry out to her bndegroom. "Catch us the foxes,
the lillie foxes. that ruin the
vmey.trds - for our vmeyards are in blossom."
The me.ming I' obvtous.
Little tuxes wou ld often creep
into vmeyards and devour all
the young. tendet trutt So,
too. "little foxes' ' of another
sort threatened to sneak into
thetr relatiOpslitp and destroy
their vtneyard of love.
"Catch the foxes, the ltttle
foxes.. .'' Thts ts a potgnant,
. p()etic appeal to catch the
troubles and ddTicultte! and
problems. however small and
pesky that mt ght destroy their
relat tonshtp. How wtse and
appropnate'
Alte1 all. how many v.ann
· and amtable rcla uonshtps
have been dashed against the
tteacherous rocks of ltttle
problems and annoymg obstacles'' How many engagement s have been broken
because of "little foxes?"
For example, two young
people are deeply in love and
about to be married, but call
ott the weddmg because they
can't agree on the mmister or
where to be marned or who to
invite and not to invite.
Or maybe she recently met
an old female "fnend" of hts,

Rev.
Jonathan
Noble

who seemed to know just a btt
too much about htm. And here
the little foxes of petty disagreement and unseemly susptcton have crept tn and
ruined their vineyard of love.
Of course, the vtneyard
may be your famtly, complete
wi th a mce home with a twocar garage housing two relati vely new vehicles. You and
your spouse may each have a
decent JOb providing sufficient incomes.
Your chtldren may . attend
the best schools and be
hl essed with ·good health ...
Beware of ltttle foxes wreakmg havoc m your .vmeyard!
The vmes of your fam ily li fe
are betng destroyed and you
have yet to apprehend the cuipnts.
While you watch your
favorite program on televiswn. your spouse stts 111 font
of the computer in another
room and your chtldren play
vtdeo games or talk on the
phone. This is your routine
night after mght

Dexter church ·
to host wiener roast ~

Fdlowship
Apostolic

The httle fox of mdtflerence and detachment has
sl ipped mto your vmeyard.
Catch him and try ~ t riking up
a conversatton wtth those
strangers you used to call
famtly. Catch the httle fox
and play with your children, if
they' ll sttlllet you.
Try praying together before
bed at mght, however stmple
the prayer may be . The old
adage has an awfu l lot of truth
tp it. "A fam ily that prays
together, stays toge ther.·
Whatever you have to do,
catch the little fo~es before
they destroy the vineyard of
your tam tly.
·
In fact , wherever or whatever the vmeyard may be whether it is the workplace 01
home. your marnage · or
Sunday school class_ apprehend all the bothersome little
dogs before they devour aitd
destroy.
,
. Wherever there .ts a vmeyard, there are. httle foxes
ready to sne~k .m and cause
damage. Dtmmuttve . and
seemmgly harmless they after
wreak more havoc then obviously wild and dangerous
beas ts precisely because they
are so small and seemingly
unobtrusive.
•
Just
remember,
little
demons are often the best of
the devil's workmen because
thetr work so often goes
unnoticed. "Catch the foxes,"
then, "the httle foxes .... "

M1 lkr

r

Lonp Rd ol1 ~n.\ Lun tt l{d

Assembly of God
LiiM'rl~

As.&lt;iembl\ or God
PO B11~ -167 Duddmg Lm~·
W V,t, P ~stur Nl.'il fcnn unt
St&gt;rv1ccs tO00 .t m J n ~., r m

Curp~!IUH Blllll l ~ l Churt·h
Su nday Sd1oul - 9 :iOum Prc,tdun g
S\!rVICL' 10 10um
EvL'nmg Se r\lll
7 OOJ'Im Wcdn csd.1y llthk StuJy 7 (Ml pm
lmenm Prcm:hcr - Hnyd Ross

Cheshire Hupttsl Chu rch
Pastor Stew Ltttlc, Sumlay Sdmol I) JO
.un Morntng Wor..,htp Ill JU am, Sumla}
C\'l! lltng fJ "\{) ptll We dnc~ny (J ){lpm

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Hope BIIJtlist Church (Soulhcrn)

Wedn csd.ty Scr\ ICC - 7 r Ill
Rulland Fma Raplist f' hurch
Sund:.ty Schn11l - I)~() .1 m Wor ~ h• p
10 45 •I Ill

26 years in local business
Roofing &amp; Building Worl5

Pomeroy,OH
740-992-6215
'

,.

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

l'rnncroy •' irstll npti st
Pastor Jon Bmck crt rn st M.nn St
Slmd.ty Sdwul IJ :l ll n m Worsh •r 10 10 &lt;1 111
Ftrsl South('rn Haphst
41 H72 Pnmcmv fttke P.1~tn r E Lam&lt;~r
0' Bryan I Sund.1y Sc hool
9 ~a u m
Wm ~ lup H 15 .1111 , Q-l'i ,tnl&amp; 7 (}() pm.
Wedne; day Scrvi~C~- 7 00 r Ill
F1rs1 Haplist Chu n: h
P,lslllr Murk Mntrnow t'lih .1nd P.tlmcr St
Middl cpoll. Sun d.1y School lJ I~ u m
Wo1 s lup • 1015 .1111
700 ptjJ .
Wed llCSJ,iV $~ 1 \ ICC· 7 ()() p Ill

Coolvtlle, Ohto

Located tess than 30 mmutes

from

Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-740-667-3156

"Still small enough to care"

'
209 Third

Dair4

Racine, OH

Queen
B raz ier

700 N. 2nd St.

·••

Middleport, OH

7
(740) 992-6451

7 40-949-221 0
:A Home Bank for
Home People"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

You aff drhrl.QI happlty down Ilu: highway. ll'llvellng to vl•lt on OUI or
rowu •cquatptanct:. Listening to your fM""Orhc radio ~tation. uoddmg ln
thnc with tM music , yo u bcg•n to hear s~atic .11.nd rhc c:cho of an01hcr
stadon in ihc background . Fine: tuning your station b to no '""U, You
have tr.t ... rlt'd out of nantt;&lt;r of tht.• frt:qucnc y,
At 1imrs. W(' Sll'a)· in our ~pirt ru.al tivc&lt;O much ln 1h~r same WMy. \\.'c
lra\TC through our busy days as U!foui.l unul ~~" ntd)' rcalt:u:: thar we a.u not
quire oui'S('Ivc.s. easily fru~lrate:d lmpauen1 . maybe\li?t'oumgr.d as w~ll.
WhM1 could lx th" cauM: or 1hts cmolional dl'5comfon' Pcl'haps rhrcr has
bc:t:n uu tn~gcdy. uo illnu~ ... but yttt nu re:al joy
Du you see youi"»Cif In this ~Cif.lum o. or ptrhap$ M:Jmt:onc: you know 1 1~
your ~pirit~J urc m ume-? R.onvml- U ;lach1KS, .. l&gt;o no&amp; be CQulormrd to
t hi$ world bur M _transfurmcd hy the- reneWlll of your mind . rhat you ngy
prove: what~~ 1tw will of (,od , what b good and accc:pt•blc and pcrfct·t "
Ar&lt; y&lt;ltl in t he ranll&lt; or Ih&lt; vole&lt; or Ih&lt; Holy Sptrlt? Won.hlp this w&lt;&lt;k
and redisc:onr 1M joy of the pn:wncc ol God )"Our life 'Gc:t "'toned •n··
1h,.

Sohbath.

-

• Hdt.-Jt

P.O. x 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

740-949-2217
Stzes avatlabte 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

If ye abide in Me, and My

499 Richland Avenue, Alhens
740-594-6333
1-800-45 1-9806

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

words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye, wil~ and it shall
be done'unto you.
John 15:7
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Hei~Jbls
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 lfi"'&amp;C:'-,_
(740) 992-3279 '
''--!!Y
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

333 Page Street
Mtddle ort OH

Rnune •' irst 1\iipltsl
P.1s10r R t~..:k Rul e Suml:iy Sc hnol ') '()
am Wnrsh1p 10 40am 7U0pm.
Wednesday Serv Kc~ · 7 00 p 111

Mt. Union 8ajfti!'lt
Ptlslor l)nv1d W1scman Su nda y Sc hool!) 45 am
Even mg
6 30 p m ,
Wcdne~d ay Serv•ccs 6 30p m
Bethlehc..-nt Baphsl Church
Grea t Bend , Route 124 R,lllllC OH
Pastor Dana~l Mecca Sunday S~ h onl
9 ~0 u rn , Sunday Worship 10 ~0 a rn .
Wednesday B1ble Study- 6 UO p rn
Old Bethtl Frte Wtll Buphsl C huoch
2Hfl0 1 St Rt 7 Mtddlcport Sund,•)
Schoo l - 10 am. Evcnm g · 7 00 p m ,
Titur:sday Scr\11ces 7 00
Hilhide Bnpl1st Church
St Rl 1 4~ JUS! nlf Rt 7 , Puslflr Rc1,1
Ja me s R Acree Sr Sunll,ly Unified
Servtce. Wor&amp;hrp - 10 30 am, 6 p m.
WeJnesduy Se r v 1~cs 7 p m

Victory BnptL-.IIndept"ndl'nl
525 N 2nd St Mldllleport. Pa:.;tor Jamc&lt;;
E Keesee. Wursht p lOam , 7 p m
Wedne sday Servile~ 7 p m
Fa1th Baptisl Church
R.ulrnm:l St . Ma son S un~ay S"' hool - 10
a m . Worship
II a m . 6 p m
Wednesday Serv u.:c:~ · 7 p m
,'
fo~sl Run Baph ~ l
Pastor Anus Hurt , Sunday Sch£KII - IU
am , WonJup - I I 11m

(740) 992-6472
Fax 740 99 -74

MI. Moriuh Baptist
Fourth &amp; Mam St , Middleport, Pastor
R c~ G!lben Cra1g, Jr . Sun day School 9 30 am Worsht]'l- 10 45 am

Houn
6am • 8 pm

Wurm Fne11dly
Atmo5pkere

,,
,,

!Mi((ie's 1{estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Dally
llome Cooktd Meals &amp;: lJtJi.ly SJnciiJls
·
Open 7 days a week

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

your hght so shme
men. that they may see
::l1good works and gtonfy your
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5: t6

MIDDLEPORT
l){oPHIES &amp; TEEs
190 N Second S!

1\nliquiiy Baptisl
Sund11 y S~.: h ool ~ Q .lO a t'n Worsh ip
10 45 am Sunday E\C nm g ~ tt 00 r m
Pastor. Don Walker
Rulland t' m Wllllbplist
Salem S1, P..istur Ja1mc Fyrtm: r SunWw
S~.:hvol - IU am
bcr11ng - 7 p m .
Wednesday Scrvll'CS - 1 p m-

• 740-992-7713

Middleport, OH

740.992-6128

Local source for trophies,
Ia ues t-shirts n more

llcmlock G ro, e ('hri-.tiu n ( 'hurlh
Mtnhl &lt;r Lat l\ Btoll ll W,n.,ltip ') IO
,tm S uml.t\ Sd!l•o l II ) ~0 .1 111 Hth k
StuLl \- 7 j\ 111
rmlllnl\ t hurth ul ( hn~t
2 1~ W M.un S1 i\ IHi t- ter A nthnn ~
~h,t l l\ · Suml.1y Sdi l•til
"J 1ll o~ 111
\V,r~hlp

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Wedtil'~d.IV

l r1nll\ lhun h
&amp; L\1111. Pollle lll \

l un llh o~n

Sund;n

Nnh1L · W"1 'h ip I () 25
'} 1~ ,, m

S~ntlnel • Page A 3

A" Income Tax &amp;
Financial SerriceJ Firm

( hurch ol ( hr1~t
II:!.~(, Cltt l llt~n ~ !hun ~ KJ
Sund t\'
St huol I J ol lll . Wu··~Jup 10 I IJI 6 p Ill
V. eJ uesda) Sd\il L~ • 7 p 111
ronwrn,

\\\' ~ l sult

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

. (740) 992-7270

" Do not steal Do not lie. Do not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19; I I

•.

111

(.nul' • pis~UJllll

( hurdi
S und,tV Sdt&lt;H•I
.md l htl ) l. udl.m' l lltllf .1 m Rc1
Ed w, 1 r~ P11; nc
1.":'6 F M,un 'II

1\n nun~

\hcldll'pnrt t huuh ol ( llflsl
•
· "ith .md i\l ,t tn 1\t~ llll 1\l ll.trhon )uuth
\ln u ~tc r J ,l~ll l l m Sund.1\ S~: h ot l l 910
tni w,r,tur- to: I "i to ll) 1m, 7 p 111.
\I,~;J n o.: ~ da } S~T\Ilo.:~ - I r 111

.,

Kt&gt;nn Chureh of Christ
') ~H .1 m Sunll.IY School ttl 'l.O ,, Ill Pu ~ loJ - J ell t ~:y W1ll e hi ,md
l rd Sunda}
Ueor"nlhm Rid~c Chun:h or Ch rtst
ll!Ut c lcn y Sund.t) Seho11l \J 1(1

P.1 ~ 101

~ 111

Holiness
Comn uunt:- Church
Pushlr St1'\l' l om ~ k M11m Sirn t
Rutl:md Sund.l) Wur~h1p IU 00 am
Sutlll ,,y Se ll lll: - 7 p 111

Ku 1h R~d c 1 SundliV ~dH KI I
Wo r,]np II ,1 m

1 Ill

Sll l.h ~ "

- (\

lll p 111

'

Zion Churt•h ur (;Iui si
Ptl m ~ ro}. H,n mon ; illl !{ ~
t Rt l4l )
Pa..,h\r Ko}!C I W,I\MIII Suml.l} Sch111•l ll l fl .1 111 Wnr ~ h1p - 10 "\IJ ,. m 7 Ill)
\\'.:dn ~~ t\uy

rm

SL'n ll~' 1 p 111

Oasis Ch rbtmn

10

l)ountlll' lluhneJo:S Chu rch
St,Jtl' Route 12:5 L.mg:.l llc P.tslor
V1clnr Rou s!J Sund.t) 'dl11tll IJ "l(f .1m
Sund.1y 11111 ~ 111p - 10 '(1 I Ill ..~ 7 p m
\VLdn~~d~• ) r l·l) d '!:" llt.: . 1 11 •u

J.urest Run
Hoi• ){u hm ~ on Sund.t) S1 ht111l - 10
\Vor-h1p IJ a 111

J\lmcrsv ille
l:l•lb RuhillM•n. Sunday Sd tunl - 9
Wltr.;hlr II) 1Ill

1-'.tSitlf

( Hhnr~ P1lgrm1 ChliJM'l
f-l.un sl mvillc ){oaJ, Pastor
Ch.trb
ML Ku1&lt;:1e Su nd •Y Sdmul l) ~0 .1111
Wur,ln p II 1111 , 7 00 p m W~:dn c~y a)
s ~ n~l ~· - 1 {M l p m

Pearl C hnpel
Sundav Sdwol - 1J .1111 Wo~ ht p

t,! 1()

o1

rhuNday

H1Uic llulhu;s.~ &lt;.:h urcb
70, Pc.lfl Si M1ddkpurt Po~,tor Ktd:
Attllrtll Su n d&lt;~ y s~ hnol - J() &lt;1m Wnr,h1p
10-l'i pm Sundu )' I; 1C 7{ MJ p m
Wedno.: sdJ.)' Scn1ct.' I lOp m

"~pm

P,t'&gt;tnr

SundJ~ S~ h oo l

ln ~ tiUllH: IHll !

Wnr ~ lup s~l\ I\.\" - 9 ,\Ill

Iii l"i
Siutl)

11 111

til

.till

\11t1! h "i

Wc ~ttl' ~d ny"'

'O

Sund.l) s~hotll
)Ill\ Sllll lld ~ Bthk

rm

B•adbur"' t' hmd1ur (hri~t
Mlll t"to:r rum l{ut1 }' 4 II IIJ 'i"!l I:St;.~Jbttl}
Ru.1tl M11ldkpm1 Sund •Y Sl hnu l - 'J I[)
WlffSIHp

10 l l) ,1 Ill

H)sell Run Commumty C hun: h
Pa•tnr Rc\ I 1rrv Ll:llllc) Sunt lay Sdl£Kll
1),0 ,1111 \Vnrshtp 10 4'iam 7 pm
Thursday B1hlc Study .111d Youth 7 p m

Pu ~lm

a 111

Laurel Chil l r't.&gt;e Mcthud1s1 C hu r~.: h
Gle nn Rowe , Sund 111 S1 h&lt;lol
9 10 11 m W1 irsh1 p - ]{) "\0 .1111 •.nd 6
p rn .Wcd n e~d a y Se•"• cc 7 00 p m

Pusw r John Gtlmorc Sunday Sl'lmol
l) 30 a 111 Wur sh1 p - IU 45 u m
BtbiC
Stu~v W~d 7 IKI p 111

Hrm.lfurd t'hu1 ( h of t: hri ~ t
(.nrncr nt St Rt 12-l &amp;. ll rtLihur) Rd
Mmt ~ le r Dnug Sh umhlm Yout h M11mtcr.
BJII Amberger Sundny Sdmo l 1J l tJ a 111
Worsh tp K 110 .1 m 10 \() 11 111 , 7 00
I' m,We~nc,..l.1y S c! Y I ~e' - 7 00 p tn

'
H1ckMy Hdl s C hurt'h of Chrisl
EY.tngclt 3t Mtkc Moor~ S un~uy Slhtxll
t:1 ,1m Wut slu p
1 0am ~ 630pm
cW~d n csdtty Scrvrl e' - 7 p 111
Reeds\l llt Chuoch or Chr1st
Postor Philip Sturm Sunday S(hflol 9 'Cl
it m, Worship Scnt~c 10 10 a m. Bthk
Studv. Wo.:dttcMity 6 'O p 111
lll'~~:h•r

Chu l'('h of Chnst
Sundl.t) s~hool '.i I{),, Ill Sunda) "nr~h1p
10 \0.1111
lhutdt ol thml
.., wd 12-1 W, E\,m g~ h s t
Denn• ~ Sargtnl Sundnv lhh k Siudy
9 10 ,, m Wq r ~h •J'I Hl l[) ~ m anJ 6 30
p m. w~Jn~ sdoiy H1l1k Stud) 7 I'm
ln1L f~t.'dllltl

Christian Union
Hurdurd t:hur(h of Chr1st in
~
Chrl!it1an Umun
Hart fo rd WV~ P a~ lor D~ &gt; uJ G r e~r
Sun.,la) .Slhool - 4 10 a 111 \\'or~ h1p
IU I O .!&lt;. Ill
7 00 p m W~ Jn c~da)
Sen lt.'C~ i ()!) p 111

Church of God
~ft. \lun .1h l: hurch ol God
Mllc 11!11 Rd 1{ ,\unc, f'a~tor J am e~
So11erlic lll Su n tl &lt;~ y Sthnol Y -IS ~ m
E ve mn~ 6 p m . \\ocdne..d.ty Srn tees 7

Mnrmng Star
P'J.slllr John Gtlmorc Sund.1y Schon I \I
am, Worship 10 am

Tht Churc h or Jesus
Chrtst or Lauer-Uay So mis
St Rt 160 -146 6247 or 146 7486
Su ndily S~:h uu l 10 20- 11 ·1111 Rehel
Snuciy/Pnc,lhuod 11 U5-1 2 0\lnuun
Suc r.llll cnt So.:r vt ce tJ 10 l 'i ,, m
Homemaktng ml!cttng, 1st Thu r.; 7 [1m

•.ast Lt'lart
Su nd a) S(houl
?a Ill Wor~ htp
I U u m I st Sunday
every month c ~e mng scr\ 1~'\' 7 00 p m.
Wcdncsd.1y. 7 p 111
]'. J ~ tnr

Lutheran

Racine
Pa310r Jlt.'te Shaffer Sunday Sthool - 10
a 111, Wor~h 1 p I I ~ m V..cdnc&gt;d,ty 7
Jllll

Our Sav1our l..uthn11n Chu n: h
V..',Jinu l dnd ll ~ nry Sb R 1\Cil ~ \l.( l tld
W Va. rastur Dll vid Ru ~sc ll Sunday
S~.:bool 10 00 am . Wor.Ju p \ I am

Cooh••lle United Melhodisl t•ansh
Pustor Helen Khne . Coo lvtllc Chunh
Mam &amp; Ftfth St. Sunday Sl houl
10
a 111 , Wohht p 9 a m, Tue~du y Scrv 1c~:~1 pm

St. Paull.ulhcrall Churt:h
Comer S)l::&amp;tnl&gt;rc &amp; Sc~nnd St . !' om~ roy
Su nday School - 9 45 am Wmsh1p - I I
am Pastor J.uncs P Brad\
Sat I 00 pm Contcrnpun.try S~:rv1c e

Bethd Churt"h
Tu w n ~ h1p Rd. 468C. Sund:~ y School I}
a 111 1&lt;.Vmslnp
l 0 a m , Wednesday
ScniL b 10 a m

United Methodist

H{)(kmgpctrt Church
Gr3nd Street. Sunday Sc hoo l 9 30 a m
Wot~h •r - 10 ~0 a m , Pas1ot Ph illl p Bell

Gr11h11m United 1\lelhothst
\\&lt;nrshtp 9 iO um ( l :; t&amp;2n~ Sunl
7 _JU p m 1Jrd &amp; 4th Su n), \\oel.lnc" l t\
s~·n • n 730 pm

rort h C hurth
Co Rd 6 \ Sunday Sch041l
Wnrship 10 30 a m

\11. Olnl' United !l.ltthod1~t
011 124 hehmd \y•lkcs\ tll e Pastor R1'\
R;,tlph Sp 1 rc ~. Sunday S~ htxJI - I.J 30 am
Wonhtp lU lll "' 111 , 7 p m Thur..JJ\
SL-r. iiTs . 7 p m

I)

30 a

111

\liddlept~rt

Chun:h of lhe ~azartne
P:~~w r Allen Mtdcap Sunday S~ h ool 9 ~Oa m . Wor~h tp - 1030a m 6l0pm
WcJnnd&lt;.~\ Sc r' 1ces · 7 p m
Paslor
Allen \1 ilk&lt;tp

Mt&gt;tgs Cooprrative Parl~h
C luster Al fre d. PJ\tof Janc
Bcatt1o.: Sun~ay s~ hott l
~ 10 a m
Wor~htp
l lam 6 30 p m

Rtros, IJie Fellowship
Chur~ h of the Nal arcm: , Pastur Ja nm:
Pt:ttJt. Sundil) Schovl · 9 10 a m , Worshtp
- ]I) 4"f am 1 p m Wetlneida) Scn,{tS
7 pm.

Ches l~r

pm

Rlllland Church or God
P&lt;h lor Ron Heath Sunda) Wur:.hlp lO
a m 6 p m Wedne'&gt;da; Sen ICC' 7

Joppa
PaMor ·Bob Randolph, Wors ~1p - 9 30 •
&lt;a m Sund..t) Sd•ool 10 30 am
'

pm

l.ong Bottom
Sunda\ S.. hool 9. "10 ;t m Wo rship
10 i(la m
Ra-d.s,ille
~ Wor,htp . Y ll) a m . StJridOl) ~~ hool
10 ~0 a 111 , 1"1 N Sunda\ ut Month 7 00

Stud y • ..,

[llll

Nl' " t1re Victory Center

Middlr porl Communit} C hur~h
S7'i Pearl St M1dl.llo::purt P. 1 ~tu 1 Si.itl i
4ndcrson Sund.1 y "Sl ht)O] 10 .t m
Even• ng 7 10 p 111 Wo.:d n c~duy Sdvlo.:L'7 :10 pm
F111lh Valle~ Tabernade Chunh
Ela tl c} Run Kuud P a ~ hlf Ke' Emmell
Rav.snn Sunday Ll cn•ng 7 p m
Thur5d:w Servtn 7 r m
Syral usr M1sswn
1411 !Jmlgcman St Syml UW Sund&lt;.~~
s ~ hon l - 10 u Ill . F\C IIIIlg
h Jllll
W!!dnesdny S c n1 1~ e 7 p m.
' Hazel Commumly thunh
0 11 Rt 124 P.t,hrr Edy:l H.trt Sund1}
Sc hool - 9 10 am '"-or~ h 1 p - 10 10 a Ill
7 30 p m
Dyes t11le Commun ll~ ( hooch
Sund,,, Sc hool - 9 111 ,, 111 '"-nr ~htp
I 0 3fla m 7pm

1771 GeDrgc ~-Cret'k Road Galhpohs, 0 11

P.tswr Bt ll StatUJ Sunday Serv1ces • 10
Wedncsda} - 7 p m &amp;
Youth 7 p m

&lt;~ m &amp; 7 p 111

Full Gospel Churt h
oflhl"LivinK Sa,ior
Kt JJM Anttyuttv, Pas tor Jesse Morn,,
S~:n t~: e~ S.ltunJ,i\ 2 00 p m
Salem Communlly Church
B.11.k of West Col umbta, W Va om ln~vmg
Rtlali P&lt;t~t o1 Chade~ Rou~ h (304) 67.5·
2::'!:1 !-1 Sund.1y s~hool 9 10 am Sunday
t'\l!nm g ~en · •~c 'J no pm B1ht y Study
'Wc~ n esduy sen ... e 7 00 prn

S}'nK:U5e Church or Ihe N8Uirmt
P;u.tor ~hle Adkins. Sunday SchQol • 9 30
a m Wor ~h•p - to 30 am 6 p m
Wedne:.da) Ser\ 1ct:~ 7 p m
Pomnv} Oturrh of ttk Nuarme
Pastor Jan La\l!nder Sunday School 1)~11 a m Wor~h1p • 10 30 am and 6
p m . Wednesda) Sen K:ts - i p m

"
Hobson Chnsh.11 n fello"sh!p Church
Pa~lnr Jt cr,Lhd Whtt c Sunday School·
10 am Sunday Church ~erv 1 ~o: C - t'l 30 pm
Wednc~d U \ 7 pm
Restm-al1on Chr1s!Ja n Fellowship
9 'tt5 Hoopt.'r RoaJ Athens Pastor
Lomu l! Couts Sunllay Worsh ip 10 00 am,
Wcdnc ~d.ty 7 pm

•

Langsvlll~ Christmu Chun:h
IIJll Gospel Pastor Robut MU1&gt; St!r,
S1md 1 ~ S( hool 9,10 am V.orsh1p HJ 30
11111 7 00 pm Wedne ~ d .t y SerV!l'e 7 00
pm

Pentecostal
PeniHostal Assembly
St Rt I ~4 Racmc . Pa ~to r W1lham
Huh ad Sunday S ~ houl - 10 a 1'U
I 1emng - 7 p m, Wednt.'sday Sefi iCts- 7

rm

Presbyterian
S) rat'Ust' F1rs1 Umltd Presbyttrlan
Paslur Robert Crow Worshlp II am

Harrasonnlle Prabylt"ri•n Chun:h
Robert Crow V..orsh1p- 9 am

Pu~tor

\liddleporl Presbyttrian
SnHkr Worship - II am

Pu~tor Jamc~

Morst" Chapel Chureh
Sunda\ ~~: h ou l - 10 a 111. Wt)rshtp - I I
am Wednesday Scr\ICC · 1 p m
Failh Gospel Church
Long Bu1tom Sunday s~huu l - 9 30 &lt;~Ill ,
Wun.lup - I 0 -15 01 m 7 ~U p m •
Wednesda' 7 ~J p m

Mf. Olive Cummunil:- Churdi
Pastor Lawrem:e Bu~ h . Sunday Schuol 9 30 am . Evemng • Q 30 p 111 . WeJncJay
SeTVJct - 7 p m

Nazarene

Nunhc~~t

.111d H1hl ~

M &lt;~rs h , J11

St John Lutheran Chuoch
Pmc Gr11ve Wurshtp 1) 041 ,t m Sund uy
SchoP I HI{)() a m ' P.t:. h•r J,unl!s P
Br.ttlv

Pa ~ tor Jane Beattie Wor ~ htp
I} a m ,
SunUay s~troUI - 10 .. Ill . TIIur!ida}
~I"\ In's - 1 p m

Syracuse Hrsl C hun.:h ufGod
ApJl k .md Su:onJ St~ • P;b!Uf Ro:1 Da\ld
Rll ~se ll Surnla) Sehoul and Worsh1p- Ill
am E~.:nmg St.'r\l~o:e~ - 6 \0 p m
Wcdnc'&lt;l.l11) Sc r' ,..-c~ tt lll p m

Bill

C lirton Tahernacle C hurch
Clti iOn , W V,t Su nd.ly Sdwol - 10 ll Ill
Worship 7 p m , 'Wed nesday Serllll:c - 7
pm

Harr1sonulle Commumty t:hun:h
Pa stor Theron Durhdm Su n~ ~y - I) 10
o m 1111d I p m Wcdnt'sJ.•y - 7 p m

J() 1\ Ill

Ca m wi-Sultun
C1rmcl &amp; R 1slM11 Rds R.Ktne, Oht o

P t ~lor

Latter-Day Saints

Kullnnd t.:hurdi ol t hr1 ~ 1
Stfnlla y Sdtllol - 9 111 " m w ,,"h1r md
Conmum1ot1 - I 0 \() a 111 Buh J W.. rry
f-.. ltl\1 '-ler

Bethanv
John G1hll1lrC SunJa) Sdwnl · 10
W~~r ~ hlf '
I) n m
Wedne sday

S~f\'KCS

ReJOiemg l.tfe Churth
'iUO N 2 nd '· A\f• Mtdd lepurt, Pa ~ t or
Mik e Fo lcm un
Pa stor Emcn tu s
Lu11 rl!lKC Foreman Wurshl p· 10 00 am
w~~ll esJ ••v S~o:IV I Le~- 7 p m

F~tilh Full Guspel Chunh
Long Buttom, Pa~tur St ev~ Rl~d Sund,ly
Sc hoo)[ q ~0 1111 Wor ~ hlp · "' 10 1m
llllfl 7 p m , Wcdnc~d ny 7 [1111 Fm! 1y lcllowshtp scr&gt;n~e 7 p m

Sno"vllle
- I U.1111 Worsh1p - 9 u m

fu ppus Plai n C lturt h ur L hn ~t
C'ntlllllUIII&lt;IIl

Co nlmt !nll ~ or Chr1s1
?fl rtl and Rac me Rd P."tm Jun Ptu lltl l
Sund&lt;l} s ,hoo l 9 ~ 0 ,, Ill WHr~hlp
10 ~0 .1m Wcllne~Jav S~n1ce' 7 OU
pm
Delhd Worsh1p (enter
C h~.: stc~ S{hflul P ~s lol
lloh Barlllr
A s~ ! :; t ~Hl P,t:;tur K&lt;tri! n 0.! \' ls Sutt da )
Wor~ln p Ill &lt;1 111 , I \emng wm~ tnp (1 jllll

AbunWmt G race R.t', I.
92~ S Th1rd St Mtddkport, P.t~ hxT~:rcM
0 ,1vt, Su nd a~ ~e r\ll ~
IU .\ m
WcJn~sday se rVIle I pIll

Splcl\l Cen lrr
W1lham K Mat~hall, Sunday
S l h&lt;~t.tl
IOI ~ um Worshtp - Y15am
Bthk Study Ml\lld ,tv 7 {)() pm

\Vesi~}Htt

Stn·: asv •lle Communil y Apostollt'
Chu rch
p,,, tor W.1yne H Jt:wctl. Sunday Ser.tce ·
6 01) p 111 , Wcdu~~day - 0 oO p m

St~nda y s~ h O •I]

111 Wor.shtp - I(I \0 u nt

S e nt~c~

•t•llu~ship

-

Rutl.md
I' l ~ llfr Rtck Bourne

Calvarv B1bl&lt;t Church
Ptllllo.:ln) P1h Co Rd Pastor Re\
Lll ido•..,.,,oJ Sunduy ~c hvol · Y \0 am •
W4 1 1~h'r to 'o am. 1 30 P m.
Wcdnc ~ day Se rvtct.' 7 30 p rn

Ash Stn'tt Church
Ash St . Mtddh:pon 1' 11~1\!r
Su nd11 y
School - Sl 30 1 111 1\.htrmn g Wl'l ~ htp '( •I0 lO 1111 &amp; 6 'U pm Wcdn ~~ da~ Servile
- 6 :10 pm YouthSo.:r\ lee fi' Up m
Agupe Lirr Center
Full Gu~pll Chua h' P.1s1ors John &amp;
l".ttly W~Jc 6U~ Snund Ave Ma~o u , 77l~U 1 7 s,r\1"--~ t11111: Sur\dt~y 10 10 am,
WE"dnesi1.1y 7 pm

Rook Spri ngs
P11&lt;:.tur Kuth K.tJa Su nd 1y Sd tool . 4J IS
a 111
w,n ~ h• p
- t O .. m
Youth
Fello :.Vsh1p. Sunday 6 p m

Pme (,nm1 Hihle Buliness t:hu rch
nu k o11 Rt ~~S P .1~1u r Rt.:v 0 l)d l
M,mlo:: ~
Sund 1\ S~ h u~ol - &lt;j 10 ,1 111
V.'m'lhtp
H )\(l
1111
71 0 p m
W~:dnl ~d.l} Sc!vt'-"' "7 1( f f1 m

lt lli.l)' 7 p lll

1

Mce tmg 1111h~ ,,]J 4-m,:tll.tll l..lJ:!II&gt;tl 11.1 11
South Fouuh A\CIILIC 1\ l tddkpun
Pa ~ tnr film Stc\l..trt tn (X) 1111 St1f)d 1;.
Oth~ r mn•tmg~ 111 home :.

Pt ,tyl r

10 tm

Pomeroy
Pa:;tor Brtan Dunh.ml Worshtp - 9 ~0
~ m StmJa~ Scl!lx11 10 35.1 m

Rose or Shuron Holi ness Church
Rd Rutluml P.t~tur Rc\
De''~ ) Kmg SundJ)' ~dn•o l - 9 10 "m
Sund.1y 1\~1Uh1p -7 I'm Wcdnl!sJJ.)
pr.t) cr mn:tmg 7 p m

hi rh Fello-w-ship Crusade for Chrisl

Y~• u th ~1 oup 6 pm · W~dn c~ da ) P11w ~: r 111
-

l~tn!! Cr~ek

Lo.:

Sund.11 School 9 30 a 111 , WorshiP · 7 00

r Ill Wcdn!!~lll1y Btblt.' Sltldy i 00 p m

( Non-dCnlH\l iiJ.JIII IU,I I I ~ lh•v. ~h tp f

He11th (Middll'port)
Pa, \!11 Hn .1n Dunh un Suntlty S.dwul
9 lO,Im W(l r~ht p - II (K l a m

"\ J\1 ~7

Falr\leW 81ble Church

L ~: tall W Va Rt I Pastur Brwn May,

Amozmg Cruce Conununll\ \ h urrfl
?a~tm W IYIIC Duulup. St.ttl Rt M\ I
Tuppns Pl.un, , Suu w \,t \ lll fl I(I .un ,\l
Il l{) pm I hur'd ty ll 1hlt: Sillth 7 !~) p m

r., ~lltr

1 /~

11\l

Other Churches

Fl u l woud ~

P.t~ lor

Wedn esday SerVICe

p 1 ~1 111 Rc\ Frank lin Dtckcns, Scrvu,.:e

•:ntt•qtrist
Ail.md Km g, Sunll .ty SdJ0&lt;1I
10 Ill,, m Wpr ~ tup 9 l( t "111 Bil1lc
Stud) V..ut 7 'i ll

Episcopal

Full Gosptl ltghlhouse
33045 H1land Rl•:~tl , Pumcru ~ P..t~tPr Ru'
Hunter Sunda) Sdn10l 10 a 111 E\t;llllll!
7 30 p m • Tuc-.Ja, &amp; I hu r-d t\ - 7 'll
pm

South Bethel Communltv C hun:h
S1l ve£ R1dg e- Pastor lmdu DamC"oud
Sunda} School 9 a m Worshtp Sen Ill"
t 0 a m lnd and 4th Sunday

Seventh-Day Adventist
Seunlh·Oay o\dvenllst
Mulhcrr" His Rd Pom ero~. Pastor
Bcnno.:tt Lu~o: k te~h Saturday ServJces
Sabbath School - 2 p 111 Worship· 3 p 111

United Brethren
!\lt. Hennon United B~Yih~n
111 C hri ~ l Ch urch
l e\a~ l o mmu nH\ 'tH. J I W1~k.ham Rd,
Pa,tor Pller Ma11mdak Sunday Sc~ ·
9 IU a 111 . Wurshtp
10 JO am 7 00
p 1U \\Cdnesda' S~f\ itC5 - 1 00 pIll
YtJUth group nu:etmg .:!nd &amp; 4ih Sundays
7 pm

Eden Umtrd Brelhren in Cbrisl
St~tc Rou•~ 1.:!4 Reed:.\ die, Su'nday
School- lj J. m, Suni.l.a) Won.hip • 10 00
a m &amp; 7 UO p m Wedne sday Serv1ce~ 7 00 p~ m . Wednesda) · voulh Servu: r 7W pm

Carleton Jntrrdtnoaainalio~tatl Church
Kmgsbury Road. Paslor . Robc!'rt Vant('
Sunda~ Schnol - I) 'l.O a n1
V.or~h1p
Sl'n tce 10 10 am E' e mng SenJ(e 6
pm

FI'Mdom Gospd 1\. lisSton
Bald Knob on Cb Rd "\ 1 Pa&lt;;tor Re\
Roger \\'illford. Sunda~ School - Y ;o a m
\\015hip- 7 p m
'

While't Chaprl U nltwan
COtlh1llc Road PaJtor · Re \ Phill ip
RMknoor Sunday S~.:hool
9 30 a m .

Let your ftg~t so shme before

men, that the) ma\ see your

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

&amp;'·

Tht cart you dtstnt, clost to ho~tU good works and glorif. rour

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

992-3785

Pomeroy

dn1
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
174 Lat• Stmt • PO b

l7t
Sn-lb•m. W\ 25265
J..., H. Andonon. u.......l r...... Di"""'
Hridi S
F~tl'u....tl'laoio&amp;

A........_

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors~
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure " So I strive always to keep
in heart; for they my conscience clear' before
God and man."
. shall see God.
Acts 24:16
Matthew 5.
,•

••

.t

1111

Bill Quickel

6 I 8 E Mam Street • Pomeroy

R,,

Ill ' 0 am

- 7 [1m

II"·

j

Davis-Oulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
INSURANCE
Insurance words abide in you, ye ~hall
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye- will, and it shall
Ftnanctal
214 E. ~aln
be done unto you.
ENCIES I"' Servtces
992-5130
John 15:7

BUSINESS SERVICES

Pt ~IUI

J .111~ lk. 1t 1 1 ~

Sdt~h •l

INSURANCE

KEBLER

Tuppers J&gt;lulns St Pnul
~u nd ~) Sd11lnl
l)
.1m V.ur\ htp li lo~ 111, T u e~ d.1 y Scn"c~
-7 'Dr 111
Ce ntroI Clu~trr
•\ h hu r~ (Syr~~u~&lt;' /, P.tstor Bob Rohtnstln
S uml;~ v SdRtul
9 -l~ um V..tlr ~h ip II
,, m W ~ dn ~sUa) s~n ~~~~ - 7 10 p nt
P t ~ lttl

Congregational
s~u•nd

V.nr,h lp

t hester ( hur(h 11r the "'lottli l t" Jt t
l·lcihl'r1 G1nc 'tn nd I) '&gt; dh~d
9 1[) ;~ 111 W1•r\l11p
I l u 111 f1 p 111
Wedne ..~~\ St:t I K&lt;. \ 7 r Ill
Rutl and t:hurrll or
NII:Wrt'IW
Su nd.l\ Sl ht lu l CJ 10 &lt;1 111 \'r11r ' h1p .
Ill ~I) am
ft 10 p 111
Wedn~'d.J\
Sc r v t cc~ 7 p Ill
?a~tnr Ho.:~

Scr\ II:O.:' - 7 r Ill

.I Ill

S11\er Run Baptist
Pustur Juhn Swansnn Sund.ty SQimol lOa Ill Wmshtp - 11.1111 . 7 011 p m
,WedncMI~y Se rv 1 ce~ 7110 p m

Michael L. Crites
•
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Ovezbiook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration ot Life "

Church of Christ

Wc d n~; sd,l)

The·sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our community
Young's Carpenter Serulce

S und.ty~huol

- Y 1U am . Wor~tup · II .1m ,md6 p m

r

i'

lh•u rl Cu lholic (hurch
161 :\tulhnr~ A\c Pu n11:tn\ 992 ~)il))(
fl,l'tur 1{ ~1 \\ ai! LI 1-: lkmr S 11 (.un
-l -l~ ,."i I "ip nJ M.t ~~ - '&gt; Ill I' 111 S un
fpn K -1~ 1) I 'i 1 111 , Sun t\ lus\ '' ~~~
.1111 J),ul } MI \~ ~ 'O ,1 m

Wor ~ h1p

GUYSVILLE- The Carthage Community
Church will have vacation Bible school June
13-15 6 to 8 p.m. There will crafts, songs,
games and snacks in a Billie science safari
while exploring the "wonderful world of
Bible science." For more information call
Josie Cremeans, 667-3593.

RUTAND - Memorial Day celebration
and remembrance service will be held at II
a.m. Sunday at the Rutland Church of God

Ma-.on
Sundll~

Baptist

Bible science safari

Remembrance service set

Rutl md

Sun 10 lMl .1 m &amp; 7 ID p m
ll nu ~ IO!I pm P.~ sul rMan ) R Hulln[l

MIDDLEPORT, - The Heath United
Methodist Church "(til have observe Alumni
Sunday with a continental breakfast at I 0:30
a.m. and worship service at 1'1 a.m. Members,
former members, and friends associated with
the church are welcome, according to Rev.
Bnan Dunham, pastor. There will be a display
of the church history.
,

MIDDLEPORT - A free dinner will be
served from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Fnday at the
Middleport Church of Christ.

~ rd

EmmM nul'l Apo~ lo l k l ulwrmtdr In~.

570 Grant St ~hdd l cpun

thun h nl (;IKt nll'rophrn
Kll ntt St Rt lhll P.htttr PJ
10 am
\\ l • r~lup II t lli \\ nlU~\t.J,II S~l\ l l~'

~u(rcd

Sch1;,;cs

Alumni Sunday
to be observed

Free dinner

·r

The Daily

\l..hu ~

OJ

pm

Catholic

- 10 ~0 .t in

A'tc . M11Jdkport K~;H II K L' Il~k Pl.t~tn1
Sum.l.1~ IIJ IO .1 tn
\\ cdn..,,da; 7 ()0
r m , Y11uth 1-n 7 10 p m

Revival announced

VINTON - Revtval servtces will be held
at the Fairplay Chapel, Meigs County Road I
off State Route 325, June 9 and I0, 7 p.m.
each evemn g. The Rev. Harry Davtd Russell,
son of the Rev. N L. Russell , will be preachmg. The Bluegrass Beacons of Columbu~ will
present a gospel concert Saturday, June II at
7 p.m. For information call 742-2271.

S~hu••l

rm

Rnu \ulte~
Aro:.loh, \\1ot). lup (l·mcr. !171 S

located on State Route 124 near Meig s
Elementary School.

Revival set for June 9-1 0

SHikl~~

Evcmng 7 Ill

St'tond U11p11sl (hurd!
WV Su nJ.t) Sdint ll 10.1111
tl.tornmg 1\or.. lup I I .un I \~ nt ng 7 pm
\h dn•·~d.11 7p 111
){,ll~o:tiW•'"'J

l'hurth of Je~us Chris! •\posiUIIl'
V.m7anJt and w~,d Rd P.Nm Jan w~

DEXTER - The old Dexter Church will
host an "old fashioned weenie roast" at 6 p.m.
RUTLAND - Rose of Sharon Holiness
Saturday night All of the food will be pro- Church will hold a revtval at 7 p.m. each
Hded and everyone is welcome to attend, said evening beginning Tuesday and continuing
Bill Blankenship, pastor. For directions or · through June 5 wllh the Rev. Tom Bell as
more mformation call 742-2553
evangelist. The church pastor is Dewey King

r

www.mydailysentine).com

I

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Church Briefs

i'

-j-

•

,.

Friday, May 27, 2oos

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Friday, May 27, 2005

CATCH Us 1HE FOXES, THE lfiTLE FOXES

allowmg out hfehne (relattonship with Him ) to become
det.tched Pet haps we're ce.tsing to be a ltvmg "body" of
beltcvers
and are little more
Pastor
than dry .md barren structures
Thorn
upon which spiritual tlesh once
Mollohan - hung Maybe we' re danger- - - - - ously close to bemg a great
mass of "dried up old bones "
Amazmgly, God's people
ha'e stood on the bnnk belute
Authoritv' Yes .. He dtd not .mu been brought back. As God
insuuct them as we often do tn 111 a vtston stood with His set the presumptton of our own vam Ezektel before a great valintellect and limited abiltttes ley of dried up old bones. He
He came sanctioned by the asked the man, "Son ot man.
Father to bnng the message of c.tn these bones live,.. Ezek iel
God's love and the glory of Hts watched as God answered Hts
mamtest (unvetled) pt esence own question He stood and
He came tn power and that watched as. at God's command.
power, produced in His ltfe by "there was a noise. a ratthng
both the presence of the Holy sound, ,md the bones came
Spint wit hm Htm and the together. bone to bone
appro,al of the Father upon Tendons .md tlesh appeared on
Him. mdtcally engaged people them and sktn covered them.
with the spintual facts of lite: but there was no breath " And
I) th.tt there is .t Holy God m then the Lord spoke and "breath
charge ol the umverse. 2) that entered them, they c.une to hfe
humamty ts woefully and eter- and stoOd up on. thetr feet - a
nally separated ftom Htm hy vast .umy." He listened as God
the reality ol sm (seltish wtll- explained to htm that thts was
fu lness in our own ltves). and God's people who thought that
3) that God has merCifully pro- thetr hope was gone and that
vided Htmself as the object of they were cut off forever from
justice in the form of His Son God's favor. But God declared
that we might recetve forgtve- that He would open up their
ness and restoration with Him '·graves" and .raise them from
provided we tmly turn to Hun their spiutual deadness. He
m faith.
would restore them to hfe and a
And it is still the Father's will place of blessmg. They would
that such power continue to know that the LORD had truly
engage the world today. Access spoken to them and that only
to that power has been entrusted He could bring them back to
to God 's people "to preach spintual li fe again (ftom
good news to the poor ... to pro- Ezektel 37:1 -14).
claim freedom for the pnsoners,
That is what revtval is It ts
to recover sight for the blind. to God gracefully bnnging us
release the oppressed and to back to sptritual life when
proclrnm the year of the Lord's we've finally despaired 10f all
favor" (from Luke 4:18-19 and the deadness that the "alternaIsaiah 61: 1-2)
tives" to fatth 111 Christ after us.
Consequently, as we walk Once we've repented of our
humbly wtth Him through hfe,
cultivatmg our relationsh1p with own \llayward nes~ ahd have
Him, He Himself dwells wtthin returned whole-heartedly to
us, assaulting bastions of hatred Htm, we allow Him to take Hts
m1d despair wtth love and hope. nghtful place in the throne of
In reverse. if we do not walk our heluts. As Lord of our
with Him, we lag behind Ht s lives, He brings healing, hope
act ivtty m the world, we and fulfillment once agam to
become disconnected from me not only Hts children but to the
lifeline of Hts love and our hope rest of the world. too.
"Revive us again;. till each
becomes echpsed by cares from
heart
wtth Thy love May each
the world. When God is not ftrst
soul
be
rekindled wtth lire from
place in our hves, the whole
above. HalleluJah' Thine the
world sutlers for it.
But thankfully. He has glory. Hallelujah! Amen.
promised that, "If My people Hallelujah! Thme the glory.
who are called by My name Revive us again" ("We Prw;;e
will humble themselves, and Thee, 0 God" by William P.
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pray and seek My face and tum Mackay, 1839-85).
(Thorn
Mollohan
has
minisfrom thetr wicked ways, then
will I hear from heaven and tered in southern Ohio the
will fo~ive their sin and will past 9-112 years and is the pas·
heal thetr land" (2 Chronicles tor of Pathway Community
7:14 NIV). Perhaps we as the Church. He and his wife are
church of today are losmg our the parents of four children.
abiltty to powerfully and effec- He TmiY be reached by email
tually conquer the world with .at pastorthom@pathwaygallove and fruth because we're lipolis.com).

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VALUES

'The Daily Sentiriel

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Father in hem·en "
Mat/hell 5.16

Metgs Coun1v's Oldest Aonst

EastMatn
Pomeroy, Oh ·

.......

OUtUI 1JJ8

·-···"'

' &amp;oaulfrr'l
;tm &amp; &amp;alrt!'

,.....

(7:11JIJJ.JIIIft

'1IJ

"ltt 1.1t wwt !PH fhot.ig.hft with

740-992-2644

God so loved the world
he gare hi!! onl,\
lbe'gol'ten son ...
JohnJ./6

-~
~peci.l t:11rt •

740-992-6298

MY !!race is sufficient
for thee: for mY
strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
t1 Cor. 12:9.
Office Service &amp; Supply
137-c N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992~76

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The Daily Sentinel :

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111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland

Publisher

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(:harlene Hoeflich

General ManagercNews Editor ·

Congress shall make rio 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 grievances.
-The First Amenc;lment to the.U.S. ConstltUtl.on

READ.ER'S

VIEW

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Rethink ahstinmce programs
Dear Editor:
I read with some interest th~ May 24th anicle entitled,
"Debate Over Sex Education Continues in Ohio," noting that
"advocates of comprehensive sex education want Ohio to stop
funding abstinence-only programs ... •:
These opponents claim. 'There is no clear evidence that abstinence programs reduce teen pregnancy or sexually tran.smitted
diseases ... " Really? Evidently they are unfamiliar with the
National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (NLSAH).
Raben Rector, Kirk Johnson, PhD., and Jennifer Marshall
note in a September 2004 paper entitled, "Teens Who Make
· Virginity Pledges Have Substantially Improved . Life
. Outcomes," the following: ·
.
·
· Data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent
Health, which i~ funded by more than 17 federal agencies,
show that the behavior of adolescents who have made a virginity pledge is significantly different from that of peers who
have not made a pledge. Teenage girls who have taken a virginity pledge are one-third less likely to experience a pregnancy before age 18. ·
·
Because they are less likely to be sexually active, pledging
teens are less likely to engage in unprotected sex, especially
unprotected non-marital sex ... Overall, making a virginity ·
• pledge is strongly associated with a .wide array of positive
behaviors and outcomes while having no negative effects. The
findings presented in this paper s(rongly suggest that . virginity pledges and similar abstinence education programs have
the potential to substantiality reduce teen sexual activity, teen
pregnancy, and oubof-wedlock childbearing.
One wonders why those who are evidently so concerned
about the health and education of our young people would
apparently be unfamiliar with such important findings ... and
from a comprehensive, federally funded program to boot!
Of course Melissa G. Pardue, the Harry and Jeanette Fellow in
Social Welfare Policy at The Heritage Foundation, also notes:
Over the past decade, the number of sexually active
teenagers has declined from 54 percent to 46 percent, according to a 2001 survey by the Centres for Disease Control and
Prevention. When surveyed about their sexual history, a
· majority of adolescents report that abstinence education prograins play an ·important role in helping them to abstain from
sex until at least after high school. ,
.
Hmmmm. Perhaps it is fair to ask whether or not these critics of abstinence programs .are really interested in the evidence, not to mention .the fact that parents overwhelmingly
support abstinence progr!llfls.
Of course,.it is also fair to ask if they have spent as much time
critically scrutinizing "safe sex," contraceptive curricula? Have
theSe programs broven effective? If so, where's the evidence?

~~",:!f::,n No

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Letters to the editor are welcome. They should ,
be less than 300 words. All/etters are subject to
editing and must be signed 'and include address
and telephone ,number. No unsigned letters .tvill
. be published. Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

The Daily Sentinel
Comctlon Polley

(UsPs 213-960) .
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

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52 Weeks .

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Friday, May 27, 2005

Obituaries .

FRONT LINES.

Outside Meigs County
13 Weel&lt;s ......... ....'53.55
26 Weelcs .:.
.'107.10
52 Weeks ..... , ..... '214 .21

canon ila lion, rc lllt'lllbc rcJ (-+ I at Chicago).
Stagg's Chicago football
as a \..! reat inno\'ator 1n ~:ol­
teams
had five unbeaten sea- ·
lege fool ball. " A mo.,
sons. won seven Big Ten
Alon;.o Stagg.
Stagg's University ol titb and tied once for the
Chicugu footbull tea m had national championship.
Slagg was X I in 1943
won another s ame. one allcr.noon . La ter he :llld · hi s wil'c . when hi., .little Co llege of the
Stella ccll:brmcd with the ir Pacific team alm ost made it
usua l victory snack of fi gs t1&gt;the Rose Bowl after beatUCLA
and
the.
· and milk. Afterw:ml. Amos ing
Alon~.t) Stagg was outside . Universi ty of California· at
cutting the grass. II helped Bcrkcl~y . At lhe end e&gt;f the
sea;on he was ·voted "Coach
him to unwind.
He c1\uld ulwav s th ink bet- ()['t he Ye:n· ...
Wh~n he was I00 they
. ter tuo when he \vas walkin·g
hi 111
a
party.
threw
along behind · the la wn
mower. Whenever he want- ·somebody asked him , how
ed to unwind. he wo ul d say did he want to be rememto Ste lla. " I think I' ll cut the bered') " I would like to be
remembered us an honest
~ra:-.s.' '
c
" He nlOWS th e lawn !o m&lt;lll." ' Stagg said.
Thm would be no probdeath ,': sa id Ste lla. Stagg
lem.
Twice in his cllreer
was still pushing the lawn
mower when he was in his when the referee fai led to
show up for the game, Stagg
~Os. When hisfamily tried to
get him to switcl1 to a power was ·asked to referee
mower. he refused.
.. although his own team was
It might have been one of · one of those play,ing. It was.
the reasons he li ved to be the two rival coaches who
I 03. Yard work, uccording 10 proposed Stagg for the job.
eve r
doubted
the latest medicul finding s. Nobody
Stagg 's · integrity or his
h:ts several hea lth benefits.
On this early fall eve ning. knowledge of the rules.
Everybody who played for
Stagg's next door •!eighbor
illlcrrupled Amos' mowing Stagg played by the rules.
they
were
to tell him his boys had been Sometimes
own . rules.
pl:tying J'ootbull on l&gt;is lawn Stagg 's
while he was at the stadiu m Obeui ence was one of them .
His players· weren't allowed
ih:tl afternoon.
" You ' II nevt;r rai ~e gra ~s to smoke, drink or swear.
tha t way." said the neighbor. . Stagg invented the for" I'm not ra isi ng grass," . ward pass and the T formasaid Stagg . . "I' m raising lion and it. was his idea to put
numbers on the backs of
boys."
In hi s lone ··Career as a players· jerseys.
Stagg ate and slept footcoach. whicl1 didn't end
umil he retireu &lt;It the unbe- ball. Stella would vouch for
lievable age of 97, Amos the latter. With his plain li vAlonzo Stagg raised not only ing and commitment to
his own two boys. He rais~d .developing the finer powers
thousands of others who in others. he is for us an
came ·out for his football. example of a saint's "more
h&lt;isehall and track team; at excellent way."
Let the bells ring for St.
Springfield College , the
U1\i vers it y of Chicago, Marv and St .. Amos.
(George Plageriz is an
College of the Pacific,
Un ivers ity. onlained minista and veterSusquehanna
and Stockton Junior College cm newsman bcHed in ·
- covering 70 seasons in all Columbus.}

Cheshire
from Page A1

MIDDLEPORT - Bett y L. McKinley. (\I. of Middleport
died Tlwrsda y, May 26, 2005, at her home J'ollowin~ an
extended illness. ·
~
She was the daughter of the lat~ Bill and Bessie M:ntox .
Also preceding her in death were a brother Joe !\1allox and a
nephew Parker 'Long.
·
She is survived hy her husband, Earl McKinley. a son . Scott
McKinley, a dau ghter. Je1&gt;11ifer (Kevin.) Tanner. · granclchildren, Jet Tanner an Hannah McKinley; sister. Delores ,(Rogen
Long, brother David (A nn) Mattox : several aunts, tm ~ le s.
nieces and nephews, and a very special fri end, Pat Denl.
. The family would like to thank all of the people wiih Mei gs
County Hospice during this difficult time. ' .
Memorial services wi ll be held Sat urday. May 28 . at noon
with visitation startin g at I I a.m. at the Brad ford Church of
Christ. Cards and condo lences may be received at the chu(ch
the morning of the service.

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· Elma I. Louks
· SYRACUSE - · Elma r: Louks, 91 . of Syracuse , died
Thursday, May 26 in the Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
-... .
Funeral setvices will be 2 p.m . Sunday in the Crenieens
Fun.eral Home, of Raci ne: Burial will be in the-Gravel Hill
Cemetery. Friends may call from fi-8 p.m. Saturday at the
funeral home . Racine Chapter No. 134 of the Eas.tern Star will
conduct services at 8 pJll. Saturday at the funeral home.
A complete obituary will appear in the Sunday Time-Sentinel.

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Local Briefs
Free immunizations offered
ATHENS - "Ohio University College of Osteopathic
Medicine Childhood Inummizatiun Program, a mobile health
program. will provide free routine immunizations for all area
children from birth through' 18 years of,age m. regardless of
incpme or insurance coverage.
The child's shot records must be provided.
Those children who have not had chicken pox should
· receive a vaccine·. as complications from chicken pox increase
the older the child is when he/she ge ts the .disease.
The serv ice is offered from I to 5:30 p.m. on Tuesdays at
Parks Hall on the O.U. campus. and until6 p.m. on June 14 at ·
Parks Hall, 8:30 to noon on Thursdays, from I I a.m. until
noon on June 24 at the Meigs Library Eastern branch, I :30 to
2:30 'on June 24 at Howe's Grove Park in Belpre and 3 to 4
p.m. on June 24 at Cool Spot in Coolville.
For those high school seniors who will be living in a college
residence hall next year, the new and improved men ingococ:
cal vaccine is available for $1 15 by calling (800) 844-2654.

MIDDLEPORT - Another farmers market will be held frorm
• 9 a.m. to I p.m. on June 4 on the lot adjacent to Peoples Bank in
downtown Middlepdn. There is no fee for vendors. This wil) be
. an ongoing event each Saturday in June,' und will then rotate
between Middlepon and Racine for the next several months.
Questions may be directed to Brenda Phalin at 992-0000,
Donna Hanson at 992-0010. or Erin Roush at 992-2239.

Barbecue planned

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SYRACUSE - A public chicken barbecue will be held at
the Syracuse Community. Center (old elementary school) on
. June 5. Serving will begin at II a.m.

Memorial Day barbecue set
CHESTER- The Chester Volunteer Fire Department wil
have. its annual Memorial Day chicken and rib barbecue Liinners along with homemade ice cream and other desserts.
Serving will begin at II :30 a.m. Parade lineup is I p.m. and
will move out at I :30 p.m.

Southern

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legion

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"Bye Bye Birdie"
A Pre-audition

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meetinil will be held on June 2, 2005

at 6:30pm at tl.e old Middleport Elementary School
· . on Pearl St., 1\-liddleport, OH;
·
Auditions will be held on Satunlay, J""" 4. 2005 (at tlw
"""" location) from 9:00.11 :OOam and I :00.3:110pm.
Sunday, Juae 5, 2805 at 2:30pm.
castlog roles ror oae ten year old boy
Largu~ber o( t_.,rs (rom ages 13 and liP (boys
.
and girts) Chonoo (ages 6 and upJ

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For......., infonnalioti &lt;ODtact:

/c

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£~

Wilbar McConaick 748-2llo&gt;-5522 orlftjuy @addp!Ua.o&lt;t ~ ·
Clllily ErwUI 740-99Z-4759 or v-aaycothy @ OOtnoaii.COIOI ·
~. ;;, tn
. }&lt; tnfA I
2111
;;~ ...._- .... -·--'"L
C
'"q ~=--'1 ;-

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High School.
Approved electronic membership in the NEOLA for
policy manual development.
·The cost is 51925 at inception of the website and S 1925
one year from that date. This
is also a $400 annual maintenance ag reement.
Approved Mary Leach as a
special education teacher on
a one-year limited contract at .
. Step 8 Ma~ter' s degree .
Approved ~rittany Miller as a
substitute custodian effective
May 18 pending completion of
all requirements for the position.
The m~eting was called
into executive session twice
for the purpose of discussing
personnel matters. ·
All Board members were
present for the meeting.

raised objections In thai

""

[~l l ·

lion ~~\.:&lt;I U ~t.: Uf L'Oll"CI:rrl '"! i.thO!! l

.mmpa11y pr&lt;&gt;JX11)' inl'i11\h:U i11
Lh~ anlh..'Xation arl':L ~

But ·compall: &lt;tnJ. 'ill,at:L' ·
offil·ial . . n~~otiat~J :1 land u~l'
agrcen 1ent lhat ~ati,fic.·d both

parties anu lhc objections were
Li ropped. That agreement
pleased the com n) i ~:-. i {tllL'f' .
" I'm glad that ' vou worked
out vol~r di(fcrC ncl':-. wi th
AEP.'' Prcs iJc111 Haro ld
Mont !:!omerv ...,a id . ''I t -..ho\v..;

what --·,",. e c~m Lill wh&lt;..!n we
work together."
·
The. ~ anne,at ion . will
become· oflicial in .10 Jay;.
Montgo mery

~o,u iJ .

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• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
WARS : EPISODE Ill
·REVENGE OF THE SlTH "

• Nebulizers
• Electric Beds
• Wheelchairs
• Diapers ·

•.Chux
• Mcdicano/Mt'&lt;liraid
We do the billing locally
{~ally

awned.

care about you!
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
K£

SISTERHOOD OF THE
TRAVELING PANTS (PG)

740-446-0007
Toll Free 877-669-GOO'l

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.
,.. ;, \~el\Y 1'"~" OR

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t:H\ROP~N
~.AatoA~
Worken,

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F.:h. X. ~(Xl'i . On Awil I :1 AEP

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]a..,t ... umtl1L'r. hut it \\a' d i"~ ·
mi~ ... cd un k' cbnil.:',&lt; d ~rul!nd ...

Cancer

from Page A1

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Stih ... lHl . ''hll!ll Rlf c c redit ..,
'' Hh ha\ 111~ dPill.' mn . . t Il l till'
\\'tXk on th'C Jll!k'\;llinn ]1lan.

·Accident

BURLII&lt;IJGHAM - The Modern Woodmen of Burlin&lt;&gt;ham
Authorization of memberwill have their matching fund dinner Memorial Day. Serving will I s hip in the Ohio High School
be from II :30 a.m,. to 5 p.m. Residents can eat in or take out. · Athletic Association tor the
Dinners are served with drink and desse•t fQr a n1inimum donation 2005-06 school year. grades
of $6. A variety of flowers and other items will also be for sale.
seven- 12.
·
The Academic Content
Standards for Social Studies.
move from there to Beech Language Arts, and Foreign
Grove Cemetery at 9:30a.m. Language as required by the
and on to Sacred Heart Ohio Department of Education .
Textbook adoptions as recCemetery at 9:30 a.m. where
from PageA1
ommended
by 'the county
the Rev. Fr. Walter Heinz
textbook
adoption
commitGPOve Cemetery to put will speak..
tee. Southern had representaflags on the 468 veterans .· Following the program in tives on each committee.
buried there . For .the past downtown Pomeroy the color
Accepted the resignation of
35 years, Leqnard Jewell guard and firing squad will Kim Stevens as cheerleading
has been chairman of the . go to Meigs Memory advisor of Southern Junior
Gardens for a service there
project.
Visits to cemeteries to con- then move on to Chester for
duct services are traditional- the annual parade to the
ly carried out hy American Chester. Cemetery. The final
Legion posts. The Pomeroy service of the day will be at 3
unit will begin at Rock p.rn. at the Hemlock Grove
Springs Cemetery at 9 a.m. Cemetery.

Ri•er City Pla:yers Community t"eatre is
announcing upc~ auditiorut ror

to Cook Koad . aero''
Rou'h Lane. do" n one ,iJc
of \Vat&gt;on Grm ~ Road 10
Ohiu 5:i~ and hack into lhc
village . Villagt· t:nunt.:i lmcmber~ reccntlv unaninHw..,l\
votetllL; acc·ej&gt;l rcsponsib ilit)
fo r mui nwi ning ; Ill of Watson
Grow Road. ~"'" t h.~ pan
thai "ill nol he annc.wd. Rife
said., Th ~ cnuncil prm ided
commis'. . ioners. '' ith ;t ·copy
of that resol ution .
"Rather than ha,·e any (On~1i c t . \\'e d·~cicled to (nfti tltain) it all... Ri l'e to ILl the
com mi ssion.·
Cheshire nearl y ~ease u tu
exist three yea r~ ugo after.
AEP. ow ner of the nearby
Gen . James M. Gavin Power
Plant, offered rcsidcllls a
buyout o r "their pro pert y.
About 90 percent of the ow ners accepted the offer. ·AEP
made I he offer after years of
w.ranglin g uver ·em isSions·
from the plant, which borders
the village corporation limit.

and then was tlown to CHH .
As of Thursday, Jordon was
listed in critical condition.and
Parsons was in fai r condition.
from Page A1
according to Kathy Cosco,
·
spokeswoman for CHI-I.
north of Mason.
Gilkey was treated and
Maso n Volunteer Fire
Chief Paul released' at the :,cene bv the
Department
Johnson said the accident wa.s Mason County Emergent·y
Medical Services.
in front of Fast Phil's Exxon.
Beth Sergent/photo
Members of the Mason Keith Little, who is the Di rector of Environmental Health in
Members of the Mason
Volunteer Fire Depart ment Police Department, Mason Meigs County, stands in the shade of a tree alter being diagarrived at th e scene within · County Detachment of the nosed with skin .cancer last year. May is Skin Cancer
four minutes of the call. West Virginia State Police. Awareness Month.
Johnson said. The New Haven Mason VFD, New Haven
important in reducing the risk
Volunteer Fire Department, VFD and Pomeroy Voiunteer
. of skin cancer later in life.
was nut far behind, arriving . Fi'e Department assisted at ·
the scene.
Sunscreen is not recom.. within I0 minutes of th e call.
Members
of
the
Pomeroy
mended tor children less than
' Rescue crews used the "Jaws
from Page A1
six months old. Keep infants
of ·Life" (hydraulic extrication VFD set up the lanuing zone
in the' shade and protect them
tools) to remove the occupants for the helicopter, according as much skin as possible .
to
the
sheriff's
department.
with clothing.
from the vehieles;• Johnson
Choose
sunscreen
with
a
The
accident
is
.under
' Recently U1e Meigs County
said. Extrication of the pati,ents
inv~sti gation by the Mason sun protection factor of 15. or Cancer Initiative along with
look about 20 minutes.
Merritt was pronounced County Sheriff's Department hi~t~~ hats that shade the . Pmish Nurse Lenora Leifheit
with · Deputy C.L. Oliver
Liistributed inlormation abou1
dead at the scene.
face. neck and ear&gt;.
leading
the
investigation
.
·
skin cancer'" well as sunscree11 .
Parsons and another pasEmergency crews remained. · Stay out of the sun between to residents who visited the
senger. Justin Jordon. 20. of
Mason, were taken to Cabell al the scene until 1:15 a.'m. to 10 a.m. and 4 p.m . when the . Mulberry Community Center. .
ultraviolet rays are strongest. ·
Huntington Hospi tal by clean up the area.
Johnson said thai because
Parents should note that
HealthNet helicopter.
of
oil
avoiding
sunburn during
of
an
excessive
amount
One of the injured was
childhood
and
adole;cence is
immediately llown from the and gasoline from one of the
scene to CHH, Johnson said. vehicles. the fire departments
while the other was transpr&gt;rt- needed assistance with the
ed to Pleasant Valley Hospital HazMat clean up.

Burlingham matching
fund dinner Monday

The news that South
IIJg difficulty conceiving in
But, lu repeat, all we' re
Korean scientists have sucthe. ordi nary way. That is the haggling over here is
cessfully cloned . human
pract ice of ·uniti'ng male whether U.S. governme nt
embryos, remo\'ed their
sperm and female eggs in a money will be spent on the
stem cells for medical use.
petri dish , and implanting project. What science can
and destroyed the leftover
one of the fertilized egg&gt; in do. some scientist will do.
William
embryonic material. 'raises
the woman's uterus. where it . The Science section of The
Rusher
again the question of how far
then devel\lpS normally. This New York·Times, a couple of ·
medical research along these
process res ults in lots of left- weeks
ago.
discussed .
lines ought to be permitted
. over fertilized eggs (i.e. implanting the genes of one
to go - or. for that matter.
human embryo&gt;). and these species in another. can be prevented from destroys the embryo. If you are either thrown awa)'. or implanting the genes of a
going . (Cloning · simP.IY happen to believe that a froLen and thu&gt; preserved human brain, for instance, in
means that the original . human embrvo. whether pending a parental decision a mouse. The writer concedembryonic cell wa '&gt; "cloned" cloned· or normall y created. on their u;,e. But thei r stem ed that this might be imposfrom the patient being treat- is a nascent hurrian life (and cells are. of cour&gt;e. a tempt- sible in species so different,
ed, rather than from a nor- there is .no obvious reason . ing target tor medical ex per- but added that it seems permally fertilized egg, thus why it isn '.t one). then raid- imentation.
fe.p ly possible to . mix the
eliminating or reducing the . i ng it for its stem cells and · ·There isn't much that can genes of a human being and
danger of tissue rejection . •
discarding the rest of the be done about this. either. our closest relation, a chimThere is no doubt that embryonic material begins . About th e on ly practical panzee. in such a way as to
stem cells. which can be to look uncomfortably com- question i&gt; whether federal produce a creature with
directed to develop into any parable to taking an organ funds should be u&gt;ed to pro- aspects of both. Science
of the huge variety of cells in from the body of a health y mote ' uch experimentation. , marches on'
the human body, hold out the baby. implanting it in a di &gt;- (California has already
A little knowledge, as ·
hope of being able to cure eased per1on. and throwing pa,;,ed a popular initiative · Alexander Pope wrote. is a
many diseases. including th~ remainder of the . baby that "ill ;,pend billions doing dangerous thing . Mankind
Parkinso n's
and awav.
;o,) E?re,ident Bush haqaid : has now acquired enough
·
Alzheimer 's. Their propOThe fiN thing' we ·had bet- he "Ill allow ;,tem cells to be · knowledge of genetics to do
nents have not always been ter realize io that. 'ince med- har-vested from left-o\'er what only yesterday seemed
responsible in th'e prom be~ · ical science is now capable embryo; already in exis·- comfonably impossible. No
they ·have e)\tended to •ic- of harve&gt;ting stem cells from tehce and -doomed · to mere law will prevent some-· ·
tims and their familie;,. but human embryo&gt;. &gt;Omebody. . de;truction. but will · veto one from doing it.
the importance of stem cell oomewhere. i-. going to do it. spending federal money op
If Ameri ca is to lead
research to medicine i-; There i' s.impl) nothing the harvesting them from new re;ponsibly, we must develundeniable.
United States can do to pre- embryos.
op the moral courage and
The trouble is that. ,. hilc vent thi,.. whe the r the
That ~omprom i;e hasn't imagination to cope with a
adult ;,tern cell' can al"' be emhryo' u-eu an! normally &gt;ali\fied the stem cell new and v&lt;J.stly stranger
used in thi&gt; research. ,,,.m created or cloned. The South enthusi~,h . They w~nt fed- world.
'
ce ll \
"harve,ted"
from Kmean ..cienti '" ha' e ju 'I era) money p,lowed in to
(William Rusher is a
human embf)O' are. tor 'ar· dcrttoll.&gt;tratcu thi, .
\tern ce ll re-,earch. and if Distinguished Fellow of the
· ious technical rea.wn~. (on·. \1oremd. "•n \llro" fertll - that. im·ulves the destruction Claremont Institute for the
sidered more de,irable . iLalion i' ' now common · of human embryos. that',s Study of Statesmanship and
Harvesting the:.e. however. among parenh who are hav- ju't too bad.
Political Philosophy.)

Brian J. Reed/ photo

said. ''All of the modifica. tions that have been re4uired
arc designed to eliminate liahility to the coumy."
from Page A1
During their busi ness meeting. wmmis~ioners approved
Beegle said. as have :i number
a resolution in support of
of conimunity volunteers.
continued federal funding for
Beegle said he is pro'viding
the Meigs County Health
information to the Ohio Dep&lt;u1ment 's cardiovascular
Depanment of Rehapilitation health grant. and requested
and Corrections as work pro- support from U.S. Rep. Ted
gresses, in preparation lor linal Strickland of the Preventive
approval from the state jail Health and Health Services
inspector to re-open the jail. He· Block Grant.
said there is no specitic time
Commi ssioners also:
schedule for the re-opening.
• Approved a personal ser. "There is nu estimated time vices contract with Norma
for the completion of the pro- Torres of Middleport. for
ject, but we're getting 'closer Spanish and Itali an.translation
every day,'' Beegle told Meigs services for the Depi1nmenl of
County Commissioners on Job and Family Seryic ~:;s , at a
Thursday. "Ours · is · a unique maximum cost of$2,000 for a
situation, and the state is han- year.
.
dling it as a special case."
• Approved a bid from
· "The requirements are . Asphalt Materials of Marietta
completely different than fo r bituminous materials for
they would be if we were June, and referred the bid to
opening a new jail. " Beegle Engineer Eugene Triplett.

'

How much stem cell research is needed? .

.

Dick Fetty, far left, and students ·in hi s Meigs High School weld·
ing class. delivered and installed two heavy steel doors for the
Meigs County Jail on Thursday. The s tudents made ttie doors
with donated mate rial s .

That left onl} ·aboul .20'
people Jil"ing in 1i1e 'illage .
The population """ ' ht,td&lt;.l
he around 1-lO. whic'h i' onh
a I iili~ 'I" ofChe,hire·,
ulatio1i bt.'lilrC the hu' out
"hid1 '""about 200. -

pop·

UJj

.Jail

Deaths

I'
LINES?•

.

The Daily
. ' Sentinel • Page A5

Betty ·L McKinley

I

CONGRESS WANTS
WOMEN OFF THE

.
www.mydailysentinel.com

Plan Farmers Market

.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

Reader Services

Wl1il~ som~ peo ple want
sainthood for th~ late Pop~
John Pm1l lk I llllve ·tw(&gt;
nomination &gt; of my own: the
late Mary Kerr. a hi gh
school principal. and An\OS
George
Alonw Stagg, the late legPlagenz
endary J'ootbull coach.
On.ce upon a tmie (hurd as
it is to believe) a bud boy .
was a kiLl .who carried
matches in hi s pocke t or spr in g. th:tl season of the
skipped school.
sc·lloul )ear w hen 1he Huck
That \vas Jack Donovan's Finn types could. be counteu
weakness. Going tn o;c hool o n to lose th eir way 1&lt;1
was never 01i hi s · li st of sehoul. Spring was baseball
"t hin gs
io
· do ." seaso n and)ack loved baseConsequently. he spent a lnl ball . He was a slar hitler
of time in Miss Kerr 's office . and ccn lerficluer un the
Mary Kerr was our hi gh hi ~ h sc hool team. If he
school principal. Those of us w:~nted In play, he had to
who grew up under her stern have hi s digibil il y can.t
and wQtchful eye al Guri'ielu signed each week by all-hi s
Heights High School in. Ohio teachers·: that me:!!ll showdeveloped a vivid sense nf in g LIP for class.
ri~hl and wrong - · a sense
It was ,the only strategy
ol whilt .was expected or us. ever de.viscd by anybody to
If we did wron~ - if we ge t Jack to go to school with
fai led to li ve up to whin was· any regu lari ty. · ·
expected ·of us - we faced
Jack cou ld win a populari..l_he prospect of ending up "in ly cunLcsL wilerevcr he went.
Miss Kerr's office."
He ch'armed eve rybody When that happellJ;!d land except my mother. Jack ami
it happened 10 me once) it I were best friend&gt; during
wasn' t all that bad. But we · our high schoo l years but my
left her offi&lt;:e with a sense mother . WLIUid. always tell
l hat the wrong we had clone me. " Don't hang arou nd
had not gone unnoticed and · with that Dono,van boy.
that it was not expected ·to He' ll never amo unt to anycontinue.
thin g."
Miss Kerr stoOl!' tall in
Well he &lt;&gt;rew up to be the ·
"' city where we
our eyes. She was tall phys, mayor or the
ically and tall 111 character li ved and later was an execuand, standi ng in the shadow ti ve with a big public utility
of her presence. we grew company wh ile my mother's
taller too.
pride and joy grew up to be a
If Jack Donovan didn't humble newspaper reporter.
hold the record fur' the must
I woulu often remind my
limes called into Miss Kerr's · mother of that in later years
office , he was a leadi ng con- and we would h:~ vc a good.
_
..
tender fo r the' honor. In I he laugh.
years 's ince, I have often
Jack and Miss Kerr had
wondered whether we could- remained good friends until
n't attribute at least part l)f she died: Their paths crossed
Jack's success in later life to ui'len when they lived in the
all those hour$ he wa'&gt; privi- same city. He· was grown
leged to spend in Mis; th en and he ·~!l e d City Hall
Kerr's company.
·
but she was always ''Miss
·
Strangely, Jack was never Kerr" to him.
My other candidate for
seen in her otlice in the

"'

Friday, May 27, .2005

The ·virtue ifgood guidance

The Daily Sentinel

,,

•.

•
Party, Bike Games &amp; Camping
At Jordon 's Campground
(laurd

Road-\Je~

Count! )

SlO.OOI Per Person
Info Call: 669-4400, 669-5831 or 992-6288
. "Everyone Welcome (Cars &amp; Bikes)"
3

Available

.

'

• ::;poos Injuria

•Medil:an&gt;
•j\cupu~ ·

Mosti...-

,•Same~IIIJ'l

CllinlpfllCIQ&lt; ,,r lh&lt; )'•at t9!Jij

\

V.P. WV Oliropt'"'llc So:

I~ ·'~~

Member of~ '6oord of

l4no.;., l'tl*lsiooals
:!0}11

&lt;
A.:adom)

Member tl

oft •

1 f"l

A

273-5321

·~

ncturc

~

·

�•

...-'
www:mydailysentiriel.coni

· Friday May 27, 2b05

PageA7

The Daily Sentinel

~~~

Friday, May 27, 2005

,,
'

'

Economic.development director
presents plan for development
John B. Ridenour

Rosemarv• Hvsell
•

S..:pl . 1.1. 19-'6- .\1~~ 2{'1. 2002

.-\pr. 16.

\·by-God cradle you in
His ~mns. now
;md forever.

1~-11 • S~·pL ~~;

Leona Eblin

2004

N,l.\ ., 19·. 1930 - Nll\. IJ. !lJLltl

~hl!ha

Mother

Your courage- and hra\'t:ry sti ll
inspire -us '-Ill'. and th\.' memory or
ydur ~mih.· lilts Jl ~ with
joy and l:u!gllll.'r.

Tht&gt; day~ .may L'lllliL' and g1.l.
hut th~ titllL'~ we ~h;trcJ
\\ill ah\~1):. r~?mai·n.

Lo\'e.,
'

•

L O\'(',

Pau lin ~

NarK~ !\lank~

Your Daugh1ers.&amp; GmnJl'hildrL'Il

0
In Loving Memory of
Joseph A. Bissell 1981
Joseph E. Bissell 1982
Violet M. Smith 1985
Leona M. Hensley 1986

Aug. 16. 1930- July ~0. 1995
July 6. 19:03- Oct . 22. 2004
Mothl'T &amp; F~thcr

Michad Pal rick Bisse ll J 9'~0
Kemieth E. B»sd l 1992
Ada E. Bisssdl 1996
Mae E.' McPeek 1997

You were ihe li ght in our life
bums forever in our hearts. ·
We ·Lm·e You.
· ~eana Larkins &amp; F;.Hni~y

'.

Orion R, Nelson
· Jun.

5.

19[(J- Ap r. 2J, 20112
Hu,hilill~

though nut of site.
)'otl ·II forever he in Ill}
h~an ;md m_
ind.

Transfers·posted

· Lme.
Virg_i11 ia Ne lson

Eric

Qrva Jeati, Marilyn. Mike anu
Gone but not foreo11c-n
'

·

·

Becky Ackerman

Families'

John Causey- ·
:w. 19.1-t' - Oec 2Y. ~O(U

·Herman Lynch

Herman Lynch

Dallas V. Hill
Ol'l. \ llJ1U · Feb. 21 2004
Hm;b;lml .. fathCr

Dtx. ~2. !t)J ~ . No\ '18. 2004

DeL'. 22. 19.1:\ - Nu\ . I X:)l~).l.

Husband

Husb;md

Fi1tlh:r · Gr;pH.lpil

life that burns tOrever

Your in our thoughts and pfayers
from morning.to ~1ight and from

in -our hearts.

year to year.

· ThOt)gh·out Of sig ht:
yo u· II forever be in m·y
heart and mind.

Love.
Al:kennan Familv'

t.ove. ,
Slyvia, Kids, Grand kids
&amp; Great grandkids

Scp1. 25: .l lJ7X- Mar. 7. 2002'
Daughier

A"pr.

You were a light in olu

'

'

. Happy Anni\'erstiry

Yuur cour;l.gt:.;llld hr&lt;n\'r) ~till
reus -al l. ;.ullf tll.~: mctm1ry of
'''"'"'""'lc fills us \vith.ftl)' and
'lau£htcr.

'You arc in our thoughts and
prayer~ from monling to night
and
from year -tOyear.

lk idi. Tini--&amp;. Family
Stc\'e. Da 'nie . ll ~ · &amp; Railey

Lq,vc.
Donna. Del:lbie. .Jan.
Art &amp; Dean

' ·

· Love.
Diane

.•

'

. ''

•'

Carolyn Jean
Bechtle ·

If tears cou'd build a stairway.

.,..
t,
I

and memories a ·lane,

Oc.L 18. 1944 - Sept. 27. 2004
_Wift:, Molhcr, Sisters

I'd walk right up to Heave n,
ami bring your home again .
You are mbsed each
·

•

You; courage and bravefy still

and every day,

inspire us all , and the memory of
• your smile tills us with joy and

Love Always.
K,atey, Jesse and Steve.
(Joey&amp;;, Herky too.) ·
Woof- Woof.

laughter.

,j

•

••

James Eakins
1953- O~:t. ~:::. 2tXXJ
Hush&lt;mil. Father

June 4.

May God cradle you in .His arms.

now and forever. ·

-Lov,,
Teresa. Jimmy. Stacy, Joey.
Ta rit &amp; Sarah Eakins

Edison Hollon

Jan. .5 , I Cli~- July 17. ~002
Hushand

Thank you for the. wond e~ ful
days we shared together.
My prayers will be \Vith
you unt il we mee t-again .

.·•

Lyle E. Baker
Muy 14. 1929 -Feh 2. 2004 ·
Fath~:r

'

Forever missed. never forgotl~n.

May God hold you in the
. palm of Hi s hand.
Love.

Love .

and Sue Baker and Family

Evelyn E. Hollon

Love. ·
Darrell: John, Jane. &amp; Judy-

'

Visit us on the Web

'

Dear Mom,

POMEROY Michael
Gulliver told the group that upon four essential human
Gulliver. Meigs County plans are moving along for a freedoms. Enumerating the
DEAR ABBY: ,My wife
appoint my parents. I'm
Economic · Development Rio Grande complex to be freed.om of speech ·. and and I are ·in the security
startrng to see the effects
Director, was guest speaker at buill in Meigs County are · expression, freedom of every business. My ex·wife is .conthi s girl i:-. ha ving _on n\y
the recent meeting of 'the well along, there there is a person to worship God in his
dering hiring us tn _provide
•
grade &gt;. · arid my parents h,ave
Return
Jonathan . Meigs possibility thilt the ooal mines own way, freedom from want si
also . notice d the drop . I
sec urity at her u~coming
Chapter Daughters of the will reopen. thadt a Dollar and freedom fmm fear. and
because of some
Dear
ha ve n't told them about her
American Revolution .
Gener Store is scheduled to freedom means the suprema- wedding
potential threats.
and haw been seelqg her
. Gulliver spoke about the' locate'in Tuppers Plains. He cy of human rights everyThe problem is that my exAbby
secret! v.
many cons ideration&gt; that spoke of the· need for health where ."
wife and I ha ve · had some
Should I tell .my parents
need to be taken before any . care facilities here as a way to
Patrici-a . Holter, regent, heated -'differences over the
and
ask for th eir .acjvice -·
major plans can take rlace, enti.ce new business and
'd' d
h
'
h ld last five years. While our
'which may mean an abrupt
pres•
at t e Library.
meetmg e
' including ntW~berin!; o resi· spoke of prospec'ts. and spo· ke at
the ePomeroy
communication
·
ha&gt;
··
1
end to 'my' rela ti onship with ·
. dences m
plannmg area, of ttw planned renova[ion of
.
d
.
h
with
those
-who
do&gt;
I
ask
girl', ' Or should 1 try
1
· water. , but'.ldt'ng's 1' n Mt'd·dlepon.
Memorial services and , tmprove great y, t ere are because l am a non-be li ever the
a Iong wtt· h access to
hard~r
nJy. gra·'es·
,·tnd
sti ll differences ~egardi n g
.
~ '"t.th
~
u
gas. and other utilities such as
Betty Mt1hoan read an arti· grave marking for Eleanor our
child that remain unre. and. frankly, .I'm uncomlort- Con tinue the relation ship at
a d
t
Cle
Ot- Proft' les 1-n Ht' story Smith, Abbie Strattan and
.
sewer n wa er.
Alice Struble were set' for ·solved. · Petsonaily, I don't ab le particrpating in pray·er. the &gt;ame time '' Is she worth
· ,,The spellker said that busi- "Revisiting Roosveft's Four
'
h ct 1 On the other hand . 1· the effort.' This h:ts been on
l.k
·e
_
my
.
e
x
very
muc
, · respec t
other
people' s my nlt' ncl t·clr lw· o ''·ee
t
' nesses are interested in mov- Free.doms' When Presi-dent May 27. ,,
'have told her so. butanI'm
' ks.
ing to the area and willing to Franklin D. Roosevelt delivFollowing the' meeting,
beliefs.·
d ,
-- · d and I don't want
y· to
· ·Please· a'cl\•t.se nle. - TORN
spen&lt;j their resources to .build erect a speech on freedom less brunch was served by Pauline professional in my uttes otten
anyone
.
our
on the job. and I don 't 1h
h
h'
Jd b 1,". TAIWA·N
here. The · local ihdustrial than a year . before Japan Atkins, Donna Jenkinsw, and
1
d
1
·
1 oug ts on - ts · wou
.e .DEAR TORN·. Yo· tt ,· tppear
·
d
management group, he said, bombed Pearl Harbor and the - Sharon ·Jewell and [)awn tnten . to et · ourh personaf great1Y appreqate
-·
to be 'tntellt'ge
- nt an·'u resp'on•
is- hopeful that a number of United States entered World Rubinen. The nexi meet;, ~o f con 11 tcts get tn t e way o NON-BELIEVER IN NEW
· · . JERSEY
sjble. Although lh!s girl is
new businesses will be will- War ·II ; he probably had no the chapter will be held~ on · he r happiness.
The
only
other
.
concern
I
DEAR
NON-BELIEVER:
special
to 'you. there is a lot
ing to move to and build in idea that his message would June. II at the home of K arren
have
about
my
ex
is
being
If
vou
do'
not
wish
to
say
at
sta
ke'.
Sn.eaking behind
the Meigs County area, pro' resonate strongly more than Werry at I This is a family
viding several thousand liv- six decades later.
picnic meeting and each fann- paid for our services, as I gra-ce. bow · yo ur head yo ur parents ~acks ts ne_~· ·
ing-wage jobs for the comRoosevelt said, "We look ily is asked to bring a covered have been burned by her in respectfully while your · th.er.'~ way to tnsptre c(&gt;rth·
the past Would it be wrong companions do. and say de_ nc e_ nor t,o sho": your
munity.
·
forward to a world founded dish of their choice.
·
to require payment and ' a "Amen" when they are fin- maturtl y. Ple.tsc level wtth
signed ·contract prior to her ished. There is no rule of eti- them . You . arc all on , the
wedding'!
· FEELING quette that demands you say same team. and they m•ght
INSECURE
ABOUT
SECU' the prayer..
"
be ~ore 11exthle. than you
' '
RITY IN OREGON
DEAR ABBY: Growing lhtnk,
,
,
POMEROY ~
Mei~s .deed, Scipio.
,
L. · Diddle. Roberta J.
However, •f . ~hey rc not,
DEAR FEELING INSE- up in a Chinese faf11ily. hi gh
County Recorder Kay Hill
Tiffany D. Shaffer, Donald - Diddle, Benetici:il Ohio, Inc., CURE: Not at all. Bui why . expectations 'have : always then Y;c;lU r .cduc.ttt.on m_ust
reponed the following transfers W Shaffer, to ·Heather D: .Beneficial Mongage Co., sher· you would want to do busi· been placed on me , especial - ·come lmL Your_ preparat•On ·
of real estate:
Woods, deed, Sutton.
iff's deed, Village of Pomeroy. ness with a customer you ly since 1 am the oldest so n, for cu lle ~~ won ·! last forev·
· f\rlin Radel&lt;;in. Patricia
Wells Fargo Bank, Ocwen
'Henry Thomas, Patricia neither 'like not . trust is ·1 have always been catego- er: and ttyou ha ve _SOIJ!C·
Radekin, ro DOnald L Lewis, . Funding Home Equi(Y., Delta Thomas, · to Henry . Travis beyond me. If there's the rized as "g ifted," so the aca- thtng spec tal wtth , thiS1 g •r~,
Deborah D. Lewis, deed, funding Home Equity to Baer Thomas, Cynthia Ann Thomas, slightest doubt that _you will · demic expectations have you ta n always pursue tl
Columbia,
Builders and Developers, deed, corrective deed, Chester.
be fully compensated for been doubled where I'm later.
.
Mary Ann Shoults, Roger J. Village of Pomeroy.
· Marc Travis Pierce, Wendy your services, .get written concerned. I expect to attend
Dear Abby is written. b1
Shoults, to Larry E. Hoffman.
Connie Pullin, Don Pullin, C Pierce, to Brandon Yonker, proof that you were hired ' an American college. ~nd Abigail Van Buren,. a_lso
Levema M, Hoffman, deed, -Thomas Cooke, Kim Cooke, to Sheri Yonker. deed, Orange.
rather than invited as a -guest my parents want me to get known · as Jeanne Phlll1ps,
Village of Pomeroy.
Ernest E. Imboden. Wanda
David Yost, dece~. David -. and a hefty "security" into an elite schooL
and M•as founded by her
Montie R. Sanders, Lola F. Imboden, deed, Village . of Charles Yost, deceased. to deposit up front.
·
Three munths ago, I start· mother,_ P(i.u/ine Phillips.
Sanders, to Wesley David · Middleport, ,.
··
· Margaret L Yost, affidavit,
Dear t\bby at
DEAR ABBY: rs it OK for ed dating a girL I really dn Write
Sanders, deed, Olive,
Dinah Stewart to Michael S. Sutton.
an atheist not to participate love her, bu.t at the sa me www.DearAbby.com or P.O. ·
Larry W. Rapp to Linda King, Dawn L King, Dewey S. " Margaret L Yost to Linda C. in the saying of "grace" time. I don 't want to com- ' Box 69440, Los Angtles,
Marie Rapp; deed, Chester.
King, Patricia A King, deed, McTurner, deed, Sutton.
before a meal while dining promi se nyy grades and di s- CA 90069.
' Gardner Wehiung, .Patricia , Rutland. ·
Earl · W. · Wines, Earl W,
Wehrung, to Scott L Walton,
Ll Pomeroy, LLC, to . Wines, Sr., to Sheila K Jones,
' ,
Geri L Walton, deed, Village Woodford Ohio Enterprise, deed; Salisbury.
. of Pomeroy.
·
deed, Village of Pomeroy. ·
Joseph , D. Loftis, Cora A
Lloyd D. Johnson, deceased,
Robena M. Thaxton to John l::oftis, to Mark Peart, deed,
to Ardella M. Johnson, affi. C Hannon, Kellie R. Han'non, : Scipio.
www.tnydailysentinel.com ··
davit.' Village of Middleport.
deed, Village of Racine.
Bruce Hann, Melanie Hann; - Carol J. Bums to . Robert K
Jonathan S. Rees, Michelle to Bruce E. Hann, Bruce E.
Bums, deed, Salem.
Renee Rees, io Kimberly L . · Hann Revocable Trust, deed,
Greg L Mills, Teresa L · Roush, deed, Sutton.
Scipio. ·
Mills, to Jack Morris, deed,
· William W. Milhoan ' to
Bruce E. Harm Revocable
Village of Pomeroy. .
All tell Ohio, Inc., easement, Trust to Bruce E. Hann, memo-. John L, Hagerty, Dorothea Chester.
rial trust, Scipio.
Hagerty, to J~s D. Swart,
Dale
Hubbard,
Lola
Timothy W. Bentz, Pamela
deed, Columbta.
· ·
Hubbard,
to
Columbus G, Bentz, to Deutsche Bank, ·
franklin Real Estate Co, to Southern
Power,
deed, sheriff's deed; Village of
Pomeroy.
."
Meigs County Soil .and Water Lebanon.
Conservation District, ease·
Emerson McDole, deceased, · James F. Hysell, Patricia
Anna Virginia
McDole, Hysell, to James Gerald Hysell,
menh
,
Levi A. Partlow, decleased, deceased, to Patrick E. deed, Rutland.
to Helen G. Partlow, affidavit, McDole, affidavit, Lebanon.
Dorothy Henley, Charles
Chester.
Thppers
Plains·Chester Henley, Dorothy Carroll
Willie Lee Cook to Debra 1Water District to Dorothy A. Hysell, to J~s Gerald Hysell,
Ann
Blake,
deed, Chaney, Kenneth E. Chaney, dee4. Rutland.
SalisburyNillage
of partial release of easement,
Marc D. Smith, Nicole D.
Bedford.
· · ·
Smith,· to Marc
Smitl),
'ddl rt. · . .
Mtepo
S ' D.
hd
d
Douglas D. Hunter, Tarija
Pamela G. Bentz, Timothy Sabrina D.
mit ,
ee ,
Lee Hunter, to Ray W. Smith, · W. Bentz, to DU Mortgage, Chester,
Robert l Smith, deed, Sutton.. Inc., Americl!'S Servicing Co.,
Jerl!ldine . Taylor Trust,
Douglas D. Hunter, Tonia L. sheriff's deed, Village of Jernldine Taylor, to Alec C.
Hunter, to Melissa R Smith, Pomeroy.
·
Cole, Kelly ·1. Cole, deed,
deed, Sutton,
Pamela Jeanne Welker, Jack . Scipio,,
R
. Edward M. Thrley to Lorie R. Welker, Roger Brooks . Yvonne Young,
oger
Steven
L , Dunn, W1'lbur· o. Dunn, Sayre, Christine Sayre, Orville Young, Sandra Bailey,
R
deed, s
, B. Sayre, June A. Sayre, to Bailey, Linda ,,,
nel 1, usse 11
Dani~tt_f.nMeiring, Bryon T Dale Hubbard, deed, Village of . Well, Karla fox, to Bruner
Land ·eo., Inc., deed, Bedford, ,
Meiring, Bryon P: Meiring, Syracuse.
Robert C. Meiring, Elizabeth
K Meiring, Kevin J. Meiring.
· Mary E. Meiring, Steven l
Meiring, Jennifer S. ·Meiring,
Morganna
Betty J. Manley
Meirring . Partnership, Robert
Alexandria Hysell
Aug. 7, IYJ3 · Jan. 2M, 2005
C. Meirring, Daniel J,
May
29,
2002-Nov.
7,
20!)2
Wife &amp; Children
Meirring, Kevin J. Meirring,
Thesday, May 31
·
Daughter
Married 57 years
. Steve~ J. Meirring, ~o Robert
RUTLAND - Rose of
Saturday, May 28
C Melhng, deed, Salisbury,
Your Courage and bravery grill
, You were a light in our life that
Sharon Holiness Church wjll
PORTLAND - · Lebonan hold a revival at 7 p.m., May
.. Sam J_.. Darst, Sherry Darst,
' inspire us all, and the memory
burns forever in .our hearts.
Township
Trustees will meet 31 · June 5. With Rev: Tom
to Thomas A. Smith ll, deed,
of
your
smile
fill
us
with
joy
at :7:30 p.m. at the township 'Bell. Pastor Dewey King.
Columbia
and laughter.
Carl Manley
·: · Marie RoSe Boy(j, deceased, building.
Tina M. Hysell
to Anthony Jones, Brenda K,
Wednesday,
June
1
Jones, deed, Village of
PAGEVILE - . Scipio
Syracuse.
,
Saturday, May 28
will met at 6:30 r -mTrustees
Michael R Ryan to Linda K.
POMEROY
. - ' Pomeroy
at
the
Pageville
town
hal
.
Ryan, deed, Sutton.
Alumni
Association
members
Victor Young ill, Katherine .
will
be
decorating_
the
Meigs
M. YO\lllg, to Julia Booth, deed.
High School cafeteria begin, Vtllage of Pomeroy.
ning at 9 a;m. Alumni memBroward County Property to .
bers are needed to assist.
Markham family Limited
Monday, May 30
Partnership, deed, Bedford..
Thesday, May 31
RACINE
- Racine Post
Ralston D. Hensley to PhiUip
POMEROY
- Meigs
R. Harrison, Paulette L. 602, American Legion will
County
Health
Department
hold Memorial Day services
Harrison, deed, Sutton.
' childhood immunization clin·
at
10 a.m. The ·Southem
John l Casto, Nora M: Casto
ic, 9-11, 1-3, 112 E.
High
School
band
will
play
to Basil W. · Rhodes, deed,
and Rep. Jimmy Stewart will Memorial Dr. Bring shot
Lebanon.
speak. . '
- records, medical cards,
David McDonald, Sr. to
Children must be accompa·
. , Roger L Adrian, deed; Salem.
nied by parent or legal
David McDonald, Sr. to
guardian. $5 donation accept·
June (Hayman) ·
Christopher C. . Anthony,
Nicholas R. lbJe
Jeremy Brickles Jr.
ed but not required for immuBrandon c. Anthony, deed,
' Friday, May ,27
Wickersham
· Nov.' II. 1955- May 8. 2005
nizations. ,
- MIDDLEPORT - Free
Salem.
.
Husband,
Father &amp; Grandfather
May 14, 1923 - Ju~e 21:J004
We
All
Love
and
Miss
You.
Roger L Adrian to .Kaaron dinner, 4:30 to -6:30 p.m. ,
Mother &amp; Fnend
You were ,; light in our li fe that '
Middleport Church of Christ. ·
Birt~days
· -K Pickens, deed, Salem.
You Are Always In Our Heans
YourCourageand bravery still
bum s forever in heart s.
:: Chester G. Wi~al, dece~
inspire us all, and the memory
Now and Forever.
Monday, June 6
.-{o Matjorie B. W1gal, affidaVI(,
Sunday, May 29
of our smile fill us with
Di, Nikki , Jason. Austin.
LONG BOTIOM·.•Vtllage of Middlepon. .
RUTAND Memorial
joy and laughter,
Grandma·
Brickles,
Mom
&amp;
Dad
Ashley &amp; Family
;; Marc Travis Pierce, Wendy Day celebration and remem· · Vicctor Bahr will be 85 on
::caroline Pierce1 to Jena R. bmnce service, II a.m. at the June 6. Cards may be sent to
' Tenaglia. deed, Orange.
Rutland Church of God local· him at 38814 Townshp Road
Scott B. Chase. Jeanette , ed on State Route 124 near 404, Long Bottom, Ohio
45743.
.
Chase, to Laverne G, Chase, · Meigs Elementary School.

«

'

Randall Peck
Margie Peck

•

Com~unity

· Harold Lawson

John B. Ridenour

Dalton A. Grover

Bob.Houdasheit

.•une 24, 1948 - July 23. 2004-. Special FricOO ·

Oct. 30. 1912 - Jan. 20, 1967

Kenneth H, Michael

Sept. 13. t 9-16 : May 26, 2002

Julk' 4. 1934-Apr. 7. 19%

Oct. 4. 1927- July 2. 1Y96

Spoust:

Husb;,md

The days may come and go.

We hold you in our thoughts
' and memories forever.

but the times we shared
will always remain.

Fath~r

•,

Spou se ·
Forcvt~r mis~ed.

never forgotten .
May God hold you in the palm ·
·
or' Hi~ hand .

Love,

Love,
Teresa Eakins

Jason. Jared and Family

Man working for his ex-wife
should get payment up front

Lo\;C,

Myt:)lc V. Gmvcr &amp; Family ,

.

'

Yuu were a l i!!~l in our lifl' lh,ot' h"ornd
fur~vcr in [)ur hearts.

Love.
Man.:ia Houdashelt &amp;
Brent and Brian

Calendar

Public·meetings

Thank you lor the wonderful
days we shared toge ther.

\1y prayers will be with yoo
' unt1'Jw~; meet again.

Other events

Lo ve,
, Virginia Michael .

''

Clubs and .
organizations

Mark A. Micba!!l

Larry D. Wehrung

Apr. 26, 1960- Feb. 18. 1003
'Soo

i\m. 18. 19-10- Jul) 8. 2003
· • _.Husband

You "ere a lighlin our l if~ that

The days may come and go.

buri1~, fore ..·er irl our heart~.

.lme.

..

.

bur, the times we shared
will
'

~

Vjrgi·nia Michael

Sadly missed.
Wife Betty

Orland J.
Laudermilt
. Ju l~ 26.\9-t5 :.'1m.l5.2002

We hold yOu in our fhoughrs
and menlOries forever.

Love You Always.
Shaula. Brothers &amp; Si sters

Roy (Frank) Riffle.
.\'Ia~

3. 193 7- Ma} 2.2001
Hu ~hJwJ

Yqu Y.eT t' a light in o~1r life thut
burn' forever in our he ;;trt.,. ~

Lme Ah,ay:,,
Wife Frona and Fan!.ily

JJOSt:pn E. Ada E.
Kenneth E. Bissell
and .
Mae E. McPeak
· father·

~·IOther

Church events

Brother· Aunt

You were a 'light in Qi.Jr life
that bums forcvCr in our hearts.
Mis ~

You 'and Love You .Aiways.

Tom; Janet and Tom

-

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,.

,

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'\
I

LocAL • STATE.

' Th~ Daily Sentinel

..

/

Page AS

.'

Friday, May 27,

INSIDE

.

AP BUSINESS WRITER

PAINESVILLE, The Peny
nuclear power phmt is gener.~ly
safe but federal regulators will
continue heightened supervision there because plant
• employees have failed to correct
severJI problems. the regulators
said in a preliminary inspection
repon released Thursday:
The Nuclei!r Regulatory
Commission. which oversees
the industry. has noted a string
of problems at the FirstEnergy
Corp.-owned Peny plant located about 35 miles nonheast of ·
Cleveland. They say ·examples
mclude an e_mergenc~ serv1ce
water pump twhng twice and a
~roke'1 mstrume~t that gave a
truse md1cation ot elevated rad1au.on. The plant was shut down
bnetly m · Dece!llber &amp;nd
January because ol the pump
troubles.
The preliminary report was
discussed at a public meeting
called by the NRC, which said
its final report on the piW!t is
expected to be tinished in July.
The NRC noted that the fmdings were .of very low safety sig-

.

.
nificance, meaning· there are no
imminent public• safety concerns.
In a speci&lt;~ review conducted
from January until May. inspectors found that Perry managers
don't sutlkiently probe possible
problems and that employees
lac·k focus on some tasks, leading to mistakes. The repon also
found inadequate supei'Vision
"I assure you that Peny's
inanagement team has a sense
of :urgency toward continuous
improvement."
' Richard
Anderson. the plant's vice president. told the NRC paneL
Mark Satorius, director of the
NRC's division of reactor projeers. told Perry managers that
the NRC's scrutiny will remain
high even though "measures
have been taken by the 'licensee
to improve station equipment
reliability.'' ,
·
About 150 people attended
the meeting, mostly FirstEnergy .
employees. Perry technician
Chuck Winz asked the NRC
investigation ·panel whether an .·
unusual number of inspectors
may have added stress to the
workers doing their jobs. which
could have led to humWI errors.

WELSH-HUGGINS
AP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT

COLUMBUS-· Black and
white Ohioans voted in greater
numbers in November than
four years earlier, with the
r increase larger for blacks.
·•·according to new U.S. Census
figures.
The figures also showed that
55 percent of voters aged 18 to
24 cast ballots last fall compared wi¢ 37 percent in the
.previous presidential election. .
The puslil to register voters
was aggressive.for the election
tharretumed President Bush to
office in a close vote decided
by Ohio. The Republican and
Democratic parties both
strongly pursued young and
minority voters.
The Census data released
Thursday showed that 586,000
blacks, or 66 percent of eligible black voters, cast ballots
Nov. 2. Four years earlier..
500,000, or 54 percent, of eligible black voters cast ballots.

.

AP Photo

Mark Satorius, director of. division of Reactor Projects for the
NRC, shuffles through papers at a meeting with representatives from Perry Nuclear Power Plant, Thursday, in Painesville.
The Perry nuclear power plant is generally safe but its managers and other employees have failed to correct several problems of enough concern to warrant ongoing watch by federal
regu lators, according to a · preliminary inspection report
re leased Thursday by the regulators.
.

.

Chase, Md., who finally voted .
about 3:30 a.m. Nov. 3, said
people sensed the .election
wmild b~ close and .could .
come down to Ohio. ·
For him and many of his

Friday, May 27
around I a.m. with total accuMorning (7 a.m.-Noon)
mutations for this event near
Temperatures will rise from 0.17 inches. Temperatures
62 to 73 by late this morning. will linger at 54 with today's
Skies will be sunny to mostly low of 52 occurring around 6
cloudy with 5 MPH winds· a.m. Skies will range froni
from the west turning from mostly clear to cloudy with 5 ·
the nonhwest as the morning MPH winds from the south.
progresses:
, · west turning from .the west as
Afternoon (1·6 p.m.)
the overnight progresses.
:
Temperdtures: ,will hold
Saturday, May 28 ·
steady around 75 with today's
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
high of 76 occurring around 4 Temperatures will climb
p.m. Skies will range from from 53 to 70 by late this
sunny to mostly sunny with 5 to morning. Skies will be sunny
10 MPH winds from the north- to mostly ·sunny with 5 to 10
west turning from the west as MPH winds from the souththe afternoon progresses.
west turning from the west as
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) . tlie morning progresses.
Some light rain showers are· Afternoon ( 1-6 p.m.)
A few showers are on the
predicted. The rainfall should
begin ·around midnigh[. The · way. some of them containing ·
rain should reach 0.08 inches heavy downpours. Expect
by the end of this evening; 0.13 inches of rain by the end
Temperatures .will drop from of ·
this
afternoon.
72 early this evening to 60. , Temperawres will drop from
Skies will be mostly clear to 72 early this afternoon to 60
cloudy with 10 MPH winds by 2 p.m. then increase back
from the west.
up to 70 late afternoon. Skies
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
will range from panly cloudy
There could be a sprinkle or to cloudy with 5 to I0 MPH
two. The rainfall should end winds from the west.

ATHENS
Mason
Thomas Michigan of Athens
celebrated his second binhday with a cookout hosted by
his parents Marc and Lesley
Michigan and sister, Lilly.
A Wiggles theme was carried out in the decorations
and also in the cake baked by
his aunt, Pauline' Mayer.
Attending in addition to his
parents and sister were
Pauline Mayer, Donnie and
Linda Mayer, Raymond
Lawson, Marie Hauck, Bill
Matlack, Raben, Lora, J-eri
and Holly Michigan, Bob,
Heidi, Hunter and Layken ·and Dorothy Clatwortlly,
Mullins. Melanie, Alex and Shannon · Bobbitt, M,att
Adam Porterfield, Connie :Rosier ·al'\d ·Donna ·Cart....,.,
and Lindsay Watsbn, · Henty ·

Rocky Boots - 28.62 '
RD Shell - ~9.49
SBC -23.65
Wal-Mart- 47.31
Wendy's - 45.62
Worthington - 16.44

Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Partners at Advest
Inc. of .Gallipolis.

Wonderful opportunities are available in Tom Peden
Country. We are expanding our staff and need more
salesmen and salesworj-len. No Experienc~ is required,
only a willingness to learn, work as a team ard have a
strong initiative .
• 401 K Retirement .Plan
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Call To Schedule An

lntervl~w:

..

Tom Peden Country
1-800-822-0417. 372-2844
475 So.uth Ch,urch Street • Ripley, WV 25271

Local Stocks

YOU

. Middleport, Ohio
(Corner of Main &amp; Jnl)

WiUHaveAn

?~Jumni Sundatl

~embers, former mem6ers
.&amp;' friends associated with the

. church are uraed to attend.
There will be a display of the chureh 's history
Reverend Brian Dunham
invites th,e public

Women's College SoccEr -

Today's games

.

.
'
Track and Field
\
Olvisi&lt;;m II Regional (at Meadowbrook},
5p.m. .
.
Olyillon Ill Regional {at Pickerington), .

'

5~~

'

5-2 L. Coke ss.oo
Products
TRY OUR
TACO
5• 5 oz. Frito .Lay S oo

SOON
TO BE ·
FAMOUS
THICK

FRIED

5

Assort. Flavors

. · 5- Little Debbie

•

ss. oo ·

BOLOGNA
Stars &amp; Stripes Cakes
$1.99

2-12 pk. Pepsi,
Mountain Dew

SALADS
$3;79

sax _

s5 .
•

2- Mister Bee 11oz.s5.

LARGE SELECTION OF
IMPORT &amp; DOMEST•C RS

fc"Ou;;N~~;;,~;~
I FREE Bag of Popcornl
1
I
with Coupon
IL No Purchase Necessary .II

CHECIIO.RIEU
Lunch meats, cheese,
spreads, salads and
sam;lwlches.
CALL AHEAD AND WE WILL

---------l'az's Jfarathon

HAVE IT READY!

Dnve-Thru ~Deli • Carry-Out

St. Rt. 7

.

992-7339 .

Five Points

..

BY MARk

WILLIAMS

RIO GRANDE - The
University of Rio .Grande
women's soccer program has
added another new player to
the tledi!-ling program with
the s1gmng of Rachel Eben
of Stoutsville.
Ebert, a homeschooled student, has a .ton of experience
· playing on club · teams. 'She
did not play in high school
because Amanda Clearcreek,
the district she lives in, did
not offer girls' soccer.
She playe.d in the midfield
and defender for the MOSSL
Select Team. She has also

F~dty, JUM 3
Track and Flekt
State Meet (at Jesse Owens Stadium,
Colymbus), 9:30a.m.

Saturdey, Junt 4
Trook and Fltold
State Meet (at Jesse Owens Stadium,
Columbus), 9 a.m·

Wednesday, June 1
· Mason CoUnty ,at Meigs. 6 p.m.
Thursday, June 2 ·
Meigs at Portsmouth (DH), 4 p.m.
Friday, June 3
Lancaster JV at Meigs 128, 6 p.m.
Saturday, June 4
Clendenin at Mason County, 2 p.m.

~GM
..

Sunday June 5
Marietta at Mason County, 2 p.m.

University of Rio Grande

Redwomen soccer signs Stoutsville's Rachel'Ebert
SPEC IAL TO THE ~ ENTINEL

Tournament Banball
Eastern vs. ~lsher Catholic {Lancaster
Beawrs Stadium), 5 p.m.
•

coached and ·. re'rereed for
Circleville Youth Soccer.
Ebert is fulti lling a dream
of playing soccer at the collegiate level.
''I'm very excited, this has
always been a dream of
mine," Ebert said. "I have
always dreamed of · playing
soccer, ever "since. I was
younger, it was my favorite
thing tQ do, so this is just a
great honor and l' mjust very,
very eXcited about school."
Ebert feels she is ready for
college competition despite
not having the opportunity to
play at the prep level. 'T m
very excited about. it.
though," Ebert said.
"I

played ' up gram," · Ebert said . "Just ' two days,'' Oliver said.
Despite not being able to
until
high . being able to play and get this
school
on good opportunity."
·
see Eben ' play, Oliver said
club · teams
Rio Grande head · coach that she c[Ime highly regard·
and then I. Amber Oliver thinks Ebert ed.
.
·played wher- will be a good tit fo r the
"Since she played on a club
ever L could Rcdwomen.
team, I'm sure she did play
find a place
"We' re . very happy to be· against better .competition,"
to play.'
· signing Rachel today," Oliver Oliver said. "One of the bad
She is also said. ''With her, we' re bring- things·is that we actually did
looking for- ing experience. she has not get the chance to see her.
Ebert
ward to the played since she was young play, but she was very interopportunity and she has played with some ested in coming here and
to play with Rio program, of the girls that we ' ve signed ·playing ·anc:j we had talked to
which begins varsity compe- earl ier."
a few coaches about her and
tition this fall.
Ebert is 't he fourth signing they had great things to say."
''I'm really excited about for the Rio women's soccer · Ebert plans to major in
the new program , getting program .
Visual Art Education.
started ~nd being in on the
"We're planning on bringRachel is the daughter of
very beginning of this pro- ing a couple more in rhe next Colette Ebert of Stoutsville.

Big Green Club welcomes Marshall
.

'

BY LARRY CRUM

.

.

.
~~----------~--~

LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM .

.,

RACINE - Southern High
School will hold its summer
boys basketball camp on June
13 through June I7 at Charles
W. Hayman Gymnasium:
· The camp will be held in
two sess ion s, . with kids
between grades 6-8 taking
place from 9 a.m. to II a.m.
Participants
between
grades 3-5 will start at noon
and end at 2 p.m. · ,
The cost ot the camp is $25
per camper and there ts a $15
charge for each additional ·
sibling.
, Make checks payable to
Southern Athletic ·Boosters
and registrations need to be
filled out.
Mail check . and · registrations to Southern High
School,
c/o
Richard
Stephens, 920 Elm Street,
Racine, Ohio 45771.
For more information, contact baskeiball coach Richard
Siephens at 698-6530, or·'athletic director Alan Crisp at
949-2611 extension 2103.

Eastern HS
announces date
for hoops camp

:Jleatft. 'l.lnitea
Met:fwaist Cft.urch

Continental Breakfast • 10:3o'a.m.
Worship Service· 11:00 a.m.

Prep Schedule

SouthernHS
announces date
for hoops camp

Michigan celebrates second birthday

..

.

Metgs at McArthur. .4 p.m.

classmates, including students
from around the country,
"being able to make a difference · in Ohio was definitely a
big deal," Sussman ·said
.Thursday.

The ligures showed that 65 ·
percent of eligible white voters cast ballots last year compared with 59 percent in
November 2000.
The 5.7 million registered
voters who cast ballots in
November was about 700,000
more than those who voted in
the previous highest turnout
race: the 1992 contest among
President Clinton, President
Bush's father and independent
millionaire H. Ross Perot.
But the state's turnout of 72
percent W&lt;lS sti ll lower than
that race's 77. 1 percent.
.
The, Census reported last
fall's turnout at 65 percent..
The rate was lowe.r because
the bureau analyzed all ·eligible voters, not just registered
voters.
ln tiny Gambier in central
Ohio, hundreds of Kenyon
College students waited up to
.12 hours to vote in November, .
hampered by equipment problems that left only one functioning machine.
Rob Sussman, 19, of Chevy

'

ACI- 48.36
AEP -35.43
Akzo- 40.95
Ashland Inc. - 68.35
AT&amp;T -19.06
BLI-12.55
Bob Evans- 23.45
BorgWa111er- 53.51
Cl1amplon- 4.10'
C"'rmlng Shops - 9.14
City Holding - 33.76
Col-49.26
DG -19.70
DuPont- 47.03
Federal Mogul- .51
USB- 29.45 .
Gannett - 75.02
General Electric - 36.94 .
QKNLY - 4.65 Harley Davidson - 49.63
JPM "'"" 35.94
Kroger ~ 16.84
Ltd. - 20.42 .
NSC -31.85
Oak Hill Financial ;25.03
OVB- 26.21
BBT -40.21
Peoples - 28.25
Pepsico- 57.1)1
Premier - 10.70
Rockwell - ,5 1.38

Bl

Sentinel

Friday, May 27, 2005

·whites, blacks vote in higher numbers in 2004 than.2000
.
Bv~NDREW

Da~ly

.

'

.

The

•

Reds doubled up by Pittsburgh, Page B4
Twins scalp Tribe In II innings, Page ~ ·
NBA Playoffs, Page B8
Browns' Winslow: "I humbly apologize, Page 88

2005

Federal regulator-S: Perry nuclear plant safe but could be better
· BY M.R. KROPKO

•

TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern High Schoo.! will be
holding its 7th annual Eagle
Basketball Camp between the
dates of May 31 through June
3.
The camp is open to boys
and girls who will be entering
grades 4-6. The cost is $30
for _pre-registration and $40
on the first (lay of camp.
Included in the camp cost
will be fundamental basket-.
· ball instruction, a camp tshirt and bask~tball, and mdividual awards are possible.
For more .information ·contact · Howie Caldwell. 40878
Old Seven Road, Reedsville,
OH, 25772.. •
.

POINT PLEASANT,
W.Va.
The Mason,
Gallia and Meigs Big .
Green Club thundered
into Point
Pleasant
yesterday
to
help
r a 1 s e
money for
· Marshall
.athletics.
Many of
the coaches and familiar
faces of the Thundering
Herd were on hand to eel. ebrate Marshall and raise
money . for student ath·
letes through donations
and a silent auction at the
American Legion Post
• 23.
One of the people on
hand was · head football
coach Mark Snyder. ·
"We are very excited tq
be here and raise awareness for the upcoming
season," . Snyder said.
"We need to get people
from this area to the
ganles."
Coach Snyder also
expressed optimism for
the upcoming football
season where Marshall
will move from the MidAmerican
Conference .
into Conference USA.
"We want to be competitive, put a product on the
field that the fans can be
Larry Crumlphoto
proud of," Snyder said.
New Marshall University head football coach Mark Snyder, above, addresses an audierce at
American Legion Post 23 in Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Ple1se see Herd, 84

Softball tourney
combig to Rio
RIO GRANDE - The
Vniversity of Rio Grande
:-viii play host to a 14-andunder gitls fast pitch S()ftball
tournament, June 17-19., at
Stanley Evans Field, · the
home of the Redwomen softball t~am.
: The cost is $100 per team.
: F~r additional information
. · br to register contact Rio
Grande head softball coach
David Pyles at (304) 6757942 or (740) 245-7490.

· Fu -1-740-446-3008

~DOrta

Staff

B r a d - . SOOtla Editor
17401 «&amp;-2342, Old. 33

'

.Wrmano my&lt;tailytrt&gt;une.oom

..,.., - . . , SOOtla Wrltlr
1740) «&amp;-2342, Old. 23
bWalt8rsOmydallytribur1e.com

larrt Cnorn, SOOtla Wrltlr
1304) 117$-1333, txt. 19

" ~rumOrnyddyregister.com ·

-.....--'- ,- ---

.

BY MARK

heads to regionals (oday

·Eastern·

'

'

ar,..--.ow•

LANCASTER- Eeste.n'$ Ken Amsbary slides safely into home plate during the Division tv ~final against Miller:
The E-15 won thllt pme against the Falcons by an 11-2 score. Eastern then claimed the district cr011m with wins
CMII" s,rnm. 'tltllley and l.eesbll'g Fairfield by counts of 2-1. and 1-Q, respectively. Today, the Eagles head north to
lMK tlilt'l BIIIOIS. ~til talt8 on WlnCastef FIShel' catholic in the OMsion IV regional semifinal. Fisher Catholic
act.• ad to the realotW by defeattnl
three tine~ state cf\ampion Newlllk Catholic. 13-1.
.

.

.

.

WtLUAMS

SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

RIO GRANDE The
University of Rio Grande
women's soccer program continues to add
talent
in
preparation
for Its' initial
varsity seasao of com- ·
petition this
fall. The latest signee is
Christine
Eddy
of
Greenfield
Eddy
McClain
High School.
She played offensive midtield for the Lady Tigers and ·
also spent time on the wings
and at forward. She is expected
to play in the midfield for the
Redwomen.
Eddy is thrilled to have the
chance to play collegiately at
RioGnmde.
'T m real excited, it's just the
opponunity of.a lifetime," she
said. "Going on and playing
' soccer at a whole another level
than high school."
Eddy fell in love with the
· campus last summer which
made the decision to sign with
Rio very easy.
"I came down here for tryouts over the summer and I
saw the campus and just fell in
lov~ wilh the campus," Eddy
said. "Then I look!!(! into the
education progmm and it's just
a wonderful education piD'
gmm and the coaches are just
wonderful and easy 10 get
along·with.''
Being a part of a new program was also key in Eddy
signing with the Redwoinen.
"I'm quite used to new progmms. when we moved to
Greenfield. it was a new program, r ve played with guys all
my life, I'm just excited to play
for girls' team aild just to ~el
out there and play that's aU I. m
looking for," Eddy said. "Just
to have some fun and enjoy it."
Rio Grande head coach
Amber Oliver is glad to bring
in a player the likes of Eddy.
"She brings a IO! of club
experience, high school experien~-e. she's actually playmg
righl now, which is a good
thing; · Oliver said. "She
played during the winler, she
was involved in indoor, so she
is very dedicated to ~ sport.''
Oliver's game plan is to sign
players· with ellperience. ··we
feel that as long as we keep
bringin~ experienced players
we can t do anything but fe1
better,~ Oliver said. ··we ~
going to try to build around
these experienced players, plus
·use the ellperience !hal we
gained last year.~
Eddy plans to major in Early
Childhood Education.

a

Contact Information
E-mail "-sporiSC.mydallysentinel.com'

Rio soccer
inks Eddy _

�..

Friday. May p. 2005

www.mydai lyse)l tinel .com

Friday. May 27. 2005

www.mydailysentjnel.com

The Dally Sentinel• Page 83

.,

•

•

._ If

you

have

a question or a comment, write:

NASCAR Thi s Week, C/o The Ga ston Gazette , P.O. Box

A/1 times Eastern
Nextei'Cup
Coc&amp;Cola 600 ,
5 p,m,, Sunday

'Buac:h Series

·
Carquest Auto Parts 300,
6:30 p.m.. Saturday

IIFJ(

. Trucll Series

•

MBNA200,
4:30 p.m.; June

3

· "~ NASCAR's May all-star weekend has .come and &amp;one. The
racing was hot and heavy, and
no one got h.u rt. That 's a triumph In ttself.
" If

em there

was

a

Race : Coca-Cola 600
Mar~. Ma rt in won 1t JUSt the Race : Carquest Auto ~art s Race : MBNA 200
""'
Where : Lowe's Motor Speed· . same . Martin provided an en' 300
Where: Dove(( Del.) lnterna·
1All~ital.
way, Concord, N C. (1.5 core . having previously won Where : Lowes Motor Speed· tiona I Speedway 11.0 mile ).
miles), 400 laps( 600 m11es.
the ail-star race, then Known ·way. Concord. N.C. (1.5 200 laps( miles.
.
When: Sunday, May 29
as The Winston, in 1998. miles). 200 laps/ 300 miles.
When : Fnday. June :i
last year's winner Jimmie Mart in called Lol'(e·s Motor When : Saturday. May 28
· last year's winner : Chad •.
John~mn
Speedway "t he greatest race last year's winner: Kyle Chaffin
Qualifying record: Ryan New- track. 1n the worl d, even tf Busch
Qualifying record : Carl Ed·
man, Dodge, 188.877 mph. t hey did gnnd it:' a reference Qualifying record : Kevin Har· wards , Ford , 152.892 mph,
Oct. 14. 2004 .
to work that had been done vick. Chevrolet. 184.445 June 1. 2004 .
Race record: Bobby Labonte, to make its turns smoother. mph, May 24. 2003 .
Race record: Ted Musgra.ve,
01
. Pontiac. 151 .952 mph . May Another Ford driver. Elliott
Race record : Mark Martin, Dodge, 104 .545 mph, May
28, 1995.
Sad ler. tra oled Martin across Ford, 155.799 mph, May 24. 31,2002.
'
last week : At long last. a the fl no sh li ne by . 582 of a 2003.
'
last week: Kyle Bu~ch. in a
veteran enter€d victory lane. second. The ra ce was also last race: Carl Edwards. in a Chevy. wtin the Quaker Steak
and 1t wasn't, the most l,;ke ly notable for an on-track sc uf- Fo rd, won the Fu nai 250 at &amp; Lube 200 at Lowe's Motor
of settinr,s. The Nexlel All- ·fi e between Kev in Harviok Richmond. Va.
Speedway.
Star Challenge, at Lowe's Mo- aM 'Joe Nemechek that carttlr Speedway, wasn't devised ried into the garage area ~
for veterans. but 46-yea r-ol d

~·~~

Chal/fnge Coca-Cola 600
21

race de·

vised for young hotshots , ii's the
Nextel AI~Star Challenge . Somehow, the ultimate veteran, Mark
Martin, won it. What could be a
bettet story?

·~

MARK MARTIN

NExTEL cup SERIEs No.

" The Fords of Mark Martin and
runner-up Elliott Sadler pulled
away from Chevy drive rs Brian
Vickers and Jeff Gordon at the
end. Don't expect the ' Hendrick
team to be so quiet in the poo,
where Jimmie Johnson is going
for three ln.a row.

1&gt; Martin said 600 miles isn't going to be all that different than
the 135-m i I e. three-segment
Challenge . Why? Martin said
that the races have become so
filled with crashes that long
green-flag runs are pract ically
nonexistent these days. The

'races are, in his words, a series ·
of "short squirts,· and old rules
of strate&amp;Y don't apply anymore .

1&gt; Only five drivers have fo llowed
up
victory in what now is .
known as the Challenge with an·
other win the following week in
·the Coca-Cola 600. The most re-

·a

cent was Johnson two years ago,
1&gt; Most insiders seem to th ink
Kansas City has the inside track
to
securing the s ite for
NASCAR's pi anned Hall of Fame.
The other leaders in the bidding
seem to be Atlanta and Gharlotte.
1&gt; Johnson swept the official
races at ~owe's Motor Speedway
last year. in fact, Johnson has a
knack for sweeps. He's also
done it at Dover, New Hampshire, Dariington and Pocon o
during his relatively brief career.
1&gt; The Cha llenge left some bud·
ding rivalries iJl its wake . Pay
close attention when the Chevys
of Vickers'and Mike· Bl iss are
running close to each other in
the 600. The same app lies to
Joe Nemechek and Kevin Ha r·
vick.

·
· WHO' SHOT- . AND-WH0'5-N&amp;T-

... Wllo'l hot
Jimmie
Johnson ha.s
won
the
~Ia

600

the
two

past
years.
Ma(kMartin
is corning off

JoHNsoN

a.. victory in
the latest race at Lowe 's Molof Speectway.

.,,._... not - Ryan Newman
cost himself a chance at winnii:IC 1he Challeree tor the second time by crashing late in
the race. ·- T~ Stewart inadvertently touched off a nine·

-pileup.

UAW-GII
Qwllty 500 Oct. 15

FEUD OF THE WEEK ·

v

e VIAGRA FoRo

E
R

Mike
Bliss

s
u

s

'

.

Martin's impressive
win in All-Star race
comes in final try ·

Brian
Vickers

crossed the fmish line first. seve ral .
lengths ahead of Bliss. who was slipsliding th rough the trl-oval grass.
Vickers intima ted tha t Bliss had
blocked and ~come down
hi'm.
Bliss said it was a.dirty move.

the Nextel

NASCAR

This

Challenge

at loWe's
Motor
Speedway in

Week

CONCORD, N.C.- A victory in the
Nextel All-Star Challenge was enough ·
to make respected veteran Mark Martin reconsider his retirement plans.
But only a little.
Martin, 46, said he would compete
next year in the all-star race, which
made car owner Jack Roush very
happy.
·
"The first thing I'd say," said Roush,
"is there's a crack in the armor here. I
don't hold out much hope that Mark
would reconsider his retirement
plans, but at least if we can get one
more race out of him in 2006, that'll be
better than nothing."
· The term "retirement" should be
fully examined in Martin's case. Unlike Rusty Wallace, Martin plans to
continue competing for several more
years ... but not, with ihe exception of
the Challenge and the Budweiser
Shootout, in the Nextel Cup Series.
The likelihood is that Martin will give
the Craftsman Truck Series a try, although he hasn't completely eliminat·
t!d the possibility of competing in a
wide range of short ·track races across
the country.
.
"I don't see bow it would be pilssible
to race a limited schedule on the level
that I want to race on," Martin said.
"It's just' not possible to do that, so
I've already said I can't sign up for another one of these (seasons).
· "This business is. not easy, and I
have bad to reach - last year I had
to reach deeper than I've ever
reached in my life to contend for
that ·championship- an\! I thought
there was no way to find any more,
and. I've had to reach even deeper
this year and rind some more. And
that's the real reason why I can't do

Memorial Day is~ time to honor and show our appreciation for our country's fallen
Revolution to the War in Iraq and all eras in.
wartime heroes. From theAmerican
.
between, hundreds of thousands of American men and women in ·uniform have selflessly
given their lives protecting our freedom. This
to
. Memorial Day, take a few moments
.
. reflect on the courage and patriotism of these proud Americans, and ·voice your .
appreciation for their efforts and the continued efforts of today' s dedicated troops.

on·

All-Star

NASCAR Tbls Week's Monte Dutton gives his take : "If Vickers had
sa id he dod what ot look to win , that
might've been controversial. 'but it
would've been true. T~ngto put some
blame on Bliss,.though, is absurd . The
only Pert of Bliss' car that Vickers was
ever under was his rear bumper:

Concord, N.C ..

\.

REMEMBERING OUR FALLEN VETERANS

Bliss slid ing out of control. Vickers

after winning

By MOnte Dutton

..

Vickers' win in the Nextel Open
put hom in the Al l-Star Challenge, but
it wasn 't pretty. A bump from Vickers·
Chevy sent another one driven by

gets out of
his car with a
checkered flag

'

ft~JIJ[l!l!ii!~~~~!rl .

~

.

Points system unveiled

This page proudly sponsored by these many fine businesses.

I would like to know how they fig.
ure the points system and how they ,
figure the prize money. Some guys
have early accidents and get more
money than the top-15 guys .
JollnF.CIIJChan
Wenonah, N.J.

~

Jolm ClarkfNASCAR This Week

it again next year. There's no possi- adding, "This is what I was looking
ble way I could step it .up another for, but as you know, most of what I've
notch from 2005."
looked for in this business I haven't
Martin, who bas never )YOn the Cup goiteo, I've only gotten part of it. It's
c)lampionsbip, wants to go out a win· an honor and a privilege to drive for
ner. He enters the Coca-C~Ia 600, these guys, and my biggest fear would
which is also at Lowe's Motor Speed· . be to have. less of a team or less of a
way, lOth in the points standings. Al· car to work with, ·but thanks' to Pat
ready this year he has won the Chal· ('Ii'yson, his ·crew cbieO and thanks to
lenge, an !ROC race and two Busch Jack Roush, here we are." ,
Series eventS.
"This is exactly the kind of season I
. Contact Monte Dutton
had hoped and dreamed for," .be said,
at hmdutto~aol.com
.

THE SHOE PLACE/ Ingels Electronics BROGAN WARNER
and Jewelry
LOCKER219 .
·INSURANCE
•

We've probably answered these
kinds of questions O'ter the years
more than any other. First the pOints.
The winner of each race gets 180
points. There are fiYe-point bonuses
for leading and for leading the most
laps. Second place gets 170, thi rd
165, fourth 160, and so on, but the
gradiant is reduced from five to four
at seventh place and to three from '
12th on down. At the end of the first
26 ra ces . the Chase for the Ne•tel
Cup is limited to either the top 10
drivers are all drivers within 400
points of first place. At that point the
system is reconfigured for the drivers
in the Chase, with the leader's Points
set at 5,050, second at 5.045 and on
down to 5.000 at lOth and, if necessary. beyond.
The reason that money earnings
at ind ividual races do not declin~
· based on finish is complicated.
NASCAR has programs - the most
notable being "The Winner's Circle • that reward drivers who have been
rhe most successful based on previous results. Another factor is the contingency plans that award money_

.

ou•

. 992-2635 • Middleport, OH

'

· ATTORNEYSATLAW

992-3785 • Pomeroy, OH

based on teams choosing to carry
cenain decals on their cars. If a driver's car does not carry a certain decal, it's ineligible tor the portion of the
purse allocated to the contingency
fund of that sponsor.

992-3345 •

FISHER
FUNERAL
HOME
•

o•

992-6059 • Pomeroy,OH

FRUTH
PHARMACY

The Daily
Sentinel

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP

BEFIME fHE UC'£, SToP IN AND .
VISIT
DEU
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992-6491 • · Middleport~ OH

Downing~Childs

FARMERS BANK.

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992-2155 • Pomeroy, OH

HOME NATI.ONAL . SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
iDii BANK
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992-6687 • Pomeroy, OH

CROW&amp;CROW
K&amp;C JEWELERS .

lea C1111••s
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992-5627. • Middleport, OH

&amp; Supply

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sacrific1ro ·their lives defending
·
the ideals of our country, we want t9
.
.applaud their bravery and dedication, and honor their memory.

Mike Blln
vs. Brian VIckers
· Mark Martin

"il;

992-2136 • Pomeroy, QH .
985;..3385 •
Plains, OH
446-2265 •
OH
304-773-6400 •

wv

VALLEY
LUMBER
992-6611 • Middleport, OH

•

'

�'
Friday, May 27, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 27, 200'5

www.mydailysimtinel.com

Sentinel - -l\egister
CLASS ·IFIED

Reds doubled up by Pittsburgh·
.

strikeout~ in) 1-3 innings. ·
Mackowiak gave Pittsburgh
a 2-0 tim:inning lead with a
two-run single off Cincinnati
starter Elizardo Ramirez (03). '
Felipe Lopez got a run back
in the bmtom ·of the inning
with a two-out home run. his
seventh of the season and second tirst-inning shot in two
days. He drove in another run .
with a tifth-inning sacrifice
tly. arid Joe Randa and Ryan
Freel each had an RBI in the
ninth.
Pittsburgh took a 5-1 lead in
a span of three pitches in tile
thrrd. Tike Redman and Jason

Bay hit doubles on back-Illback pitches for the frrst run .
Ward. baning behind Bay. hit
Ramirez's ne\1 pitch 1'or a
two-run homer. his ninth of
the season.
The Pirates '''aded the bases
later in the iririinu on J.tck
Wilson's double . "Humb'erto
Cota's intentional walk and
Perez's bunt single. which
forced Ramirez out of the
game. Relie\·~r Randy Keis'ler
walked Matt Lawton . to force
in Wilson with: the mning'o;
fourth run .
Ramirez lasted , 2-3
innings. the shortest of his
three starts . He ~ave up eight
hits and six runs with three
walks and one strikeout.
The Pirates added a run on
Mackowiak's bases- loaded
single in the sixth and irnother
on Lawton's solo homer off
the right-field foul pole in the
seventh.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - Shannon
Stewart 'homered with two
outs in the lith inning off
David Riske to give the
Minnesota Twins a 5-4 win
over the Cleveland Indians on
Thursday night and a split of
their tight. four-game series.
Stewart ripped a 2-2 pitch
from Riske ( 1-2) over the
wall in straightaway center
field and into the empty picnic pavilion as the Twiris won
the third straight extra-inning
game between the AL Central
rivals.
Of. the I 0 games between
Minnesota and Cleveland this
season, six have been decided
by one run.
The Indians had not gone 10
extras against the same team
in three games in a row since
Aug. 28-30. 1967, at Kansas
City.
. Jesse Crain (5-0) pitched
the lOth and Joe Nathan
worked a shakv lith for his
14th save. Nathan, who blew
his
second
save
on

..

~~r-~---------O.:..r_F_..a.,.x "llllllllo(740) 446-·3,;,00,;..8;.,__ _ _o:__r_F_a_x_To_:_(7_4~0):....:9_;9.::_2·--=.2_15=--7-..,.,..

1101

Ofp(}e 1/odr.s-

Publlc Notim in ~:~:~
Your Righllo Know, O.livond JliPIIo'
l
•
'r

PUBLIC NOTICE
Public Notice
The annual report
Form 990PF lor the Notice ol Publication
Kibble Fou~datton, Stephen D. Miles,
Bernard Y.
Fultz, Attorney at Law
Trustee to available 18 W. , Monument
for public Inspection AV8fiUO
at Bernard V. Fultz Dayton, Ohio 45402
Law Office , t'11 112 WtnHred J. King, aka
- t Second Street, Winifred Jane King,
Pomeroy,,Ohlo 45769, and II deceased, all
during regular bualhetra, dev.lsees; toganeao hours for a peri- . tees,
ea:ecutors,
od of 180 clays sub... executrtxea, admlnls·
quent to publication trators, admlnlatra·
of this notice.
· trlxee end assignees
{5) 18, 19, 20, 23, 24, ~nd. David Allen
25, 21, 27,31 {6) 1, 2, 3' Reed, aka David A.
Reed,
and
If

Public Notice
NOTICE OF LIEN
SALE
The following p e lt property Within the
lloted storage untta Ia
scheduled for aate by
Auc1ton to satisfy the
lion
ol
Hartwell

Slorage.
. .
·T he Mia will be hokl

June I, 21105 II 10:00
o.m. II the Hartwell
. Slorage ftclllly. 34055
Laurel
Cliff
Rd.,
Pomeroy, Ohio,

Unit: 14

aw-: Bonnie Smith
4 Cardinal L-.
ApLB
Athena, OH 45701
Unit: 132
..
aw- Terry Swindell
2211 Eastern Ave_,
Lot 21, Gallipollo, OH

45131

Unlt:MO

owner : Joey Bla•er
401114 Corman Rd.
Pometoy, OH 45719
Unlt:M7
Owner: T!HIY COroiOIIy
4111
S,
2'!11
llkldlaport. OH 457eO
Unlt: ·J1DO
OWner:
Sholly
Langvell

31311 IHiaeomallloc:kb* Growe
Rd. Pomeroy.
4579
(5) 20, 27

OH

Winifred Jane King,
and If deceased, all
hairs, devisees, lega-

tees,

executors,

executrixes, administrators. admlnlstratrlxes and asalgnees
and, David Allen
Reed, aka David A,
Reed,
and
If
decea. .d, all helro,

HOW IQ WRITE ·AN AD
.

devisees,

legatees,

Former Marsha il football coach Bob Pruett shares 'a laugh with the supporters at American
Legion Post 23 Thursday in Point Pleasant; W.Va .'Pruett, new Herd head coach Mark Snyder,
MU men·s·basketball coach Ron Jirsa, and others were among the guests that participated
in the MGM B1g Green Club fundralsing event ·
·

Herd
from Page Bl
A srlent aucuun was held
at the dinner where item s
&gt;such as u football signed by
Chad
Penningt0i1 ,
portable DVD pla yer and
·other various ·Marshall
items were avail;rble.
Today. members of the
MOM Big Green Club will
meet at Riverside County
Club in Mason io participate in a golf scramble.
Proceeds from the events
QO
to benefit Marshall
UniversitY
athlctks
through 'the Big Green
Scholarship Foundation.
Another person at the
dinner was former head
football coac h Bobby
Pruett , who was received

a

with a standing ovation ·from the University that
from the audiepce. Pruett were on h·a nd were
recci,·ed various gifts from Marshall inte.rim president
Mason County in'cluding a . Mike Farrell. woman's bascoach . Royc.e
Rrver Museum hat and ketball
mothman T-shirt.
Chadwick·. tight end and
"This has always been team captain of the football
my favorit e event. they team .Jell Mullins. who is
work so hard to put thi s from Gallipoli s. Ohio and
on ." Pruett said. "This is a men's basketball coach
fiin event and I wi II keep Ron Jirsa.
" ! have enjoyed this
comin g back as long as
event for two years and
they have it."
· Point Pleasant mayor Jim made allot pf friends. its
Wi Ison was ,rl so on hand at this area. what el se can l
the dinn er. He said that the say.-· Jirsa· said. ''I'm excitmrses ed about the year coming
even t typically
between
$7.000
and up and wanted to spread
$12,000 depending on the some of the· exc itement 10
the fans ."
amount of the people.
"I have been involved
All that were on hand
over 20 years. i·ts been a expressed anticipation for
good marnage \Vith our the upcoming season as the
Mid-Ohio Valley Center Thundering Herd step up to
and Marshall ," Wilson said. Conference USA starting
Among the other faces this falL

The Sheriff's Sale
Home National Bank
vs~

Whaley et.al.,
' #04CV079
Has Been
Dismissed
Help Wanted

executors, executrix-

es, admlntllrators,
admlnlsti'alrixes and
assignees
be,
required to set up any
Interest they may
have tn said premt"s
deceased, all .heirs, or be forever barred,
SUPPLY/INSTRUMENT TECHfqiClAN
'ctevtseeo, tegateea; that upon failure Of
said
Defendants
to
Pleasant
Volley Hospital is currently
•xecutors, executrix..
es, edmlnlatratars, pay cir to cause to be accepting resumes for a full·time
a'dmtntotretrlxes and peld aid jUdgement
Supply/Instrument Technician . Previous
within, three days
aoalgneea
who"
surgical or central sterile experience
8~11.. r
Ire from Ita rendition t11a1
an
Order
of
Sara
be
preferred. Knowledge of medical supplies
wUI hereby
taka notice that on· lulled to the Sheriff
ond
lerminolagy or the demonstrated ability
December 20, 2004, ol Meigs · County. · to learn quickly·.·.
'
Ohio, to appraise,
USDA
Rural
Development, filed Hs advertl" In the Dally Excellent solory, holidays, health insurance
single/family plan. denial plan , life
Complaint
In Sentinel and sell said
real estate, that the
Foreclosure
and
insurance, vocation, long-term disability and
Marshalling of Liens premlaes be sold lree
retirement!
In the' Commcin Pleas and clear ot Ill
Send resumes to .
claims,
.
liens
and
Court
of
Metge
County, Ohio, being . tntereat of ony of the
PIE'asont Yolttt, Hospila(
Case No. 04-CY·169 paMieo herein, that
(fa Human ResouKes
against John E. MUter the proceeds from the
2520 Voley Drive
and Lori A. Miller sera of said premises
Point Pleosont, WY 25550
be
·applied
to
the
.
praying for [udg•
Plaintiff's
judgement
mont In the amount of
{304)675~.
$76,181, 10 wlllt Inter- and. for such other
www.pvolley org
relief to Whlcll USDA
. eatlhoreon according
AA/EOE
to the terrno of the · Rural Development Is
nota from August ao, · entltled2004 unlit paid and . ~td defendants are
for fursdooun ofaald dlrecteCI to the comMor10190 Deed on the' plaint wherein notice
under the fair debt
following deocrlbed
cotleciiCH! procttce act
......- . of Whlcll
Ia glvon. Said de~Wt­
..lei
Defendant~.
dolnto
will take notice
John E. Millar and
LOti A- Millar 1r0 tho that il be required to
· •n•w•r
&amp;aid
OWIM1"5 of:
Complaint · on
or
Commonly known 33058 St. Rt. 33 f215. before the tat clay 'If
l'afNroy, OH 45769. July, 2005 orjudgeand fln1her delcribed ment will $ rendered
accordingly.
·In o mortgage filed
Rural
JulY 21 , 1988 ' In USDA
DevelOpment
VOlume 171 , Poge
1141•, Melgo County .Plaintiff
Stephen D Miteo
Recorder's Office,
Attorney
Mel - Defonclanto, . (4)
29, (5) 6 , 13, 20, 27,
Winifred J. King oka

.Racine Fire Dept
Chicken BBQ
Sunday, May 29th
Homemade Ice Cream and
Desserts available ·
Serving at 11 :00

FREE KIDS
FISHING DERBY
Saturday, June 11th
8 am -12 pm
at Meigs eounty Fish &amp; Game
Club on W. Shade Rd- 1 mile
West of Skinner Rd.
Info call Dave at 992-Q026
Sponsored by Meigs County
. Fish &amp; Game Association

THE
CLASSIFIED$
aren't only. 'for
buylnK or sellln•
lte~ns.

you can use

this wvldely .-..d
section to wvlsh
sol'fteone •

H•ppy Blrthd•y.
provide • Thank
You .. • n d place an
ad ...... .,. Menaory-

otl a loved one.

For naore ln.,ortnetlon. con'hlct yoUr
loc•l Ohio V•lley
PubllshlnK oHice-

&lt;8ialhpohs 1!Bnilp mrtbune
(740) 446-2342

The Daily Sentinel
(740) 992-2155

;f]:)oint ;tl)leu9unt

~register

(304) 675-1333

(6) 3

'

•t

Now you con hove borders and graphics
~ · added to your classified ads
"'
Jr1'.
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small ·
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

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

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
Sunday Display : 1:00 p.m.
Thursday for Sundays ~_a per

• All ads must be prepaid'

POUCIES : Ohio Valley Publial'ung ruentes the right to edit. rejec:l. Of cancel any ad at any time. Errors must be repor1~ on the first day al publintion 11nd
Tribune-Sentinel-Register Will be responsible tor no mOfe than the c:oat of the space occupied by the error .!lnd only the l1 rst inser1i0fl. We ahall nOt be !•able

any lou or expense that reaulta from the publication or orri laslon of an advertisement. Correction will be made in the first available ed111on. • Box number

an! always confidential. • Current rate card applies. • All real estate adver1•nments are 1ubj1K't to the Feder•l Fair HouainiJ Act ,of 1968. • This
accep1a only help wan1ed ads meeting EOE atandarda.
will not knowing!~ accept any .tvertiaing in violation of the la'OV

4

Kittens to
(304)675-6£95

To Do

1Dam.

Black lab mix mate 5 mon
old neutered house-b roken
good w1th k1ds 304·!.195·

3577

Rummage Sale June 3rd .
2005 . 9am·2pm, VFW Post
Jrd
Ave
4464.
.134

r::::::~:;::::~I L

w1th home 1mprovement
Compare our pnc~s . Free
est imate , (740)256-6878

Holdog'slcorn bread.

Free K•tens and Mama Cat
740-992-7285

Free kittens 1 All colors.
mates and females. Have
been wormed . (740)379·
9465 or (740 )37 9·9445.
Healthy ,

l1tter tramed. 8

week old kittens:

tree to

good home.

~

~n

YARD SAU:.

YARD

,

p6

So\.LE~

YARD SALE-

Pr. Pt.~-:•s.~l'IT

2 Fam11y Yard Sale Saturday
2B. Sunday 29th, 9 hll 4 R!
62 South top of Qead Man's
Fnday and Saturday. May Hill
Stove. Retngera tor,
27th-28th , 130 Amby Ln . Clothes. Toys. end Tables,
Porter, 1/2 m11e past St.RI. TV. Lots ol Mise
554 Furniture. Prec:1ous
Moments, household items Garage Sale Saturday May
28th
8-5
3 miles ·
and more.
out Sandhill Rei. ngh t on
Huge Yard Sale, Saturday, Belle Road , nght on Pebble
May 28 1686 Lincoln Pike .
Gallipolis. Lots o! baby/tod- InSide Yard Sale Frl - Man
dler g1rl clothes- like new. 5 M1l= Rd. ·Galhpolis Ferry,
Tons of toys . ~r1de on's, 8-4

GALUPUI.IS

I will clean houses or oH1ces
References ava1lable . For
the best 1n cleanl1ness call
Mal1nda at 304-531-1794 or
740-992-5805.

FotiND

Female Husky found on Fair ·

Ground Rd. Wean esday
(740)446-035o

Found yo ung male German kitchen. picnic table. etc )
Moving Sate Fri&amp;Sat 301
Shepard. Re'ally sweet &amp; Like
new
adult
Joan &amp; Capehart, . Haven
friendly (740)446·2867
clothes/shoes Went out ol Heights. Odd 's N Ends. Lots
business craft sale Alt crafts
of MISC .

IT'S
YARD SALE
TIME

BUSINI'SS
01'1'0Krr~rn·

© 2005

www.comics .com

110

HELP W&lt;-'fi'EI)

at least hall off Wooden

Gallia-Meigs
Commun1ty
ActiOn Agency is accepting
all handmade. Phone tables. Sam-?
Millstone
Road. applications' to r the following
magazine racks. bookcase . Clothes, House hold Hems, poSitions,
etc Something for everyone P1ctures. Etc
· Aa1n or Shme . Come early!!
Case Manager 1
WANTID
$8.90 ·per hour
Full time. temporary
primitives and sewn crafts,

4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
Announcement ...... ,...,................................ , 030
Antlques ............................ :.......................... 530
Apartments for Rent, .. ,.......................-....:... 440
Auction and Ftea .Market............................. 080
Auto Parts &amp;o A~cessories .. ,....................... 760
Auto Repair ................................................. 770
Autos for Sate .............................................. 710
Boats &amp;o Motors for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplies .............. ,........................ ,550
Business and Buildtngs ..'........................... 340
B~slness Opportunity ........ ,......... ,....... r...... 21 0
Business Training ..................................,, .. , t 40
Campers &amp;o Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment .......... ,, ....................... 780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care .................. :...... :....: ........ 190
ElectrlcaliRefrlgerallon ..... ,,,,,,..... ,,,... ,,,,,,,:,840
Equipment for Rent... .................................. 480
Ex cavatlng ................... ,............... : .. ,...... ,.. ,.. 830
Farm .Equlpment... .... :....... :.. .. ...................... 610,
Farms for Rent............-............... ,,, .... ,.... ,,... 430
F'-rm• for Sale ........... ..................: ....., ......... 330
For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sata ...... ,.... ,............ ,................................ 585
For Sale or Trade .........................................590·
Fruits &amp; Yegetables ........................ ,.............580
Furnished Rooms ...................-....................450
General Hautlng ...................... ,.. ,,,._............. 850
Giveaway.............., .......................................040
Happy Ads ........................................... ,........050
Hay &amp;o Graln .............................., ......... ..........640
Help Wanted .................. ,.............................. 110
Home lmprovements............................ .,....8t0
Homes for Sale ........................... ,................ 310
Hou..hold Goods ..................... -........... ,.. :.. 510
Houses for Rent.. .................:.................... ..410
In Memoriam ................................................ 020 ,
Insurance ............... ,,,, ........... :..,.......... ,,,,,,,,. 130
Lawn &amp;o Garden Equlpment........... ~ ............ 660
Llvestock ........... ,.. ,, ........................ ,,,,, .........630
Loll and Found ....................,,........-............ 060
Loll &amp;o Acreage ............................................ 350
Miscellaneous ................ ,...........,._.. ,, ........... 170
Miscellaneous Merchandlse..........,:........... 540
Mobile Home Repalr-................................... 860
Mobile Homes for RenL ........................... .42Q
. Mobile Homes for Sate ................................ 320
Money t9 Loan ....... :...................... -.............. 220
Motorcycles &amp;o 4 Wheelors .......................... 740
Mualcallnatrumento ................... :._............. 570
Personals ,•,........ ,, .....:... ,.,, ...........................005
Pets for Sate ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp;o Heatlng .................................... 820
Professional Servlces ................................. 230
Radio, TV &amp;o CB Repatr ......................-........ 160
Raat Estate Wanted .............,....................... 360
Schools lnstru'ctton..................................... 150
Seed. Plant &amp; Fertilizer ,........-.................... 650
Situation• Wanted ................... , .. ,........-....... 120
Spaee for Rent ..................................,_,.. , .. 460
Sporting Goods .. ,,,...... ,,,., ......... ,............... ,, 520
SUY'a for Sete ..........-................................... 720 ·
Trucks lor Sate ..............................: ............. 715
UpiiOistery ..................................... -............. 870
Vans For sate .................................... ,_ ........ ,730
Wanted to Buy ........,_.. , ...............-....... --...... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies .............. :... 620
Wanted To Do,_ ................ :...... -.:.. __ :............. t80
Wanted to Rent... .........................-........., ..... 470
Yard Set. Galllpolts .......,_......... -...··--·· ........ 072
, Yard Sate-Pomeroy/Middle......... ---.: ........... 074
Yard S.I•PI, Pleasant, ,,.,,_,, ...,_ ............ , 076
I

10

mRS\H,

~·
All real estate-advertising
In this newspaper is
subject to the Federal
Fair Housing Act of 1968
which makes it illegal to
advertise ··any
preference , limitatio n or
discrimination based on
race, color. religion , sex
familia\ status or national
orig in, or any mtention to
make any such
preferenee, limitation or
discrimination."

HEu• WANTED

I

mBUY

Absqlute Top Dolla r.: U S.
Case Manager 2
Si lver and Gold Cams.
$9.94 per hour
Proofsets, .G old A1ngs, U.S
Full time. temporary
Curr.ency.-M T.S Coin Shop.
151
Second
Avenue. Pos1t1ons will be responsible
Gallipolis, 740.446-2842.
for. supervision of temPora ry
youth worl&lt;ers (age 14- 18)
Good
Quality · RQlofing at ~v anous works'1tes m
Slates Will pay $2.00 per Meigs County. as well as
slate For US(j 1n Art ProJect.
mamtenance of reqt.i1 red
Call740-992·9177
protect records PoStiiOn s
w1ll be act1ve early June unt1l
I \II'! 0\ In~ I
August
approxirT.Jately 10
Sl H\ I&lt; I "'
weeks

HEU• W,OO'FJ)
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assembl e crafts.
wood items .
Materials provided .
To $480Jwl&lt;. .
Free Information pkg . 24 hr

Qualifications: Age 18 or
older. high sChool diploma or
GED. val1d dr1vers license.
clear back ground oheck and
drug test. prior e)(perience
w1th youth preferred.
App'tications a11ailable at;

801·428·4649

Meigs One Stop .. MCDJFS.
175 Race Street , Middleport
An Excellent way to earn
GMCAA,
1369
Powell
money The New Avon .
Street, Middleport
Call Manlyn 304·882·2645
GMCAA. 8010 North State
AVON ! All Areas I To Buy or Route
Chesh1re
Sell. Shirley Spears. 304· GMCAA, 859 Th1rd Ave
675 -1429
·Gallipolis
.
Gallia One Sfop. GCOJFS.
Doctor's
Office
Pomt 848 Third Avenue. Gallipolis
Pleasant area. recn;iting to

z.

f1U need for Ottice managemen!, codi ng/billing. book·
keep1ng . Relevant experi ence requ1r_ed . Please send •
resume/qualifications. references, FIT or PIT preference, and des1red s·alary
ran~;Je to P.O. Box 275 . Pam\
Pleasant, WV 25550
Domino's now Hiring:
Sate Ori\iers ·
and Managem ent
All Locations.
..._ Apply m person , .

t304)675·5858
(7 40)446-4040

.

Due to recent changes 1n
co\/Eirage. area ~Med1 Home
Health Agency is seeking a
highly motivated. lnd£tpencl·
ent • !uti-time Ae1,1 1Siered
Nurse to managel!;j.ervtce
clieqts out ol our Gallipolis
office. Must be liCensed lfl
both OhiO and West V1rginia.
We offer a compet1i'ive
salary. benefitS package and
401 K E b.E Please send
resume to 352 Second Ave .
Gallipohi. OH 45631 or can
t -800-481-6334.
Attn.
Audrey Farley, RN

1979 Ho mette 12x50
2
Bedroom t Batn gas. self
cont-a~r cond1t .or er
W 1t1
rent for $265 00 a mont h or
~ell for $3.495 00. 740-385·
4019

1982 C layton 14x 70 newly
remodeled excellent condl·
uon
F1re p1ace bu1tdmg.
te'lce . porch e,_ apphan ces
mclud ed . S8 495 Needs
moved
· (740&gt;256-8816
(740)339·3709
1993 Holly Par~ rnCJ blle
. home 2 bedroom-2 ful l oath .
tnQ. range ,was her &amp; dryer.
cent ral au. large cavereo
deck
&amp;
ou t
bu 191ng
(740 ) 4~1·01 2 1

1999 Oakw ood 16x75 3
bedroom 2 bath underpmn1ng
and
fron t
dec k
E~~: ceHen!
cond1!10n
St9.5DO Needs moved Cal l
(740)446-6565 at te· 5pm

200 Clay)on 14:.:70 3 oed·
fOO!'"l

2

~ shm~led

ba th

centra

eur

rool. vrnyl s1d1 ng.

s1ttrng on :~·.c aCies o'
gr our-d r:ucc olace $35.000
f1rm (7401742-4012
2003 1 5~~:80 Narr s 3 bedroom 2 bat'l all appl ances
Call (7401367·0402 leave
mesE.age

Managers Pos1t1on

Yard Sale Sat. May 28

't

"""P•po•l

"(ltliL F. IIn&gt;tK~

17 40)992-7321

I w1U care for your loved one
in my home·. Ca ll (740)388 0118

r"--------_.!·
lnrrMD

Hmm;
fURSAI.F:

Carpente f Wo rK 25 yrs . ex.p .
Attention!
Decks. block. concr'ete. new Local company 'o11er1ng -No
bUi lding from ground up DOWN PAYMENT
pro(304)675-5987
grams tor you to buy your
home 1nstead ol renting
Dozer for H ire (30 4)895· · 100°o flnancmg
3571 or (304)895-3638
· Less than perfect cred1t
accepted
Gentles Contruct1on- Home
Improvement.
30 years · Payment could oe the
same as rent
expenence. Customer s&lt;lll·
Locators.
faCtion guareneed. Anyting Mortgage

Large Cheerleader YARD
SALE at South Gallia H1gh
School. Monday 5130/ 05

Giveaway

10

W\IVIW

lwright@ic.net

·..
t

""'

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

CLASSIFIED INDEX

DISMISSED

u-.

'

"

Or Fax To (304) 675·5234

Oearlliire.f'

• Start Your Ads Wlth A Keyword • InClude Complete
Description • Indude A Price • A"oid Abbreviations
• Include Phone. Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run' 7 Days

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response ...

Larty Crumlphoto

. Announcements

Help Wanted

Word Ads

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

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Announcements

.,'Jf!Y.• '

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS
AD NOW ONLINE
..
To Place
~ribune
Register
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••

...Twins scalp ·(]eveland in 11 innings
Wednesday night. gave up ~· crui sed into the se1'enth with
two-out walk and single a -1-1 lead. but had It all fall
before getting Jody Gerut to apart in the span of four bat- ·
fl y to right. ·
ters as the Indi ans hit three
Minnesota's bullpen, which straig ht doubles and a tr:iple
came in with a 2.59 ERA. to tie it.
sh ut out Cleveland over the
Alex Cora led otl with ally
ftnal five innings on four hits . . ball to the gap in left-center
Gerut had three hits for 'that dropped in between outCleveland, which dropped to. fielders SteWart and Torii
7-13 in one-run games.
Hunter. who stared at ea.:h
Indians th ird baseman other waiting for the other to
Aaron Boone made two field- take charge.
ing errors. failed to bunt a
Ronni e Belliard followed
runner over in the eighth and with an RBI double. and
popped out on the first pitch Grady Sizemore blonped a
with a runner on in the .!Oth. two-base hit· to make it 4-.1.
Cleveland's C.C. Sabathia, Casey Blake then hit a shot to
who before the season said he right-center that Hunter nearhated the Twins. still can't ly grabbed after a long run
beat them. The left-hander but had the ball bounce off
pitched well enough to win his glo ve. allowing ·Sizemore ·
but was hun by five walks, to score and ·chase Radke.
the most painful one with two
The Tv. ins wiggled nut of
outs to Mike Redmond in the the inning with no more dam"
ninth . ·
age as J.C. Romero struck nut
That one cost Sabathia a two and right fie lder Jacque
chance io finish. as he gave Jones made a diving catch on
up an infield single to pinch- Gerut's flare .
·
hitter Terry Tiffee and left
Radke g&lt;we up ,four runs
after throwing 118 pitches. and 12 hit s in six-plu s
Sabathia allowed four runs innings. In his previous start
and six hits in 8 2-3 innings. against Cleveland. he threw a
Twins starter Brad Radke, three-hit shutout.

'I

'

.

8Y 'ToM WITHERS

.~.

~ribune -

Major LEaguE Baseball

CINCINNATI I(A P) Oliver Perez con inued his
success against the Cincinnati
Reds and" got plenty of suppon from a balanced offense.
leading the Pittsburgh Pirates
to an 8--1 victory Thursday
night thaf snapped a four,game losing streak.
Daryle Ward and Matt
Lawton hit home run~ and
Rob Ma.ckowrak · drove rn
three runs as the Pirales· won
tor the seventh Hme. rn therr
last 10 games m Cr~cmnan
and snapped the Reds threegame winning streak. Eight of
Pittsburgh 's nine staners had
at least one hit apiece by the
sixth inning. including two by
Perez .
Perez (3-4) has posted
' baci&lt;-to-backwins for the first
time this season, and he is 5-0
in seven starts against the
Reds dating to.last season. He
allowed three hits and two
runs with live walks and eight

The Daily Sentinel • Page 65

A local Athens electriCal diS·
tnbutor IS look1ng tor an 1nd1vtdual who can superv1Se
and develop others. prov1de
excepti onal customer servICe and b~" able to parllc1·
pate in all aspects of r1:1nnmg
a bus1ness Previous 1111ec1r1 ·
cal sales/managers r;!)(perlence a plus.
Send
resume
to
HA
Department PO Box 6668
Hunt1 ng ton WV 25773.

94 Clayton Noms 1&lt;1 .70
tota l eleC: IIIC. 28R. 2BA
vmyl sk1rtmg 2 decl&lt;s helilt
pump.
$1 a 000
080
17 ~ 0) 388-8739 .

99 Holly Pa rk Glenmoor 3
BA .· 2 bath , v1nyl shmgle
R10 Grand e al ready set up
or can be "TlOved 51 1 900

13041633-6536

)I( Mason County An1ma
eltare
Leagu
Employment Opportun1t1es·
Part T1me Dog Warden
Pos11ion open tor a dog war
en. Must like an 1mals,
ave good drh11ng record.
n be a'o'ailaole to war

SAVE SAVE-SAVE
Stock models at old pnces
2005 mod els arr1v1ng Now
Cci le s
Mob1le
Homes
15266 U S 50 Eas t Athe ns
Oh iO 4570i , (740)592-1972
kWhe re You Get ' Your
Money 's Worth ~

art T1me Kennel .employ
es · Po511ions open· lor
age cleaners Must lov
n1mals and w1tlmg to wor
orne weekends . Out ie
nclude cleanmg kennels.
athmg , an1mals
an
nswenng phones
olunteer Positions neede .
Fund ra1smg Cha1rperso
r a non prof1l an1mal shel
er. grounds people. Iron
sl&lt; workers. dog walkers.
P,lease send resume t
CAWL
c/o
Sail
am mack 6120 Hacke
HarriSburg ,
P
No phone calls t
halter Please.

i

I'ROFESSJOl\.U

·. 1~~,.v;:~~"C:.;:g· e~b~g·

Vetennary Ass1stant need- L~---Sii!LR:;:
' ~\~'t,oc:R'&gt;Iii-.J.
ed Experience preferred .
but will tra1n PT/FT. some
TURNED DOWN ON
weekends
reQuired
SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI?
Mimmu m
wage .
Send
No Fee Unless We Winl
resume to French Town
1 . 688 . 582 .334 5
Vetennary CliniC, 360 SA
160. Gallipolis . Or fax -;;;:::::;:::::::::;::;

(740)446-4101 .

Applications
must
be
rece 1ved at GMCAA. 8010 McClure's Restaurant now
No rth SR7 , Chesh i re by h1nng all locations full or
4pm Tuesday May 31 . 2005. part-t1me , p1ck up application at locatiOn &amp; bnng back
Equal Opportunity Employer between
1,0·00am
&amp;
11:OOam , Monday
thr u
Help - wanted- Da rst Adult Saturday.
Group Home." (740")992- - - - - - - , - - -- 5023
'Millie's Aes'taurant now
accepting application for all
WANTEO: pos it'10ns . 39239 Bradbury
HELP
Salesperson. An amb1!JOUS Ad .. Middleport. Qh
person can ear.n up to - - - - - ' - - - - $500/wk Cal i for deta1ls Overbrook Center IS currentIQCally at 304 -675-5100 or ly accept1hg applications for
out-of-town at 1-666-902- LPN 's ALL SHIFTS!! If you
are Interested, please come
511)0.
m and 1111 out an appllcahon
Home Health Agency h1r1ng
at
333
Page - .S treet,
LPN/AN tor Jackson area
Middleport. Oh EOE
Please send reSume to P.O.
Bo)( 707 . G3ttlpOhs. OH
45631 .

·riO

Hmru;

Tratle r and lot 14:-: 70 3 J
acre. 1 br .. cent_ a1r ha nd1·
cap ace carport , ou t ouild1ng. n1ce horl']e or rental
property.
36058
Rock
Sprmgs
Ad
Po mer oy.
New 3 BOt. 2 Ba th Home (740)992·2762
Only 198/mo. Includes ale
. Lms&amp;
delivery and Set up 740-

c3:..85:_-:..99_4_8_ _ _ __

Make soo~ Selling Avon Call
(740\446-3358 .

or fax 304-675-6553

Med• Home Care has an
opening for a LPN Fax your
resume to (740)441-1071 or
contact John Kea rns at

Responsible. E)(pene nc ed
Ch1ld Care ne-eded 1n my
Home lor two G1rts ·ages 6
and 7. References Reqwed

7234.•

(740)4A6·3e80.

(304)675·6082

ACREA(;E

e

E. ..
,-n·JJ

Hol'St::s

'

I

r

wanted· B illing person tor L--..:•~UR,:.ii;S;;A;;I.F;;:_.,J New 3 BA 2 Bath Secnonal
1 acre lot w.-pool and large
physiCian oH1ce Part t1me.
Home
On ly , 249fmo
Qarage·. loc ate d at 96
Must have reilable trans~ $59,000. New Haven 2,800 Includes AIC . delivery &amp;
Herison
Rd..
Add 1so n
por1ation and medical office sq. ft Log Cabin as is. w/3-5 setup. 740-385-7671
530 000 ftrm no land concodmg and bill 1ng e)(per1- acres. Call M1ke (513)3 t 4- New 3 BR Ho me OnlY tracts \9:3,7\828-1528
ence- compUter and typmg 2754
189/ m·o. Includes ale. del1v·
ery and set up. 740-385· 2--8 Acrl!l Parcel Paved
skills a must. Benefits availro~d · f ro nt Tuppers Pla1ns
able .send resume to CLA 108 Legion Terrace . ranch· 43 7
Box 569. cJo Gallipolis rype hOuse nas a sunroom
water Letart twp
·Metgs
Tribune . P.O. Bo)l 469. w1th a beaul1ful v1ew ol nver No Down Payment IS possi- Exc ·Huntmg SS.OOO 00 pe r
Gallipohs. QH 45631
.. This 2 bedroom home tea- ble on this beautiful 3 bed- ac re 740 _247 _2475
tures hardwood floors. c:e11- room . 2 bc;~th home 2 car ;;,;,;;...;.;,:.:.;;..;;;.;.,;;,._ _
150
ScHooLs
1ng tans. gas fireplace and garage Detc l&lt; overlook in g
REAl. ·~ IAn:
1.
INo..TitUCilON ·
breakfast nook . Three yr. old beautiful v1ew Fl\"e Pomts
\\~.\.
roof . close to business sec· area {740)992·6667
l.o---iioiiriioiiirio-_.1
Gallipolis Career College liOn $47.500. (7 4 01 992 · Owner relocat1ng. o~o down 1 Buy Homes- Local,pe rson
(Careers C lose' To Home)
5502
Must see th 1S Immac ulate buys homes Conhdent1al
Call Today! 740- 446·4367
3 bed roOm. 1 bath house m 2000 sq ft. hOme w1th Ou1ck cash ·J1m . 740-9921-BD0-21 4·0452
town . fenced back yard. remodeled kitche n, ou1lt-ms 630CI No c alls after 9
www .gaiiJpolisauMrc~ com
HUGE
2 car gafage. Great neigh borhood clOse
.t.ttr!W!t!Jd Member Acc ted' hrl9
to town Call (740)446-8325
560,000.
(740)446-3136
Couool lor lnOelltii'IOOrll ColleQI!S
or VISit www ORVB corr
and Schools 127·18
3 Bedroom. 1 Bath , Large Code 4505 Prtced to sell at ~10
Fenced Lot. Lots of Storage, $132,500
&gt;OR Rrsr
A m1les out
Sandhil l
Ra nch Bnck Home 38r 1Sa
(304)675-2507
2 / Car-Ga ra ge
1 BR Cottage m Gallipolis
3-Bedroom.
1-Bath Base meni/Sunroom
All DepoSit
&amp;
reference
Remodeled.· Full Baseme nt. Appl1 arlces included By req u1red No pets Call aner
Apphances
u'lcluded . Appointment (304)882·2230 4p m 17 40 ]446-2468
Ou tOVIldmg &amp; 24FT Pool. or ( 304 )533-6636
2 BDR . 2 1 2 baths. 2 car
188 Park Dt1ve (304]675·
Ready to move 1n 3 BR garage· lurn1snect . close to
7460
Home 1n courrtry semng only Holze r hosp1t al t 7'40) 441 4 bedroom. IIVIOQ room. din- 198t mo. w1th 10"o down 031 0
Ing room. k1tchen. 2 bath· 740-3li5-4367
2 toedroom 1601 Graham
room house. Heat oomps
~lorm F How_
,
Sc ... ~.:=' RJ No pets rent
full s•ze basement large
lliR S\lf
,3 .. .)Q .... C "
5200 depOSit
storage butldin g attached
-JO•J45-i!05u
garage. PriCed at shOv.rng
Ph on e (304)675 -4208 lilt 200CI
Fleetw ooo
rrom
2 bedroom Muse no pets.
'k1tchBn, model w1th s~artlng
c:hatr S20D
referenc e reqwred start1ng
and central a~r. W1ll del tver
at S350 mOF1It'i Call Jay
7 Homes under $14000
Very clean 1-800·837 ·3238
i.740)4J1 -D1t.O
Will deli11er. 740·385-436 7

filii

E•cellent Income Nauonal
Cap1ta l Fund1n!) Group noW
hnmg
Courthouse
Researche rs . W ill .train to
work hom home on your
computer . No exper1ence
necessary. Call t-8()()-4ot()·

(~~

with Carport. some App,
c9ntral HeaVAC $65.000 Or
Best.Offer
(304)6757783/leave-message.

.

°

�"-··-··t.~.::u.~.·E.~S.,_.,~ ~.,r__~.".~••R•EN. .EN1···..~.·. ,~1 . t
10

111

2 BR, 3 m1les trom HMC,
: $450 mo d8pos1t &amp; ref
' reQwed No pets Cal l
: (740) 446-2651

I ..,,, ,\

Pomeroy 2 or 3 ·br , Naylor lab puppies- $225 Vet
Run , w/d hook-up, s/r. HUD, checked- -1 st shots &amp;
leave message (740 )992- wormed
Siamese
Himalayan killens- $75 .
61l86

(7 40)446·1 062.
3
BR
Ranch
Home
• w1anacned Garage 1n, C amp
• ,Conley area of Pt
Large
•tenced yard 111 great ne1gh~ borhood S675 mth. Depo$11
"''l nd References re q ~1r,ed
:Call 1·304-53 H197 or 1·
·304·273-t112

Taking AppliCatio ns for
Tracy Apartmen ts. 3317
Franklin
Ave
S1ngle
Beclroom.
t.:Jpsta1rs
(304) 675;2288 Reference
Required

Tara
Townllouse
Apartments , Very Spac16us.
2 Bedrooms C1 A, 1 112
Attention!
Bath.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby·
Local company otfer~ ng "NO
DOWN PAYMENT" pro· Pool PallO. Star t $385/Mo
grams lor you to buy your No Pets. Lease Plus
Secur1ty Deposit Requ1red.
' home rnstead of renting.
(740)446-348 t
• 1 oqoo frnancrng

· Less than perfect credrt
accepted
· . Payment could be. !lie
same as rent
· M ~ rtgage
Loc ators ..
(740'1992:732 1

Brano New 2 Bedroom
Hb use m town $4751mo.
C1A. WashertDrYBr' Hook-up.
Stove/Refnge rator Included .
(V40)441-0 194 or (740)4411184
In town locatran' 1-2 BR
Ranch home. mce .,.ard. AC .
Refer ences
requrred .
• $450/mO rent &amp; S450 Sec.

M1n1ature Pinchers 1 male,
black/1an, tails docked, dewclaws removed , wo rmed .
Ready to go S30Q each
(7 40)38S-Bt 24
Plttbull puppies 6w~ s old,
1st shots and wormed. 1
male. 3 fema la. 5100 each

(740)446·0872.

4900
SPACE

&gt;UK R ENT

• Oep. You pay all utilrtres . . For Le ase: Office or retail
· 6115 .
Call
•
spaces in \lery good .condi• 1?4014 4~-3644 '
Iron . Downtown Gallipolrs.
• Small 2 bed 1oom house App.ro~ t600 sq. 11. each. '1
:$475 mo11th . 1 m1 le• from o.r 2 bathS Lease' price
· ; town . Call (740)441-0 194 or negotiable to enco urag e
new
business.
Call
i. (.7 40)441-1 184 .
(740)446-4425 or (740)446! SpaCIOUS 380. 2BA , OR . 3936.
• t 5K22 LR. naa tpump_ 20m1n
\II IH II\ \Ill"' I
• Available

·-------------------

(, \III II '

I

Reg .. Rottweiler pupp1es for
sale. Mother &amp; lather ·on
prerr11ses. Call (740)388·
9665.

Phillip
Alder

TRAILBLAZER

u._....:., 8-.~ \l - 1'.~11

1977 MGB Convert1ble lor
resloratipn with · another
complete MGB lor parts
St ,OOO. (740)44 1-0542 or

W arrant, · Sales &amp;
. ,H20 Emot .\ l ain St. •

198 1 01ds 98 , 4dr, Runs
Goa&lt;;!. (304)67 5· 1264

Call U.l&gt;. Const.
for all JOUr honu·
re J)Uir m·ed ~. roo li n~.

1985 Trans Am , Viper blue,
5.0, H,O.. Ssp. Only 55.000
m1tes. w1th T-ta:ps . Ca ll
(740)446 -0350.

sidine·. udd -nn s.
l'l'nm dl'lin ~ t•l c.,
l'rct• t•sl iu mlcs
(7~0)

740-992· 7599

Auto &amp; Truck

991·1979

Repair

lea\·e mt.•ssa •t'

NEA Crossword Puzzle

992-6215 ·wn3£'125

:&amp;

NOMA
WHAT YOII10'1
STYlf...

~~

(

· Summ

.

iC!JJ

H.\l'

· ... THf

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

---------------

sso

~

I

Concrete Removal
and Replacem!!nt

AU Types Of

• At-~·l'Jlt i nJ,: Nc"
\ lt•n1ln•rs
tl t.·~ n· ~ IJu t ~·

l 'um mcn:ia l
ElJUiJmll'nt
• \\'u r km ll on \IIUr own

hu u~ 2~!7
Scr iuu s lnq uil"ies O nh·
7-fU .')IJl. tJ'.I ~$
.

1-'rl' t'

E.~ tinmlt·~

• Tate the PAIN

clwo.\'l' a lasting

tribllle w your lo~·nJ
mre 's memory.

out of PAINTING!
Let me do 1l for youl

LINDA'S PAINTING
11401 985-4180

COI\11'\N\'
.19728 SRI -U
p,,m~,·nn. ,OI\

7-tll-991-9922

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

4wd 11 nar warranh' l

,\:Il l flrl lllL
,l [ljll 'II\ I JllL'Ilh ,li !IlL
1.1 llilll'' LUil\L'IliL'LL•'
'
.
f1 Lllll

;:--...7/

260 :\ lui herr.'· -\ n•.
Pomero.'
Snm f Grt&gt;ul Lno· Prices

ami Smiling
Paces.

NOPE !! YOU'VE
SEEN WHAT I
DRIVE !!

VANITY

!

i! 1:1--.....-....~.~

!

IL_
l

No"'' ope11

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
7-10·992·5776
Flowds &amp; Vcgr:tab1c=
plan ts Fl at S6.95

1
I

DOC

•

OH·

~~~D-~'~--~

; THE BORN LO!?ER

10·· Hang ing Ba~ ket s­
~0 Va r. $5 .'J5- $7.95
Pcrt.: uni ab 6'-- I "

p-

I&gt;.. NE.\-1 ~\\.)\)'( C.LI&gt;-Ir&lt;\:'l II'
S\1&gt;-.'(-(&gt;..\· ~(. MOMS
'rJUf. PI&gt;-\ D...

S2 .lJ5 - $5 .lJj
Poucd Pl arus .f'- J 2"

P'FOR W~-\~&gt;..1 N..L \\-i(.\~ WO~
W/&gt;6 WC)I&lt;:.Til., 1\-\l:.'('t&gt;

~

~ $ 130,000 "'(W.!

$1.25 . $11.95

1\ lon-t-'ri.
llam to .1pm

l :!" Ferns S10.95

PH: 992·4183

Closed Sunda '

Open Daily 9 -5:

~

High and Dry

Storage
'I'll
Construction
Im provement

N.:~d:-.

• Sidin.~ • Window~

• DcL· J:~ • Porclu.~~

• Cerami.: Tile &amp;
Hunl wuod Fluorin~
•

G:.tnl~(:~

Pomero y, Ohio

-

• Rtlotn Add .·. Rt)nfint:
• K 1td1t' l l~ • ~ .t th .. -

"No Joh l i1 Smu t! "
Racine. OH
740·2~7-2 16 1 or

740-4 16'. J50H ·
1-' y r~ Exrx·riL'JH.:L"
pd 1 mo

HOWARDl.
WRITESfl S SONS
ROOFING
All type-. (l f

roofin g:

MANlEY'S
SElF STORAGE
· 97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

10x10xl0x20 '
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport' s only
5~11-Storage"

Shingle. ~li.Lt Mct al NC\\ or R.:pair
S e :.tmle~s

Guner-

Down -.pOtlt - S i J~ng

· •frel Eslimltlh

949-1405

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRICDIII
· New Homes
· • Garages

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GEI\IERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

IMPORTS
Athens

• Complele
Remodeling

140-992-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

work

T HERE ARE
t&gt;' F FERENCE S! r
MEAN , MRS . GODFREY
IS A. S I XTH GRADE

MRS. Goi&gt;I"JtEY!

•

33795 Hiland Road

MANY

i'EC.A..IJSE THIS - 11RS
GCJS.lEY " C H.A.RACTER IS
SO C.L8'R.LY lYooS ED ON

Hupp

10x30 ·
Janel Jeffers

A ft Your Hum c

T EAC-H E R ~

tc

.Whaley's Auto

C ANCER (Ju~ 2 1 -.Juty 22)- Do not
bloCk yoursetf from ach~ing success today beCause or ideas or con-""
cepts vou cltng to that have Pf&lt;Wen to
be u nproductM:t. Being opened to a

PEANUTS

revised outk&gt;qk can bring you smia&amp;s.

11M DEI'RES5EO BECAuSE I
DON'T ~T TO 60 TO

SIA'MIER ~ TillS YEAR ..

M·Fri 8:30-5:00

'' SIIE 1.\11\5 PReV TO
TilE BROODil\16

BIWU6HT

ON~

ISIIOULD61VE
IIER. A CALL ..

IRREVOCABLE
PARTIN6S~

Sat. S:30-Noon
Sun . Closed

•.-u• ca. Ra'd m!!!

LEO (.kJty 23-Aug. 22)- A f rustrating
condition where your work or career
is concerned may begin to u~ a
favOrable 1 change starting l oday.
Continue to hang in there, because
bett&amp;f times are ahead .
VI RGO (Aug . 23-Sept: . 22~ ~ T,Y to
share time today with a friend whet'e
the relationshiP has been sagt,¥.g
&amp;ately. Events witl transpire .w rnch wiH
help renew your bond. and strengthen
your fuetings tor one· another.
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct .. 23) ~ This
rrMght be an kteal day I O go shoppii 1Q

so.- wOe--ticket

tor

the home.
Thing&amp; lhat you acquire today witt
becutll8 ceotletpieces that you won't
tire "' readity: they-. bring ')IOU lots of

BUCKEYE Samtalioa

items

joy.
SCORPK&gt; (Ocl. 24-NcN_ 22) ~ Ideas
01 eausee abOut wtwcn you akeady
te8l atrongty are lilcefy to take on 6'Vefl
greatef' inlensity today. With your new
enthuldasm and V'&amp;O'e, aupportefs
will be ' ~ drBwn ID your pet prt:Jt,

SEPTIC TANK PI/MPfNG 195.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TODAY
992·3251 OR 591·8757

cocktail

beach

DOWN

24 Tire

request s

support .

1 - ·choy
2 Two-color
cookie
3 Wltd pig
4 Blockbuster
5 Gab
6 Squall
7: Tiny
amounts

8 File
9 Highway
-cruiser

46 Gourmet
cheese
48 Feed
· lhe kitty
49 Arrests
50 Hindu

25 Rhea

cousin
27 Snakes
lack them
29 Fresh

31

Vlve

le -l

. teacher

3 2 Casl a vote .54 Colo.
33 Bulterlly
neighbor
catcher

35 Aloud
37 Gives wofk

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~ Cichef ayol1;19falns ¥1: created h"om ql.rOiaiiOnS by!~ peoole. pa.stll'ld pt!Sefll.
Eacfllfllel 11'1 the opt)ef sw.:rs lor anc1tlef

• Today's clue· G equ.ols J

" Z' H
K

K

RCBKRBD

SZTTBDBMR

L R KDL
NFHB

K DB

K N RFD .

WDBBS

HFAZB

NKMS I .

BI B

ZR ' L

RC BI

Q. F . •

KMS

J .

LKHPBJ

GKNVLFM

~_:'_.'_S..::.....;;@_!~~,_:{L£1fS•

_TliA_
..

;mportant goals may be revvaled to
you.

Parts

creepy
41 Printemps
18 So long!
month
22 Well
42 Misgiving·
enough
43 Take the
2 3 Waler·
lid off
power org. 45 Tearful
Chilmpagne

(C) 2005 by NEA. Inc. "27

GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) ~ L1sten
attentively when you a re engaged In
conversations l oday wi lh pe rsons
whose ideas . you admire grea tly.
Fresh thoughts on ways to reach

SeeBrenl or Brian Whaley

60 Lie on the

.......

o~-

••••
Uat

o1""'

fout Jaanl:l.d wards b.bo "'f.... ,.., .....,.. ~

SOFUNI

happen . Greater bonds .w ill be established to the envy of everyone.

•

aud~-l.fler .lhrl&lt;el Parts

20 Even so ·

13

- Kristin Chenoweth

change regard ing Important busi ness, soc:lal or poisonal relaUon&lt;&gt;.hips.
l h" year ahead mtghl be When it' ll

5-0&lt; IAL STUDIES .,

•

St. Rt.68 1 Darwin. O H
740-992·70 13 or 740-992·5553
Re.&lt;toc~''!l La le Jlodel

59 Feminine
nouo1 ending

·12 Window sill 40 A bil

. PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'I've sung lor bolh Bill Clintoo and George W.
Bush ... when lhe commander in chief calls. you show up!" '

Saturd8Y, May 28, 2005
By Bernice Bede Osol
If yo u're looking tor a favo rable

~

i::j

I.~ I I 1· U
I IURI' IO Dl ~
NTE

~~~
H

s.

.

.

•

.

.

I've no ticed that ma ny

~

people go throug h life running from somelhing t h ai is

r-,r.~_,ti,G"'Ir.~-;TI,....:E::.,I~~; ~~:.- :~ '1::

L -.L._.1.-.J.L....J.L-..J...--1.

•

~~~~ES

~~f~

.

-

b y fiiJ.no in

-

r+.

Q . . .od

-.m1111 words

.... , _ .,...... 3 bolo..

r r r r r r I' I' 1

II IIII I II

SCI&amp;M-UIS ANSWIIS
.
.

•• u - n

.iurtJJ«.· Ounce- Arrvi ·Cosmos · COMMON
A lriend ot nine doesn1 make_., sound decisions.
llhinl&lt; the best sense man can use is COMMON sense.
ARLO&amp; JANIS

eeL

SAGrr{ARlUS (Nov 23-0ec. 21) 'rour ..-..er tcdio 108 of sell-wor1h ~
be heightened and strengtheoed
today and gNoe you impetus; llo strivE~'

"" ......-. ....... Set
yow !ligtds and
as high as _y ou'd liklt .

·Affordable Ra tes
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

' CAPRKX&gt;RN . (Dec. 22-.Jan _ 19) Tho&amp;e nobler q•aJiibes you possesS
wil be ~ loday and win
you new adrnfrabon from friends.
Wha1 )'UU g;.,e of ~ to them.
lh6ty. n u..n. will gNe ~ bade. in

---

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740-742·2293
' leave a message

p an

AQuARIUS

'Wtl8fl iC

20-Feb.

c:omes "" your-

19)

eatTWIQIS

-

of'

inc:c:Jma, you don't ha¥8 llo be ~
wilh h 11t.z11UB: quo. Today c;::urldbuo IS
~ be p-=
._ tDf you ID 1MB SIBp5

Hill's Self
Storage

11'\M'W ~ improve your IDr in - ·
PISCES ' (Feb. 20-Mard'l 20~ ~ A
hope - - -;ou'¥8 ......, dose llo )'OUf'
heart. !:hal you 1houghtt was total'y out
of )'VIM' . r-n. be ~ ..W.
niNll IIBIOday. [)QI:t'l: tal your opcirnism
. ..,...lor
ARIES ( Man:h 21-April 19) - '.Just
t
. . an
.as too tough
'tcw ·aiUCf.., 1o .:hiewe dooel5n't mean
..... )'OU' r:e
l6d 10 tail -- Wll9ll.
Keep . . tMn. blillelte in ~ and
you can •
1 ..rwn ww oew per-

NOmiPDIIGE

Upper River Road • Calli~lis
7411-44~0842 • 949-1155 Evenings

29670 Bashan Road
'

In today's deaf, there are two feas.ible
game contracts. So. how. would you plan
the play in both· four spades and l ive
clubs? Wes1 cashes th e diamond ace and
' continues with the diamond king.
North's redouble shews 10-pfus points.
(Over West's double, a two-heart
response would be nonforcing.) Since
South has opentng values, WEist enough
to double, an d North su~icient to redou·
ble, East is known by even the janitor to
be weak. But since East has a definite
preference among the three unbid suits, ·
he should express it (His two-diamondb.id does no t promise points.) After that ,
th e auc;tlon is natural except Norltl 's
three-diamond cUe"bid, which asks Soutt1
to bi d three no-trump if he ha's. -a diamond
stopper.
Assuming West ha s a normal takeout
double with at feast three cards in each
unbid 'suit , in five clubs. you ruff the second diamond, play a club to dummy's
king. and return a club to your ace.
(Without West's double, you would
finesse your ja~; and you could do that
here.) You now .concede a truinp to West
and c;:taim
In lour spades. you shoold establish your
side suit lirSt. So. ruff the second dia·
mend , play a club to durf!my's king, a dub
to your ace. and a third club. When West
continues w;ith a third diamond . you could
trum~ . but it is safer 10 discard a heart or
club. Then , you can ruff anolher diamond
with dummy's spad e queerl, draw trumps,
and caSh the clubs. ·

~~!'?!,

(740) 992-5232

Rocky '.'RJ~' ·

caller

lhe Self."

~Astro-

Phone
5x I0, IOx 10,
lOx IS, 10x20.

58 Foul ball

. shuttle
19 Oahu
neighbor

in verse
39 Iron

is concerned with two characters. a Don
Quixote. the Ego, and a Sancho Panza .

i,

'

EVER THINK
OF GiTTIN'
YORESELF
SOME'A . THEM

17 Flew lhe

38 Unfold,

W. H. Auden wrote . ~Every autobiography

· BARNEY

T&amp;D TRA(,IOR SALES &amp; EQUIPMENT
righl in lhe IK-.ut of Chesler
98.'\4..'184

Cen ter

Ope nin!!: lead: • A

~

.

&lt; •

Radius 1\ol o " e r.l 30 inc h cutting width to 50
· inch cu tting width 3 ~·e ar warranty •

C om m u ni l ~·

'"'

Pass

~

****A lso a n tilable*•**
• Tu_sk M uste r Trul·ton 26 horse - 3 S horse.

O N :S

.llll'l

ENGYCLOPI'TA!

...

starting at 27 hnrse - 57 horse
with shuttle transmi ss ion
-1 -wd. remote hydraulics 3 yea r warranty

IS NO\V OPE N AT

·Pass

PaSs
Pass
All pass

make-able games

1

SyrJt.:u~t.:.

Pass

57 Hailer

producer
23 Squirrel
abode
26 Mild onions
28 EnthusiaSm
29 Kind
of jacket
30 Baseball's
· Hank 34 ,Keep
occupied

East
2 .•

Hcdbl.

volcano

16 Bl9'llcket -

21 Golden egg

Two trump suits, two

ON~

;r. 'l&gt; l-lt:f A 6Ytl0
WITt4 EVfflYTttiN6.

New Dealer lor Monrana Tractors

W. Maiu Pomuoy

area

7
AJ 5 4 2

North

author
53 Putfin kin
55 Ve rve
56 Acllve

parrot
15 Low·lylng

8 6 52
10 J '
J865 3

3,.,.

52 " Bus Stop"

36 Moonbeam

i

Fo nne-rly at 108

We~ t

DbL
Pass

employer

14 Green

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

30 Yrs. Exp . · • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

The Parish Shop

· South

'"'

Tree Service

1-'n'et~d/y

Mon -Sal IOAM-:SPM

\h· \\l'],,l111l'

•
.

42 Give,
u a price
44 Maanun

ew.am ..
13 Grimace

Sou th
A AK.1I04
., 6 2

JONES'

The \-tulberr.y

\CREE
~10~1 ~lENT

"' i 7

'"'""'

ND V ARRIVAL ZTR Dl•on (Zero Turn

ln-.un•d

:n -o~

DeHler: Sou th

25 Years Experience

740-992-6971

"' Q 10.

1 Shorl

etot
46 Cowboy 's
7 Mensa data
bed
10 Galleon
41 Banister
cargo '
51 Tighten a
11 Paperless
corset

Vulnerable: Neithe r

• Fa rm Pro TraCtors 20 horse·· 30 lio i-se
lmid r rs, ·finish mowers, tillers

David L ewis

•
•
.

740-667-0700 1-Btltl-t

Concrete Work

.-\sk fnr .ld l'

r

v~xs

CONCRETe
CONS'I'IIUC7'10N

,·\
PRIVATE GYM

II

H£J2.E.!

V.C. YOUNG Ill
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years Local Ex rience

~ IS ~QJ£ND

AND

4 5783

• QJ 9 8
t A KQ 4

41 Oven glove

hairdo

East

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement .
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Acc ident

Remodeling

I.EWIS

Let us heltJ)'l~U

e.RJNGIN(i W'OWU.

We do it all except
furnace wor k

99.2-5682

•

FIN ISH .' Tl-i £ "1 'J&lt;E:

• Patio and PorCh Decks

(740)949·2217

Bal~.

• Room Add iti ons&amp;.

HiJR.RY LIJ" AND

. Tuppers Pl ains, OH

~~~~..

W es t
• 9 7

· ACROSS

4 Car-sticker

'·-" K 6 3

-41800 SR" # 7

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing ·
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vinyl Siding &amp; P11inting

l'om ero)', OH
on State Rt. 124

94 Harley Davidson Ultra
Classic, 10.000 miles; blue.
excellent conditio n. $13,500.

and Financial Services

• YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

No rtb
o5
• Q 3
. AK754
• I0 9 2

Rocky Hupp Insurance

• New Garages•

3 mil es west of

40 M OIDR(TCI .&gt;&gt;ii
4 WH&gt;:!HR~ '

r

•

O H ..f.:'7t'tl~

[ROGER HYSELL I
I GRRRGE

!

i

FREE ESTIMATES

S•~ n il't'

I

L'o

r
I

COMMERCIAL and
· RESIDENTIAL

TERRY'S ENG I NES

·---iiiiiiliiiiio--•

•

WimiO\\ ~ • R( l(l1l ng

...... · · ~ ...... 1"""""-'· ..~ .. ~-1 .. 1 h.~. c. iu ~· ..1 ... ~•b·•-

(7 40)441 - 760~

L

•. Rq1lat:e mL"n ~

f ur K~·dniux Equ ip m t• n l
• 10,000 ._~(;_ 1 2.tHII ~ \\'all Ul'iclo!-" ..~ Strnttun
s l a ntlh~· (ll' lll• r utm· s~· stcnl .-.

Atrn o;
HlR.SALE

:-'

Nc" H om~~~ Vinyl
SitJ irig • New Gantg.(.'!-1

• Lm,1l &amp; TrtH't or St•n·icl'
• l'kku p &amp; I Jc li Hr~ AHt iluh lt•
• \\'urra n t~ St•nkl' ll ea~ h· • ·

r

1~;;;;:;:;;;:,;;~l

6UILDERS InC.

Sales &amp; Warranty Ser vice DE!aller

1995 Buick Park Avenue .
Available at McKean Farms
leather · ml . 52.000 miles .
on Centenary Road and the
very good condition. $4,800.
Willi am Arin MOtel (740)446·
(740)367 -7t88
9442 .
.
.
1995 Ford Probe Auto Air
FOR SALE
$1495.00-·1996. Plymouth
Neon 4 Dr
Auto Air
$2495.00··1994. Plymouth
For Sale Al')glo Arabian Voyager 7 passenger V6
Gelding Horse ,, 8yrs old , Auto
A1r
$1995·.00
good Trail Horse $1 ,200 RIVERVIEW MoToRs
.2
(304)675·6540
Blocks ADove McDonalds.
(740-992HomegroWn Strawberries. Pomeroy, Oh

r

BISSELL

ATV'S• GOKARTS• CYCLES

Harley Davidson custom lov.:
rider. Black w/chrome . IriDal
flames , perfect shape, on ly
3490)
"to Gallipolis/Rio Grand€. No · ..,~-~-----, 740·378·6291.. Monday 1 ~ru - - ' - - - - - - - - 21 ,000 mnes. many e~tras
Saturday. 8:00-6:00. 65002 1996 White Fireb1rd. auto. V- $9,500. (740)416-2213 or
: smokmg no 1ndoor ~ts. ilD
HOUSEHOUJ
"'Mu'st
b€
. reli able ·
State Route 12;4. Reedsville. 6. good cond .. 133.000 (740)Q:85"3677 .
Got.Jl]!;
miles. Asking 54 .000 080.
: s~OOtmonth. includes water
I \R\1 '-ol 1'1'1 II "'
r (740)37 9-9465 or (740)379·
T-Top.740·992·6079
.
BOATS &amp; MUIOR'
,\1 1\l...,lt)(l,
} 9445.
.
H&gt;R SAI.I:
1997
Buic k
LeSabre
Limited . 75 th ousand miles
i\I()IIII .E Ht&gt;\I&gt;:S
FARM
Leather
Int..
Loaded. 1996 Stratos ba ss boat. 115
Appliance
:. FUR RE.v r
·
EQuiPMENT
Garage Kept.
$5.995· fast strike . 2001 Soft nde
trailer. custom cover, e)(cel•, 14JC 70 eJCpa ndo 3 bedroom.
Warehouse 0% FiKecl Rate up to 24, (304)675- t~3 1
lent . cond it1on . ·S6500 .
1 t t, 2 bath S475-T deposil .
months on New John Deere 1997 Mercury Sable. Run s &amp; (740)446·4987
mcludes water, sewer &amp; in Henderson . WV
Pre- Compact Tractors &amp; 11 0 TLB looks good. garage kept.
;, tras h pickup - (740)446- owned applicanes starting al at Ca rmichael Equipment. high miles. very dependat&gt;le. 97 Yarnaha 100 Wave
Runner Jet Ski, .3 Seat er,
~4824
$1.500. (740)441 ·8947.
$75 &amp; up all under warranty. (740)446·24 12
Trailer. Life Vests asking
we do service work on all
cal l
evenings
2 be droo m mobile t)ome on Make· and Models (304)675 - 1995 M.F. 362 tractor, 55 2002 Cadil lac D.eville. white $3.000
H .P. 8430 ease l.H . round diamond. fully equipped. (740)596·8038
Pole Cat Rd $425 month 7999
plus utiht1es. $425 deposit · - - - - - - - - - - - bai ler. 55 N.H. rake, 479 factory warranty, 22,900
Call (740)4413-4107
For Sale: Antique twin beds N .H. haybine hay ~ t edder, miles. like new $24,995. Year 2000. Pontoon Boat . 24
loo t, Sweetwater, 50 HP
(740)256c!428 .
and 3 bra1ded area rugs. (740)985·3843
2 bedroom, 2 bath. CIA, Phone (740)446-1801 .
Mercury, Power Tr im. 4
Toyota
Spyder Stroke Engine . Big FOot
4' ·Brush hog , like new. 2003
stov e / re frigerator .
(740)446·41305.
•
Convertible
E)lcelfent
co.ndi- Outdri ve. lo ~n ge Se ats .
water/trash paid. No pets Furniture S&amp;,le: Mollohan's
IIOn. 7.000 miles. 6-speed.
please. $375/deposlt and Sofa and cllair startin_g at
Room
Depth
Hay wagon 19 tt. Stblfus Sequential Shift. in storage Pri\o'acy
_relerences . (740)388-8371 . · 5399. Call (740)446-7444
Fmder.
Hour
Meter.
Good
kicker wagon. Removable from October to April
only
50
hours
on
Radio.
Has
3 bed room. 2 bath. _2.5· Mollohan Ca'rp6t. 202 Clark steel racks. like · new t1res (304 )675-431 8 or (304)208·
Boat. Garage kept in w1n ter.
and
bed.
(740)245·0485
acres. close to college . $350' ·chapel ROad. Porter, Ohio.
4126
Like New Paid over $18 ,000
'per month plus deposit . (740)446-7444 1-877-830 10ft.
No
Til
Drill
John Oe9re
96 Chevy Corsica V6 . auto- Will sale lor $13,000
(740)474·3986
9162 . Free Eslimates, Easy
lor
Rent.
Carmichael matic. 4 door, AC . power {304)773·5944
financing, 90 days same as
Equipment.
(740)446-2412
. locks ,· tilt , nice pain t . and
3Br Tra1ler w/fefr.ldg &amp; cash . Visa/ Master Card .
CAMI'ERS&amp;
interi or, looks and runs
Stove ,wash er " &amp;
clryer Drive- a- littl e save alot
John Deere Commercial
MOTOR Hol\m;'
grea
t,
$1
.600.
(740)669included Section 8 approved
Worksite Prod ucts In Stock!!
Thompsons Ap pliance &amp;
0302
(304)576·2934
Compact EJCcavator 27C,
1989 32FT. Yukon Camper
Repair-675·7388. For sale.
35D, SOD/Skid Steers 371, 97 Cavalier Z24 2 door. 5 has separate bed room. air &amp;
Beaut1fut · river view 1n re-conditioned
automatiC
325 ,
328/Tractor speed, AC, tilt, new · black awning· $5 .000 (304 )675Kanauga. Ideal lor 1-2 peo- washers &amp; dryers, re t r~gera · 320,
Load er Backhoe 110TLB. paint. nice interior. looks &amp; 7962
ple
No pets. please to rs. gas and electric
great.
$2.900 .
--Ap plica tions being raken . ranges. ai r conditioners. and Check out our renlal rates. n.ms
Great Financing Available- (740)669· 0302
1992· 29' Airstream Excalla .
Call (740)44 1-0181
wringer washe rs . Will do
Equ1pment.
Carmichael
Very
good condition, tw1n
repairs on major brands in
15
TRUCKS
(740)446-.2412.
beds. Ph . j740)6454454.
Crean . 2 bedroom mob1le shop or at your home.
•'oR SALE
home close to town . Call
1995
Gullstream
24 '
Used Furniture Store, 130 New 5003, 5005. &amp; 5020
(7 40)2 56·6574 ,
Series John Deere ' utility 2000 Silverado 4x4 . 28.000 Conquest L1mi ted Edi110n
Bulaville Pike, Washers . dryTractors @ 0% fi xed! 36
Mobile Home Lot onty
en~ . re;frigeralors , ranges,
miles. e11.cellent condition. 1' Class C motorhome. Like
months. Used Utility Tractors owner.
Addison Pike- S125imonlh- mattresses.
$14.500.
Call new With only 7.600 miles.
dresse rs,
4.9% Variable/ 60
Fully equipped with many
call (740)446-3644 for more cOuches. dinettes. rec liners, @
(740)446-16313.
'months
Ca rmichae l
edras.
$22 ,000, .(740)256into.
grave monuments. much
,Equipment. (740)446·2412
2001 Dodge 1500 Sport V8 , 1428 ·For pictures See ·
more.
{740)446·478 2
Mobile Homes sites in the
cab.
$t6 ,900. www.rvtrader.com /rvdetail p
Gallipolis. OH Hrs.· 11 ·3 (M- New John Deere 5025 quad
Shade area. Wate r. Sewer,
hp?id+ 125806.
(740)64,.6734
S)
Series l:Jtility "(ractors @
Tr'ash . included
$130.00
2.99% Fixed! 36 months: 98 Ghevy 4x4 . 78.000 miles. 1998 30' tilth wheel travel
, ;per month 740-385·40 19
Ca rmichael
Equipmen t. $7,900. 1997 Chevy S- 10, trailer. double slide, e)lcel(740)446-2412
117, 000
miles
$3 ,500 lent condition. $13.900
I""" APAKI~ IENI~
(304)675·6859
FOR REI\'f
phon~: {740)698·9319
Buy or
sell.
Riverine · New John- Deere Round
34' ~oa " Ja'yco Eagle 1-12·
Antiques . 1 t24 East Main Balers @ 1.9% Fixed Rate
4x4
I and 2 bedroom apart·
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy. 740- Financing for 48 Months or
slide out Lots ot extras. Like
Fo R SALE
men ts, furnished and unfur·
new condition'. (740)339·
992-2526 . Russ Moore , New Model 457 Stand ard
nished. security deposit
Round Baler Only $13.250 1998 Ranger 4JC4, 5 spd , 3L, 0218.
reQu~reCI , no pets, 740·992·
cash. Makes 4X5
AM/FM cassette, AIC . off
2218.
Carmichae l
Equipment . roaO package . new paint, Coleman Camping Tra11e r
12FT. 2 King Beds. $5.500
(740)446-2-412
$6,000 OBO. Call after call for Details . (304)675·
2BR apt. State Route 160.
$400/month. stove/retngera- Full sile Serta Elec. Bed. 3- Special Purchase·· John 4:30pm {740)256-6257.
1731
tor included. washe.rldryer P1ece Mahogany Bedroom ·Dee re 702 8 &amp; 10 Wheel
1999 Bravada, fully loaded, Truck ·Camper. AC . TV
. ; hookup. (740)44 1·0194 _or Sui te (304)675- 4034 or Rakes/ John ,Deere Disk
leather, dual-power seats. Antenna , wired for Cable.
~1740 ) 441 - 1 184..
(304)675-04 18
Mowe rs." CSII tor price . ne.w tires. Alloy wheels . Blue
like new $6,500 (304)675- - -- - - - - - ' Carmichael
Eq~i p ment.
Book price ' $6 ,750, sacr!Hce 3353 .
• BE~UTIFUL
APART·
(740)446-2412.
JET
$6,495. (7 40)645 -'2729 or
, MENTS
AT
BUDGET
AERATION MOTORS
'-o il.:\ H ' "'
PRICES AT JACKSON
Tandem gooseneck lull 811.8 (740)379-25!1-4 leave mesRepa1red. New &amp; Rebuilt fn
sage.
will
return
call.
ESTATES , . 52 Westwood
head deck . 23+5 , !reate~
10
Slack _ Call Ron E11ans. 1Ha\IE
Dnve from S344 to 5442 .
floor. $4 ,300, g~:md tires _ 1999 Ford F250 diesel truck
800-537 -9528.
L\
IPRO\'F.\IEI\1S
(740)446·9317.
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es. Call
4K4. 3/4 ton eidended cab.
740·446·2568.
Equal
6sPeed. st'andard. loaded. ·
Your
used
eqUipment
Housing Opportunity.
BASEMENT
NEW AND USED STEEl,.
Carmicllael 81.000. Ve ry clean . Price
WATERPROOFING
Steel Beams . Pipe Rebar source.
Equipmen~. (740)446-2412 $21.500 , (740)388·0356.
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- For
Unconditional lifetime guarConcrete.
Angle .
or Visit www carea com.
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
2003
Jeep
Liberty antee_ Loca f references furChanne l, Flat Bar. Steel
·Townhouse
apar tments . Grating • For
Renegade. Loaded . 4)(4 , nished EstablistJed 1975.
Drains.
•andJor small llouses FOR Dnveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
$14,500
OBO.
Call Call 24 Hrs . (740) 44 6'RENT. Call (740) 441 · 1'11.1 Scrap Metals Open Monday.
(740)256-1618 or (740)256· 0870 . Rogers Ba sement
:lor application &amp; informatiOn . Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Waterproofing ,
6200
14 month old Bl ack Angus' ' - " " - - - - - - - Friday.
Bam-4
:3oPm.
Closed
: Do wntown Point Pll!asanJ
cross bi.JII out of registered 2004 Ford E.x.ped . XLT. 5.4
Saturday
~
•Two I Bedroom ApartmEJnts· Thu rsday,
Bull. (7 40)446-6755.
Triton VB . 4.x.4, power.
•R efe rences
&amp;
Deposit sunday (740)44S.:.7300
9ru1se. lilt. eKcellent condi:Requ1red 1304)675-3788
2 Miniature Donkeys Jacks. tion ..
SPA FAcrORY ounrr
$23 .900
OBO.
1 yr. old, 6 yr. old White {740)245-916.2 .
Top Quality,' Warranty,
Furn1sh ed apt_ 2n d Ave_
(304)882·221_3
Wholesale . Financing,
Upsta 1rs. all uti11t1es paid.
Delivenes
: one bedroom no pels,
Ask ~bo u t Qur AQHA
2 locat1ons
H &gt;R SALE
. Galhpolrs. (740}446·9523.
Member D1scounts on new
Milton Flea Market
John
Deere
Equipment.
&amp; Ashland Kentuckv
'Furnished upstairs. 3 rooms
Ccirmlchael
Equlpmenl 1962 Ford Conversion Van .
(606)922·7165
(7401446 _2412 _
4 Captain·s Chairs. AfT. A/C,
bath . Clean. ref. &amp; dep
::-~-:---,.----- · AM/FM Cassene. 302 · V8
reqUired. No pets (740)446Wolff Tanning Beds
Paint Mare . 5 yrs. well broke. Eng., Everything Works.
: 1519.
Huge selection,
$1 ,300. OH yearling stud , looks Good , Runs Good,
lrrlmediate Delivery.
• Grac1ous living. 1 and 2 bed$500. (740)256-6824 .
$1200. (740)256- t961
F1nancin g
~ room apartme·nts at Village
1-800-894-6997
Registered Quar ter horse 1997 Ford Conversion Van ,
[Man or . and
Riverside
~ 740) 446-65?9 .
mare, 5 years old, beautiful 74,000 miles, eKcellent con!Apartments m Middleport
dition . new tires. $9,800.
and gentle : $1 .500
1~rom S295-S444. Call 74011'10)992·2945
Tennessee
Walker
gelding,
B
UIUIING
' 992 -50 64 Equal Housing
6 years old . great disposi ; Opportumnes
2000 Chevy Astro Van . Gcyl.
tion . $950 Both have had 3
•
. , N1 ce 2BA. 1 bath wl attached Block. brick. sewer pi pe s, months profess1onal training Good Condi tion, New Tires.
: gar 54'00 per mo. no pets. windows, lmtels. etc. Claude recently. (740)256-9172 or 55 .995 080 (304)576·2934
, Depos1 t
&amp;
re ferences.
4) M U IOIIC'I'lU'S'
Wmters. R1o Grande. OH (740 )256" 8111 ·
; (740 )446-2801
4WH•D£RS
&amp;
•:-----:--- - - Call 740-245-5 t 21 .
: North 3fd Ave . Middleport
I'm;
GRAIN
2000
Har ley · Dav1dson
! 1 b_r turn1snec1 apt .. no pets.
~
FORSALE
.
Sportster 883 w/ 1200 k1t .
pre\o'lous rental relereces &amp;
Square bale of mixed grass·
S.boo m1les. new !Ires. lots
depOSit. 1740)992-0165
AKC Registe red male long es. You gather from the field of Chrome. eJCcellent conch·
Miniature and save money or place lion. $8.000, {740)94 9·4019,
One Bedroom. No Pets. ha~red
Dachshund.
Dark
red
. 4 mo order, Hager 740-949-2241 740-591 -5610
: Uhlilies Pa1d. $400/mo ..
.
. DepOSit
&amp;
Refe rence 'old . $400 Phone {i'-l0)367Tobacc o Plilllts tor sale. Call 2002Yan1aha TIA· I1 25.1ike
0846.
'
· ReqiNed {7401 446·3667
(7 40)446-7843.
new, fl dden OCCaSIOMIIy,
· --~----------. ~P!easa'nL Valley Apartment Chihuahua puppi~S. Very
I ,., . . ,\ I. ,UII\ t L lll
$1600, (74{))992·2762
1
.Are nQw tak1ng Appl1canons cut e, lovable. Call {740)245·
John Deere Riding Mowers 2004 1200 Custom Harley
: for 2BA. 3BR &amp; 48A.. 5984
star ting at $1 .399. F1nancing Oav,dson, all new - w1nd·
. Applications
are
tak.en
Full blooded Rat Temer ava1fa ble' subtect to John shie ld saddlebag. edra
'Monday fh ru Fr1day from
pups_ Wormed and shots Deere Credit appmva l. Your chrome. lois at extras, must
:9 00 AM -4 PM Office IS
(740)441 - 1218
payments could be as low sell. 58.800. (304 )593-3542
' Located at 1151 Evergreen
as $39 month w1th SO down
• Dnve ·P01n t Pleasant, WV ~ apanese Chm PUIJIJ18S, 6
98
Honda
Goldw1ng.
Carm1cllael
Equ1pmen1
'PhQne No IS (304)675- wks old 3 males. 3 females .
Excellenl C0nd1bon. 17 000
~740 ) 446·2412 .
$100 each (740 ) 441 -~94
5806EH0
m1les $8.000 1304 )675-4581

•

The Daily Sehti"nel • Page 87

BRIDGE .

Purchase a New John
Deere
Prem ium
Lawn
Tractor &amp; receive '5250
towa rd a John Oee;e
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10

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

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Twir&lt;l R1vers To wer 1s aCcept70
Mt&lt;SI{'AI.
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WV
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Friday, May 27, 2005
ALLEY OOP

Friday,·May 27, 2005

Page 86 • The Daily Sen.tinel

RaCine . Ohio

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Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

NBA · Playoffs

Larry Brown may be
headed out of Detroit
AUBURN HILLS. · Mich.
'' I think within 72 hours (of
(AP)- An unspoken secret the end of the season) I'll be
seems to en,velop the Detroit able to let (team president Joe
Pistons, the expectation that Dumars) know. If he wants to
Larry Brown won't be around make a change before that, I
next season.
can accept that," Brown said
The broad outline of an exit Wednesday after the iss ue of
strategy is already in place for his future flared up again.
the c0ach, the future day-toThe late st dustup came after
day developments sketched it was reported that Cleveland
out in penciL
owner Dan Gi lben had asked
All indications point to for the Pistons' permission to
another of Brown 's manv speak to Brown about possidepartures, wifh · doctors'· bly becoming the Cavaliers'
orders already the destgnated team president. Brown said
culprit.
.
he has never met Gilben and
Only this time. it's serio•Js. has no knowledge of ever
What's different now is that speaki ng to him (Brown
Brown is sicker than the pub- noted that Gilb,en was once a
Jic knows. and the publi c Pi stons' season-ticket holder.
wouldn 't be so quick to think and he may have met him'
he was deviously plotting · before Gilbert purchased the
another vagabondish train- Cavs).
hop if it knew ·the whole
Other teams have also made
it known to Brown that they 'd
story.
Brown 's health problem is bf'interested in bringing him
related to hisbla~der and was aboard in a froni oftice pasta result of compltcat1ons from tion, but whether any of those
htp ~eplaeement surgery, and teams tia've received pcrmishe satd hts ltfe has not been sion to speak 10 Brown's repthe
.
.
. same. smce Nov · 3 whenla resentanves
IS not clear.
·
dtfficuln~s developed. .
Brown insists he has be n
" I don t want to continue
f
·
.
e
.coaching with what I have to up rant about everythmg With
deal with," Brown said in an Dumars: and he understands
interview
with . The Dumats. need to have. a Plan
Associated Press and the · B ready tn case Brown s medPistOns' four newspaper beat teal con?1~10n forces hun to
writers. "If it's cleared up. g t~e up c~achmg.
then we won't even have an . My goal ts to do the best
issue."
JOb I can here. and then ·hopeWhether the defending fullr be , a coach. becau~e
NBA champion Pistons win that s ~hat I do. ~f I can t:
another title _ they lost to then I II deal with that.
Dwyane Wade, Shaquille B~?wn sa1d.
,
O'Neal and Miami 92-86
Thts ts my last coachtng
Wednesday night in the j?b:" he said. "The only place
Eastern Conference tlnals. I m go mg to coach next sealeaving them tied at 1 going son. or ever, IS Det.~Oil. 1
into Sunday night's game at thmk. m terms of ever.
Detroit .- Brown is checking The eastest way out for the
into a hospital a day or two Ptstons and Brown could be a
·after the season ends.
mutual parttng of the ways.
He is not comfonable disIt ·could be. until Augusi
cussing his condition pub- before Brown k~ows whether
lidy. It is not life-threatening. hts recovery -. tf he recovers
but it is serious. And Brown - w1ll allow htm to return to
decided in ttie middle of this the sidelines.
season to put off treatment . . ' Brown said it · would be
which 'likely will include unfair to make the Pistons
surgery, untii after the season wait on him. and he also
ends.
known there are quite a few
There will then be a period unemployed head coaching
of a few days in ·which the candidates · out there Pi stons will have to announce. including Flip Saunders and .
if they'll wait on Brown, Phil Jackson head the listwhose chances · of a full who need to know exactly
recovery - based upon what which jobs are going to be
his doctors are telling him open · before they decide
are far from guaranteed.
where they ' II go.

.

.

BY TOM WITHERS
AStSOC IATED PRESS

CLEVELAND_ Kellen Winslow Jr.
·apologized to Browns fans on Thursday
for hi; reckless use of a motorcycle and
confirmed that he will miss the upcoming season because of injuries sustained
in the crash.
Winslow tore the anterior cruciate ligameitt in his right knee and suffered
unspecitied inter~al injuries on May I
when he wrecked · his · high-powered
motorcycle '.¥hi le attempting tricks in a
secluded parkitig lot near his home.
For the first time since the crash,
Winslow contirmed that he will miss
his second season as a pro and acknowledged that it was a mistake to take up
motorcycle riding .
''To those members of the Cleveland
Browns- family who ·1 have disappointed
by my decision to ride a motorcycle, I
humbly apo\ogize, " Winslow said in the
statement. "In hindsight it was unwise
to learn to ride a motorcycle
to

without a professional instructor in a
controlled environment. ,
"While many of you are disappointed
that I will not be on the field with my
teammates for this upcoming season, no
one is more disappointed in this fact
thlln' me."
Winslow did not indicate if he will
seek a second medical opi nion on his
knee. Last week. two sources within the
league told The Associated Press that
Win slow tore his ACL in the 'accident . .
Winslow. who 'spent nine days at the
Cleve land Clinic recovering· from
injuries in the crash, has been .working
out at the Browns' training facility in
Berea. He has taken part in the .team's
. 11-day pi1ssing camp. learning the new
. playliook and system being installed by
Browtis first-year coach Romeo·
CrenneL
Because he ~roke a dangerous a&lt;;tivities clause in his cOntract, the Browns
maytrytorecoupaportion'ofthe$5.05
million in bonuses he has received since
signing a six-year. $40 million contract
last season.

LIVINl~

'

School's Out:
Students and faculty, prepare for
the.end of th~ school year, Cl

.

, The club may restructure Winslow's
contract to allow' him to make back
some of the money he may have to
return.
Winslow bought the motorcycle on
April 9. Westlake Police obtained a surYeillance tape that showed him performing "wheelies" on the bike before
hitting a curb at 35 mph and flying over
the handlebars.
He was charged with disregarding
safety, a misdemean3r that carries a
maximum tine of $15.,.._,
. ·
Win.slow, a .star at the University of.
Miami. was the sixth overall pick in t~e
2004 draft. The Browns traded a second-round piCk to move up one .spot to
select the son of Hall of Famer Kellen
Winslow Sr.
The club was co unting on him to
improve their offense last season, but he
broke his right leg in Week 2 at Dallas
and missed Cleveland's la.sl 14 games.
He was still · recovering from two
operations· on his leg at the time of his
motorcycle accident.

, House ofthe Week:
House invites cool, Southern attitude, Dl

'

tDit
.

.

Hometown N~ws for t1allia &amp; Meigs counties
'

Ohio \'alit·~ PuhlishingCo.

Pnnw1·o~ •l\lithlll'pm1•Gallipnli'. \l;t~ :!&lt;), :!nn;;

.

• Angels win regional
track title. See .Page B 1

.

POMEROY - Making the most .of the
journey after high school by embraci ng the
future and the challenge it presents was the
theme of the valedictorian and salutatorian
addresses at Meigs High School's 37th
annual commencement Friday night.
Speaking to the 153 graduati ng seniors of
the class of 2005. before an auditorium
filled with their family and friends, Katie
Reed. valedictorian. and Randy Han, sa lutatorian, reminisced about their high school
years but stressed the imponance of making
good decisions as a graduate and living life
without regrets.
·
"Don't be afraid to spread your wings. It's
time to fly,'' said Reed who encouraged her
classmates to "Work like you don't need the ·
money, love like you've never been hun, dance
like nobody's watching. sing like nobody's listening, and live like its heaven on earth."

"•

••
•

ON .MONDAY. '
Tht Daily Sentinel. and
'~

• CD Stereo System

34 MPG

• 2.8 Liter Engine

on Hi9hwal11
.

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•

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• A'r Conditioning

:=~o'::.... 5,150'

..

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OBrriJARIFS .
Page AS
• Alice Evelyn Beckett
• Anna K. Ellis
• Elma I. Louks
• Carol D. Mannon
.. • Sam May
• Earl W.McDonald
• Gaylord Perry
• Michael A. Rose .

WEATIIER

......,._

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···---

lUll .W ... IIIIINI

Cha~ene

Hoentch/ photo

Local soldier meets his pen pals
BY Bmt SERGENT
• Yart.tc 2.1 Ultt' f"f'M
• Ail G•'Jili ± 1
.• . . . . . \pta lttldl \eolt

~~~ 2003. with Ginobili com-

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BSERGENTII!OMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.........

-

INDEX
4 SECTIONS -

iiiM

• • , , 11.1-

•.
••

.••

••990· •20,990• •23,590• •29,980•
:
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Around To.wn
· Celebrations
Cla:ssifieds
Comics
Editorials

RUTLAND - Sgt. First Class Jim
Freeman of the U.S. Army National
Guard recently asked fifth graders,
"How many of you have )Ieard the
expression 'there's no places like
home?"'
"Well, it's !nJe," Freeman answered
with a smile .
Racine resideni Freeman is ·home
from Iraq on a two-week leave and
gave up his morning to visit with
Donna Jenkins' fifth grade class at
Meigs Intermediate SChool.
Jenkins' class had been ciJrresponding with Freeman while he is serving
in Iraq with his. 463rd Engineer
Battalion ' C Company, which calls

24. PAGES

A3
C4-s
D Section
insert

A4

Obituaries

As

Region

A2 .

B Section
Sports
Weather
A6
~ aoos Obio Volley Publ••inc eo.

Parkersburg. W.Va., home. When
Freeman and the class finally met, it .
was like pen pals getting together.
llte class began by singing two songs
for Freeman. The songs welcomed him
home as a hero and thanked him for his
· service t&lt;i their country.
·

Please see Pen fNIIS. A3
Sgt. First Class Jim Freeman
of the U.S. Army. National Guard
was asked for' his· autograph by his
pen pals in DOnna Jenkins· fifth
grade class at Meigs Intermediate
School. Freeman signed his autograph on Iraqi money, or "dinars "
that he' passel! out to his pen pals.
-~/plloto

'

BY

CHA~LENE

HOEFUCH .

---------- .
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENHNEL.COM

POMEROY - The third
annual Gold Wings and Ribs
Festival June 3 and· 4 will
kick off a Variety of summer
programs on the parking lot
and in the amphitheater of
downtown Pomeroy.
Paul Damell, chairman of
the festival com mittee, says
several hundred motorcycles
from several states in the
midwest are expected to start
rolling into Pomeroy Friday
for the annual event.
Highlighting bike events this
year will be two light parades,
one through Pomeroy, over the
bridge into Mason and up to
New Haven on Friday rught; . ·
and the other up the river
through Pomeroy. Syracuse,
and Racine, back down into
Middlepon on Sarurday night,
before returning to the
Pomeroy pading light.
Bot.h light parades, which
will feature many motorcy-.
cles, some decorated with colorful lights creating a spectacular sight in the night as they
roll through the river communities. will begin at 9: 15 p.m.
Entertainment to appeal to
most music lovers will begin
on Friday. The opening day's
schedule
features
Julie
Imboden from :Z to 3 p.m.;
country-western singer Joey
Willcoxen at 3:30 p.m. and
local vocalist Katie Reed
from 5:30 to 6 p.m. Popular ·
Elvis impersonator Dwight
Icenhower will do an evening
show .in the amphitheater
beginning· a 6 p.m.
Saturday morning will find
D.J. Rockin' Reggie spinriing
discs on the parking lot's
main stage. an art show
underway in the ·court Street

· Pleue see Fest. AS

•

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RELAY
-

Gallia

Relay

LHe is Friday!

FORUFE
CLOJ

MONDAY · SATURDAY 9 an-1 9 pm

1

Mi

Holzer Medical Center is a
proud sponsor of the
Gallia County Relay for Life

'&amp;DAY

SuNDAY 1prn 8pm •

~22 C7S~

• TOLL ;:REt 1 8:JO 822 0.117

.\

•

•

Gold
Wmgs, .
Ribs fest
ldcksotf
season
.

MERCERVILLE ·- This
year's graduates of ~outh
· Gallia High School were
challenged to find their passions during the school's
commencement ceremony
·
Saturday.
Proud parents, grUJ!dpar. ents. family and friends filled
the school's gymnasium as the
45 members of the school's
class of 2005 graduated.
Valedictorian Julie· Gwinn
told her fellow graduates
that they should do their best
to make their lives count.
"This country wasn't built
by apathetic people who didn't care whether or not their
voices were heard, but by
strong people who had a
vision of what needed to be
done and did it;" she said
during her valedictory
speech. "Now it's the 21st
century, and you ·don't need
a· revolution or war to exhibit passion. Have a passion
Paul Dant/plloto
for your loves, your family South Gallia High School graduated the class of 2005 Saturday. Pictured, from left. Samantha
and your friends. Have pas- Mooney. Josh Lyall and Genie Rossiter get ready to enter the gymnasium for the ceremony.
sion in your opinions, faiths
and beliefs ."
seemed to know . it likely during the ceremony.
has grown from a group uf
Before entering the gym, would be the last time they
Gwinn spent some time awkward, unsure teenagers
the class spent time adjust- would all be together for a reflecting upon how they all into caring, mature, confiing their gowns, mortar- long time. Some wondered had changed during their . dent adults," she said.
boards and tassels while , aloud if ,they would be able years at South Gallia.
· talking and laughing. Most to keep from shedding tears
"In four years, this class
Ple•H Htl Gooclbyt:. A&amp;

JO. allow ~ emPloyees to
.obtlerve the . Memorial
,De,- llolid8y. . ~
lleg\Jiar putili~loo a.nd
business · hours resume
t~M~31.'
~
~
,.._ - .....

Vat~dictorian . Katie Reed and
salutatorian Randy Hart led the 153
graduates in the processional march ·down
the hall and into the Larry R. Morrison
Gymnasium where Meigs High Schools
37th annual commencement took place.

NEWS@.MYDAILYrRIBUNE.COM

&gt; ., ' .

• Air Condittoning
• ,e,m/FM stereo

Please see Meigs, A2

BY PAUL DARST

·

the
Gallipolis
Daily
'Tribune · will not be PtJir
li~ Monday, May 30,

• Air Conditioning
• 2.2 liter DOHC Engine

She descritied · graduation from high
school as just a small step toward many successes to come. She called on the students to
be bold enough to use all they have learned
to create their own success- success that is
no longer dependant on others but upon the
individual.
.
In his speech Hart reminded his classmates
that each person controls their own destiny.
"The guidelines and crutches have been
stripped away. and if you haven' t realized it
yet, after you l e~ve this builqing tQnight you

Sourn GAwA SENIORS SAY 'GOODBYE'

No PAPERs
COIALT•DODR

$t.50 • \'nl. :I&lt;J. :\n. 1, 1

Meigs High.School ·
·graduates
153 ·stu.dents
.

SPOR1S

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

IIIMD .W lOOt CMIVY

•

.

HO EFLICH@ MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

SAN ANTONIO (AP) points 5.5 rebounds and 4.2
1be fastball-like pass th.at set assists this postseason, despite
up a series-winning shot with ~oming off the bench for etght
0.5 seconds left was gutsy. games. He became a super sub •
The 52-foot bank shot in after the Spurs lost thetr playGame I of · the Western off OJ?Cner. then returned to
Conference ·finals was impres- the hneup and scored 39
sive. The behind-the-back points four games ago. San
reverse layup in the closing Antonio ·is 4-0 since the
.
minutes of Game 2 was ·mind- change.
boggling.
"l;le has been great for us:·
Those great plays, all made Tim Duncan said.
within the last week, definite- · Coach Gregg Popovich
ly belong on Manu Ginobili's likes having the ball in
personal highlight film.
Ginobili's hands. especially in
But teanunate Tony Parker · crunch time, because he
has seen one that' topS ·em all. knows the 6-foot-6 forward
"When he kicked it with his can do so many thmgs - ·hit a
foot from halfcrnirt.'' Parker long jumper. drive to the bas, ·
said, smiling. "that was bet- ket. draw fouls or make a
ter."
smart pass.
That didn' t happen in a
Their relationship has
game, of course. At least. 001 evolved since Ginobih anrived
yet. Tite way things have been three seasons ago. It's no
going for Ginobili and the San coincidence the Spurs have.
ing off the bench &lt;C&gt;a rookie.
the goal for San Antonio's
offense was tO be one point
better than · its defense
allowed; it usually was as the
Spurs won the championship.
This year. with Ginobili starting for the first time. San ,
Antonio is two wins from
returning to the Finals with an
offense that· s · cracked I00
points in se\ .en of its 10 playoff "ins ..
.. , think it was gradual. but
steadv." Ginobili said of his
grov.lng role. "I started doing
the little things that every
team needs. That was the way
' to gain Pop's confidence (and)
to show your teanunates that"
· you are a team player. that you
don't care about the stalS. that
you want to make them better.
too. and that JOO just care
about winning.
Gioobili was ~"'arded last
~r " i tit a S5 2 million.
six-~ear contract. Since then.
be's led Argentina to a gold
medal· at the Olympics and
made his fU'Sl All-Star team.

ALONG THE RIVER

Browns' Winslow: "I humbly apologize"

Ginobili's ener.gy,. shots
driving San Antonio

Antonio Spur.; lately. anytl)ing
seems possible. ,
·
San Antonio beat t.he
Phoenix Suns in the first \Wo
games of the confe.rence finals
· red
OD the Strength Of l WOIIlC
•
ible fourth-quarter rallies:
with their Argentina import in
the thick of the action both
· · times. 1be series shifts to San
Antonio for games SatUrday
·night and Monday night.
Injured Phoenix guard Joe
Jolmson pr.tetited Thursday
and said he · doesn't '1hink
there 's anything that could
keep me off the coun" in
Game 3. although stopped
~of s.aying he's definitely
playn~g. .
While hts return \mulct be a
huge boost for. the Suns. the
Spurs are IQ9king forward to
playing before their home
fans for the fJ.I'St ume m. nearIy two week~ . Ginobili saJd
be's read}· -w feel those
goosebumps the) make ~ ou
feel." Funny thing i&gt;. San
~o fans sa) the same
thing about him.
Oioobili is a•·eraging 21 .8

Friday, May 2'7, 2005

•

•

•

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