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'

Hurricane Katrina makes

Rescuers evaeuate

landfall on F1orida}s ·

sUbmerged district in
Swiss capital floods, A2

southeast coast, A2

Middleport o Pomeroy, Ohio
jtl l

I \ l "'\ • \ td. ),}.

!lUll'' . \1 (.\

'\11 . q

SPORTS
o Two

days, two wins for
Meigs golf. See Page Bl

1..,

I :2 h

\\\\\\ ,mH!aih ... t•ntinl'l .t·um

..! PO ,)

Commissioners to seek 9tt·surcharge
'

ing approval for the monthly ate each month depending on
fee, which would be collect- ·the number of phone line s .in
ed for the purpose of estab- service at the time , but we
POMEROY
Meigs li shing and maintaining a feel the estimate is accura te,
County Commissioners will county-wide 911 service.
and that it would be sufficient
seek a 50-cent monthly teleMeigs
County for operati ng the s'ervice."
phone surcharge for 9l\ Commi ss ioner
Commi ssioners chose the
Mick
operations in the November Davenport said the l!lOnthly phone surcharge over a pro pgeneral election.
charge would generate an erty tax levy based on the
Commissioners approved a estimated $40,000 per year, operation of, 91 1 service in
resolution Thursday authoriz- based on 7.000 telephone Vinton County, smaller in
population
than
Meig s
ing language for the Nov. 8 lines per month.
general e\ectibtl ballot, seek"The figure would fluctu- County. Vinton County operBY BRIAN

J.

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSEN TINEL.COM

ates a 9 \1 se rvice through the same telephone liqe fee. and
sheriffs ·department. It ts ·operates at an annua l budget
overseen . by a pan -time of $29,000. If approved the
director wh o also works as a line fee would be co ll ec ted
'deputy sheriff.
on telephone bill&gt; beginning
A 911 Committee has sug- April I, 2006.
gested that the co unty acquire
Other husiness
real estate. construct a new
Commissioners app rol'ed
9 \\ emergency operations the re-appointment of Paul
center. and emp loy a full- M. Reed of Middleport to the
time 911 director. The Vinton Board of Tru stees of the Rio
County system. meanwhile.
is funded entirel y through the
Please see 911. AS .

Racine requests
meeting with
Mountaineer
spokesperson
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINE L.COM

RACINE - AI thi s·weck's
recessed meeting of Racine
Village Council, village offi·cials requested a meeting
with Mountaineer Plant 's
Environmental Coordinator.
Chris Long concerning the
plant's new wei scrubber.
The meeting is tentatively
scheduled for 7 p.m . on Sept.
' ~-"'
19 at the municipal building.
~
.
Council's concern stems
from the possible use of high
su lfur coa l fro.m the old
Philip Sporn Coal Mine in
the new wet scru bber. High
sulfur coal was burned in the
Page As ·
Beth Se~genljphoto
wet scrubber at American Workers from Blacktop Corpor3tion work on paving Spring Avenue yesterday, The street paving
o Mildred Ann Fitch, 70
Electric Power's Gavin Plant
project in Pomeroy is nearly two-th irds complete.
o Carl Eugene Parker, 47
when touchdowns of blue
plumes of sulfuri c ac id
o Charles Vroman, 69
aerosols occurred at Cheshi re
in 2001.
Earlier thi s year Long and
was' the street's condition.
Street Loop; Wolfe Drive ;
BY BETH SERGENT
other AEP officials visited BSERGENT@
MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM
··some streets ha ven' t been Spring Valley; Union Terrace;
Racine and surroundin g vi lpaved in awhile but are still Pomeroy' s three municipal
lages
to explain the lessons
• Ohio Pawpaw Festival ·
POMEROY
The in excellent condition." parking lots; Laurel Street slip.
they learned from the probMulberry and Butternut
coming to Lake Snowden. lems with Gavin's wet scrub- Pomeroy Street paving project Anderson added .
is near\ y two-t,hirds complete. · The paving project has a Avenues wi ll be patched.
ber and the solutions they according
See Page A3
to
Village price tag of $173.778.25 and East Main Streer will not be
believe · hav.e been put in Administrator John Anderson. will
• Local Briefs.
cost the village of paved because it falls under
place regard less of what type
There
were
a
few
delays
Pomeroy
$32.000. The rest of the jurisdiction of the Meigs
See Page A5
of coal is burned.
last week due to equipment the bill will be paid by Issue County
Highway
Mayor J. Scott Hill report- problems and problems at the Two grant money.
• Meigs Medical Clinic
Department. Pomeroy Mayor
ed that the current police factory where the contractor,
'
adds physician to staff.
The village borrowed the John Musser recently said the
cruiser needed repaired Blacktop Corporation, pur- $32,000 along with refinanc- county has plans to pave East
See Page A5
again. The 1997 Ford Crown chases the actual blacktop. ing $26,971 from a previous Main Street next year.
• Bradfords arrive at
Victoria has 85,275 miles on However, now things seem to paving project via a loan
In a recent anicle about the
it and does not . have the be rolling along.
Middleport church. ·
from
Peoples
Bank paving project it was incorpolice package setup.
"Thi s is something we've Corporation.
,
rectly reported that the parkSee Page A5
Hill presented counci l wjth surely needed for awhile."'
The paving project which · ing lot at the Pomeroy
• Bitter complaint
two price quotes on ve hiCles Anderson said about the began last Monday in the Municipal Building will be
to replace the police cruiser. project.
of a righteous man.
, Sugar Run area includes the paved. II will not.
Counci l agreed to purchase a
West
Main.
The river front parking lot s
·Anderson said that several following;
See Page ·A6
. 2002 Chev rolet lmapla with factors went into deciding Second,
Court,
Lynn. will be paved in sections to
• A Hunger For More.
37. 969 miles on it as well as which streets were chosen to Sycamore., Mechanic, Fourth, allow for' some parking each
the police package setup to be paved such as the amount Seventh , Condor. · Plum, day. Parking will be prohibited
See Page AS
handle all the car's electrical of traftlc on those streets and Cherry, Fisher, Wright, Beech. on one of the two river front
! Meigs County Court
requirements for $7,995 from the)asltime they were paved . Osborn, Lasley, and Buckeye parking lots when the pa, ing ·
News. See Page A8
The. primary deciding fac tor S1reets; Spring Avenue: Fifth eventually arrives there.
Please see Radne, AS
-~

Page 24 • 'rile Daily Sentinel • 2009 Fall Sports Edition

-·
'

OBITUARIES

PQmeroy street paving.rolling along

.INSIDE

om·
ountr

WEATHER .

INDEX
•
'
.

2 SEcrtONS-

mono~v- SATUROAV 9 dm:. 8 pm •

sunottv lpm- 7pm • 344-5947 • TOLL fREE 1-B00- 822-0417

NEW HAVEN. W.Va . Appalachian Power will file
a formal appeal of $ 110.000
in penal tie s from the U.S .
Labor
Department' s
Occupational Safety . anct
Health Admi nistration, company spokeswoman Jeri
Matheney said.
"We disagree with the allegations. especiall y that they were
willful ,'' Matheney said. "We
are formall y appealing, and
intend to pursue this through
everv avenue available."
OSHA initiated its inspection on Feb. 2-1 in response to
a complaint 'li lcging that
Fluor Maintenance Sen·ice. a
contractor pe rforming boiler
repair
~en· i ce~
. for
Appalachian Powe r Co ..
exposeu its cmpln:ees to
asbestos at the Ne\1 Haven
work ~ ilc. The in vc~ t ic atio n
yielded two willful cil&lt;ltions.
with a penalty of S I Ifi.OOO.
Mathcncv said "o rker s
from Fluor' were exposed for
i.l

matter - of minute!'! when

they unexpec teuly 1rent outside of the area in which the1·
were contracted to " o,"k.
"The contptclor's employees were wnrkirh! Jurin !..! an

outage in an area ...that ,:L~c...ord~

indi cate alreadY had been
deaned and t6teJ ... ,he said.
"As &gt;uon as
learned they
wen I beyond the sc·llpe of their
project. they were stopped."
OSHA said the ~o mpany
should h'm: notified · Fluor
about the asbesllK
"Appalachian Power Co. did

we

Please see Sporn, AS

Pomeroy C8 testing unit now open
BY BRIAN

==========·

•

BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY©MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

J.

REED

BREEQ@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO M

Details on Page A8

•

Sporn plant
will .appeal
$110,000 .
OSHA fine

J6

PAGES

Calendars
A3
· Classifieds'
B4-6
By
Comics
Dear Abby
1\3
Editorials '
A4
A6-7
Faith • Values
Movies
As
BB
NASCAR
Obituaries
As
B Section
Sports
AB
Weather
© 2005 Ohio Vall~· Publishing. Co •

POMEROY - . The CS
Health Project began seeing
local' subjects at its Pomeroy
testing site on Thursday.
The modular oftlce and laboratory, located on the parking
IQI across from Veterans
Memorial Hospital. is now
open by appointment only. The
staff begm · collecting ·health
histories and blood samples - .
and paying panicipants cash
- yesterday afternoon.
The site has been placed
primarily to serve customers
in the Pomeroy Village and
Tuppers P\ains~Chester Water
Districts who are eligible to
Bdan J. Reed/ photo
participate in a massive health
Margie
Skidmore
and
Dolly
Warden.
nurses
with
the CS Health
study, designed to detenmine
if a link exists between expo- Project's testing unit in Pomeroy, accept a health history quessure to the chemical through tionnaire from John and Kimberly Aeiker. The unit began see·
local drinking w::tler supplies ing scheduled appointments yesterday.
and disease.
Those who participate in the pleled, panicipants will be Ch~cks are issued the day o(
health suryey must lirst com- called for an appointment. No the appointment.
.
plete a questionnaire online . .at walk-ins will be seen at the site .
Dr. Paul
Brooks. a
Those who complete the Parkersburg. W.Va. phy&gt;-iciari
www.CSHealthProject.com. or
a paper questionnaire which is ·health survey wi II be paid and one of two nlen coordinah
avaiable from the testing site. $ i50. The stud y will pay
Please see C8, AS
Once the questionniare is com- $250 for a blood sa mpl e.

Submitted photo

Eagle Scout Trevor Depoy rece ives a special achievement
award from James Sn1ith of Ewing Chapter . . Sons of ' the
American Revolytion.
,

SAR honors Pomeroy Eagle Scout
BY CHARLENE' HOEFliCH
HOEFLICH@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POM EROY - P\1merm
Eagle Scout Trevor Dcpov h;),
be~n hono'reu for a,· ~iew ­
inems in scout work and his
community spi rit by !;:wing
Chapter. Sons of the American ,
··
Remlulion (S .A.R.).
James M. Smith. coordina-

lor oft he S.A.R·, recoenition
program rece nt! : presented
the member of Bov Seoul
Troop ~~l) \\ilh a pZ11ch and o
cenificate .

Depoy. a 200:'i grad uate of
Mei g' Hi gh School now
attending the University of
Rio Grande : received hi s
Eag le Scnut award in the

Please see Scout. AS

�' \

'

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Page.A2·

Th~

Friday, August 26, 2005

ALBANY
Meigs
Cou nty Bikers Association
will hold Family Fun Day
beginning at noon
at
Jordaq's Campground. Free
camping. All children must
be acco11,1panied by an adult.

Public meetings

•

Monday, Aug. 29
POMEROY Veterans
: Service Commission, 9 a.m.
: at office, 117 Memorial
: Drive, Pomeroy.
•

·•
Wednesday, Aug. 31
• ATHENS - A Region 14
: workforce investment CEO
consortium will be held at I0
a.m. at .the. OU Inn, Athens.

· Sunday, Aug. 28 .
CHESTER - Annual picnic of the Shade Ri ver Lodge
453 and Pomeroy Chapter
186, O.E.S. will be held at 3
.- p.m. at the home of Esther
and Scottie Smi th. Chester.
Members and fami lies invited.
Take covered dish . Meat
Saturday, Aug. 27
drink will be furnis hed :
and
RACIN E - Racine class
of 1954 will hold a reunion
Mnnday, Aug. 29 '
picnic from noon to 4 p.m.
POMEROY
- OH-KAN
Sat!Jrday at Star Mill Park.
Coin
Club,
7
p.m.
, Pomeroy
. Friends from other classes
·arc invited. Take a covered l!.ibrary. Grading seminar
will begin at 6:15 with
dish .
Buffalo nickels the subject.
The ANA grading gu ide is
out and should be here for
the meeti ng.

School events

AP Photo

A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Admin istration co lo renhanced radar image shows the center of Hurricane Katrina
making landfall between Hal landale Beech and North Miami
Beach. Fla. at about 6:30 p.m. EDT Thursday.

Hurricane Katrina m'akes landfall on
Florida's southeast coast killing two
Bv JIU BARTON ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

AP Photo

Aerial view shows a flooded area in Ulm-Wib lingen on Wednesday. Rescue workers. some using helicopters, evacuated hundreds
of people Tuesday from flood-stricken areas of Austrra and so uthern Germany and bu ilt sandbag barriers along swollen nyers
as heavy rains and landslides battered central anp southern Eu rope.

Rescuers evacuate submerged district in Swiss
capital ·as central Europe ·struggles with_floods
The 1wer Aare broke
AS SOCIATED PRESS WRITER
lhmugh the windows of a
v:hi ldre n'' clothes shop in
BER N. Switzerland Bern. leaving baby strollers
Re scue workers completed and toy&gt; lloating in mudd y
an airl ift evacuat ion nf :1 water in ·the deserted streets
half- stJbmer~ e &lt;) riverside di sof the c·i ty's Matte district.
trict of th ~ Swiss capital
" It really hi ts home when
Thursday as large part&gt; or you .\ o mething like this ...
ce mral and southern Europe s&gt;tid fi rc serviv:e chid Frant
were hit by llunding ,that Bachmann. who kd the evackilled at lea.,! -12 pec&gt;ple'.
ua~i dn operation. "Lots of
H:irdest hit was Roman ia peop le have lost their whole
wi th .11 victi m,, many of exi:-.tence :·
Re,idcnts evac uated fro m
wl1om were . trappcJ in, ide
their homes and drow ned :h the Iow-lving area looked on
iorrcnts of watL'r ru shcJ in . in tears - as' wa ter re ceded
Au stri a. Bu l g~tria. Gt;rmuny slo wly. offeri ng the fi rst
and Switterl"nd reponed a glimpses of st reets .. squares
total or I I deaJ. hlll numbers and ground lloors submerged
were C\pec·tcd · to climb as· in mud. Tile areit has been
mor~ hnti ie:-. or thl' m i:-.:-.i ng
fully searched and none of its
I . I()() residents remain. said
are n.~l' o\' crcJ.
Across the A lps. mi.li tary city police spokesman Franz
Maerki.
·
hcli ~:u plcr~ were ferrying in
Police kept· guard to presupplie&gt; to s alleys cut p iT by
fl ood in ~
and evacuating vent people returning to the
stranded touris ts iSolated in area warn in l! that more
mountain pastures by the ris- watc'r could surge down from
the mountains a~ l!l.ockages
ing waters.
BY THOMAS BRUNNER

of debris and mud give way. there eased up.
"The danger is over." said
"As soon as this wood is
gone, the water here wi ll ri se Dori s Ita, the head of
rapidly
again ."
said Austria's flood emergency
department. "But we are ·still
Bachmann.
Many homes there are in watc hing the situation."
imminent danger of collapse, · In Germany, the Danuhe
and electnc lty. phone l111es · llooded part of the southeastand gas are cut off. city ern town of Kelheim. inductaut horities said.
ing
its
Weltenburg
Three people were also Monastcrv. founded in the
mis sing in ~ Romania's hard- 7th century and described as
hit Harghita, inc luding a 4- the oldest in Bavaria.
year-nld girl , said M&lt;iria
The ground llonr of the
Magdale na Sipos, a local Benedictine
· mona stery.
gove rnment officiaL
which draws 500.000 visi tors
Szi liard Stranitsky, . who a year. was submerged early
drove through the area late
said
Father
Wednesday. said cars were Thursday,
monastery's
Benedikt
,
the
unable to move because of
the rain and mud ·on the prior.
"The community is workroads.
·
."1 was scared of driving ing feverishl y to resc ue what
over a corpse. either human it can," Benedikt told The
or animal. because I couldn' t As sociated· Press.
There was some good news
sce· a thing .'' said the 37as
Swiss ra ilways said main
year-old Stranitsky.
Officials in Austria tu rned routes through the Alps contheir ·atteiltion to the cleanup . necting northem and southand reconstruction as the rain ern Europe were open again.

Crude oil prices
creep
to
new
high
,.
BY EDITH BALAZS
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

Oil prices crept up to settle
'· at a new high Thurscl'ay. takin~ their cue from a rally in
gasoline futures. But analysts
said the momentum was
somewhat bewildering given
the easing of concerns about
a storm 'expected to move
into the Gulf of Mexico.
Tropical Storm K ~ tr i n a
truJged toward Florida' s
coast
on
southeastern
Thu r,day and fore casters ·
expected it )o strengthen to a
weak hurricane before .making landfall overnight. But
the U.S. National Hurri cane
Ce nter 'aid after the storm
moves into' the Gulf of
Mexico. it could turn to the
north and eventu ally strike
the state's Panhandle early
next , week - a path that
would keep it away from the
heart of the oil and ga' producing regions of the Gulf. .
"Today was a golden
opportunity to sell off," said
&lt;~ naly s t Phil Flynn at Alaron
Trading ·Corp ..in Chicago.
"One would think that with
Katrina going off in a different direction. the market
would too. But it didn't."
On Wednesday. fears that
Katrina would disrupt oil
and natural gas production in ·
the region wa' the main catalyst pu , hing October crude
futures on the New York
Mercantile Exchange to a
record close of 56 7.32 a bar-'
rei.
"The market real ls went
bonkers ahout th is- \torm..
even more than usual.''
Flynn sai'd. 'That tells me
this market is looking for
excuses to dri ve higher."
Crude futures gained 17
cents to &gt;ett le at 567.49 on
Thursday. the highe't clo,ing
price since oil began trad ing .

FORT
LAUDERDALE.
Fla. Hurricane Katrina
dumped sheets of rain. kicked
up the surf and blew strong
winds along the densely populated southeast coast Thursday.
killing two people shortly after
it stmck land .
·
Katrina's maximum sustained winds increased to 80
mph before the Category I
stonn made landfall along the
Miami-Dade and Broward
county
line
between
Hallandale Beach and North
Miami Beach. ~a id hurricane
specialist Lixion Ayila with ihe
National Hurricane Center in
Miami .
An estimated 5.9 milli on
Florida residents wer}! in
Katrina's projected path.
"It's like a ghost tow ~ out
here," said Mark Darrcss.
concierge at The Astor Ho.tcl in
Miami Beach. where the night
time crowds generall y clog the
streets. " I see the random. not
so smart people. riding scooters every now and then."
A man in his 20s in Fort
Lauderdale was cmshed by a
falling tree as he sat alohe in
his car, while a pedestrian was
killed by a falling tree in the
Fort Lauderdale suburb of
Plantation .
Ruin fell in horizontal sheets
and blew gusts of up to 92
mph. toppling trees and street
signs. Seas were estimated at
15 feet, and sand blew across
and covered waterfront streets.
Florida Power &amp; Light said
more than 412,000 customers
were without electricity.
Category I storms :have
maximum sustained winds of
74 to 95 mph. and win4 damage to secured stmctures is
usually minimaL Weather officials said Katrina was mostly a
rain event, with tlooding the

main concem.
"In· essence. this is a very . I
dangerous stonn. It's important to take this seriously."
Gov. Jeb Bush said.
As the stonn took aim on the
coast, flight s were canceled at
Miami and Fort Lauderdale
airports.
The hurricane forced MTV
to cancel or postpone some of
the performances leading up to
its al'iard show. mcludmg lestivities celebrating the release
of Ricky Martin 's new album .
The show itself. planned tor
Sunday in Mian1i Beach. isn't
expected to be affected.
Floridians wary of Katrina
prepared by putting up shutters, stacking sandhags in
doorways and stocking up on
supplies:
At a supermarket in
Hollywood. Cassandra Butler
hefted two live-gallon bottles
of water as well '"a 24-pack of
smaller bottles into her shopping can Thur~day.
"It's not that I'm wonied.
I've been in south Florida all
my life," Butler &gt;aid. "But this
is a feature of life down here,
and you are 'mart to deal with
it."
At a Home Dep.1t in Miami .
Jose Guerrer,_ N . loaded' 4by-8 sheet&gt; oi plywood onto a
metal can. 'He JJ1d his family
huddled in their Coral Gables
.'
home as Hurricane Andrew
screamed by in 1'193 and he
has been boarding up the house
during hunicanes e\er si nce.
" I have to protect the doors
and window;:· Guerrera said.
His wife. meanwhile. was
shopping for "ater and food.
"That's her problem . She's
gotta take care of tlje food. I
take cafe of the work."
Water management .officials
lowered canal levels to avoid
possible flooding, and pumps
were activated in several lowlying areas of Miami-Dade.

on Ny mex in 1983. On an energy anal ys t at Texas- ing to heating oil and· natural
ilrllation -adjListed basis, oi l based consultants Purvin &amp; gas as demand for these
prices . wou ld need to hit G~rtz in Singapore . "We are products usuall y peaks in the
abo ut S90 a barrel to match now heading into the fourth winter.
the highs of 25 years ago.
· Nymex natural gas fu tures
quarter, a seasonall y higher
Crude futures
briefly demand period .''
declined by 21.4 cents to
touched 568 a barrel in
Market focus is now shift- $9.77 per l.OOO cubic feet.
overnight electronic trade.
'
reflecting the market's longstanding jitters about ri sing
demand and th'e limited
amount of ex.cess production
capaci ty around the world.
Stoking bulli sh sentiment
was a U.S. suppl y report that
showed a decline in gasoline
in ventories a nd China say.i ng
its crude imports spiked in
Please see Dave or Brenda·at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
Jul~. Traders also eyed a
or call 992-2155 for details. Ads. must be paid for in advance.
refi nery snag in California.
Still. the fear of supply
troubles exceeds the actu al
ti ghtness in the 11;1arket,
2 Col. 4,.
traders said.
Col.
"FroiJI a p_urely fundamenWeekday
r---------------~I
Weekday
tal basis. the market shouldI
n' t be within 520 of the
1 Col. x 2"
$46.80
$58.50
.crude price that we're see1 Col. x 3" Weekday
ing:· said oi l broker Aaron
Sunday
Sunday
Weekday
Prudential
Kildow
of
$11.20
$71.60 .
Financial. "But people are
$89.50
$17.55
relucrant to. sell."
Sunday
Gaso line future s surged
Sunday
3.79 cents to $1.9637 a gal$17.90
lqn on Nyme.x. where heat$26.85
ing oil rose less than a penny
to S1.8695 a gallon.
In London. Brent crude
futures on the International
Pe!roleum Exchange climbed
26 cents to $66.27 a barrel.
Worried that Asian eco- ·
nomi c growth could be
derailed by high oil prices.
the ·lntemational Monetarv
Fund wa·rn ed Thursday of
high inflation in Indonesia
and the Philippine&gt;. IMF
Sund~y
managing director Rodrigo·
de Rata suid price&gt; were
likely to remain high in the
X
ncar te rm.
"The market sentiment l'
W~ekday
not whether crude will one
day reach S70, the question.
" ·when ." 'aid Victor Shum .

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...
Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.

2

x 5"

rt\\ANK YOlJ

x

-

2 Col. x 3"
Weekday $35;1 0
$53.70

2 Col.

Email engagement weddiQg or ann~versary
announcements and photos
.·
· to news@mydailysentinelcom!
'

2"

$23.40
·sunday

Clubs and ·
organizations

Church events

Saturday, Aug. 27

·Local .stocks
ACI- 60.48

USB- 29.43
Gannett - 72.79
General Electric - 33.50
GKNLY- 5.05
Harley Davidson - 50.30
JPM- 34.12
19.70
Kroger Ltd. - 21.87
NSC - · 36.79
Oak Hill Financial - 30.75
OVB- 25
BBT- 40.60
Peoples - 27.05
Pepsico - 54.51
Premier 12.87

AEP- 37.12
Akzo- 40.77
Ashland Inc. - 58.93
· AT&amp;T- 19.46
BLI - 12.25
Bob Evans - 24.90
BorJ~Warner - 60.31
Champion - 4.45
Charming Shops - 11.70
City Holding - 36.74
· Col - 48.55
·
·· DG -19.48
DuPont - 40.01
Federal Mogul - .45

Borders and Artwork

26, 2005

daughter to cruel exposure

Friday, Aug. 26
LANGSV ILLE - "Come
Alive in 2005" by Prophetic
Mini stry
of
Christian
DEAR ABBY: I am not a
When your daught ~ r-in- la\\
lnterational will be presented
pretty
woman.
and
I'm
cer,
comes
in. guide her to the
at the Langsville Church, 7
tainly
not
photoge
nic.
Over
chair
you
w;ull her to u,e. If
p.rn. Aug . 26, 27, and 28.
she que,tion, yo u about' it.
. Theopholus and' Valerie t~e . years I . have been in
numerou s piclures - some
e.xplain that after her la ' t
Jones of Winston, N.C. pas- with family members , some
visit you had t" h:ivc the
tors .
alone on spec ial occasions.
Dear
chair ·,he U\cd repaired :u1d
RUTLAND
The
When my fami ly has getAbby
that thi ' one I' ' turd icr S:11 it
Rutland Freewill
Bati st togethcrs with other family
kindl y. hut il ' he take;
Church will host a songfest . members and/or frie nds. my
ollensc - "' he 11.
at 6 p.m . Five churches will mother always brings pho- .
DEAR ABBY:. II&lt; "' dt&gt; vu u
come together to sing each · to graphs that show me in the . .
.
ask a friend 11&lt;&gt;1 to illclttdc
providing
local
talent. most unflattering poses or tnend wanted to nde her you in fund -rai ,i ng •md parFellowship dinner wi ll fol- circumstances. I ha ve told . horse but was too heavy for ties·&gt; I
n.:icr hee11 much
low. All singers welcome . her this is hurtful and asked the an imal to safel y carry.
of a part) -goer. I di,Ji kc them
Call Pastor Jamie Fortner . her to please stop. She says
What should I tel l· . my and avoid them if I ca&gt;L l:llll
742-2810 for more informa- I'm a "poor sport'' and that daughter-m-law who we1ghs I ge t tired ol '&lt;1) i11g no. If 1
tion .
people aren't laughing at me, at least that. much wl1e 1~ she go : 1 can hard!) 11:ri1 10 get
just at the picture.
wants tO Sl( on mx ,hVIhg back hOillC - :uJcJ \O mCIIIllC.\
Sunday, Aug. 28 ·
I'm tired of beino laughed room sola : and chatrs 1 She I ge t several in vi tes ll &gt; p.ll'lie;
CARPENTER
The at, and after 50 yea~s . I think has already split the wood for pet s. jewel ry. P"h ,111 d
Agape Jubilee will be in co n- she should stop making me frame on one of them. It wa' pans . . et(. which I 11 c·ithe 1
cert at the Mt. Un ion Bapti st feel bad . Why does she do less than seven months old. _I need nor can afford. Do , ou .
Church near 'Carp enter at this. _and do you think I'm had II rcp:.ured, but I cant ha ve any com ment\ on tlii, &gt;
. 6:30 p.i11 Sunday. For more just a poor sport'7 - NEGA- afford new furmture . The - STUCK If\ WAS HINCi information Contact David TIVE ABOUT . THE PHO- chairs are not big enough for TON. o.C.
TOS MANHATTAN. KAN. her body. I wou ld prefer she
DEAR STUCK: You arc
Wi se man, 742-2568.
DEAR NEGATIVE: You' re sit on the kitchen chairs . onl y as "stu ck" "' , &lt;'ll
not a poor sport : your mother which are heavy.
choose to be . A' r sec it. \pu
has a cruel stre;tk . No one
Their 'living room. fl1rni tu re have two choiL·c&gt;: Rc l'u'C:thc
ever tau ght her that uye IS less than five years old, but in v'ita ti ons '" 1he 1 are
humor lies in the ability to 11 a lread ~ looks 20 years old . . rece ived. or tell thc&gt;e btl,t ·
Rockwell - 50.42
laugh WITH people rather The labrtc IS sagg1ng and the esslentrepreneurs that , ll li do
Rocky Boots - 30.75
than AT them.
sprt ngs are broken.
not wan t to he inv ited ·t., parRD Shell - 63.54
Because this has been her
I asked my son to say tie.s of th is kind. The n. if thes
SBC- 23.88
pattern for 50 years. it's s?mething to her. but he has- persist. recognize th•n "real"
unlikely you will ever change n t. I tee l he shou ld be the friends don 't ,uhjcct lricnd'
Sears - 138.07
her. However. it may console one to tell her. They'll be VIS- to tempta tio n - and· take a
Wai-Mart - 45.29
you to know that by insisting lUn g aga 1n soon. What gtant step backward.
Wendy 's - 47.50
on
di splaying those unflatter- shou ld I . say to her ? Or
Dear Abby is wrilfen by
Worthington - 17.43
ing
pictu~s. yo ur mother is should I lnstst that my son · Abigail Van Buren , also
Dally stock .reports are the
revea ling more abou t her tell he r? - MINNESOTA know 11 as Jeanne Phillips.
4 p.m. closing quotes of
character than anyt hing in the MOTHER-I N-LAW
a11d was j'ou11ded by her
·the previous day's transacphotos.
DEAR . MINNESOTA mother, Pauliue Phillips.
tions, provided by Smith
DEAR
ABBY: · You M.I.L.: Belore your son and Write
Dear
Abby
at
. Partners at Advest Inc. of
1
answered a question from a daughter- 11;1aw arnv~. put www.DearAbby.com ,;r 1~0.
Gallipolis.
reader ·who asked how ' to one of the sturdy kitchen Box 69440 Lm A,11!(eles CA · ~
respond when her 300-pound chairs in the living room . 90069.
'
' ·

'""e

·Ohio Pawpaw Festival coming to Lake Snowden

.

1.

'

The latest in tree care offered at workshop

ALBANY -· · The Seventh least 20 sample of their Hash String Band with good
Annual
Ohio
Pawpaw drink. dessert, sauce or old' .fa shioned Appalachian
Festival will take place on bread, along with a copy of h oe-d~w n ; and One , Way
ATHENS - Honoring the
Saturday and Sunday, Sept. the recipe. There to share hi s Ri(ler with uplifting. high - comm itment to promote the
18 and at Lake Snowden wisdom of tindin g~ learning energy bluegrass extra vaga n- profe ssional practice of tree
near Albany.
from and working with the za.
care and to fo ster a greater
Gates open at I 0 a.m. on million s of pawpaw t(ees · Other · activities inclu de public awareness of the bene· both .days. The event costs growi ng in the eastern united Chi ldren's Activitie s by fits of tree s, the ODNR
$5 per person per day, or $8 States will be Chris Chmiel Rural .
Actio~·s
Division of .Forestry. U.S.
· for both d ays, with kids of Integrati on Acres.
Enviro nmental
Learning Forest
Serv ice
&amp; the
under.I2 being admitted free .
The contest to come up Program; and Atlatl throwing Intern ational Soc iety of
Expected are . pawpaw with th e best pawpaw in and competition, with a sanc- Arboriculture are partnering
entht,tsiasts from around the se lect and wild varieties will tioned ISAC throw at 2 p.m. to offe r the best and latest in
· country. Since this is the begin at II : 15. a.m. To enter; on Saturday and Sunday. ,
tree care.
peak of the season, the day one mu st have three fruits
Representatives and memThe
2005
Arborist
will be fi lled with pawpaws from the same tree for sam- bers of Green Energy Ohio
Certification
Work
shop
pawpaw foods, pawpaw ples. These must be at the will present a works~op on
Series
will
be
held
Thursday
beer. pawpaw music, paw- Pawpaw Tent by II a. m. for clean energy on Saturday
paw art, pawpaw hi story, weighing. Cash ptizes will from 9:30 a. m. and 5 p.m. evenings, Oct. 6. 13: 20, and
pawpaw trees, pawpaw peo- be awarded.
Workshop speakers will pre- 27, Nov. 3. 10 and 17 at the
ple and much more.
There will al so be li ve sent case studi es and ODNR Di strict oflice on East
This year's festival . fea- music and entertainment resource information includ- State Street in Athens.
Even .those w·ho are not aQ
tures. several returning paw- both day s. Sillurday will ing . consumer. university,
paw events, including: The include
Bear
Foot government, utility· and agri- arborist, can Jearn the latest inPawpaw . Tent where those Appalachian storie s . and culture perspectives. Topics tree pla.nting and pruning;
attending the fe stival can music ' for children of all include solar. 'wind and bio- fertilization; . tree protection
smell, touch, and most ages ; Eileen Motok and ·mass clean energy app lica- and se,lection: insects. disimportantly taste the tropical Intuit Earth-ce ntered folk; tion s, energy effic iency, eases and many of the
• flavored fruit that's been Columbus Police and Fire green buildings and the 2004 mechanics of community tree
care by attending one or all ·of
:growing in America for thou- Pipe and Dmms, Traditional Southeast Ohio Solar Tour.
• sands of years.
'Participants will learn the workshops:
bagpi pes;
J.D.Hutchison,
- Paw paw growers fro m singer/so ngwri ter extraordi- more about gree n building,
across the country, like naire; Five Guys Named energy efficiency and renewIntegration
Acres
and Moe surfabilly, R&amp;B. swipg: able energy initiatives underPeterson Pawpaws, will have Big Red and the Wagoneers, way in many sectors of
their best fnut. Samples of tradi tional bluegrass: Death Southeast Ohio and the rest
: select varieties can be tasted. By Banjo. bluegrass and of the state. Attendees will
: the fruit can be purchased to beyond, Greg 0' Brien &amp; The receive information on Ohio
: take home, trees can bought, Spoodoo Cad illacs with clean energy projects. how to
and · advice can be solicited roc kin' blues. and Forealious participate. the resources to
from pawpaw researchers and the Serendipity Circus initiate a new project and
wri.mydallysentlnel.com
and experts.
how to tap into the statewide
with their "pawpawretta ."
Members of the Ohio
•
Sunday
features
wi ll clean energy network .
: Pawpaw
Growers include
More information on the
si nger/songwriter
: Association (OPGA), the Steve
Free; Ohio Pawpaw Festival • can
· Paw Paw Foundation, and Appalachian/Naiive be obtained at
: Kentucky State University's American songs &amp; chants for
www.pawpawfc st. co m or
Pawpaw Program will be the whole fam il y~ Rabhit by calling 740-698-6060.
there to answer pawpaw
· questions. There will also be
: a full lineup of presentations
. and actiVIties open for dts::cussions on pawpaw grow. ing, cooking. genetics, medi; einal uses and other topics
related to sustainability.
There will also a pawpaw
competition where wild and
Aa!E26MOVIEa-tANNELS
: cultivated pawpaws can be
::entered. Those taking part
... C•-. 3 MONTHS
: are to take three fruits from
the same tree . Judg~:s , are
FREE 0\(R EQUIPMENT UPGRADE
also needed.
Cooking with pawpaws
FREE STANDARD
will be demonstrated by
PROFESSIONAL INSTiJ..LATION
· Chef Jackson Rouse, from
•
: the Murphin Ridge Inn in
FIRST t.tOII/TH
:·West Umon, and Chef Dave
Rudie from .the Lafayette
Hotel, Marietta. Handling an
. evaluation of the pawpaws
: will be Neal Peterson of
106 N. 2nd, A venue ,
· Peterson
Pawpaws
and
Middleport, OH
s £ • ... o • a
· founder of the PawPaw
740-991-1635
-TYIDrll.
: Foundation for this taste test. ing. His work of collecti ng
..._
. superior pawpaw varieties
~------...-·-----·
"':=t:-··----a~·::=--·-­
-~------·...............
from early
-_- - -_-____
-.
- .. __
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...._
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.
. . . - - -~~,.....,....:-'a..":..r-..._..,....,..:::::.-.i.
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has 1900s
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.
.
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,
.
: select some tmpress1ve paw• .,. ,4• .,. ............ ~~.._..,_...,_(ll! ..._,_..,.....,.."'"'~"~.,.,~~....-f111Q ~&gt;'Qn:·. paw van·'etJ·es.
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.. A cooko ff 1s a so p anne .
~·liN·-- --~.,...
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. .
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;;
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. with part1ppants
· to l ake m . ~~·;·;·;·~-;·;-~~~--

VISit us
online at

Anyone who is a gardener,
tree commissioner. park
board member. public serv ice
worker.
landscaper
or
gro undskeeper ur land manager, can benefitfro~1 attending the workshops series.

from 6 tn 9 p.m. eve r)
Thursday in Oct ober and
Nov, 3 and 10. For tl1o-;e wl1ll
want to becume a· Certified
. Arburi't. a test wtll be gis·en
on the last Thursdav. Nu~. 17.
For more infnnn"tinn "hm11
according to Ann Bonner, an regist rJ1ipn and :-. L'llnl~tr..,[lips.
urban forester at ODNR . She contact Bonner at 7-ln- 5~1) ­
said the he workshops will be 99 10

•

$9.95~

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10 •-mailaddres11s with Webmai/l
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Ingels

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Kirk Pullins
would like to
AEP-Mountaineer
Power Plant for
purchasing his'
Dairy Feeder at the
Meigs County Fair.
. .L.

r,\"'
...
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(

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- is having an

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•

Friday, August

Morn subjects camera-shy

·Community Calendar
.~

PageA3

Bv ·T HE BEND

Daily Sentinel

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Page.A2

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 26, 2005

·Community Calendar ·
meetings

•
•
•

Monday, Aug. 29
POMEROY - Veterans
~ Service Commission, 9 a.m.
: at qffice, 117 Memorial
; Drive, PomerV'.
Wednesday,_Aug. 31 .
; ATHENS -A Region 14
· : workforce investment CEO
consortium will be held at I0
a.m. at the OU Inn, Athens.

School events
AP.Photo

A National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration colorenhanced radar image shows the center of Hurricqne ,Katrina
making landfall between Hallandale Beach and North M1am1
Beach , Fla . at about 6:30 p.m. EDT Thursday. ·

..

-~
­
'· tiP

'

.

HurriCane Katrina makes landfall on
Florida's southeast coast killing two

.

. main concem.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
"In essence. this is a very
dangerous stonn. It's imporFORT
LAUDERDALE, tant to take this seriously,"
Fla. Hurricane Katrina Gov. Jeb Bush said.
dumped sheets of rain, kicked
As the stom1 took aim on the
up the surf· and blew strong coast, flights were ctmceled at
winds along the densely popu- Miami and Fort Lauderdale
lated southeast coast Thursday. airports.
·
·
The hurricane forced MTV
killing two people shortly after
to cancel or postpone some of
it struck land.
Katrina's maximum sus- the performance ~ leadi~g Uf' to
tained winds in&lt;:reased to 80 its award show, mcludmg fesmph before the Category I tivities celebrating the release ·
storm made landfall along the of Ri&lt;:ky Mmtin 's new album.
Miami-Dade and Broward The show itself. planned for
county
line
between Sunday in Miami Beach, isn't
Hallandale Beach and North expe&lt;:ted to be atTected.
.
Floridians wary of Katnna
Miami Beach. said hurricane
specialist Lixion Avila with the prepared by putting ~p shutNational Hurric'ane Center in ters , stacking sandbags in
Miami .
doorways and stocking up on
An estimated 5.9 million supplie, .
At a supermarket in
Florida residents .were in
Katrina's projected path .
Hollywood. Cassandra Butler
. "It's like a ghost town out hefted two five-gallon bottles
here," said Mark Darress , of water as well as a 24-pack of
concierge at The Astor Hotel in smaller bottles into her shopMiami Beach, where the night ping can Thur:;day.
"It's not that I'm worried.
time crowds generally clog the
streets. "I see the random, not I've been in south Florida all
so sman people . riding scoot- m~ life," Butler said. "But this
is a feature of life down here,
ers every now and then. "
and
you are smart to deal with
A man in his 20s in Fort
Lauderdale was crusheo by a it."
At a Home Depot in Miami.
falling tree as _he sat alone in
his car, while a pedestrian was Jose Guerrem, 68. loaded 4killed by a falling tree in the by-8 sheets of plywood onto a
Fort Lauderdale suburb of metal cart . He and his family
huddled in their Coral Gables
Plantation.
Rain fell in horizontal sheets home as Hurricane Andrew
and blew gusts of up to 92 screamed by in 1993 and 'he
mph, toppling trees and street has been boarding up the house
signs. Seas were estimated at during hurricanes ever since.
15 fee( and sand blew across
"I have to protect the doors
and covered waterfront streets. and windows:· Guerrera said.
Rorida Power &amp; Light said His wife , meanwhile. was
more than. 412,000 customers shopping tor water and food.
·'That's her problem. She's
were witho~t electricity. .
Category I storms have gotta take care of the food . I
maximum sustained winds of take care of the work.''
74 to 95 mph, and wimj damWater management officials
age to secured structures ts lowered canal levels to avoid
usually minimal. Weath~r offi- possible tlooding, and pumps
cials said Katrina was mostly a were activated in several lowrain event, with tloodit\g the lying areas of Miami-Dade.
Bv JILL BARTON

'

AP Photo

Aerial view s hows a flooded area in Ul m-Wiblingen on Wednesday. Rescue workers . some usrng hel icopte rs, evacuated hundreds
of people Tuesday fro m flood-stric ken · areas of Austria and southern Germany and built sandbag barriers along swollen rivers
as heavy ra ins and lands lides b~tter ed centra l and southern Europe.
·
,-

Rescuers evacuate submerged district in Swiss
capital as central Europe struggles -with. floods
The ri vc r Aare brok ~ of debris and mud give way.
" As soon as this wood is
. through the windows of a
oone,
the water here will rise
children· , cl othes shop in
again.''
, said
BER N. Sw it1 erl and Bern. leaving baby strollers ~apidly
Resc ue workers wrnpletetl . and toys Boating in muddy Bachmann .
an ai rlift evaL"uat ion of a wa ter in the desened stre et ~ . Many llllmes there are in
imminent danger _of collapse,
half- s ubm e r~ed riverside dis- of the ci tv·s Matte district.
" It reatly hits ·home when and electricit y. phone lines
tri ct of the Swiss capiwl
Thursday as larg~ parts or vnu something like .th is." and gas are cut off, city
central and southern Europ~ saitl fire servi&lt;:c chief Franz authorities said .
Three peopl e were also
were hit by llooding that Bachmann. who led the evacuation t\penttion. "Lots of missing in Romania's hardkilled at l e as t .+~ pe&lt;'ple.
Hardest hit was Romania peopl e ha ve losJ their whole hit Harghita, including a 4year-old girl , said M&lt;lria
with .11 victims. rnan y of existence .··
Res idents evacuated from Magdalena Sipos, a local
whom were trapped inside
thei r homes and drowned as the lo w-lying area looked on government ofl1cial.
Szillard Stranitsky, who
· torrents of water rushed in. in tears as wa_1er receded
Austria. Bulgana. , Clermany slowly. offering the first drove thro\lgh the area late
and Switze rland reported a gl impses of streets. s4uares Wednesday, said cars were
total of II dead. but numbers and. ground lloor~ subme rged unable to move becau se of
were ex pected to climb as · in mud . The area has been the rain and mud on the
more bod ies or the mis." ing full y searched and none of its roads.
"I was scared of' drivin g
1, 100 residents remain . said
are recovered.
over
a corpse, either human
Across the Alps. military city .police spokesman Franz
or animal. because 1-couldn't
helicopters were ferrying in Maerki.
Police kept guard to pre- sec a thing," said the 37supplies to valleys cut off by
tlooding and · evacuatin g vent people returning to the year-old Stranitsky.
Official s in Austria turned
stranded tourists isol ated in area. warning that more
mountain pastures by the ri s- water &lt;:ould !iUr~e down from their attention to the cleanup
the mountains ~as blockages and reconstruction as the rain
ing waters.'
BY THOMAS BRUNNER
ASSOC IATED PR ESS WR ITER

there eased up.
"The danger is over." said
Dori s · Ita. the head of
Au stria ' s tlood emergency
department. " But we are still
watching the situation.''
In Germany, the Danube
llooded part of the southeastern town of Kelheim, includmg
its
Weltenburg
Monastery, founded in the
7th century and described as
the olde st in Bavaria.
.. The ground tloor of the
Benedictine
monastery,
which draws 500.000 visitors
a year. was submerged early
Thursday.
said
Father
Benedikt , the monastery 's
pnor.
"The community is working feverishly to rescue what
it can." Benedikt told The
Associated· Press.
There was some good news
as Swiss railways said main
routes through the Alps connecting northern and southern Europe were open again.

Crude oil prices creep·to new high

on Nymex in 1983. On an energ y analyst at Texas- ing to heating oil and natural
inflation-adju sted basis, oil based .consultants Purvin &amp; gas as demand . for these
pri ces would need to hit Genz in Singapore. "We are ' products usually peaks in the
Oil price s crept up to settle about $90 a barrel to match now heading into the fourth winter.
at a new high Thursday. tak- the highs of 25 years ago.
Nymex natural gas futures
·quarter, a seasonally higher
ing their eve from a rall y in
Crude futures briefly demand period.''
declined by 21.4 cents to
gasoline futures. "But analy sts touched $68 a b1rrel , in
Market focus is now shift- $9.77 per 1,000 cubic feet.
said the momentum was overni ght electronic trade .
somewhat bewildering given reflecting the. market's longthe easing of concerns ·about standing j itters about ri sing
a storm expected to move demand and the limit ed
into the Gulf of Mexico.
amount of excess production
Trppical Storm Katrina capac ity around the world.
trudged toward Florid a's St okin g bulli sh sentiment
.
'
coast
on · was a U.S. suppl y report that
southea.stern
Thu rs day and fore casters showed a dedine in gasoline
expected it to strengthen to a inventories artd China saying
weak hurricane before mak- · its crude imports- spiked in
Please see Dave or Brenda at the The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy
ing landfall overnight. · But Jul y. Traders also eyed a
. or call 992-2155 for details. Ads must be paid for in advance.
the U.S. National Hurricane refinery snag in California.
Center saict after the storm
Still. the fear of supply
move s into the Gulf of troubles exceeds the actual
Mexico, it could turn to the ti ghtness in the market,
2 Col. x 4"
nonh and eventually stri ke traders said.
Col. x
the state 's Panhandle earlv
"From a purely fundamenr----------~·---~
Weekday
.
I
Weekday
next week - a path that tal basis. the market shouldwould keep it away from the n't be within S20 of the
Col. x
$46.80
$58.50
heart of the oil and gas pro- crude price that· we're seeCol. x 3" Weekday
du&lt;:ing regions of the Qulf.
ing," said 'oil broker Aaron
Sunday
Sunday
Weekday
"To&lt;iay was a golden Kild qw
of
Prud e ~tial
I
$11.20
opportunity to selt off.'' said Financial: "But people are.
$71.60
$89.50
'
$17.55
analyst Phil Rynn at .Alaron re luctant to sell."
Sunday
Trading Corp. _in Chicago.
Gasoline. future s surged
Sunday
"One would think that \Vith 3.79 cents to S 1.9637 a gal'
:
$17.90
.
Katrina go ing off in a differ- ion on Nymex, where heat$26.85 .
' '--- - -- - -- - - - ' r
ent direction. the market . ing oil rose less than a penny .
would too. But it didn 't.''
to S 1.8695 a gallon.
On Wednesday. fears that
In London, Brent. crude
Katrina would : di srupt oil fu tures on the International
and natural gas product ion in Petroleum Exchange 'climbed
the region -was the main. cat- 26 cents to $66.27 a barrel. .
alyst pu shing October crude
Worried that Asian eco·
futures on the- ·New York. no mic growth could be
Mercantile Exc ha nge to a . tlerailed by high oil prices ,
record close of 567.32 a _bar- the Intern ational Monetary
rei.
.
Fund warned Thursday of
''The market rea lly went high in1lation· in Indonesia
bonke" about thi s ·,torm . and the Ph ili ppines. IMF
even m.ore · than usual." manag ing director Rodrigo
Flynn said. "That tell s me de Rata said prices were
this market is looki ng for likely to remain high in the
excuses to dri ,·e higher...
n,ear term .
Crude futures gained 17
"The market sentiment is
cents to settle at 567..+9 on not whether crude will one
Thursday. the hig he;t clo,ing day rea&lt;:h 570. the · question
pri ce .since oi l began trading i' when." ;aid Victor Shum,
BY EDITH BALAZS

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRI TER

Meigs County Fair "Thank You" Ads
SHOW APPRECIATION TO YOUR FAIR BUYER ...
'

· Here are some of the most popular "Thank You" ad sizes.

2

.

1

5"

rtl\ANK YO(]

2" -

1

2 c ·ol. x 3"
Weekday' $35.1 0
Sunday $53.70

2 Col. x 2"·
Weekday

Email engagement wedding or anniversary
. announcements and photos .
to news@mydailysentinel.com!
'

'

'

•

$23.40
Sunday

80
and Artwork

Saturday, Aug. 27
RACINE - Racine class
· of 1954 will hold a reunion
picnic from noon to 4 p.m. .
Saturday at Star Mill Park.
.. Friends from other classes .
·are invited. Take a" covered
·dish.

Clubs and
organizations

Page A3

BY THE BEND

·The Daily Sentinel

~ Public

'

•

ALBANY
Meigs
County Bikers Association
Friday, Aug. 26
will hold Family Fun Day
LANGSVILLE - "Come
beginning at
noon at Alive in 2005 " by Prophetic
Jordan's Campground. Free Ministry
of
Chri ~tian
camping. All children must lnterational wi II be presented
be accompanied by an adult. at the Langsville Church, 7
p.m. Aug. 26, 27 , and 28.
Theopholu s a'nd Valerie
Sunday, Aug. 28
Jones of Winston, N.C. pasCHESTER - Annual pic- tors.
,
nic of the Shade River Lodge
RUTLAND
The
45 3 and Pomeroy Chapter Rutland Freewill Batist
186, O.E .S. will be held at 3 Church will host a sorgfe st
p.m. at the home of Esther at 6 p.m. Five churches will
and Scottie . Smith, Chester. come together to sing each
Members and families invit- providing
local
talent.
ed . Take covered dish. Meat . Fellowship dinner will fol and drink will be furnished . low. All singers welcome.
Call Pastor Jamie Fortner
Monday, Aug. 29
742-2810 for more informa- POMEROY - OH-KAN tion.
Coin Club, 7 p.m ., Pomeroy
Library. Grading seminar
Sunday, Aug. 28
.
will begin at 6: 15 with
'CARPENTER
The
Buffalo nickels the subject. Agape Jubilee will be in conThe ANA grading guide is cert-at the Mt. Union Baptist
out and· should be here for
Church near Carpenter at
the meeting.
6:30 p.t)l Sunday. For more
information contact David
Wiseman , 742-2568 .

Friday, August 26, 2005

.

Mom subjects camera-shy
daughter to cruel exposure

DEAR ABBY: I am not a
When yo ur dau ghte r-i n-law
pretty woman , and I' m cercomes in, guide her to the
tainly not photogenic. Over
chair you wa nt her to '"" · If
the year~ have been in
she questions vo u abou t it,
numerous ptctures - some
. explain tha\ &lt;Jftc r he1' last
visit vou had ·to hllve the
with familv members, some
alone on special occasions.
Dear
chair ~she used repaired and
When my famil y has getAbby
th'at this one is , tunlier. Say .it
togethers with other fam ily
kindl y, but if , he take'
·members and/or friends. my
offense - so he it.
mother alway s brings pho. DEAR ABBY: How do.-y ou
tographs that show me in the
ask a friend not to incl ude
most untlattering poses · or friend wanted to ri de her you in rund-ra i.sing and parcirc umst&lt;tn&lt;:c s. I have told horse but was too heavy for ties 0 I have nel'cr been much
her thi s is hurtful and asked · the animal to safely carry.
of a part y-goer. I dis like them
What should I tell . iny and avoid them if I """· But
her to please stop. She say.s
I'm a "poor sport" and that daughter-m-law who weoghs I gei tireJ of sllyi ng no . If I
people aren't laughing at me. at least that much when she go. 1 can harJi y 1vai t to get
wants to s1t on my ,hvmg back home - antl ,sometime'
just at the picture.
r· m tired of be ing laughed room · sofa and c hatrs ! She 1 get several invi tes to parties
at, and after 50 years , 1 think has already . spirt the wood for pets, jewe lry. poh and
she should stop making me trame on one of them. It was pans, etc.. which r neither
feel bad . Whv does she do less than seven months old . I need nor ca n afford. Do you
this. and do 'you think I'm had it repaired. but I can ' t have any comment ' on this·•
just a poor sport'? - NEGA- afford new furnitur e. Th e - STUC K IN WAS HI NG TIVE ABO UT THE PHO- chairs are not big enou gh for TON. D.C.
.
TOS MANHATTAN KA N. her body. I would prefer she
DEAR STUC K: Ynu are
DEAR NEGATIVE~ vou' re sit on the kit chen chairs. onlv as "stuck" as vou
not a poor sport · your mother which are heavy.
cho.ose to be. As I &gt;ee it. ·,·nu ·
has a cruel str~ak. No one
Their l_iving room furniture have two &lt;: ho i c~': Refus c. tlle
ever taught her that true is less than five years old, but invitations '" th ev arc
humor lies "in the ability to It alread y looks 20 years old. received, ·or tel l th ese h&lt;h tRockwell - 50.42
USB- 29.43
laugh WITH people rather The fabric is sagging and the ess/entrepreneurs that yo u J,,
Gannett -. 72.79
Rocky Boots - 30. 7_5 ·
than AT them.
· sp~mgs are broken .
not want to be in vited to 'pmGeneral Electric - 33.50
RD Shell - 63.54
Because this has been her · I asked my son to say ties of thi s kind . Then. if thev
GKNLY- 5.05
. pattern fur 50 years, it 's S?mcthing to her. UUI he has- persist. rewgni Le that " rea(
SBC- 23.88
Harley Davidson - 50.30
unlikely you will ever cjmnge n t. I feel he shoul_d be the friends don't subject fr iemls
Sears - . 138.07
JPM- 34.12
her.
However, it may console one to tell her. They II be vt s, to temptation - a nd t a~c: a
Wai-Mart - 45.29
Kroger 19.70
you
to know that by insisting Jt tng agaon soon. What giant ste p backwa rd .
Wendy's - 47.50
Ltd. - 21.87
on displaying those un1latter- should I . "'Y to her? Or
Dear Abby is writte11 by
Worthington - 17.43
NSC- 36.79
ing
pict)Jtes.
your
mother
is
should
I,
tnst
st
that
my
son
Abigail Van Buren, alsn
Oak Hill Financial - 30.75 Dally stock reports are the revealtng more about her tell her. MINNESOTA klww11 as jeanne Phillip,-,
4 p.m. closing quotes of
OVB- 25
character than anything in the MOTHER-IN-LAW
a11d was founded by h er
the
prevlo!IS
day's
transacBBT- 40.60
photos.
DEAR . MINNESOTA mother, Pauline Phillips.
tions, ·provided by Smith
Peoples - 27.05
DEAR
ABBY:
You M.I.L: Before your son and Write
Dear
Abby
at
Partners at Advest Inc. of
answered a question from a daughter- -m-law arnve, put ' www.DearAbby.com or P.O.·
Pepsico - 54.51
Gallipolis.
Premier 12.87
reader who asked how to one of the sturdy kttchen Box 69440 Los A11ge/es CA
respond when her 300-pound chairs in the li ving room. 90069.
' ·
'

Church events

Saturday, Aug. 27

·Local stocks
ACI - 60.48
AEP- 37.12

Akzo- 40.77
Ashland Inc. - 58.93
· AT&amp;T - 19.46
BLI - 12.25
Bob Evans - 24.90
BorgWamer - 60.31
Champion - 4.45
Charming Shops - 11.70
City Holding - 36.74
· col- 48.55
· DG -19.48
DuPont - 40.01
Federal Mogul - ...5

· Ohio ,Pawpaw Festival coming to Lake Snowden

The latest in tree care offered at ·workshop

ALBANY - The Seventh least ' 20 sample of their Hash String Band with good
Ohio
Pawpaw drink, dessert, sauce or old' fashioned Appalachian
Annual
Festival will take place on bread, along with a copy of hoe-down : and One Way
ATHENS - Honoring the
Saturday and Sunday, Sept. the recipe. There to share his Rider with uplifting, high- commitment to promote the
18 and at Lake Snowden wisdom of finding. learning energy bluegrass extravagan- professional practice of tree
·near Albany.
from and working with the za.
care and to foster a greater
Other activitie s include public awareness of the beneGates open at 10 a.m. on millions of pawpaw trees
· both' days. The · event costs growing in . the eastern united Children's Activities by fits . of trees. the ODNR
Action's Division of Forestry. U.S.
$5 per person per day, or $8 States will be Chris Chmiel Rural
· for both days, with kids of Integration Acres.
Environmental
Learning Forest Service
&amp;
the
under 12 being admitted free.
The contest to come up Program; and A tlatl throwing International Society of
Expected are pawpaw with the best - pawpaw in and competition, ·with a san&lt;:- Arboriculture are partncring
entht!siasts from around the select and wild varieties will tioned ISAC throw at 2 p.m. to offer the best and latest in
· country. Since this is' the begin at II: 15 a.m. To enter, on Saturday and Sunday.
tree care.
Representatives and mempeak of the season, the day one must have three fruits
The
2005
Arbori st
will be filled with pawpaws from the same tree for sam- bers of Green Energy Ohio Certificati on
Workshop
pawpaw foods, pawpaw pies. These must be at the will present a workshop on Series will be held Thursday
beer, pawpaw music, 'paw- Pawpaw Tent by II a.m . for clean energy Qn Saturday
paw art, pawpaw history, weighing. Cash prizes will from 9:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. evenings. Oct. 6. 13. 20. and
pawpaw trees, pawpaw peo- be awarded .
Workshop speakers will pre- 27. Nov. 3. 10 and 17 at the
pte and niuch more.
There will al so be live sent case studies · ·and ODNR District oflke on East
This year's festival fea- mu sic and entertainment resource information includ- State Street in Athens.
Even those who are not an
lures seveml returning paw- both days. Saturday will ing consumer, university,
arborist,
can learn the latest in
.paw events, including: The include
Bear
Foot government, utility and agriPawpaw Tent where those · Appalachian stories and culture perspectives. Topics tree planting and pruning:
attending the festival can music for children of all include solar. wind and bio- fertilization: tree .protection
smell, touch, and most ages; Eileen MotoR and mass clean energy applica- ·and selection: insects. di simportantly taste the tropiCal Intuit ' Earth-centered folk; tions. energy efficiency. eases and many of the
• flavored fruit that's been Columbus Police and Fire . green buildings and the 2004 mechanics of community tree
care by attending one or all of
:growing in America for thou- Pipe and Drums. Traditional Southeast Ohio Solar Tour.
•sands of years.
bagpipes:
J.D.Hutchison,
Participants will learn the workshops.
· Pawpaw growers from singer/songwriter extraordi- more about green building.
across the country, like riaire : Five Guy s Named energy efficiency and renewIntegration · Acres
and Moe surfabilly. R&amp;B , swing: able energy initiatives mider. Peterson Pawpaws, will have Big Red and the Wagoneers, way in many sectors of
· their best fruit. Samples of traditional bluegrass; Death Southeast Ohio and the rest
: sc;:lect varieties can be tasted, By Banjo, bluegrass and of the state. Attendees wi II
: the fruit ~an be purchased to beyond, Greg 0' Brien &amp; The receive information on Ohio
· take home, trees can bou~ht, Spoodoo Cadillacs with dean energy projects, how to
and advice . can be soliCited rockin' blues, and Forealious participate. the resources to
from pawpaw researchers and the Serendipity Circu s initiate a new project and
www.mydallysantlnel.com
with their "pawpawretta. "
ho~v to tap into the statewide
and experts.
Members of the Ohio
Sunday
features
will clean energy network.
Growers include
singer/songwriter
More information on the
: Pawpaw
: Association (OPGA), the ·Steve
Free: Ohio Pawpaw Festival can
Your online
· PawPaw Foundation, and A p p a 1a c h i a n IN a t i v e be obtained at
source for news
www.pawpawfest.com or
: Kentucky State University's American songs &amp; chants for
Pawpaw Program will be the whole family~ Rabbit by calling 740-698-6060.
there to answer pawpaw
: que~tions. There will als? be
. a full lineup of presentatiOns
: and activities open for dis:: cussions on pawpaw grow, ing,.cooking, genetics, medi'· cinal uses and other topics
· related to sustainability.
There will also a pawpaw
· competition where wild and
FREE 25 MOVIE-CHANNEL~
: cultivated pawpaws can be.
::entered . Those taking part
1.. C!..,._ 3MONTHS
· are to take three fruit s from
· the same . tree. J udy:s are
F1IEI! DVR EQUIPMENT UPGRADE
also needed.
Cooking ,with pawpaws .
FREE STANDARD
will be demonstrated . by
PROFESSIONAL INSTALLATKJN
· Chef Jackson Rouse, from
:. the Murphin Ridge Inn in
FIRST MON'Tl-&lt;
:·West Union, and Chef Dave
Rudie from the Lafayette
Hotel, Marietta. Handling an
. evaluation of · the pawpaws
106 N. 2nd, Avenue
·
d~
: will be . Neal Peterson of
Peterson
Pawpaws
and
Middleport, OH
• £ T .. o • "
· founder of the PawPaw
740-992-2635
: Foundation for this taste test, ing. His work of collecti_ng
~.-.-·--·. superior pawpaw vanetJes..._, _. ~---·---·--from early 1900s plant
breeders has lielped him
· select some impressive paw. paw varieties.
'
: A cook off is also planned ,

VISit us
.online at

OVER200

I

CHANNELS

·FREE

lagels Furaltare B Jewelry
,,.

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--·--..
-·---

Anyone who is a gardener,
tree commi ssioner. park
board member. public service
or
worker.
land scaper
groundskeeper or land man ager, can benefit from attending the workshops series.
according to Ann Bonner, an
urban forester at ODNR. She
said the he workshops will be

from 6 to 9 p.m. everv
Thursd ay · in October and
Nov. 3 and I0. For thos~ who
want to become a CcniJ ied
Arbori st. a test will be give n
on the b st ThUJ·,day. Nov. 17.
For more ini'orm&lt;i tion about
registration :mel s ciHll a rs hip ~.
contact Bonn ~ r at . 740-5899910

would like to Tn,nu
AEP-Mountaineer
·Power .Plant for
purchasing his
Dairy Feeder at the
Meigs County Fair.

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Ingels Carpet is having an

INVOOOrY
rBDUCTION

Molrawk

Berber
Carpet
S T.-\RTI~G

.\T

Mohawk

Textured
Carpet
~T-\Kl

1:\\. -\T

Flooring
Sl-\R'TI'• ; ' I

$6g;) . $7g;)
Sq. Yd.

Sq. Yd .

Sq. ft.

�.,
•

The Daily Sentinel

'"

OPINION

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

Ohio Valley Put:&gt;lishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

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

VIEW

READER'S

Fun
Great summer if entertainment
Dear Editor:

What a great summer to be irr Meigs County. Because of a
few hard-working individuals. we've been able to spend many
warm summer e.venings enjoying a variety of events.
The Friday and Saturday evening concerts on the levee
were great. What a pleasure to sit by the river and listen to the
111USJC.

The Chautauqua and Che&gt;ter-Shade Days were a unique
and educational experience. The very talented and personable
actors did a superb job of portraying the 1920s character-s. I
can ' t imagine memorizing all that dialogue and knowing so
mu ch about the character. Our local talent who opened the
Chautauqua each evening made us proud, and these events
were all free!
·
The Blues Bash filled the parking lot on Friday and
Saturday evenings as well as brought in more boaters than I
have ever seen in Pemeroy. The event had another lineup of
great musit·ians.
Then. how lucky were we to be entertained by a groltp the
caliber of Phii .Dirt and the Dozers'l They really know how to
put on a show. Opening for ·them was our own Katie Reed
who sings like a pro. ·sure hope they:ll be back next year.
· Rounding out the summer was the 142nd Meigs County
Fair which had something for everyone.
Good job by all of the people who worked so hard to bring
these things for us to enjoy. We loved them!
Marcia Amold·
Pomeroy

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Aug. 26, the 238th day of 2005. There are 127
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Aug. 26, 1920, the 19th amendment to the U.S.
Constitution, guamnteeing American women the right to vote,
was declared in effect.
On this date:
In 55 B.C., Roman forces under Julius Caesar invaded Britain.
In 1883. the island volcano Klpkatoa began erupting with
increasingly large explosions.
.
. In 1936. the Anglo-Egyptian Treaty, calling for most British
troops to leave Egypt (except those guarding the Suez Canal)
was signed in Montneux, Switzerland (it was abrogated by
Egypt in 19~ I).
In 1961 , the official International ' "Hockey Hall of Fame
opened in Toronto.
Thought for Today: "Suffering belongs to no language." Adelia Prado, Brazilian poet.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
"

be

Letters /o 1he edilor are welcome. They should
less I han
300 words. All /elfers are subjec/ 10 editing, must be signed,
and include address and 1elephone number. No unsigneilet/ers will be published. Letters ,·hould be in good /asle,
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of I hanks to organi~a li ons and indh·iduals will nor be accepted for puh/icmion.

. Th~

Da~ly

Reader Services
Correction Polley

Our main concern in au stones is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story. can the newsroom at (740) 992·

2156.

·

Our main number is
(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

News ·
Edttor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ex1. 12
Reporter: Bri~n Reed. E)(! . 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, 't;:xt. 13

· Advertising
Outside Sales: Dave Hams, E:w:t .. 15
Outlkte Sales: Brenda Davis, .Ext 16
ClaaoJCirc .: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext 10

Circulation
Olstrie! Mgr.: Jason Panerson. Ext. 17

General Manager
Char1ene Hoeflich. Ext. 12

Sentinel
(USPs 213·9601
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Published every ahernoon, Mond.ay

through Friday, 111

Court Street,

Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-dass postage

paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press afld tt1e .
Ohto Newspaper Association.
Postmuter. Sen&lt;l address ~rrectlons
to The Daily Sentirml. 111 Court Street.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.

Subacrlptlon Rates
By carrier or motor route
One month •••.•• ... •.•1 0.27
9ne year .... ..... 1 • ••'123.24
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Friday, August 26, 2005 '

~ Friday, August 26,2005

Now that we· have raised
our nation's consciousness
about the dangers of smoking, maybe it is time to go
to work on another deadly
killer in our midst and a
George
destroyer of families.
Plagenz
The culprit is drinking alcoholic consumption.
We experimented "lith u
solution to the drinking
the
18th
problem in the years from enforce
1920 to 1933. It was called Amendment - said nothProhibition - more formal ' . ing about selling grape juice
ly the 18th Amendment to that might ferment after it
stayed awhile in the cellar.
the Constitution.
And so was born the
It was not the country's
"wine
brick."
first attempt to control
Wine bricks were a grape
drinking .
concentrate
in. solid form,
The unbridled ·growth of
about
the
size
of a pound of
saloois and breweries after
the C vii War led to the for- · butter. They came in several
mali n of the National . flavors - sherry, muscatel ,
ProhJbition Party in 1869 claret and others.
The secret was· to let the
and 'later to the creation of
the Anti-Saloon League, bricks dissolve in a gallon
which eventually was suc- of water, add sugar and
cessful in enacting national shake the mixture every day
- and in three weeks you
Prohibition.
Did
the
. " Noble had wine with a 15 percent
Experiment" - as some ah:oholic content.
But to put these directions
dubbed Prohibition - . fail?
on
the package would be
It depends on whom you
ask . The· evangelical maga- illegal under the provisions
zine. Christianity Today, of the Volstead Law. So the
said in an editorial, "If makers of the wine bricks ·
responsible historian s will printed a list of instructions
look at th.e record and which said:· "Do not disexamine the testimony of solve this brick in a gallon
men and women of high of water, add sugar and
reputation. they can hardly shake daily for three weeks.
. fail to c6riclude · that To do this would give you
Prohibition brought signifi - wine with 15 percent alcocant gains to. society as a holil' content."
Was ·there less drinking or
whole and . made life more
more
during lhc years of
livable for many American
Prohibition?
Andrew
families ."
Sinclair, in his book, "The
If Prohibition did fail , as Era of Excess," says that
many believe, part of the beer consumption declined
trouble was that Prohibition bul that wine and "spirits"
laws were hard to enforce. consumption increased.
It was illegal, for instance ,
"Reaso nable
hometo sell fermented alcohol. brewed beer was harder to
but the Volstead Act
make than fermented grape
passed hy Congress to

JUice or a passable gin:"
wrote Sinclair. "Moreover,
beer was too bu.lky and dangerous ·to t~ansport for long
distances." ,
·
While bootleggers flourished and grew rich during
Prbhibition. Sinclair report·
ed that a "sophisticated and
economic
group
of
Americans preferred to mix
their own poison."
They bought raw alcohol
from the bootlegger or
druggist and mixed ttin the
bathtub with quanttttes of
glycerin and oil of juniper.
"It was thi s mixture,"
wrote Sinclair, ''that did
much to ruin the digestion
of the American middle
classes. The mixture was
served with quantities of
ginger ale to hide tlie flavor
although nothing could disguise the crawling horrors
of the aftereffects."
Even the critics of
Prohibition admit that the
speakeasy. which replaced
the corner saloon, discouraged the patronage of
drunks and hangers-on who
now couldn't afford the
price of a drink which cost
two to I0 times the old
saloon price. ·
,
On the other hand,
Prohibition gave drinking a
new respectability. F. Scotl
Filzgerald tells in "The
Beautifttl and the· Damned"
how ,th.e possession and
consumption of akohol 111
public took on &lt;ill the glamour of social prestige.
It became fashionable for
women to drink for the firsl
time . While the saloon had
been &lt;r male preserve,
women now frequented the
speakeasy.
While many refer to
Prohibition as "the Noble
Experiment That Failed,"

many others disagree with
that conclusion.
A Methodist mtntster
wrote, "Those of us who
lived through the dec.ade of
amaziflgly
successful
enforcement of that law
know ·very w'ell that
Prohibition did not fail. It
was a ·tremendous success."·
An economist of the time
was quoted as saying, "The ·
savings from alcoholic consumption have served exactly the same purpose as if
there had been an increase
in earnings and i11come 'of
$4 billion a year."
A soc ial worker was
reported · as
saying.
"Prohibition certainly has
done well .by the poor.
Tenement house brawls are
few. The continual Saturday
night drunk and Monday
morning . headaches are
gone."

·A clergyman said in a
magazine article, " In 20
years in the ministry I have
never encountered a seriou·s
probl em in my constituency
where alcohol was · not a
major factor." Another .minister called attention to the
40.000 traffic deaths a year
altributable to drinking dri:
vers ."

A Catholic priest who
specialized in dealing with
the problem of alcoholism
said, "The presence of two
or every three inmates in
our prisons can be traced to
drinking."
Are we ready to try
another Noble Experiment?
Or; given · the country's
growing taste for alcohol,
w.ould Prohibition again be
doomed to failure'?
(George Plagmz · is an
ordained mini.&gt;ter and vet·
eran newsman based in
Columbus, Ohio.)

THE PRES~URE ,

I'M TAKING
SRtWING 101,
· f'RE·DUI LAW

OF A GOOD

PARTY SCHOOL.

The D~ily Sentinel • Page As

www ,mydailysenti~el.com

..,.

:Obituaries

A thirst for change

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

PageA4

Local Briefs

Meigs Medical Clinic
adds physician to staff

Mildred Ann F'dch

Passes on sale

BELPRE
Mildred Ann
Fitch, 70, of Belpre, passed
away Aug. 23, 2005 at her residence surrounded by her family
following an extended illness.
She was born October 15,
1934 in Meigs County, Ohio,
. a daughter of the late David
. and Mona Gorrell Wolfe.
· She was a member of the
St. Mark's United Methodist
Church where she was a .
member of the choir and the
Martita Circle. ' ,
Mildred was a devoted and
caring wife, mother ani:l
grandmother, devoting many
Mildred Ann Atc:h
years to caring for them .
She is survived by her husband of 42 years Larry Fitch Sr., three daughters Belinda
Adams and her husband Bobby, Jr. of Racine. Cindy Knapp
and her husband Ed of Parkersburg. W.Va., and Jo Fitch of
Belpre; five grandchildren , Monica Chadwell, Vicki Adams •.,
Eddie Knapp, Shaun Knapp, Brandi Fitch; great granddaugh- '
ter· Brooke Chadwell, brother Ross Wolfe of Logan and sister
Gladys Fryman of East Liverpool.
In addition to her parents, Mildred was preceded ih death by
her. son Larry "Bubby" Fitch Jr. whom she cared for many
years·, daughter, Tina Fitch, her first husband Roy Fitch,
grandson Travis 'T.J ." Adams, granddaughter Michelle
Knapp, two brothers, Chuck Wolfe and Gene Wolfe. and two
sisters Mae McLeod and Thelma Cozart.
Visitation was from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 Thursday at Leavitt
Funeral Home, Belpre.

TUPPERS PLAINS -Season passes for sports events at
Eastern High School are now available from 8:30 a.m. to 3
p.m. at the high school office .
Senior citizen passes may be purchased for football and volleyball season for $10, and for boys and girls basketball for
$10. A Golden Buckeye card is required to purchase a senior
citizen pass and ticket holders must be residents of the Eastern
Local School District. The pass is ~ood for both junior high
and high school sports .·"
An adult pass for volleyball season is available for $30 and
is good for all volleyball matches at both the junior high and
high school level.
.
'
Adult passes for the football season are available for $15,
and are good for both junior hiilh and high school games .
Prices for admission to athleuc contests at the school are $4
for high school games and $2 for junior high games for adults
and $2 and $1 for students.

POMEROY - Services at
the Castrop
the new Meigs Medical
Center in
Clinic in Pomeroy continue to
t ·
h
e
grow with last week's addio· Blenes; ·
tion of Steven G. Carin · Jr.,
Medical
D.O,, gastroenterology and
Park . ·
internal medicine physician .
Audrius
Carin is offering service&gt; at
' Rubcn as.
the clinic every Tuesday from
M.D .. internal medi - ·
3 to 5 p.m. . The Mei gs
Medical Clinic, which opened
· dne. · and
Steven G.
in July, was established by the
R.K. Giri,
Carin, Jr.
O'Bieness Health System.
M D., geri Physician services also atric and intemal medicine.
include: Jane E. Broecker. .will altemate t&lt;J provide office
M.D.. Michael J. Clark, D.O. hours every Monda y from .I to
and Jack M. Ramey, D.O .. of 4 p.m. Their servi~:c&gt; will not
River Rose Obstetrics &amp; be available Monday. Aug. 29.
Gynecology, with office Ruksenas and Giri arc a&gt;socihours every Tuesday and ated with Healih FiN Care
Center in Athens.
from I to 5 p.m.
POMEROY - . The East Letart Road at the intersection of. Thursday
Earl L. Driggs, D.P.M. ,
Mei gs Medical Cltnic wil l
County Road 28 will be closed for rebuilding a 'week begin' podiatric surgeon. has oftice be closed Monda y. Sept. 5.
ning Aug. 29 .
.
I
hours on Thursday from 8:JO for the Labor Day holtday.
a:m . to II :30 a.m .. anc\ begin- The clinic is located at 113 E.
ning in September. will switch Memorial Dr.. Suite A. in the
to Saturday office hours. On Medical Arh Buildin g in
the second and fourth Pomeroy. Appointments can
Saturdays of eac h month be made by cal ling 740-'1'12·
POINT PLEASANT - The staff' of the Mason County Driggs will see patients from 9158
Monday' throu gh
Health Department. in conjunction with Dr. Shrikant Vaidya, 8:30 a.m. to II :30 a.m. The · Friday, H a.m . to noon and I
urologist, and his staff at Pleasant Valley Hospital, will be four physicians are based al ,p.m. to 5 p.m.
conducting their eighth annual free prostate cancer screening
clinic for men age 45 and older. The clinic will take place 4:30
to 7p.m. Thursday, Sept. 8 at the health department.
.
The exam will include a digital rectal exam and PSA blood test.
Test ·results and any follow-up recommendations will be mailed
· to those who receive the exam. For more information or to schedPOMEROY - Carl Eugene Parker, 47, of Pomeroy died ule an appointment, call the health department at 304-675-3050.
Wednesday, Aug. 24,2005 at O'Bleness Memorial Hospital ,
Athens.
He wa' born July 2, 1958 in Pomeroy, son of Mary Parker and
the late Roy Parker. He was a member of the Marietta Carpenters
SYRACUSE - Recyclable Recycle Days. a free event. will
Union Local# 356, a member of the Shade River Masonic Lodge
take
place from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m .. Aug. 26-28 at the parking lot
#453 and a member of the Mercy Missions Church, Chester.
near
the Syracuse Village garage.
He is survived by his wife. Arlene Connolly Parker: his
Mark
Hart of H&amp;S Hauling and Home Maintenance will be
mother, Mary Parker: stepmother, Pauline Parker, a son, whom
is 'in the Army, and daughter-in-law, Jason and Angela Parker, providing a trailer to store the appliances . Hart will also offer
a daughter, Amanda Jo Parker; at home, two grandchildren, free pick-up service for those that cannot make the drop off
Jacob Parker Laudermilt and Tiffany Renee Parker; three point. Those wishing to have appliances picked up during the
brothers and sisters-in-law, Ralph and Jenny Parker, Lester and three day event should call Hart at the following numbers:
Pam Parker and Jack and Anita Parker; a sister and brother-In- 447-2151,447-2152,992-3140.
Hart will take anything metal including air conditioners, hot
law, Carolyn and Bill White; his father-in-law and mother-inwater
tanks, washers, dryers, refrigerators, stoves, wire, alulow, Theodore and Marjorie Connolly; special friends, Greg
and Paige Winebtenner. Bob and Pam Murphy, Mark Parsons minum, cans, etc. Basically he will take anything metal and
recyclable. He wi II not take tires or trash.
and Kenny Young; and several nieces and nephews.
Recyclable Recycling Days is available to Syracuse as well
. He was preceded in death by his father, Roy Porker.
Services will be held I p.m., Saturday, Aug. 27, 2,005 at as county residenls.
Pastor Michael Bradford and family
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, with Rev. Rob
Combs and Rev. Don Coml\s officiating. Burial will be .in the
failure to require employees
MIDDLEPORT - Pastor platforms in Arkansas and
to Mi'chael Bradford. his wife, Oklahoma. as well as youth
potentially
exposed
Mound Cemetery, Chester.
.
Friends way callat the funeral home, 5 to 8 p.m. Friday.
asbestos to decontaminate Kimberly. and sons Jordan. camps and sectional events.
their clothing. The contractor and Isaac have come to Rivet
~asonic services will be conducted at 7:30pm.
from Page A1
The family plan s a choir.
was fined $1,875.
Valley Worship Center i~ youth choir and bane\ at the
OSHA defines a willful
church, and new programs for
not notify Fluor Maintenance violation as · one committed Middleport.
The hew pastor and his fam- young children. inducting a
Service of the contirmed pres- with an intentional disregard
ence of asbestos despite know- of, or plain indifference to, ily come here fr&lt;im Oklahoma. black light puppet program and
ing that the contractor'&gt; . the requirements of the where they pastored New Life drama programs tor all ages.
Center.
The
The Bradford, will also
employees were going to work . Occupational Safety and Christian
Bradfords
are
originally
from
continue
services offered
on the area in question," said Health Act and regulations. A
Arkansas. Bradford is a through
River
Valley
BELPRE- Funeral services for Charles Franklin Vroman, Stan Elliott, area director of serious violation is a condi· licensed mini ster with the Christian Academy. Pastor
69, of Belpre will be held at II a.m. Saturday at the Leavitt OSHA's Charleston office. tion where there· is a substan- United Pentecostal Church Bradford will serve as princiFuneral Home in Belpre. Burial will be in Middleport's "This ·was in direct conflict tial possibility that death or lnternational. He was rescued pal and senior administrator.
Riverview Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home 2 with the company's written se~ious physical harm can · t'roni a life of drugs and alco- and Kimberl y will \e rve as
result to an employee.
to 4 and 7 to 8 p.m. Friday. Masonic services will be held at asbestos program.:·
hoi and spent years playing admimstrator am.t su pervisor.
The alleged willful viola"
Each company has 15 busi- music in nightcluhs in They. along ' with &gt;O n Jordan.
7:30p.m. by Belpre Masonic Lodge 609.
tions include the company's ness day~ from receipt of the
failure to determine the pres-- citations to request and partici- Arkansas, Missouri · and are certified to admini,trate
and teach in lhe ACE School
permtssron from counc·il to ence of asbestos 'prior to a con- pate in an informal conference Tennessee.
Kimberly
Bradfor
is
ex
periof
Tomorrow program . Open
build two, six-foot by 10-foot tactor beginning work and fail- with the OSHA area director or
sleepin~ roon1s in the bay
me to communicate the results to contest them before the inde- enced in jail ministry as a enrollment for levels K-12
area of the squad building. of asbestos samples prior to pendent Occupational Safety speaker and worship leader. will be offered. and prefrom PageA1
enjoys motivational speak· school classe,, which h:tve
The rooms are required to work commencing that result- and
Health
Review and
comply with equal employCommission. The investigation ing to · youth groups and always been open to the pubMiddletown . The cage kit ment opportunities for both ed in potential exposure.
Fluor Maintenance Service was .conducted . by OSHA's women's groups. Her speaking lie, will be ·continued.
cost $90, the installation males and females . The work
topics include "Vicious Cycles
Services are held at 10:30
of equipment will cost $200, will be paid and completed alw was cited for one alleged Charleston area office, tele- versus Victorious Cycles.'· a.m. onSu?day. and 7.p ..n~ on
serious violation due to its phone (304) 347-5937.
Uecals will cost $300.
"The Power of Giving." Wedne,day Pr,tyc r sen ile "
by the Meigs EMS.
: Other council stipulations
''Raising Successful Children . 6JO p.m .. on Tue,day .. lol- .
Council adopted Ordinance
about the car included not 979 to issue .Ufl amended
amount of $2,643.57, for gas with Godly Principles.'' and lowed by leadcrshtp trammg
purchasing the warranty for appropriation of $ 15,000 for
and oil; Recorder Kay Hill , in "It's my Marriage and I'm through Augu,t ·
$540, and that the total pur- placement into the general
the amount of $1 ,077.40, for Sticking to It." She is al so in
chase price not exceed fund . Thi s appropriation is to
'from Page A1
.supplies; and Engineer the process of writing her tirst ·
,$9,000 upon the approval of be allotted into the following
· ' Eugene Triplett, in the book, which will touch on
a'council representative after accounts: $9,000 into "other Grande Community College. amount of $179,633 for bitu- some of those issues.
•
vehicle inspection .
The Bradfords ' sons play
contractual services,'' $4,000 His term will expire Sept. 1O, minous materials.
~
. Hill reported that he into "natural gas," $2,000 1 2010.
· • Approved payment of drums. guitar and keyboard
received a verbal quote from into "other."
Commissioners also :
bills, including $17,806.68 in. and sing. They otl'er a variety
aLM Engineering for com• Approved appropriations general fund expenditures. · of gospel music. but contempoThe meeting was called
pleting the plans and draw- . into ellecutive session once to adjustment requests from
Present were Davenport and rary is the.ir favorite. The have
ings on the Star Mill Park discuss personnel matters.
ministered in music on district
Sheriff Robert Beegl.e, in the Commissioner Jim Sheets.
restrooms. A quote is also
Absent from the meeting
expected
from
Breech were Councilmen &lt;Duke Bentz
Cham~on
seeing approximately ! 20
whichever comes first:
Engineering. Council agreed and Ivan Poo,vell. Besides coun"We will be here until we test subjects per day. A iln'al
to allow Hill to obtain state cil, present at the meeting were
max out of money or partici- site in Point Pleasant. W.Va .
. permits for the project and to Hill, Street Comh1issioner John
.
patlon tapers off." Brooks said will open on Sept. 8.
from PageA1
employ one of the two com- Holman. Fire Chief David
yesterday.
"We have a tinite
Brooks· said yesterday
. panies who submitted bids.
Ncigler. Police Mal'!\hal Curtis
amount
of
money
to
work
The Park Board has accu- Jones and•· Clerk-Tre&amp;surer ing the progmm. said yesterappointments are being made .
with, but I have .a feeling we'll as quickly as the y can. and ·
mulated over $16.000 to com- David Spencer.
day the site will see between
The next regular meeting 60 and 70 participant~ per day, be here less than a year."
plete the restrooms project.
The Pomeroy unit is· one of said use of the online quesEmergency
Medical of Racine Village Council is . and will remain open until all
tionnaire will help expedite
Services Administrator Gene at 7 p.m. on Sept. 6 at ihe participants have been seen or four locations the C8 Health the scheduling process .
Project will operate. Two oth. Lyons asked and received municipal building.'
"The ke y is patien ce."
until the project runs out of ers. in Lubeck, W.Va. and
Brooks
said.
now
open,
and
are
Belpre.
are
money for 'participants,
FRI 8126/0S • SUN 8128/0S
ongoing program with the
Box Office Opens 112 Hour
organization.
Before Flrsl Show
f'biAf""..c«"f of ll'k: ~dtt II)!.)(
"We welcome nominations
THE BROTHERS GRIMM
\'.fl W\' Chi~ic ~-.:~t·t~
from scouting organizations in
from Page A1
Mtmbt'f of A.menatn Brm! o(
'rPG131 i :oo 3:20 7:0o &amp; 9:20
the tri-counry area for these
kml"ic Ptl.fCSS~ooals
MARCH OF THE PENGUINS
achievement award&lt;' said
·
20)
rs
~·-.:p:nc.'fk'l.'
IG\t:t5 3:15 7:t5&amp;9:15
spring. His final project inhis
&amp; )tEDICAI. F.QUIPMF.NT
He noted that
\kmh.T ,-( Allll'fh.:an Al1llk'm~
THE 40 YEAR OLD VIRGIN
work to complete requtre- Colburn.
Auto Accidents Workers'
of \1l"dil-al At'U(IIfl(ll•l'
ments for the Eagle award between now and the May I, • Home Oxygen
IRl t :20 3:30 7:20 &amp; 9:30
2006.
deadline
for
next
year's
• Portable Oxygen
Compensation
wail' measuring and painting
REO EYE (PG13)
• Spma lnjunes
quarter mile markers on the awards, nominations should • Nebulizers
t :10 3:10 7:10 &amp; 9:10
Ele&lt;:tric Beds
• Mcrdiclft
• M® I~
nverfront
walkway
m be made to Smith at 949-2.126. •• Wheelchair&gt;
THE SKELETON KEY (PG13)
"Those
nominations
of
• Ac\lpu~urt • Same dl} appt
Pomeroy. The youth has been
1:20 3:20 7 : ~0 &amp; 9:20
Diapers
involved in scouting s-ince he scouts to be recognized can •Chux
DUKES OF H.AZZARD (PGt3)
come from Meigs. Athens.
was in the ftrst grade.
1:t5 3:t5 7:t5 &amp; 9:t5
Medicar&lt;/Medicaid
In announcing the selection ·Mason. anywhere in the
DEUCE BIGALOW:
We do the
of Depoy for the special area." Colburn said. noting
EUROPEAN GIGOLO (R)
achievement award, D~le this is not the only youth pro740·446-GOOl
9:t5
Colburn. S.A.R. public rela- gram which the S.A.R. sponSKY HIGH (PG)
Toll F-:ee 877·669-0007
tions representative, said that sors. They also do essay and
1:10, 3:t0 , 7:tO
70 Pine Street • G•llipolls
recognition of the ac_com- oration programs working
Ravenswood,
WV
3t6·Washl
n
St.
Wt cart about
plishments of youth ts an through the schools.

Road closing

Prostate cancer
screening scheduled

Bradfords arrive at Middleport church

Carl Eugene Parker

Recycle appliances

Sporn

Deaths

~HANGOVER

MEDS THIS
SEMESTER.

Charles Franklin Vroman

Racine

•

What energy crisis?
As everybody knows. we
are in the throes of an
"energy crisis.'' Gasoline is
threatening to gush over the
$3 a gallon mark, and 'we
haven't even he\lrd yet the
bad news about the price of
heating oil this coming winter.
It isn't that the world is
running
out
of
oil .'
Presumably that will happen
sooner or later, but it isn't
the cause of the c~rrent crisis. To take just one exam~·
pie, there are reponedly
major reserves .of oil i'n the
ground . under parts of the
Arctic Natiomil Wildlife
Refuge in Alaska, which
could easily· be accessed by
eq uipment
that
would
require using only a tiny
fraction of the immense area
set aside for the refuge . But
environmental
lobbyists
have thus far succeeded in
keeping Congress from
authorizing any steps in this
direction. lest the caribou
that roam the North Slope of
Alaska be inconvenienced
to some undetermined (and
quire possibly nonexi stent)
degree. . ,
Similarly, there are other
reserves of oil off the coast
of California. B~t do vou
have any idea how exerc ised the owners of coastal
property there can get over
ther possibility that their
vi( w of the Pacific might be
' dis(lgured by the sight ~foi l
derricks projecting from the
ocean's pristine ·surface?

William
Rusher

And they, too, enjoy the
benefit of the environmentalists' support because
under-ocean oil wells would
supposedly wreak hav.Qc
with the 'lifestyles of the resident . fish
though
research suggests that the
tish positively adore such
few oil rigs· as ellist. for the
same reason that they cluster around sunken ships and
coral reefs.
Well. suppose the environment:ilists succeed in
keeping us from these (and
other) reserves of oi l forever? Is there aoywhere else
we can turn for ~nergy'
Of course . There is always
- and always has been. for
the virtually past half-centu·
. ry nuclear power: a
source of energy lhat is literally inexhau stible and
(unlike fossi l fuels ) virtually
pollution-free. As a matter
of fact. back lll the 1960s
&lt;when the environmentalists
were first ' warming up. and
· lerocd in on coal and oil as
the. vrllams that were polluting the. environment. their'
law&gt;utts alwa y&gt; included
canned paragraphs pointing
·.

out that there was a splendid plant. According to some
source of energy ·available · studies, sharing a coll)mon
that ~aused no pollution wall with the San OnOfre
whatever: nuclear power'
nuclear power plant will
Later the environmental- contaminate you with less
ists revised their pitch and radiation in a year than you
stopped promoting nuclear can get by living in Denver.
power. since it involve s
What 's more, France,
radioacti ve, waste products Japan, and Taiwan (to menthat require careful disposal . tion only three ellamples)
In stead. the American peo- leave the United States in
ple were encouraged ·to the dust when it comes to ·
assume that every nuclear relying on nuclear power.
power plant was a ticking ·Yet in the United States the
atom bomb that might ''go hysteria against nuclear
off' at any lime, killing hun- .power plants roars on , and
dreds of thousands . of peo- not a sirigle new plant has
ple. Thi s fear may have been constructed in · three
been bolstered by the 1986 decades. The indu,lry · ha&gt;
Chernobyl disaster in the been forced to content itself
Ukrainian Republic of the with maintaining those
form er Soviet Union. but already constructed.
the Internat ional Atomic
Of course, the immediate
Energy Agency\ years-long utility of nuclear power
investigation concluded that resides in its ability to prodesign flaws. the flout ing of duce electricity. Its substitu·
safety procedure.s and the tion for oil (or coal) in other
lack of a "safety culture" uses involves further techamong_ the Soviet adminis- nological refinements; such
trative agencies resulted in as nuclear-powered •Cars.
the disaster. which spewed But there is sirnply no quesradioacti ve material into (he ti\)n that it could, over time,
environment and has been p~acticaHy end the world's
linked to dozens of radia- need for oil, and put the
tion-related deaths .
Saudi Arabians back on ·· ·
But the &gt;afety of nuclear their proverbial camels.
power
generation . in
Nol. however, until .we get
America deserve ' to be leg- over the hypnotic power of
endary. Even the famou &gt; the far-out environmentalaccident at Three Mile ists. Meanwhile, get ready
bland · killed not a &gt;ingle for $3 gasoline.
soul. As a matter of fact.
(Willian! R11slrer is a
.there has neven been so Di.lfi~tglli shed Fellol.· of the ·
mt~~:h as one radiation-relat- C/aremo/11 ltwiwre for 1/re
ed fa'tality in any American Swdr v/Siale.mramhip a11d
commercial nuclear power Polilic&lt;d Philosophy.)

will

911

Audrionna Pullins
would like to thank
Bob's Market
&amp;. Greenhouses
.for purchaSing her

t

2005 Grand ·
Dairy .

C8

·Feeder at the Meigs
County Fair.

Gr~WooriMii'1iliA

Scout

!

Ravenswood·
ChiropraCtic Center

.

304-273-5321 liE

,.

�'

•

•

Page A6

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, August 26, 20Q5

Rev.
Jonathan

Noble
PASTOR TRINITY

CHURCH

when he Sdtd 111 so many
words, " I' ve looked eve rywhere but I can't t111d the
Lord. He s htdmg and won' l
let me lmd Htm . but I know
He sees me ,md He knows
helle! He may not let me see
Him or he,tr Htm or feel Hi s
presence. hut I know He's
,uouncl here somewhere
'He sees me ,md He knows
bellet He knows I ha ven' t
dune anylhtn g wro ng. I
hdven' t done ,m ythtng to

..

Prophetic Ministry
deserve th ts Ri ght now 1t Indeed, this ts the lesson Job Stde, and I the undcrstde.
Not ttll the loom IS silent,
seems hke I' ve been throw n teaches, as St James reminds
weekend service
and shutt le cease to ny.
out hke an old lump ot us 111 hiS eptstle
Wtll GuLl un ro ll the canvas
"Be patten! the refore.
worthless coal, . but let ht m
LANGSVILLE - ''Come·
test me in the cructble. let beloved , unti l the commg of and explatn the reason why.
Ahve tn 2005" by Prophetic
The da t k threads are as Mtmstry
Htm gtve me a fa tr trial, and I the Lord. . Strengthen your
of
Chr-istian
needful
in the sktll lul J nternattonal wtll be presentshall come out pure gold," as hearts, for the commg of the
one transla11on has it
Lord is near. You have heard Weaver's hand
ed at 7 p m Fnday, Saturday
As the threads of gold and and Sund,ty at the Langsville
What IS Job rea lly saymg at the endurance of Job, and
here ? What do we often say'' you have seen the purpose of &gt;t lve r 111 the pattern He has Chu rch Theopholus and
Well , God has done thts, or the Lord, how the Lord ts plan ned.
Va lene Jones of Winston,
How so very true And the N C pasto rs
caused these tbmgs to hap- compass iOndte ,md merc tful "
pen, and it's not lair Pe11od
The Lord allows us to gq pattern He's planned for our
And tf the Lord would •just thrQugh tnals and face adver- lives really is a wondrous
gtve me a chance, I' d prove it Sities, and when He does 11 beauty, tl only we wtll be Song Fest tonight
and then He' d let up a little sure doesn't seem hke He's patient, trust Htm and believe
RUTLAND
The
btl. But no - .md here 11 bemg compass tonate but He that He ts compasstonate and
comes. the real ktckcr - God ts. Tht s truth ts very we ll mcrct l ul. then. we wtll be hkc Rutl ,md Free wtll Ball st
"stands alone and who can expressed, I th111k 111 a little Job, not only 111 hts thstress Churd1 wtl l host a songfest
at 6 p m tonight (Fnday).
dtssuade hun."
poem by an unknown duthor. but 111 In s l11u mph as well,
My ltfe is but a weavmg,
Editor 's Ndte: The Rev. Ftve clnuches · wtll come
And desptte Job's vety
understimdable human weak- between my God and me,
Jonathan Noble is pastor at lQgethct to.St ng each provtdness - his distress and dtsI do not choose the colors, Trinity Church of Pomeroy mg loc.tl t,tlent Fellowship
follow. All
couragemem, hts doubt and He worketh steadily,
and may be reached at trinity- dtnnet
bewtldennem - he has been
Oftun es He weaveth sor- ijdn@charter.net or by writing smgers wek ome. Call Pastor
honored down through the ages row, and I 111 fool tsh pndc,
to Trinity Church, P. 0. Box Jamt e Fortner 742-281 0 for
more mt orma11on.
for hts pattence and endurance.
Forget He sees the upper 429, Pmneroy, Ohio, 45769.

"'II

1

..•

cum.., li.mces mtu our li ves so

that we may trust Hun mdeed
A ltle of l,uth isn' t much of
one tl such f,uth ts never
allowed to surface and develop 111 our ex penence Smce
we knov. th,ll "wllhout lallh n
ts tmposstble to please God"
(see Hebrews II 6), let us
rejo ice 111 our opportumtles to
hdve occastons to ple.tse Htm

t hro u ~h

.m .tell ve and vital
t,ulh t h,ll grows .ts \Ve , learn
th,n there reall y are no suc h
th1ngs

as

··u nce rtarn

Ctrcumstances" for a chtld of
God The one who wal h
h,md-tn hand with God, has
·solt d gro und to tread upon
.tnd sure footing tor ht s JOUrney t h o u g ~ togs and mtsts
may vetl the path "We know
th:tl 111 ,til thmgs God wor ks
lot the good ·of those who
love Hun, who ha ve bee n
c.t ll ed accordm g to Hts purpose" (Rom,tn s 8 28 NIV)
The tutor known as "Loss"
teach es us dppreciation fo r
our bl esSi ngs, parttcul arl y
wlten our losses are wetghed
·agumst the thmgs we gain as
the chtldren of God. And tl
th.tt tsn' t enough, Loss has a
"sister" c,tlled "Gne f ' who
pnn tdes us l'dth the cumculum by wluch we most profound ly lca tn ' joy"
tnasmuch as Gnef provtdes tor us
a w ntcxt lor celebratm'n. We
most pomtedly know what tt
means to ha ve something or
so meone spec tal in our lives
when we' ve kno wn the piercmg sorrow ot losing somethmg spec tal to ns.
One mstru ctor wnh whtc h
nearly all of God's chtldre n
.tre met at some pm nl 111 thctr
lt ves ts the une call ed
"Rejection '' To Rejection Is
g1ven the dSsJgnment of radi Cdl tr,mstormatton of our
faith Hts ts a comprehenSive
course that' cove rs such deep
s.ub tec ts
as
'' Heave nl y
Socwlog}. · "Foundational
Pn oll ttes"
and
"The
Chenu stry ol Forgtve ness"

Pastor
Thom

Mollohan

In Hea venly Sm:mlogy,
Rejecti on takes God 's Word.
the Btble. ,md puts our lives
uno perspecti ve, bnnging to
ltght the soci,tl dynanucs of
the kingdom God is Lord
mer all the umverse, mclud-.
mg my tm y corner ot it.
ReJection t ea~h e s us that, as
we are care full y and fmthfull y
abtde in close union wtth God
through Chri st. that n is God
that our world rebels against.
It ISn' t about me When someone reacts agamst rny lite's
testtmony ,md even seeks to
harm me, I' m not really the
target.)t is God they are reactmg agamst (directly and indirectl y) " It is not you they
have reJected, but they h.tve
reJected Me, my chtld,"
(adapted from I Samuel 8:7).
"If the world hates you.
kee p 111 mmd that It hated Me
li rst II you belonged to the
world , tt would love you as tts
own As tt 1s, you do not
belong to the world, but I have
chosen out of the world That
ts wh y the world hates ycm
Remember the words I spoke
to you· ' No servant ts greater
than hts master.' II they persecuted Me, they wtll persecute

you also If they obeyed My
leachmg, they Will obey yours
also They wtll rreat you th ts
way because ot My name, for
they do not kno" the One
Who sent Me , . He who hates
Me hates My Father a' well''
(John 15 IH-21. 23 NIV)
Rejection provtdes us ,, l,tb
ex penence for seemg up close
the cosmtc battle bemg waged
here on earth · That ot the
human wtll set ag,unst the
mercy und might of God. An
attack upon me isn' t really upon
me; it's upon God. As a child of
God who seeks to walk closely
with Him, you also will find
yourself somettmes .tttacked
(whether verbally, emottonally.
or even phystcally) But tt tsn't
about yo u. Don't take 11 personally. God ts the one that the
world ts tejectmg
Through
"Foundattonal
Pnoritt es," Rejectto n tu tors
us, under the control of the
Holy Sptnt, to evaluate wlt y
we follow Chnst in the fi rst
place. Do we follow Hun tor
the a~: c laun of othct s'?
ReJ CCtton etthet transform s
our moti ves as we persevete in
following Him or tt weeds us
out should we choose to be
hke those menttoned m John
12:43 who, "loved pratse tram
men more than prat se tram
God " ReJectiOn st fts our
motives and causes us to ask
the questton in our walk wtth
Jesus, "Is th ts new life 111
Christ reall y worth 11 ? Am I
reall y wtlhng 10 give up c.tnng
ahout what others think ot me
and nsk the approval of other§
m order to please God''"
Constder that thts ts a

Fellowship
Apostolfc

P

M.lvrr Vall ey
Wor.;htp C~ mcr K71 S \rd
A'&gt;'e Mlddl~j)llrt Kc\tn Kunkle P a~ l or
Sunday, 10 10 J m
Wedn ~)d ;ry, 7 OU
pm Youth l-'p 7 3Up m

"

A posLult~

..

Emmanuel A. postolk TabernacW IlK.
Loop Rd nlf New Luna Rd Rutland
Sen II. CI&gt; Sun lU (X) a Ill &amp; 7 1{) r m
TILUrs 7 {~J p m Prlsl nr Many R Hult on

..

•

Assembly of God
Libert) AsSt'mbl y or God
PO Bnx ~ ll7 Ddddmg Lan~ M ~son
V. \',1, P,,: LDr N~ll T~ ILil~n l, SundOI}
S cnJ~ C~&gt; I(J ()(]a m an d 7 p m

.,

Corpcn1 cr Raptlst Church
Sundoy SLht:x1 l • 9 30am. Preachmg
Servtl C 10 :«Jam
E\ ~ mn g
Scrvu,:c
1 OOpm Wednesday Brhle Study 7·00 pm
Jmenm Pre .~~.:h~·r Royd Ross

'"
'"

Ches hLre Bapllst Church
Pastor S L c~~ Lrule Sunda) Slhool 9 3{)
am Mnmm ~ Wor~ h1 p 10 30 am, Sunday
eve tu ng 6 111 pm WedncMlay' fl lOpm
Hopl' Kap11s1 Chu rc h (Southern)

'

tremt•ndous oppoll unlty for ,t
ge nume del ot v. orshi p in your
ltl e Becau se "worshtp" ts all
.thout the "worth-shtp" ot the
One bcmg worshtped, daring
to sacnltce yom constdcration
of the app roval or others can
be a ft agrant offe rin g tndeed.
The esteem or God chosen
over the estee m ot other men
,md women m.ty be seen as
radt caltsm, hut 111 the sptritual
realm , 11 ts the onfy logical
conclu sto n one can reall y
teach when wctghmg hts or
her pt!Ottltes mille. " . . Any of
you who does not give up
everything he has cannot be
My dtSctple" (Luke 14:33b)
Fi nall y, the tutela ge of
ReJecuon ts used hy the Holy
Sp tnt to cduse a "chem tcal
rcdc'tt on" 111 the spmtual
tealm in us who have pl aced
out faith 111 Chnst Jesus to
become the rec tptents a t
un beltev,tble lorgiveness, the
fruit of trul y ";un:1Z111g grace"
"But I tell you who hear Me·
Love your enemtcs, do good to
those who hdtc you, bless those
who curse you, pt ay for those
whu llltstt eat you .. It you love
those \\ho love you, what cred11 is th,tt to you I Even 'sinners'
love those who love them . But
love your enemtes, do good to
them, and lend to them without
expecting to get anythmg back.
Then your reward wtll be great,
and you wtll be sons ot the Most
High. because He IS kmd to the
ungrateful ,mu wtcketl Be meretful, .fUSl . ts your Father is merctlul Fnrg tve, ,md you wtll be
torgtvcn" (Luke 6·27-28, 32,'
35-36, 37b)
Oncc we've been set tree

tram condemndllon by God
through Hts forgtveness,
ReJCCtton 111 our experience
allows th e · dy namtc of forgtve ncss to dll ,tck !he s tron ~ ­
holds of condemnati on Ill
othet people' s lives as well ,
and shed the glow of hope
IIll O the dark dun geon ol
despatr th,tt unforgtve ness,
.htt terness and anger would
otherwtse but ld for them.
Essenuall y, Retcctton m
your hfe provtdes you a door
by " htch you m.ty enter into a
deeper and more meanmgful
walk wtth God while smlultaneously allowmg the Gospel
of Chri st to be lifted up for
others to behold and al so
rece tve So tn ltght ot all thts,
"do not fret because of ev tl
men or be cnvtous ol those
who do wrong, for hke the
grass they wtll soon wither,
like green pl ants they will
soon dte away Ttust in the
LORD and do good, dwell ine
the land and enJ OY safe pasture. Deli ght yourself 111 the
LORD and He wtll gtve you
the dcs tres of yo ur heart.
Commu yu ur way to the
LORD , trust 111 Hun and He
wtll do tim . He will make
your nghteousness shine like
the d,twn, the JUstice of your
cause ltke the noonday sun"
(Psalm 37 1-6 NIV )
(Thom Mollohan and his
family llaPe mi11istered in
sou/Item Ohio the past 10
years. He is the pastor of
Pathway Commu11ity Church
a11d may be reached for comme11ts or questio11s by e-mail
at pastorthom@pathwaygallipoli.l .com ).

~7 0 Gr.1n1 St

Midlllcpm1 Sunday st: houl
lJ ~O.Jm Wnr~ h tp
II a m nnQ6 pm ,
We,tnc st lny Ser&gt;IH 7 p m
Rulhmd Fi r'lit Bapti.'lt Cllu rc h ,
Sund.l) Sd HMll lJ 10 a m Wo11ih1 p
W4 5a m

"

"

Pomt"rov f 1rsl Baptist
j ,1n Brm kcrL Ea ~t Matn St
Su111111 ) wnr , htp . 10 01 1 ,\ 1'11 WLd Bthle
S1Udy b 1(1 pm

"

P u~ t m

"'

~ lrs1 S&lt;luthern 8apt1 ~ 1
41 H72 Pmnc rn) P1h Pa, tor f LanHlr
{) IJ r}ant Sundav Sdnttol I) '0 a m
Wu r.o;h!p S I5.Lm 9 4~ um &amp; 704l p m ,
W..: dn ~· " l .l ) S..: n iU'' 7 no p m

"

Fi rst Bupl1st &lt;.: hurch
P.!s lol M Lrl.:. Morww r,th .nnl P.1lmcr S!
1\-ILliJ il p•rL Sundil) SLh•1o ] V l 'i .1m
Wllt \ 111]1
10 I 'i a Ill v 7 04! p til '
WeJ il l''da) S ~ f\ Lll! 7 ()()p Ill
RllUnt' F1 rst Bt~ ptlt'il
,,,1';1111 KLl k Ru k SunJ ;r4; Sl hiHll IJ ]()
,1 m \\u r, hiJl
Ill -U) 1 m 7 O!l p m
W~·Jn ~ ' d :t) Slr\ ILn 7 ()() pIll

''

"'
"'

Siht&lt;r Run 1\aptist
1\ L,tllf John
lnson Sund.iv Sc hPOI .
W,t m Wn rslu p
ll.1 m 7 Otl pm
Wt•dne, d.ly Sen Ill's 7 00 p m

s.....

"'

Ml Un1on 8 i1 ptlsl
DaV Id Wise man SunJ~ y s~ h oo l
~ ~ 5 ~ tl1 , I:H m ng
6 30 [I Ill
\ \-ednesday Ser v 1 l e ~ ft ~Op m
l'asLil(

Bethlehem Bapt1st Church
Gr eat Bend Rout e 12A. Racme OH
Pa ~ t m Damd Men·n Sunda} School
IJ ' 0 am Sunda) Worsht p
10 30 am
11
\\cdJtesJav IJ Jb\e SLudy • b OU p 111

"

"'

.." '
'

.

.''

Olrl Relhtl Fl't't Will Baptist C hurch
2Xtl0 1 St Rt 7 MaldlL'po rt Sund.t)
Sdll•l•l 10 a m E\ t mng • 7 00 p m ,
rllll r~ dJI S~ nK ~ ~ · 7 I)(}
Hill side Daptlsl Church
St Rt 143 JU ~I off Itt 7 Pasto r Rev
J11 mes R A~; r ee, Sr Sunday UntiL ed
Sm It t Wo r ~h1 p 10 ~0 am . 6 p m
WNn e sd a~ S c r~!Ct'~ 7 p m

-"

'"

Vlclory B•pl iStlndependenl
N 2nd St Mtddle pon Pasto r James
E Keesee , Wor sh tp lOam 7 p m
Wednesday St l'\ i\."CS · 7 pm

'

Be Optimistic
Oo~1 know

Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6215

snmmnc "o\-tlO alway•
h:u • '-11Uk ou hn or
hl'f b,-rl 1\o m.aliC"t
wlu1 ki nJ of uouhk •
ltf~t

Pco rlc li~

Athcn ... Poml' lllYor P.n kl'r"hurg
1-740-667·3156

"Still small et/011/ilt to care"

•
I'J){UUII$ ,

209 Thord
Rac1ne, OH

Dair1.1

Queen

•tti•""

Brazier

wo nt t.h ilt C9l lles from
111&lt;- Latin wnn:l

700 N 2nd St

'"

Middleport OH

l llt"~ U n§

"' bft~ "' .

WouMn'1 11 he

Fen ce &amp;

tr~ t

O -len 992 M5 1

I(J IJ'p~h l h &lt;' up•
and dowm of lifr

Somct1nl¢' 1W l.'tili

-

•lm:111,c a.nydu u8 bu1
nut own aniHkk. ~
mat1cr what i• koinlt on

dlt
wntkl. WC' can alway•
l1ft np o u r htart• and
m f)"t livet. and

ln~:m ou

dl

P,Q Bo• 683
Pomero Ohoo 45769-0683

J.r.;,yrul r

l11at ~thct 11'0
ro cnn ~o n:i oin" .ind b(!

opum. n..:'

, L -L_;:.__ _ __.:..&gt;.~.._ _

~...,_-=...__-----1

-...w .and l iM- Lord ha• taktn 3\' ~Y. may d w nam'" t~f lhl' l_{)rd b&amp;-

Jinl.,d .. Uob l .l l )
With ( ; nd 's helt•· we can be l'll'tilmstJc . l• rai~ Hlm dUs wt"C'k m
fUi l' clw :«n t10~ 1~ of wonhip and fr...,_u o n t he " hc:lt " an you.,'" lifor:

MCJ(\D_A¥

fl f.) OA't

l n.-.... u. , 1n ....... ou. z u..q
1&lt;1·11
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b l· l'"

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WE.ONF.$QA,l

ll--..117
h i II

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lllllUUA'I'
l

n-•r
:L I· IJ

499 Richl a nd Ave nue. Ath\•ns
740- ~94 -6333

( ;00 1 \\'Onl tcll ~ tht&gt; u o ry or job, " ~ood rn~ u Y~ h(,J es~aenccd l\t"C'itl
11ill'rnnR. Uctl'llil&lt; tu 1 trou hl e~ , Joh m m •nuoi tn Wflflhlfl ( ;od lfe t.;~~d .

li\.~'DAY

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

Hills Self Storage

7 40-949-2217
StZes avaolable 5x t 0 to I 0 • 20

If .ve abide ;, Me, and My

•hi••V.•·

. the toN

740-949-2210

29670 Bashan Rd .
Racine, OH

(&lt;k'UWll o n t ht bc-11 •

,~,.

Locutc'.l lc"" th.m 10 mmutc:-. from

SATL1U)AY
l T-.dio)'

li l-t

t-800-451-'11106

words ab1de 111 )'Oil, ye shalt
ask what ye will, a11d it slw/1
be (/o11 e 11rllo you.
.fohn 15:7

www.ka rra udiolo v.t:um

The Hppllance man
7 40-985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service' • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Young

MEIGS FAMILY EYE CARE, UC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mutber r~· Heights
Pomeroy. Ohin 45769
(740) 992-3279

Tol Free 1-877-SHJ -2433

Faith Ba ptl§t Cburrh
Rullroud St , Mason Sunday Schoo l · lO
a m Worsh1 p
II a m
6 p m.
Wednesday Se n1 ~es 7 pm

Michael L . Crites
Director of Fa mily &amp;
Communitv Services
oVerbrook
'
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration ot We "

1-'orest Run Baptist
Pa§tor An us Hun, Su nda~ School
a m, Worshlp · ll am

.,

""'

333 Page Street
(740) 992·6472
Fax i 74oi 992-7406
M&lt;ddleport OH

Mt. Moriah Baptbil
Foun h &amp; Mam St , f&lt;rhddlepon Pastor
Re1 GtlDe rt Cra1g, Jr . Sunday School ·
930a m Wor.;h1p IO-l5a m

H nurs

Antiqultv Baptist
Sundu&gt; Sc hool IJ ~0 am , \\o ors h1 p •
Ill 4 ~ a m Sund:l} E1emng 6 00 p m.
Pastor Don ~'alker

Mi{fi.e 's 'J&lt;.?staurant
Homematle Desserts Made Datly
Homr ( ooJu d Mrals &amp; Dnrly Spu wls

""

U pr.: n 7 d.LY" ~~ wee k.

0

""
"0
""

740·992-7713

'

Blessed are the pure
in heart; j01: they
shall see God.
MaUhew 5:8
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; lEES
190 N Second St

Middleport. O H

740·992-6128

Local source lor trophtes,
Ia ues t-shtrts and more

KEBLER
BUSINESS SE RVI CES
A 11 A t·cou11l11rg &amp;
f 'maflcral !)ervices Firm

6 18 E M.nn Strccl • Pomem}

(740) 99 2-7270

" Do not steal. Do not lt e . Dt' not dccctvc one ~mother. "
Lev nt c ~ s 19 , I I

Trinity Chu n:h
Sewnd &amp; L)nn P()meroy Pa~ux Re\
Jnn11than N&lt;1hlc W11 r~tu p I 0 2 ~ 1.1 m
Sund;1y S dl!.Kl]IJ I ~ 1.1 111

·• m Da ll y M.t ~s

~ }0 a m

Church of Christ
Hrm loc k Grme Chmlian Churrh
Mtn tsLer Larry IJ rnw n, Wllrsh1p • 9 3U
a 111 Su nday St: h ~ KJI 10 ~0 am B1blt
Study - 7 p m
Pomeroy Chu rc h of Chn." t
Sunda} Sdmu l 9 30
a m Wur ~ hq1 10 10 am 6 p m
Wc Jne ~ ay Sc rv 1 ~e~ - 7 p m
212 W Mam St

H 22 6 Ch ildren s l ~o m c Rd , Sunda y
Sl hool · I I a Ill , Wo 1 ~ h 111 · I!Ja rn ,_ 6 p m
Wcdnc&gt;ll.l} Scrvllcs 7 p m

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•
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Rulhmd Fm Will Baptist
Sa lem St PaMor Jam1 e Furtner Sunday
S~:: h oo l · 10 u m Evenmg
1 pm,
Wednesdlly Servk es · 7 p m

your hght so shme before
men, that they may see your
good work s and glonfy your
Father 111 heaven."
Matthew 5.1

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•

•
•
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•
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11
11

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Episcopal

Holiness

Ente rpnst
Arla nd K1ng Su nday Sehoul
If) lfl .1 111 Wor'h 1p 9 ~ t J am B1ble
Study Wed 7 ~0
Fllll\o\ oods
P a~ J ilr KfH h Rmkr Sund ay S~hoo l
10
.1m Wl•n.lup II a m

l:om mumly t:hureh
Pa~Lllr Sle\e fnmd; \1 alll • SLrcet
RuLI .Lild Sund.ty Wo r~up- J 0 (10 ,, m
Sunday Scn'l(t- 7 p m

Furest Run
PasLor Bnh R ohm~o n Sunday S{hnnl 10
u m Wnr1&gt;h1p ~ ur n

Keno Churc-h of Chrlsl

Ro!if or SharoTt Holiness &lt;.:hu n: h
..
. l eadrn g Creek Rd Rutl and Pa ~ Lnr Rev
Dewe) Kmg, Sunday school 9 ~0 u m
Sunddy
wmslu p 7 p II\ , WeJ ncMlay
pra)e r met:ung 7 p rn

· '} 10 .1m , Sunday S( hool
Ill 10a m Paslur J ctfr~y Wall a~:c, hl ami
1rd Sunduy
HeHrwallow K•d ~:e Chur.ch of Christ
Terry, Sunday School . - 9 lO
&gt;m
Wtlrs hl p · 10 1() u m 6 1U p m,
W~:J n e~d ay S e n tt: c~ 6 ~ I J p m
P~ stor B ru ~ e

Z10n Church of Christ
Pomc r~1y, Ha rm onv1lk R d (I{ L 141),
P:~s LO r Roger Watson Sunday Sd1011l
!J ~ n 11 111 Wnr~ h 1 p
Hl ~0 a m 70 0
r m Wednesday Serv1ces · 7 p m

l'uppers Plain Church of Chnst
wur ~h tp S&lt;! ntce - 9 i m
Ct1 mmurmm · 10 a m , Sunday ~h hoo l
\0 15 .1111 . Yumh- 5.,10 pm Sunday 8 tbk
Stud) W&lt;!d ne ~ d ll) 7 pm
ln s tru m ~ n r t l

pm

1.1111
~ Oa m '

a m , Worshlp

S unlll ~

Bethel \\orshlp Center
S R 7 Pastor Koh Barher \\~ ~ r , lu r
SCI'V ICC 10 a Ill Sunda rJmll\ L r L ~
d a~ s e~ tnd ud mg Adu lt R1 hlc Stud '
M ~ rn~ ge Class Ou ter Luti iL " Youth
Ml sSitmeLLes, &amp; Ruy al R a n gc 1 ~ 6 fl lll
Su nda) Ce ll Group meeu ng s th rn u!'hout
the \l.etk

Sl h&lt;•ol - 11

IU am

Pta rl Chapt:l
Sunday SdllKJI 9 am WorshJ)l · J() a m

Pas tor Bn un Du,oham Wursh1p
a m, Sunday s~tiwl - 10 1"i a m

lJ

30
Ash Stm l &lt;.: hu rch
A~ h Sl
Ml dd lcpo rL -P,t'i tor
Sund.t \
Sd J~1 o l
1;1 3(1 a 111 , Morn 11111 'W·n ~tup
10 ~0 a m &amp; 6 10 prn Wc d u c ~ da y St: l ~ 1 u
ll 10 p rn Y1ttll h Scrvlt C ft :10 [J m
A.ijllpt I 1ft Center
~u l l Gm pd Cluu d l
P a st v1 ~ John &amp;
P my 'll. . td~ 611l S ~ wn d Ave M as~ m Tq
~() J 7 Sl rut, Ltmc S und ty 10 10 ,) m
W~d n c~ d ay 7 pm

RIK'k Sprm gs
PasLo r Kc1lh Rader Sun d.IV S~ hool ~ 1~
a m , VnH~&gt; hl [l
10 &lt;1 m
Youth
Fell owship Sund.1y fl p m

Pin t' Gro ve Bible Holiness Church
112 nulc ufl Rt 125. P.t~ 1 ur Rev 0 Dell
Manley, Sunday Schm1l
Y ~ () .t m
Worship
1 0 ~ 11
,1 01
730 p m ,
Wcdne~ d ay S erv ~ l ~ 7 1{1 p m

Rullt~nd

P,t, I\Jt H11. k 1\ou rnc. S uml ~y Sdl•)l) l
1) 'l; O ll Ill wnr~ h l]l \() 1() a Ill Thursday
s~rv l l~s .

7pm

Slllt- m Cl'nt~ r
P.lsLm Wt lh. un K ~ l ar ~ hall Sunda}
SchJk)l 10 I' 1rn Wnr ~ h lp lJ I ~ a m
B1bl.: SLuJ y M,,fldi.l}' 7 tKJ pm

Weliltvo n Klhle U olln es.~ Chul"l'h
Mtddte purt t•.t~to r RtLk
Hournc, Sund.ty Slhl)(l l H) 11 111 W1,rsh1p
10 4'i p m Sunda) I w 7 00 p m
\ \1L
"&lt;Inesday Sen lee 7 111r m

1'i Pe arl St

Abundant Grace R F I lJ ~ '\ S l tmd St Mldtll eron P,L ., L n r Te rc~ a
D a\ 1 ~
S11 11l!~) 'erl l l~.
10 am
Wed ncWa1 '-l'tl tu 7 p m

Sno ~ vi ll t•

SunJ ty S dt ~lO I 10 1 rn Wnrsh1p

I}

h uth •·un { , o ~pel C hurch
BuHnm P t,Ll•r SLn c Rc..:d Sunda)
St.' hool I} ) {) .1111 \l. of.~ l11p ') \() am
onJ 7 p m Wullll~ d ny 7 p 111 Fr1d.1}
lcllo\l. slll)l 'lr\tlc 7 p til

.1m

Lo n~

Hysell Run Commuml} Chun:h
P.l ~ h lr" Rc\ Larry lcml ~y Sunduy Sthnu ]
. ·~ 1lla m Wnrshlp · J 0 4~ a m 7 p m
Thu! Sll.l} B ~hl e Study atiJ Yuuth 7 p Ill

IMha ny
Pastor John (,Litnnrc Sur1~la' Sd1uol 10
u m W1)fSh 1p
Y 1 m Wt'J rt ..: sJ a)

'I au M'I ChfT 1- rl'l' Method1s1 Churrh
P.l,h•r Gk nn Ruv. ~. SunJ av Sd wo l ·
IJ ~ () .Jill Wurslup 10 ~ (I am .md 6
p Ill We(lll\' sl l tYSetvll l' 7 (I() p m

~1'

Latter-Day Saints

Rutland Churrh or Chmt
Sunda} Sd mol - ~ '0 am WUJ sh1p uml
Communmn 10 10 am Hoh J Werry
Mnuster
Bradford Chun:h of Chri st
Corner (11 St RL 1 2 ~ &amp; Hrudh ury RU
Mmtstcr Doug Sh.1mhhn Youth Mlmsk r
IJ tll Amb c ~ gc r , Sund l}' Sdli)OI · Y ~U a m,
\l.\1 r~ h J p
~ 00 am
10 ~0 am , 7 00
]l m ,\'n~ dnesd u y Serv1ces 7 {){) p m
Hickory Hills Chun:h or Chr1st
Plams. PasLu1 M1ke M\JUIC, B1bk
cl ass 9 a m Sunda y worship 10 11m
SundaY. worship 6 30 pm Sundav Rtble
da.ss 7 pm Wed
Rffiisvllle Churth or Chnst
Pastnr l'h1hp Sturm Sunday S•hool 9 ~0
am Wo!'11htp Ser\llC 10 10 11 m B1ble
St udy, Wc d n~sdlly, 6 30 p m
De• tt r C hurch nt Christ
Sunda v s.:: hool 9 \0 a m Sund ay \Hlf!\ hl p
IU ~ Oa m

Churrh or ChriSt
lntcrsed ton 7 and 124 W E' angc l1 sL
Dc nm s Sargc nL Sun da y 8 1ble Study ·
930am Wursh1 p IOlOa m and6 10
p m Wednesday B1ble SLud y 7 p m

Christian Union
Hai'tford Churth or C"-rlstln
Christian Union
Hanford. W V11 Pu slor Da vtd Greer
Sunday Sl; hnol 9 ~0 a m Worsh1 p
10\0 am. 700 p m Wednesdn}
Sm LCt~ 7 00 p m

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Chun:b or God
Md e H1 il Rd Rucme. Pastor James
Sanerf1eht Sunday Sc hool 9 4S am
E\C:mng 6 p m , Wt'dnesda v Serv tces 7

pm
Rudand Church or God
Pastor Ron Heath Sunda' Worsh1p 10
a m , 6 p m , WednesdP) Sen 1ces • 7

pm
S~ n

cult' First Chun:h or God
Apple 11nd Second Sts , Pastor Rev Da' 1d
Ru ~sell Sundll) Sc hoo l and Worship 10
am E\ tn tng Servttes 6 ~ 0 p !1'1
Wednesdll}' Semces • 6 JU p m
Churth of GC)d or Prophery

K&amp; C JEWELERS
.212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

992-3785

992-6677

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

R ,&gt;h tn ~' ' "

Ht hl1 (.hun. h
f' n

P ~st or

f{J

Bl a d.: "~''

J Suud.11 \du 11•l
\\ ur'h lp ] ( I 111 ~ 111
"!
1,\ L'tJn~ ...J u \ S~' l\l ll'

Communi ty ur C hnst
Pnn lan d Rllcme lh t P r~ ~ I M J1m Pro /1111
Sun dav Schnol 9 1() n m, Wor, htp
10 ~ 0 a m Wc lln ~sday Sen tl:t' 'i. 7 1111

Mtn ersv ill r

P1 ~ l

Pr1mnm

7

Re v

am

1()

Q

p rn

10

~ fl plll

Sturn Hil t: lommuruh Apus loh ~
~ hun h
l'a,llt r \\ ~ \llC 1&lt;. k u,JI &lt;.,u ndt~ ll&lt; lr,lup
(1 01.1 p m \\ nl n o.:~d 11 '• IMI p m H1b lc
Stud )
KtJmctn~ I d t ( hun h
'i tlU 'I; ~ li d A11 1\! JJd k pntl 1' ~~\vr
\1tl.:.t' 1-' urL111 .1 11
P.t ., l\ 11 i lll C r iiU ~
l~,t W r e ii L t huo.:lll lll \\ot ,lllp I() OI J un
Wc dn ~:,J ~~ Sd\ lll' 7 J' rn

lhfto n IHlwl lliU it• I hurth
1 1.\u nJ t\ ~c h nol
ill till
Wr•r' h1p 7 p m \hJn ~,d. J ) l.\~:n1u 7
pm

Cl1 11 un \1, I,

~e ~ l1fr \';ctnn ( r nhr
1771 Gcllt};l' {_ n. d . R•1td ( t&lt;Jiltpnh-, ( )H
Pa.,t1•r Bt11 Sl:tten SunJi!~ S~ tli l~' Ill
l Ill &amp; 7

r

m

\~ ~ Jn~-J .n

7 pIll &amp;

) nulh 7 pn1
1-'ull (.os ptl Lh1m h
of lht' I t H n~ Sll \ lor
J.I. Lns A111 1q utt) P.1, 1or J~: "~
S en r ~ e s SaLurda; ~ llll ]l lll

~ 1 " 111 '

Salt'm ( omnmmh l hurch
ilal k of West c~J ] umhl .J w \ a &lt;' Ill LIC\ ~~~~
Rnod Pa, tor Ch o~ rl l'' Rou,h I ~114 1 fl7~
~ ~~X Su m..l .ty Sdtoo l IJ ~11 .1111 Su nd u'
C\t:n m g w ~ ~~~c 700 jl lll 81 hh SLUJ\
Wedne, diJy ,.,.n ll ~ 7 00 pm
Hobson C hnslut n f ell owsh1p Chu rrh
Pastur H c r~dic l Wh 11~ Suud.l) SdJOt! l
10 am Sund.1y ( hur&lt;:h ~ en Il l' fl ~~~ pm
Wc d r11: ~d.1 ) 7 pm

Sc rv ll ~s - I O um

H111dbury l: hurch nf ( hn~&gt;t
M m l sL ~· r T1 H11 Runynn ~l) "i "iS Hr:tdhur;
Ro.td M1ddk pnrt Sunday Slhc1ol • 9 10

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My
INSURANCE
Ful[ llne at
words abide ill you, ye shall
Insurance
Products+ ask what ye tvill, and it shall
F1nanc1al
be done unto you.
Servtees
AGENC lES Inc
John 15:~
BUt

1

!Non de nommauonal [el l ll w ~ htp l
Meeung m lhe old Amem:lln Ugn•n H~ll
SouLh Fourth A\enue ~h ddkpnrt
Pastor Chns Stew an 10 00 am Sur1d a)
Other rncctmgs 111 hurne~

Pnmt'my
Wor ~ h1p

( l1 h t~n

011.s i ~ C hri ~ llan Fe ll n ~ ship

Heuth !Middleport)
Pustot Hnun Dun ham Su11 d.L; s~hnn l ·
&lt;J30arn Worsh ip · II Di) ~ m.

n anvillt' Holiness Chu rrh
3 10'i7 Sl.!lt' J.l&lt;1Ule t!'i Lmg,\ lk PasLnr
Vu,;tur Rou iih, Su ml.1y ~dt~JOI \} ~ 0 a 111
Sunduy ""or~ htp I[) \(} am &amp; 7 p m
Wed rt~·sJ u y pr.t}et &gt;erl Il l
7pm

hlnit'\4 lhbLt C hurt h
I Cl&lt;trl \\ V~ HL I l'a~t••r l:l r1 m ~b y
Sunday Sl h ~&gt;•il 1;1 11) ~ m 1.\nl'•lup 7 OU
p 111 Wcdn~ ~lb \ Hthle Stud\ 7 00 p m ,
h .ilh Fell o\4 ~ hLp &lt; M.Jsadr 1~1r ( hrist
l' h lur lh• I r.trll.ltu IJt ~k~ rh S ~·n 1 .::~
I nd&lt;~ ~ 7 1' n1

Other Churches
Amazany: Gra~e lommumt\ l hu n: h
Paswr W:~} ne Dunlap StaL~ RL 6KI
Tuppers Pl u1 n ~ Slln \\&lt; ~~r~ ht p Ill Jill &amp;
6 30 pm.. lllursda) f.h bk Stud) 7 Oil p m

P a~ 1 11r

G race t.' plscopal ( hu n: h
12h E Mum St Pmneroy Sunday SlhO(ll
Hul ) Fu-= hamL II 00 a Ill Rn
and
F.~.l wnrtl Payne •

Caha ry Pilgrim C..: h t~pel
H a rn ~ ~lll\i trl e
Ro11d
Pll~ l nr
Cha rles
McKe111le Sund t!~ S~hoo l Y 30 am ,
Wur ~htp
I I a m . 7 Oil p 111 , Wc dnc ~d ay
Sei'\JCC 7 00p m

'

•
••

Pil~ h J I

Middleport Church or C hrist
5th anU Mum PasLOr AI Hartson Youth
Mtmster Josh Ulm S u nd~ y Schon! I.J 10
am , Worshtp 8 15 J O~Oa m 7 pm .
WeJncsday ScrvllCS 7 p m

•"

"
•
,.•
•

Tupperii PI1Uflli St P11ul
Jane f:l ealltc Su nd ay Schuol 'J
~ m. Wor,htp
10 a m Tuc ~1.l:t} ScrvKe~
7 l0 p m
l~ntntl Cluster
A,tturv tS}' TOilU&gt;e l PasLur Bub R nbm ~o n
Sunday s~hl ){l l IJ .. , a Ill . 'Worshi p II
11 m V. ct lne ~ d.l ) Serv1n ~ · 7 ln p m

pm

p,,sltlr Bnh

10

h am - Rpm .._

1\ /11111\( l h f /f

Sacred HeaM Catholk- Churrh
] f) I Mu lhcrry Aw Pomeroy, 9&lt;}2 ~ 89R
l'asLnr lkv WalLe r 1::: Hcm7. , Sa L Con
4 4 5 5 15p m , Ma s ~ 5 10 p m , Sun
Cun -S 451J 15 a m , Sun M a~ ~ '} 10

Rtden11u r Sunda\ 'illhlHI
Y ~~ ~ a m
' p I (I ~[l,t m Wnl n(...!d ~ 1\er.r.:: e
Wm,lu
• 7pm

C hl"ritl' r t hun: h or the Nuartne
Hcrhcr1 Gr.tk Sund Jy s~ho••l
- 9 lO a m Wor,Jup • I I d 111 , 6 p m
Wedne..mty Sen l lC~ 7 p m
Ru tla nd Churt' h of I be ""laZMrtnt'
Sunday S(hOI'J I Y " l a rn Wn r ~ l up
]() ~ 0 01 m , 6 1U p rn, Wed n c MI~I
Scmccs 7 [J m Rc1 Mtkc C l;~rk
Pa.~ t or Rt~

d1lli
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
1741..aJ M Strtrl• PO Boll70
Sew Ha, rn . WV 15265
OnNo-I N-eOo•

HHrnsu nYille ( ommunil~ (hurth
Thd &lt;\ll Du1h nm 5onday. Y 10
a 111 .md 7 p m Wcdn ~ sd&lt;t ~ 7 r m
P a ~ t nr

Ca rmci- Suunn
(' t r m~ l ~ ll &lt;~~ h.~n Rds Raonc Oh1 o
Pfi ' lllf John ( J tltn or~ Sun day !:idlO•II
Y 1o am . Wursh1p 10 4~ a m l1 1hk
SLUdy Wed 7 ()(I p m
l\lorrung Star
Jla-; Lor John (Jtlnmrc. Sund IVSlh tMll I I
am W11rsh1p JO .tm

rhl' Chun:h or lesus
t.:hn sl or l.ilth: r·Dily Su mt..
St Rt 160. -l-1 6 6 147 or 44 6 74 8ft
Sunti,J\ School Ill :w 11 a m Rc.l td
S it li~L~I Pn e s t h\itod
I I ll 'i I ~ UU nn ntt
S.tlr.un ..: nt St: t\l l ~ 9 10 J&lt;i a m
H u m em .1k m~ mc cLl ng I ~L Thurs 7 p 111

FB1Ih \'all ey f11 l~ rnudt Chunh
Ru n R lllil Pastnr I{ ~' 1 111 11 11'11
Ra w~on
Sunda y I \t:illn g 7 r 111
rllUrsda) S..: rVIH 7 r Ill

Lutheran
St. John l.utheran Chun. h
Pmc Gruve Worshtp - 9 UO a m , Sundav
10 00 a m Pasw r Jum cs P
Schoo l
Brad)'

Radnt
Pastor Po.:tc Shafter Sunday School 10
II a m , V. cdne~Jay 7
a m , Wurshtp
pm

Our Saviour l.utheran t.:hurch
Wa lnu L and Henr) Sts R1ncns,., ood .
W Va P a~ t m On\rd Russel l Su nda v
School 10 00 a m Wor.;h1p II am

Cool,lllt' United Me thodlsl Pamh
PasLOr Hd en Khnc, Coolville Churl h,
Mam &amp; f lfth SL Sund.Ly S~hoo l 10
n m Worsh1 p ') i m Tu ~s doy Sen te e$
7 p Ill

St. Paul Lutheran C hun:h
Comer S)ea mo re &amp; SeL ond St Pumcro)
Sund ay S( hoo l • 9 ~~ a 111 Wnrsh1 p 11
am

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Worsh1p - I I a m Pastor R1chard Nea"c
B~hlel Unlled Methodist
Nt \lo Ha1 en RL cha rd Ne ase Pastor
Su nda y worsh1p q ~0 am Tues 6 ~0
prayer and Bible Study

Ches1 er
Pastor Jane Bcamc Wm ~ h i p 9om
Thursday
Sundmy s~hon l · 10 a m
Sen 1ces 7 p m
J oppa
PasLor B11t"t Ramlulph Worsh1 p
a m Sundav Sd1ool 10 10 am

..
......
....,
....
..............
:flfl)er :funtral "olltt

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

t•

.._

*112-M44

Dyesvillt' Comnmn\1y Churt"h
Sunday s, hool · 1,1 ~U a rn Woh hlp
10 30am .7p m

Hoc kingport C hun:h
Gr.:md Street, Sundu} Schonl 9 ~0 a m
W1lrshtp • 10 lO 11 m , Pastor Ptulhp Bell

Faith Gospel C hurt.'h
l ong ftottnm Sunda) S(hool Ci 10 a m
\\lur~l11 p
10 4'; am, 7 ~ U p m ,
\\oednesda y 7 ~0 p m

tI

Pentecostal
l't'nl nnslltl A s!!~ mh l l
St R1 124 l{ tl lll l l'.t' tnr V... 1l11~m
H&lt;lh,!l lo. Suuda&gt; S.. lt ut• l
1\1 1m
~\ l' lll lll:' 7p ll l W~ dn e~d ! )S~f\ I &lt;CS 7
ip m

Presbyterian
s , ra' ust F irs Ll nnC'd Pn!sb\ltr lan
Pa,11.•r (( on, rt frn\l \\ nr-h1p I I a m
Harnson , dlt" l'nsb' h•rtan t hun: h
Cnw. \\ or,hl[l Y ~ m

P.J~I tlr R 0 h~ n

\lldd k p.&gt;rt l'resh\ll.'ru•n
S11' d~ r \~Pr• h lp I I J 111

Seventh-Day Adventist
\ l ulhu n HI ' !h l Pnmcrn1 Paq l1r
Bt.' nndL Lu.. lo.t~~h S.!IU! JUI s~l\ll~'
S11bhath Sl hool ~ p 111 \\ or~htp 1 Jl m

United Brethren
\h

Mt Oin t Communll\ Chu rth
PosLor La,., re n ~::c Bush Sunda) School
9 ]0 a m . benmg 6 30 p m. Wedneda1
Serv1ce 1 p m

Middleport Churrh of the Suarene
Pastor Alhm ~hdr.: ap Su nd11y Sr.: hool
930 am ,WorshLp IO JO a m 6 30 pm
Wednesday SerHccs • 7 p m Pastor
Allen M1dcap

Full GU!ipel Lighthouse
H1land Ruad Pomeru} PasLOr Rll)
Huntc:r Sunda} Schno l 10 am bc mng
7 30 p m Tue;day &amp; Thur ~d a1 ., ~0

Reed.1;vlllt Fellowship
Church of the Naz arene PasLor Jam1 e
Peu1( Sunday Slhop l · 9 30 am, Worshrp
I0 45 a m , 7 p m Wednesday Sen t e e ~
7 pm

South Deibel Communll' Church
Sther R1 dge· Pastor L1 nda Darne,., oOO
Sunday School 9 am . V. orsh tp S enK~
10 a m 2nd an d 4th Sunda\

~304';

pm

Syncuse Chun:h or the N au rtn~
Pns10r MLke Adktn s Sunr.la) Se houl 'J 30
I 0 J O am 6 p m
a m \\ o rsh1 p
Wednesda) Sen 1 ce~ 7 p m

•

la ng~ ull e Chm11 wn ( hurrh
lu ll (ju,pd l'i.J' Lur K o h ~n M u"~r
Sund av Sd Hlll] 9 lO .1111 Wtlr, lnp 10 tO
1.1111
7 1111 pm \\ cdn ~,J a\ Salin 7 {)()
pm

P'o.~&gt; L DI J am ~ •

C arl ~ to n

'J lO

l ong Bottom
Sunday St huo l I) l() a m, \\otship
10 \O nrn
Rttds, IJie
Wor~ h 1 p ~ 9 10 a m , Sundo~ S£ hunl
10 ~ 0 a m Fm; t Sunda} ol Momh 7 ()0

Hazel Commuml y Church
Ott RL 1 2~ P;bLOr Ed~cl H,m Sunda\
Schm•l . 1,1 30 &lt;llll . 'w\ orsh1p lit •o a m
7 30p m

Mo" c Chapt&gt;l Chu rch
Su nd ay S( hool 10 .1111 \\ o r ~ h t p
am Wed n(W ay S l.'f\ l ~ e · 7p 11l

Nazarene

Meigs Cooperad ve Parish
Nor! heas L Clu ster Alfro:: d. Pustor Jane
Ben ltit, Sunda v Schoo l
9 ~0 a m ,
Worship l l am . 6 30 p m

Syra( u~ c l\11ssmn
14 11 Bndge man St . S y r ll ll ~e Sill tdl l
lfl .1m t::~ c n m g
o rm
Sd lllliJ
Y.-edncsday Sn \ lle 7 p m.

Hetht'l t:hurcl1
Tnwnshtp Rd 4!1SC Sun d:n Sl hm tl 9
a m Wo r ~ htp
10 a m \\ ednesday
S..:rv u.:es - JOam

Ton:h Churth
Co Rd 63, Sunday School 9 lO am
Wouhtp · IOJOa m

Mt. Ollvt United Methodist
Off 124 behind WilkeS \ tile Pas10r Rev
Ralp h Sptres, Su nda} School · 9 30 am ,
Worshi p I 0 30 a m , 7 p m , ThursJay
Stn1ces 7 p m

M1ddlt&lt;pnr1 Communh\ ( h1m h
57' Pear l St M1dd k po rL l' a~ Lt 1 r Sam
Andersn n, S u u d ~ y Sl hu11 l 10 a m
h emng 7 10 p m Wc dne~Ja\ S~:n t n•
7lOp nt

RrstoruUnn t: hn sh11n fcllu" "hrp
Hnn pcr Rn 1tl Alltt' n&gt; Pu ~ J PT
I "tl l ll~ ( ()I LS S und.t~ \\ or~ hi p Il l no ,un
w~ d nc,d.1\ 7 pm

LP6 ~

B a d ~)

F'ust Lt'lurt
P 1sltlf H1ll MM• h1ll Sundl ) Sr.: hnnl
'ht m Wu rst11p HI ~ m 1st S u n d ~¥
t'VCl ) 11\llllt h CVCI\lll ~ M! \\ICC 7 1J() ]l nl
w~d n ~ s JJ y 7 p m

~25

"O"'•

IVtl! m I r w ml/1

.g(Jcod ..0 . 00h 11ft t'" ll

.

Coolvtlle, Oh10

throw• thftr way.

the y lllfll"v&gt;k.i l tha n
with a h.altPY han

&lt;

26 v~rs in local bus/ness
Roofing &amp; Building Work

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

Congregational

Tupp!: r~

•

Young's Carpenter Service

Catholic

Wursht p Ill

~

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

0 J Whitt.' ]{J off Sl Rt J{,() Pa_,tor I' J
'
Chapman Sunda) S(:hool
\0 a m ,
Wor:.h1p I I ~ m. \\oedncsdty S e rv 1 ~c " · 7

Pomen1y Wes l!ilde Church ot Christ

Baptist
' '

Second H•ptlsl Church
WV. Sunday S~ huu l 10 am
Mon11 ng wursh1p II am E\e nrng 7 pm
Wednesday 7 p m
R ;ann~ "' ooU

Chu i'C'h or Jrsus Chm t Apmtrilk
VanZunth and Ward Rd Pa ~tur J a me ~
MLller. S unda~ Sl houl
I(J 30 11m
E\crung . 7 \0 m

A Hunger For More
Jesus s,ud 111 John 14 25,
" The Cou nse lor, the Holy
Sptnt, Whom the ~. nh er wtll
send 111 My ·nam e. wt ll teach
you allth mgs and wtll rcmmd
you of eve rythmg I ha ve s,u d
to you" (NIY) . In the classroom ot ltfc, the Holy Sptrit
asstgns to u' dtff eren t sedsons
Wtlh dttlerent "tutors " The
tutor ca lled " Wanmg," tor
example. ts used to teach us
pattencc . as "-C sometimes
are re4 u1 red to do nuthmg
BUT w,tit on somethmg 01
someone. Standtn g 111 lme .11
the qs hter's register, silting
long mtnutes in a doctor 's
oflt ce , or v. atc hmg the matl box lor ,, long-ex pected
ched to arnve, al l allow us to
exeru se tl1e dtsc tpltne at restmg though surrounded by "
wo rld th,ll stri ves
"But they th,tt wan upon the
LORD sh,tll renew thetr
strength . tltey shdll mount up
wllh wmgs as eagles. they
sh,tll run . and not be WCdl v,
and the} sh.tll v- alk , ,md nut
famt " (l s,uah 40 4 1 KJV )
Anothe r tu tor known as
" Unc ert.u n C trcum st,mces''
mqructs us Ill the llMUer or
trust and ta nh 111 God How
fo rtunate ror us that our heavenl y F.nher all ows suc h ctr-

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

. www.mydallysentlnal.com

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Church News .

BII'I'ER COMPLAINT OF A RIGH'IEOUS MAN
"If on ly I knew whe re to
fi nd God. I would go 'to hts
throne and talk to him there. I
would lay ou t my case and
present my drgument&gt; ''&lt; And
how many o t us have felt lh ts
way, too? " II onl y God wou ld
gtw me a fatr heanng, t'd
prove to Him th at I don't
deserve any of thts. I would
convince Him of ·JUSt ho"
nght I am, but I cannot t l!H.I
h11n . tor he ts hidden "
· You can almost hear the
angu tsh 111 Job's votce dnd
lcel hts pam ful dtstress God
IS htdmg, ltke an adul t or
oiLier stbhng htd111g tro m a
smdll child much longer than
they should. or worse, st mpl}
because. they don ' t w,mt the
chtl d to find them Anu whtlc
tht s is not unco mmon, tt &lt;etrc
doesn't help the cht ld\ teelmgs any: they tecl deserted
and rctcctcct .
ThiS ts kmd of how Job fe lt

.'Friday, August 26, 2005

Pomero) Cht~ n:h of th~: \az.a ren~
Pastor Jun l n\ender Sunda) Sc hoo l ·
Y ~U a m Worship - 10 10 a rn and 6
Jl m Wed ne~day Sc rvtr.: e ~ · 7 p m

Interdenominational Chu rc h
Krngsbu n Road Pastor Rot&gt;en \'on.. e
Sunctn\ Sc hool
9 10 am \\w'&gt;hlp
Sen 1ct tO lOa rn E\cn1 ng S('flt{e fl

H ~: nnon

lm lt"d fl n:th l'fn
In Chn sl C hu rch
Texas Communli\ ll'i..L II \\ I&lt; kh ,rm RJ
Pastor Peter \ lortmduk Su n.ta~ s ~h oo l
9 30 a m \\ m~ l up
10 •o ~ m . .,. 00
p m \\ edne ~ da\ Sen ,.. e., 7 00 r m
You Lh group me ct1n~ 2nd .\: ..Lth Sunda\S
7 pIt\ ~

.

Eden l nited Rl'l':th rt'n In Chr1s1
Stale Route 1:: -1 bCL \\ een R&lt;·~d ~ 1 1 lle &amp;
H ~X km g ]'ll.lTI
Sund111 S• h01'1 10 a m .
Sundn\ WorshLp II I)(] .1m \\ edn e~d a y
Scr \ JCC' S 7 on p m Pa, rM \ I '\ dam
\\ il l

·~ltend SluJ!Wil

!l?egalarty.

pm
Frttdom Gosptl :'l.l1sslon
Bald Knob on Co Rd l l PhWr Re \
Roger Wtlllord Sunda' SchOll I 9 ~0 am
Wor~ht p· 7 p m
\\ hil els Chapel \\ esl e,an
Coo l•1 lle R o ~ d Pa s1o r Re; Ph1lll p

, ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITIION CENTER
,

Let y~ur light so slm;e befme
men, that the) nw\ ~ee \'otu
The care )'OU deserve. close 10 home good wo rks and glm if' 1 0 111
36759 Rockspnngs Rd .
Father m he01·en "
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Mmthe11 5 16
7 40-992·6606

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INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

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

"So I stnve always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man."

Acts 24: 16
&lt;

or God so lm·ed th e
he ga ve hn only
JeR~ Ol.te ll

\1

01/d

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John 3:16
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II Cor. 12:9

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137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

�·page AS

COMMUNITY

The Daily Sentinel

· Friday, ~ugust

Ripley golfers rally to beat Wahama, Page B2
River Valley golf wins another match, Page 82
Reds, Indians Win, Page 83
OVCS soccer offends Federal Hocking, Page 84

26, 2005

Meigs County Court News .
POMEROY
Meigs
Amamfu D. Cunis, Pomeroy, Columbus, $30 and costs, Joseph B. Jones, Gallipolis, $45
County Court Judge Steven L. $25 and costs, three days in jail, speeding; David A. Hunter, and costs, probation, speeding,
Story recently processed the suspended, probation, passing Charleston, W.Va., $30 and $150 and costs, I0 days in jail.
following ~ases:
bad checks; Peter B. Dane, costs, speeding. $20 and costs, suspended, probation, no O.L.:
Ali
F
Aburahma, Athens, $30 and costs, speed- display plates I valid sticker, B.randon G: Juarez, Hampstead,
Charleston, W.Va .. $30 and ing·; Teresa M. Danner, $20 and cost~. Feckless opera- N.C., $30 and cost&gt;, speeding.
costs, speeding; William R. Gallipolis, $50 a.nd costs, tion; Carl
E.
Hussing,
Robert
E.
Kauscher,
Adams, Long Bottom, $30 and speeding; Clyae L Davi s, Clevelanp, speeding; Tony J\1. Cincinnati, $30 , and costs,
costs, speeding; Paul A. Adkins, Reynoldsburg, $30 and costs, Hutton, Rutland, $30 and costs. speeding; · Jenniefer J. Kim,
Ravenswood, W.Va., $90, dri- speeding; Joshua D. Dickens', scat belt violation; William C. Gahanna, $30 and costs, speedving under susplrevoc; Aaron S. Pomeroy, $25 and costs, three Hyatt, Albany, $506 and costs,' ing; Crystal A. King, Pomeroy,
Akin, Gold~boro, N.C., $30 and days in jaiJ, suspended, proba- overload; William R. lssacs, $30 and costs, seat belt violacosts, speeding; Joshua K. tion, passing bad checks; Ronna Guysville. $30 and costs, syeect- tion; Kelly D. King, Davison,
Allen ~ Albany, $50 and costs, M. Dillard. Columbus, $30 and
ing; Jennings L. Jett, Racine, Mich., $50 and costs, speeding;
speeding ; Justin R. Allen, costs, speeding: Sandra D. $3 10 and cost~. overload; Ta~ha Kurt W. Klaski, Dover, $70, no
Syracuse, $30 and costs, seat Distelhorst. Raci ne. S30 and Johnson, Pomeroy, $150, 30 taillights on vehicle; Kelly A.
belt violation; Ernest P. costs, speeding; Alan L days in jail. suspended, proba- Klein, Fairfield, $50 and cost,,
Anderson. Langsville, $90 and Dodson, Pomeroy, $30 and
costs, overload: Jason Arix, costs. seat belt violation; Sally tion, disorderly conduct; Ronald speeding in 60 mph zone:
· Chester, $20 and costs. failure A. Dunaldson, Long Bottom, L. Johnston, Bluefield, Va., $30 • Tommy Lane, Racine, $50 and
to control; Christine L Azbell, $30 and costs, speeding; David . &lt;md costs, speeding; Walter L costs, disorderly conduct;
Athens, $20 and cost~. failure to J. Dubbs. Pomeroy, $200. 10 Johnston, Nelsonville, $90, dri- Richard Laudermilt, Bidwell,
control;. Mary J. Bable, days in jail. seven suspended, ving under susp. / revoc.; $17 and costs, probation, speedSyracuse, $70, 180 days in jail, probation, no O.L.; Aaron D. Heather H. Jones. Charleston, ing, $850 and costs, 10 days ·in
suspended, probation, domestic Dunkle, Mooresville, N.C., $50 W.Va., $30 and costs, speeding; jail, seven suspended, prdbaviolence; Tara L Barber. and costs,.speeding; Gregory A. ·
Middleport, $30, tishing w/o Duty, Little Hocking, $30 and
valid license; Chad J. Bayha, costs, speeding; Rebecca W.
Athens, $50 and costs, speed- Early, Gahanna, $50 and costs,
ing; Michael A.
Beck, speed ing; Douglas B. Eblin,
Gallipolis, $100 and costs, l)() Pomeroy, $340 and costs, overdays in pi!, ~7 suspended, pro- load, $410 and costs, overload;
bation, obstructing ofticial busi- Koshaya R. EI-Aiam, Sterling
ness;
Raben
M. Bell , Heights, Mich., $30 and costs,
Branchland, W.Va., $20 and seat belt violation; Dalton J.
costs, permit violation, $410 Elliot, Lakeland, Ra. , $30 and
and costs, overload. .
costs, seat belt violation; Walter
Michael J. Blackwell, Lewis A. Ellis. Rutland, $30 and costs, ·
Center, $50 and costs, speeding; seat belt violation; Jeffrey W
Julian E. Boggs, Coolville. Enoch. Columbus, $30 and
$28'3 and costs, · overload; costs, seat belt violation; Sharon
Nicholas
N.
Borgert, E. Fein blatt. Columbus, $30 .
Huntersville, N.C., $30 and and costs, speeding; Faith L.
costs, speeding: Amanda J. Felice. Mount Clemens. Mich.,
Buck, Middleport, $30 and $30 and costs, speeding; Jamie
costs, 5peeding; Tina L Bugaj. M. Fisher, $100, 10 days in jail,
. Racine, $100 and costs, 90 days seven suspended, probation,
in jail, suspended, pro!Jation: .reckless operation, $30 and
Ronald J. Burke, Albany, $30 costs, probation, failure to conand costs. seat belt violation: trol; John V. Foster, Galena. $50
Kevin R. Byrd, Hamlin. W.Va., and costs, speeding: Ellen M.
$258 and costs, overl011d: Molly Freeman, Gallipolis, $20 and
Cadarett-Butcher, Cross Lanes. costs, traffic cont dev/signs ;
W.Va., $30 and costs. speeding; Ronald E. Freeman, Racine,
Chris W Capehart, Middleport, $138 and costs, overload;
$150 and costs. probation. culti- Randy L. Fryar, Coolville, $410
vation of marijmma: Bmndon and t·osts, overload; Royd C.
R. Carpenter, Middleport. $350. Fulton, Pierce, Ra., $30 and
10 days in Jail, seven suspend- costs, speeding; Michael A.
ed, probation, DUI: Thuricn H. Gibson, Versailles, Ky.. $30 and
Carter, Middlepon. $30, fishing costs, speeding; James R.
w/o valid license; Michael J. Greene, $25 and c.osts, three
Case, Springtleld, $50 and days in jail, suspended, proba-·
costs, speed ing; Matthew J. tion, rassing bad checks, $25
l6 MPCi ON KI·WAV! --...
Cassler, Lancaster, $30 and and cost~. three days in jail, suscosts, speeding. ·
·
pended, probation, passing bad
Bryon L Casteel, Guysville, checks, $25 and costs, three
$90, domestic violence; Anna days in jail, suspended, probaM. Chapman, Maumee. $30 tion; passing bad checks.
.IIIMD lllW JII05 CIIIWY
and costs, speeding; .John L. . Donna M. Greenwald,
AVID 4 IIDCIII OR 5 IIDCIII
SUIIFIII SUI • SOUID
Chevalier, Reedsville, I0 days Charleston, W.Va., $30 and
in jail, I0 sus}Jended, probation, costs. speeding: Candy J.
no O.L.; Cooper M. Clark. Harmon, Rutland. 10 days in
Piqua. $30 and costs, speeding; jail, sus)J\!nded, probation, no
Air Conditioning, u; U1er E&lt;o T!(
AUTOMAliC
PaulaA. Clark, Middleport, $50 drivers license; Jay M. Harris.
~ng l nf , Fold Down Aur s,.at
Power Sunroof, CD Sttna &amp; Crutn
and costs, I0 \lays in jail, sus- Charleston, W.Va.. $30 and
pended, probation. P!ISSing bad costs, speeding: Kevin Harris,
checks; Bobby W. Clay. Wheelersburg, $30, speeding;
Columbus, Miss.. $30 and Kristine W. Harris, Racine, $20 ;
costs. speeding; Stephen S. and ' costs, assured clear dis- .
Cline. Buckeye. Ariz. , $50 and tance; James Ha~ley, $25 and
costs, speeding ; Timothy A. costs, three days in jail, susCoat~ . Pomeroy, $20 and costs, pended, probation, pa~sing bad
IRAIID I&amp;W 30115 C..W
·• • • .W :1005 CIIIVY
disorderly conduct; Adam C. checks; Laura A Hicks, South
SUIAAIIO
UT.
CM
PICIII'
COL.OitUO
m: CAl 4WD
Cochran, Cheshire, $30 and Charleston, W Va:, $30 and
costs, speeding; Andrew B. costs, speeding; Connie T
Coffman, Racine, $20 and Higman, Pomeroy, $110, passcosts, right-of-way I public ing bad checks, $70, passing
4300 V-I £nglnt, Air Conditioning,
Z71 Ort·Road Ptekagt, Vortt( 2.&amp;
highway ; Cindy L Conley, bad checks, $70, passing bad
4 ~ud Autom1t1e
lUtr £_
nglnl, Fog Lamps
Portland, $30 and com. seat checks; Dallas A. Hill, Racine,
belt violiuion; Zachery E. $30 and costs, seat belt violaConnally, Raciqe, $50 and tion; Alan K. Himmelreich,
costs, speeding; Brandon S. Jacksonville. Fla., $50 and
Constantino, Belair Ha. Md., costs, speeding; Larry E.
$30 and cost,, speeding; Ben R Hoffman, Pomeroy. $41 and
Coppick, Pomeroy, $310 and costs, speed; Russell W
costs, overload; Rebecca S. Holbrook, Hilliard, $25 and
• .., IIW 3005 CIIWY
IR.•• IIII&amp;W :1105 CII&amp;VY
Corfee, Leon, W.Va., $90. dri- costs, failure to control;
. liltU.OX LT AWD
S1.V11A110
UIIICIIill
~
ving under susp/revoc, $70, Christopher D.
Hopkins,
false info to police ·officer. $20 Ravenswood, W.Va., $90, no
and costs, use of unauthorized O.L: Kyle W Hopkins,
plates; Ryan A. Cozart, Wellston, $70. driving under
Deep T!nt WindoWS:, 5 Spied·
5300 V· 6 ENGINE
Syracuse, $5. and costs, domes- fm. susp., $20 and costs, usc of
Aut~m~tl(, CD Sttreo ~t,.m
~D Tral!trlng Pkg., lod:.lng Dlft
tic violence; George M. unauthorized plates; Shennan
Cremeans, Gallipolis, $30 and Hopkins, Athens, $20 and costs,
costs, seat belt .violation; Rachel failure to control; Douglas T
G. Crews, Ridgecrest, Calif, Howard, Johntown, $100 and
$30 and costs, speeding; Robbie costs, drug abuse; Cyndra L.
C. Cundilt'. Rudand, $20 and Hudson. Pomeroy, $30, seat
costs, traffic com dev/signs.
belt violation; Kathleen J Hull,

tion, DUI, $200 and costs, I0
days in jail, seven suspended,
probation, driving under susp. I
revoc.; Lisa . P. Lavoie,
Reynoldsburg, $30 and costs.
seat belt violation; Jason S.
Lawson, Reedsville, $308 and
costs, overload; Robert F
Lawson, Reedsville, $20 and
costs, right-of-way I public
highway; Douglas L. Lovett,
Lake Elmo, Minn., $50 and
costs, speeding; Catarina F
Lucrecia, Clarksville, Tenn ..
$90, no O.L.; Kimberly A.
Magner, Spokane, Wash., $30
and costs, speeding; Keith R.
Manring, Wellston. $240 and
costs, overload; Cheryl D.
Marnhout, Racine, . $30 " and
costs, speeding; Brynn Martin,
Cheshire. $100 and costs. 180
days in jail, suspended, probation, passing bad
. checks;. Brynn

$21,980*

·---211ScavY
SILVIIAIO J/4 TQI U. 4WI

NewsChannel
Friday, August 26
Morning (7 a.m.-Noon)
ft looks like a cloudy morn· in~ . l,'l)ere might be a bit of
ram around the area.
Temperatures will stay near
71 with today's low of 70
occu rring around 8 a.m.
Wind' will bt! 5 MPH from
the south .
Aftemoon (1-6 p.m.)
Expect a humid afternoon.
There is a good chance of
some rain . Temperatures will
hold 'teady around 79 with
today's high of RI occurring
around 5 p.m. Skies will be
panty cloudy to cloudy with
10 MPH wind' from the
'out h.

..

Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight)
It should be a humid and
cloudy evening. A few sprinpessible.
kles
are
Temperatures will drop from
80 early' this evening to 73.
Winds will 1be 5 to I 0 MPH
from the south .
Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
· It will remain •humid and
cloudy. Lighi rain is forecasted. ,The rainfall shou ld begin
around 4 a.m. The rainfall
will tin ish around 6 a.m. with
total accumulations for this
·event near . 0.09 'inches.
Temperatures will linger at
72 . Winds will be 5 to I0
MPH from the south.

$18,990*

R'

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$24,690*
Pow~r windoW$- lodu, li"
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Aluminum Whul5.

.STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEl .COM

Friday, August 26

Point Pleasant at Ripley
Hamlin at Hannan
College Soecot
Rio Grande at Missouri Baptist, 7 p.m
College Volleyball
Rio at UMD Toorf\8rnent, TBA

•

BY BRYAN WALTERS

Croos Ccumy
Early Bird lnvitatbnal at AiverVai1E1"y', 9 a.m.
• Girts Soecot
P:]nt Pleasanl at Spring vaney, TBA

\lolteyball

O.JC PreviB'N a1 AtVer Valley, 1 p.m.
Soecot
..Jacksorl at Gallia Acaclemy. 1 p.m.
College Soecot
Rio G~r'lde al Columbia College, 5 p.m

POMEROY After
two weeks of the young ·
golf season, a pair of local
teams have shown that
they can play with the
competition.
'Thursday at Pine Hills

URG baseball golf
outing in October
I

$18,970*
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I

I'

RIO GRANDE - The
2005 Rio Grande Baseball
Go If Outing wi II be held I
p.m. Saturday, October I at
'Cliffi sde Golf Club. An .
alumni baseball game will
follow the next day .
Check-in time for the ,gold
outing is 12:30 p.m. The
. baseball game will be held at
I p.m. (DH) 011 Sunday.
· October 2.
For · more information .
please call Rio Gr~nde head
baseball
coach
Brad
Wamimont at I-800-282720l·Ext. 7&lt;186 and/or e-mail
bradw @rio .edu or Herb
Sharfenaker 1-6 14-276:5263
Ext 436 and/or e-mail
HJS 13 @yahoo.com.

I

American Legion .
evaluation day set

5300 V·8 POWER
l-ID Tr.allerlng Pkg ., locking DIH .

ROCK SPRINGS
Feeney-Bennett Po~t 12 8
American Legion is hosting
a pre-tryout evaluation day,
especially for 14- 16 year old
boys from Meigs and Gal!ia
Counties who might ha ve
interest in playing American
Legion baseb~ll next summer.
The plan is to plant a seed
of interest in younger play ers with hopes of forming a
Junior team for next su mmer.
The tryout/evaluation day
will be on Sunday, Aug. 28
from 2 to 4 ' p.m. at the
Meigs High school Baseball
Field. Bring your personal
equipment.
· The tryout day is specifically for 14-16 year-olds,
however, if you are 17- 18
and ha ve never played for
Post 128 you are welcome to
come.
An y questions , contact
Coach Stewart by e-mail at
diamondD 1@columbu s.rr.c
om or cal) (740 )591-4605.

1115 ClliVY

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·
Prk111 good August 2S' h01Jih Auvust 21th.

'

'

CQntact Information

'

fiX- 1·740·446-3008
.

E-mail...,.. sportsCmydailysentinel.com
SPOrt&amp; Staff

Bred Sherman, Sports Editor

' - t.n

b R•!.r Ut!WI.A1N

.... t»l r.........,., ""'Rl
~-~

(740) 446·2342. ext. 33
bst1erman@mydarlytnbune.com

.,_~~:,.,.,.

~,

..... o~ .n

Bryan Walter~. Sports Writer ·
. (740) 446·2342, ext 23
bwallersOmydarlytnbune.com
·Larry Crum. Sport1 Wrher
(3041 675·1333, ext. 19
Ierum 0 mydallyregister Com

MONDAY - SATURDAY 9 am- 9 pm • SUNDAY 1pm - 8 pm • 422 -0756 • TOLL FREE 1-800-822-0417
.,

Smith to
sit out
opener

G o I f

Sports Briefs

Discount Price

Elaine Hou,choiJer were
both top 25· runner' l"'t season for River Valle y. which
, fini shed th ird.
Meigs will al"' he in the
fi eld and wi ll return A, hl ey
Samar. their top fini&gt;her. It
will also be the fiN var,i ty
race for her teammaie, fresh man Kimi Swisher. y.'hu was
a top I0 runner in the JUnior
high race in 2004.
Beth Hyse ll will run for
Eastern, and is also a top 25
threat.
A award' ceremony will
follow the event. and is tentatively sche.duled for II :30
a.m. on the football bleachers.

OWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

Satuttlay, August 27 '.

Employee

Locally, veterans Shane
Plantz and Chris Canaday are
expected to fare well for
Gallia Academy and Adam
Pines and Gary Zonghetti are
ones to watch from Meigs.
Aaron Martindale will be a
so lid runner for Eastern.
whi.ch is starring a cross
country riew program.
On the girls side, Gallia
Academy will try to improve
on its second place finish last
season. Carol Fahmy, who
was fourth last year, leads the
way while 'strong additions
Lauren Adkins and Lee Ann
Townsend move up to varsity.
Stephanie Griffith and

Two days, two wins for Meigs golfers

Green at Southern

·Our Prices Are Below The •••

CHESHIRE
Cross
Country season, for· both varsity and junior high, gets
underway Saturday morning
with the IOth annual River
Valley
Early
Bird
hwitatioriaL
The first race begins at 9
a.m. with junior high girls,
while junior high boys, varsity girls and varsity boy s will
folloi&gt;' in approximately 30 to
45-minute intervals.
The host Raider boys will
be seeking a fourth straight
team title; coach Ed Sayre's
crew set the . lowest team

score in the hist ory of the
event last season with a 21.
Though some key runners
have exited, Riv.er Valley has
a s.trong cast back and is one
of the favorite s on the boys
·
.
side. Chris Lester. Jon Casto .
and Kyle Hively were all in · Wheelersburg, which . was
the top 12 last season. Lester se~.ond last year. The tno of
and Casto were . third and Ryan Bell, Herb1e Otworth
fourth and will be contenders and N~ck Hadsell Wlll pace
the Pirates.
for the individual title.
Vince Weatherstein. Matt
Other runners expected ro
Nibert and Daniel Hill are challenge for the boys mdttitle
include
also bein.g counted on heavi- Vldual
ly for the defending champs. Alexander's Jaz Ammon and
as the top five fini shers count Fairland's Chuckie Wentz,
the defending OVC track
toward the team total.
Expected to challenge champion in the I ,600
River Valley for the title is meters.

PrEp Golf.

FoatboM
Gallia Academy at Meigs
VVilliams1crwn at Waharna
Eastern at South Galia
Southeastern at River Valley

'l7 MPCi ON KI·WAVI ---. 32 MPCi ON KI·WAV! ---,

RivEr VallEy Early Bird PrEviEW

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•

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PrEp Cross Country -

GALLIPOLIS - A .schedule or upcoming collega
and High school vars1ly &amp;pOrling aven1s l!lvolving
teams from Gania , Metgs and MaSon &amp;!unties .

$21,990*

IRA. _ . :1001 IIUICil

Frida~August26,2005

rNP Schedule

$13,990*' $14,990*
$10,390*
.

$18,980*

K. Martin. Langsville, $100 and
costs, 180 days in jail, suspended, probation, passing bad
checks, $1 00 and costs, 180
.days in jail, probation, passing
bad checks; Betty J. Mathews,
Buda, Texa~, $30 an~ CGSIS,.
speeding; Justin M. Mays,
Parkersburg, W.Va., $75, failure '
to control: Darrick E. McCioiJd,
Vinton, $30 and costs, seat belt
violation;
Charles
V. .
McDonal(l, Gallip&lt;1lis, $50 and
costs, speeding.
Harley
E.
McDonald,
Middleport, $115, DWI and I or
drugs of abuse, $70, driving
under fra. susp., $30 and costs,
seat belt violation, $70, fleeing;
$20 and costs, reckless opera- ·
tion of vehicle; Richard H:
McKee, Portland, $20 and
costs, failure to yield 1/2 road- .
way;·

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

.

Stewart

Course,
b 0 t h
Meigs and
Wahama
put on a
display of
their abilities in a
nip ,a nd . tuck battle
!hat went
down to

the wire.
In the end, it was the
host Marauders that cap..rured a two-stroke vic\qry
over the White Falcons
with a team tally of 163 .
Afterward, MHS ~oach
Matt Fields talked about
how Thursday' s latest tri umph capped another
good ending to another
good week.
" It's been a wonderful
start, the kids have been
playing great," Field s
commented. :·we have six
or seven guys that we
rotate into the lineup, and
we have used a score· from
every one of those g uys
thi s year during a match.''
That depth proved to be
the difference al Pine
Hills, as both Wahama and
Meigs were tied after half
of the scorin g.
Jake . Venoy and Kirk
Legar each fired a 40 to
lead the Maroon and Gold,
while Darin Reece and
Adam Rou sh duplicated
that feat for the Red and
White with 40 apiec;e.
Steven Stewart shot a 41

Please see Two, B1

COLU MBUS (AP)
Whil e No.6 Ohio Stale gears
up for another highl y anticipated seaso n. 4uarterback
Troy Smith can do litile more
than wall:h from a d istam;e

and

cncoura~~e
.. 0

hi s team-

mates.

Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs senior Jake Venoy closes· hi s eyes after his tee shot on the first hole of Thursday's
tri-match at Pine Hilts Golf Course. Venoy and teammate Ki rk Legar each shot 40 to lead the
Maruaders to a two-stroke victory over Wahama.

Smith is .&gt;u'pended from
the .opener against Miami
(Ohio) and Just in Zwick is
the Bu ckeyes starter. Beyond
the first week of the 'eason.
·no one knows who'll play or
how much. It' s " difficult
way to ~tu11 a seas1.,m - , both
for the team and the quarterbac ks.
Even t hou ~ h he can not
play in the ope ner. Smith is
trying to .;ontributc in other
ways.
"Leading the team i ~ th e
bigge.-.t thfng right now:· th e
junior said. "That's whai the
quarterback does: he makes
good deci sions and tl!:,Jeads
the team ."
'"iOJ
Yet it is Smith\ deci,ionmakin g that has gl)lten him
into trouble.
Ohio State suspended him
from llbt year\ Alamu Bowl
after Uisroveri nc he ·had
·accepted around $~~()() from a
D~.tyton busine,~man who
was a major supportt"r nf the
· h~ilm .
The boo~ter was
banned from conwc1 with the
ream and the NCAA requi red
Smith to repay the money 10
a charity. Plu s. . it tac ked

Please see Smith, Bl

Solich unquestioned leader of Ohio
ATHENS (AP) - When
Frank Solich pulls open the
blinds in his office. he gazes
down on a stadium le ss than
half the size of the pl~ce
where he used to coach.
Green. not red. is the. dominant color. and winning football rarely has been seen
there .
· There are other
differences
.
between his· old job at
Nebraska and new one at
Ohio University' including
this: The coach 1\taning his
first season, not his players,
is clearly the star.
Souvenirs now feature the
slogan "Got · Frank 1" and
Solich's face is plastered on
billboards around town even
. though he hasn' t coached his
first game for the Bobcats sept . "_, at
th a t.s
Nonhwestem
"Having a football coach
, of Frank Solich's stature ereales insllmt credibility witliin
the program . , on campus .

''

with alumni, and from
prospective student-athletes
that was not present before."
OU president Roderick
McDavis said .
After spending part of five
decades as a player. assistant
and head coach at Nebraska,
Solich was hired by 'Ohio in
hopes he will generate interest among fans and recruits
- and eventually produce a
winner - in the perennially
struggling Bobcats.
"Right now my players are
as excited as anybody\ team
in the country. Our coache'
are excited. Now. whether·
we can create that kind of.

· excitemelll to fill the stadium
and be able to be successful
' year after year. · I don't
know," he said. "We're·
going to have to change the
culture of th ings here a lillie
bit."
Solich, who grew up in
Cleveland and used to make
recruiting trips to Ohio for
Nebra.ska, inherits a progrnm
that has lost its on ly two
bowl games· ( 1962, 1968)
and counts only two winning
seasons si·nce 1982.
The · fac t the Bobcats
the..
cou ldn't
match
Corn!mskers' tra~k record, .
fan support or recruiting base
didn ' t matter .to the 60-yearold who began his coaching
career trying to resurrect
struggling Nebraska high
school teams .
"It's not the crowds. it's
not the si1.e of the staditml

Please see Sollch. Bl ·

AP photo

Former Nebraska coac h Frank Sotict1 directs his players at
Ohi n Un iversity fooiball practice Monday. July 11 in Athens.

�.

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

'

'

Friday, August 26, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com
•

.

·'

PrEp

Golf ~-

Ripley rallies to beat Waha·ma in River Cup
~PORTS

sent

CORRESPONDENT

w

MASON. W.Va. - The
River Cup Match is &gt;,til l
alive fur Falcon gulf fatl&gt;.
Down through the years it
ha~ al\\'ays presented great.
in teresting and somet imes
unique happenings in the
three fot'mah used. but
u l "· ay ~ ex citing fun.
J{iplcy came to Ri,erside
on Wedt\csday as one of the
highly -rated Cia" AAA
teams and had to reach
down deep in thei r b,tgs to
find the shqts that ba re ly
got them p~l:-. t tht: goml.
Cla.,s A. frisky Fakons of
Wahama.
Playing th e · fir st three
hole;; as alternate shot format for the two-ma n faceoft's . then the next three
holes as better ball format.
and the third tri o of holes as
Bryan Walters/photo
scram ble, the Wahamans
Wahama's Dan Roush chips from the ro ugh during Thursday's tri- forged int o a total team lead
match at Ptne Ht lls Golf Course.
with some fine play that

River Valley claims .
second""str~ight ·victory
'

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIB UNE COM

•

WELLSTON - The Ri 1-cr
Valley golf team won its second
match in as. manv trie..,
Thursday with ,, tic: hrco~~er
victorv at f aimr.ce ns Coumrv
Club over three other teams.
The Raider., dJOsted a tec~m
score of 167 an lini shed in tte
witll Wellston Gold. but Jared
J'1,1wnr111's 4() in the live spot
was lciwer than the host
school\ ll \'e scorer. allowing
RVHS lt&gt; daim the vtctot)'.
Ju.st in Nrilan !ired a seasonbe.st JX. t yin~ Wellstnn's Andy
Dcrnm a.s medali.st 0 11 tile d,ty.
Craig lagers and Cratg
Barker eacil shut rounds of -12.
whi!C Bruce Stout al.so had his
best pcrl(&gt;rm ancc oi the youn g
season with a 45 .
~

.._

J

•

'

T
h -e
R ocke t s
divided t h ~ir
squad
into
two
teams.
and both host
teams
fin ished in the
mtddk of the
pack.
T h~
Blue
team
fin tshed tile
Nolan ·
day wt th a
1'!3 . while South Gallia struggled to lnrmh wuh a team total
or 215.
"
Junathan Wells led the Rebels
wi th a 42. whik Brody Green
follo wed wt th a 51. Kevan
Johlhon and Jess ie McComas
ro.undccl '&gt;Ut the team score with
cl'il&gt;ns of 57 and 65. respectively
J.ic:oh Watso'n rou nded out
South Galliit's day with a 68.

-

shock

a v e s

through the
Viking
ranks.
. T
h e
Falcon first
Jour
·had
topped the
fo ur Viking
l eaders ,
Reece
Ripley fift h
anll 'i l&lt; tli had barely edged
ahead of W&gt;thama ·s final
duo. and things were loo king rosy.
However. the Class· AAA
depth. and experience batted
bijck agait&gt;s t the rdentlcss
Falcon sw ingers_ Under the
same three f()rmar- during
the seco nd .nine hole s.
Ripley's num ber ·o ne, Tyler
Ludwig . and number two,
Jared Parsons. ca me up
with a, pressure birdie on
the 18th (]ole to pull even
with Wahama 's number
o ne, Ju stin Arnold, and
· number two, Da nny Roush.

at
nine
point s for
each team .
Then. the
secoi1d
Wah a rna
duo of number
three
Darin Reece
and num be r
four
Garrell
Kaylor
Kaylor really generated local elation as
they stroked past Ripley's
three and four. Brell
Barnette and Nick Mosser
11 -7 to give the Falcons an
exc iting 20- 16 lead.
But. now. the Class AAA
depth stepped up in the persons of number five and
six. players Thomas Peden
and Chase Smith when they
surged ahead late to ove rco me · Wahania ns Adam
Rou sh and Adam Ingels .1 25 1/2, j ust enough to
squ eeze by the Falcons and
produce a 28 -25 1/2 breathtakingly clo se comeback

win for the Vikings.
In a normal hi gh school
match. only the first fo ur
would have de termined the
outcome where Wahama
was ahead. but the Ri ver
Cup is exci tin gly unique in
format and even tful endings.
.
Coac h Bob Blesstng
chimed, " It was one really
i'nteresting and fun match
for all participants. It was
pa rti cularly e ncouraging
for us in that our top tour
outscored Ripley's leaders.
It shows the depth of
·'AAA' ' over si ngle-A. but
no one b&gt;tcked up. our guys
really did a good j ob and
we're very proud of the
fine show ing."
The Wahama seaso nal
mark now stand s at 15; 10
and· Blessing noted a new
addition to the sc hedule as
Wahama hosts Ripley and
Ravenswood at Riverside
at 4 p.m. Monday, August
29.

Browns to see if they're up to
speed versus -CarQiina Panthers
C LEVELAN D (AP) Like a politician pu shing the
party platform. Cleve land
Browns
coach
Rom eo
Crennel repeated one phrase
more than an y other during
his fi rst training camp. Tl1e
mantra: Slow and steadv.
Day after day, inju-ries ,
practi ces, rooki e Bray lon
Edward s· Ct1ntract negot iations and the Brown s
progress were succ in ctl y
su mmed up by Crennel as
''s low and steady."
On Friday nig ht, the pace
mLtst qui cken.
The Browns. unbeate n in
the ir fir st ·t wo exhibition
ga mes. will face their toughest matchup of the preseason · as they host the
Carolina Panthers. a squad
Crennel and his.pl'ayers consider to be one of' the NFL's
bcq. ·
" It 's a great test," said
Brown s quarterback Trent
Di Ifer. "They have a very
active defense, a defense
' that brings pressure, which
quarterbacks
lo ve.
1-lopefu'll y. it will open up a
chance to make big plays. "
The Panthers (1-1 ), who
have looked real good (zero
turnovers in a 28-10 win)
and t'eal bad (six turnovers
in a 27-2 1 loss) in their two

ex hibi tions. may
be without
Pro Bowl
defensive
end Juliu s
Pepp e r s.
Notebook
He didn't
pra c ti ce
thi s week because of a foot
tnjury and i!'s doubtful. that
he wi II play.
·Peppers' absence notwithstanding, the
Panthers
should be a good ga uge for
Cre nne l to determine how
mu ch
the
reti10de!ed
Browns have grown after a
month
of
practices .
Typically, the third preseason game is when starters
get their most playing time.
making if a dress rehearsal
for the season opener.
" I think Carolina would
be a good game anytime
because they are a good
team," Crennel sa id. " I told
the team that two years ago
Carolina was · in the Super
Bowl. If it hadn ' t been for
the \ injuries they had last
year they · mi ght ha ve been
back there again."
·
Crennel' devoted much of
camp to teaching his system
and in stalling a new 3-4
defense ; which remains a
work in progress to New

England's former defensive
coordinator.
"Thi s defense ha s a
c hance to be effective,"
Crennel said. "We mi ght not
shut out anybody. we might
be luc kv to win. but we have
a defe nse in stalled." ·
Cleve land' s offense ha s
bee n slowed by pena ltie.s .
La st week in Detroit , the
·c lub was fl agged 12 times
for I09 yards. A week earli er again st the . New York
Giants. the Brown s had 15
penalties for 12 1 yards.
Crenn el. . won't tolerate
mu ch . more. In the seco nd
qua·rt er against the Lions. he
yanked veteran offensive
tackle L.J. Shelton from the
game after an offsides call.
"I understand the meaning
behind it. " Shelton .sa id .
"There wasn' t an y ranting
or raving about it , but I got
the point."
It 's one Cren.nel won't
he sitate · makin g again if
necessary.
" I hope that they un derstand that penalties will get
us beat." he said. "That' s the
message that I'm tryin g to
se nd to them. We improved
on the penalty situation. but
\Ve still had too many of
them ."
Cleveland's runnin g game

suffered a bl ow last week
when · running back Lee
Suggs sustained a hi gh
ankle sprain. He' ll mi ss the
final two preseason · games
and hi s status for the opener .
is in doubt.
·
Crenn e l plans to start
Re uben Drou ghn s. who
mi ssed the first exhibition
ga me With a ham strin g
injury and rus hed for 30
yards on eight carries last
week.
Six turnovers and two big
plays doom ed tl1e Pan thers a
week ago in 'their loss to the
Giants, snappin g Caro lina 's
I0-game presea.son wim\ing
streak .
Coach John Fox had· to
juggle hi s first -team defense
thi s week, moving firstround pick Thomas Davi s
from lin ebacker back to
sa fet y aft er start er Colin
Bra ch · suffere d a se:tson endin g knee inju ry against
the Giants.
Davi s began tra ining
cam p at safety but wa.ssw itc hcd to outside line baCker. He's on the fl y
aga1n .

" I can hope this ts it, hut .
who kn ows '.'" he sa id . ''It
may not be it. I will try to
play well wherever they line
me up ...

WASHINGTON (AP) After all of the injuries, after
the long power drought to
start 2005, Ken Gri'ffey Jr. is a
· 30-homer player once again.
And the instant offense he's
· providing day in and day out
for the Cincinnati Reds is precisely the son of clutch hitting the Washington Nationals
can only dream about right
now.
Griffey reached 30 homers
· in a season for the first time
since 2000, Brandon Claussen
won his fifth straight deci sion
by becoming the latest unher,
aided hurler to shut down
· Washington and the Reds beat
the Nationals 5-3 Thursday.
" As you get older, stay
- around, you just go out and
have fun and don ' t worry if
you hit them out," the 3'5year-old Griffey said after his
solo soot off Livan Hernandez
()4-6) gave Cincinnati a 3-1
lead i.n the seventh. ''I'm not
. trying to hit it out, just trying ·
to get good contact."
Oh, what the Nationals
would give for that at key
moments.
They left · 10 runners on
base Thursday, and twice
failed to score after getting
someone to third base with
only one out, including when
Hernandez grounded into a
double play in the fourth
inning.
Less forgivable was Gary
Bennett's po~up to shonstop
'in the sixth w!lh runners at the
corners and one out. It came
on a curveball that was the
last pitch for Claussen (9-8),
who gave up one unearned
run, six hits and two walks
. over 5 2-3 innings. He is 5-0
with a 2. 77 ERA over. his last
six stans.
"It's like a pasture out
there," ,Claussen said. "It 's a
pitcher-friendly ballpark."
After Bennett, pinch-hitter
Carlos Baerga grounded out
against r:eliever Matt Belisle
to end the inning .
" A real big spot for us ,"
manager Frank Robinson
said.
Why does Washington
· seem to have so much trouble
getting runners home from
third with less than two outs?

Smith
fromPageBl
another game onto his suspension, forcing him to mis&gt;
the 2005 opener.
.
,Smith was contrite for t~at
mistake .and apologized to
his teammates and Ohio
State fans. Coach Jim Tressel
said last winter that there are
limits to what an apology
acco)llplishes.
.
"The w·ay you rehabilitate
:: yourself wtth anyone is with

Solich
fromPageBl
Bryan Walters/photo

Metgs JUntor Cody Davids.on misses a bi rt11e putt on the ninth hole
during Thu rsday's tn-match at Ptne Hills Golf Course in Pomeroy.

Two

Davidson and Alexande r\
Wtl lte Asi kainen tied with a
JX for co-medalist ho nor.s.
w11h Steven St~wan ritmh ing
. from Page 8 l
a stroke beh ind in tim place.
Ltke Venoy fired a -1-1 .
for MHS. while both Jo&gt;h while tealllmates Kirk L~!.! &lt;lr
Vcnu v and Dru ReeJ rounded ;~1d Dan Bookman each shot
out ttic team score with a 42
-16. · Josh Venoy fin ished
Dan Bookman fired •r -13 Mei gs' day with a 47 .
and Cody Davidson o~Jlkd J
Wes Cooper I ired :r 41 fo r
44 to enU the victors day.
runner-up Hclprc. wh ich
Danny Roush lollowed posted a team total of 176.
Reece and Roush with a
Wellston fini sJ1ed third
round of 42 . with Garrett with 192. while · Vi nto n
Kaylor fi nished Wahama 's County placed fourth with a
team .score of 165 with a 4.1. 202 .
Jus!tn Arnold ' hut a -15.
The Spartans finish ed a
and Adam Ingels added a 5-l. stroke be(ltnd the Vikin gs for
in completing Wahama \ day. fifth , while Nelsonvil le-Y0rk
"Wahdma always has some linished last with a 21 2.
good players. and we always
Meigs now has a four-poinl
look forward to playing edge in the sea&gt;on standing '
them,'' he· said . " It's always a with 19. s ittin~ ahead of
close match and they defi;· Belpre
at 15.· Wellston sits
nitely make us better."
third wi th 14 points, whi le
, Nel so nvill.e-York started Vinton County stands fourth
with four players. but one with eight points.
·
was disqualified for running
Alexander has two-point
out of balls. The other did not advantage
over NYHS for
finish .
fifth
with
three
points.
Those who did finish for
the Buckeyes were Jdted
TVC Ohio Standlnp
Bunting with a 46 and Kayla
after 4 events
Runyan a 63 .
A day
earlier,
the
Meigs
19
Marauders. captured the ir ·
IS
Belpre
third victory out of four Tri ' wellston
14
Valley Conference Ohio
County
8
Vinton
Diviston matches with a conAlexander
vincing nine-shot win over
3
Nels.-York
I
Belpre at Brass Rin g.

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Griffey, Reds power past Nationals Indians sto~p Devil Rays, 12-4

WEst Virginia RivEr Cup

BY FRANK CAPEHART

.Friday, August 26, 2005

.

.
.J

::
::
::
::
''
::
::,
',
:
•
:
:
:
:
•:•
•
:
:
:
•
:
:

~T~.,.TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT,..T,,. 4

_:___~

:that keeps me in t~e profe ssion," Solich said. "Really
it's being around young people and establishing relationships with the coaches on
., your staff, the players in your
:program. ~at to me is what
·tt's all about•."
· Solich was an assistant on
Tom Osborne 's staff .at
Nebra ~ ka from
1979-97,
helping tile Cornhuskers win
two outright national titles
.'. and share a third. Promoted
to head coach when the Hall
'or Farner retired, the
Cornhuskers were strong
under Solich but never as
dominant.
Solich compiled a 58-19
record in six seasons and
guided the Cornhuskers to
the 2002 Rose Bowl, where
they lost their national championship bid 37-14 to Miami.
The team slumped over the .
next two years and athletic
director .Steve Pederson fired
.: Solich, who arrived in
.. Lincoln in 1962 · as a small
·.:but tough fullback.
Solich turn ed down the
· head coaching job at Army
after the 2003 season, then
&gt;pent last year vjsiting college and p~o teams, learning
as much as he could about ht s
profession in case the ri ght
opportunity carne along.
Thi's is it, he says.
"If you have the proper
: backi ng, you're going to
have the chance to succeed. If
:. you don ' t have it, those
:: chances are going to be
I.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fia.
(AP) The Cleveland
Indians knew what they had
to do to keep pace in AL
wild-card race.
Ronn ie Belliard hit his first
career grand slam during a
seven-run third inning, leading the Indians to a 12-4 victory over the Tampa Bay
Devil Rays on Thursday
night.
Jose Hernandez . went 3for -5 with three RB!s for
Cleveland, which stayed less
than a percentage point
behind the New York
Yankees
and
Oak land
Athletics in the AL wild-card
race.
The Indi ans took the field
Thursday night knowing the
Yankees and Athletics had
a!ready
won
afternoon
games.
"We created opponunities
and took advantage of them
when they came ahout ,"
Cleveland manager Eric
Wedge said.
Cle-veland has won seven
of eigh t overall. and are 3926 on the road. The Indian s
are 17-6 since July 31 : the
best record in the majors.
Ediwrdo Perez homered
and tied a career-high with
four RB! s for Tampa Bay,
which lost for the fourth time
in 13 games.
"That was a lon g game,
wasn 't it?" Devil Rays manager Lou Piniella asked oft he
game that lasted fi ve minutes
short of three hours .
In the third, Hernandez had
an RBI single to make it 4-1.
Two runs scored on Kazmir 's ·
errant throw home on Ben
· Broussard's grounder with
the bases loaded . Replays
appeared to show the groundball went off Brou ssard 's
foot. which would have made
it a foul ball.
· !3roussard.said the ball did
hit his foot.
" It barely nicked my foot ,
und took a funny bounce.''
Broussard said. "None of the
umps reall y had a good look
(t( it''
Belliard's grand slam off
Travis Harper on a 3-2 pitch
gave Cleve land a nine-run
lead .

AP photo

Cincinnati Reds' pitcher David Weathers , right, is congratulated
by teamm ate Jason LaRue. left, after earning a save in the Reds
5-3 win over the Wash ington Nationals Thursday in Washington.
"That's a great question,"
Bennett said. "I wish had the
answer to that, Or 1 wish
somebody in here had the
answer."
Robin so n has lamented
since spring training that his
club lacks a true slugger, the
sort of player who · can alter
the_course of a game with one
,
swmg.
Someone like Griffey. But
"after getting at least 40
homers in seven of eight seasons from 1993-00, he strugj;led through injuries that limtted him to ·a yearly average of
fewer than 16 homer• and 80
at-bats from 2001-04 .
There was a torn knee tendon, hip and. thigh strains, a
dislocated shoulder, a bad
ankle, and then the torn hamstring in August 2004 that had
to be reattached. to the bone
with screws. He began 2005
by going 79 at-bats without a
homer, the longest such season-opening drought of his
career.
But he's turned thin gs
around, panicularly of late.
With two other hits

Thursday, Griffey is batting
.457 with five homers and II
RB Is over an !!-game hitting
streak that's lifted hi s average
to .297. He's got a chance to .
hit .300 over a full season for
the first time since 1997 with
Seattle.
His two runs put h.im at
I ,400 for his career, and he
moved within nine hits of
2,300.
" I don't re ally think about
those things. I just concentrate on one at-bat at a time,"
he said. "And if I can put a
good streak together, then
that \ OK."
Sean Casey also had three
hits for Cincinnati, and Felipe
Lopez and Austin Kearns
added two each.
After Griffey's line drive on
a 3-2 pitch began the seventh,
Hernande z hit the next batter,
Adam Dunn, before being
lifted. Dunn eve ntually came
around to score on reliever
'Hector Carrasco's wild pitch.
Carrasco also gave up Jason
LaRue's RBI double that
made it 5-1.

your actions and what. you do
in the future ." Tressel said,
referrin g to Smith . " It's not
what you say today. "
This
summer.
Smith
skipped a Class to attend a
football camp sponsored by
Tennessee Titans quarterback Steve McNair. That led
to a six-week investi gation
which found that Smith did
not hreak any NCAA ntle s.
"What happened, happened ," · said Smith, the
starter in a 4-1 finish to the
2004 · regular season . ''I'm
glad of the outcome. I'm Just
looking forward to being on
the field with my team-

mat es."
Asked if he could be
counted on by those teanimates. he fixed an icy stare
on the questioner and
replied, "Always.''
In a form of in-hou se punishm ent. Tresse l bu sted
Smith all the way down to ·
the scout team when preseason workouts began in
August.
The scout team is where
walk-ons and second-tier
u·nderclassmen serve as cannon fodder for the_ frontlin e
players. It 's a precipitous fall
for a quarterback who rushed
for 145 yards and passed for

, ......,e~

•

"He made a mistake,'' said
Belliard, who entered hitting
.231 with runners 111 scoring
posi tion and two outs. "It's
been hard for me to get hits
with tw o outs and guys on
base. I'm excited we won the
game."
An anti cipated pitchtng
duel between Cli ff Lee of the
Indi ans and 2 1-year old
Tampa Bay rookie Scott
Ka zmir never happened.
Lee ( 14-4) allowed four
runs and four hits over six
innin~ s. He is 5-0 in hi s last
eight ~'tarts.
"He gave up the one threerun shot,'' Wedge said. referring to Perez's homer. "Other
than that. he was down in the
zone effectively."
Kazmir {7-9) lasted 2 1-3
innir1gs. giving up eight runs
- fou r earned - and eight
hits. The le ft -hander had
been 4- 1 with a 2.44 ERA in
seven starts since the All-Star
break '.
''The main thmg is just, the
slider I was throw ifig. everyone was hanging ri ght down
the mtddle." Kazmir said .
··It's fr~ stratin g on the

mound ··
It was Ka1111ir \ short est
outmg th is scaS&lt;'ll
" Wllh youn g pitdwrs .
you· rc gomg tn g~ t what ~ o u
saw toni ght at tilll l' " ...
Piniella sa id.
Lee &lt;1nd K&lt;1m1ir faced eac· ll· ·
other · in Cl crel;utd u·n Aue
14. when the Dev il R;t\ s w,;n
1-0. Neithe r w;" i111uhed in
the decision tiM s"" I.ee
work eigh t ..,l'Orl' le . . ... nmin!l"

and KaLmi r not alhm a ru n
oYer six inn1ng ... .

Consecu ti've run --.cm ill :.."
doubles by Hern :111dct ;111J
Aaron Boone. and an RBI
single by Brou.s sard put the
Indians up 3- 1 in the .scconJ .
Hern;indez. who had four
hits in hi s last 31 at-ba". had
an RBI &gt;trig k in fuunh. and
Travis Hafner hi! lm cOth
homer - a solo shut - one
innin g later.
Tatllpa Bay took a 1-0lcitd
in the first on Perez's RHI
gro under. He 1111 the th ree-run
homer in•he third.
Lee retired hi .s fina l I0 hatters after Peru. \ homer He
had ri ve "rikcriut s c~nd no
walk s.

241 in a stunnin g upset of else on the team. And he · ,and heIri ng our 1 ~.1111 g d lwt ter. That 's 11·ha L we locus on
rival Michi gan in the reg u- waits.
lar-seaso n finale.
"We've got the team 1n a !pt. That \ the most llliP&lt;'r"The scout team are the mind. the team in foc us." he ta tlt Lhtng \\·C L' an do...
.
guys who prepare the said. "The guys are going to
Smitll stresses th :ll hi &gt;
defense for the win." Smith be ready for Miami game. mind j.., onh on ,the Mtami
said. "So being able to do I' 11 do whatever -! can to get. game. He sc;iJ it "i ll iwt he
that and be ing over there them ready for the Miami difficult for hi m ti1. j ump
with the defensive guys is ga me."
hack in to ,trtllln ·'' ful l ,reed
Zwick, recove rin g from a for th e hy r cd . . e L· Il lld ~; 1mc
always a plus. It's humbling
that I had a chan ce to be the twisted ankle , said he's not again~\ Nll . ~ TL'.\;1 ~ . HL' ,d-., ll
starting guy, you know. I concerned about losing the sa id hL· .dPL' ~ Il -1 ~ pe11J timL'
made a bad decision and 11ow job to Smith wl1en Smtih thinki ng ahout whether he ' ll
I have to come back 'from becomes eligible.
scnitch."
"I don ' t think we worry regain hi... -.,t.u·tin g -..pot ~) f'
So Smith attends practices, about that a whole lot(' not.
takes snaps , takes hit s, Zwick said. ··we j ust worry
watches fil'm and learns about goi ng out each and
'
II
I
plays just like every body every day and getting hell er
•

..

Aspecial tfuin~i to

··one of the best things that
diminished some. It was
Starting
quart erback
obvious to me that thi s presi- Au sten Eve rson acknowl- he's done is just not harp on
dent wants the football pro- edges that Solich 's time at things of the past and he hasgram to work, " Solich said.
Nebraska might be the reason n't even talked about other
He took over · about a people are psyched about places and stuff," Everson
mot\th after the firing of football again on the south- said . "He know s he's here
Brian Knorr. whose teams east Ohio campus where se ll- now and he's really focused
went 11 -35 in four seasons.
outs are rare in 24,000-seat on that and getti ng us to
With
in-state
Mid - Peden Stadium.
where we need to be.''
American Conference rivals
Count cornerback Mark
But Solich has won over
Miami (Ohio), Tol edo and his players by focusing on the Parson, pan of Solii:h 's lirst ,
ijowling Gree n huilding top present and not an ything he's recruiting class. among those
25 programs, McDavis. an done before. said Everson, a who are impressed.
Ohio graduate, believed a jun10r from Brentwood,
''You can tell when people
sideline veteran was needed Tenn .
have a positive attitude. a
to improve the Bobcats and
their .492 all-time winning
percentage.
The university president is
promising to be patient as
Solich works to win over
rotentia( recruits .
QIJckEvel!
" We clearly understand
. ..
......,.. ,...
......... ......- ·
that it will take coach Solich
~
,-· i
and his staff some time to get
"n.o!!""o;odoar""ot"'roc:
""f'ko~n.;.lngthe job done," McDavi s said .
..o.
Recruits should get a better
-~
look at the 'Bobcats th is season, with ES PN network s
showing six· of their games.
The cable giant's schedule
includes the hmne opener
against Pittsburgh on Sept. 9.
the day after Solich 's birthday.
.,..., ..
""
Osborne said Solich, hts
hand-picked . successor at
Nebraska whom he later rec-- ~--. --~....:--..
ommended for the job at
Ohio, · can turn around the
Bobcats because he 's ·a good
recruiter who's organi zed.
. .. .
"Some people are PR guys
...
with not a lot of substance in
. ~;:- ~~.
:~ ~~ ::64
..:
terms of the ir knowledge of
.;::14.::".
,\.
ihe game. but Frank is totall y
committed to coaching. He
knows the ga me and he studies the game," said. Osborne.
now a congress man.
~

AP photo

Cleveland lnd tans pitcher Scott Sauerbeck . ngl1t. embraces
catcher Vtctor Mar tinez after Cleveland defeated the Tam pa
Bay Devil Rays 12-4 on Thursday in St. Petersburg. Fla.

tJI
~

'1Je'66ie 'lJra(e for
going out of fur
way for our
4-Jl yroup! I

wmnmg allitude. and don't
accept losing:· said Parson. a
fres hman from Richmond.
Va.

Solteh is look ing ahead and
not had decli nin n to delve
into the r~asons
it didn ' t
work. out for · him at
Nebraska.
"There arc th'ings that 1
stru gg le with. but I do not
stru ggle with me bein g here
at Ohio .Uni wrsi ty in A th~ n s.
Ohio,'' he said . ''I'm here and
I like tt here ...

'

wh\

Pioneers
I
II

·4-H Oub

BUC

Are Coming To The

-~kE~~~.;:.=~.:-.:~; The Daily Sentinel
~.~;M··-w·~·

~,.

~7 -~;~

Ohio State Football

""!!~

--~~._,.,a..,,-

-- ~n _~-~ -= 7i

_
,
"
_
;~!J!¥!
.
.
--- .....

.._._ _.

Coach Jim Tressel is predicting
The Buckeyes will compete for the
National Championship this year.

WATCH FOR IT THIS SEPTEM-BER!

• I

_:_:j~
,_ --~--~~~--------:---_.:c.__-~----:-:---

'

It

�,

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Stpndinas
American L.etgue
- t Dlvlolon
' WLPctGB
lloolon
72 53 578
NowYorit
70 56 Me 2 ~
Toronto
84 63 5C4 II
llolllmoro
61 65 484 11 \
Tampa Boy
52 16 4CJe 21 ~
Control Dt.llolon
WL Pel GB
Chloago
77 47 821
Clevetana
71 57 555 6
Minnesota

87 60 528
61 84 466
Kansas City
42 83 336
Woll Dlvlolon

Detroit

11 It

16 \

35 ',

WL Pet GB
73 64 575
70 56 556 2 \

Angeles
Oakland
Los

Texas

59 67
64 72

Seattle

468
429

13 ~

1U

Thurwday'a Game•
Oakland 11 Detroit 1
N Y Yankees 6 Toronto 2

White Sox 2 Minnesota 1 10 inrunga
Seattle 8 Texas 2
Balt•more 2 L A Angels 0

Cleveland 12 Tampa Bay 4
Kansas C1ty 7 Boston 4
Friday'a Gamet
Kansas Ctty {Wood 4·4) at N Y
Yankees (R Johnson 11-8) 7 05 p m
Cleveland (Sabathta 10·9) at Toron1o
(McGowan 1 1) 7 07 p m
LA Angels (E Santana 7 5) at Tampa
Bay (Fossum 7 10) 7 15 p m

Oakland (Bianh:m 7 9) at Baltimore

(Chon 1().71 7 35 p m
Minnesota (Lohse 8 11) at TeKas (Loe
54) 8 05 p m

Detrolt (J Johnson 7 9) at Boston
(Wakefield 12 10) 8 05 p m
Ch1cago White Sox (0 Hernandez 8
6} at Seattle (FHernandez 2-1} 1005
pm

National League
East Olvlalon
W L
Pet
Atlanta
72 55
567
Phlladelphm
69 59
539
Ftonda
67 60 528
New York
67 60 528
Washington
66 61 520
Central Dlvl•lon

WL
81 47
67 60

St LOUIS
Houston
Milwaukee
Ch1cago
C1nc•nnat1
Pittsburgh

Pet
633

3 '1,

5
5

GB

528

13 .

492

18

61

480
465

19 .
21 •

422

27

Wast Dlvlalon
W L
Pet
63 63
58 71

Arizona
Los A.ngel9s
57 70
San Francisco 55 71
Colorado
49 78

437

386

ThurSday • Games
Ci ncmnatl 5 Wash1ngton 3
F l o r~de 3 Milwaukee 1 10 1nn1ngs
St LOUIS 6 Pittsburgh 3
N Y Mets 3 Arizona 1
Colorado 5 L A Dodgers 4
Friday s Gamea
Flonda {Vargas 4 1) at Ch•cago Cubs

(Rusch

5 6) 2 20 p m

Cmcmnatl
(Harang
8·1 1)
at
Pittsburgh [Redman 5 13) 1 05 p m
St
LO UIS
(Suppan
12-9 )
at
Wash ington (LOBIZB 8-9) 7 05 p m
Atlanta (Ram1rez 1D-7} at Milwaukee
(Shoots 9 9) 8 05 pm
Philadelphia \Myers 1-1 -6) at Arizona

(Halsey 8 101

COLUMBUS (AP)- Oh10
State ar¥.ued Thursday that tt
shouldn t be held liable for
some NCAA rules ViolatiOns
because former men's basketball coach Jtm O'Bnen made
It impossible for athletic
adm101strators to know about
Ihem
The umverstty tssued tiS
formal response to the NCAA
and conceded to the mne vtolations, seven 10 the men's
basketball program and one
each for the women's basketball and football teams
Among the most ~e nou s
char~es, the NCAA satd
admtmstrators and compliance offtctals should have
known about transgressiOns
by O'Bnen and one of hts
asststants, Paul Btancardt
The school shtfted responstbthty to 0' Bnen
"That the men's basketball
staff mtent10nally concealed
matenal facts trom athlettcs.
and compliance adnumstrators and dtsregarded spectlic
mstructtons from the comphdnce ot!tce should not be
deemed as evidence of a lack
of appropnate momtonng by
the mslltutmn," the response
states
Oh10 Stale sa1d the men 's
basketball team would have
two fev.er scholarshipS than
• the NCAA maxtmum of 13

thts season The school prevtously fired 0 ' Bnen and prevented tiS men's baskerball
team from playmg m a post
season tournament lasl season
- even though no players or
coaches mvolved many of the
alleged vtolallons were sllll
affiliated wnh the umverstty
"The umverstty believes
that tts corrective measures
and selt-tmposed pun111ve
acuons ,presented herem, and
any subseque nt acuons taken
by the umv erslly, shou}d be
recogmzcd and accepted by
lhe NCAA as necessar),
appropnate and sufftctenl, ·
lhe response reads
The umverslty sent the 225page document, ,tlong wl!h
about I ,500 pages of evtdence
and exhtbtts, to the NCAA
ofttces tn Indianapolis by
overntght councr Wednesd.ty,
the day bel ore tl was due
O'Bnen's attorney, Joseph
Murray. dtsputed the Unt\ ers~ ­
ty's clatms
"U nlike Ohto State Jtm
0' Bnen doesn 1 need 2,000
pages ro explam why he d•dn 't do anythmg wrong "
Murray satd
Btancardt has dem ed any
wrongdomg
The NCAA wdl co llect
mformat10n and then hold .t
hearmg Dec 9 or I 0 to dec1de
tl Oh10 State 's selt-tmposcd

penalties are sufft ctent
NCAA spokesman Kent
B,mell satd the orgamz.tlton
doesn't comme nt on pendmg
enforcement act10ns
Oh10 Slate hred 0' Bnen m
June 2004 after he adnutted
he arranged a $6.700 paymenl
111 1999 lo the famt ly of a
Aleksandar
recruit
Radojevtc 0' Bnen has sued
Ohm Stale for tmproperly ftr
tng htm, saymg he dtdn'r v1o
late NCAA recruttmg rules
h&lt;td'
because
Radojevtc
already been ruled tnehgtble
ro play tor the Buckeyes
0' Bnen repeated that clann
m a re ~po n se hts lawyer tiled
with the NCAA !his week,
s.ty mg Radojevtc was considered a professtonal athlete ar
the ume the loan was mdde to
.tsstst hts tamtly 1n war-torn
Kosovo
The NCAA vtolattons also
mcluded a booster who
helped another b&lt;tsketball

player wtth hts schoolwork
and gm e hun money
Kathleen Salyers, who
clauns she housed Boban
S.tvovtc, has sa td she per·
suaded
professors
at
Btancardt 's request to change
Savovtc's fatling grades so he
would remam elig tble to play
She declined to comme nt
on Oh10 State's response , but
released a statement on her
Web sne saymg she regretted
havmg had a role tn the vtolatwns She satd she was
mvolved as d "dtrect tesult of
others whom were m a posttmn of trust and au thonty lt
v.,IS thetr breach ol the trust
and aurho11ty that they were
gtven th&lt;tt has brought us here
todc1y"
Oluo Stale athlettc dtrector
Gene Smtth se nt letters
Wednesday to Salyers and
thtee other boosters who had
contact wtlh Savov tc and
Radoje&gt;t c, banmng them
from dotn g anythtng on
behalf ot the school or tts .tthleles
'Your vwlaltons have
caused stgmttcanl embanass
ment to the untvers•ty and
contmue to c,wse dtsruptton
to th e men s b,tsketball program," Smtth wrote to
S&lt;tlyers, taktng a stmtlar tone
with the others
The NCAA .tccuscd bolh

now the head coach at Wnght
State- of fathng "to monitor
the conduct and admmistrauon" of the basketball program from July 1998 to May
2002
'"Fatlure to momtor' would
c,onstt tute a complete omts·
sw n m the 1nslttuuon 's
responstbtlittes Thai dtd not
happen here," Oh10 State's
re sponse states
"The umverstty 's efforts,
however, were met w1th
deceptiOn and concealment by
rhe men's b-asketball staff"
The one football v10lat1on
mvolved quarterback Troy
Smnh 's acceplance of around
$500 from former OSU booster Robert Q Baker Ill May
2004 Smtth was suspended
from th e Alamo Bowl m
December and from thts season's opener on Sept 3
agamst Mmmt (Ohm)
Oh10 State also confirmed
the NCAA's fmdmg that a
Columbus onhodonust provtded free and dtscounted serVICes to women's baskerball
players The sc hool satd the
orrhodonttst dtsputed some of
the detatls of the allegauon, so
Ohto State off1ctals wtll
mv esugate further and update
the NCAA oo thetr fmdmgs

BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE COM

I

9 40 p m

Colorado (Francis 11 9) at !fan Diego
(Eaton 9 2) 10 os p m
N Y Mats (Trachsel o-o) at San
Francisco (Corre1a 2 4) 10 15 p m
Houston (P.etlitte 11-9) at LA
Dodgers (Lowe 8-12) 1040 p m

STEWART- Ohm Valley
Chnsuan soccer coach Jeff
Patnck thought ht s team
would be good on both stdes
of the ball dunng lhts upcommg season
Federal Hockmg may agree
wah the Defenders' mentor
followmg Thursday's 12-0
shutout,of the Lancers to open
the 2005 year
OVCS managed a 54 3 edge
m the shot column, and semor
Luke Swmey's lour goals propelled the Blue and Gold to the
successful season opener
Swmey had an unasststed
hat tnck by halfume, and the
guests held an 8-0 advantage
at the break
Swmey's goals m the first
and thrrd mmutes gave OVCS
a 2-0 advantage
Mtke

Wtll1ams
padded the
lead to three
m the seventh
nunu!e oft of
.m as&gt;ts! from
Brandon
Coughenour
Rtch,trd
McCre e dy
found Zach
Swiney
Carr
m
mmute 15 tor
a 4-0 edge, then Swtney found
freshman Kyle Scouten lor a
goal m the 18th mmule
Swmey completed hiS hal
tnck 10 the 20th mmute with ,1
solo goal for a 6-0 advantage
McCreedy and Carr hooked
up agam m the 22nd mtnute
for a 7-0 edge, then Scouten
added hts second c.~reer goal
when classmate Mtchael
Wnght jound Scouten,wnh an
asstst and gave Oh10 Valley

Chnsllan an 8 0 haltttme lead
Swmey went back to work
to open the second half, nml
mg hts fourth go,tl of the game
m the 41rd mmule Carr had an
asstst m makmg the score 9-0
Sentor Cory Kelley gor m
th e m•x dunng the 63rd
mmute, addmg a goal for the
double-dtgll edge
Sw1ney sent .t corner ktck
toward lhe box m the 73rd
mmute, and Narc Brown took
the pass and planted tl m lhe
back of the net for an elevengoal lead McCreedy added a
successf uI penalty ktck m the
linal mmute to complete the
sconng
Semor Luke Si111son had
suctesstul saves on all three
Lancer attempts to earn hts
hrst shurout tn goal Mtke
Wtllatms w.ts the keeper 111 the
second h.tlf, bur he d1dn '1 lace
a shot auemp!

CINCINNATI (AP)- Bob
Huggms te.tr!ully thanked
tans ThUI sday tor thetr 16
years ot support, whtle
lawyers lor the ousted coach
of
and the Unt\erSll)
Cmcmnau latled to timsh the
detatls of h1 s $3 mtlhon conttact buyout
Hu gg ms agreed ro step
down on Wednesday, a d.ty
alter the s.hoo\ v.arned he
would be tired tf he dtdn 't
restgn He agreed 111 pnnctple
to a $3 nulhon buyout for the
rest ut hts contract, with
detatls ro be worked out
"We' re sull talkmg about
the (buyout) language,' satd
R1 ch,1rd Katz, Huggms'
lawyer
Katz satd he and the um\erstty's lawyer ha\e or her obhg
atmns and probably won't

complete the deal unt1l next

week
The s1des are dtscu ssmg
when he v.tll leave and how
much he wtll get The school
IS wtllmg to let htm stay man
advtsory role for three
monlhs. easmg the transttlon
to an mtenm coach
Kuggms led Cmcmnau to
No I mnkings, a Fmal Four
and \4 consecuttve NCAA
toumament appearances durmg hts 16 seasons at
Cmunnatt The Bearcats also
had numt&lt;rous player arrests
and vtolanons dunng hts
tenure , earnmg an NCAA
probatiOn
llle school ts expected to
announce on Fnday that
Huggms' to{) asststanl, Andy
Kennedy, wtll be the mtenm
coach

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45769,
Phone
Number 740-992·2911
lor a $10 00 non·

The applicant's s preferred
alternative

refundable fee
Each bid must be

channel proteclion In
the Oh1o River The

accompanied
by
either a bid bond In
the amount of 10% of
the bld amount with a

applicant's minimal
degradation alterna·
live would result In
the filling of 0 09

surety satisfactory to

acres of wetlands and

the aforesaid Melgo
county

the placement of 5800
cubic yards of rock

Commissioner or by

channel protection In

cerllfled
check,
caohlera check, or let·
tor ol credit upon a

applicant's

Issuance or a alated
effective
date

Pursuant lo Ohio
Revlaed
Code
Section 3745 04, a

which ever brings the

highest return lo
Meigs lndustrloa, Inc.
Vehicle will be sold as

fmal action may be

11 condition

appealed to the
Environmental
Review Appeals
Commission (ERACI

To Inspect vehicle
during normol bull·
ness hours, catl 1·
740.992-6681 Bids

(formerly known as

be

will

open

on

the Environmental
Board 01 Revlewl by

September 9, 2005 at
11 00 am. at Meigs

a parson who was a

Industries

perty to a proceeding
ileforo lhe director by
filing an appeal within
30 days at notice ol
lhe Final Action
Purauant to Ohio
revised code oecllon
3745 07, a Final

Send aealed bids lo
Executive Director
(BIDS)
Meigs
Industries, Inc

Action Issuing, deny-

31, (911

Ing, modifying, revok·
ing, or renewing a
permit, llcenee, or
variance which Is not

preceded
by
a
Action,
Propoaed
may be appealed to
the ERAC by llllng an
appeal within 30 days
ol laauance of lhe
final action. ER AC
appeala muat be Iliad
with Environmental
Review
Appeals
Commlsalon,
309
Soulh Fourth
Street, Room 222,
Columbua,
Ohio
43215 A copy ol lhe
appeal

must

be

served on lhe director within 3 days after
llllng lhe appeal with
lha ERAC
Application for perm II
lo lnatell
Facemyer "Lumber
Company Inc.

31940 Bailey Run Rd
Pomeroy, OH
Action
Date
0711812005
Facility Oescrlptlon
Air
ldenllllcallon No 06·
07893
Appllcallon Received
lor Permit to Install

Wood Boiler.
(8. 26
Public Notice
Melga
lnduatrloa
Incorporated will be
accepllng bids lor lhe

PO Box 307 · t310
Col1eton Street
Syracuae, Ohio 45n9
(8) 25, 26, 28, 29, 30,

Dorcaa and Johnson

Road Povlng Project
will be received by
lhe Melgo County
Commissioners

at

lhelr oHice at The
Meigs
County
Courthouse, Second

Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 1 15 p m

Time,

September 8, 2005
and then opened and
rood aloud
The project provides
lor peylng 35470 L F
of Meigs County
Road 28 Apple GroveDorcaa Road In Letart
Sutton

Townships and 4490
L F ofTownahlp road
631 Johnaon Road In
Letart Township

In

Meigs County The
engineer's

amount In the favor of
the aforesaid Meigs
Commissioner

NOTICE TO CON·
TRACTORS
Sealed proposals for
lhe Apple Grove-

and

than 10% of the bid

County

Public Nottce

Local

solvent bank In lhe
amount of not less

estimate

for this project Is
$307,450 00
DOMESTIC STEEL
USE
REQUIRE·
MENTS AS SPECI·
FlED IN SECTION
153 011 OF THE
REVISED
CODE
APPLY TO THIS PRO·
JECT COPIES OF
SECTION 153 011 OF
THE REVISEO CODE

bonds

Bid

shall

accompanied

be
by

proof ol Authority ol
the oHiclal or agent
signing the bond
Bids shall be sealed
and marked as Bid
lor Apple Grove·
Dorcas and Johnson
Road Paving ProJect

and mailed or dellv·
ered to

Meigs

County

Commissioners

The Me1gs County
Courthouse, Second
Street Pomeroy, Ohio

45769
(8) 26, 29, (9. 6
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE OF RECEIPT
OF 401 APPLICATION
Public nollce Is her.by given that the Ohio
Environmental
Protection
Agency

(OhiO EPA) DIVISIOn
of surface Wat'r
(DSW) has received
an applicatton lor
and has begun to
consider whether to

luue or deny, a Clean
Water Act Section
401 certification lor a
projecl to construct a

50·foot wide boat
launch ramp lnlo the
Ohio River, Including
concrete ramp, cour-

teay dock, paved
parking area, and

lowering of the water
quality Other alterna-

associated amenities

tive resulting In lesser or no degradation,
or lowenng of water

As required by the
Ant1
degradation
Rule, three alterna·
tlves have been sub-

milled for the protect
would result In the Ill·
lng of 0 44 acres of
wetlands and the

placement ol 5800
cubic yards ol rock

the Ohio River The
non-

Parsons wishing to 1)
be on Ohio EPA s

during the review
-process
No exclusions or

interested

waivers, as outlined
by Paragraph 3745·1·
05 (D) ol the Anl1
degradation
Rule
(affective as of May 1
1998), apply or may

reviewing the appli-

EPAIOSW, Attennon
Permits Processing
unll, P 0 Box 1049,

appllC&amp;tlon for the
certification and tech-

Columbus,

nical support InformatiOn may be
Inspected al Ohio

Oh1o

43216·1049 wllhm 30
clays ol the date of
th1s public nollce
(8) 26

2 Days Only!
Fri. &amp; Sat., Aug. 26 &amp; 27
40%off

regular pnced new fall arnval!l
exGiudes "Pnced Jus! RJght" nems and coats

Extra 70% off
Yellow Sticker sportswear
plus m1sses jUniors &amp; g1r1s SIZes

20% off Red Sticker
Ohio River I
Galllpoli1

EPAIDSW, Lazarus
Government Center,

South

Front

Columbus,

Ohio, by flrsl calling
(614~
644-2001
In Memory

In Memory

was submitted by the
Ohio Department of
Natural Resources,
DIVISIOn
of

southern corporation
limits of Racine
Ohio,
Sutton

In

Director ol Ohio EPA.
Startmg August 30,
2005, copies ol the

Street,

Route 338 al the

menlo for Ohio EPA s
consideration

cation should do so
tn writing to Ohio

122

ect is located on the
west side of Sate

submll written com-

be granted by the

degradation alterna·

Engineering, 2045
Morse
Road,
Columbus,
Ohio
43229-1;605 The pro)·

mailing list lor this
prorect, 2) request a
public hearing, or 3)

In Memory
In memory of Richard Wayne Rowe
who left thiS world August, 2002
We rememher your love, kmdne ss and
great sense of humor 111 all that vou d1d
and toward all you met Your presence ts
always with those who loved you
You

Township,
M11gs
Counly The Army

wtll foreve r

hve

Am Legton Mtddlsport
Saturday August 271h
F1ve Early Btrd Games
Startmg at 5 pm
Starttng at 6 30 Playtng Bmgo
tor FREE
F1rst &amp; Second packs lree &amp; after
1st &amp; 2nd each pack IS $5 00
Guaranteed $60 00 a game
Door pnze IS $950 and Star Burst
IS $1 ,000 &amp; Crank It Up $6,000
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

111 our hc ~trt s

May God keep you 10 h1 s care

Corps of Engineers

number for this proj·
eCtiS 200301069 The
Ohio EPA number for
this project Is 052296
The discharges from
the
acllvlty,
If
approved,
would
result In degradation
to, or lowering of, the

water quality In the
Ohio

R1ver

(05030202)
The
review of lhe appllca·
lion will be conducted and a deciSion
whether to grant or

deny the application
will be made, In

accordance

w1th

Chapters 37 45 -1 and
3745·32 ol the Ohio
Admmlstratlve Code
(OAC) In accordance

wllh OAC 3745 ·Hl5,
an anti degradallon

rev1ew ol the appllca·
lion w•ll be conduct
ed before dectdlng
whether to allow a

Brothers S1slors. W1fe and Fam1iles
Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WANTED· Pos1110ns a\atlable to assiSt
;.m Jnd1vadual w1th me nt&lt;.~l retardation \l.ho

r61des

Ill

the

M e 1g ~

County

I) 40 hrs (li ve 10 ) 1 12 pm Mon S 7 :lO
am/ 3 12 pm Tues S 7 ~() &lt;tm/6 12 pm
Wed!fhurs 5-7 30am Fn sleep 01er
req u1red Excellent hcndit package,
mcl udtng 10sumnce ant! patd tnnc oft
2) 28 Ius 2 30 8 pm Mnnrt ucs 2-6 pm
Wed!fhurs 3 II p111 Fn Must ha1e lngh
school d1ploma or GED \,1i 1d dmer s
l1 cense thre e yearo;, good dnvmg expcn
c:ncc and ad12quatc auwmoh1lc m;. urance

S7

SenJ resume to
Bu(ke)e Communi!\ Sen ices
P 0. Box 604, Jackson. 011 45640
or c- mml to be)ccscn @)ahoo.com.
Dc.1Jimc lor apph c.mts 8/3 1/tlo •
~5/hr

Pre employment c..hu g te,un g
ual Q))ortunlf Em lo er

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Pleasant Valley Hospital IS cUTrently
acceptmg resumes for a Medical
Record Transcnpttomst Regtstered
Health lnformatton Techmc1an
preferred One to three years of
medtcal transcnpt10n expenence
Mtmmum speed of 60 words per
mmute
Excellent salary, holidays, health
msurance smgle/lam•ly plan, dental
plan, ltfe Insurance, vacatiOn, longterm d1sabthty and retirement. Send
resumes to
Pleasant Valley Hosptta\
c/o Human Resources
2520 Valley Dnve
Pt Pleasant, WV 25550
304-675 4 340
AA/EOE
I

M~lp

CDunly OH

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

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word Ads

~~

r~.·___

I'FRioN.ill;
____

-.
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to
50
Poss1ble
40
Commitment Send L.etter
Ph No P cture
Stilm!g
551 Canslltutlcn Dnve

r
~

1yr Mom Cat

740 992 7037

can
Reward !I

r

~

1
·

YARD SALF

:::::::::=~
YARDSALE·
GA!JJPOI.l~

2 ktltens

(304)662 2925
August 26th August 27th
9am 4pm
565 Georges
Creek Ad
Tupperware
Avon Toys Clothes D1sHes
Pool and Vanety of Mmc

Bobta1l kittens to g1veaway

Call(740)245·9037
Free K1ttens to good home

740 992·1426

All Dl•pi•Y· 1:Z Noon ;z
aualn••• Day• Prior To

In Next Day'a Pap•r

Publlc•tlon

sunday In-Column 1:00 p . m
For Sundaya Pap•r

Sunday Dl•play 1 400
Thuraday for Sund•v•

• All ada must be prepaid•

"

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
www com1ca com
Concealed P1SIOI Class
Septembe1 3 9 00 am VFW
Mason WV Ph {740)843
5555 Cell (740)416-3329

MOVING SALE
12ft boat and lilt tra1ler
2 motors 2 trolling
motors 4 good t~res and
wheels Furmture beds
Ant1que furniture Large
GE deep freeze Power
tools hand tools table
saw mower sh redde r
vac mulcher Christmas
decoratiOns
lots of
Santas Home lntenor
Womens and boys cloth
tng d1shes Off Route 2
5 m•les out Crab Creek
follow s1gns
Road
Friday and Saturday
9am 1111 dark Ram or
Shmel

r
I . .___

r

4
Siamese mother.
YARD SAUcat 8mth old H1ma1ayan k1t ___ foMF.RoYMwol..t .
ten
to
good
home
(740)446 4529
Garage A Palooza 4 famil y
garage sale August 26 27
1691
Lmcoln
Yellow Water lnses great for sm 1ths
a Fish Pond (304)675 3718 He ghts huge select 1on of
womentg 1rls cloth ng bed
Los'r AND
dmg turmture backpacks
glassware
radiOS
Lon aber er
Found Jack Russell white =~~1:::......,--...,.,.
and brown face no tad tat
YARI&gt; SALEtoo 10 rlghl fiar found on
Pr. Pl.J.A'\ANT
fntllan
Run
Road
Aeedsv 111e
740 590-0231 B1g
Yard
Sale
2403
(yell) or 740 667.0230
Jefferson Ave
bes1de
Church of God Thurs Fn a
Found
Female Beagle 6 &amp; Sat 8-1 Electnc Hospital
Bed $100 Children &amp; Teen
• wlbnght green collar 1n
School
Clothes Good Pants
Letart
Radical
Lane
&amp;
Shirts
fOr Men 25 &amp; 50
(304)895 3551
Women s
Lrg
Clolhes
priCed
to
sell
Lots
ol
M1sc
Found Older male white
Betty
Perry
Poodle
found on
Ato
Pregnant

t

FOUND

ru_B_U\.:..-.J

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Silver and Gold Co1ns
Prootsels Gold A1ngs Pre
1935
US
Currency
Sohla1re Diamonds M T S
Com Shop 151 Secane!
Avenue Gall1pohs 740 446
2842
-------Real-Estate W&amp;•lted Local
person lookmg for a home to
Ouy
All cash
Me1g s or
Gallla No doub e w de or
modular 740 416 3130

I \ 11'10\\11 '\I
" I It\ I&lt; I .._

•

4x4's For Sale ... ..... .. ...
725
Announcement
030
Antiques .
~30
Apartmenta lor Rant .. , .
. 440
Auction and Aea Markel ... ..
.. .060
Auto Porta a. Accessories
760
Auto Repair.
no
Autos lor Sale
710
BoaIll a. Motoro for Sale..
. 750
Building 'Supplies.. . ..
550
Business and Buildings ,
340
Bualnoos Opportunity . .
2t0
140
Business Training
Campers a. Motor Homes...
790
Camping Equipment.. ..
780
Carda of Thanktl
01 o
Child/Elderly Care
190
Electrlcai/Refrlgerallon
.. .840
Equipment lor Rent...
480
Excavating .. , ... ..
830
Farm Equipment
610
Farms lor Renl
..430
Farms lor Sale. ..
330
For Lease , .. ... ..
490
For Sale.. . .. .
585
For Sale or Trade
.590
Fruita a. Vegetables.
580
Furnished Rooms....
450
Oonerol Hauling.
. 850
Giveaway .. .
..... ! .. ..040
Happy Ads. . .. ..
.. . .... ... ... , ..050
Hay a. Grain ..
. 640
Help Wanted.
110
Home Improvements
.. 81 0
llomea for Sele .... ..... ... .......... .. ....... 31 0
Household Goods.......... ... ... . .. . 51P
llouaes lor Rent..
410
In Memoriam
..
.020
lniiUrance

.

• .................. 130

Lawn 1 Gorden Equtpment

Uveotock....... ...
Loot and Found.
Lote &amp; Acreage.
Mlocellaneoua ..
MI11C8IIaneous Merchandise
llloblle Home Repair .
Mobile Homes for Rent .
Mobile Homes for Sale
Money to La.n.. .. ..
Motorcycles &amp; 4 W-rs
Muolcallnatruments .
Personals
Pelll for Sele.
Plumbing &amp; Heating ..
Proleaolonal Services
Jladlo, TV I CB Repelr ...
Rool Eatate Wonted .•
Schools Instruction
Seed , Plant &amp; Ferllllzer ...
SHullllona Wanted ..
Space for Rent.
Sporting Goocla
SUV'olor Saje
Trucka lor Sale.
UphOialery .. .
•
Vona For Sale.
Wonted to Buy . .. ..
Wanted to Buy· Farm Suppllea
Wanted To Do..
Wonted to Rani
Yard Sale- Galllpolla ... ..
Yard $ale-Pomeroy/Middle
ard Sale-Pl Pleaaent

660
630
. .060
. .. 350
170
540
. 860
.420
320
220
740
570
005
560
...820
230
160
.. 360
150
650
120
460
520
720
715
. 870
730
090
620
.. 180
.. .470
072
,074
, 076

ENI-CLUNO NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTER S
WYTHEVILlE VA

1 800·334-1203
100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood rems
To $4801wk
Matenals prov1ded
Free Information pkg 24Hr
801 428 4649
An established Ousmess m
Gathpohs IS look1ng lor one
h•ghly mot111ated salesper
son w1th a strong work ethiC
to JOin our company Are you
lookmg for full time work ?
Are you looking for a penna
nent full time position ? Are
you 1nterested 10 unlimited
earnmgs potentia l?
All
replies Will be kept 1n str~ct
conflctence
Send
your
resume to CLA Box 569 c/o

oo

To;;,;;no..,_.,.I

180

~

WANTEIJ

1

L , ._ _ _

IWrlght@IC net

110
.
IIElJ'WMmD
1

OUTSIDE SALES
REPRESENTATIVE

ConstructiOn workers local HEALTHCARE SERVICES
area e;.:penence preferred GROUP
The
largasl
(740 )992 7953
provider of housekeep1ng
and laundry serviCes lo the
DRIVE
long term care industry IS
lookmg for expenenced
Fam1ly Onented Carner With housekeepmgl
laundry
loads out ol Jackson OH superv1sors If you want to
needs OTR dnvers to pull grow With a well estabhs1led
relngerated trailers m the pubhcly
held company
easl half ot the u S
please fax resumes to 614
734-9754 or call 1 80Q-804

• Weekly Pay

OS51 ox1 93

• Late Model Fretghthner

Help Wanted- Overbrook
Center ts currently acceptmg
apphcai!Ons tor Part-Ttme
LPNs for the 7am to 1Pm
shift Please come 1n and fill
out an apphcaltan at 333
Page Slreet Mtddleport

• 95% no touch fre1ght
• Full benef•t package

•

OH EOE

• Homet1me on weekends

LICENSED SOCIAL
WORKER

The
Galltpolls
Da11y
Tnbune IS acceptmg
resumes lor a lull lime
ou1s1de sates represents
''veto JOin our sales team
and to manage an estab
fished account I st whtle
callmg on new accounts
The successful candtdale
will be a dtsc•phned self·
mott\led team player that
understands the lmpor
developmg
tance
of
strong m1.1tually benefl
Claf bUSiness reiSitOn
shrps With our customers
The ideal cand1date will
have sale expenence For
conhdent1al
1nlerv1ew
please send resume and
cover letter to Galhpohs
Oa1fy Tnbune Attn Jim

Fiii•iiiaoiillaiiindiiiilo8iii
2;;;5o.T,;;
h,;;;rdiiiA;;'."ol
OhiO
45631
Overbrook Rehab11tta110n • GallipOliS
Center m now acceptmg
Blue Velvet Transport
&amp;
EMT s
resumes lor ttte poSition of ParamediCS
Call Bob at 800 652 2362
needed
Apply
at
1354
01rector of Soc1al ServiC9S
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis
The
qualified
candidate
Or1vers needed at Allied
Waste
Class B COL must be a LSW possess1ng
POSTAL JOBS
requued Please apply at s11ong volbal and written
skills $15 94 $22 56/hr now h1r
P01nt Pleasant Job ServiCes communicatiOn
Med1ca1d Medicare and •ng For applicabon &amp; tree
·/
Drivert Needed
MDS knowlednA Lonn term government JOb mfo call
•·
...
A
lean Assoc o1 Labo r
COL 0 nvers WI Ill ng to drrve care exponence preferred
mar
Ior Iocal ready m1x-concrete but not roqurred Qualified 1 913 599 8226
24/hrs
company Expertence 1s
candtdates
may
send ,0em
p::.s::•"'
.
:::...
____
_
preferred but not necessa"'
-2
1
•
resumes
to Charta
Brown·
Res1dent1al
Treatment
Dnver must be w1llmg 10 do
M
AN
lNHA Fac•lily
c G u•re
for bOys now h1rlng
pre mamtenance on trucks Ad m1mstrator 333 p age 0 1ract Care Workers Pay
&amp; EIQU!pmenl yard work &amp; Street Middleport Ohlo based on expenence patd
other m1scetlaneous chOJes 45760 EOE
Expenence operating equ1p
msurance (740)379 9083
:nent &amp; extra sktlls such as Look•ng to hlfe highly mot1 9am 3pm Mon Fn
welding a plus
Call (304)937 3410

_...::.:::...:.:.::....~...:.._:__

Engmeenng f~rm seeking
ndlv,duals IO prov~de con
struct!On •nspectton serviCes
for water and sewer utlhl!es
Expenence a pos1t1ve but
not 11ecessary (tra1n1ng pro ,
vided) Must be Willing to
work out of 1own on a week
tv baSIS Musl have reliable
transpor1at1on
Beneflls
401K Health Insurance
Expenses
etc
Send

'.s"

t

Bo

TSC19

vated energetic hard work
1ng lndrvtdual for the fastest
growmg cellular company 1n
Galha County Stop by and
talk to Tern at Axcess
Commumcat•ons LLC 18
Berger Ave GalhpoltS OH
Bnng a resume 01" for more
Info cell (304)8 12 1919

c!o

Gafhpol1s Tnbune PO Box
.,.me o
x
PomtPieasant Reg1ster 200
469 Gallpohs OH 45631
MM 'I s t Pt Pleasanl WV
An Excellent~ way to earn .25.::5::50:...__ _ _ _.,--money The New Avon
Expenenced P1zza Shop
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
workers lor growmg bust
Are You Getting What You ness Apply m person Only
Deserve? Let us Tell you J1manetb s P1zza Buckeye
How You Carll! Western H1lls Ad Rto Grande
Express 1s conductm g a
OrNer h1nng Conference m
~
your Area' When? Sat
August 271h 10am 4pm
Where ? Hohday Inn 800 3rd
Avenue Huntington
WV
EXTRA! EXTRA!
25701 (304)523-88&amp;) Most Look 1ng for a partt1me job
All T•acto rs Replaced With
but havmg no luck.?? We
New 04 05 and 06 Models 1 may have 1ust what you are
H1rmg DeciSIOns made on
lookmg for' The Poml
the sputl Average 3 000 Pleasant RegiSter IS seek
m•l week
EZ Pass &amp;
lnQ a dependable hard
Prepass 1 day OnentatiOn
wonung individual lor a
MOTOR ROUTE
Great MediCal Insurance
Class A COL loqwed call tor 'POS/tton If mterestod ma k
more mfo
877 316 7100
ng $950 per month work
Western Express
lflQ 5 hours a day 6 Oays a
week ot1 on Sundays
A.re you look1ng fo1 a change
Please Contact
1n your nurs1ng? Full ti!TI£!
Sean Cullen
AN needed for grow.ng
Dlst Sales Mgt
home
health
agency
(304)675 1333 ext 20
Flex1~e sclleduhng compet
For
a limned " me make SO%
1t1ve wages w1th benefits
"
sellmg
Avon Call (740)4A6
Call toll free 1 866 368
'

1Hl0

Attention I
Local company oHen ng "NO

DIRECT TV 3 room With
TJVO FREE 145 chan nels
only $39
per month Ask
how to get FREE HBO
MAX and home entertam
ment system Call 800 523
7556 for deta Is

• $500 Sign on bonus

NO EXPERIENCE NECE SSAIW
FUU TIME CLASSES
COL TRAIN!Nu
FINANC t.IG .t,\IAJLABLE
JOe PLACEMENT

4yrs old 3br 2ba With f1re
place on 1 5 aces 10 coun
try $89 900 (740)709 1166

MISCEI LANIOlfS

• No Forced NYC

LEARN
TO
DRIVE

3069

1'70

Condos

(740)245

3BA 28 home n Aac1ne
1 6 acres close to school 2
car garage k1tcheh app 1
ances mdu ded ( 740~949

Gallipolis Career Collage
(Careers Close To Home )
Ca I Today' 740 446 4367
1 sao 2 t4 0452
www ga11po! scarearcol ago corn
AccHtd l ed Member Ace Ddll ng
Counc 1 to 1 rn:lepencleJlt coneges
af\d Schools 12746

\VANJID

magazmes m1sc

&gt; HoM&gt;.,
mRS \II

HOMES
Su.t

M(MIII

FOR

Fndayl Saturday Bam ?
1240 Kemper Hollow Ad
Fuel Tank (304)675 6183
Iron SI&lt;Hiets Old glass tools Rummage Sa e Frr Aug 26
830am? SatAug27830
&amp; f1shtng reels
Guide Post Magazmes to
am 3 30 pm Haven of Rest
Giveaway (3o41675 5190
Church 40 WarWICk Ad Pt
Saturday Only 475 Kathy Pleasam (Behmd Village
Pa,rt Bo;w;er pupp1es 6 wks St Sam 4pm
Household P1zza)
old ready to go (740)742 1tems oraft supplies books

2500

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
addedtoyourclasslfledads ,
fJ~
-""
Borders $3.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1 .00 for large

Display Ads

Chocolate lab puppy

apprmdmate1y 4 months old
lasl seen on Landaker Road

Wlnchoster1KV 40391
GM!AWAY

1e~-::::::::
~~~~

Oeacl~;,u-

Dally J:n-Colun1n- 1 00 p m,
Monday-Friday for I n - r t l o n

VISA

gQ2-2157

Or Fax To

Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.rn. to 5:00

r
_.ll : ,

JUST SAY
CHARGE IT!

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

Oftfee 11o~~
\ ' ' I 1\ \ t I \ II ' I ....

1.;

Regl~ter

Sentinel

m:rtbune

To Place

CLASSIFIED INDEX

parties

1- Re

m:rlbune - Senti
C-LASSIFIED

Grande campus
7182 dayllme

same number.

quality, will be con·
s1dered by Ohio EPA

live would have no
direct Impacts to
water resources on

slle The appllcallon

Applications can be
made available at
Ohio EPA D1strlct
Offices by calling the

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

www.mydailysentlnel.com

0' Bnen and Biancardt -

Defenders offend Federal Hocking Cincinnati, Huggins
continue negotiations

GB

500
450
449

~rlday, August 26, 2005

Ohio State says it shouldn't be liable for some violations

6

63 65

66
59 68
54 74

San Otego

GB

Friday, August 26, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

3356

h1nng
All shifts
AVON~ All Area s' To Buy or Now
5ell
Sh1rley 5kears 304 McDonalds of A1o Grande
A.pply 1n person
675 1429

NE ProJect Manager tor
salary positiOn Lead 1eam
of asSistants In reset of reteul
d•splays for home improve
ment re 1a1 1er c rew mgml
and planogram exp a must
Trvl may be up to 3 wks
EIQ:)enses pd + per dl9m
Must possess reliable trans
portatiOn Send resume to
jOrdan 1ustusOresourcep co
m or tax to 888 501 7972
OhiO Valley Home Health
Inc hlnng Full Tml9 AN 5
CompelltrteWages Mileage
and benefrts tncludmg health
Insurance Apply at 1480
Jackson Pike Gallipolis or
phone toll tree 1-866-44 1
1393
Expandmg Into
Mason County WV
WV
AN s encouraged to apply
Wanted

MediCal

OH,tee

ASS!StantwitheKpenance~fol

Someone to care klr eklerty
female Prefer non smoker
references 45 yrs of older
weekerld shift
(740)446
3496 9am 5pm ask tor
Usa
The
Athens Me1gs
Educatooal ServiCe Center
•s seeking a qualified apph
cant to serve as Talented
and Gifted Coordinator tor
Me~gs County Schoots for
the 2005-2006 School year
Applteanls musl hOld a valid
certlftcatelhcense as a
SuperviSOr and a teach1ng
cert•flcatel hcense w1th a
Talented and Gifted vallda
tiOfl or be Willing to work
1oward appropr1a1e 11cen
sUre) Th1s 1s a 10 month
pos1t1on
With
Board
approved benefits
Salary
Will be based on expenence
and certihcahon according
to the salary sea~ Submit a
tener ol mterest resume
and references to John 0
Costanzo Supenntindent
Athens Me1gs Educational
Serv1ce Cente• 320 1/ 2
East Ma1n Street Athens
OhiO 45701 no later than
12 00 NOON September 2
2005 The AMESC IS an
equal opportufllty employ
erlproYicjer

.::c::.::=;;_____
Truck Duvers Needed
Hondo
""based ca"'
I

phyS~n office A umque
pos•tlup requ1nng knowt·
edge of computeNI and 11eta
entry also 1CD and CPT
coduog Aellabf.e transports
bOn needed No weekends

rson tonv
ed
er looking
r expenenc
Class A COL Onvers
Inte rested
parhes
call
(3CM)675-7-434
"-'....:..:-'-----Wanted Waitress tun tune
Appty 11"1 person HOliday Inn

or

Gallipolis

holldllys

required

Be II
1 ble Sola,...
ne I s aval a
,7
negollable with exper10nco
A flexible employer Ma1l
resume to CLA Box 568 c/o
Galhpohs Tnbune PO Box

469 Gall•pol,. OH 45631

DOWN PAYMENT" pro
grams for you 10 buy your
home mstead of rent1ng
• 100% financing
Less than perfect cred1t
accepled
Payment could be th e
New 3 BR Home Only
same as rent
$189/mo
Includes wc dehv
Morlgage
Locators
ery and set up (740)385
(740)367

oooo

Cape Cod Home 2185 Sq
Computer
Repai r
and
Ft 2 112 Bath 3 BA 2 Car
Troubleshoot Web Destgn
Gara ge &amp; Carport Double
Network1ng Programming
Dr 11eway on 1!2 acre lot 2
BUild New Systems Restore
yrs old Hardwood fl oors
Wmdows.. V1rus Removal
$~45 000
Pnvate Onve
PhoneN740 992 7903
located 397 Honeysuckle
http IJwww geoc1 11es comlhO
Gallipolis Ferry WV
Ln
tda m n32934 / Em at l hot
(304 }593 2864
damn32934 @yahoo com
Expenenced n Home Care
Pomt
for the Elderly
Pleasant area only
Call
(304)675 6178
Oa',' shift
only

All real estate Advertising
lnlenorfExtenor
Pamt1ng
and
Power
Washmg
Reasonable rates refer
ences expenenced Free
est1mates Call (740 )742

2013 m (740)645 2638
State Cert f 1ed L1nk
approved chlldcare has
1mmed1ate openmgs tor
ages 6 weeks&amp; up call
Shelly 304 675 2343 for
more details

11\\\ l l\1

r.10--·B·USI·NE'I-:S-_.I
-.
0ProRitJNm
Established lawn care bus •
ness tor sale Ca 11 740 ~446
1098

•NOTICE•
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends lha
u do bus ness With peo
le you know and NOT t
end money tt'lrough tl1
81l until you have 1f1vestl

::•~lod=t~o~ff~
ho en:n::=~

r

MnNEY

Til I 'l \N

~;:::;~~~~~~~
**NOT I C 1&lt;:

**

in this newspaper 1s
subject to the Federal
Fair Housmg Act of 1968
which makes It illegal to
advertise any
preFerence llm1tat1on or
dta'"dmlnatton baaed on
race color tl!lhgt~on sell:
tam1l1al status or national
orig1n or any mtentlon to
make any such
preference llmttallon or
discrimination
This newspaper will not
knowingly accept
advertisement&amp; tor real
estate which 1s m
vlolatron of the law Our
readers 111re hereby
1
Informed that all
dwellings advertised '"
thla newspaper are
ava1lat»e on an equal
opportunity beaes
Located on qu1et dead end

5540

L---iiiii.iiiiiio-.J
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY !SSt?
No Fee Unless We W nl
1 888 582 3345
Rl \I I ..., I \II

...,~-~---'"'"!
Ho:\U~

J3:10

.__ _iiHiiill!lioiiiSii-\Uiiiio
. _.,.
--,
17 5acre farm house w th 3
bedrooms INmgroom 0 1n
n ngroom
kitchen
2tu I
baths attached I 5 garage
Small ba rn new 2 5 car
t&gt;IOck garage ell fenced In 1
mlfe from UAG on SA 325
(740) 24.5 5469

4367
N ce

Used
14x64
2
Bedroom Onty $4995 Call
(740)385 0698

STATE ROUTE 554 BIDWELL New 4 bedroom 2
bath manulaclured home
Features 1111ng room tam1ly
room w1th f replace and
BONUS room Corner lol
Above ground pool wtlh pool
house Ready lor move m
PRI CED
UNDER
APPRAI SALII
(7 40 )446
32 18
THEISS ROAO VINTON
Brand new 3 bedroom 2
Oat h manufactured home
Complelely set and ready
tor move 1n Features hvmg
room lamily room and
beaut lui sKy 11 t k1!Chen
DAASTIC,ALLY AEDUCE011
Call (740 )446 3570

r

Lms&amp;
AlRI \(,f

1 Acre w1th old !louse Jm1
soulh of PI Peasant on Rt
2 $16 000 17 40 256 6522

Rflt F.•m tl
WWIHl
1 Buy
buys
QuiCk
6300

Homes Local person
hom es Confidential
cash J m 740 992
No calls alter 9

Ul\ I l l '

;;::=:;:;===:,

street near GAHS 4BR 2
J/2 Baths extra large I1V1ng r:
room utthty room den •110
Ho( ·st-!-1
screened 1n porch LOTS of
t-llH: R.IJ&gt;..i
s1orage Carpet less tllal1' 4
years old healmg/AC ess
Bedroom Hous e 1n
than 2 years old (740144 1
Syracu sE tor Rent No Pets
0555 evemngs
$400 Montn $400 Depos1t
Newly remade ed 3 or 4 (3041675 5332
bedroom house cen tra an
lull basement ha rdwood 1 bedr!:Jom house
11
lloors detached garage Garf1eld Ave
Gatllpohs
large covered pat10 fenced $ 300 mo (740 )4 41 0194
S69 500 (740}441 1184
back
yard
(7 40)709 1382
BR/1 bath
Older
2
Fa rmhouse wl 10 acres m
country
3 miles
from
Hartford
S49 500
Realty
Homestead
(304)882 2405 \304)6 75

m:~~-----,

For Sale
C ay1 on S1era
28 ~o:56 Doublew1de Modular
Home w1th 10x26 movable
front porch
Buyer Mus1
Move Horne lo theu S1te 3
Bedrooms MBA w th lull
balh and 6 Soaker Tub 2
Ad I Bed rocm s w th lull balh
Inclu des
aI
upgrade
Ap pt an ces
also
Refr1 gera1or Washe r Dryer
n Mud Room L1v ngroom
has 4~ Surround Sound TV
Sys tem w th 6 changer
CD/OVO player All wmdow
treatments and 3 ton 3600
BTU Heal Pump Prtces at
For 1nformat on
$44 900
and v1ew1ng cal (304)675
7137 If no ar.1swer leave
me ssage wllh name and
phone number

1 pOSS ibly 2 Be droom
House m New Haven
S3001m ontl1 S27 5 depOSit
No Pets (304 )882 3652

2 houses 1 IS 4 bedroom
S900 month 1 15 3 be&lt;:! room

S550imontl1 plus depostt
AI 2 N 3br Full SIZe (740)256 8152
Basement all Br ck 1 Car
Garage (304)895 3129
3 Bedroom 2 Car Garage
Basement C A S700 mo
wwworv com 1nctudes wa ter sewe &amp;
Home Lastmgs
trast- C40)44~ 4824
List your home b~ calhog
3 t&gt;edroom 2 lull bath 2 hv
17•01"6-3620
mgroorlls
d 1n1ng
large
k~tche n
basemer"lt large
te nceo oacKyard Sout,hern
Is a Steal' 4 bedroom 2
Schoo l 0 1st• ct Ava1labte
th 2 car garage New
Oct
1st 740 4 16 1687
aven VW Code 6505 or
17J01753 2595
II (304 )882 3366
Adentton t
Loca cornpany ofle rmg NO
~lORD.} Hm 11"
oro
DOWN P4.YMEN T
grams lor you 10 tvy your
home 111stead of rentmg
27 Acres Doublew1de 3
100"o f1nanc1ng
Dedroom
2 bath
Lg
Less man perlecl cred 1t
Outbu ld1ng LG Shed Long accepted
Hollow Ad m Lelan S65 000
Payrnent could be the
after 2pm (304)895 877 0 or sar"'e as 1ent
(304)593 B139
Mortgage
Localors
1740 \367 0000
5 Homes under $1 0 000

' nlRS•u

Will Oelver (740)385 7671

CLEAN SWEEP SALE Lol
model clearance All rema1n
1ng 2005s must go to maoc e
• room tor new homes under
~------- construchO" SAVE SAVE
3B A Ranch 2 car garage SAVE l OAKWOOD HOMES

House for Rent m Pomt
Pleasant (304)675 6224

Small 2 Bd House 4 m1!es
from Tuppers Pia ns on 68 t
We s1 Ideal tor 1 or 2 per
sons
K1tcnen appliafiCes
pool Clty schools S90 000 GALLIPOLIS Cal 1740\446 washer oryer nooto. up large
3460 SA 218 Ga l1po11s
yare &amp; storage shed No
3093
DH (7401256 1962
._.:c.::_
_ _ _ _ __
1f1S dE' pets Non smolo;er 1
Grea1 Usee! 1994 14•70 3 vea,r ease 5400 00 a M
4 Sa le 9 Am Home on t Bed room 2 Batll Includes o1us $400 00 deposn and
acre w garage neaT AKZO heat pump Cal 1 17401385 ut,ht-IE'S Ava1lat:J!e Sept 1st
...,. 40 o.i85 3ijQ4
595 ooo 13041675 5ozb
24J.&gt;

�Friday, August 26, 2~

www.~ydailysentlner.com

Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

~-

·t=tlday, August 26, 2005

.

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

~LLEYOOP

TRUCKS

NEA Crossword Puzzle

mRSAI.E
2 Bedroom Trailer In tl1e
country. $300/mo, $~50
• deposit. Application s now
being
accepted
Call
(740)388·0462 tor more
Information.

For Lease: Office or retail
spaces iri very good condition Downtown Gallipolis.
Approx . 1600 sq ft. each. 1
or 2 baihs Lease price
negotiable to sncourage
new
busrness.
Call
· 2 Bedroom tra iler in Tuppers (740)446-4425 or (740)446. Plains. Has nice porch 3936 .
$300.00 rent plus deposit - - - - - -- - and utilities . 74()-667 -3487 . Prime Commercial Space at
Spring Valley Pl{lza. 3,000
bedroom, A/C, very ruce , sq. ft . Call {740)446-3481
- no pets,
rn Gallrpol1s .
(740)446·14.09 or (740)446-

:2

0
. _20__3_ _ _ _..:.__ _ . i$lO
3 bedroom mobile home tor
the
co untry.
rent
1n
4
{7 0)256·65 74
3 bedroom Trailer in Leta rt
all $350 month $250 deposit

(304)882-2858

BRIDGE

AKC Registered !em. Boxer
8 months old, fawn color,
and has had. all shots.
$250.00 740-992-1812 or
416-5410

1993 Red Chev-y C3500, 6.5
DiGsel
Dully,
Turbo.
Extended Cab, .2WO, XM
Radio, PW/ PL. Auto, $7,200
1996 Black Chevy S-10,
Exte~ded
Cab,
Auto,
Doberman Pups, Black &amp; PW/Pl, Running Boards,
Tan , 2 Female, 2 Males, no 4X4 $6,800 (304)593-5073

ACROS.S

Phillip
Alder

papers, Parents on premis- - - - - - - - - es. 1sl shots &amp; w"or med 1997 Dodge Dakota SLT VB,
$250 (304)675·8196 aft~r
Automai ic, 2 Wheel Drive,
5:00
72 ,000 i-niles (304)593·1614
Full blooded Boxer Pl,fps.
1
Mother and Father on prem-

l•aa

. HOI 'SEHOU)

suvs

lllR S,1 I.E

•

rses .
Female Brindle &amp;
GOOI}t;
Fawn . w/ White markings
1998 Jimmy 40. 4WD, V6,
L.--·;:;;:~:;,.-.,J S250 (304)675-6501
4.3L all. Leather, excellent
Pit Bull Puppres lor sale. Full condition
lots at extras
Blooded _ No Papers, $150 304 675-8755
each
(740)388-8901 or

Hauling
Service

'

(740)388-8596.

Available .September 1s t.
Warehouse
280 wl new carpe l , AIC,
12x24
lront
porch .
$300/mth .
$300/ deposlt. in Henderson, WV. Pre·
Rutland
area
Mi~e - owned applicanes startin g at
. $75 &amp; up all under warranty,
{740)742·2595
we do service wOrk on ·all
Beautiful river view in Make and Models (3041675Kanauga . Ideal for t-2 peo- 7999
ple. No pets , please.
Applica tion S being taken . Brown suede sola &amp;
Joveseat .l;ly United, good
Call (740)441-0181 .
cond. $400. Call (740) 446For rent rn New Haven " 4417 before 7pm.
newly remodeled 3 bedroo m
mobiJ8 home, ale, fully fur - Gas Ran ge, alec . range ,
wash er, $100
nished. includes dishwash- compant
er, w/d, m1cro &amp; TV, ca ble each. Call 1?40)446-4417
hOOkups in al l bedrooms, all :
be::lo
:::r_:
e_:7_:
Pm
~._ _ _ __
utilities, paid including cable, Green Sofa &amp; Charr Qy
$115 each per week for 2 Southern Droams. must sell.
renters. $100 each per week _5300 _ Call (7 40)446-4417
for 3 renters, (330)336-570!:1 belore 7pm.
or 330-464 -9424
--'---'----Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark
Mobile Home in New Haven
Chapel Road . Porter. Ohio.
' 53 30/month. S300/deposlt
(740)446-7444 ·1-877-830(304)882-1107
9 162. Free Esi;mates, Easy
Mobile home lot for rent n~xt tinanc1ng. 90 Clay s same ~s
to Meth ~pist Church m cash Visa/ Master Ca rd.
Drive- a- little .save alot
Kanauga .

24'x32·- 3 stall garage for Thompsons Appl1ance &amp;
rent (740)446-4782
Repair-675-7388 For sale.
re-condrtioned
automatrc
AIJAMT\IE."t 'TS
washers &amp; dryers. refrlgeraFow Rt-:Nr
.tors. ga s and electric
ranges. arr conditioners. and
1 and 2 bed room apa rt - wrrnger wa shers Writ do
ments. turni shed and unlur- repa irs on ma 1or Orands rn
nished . secur"1ty deposrt shop or a! your home
rE!Qurred. no pets. 140-992- ::_::c:_:::_:::_c_::::_.:__:::.:__:::_ _
Washer and dryer set, $100 .
2218
Call [740)446-44 17 before
2 Bd. Apt available m 7pm.
·
Middleport.
No pets
$300.00 .
Caii.SBS-514~
A' "11QliES
.
01 92. HUD approved.

FRUITS

• Appliances,

• Cars,
• Garage Melal
Call
740-742·2595

. FoR SALE
&amp;

1984 Chevy Pickup. 4ll4,
engine and transmission
Ca~ ning tomatoes for Sale. good: body rough , $1200.
(740)446-2815
Very n:ce! $4.00 you pick,
$5.00 we plck(by order) Jim
O'Brren Farm. Letart Falls. 1995 Jeep Grand Cherokee,
Ohio. 740-2 47-2113.
$3000 QBO. Call (740)286-

VH;n\IILES

r___

I \R\1 "il 1'1'1 II s
~\ 11\l ... lt)("
10

1998 Dodge Grand Cara\/an
ES, While, Tan leather, quad
seals, ' rear AiC, New tires,
lo(lded,
$6 100
OBO.

FAKM
EQI III'~UNI'

0% Financing for up to 36
mqnths on John Deere
Compact and 5000 Series
Tracto'rs · with JoM Deere
Credit approval . Check them
ou tl Carmichael Equipment
Inc (740)446-2-4 12.

(740)44 ! -0135

740-698-6809

$5,200 080 (304)576-2934

~ MamRCYLU:lil

i980 Harley FLT, 5 Speed.
Rubbe r Mount Custom
Road King Conversion
$9,000 or alter (304)6754975

LLC.
740-742-2455
• Repairs
• Parts '
• Service
• Spcc:iulty • Clutche s
' • Brakes

Owner Operated

·~lease adopt from the
Meigs Co~nty Dog Pound
otd m'¥ a fr~enffor l1fe.

River Valley Christian Academy
· · Now enrolling students for the
2205-2006 school year.
Grades K-4 throtlghl2

· Norwegion tlk hoond
·Yellow lobs .&amp;retriever
mixes

K-4 Open House
Aug. 25th at 7:00PM

·Germanshepard &amp;co IIi•
mixes

· Walker coon hound
• B&lt;og&lt;~ mixos
Mml C\ITE PUPPIES!

For more information call
740-992-3824 or 740-667·0338

&amp;
Mai"OR HoMFS

iL.-------.,.1

(740)367-7746

"59.=4:_9_ _ _ _ _ _
-

For Sale: 6x 12 tra1ler wrth
ramp , treated wood, used
approx _ 6 t1mes. $750 firm .
(740)245-9034 ~

Apt . for Rent. Beech Street
JET
Middleport . One Bedroom ,
AERAT ION MOTORS
lurnrshed . uti lities paid, rei- Rej)arred , New &amp; Aeburlt In
• erences. 74o-992 -0165.
Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1BEAUTIFUL

MENTS

AT

APART-

800'537-9528 .

BUDGET

PRICES AT . JACKSON
ESTATES , 52 Westwood
Drive from S344 to S442.
Walk to shop &amp; movres. Call
740·446·2566·.
Equal
Housing· Opportunity_

Large Print Wester n Sell or
Trade (304)675-5516 alter

5pm

Meyco Mesh Wrnter Safety
Cover 16'x 32' w1th cen"ter
end step. Patro Table &amp; 4
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT- chai rs ,
Other
Items
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
(304)675-2045
Townhouse
apartmenis.
and/or small hOuses FOR NEW AND USED STEEL
RENT. Call (740)4-41 - 1111 Steel Beams , Pipe Rebar
An gle .
Concrete.
for applica tion &amp; inlt?rmation For
Channel, Ftat Bar. Steel
Downtown 2 Bedroom A/C. Gratmg
For
Orarns
No
Pets,
Referen ces, Drrveways &amp; Walkway s L&amp;L
Deposit. (.740)446·0139
Surap Metals Open Monday.
Tuesday, Wednesda·i &amp;
Furnished upsta1rs. 3 rooms
Frrday. Bam-4 30pm. Closed
&amp; bath. Clean . ret . &amp; dep'
Thursda)l.
Sa turday
&amp;
requrred. No pets (740)446·
Sunday {740)44 6- 7300
1519.
Sharp Oookshel! stereo sysGracrous lrvihg 1 and 2 bed·
tem so unds great. $50 Call
room apartments at V1llage t740)446-4417 befor e 7pm
Manor
and
R1verstde
Apartment s rn Mrddleport
From $295-$444 Call 740·
992-5094 Equal Hou smq
Oppor tu mties
Block. bnck. sewer p1pes.
Immaculate
apartment. wmelows . llr"ltels. etc. Claude
Walking drstance to UAG . Wmters. Aro Grande. OH
·Recently remodeled. 28R Call 740-245 -5 121
new pnvate deck. $400/mo
DAVIDSON METAL
(614)595-7773 or 800-798ROOFING
4686.
"18 Colors
' 30yr wa rranty rn wr rt1ng
Tara
Town'louse
•Protess1ona1 lnstalla!IOn
Aparlments. Very Spac rous ,
• Free Estrmates
2 Bedrooms. C1A. 1 112
740-596-2909
Bath. Adul t Pool &amp; Baby

r

..,r______._

1969 Stratos Bass Boat, 16
Ditching/Trenching
Foot, 70 H.P. Johnson Motor
Service
LIVES'IOCK
with power tilt and trim . N~w .4x4 Commercial Ditch-Wrtch
trolljng motor. -$3,700. Call with six-way blade , DiggingQne male Pygmy goat alter 5:00 P.M. (304)675- 06pth up to 5'6". Gas,
Water, Cable, Electric &amp;
(buck ) black wiUl small 7382
Drain lines (304)576 -9005
amount of . while . Call
(740)441-1590
'
1993 Yamaha 500, 2 seater
Wave Runne r &amp; trailer.
Overall~ great condition .
$500. Demonstration BonusAsking $1 ,000 OBO. Call
Let us demo a John Deere 2(740)446-686t or (740)645Trak or X Serres All -Wheel
7636
Steer on your lawn and
rece1ve art extra $500 off our
already diSCOunted prices
In Memory
In Memory
Ltmited
lime
alter
Carmichael Equipment Inc.
(740)446-24 12.

1 *W*Iiiihll111

*

1 11Mi811!1M
1i!M
10

AL,l&gt;;

'---·H-)R-S,
.\Ui i;o-·
01 Pontrac Grand AM . 5s ·peed. AC, good Gas
Mile age. "Looks
Sharp.
$4 9ob (7 40 )441 -8241 or
(304 )67 5- 7998

1965 Mustang Fastback
Aangpon-.Aed eKtenor: black
rnterror. 6 cycle , 3 speed. air
cond1t1onmg rad1o. good
dflver
Rust free AZ car .
Prrce St9,000 DO_ Hill's
Automotive Class1c Car
Resloratron &amp; Pa rts. Inc .
Ba shan
Road ,
29670
Aac1ne. Oh10 45771. Phone
740-949 -2217 . Website :
www.hlllsresto.com
1986 Ford Mustang . V6 ,
Avtomattc, Fa rr ConditiOn ,

S500 080

(740)388~048 I

1990 Che:vy Lumrna 3 1 L 4
Or alu1T11num wheels . good
runmng car 167.000 mrles
$1 400 oo · OBO 740-7421011

Pool, Patro, Start $385/Mo r:t::::---~----, 1990 Ford Ta urus, good
condrhon. runs .great Great
No Pets . Lease Plus
J~:-I'S
:secur rty DepoSit Requrred.
wor~ car 1
$500 OBO
"(740)367-7086
-.l)l( SA.U:
1740)645-0205

TwJn ANa's Tower1ts accept· 10 wk old Labs Regrstered
rng apphcatrons lor ~a1t1ng $75 each
Call 1304)675·
list fer Hud-subsrzed 1· Or. 2503 or (740)247-2 117
epa~tment , can 675-6679
5 AKC Mtnr Dachshund
EHO
Pupptes. Black &amp; tan. short
Upstarr&amp; apanrnent 2 bed· harred
Leave Me!&gt; sage
roow stove 1etngeratar (304)895·3299 Ot (740)446wa ter.
trash
mctuded 7292
Deposrt reQuned rent S300
(740 )446 -7620 1740)441 - 6 Blue Hee ler puppres. fuJI
blooded": bu t no papers.
9872
$100 (7 40)446-3333 or sto'p
S1~-\n:
by Feed 510P Gaii100!rS

HlRRENr

1994 Chrysler LHS. Runs
Great St50Q (7 40 )256-

6002
1997
Dodge
Stratus .
110 .000 mrles. Cold Arr .
Runs Good, $1400 OBO

Tinv'fi11le ungel, with wings of
mnwy white for such a
- silnrtlime, I'OU were
our shinnii1g light.
One year ago, our love,
\'Oil were called lwme to the
·
heavens above.
Straight into the arms of Jesus.
Will took with, all our love.
- We IIIli\" not under.1·tund
ll'hy ~rou liad to go.
but we trust in God
and that's whv we know.
That you were "sjJt'cial "for our
Lord to 11eerl will so.
Umit'we nleet agliin. our tim·
angel we lrH'e .vo, j(Jret·er in our
hearts, your memonalwuvs glmrs.

Daddv, Mommv. Mae Mae.

Pa Pu

"B"

till(/

Ma Ma Janet. MaMa Karen,
Pa Pa \km Matre and Ma Ma
Patti. Grandpa Jeffers
and other family.

--------c-

. Ttt~

/

Owner: Jeff Stethem

Office: (740) 992·2804 Cell: (740) 517·6883
POWER WASHING
(Commerci "l and Resideotial)
.,
Mobile Homes, Houses, Log Homes, Decks, Drrveways;
Sidewa lks, Gas St~tion Awnings, Degreas_ing of
·
Equipment, Boats, Campers, Tractor Trailers,
•
Dump Trucks, pa1nting or stai nins of your deck
or log home, Aluminum brightenins.
Special-rates lo Trucking and Dump Trucking Co mpanies.

BARNEY
IT; LUI&lt;EY, HOW COME THAR'S
ALWAYS A PILE OF CRUM8S
'ROUND YORE CHAIR ?

LAWN CARE DIVISION
.
(Commercial ~nd Residential)
1
Mowin$, Trimming, Tree: Trimming. Aeration, Fertilizatiort:
Spra'flhg of fence lines, Leaf Removal, as well as_small,
landscaping jobs such as planting and mulchmg.
FREE ESTIMATES • GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES •

INSTALLED
to 101 Ul '
Optional \Jpgr.ades Available ;
Argon Gas &amp; Heat Mirror

Gallipolis, OH 45631

KlngKun•r

(j_ FARhN.HD

l:11111e By II t'•ke
Allnllta,. o/.

131111 ••,.,. 1111
lllllllllpJI.,
wamlrat:llln

"L.lwn .lncl Gard~
Trac tors .:tre our
'
Business ...
not o ur slde!tne."

&amp; Service
Wf- ~t•n·/.-(' mll.'il mllki'S

204 Cond11r Street
Pomcruy. OH

740-992-2975
Gene Arms/Owner·
Operator 740-992-3174

r.NEW tOEA

High and Dry

•

A J
Q763t

.

DOWN
· 1 Pepper

19 Me. Dunne

grinder

21 - Molneo
22 Se~Importance

2 F001no1e
word
3 "Kubla

23 languogo
wMh c!lckl
26 Shaggy

locale

4 "Siar Wars "
26 Hill and5 Mr. Clopton 27 Shake6 Nibble on
speare
7 Horaas pult H
villain
director

29 Molher lode
Dealer: East

30 Olsllgure
32

Aelndaer

f
!!

(Keep Your /\•Ioney LtlCaiJ

G&amp;R SANITATION
Run Rd ..
Pomcro ·. OH

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

4 yn. uf Rcliahlc Scrvirc
.n~61· Bailey

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• VInyl $idlng &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks
We do It all except
furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 wv a"l(;n~
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Years local E1 rience

Cornerstone
Elecbical
Service
0

fOR All YOI/11

.R~ky; •'RJ~·~

Sx 10, IOx 10,

33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy. Ohio

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only

Self· Storage•

ROBERT
BISSELL
CONSTRICDON
• New Homes
·Garages

·Complete
Remodeling

140-992-1611'
Stop f. Compare

:....;::......J

,: : THE
.,.. BORN

g'

LOSER

. C./&gt;.,IZE. TO JO\ ~ tf\E. FOR ~C
PI\~\UR( POOL TO~ORI&lt;OW?

"'
"''"

..= ~IG

. H"PP.. ... ..
IMPORTS
93 Columbus Rd.
~-

Athens

NATE

· ~----~~--~~--­

•• t•,, w,~

•
••
•
••

WE
WERE
AT
"PoL~I&gt;.

FEST

z.ooz. ~.

Parts
SL Rc681 Darwin, OH
740-992-7013 or 740-992-5553

~EANUTS

R~·slockin.g

l.al£• Model Salvage
u nd Arter .11-la rket Parts •

See Arent or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
SaL 8:30-Noon .
Sun. Closed
got you
$275ton (Whllt supply Lilt)

• Ex~llent Balanced Ferlililer
S-URE A- $205ton top dress your field cob mnt
wlttl T.M. ull S5.7511001b. big
Airway I Rotowick pasture
renovators rentil anllablt.
~lushruuna t:umpost"Avwilahle
.W ?f SO\'~an 'leal Sl3.25 100/lb
·
18 ~p~~drr bu~ifS ln·ailahlt' ror II.~
Ai~lJ pll'iiUrt' reno\·ators &amp; ~ers 8\'ailable to
l.inmsed agnmi.uni!iol on stwR' anlilable for ronsullln~

~

..

: suNSHINE CLUB
'

a-1 'G(X)D.

~

(CME-S
~lDI I HA~ 1-\IM

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

••

:GARFIELD
••
HE'5 HOL.P!N&amp; HIS
CONCEN1"RATION
6ET1"ER 1"HAN U5UAL.

Let me do 1t for youJ

UIII'S PIINDIB

••

0401985-4180

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"
Call Gary Stanley
740-742·2293

• Leave a message

29670 Bashan ,Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949·2217
Sl~s

5'x10'
to 10'x30'

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

BAU!\1 LUMBER
''Taki1111 The Sti1111 Out Of
'Hard Work!''
Mid-Size 4Whccl Drive Tractor
wilh Jrlhp &amp; 40hp Kubola Engines

BAUM LUMBER .
Rt. 124 Chesier 985-3301

li14fl mo pd

·- ·

Saloons
Qatar ruler

Fah boola

48 Wraps
49 Anr.lina

Jolt role

SO Dash
51 German
article
54 Grassy
1ield

house

33 " The Bells"

39 Dlsqutet
~ standout
poel
41 BaHery posl t 1 Turkish line 35 Sports
43 Marlins' st. '18 Capone foe

20 Coflae·

44 Swlmauh
piece .
45 Soh drink

break !real

22 "Falha"

choice

"zebras"

37 Tallla!a
40 Adlusls,
as tires

42 Pestered

Hines

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celeb! it,- C1pher cryptograms 8re crealfld trcm qoolalions bV li"IT\OI.J! p&amp;ople. past aM j)resenL
Eacll leMer 11 the clJ)he.- staro;Js tor arloXhe-r
Today's clue: Wequals K,

.

"RFHAGT

EK

NWAG

SAHZEXH .

UGKEPFUM

U G HU P

VEX

RGEHZU. P

HZU

CUP NEG

OXMTLUGH .''

NXNRG

N R P R G M E·G

•

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ...:. "I don't preach painting_ I'm for anything that a
person steps up and says is an, no matter what. " - Ed Ruscha

r:~~:t;~·

-....'lllrthdo\y:

your time and effort today and you wm
lind th ai you are luckier than usual
now i~ being able to achieve a, num ber of signilicant ob)ecHves and
goals.
AQUARIUS {Jan. 20-Feb. 1 9) - What
at first appears to be merely a moderate gesture ol, good wil~ today by a
lriend could turn ou t to COnliiJin anum ber of beneficial elements th at actual ly turn out to be rath er grand in scope
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - II you
are not satisfied with lhe status quo ol
things, today is the day to take some
positive steps to alter a maUer to your
satislactipn . ladY Luck will assitlt you
all th e way.
ARIES (March 21-April 191 - Paint
your mental canvas with bot(:! strokes
tOday. beca.u se 11 wilt be your larger
Ideas that w111 have the greater
chances tor. s uccess. Don 't waste
your •irne or energy on lesse r ones.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Your
mriltorral prOs pe cts look eKceptionally
encouraging today because of fortu nate Influences hovering about you at
this time. Of co urse you"11 hav~ to put
things In motion with action
GEMINI (May 2 1-June 20) - When it
comes to involvements with friends or
tami!y 'today. they may look td you to
tak!!' charge ot situations because of
your adept organizational touch . You'll
be an effective leader.
CANCER {June 21-July 2~) - Those
very rellabte hunches you get !rom
time to time that you've learned to
dapand on wut once again become a
valuable asset for you today When you
bland your logic with your lnlultton .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - If there le a
good reaaon why you would Ilk• to
lnlluerice·a group to your way of thinkIng today, elngl• out the key ~op!•
and work with them ·r ath•r than
anempt to ..way th• m•Jorlty at larg•·•

AN

FE'LCRNNAEG .

; Graph

SOUP TO NUTZ

Scorpion Tractors

28 Copied
31 Pedro 's

Jars

G.C . Lichtenberg . an 18th·cent~Jry
German physicist and philosopher. wrote,
"One Is rarely an impulsive innovator after
the age of 60, but one can still be a very
1ine orderly and invenUve thinker."
It is more liKely that an Oltler declarer
rather than a youngster would make .
today's contract. Fi rst, th ough, look only
at the South hand. East opens two diamonds, showing a decent Sl&gt;c-cartl suit
and some 6-10 high-card poitlts . What
would you do? (11 you double, partner
advances with th ree clubs. What ' ne)(t?)
You, South, reach three no-trump. West
leads the diamond si&gt;c and East puts up
the queen. Whatever your age, do you
have a wise head on your shoulders?
What would be your pla,n?

Now Available At

St.

container
36 Supporter
9 Hair curler
38 Prizm , _ I 0 Soccer

S@ R4tl ~- ~ £ f!&lt; s·

WOlD
GAM I

lci1ftd irr CLAY I . POlLAN~·-=-----

ltllars
0 horronge
Krombled words
of

lour

!ow to form fout simple wo•cq ]- :&gt;J!~

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I
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JICMIV

LUPPY

2

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TH

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always remembec

,stamps stick to themselves.'
the starlet ch1cped 'an:· that's
-.,.-:E:-::F-:Y::-:-L-=-E--. how I remain . - . -. - ·

1.

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Comple1e rh~ cl-ludle QVole~

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_
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_ . by !,tim; in t h ~ m•'s1 n~ words
L.....I-..J.-L-...1.-..L......J you de-velop l1om site N~ : ~elo""''·

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PIUNT NUM8E'!EO LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
.

A UNSCRAMBlf ABOVE lETTERS
·j
t:l
TO GH ANSWER
1
_ ___;,::::.;~:...,:::.:.;::.:.;.:__ _ _.,I.._J......J._.J....,l_J.....J
s~uM

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan _ t9) Zero in on targets that are worthy or

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 Sl Rt 7 N

Do not succumb to
a natural impulse

6 Flower

l4 Hou1d's hck

Saturday, Aug. 27, 2005
By Bernlc:e 1'3ede O•ol
11 1"1ealth permits, try to become mo'r 9
actively Involved in social sports In the
year alieiid. They will provide you with
some healthy outlets that will give you
greater endurance and enable you to
m¥t a new oir.cle of friends.
VIA GO (Aug . 23-S ept. 22) '--'- Hopeful
conditi ons prevail today where Your
lln3nces· andfor career IS. concerned It
you don't get swayed aWay from activities that c an produce Qilins. You're
the captain of your own ship
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 23) Tho
smaller pieces witt noatly tau Into
pia9e today once your general ouUine
is clea rly defined and d~awn . Kaep th e
broad picture betore you a) ,a ll limes
so you don't get ott track.
SCORPIO (bet . 24·Nov. 22) H
might prove Wiser than most times to
. keep your ambitious Intentions to
yourself today, so ,ihat yOu can "! be
sidt:ttrnckad by on lookers. What ronny
mahers at this time are actions. not
words .
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc. 21)- 11
you do not ~ a ll ow yoursett , to be
coerced into making hasty decisions
today and do take ample time to
weigh all ot your auernattves, lady
Luck will help you come out bettor
than you th ought.
.,_

Whaley's Auto

the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

·Prompt &amp; quality

Pass

~

•

740·367-0544
740·367-0536

GENERAL
CONTRACTING

Pass

\

OHIO_LICF.NSE # 38244

Hill's Sel.f
Storage

3 NT .

Pas~

Eatst
2•

~· Astro-

ELECTRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBil.[ HOME
REPAIRS
• CARPENTIIY
• ROOF • PAINT

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;

~orth

has a five-card major, it will probably be
best to make that suit trumps. Here, North
would reply three clubs. Now South
Should sle'er his partnership into clubs. by
first cue-bidding ttiree diamonds, then
ra ising North's four-club rebiO to five . (If
Soutti immediately jumps to live clubs, he
might miss a slam.) Here; five clubs
make s. but not six.
At the time , Soulh impulsively pi~Jnged
into th ree no-trump. He caUiioiJsly ducked
the first trick , won East's diamond continuation , and played a low club . When West
prodUced the king, declarer gave a happy
grunt and Impulsively caned for duminy's
· ace. Suddenly th e contrac1 was ~Jnmak­
able. East got in with his club trick and ran
the diamonds. If only South had inventively let West hold trick three, he would
haowe won 10 'tricks.

"
••'--__.:

w~

t'

(740) \192-5232

Janel Jeffers

WeRt

44
45
46
47

South should maKe a takeout double over

••

Phone

10xl5, 10x201
10x30

Snutb

language
25 Explorer
Ponce de

Khan "

bloseom

Vulnerable: Both

23 Menagerie
24 Karachi

two diamonds: no-trump can wait. II North.

•••

Storage

MANlEY'S
Sllf STORAGE

*Wee kly Trash Service

QUALITY WINDOW SYSTEMS, INC.
1·800-291-5600 740-992-4119
www.qualitywindowsystems.com

TH' ONE; WON'T ALLOW
A 'DAWG IN .TH' HOUSE n

l

$219

2150 Eas1ern Ave .

j

1

t~:, . . -. ~

Vinyl Double Hung

Sales~ Parts • Service

ip.{!!!!!

A!lf JIJST
wAY OF SttlFTlNG Tl'lf

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT. INC.
740-446-9777

COO~IOO~S

fllNI~'S
ILAM~.

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

''"

1233
1997 t;ionda C1v1c t09:ooo
m1 Afte r market accessones 38+ mpg Clean.
black/black CaU {740)441-

A K Q

A K 4,

5i 81gllnl
-~
mounlolno 60 Lip, slangily
13 They oKiol 61 Reiher
14 Smolt volley
of CBS
·
12 Eurao)on

guide

.. J 9 5
South
•

Celebrltlon
Razor bt'llld
Typo ol lido
°Fiiltlllnd

17 Planting

tKQL0 98 -i

•

55
56
57
58

15 ·Commend
16 Earth 's otar

Opening lead: t 6

Ta~e

Sddlv missed bv,
Ton ·, Michael ,

--···-·

1740)256-903! or (740)25&amp;

AKC AHRA Reg Beagle 9865.
puppres lrt-color ed. frrst - - - - - - - - Downtown Offtee Space- 5
shots and wormed S100 1999 Chevy Metr o 4 dr · 4
room surle S650/mo. 1 room
cyt 76.000 mtles SJ.OOO
080. no reasonable offer
oft1ce- S225 'mo. 2 room 1304)675·3508
Securrty AK C
sutte $250/ mo
Goldeh
Retrrever refused . must selL Call
aeposrt requrrect YoU pay Pup~ leS
lSI Shots
1740)441-0712
uttht1es All spaces very nrce Wo.rmed Mother Father on
Elevator Call (740)446·3644 prem1ses
S250
each 1999 Ford Taurus power
{740 )643-0013
wrndOYtiS.
power
lOCkS
• tor, apporntment
$2800 (740)446-0425
Pnvate Motule Home Space AKC -M 1n1atu re Pmscher
rn · Centen ary Close to Tarl's Doc~ Dew Claws 99 Grand Am SE, 2 door
Green Schoo! 1740)44 6- Ready September
1st AC . Auto Red $2900
(7401388-8788
,(740)44 t ·9054
4053

a·

Our "Bella"
Tiny Angel

10 7

QJ

.

WINDOW SUPER SALE '

I Tractor
Gravely
Sales

4 ;.:
1 2;__ _.....,
for Sale- lift cha1r, (740)992 - ~i7;,;•;;:0::;14:;;4;;,
6~,;;2;:,

•

•

740-667-0700 1·888-HUPP234

CA.f\tiPEHS

r

. J 9642
. 1087653

'

Rider...:Push-Weedeating

Trucks Dozers

.
I

4 room , bath, W/0 !lookup.
Poner/ Kanauga • Area
Water. sewer, trash pa id
References (740)367 -70 15.

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Roll overs • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • Cancer • Accident ,

No Lawn To Small
Call 742-2595

for Farln Equipmcn!-

i 992 Harley Davidson Ultra

East •

• G
... K

HARMON
LAWN CARE

Class1c, wlmatching Trailer,
JO 6600 dieSel combine &amp; many Extras $12,900 1..,;,_:;,:;~.:,,:.:;;::;;:~.,1
w/4-row corn head. Ready 'OBO (304)458-1886
2001 JaYco Designer Series
!or !ield . $5,000 (740)38-4·
27RKS, 5th Wheel . Lots ot
5 127
2000 Honda XA100A dirt
accessorres
$21 ,000
bike, excel lent condition.
(304}675-2246
John
Deere
10
tt
No
Til
Drill
runs grea t. FM_F p1pe,
2. bedroom apt. on SR 160
Buy
or
sell. Aiv€rine lor
Rent
Carmichael $1200 . Call {740)388-9996
Fully remodeled , central air
2003 Coachman 24FT, n ,
Antiques , 1124 East Ma in Equrpment. (740)446-2412. evenings.
washer/dryer hookup. stove
Bath,
AC, Furnace. Sleeps
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740&amp; retr1gerator mcluded.
5.$9.000 (304)675- 1444
992-2526
Russ Moore. John Deere Commercial
$460/mo
(740)441·0194,
Worksite
Products 2002 Yamaha V-Siar, 1100;
'I~Hf(l"
(740)44 1· 1184
Compact Excava tors/Skid ' 1983 Yamaha 650. Call
Steers/Tractor
loader (740)245·9 100
10
2 bedroom apt. on SA 650.
Ho~m
Backhoe
in
stock.
Check
out
Brand New. Cent ral air, ...._ . .
IMI'ROVEIIUNIS
black
Suzuki
our 1 rental rates _ Great 200~
stove &amp; refngerator rnclud·
available Boulevard C50. 1,300 miles.
ed, wfl she r/dr"yer hookup. Blonde Wooden Water Bed l1nancrng
BASEMENT
Excellent Carmrc hael Equlpmen! Inc. Many extras. like new.!
$700/mo
(7 40)441 -0194 . Queen SIZe.
WATERPROOFING
Condition
$150.00 Call (740)446·2412.
$6,900. (740)446-3431 '
(74D)441-1184.
t:Jnconditional lifetime guar740-949-2607
antee.
local references furPOLE
BUILDINGS
2 bedroom. 1 bath, water - - ' - - - - - - - Tw1n D&amp;D Carbon Fiber nished . Established 1975.
· Any Size
paid. S350 month. $350 DP Ultra GYMPAC complete ·Any Style
Slip-on Exhaust for CBR Ca ll 24 Hrs_ (7 40) 446security
deposit
Call weight llftrng workout center, · "CuS1om Buil1 to fit your
600 AR light-tinted wind- 0870, Rogers Basement
S 180 080, must go
needs.
(740)446-3481.
screen . $750.00 OBO tor waterproofing
(740)441-0135
'FREE Estimates
2 BR, washer dryer hookup,
both 740·742-10 11
..- .......- - - - - - - ,
740-596·2009
Extra long Twrn Bed , Qualify
heat pump/AC
"1 SA cabin . heat pump, also Mat1ress. great lor tall per- Your ProStar Trailer Dealer. [750 BoA-r.i &amp; MmUHS
E.XCA\'A'IlNG . '
. FOR SALE
~
.
storage· bui ld1ng (740)286- son, $200, (304)882-2494
Carmichael Equrpment Inc .
2240or (740)441-0t17.

1 .J:!~Tu~ppers Plains, OH
I•
~ 45783

WeRt

U . o - 53 LAtch onto

4 Wino
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extras .. $19,000. (740)388·
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OUTSIDE
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4x4

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and Financial Services :

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Appliance

Rocky Hupp Insurance :

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52 Mo. Tllumw1

•

•LETS ANSW ERS t-· ,_, •

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abOUt OUr bOSS's huge e;JO . ~When · he S Or ~ ~ sway 10

SUCCESs ."

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ALONG -THE RIVER
The Carfora farm:
Horse farm run by three generations
of Carfora women, Cl

"'

• llHAFTS.MAN THUC!M •

' Foqd C11Y 2150, '
7!30 p.ri\ ••~ .

!
1:

9 p.m., Wed(lesday
J

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'

'

four lead changes. Not even
one occurred as a re suJt of

Last year's winner : Da,e

Earnhardt Jr.
Quafllyln&amp; record: Ryan New- an honest-to-go 0dness pass.
man, Dodge, 128.709 mph, The four who held the lead
were Dale Earnhardt Jr.. SterMarch 21, 20D3.
Race
record :
Cha rlie ling Marl in, Tony Raines and,
Glotzbach,
Chevrolet, finally, for the final six laps,
101.074 mph, July 11, 1971. Mayfield. Wilh 20 laps to go,
Last race: Jeremy Mayfield Earnhardt Jr. was ninth·, Marhas a knack fo r drama , but lin was 12th, Raines 17th
ra ces at Mi ch1gan Interna- and Mayfield 19th. Earnhardt
tional Speedway aren 't al- an£Marl in had to pit. Raines
ways exciting in the conyen- should've . Mayfield rolled the
tional sense. The GFS Ma r- dice that he could make it to
ketplace 400 ended with real the end on fuel , they came

I!

0'~11\y 200.

~

Race: Food City 250
Where: Bristol (Tenn.) Motor
Speedway (. 533 miles). 250
laps/ 133.25 miles.
.When: Friday, Aug. 26

Last year's winner : Dale

,.,. .......
'.

madcap antic s, even though
Race: Sharpie 500
Where: Bristol (Tenn .) Motor it was too loud to hear any
Speedway (.533 miles ). 500 laughter emanating from the
crowded grandstands. In the
laps/266.5 miles.
final nine lap~. there were
When: Saturday, Aug. 27

'

'

-.The Chase format hes actually
lHsened the Importance of win·ntna illclividu&amp;l races. Even with
.Jelemy Mayfield's victory, four of
the top 10 In points remain winless. In the last year of !he old
aystem 1:?0.03, the top 11 drlv. 'ers W&lt;ln·at least once.
r;;;
'
• 'To date. only 10 drivers have
• ·won raoes·thts season. In 2003,
~here were 17 race winners.
. ~st year there were 13.
-. The key to Mayfield's vlcto ry
was the .fact that the final 51
' laps.were run without caution
flags. One by one, the leaders
. either made pit stops or ran out
of gas as Mayfield and others
advanced through the standIngs. With six laps to go, a virtu-

smoke and im aginary mir·
rors. The air was rife with

up

" seven,~

Earnhardt Jr.
Qualifying record: Greg Bif- .
fie. Ford, 127.132 mph,
March 26 . 2004.
Race record: Harry Gant.
Buick, 92.929 mph, April 4,
1992.
Last week: Ryan Newman , in
a Dodge , won for the second
week in a row. taking the
Domino's Piua 250 at Michl·
gan.

Race: O'Reilly 200
Whore: Bristol (Tenn .) Motor
Speedway (.533 miles),' 200
laps/ 106.6 miles.
W~en : Wednesday, Aug. 24
Last year's winner: Carl Ed-

•

""'""'"'"¥

-p

"

I!IIISTOl OATA

SPORTS

wards

• Rebels win s.hootout witt\ ·
Eagles. See Page 81

Superspeedway in Gladeville,
Tenn .
'

the first time all year.
• ..,fEUD OF THE WEEK ·

JEREMY MAYFIELD

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

v

No. ·19 SLUGGER LABBE DoDGE

u

s

Candidate
withdraws ·
from race

Kurt
Busch

ues to sound as if he is unlikely to

release the reigning Nextel Cup
champion from a contract that obligates him to remain with Roush Rae- .
ing In 2006. ··;have no such intention (of letting him out of his deal ).'
said Roush, "Kurt's been a challenge
for everybody that watched a race,
for everybody that's moved up close
to h1m and paid attention. He's been

Stewart never led a lap, although he rose as high as second-before having to pit at the
end and collected yet another

a challenge to a lot of us, and for me
that's going to end sooner or later."

\

_..The first Mich igan race was

. dominated by Jack Roush 's

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton etv~a hla take: "Contractual
strife of this nature has never rea lly

Fords, and that wou ld've been

the story again had it not been
for the fuel issue. The team still

occurred, at least not to this extent,
in stock-car racing. The sport is grow·
ing rapidly, and it's probably unavoidable that racing becomes more Hke
other sports in terms of contract

toOk four of the top seven

spots.
.., The top 10 in .Points remained

the same, though there were a
couple of position swaps .. May-

squabbles and holdouts."

field moved from seventll to

sixth,' and Carl Edwards went
from 10th to n1nlh.
-.Scott ~iggs' second-place fin- ·

·

FAN.. TIF"S

Here's your chance to
get a place of the action

ish was a career best , and it

couldn't have come at a better
time for a driver whose plans for
2006 haven't yet been finalized .
• Though nothing is official.
Michael Waltrip seems headed
to Bill Davis Racing, which would
also put him in position to drive
a Toyota if and when that manu·
lecturer final ly enters the Cup
ranks.

-. Wllj&gt;'l not
- (i,rt-· his 1
past
13
races, Jeff
Gordon has
finished no
better than
seventh ....
Elliott Sadler
crashed early in· the GFS
·Marketplace 400. Jailing to
13th In the points standings.
66 out of 10th place.

Ol1ve, Jack ie L.Westf~ll. Salisblu-y. Bill Spaun. Manning
Rohen Head ley. Carl P. K. Roush, Oscar T. Smith;
Bar ringe r,
William . R. Scipio. Tam iny Andrus. Ruger
ship tru stee races:·
· Osborne; Olive Tow nship Cotterill. Kev in W. Payne .
Bedford. Roher1 F. Hawk , Clerk (unexpired term cnd in ~; Philip L. Erwin Sr.. Robcn
Ronald Wood ; Cl1cster. 131air IVL!rch 3 1, ·200X) , Sari E. Butcher. Jame&lt; RtUl.dall Hill;
Windon.
Alan
Holler: Pr)fllm1 -Suttl e. Lau rie H. Sunon. Kenneth R. Guimher.
Col umbi a; Paul D. Caner. Harber;
Orange .. Roger Jeny L. Hayman. Carl Salser,
Donald Ch~ad'lc . Granvil le Ritchi e. David L. Sheet s. Edward E. Gihhs. C.T
Stout; Lebanon . Thom&gt;rs E. · James Eugene Wa tso n. Janies Chapman Jr.. Larry C. Smith.
Allen, Donald R. Dailey. A. Watson; Ru tland. Robert ,
Boards of Education
John R. Krider. Lawrence H. L. Birchfield. Charle s D.
Meig s Local Board of
Hayma n, Bob Se llers . Garry Barrell Jr. , Steve R. Lambert; Education : Wayne E.' Davis.
Smith ; Letart. Bob Morris.
Salem, H. Danme Lambert .
Dave Graham , Bob L. Wood : R. .Keith Oiler. Cecil L. Stacy;
Please see Ballot. Al
Township trustees
The followi ng candida tes
have been certified for town:

Football season and

Busch will move to Penske Racing South in.2007, and Roush contin-

., Here's another surprise: Tony

in a row.

Meigs
County
Cornmissioners have authorized a request for a SO-cent
telephon e line ch&lt;irge to
implement and operate a 91- 1 emergency dispatch
. operation. If approved by the
voters this fall. the line
charge will ge nerate an estimated $40.000 per year for
the service .
The TB ·levy renewal. if
approved , would gene rate
$139,000 per year for the
county's TB clinic.

Jack Roush
vs. Kurt Busch

gin between him and 10th place
fwm 67 to 58 points.

• Who's hot - Jeremy Mayfield's victory was his third
straight finish of 11th or ~et­
ter.... Tony Stewart has finished in the top 10 nine races

'

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

s

ish. Gordon narrowed the mar-

WHO'S HOI
ANU WHO ' S N(H

Countywide levies, local issues 90 Meigs ballot

E
R

Jack
Roush

$1.50 • Vol . :J9, No. :J2

l'omt•t'o) • 1\liddkport • (;allipoli' • .\ugu't :!I!, :.!oo;;

POMEROY .- A proposed
telephone line charge for
countywide 9-1-1 service. a
renewal of the tuberculosis
levy and candidates for township trustee, village council
and school board will appear
on the Nov. 8 Meigs County
gener~l election ballot.
Thursday was the filing
deadline for local issues and
candidates for office.

Last race : David Reutimann,
in a Toyota. won at Nashville

the lead. That iS, until his Dodge
ran out of gas.
-. Amazingly, Jeff Gordon im·.
proved his chances of rna king
the Chase with a 15th-place fin-

·

I lhio \aile_, l'uhli,hing l ·u.

~g.27

al unknown, Tony Raines. was lrl

top-five finish.

· ·

Qualifying record : Ken
Schrader,
Chevrolet,
126.922 mph, Aug. 25,
2004.
Race recprd: Travis Kvapil,
Chevrolet, 88.813 mph, Aug.
20,2003.

and he won for

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties

'

Shamiesoo

Food City 500
April3

\

House 'of the Week:
Colonial-style house offers
stately presence, D1

a

..,

.,.. If you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/O The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box

'

'

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDA ILYTRIBUNE.COM

OnnuARIES
PageA5
• Grace Nibert Carman
• James 'Jim' Hardyman
• Carl Eugene Parker
• John E. Richards

INSIDE
•.. l\le1sonvtl1e·.u:s 33
bypass gets environmental
clearance. See Page A2
• Local Briefs.
SeePageA3
• SOACDF grant
funding now available.
SeePage AS

Jeff Gordon, Tony Stewart, Kasey
Kahne and Kevin Harvick are offerJohn Clark/NASCAR This Week

With three races remaining before the flnallO-race Chase for the Nextel Cup, Jeremy Mayfield ls In sixth place.

ing up race· used memorabilia and
signed collectibles for a charity online auction, taking· place Sept. 3-

18 at www.GoMotorBids.com. items
-include sheet metal and parts from

Just like last season, Mayfield coming on strong near the end
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

for fuel, dropping him to '26th place.
Wl\_en the remainder of the race was
contested under a green flag, May- .
field rose to the lead as other contenders were forced to pit He wound
up winning by nearly two seconds
over another driver, Scott Riggs, who
used a similar strategy:
" 'Slugger' (crew chief Richard
Labbe) made the call to stay out," said
Mayfield. "We saw the '24' (Jeff Gordon) do that (a lap earlier), and we
knew if it went caution-free, we had a
shot to win the race. My hat's off to ·
the guys on the team. We stayed out at
the end and won the race.
"Today was our day. The guys made
a great call. They gambled, and we

BROOKLYN, Mich. - Jeremy Mayfield proved for the second consecutive year t'nat he is at his best as the
races wind down toward NASCAR's
Chase for the Nextel Cup.
In 2004, Mayfield won the final regular-season race in Richmond, Va.,
thus securing a position in the Chase.
This season, Mayfield likely spared
himself the tension of a· year ago by
pulling off a strategic triumph at
Michigan International Speedway.
The victory, the fifth of his career,
lifted Mayfield to sixth place in the
Cup points standings with three more
races remaining before the 10-race won."
Mayfiel(l, 36, took exception to the
Chase. Only the top 10 will be eligible
suggestion that the win was somehow
for the &lt;;hampionship.
With 51 laps to~o, Mayfield pitted . cheapened by the fact that it was'··

crafted by strategy instead of speed.
"You're probably going to read we
won it on fuel mileage, but a lot of
races have been won on fuel mileage
in the past," he said. "There were only
a few teams that elected to take that
chance, and we were one of them. I
thought that was pretty co9l. For my
team to.do that with the position we're
in in the points ... if we had run out of ·
gas, it would have been a big story. If
we'd run out of gas, we'd have fallen
out of the top 10 and I might not have
made the Chase.
"They (his team) stuck their butts
on the line, and they had a lot of confidence in me to save gas. I had confidence in them."

the actual race cars. helmets. uniforms, {ind rare and unique die-cast
col lectibles. The winner of each
auction will re ceive two t ickets to
meet the driver and have him personally autograph h"is or her winning
item.

lan McNemar/ photo

Gallia Academy's Jayme Haggerty shakes off Meigs· Brad Ramsburg on a run in the second quarter of play during the Blue Devils'
28-6 win over the Marauders Friday night at Bob Roberts Reid in Pomeroy. In the ir 33rd meeting, Friday marked th.e last time the
two teams will face off in the foreseeable future, endi~g a 38 year riva lry. See Bl of the Spor ts section for the full story.

three

whose

c.:ommi ~~ i o n
:.eats
terms ~xpire this year.·

Please s~ Marchi, Al

Stewart's benefit concert
will feature music, guests
The Tony Stewart Foundation will
holds its second-annual benefit con-

cert on Oct. 5 at the Luther F..Carsoh Four Rivers
Center in Paducah,
Ky. The concert \&gt;/ill
feature
Montgomery Gentry and

Phil Vassar, along
with guest appear-

• Superior Flooring has
ribbon cutting ceremony.
SeePage AS
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

· WEATIIER

ances by Stewart.
Da le Earnhard t Jr.,

Kyle Petty, Kasey
Kahne , Kevin Har-

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmduttonSO@aol.com .

GALLIPOLIS ....._ Robert L.
Marchi has withdrawn hi s ~.:an­
didacy for a third term on the
Gallipolis City Commission in
the Nov. 8 election .
The Gallia County Board
of Election s approved ]Jis
withdrawal from the race
whm it met Friday to certify
petitions f•Jr placement on the
fall ballot.
Elections Director Jeff
Halley saip Marchi had
requested the withdrawal on
Wednesday, but the board did
not act on it until Friday. The
deadline for candidate filing
for the general election was
I Thursday.
Marchi declined comment
when contacted Friday.
Marchi 's petit ion had been
on file with the elections
board since ·April when the
deadline for commission candidates was seL in part to
determine the need for a primarv election in .Mav.
Becau se Marchi.' in cumbents .Dow W. Saunders and
Carol! K. Snowden . and
first-time commi ssion carldi datc James A. Coua were
the only ones 10 file for the

vick, Michael Waltrip and Martin Truex Jr. TICkets,
which range from $100 to $150, are
available l&gt;y calling .1270) 450-4444
or by _accessing www.fourrive"rscen-

tewrg.

&amp; Supply

DetaHs on Pa&amp;e AI

Co.

INDEX
4 SEC110NS - . 24 PAGES

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

.

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics

Dear Abby
Editorials
Movies
Obituaries
Regional
Sports

Weather
©

A3
C4
D3-5

insert

As
A4
A2

As
A2

B Section
A6

2oos Ohio VaUey Publishi"K Co.

MIDDLEPORT - With ilie
discontinuation of basket bingo
games at the Middleport
American Legion due to bingo
licensing issues, charitable
organizations hal(e been scrambling to replace their sometimes lucrative basket bingo
fundraisers with an alternative.
It turns out those organiza'
lions without a bingo license
may still legally hold basket
bingo events by turning to
the
Ohio
Lottery
Commission for help.
The
Ohio
Lottery
Commi sion issues bingo
licenses to registered charitable
organizations for a fee which is
determined by how · many
games per year the organization is planning on hosting.
For basket bingo, which is
defmed as a Type I Bingo by the
Ohio Lottery, registered charitable organizations are charged
$50 for one to three weeks of
bingo events per year; $1 SO for
four to 25 weeks of bingo
events per year and $200 for 26
to 52 bingo events per year.
The bingo license fonn can
be obt~ined and completed
online at www.ohiolottery.com.
Click on the charitable bingo
link for the fonn and instroc-

Please

see Bln10. Al
lr

Please- see Moth man, Al

Top left: Kat ie Wells. producer for AuthentiC
Entertainment. g1ves d~rec­
tion to Fred Bowles of Pomt
Pleasant during a scene in·
the Mot~man documentary.
Left: Director Christian
Ortega readies the camera
as Je remy Mar tin of Point
Pleasant and T1111 Fnck of
Cumberland. Md .. the -Men
In Black. - wait to· hea r the
word · Act1on!- dunng filming
of ti1e ·Mothman documenta ry for the Travel Channel.
Diane Pottorff/ photos

'.

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