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The Daily Sentinel

PageBS

PRO FOOTBALL

~·"'"~~t;l'~.,...~~&gt;rr~ ?;'; ~ !t'j~ ~W' .":,!Jf' .'fl??;:l~~

Thursday, December 15, 2005

BY

ACREB·~-+-HOMB ()~

2006 Pet Calendar

Browns look to salvage season with another win

"rl

inside today's Sentinel

· -+~..........
244 North 2nd Ave • Mid!)lcpnrt. OH

l

'

days til Christmas

JOE MILICIA

ASSOCIATED PRESS

BER EA - No NFL team
enters a season with the goal
of winning five games.
But fo r th e Cleve land
Brown s, fiv e wins would be
a sign of impro veme nt, however slight , in coach Romeo
Crennel' s first season.
The Browns are 4-9 and
have los t three strai ght
entering Sunday's ga me
agai nst the Oakland Raiders.
who 'share an ide htical
record and losing streak. ·
. It would be easy to say the
teams have no reason to care
anymore. Cre nnel, however,
said there's plenty of motivation for hi s team.
"If we're able to go ~ut
there and ge t the victory,
we'll say that we. have made
some prog ress this year," he
said Wednesday. " I want
them to treat this game as a
pl ayoff ga me , and that' s
what it really will be for the
teams involved."
The Browns went 4-1 2 last
season as the team went into
an injury-r iddled tail spin
and coach Butch Davi s quit
with five ga mes left. Crenne l
has given , the team a fresh
. outlook , but the changes
haven' t been evident in the
win column ,
"We'd like to finish up on
a strong' note here at the end
so going into the offseason
we have a good attitude and
can look forward to next
year," Crennel said. " It
would be a good carry-over.
When the guy s walk out of
this building at the entl of
the year - make them feel
. better about working in the
offseason and preparing for
another year."
Kicker Phil Dawso n says
.it doesn' t matter what time
of year it is or what thei r
· record is - they just want to
win another game.

~....

•'Coach is right,'' Dawson
said. ··we all want to walk
out of here fee ling like, you
know what. we learned some
things this season. We got
better thi s season."
The Browns have salvaged
wins late in each of the last
two seaso ns. They beat the
Houston with interim coach
Terry Robiskie in the final
week last season and in 2003
ended Ci ncinnati 's playoff
hopes with a road victory.
"Since I' ve been here,
we've never quit and I have
no reason to believe that this
team will." Dawson said.
Rookie
. quarterback
Charlie Frye has plenty to
play for. He' s trying to prove
himself as the tea m' s quarterback of the future. Frye,
who has a sore right knee, is
expected to play Sunday and
is still looking for his first
win as an NFL starter.
"I hope to get a win,'' Frye
said . " I hope to get three
· wiris. That's . the goal' every
week."
Since Frye took over as
quarterback, the Browns
have lost two close games to
teams likely headed to the
playoffs - Cincinnati and
Jacksonville.
After Oakland, the Browns
have home games ·left
agai nst
Pittsburgh and
Baltimore. The Browns need
a win in 'the last two weeks
to avo id going 0-6 against
their AFC North rival s for
the first time .
Crennel knows there's
another motivating factor
besi des wins · entering the

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;;ul'ENTS • \ 'ol. ;;;; , No . H6

SPORTS
• Miller upsets Eastem.
See Page 81

Cleveland Browns head coach Romeo Crenn'el signals a time-out during their 23-20 loss to the Cincinnati Bengals, on Sunday
in Cincinnati.
next thing to go? It's a cycle. thing that we've wanted .
The coaching staff goes, The reason is because of his
inconsistency on his drops,''
then the players go."
Notes: Crennel gave WR he said . ... The Browns
Antonio Bryant a· lukewarm injury report for the Oakland
evaluation Wednesday, say- game is longer than it'~ been
ing he's helped the team as ' all season. DB Antonio
its leading receiver but has Perkin s (hand ) is listed as
made too many errors. doubtful. Questionable are
"Anionio hasn't been every- OG Joe Andruzzi (c'ilifJ, TEs

Wilkinson rips Spurrier, apologizes
for calling Cincinnati a racist city
Bv JOE KAY

Bengal s (10-3) one victory
away .from clinching a playoff spot and m~king a d ean
CINCINNATI
Dan break with · their troubled
Wilkinson
apologized past - one that prominently
Wednesday for · calling invol ved Wilkin son.
Cipcinnati a raci st city, a
The Bengals made him the
COJllment that led the top overall pick from Ohio
Bengals to trade thei,r former State in 1994, when they
No . I drafr pi ck to the were co ming off their secWashington Redskins after ond straight failed season
the I '197 season.
under coach Dave Shula.
The defensive tack le also Wilkinson failed to develop
~riticized former Redskins into a Pro Bowl player in
~oach Steve Spurrier, ·who fo ur years with the Bengals,
j'Vent 12-20 in Washington becoming disi llu sioned witb
from 2002-03 before quit- the organization and the losling. Marvin Lewi s was the ing .
Redskins' defensive coordi Wilkinson blasted the city
nator in 2002. and became in December 1997, saying
the Bengais' head coach the residents were "prej udiced
next season.
and uptight and stiff." When
"Marvin should have been the Bengal s used their fran our head coach," Wilkinson , chi se designation on him, he
who now plays for Detroit, gre)V more unhappy. Finally,
sa id Wednesdny in a confer- he went on a radio show and
ence call with Cincinnati ca lled Cincinnati a raci st
writers.
city, a remark that prompted
"Actuall y, Marvin was our owner Mike Brown to .trade
head coach. We had Steve · him to the Red skins.
"It's a factor in our way of
Spurrier, but Spurrier didn't
have a clue how to trai n and thinking," Brown. said at the
get an NFL team ready. He time. "It's a burden for him
just didn ' t have a clue of and a burden for us. He 's
how to train a team anti still a young man, and I
coach the team and under- think one day he' ll wonder
stand what all went into it. . why he said .these things."
"Marvin did everything.
Brown
was
ri gh t.
Marvin did everything as a Wilkin son, in hi s third seadefensive coord inat or, but son in Detroit, said he has
he was able to· keep himself matured over the yea rs and
humble in the situation and wishes he hadn' t sai d what
move on after that one year." he said.
In hi s third season in
" I have no negatives or
Cincinnati , Lewis has the grudges toward the Bengals
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Next year, Ohio State and Cincinnati
will meet for first time since 1962
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Ohio State and Cincinnati play
each oth-er next year for the first time since the 1962 NCAA
men's championship game.
The game on Dec. 16, 2006, will be ftrst between the teams
in the regular season since 1921. It's part of the annual John K
Wooden Tradition doubleheader at Conseco Fieldhouse.
Purdue, the host team, will play Butler in the other game.
Separated b;y fe~er than 100 miles, the two schools have
played only etght Urnes, most recently in Cincinnati's 71-59
victory for its second straight NCAA title in 1962. The
B.earcats also beat the Buckeyes for the championship the pre,vtous year.

.

organization or the city or
anything,"· he said. ''I'd like
to take this opportunity to
apologize to those I've hurt
or bothered or made upset or
anything else .."
Wilkinson, 32, gre w up in
Dayton and still has family
there. He said he was wrong
to call Cincinnati racist.
"That was just blatant
ignorance," he said. "Again,
that 's ·the immaturity I' m
talking about ~s far as some
of the things I've said and
done. If I had a chance to g.o
back, I would certainly correct . soine things, and that
was just wrong . Saying the
city is racist and conducting
myself in that way that I did
was bad.
"As a young man at the
time, all I can remember is
feeling· trapped, that I have
to get away from this team .
That's what I recall from
eight years ago ."
He al so recalls that the

HOLZER
CLINIC

Steve Heiden (ankle) and
Aaron Shea (calf), CBs
Michael Lehan (hamstring)
and Ray Mi ckens (groin)
and DE Orpheus Roye
(knee).
RB
Reuben
Drougtms (knee), OG Cosey
Coleman (knee), CB Leigh
Bodden (concussion,) and
Frye are probable.

(740) 589-3100

Page A5
• Donald E. Buctlanan, 85
• Barbara A. Croy, 60
• Emily Lynn Runyon, 71

INSIDE
• 'fhe simple message of
Christmas. See Page A2
• A Hunger For More.
. See Page A2
• Church leads mission
giving. See Page A2
·• Local Briefs.
See Page A5
• Churches announce
. Christmas programs.
See Page A5
• 700 food baskets
distributed. See Page A6
• Quilts donated to needy
children. See Page A6
·• DofA enjoys Christmas
party. See Page .A6
• Huge tumout as Iraqis
choose parliament in
·mostly peaceful vote.
See Page A7
• Workers' comp surplus
could be gone in two
years. See Page AS

·. ')~ -fBl'~f~ r -&gt;
~~--VJ.~.. '

Bengal s' facilities and
coaching staffs ·were among
the league' s worst , contributing to their 14-year run
without a winning record .
Wilkinson had three different defensive line coaches in
his first three seasons in
r:incinnati.
"I think that's where the
organization dropped it,"
Wilkinson said. "I think my
first
three
years
in
Cincinnati, we · had defen sive line c,aaches that never
coached defensive line on
any level. Any level. "
Asked if he had one thing
he regretted about how he
acted
.in
Cincinnati,
Wilkinson said, "Looking at
it in hindsight, if I had it to
do all over again, there are
many things I regret. Some
of the things I've sai d anll
done were so out of character for me that it still bothers
me today when I think about
that stuff."

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(740) 395-8801

Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH
(740) 446-5135

Details on Page AS

I

INDEX
2

SECTIONS- 16 PAGES

Calendars
A6
Classifieds
B4-6
Comics
.~
B7
Dear Abby
A6
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A2-3
Movies
As
Obituaries
As
Sports
B Section
Weather
AB

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Co:mmissioners open bids for Academy restoration
,.----, be re- bi d. gram , which co rnmis~ioners
The &lt;icade- allocate.
Other business
my buildPOMEROY
Steve
ing is locatLamar Lyon s II. pres ident
Milhoan of Long Bottom was
ed next to of the Tuppers Plains Fire
the apparent low bidder for
the Chester Department anti Captain of
the replacement of windows
Courtho use the Tu ppers Plain s Area
at the Chester Academy,
and
is Emergency Medtc R6 unit,
when
Mei gs
County
undergoin g spoke In co mmi ssioners
Commissioners opened bids
res torat ion about the need for repairs to
on the project Thu"day.
by
the the count y-ow ned ambulance
Milhoan's
bid
was Thomas Proffitt C he s t e r - used by the volunteer squad.
$23,000, and that of Quality
S h a d' e Lyons said the sq uat! needs
Window
Systems
of Histori cal Association and repairs tuthe back door, usctl
Pomeroy
was $27,969. commissioners, who own it .
for loading patients. the lockmech ::m i sm
whic h
Action on the bids was tabled
The windows for the pro- ing
pending review.
ject have bee n purchased, and secures the cot in place, and
No bids were received on the installation work is to be the brake system.
Lyons said the volunteers
the monar and brick repair financed
tluough
the
project for the building, and Co mmunity Development have requested repairs lo
that pon·ion of the project will Block Grant formula pro- ensure the safety of patients
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEO@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

they transport . btil said the animals ·'only when absoluterepai rs hav e not yet bee n . ly necessary." Since he took
made. He also addre'Sed over the job. he said. the
problems the volunteer &gt;&lt;1uacl num ber of ani mals euthaunit has expcricm.:e&lt;.J in nized has decreas-ed from 95
obta ining. nC ccssary medi cal percenl to .65 percent, by
supplies from the count y work ing with resc ue organiEMS offi ce.
~a ti ons
and encouragi ng
Meigs Cou nt y Dog Warde n adoptions ..
Th omas Proffitt met with
Com mi ssioners also:
cotmni:-;sioners to di sL" us:-. his
• Approved tra nsfers withrecent euthana:o;ia tra ining in in the budgets of the Juvenile
Davton under the direc tion of anti Probate Court and Clerk
t11e. Amcr i ~o:;w
Humane of Courts .
Assoc iation. His ceni i'ication
• Recessed their meeting
wil l allow · him to eurhanize unt il II :30 a. n'L on Friday for
dogs in the dog _pmmd. and payment of bill s.
relieve the cou nt y of the
Present
were
expense of paying a local vet- Commissioners
. Mick
eri narian to do the work .
Dave nport and Jim Sheets
Proffitt said he euthani zes and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Sales tax
deficit half
last year's

AP photo

final three ·weeks - his
players' jobs.
It 's what motivates linebacker Kenard Lang,
"You still get your check.
Mr. (Randy ) Lerner · signs
your check. You 've got a
job," Lang said . "Last year
they brought in a whole new
coaching staff. What's the

FRIDAY, DECEMBER t6, :.!.oo;;

lr()

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY Meigs
County collected $4,385 less
in sales tax this year than last.
year, but the collection of the
tax increased for six months
of the year.
A downward spiral in the
collections seems to have
slowed significantly, with a
collection deticit of only half
of last year's. Meigs County
Parker
Auditor
Nancy
Grueser has is sued the
December sales tax comparison, which shows a collection of $87,897.11 in the
county's one-percent tax for
December. This month's
receipts bring the ·County's
year,to-date collection to
$1,088,139.48,
just
$4,385.78 be low the collections last year.
Collections were up in
April, May, August, October,
November and December this
Please see Sales tax. AS

Meigs Board
takes step
forward on
CIC-Rio
Grande project
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFL ICH@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

POMEROY If the
Meigs Count y Community
Improvement Corporation
(CIC) is to construct a building on land adjacent to
Mei gs schools at Rock
Springs and lease it to Rio
Grande Community College,
a sewage problem will have
to be resolved first.
With that in mind, an engineering consullant has been
retained by the Meigs Local
Board of Education to review
the current sewage system at
, Meigs High School and
deterrnine upgrades and
changes required to handle
the additional sewage of
another building.
Tentative platJS of the CIC
call for tying the Center into
the sewer system now serving both Meigs Hi gh and
Meigs MiPJie Schools.EThe .•
additional capac ity is t a
problem," said Meigs ocal
Superintendent
William
Buckley, "if ce11ain upgrades
and changes are put in place."
The superintendent said
this week that "the board is
willing to look at donating
the property for the college's
Meigs Center but before anything is done the sewer issue
needs to be resolved."
Please see Board, AS

·'

'

,

Bath Sergent/photo

The Parish Shop volunteers Eloise Watkins (left) and Mar y Bowles donate six .hours of their day, five days a week ·a t the store,
selling, accepting and distributing hou sehold goods. The Parish Shop has bee') in existence for 18 years and this will be its first
Christmas at the Mulberry Community Center.

PARISH (L01HING SHOP'S FIRST CHRISTMAS
AT MULBERRY (OMMUNin' (ENIER
BY BETH SERGENT

aSERGENT@MYOAI LYSENTiNEL.COM

Eloise Watkin s. Mm·y Bowles, Bell y
.Reibel. Rose . Barrows, Dc lo rc·s ll awi&lt;
and Cintly GlaLe.

POM EROY - The Pari sh Clothing
Mo~l of these . volu11teers g ive six
Shop has been part of Meigs County for !lours of th eir time. li ve day\ a week to
the pa.~ t 18 years and since March it has ope rating the shop.
.
been at its latest . location in the ' Bowles has been volunteering at the
Mulbel'ry Community Ce nter where it shop for the past 17 years and says she
has stayed with the shop for so long
will celebrate its first Chrislmas.
May be a shop can't celebrate Christmas because she enjo ys helping people .
"It does me good:· she said.
but the volunteers that are the bac i&lt;bonc
VoiLIIlteer Eloise Watkins who has
of the shop can. helping to mai&lt;c
been
with the shop for 16 years agreed
Christmas nicer for their customers.
with
Bowles.
The Parish Clothing Shop operates on
Both women al so said they appreciated
volunteer labor from workers like

the opponunity to visit with the many people that come in and out of the shop.
Business has been picking up since the
move to the center. bringing visitors from
throughout Meigs County. Athens County,
Parkersburg. W.Va. anti even Florida.
The shop spedali zes in used household items like clothing. shoes. toys,
games, di shes. The shop operates on ·
donations and then sells them at a discountcd price.
"Our clothes are affordable," Mrs.
Watkins said proudly.
Please see Parish, A5

Pomeroy cracking down on unpaid fines
or letters for unpaid pqrking
Department Met er Maitl paitl in full .
Sandra Thorla said she has
Indi vid uals with unpaid ti ckets arc reminded that the
sent out rem intler post cards traffic or mi sdemeanor cita- full amount shown on those
POMEROY - Thousands and letiers lo those with out- tion .s and unpaid parking post cards and letters are due.
Those ti nes are due immeof dollars in unpaid parkmg swnding parking tickets with tickets are subject to arrest
and mayor's court fines are often no response.
and/or the loss of their tlri- di ately to avoid repercus"
outstanding in the vi ll age of
Thorla can pull out fist ful s ver's license. Warrants for stons.
Pomeroy,
fo rci ng
the of unpaid parking tickets arrest are being issued and
Pumcroy Clerk of Courts
Pomeroy Police Department from her file s.
. license suspensions are bei ng Tammv Sm ith will be availto crackdown on offende" by
Not paying parking ticke ts sent to the state or Ohi o ahle \1 ·a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday
stepping up vehicle towi ng, can rcsull m vehicles being Bureau of Motor VehiCles for thn&gt;ugh Fri day to assist with
blocks on dri ve r's license towed
and
remaining ....4\QSe with unpaid fines.
any questions and ac~~,pt
renewals and arrests.
im pounded unt' all ( ~' · lndi vid4als•. that have payment s. SmiJh can ' ·.~~·~;.
..... :~!'N~my
Police standing parking ~~~)¢,~_'J:f'l!
..~ceivr~ post card reminders reached at '192-611 11 .
. '.'(
( 1·j(f;, · '• · · ~ ~------,------J!nL-•--f.'~,.:.:.__,;.~r-----------:----;---·
· ·•
'!'/' ". · · . .,
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTiNEL.COM

I

Faulty heater to_' blarrle in fatal fi.rre

Capt. John Perry of the
Ga)l hi
County Sheriff's
Department said Michael D.
KERR - A faulty kerosene Proctor. 59. 1564 Kerr Road.
heater that was !laming close di!.!d in a blatc that was fou!.!ht
to a wall in a residence ncar by volun teer lircfight~r.., frOm
Kerr is believed to be the three local departments.
Perry ~aid an initial investi cause of a lire that ki lled a
Bidwell-area man Wednesday gation of the .scene near the
intersection with Ohio 850
night, investigators said.
Bv KEVIN KELLY
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIB.UN E.COM

indicates the lire was caused
by the heater. The vict.im had
called a fami ly fri end prior to
the blaLe anti told him tha t
the heater wa~ malfum.: tinn ing and flamin g. Perry added.

Proctor. who was paraly7.cd
fro m the waist do,vn from a
traffil: acciden t some years

ago anti whcckhair-bountl.

was unable to escape the fire ,
Perry said. In vestigators said
fl ames from the heater spread
to a nearby wal l. and.the victim is be lieved to have been
overcome hy

~mo kc .

Proctor was the only resident in the house.
Please see Fire, AS

�Page4A2

FAITH • VALUES
The simple message of Christmas
A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, December 16,

Friday, December 16,2005

2005

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Scripture: Hebrews 1. 1·3

"At Christmas play and make
good cheer," said Thomas
'fusser. "For Christmas comes
but once a year."
But amidst all of the rushing around and the hustle and
bustle of the holiday season,
many of us would probably
say, "Thank the Lord, only
once a year!"
Obviously, this should not
be the case; nevertheless, with
all of the programs and special
services, with family and
friends visiting and exchanging gifts, and everything else
that seems to go along with the
modem American Christmas,
things get pretty hectic.
In fact, the whole season can
be so stressful and so full of
activities that we lose sight of
the really radical simplicity of
the Christmas message; the
rather uncomplicated message
we hear in the frrst three verses
. of the Epistle to the Hebrews.
Here in these few words we
are reminded that God has
communicated
with
humankind down thro11gh the
ages, most perfectly and
complete!~ through His Son
Jesus 'Chnst, who upholds all
of creation, and who al so
redeems and purifies us.
The Christmas message is
really very simple. God
spoke to our ancestors and
really everything He said prepared the way for Christ, Hi s
eternally begolten Son, the
incarnate Word of God,
through whom He speaks
completely and perfectly.
God the Father created all
things and sustains all things
through His Son, and of course
God the Father sent His Son
into the world to make purification for sins, so that everyone who beheves in Him
might not perish but have everlasting life in and through Him.
The
babe born
in
Bethlehem was and is the
very God of the universe, and
whether or not we believe in
Him, our very lives
indeed, every breath we take
- depend wholly upon Him .
Jesus Christ, the eternally
begotten Son of God, is King
of kings and Lord of lords,
and He sustains all things.
Well, St. Paul said, "for in
him all things tn heaven and
on earth were created, things
visible and invtsible, whether
thrones or dominions or
rulers or powers - all things
have been created through
him and for him. He himself

Rev.
Jonathan
Noble
PASTOR.
TRINITY CHURCH

is before all things. and in
him all th ings hold together."
(Col. I. 16- 17, NRSV)
In other words, God the
Father created all things
throu gh the Son and He suslatn s everything, mcludmg
each of us , through His Son.
At Christmas, we celebrate
the birth of thi s Son; we
remember and cherish His
entry into this world' as one of
us, as a baby boy born of the
Blessed Virgin Mary.
You see. what we do. what
we celebrate at this ttme of
the year is not JUSt some ntce
event of htstory. ln fact, it is
not just an important event' in
h1 story. Along with Easter, it
is the central event of all
human history, an event without which our Faith becomes
little more than a hallow
shell, or something worse.
It is the great celebratory
event of life itself, and we
m1ght well hear St. Leo the
Great urge us today as he did
h1s own people in fifth century Rome when he said:
Let us he glad in the Lord,
dearly beloved, and rejoice
witl1 spiritual joy that there has
dawned for us the day of evernew redemption, of ancient
preparation, of eternal bliss.
For as the year rolls round there
recurs for us the commemoratton of our salvation, which
promised from the beginning,
accomplished in the fullness of
time, will endure forever...
Amen. lf we truly believe
this, then not only is Christ the
reason for the season; not only
is He central to our Faith; He
is in fact the very foundation
of life and the world, without
whom there simply is no ltfe
and apart from whom the
entire created order unravels
and passes away.
So, as Tusser said, let us
"play and make good cheer."
We have good reason, And
though Christmas itself
"comes but once a year," the
message is everlasting and
the point it makes is reason to
celebrate every day, throughout the year, every year; now
and forevermore . Amen.

Imagine the sweet smell of
fresh hay wafting through the
cozy closeness of the most
famous stable in human history. Instead of the lonely and
wide open road on a cold and
clear night, there is both a
warmt h and a comfortmg
reassurance that came even
from the presence of barnyard animals housed within,
in spite of their shuffling
hooves and sn uffling noses.
A young woman enters the
scene, a little lady who has
been chosen by God to bear
into the world His Incarnated
Word. Supported and cared for
bv her loving husband, she settles down perhaps with something that ts a little like a sigh
as she resigns herself to her
surroundings. Yet, into thi s
humble and gentle beginning,
the Ancient of Days mtersects
the mortal with His divinity,
the temporal with the eternal,
the common with the holy.
But it isn' t such an unreasonable postulation ... that of
God Almighty allowing His
Son to be born in such crude
circumstances. Maybe we
feel that 1f WE had 1\een 111
the Father's shoes, we would
have arranged for Jeses to be
born in a palace ... or at least
a Holiday Inn Express.
Certainly we would not have
condescended to Hi s amazmg
and wonderful arrival taking
place in a barn'
Yet ... God chose to do just
that. Don ' t think for a
moment that God was caught
off guard by the fact that all
the rooms of Bethlehem had
filled up: The httle Sav10r

Pastor

Thorn
MQIIohan

was NOT born in a stable
because Hi s Dad simply forgot to get a reservation for
when they arri ved in town.
There truly was, in a sense,
"condescension"
(God
"DESCENDED to be WITH
us") . It wasn't m His being
born in a stable, but was
rather in Hts leaving the glory
and light of heaven to come
into the shadowy dominion of
the mundane. Even if He had
been born in a dazzlingly glorious palace, it would been so
fa r beneath what He had
.always known in heaven that
it would doubtlessly have
been laughable to all of heav en's cittzens who were "in the
know," seeing how the best of
human effort compared to the
majestic and awesome mansion s of heaven .
Yet, when the angels came
and announced the birth bf
Jesus to shepherds who "tended thw flocks by night"
(Luke 2·8), they did not laugh.
They sang. Their eyes were
not drawn to what tends to
draw our eyes. Whether baby
Jesus was born 111 a stable or
in !he house of Herod the
Great or even Caesar
Augustus was of no conse-

que nee to them. It was enough
that He entered the world.
No ... Hi s coming to earth
m a stable stall was about
cutting through human frivo lity and getting straight to the
matter of connectin g the
mercy of God to the need of
ALL humanity. Unthinkable
in any typically worldl y
sense is the goodness of God.
It isn't just for the "nch" ... it
isn't just for the "religious" ...
it is for anyone who turns in
truth from his or her own
waywardness, seeks the
incomprehensible forgiveness of God, and embraces
God's will for trusting and
hol y faithfulness in our hves.
"Born in a stable ... so that
all might be able ... to receive
His amazing love! ... And
slain on a tree ... so that we
also might be ... given hope
of heaven above!"
"In that region there were
shepherds living in the tields,
keeping watch over their
flocks by night. Then an angel
of the Lord stood before
them, and the glory of the
,Lord shone around them, and
they were terrified. But the
angel said to them, 'Do not be
afraid; for see - I am bringing you good news of great
joy for all the people: To you
ts born this day m the city of
Davtd a Savior, Who is the
Messiah, the Lord. This will
be a sign for you: You will
find the Child wrapped in
bands of cloth and lying in a
manger.' And suddenly there
was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host,
pra1sing God and saying ,

'Glory to God in the highest
heaven. and on earth peace
among those whom He
favors! ' When the angels had
left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one
another, 'Let us go now to
Bethlehem and see this thing
that has taken place, which
the Lord has made known to
us.' So they went with haste
and found Mary and Joseph.
and the child, lying in the
manger. When they saw thts,
they inade known what had
been told them about this
child ; and all who heard it
were ama zed at what the
shepherds told them. But
Mary treas ured all these
words and pondered them 111
her heart. The shepherds
returned, glorifying and praising God for all they had heard
and seen, as it had been told
them" (Luke 2:8-20 RSV).•
Allow the · message of
Christmas to pierce the night
of your own soul and bring
the dawn of God's grace into
your life . Seek the Savior
Who came and died so that all
men and women everywhere
-including you- who will
turn to Him in faith might be
forgiven and released from
the bondage of sin and given
the gift of eternity.

(Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past ·10/12 years. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church and may be reached
for commmts or questions
by
e-mail
at
pastorthom @path way gallipolis. com).

CHURCH LEADS MISSION GMNG

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Submitted photo

Stgn Up Onttnel

The First Southern .Baptist Church of Pomeroy has received recognition for mission gifts exceeding $50,000 this year. The Rev. Bill Wellman . director of missions for Scioto Valley Baptist
Association, presented a Cl?rtlficate to Donna W1lson, Women's Mission Umon director for the
Pomeroy church. First Southern led all churches in the Scioto Valley Association in mission giving.

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

Communicadon
Ia a buic nood ift
owMO!d.Tho

u,lephoftewasdte
ftroc fa"" I l l communk:Mion.. we
could pick"" tho
reccher and heai- a

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Loca1ed less !han 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156

"Still small enough to care"

frioftd or ICIMd OM

w. ...

di!!J!!!•.-~ .209 Third St.

Dairq

thon-·-

MOre coantet4d

wkh..UpMoMt ....

Queen

co...,...,.ro; not only

Brazier

unwe.....,•woic•

a;;n-

Racine, OH

SYRACUSE
J

700 N. 2nd St. Middleport, OH
740-991-llll

on lhephonar.-.
can tnnunit t.xt

udpktumjn•
ftulo. Mow, whod&gt;er
.... photlo or .-.noll

740-949-2210
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

g

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

nat door or
t ........ cbofmllu
aw.y. ~ expect to
make that instant

...

....... ,.

connKtion.

PO Box 683
Pomero , Ohio 45769-0683

conlider another
irwilibto, more

unearthtr ro,.., of
communKadon •.•

.,_, bch UM• M com• to God witlo foith .... tho ICCepWlto of Hh will,
w cUJ a.pect to tannect wkh Him. our soura of aft dlat MwiM and cood.
Harle II :14 -

thlo u we ...d.. , ''Thorofore I tel you, " " ' . - JOU uk
for In P"'l"'r, boRe.. that ,... haYe """hod k, ond k will b. yovrs." l(oopln1 in
toiiCh with Gocl thf'IIIHIIh ....,.run hpe an lnc:redl»&gt;e impKt on our liwes etth

llld....-ydoy!
Ao we worthlp God t h l a to tloank Him lor the
dMne comm,.nlcation of pnl)'er, the ultimate connection.

may,..,..,,.,_

......

D.o.,Ji•l

O ~ tokl

HUOA Y
knel• llfln

· ·l·lt

l 1· t4

II I-to

wtDHEsDA.V 1'HUfiiSDA.f

l:t--4

5,8, 1 URIM Y

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-59.4-6333
1-800-45 t -9806

The Hppllance man
740-985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts

All Makes
Ken and Adam Young

•

Catholic
Sacred Heart Cath olic Churt•h
16 1 Mul t&gt;cny Ave .. Pomeroy. 1JlJ2-5!WX,
Pasmr n c~ Waher E Hemt S.tt Cnn
44~-5 l'ipm . Mll~S- 510 pm
'iun
Cun -8·45-9 15 a m .. Sun M.t ~s (} 3(1
am, Da1ly Mas~ - k m,, rn

Church of Christ
Emmanuel Apostolir'Tohunacle In c.
Loop Rd off New Ltmn Rd Rutland .
Servu;:es Sun 10 00 am &amp; 7·30 p m ,
Thurs 7 00 p m, P~ stor Marty J{ Hutton

Assembly of God
Liberty 1\ssembly of God
PO Box 467 Duddmg Lane, Ma~on ,
W.Va.. Pastor. Nell Tennam, Sunday
Servtre~- !0·00 a m and 7 p m

Baptist
Carpenter H~tplist Chun:h
Sunday School - 9·lOam Preachmg
Servrce 10 3Uam, Evemng St:rm;c
7 OOpm Wednesday Btble StU'd) 7 00 pm,
lntenm Preache r - t-l oyd Ross
Cheshire Baplist Churth
Pa~ lnr Steve Li!t le Sunda~· Seh0(11 ' 9 ~0
am, Mommg Worsh1 p
10.10 am,
Wednesday B1hle StuUy 6 30pm, chmr
practt ce 7,30, youlh and Bible Budd1es
6 30 p m Thurs I pm hook smdy

Hope Baplisl Cbun:h (Southern)
570 Grant St, Middleport, Sunday !;C hool
- 930am , Won;htp llam.an d6 r m.
Wednesday Servtee - 7 p m Pa~tor Gary
El lis'
Rutland Flrsl Baptisl Chul't'h
Sunday School - 9 10 a.m, Wor~1up
10•45 am
Pomeroy Flrsl Da plist
Pru;tor Jon Brocken East Mam St.,
Sunday School 9 30 am, Worsh1 p 10 am

\\-eststd t Chu rch uf C hri~l
33226 Children's Home RLI. Poml·my Oil
Cn!llacl 740 4·11 121Jtl Sund.r) llH IITllll)!
IU 00 !)un murntng Bthlc ~ tud) .
fo!low rng w o r~h 1 p, Sun cv.- 6 00 pn1
w~u bt blc §tudy 7 rm
Hemilll'k Grove Christian ( hurch
Mimster Larry Brown Wur , hrp 9 30
am Suncl.ty Sdwol - 1() Ill ,t 111 B1h k
Study - 7p m
Pum~roy

Flr.;;l Baplisl Chun:h
Pastor· , 6th and Pal mer St, Mtddte~rt .
Sunday School - 9 15 am . Wonh•p 10 15 am , 7·00 p.m .. Wednesday
Serv1ce- 7·00 p m
Racine Firsl Baptisl
Pastor . Sunday Sehoul · 9 30 a. m .
Worshtp - I 0·40 a m , 7 00 p m ,
Wednef&gt;day Servu."CS - 7 00 p m

~LocalNet

C11l

Tod11~

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

If ye abide ill Me, a11d My
words abide i11 you, ye slta/1
ask what ye will, .a11d it shall
be done unto you.
Jolt11 15:7

MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulbc JT) Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992-3279
Tol Frt'e 1-877·583-2433

•

com

&amp; Sa~11 1

(7401992·6260
Rrl 1 ~nll'

lnlf'tlli'l

Arrr~s

Stnrr 1'l'l4

Belhlrhem Bapti~t Church
Great Bend, Route 124, Ra c111c. OH.
Pastor · Damc1 Mecea. Sunday School ·
9 30,a.m .. Sunday Worsh•p - 10 30 am .
Wednesday B1ble Smdy - 6 00 p m
Q!tiBethel Free Will Bapllsl Chul't'h
28601 St. Rt 7, Mtddleporl, Su nd.ay
Scrvtce - 10 am, 6 00 p m, Tuesduy
Scrvrces ·6 .00

333 Page Streel
Middle,;-ort OH

(740) 992-6472

Fax i740i 992-7406

Warm Fr1 endl'
Armo.\phere

Hours
6&lt;.~m - 8pm

Miftie's :J(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Spec'iots
Open 7 days a week
740·992-7713

Hillside Baptist Church
St Rt 143 JUSt off Rt 7, Pastor Rev.
Jam es R Acree. Sr., Sunday Un1fied
Servtce, Worshtp 10 30 am .. 6 p m.
wednesday Servt~e s -7 p m

· Fllilh Baptist Church
Ra1lroad St , M ~on , Sunday Sch0111 - 10
a.m., Worshtp - 11 a m.. 6 p m,
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p m

Forest Run Baptist
Pastor , Anu s Hun. Sunday School • 10
am , Wonhlp-l lam

..

Mt. Moriah Bapdst
Fou rth &amp; Mam St .. Mtddleport, Pastor
Re ~ G1lben CrBtg, Jr , Su nday S..:hoc•1 ·
9.30 a.m.. Worshtp - to 45 a.m
Anhquity Baplist
Sunda) Sehoul 9 30 am , Worship 10 45 am, Sunday Ev cnmg • 6 00 p m
Paslor· Don Walt.er
Rutland Free Will Baptl5t
Salem St , Pastor Jamie Fortner, Sunday
School
10 11.111, Evemng • 7 p.m.,
Wednesda y Ser. rces ~ 7 p m

Portable Toilet Rentals
Jack's Septic Tank &amp;
Portable Toilet Service
(In Darwin)
l9S25 Gold Rtdge Road. Pomeroy. OH

Yotu #2 Bu.f ill eS.\ is our #I Bll.lille.u
Phone or Fax 740-992-7 I19
Owners· David &amp; Edith Brock lcs

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
St. Middleport. OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues ·t-shirts and more

190 N-:-second

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
Au Accormliug &amp;

Finallcial Services Firui
61 R E Ma111 Street • Pomeroy
(740) 992-7270

111

s~r v u. ~:' ·

I \&lt;:lltll,l!

(,

\(1

p 111 \\lcdnc'le:lay

Ill li J am

I' Ill,

Wcdnl'\JaJ Sl'n 1n·~ r1 IL) r n1
Wnr~h1p

( 'lnu ~~~ uf' (;ud ol l'ruphct·~
OJ Whll!.! H.d 411 1 "' 1{1 lhll. 1'.4'&gt; (o&gt;r \'J
(h ~ ptll J il , StuhJ.n SdttKII
10 am .
Wo r, ht p II ,, 111 • \\'l'tl n ,·,dJt ~ -.rn tu "- 7
]'Ill

s~ h•Jol .

a 111 • Worsh ip- 10 I() .\ m . (,
Wednesday Scf"\iu·' 7 p m

'llu
p

m

llom rroy We.o;lsldl' l 'hurl'h of Christ
Cl uldt en s Htllne KU Sunil~)
Scholl! - I I am, Worshtp l!la m , (J pn1 ,

kn

am

Holiness

\\'hilr '~

1\ttlUlh

7.00

l'h1111~

J,m&lt;' l:k~tll~

Middleport Church of Chri ~t
5t h and Mam, Puswr AI H~rl 'ill l\ , Ymllh
Mrnrslcr Josh Ulm , Suntlay Sllw"l - •I 'D
3m. Wursh tp- K l'i 10 ]0arn. 7 rm.
Wedn ~!;(lay So.:rvtccs- 7 p m

( ornmumh ( hu n. h
P.t,tur Stn •· .,.1onwk M un Strl'l' t
ltut! .mrl " '&gt;un dt o \\&lt; lt'&gt;htp--1lll~l .tnt
Sllllll "~ St' l \ ll \' "' p m

Foreo;t Run
Bnll l&lt;ohmso n Sunday Sdmul
·• Ill Wnr~lup - Y ot m
P.1~111r

10

Heu\h (Mtddteportl

l)anvillc ll nlu w~s l:hu.-ch
l.~'i Lang.vlll' Pa•.tclr
V1~h' r l{ (liP•h, S um l&lt;~ y ~Lhuol
l,l 30 .tm .
Swnl.ty v..or,lup - 10 \o .1m &amp; 7 r m.
1,\-~Jm.-,\l.ry IJii.l~ C l '-1.!1\ lle - 7 p ill

P •~tor Bn.m Du11h.uu

11\)q Sr.tl&lt;' Rnllh'

Keno Chun:h or Christ
Worship - 9 JO· a.m . Sund;n Sdi111&gt;l
10 3U am, Paslot-kllrc) Wull n~c l't and
Jrd Sunday
8earwallow Kidg~ Chun:h or Chrtst
f',tstnr Brulr TerrJ. Sun day So.:hn,ll -9

'tJ

am
~0

Vv~-dnc~t.l.ty Scr 111o.:c~-

u

111

(i

\lincrsvilte
l.hJil i{ot&gt;nN ill Suml oty SLh4wl
,, m . W11r•l11p - IIi .1m

t:a han l'1l~ n m C hu ~l
ll JIItsnn\lll&lt; Ko.tll
Pa~lor
Chat! ~,
/1. 1 o;K~11' 1 ~
SunU.I) Sdt'"'' Y 10 ,t m .
W&lt;•r~htp
II .1111. 7 1)0 p 111. Wu.lne~U. t\

R o~

Zwn Church or Chnst
Hat'flMln\ilk Rt.l 1H1 ~~ ~~
t-'a~tor . Roger Watson SunU~; s~ huul IJ·1n a m, Wor ~hlp - 10·10 um 7-t.I(J
p m . WedncMiay Scrv t ~l' - 7p 111
Ptl m~my.

Tuppers Ptam Chul't'h of Chrt st
ln str umtmt~ l . Wur~l11p ScrvKL
() 11 rn ,
Commumon - I 0 am, SunJ.ty S~ h•~&lt; J I
10. 15 .1m .. Youl lt - 'i 10 ]Jill SunUay, B 1 l'l ~
Study Wednesdu~ 7 Jim

Brad bur} Church of Christ
fmn Kunytm, 1Y.'i5K Hr.1dbur y
Middlcporl Sumllty Sd111n1 - 9 ~()

M m1 st~:r.

am
Wot'!'htp - 10 JO u m
Rutland ChuNh nf Christ
Sundiiy School - 9 30 ~ m, Wot"hip ,l\ld
Cnmmumon IO.JO a m , Bnb J Wrrry,
o\.lhms1cr
Bradrord Churc-h of' Chrisl
Corner ot St Rt 124 &amp; B1adllUl y Rd.
Mmtstcr· Doug Sh11mhhn, Youth Mm1s1cr
B1l1 o\ mhcrgcr, Sunda y Sc hm'l - I.J "10 J m,
Worship - 1!. 00 am , I0 10 .1 m , 7 00
p 111 Wcdm:"diiy Serv n .-~ - 7 00 p m
Htckor:Y Hills t'hurrh ol Cl•nst
Tuppe rs Plum~ Pu~t1 'r \-hke M oor~ R1hlc
class. Y a m Sunday, wor•h•r 10 a.m
Suoiliry , worshi p 6 '0 pm Sunday. Brhle
cla~s 7 pm Wed

I)

Pearl f'hape1
Sund ,l)' Sell\ I\ I] 1) .. Ill . w•• r~hip 1f) .I Ill

7 (Hlp II\

l'omero}
,
P.hlilf Hn,ut Dunh am Wur~l11p
J. 111 SundJ) s~hnol - 10 -'' ;,r m

nfShunm Hnliness ('hun:h

I l'adrng ( red Kd .. Kuel.mU, Pas1111 RL1.
J)cwL' \ Km~ . SunJ.t) ~dmul - •I 10 , m .

Pine (;mu· Hihle llolineo;,&lt;; Chun·h
1/2 nu ll- oll kt l 2\ l'.t•lor ~~ ~ \' 0 Ddl
M~nlqSu n dt~) Sd111ol
() lO .t m
Wor,hlf" - II) JO ,, 111
I ~(I Jllll
W~Unc~dJ) S~n i ~C - 7 I() p Ill

10

Nulland
P.t,lllr kll \.. BLLllf!lt' ';und.ty Sd11m1 •
410atn 'hut~hlp - 111 'IO.t.lll, lhul\da~
Sen tl'~'" - 7 p 111
Sa lem Center
l'.t~lllf W1lh.tm K
M..r ..ha\1 Sunda)
SdhKll - )I) I ~ a ill Vlitln,lllp - Y I ~ a Ill,
Btlllc Study M•mda) 7 00 pm
Snow uti~
SundaySdn}lo[ IOum W111slup IJ~ m

Wt!sleyun Brbll· Holinc s.~ t'hur.•·h
/'i Pe.tr1 St, Mrddki'Ofl P.t•1or R11'k
Buumc, SunU.ty Sdu,ol - I !I ,1 111 Wnr,lnp
- lll4'i pn• . Sunllu} [I&lt;' 71Kl p ut
W~Jne,du) Set 1I~&lt;" - 7 1() 1) rn
lt y~t! ll

~

Rol k Sprtnj!S
P.t,l&lt;lt Kcuh Rader. Sunda) ~~ houl - 9 15
•l lll
Wt&gt; l ,111]1 - )/) o\111, Y&lt;•utll
h :lhlll -,!up Suud,1y 6 p111

Wcdll~ "J .t y

SljtiJ ••y "' 'l ' lup -7 p.m.
[lf,I)'I!J 111\!Cilllg_ 7 fl Ill

Other Churches
.-\oumng Grat'r l:ommu •lil) Church
Pa.,lnr WH)IIl' Dunlap Stutc Rt (~I.
Tupper' f'hu n~. Sun V.ur~hrp I() .un &amp;
6 ~0 pm .. Thurfida) Kthlc Study HIO p m

lJ .IOam,Wt•r~hlfl · I 04~ .tlll

Oasb t.: hrrstlan Ftlloltship
Ntln-Ucnumrn auur iJll cllowslupJ
Mccttn~t m tlu: old A111cn~an Lcgu •n Hall
S•1uth l"ourth A~enuc, MidJleporl
P.l'tnr Chns Stewart Ill OU am Sunda)
Other mc'ct mg~ 111 llllJl lt:~
Communit y of Chrio;t
Pnnl.mJ Rat•me Rd Pa-~ m Jun Pmfli n
SunJJv Sdtool · 9 JO a 111, """"h1p
10 '0 am. Wednc &lt;;day Semcc~ 7 ()()

Sln-;-t Chun:h
WH A~h St, MtUlllcpr.m-f' ,,, tur Jclf Sn111 h
S undu~ Sduml - 'J \ (1 11 m . Mormn r. .
Wor~h t fl - l() JU .1 m &amp; 6 "1() pm .
Wednesday Sen 1..:e 6 10 p 111 , Ymnh
Scrv11:c h 30 p m
Agape tiff' Ccnler
'Fu ll-Gospel Chu rLh', Pa~tor~ John &amp;
Puuy WnJc, 60"1 Sewnd A\c Ma ~ m1 773
~0 17 , Scn•tn• 11m ~ Sund~y It) "10 .1m ,
Wcducsduy 7 pm
i\~h

o\.bundunl Gnll't! R.F. I.
lJ2\ S nnrd St Middl cpM . r u~lor Tc rc~a
D .I V I ~. Sun lla y ~erv 1 ~~ 10 a m ,
Wcdnc...tny ~rvtce 7 pm
Faith 1-' utl Gosprl Church
L•IIIS Bonom, f'a~tor. S1cv~ Rcc ll, Sunda~
School - lJ JQ a m Wursht p 9 ..\0 am
anll 7 p m Wedn~sll&lt;~.y - 7 p m Fnd.1y tcllnw~h1p s~rv t c~ 7 p m

I. ~turd f'li fT F'~e Mcth!)Cii sl (_ 'hurl'l1
Pa~tor

t:amlt1 -Sullon
Ciirmcl &amp; H~,h.m RU ~ K.K HW, OhliJ,
P ·1~111r Jnhn G1lm"rc Surul.1y S~hnol ·
'J ~ ~ ~ .1 111 , w~,r~hljl - /() 45 a.m
B1blc
Sti••'Y w~d 7 OH r m

Glenn Ruwc, :SumJ,,y Sd11"'l -

010 n m \.\m shtp
l1111l,Jm and6
p 111 ,WcJneMJii) S~f\IL ~ · 7 (I() f1111

Latter-Day Saints

Mornlnt~: Slur
P.ht t'r John G•lm••rl', SunJa y S1.hPol - I I
~ m. VYorslup 10 a 111

The t.: hur~h of .lesu"
Chri st or La.lt~r-Uay Saints
St Rt 160 , 44 11-6~47 or 446-7-IK6,
Sunday SLl mul 10 20- 11 a m., Rcltcl
Sne r c t yff&gt;n e~ thon&lt;l
11 fl'i-1~ ()0 nmm,
SotCiot lll l.! ll1 Scnr~e Y-1 0 15 a 111,
H&lt;I!II Cfllakmg mel'llog. lsi Th u r~ 7 r m

Lutheran

Eastl.etarl
f',t.,l&lt;lr Btl! Mar,hu\1 Suml uy ~~hvu l
Y,l m, Wnr•h tp - 10 a m , lsi SunJ~y
~~.- r ~· month ciCIIIllg se rvtll.! 7 00 p m
Wcllncsda)l - 7 p m

St John Lutheran Churt'h
Pme C1n1H \'l'nr~1up IJ (}( ) .t 111 S uml ~)
S~ho &lt; l l · 10 00 am
Pa,Wr James P
Btady

Ita cine
i'a~t o~r K..:rry Wood. Sunday Sdm&lt;ll - 10
am, Wor ~lup - II am

""' •• your light so shine befor.el
that they may see
wori\s. and glorify
:1f'ather in heaven."
Matthew 5:

Rrtdnllt~

Chun:h of Chnsl
Pasto r Ph1l tp Sturm. Sunday Sdrvol 9 10
u m . Wors htp Senrce J{) JO am, B1hlc
S1udy. W!.!dnesday, 6 lO p.m

Curncr S)~am,trc &amp; S c ~o.mJ St , l't&gt;m~rny ,
Sund••Y !\lhoo l - Y 4'i am WOI'sh tp - 11
ol lll

De"ler CHun:h or Christ
Sunday school ':1 10 ,1m ' Suntlu} worstnp

Gruhunrlmih-d 1\lelhodi~
Wor•l11p - ll ,, m Pa,a•r Rl lharU N~~·r.
8&lt;.-cl1lclllnih-d J\ldhodisl
Nc1' I Lr\~tl R1 ~h trd Nt, t"l' Ptl &gt;Wr
S u nu ~.v Wlll \lup ':1 :.o .1 111 l ues. 6 ]0
pr. ty~r anti R1t"l k Stud)

- 10.30 am

Church of Chris I
7 aoU I :!4 W, Evangdt•l
Dcnnts Sargcm, SunUuy R1bl e Stud}
9 JO a.m , Worshlp Hl.Jil am and 6 JO
p m , Wcdnesdlty Btblc Stud) · 7 p;n
l nter~ec l tvn

Farth Valley Tabernacle Churt'b
Ba1ley Run Road PJstor K c~ Em mett
Ra w•on. Sund ay Ev.-r1ng 7 p m.
Tilllfst.l.ty Sc:r vK~ - 7 rIll
Sy racuse Mi~ion
14 11 Brtdgeman S1. !\ymut~e. S und n~
So.: hool - 10 a m, Eve umg 6 p m,
Wet~ne&gt;id,ly Sen. tee- 7 p m.
Hpzet Community Chun:h
011 Rt I 24, Paswr Ed~cl H ~rt , S und.t~
Sc hool - 9 lOam Worsh1 p 10 ·10 am ..
7 JOprn
D)enllle Community Chun:h
Sunday Sd~t~ol - 9 30 a 111 , Wunht p -

Christian Union
Harlford Church of Christ in
Chrl'ltion Union
1-tartll'lrLI, W V.t , P~ s tor Do~l' Hl Grcn .
Sunday Schon! 9 ~0 .1m \Vnrstup
10 30 a m
7 00 n Ill . W~JncsJ.t;
Sef'\ tees - 7-f)() p tn ·

Church of God
MI. Mon ah Church or God
Mrle Hill Rd , Racme, Pastor. Jam~.,
Satterll!.! ld Sunda) S..:hoo1l - Y 4'i ,t m
Evcmng - (i p m. WedncsdJ} S.-rvKcs - 7

SCI"o i ~&lt;!S

Mt·i~s ( 'oupentlt\'e Pa ri ~ h
N•lrthe,ht Clu,tcr. All red. l',t, tr•r Jun l
1\c,J tll~ Sumla~ School
9 ~0 .1m
Wursh1p - IJ ~m .O.lllpm

Joppa
P.t,ltlr' B·•h R.md .. lph Wm sh1p
.111 1 Sunda) Sdtuol - 10 lU am

Syruruse First Church or C.od
Sun.l.J ~

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

l.ong llollnm
Sch.u1 l t) 'O ,1111 .

.fisbet .funeral Jlomt
2141111111 . . . Ill. •

t It•

41111

..... ....
··--··
MNI!.fltl

. . . l .... -

Pomeroy

il1iil
ANDERSON
F UN E RAL HOME

1741A)"'s'"'Ho H,.z,o
NewHmn,\V\ 25265

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

-

II

Sou lh Rethet Communlly Churt'h
Sth cr KtLigc - Pa5tor Ltndu D am~1.1.nod
Suot.lay School -(} a m . Won;htp Sef"\ tl'f
I0 il m 2nd and 4th SundJy

Rtll S c .tt~n Suml:1) !\L'f\' 111'~ - ]()
111 &amp; 7 fl lll Wc dne,~d.ty - 7 p 111, &amp;
'wulh7p m

l-ull (,o!&gt;pel C hul'\'b
orlh e Lh·ing Sa ~i or
Kt . IJN. •\ rlttquny. P.1 stnr Jt·~se Morm
Sen tlc~ s.llilr(h•Y 2 110 p m

Sa lem {'cmmmnil) Church
'he, I Ci&gt; lumhta, W.V.t "m Lw~lll)l
Roo~U P.hlnr Clwll'., Rou ,h IJ04i tl75
~28M Su nd .ty Sdtm•l 9 1() .1111 Su nd ay
l'\enm ~ \etvtu.' i on pm B1 t&gt; ly S1uUy
WeJncsJ~} :.t.!'\lcC 7 ·1)l) rm
Hohson t:hristian 1-'ello wship Church
Hc1Mhcl Wli •tu, Suml;.~y Sdlllol10 am, Sut11l11y rtum:h ~cr.· t ~ c f1 111 pnt
W~dllcbda ) 7 pm
1 1 a~ cor

RC!Iitonttinn ( hrlslran l-'ello1-1 ship
H oo11~r lt t~. J d ~ /\t h en~ Pastor
l..onnt.: Coi11,, Sund.t) v.,,r,hlp 10 tJ-11 am
Wcdn ~:'-llit y " pn1

Pentecostal
Penteros11111 A ~se mhly
Jo'.l L!4. Ra~llll', P,J, tur Wr lh.ml
Hobact. S unU ~} S~htm l
10 a.m .
E~c nm g - 7 pm W~dnc~dny -.~~· H: t~ - 7

St

' "' Presbyterian
Syracuse 1-' int Unit ed Presb~tl· nan
Rnhcn Cno~.~.. \Vnrshl]' l 1 1m

P~~o lor

UHrriwn\itle Prcshytcrian Chunh
Rnher1 Crul\, Worshi p - Y.1 111

l'~stor

Mlddl epo rtl 'r~ bv teriun

Pastor James Sn)dcr. Su nda ) SdHH&lt;) Ill
.1 111 , ~.~.or, h tp sa\fl~ 1I .1111

United Brethren
Mt. Hl'rmnn United Drcthnn
in Chn~t l:hunh
T~xa" ~&lt;1111111Unlt~ '64 11 W1ckhltlll RU
P~ s lm Pe ter M.utmtlalc. Suml.1y Sdtool 9 \0 am, Wor."ihtp
t tl\(),, m 7 on
p m, Wcdm:sdu) S~r\IIC' - 71 11 1 p 111
Youth !!fClUf'J mnu ng 2nd &amp; 4th Sund .t} ~
lo"den United Hl't'thren in Chri~l
Stale R11Ut e 12-1 ll ~tv.cen RccU" 1llc &amp;
Hnekm~ ron
~am l a&gt; s~hon l
Ill a m .
Sund &lt;~ y Wnr~ h tp - I I !KI .1 111 Wellnt.:•t..lay
Scr \· t ~e~
7 01! p m . Pu ~l\lf M 1\dmn
Wtll

Carleton lnlerdenominattooal Ch urch
Km g~bury R o ~d . Pastor Ruhcrl Van~~
SunUay School - 9 '0 a m Wnr~h•r
Sen ICe 10 3tl a.m . E~ct1111g Serv 1..:c 6

pm
Fn-edom l.iospell\-11551on
Bald Knllh. t}n Co Rd \I Pa ~ tor Re1•
Ko"c1 Wlllrurd, Sunday Sdtroul - ~ )0 a rn

Me1g~

County\

Olde ~ t

Flori ... !

East Ma1n ·
Pomeroy, Oh

T11e care )'OU deurve, cJost! to !lome

36759 Rockspnngs Rd .
Pomeroy, OH 45769

"U\t II~

740-992-6606

~11 nd

yOIJ/

thO UP.,hf~

Wlfh £flll~ III J

~lltf! •

740.992-2644 . 74()-992-6298

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
or God so loved the world
PHARMACY
he gat'e his only
We Fill Doctors'
lht'Pr,olfen SOil ...
Prescriptions
Jo!m 3: 16
992-2955
Pomeroy
"So 1 stnve always to keep

n
H

&amp;noulfer'll

my co nsetence clear before
God and man:·A f 24
~= ~

e,
10
Jom .. II. Anolmon.Uctn..olfonmllll"''"'
h 58
Lo--7•4•0•·•6•6•7•·•3•1•1•0--.._H.•Id,jjlS.Andr""n. l'on'lhoo~ho '""'"'' floo~•ooo:ngi_ _ _.;.M~a~f~l:.!e:w::::jL
00 VI

Pa ~ w r.

a

Morse Chaprl Church
Sunda y ~ ~. hool- 10 am Wor~h ip
a 111 w~dnc ~day SerVICe - 7 r m

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITATION'CENTER

~~.

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Fuii!Jne ol
INSURANCE
Insurance words abide in you, ye s/w/1
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye will, aud it sltall
Fmancial
214 E. Main
be doue unto you.
Servtces
992-5130
John 15:7

J'l'lln1-1ship

Pomeroy L' hun:b of lhe Naz11rene
1' .1 ~1 1\1 Jan La\CI11k r Swu lay s ~ hHnl
Y ~ (I ,, m Wn1•htp - 10.10 ,, 111 .tnd 6

\\.or~hip

Nr \\ Llfr Vktor_\- (enter
177J G~llrg~s Creek R&lt;•.t~i (,,llhp&lt;' lt ' Oil

Se~~nth·Da~· Advetllrst
Mulhcrr) Hg Rd , Pom~rny l' .t ~tul
tknnel1 Ltt~k•c~h . S&lt;~l u r d .ty St•rvll~·
Suhhalh Sd1nol ~ p rn Wuro,hlfl ~ r m

F11ll Gosprll ighthouse
11045 Htl.md Road, Pomeroy, P.rstor Koy
Hunter Sundny School 10 am. E1enmg
7 JO ]l m , luc sUay &amp; '1hursday 7 JO

SJ racu~ Ch ul't'h of the Nar.a.renl!
PJ~ tn r Mike Adkm" Sunday S~ h vol 9 30
~ nr
V.&lt;Jr,h •p
IU 10 ,J m 6 p m .
Wctlnt'"ll.•y Sc n t~c~ - 7 p 111

') 'fl

pm

7 pIll

Church nl 1hl' N:tl.tr~nl!, l'.t~lor Jnrml&gt;'
1'~1111 , Sund.ty Schnol · 9. ~() .t m.. Worshtp
10 4'i a Ill 7 pIll Wedn~ sdn~ s~r~ ll!.!S
7 pm

(he;ler
Pttslm ' J,m.- He.1111e Wo~htp I} ol .lll .
Sunday s~hu..• l - 10 am
Thur-;d.t)
s~r. tr.-s 7 11 m.

, L'lirt un ·tahe rna d~ Churt'h
Clt ll\\11 W Va S und.1~ Sth•ILII - 10.1 111 ,
Wur~lllp - 7 p 111 . W~dne,U,1y ~CIY ! CC · 7

Seventh-Day Adventist

pm
N ced~ llll t

pm

992-3785

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
C I 'II Oh'

Nazarene

pm
Rutland Chun:h or liod
Pastor Non Hen lh Sund.ty Wur'&gt;hlp - 1\}
am . 6 p nt, WedneMiay s~nlll"' 7

forth Chun:h
Stmd.ty .)~ IH IIII · IJ 'OJ m,

Middlt!port ( hun:h ofthl' ~IIZIU'Cne
'1' ,1 ~IIW Alkn MtUc:tp Sumlt} St:hCllil ·
(} J() .1 Ill ,Wut-.lnp - I 0 10 a Ill , (l 10 p 111 ,
Wcdncs dny Sen ll'C\ 7 f1 m P.1stur
A1ku M•r.kap

7 p Ill

Rl'joldng l.lte Church
M1ddlcpMt Pn&lt;,trtl
Pu-.wr. 1--. mciiiU&gt;
L&lt;Jwn.: ncc I "l&gt;'man W\Jr~ h tp- Ill Oil 11111
Wc:dnc~day S.T11~c~ 7 tl m.

J0 10il m ,7 rm

Fuith Gnspel Church
Long Bullllm, Sunday ~-hool - ':1 ~0 ~ m ,
Wm shtp - 1 0 .4 .~ a 111 . 7 JO p m..
Wednesday 7 10 p m
Mt. Ollvt! Community Chun:h
Prt~ t or L1twrcnr.c B u~h . Sundny Schnnl ':110 am, El'erung - 6 Jll I'm, WeJned ay
SerHCe - 7 r m .

v.,,r\h•p 1n 111 .1 m

1\11. Olhl' IJnliL-d !\h,thod.lst
Oil 124 h~hlllli W• l k..:~\ilk, i'a•hlr R~·\
Ra lph 'ip1rc" Sunday S ~ hnn1 - 'J 10 .tm
Wm~l11p • 1() ,10 .1111. 7 pm, lh ur ~d~}

Stn ers,·illt Comm11nily A [lO~tollr
t:hu rch
r 1s1nr \'.-,tynl' R Jcv.d l, Sunda~ 'WOro;lup
6 0U p m . W~dnl·~d&lt;.l) - (, t~ l p m ll1hk
Study

Lung~v1lle t.: hrbtiun Churrh
Ful l Go~pcl l'.1 ~tnr Rn h ~·t t \1ti ~'L· r.
Sumtay Sd11~1l Y I() .un , Wo 1 ~htp 10 .10
am - 7 00 Jl!tl Wedne ~day Sen I l l' 7 Oil
prn

IJOt·kingporl Church
Gr.tnll S1rcct. Suml.t~ Sdt n\~l - g ~t! J 111
V.&lt;lr&gt;lttp Ill ~ l l am p~,tor Pht lltp 111'11

li~

hirvi~\t Hiblt- t.:hun:h
Lclarl. V. V.t Rl I Pa stor Bmm MJy.
Suntlay St htKI I - 9 10 .1 111 , Wor,Jup · 7 110
p m , Wcdneo;day Athie StuJy 7 ( ~)p Ill
Faith 1-' ellu"ship ( rusadl!' ror Chnst
P,t,lnr Rc1' Franklm D1 c kcn ~ ,'i.-rl'lll'
1-1 t\.1.!) 7 pIll

1\-ltddlc::purt Communit) Chun·h
'i71i l'cHr l S1. M11ldleport P.t ~tor· Sa m
A"mle11n11 S unll~ y Schoo l 111 am ,
F~c nmg - 7·10 ]l m , Wednco;tla y Scr\ ICL' 7. 10 p rn .

Brtht·l Churrh
lu11no;h1p Rd, 4(lii(' SunJay Sdi&lt;KII - g
a m. Wor shi p
I ll a !1l . Wcdn~sda}
SctVI~'l'S · f!) ,\ Ill

Co R!l

\locJn(',J,il Sc'll t•c

11 1h'\

P;t~lllf Helen Klmc. Oml1t lk C'hUJ..dJ
M.un &amp; ltltll Sr &lt;&gt;und ,l) s~· hon l - 10
;till, Wor~h tp 9 .1 111 , Tuc~t.la) Scr v t~~' 7 f1 Ill

United Methodist

Ill \0 am

7 pm

Hurmonvilll! l:ommunity Cbunh
P.t~lor Ther1111 Durham Sund!l)' - 9 30
a m and 7 ]l m., V.edm: sdu) - 7 r .m
'

Coolvillt• United Mt'th!Kiist Parish

Our SuHnur l.uthcr11n \ hun·h
.IIlli l k tH\ Sh !l..t l ~ n &lt;; v...ond
WV,1, l'.t&gt;lllr Da,t d N t • ~~·l ll Su mJ,11
Sehoul - I(] 00 ,t m Wnr~lu p - I I ·• m
Wo~ lntll

Wur..,htp

Ba~k ,1]

lll-!han)
JtJhn (Jthnor~ . Sunduy Schu11l - 10
.1 tn Wm ~ ht p - I) J. 111 • WcJne ~ Uay
s~ r vte~·, - In a m

Fluu .. tl,ly Bthle Stutly ,Ill[) Y&lt;IUi h 7 rIll

Wes l t'~lln

500 N lllU A1c

Hc:lhri'Wnrship Cc:nh•r
197X:! S R 7 RccdsHll c OH 4'i77~ l/~
n11 k nurt h ••I Ea~tcrn S~ hu11b un SR 7 A
hill (_""flCI (h u t~ h. P~\111 1 Ruh Ba1 bn
ASM'~Ia1&lt;' l':~~tor Karyn Davt~. Yuuth
p.~,tnr Su11~ 1-rano, Sunday 'c r v1c~~
ltl·Otl ollll wurship li UO fllll I allltl) L11l'
('l,""l'' Wed H ntn~ C~ ll Groups 7 Qrl
p rn , Dutcr Lmllh ('~IJ (',r(lup a1 the
t hurdt fo 111 pm l1&gt; I! ll) pill

Pa~1or

?p.m

Chu pt'l

(l&gt;ul•dl, l&lt; uJd . l' ,l~to t K~-, l'lul l tp
1) 10 .1 rn ,
Htclt:nour Sum.la~· Sdwnl

Cahar} Hthle Chuf"('h
P11rnern) Pike Co RLI l'&gt;~ b iOI ~~v
Bl:u.kv.l)(o\l, Sunday So.;hnol - 9 l (l a rn .
Worc,lup 10 30 ,, m
7 '0 p n1 .
Wcdnc~Ja) Sc rv tH' - 7· 10 p m

1

Ru n (ununuml) t:hurch

RC\' Li tTy I em ley Su nduy Sclmn l

l'.t~lot

Rutland Churrh ur thl' Naza rene
St hool • ~ :w .1m Wur ~tu p •
1!1 .~0 ~ m . 6 ~ 0 p 111 , WcJnc~d~ y
sa,· ite~ 7 r m H.~,- 'M• kl' Cl:uk

Suml u ~

pm

School

Y l() .1m . Wor'h1p - I I 00 .1 111

10 p 111

0 .11 1 p m

S uml. t~

PJ ~ tor

Sc!\ l ~l' -

C hurch of thl' NazaU'l'ne
Pa~tt•r. K\!1 Ht&gt;rben Grate Sunday S,hool
(J \(I .t m . Wm,htp - I I .1 m 6 p m..
WcJnc~d.J\ Scr\ Kl"• - 7 p m

a m , Wt•r~lup - l l .llll

~322b

Wcdn~sd.ry ScrvKc~ - 7 pIll

7 pm

C h ~sler

SunJ.t) SdHH&gt;I

1-: ntt'rprise
f'.t~t&lt;•r Arl,nld Ktn ~. Suntl.l) S~h"" l
10 311 :r m W,1r~h 1p 1! JU .1 m Bthle
Stull\' Wcd ... 7 10
Fhat"oods
t'.t~lor K ~ n h l«,ulcr Sun d1) SdH"l l - 10

Gran• FJliMOtlal Lhu nh
E M.nn .S1 Pt llll l'r''' '-;mh.lll\ s._ ht• ll
( ~J

111

St. l'aul
SunU tt) S~. h u , ol - I)
am Wur"hl]l 10 .1111 . Tu,·,da~ Sen tt:!.! &gt;
-7 'tlpm
l'l·utral ( lu~tcr
A-hur) 1Svn10..' U'~· J Pit' l"r Boh Rot"IJ!I'• I'I1
Sumla) Sdl&lt;M •I - Y4:i .t.111 , W"1"h 1p - 11
o1 rn
Wc dn ~ 'lloi) Scn ll'C\ 7 ~( I p rn

Episcopal
11&lt;•1,• l:'. u ~ l1.m , 1 II
F.dw,m.J P:1yl)e

~ I) J

Tup pt"rs

l'&lt;~..,tu r

Trtntt~· Chunh
SL'l:nnJ .\.: L\ 1\1\ I'PIIl&lt; rt•)', f'.lol••r k1 1
Jnn.1lh i.ln 1\•lhk. Wor ~h t p I l l :!i .till
Su nJ 1 ~ "S~ hnol () I&lt;; am

JnJ

• Y

10 10 a 111. 1-u'L SunJ.11 nt
p 111 'l'r\ II l

Congregational

l~ (}

s~rvlli'~ -

R t't·d~,ill~

St. Poul Lutheran Church

Victory Baptist Independent
525 N 2nd St Mtddleport , Pastor James
E Keesee, Wor;brp- lOam, 7 pm,
Wednesday St:rvtces- 7 p.m

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A G:lebration of We"

a

Chun:h ufC hrr st

211 Y.. Muin St , Sund.ty

Worship - 1tJ
Flrsl Southern Baptist
41R72 Pomero y P1ke, Pastnr E Lamur
O' Bryant, Sunday School • 9 30 am.,
Worshrp - 8 I ~ a m , 9 45 am &amp; 7 00 p m .
Wednesday Servtccs - 7.00 p m

- 6·30p m'

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

~y

River Valley
Apostolic Worshtp Center, 873 S. 3nl
Ave, Mtddlepon , Rev Mtchaet Brad!urd.
Sunday. 10·30 am rue~ 6 30 pnryer.
Wed 7 pm Btble Study

Mt. Union Paptl'Ot
Pastor , Sunday School-9.45 a.m ,
Evemng - 6 30 p m.. Wednesday Servtccs

Harrisonville's new church

..,.,Wnat

Churtb of Jes us Christ Apostolic
VanZandt and Wa rd Rd Paslor Jamc~
Miller, Sunday School - 10 30 am,
EH:mng - 7·30 p m

Stlfer Run Bi!.plisl
Pastor John S~o~oa n son , Sunday School ·
lOa 111, Worshtp • II am. 7 00 p.m
,Wednesday Servtces- 7-CIO p m

pto6XIas~

HARRISONVILLE - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marshall pastor a new church in Harrisonville call "A New Beginning."
They describe it as a non-denominational full-gospel church
There is a Sunday service at 2 p.m.

Serond Jlaplisl C hun:h
WV Sur~du~ Sdl&lt;~ll 10 .till
. Ml'mmg v.orshtr II am [\~nmg 7 pm
'Wcdnc~t.la y 7 p m
R :~vc ns~J.oo&lt;l

Ro&lt;~d,

'99

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydailysentlnel.com

.

.1i:~~:: 1 "
?&lt;

Office Service &amp; Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992 6376

_______.;._J.::::=;;=:::::::..l____;~~-~~---J
cs

:

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

Street • Pomeroy,

Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
·

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the .
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
. of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition .
the Government for a redress of grievances.
- The Fl rst Amend merit to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, Dec. 16, the 350th day of 2005. There are
)5 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
_ On Dec. 16, 1773, the Boston Tea Party took place as
American colonists boarded a British ship and dumped more
than 300 chests of tea overboard to protest tea taxes ..
On this date:
In 1653, Oliver Cromwell became lord protector of
England, Scotland and Ireland.
In 1770, composer Ludwig van Beethoven was born in
Bonn, Germany.
·
In 1809, Napoleon Bonaparte was divorced from the
Empress Josephine by an act of the French Senate.
In 1905, the entertainment tiade publication ·Variety came
out with its first weekly issue.
In 1916, Gregory Rasputin, the monk who wielded powerful influence over the Russian court, was killed by a group of
noblemen.
· In 1944, the World War II Battle of the Bulge began as
German force-s launched a surprise counterattack against
Allied forces in Belgium.
·
In 1950, President Truman proclaimed a national state of
emergency to fight "Communist imperialism."
In 1960, 134 people were killed when a United Air Lines
DC-8 and a TWA Super Constellation collided over New York
City.
In 1980, Harland Sanders, founder of the Kentucky Fried
Chicken restaurant chain, died in Shelbyville, Ky., at age 90.
In 1985, reputed organized-crime chief Paul Castellano was
shot to death outside a New York City restaurant.
Ten years ago: President Clinton ;md congressional
R,epublicans traded accusations as their budget impasse led to
~ second shutdown of the federal government.
Five years ago: President-elect Bush selected Colin Powell to
become the ftrst black secretary of state.
. One year ago: Bobby Jo Stinnett, 23, of Skidmore, Mo., was
found dying in her home, her unborn baby cut from her womb
(Lisa Montgomery of Melvern, Kansas, is to face trial for
allegedly strangling Stinnett, performing a crude Caesarean
section on her and parading the infant around as her own).
llritain's highest court dealt a huge blow to the government's
anti-terrorism policy by ruling that it could not detain foreign
suspects indefinitely without trial. Former Iraqi dictator
Saddam Hussein met with a lawyer for the first time since his
capture a year earlier. Agnes Martin, one of the world's fore· ·
most abstract artists, died in Taos, N.M., at age 92.
.. Today's Birthdays: Author Sir Arthur C. Clarke is 88. Civil
tights attorney Morris Dees is 69. Actress Joyce Bulifant is 68.
: Actress Liv Ullmann is 67. CBS news correspondent Lesley
.Stahl is 64. TV producer Steven Bochco is 62. Pop singer
:Benny Andersson (ABBA) is 59. Actor Ben Cross is 58. Rock
:singer-musician Billy Gibbons (72 Top) is 56.'Rock musician
l3ill Bateman (The Blasters) is 54. Actress Alison LaPlaca is
46. Actor Sam Robards is 44. Actor Jon Tenney is .44. Actor
Benjamin Bratt is 42. Country singer-songwriter Jeff Carson is
42. Rhythm"and-blues singer Michael McCary is 34. Country
musician Chris Scruggs is 23. Actress Hallee Hirsh is 18.
. Thought for Today: "Any sufficiently advanced technology
:is indistinguishable from magic." -Arthur C. Clarke (1917· ).

This will be Tom's second
Christmas with us. It will be
-if he comes home.
As I write this, Tom is our
prowling somewhere. In the
past, when he has had the
urge to prowl, Tom has
stayed away days and nights
at a rime. Just when we
would figure he was gone
· for good, he would come
home. "Tom's home 'some·
body would shout. We
would break open a carton of
milk, pour some out for
Tom, and it was like the
Prodigal .Son returning. A
couple of days before last
Christmas, the old wanderlust got to Tom again and he
was off. All I could do was
hope he made it home for
Christmas.
·
There was a time when it
wouldn 't have made any difference to me whether Tom
ever returned. He came
uninvited into our lives last
summer - a stray cat with
cuts and bruises all over
him, a piece of his right ear
gone and a ravenous
appetite. It brought out )he
pity in the little girls at my
house - . but not in me.
1"

"Don't feed that cat." I
said. "or he'll never leave."
Bur you know what
chance ·a man has when the
women in his-house are lined
up agaii.1st him. And sure.
enough, Tom set up housekee.ping on the back porch.
"All right, but he's not to
come in the house," I
announced firmly. "One dog
and cat in the house is
enough.".
Everybody agreed.
But then the winter weath·
er came. and someone decid·
ed one night that Tom would
· be cold out on the porch.
When I opened the pantry
door the next morning to get
my cereal, there was Tom.
"Who let this cat in?" I
bellowed.
· Silence.

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But , of course, Tom has
been inside ever since except for his occasional forays to who-knows-where. I
have even started 'calling
him ''Tom" like everybody
else - . instead of "that cat."
He has become part of that
picture of home - "eternity
frameil in domesticity," to
quote Mrs. Miniver which is what Christmas
means to me.
Phillips Brooks, who
wrote "0 Little Town of
Bethlehem," once said about
that first Christmas: "A
father and a mother and a
child were there. No religion
which began like that could
ever lose its character."
He mighl have added that
the animals were there, too.
A donkey carried the virgin
mother to Bethlehem on that
far-off night so long ago.
And the animals helped to
keep it warm in the manger
where the baby Jesus was
born.
When the 19th-century
English writer Thomas
Hardy and his brothers and
sisters were children, they
were told by their parents

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www .mydallysentine] .com

Churches announce Christmas programs

POMEROY
Many dueling a Bi6le study with the Gift of Love" cantata gram will be presented by
Christmas programs will be songfest, 7 p.m .. Sunday, at and drama will be held at 7 the
Enterprise
United
taking place over this week- the Minersville
United p.m. Sunday at the Zion Methodist Church and the
MIDDLEPORT- Emily Lynn Runyon, 71, Middleport. enq.
Church of Christ. The chil- Pomeroy Church of Christ at
Methodist Church.
passed away on Thursday, Dec. IS, 2005,. at St. Joseph's
They include:
· • The Long Bottom United dren· ~ program will be at th 7 p.m. Sunday at the Church
Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
o The Rutland Church of Methodist Church which will 10:30 a.m. service.
of Christ.
She was born on March 13, 1934, in Glouster, daughter of God which will have a have it Christmas program at
o Christmas services at Old
oA cantata, "The Gift Goes
the late Delmer Gladden and Louise Richards Gladden. She Christmas program at 7 p.m. 6:30p.m. Sunday.
Bethel Freewill Baptist On ," .will be presented at
was employed as a school secretary. She was a member of the Saturday night with special
o The Carmel United Church, Ohio 7 and Story's 10:30 a.m . by the choir at the
Bradbury Church of Christ.
.
music and a play, "A Methodist Church will have Run Road, will begin with Mt.
Hermon
United
ln addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by a Heavenly Visitor."
·
its
Chritmas
program, Sunday school at I 0 a.m. and · Methodist Church, and. at 7
brother, Richard Gladden. .
• The Syracuse Charge of "Christmas at the Horseca ve an evening worship service at p.m. there will be a
She is survived by. her husband, Tom Runyon of United Methodist Churches Mall," .7 p.m., at Carmel 6 p.m. with preaching by Christmas
program including
Mtddleport, and chtldren, Thomas Runyon of Barstow, Calif., will celebrate the third Building on Carmel Road.
Lawrence Lee.
recitations
and the play. "The
James Runyon of Cleveland, Shelley (James) Blick, of Sunday in Advent by cono "A ~hristmas . Legacy:
o
A
family
Christmas
pro·
Perfect
Gift."
Youngstown, and Betty Joan (Frank) Mathews of Austin,
Texas; 10 grandchildren, and three great-grandchildren.
Memorial services will be held at I:30 p.m. 011 Saturday,
Dec. 17, at the Bradbury Church of Christ.
Arrangements were handled by Fisher Funeral Home in
Bv DAVID HAMMER
assured them that both cities . before early retirements kick'· around,'' said Rep. Denni s
. Middleport.
.
.
ASSOCIATED
PRESS
WRITER
would add 500 jobs in the . in. That means the Cleveland Kucinich, D-Ohio, whu, like
In lieu of flowers , contributions may be made to the
next six years.
site will go from . 1.100 LaTourette, represents a
American Diabetes .Associatioo 1 122'1-A Ohio Avenue, P.O.
WASHINGTON - The
Gaddy's office declined to employees to nearly 1,800, Cleveland-area dtstrict.
Box I 115, Dunbar, WV 25064.
specific
figures · and Columbus will go from
Under the plan, Cleveland
On-line condolences may be. sent to www.fisherfu11eral- Department of Defense give
telling
its
payroll
and
began
Thursday,
but
Rep.
Steven
2,QOO
to
almost
2,700
in
the
will handle Navy and
homes.com
accounting workers Thursday LaTourette. ·R-Ohio. said next four years.
Marine pay; Co lumbu s will
about fina l plans to cut 5,000 DFAS' total work force will
It was particularly welcome have most accqunting func jobs by 20 II while reducing drop from 14,000 to 9,000 news in Cleveland, one of the tions; Indianapolis will keep
.
.
26 main offices to five.
through cuts and attrition. nation's poorest cities. It orig- at least its current 2,700
REEDSVILLE- Donald E. Buchanan, 85, of Reedsville,
Offices in Cleveland and Gaddy said in a statement inally stood to lose all 1,100 employees and handle Army
died Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2005, at Arcadia Nursing Center Columbus, Ohio, were the that DFAS is using this round . of its current DFAS jobs and Air Force pay; Rome.
in Coolville.
big winner~. Members of the of base closings to become under the Base Realignment N.Y., will have at least
He was born April 19, 1920, in Reedsville , son of the late Ohio congressional delega- more efficient. .
and Closure plan.'
.
I .000
employees
for
John and Mary Reed Buchanan. He was a veteran of the U.S. tion said Thursday that
Initial job gains by 2009 . "I think this will be one of a~:counting; and Limestone.
Army during World War II and was a retired laborer for Union Defense Finance Accounting will be as high as 700 jobs in those points identified .as Maine, gets at least 600
Carbide. He was a lifetime member of the VFW Post 9053.
Service director Zack Gaddy each Ohio DFAS office Cleveland's economic turn- accounting positions. ·
His wife of 46 years, Betty Buchanan, survives, as do a
daughter, Sheila Buchanan, and four nieces.
Springfield received mutual causi ng the fire, Perry said. the victim abcut the heater
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her brother, Earl Buchanan, and a sister, Ovalene Royse.
.
aid from the Rio Grande and He wasn't sure if the investi- cinched it for us."
Servi.l:es will be held at II a.m. on. Saturday, Dec. 17, 2005,
Cen.terville . volunteer fire gation would continue fort her.
The family friend was not
at White'Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville with Pastor
from PageA1
departments, whi~h reported"The fire marshal will be identified.
Jamie Pettit officiating.
·
ly brought the tire under con- doing some laboratory tests,
Perry said that in addition
· Burial will follow in Randolph Cemetery in Reedsville.
trol
within
two
hours.
but
unless
that
turns
up
some·
to
the fire marshal and she&lt;Springfield
Township
Friends may call from 2 to 4 and 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday at the Volunteer Fire Department
The State Fire Marshal's thing, we don't expect a iff's office. other ·participants
funeral home.
was notified at 7:07 p.m. by office has been on the scene change in our opinion on this." in the investigation were th'e
Gallia County 9-1-1 that the" and confirmed the initial con· Perry said. "I think the fact the fire departments and Dr.
one-story residence Proctor elusion from the sheriff's family friend told us about the Daniel H. Whiteley, Gallia
occupied was on fire . department about the · heater phone call he recei ve,d from County coroner.
COOLVILLE- Barbara A. Croy, 60, died unexpectedly 011
Monday, Dec. 12, 2005.
·
could benefit everybody."
The CIC hopes to build a
According to Reed and
Her husband, Donald E. Croy survives.
$1.2
million
·classroom
and
He
said
the
land
under
conSwisher,
the 10,000 squareServices will be held at I :30 p.m. on Sunday, Dec. I 8, 2005,
office
building
for
a
new
Rio
foot
building
is actually the
sideration is located above the
at White-Schwarzel Funeral Home in Coolville, with burial at
.from Page A1 .
Middle School and the flat Grande Meigs Center on the first phase of a proposed twoWhite Chapel Church &lt;:emetery in Coolville.
phase building proJect, which
section which is now used as a Meigs Local property.
Friends may call a half-hour prior to the service at the funer·
mcludes a second building to
The
proposed
Center
sports
practice
.
field
.
"That
al home.
While the sewer is "not a
would
not
only
serve
collegebe
in the future next to
big hangup' nor a major field will be retained for future level students, but would the built
first.
·
issue,'' according to Buckley, use by the district -like for a allow more students in local
told the Board that
he said ·it will require some full football area someday if high schools to take advan- theReed
ARC
funds awarded to
needed.
The
CIC
proposal
upgrades and line extensions.
the project will be available
tage
of
the
Ohio
Post·
does
not
affect
that
at
all."
He emphasized that there
According to the architect Secondary Option taking col- in March, and that the project
will be "no cost to the dis·
courses at state expense. could go to bid in early
trict" and also noted that in there is plenty of room on the lege
It would also provide an spring in order to. be in use
•
fact the district will benefit acreage above the Middle opportunity
for teacher train· "sometitne in the 2006-2007
School
for
"what
the
CIC
· POMEROY -Leading Creek Conservancy District has "since the CIC will pay for
ing
now
required
for contin- school year." It has been
·.wants
to
do
...
lifted a boil advisory issued for Wagner Lane. Union Avenue an ugrade to the overall sysreported that Rio Grande will
ued
licensing,
Buckley
said.
and Union Terrace.
Among things to be includtem - something that needs
likely
lease the property for
The
CIC,
a
non-profit
ecoed in a land agreement
to be done anyway."
IS
years
and assume ownernomic
development
organiBesides the sewer upgmde, between the school district zation which invests in real ship once the debt on its conthere are other utility matters, and the CIC will be "first estate and buildings to struction is paid.
POMEROY -A community giveaway of household iteins such as availability of water, right of refusal on the build· encourage industry and eco·
supplied by individuals and churches from Sandusky County electric and gas at the site to ing if the project would ever nomic development, has
for the residents of Meigs County will take place around 10 be addressed by the project fail because we would want it received a $400,000 grant
SPRING VAlLEY CINIMA
always to remain an educaa.m.' at the Mulberry Community Center. The giveaway architect of the CIC.
446·4514 '1Uv I! f IC l TLit Jl
from
the
Appalachian
"The sewer upgrade and tional facility," Buckley said. Regional Commission for the
begins after the truck is unloaded.
FRI1V1~05-TUES1V2W05
Paul Reed and Michael
the funding for that needs to
estimated $1.6 million pro·
Office Opens 6:30pm NIGHTLY.
be taken care of first," Swisher, representing the ject Farmers Bank and
12:30
PM FOR SAT &amp; SUN
only $5 to purchase goods for Buckley stressed, "and then it · Meigs CIC, met with the Savings Company and Home
will be just working out the school board last month to National Bank have agreed to
her daughter.
discuss the ongoing plans finance the balance of the
details
with the CIC."
"I told her I couldn't charge
The
superintendent between the CIC and the Rio construction cost.
her," Mrs. Bowles said.
from PageA1
When asked how . she explained that having Rio Grande Community College
Grande so close to the high Board of Trustees, on which
The women said that pro- knows when people are school brings "a lot of poten- both Reed and Swisher serve
ceeds from the shop go back telling her the truth about tial, has a lot to offer, and representing Meigs County. ·
into the many programs at the their hard times she said; "I
just know."
I•
center.
Mrs.
Bowles
and
Watkins'
The Rev. Keith Rader,
to help make expenses for
director of the Meigs combined experience at The
county departments. The
HELlOS
Cooperative .Parish s.Yd that Parish Shop have left them
sales tax receipts, which are
PERSONAL
The Parish Shop provides with many stories about
paid two months behind, are
OICYGEN SYSTfM
from
PageA1
&amp;
residents with access to the interacting with people but
paid into the ~eneral fund and
HEUOS
•
Easy to ~any.
.
THE
GOBLET
(PG13)
stories that stay with them
basic need of clothing.
......., .... ...... • Cool, qutet operation .
. year. In 2004, the county's col· are often rehed on for cash
• Weighs just 3.6 lbs. 1
The Parish Shop also are children that have no
flow when real estate tax col- .
WALK THE UNE (PG13)
lections
were
down
$8,416.36
•
Requires
no
electricity
battefies.
lections and other receipts are • lasts up to 10 hours atora setting
donates' clothing and house- clothes that they helped
of 2.
below
those
of
2003.
hold goods to people who clothe.
not available.
• Takes about 40 seconds to fill.
The county has continued to
For this reason they continThe loss of several retail • Operates upr!ght, on its back or in any
have been burned out of
position inbetweert
their homes or to · people ue to volunteer at Th~ Parish lose ground in sales tax collec· businesses and a local car
lions since 200 I. In 2000, the dealership several years ago
·
who are going through a Shop.
740-446-0007
county
received $1,191,746.15 have been blamed on the loss
The
Parish
Shop
is
open
hard time.
Toll Free 877-669-0007
in revenue from sales tax, as
Mrs. Bowles relayed a from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m .. in sales tax revenue.
70 Pine Street o Gallipolis
County Commissioners well as a loss of retail business
recent incident where a Monday through Friday. The
owned. We care about
rely heavily on the sales tax to Wai-Mart in Mason, W.Va.
woman entered the store with phone number is 992-4·183.

Emily Lynn Runyon

that if they should go out
into the barn on Christmas
Eve at midnight, they would
find all the animals kneeling
down in adoration of the
Christ Child. The adult
Hardy tells the story in one
of his poems and goes on to
say:
"So fair a fancy few would
weave /In these years. Yet I
feel I If someone said on
Christmas Eve, 'Come; see
the oxen kneel/ In the lone·
ly barton by yonder comb I
Our childhood used to
know,' I should go with him
in the gloom. I Hopil\g it
might be so."
Last yeat, Tom arrived
home on Christmas Eve,just
before we left.for church. I
figure he knew all along he
would come home, but with
his sense of the dramatic, he
waited until the last minute
to spring his surprise ·and is
scheduled to do the same for
this Christmas.

Cleveland, Columbus to gain military payroll, accounting jobs

Donald Buchanan

(George Plqgenz is an
ordained minister and veter·
an · ne-.ysman based in
Columbus, Ohio.)

Fire

Barbara Croy

Board

IS,THAT...?
YEP... BOB DYLAN'S
WEEKLY SATELLITE .
RADIO SHOW.

Local Briefs

Boil advisory lifted

Community giveaway planned

.

7

'

Parish

0 0

(]lllllily

Sales tax

Merry. . . er. .. holidays

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The Daily Sentinel

Obituaries

.

George
Plagenz

-.

Letters 10 the editor are welcome. They should be less than
.300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned let·
ters will be published. Letters should be .in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of thanks to orga·
ilii:ations and individuals will not be accepted for publication.

Friday, .December 16,2005

Home for Christmas

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court

Friday, December 16, 2005

PageA4

Unless ypu are just back
from some other planet, you
will have noticed that there is
much more commotion this
year than in previous , years
over public observatiqns of
Christmas. The expenditure
of public money · on such
explicitly Christian phenol11·
ena as creches in public
parks, or even crosses on
public hilltops. had already
been pretty well wiped out in
previously, owing to the
Supreme Court's absurd
decision that these amounted
to an "establishment of religion" and were therefore
the
First
barred , by
Amendment. But 2005 is the
first year in which Christians
have taken much notice of
the degree to which Christian
terminolbgy - terms like
"Merry
Christmas,"
"Christmas tree," etc. have been quietly retired by
such non-governmental enti·
ties as certain department
stores, and replaced by such
neutral _terms as "Happy
Holidays," "holiday tree,''
and the like.
The theory that supports
these changes is that using
expressly Christian terms
offends non-Christians, or at
least make them feel exclud- .
ed or unwelcome. And since
commercial enterprises like

· William .
Rusher

departmen,t stores aspire to
serve not·only Christians, but
Jews, Muslims and atheists,
Christian references must be
excluded in their communications with prospective customers.
Personally. I think that theory is nonsense. In my own
experience, the great majority of the Jews I know (I
know very few Muslims) are
thoroughly used to the
appearance of Christian
expressions in all sorts of
oral and written communications, and take no serious
offense at them. This is, after
all. an overwhelmingly
Christian country, with
believers ranging somewhere
above 85' percent of the population , and references to
Christian beliefs and practices are inevitably almost as
ubiquitous as the air we
breathe. To exclude them,
and replace them with awk·
ward constructions
. like "hoi·
.

iday tree," causes far more
interreligious ill feeling than
it eliminates.
But that is where we are
being led by the Supreme
Court's preposterous notion.
that governmental recogni·
tion of such · simple truths
would constitute an "estab"
lishment of religion." That
ruling is now the settled Law
of the Land, and the only rea·.
son we still have "In God we
trust" on our coins and
· "under God" in the Pledge of
Allegiance is that the Court
is simply too· scared o.f the
public reaction to knock
them out.
The real winners in this
decades-long battle have
been the atheists. They are
relatively few in number, b\lt
they abo.und in the elites that
dominate our higher courts,
and they have done very well
indeed by keeping their
heads low and letting .those
courts progressively constrict the areas in which religious concepts can be manifested. The net result has
been to eliminate almost all
religious references - not
only Christian. but Judaic
and you-name-it- from the
public square.
Not surprisingly, their success is now making the atheists a bit bolder. Attacks on

the very idea of religion are
becoming commoner, and
more vicious. A couple of
months ago the ·san
Francisco Chronicle pub·
lished, on its front page no
less, a diatribe by one of its
columnists that read in part
as follows:
"There is this delicious
rebellion .... (M)aybe it's just
a giant and wise recoil away
from bogus notions of a warmongering
homophobic
paternalistic God.... Millions
are doing it, especially the
young. They are shucking
'religion' and taking up 'spir·
ituality.' ...This is, essentially,
the modem rule: If it's cui·
tural and it's individualistic
and the pope scolds against
it, you know it must be juicy
and right."
To be sure, the San
Francisco Chronicle, the
poor thing. has to pander to
its jaded audience. But thefe
are signs that, in less
advanced areas of the coun·
try, Christians and Jews alike
are beginning to notice what
is going on around them, and
are fighting back.
(William Rusher is· a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremollt Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

IMAGINE ...

,~-,~~r- ~)

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YOUR FUTURE

Clumgi11g the way

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Santa will be here Saturday.,.,_~,
December 17tlt, 9-12 ~\\\'.

LIGHT

~ tv ueate a mattr!IS!i lhllt aulomltically
reacts to your IXlllf9 weignl, !WIIpe, aoolllm1)811turt
to Pf(Mde unsur(JQSII(I t;OfTlfm aoo lherol)tlltic
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~reGIMI11D I'CU'" bOdy, alleYia~rlll coon1er·preaaure
and prof111)1111Q oeep-FIEM sleep.

TillS CHRISTMAS

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Open til B:OO

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Silver Bridge Plaza Gallipolis
(740) 446-3484
.

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BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Community Calendar
:Public meetings

PageA6

p.m., followed by games.

MIDDLEPORT
Christmas services at Old
Bethel
Freewill Baptist
DEAR ABBY: My family
Saturday, Dec. 17
Church,
Ohio
7
and
Story's
and I have lived in this subdiviPORTLAND - Lebanon
Sunday
Run
Road,
with
sian
for 10 years. We are
Saturday,
Dec.
17
Township Trustees, 8 a.m.,
school
at
10
a.m.,
evening
friendly
with our neighbors. All
township building, to disRUTLAND Rutland
at
6
p.m.
with
worship
of
the
children
here play woncuss FEMA projeciS and a Church of God will have a
preaching
by
Lawrence
Lee.
derfully together and are ofvarChristmas program at 7 p.m.
:legal opinion.
· ages.
Dear
POMEROY -Cantata, 1ous
There will be special music
One of my neighbors,
Abby
and a play. "A Heavenly "The Gift Goes On," by
:
Monday; Dec. 19
cboir
at.
Mt.
Hermon
United
"Rachel," and I were very close
. • LETART
Letart Visitor."
Brethren in Christ Church, at one lime, but we are recovertownship tmstees. regular
10:30 a.m., and Christmas ing from a fallout involving· her
meeting. II a.m. at the
Sunday, Dec. 18
program at 7 p.m., inducting eldest daughter. We are trying
office bui'lding.
MINERSVILLE
to repair the friendship, but it makes me want to see less of
Syracuse Charge of United recitations and the play, has reached the point that 1 hate you rather than more."
Methodist Church will cele- "The Perfect Gift."
living here.
DEAR ABBY: My elderly
brate the third Sunday in
Rachel is jealous of anyone 1 mother lives in a small efficien1\Jesday, Dec. 20
Advent by conducting a
spend
time with if it's not her. · cy apartment. Last year, my
- Advent
Bible study with songfest, 7 . POMEROY
She
is
constantly out in her out-of-town siblings - all of
p.m.. Minersville United Penance Service, 7 p.m., yard, and 1 feel like she watch- whom live within 50 miles •
Friday, Dec. 16
Sacred Heart Church.
. · POMEROY
Meigs Methodist Church .
es everything I do and who visited her on Christmas Day
LONG
BOTTOM
.County Cancer Initiative.
comes and goes. When I spend with gifts she could no.t possiSaturday, Dec. 24
Christmas program at Long
:Ce~ular meeting, noon at the
POMEROY -Cantata, time with other neighbors, she bly use.
Bottom United Methodist
'W1ld Horse Cafe.
One sister brought a set of
"Emmanuel," by choir . of retaliates with rudeness and
Church, 6:30 p.m.
crystal
glasses.
RACINE
-Carmel Enterprise United fV!ethodist with negative, insulting c0m- heavy
Saturday, Dec. 17
ments
and
behavior.
(Mother's
hands
shake,
and she
and
Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT - · Annual United Methodist Church Church
How
can
I
get
across
to
her
uses
a
plastic
dri_
n
king
cup
with
· program, Church of Christ, 7 p.m .: at
inspection · at Bosworth Christmas
that
although
we
may
have
a
handle.)
Another
sister
Council 46. Royal and "Christmas at the Horsecave Churcli of Christ.
been close friends at one time, brought a silver lea service
POMEROY -Christmas we're
Select Masons, S p.m. in the Mall," ·7 p.m. , at Carmel·
now only friendly neigh- (which I had to pack i'n a closet
Vigil Mass, with participa· bors?- WANTS TO MOVE for her). My brother brought
Middleport
Masonic Building on Carmel Road.
POMEROY
"A tion by children of the [N OHIO
Building.
her two ,pieces of heavy lug·
SALEM CENTER ~Star Christmas Legacy: The Gift parish, 5:30 p.m. at Sacred
DEAR WANTS TO MOVE: gage (which took up all the
Grange #778 .and Star of Love," cantata and Heart Church. Midnight It appears Rachel has e·mation- room in a closet).
Junior Grange #878 Fun drama, at Zion Church of Mass on Christmas Eve will ally regressed to the grammar
Mama no longer is up to
Night and Christmas Supper. Christ,' 7 p.m . Children's be preceded·. by a choral pre- scho&lt;il level, where children entertaining, and .all those
with potluck supper at 6:30 play at 10:30 a.m.
sentation at 11:15 p.m
·assume that if they are friends expensive gifts were useless to
they "own" each other. I see no her. She has tried "hinting" that
reason to issue any proclama- she doesn't need things like
tions. Get your message across that, but they refuse to listen.
by continuing to have an active
It would he so much more
social life with neighbors you helpful if they would instead
enjoy and ignoring her sulki- cook a meal for Mama, or stop
ness. If she makes a nasty com- by a restaurant and bring her a
ment, tell her: "You know, snip- meal when they visit. She isn't
ing is a very unattractive trait. It up to cooking. and a gift like

Church events

Clubs and
organizations

700 food

baskets distributed

that would not wind up packed
away for the next generation.
When they visit, they usually
stop by a restaurant and eat, but
they never stop to consider that
Mama would love a meal, too.
I try to cook for _her as often as
I can, but 1. have a disabled
child at home who is in and out
of the hospital. When I do
cook. I package meals for her
that she can microwave and
enjoy. What a help it would he
if my siblings would do thls.
Why don't people stop and ·
take into consideration how a
person lives and what his or her
need1 are before buying a gift?
Thanks for]etting me vent. CHRISTINE IN SOUTH
CAROLINA
DEAR CHRISTINE: It may
he that doing what you suggest
takes too much time and energy. Or. in the case of your siblings, the motivation for the
.expensive gifts may he guilt.
Youcan'tchangethem,butldb
recommend you remind Jhem
frequently how much your
mother would appreciate it if
they would bring her a nice
meal when they visit. You'll he
doing them - and her - a
favor.
'
Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was fowuied by her mother,
PuulitW Phillips. Write Dear
· Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440 Los
Ange/e~·, Calif. 90069. '

·noFA ENJOYS CHRISTMAS PAR1Y .·
CHESTER - A Christma.~
dinner and party wa.1 enjoyed
by members of Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, at last week's meet·
mg .
Gifts were exchanged, readings were given, carols were
sung and quarterly birthdays
of members were observed.
Charlotte
Grant'
read
"Christmas is Here" and
Esther
Smith
gave
"Grandma's Christmas." An
auction was held ·to raise
money for the district treasury.

The birthdays of Ruth pledge to the flag, scripture,
Smith, Janet Depoy, Thelma . the Lord's Prayer, &lt;md the
White. Opal Eichinger, Grant, National Anthem. Reported ill
Arden Depoy, Smith, lnzy were Pauline Ridenour, Julie
Newell, Sandy White and Fleming, . Deloris
Wofe,
Kathryn Baum were celebrat- Dawna Gnieser, Ruth Smith,
ed with gifts and a cake.
and
Scottie
Smith.
During the meeting con- Nominations of officers was
dueled by Thelma White, it held.
was noted that the books will
Anending besides those listhe auditeq on Dec. 29, that ed were Mary Holter, Barbara
the past councils and district Sargent, Opal Hollon, Jo Ann
past councilors and deputy Ritchie, Doris Grueser, Scottie
club will has a meeting on · Smith, Everett Grant, Gary
Dec. 20 at the Masonic hall Holter, Keith Ashley, Laum
with a $~ gift exchange.
Mae Nice, Marge Fetty, ano:l
· The meeting opened with a Jean Welsh.

~ay

" Beth Sorgent/photo
.
.
;This year the Meigs Cooperative Parish packed 700 food b·askets and distributed them to tam·
;ilies this week. Families received a food basket for each individual in that family. The baskets
·contained items such as cereal, ham, rice, instant milk, spaghetti and spaghetti sauce. Last
\l,l!ar the parish distributed 500 food baskets at Christmas . This year volunteers dealt with not
only the cold but the rain as they passed out the baskets this week. Some of those volunteers
were (from left) Father Walter E. Heinz, Jim Will, Judy Gilmore, Eddie Ball, Tom Ball, Arland King
and in the truck Roger Watkins.
· .

Merry Christmas
to ooffieone.~pecial with a.
&amp;ntinel Christmas An8el

BY ROBERT H. REID

compromise with rival fac- hopeful the new govemment
tions, with widely differing would he more successful than
views, to fonn a govemment.
the outgoing one in restoring
BAGHDAD - Millions of
Up to · II million of the security.
·
Iraqis, tram tribal sheiks to nation's 15 million registered
A common theme, however,
entire. families with children in voters took part, election offi- appeared to he a yearning for
tow, turned out Thursday . to cials estimated, which would an end to the turmoil that has
choose a parliament in a most- put overall turnout at more than engulfed Iraq since the I..J .S.ly peaceful election - among 70 percent.
led coalition mvaded in March
·the freest ever in the Arab
Many Sunnis said they voted 2003 to topple Saddam 's
world.
to register their opposition to rep me.
So many Sunni Arabs voted the Shiite-led government and
"The ftrst th'ing we want
that ballots ran out in some to speed the end of the U.S. from the new government is
places. The strong participation military presehce.
security," said Hussein Ali
by Sunnis, the backbone of the
"Liberation is the most Abbas, a 66-year-old Shiite as
insurgency. bolstered U.S. important thing for all Iraqis," he voted at Baghdad's city hall.
hopes that the election could said Sunni grocer Omar Bacby "We are surviving but it is a
produce a broad-based govern- "I don't care if we die of thirst struggle.:·
ment capable of ending .the and hunger, as long as the
Officials said it could take at
daily suicide attacks and other Americans leave."
·teast two weeks until final
.violence that have ravaged the
Opposition to the American results are announced for the
country since the fall of military presence runs deeper parliament. which will serve a
Saddam Hussein.
among SunniArabs, the minor- four-year term.
Difficult times lie ahead, ity group which enjoyed a privViolence was light. Insurgent
however. The coalition of reli- ileged position under Saddam, groups. as promised, g,enerally
gious Shiite parties that domi- than among any of Iraq's other refrained from attacks on
nates the current govemment is religious and ethnic communi- polling stations. In the Sunni
·
.expected to win . the biggest ties.
Arab militant stronghold of
port1on of the 275 seats, but
While Sunnis were defiant, Ramadi; masked gunmen pro· will almost . certainly need to Shiites and Kurds seemed vided by local sheiks guarded
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.l'

&gt;Yffi~

~· _, :'•

polling stations. frisking voters
as they entered.
Thursday's election appeared
011 tmck to record more votes
than any other parliamentary
election in an Arab country though more than 17 million
people voted in a May referendum in Egypt, and more than
14.6 million in a September
referendum in Algeria, according to IFES, a nonprotit organization that supports building
democratic societies.·
"The number of people participating is very. very high.
and we have had very few
irregularities,"
U,S.
Ambassador Zalmay Khalilzad
told The Associated Press. "It
is a good day so far - good for
us, good for Iraq."
President Bush called it "a
mrijor step forward in achieving our objective." U.s: offi·
cials hope a broad-based gov·
emment will be able to quell
the bloodshed so that the
United States can begin to
bring troops home next year.

&gt;,

•

•

AP Photo

Iraqi supporters of Shiite list United Iraqi Alliance carry a picture of promment Shiite cleric Grand Ayato llah Ali ai-Sistani
and show their ink stained fingers marked when casting their
votes, during_an election rally at AI-Sadr city east of Baghdad ,
Iraq Thursday. Iraqi voters faced tight security measures
Thursday as they cast ballots in a historic parliamentary election the U.S. hopes will build democracy and lay the grounowork for American troops to withdraw.
•

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·aa~~.

things, behold, an angel of the Lord
·
"Joseph, son of David, do not be
for that which is .conceived in her is
forth a Son, ani you shall call His
.....~ people from thei~ sijr." .
. .· .·

~~·'1f:l

MATTHEW f:20-21 NKJV

. ''

rinitJ
Sat. Dec, 17th· Community Christmas Benefit
for Rutland Fire Dept. @ Freewill Baptist
Rutland Church' 6:30pm-Caroling
Rutland's Famous Roast "Beast"
Santa @ Rutland Fire Station 4·6
Sponsored by Rutland Church orthe Nazarene
Rutland Freewill Baptist, Church of God,
Hysell Run Church
Sunday Dec. 18th Children's Musical lOam
"It All Happened In The Country"
I December 31st-New Years Eve Celebration Spm
@ Fellowship ijall-games, activites-food
Pastor Mike Clark .

Co~r~ationa{Chu~h
'East 2na Street • Pomero!J, OJ{

CliristniaS ive Services
!featuring %e 13ef{ Choir

Specia[ ::Music - 7;30 p.m.
Program-8:00p.m.

RUTLAND
Church the Nazarene
Rutland,OH
740-742-2202

Sunday
December 18th

Christmas Party
at Nazarene Parsonage '
· ·.
SundaY·Decembe~lSth
9:30am Sunday School .
1
: ''
l0:3Qam ~hildren 's Chrispulls,.P~ogram.
6:o0PfJt~f;1i)g (Meet a(~~~~h). ."'\
Wt1fn~
. ay . E~~::Lh
ve~
. g .~· Y.~
J, ce 7Jlm
.l
· Sunda'
-1, ··

·Quilts donated to needy children
Sacred~ ea~ ~

Adam Rodgers
"Merry Christmas"
Mommy &amp;. Daddy

Friday, December 16, 2005

·HUGE TIJRNOUf AS IRAQIS CHOOSE
IN MOSUY PFACERJL VOTE

•'

, ~ONLY,..,
$-JQOO
fer fi~ure
, Prepaid

PageA7

NATION • WORLD

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, December 16, 2005 ·

Jealous, immature neighbor
causes strife for subdivision resident

'

161 Mulberry Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio
740-992-5898
Christmas Schedule 2005
CONFESSIONS
•
Saturday, December 17 4:45 P.M.
Sunday, December 18 8:45A.M.
ADVENT .PENANCE SERVICE
Tuesday, December 20 7:00P.M.
Masses ·
5:30P.M. Vigil Mass with children's participation
Midnight Mass w/Choral Presentation@ II : 15 P.M .
Mass Christmas Day 9:30A.M.
Mass New Years' Eve 5:30 P.M.
Mass New Year's Day Same as on Sundays 9:30A.M.
'Father Wa(ter 'E.'l-feinz, Pastor

ro:3oam

se~~~rfi~!J1~;r~l~·t 'rt.

New Years Eve,Pniy~t &amp;Party Spin
, • .,

l

'

.

,'f-t

.I

'"'·~·,I&gt;

lN '

~.. J~~;i.J •'

9:30 amSunday School
I 0:45 Choral Presentation of

"&lt;Ute 8ift 8oes On"
Lunch to follow!
7pm-Children's Program

•

~

.

1
.

.

~~YAACU.SE CHURCH
OF THE NAZARENE
SR t 24 • Syra~u~.;tit&gt;H•
740-992-251

Aatual Size 1x3
4t Rune Friday, December 24f;;h _
* Deadline for entry DeCember 17-th at 5:00

'&gt;l

Saturday-December 24

Everyone Welcome ., , )
, Pastor Mik~;Adkins"

..

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•
••
,.,,

,,

11:00 P.M. Christmas Eve
Candlelight Service

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH
41872 Pomeroy Pike Rd .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pastor Lamar 0 Bryant
"Our commitment is to meet your spiriti4Dl 11eeds''

'

4t

Mail or drop off -at :.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
:

·

Submitted photo

'[he Bits and Pieces Quilting Guild of Meigs County and the Peace Lovers·Quilt Guild of Athens·
(jonated over 20 quilts to the Meigs County Department of Jobs and Family Services Angel Tree
P.roject. The quilts wil l be distributed to needy children In Meigs County over the holiday sea~n. Here, Debbie Gerard and Amy Cremeans, employees of DJFS. display one of the donated
.quilts. Anyone interested in joining one of th~ guilds can call Saundra Tillis of Bits and Pieces,
;742·2572, or Debbie Bollington of Peace Lovers, 742-0212 .
~·
•'

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.•
t

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Child's Name:-------------_..:___:_
From: ______~--------~------------------YourName: ________________________________

I

· PROUD TO BE APART OFi'OUR LIFE.
The Daily Sentinel • Subscribe roday • 992-2155
·
www.!'Jytf.aily~entf~l.coin
•

Address: _____________________~------Phone: _________________________________

~atrnr•-lav

Grace Episcopal Church
356 E. Main St.

Pomeroy ·
Father Ed Payne

Christmas 'Eve
Cantf{e{igft.t Services
6:00p.m.

December 17th@ 7:00P.M.
•

Bethel Worship Center. will present
the Cflristmas Musical
"Put Christ Back In Christmas"

"

under the di~on of Bet\y Fulks. T)till musical will als11
I lnclUIIe performances by c.o.R.E. brama Team and StiiiU'tl.ll'
With Jesus ministries as well as the BWC Choir.
Suoday Evening's Performance, December 18th will be at 6p.m.
, i:·

Bethel Worship Cfntcr i~.locoted just 2 miles south of
Tuppers Plaht&lt; on Slate Roule 7.

Morning Service wilt bt held on Chri&gt;tmas Oay. December 25th
at 10 a.m. to celebrate the birth of our sa,·ior, Je.oms Christ. We
Invite you to join us for any or lhese "ery special services.

'Dethel «Worship Center
Tuppers Plains, OH
740-667-6793

Pastor Rob Barber

Ads m~st be pre·paid

Service
'1Jecem6er 24, 6:30

UO.--------!--A.J

·r'lit \\'(,,.,(
1i""' '"'. ti. .~;
t111l t!lihfl Ii i$

.

JnT(i I ill!

'

Middleport Church Of Christ
· Fi fth &amp; Main
www. rn idd l~portchurch .or/;!

c•rlslmas Morning WorshiP al10:3Dam

..

�The Daily Sentinel

-OHIO

Church officials testify against
allowing more abuse lawsuits
Bv CARRIE
SPENCER GHOSE
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

COLUMBUS
The
Roman Catholic Bishop of
Columbus fielded tough questions from state lawmakers
about sexual abuse in the
church after he said it would
be bad public poli.cy to allow
lawsuits over abuse cases that
are decades old.
Church officials are ftghting
the bill that would create -a
one-year window allowing
victims of sexual abuse by
priests to ftle lawsuits over
alleged abuse that happened
as early as 1970.
· Columbus Bi shop Frederick
Campbell said the provision
would not protect c.hildren
and might be unconstitutional.
"This undermi ncs a runda- .
mental right to a fair defense
of a case."" Campbell said.
"Some of the people involved
may even be dead. ... We
believe this is a bad answer to
a very real problem."'
Church. officials don "t
·or.pose the main part of the
-btll, requiring any Ohio
employer to report suspected
abuse and allowing future victims to sue within the 20 years
lifter they reach age 18. Under
current law, victims have until
one year after reaching age 18
to sue.
Campbell also has met privately with lawmakers including House Speaker Jon
Husted since the bill passed
the Senate unanimously in
March . He advocated creating
a st~te-run registry to publish
. the nilmes of priests or other
· church employees who are
removed after credible abuse
accusations.
."My abiding concern is for
the protection of children. for
the healing of past victims,
but also for ass~rance that due .

process is taking place."
Campbell said.
Rep. John Willamowski, the
Lima Republican who heads
the
House · Judiciary
Committee. wouldn't say if he
suppot1s removing the oneyear window for filing old
claims, saying he didn't want
to sway the rest of the committee . However. he liked the
registry idea and said. it's possible the bill co~ld contain
both.
The registry alone wouldD 't
address all the goalS of the
bill, which include justice for
past victims and protecting
the community from abusers
who've never been named, he
said.
"Their plan was they'd try
to take care of it on their
own," Willamowski said.
Campbell's
testimony
focused on protecting future
victims, while the bill needs
to help redress · past abuse.
Wi llamowski said.
"You need a monetary
penalty o"r some other mechanism." he said.
·
Committee
members
pressed Campbell on why the
church in the past would
tran sfer priests accused of
abuse instead of reporting it to
authorities and also reminded
him that the bill would apply
to all religious groups not just
the Roman Catholic Church.
"Let's not focus on 30 years
ago. We heard testimony on
acts or inaction of the church
as recent as four years ago,"
said Rep. Matthew Dolan, a
Geauga County Republican.
"I'm asking you. have you
moved past it?''
Campbell replied it was
tragic that past church leaders
ignored the law and the victims went through a horrible
violation.
"I "myself am appalled by
some of the actions," he said.

Mother to be allowed to attend daughters'fonerals
WEST UNION (AP) - A , Court, where bail was set at
woman who faces two charges $1 OO,OQO on each of the two
of aggravated vehicular homi- · counts.
cide in the deatlts of her-daughProsecutors cont.end that
ters will be releq:;e\1 Jr.om the ,. Edwards ~as., Q!upk. eiJf\Y
Adams County jatllong enough Saturday when her vehicle
to anend visitation and funerals cmssed the center line on Ohio
for them. a prosecutor said 125 near West Union and colThursday.
lided with a van. Her daughters,
Patricia Edwards, 30, of West Morgan Daulton. 10 . . and
Union, wa' arrested Wednesday Skylar Edwards, 6, were thrown
night and was · arraigned from the ve~icle and died later,
Thursday in Adams County Prosecutor David Kelley said.

Local stocks
ACI - 80.32
AEP -37.28
Akzo - 42.02
Ashland Inc. - 56.8f·
.BLI - 12.00
Bob Evans - 23.51
BorgWarner - 60.04
CENX - 23.94
Champion - 4.06
Charming Shops - 11.65
City Holding - 37.15
Col - 48.09
DG -19.55
DuPont - 42.86
Federal Mogul - .37
USB- 30.78
Gannett - 60.50
Geneial Electric .:.... 36.00
GKNLY - 4.95
. Harley Davidson - 53.10
JPM - 39.58
Kroger 18.99

Ltd. - 23.14
NSC- 43.48
Oak Hill Financial
8.98
OVB- .01
8BT- 43.05
Peoples
30
Pepsico - 59.60
Premier 14.50
Rockwell - 59.94
Rocky Boots - 18.10
RD Shell - 59.94
Sears - 122.30
· Wai-Mart - 49.26
Wendy's ~ 55.32
Worthington - 20.88
Dally stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing· quotes
of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
Smith Financial Advisors of
Hilliard · Lyons In Gallipolis.

Page AS

However. Campbell said
some bishops in the past
transferred suspected abusers
after therapy on the advice of
medical professionals.
Claudia Vercellotti. director
of the Toledo chapter uf a victims network , said Ohio's
bishops should have come to
face questions after about 84
survivors risked embarrassment and financial penalties
for breaking gag orders by
testifying .
She said the training and
protective measures outlined
by witnesses Thursday still
don't help victims trying to
publicize old cases.
"You can't protect kids in
the future unless you clean up
the past," Yercellotti said.
Willamowski said he was.
somewhat disappointed that
Campbell,
installed
II
months ago, was the only
bishop to testify. Campbell
couldn't answer specific questions about past abuse allegations in his diocese or say
how much ·has been spent on
defense lawyers for priests.
Timothy Luckhaupt. executive director of the Catholic
Conference of Ohio, said it
was highly unusual for even
one bishop to testify before
the Legislature. but that the .
dozen nuns, attorneys who
specialize in church law and
other diocesan employees
who testified had better
answers for the committee's
questions.
"We could have had all of
them (the bishops) here,"
Luckhaupt said. "We felt the
individuals we have here have
specific information."
The Legislature adjourned
until January on Wednesday.
Willamowski said there likely
would be amendments offered
next month. but he's hopeful
the bill would have the sup• port of the full House.

Friday, December 16, 2005

LITTLE SANTA

•
LocAL SCHEDuLE
GALLIPOliS- A schedule ot upcoming collegB
and hlgl'l school varsity sport1ng events involving
tAams from Gallia , Meigs and Ma.soo counties.

Frlday'a ggmes
Soya Basketball

Eastern at Sou!hern, 8 p.m .
.Wellston at Meigs, 6:30p.m.
River Valley at Fairland, 7:30p.m .
Gallia Academy at Warren , 7:30"p.m
OVCS at South Gallla (at Unh1ersity of
Rio Grande), 7 p.m.
·
Wahama at Man, 7:30p.m.
Girls Basketball
OVCS. at South Gallla (at University of
Rio Grande), 5:30 p.m.
Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant , 7:30
p,m.
Wrestling

Point Pleasant Pool Tournament. TBA

AP Photo/The Repository, Scott Heckel

Mike Mercier. a eighth grade North Canton Middle School student who dressed as Santa.Claus,
offers a gift to 18 month-old Shaelyn Spring who also dressed for the occasion Thursday at the
YMCA in Canton. Fifty sixth, seventh and eighth grade students with learning disabilites host·
ed the Christmas party for the youngsters compete with cookie .. punch. gifts and assorted
crafts and games.

Workers' comp surplus could be gone in two years
BvANDREW
WELSH-HUGGINS

)

Salyrday's gam.u
Boys Baakelball,
Point Pleasant at River Valley. 7:30p.m.
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 6:30p.m.
Southern-at South Gallia, 6 pm
Girls Basketball .
Calhoun County at Wahama. 7 p.m.
Wrestling
Point Pleasa111 Pool Tournam ent, TBA
Meigs at Warren Invitational
.
College Basketball
Rio Grande at Bethel TN Tournament.
TBA
Mondav. December 19
Glrll Baeketball

Trimble at Eastern, 6 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Logan , 5:30p.m
Meigs at Nelsonville-York, 6 p.m.
Coal Grove at River Valley, 6 p.m.
}'Vahama at River Valley, 7 p.m.

INSIDE

SATURDAY,

Opening

THI·

v \I LEY CONFF.RE.'-iCl·.

er upsets Lady Eagles, 46-43

STAFF REPORT

BY LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYOAJLYREGISTER.COM

• &amp;Mlral d1arged i1 boat
SCCH"ldal. See Page 83
• Sooreboard. See Page _84
Live .
Broadcast
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Spectals Include:
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Steak-Baked Potalo ~
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PRIZES

Now accepting

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308 5. :Srd Avenue • Middleport, OH

HOLZER
CLINIC

Holzer Clinic
Kimberly Jenkins, MS, CCC/A
Loretta Lauder, MA, CCC/A

280 Pattonsville Rd .
Jackson. OH
(740) 395-8801

90 Jackson Pike
Gallipolts, OH
(740) 446-5135

Brild Sherman/photo
Eastern's Kaylee Milan (11) is trapped by a pair of Miller defenders during the. first quarter Thursday.

BRIEFS

.Browns sign
Andra Davis to
5-year extension

MASON - Wahama could
have taken the final three
quarters off - offensively
anyway.
The Lady Falcons scored
22 points in the first period ,
and then stifled the Hannan
offense the entire night, en
route to a dominating Sti-20
girls basketball victory
Thursday night
Behind a strong opening
quarter from Amber Tulley.
KeithAnn Sayre and Beth
Keyes, the Lady Falcons .
jumped out to a commanding

lead"' while holding the Lady
Wildcats in check, putting up
22 points to open the game
while holding Hannan to a
mere six.
Helping Wahama in their
etfon was an oppressive full
court defense which forced
Hannan
into
numerous
mrnovers and mi ssed shots.
In fact , only two players
from rhe Lady 'Cats squad
s~ored on the night, w~il~
Wahama had 10 · different
players contribut~ to the scarmg.
.
But the aggressive defense
came with a price as Wahama
committed numerous fouls.

g1ving Hannan opportunities
to hang with the Bend Area
team at the free throw line.
However Hannan could not
capitalize on th e opponuni:
ties presented as the southern
Mason County team hit a
poor 16 percent (3-for- 18)
from the charity stripe .
After the quick scoring
which put Wahama up early.
Hannan crawled back within
seven points with two minutes left in the first period;
but the Lady Falcons stepped
up and never looked back on
their way to the "win.
With subs coming in and
mil of the game for the w_hite

BEREA
(AP)
Linebacker Andra . Davis
signed a five-year contract
extension on Thursday as the
rebuilding Cleveland Browns
locked up their leading tackler and a team leader for the
future.
Financial terms were not
immediately known.
Davis. who has a team-high
l69 tackles through 13
gat;nes, signed a one-year
maximun\ contract tender
before this season, which
pulled him off the market as a
tj:stricted free agent. Without
a new deal, however, the 26iear-old would have become
1!11 unrestricted free agent in
the off-season.

740-992-4466

Holzer Clinic Jackson
Roxanne Groff, MA
Loretta Lauder, MA, CCC/A

TUPPERS . PLAINS With the exception of the
second quarter, Miller kept
Eastern contained. But
Easte rn · couldn't contain
Ashley Heavener.
Heayener scored 26 points
and collected 13 rebounds as
Miller rail ied from a fourth
quarter deficit to po st a
minor upset of Eastern 4643 in girls basketball action
on .Thursday.·
Miller evened its record at
3-3 overall, as well as in the
Hocking. Division of the TriValley · Conference at 1-1.
Easterm on the other hand,
saw its record fall to I -4 and
1-2 against Hocking foes.
No other Lady Falcons
reached double . figure s;
Randi Toth was closest with
eight points followed by
Jenna Murphy with six.
The Hupp sisters combined for 23 points for
Eastern - Jes sica Hupp
scored a dozen -and Jenna
added II. Erin Weber and
Katie Hayman each went for
seven.
lillian Brannon
added six.
Miller methodically built
a 7-0 lead in the .first quarter
and the Lady Eagles were
nearly blacked had it not
been for a Jessica Hupp 3pointer at the buzzer to
make it 7-3 at the first stop.
The .Lady Eagles woke up,
though, in the second quarter and put 20 points on the
board to claim a 20-18 halflime advantage. But Eastern
could only 20 more points
the remainder of·the contest.
As a result, Miller entered
the fourth quarter trailing by
only a bucket. The Purple
and White was able to make
up the ground and pulled out
the three-point triumph.
Eastern . plays host to
Trimble on Monday.

Wahama trounces Hannan in Mason County rivalry

.....

Visit any of these 3 Holzer Clinic location.s and Receive $100 off one hearing aid
or $200 off a pair.
·

..

COllege Basketball

Rio Grande at Bethel TN Tournament
Women's College Basketball
Rio Grande at Pikevllle, 6 p.m.

Local weather

224 Columbus Road
Athens, OH
(740) 589-3100

.

SPORTS@MYDAILYSENTINEL .COM

William Mabe, admini strator agency's approximate $850
of the · Ohio Bureau of million annual medical payAP STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
Workers' Compensation.
ments by $100 million and to
As a result of the bureau's more aggressively collect
COLUMBUS - The sur- financial
struggles, the debt owed by employers.
plus maintained by the state . agency also wi 11 not provide a
Workers' comp is recoverinsurance fund for injured rebate to employers this year, ing from an investment scanworkers, as high as $6.6 bil- a blow to businesses that have dal that included $300 million
lion five years ago, could dis- received $10. I billion in such in losses, including up to $13
appear by 2007 if the repayments over the past I0 million in a rare-coin investagency's finances don't years.
ment.
improve, officials
said
Providing that rebate is
The scandal also led to Gov.
Thursday.
impossible when "you don't Bob Taft's historic conviction
The current surplus of $850 have enough surplus, you're on ethics charges and the fedmillion could be gone in two not making a profit, your eral indictm"ent of a Toledoyears if the bureau continues expenses are rising," Mabe area coin dealer accused of
io pay out more to injured said.
funneling $45,000 to the
workers than it collects, a
In June, the Workers ' Bush-Cheney campaign in
problem compounded by ris- Compensation
Oversight 2003 through colleagues and
ing medical costs, said Commission, for the first
associates to skin federal
time, rejected a proposed campaign finance laws."
rebate for private employers
The bureau currently pays
of $70 million, saying it no $1.29 for every dollar it
longer had confidence in the spends on processing claims
Friday... Cloudy with a around 20. Light and vari- agency's ability to provide by injured workers. Mabe
30 percent chance of snow able winds. · ·
those rebates.
wants to see the ratio as close
.~howers. Highs in the mid
Sunday and Sunday
Mabe wants to reduce" the to $1 as possible.
30s. Southwest winds 10 to night. .. Partly . cloudy. Cold.
15 mph with gusts up to Highs in the mid 30s.
Lows around 20.
25 mph.
Friday
night ... Mostly
Monday ...Mostly cloudy.
cloudy. Cold with lows in Cold with highs in the
the mid 20s. Southwest upper 20s.
Monday
nighl
and
winds 5 to 10 mph with
Thesday... Partly
cloudy.
gusts up to 20 mph.
Saturday... Parlly cloudy. Cold. Lows 15 to 20.
Highs in the mid 30s. Highs in the mid 30s.
Southwest winds around 5
Thesday . night through
DECE~BERf7TH
Thursday
... Partly cloudy.
mph.
Saturday
night ... Partly Cold. Lows in the lower
~o
cloudy. Cold with lows 20s. Highs in the mid 30s.

Holzer Clinic Athens
Roxanne Groff, MA

Friday, December 16, 2005
HIGH SCHOOL GIRlS BASKF:fnAI .I~

%idJ! ·

Sponsored By: Meigs County
DIStrict Public Library and
The Friends Of The Meigs
County Library

High school girts basketball
Fairland 78, River Valley 49
·~ Miller 46, Eastern 43
Vinton County 58 , Meigs 44
Wahama 56. Hannan 20
~ Warren at Gallia Academy, ppd
.· Trimble at Soutbern, ppd
:~ High school boys basketball
: Buffalo 83, Hannan 54

-=-tBreak

Bl

The Daily
Sentinel
.
.

'

~lien-lion- ~It
ou
not pout~
you better not cry,
nr"''""'"" visit Santa Oaus at +h ... I
Pomeroy Ubrary
on December 17, ZOOS
at

'fliURSnAv's ScoRES

Fairland wins .
big over Raiders
Bv BRAD

CHESHIRE - Fairland's
Lady Dragons scorched the
net&gt; for 48 points in the first
half. u.,ing big games from ·
Brianna Davis and Megan
Auxier to decisively defeat
River Valley 78-49 on
Thursday.
Davis 'cored .12 point'
and Auxier wem for n
points and I0 rebnund&gt; '"
Fairland
succeS&gt;ful ly
opened its Ohio Valley
Conference ·season · with a
lop sided girh baskcthal l

~one - 1-740-446 -2342 e~~:t. 33

lftlx - 1-740-446-3008
E:mail- sporlsOmydaltysenlinel.c:om

Will.

Sllltf

&amp;r.o Sherman, Sporte Editor
(740) 446 -2342 , ext. 33

b&amp;hermanOmydailytribune.com
Bryan Wlltera, Sports WrHer

(740) 446·2342 , ad. 23
bwalters@rnydail ylribune.com

.
Larry Crum, Sporlt Writer

{740) 446 -2342 , Blfl. 33
Ierum @ mydailyreg1s1er .com

•

SHERMAN

BSHERMAN@MYDAILl'TRIBUNE .COM

CONTACfS
fipQtt$

Falcons. Wahama put up 13 rebounds.
more points in the third periDefensivly for Hannan,
od while holding ~Iannan to Amhcr Tulley, Tahitha
only seven.
. Johnson and Jessica Hoffman
With the co mfortable 22 all had three rebounds in the
point lead heading into the game, but as a team Hannan
half .. Wahama moved players _o nly managed to grab 24
around to get more kids in the boards while the Lady
game. while Hannan,_ ~trug:-- Falcons brought down ,42
gled with the foul trouble of total rebounds. led by
it., bc&gt;t ball humllcr. Summer. KeithAnn Sayre who had
Stover.
eight.
KeithAnn Sayre also proStover scored a team high
It points in the contest while vided a ga me high 1-3 points
also grabhin g three rehou nds to go along with four steals
and !\ix steals. Tea mm cue and three assists.
Briuany Sabol sky was the
Wahama put up nine points
·only other Lady 'Cat to score.
· pomh
· anu·' I0
Please SH Mason, Bl
putting up nme

Brad Sherman/photo

River Valley 's Margo Fraley (30) collects a loose basketball tn front of Fairland's Shea
Berry during Thursday's Ohio Valley Conference basketball game. Fairland won 78-49.

Fairland abo evened it~
overall mark at 2-2 and both
win~ ha\'c ~.:orne a1 th~
expense of Gallia Count)
teams;
rhe
Lawrcnc~.:
Countian' defeated Ohio
Valky Chri"ian in the 'ea- ·
son-opener.
Beth Payne hit four .l-

pointers and scored 19
points for River Valley. but
it wasn't enough to keep the ·
Lady Raiders from dropping
(hetr second st raight and
fal ling to 2-J -overall and 1-1
in the ave.
River Valley held a I 2-8
lead early on thanks to the
:-..~.:n rim.!. touch of Pavne and
Kir&gt;tcli Carter. who finished
with II marker&gt;. However.
Fai rland do,ed out the first
4uartcr with a 16-0 htn (O
'-.C:ilc nmtrol and was never
chall.:ngeu the remainder of
t h ~ way.
Fairland forced the home
team to commit II turnovers
m·er the opening eight minute&gt;. Ri ve r Valley gave the
ball away 22 times on the
night.
The hi¥h-,coring Dragons
leJ 2-l- 1L after one quarter,
then po&gt;tcd another 24 in the
Please

SH

Raiders, Bl

�Page B2 •

The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

Still maintaining innocence,
sprinter says he's through
year of a plan Montgomery
and Conte came up with in,
2000 to· turn him info !he
worlcl" s fas1es1 man. lhe plan
- ''Projecl World Record"
_ allegedly called for
Montgomery to take THG.
Momgomery
acknowledged he had associated wil~
a bad crowd.
"That's why I'm accepting
what happened to me," he
said. "My mother always told
me 'Walch the company you
keep.'"
Bul because his world
record run came long after he
sp lit with Conte, he considers
it legitimate.
"Mentally, they can't lake
that away from me,"
Montgomery said .
Jones has never tested pasitive for improper drugs and,
unlike Montgomery, faced no
acc usations from the U.S.
Ahti-Doping Agency. But
because of allegations from
Conte and ex-husband C.J.
Hunter, along with the same
scrutiny association that
Montgomery faced , she has
been dogged by suspicion
wherever she raced.
Jone s, who won an
unprecedented five track
meda) s at the . Sydney
Olympics, withdrew from the
U.S. championships last
summer, picking up her
warmup clothes and walking
away from the 100-meter
heat blocks. Later, her agent
cited an injury. She hasn't
raced since.
. "She wants to go out and
race to prove hetself and
that's going to be tough,"
Montgomery said. "But she
can prove it to herself, and
that's
thing." the most important

BY BOB BAUM
ASSOCIATED PRESS

Disgraced sprimer Tim
Montgomery says he's done.
The former IOO-me1cr
world record holder has
.retired, rather !han wailing
out a two-year suspenston
and returning under a cloud
of suspicion.
"I don't want 10 be looked
upon as a chea!," he said in a
·telephone inlerview with The
·Associated
Press
on
Thursday.
Although he did no!' test
positive
for
drugs.
Montgomery was banned for
doping .based on evidence
j!athered in the criminal
mvestigation of BALCO, a
San Francisco-area lab that
,
·served many high-profile
athletes.
"It's like getting a whipping for something you know
you didn't do," Montgomery
said.
·
The 30-year-old runner
AP photo
maintains he never knowingly took steroids or any other Tim Montgomery of the United States waves to spectators
banned substances. and warafter winning the 100-meter dash event in the IAAF Osaka ·
ries about his legacy.
Grand Prix in Osaka, western Japan, in this May 10, 2003
"That's the main concern
•because 1don't know what to photo. Montgomery, the former 100-meterworld record holder,
tell my kids," Montgomery has retired, rather than waiting out a two-year suspension and
said: "I don't. know what to returning under a cloud of suspicion. Although ·he did not test
tell my mother and father, positive for drugs, Montgomery was banned for doping based
even though they say they on evidence gathered in the criminal investigation of BALCO, a
love me and don't worry San Francisco-area lab that served many high-profile athletes.
about it."
He maintains he never knowingly took steroids or any other
Montgomery said he; and banned substances, and worries about his legacy. .
.three-time Olympic gold record of 9.78 seconds he set 'Conte, serving a fourmedalist Marion Jones have in Paris in September 2002. month prison term as part of
split, although they remain in Asa fa Powell of Jamaica a plea bargain, has admitted
regular contact. They have a broke that record with a 9.77- di stributing the steroid THG,
2-year-old son, Monty.
second run in Athens last which at the time could not
The U.S. Anti-Doping June l4.
be detected in tests. That
Agency soug hi a .our'
year
Tre\•or
Montgomery said BALCO change d
w hen
·ban, but the Court of founder Vt'ctor Conte served Graha111, former coach for
Arb t.,ra,.wn .or
' Spo rt cu t th e as his nutritionist from Mon tgomery an d Jone s' sent · He said he doesn't. know
time in half in a ruling issued December 2000 to June 2001 a vial containing THG to Jones ' specific plans.
this week. .
.
and told him that all of the USAOA !hat tipped authori"When we talk, it's just
Th~ pumshmen.t rehed substances he was providing ties to what some athletes about
the
child,"
were
using.
Montgomery
said.
heavily on the tesllmony of
1 1
fellow sprinter Kelli White, w~.re. ega · ld , be V'
Montgomery said he
He said he pla.ns to start a
who accepted a two-year ban . Vtctor wou n t
. tcto.~ "never heard of THG" until magazine called "Real Talk''
and agreed to cooperate with · tf he told you what was m..'-'· ttie substance became news. . to allow athletes to talk about
investigators.
Montgomery satd.. He
Montgomery. however, tes- issues of the day.
"I don't even know Kelli ~ssured ~e no stermd was tified that in 2001 Conte gave
Montgomery's suspension
White," Montgomery said, mvolved.
him weekly doses of human ends in June 2007. His coach,
"so why would 1 tell Kelli
Montgomery conceded that growth hormone and the Steve Riddick. said he isn't
White anything."
Conte .could have supplied "clear," the San Francisco sure the sprinter's through
All of Montgomery's per- htm Wtlh banned substances Chronicle reported in June running yet.
formances were wiped off the Wtthout hts knowledge.
2004.
"He may say he 's retiring,
books as of March 31, 2001
" But I never tested pos•The s·an Jose Mercury but ask him again in a
News published details last . month," Riddick said.
- that includes the world tive," the sprinter said.

I

Hurricanes stonn past .Blue Jackets
comple!e !he perfect start.
Carolina has 'three more
games left on its longest
home stand.
RALEIGH, N.C. - The
"We 've got to win them
Carolina Hurricanes made all," coach Peter Laviolette
winning at home look down- said. "We have got a chance
right easy at the beginning of to really take advantage of
the season. Perhaps a few the schedule here."
lessons learned on their
Mike Rupp scored hi s first
longest road trip can help goal of the season for the
· them regain that superiority. Blue Jackets to Gut the deficit
ROd Brind'Amour scored in half early in the final peritwice and Martin Gerber od, but the Hurricanes held
made 25 saves · to help· on behind Gerber. who has
Carolina hold off the solidified his spot -at the top
Columbus Blue Jackets 2-1 of the depth chart with five
Thursday night, giving the consecutive solid starts .
Hurricanes
consecutive
He pulled a muscle i'n hi s
home victories for the first hip in the opener and split
time since early November. time early on with rookie
Following a 7-0 start at the Calli Ward, but Carolina sent
RBC Center, Carolina lost Ward to Lowell of the AHL
four of the next six before for what was termed a condiheading out for six games on tioning stint. Gerber has
the road against' mostly essentially kept him off the
·Western Conference oppo- I·ce .
nents.
"l don't think it's that big
"It was kind of the exam- of a deal," Gerber said of his
pie we saw out on the West status as the No . . 1 goalie.
Coast," defenseman, Aaron "Of course, 1 want to be the
Ward said. "They really take guy in the net, but at the end
advantage of being at home. · of the day, you have to wm
Thai's how we have to hockey games."
approach it here."
Brind'Amour's first goal
Cory Stillman originally came on a 5-on-3 advantage
was credited with giving when Cale Hulse (roughing)
Carolina a 1-0 · lead in the and Dan Fritsche (tripping )
second period before il was were called for penalties secchanged,
allowing onds apart deep in their own
Brind'Amour to get his firs! end. Stillman took a pass
multi -goal game in two from Whitney and sent a onemonths. He scored his sec- 1imer toward !he net, and
ond with' a brilliam effort Brind'Amour deflected it
. after digging the puck out of past Leclaire.
the corner from his knees.
''I felt it hit the stick, but
then getting to his feet to take I'm not sure it changed the
a pass from Ward behind the direction of the puck,"
net.
Brind'Amour said. "Bu l
His wraparound beat you've got to score on S-onPascal Leclaue to secure the 3s.''
win for the Hurri~anes. They
Columbus didn't when the
beat Chicago 5-3 on Tuesday Hurricanes were down two
night and added this one for players near the end of the
their first home winning fi rst period after Erik Cole
streak since beating the and Whitney went to the
Florida Panthers on Nov. 5 10 penalty box. The Blue
BY KEITH PARSONS
ASSOCITED PRES S

.\

'

I

. Friday, December 16, 2005

Robinson, Buffalo
drop HanDan boys
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

ASHTON- Hannan could
not stop the high powered
auack of Buffalo Thursday
night as the No. 4 ranked
Bisons thunaered to an 83-54
victory at Hannan.
·
Buffalo jumped out to a 22
point first quarter while limitwg the home quad 10 only
eight points behind the strong
play of Adam Scott and David
Robinson.
The Bisons continued to
gallop into the second cantos
with 22 more points while the
Wildcats only managed I0
points, gi,ving the visiting
Buffalo squad a comfortable
44-18 lead heading into the
half.
The Wildcats. finally managed to start putting points on
the board on the second half,
behind strong play from Ryan
Canterbury, Kevin Blake and
Wes Gue, putting up 14 points
in the third and grabbing a
game high 22 pomts in the
final quarter of play.
But the early Buffalo lead
was too much for the
Wildcats to overcome, as
Buffalo scored 20 in the third
and 19 in the final quarter,
holding oit for a commanding
29 point victQry.
· The Bisons were led by

Mason

•

fromPageBl
in the third period, · led by
Tulley who had four, while
holding Hannan to only two
points in the period.
. ln the final period of play,
.Mary Kebler hit a lay-up to
open the quarter and the
While Falcons continued to
roll with four points from
both Keyes and Hoffman.
leading the way to 12 points
in the fourth while holding
Hannan to five on their way
to a· 36 point victory.

fromPageBl
second stanza to build a commanding 48-20 advamage a!
halftime . River Valley, which
. scored only eight points in
the second quarter, went
scoreless for the frrst 3:46 of
that frame and didn't,make a
field goal until the 1;40 mark.
While Fairland connected
on 47 percent (26-of-55) of
its field goals. conversely,
River Valley was a cold 19of-63 from the floor and
made only 6-of-16 free
throws.
Shea -Berry was 6-of-6
from the free throw line and

I
AP photo
Columbus Blue Jackets' Sergei Fedorov (91) pushes the puck
up the ice as Carolina Hurricanes' Aaron Ward (4) defends during the second period of NHL hockey game in Raleigh, N.C.,
Thursday. The Hurricanes defeated the Blue Jackets , 2-1
Jackets · couldn't
solve
"We didn't play a bad
Gerber and the Carolina game, but they played well,"
defense, with Brind' .4Jfiour, Leclaire said. "ln the end. we
Ward and Glen Wesley lead- lost."
ing the charge.
Notes: Before tqe game,
"They're playing as a the Blue Jackets sent G
1eam, that's why they're win- Martin Prusek to Syracuse of
ning, that's why they're lead- the AHL. He was 3c3 with a
ing
!heir
division,'' 3.22 goals-against average in
Columbus coach Gerard nine games with Columbus.
Gallant said. "They deserved ... Carolina C Eric Staal was .
the win. \Vith a good goalie held without a ,point for the
and good defense."
second straight game, the
lt was the third loss in four first time that's happened this
games for the Blue Jackets. season.

I

Bv JoE KAY
•ssociArEo PREss

Robinson with 20 points and
Scotl with 18, while Just
Whittington contributed 10
points, Just Raynes nine
points, Nick Harris etght,
Brock Duncan five, Josh
Gillcrest
four,
Cory
Blackburn three and Chad
Statts, Rovi Parker and Kevin
May two points.
All 1otaled the BisoQs had
II different players contribute to the scoring effort
while Hannan only manalled
to have five players put pomts
on the board.
Canterbury led the way for
the Wildcats with 18 points,
five rebounds and two assists,
followed by Kevin Blake who
had 16 points, two steals, two
assists and four rebound s,
Wes Gue who had a doubledouble with 12 points, I 0
rebounds, four blocks. three
steals and two assists and
Brad Edmonds and Arran
Payne who both had four
points in the game.
Adding to the trouble s for
the Wildcats were a team total
of 28 turnovers and a poor 21
percent night from the field.
Hannan will get quite a bit
of time to rebound from the
loss with nearly a monlh off
as the Wildcats return to
action 7:30 p.m. January 6 at
Wahama

CINCINNATI -There was
no drama on the. Bengals'
Shayne
'Sideline
while
Graham lined up for the.
'biggest.kick of the season.
No one held hands. No one
even . held their breath. They
assumed he would make it.
. He did, of course. Graham's
'37-yard field goal on the final
,play Sunday gave the Bengals
a 23-20 vic~ory . over
Cleveland, left them m controt of th~ AFC North and ·
showed why they never fret
when the game comes down
to a kick.
"S~gar-foot Graham, baby,"
recetver
T.J.
Houshmandzadeh said. "I
have confidence in Shayne. It
wasn't one of those where
guys were holding haitds. 1
.knew he was going to make it.
.He's really accurate."
N&lt;~-Bengal s kicker has been
more dependable. During his

three seasons in Cincinnati.
Graham has made 86.7 percent of his field goal anempts.
by far the best in franchise
history. He's so close to automatic that his teammates
assume they've got points
once they reach the opponent's 30-yard line.
"His nickname is Shayne
Money graham," running back
Rudi Johnson sa id. "I
believed once we got 1he ball
down there, Shayne wou ld
close the deal."
Graham is 23-of-27 on licld
goals this season, an 85.2 percent accuracy rate !hat is
slig htly below hi s ·career
norm. Graham missed most of
training camp and preseason
with a strained groin, and
needed a few games to get
back in form.
In five seasons with
Buffalo,
Carolina
and
Cincinnati, Graham has gone
91-for-1 09 on tleld goals, an
83.49 accuracy rate thai is
among 'the best. He needs nine
more field goals to qualify for

second a1 83.33 percent.
Graham has missed only six
of his 63 career kicks from
inside the 40-yard line.
"Shayne's money." quarterback Carson Palmer said.
"He's not going to miss in
there."

AP photo
Cincinnati Bengals kicker Shayne Graham (17) celebrates
after kicking a 37-yard field goal as time ran out to defeat
the Cleveland Browns, 23-20, Sunday in Cincinnati.

the career list. where he
would be in the top rive.
The Colts' Mike Vanderjagl
- whoplays home games in

the climate-comrolled RCA
Dome -· is the current accu-·
racy leader at 87.65 percent.
Cleveland's Phil Dawson is

BY JEFF BAENEN

The only thing he hasn't
done is kick many game-winners. Graham simply hasn't
gotten the chance.
The game-decid ing kick
against Cleveland was hi s
first !his season. Las! season,
he made a 39-yard kick to
beat Miami wi1h , 2 seconds
left. and a 24-varder on the
final play to beat Baltimore.
He's had so few in his career
that he remembers each one in
detail - two in high school,
one. in college, four in the
NFL.
.
"You see a !01 of other guys
getting 'game-winning opportunilies · and you're kind of
like. ' It must be nice, I'd like
to get that."' Graham said .
"You get yourself worked up
all week Lo get that and when

CINCINNATI (A P) Bengal s · rookie receiver
Chris Henry was arrested on
1raffic
and
marijuana
charges early Thursday
morning, but later practiced
with the team.
The Bengals said in a
statement that it wouldn't
take ai1y action until his case
goes through the court system.
Henry. a third-round pick
from West Virginia, was
slopped by poli&gt;e in nearby
Covington, Ky., at about 2
a.m., according to a police
report. He was driving a
vehicle with expired . tags,
had an expired license and
was speeding, police said.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

MINNEAPOLIS
'Quarterback
Daunte
Culpepper and three other
,Minnesota Vikings were
·charged Thursday with
:three misdemeanors each
:for taking part in a bawdy
:boat party earlier this season ·on Lake Minnetonka.
Culpepper,
Bryant
McKinnie, Fred Smoot and
.Moe
Williams
were
:charged with indecent con- .
;duct, disorderly conduct
·and lewd or lascivious conduct, according to court
papers.
If conv'icted, each player
·(aces up to a m'aximum of
90 days in jail and a
:$10,000 fil)e on each count.
: Prosecutor Steve Tallen'S
~decision was based on findings by the Hennepin
County sheriff's office,
whose
investigators
reviewed allegations of
lewd and drunken behavior
'aboard a floating party Oct.
6 . that involved some
AP photo
Vikings players.
Minnesota Vikings quarterback Daunte Culpepper looks to pass
Crew members com- during practice in this Sept. 3, 2003 file photo taken at Eden
plained that some people Prairie, Minn. Culpepper and three other Viking players were
took off their clothes and
Thursday with three misdemeanors each for taking part
.engaged . in public sex acts charged
in a bawdy boat party earlier this season on Lake Minnetonka.
during the cruise, according Culpepper, Bryant McKinnie, Moe Williams and Fred Smoot were
to Stephen Doyle. an attor- charged with indecent conduct, disorderly conduct and lewd or lasney representing the boat
owners , Al &amp; Alma's civious conduct, according to court papers.
Supper Club and Charter ecuting attorney for the other state officials and
Minnetonka instituting a ·new code of
Cruises in Mound. The Lake
crew members identified 17 Conservation
Distri ct, conduct.
Vikings · among about 90 which handle s nonfelony
The Learn has since recnv.people on the two boats.
crimes comm'itted on th e ered on the field and. with
The court papers released big lake just west of quarterback Brad Johnson
Thursday said . Smoot and Minneapolis.
the
injured
rep lacing
defensive
end
Lance
The boat sca ndal hit the Culpepper, reeled oil six
Johnstone arranged the Vikings when they :wete straig ht wins to become a
charter.
already reeling, off to a 1-3 playofl' co mender at 8-5.
· Smoot declined comment start and made them the
Running back Michael
;n the team's locker room obje~l of national ridicul e Benn elt said he didn't lhink .
before
practice.
Both on late-night TV and cable the charges would hurt the
Culpepper and Williams are sports
channels.
New team headin g into Sunday's
on injured reserve and in owner Zygi Wilf. who had game agamst Ptttsburgh.
.rehaoilitation on their own,
away from the team . been seeking state help fo r ''Everybody's upbeat." he
McKinnie wasn ' t see n in a new stadium, responded sa id . "We have the dislrac- .
forcefully. apologi zin g to' tion today. but again we've
·the locker room.
· Vikings coach Mike Tice Gov.· Tim Pawlenty and dealt with it prelly well.
was careful with his reaction .
IIIQI'IC YIAB·IND IN. .ft08Y
"According to NFL rules
and union contracts. there·
· •· . ·RIDUCftO. IILI
·is a large difference
·.between allegation s . and
.
•r
·-~~
charges and convictions,"
.
Tice said. "So until at any
In
AdditiOn
'For
Every
Vehicle
Purchased,
Your
Name
point there is a conviction
GOes In Jbe Drawing For A 199/i Vamah RAZZ Scooter.
of some type, if there is, I
Drawing Will De Held At The End Of Our Sale,
have no action to take and
December 31 At 4:00P.M. Value Of Scooter Is $1000.00.
nothing to say."
Not Necessary To be Present For Drawing.
After that, Tice threatened to stop · talking to
reporters if anyone asked
more questions about the
allegations.
Reports that some women
at the party were paid to
come · frpm
outside·
Minnesota had raised the ·
possibility
of
federal
Don't Miss This Opportunity To huJ Yuur Next ·vehicle.
charges, but U.S. Attorney
*Tax, Title and Fees Not Included.
Tom Heffelfinger said
~l!t't1 (JirlstltUIS anti &lt;Happy &lt;}'tew Y'ear!
Thursday that no such
charges would be brought.
Roan for the special sal•·: Mon-Fri: 9:00·5:00. Sat: 9:00-1:00
Sun: 1:00-5:00 IO.C. 24th 9:00·12:00 Closed Fo• Christmas)
Heffelfinger cited insufficient evidence.
That decision, along with
264 Upper River Rd. • Gallipolis, OH 45631
sheriff's decision to send
the case to Tallen's office,
(740) 446-9971
meant any charges would
be minor. Tallen is the pros-

you don'! ...
'·You don'! feel use less,
because you've helped the
team out and you · ve put up
some points, but we always
want Lo be there in t.he fire."
. The Bengals haven'! been
to 1he playoffs since 1990, so
they haven't had many pressure-packed kicks in the last
15 years. A victory Sunday ·in
Detroit wou ld clinch the AFC
North title and ensure a home
playoff game, one that could
come down to Graham making a fourth-quaner field goal
in nasty weather.
He'd love it.
''We always want to be
kicking that field goal that
wins the game, no matter how
old you are," he said. "I've
caught my self doing it this .
offseason, lining up for a field ·
goal and saying, 'OK, this is a
game winner.' trying to put
myself in that situation mentally.
·
"But you can never truly
replicme it until you get out
there."

-., 1-----~------- -· --

Officers said they also
found two small bags of
marijuana on Henry, who
was charged with possess ion
of marijuana.
"The club is aware of the
reports regarding Chris
Henry." the Bengals said in a
. statement. Thursday night.
"In such cases. the team con-

siders it inappropriate to
comment further while the
matter is still being adjudicated.
"When the legal process
has run i1s course, !he team
and the NFL will consider
what action is necessary."
Henry ranks 1hird among
. Ben gals receivers with 30
catches and has scored five
touchdowns. The rookie' has
developed into !he team's
No. 3 receiver, behind Chad
Johnson
and
T.J .
Houshmandzadeh .
· The Bengals (9 -3) can
clinch the AFC North title
with a victory Sunday in
Detroit.

.EMAIL OR FAX US YOUR LOCAL SPORTS NEWS
sports@ mydailysentinel. com
FAX: 740-446-3008

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.
On Friday, December 23, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forg9tten. They will be .similar to the sample below:
If you Mish, select one of tbe followin~ FREE verses beloM' lo
accompany JOur tribute.
I. We hold you in our thuughts and memories forc\'Cr.

2. May God ~:radlc )'OU in His anns. now and forever.
3. Forever mi s~ed. never forgoucn. May God hold you in the palm of

David C. Andrews

July tO, t961-May 5, 11!80

May God's angels
g~ide you and
protect you
throughout time .
Always in our· hearts,

John and Mona Andrews and
family

His hand.
.t. Thank you for the wonderful days w~' shared together. My prayers
will be with you until we meet again.
5. The days we shared were sweet. I long to see you at;ain in God\
heavenly glory.
.
6. Your coorage and bravery still inSpire us all. and the memory of your
smile fill s us with jby and laughter.
7. Though out of J.ight. you_' II forever be in my hean and mind.
8. The days may come and go, but the times we slmrcd wil l alwt~y~· rcnlain . .
9. May thl' light of peace shine on your face for eternity.
'
10. May God's angels guide you and protect you throughout time.
11. You 'II.'CTC ~ l ight in our life that bums forever in a·ur hearts.
12. May God's graces shine over you for all ti me.
13. You are in our thoughts and prayers from morning to night and from
yLmr to year.
14. We -.end this message with a loving kiss for eternal rest and happ111C"' ·

15. May the lord bless you with His graces and wann. lm•ing hcan

...D .IY'I An8 CENTER

KENlY'S AUTO CENTER

.I

• Page B3 ·

Culpepper, three other Vikings ·;sengals rookie Henry facing
charged in boat party scan(lal traffic, marijuana charges

While Sayre provided 13,
Hoffman added nine, Tuller
and Airel Derifield eight,
Brittany Curfman and Keyes
had six and Chelsea Fowler,
Kebler and Kayanna Sayre
put up two points in the
game.
Poor shooting brought on
by the full court pressure
from Wahama plagued the
Lady 'Cats all night on their ·
way to only 20 points in, the
game .
. .
Now 2-2, Wahama returns
to action Saturday at home
againsl Calhoun County
while Hannan heads into
tournament action Friday and
Saturday at Tolsia.
scored eight points while
Erica Smoot came off !he
bench to score seven points
for the winners. Sara Hatfield
added
four,
Molly
Bumgardner three and Lexy
Statern tossed in a bucket.
Rachel Walburn added
eight poin1s for !he Silver and
Black and Kayla Smith
chipped in four. McKenzie
Clux10n, !Iiana Corfias ad
Brooke Taylor scored two
each and Jessica Spencer
. split a pair of free throws.
Fairland won the junior
varsity game by a 34-19
count. McKenzie Rucker had
14 for the Lady Dragons and
Courtney Circle's five paced
the Lady Raiders.
River Valley plays host to
Coal Grove on Monday.

The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Bengals never sweat when Graham decides game

Larry Crum/photo
Wahama's Amber Tulley goes u'p for a layup during the White
Falcons 56-20 victory over Hannan Thursday night at Wahama.

Raiders

-

. Friday, December 16, 2005

. TO REMEMBER YOUR LOVED ONE IN THIS SPECIAL WAY,
SENO $7.00 PER LISTING • $12 IF PICTURE INCLUDED
Fm nut the form "'low and drop off to
The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Memories
Ill Court St'., Pomeroy, OH 45 769
IIEAilllNE: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 12 Noon

Ir------------~-~--~-------~-----------,
Pl~a sc publi sh my tnhulc m the specml Memury Page nn Fnda&gt;·· D~ccmh~.:.r 23
1
I

I

I

~ ~~.~~-

I Rdatidn~hip tn me
I
1 Date ot' hinh
I · .

NumO~.·r of sclct"ted vcr"e

Date of ra~:-;in

1 Print your 11~unc here

I

II,AUd res~

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II

Phone number

Cily

Slale

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Make Check Payable to THF. DAILY SENTINEL

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�•

SCOREBOARD

: The Daily Sentinel
High School Basketball

NAIA

American Mideast Conference

Bovs BMKEJ&amp;ALL

FAIRLAND 78, RIVER VALLEY 49
FAIRLAND 12-2, 1-Q)

BUFFALO 83, HANNAN 54
BUFFALO 12.0)

Brlanna Dav1s 11 8-10 32 Lei()' Staten 1 o0 2, Megan Au~trer 8 4o.4 22 Shea Berry 1
6-6 8, Chrlstln Capper 0 0-0 0, Molly
Bumgardner 1 1·2 3, Sara HaHietd 1 2-6 4

Just1n Raynes 4 0-0 9, Josh G1llcrest 2 0 0
4, Adam Scott 7 o-o 18 Chad Statts 1 ~
2, Rov1 Parker 1
2 Dav1d Robinson 8 4·
6 20 Nd: Harns 4 0-0 a Brock Duncan 2
(}.(} 5, Kevin May 1 ().0 2, Just Whittington
5 0..0 10, Cory Blackburn 1 1·2 3 TOial$--

o-o

Enc Smoot 3 1-4 7 Emma Baker 0 0·1 0
Desttnee Spears 0 0 1 0 Totals 26 22·34

' 78
: RIVER VALLEY 12-3, 1·1)

1

31 S.8 83
HANNAN 11·1)

• StePhanie Gnthth 0 0 2 0, Rach el Walburn 1 Ryan Canterbury 7 4-5 18 Kev1n Blake 3 a2 4-6 8 Beth Payne 7 1·2 19 Jessica 8 16, Brad Edmonds 2 o-o 4 Wes Gue 52·
Spencer 0 1-2 1, Krrsten Carter 5 0 2 11
4 12 Arron Payne 1 2 4 4
Kayla Smith 2 0 0 4 Margo Fraley 0 0-0 0. Buffalo
22 22 20 19 - 83
McKoozle Cluxton 1 o-o 2 tirana Corfras 1 Hanna"
a 10 14 22 - 54
o-o 2, Brooke Taylor Totals 19 6-16 49
I 3·Polnt Goals-&amp; 2 (JusM Raynes Brock
Fairland
24 24 11 19 - 78
. RiwrValley
12 8
14 15 - 49
• 3-Po•nt Goals-Fairland 4 (Davis 2, Au"1er
: 2) RV 5 (Payne 4 Carter)

Duncan} H 1 (Kev1n Blake)
Otllo High SchoOl Glrlt Basketball
Thursday's Reaulta
A.kr Central Hower 72, Akr Buchtel 3B

MILLER 46, EASTERN 43

Akr E 49, Akr N 22

MILLER (3-3 1-1 }
1 .&amp;.kr F1restone 74 Akr Garfield 29
Ashly Heave~e r 11 4 . 7 26 Rand• Toth 3 2 • I Akr Kenmore 42, Akr Ellet 39
~a, Janna Murphy 3 0·2 6 Kelsl Brown 1 1 ~kr Manchester 61 Zoarville TuscarQWas

3

0-1 2 Lora Spencer 1 ().0 2, Courtney
AppleCreekWaynedale49 Norwayne47
lrloops 0 1·2 1 Hillary Bray 0 1·2 1 Totals 1 Bainbridge Pa 1nt Valley 59, Frankfort
• 19 8-17 46
Adena 49
• EASTERN (1-4, 1-2)
Bata111a 60. FeliCity Franklin 48
• Jess~ea Hupp 0 9· 1 4 12 Jenna Hupp 4 0·
Blanchester 32 Williamsburg 19
•b 11 Enn Web9f 1 5 S 7, Kat1e Hayman 2 Huntmgton Ross 59 P1keton 26
0-1 7. Jlillan Brannon 1 1·4 6 Ryan Dav1s
Unloto 70 Witllar 1sport Westfall 55
0 o-o 0, Morgan Werry 0 0-Q 0 Alyssa Zane Trace 56 Richmond Dale SE 40
~ewland 0 0.0 0 Amber Wdlbargar 0 0-0
em Manemont 41 C1n Made1ra 38
0 Kaylee Milam 0 0·0 0 Gaorgana
C~n McNICholas sa Kettenng Aller 51
KQblentz 0 o-o o Totals 8 15·24 43
Cln Mercy 46, C•n 'McAuley 44
Miller
7 11 12 16 ~ 46
1 C 1n St ursula 46 Cin Ursuline 36
• Eaatem
3 20 10 10 - 43
Clermont NE 52 Betllei-Tate 38
; 3-Pomt Goals-Miller 0 Eastern 4
Corning Miller 46, Reedsville Eastern 43
Doylestown Chippewa 70. R1ttman 43
VINTON COUNTY 58, MEIGS 44
Fayetteville 52 Manchester 30
Georgetown 79 Lees Creek E Cl1nton 32
VINTON COUNTY 1:1-2, H)
Ironton 54. Portsmouth 38
Megan Owmgs 7 1 2 15 Kelsey Day 2 1·4
Louisville Aqumas 38, Can S 28
5 KriStin Collins 4 2-2 10 Jess! Harkins 1
Sandy Valley 65, Conotton Valley 39
5-8 7 Diana AnJ.;rom 1 0·1 3 Enca Reed 2
o-o 6 Abbe Batey 4 2 5 10 Stepll Williams Mansfield Sr 70 Orrvtlle 62
Massillon Tustaw 52 Can nmken 41
1 o-o 3 Totals 22 11-22 58
N Bend Taylor 52, Cm Deer Park 40
MEIGS 13·3, &lt;&gt;21
New Boston Glenwood 48 Beaver
Cayla Lee 2 0·0 4 Meghan Clallan.,d 5 3-5
15 JoeyHannlng22-26.CatleWolfe21 -. Eastern 39
Fautand 78. Chesll~re AIWr Valley 49
5 5 Amber Burton 2 0-Q 4 Brittany Hysell
Reading 50 F1nneytown 35
1 0 0 2 Cectha Core 1 0 0 2 Totals 16 6S Po1nt
Cllesapeake 34
12 44
Sard1n1a Eastern Brown 75 Peebles 58
Ylnton Co.
11 15 12 20 - 58
McDermott NW 51 L.uca6VIIIe Valley 45
Matus
10 8
6 20 - 44
Sm1thv1lle 42 Dalton 40
3-Pomt
Goals-VC
3
Meigs
2

I

se.

Rebounds- VC 33 Meigs 20 AsslstsVC 10 Ma1gs 5 Steals- VC 12 Meigs 6

Turnovers- VC 14, Me1gs 20
Fouls- VC 15 Me1gs 14

Team

0 0 Summer Stover 4 3-~3 11 Arlanna
Blake 0 0 0 o, Jassy Shannon 0 0 -0 O,
Al•sna Corne ll 0-0 0, Kim Saunders
0 0 Tabitha Bowman 0 o-2 0, Carne Watts
0 0-Q 0 Bnttany Sabolsky 4 0-0 9 Kall
Edmunds o 0-0 o. Katah Perry o 0·3 o
Totals- a 3-18 20

o

Thurtday'l Rnulta
Cle E 61, Cle Max Hayes 51
Madison Christian 59, Gahanna Christian

38

Airel Derif1ald 4 0-0

8, Jessica Hoffman 5 2-2 9, Tabitha
Johnson 0 o-o 0 Ke1thAnn Sayre 5 1·2 13,
Cllelsaa Fowler 0 0-0 0, Mary Kabler 1 0-0
2 Brrttany Curfman 1 0-Q 2 Beth Kayes 3
0-0 6 Kayanna Sayre 3 0-0 6, Tiffany
Sleeth 1 o-o 2 Totals- 26 2·4 56

6 7 2 5 - 20
Hannan
Wahama
22 13 9
12 - 56
3-Po•nt Goals--H 1 (Bnttany Sabotsky), W
2 (Ke1thAnn Sayre 2) Fouled Oui-H 1
(Summer Stover) Rebounds- H 24
(Brittany Sabolsky 10), W 44 (KetthAnn
Sayre a) Asslsts-H 1 (Ananna Blake), W
7 (KelthAnn Sayre 3) Steals-H 8
(Summer Stover 6), W 15 (Amber Tulley 5)
Blocks-H 2 (.&amp;.l1sha Cornell, Brittany
Sabolsky), W 3 (Jess1ca Hortman Brittany
Curfman Beth Keyes) Personal Fouls--H
11 W22

0·0

ALL
9·3
7·3
53
55
67
65
3·5

().2

4-5

AMC
1-0
1·0
10
11
12
0.()

SOUTH
Walsh
Cedarville
Mt Vernon Nazarene
Urbana
Oh1o D"om1mcan
Tiffin
Shawnee State
Wilberforce
A10 Grande
Malone

AMC

ALL

30

7-2

3.()

8-3
1&lt;&gt;4
S.6
4·5
11-2
S.9
26
S.5
2·7

2·1
2·1
21
12
12
12
0·3
0·3

Friday's gamea
Tiffin vs Mlssoun Vallay at Notre Dame
ClassiC 5 30 p m
Kmg TN vs
Walsh at Malone
Tournament 6 p m
Rio Grande vs Lambuth at Bethel TN
Tournament 6 p ll).

SOUTHWEST

I

Arkansas 75 Nicholls St 40
Texas Tech 99, Oral Roberts 58
FAR WEST
Anzona St 68 Fresno St 52
Oregon 89, Idaho St 69

I Toronto

I M\am1

4 18 182
Southeast Division

AMERICAN CDNFERENCl!

EI01
WLTPC1PFPA
New England 8 5 0 615 294 289
6 7 0 462 242 261
M1am1
4 9 0 308 191 282
Buffalo
3 10 0 231 169 274
NY Jets
SouIll
WLTPciPFPA
x-lndlanapolls 130 0 1000392 180
9 4 0 692 273 227
Jacksonville
4 9 0 308 252 329
Tennessee
1 120
193 354
Houston

on

North

Denver
San D1ego
Kansas City
Oakland

13 10 565
Orlando
9 11 450 21.
Washington
9 11 450 2'
1 Charlotte
6 17 261
7
1 Atlanta
4 17 190 8
Central Division
1
1
WlPctGB
Detroit
16 3
842
lnd1ana
12 8
600 4'lt
\ Milwaukee
12 8
600 4h
Cleveland'
12 9
571
5
j ChiCago
11 10 524 6

I

Thursday's Rnulta

Girts
Braxton County 47, Uncoln 44
Chapmanville 67 Guyan Valley 36
Duval 44, Sharman 43
Elkins 73, Nor.th Manon 45
Gilbert 41 Matewan 37
Ham11n 52, HuntingtOn 45
Hurricane 53, Poca 29
James Monroe 56 Wests•de 25
Morgantown 78 East Fa1rmont 29
Roane County 55 Gilmer County 52
South Harrison 59 Uberty Hamson 10
Tnn1ty 55, Clay-Battelle 54
Tyler Consolidated 51 Beallsville, Ohio 49

Boyo
Braxton County 65 Grafton 56
Duval 44 Sherman 43
Herbert Hoover 54 Clay County 45
lmsly 98 B1shop Donahue 52
Mercer Christian 74 Tug Valley 71
R1pley 97 Hurricane 77
St Albans 50 North Manon 38
Valley Fayette 73, Wood COunty ChriStian

56

I
I

NCAA BASKEIBML

7 6 0

9 4 0

538 258 246

3 10 0

231

WL T Pel
9
6
4
3

Ch1cago
Mmnesota
DetrOit
Green Bay

4 0
5
9 0
100

o·

I

x-Seattle
St L.OUIS
Aniona
San FranciSCO

112
5 8
4 9
2 11

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: !1 hereby

given

that

on

Saturday, December
17, 2005, at 10.00
a.m., a public sale will
be held a! 211 w
SecondS!., Pomeroy,
Ohio. The Farmars
Bank and Savings
Company Ia selling
for cash In hand or
certified check !he
following collateral:
1989 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS SUPREME
1G3WH14W5KD3401
.79
1990'
8UICK
REGAL
2D
2G4WD14LOL1455122
CHEVROLET
1995

s

1

0

1GCDT19W7S813215
1 1998 SUZUKI SWIFT

H

B

2S2AB21H5X6603595
"1999
CHEVROLET
4X4
SILVERADO
1GCEK19V7XE18902

2
2000 JEEP CHERO·
KEE 4X4 11 2000
CHEROKEE
JEEP

4

X

4

1J4FF48S3YL118411
Farmers Bank
and
Savlnga
Company, Pomeroy,
Otllo, reserves the
rlgh! to bid at thlo
sale, and to withdraw
the above collateral
prior to sale. Further,
The

The Farmers Bank
and
Saving•
1:ompany raaervea
the rlgh!to rajoc! any
or all bids subml!lad.
Tha above described
collo!erol will be sold
" as la~whera Ia", with
no
expreaaed
or
Implied
warranty
given. For further
Information, or tor an

appointment
to
Inspect
collateral,
prior to aale date cona
tact Cyndle, Stacy, or
Randy a! 992·2136.
(12) 14, 15, 16.

Public Notice
Public Notice For
Sale
In accordance with
!he Ohio Revised

Code, aealed blda will

•

be received by the
MEIGS Counly Board
of Commlasonara In
their office loca!ed In
the Courthouse, Third
Floor, Second Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
for one used ambu~
lance belonging to
EMS, until 1 PM on
Thursday, December
22, 2005. The bids will
be opened all :30 PM
on the same day and
read aloud for !ho fol·
lowing:
1 uoed 1996 McCoy
Miller Ford Super
Duty

ambulance,

Serlo! Number 06666,
No guarantee or war·
ren!y. NO EMS OR
EMERGENCY EQUIP·
MENT WILL BE SOL!Ol
WITH THE VEHICLE.
V8hlc!e may be seen
at !he EMS building,
located on Memorial

Drive, In Pomeroy,
Ohio, during normal
bualneaa
hours,
Monday
through
Friday.
ALL BIDS
MUST BE SEALED
AND MARKED "BID
FOR USED AMBU·
LANCE". The Board
of
County
Commlsalonera
roserves lha right to
reject any and/or all
bids and/or any pari
thereof, and waive
any lnformall!y In any
bid.
12/14,t6

Public Notlca
Tho
Cheater
Townohlp Board of
Truoteo will ooll by
seled bid !he follow·
lng place of equip·
mont
1988
Ford
L8000 Dump Truck.
Minimum
bid
Ia
$5000.00 For mora
Information on the
truck please contact
any of the truateea.
Elmer Nowell 985·
3537; Blair Windon
982-6981; Alon Holler
982·501 0. Bids mua!
received
by
bo
January 4, 2DQ6.. Bids
can be mailed to
Chesler
Township

,

POBox 46, Chesler,
OH 45720, clearly
marked "TRUCKBID".
The Board of Trustees
reserve the right to
refuse any and or all
bids.
Janot R. Lifo, Clerk
(12) 16, 23, 30

T Pel
0 646
0 385
0 306
0 154

PF

307 378
252 319

188 381

pm
N Y G1ants at Washington, 1 p m
Buffalo at Clnmnnatl, 1 p m
Dallas at Carolina, 1 p m
Jacksonville at Houston, 1 p m
San Francisco at St Louts 1 p m
San Diego at Kansas City 1 p m
Atlanta at Tampa Bay, 1 p m
Pittsburgh at Cleveland 1 p m
Philadelphia at Arizona, 4 OS p.m
Indianapolis at Seattle, 415 p m
Oakland at Denver 4 15 p m

I

I

Sunday, Doc. 25
ChiCago at Green Bay, 5 p m
M1nnesota at Baltimore, 8 30 p.m
Monday, Dec. 2B
New England at N Y Jets, 9 p m

Public Notice
Tho Mkldloport Pollee
~arlment will oHar
lor sale by sealed bid
a 1998 Ford Crown
VIc. The vllhlcle will
be sold In as !o condl·
lion wl!h no warrenly
either expressed or
Implied. All blda mual
be
received
at
Middleport PD by 4:00
pm on December 23,
2005 and will be
opened at 4:00 p.m.
on December 26,
2005. All blda muat be
~arked "Bid for 1998
Ford Crown VIc" on
the outside of env•
lope.
The aeller reaervea
the rlgh!to rejec! any
or all bldo.
(12) 16, 18,21

Help Wanted

received

In

the

Clark's
office by
December 28, 2005 a!
11 :DO a.m. Bldo mull
be Haled and marked
with appropriate vehl·
clo being bid on.
Pomeroy
VIllage
reHrvea the right to
accept or reject any
and all bids. Vehicles
can be seen at the
Pomeroy Pollee Dept.
Con!ac! Chief Mark
Proffitt.
(t2) 16, 2t, 26

Post #128

Christmas
Dinner

Outreach Immunization
Clinic
sponsored

by

Me1gs County HBalth Dept.

&amp; Middleport/Pomeroy
Rotary Club

Saturday, December 17th
10 am ·12 pm
Sc1p1o Twp Volunleer Fire Dep!
Harnsonville, Ohio

December 21st, 2005

6pm
WV

Jobs Foundation

BINGO
*Now Playing•
Friday &amp; Monday
TONIGHT
14$100 Games
2 $300 Games·
$1500
COVERALL
Guaranteed Paydutsl
Doors Open 4·00 pm
Early 81rds

5:15pm

Regular Session 6:30 pm
124 Htghland Ava PI Pleasant, WV

304·675-3877

\ \ \ 0 1 \ 1 I \II \1"-1

I

ri.w••••CEMINTS---.,.1
ANNOUN

r

~~

I~,r_.:~~uc~:n:;,~::;N:::~-"'""'

Lost (2) narrow gold bands
(attaclled) with small d1a
A"entlon
Aud1t1on tor monds SBfltlmental Value
Chnstlan band Bass Pl ayer REWARD
Please
call
Keyboard Player Drummer (740)388 1708 or (304)576·
Ser ious 1nqu1res (740)992 4501 and leave a message 1f
0328
no one 1s there

Shop
fbe

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

I wnght2005@detnews com

r

0

WANI'EIJ

r

1740)367·7522

Chnstmas Pupp1es 4mates
and 1temale also g1v1ng
away moltler
Father-full·
blood cocker span~el moth·
er-beaglelcocker
spaniel
miX 740 446 4409

r
r

5004

Wanted
Bob
Evans
Caboose Photo wanted lor
~~:::::::::~ history book Caboose was
at Bob Evans Farm on d1s
play
Scrapped around
4
YARD SALE1970 6,4-870.7315
1
-. PoMEROYIMmot.E .

Y&lt;Ril SALE

I '11'111)'11 \I
-.,1 \{\ I! I -.

Mixed breed pups to g•ve·
away 3 males 4 female Call

"li,O

lns1 de garage
sale· Weather
Permitting,
Ew1ngs
Garage - ; ; ; : : : : : : : : : : ;
at 300 4th Street, Pomeroy
HELP WANI1ill

1740}245·5221

Ohio on Fn 16th Sat 17th ol
Dec , sale wil l take place 1n
garage where 11 1s warm
Lostl Gold Marine Corps 6am on Fnday &amp; Sat~~tday
A1ng w1th Onyx Stone!! w1\l be the start t1me toys
TV's computer monitors
Aewardll (740)992·9927
clolhes housewares glass·
Lost·2 Cows • 1 Red Cow ware, much morett Items As
and 1 Red wrth wt1rte face Is, No returns , Not respons1Call 740.742·2773 or 740 ble for accidents on premls
742·2220
as

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4's For Sale...... .............................. 725
Announcement... .. ............................. 030
Antiques ............. ................................... 530
Apartments for Rent .............. ..................... 440
Auction and Flea Market............................. 080
Auto Parts &amp; Acces•orles ... •• ••• .•• .. ...... 780

no

Auto Repair........... . ....... . ... ... .,.. . ....
Autos lor Sale.......... .... .............. ... ... .. 11 o
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ••• .......... .... .. ' • 750
Building Supphes ................................... 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Bualne.. Opportun!ly .......... ....................... 210
Business Training ..................................... 140

Campers &amp; Motor Homes........... .... ....... 790
Camping Equlpmonl .. . . ... .... ... .. ....... 780
Cards of Thanks..... .... .. . .... .... .. .. .... 010
Chlld/E!dorly Core... ... .. ... .... .. . . .. ... 190
Elactrlcai/Refrlgeratlon ...............................840
Equipment for Rent........................ .•••••• .480
Exoava!lng .............. ........ .................... 830
l'arm Equlpmen!....................... . .... 610
Farms for Rent.......... ...... ............ • .. . 430
Forms lor Solo... ... ... . .. •. ... . . .. .. 330
For Loa sa.... ....... .. ... . . . ......................490
!;or Sale .. ....... .. ..... ......................... 585
For Sale or Trade. ........................ ... ... . 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables............ ....... . •. ........ 580
Furnished Roome............. .... ....... ... .......450
General Hauling ..................................B50
Giveaway .............................................040
Happy Ads .............................................050
Hay a Grain .............................................640
Help Wan!ed .............. ...................... 110
Home Improvements ...................... 810
Homealor Sale ..............................310
Housahold Goods ............................ 510
HouMsfor Rent ..................................... 410
In Memoriam ........................................020
lnaurance. ...... ..... ........... ..... ...... .. ........... 130

.........

540

Mobile Homo Rapalr ............................. 860
Mobile Homoofor Ron! .......................... 420
Mobile Homeofor Solo ......................... 320
Money to Loan ...... .................................... 220
Motorcycloo &amp; 4 Wheelero ....................... 740
Mualcallnatrumenta .................... ........... 570
Personals . .......... ................. . .. ... .. .. 005
Polo for Sale .................................... 560
!umblng a Healing •..o........................ 820
Profesalonal Services . ........................... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair ........................... 160
Rul Estate Wanted ...........................360
Schoola lnslructlon ...... ....... •• ••• .... .. . 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertilizer ........................ 650
Situations Wanted ...................................120
Speco for Rtn!............ ........ ............ .. . . .460
Sporting Goodo .. .. . .. . .. ...... •.... . ..... 520
SUV's for Sale ............... ... .. •..... . .720
Truck• lor Sale ... ... •. ... .. •. ... ..... . ..... 715

Upholotary ................................................... 870
Vena For Selo ..............................................730
Won!ed to Buy ....... .. . .. .. . ... . .... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplies. . •. .... .620
Wanted To Do

.. ... • .. . ...

. • . .. . 180

Yard Sale-Pt. Pleaeant

.... . . . ...

....... 076

o

www.comlcs com

l 0•••••••...11h6
1•1•

"A fast paced Me1gs County
ott1ce IS loolc1ng lor an off1ce
clerk w1th a degree 1n
English and a mHlOr 1n
Accounting
or
F'ubllc
Relations Must be able to
work well wllh tile public and
able to mull1task General
knowledge ol Peachtree,
MS Word, Excel and MS
Explorer are t:ieSired
A
grammar and spelling test
w111 be reqwed w1th all Inter
v1ewed applicants, a second
language 1s a plus
Must
stata what proflc1encles are
as some vanances may be
allowed Please provide a
resume and send to Da1ty
Sentinel P 0 Box 729·B
Pomeroy Oh1o 45169 _

An E"cellent way to earn Dispatchers &amp; EMTs need·
money The New Avon
ed Apply In person 1770
Call Manlyn 304·002·2645
Jackson P1ke or for more
1nformat1on call (740)446AVONI All Areasl To Buy or
7930
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304
675 1429

mv

Babys1ner needed in
home
for
Occasmnal
aven1ngs anct some weekends $5 00 per hour Call
740 742 1516

Darst Adult Group Home
needs help, (740)992 5023
Dental ASSIStant
The Me1gs COunty General
Heanh DIStriCt IS accept1ng
appl1cat1ons for a Dental
Dental
Assistant
The
Assistant works under gan
eral superviSIOil &amp; requ1res
considerable knowled~;~e of
dental off1ce practiCes &amp; procedures &amp; den1al operatory
practices &amp; procedures m
order 10 ass1st dentist In
to ur-handed dental treatment &amp; to perform chal rside
assistance Mimmum qualifl·
csiiOns Include completion
ol associate core program 1n
dental assisting technology,
proof of Inoculation or Immunity to hepatitis 8 wus and 2
years el(penenca Applteant
must subm1l three letters of
recommendaiiOn With apph·
cation
to
Health
Commiaaloner
112
E
Memonat Dnve, Pomeroy
Ohm 45769
Salary IS
dependant on e~~:penence
and
qualll•cahon&amp;
Apphc,tiOns w•ll be accept·
ed un111 position •s ftlled
Local busl!less looking for
Off1ce Manager Must have
good telephone skills &amp;
good w1th the public, knowl•
edge 1n computers &amp; com
puter account1ng programs
&amp; an other off1ce mach1nes
Send resume to
L.ocal Business
PO Bo" 775
GallipOliS, OH 45631

(740)949-2217 7am·

7pm
Front desk clerk wanted
Must be very frien dly and
outgomg
personality
Computer experience helpful No Pllone Calls Apply
In person at Holiday Inn 577
State Route 7N

150-$300 day L.ocal mea
IStrlbutor looking for 1nde
ndent Route Manager
lth reliable pickup trucks
o truck, no problem Wha
re you wa1t1ng ror call th
a ta1n Now 740-441-1274

Boo! Driving Job
Avallebla
Local
Fam11y-Orlented
Camer w1th Open Door
Polley tS looking tor OTR
Class A COL dr1vers wtlll
one year exper1ence
• 40cpm-all m11es
•weekly pay
•L.ate model ~re•ghtliner
Condos
"No NVC
•95% no touch tre1ght ,
"Hosp1tazllaHon and 401 K
•Homelfme on weekends

Now hiring full and part t1me
McCtures Restaurants m
Middleport and Galllpohs
Apply between 10 10 30am

Call 1·800 652 2362

Gat11pohs Tribune, PO Box 56rv
469 Gallipolis OH 45631
Residential •
Treatment
Fac1llty tak1ng appliCations
Med1 Home Health Agency,
for youth worker Pay based
Inc seeking a full-t1me AN
expenence
Pa1d
on
Patient Care Coordinator or
Insurance Call between
Account
E"ecutlve
fof
9 OOam 3 OOpm Monday·
Ga!llpolis, Oh1o and sur·
Friday (740):379-9083
rounding
area
Out1ea
Include establishmg and Singer and Musicians needmamtaln•ng open lines of ed For more lnlormat1on
communication with area contact
Pastor
James
physicians and health care W1reman C (740)446·8613
factli11es 1n tile delivery of
Home Huallh services We Work around your schedule,
offer a competitive salary $450 S t 500 monthly part·
and benefits package for full lime S2CJ00-$4500 lull-tim&amp;

Oh1o Valley Home Health
Inc hiring Full T1me AN
Accepttng applications lor
CNA STNA CHHA PCA
Competitive wages, mileage
and benef•ts lnclud1ng health
msurance Apply at 1-480
Jackson P1ke Gallipolis or
ptlone toll free 1-86fH41·
1393

www.orvb.com ·
Hom• Llatlnll•
L1st your home by ealhng-

(740}. .6·3620
V ew photos/m!o onl1na
New Haven WV 4
Bedroom 2 Ba'h 2 Car
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W•nl
1 888 582 3345

Garage OutbUIIdmgs Close
to town PRICED TO SELU
Code 6505 or call \304)682·
336;
8 _ _ _ _.,.._ _,.,

MonlLE Hortt~
tl&gt;R S/\1....[
Lwo.-~:::.~--_.J
77 acres w11h 14&gt;70 mobile

hOme
All electric
3
3 Bedroom 2 Bath w1th bdrmsl t bath wttll porch and
F1replace 1n R10 Grande bUIIdmgs
Beau111ut v1etv
area s acres mil 40x60 $30 900 call (304)895 3158
barn $120 000 (740)709
10 used homes under
1166
$3 ooo oo Must Go I Can
78R 5BA Foreclosure only Ela1ne 740 305-0698
$18 000 For ltstmgs call
16x80 homes stalling at
800·391 5228 ext F254
$25995 00 • tncludes v1nyt
A Chnstmas spec1al
l si s1dmgl shmgle root Call
year o! homeowners 1nsur Russ 740 385 2434
anca 1s att you need to buy
th1 s n•ce lloma m Gall1a 1980 s 12"65 Mob1le Homo
$2 500
(304)675·3927
County S1ngle story new
before 9pm
root w1ndows s1d1ng and
level lot Less than perfect 1994 t4x70 C/A new carcredit ok Payment $550 per pet like new condition up
month Tn1s could be your on wheels ready to move
FREE DIRECT TV up to 4
last chance to buy a home $12 000 080 (740)388rooms w1th equtpment and
so easy 740 41S 3130
9686
1nstallat1on 130 plus chan
nels with HBO Stars and
AHentlonl
Show1•me
$39 99/Montll Local company offering "NO 1996 Skyline 28x64 3B!=l
2BA fireplace catlledral
Call today and get a FREE DOWN PAYMENr proce1hng.
$35 000 (740)709·
DVD Player aoo 523 7556 grams tor you to buy your
1166
for detailS
.,..,:;::::::..._ _ _ _...., home 1nstaad of rentmg
89 House Trailer
$5900
• 100% lmanc1ng
180
WANTED
' Less than perfect cred1t Senous calls only 740 675
4218
accepted
• Payment could be the
25 Years E"penent,ad Care
'91 Skylina 16x80 3Br/2Bth
same as renl
G1ver has opemngs tor your
$145/mo Call (740)385
Locators
Mortgage
Mom &amp; or Dad or Loved
7671
(740}~6t·OOOO
One
w1th
Fam1ly
Enwonment
l.:egally Clean ,pnd cozy hOme With New 141t:70 Vmyi!Sh•ngle 3
L 1censed
Hearth
Care basement garage and car Br 2 Bth $24 995 Call
Fac111ty
Rates starting port at 1228 College Street {740)385·9948
$1 500 monthly (304)675 Syracuse 74D-992 2906
New 161(70 3 Br/ 2 8th
6183 or lax \304)e75 6182
$229/mo
Vmyt/Sh1ngle

1150

Nurs1ng As ststant Classes
Beginning January 3rd
2006 II you enjoy elderly
Home Health Care of people and want to become
Southeast Ohio 1s currently a member ol our health care
hmng home aides and regis- team, please stop by
tared nurses Fullt1me part Aockspnngs Rehabll•tatiOil
t1me per·d•em Compet111ve Center
at
36759
Road,
wages1 flexible scheduling Aockspnngs
Call Toll Free 1-866 368- Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 and fill
1100
out an application for the
classes
lns1de Sales/secretary need- Extend1care
Health
ed lor busy offiCe enVIrOn· ServiCeS tnc 1s an equal
ment General computer opportun1ty employer that
SkillS necessary Good ver- encourages
workplace
bal and wnnen co mmun1ca dtversl~ MIF ON
lion skllls a must Please
Part-t1me
Recept•ontsl
submit Resume to PO Bo"
needed fOJ Dental Ol11ce tn
2~5 Gallipolis, OH 456:31
PI Pleasa nt area Please
Jom
the
Tupperware send resume to
Dental Otf1ce
Opportunity lor only S15 K1t
3~4 lnd1an Creek Road
contams 585 In Products
ElkvieW Wv 25071
and Business Matenals

t1me EOE Please send
resume to Jud1e Reese
Cllmcal
Manager,
352
Second Avenue Gallipolis
OH 45631

Newly remodeled 3 or 4
bedrooms central air full
basement hardwood floors
detached garage large cov~
ered pat o fenced back
yard close to schools Po1nt
Pleasant
$69 500
(740)709 1382

Application
Deadlme
Mecll Home Health Agency December 27 2005 12 00
Inc seek1ng full·t•me and NOON
part11me RNs tor the
Gallipolis OhJO area Must
S&lt;.HOOI.~
be lice nsed m Oh1o and
IN&gt;,"TRUCilON
West V1rgm1a We offer com·
peht1ve salary
benefits
package, 401 K and s1gn on Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
bonus ol $1 500 for lull-t1me
Call
Today! 740 446·4367
and $750 for part-time
1-a00-2t4·0452
E 0 E Plaase send ,resume
WW&gt;N galllpollllcareelcollege tom
to 352 Second Avenue
Ar.c1edit&amp;d Member AcCredlllng
Gallipolis ~ OH 45631 Ann COundl 'lor lndapenden1 Colleglit$
Judie
Reas e
Chn~cal and Scroos 127oiB
Manager

Call (304)773-5630 now for
POSTAL JOBS
more details
Off~r ends
$15
94·$22 56/hr now Nr
December 30th
lng For application and free
Legal Secretary needed governement job 1nfo call
E"panence
preferred American Assoc ol Labor 1
Please reply to Box 548 c/o 913-599 8220, 24/hrs emp

DRIVE

D1vts 1on 0
manc 1a1
lnst•tut•on
ll•ca of Consume
tta1rs BEFORE you rel1
ance your home o
btaln a loan BEWAR
f requests for any larg
dvance payments o
ees or msurance Call
he Of11ce of Consume
t1a1rs toll tree at 1 866
78-0003 to learn 1f th
broker o
ender
IS
proper!
•censed (Th1s 1s a publ

Hor.ns
o P P 0 r t u n 1 1Y
FOR SAn
em pI oye rip r ov 1d er L•••illiliilil"
jj,";.,_.J

Experience d pamt &amp; body
Dental Clm1c Administrator
2 bedroom apt1n Centenary, The Meigs County General man needed lor Restoration
all uttllt1es pet except electriC Health D1stnct •s accepting Shop, contact H1lls Class1c
Cars

;:::~~==:
••NOTICE•*

r1D

HELPWA1'.1'ED

appllcat1on for a Dental
Clln1c Adm1mstrator Dubas
mclude plannmg. d1rec11ng
&amp;J or coordmalln~ all cliniCal
t•scal &amp; support serv1ces
Mln1mum
quahhcat•ans
1nclu de a BA!BS m Busmess
Adm1n1stra1lon or equivalent
degree 2 years mcpanence
Ill a clln1cal saH~ng and a
thorough ~now ledge ol the
Sate MMIS Applicant must
submit three letters of rec·
ommenda110n w1th appt1ca·
t1on
to
Health
CommiSSioner
112
E
Memorial Dr ive Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769
Salary Is
dependent on experience
and
quahflcat1ons
ApplicatiOns will be accept·
ed unt11 pos1t10n ts filled

I riO .!~£

R1chland Avenue
SUita
ifl08 Athens Oh1o 45701 ;;,;;p;;;..~,...---.,
The AMESC IS an equal

L••••••••-"
$325 Call (740}25tH 135

.:!~~

HFJJ'WANIID

The
Athens-Ma1gs
Educa11onal Serv•ce Center
ts seeJ.;mg a qualilled appll·
cant to work f1ve (5) days a
week (32 5 hours per week)
as an EducatiOnal A1de tor
ass1gnment
at
Beacon
MRDD lor the rema1nder at
the 2005 2006 School Year
This pos111on does not have
benefits Applicants must be
w1111ng to be flngerpnnted to
have cnm1nal record check
hold a val id Educational
A1de License passed the
Paraprofessmnal Test lor
Educat1onal A1des or have
the proper degree or coursework needed to meet State
reqwements abtl1ty to worJ.;
well with staff students and
the public and must prov1de
their own transportation
Salary will be based on
qual1f calio ns and exp~n
ence Please submit a letter
of 1nlerest resume and ref
1
erences to
John
Costanzo Supermlendent
Athens- Meigs Educational
Serv1ce
Center
507

Schnauzer salt/pepper lost L• • •.:m~Biii;UYO.• .,J
1n v1cm1ty of Eastern and
Chatham Ave If found Absolute Top Dollar U S
please call (740)441.0143 Stiver and Gold COit'JS
Proofsets, Gold R1ngs Pre
GIVEAWAY
or (740}709·1861
US
Currency,
1935
Solita•re Diamonds M T S
__
Reward L.ost Friday around C01n Shop 151 Second
Rayburn Rd&amp;Sandhlll.Ad
5 black lab pupp1es Mother pt Pleasant Small black Avenue , Gallipolis 740 446Black Lab (on prem1ses) male Skipper Kay dog w/no 2a42
father traveling salesman ta1l answers Ia Captam
I buy Junk Cars (304)773
9wks
old,
wormed 1304)675·3354

11120/05
•wreaths &amp; Grave Blankets
(7401949 •2 1 15
SS·$ 25 ,
Sues Greenhouse

Wonled to Rant ...........................................470
Yard Sale- Gal!lpollo .. ..................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle ........... . . .. .074

I

jt'6

Cross Creek Auction House
Rt62 BuHalo Saturday night
6pm D&amp;E discount !rom
V1rg1ma large Tra 1ler load
L.ast minute
Chnstmas
Sho~p1ng
Mastercard &amp;
V1sa
accepted
Phone

I, Janed Sm1th am not - - - - - - - - - 1616
responsible lor any debts
REWARD
pet
Miniature
pther than my own as of Childs

Mlacellanaoua Merchandlle..........

Need a
lob Done?~

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

(304}937-2118 or (304)55().

Lawn 11 Garden Equlpmon! ..................... 660
Livestock..... .................... ...................630
Loa! and Found ........... ........................ 060
Lola &amp; Acreage.... ... . ... ......................... 350
Mlocellanaous.... . . .. ............... .............. 170

Public Notice
Pomeroy Vllloge hao
lor oa!a the lo!lowlng
vehicles. t995 Ford
Crown VIc, t998 Ford
Crown
VIc,
1994
N!aoan Pickup Truck.
Bldo
muat
ba

Middleport
American Legion

Successful Ads
Should Include These ltems
To
Get Response ...

379 211

Saturday's Games
Tampa Bay at New England, 1 30 p m
Kansas C1ty at N Y Giants 5 p m
Denver at Buffalo, 8 30 p m
Sunday'• Games
NY. Jets at M1aml, 1 p m
Ar1zona at Houston 1 p m
Seattle at Tennessee, 1 p m
San Diego at Indianapolis 1 p m
Plllladalphla at St Lou1s 1 p m
Carolina vs New Orleans at Baton
Rouge, L.a, 1 p m
San Francisco at JacksonviMe, 1 p m
Pittsburgh al Minnesota, 1 p m.
C1nclnnat1 at Detro11 4 05 p m
Cleveland at Oakland, 4 05 p m
Dallas at Washington. 4 15 p m
Atlanta at Ch1C8QO, a 30 p m
Monday's 01m1 •
Green Bay at Bahlmore, 9 p m
S.turd8)'! Dec. 24
Tennessee at Ml8ml, 1 p m
Detr01t vs New Orleans at San AntoniO, 1

I

HOW I0 WRITE AN AD

PA

x-cilnched d1vlsmn

a

Broad Run Gun Club
680 Slug Match
Sunday, Dec. 18th
12 Noon

PA

692 210 148
615 246 286
308 203 257
231 255 255 -

WNI
WL

PF

Now you can .have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
{r~
Jm
Borders $3.00/perad
Graphics soc for small
$1.00 for large

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

200 331

Nonh

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
WANTED: Two part·fune positions
available to asstst an mdmdual wuh
mental retardatiOn m Vmlon County
(Danv11le Area)
l) 25hrs: 10a-6p Mrfu/W,
2) 25hrs. IOa·6p Th/F/Sat,
Must have h1gh school dtploma or GED,
vahd dnver's hcense, !hree years good
dnvmg expenence and adequate
au1omob1le msurance. $7 25/hr Send
resume to Buckeye Community Serv1ces,
~0 Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640 or email
to: beyecserv@yahoo com Deadhne for
applicants 12/22/05 Pre·employment
drug testmg.
Equal Opportumty Employer.

Offet? 1/ou.P-$'

692 246 209
692 300 214

9 4 0
8 5 0 615 313 254

Carolina
Atlanta
New Orleans

I
I

Help Wanted

Or Fax To (740) 992·2157

5 8 0 385 252 314
Soulll
WLTPctPFPA

I Tampa Bay

I

Westside 55, James Monroe 50

PF P.A.
769 322 231
615 378 252
615 329 288
308 259 322

WL T Pet PF PA
9 4 0 692 345 241
8 5 0 615 284 233

NY. Giants
Dallas
Washington
PMadelphla

I

I

WVa. prep baaketball 1cores

0
0
0
0

E11t

a

,..

103
B 5
8 5
4 9

NATIONAL CONFERENCE

I

I
'
I

\

(.

Weal

1

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS
AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
l\egister
UCribune
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
Call Today•••
'(

W l T Pet

WLPciGB

I

I
I

WLTPC1PFPA
103 0 769 350 259
8 s 0 615 295 234
4 9 0 308 171 253
4 9 0 308 203 237

Cinc1nnat1
Pittsburgh
Bah• more
Cleveland

I

I

~ter

National Football LINI!Iue

I

I

UCribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

P R o FooTBALL

7'1t

~o~hel'l vs OhiO Domlmcan at Otterbem ! PRSantaOCiaHra805 ECWKEash1Yngton 54
7
ConcOJdla Ml at Notre Dame 7 30 p m
Roberts Wesleyan at Hesser a p m
8
1
Seton Hill
:S';.ef4
Nattonal Hockey League
Tlff1n vs Concord1a Ml at Notre Dame I
EASTERN CONFE:RENCT:
Class1c 1 p m
Atlantic Division
Seton Hill vs Walsh al Malone
W L OT Pts GF GA
Tournament 1 p m
NY Rangers 20 9 4 44 105 82
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Daemon at Gannon 2 p m
I Phllaclelph1a
18 8 4 40 113 97
Southweat Division
Mtssoun Valley at Notre Dame, 3 p m
New Jersey
14 12 5 33 93 101 I
W L Pet
GB
K1ng TN at Malone 3 p m
N Y Islanders 15 13 2 32 96 102
18 4
818
San AntOniO
RloGrandeatBetheiTN 3pm
Pittsburgh
8 17 6 22 82 124
16 6
727 2,
Dallas
Nonheast Division
Roberts Wesleyan at Fisher, 3 p m
MemphiS
13 8
619 4,.
Shawnee State at Charleston 7 p m
W L. OT Pts GF GA 1 New Orleans
10 12 455 8
Mount Vernon Nazarene at Tampa 7 30 Ottawa
22 5 2 46 124 61
9 12 429 8h
1 Houston
pm
'
20 10 1 41 102 98
1 Buffalo
Northwest Dlvlalon
I Montreal
16 9 5 37 aa 94
W l Pet
GB
Toronto
16 12 3 35 102 97
Minnesota
12 9
571
Women'sAMC
Boston
11
15
6
28
96
109
Denver
12 11 522
NORTH
AL.l
Southeast Division
Utah
10 12 455
AMC
44
1
WLOTPtsGFGA • Seattle
9 12 429
1.()
Daemen
20 9 2 42 112 99
[ Portland
6 15 286
7• 1 I Carol1na
Roberts Wesleyan
2·1
2
Tampa Bay
18 11 3 39 101 95
1
Pacific Dlvllfon
2·1
Notre Dame
Atlanta
13 16 4 30 116 125
WLPctGB
Geneva
2·1
42 1
Ftonda
11 184 26 85 110
LA Clippers
14 8
636
Carlow
2·1
44
Washmgton
10 17 2 22 83 115
Phoenix
13 8
619 ~
Houghton
1· 1
~.~
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Golden State
13 9
591
1
Sa1nt l/1ncent
1·1
Central Division
LA LaJ.;ers
12 10 545 2
1. 5
Po1nt Park
1-2
W l OTPts GF GA
Sacramento
10 13 435 4},
Ursulme
5· 7 1 Detro1t
21 9 3 45 123 89
{).1
Seton H1ll
3 7 1 Nasllv1lle
I
19 7 3 41 as 82
W&amp;clneeday's Games
SOUTH
Cllicago
12 16 2 26 84 107
Cll1C8go 105 Toronto 94
1
AMC
All
Columbus
9 22 0 18 59 108
Philadelpll1a 106, Atlanta 101
Cedarville
:J.&lt;l
9·2
St LOUIS
6 17 4 16 76 106
Boston as, lnd.ana 71
Shawnee State
2·1
9·2
Notthweat Division
Orlando 105 New York 90
OhiO Dom1mcan
2·1
8·3
W L OT Pis GF GA
Detroit 109 Sacramento 98
Tithn
2·1
53
vancouver
20 9 2 42 103 89
Charlotte 91 New Jersey 83
2·1
R1o Grande
64
Calgary
18 9 4 40 75 73
Mlam1 100, Milwaukee 83
2 1
Walsh
45
Edmonton
17 11 4 38 100 94
L. A Lakers 94, MemphiS 79
Mt Vemon Nazarene
H
84
Colorado
16 12 3 35 117 104
Dallas 102 Phoen~x 96
H
Wilberforce
3-6
Minnesota
12 15 4 28 a3 77
New
Orleans 102 L. A Clippers 89
().3
Urbana
3-6
Paclrlc Division
utah 82, Portland
().3
Malone
W L OT Pts GF GA
2·8 1
Houston 111 Golden State 105, OT
I Dallas
20
1 41 99 60
Thursday's Gamea
Friday's games
LosAngeles
18 131 37 107 93
Cleveland 94 Denver 85
A1o Grande at P1kev1lle, 6 p m
Phoenix
16 14 2 34 90 B4
San Antomo 90 Minnesota 88
Oh1o Oom1n1can at lnteramencana PA Anaheim
14 13 5 33 87 86
Houston 104 Seattle 9a
Tournament
San Jose
13 12 4 30 88 96
Friday's Games
Saturday's games
Utah at Indiana 7 p m
Urbana vs Sa1nt F1anc1s IN at Sllawnee Two po1nts lor a w1n one po1nt lor overMle
New York at Atlanta 7 p m
State Class1c 12 p m
loss or shootout loss
Golden State at Toronto, 7 p m
Ursuline at H~ram 1 p m
M•lwaukee at Boston, 7 30 p m
Cedarvi lle at Central State 2 p m
Wednesday's Games
Denver at New Jersey 7 30 p m
Malone at Oaemen 2 p m
BuHalo 4 Dallas 3
M1aml at Philadelphia, 8 p m
Notre Dame at Shawnee State, 2 p m
Washington 3 L.os Angeles 2
Ch1ca~o at Delro1t, a p m
Tiffin at Nova 6 p m
Anaheim 4 Tampa Bay 2
Phoemx at New Orleans, 8 p m
Shippensburg at Seton Hill 7 p m
Thu!'lday's Games
Orlando a1 Dallas, 8 30 p m
Oh10 Dormmcan at lnteramencana PR
Caro11na 2 Columbus ,
Seattle at Portland 10 p m
Vancouver 5, Philadelphia 4
Wash1ngtonatlA Lakars.1030pm
Dallas 2 Ottawa 0
I
Satu~'l Games
Atlanta 3 New Jersey 2 OT
Houston at l A Clippers, 3 30 p m
Boston 3 M1nnesota 2
Miami at Cleveland, 7:30 p m
Thursday's College Basketball
Flor1da 3 Detro•! 2 OT
1 ln d1ana at New Vorl&lt;, 7 30 p m
Majer Scores
Nashville 5 Chicago 3
Detro•t at Charlotte 7 30 p m
EAST
Edmonton 5 Montreal 3
PhoeniX at MemphiS 8 p m
Rutgers 91 Ma1ne 56
Tampa Bay 3, Phoen1x 1
utah at M1twaukee, 8 30 p m
SOUTH
Frlday'a Gamea
Boston at Ch1cago, 8 30 p m
Chattanooga 92 Va lntermon162
Buffalo at PittsOUrgh, 7 p m
' Sacramento at San Antomo, 8 30 p.m
DavidSOn 112 St Marys Md 59
St loUIS at ChiCago, a 30 .P m
!
Sunday's Gamea
Furman 99 Sewanee 69
Washington at San Jose 10 30 p m
1 Ptnladelphia at Toronto, 1 p m
loUISiana-lafayene 95 Oral Roberts 74
Denver at AHanta, 2 p m
L.os Angeles at Anahe1m 10 30 p m
MISSISSippi 69, Nicholls St 43
Saturday's Games
Golden State at New Jersfoly, 6 p m

~a~~~~~·,s

www.mydallysentlnel.com

San AntOI'\IO at New Orleans 7 p m
M1nnesota at Dallas B 30 p m
Washington at Portland, 9 p m
Houston at LA Lakers, 9 30 p m

n

Tol Rogers 49 Tol Woodward 45

oo-

WAHAMA 12·2)

o-1 8

Wheelersburg 72 Portsmouth W 32

Ohio High School BQyo Baakllboll

WAHAMA 56, HANNAN 20
HANNAN 11 ..)
Tabby Payne o 0-0 0, Amanda Porter o O·

Amber Tulley 4

StJgarCreek Ga'"WIII' 52, NeiM:orr&lt;rstoWn
11

Daemen
Pomt Pa1k
Seton Hill
Geneva
Notre Dame
Sa1nt VIncent
Houghton
Roberts Wesleyan

Friday, December 16, 2005

Friday, December 16, 2005

Pittsburgh at Buffalo 5 p m
MISSISSippi St 104 Jacksonville St 80
Toronto at Ottawa. 7 p m
South Flonda 62 Flonda Atlanl!c 44
Florida at Atlanta 7 p m
Southern Miss 90 Wlll1am Carey 57
New Jersay at Carolina 7 p m
Tile Citadel 73 WebbQI' 56
Colorado at N Y Islanders 7 p m
Troy 71, Alabama St 53
Detrt&gt;lt at Tampa Bay 7 30 p m
MIDWEST
1 Philadelphia at St Lou1s 8 p m
Wtsconsm 74 W1s ·Milwaukee 68
Montreal at Minnesota 8 p m
SOUTHWEST
Columbus at Nashville, 6 p m
Arkansas 79 MISSOUri St 75
Boston at Calgary, 10 p m
Pra1r1e V1ew 7 t Savannah St ~
Edmonton at Vancouver 10 p m
R1ce 93 Palm Beach AtlantiC 54
PhOen~x at Los Angeles, 10 30 p m
Tel(as St 58, Texas-Pan American 57
Sundl'f 1 Gatne1
Colorado at N Y Rangers, 5 p m
Thursday's Woman's Basketball
Ftonda at Washington, 6 p m
MaJor Scores
Dallas at Ch1cago 7 p m
SOUTH
San Jose at Anahe1m 8 p m
Charl eston Southern 93 Southern
Wesleyan 70
L.ows1ana-L.afayette 68 Savannah St 40
P R o BASKETBALL
lOUISVIlle 66, N Colorado 57
McNees" St 72, Mobile 61
NBA
Mercer 51, Soutllern M1ss 49
EASTERN CONFERENCE
MISSISSippi St 79 New Orleans 59
Atlantic Division
South Carolina 77, Oh1o 49
WL
Pet
GB
Tennessee 83 Louisiana Tecll 59
Ph1ladetph1a
12 1 1 522
MIDWEST
Boston
9 12 429 2
LSU 64 Ohio St 48
New Jersey
9 12 429 2
St Mary's Cal 60, Bradley 55
NewYorJ.;
6 15 286 5

BASKETBALL

NORTH

GIRLS BAsKETBALL

PageB4

(303}292·8959,

wwwOurAnswarcom
Work 0 home Eam $450$1 500 monthly part t1me
$2 ,000-$4 500 lull t1me
www OurAnswer com

1

L---.:1iO'oiiDoilili..-,.J

Delivered (740)385 9948

Computer Trouble Slloot
and Rapa r
Aflordable
Pr1ces
Expert Service
740·992·2395
Do you need a Care G1ver
Compamon?
I Have
References
Call Beverly
(304)675 1064
Fam1ly Day Care 3 open
1ngs 6 3Dam·5 30pm M·Frl
&lt;Serhhed
&amp;
relerences
Chester Mary {740)9854282
•
Georges Portable Sawm1H,
don t haul your logs to the
M1lljust ca lt304-675 1957
II '\\\ ( I\!

•NO I

•

HiO VALLEY PUBLISH
NG CO recommends tha
ou do business with peo
le you -know, and NOT t
nd money through th
all until you have 1nvesh
ated the ottenn

r
Att real e1tate advtrtlslng
In lhts newspaper Ia
1ubject to the Flld11111
Fair Houtlng Act of 1968
which milk" 1111..gal to
adveftlM any
p...,t.,enee, limitation or
dllcrimln:flon hHd on

A local church group IS look
mg to purchase appro"•
matety
5 acres near
Gallipolis (740)388 8276 or
call

rae• coif, ,.llglon, MX
familial 1tatu1 or national
origin, or 1ny Intention 10
m11k1 eny euch
prtferenct, Umi~llon or
diKrlmlna!lon "
Tille n•w1p11per will not
knowtngly accept
adnrtlnmenla tor real
aat.te which II In
vkJiatlon of tha law Our
reader• are hll,.by
lnform.cl that all
clwalllngt &lt;dverttMd In
this MWIJNiptlr are
available on 1n ~ual
oppor1unlty bi!Ha

Need to sett your hOme?
Late on payment s d1vorce
JOb transler or a dealh? I
can buy your home All cash
and qu1ck closmg 740 416
3130
Ul\1\l"-1

Hou.ws
FOKRL"VI

t 11 n town 2BR
bath
hOuse $375/mo plus Sec
Dap
Vou pay uttlit1es
Country settmg m Galha References and mtn 1 yr
requ ired
Call
County! 3 bedrooms 2 lease
baths f1replace $85 000 '740)446 3644 lor mme 1nfo
1740)709·1166
280
1Ba
m country
Sandhill 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath stove 'rel ngerator pro pane
LA
FA
1 +acr es neat pAy own utlil t1es
landscapmg Outb u ld ng $375 mon th d eposit r£'1 01
Deck
several
Extras Ef\CeS no pel " (7 40 'l.fo,
(304}593·0852
9686

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

3BA 1 5 bath newly renovated 1 Otoc~ trom schools
11'1 downtown
Gallipolis
!740)446 1 119 or (740)709
1249

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

'

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, December 16,2005
ALLEYOOP

Friday, December 16, 2005

I \In!'' 1' 1'1 II..,
,\II\ I 'Ill( 1,

ACROSS

AHenllon!
Local company oHering "NO
DOWN PAYMENT"' programs for you to buy your
1'1ome instead of renting.
* 100% financing
* Less than pertect credit

BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT

Heavy Equip Trai ler, Dual
Wheels Tanderrl Axle 13 ton
$2 ,800 (304)895-3638

rL-------·I "--------

2325 or (740)446-4425.

Llvm'ocK

AN11QUEN

APART·
BUDGET ..,

AQHA gray mare 3 yrs.
$3,000.
Bay weanling,
Buy
or
sell.
Riverine $1 ,000, Brood mare $1,000.
Antiques, 1124 East Main (740)379-2932 .
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740992-2526. Russ Moo(e, Registered black Angus Bull

PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Drive from $344 to $442 .
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call

r

accepted
Equal ,ow
in~•:::r·:-:------, 3 year old. Limited edition
• Payment cou ld be the 740 -446 -2568.
Housing Opportunity.
~~DISEF.&lt;lUi
9273 son, Sunset' Valley
same as rent.
Loca tors .
t •U-1\\..WU'I
Phylis dam. Excellent depoMortgage
"

(740)367-0000

For rent: 2 bedr oom . 1 bath,
fully renovated. all appli·ances,
1940
Eastern
AVe nue,
$475/monlh.
$475/cteposil. Call (740)4463481.

I

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
EO &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments, 2 girl pagent dresses, size 6,
and/or small houses FOR 8, $60 each, 740-742-1601,
REN T. Call (740)"41 · 111 1 740-4 16-4544
tor applic,a tion &amp; Information.

r i il i i 0.-,.1
L.,---i

·~ I~

~~~

taL Appliances f urni shed.
.wr. ~
(740)441·01 17.
--------Modern 1 bedroom apt . Block, brick , sewer pipes,
(740)446·0390.
window s, lintels, etc. Claude
2 bedroom, nea r Porter.
Winters. Rio Grande, OH
Water/trash paid, no pets,
NEW EllM VIEW
Call740·245·5121.
relere nces
requ ired. · .
TOWNHOUSEIAPTS
$370/m o. plus
deposit.
NOW LEASING!
FOR SAI..E
(740)386-1100 .
SPACIOUS
2 &amp; 3 BEDROOM
28A large livlngroom. car2 Regist ered Miniature
BOTH FLATS&amp;
pet, porch, air, in Gallipolis,
· Dachshund puppie s. 7wks .
TOWNHOUSE
S
very nice. no pets. (7 40)446First shots and Wormed
AVAILABLE
2003 or (740)44 6·1 409.
black &amp; ten . $300 (304)593' ALL ELECTRIC
3 bedroom mobile home in
3620
'CENTRAL AC &amp; ~EAT
the Shade area. Water.
'STOVE, REF ,
Adorable Chri stmas puppies
sewer, trash included, $325
"DISHWASHER
AKC . Go lden Retriever, 1st
a month plus deposit. No
•GARBAGE DISPOSAL
Shots &amp; Wormed, ready to
pets a llowed . (740)385·
"WIND BLINDS
4019.
"CEILING FANS
go $300 (740)256·1084

r
"--------,.1
PETs

'WATER, SEWAGE. &amp;
3 bedroom mobile home, 2
·-TRASH INCLUDED
ba th . 1n Middleport, c/a,
PETS CONDITIONAL
$425 plus deposit: 2 bed(304)882-3017
room mobil e home in
Middleport. all eleclrlc, $375 ~
plus deposit, no inside pets, ~-~~
740-41 6·1354
Mobil e home spaces in
Country Mobile Home Pa rk.
(740)385-40 19.

r

APARTMEN'IS

FOR REI'&lt;T

1 and 2 bedroom apartments, flJrnished and unfur·
nished, security deposit
required, no pets, 740·992·
22 18
1 bedroom apartment lor
rent . (740)992·5858
1BR apt 4 rent. Aefrig,
stove, water, trash , sewer
pd. $325 mo. Porter 0 .
New 2BR apt WID hook up,
water. trash pd. $400.
Kanauga Ollio. (740)3677015.

AKC Beagles, 12 weeks on

11n ''·d'(
.

11~

8388.

AKC Pekingese pupp ies.
Beautiful Christmas pres'
ants. (740)446'·1000.
Downtown Office Space· 5 -A-KC_Po
_ m_e-ra-n-la_n_P_u_p_s-.1
room suite $650/mo; 1 room White
Ma la,
t
Sable
office- $22Simo.; 2 room
suite $250/mo. SecuritY Female, Wormed, Ready to
deposit required. You pay go. $350. &lt;740 )388 -8642
2 bedroom apartment Meigs utilities. AU spaces very nice Full
blooded
Golden
Qoun ty, ·very nice, clean, Elevator. Call (740)446-3644 Retriever pups. 3 males, 6
54 25
d
or a int ent.
'
females, wormed and first
. per month
plus ~
epoSII. no pets, references
· d (740)992
shots, $150 each. Parents
&lt;equ1re ·
-5174
on premises. ontact 8 abby

'"

"~---FOiiRiiiiRENriiiiOo-rl

c

in th e colJntry, 6 m11es soutl1
on At. 7. Includes stove and
refrigerator, $250 per. month
plus depos11. utilities included . Taking applications
(740)446-4514.

~28,:R:::.:_u,:p:_st:_:al='rs='a-p_t_2_3_81 st

Watahousa
in Henderson, WV. Preowned Appllcanes starting
at $75 &amp; up all under
Warranty,
also
have
Household

Misc.

ence. (740)4

4

6-4926.
Brand new 2BR apl in
Gallipolis, S450/month
2BR apt SR 160 past Holzer
hospital, $375/month
28R
apt
Bidwell ,
$400/month. (740')441 -1 184 ;
{740)441·0194.

2002 Camara Z28 35tl1
Anniv ersa ry. Low mite s,
loaded, all option s $17,500
080_Call { 3 4 3 . 5706

o )n

2002

White Chevy Cavi ler
Power
Brakes,
Power
Steering, Auto Trans . New
Tires and Low M il eage.
740-949-225 3.

90, Volvo 2~00l, no rust,
runs great, totally reliable.
25mpg
$3,000
080.
(740)245-9142 .
93 Toyota Camry $400·. Cars
from $500. For listings 800391-5227 Ext. C548.

.FlS

TRUCKS

"--------,.1
FOR SALE

1985 Ct1evy 1-ton dump
truck, n ew motor, cab &amp;
paint. Used daily. Asking
$3 ,000. (740)256-1253.

wood framed . like new,
$300 lor both . (740)4460852 speak with Jay or
Melissa
- , - - - - - - - - -Sanyo 27~ cOlor 7V stereo
TV $50 OBO. Call (740)645·
7465

work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

i

4x4
FoR SALE

~

(740)441-7090 .

Dodge Dually 1-to n
extended
catl ,
4x4.
cummins Turbo diesel.
21 ,000 miles. excellent con ·
dillon. garage kept. $25,000
firm. (740)286·0257.
1993 GMC Truck heavy half
4 wheel drive 4.3 V6 auto·
matlc transmission. Runs
excel len t, tranny rebuilt,
motor has low miles, dual
••"aust, toolbo• . Wo"ll sale
"
lor ....,
or best oHer ·on

••,too

cash . Call (740)441 -9378
leave message.

Miniature Pincher. 1 male, 8
wks, black/tan, $300. Male 1998 Mercedes-Benz ML
Shar-Pai 2yt .old, $30d. 320, 4x4 loaded $10,000
1740)368 8124
1304)675-7773
·
·
Purebreed Jack Russe ll
pups. First shots, wormed,
tails docked, $125.00. Call
74G-992·4131 or 740-5171453.
Registered Border Collie
pups. Known for in1elligence
and
herding
instinct.
Imported bloodline and
Classic colors . Wormed and
1St Sh01S. "Tile Gift !hat
keeps on GiVing" lee

4X4 Chevy Truck , Loaded.
Black in Color, Topper. New
Trans, nice stero, $4900.
74D-675-4218.

7411-949-2217

..
"-~~

"r'~~~"~;..;.-:v:":-~----,

FOR SALE

"Insured"

Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
• leave a message

.

.Jr..lsntlJMENI'S

Kimball
Organ/Piano
Swinger
400
The
Enterlalner/11. Asking $500.
Ca ll (740)446·3317 .
--------Upright player plano with
scrolls $300. Calf (740)4464859.

•

Co&lt;Jm

c-

.tina r.a..o

oll.klrR.Io-IJ.r

odt"..nlmioo

.Oimbrj

WlimL H•'"'

LuA• HDIIII

tEm&amp;rold'ery
Nv job ro BIG
~~ or small

SEPTIC TANK PI/MPINC 195.00
PORTABlE TOilET RENTAl
CAll FOR APPOINTMENT TOPAY
591·8757

·

Belint.la &amp;'Leo
Wellington

(740) 992-6694
28589 St . Rl. 7
Middlepo" - OH 45760
Open Evenings
&amp; Weekends

MANLEY'S
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech Street

992-2156

~·

Tree Service

"

fRANK &amp; EARNEST

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

t-IAV~

YOV/l IMAGiftiAfl.Y
PLAYMAn CAL£. MY
\I IMAGINA/lY
~~)?- PLAYMATe.
; ..
----

Stethem

POWER WASHING
(Commer(iat and Residential)

·BARNEY

Mobil_e Homes, Houses, Log HomeS, Decks, IJriveways,
Sidewalks, Gas Station Awni ngs, Degreasi ng of

Equip~e~;n~t,l~~~~~~~j~j~Tr0~acto~•:~To~aiiters,
' "' I

I JEST KINDA TOOK TO IT

deck

NATURAL-LIKE !!

Spedal rates

:THE
BORN LOSER
.
.

mmrnr--,

P'SIC,I-\ .. 11'5

P'WI-\E.I'I '(OU

F!£.N.I 1.(

.:BIG NATE

Owner

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

Remodeling

148-992-1811

Licensed Home Builder

Stop &amp; Compare

(740) 992-0496
V#

Cornerstone
Elecblcal
Service

'I'D
CONI'I'RUC'I'ION
All Your Homt

• FOR ALL YOUR
ELECTRICAL NEEDS.
• MOBILE HOME

lmprovem enr Needs

REPAIRS

Room Add.
Garages '
Window s
Decks &amp; Porche s
Kilchtms &amp; Buths

Plumbing &amp; Elec lric
Siding

Carponll

• CARPENTRY

. • ROOF • PAINT
LICENSE # 38244

TIM DEEM
48336 SR. !24
RACINE. OHIO
740-247-2090
orCetl 740-416-350!!

740-367-0544
740-367-0536

,,.~

Oear Dr. Love ,

Affordable Services
(304) 675-6000
1401 Kanawha St.
Pt. Pleasant

Chuck Wolfe

~
~~

.

My girlfriend and I
really enjoy board games.
Every w~~k~nd, .she comes
eve r and we play Clue,
Monopoly, etc.

• Caring • Professional

~9J~!~Ir..

IMPORTS
Athens

But ldtely it see~ like
.she is get't i .ng boced
with the same old gdroes.
Wh at should I do7

I

1990 Dodge Omni, body in
good condition , lor part s
only. Make offer. (740)446·'
7665.

TIIIICCII'IIIIS 111111-IIIIWIIII•Illllrl. .
Cllllctlllllllnllls &amp; IID810HHII III•IIHrl . .
61111, CIAilleS. IIIW IIIIM Dn ..._ fiiiJIMIII .
llfVISIIIIII Blllbtl.lllllllllrt SIQ llnltrlt.
T-llllrtsllld lltmn.ltrlln 1..111:11111111

14ERE'5 AN
INTERESTING ITEM
FROM NEEDLES,
CALIFORNIA -- ·

hlwetlhlll-.llnZIIII.CIIII

1-lQ.M2-323Z •1-148-'IU-1111
Onlllrs lnlt1-166-550-3232

• WI DIIIV•fllllllllllrl In lim.... Ani
MlllleiiiiOJder
IIIIIIICIIIIIIIUI..II JIICls
IIIIMIIlll FIHIIII-5

SOMEONE SNEAKED
INTO THE CHAMBER
OF COMMERCE 6UILDIN6
LAST NIGHT,AND PW66EO
IN AN EXTENSION CORD

r

·12% Cattle $7.75
-Econo Beef $6.85
·Whole Corn $6.25/Bag
-Cracked Corn $7.25/Bag
·16% Hog Mix $8.751Bag
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

'SUNSHINE CLUB

Shade River AG Service, Inc

..

T~E

CORD LED
OUT 01' TOWN
SOMEWHERE
INTO TfiE

Ohio 45769

----

For more Info. call

740-985-4372

Summer Sausage
Made
SR 124 bel ween

Racine &amp; Syrac use
949,2734

F-118414

.'

.,.,..

7 40-446-9800

•

ADVERTISE
IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH

.GRIZZWEL,LS

HAlJM LUMBER
Scorpion Tractors

T'IE ~Eit

1\\dJ(i\lT Cf

"Taking Th• Sti11g Out Of

l3Efo~

Hard Work! "

Mid-Size 4Whccl Drive Tractor
wi1h 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

·vouR

1/4

i

Pomeroy/Mason R riorlnF&gt;I
Mason, WV

-,

l'VE ~ml uo\~ I'\UT5 ~'1'\1'1~ 1d .F\GU~
GoME'fl.l I1-l.G. I CA\-1
G\Vt:' l'\Pru&gt;. R&gt;l'&gt;.
Cf\RIS\ MJl..'i&gt; 1\\/&gt;.T

Now Available At

I E

BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

.GARFIELD

•,

.1885

Ill:........

DESER.T ..

rfS (HEAFtR 10
lA!:$ A- BUS

fft

Skinned. Cui &amp;
Wrapped

WHY NEW S-

;PEANUTS

~
L1NCO LN
Gallipolis, Ohio

PIDCESSING

PEOPLE
WONDER

Bllcl llahiii1111CIJ.410111, 11111111111. hr 1.111111111

Open For Christmas

CAMPERS ETC.
AT THE
MEIGS CO.
FAIRGROUNDS
Nov. 12, 2005
9:00AM-11:00

perhaps a
Yahtzee.

DECLINE .

Brunhouse

WiNTER
STORAGE . "DEU¥
OF BOATS,

Or

fAPEI'.S
ARE IN

MOTORCYOJ.SI

740-992-5776

AND

lncounhollghtlng &amp;NoveiUes

35537 St Rt 7 N •

Poinsettias-All Sizes
Open Daily 10-4, C losed Sunday

Dear Puzzled :
Get a Ufe.

Puzzled

4 WHEELERS

.,. 34

lai ssez--

5 Fairy·lele

6

heavy
Greek P

7 Single-file
8 Grad.
school
9 Calcutta
attire

spades. ·
Declarer had t~ee top losers: one heart
and two clubs. The trumps lay beautifully,
so he needed to avoid a diamond loser.
But eithe r opponent coul d have held the
diamond queen. It was time to collect
e~&lt;:tra data.
West led the near! ace, tile layout of that

points en route to victory, 107-40.

David, Donna &amp; Brad Deal

• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete

ADVE

A

After taking East's spade queen with his
ace, South led tl1e club jack. We st went in
with the king and played his remaining
spade. Declarer put up dummy 's jack and
led a dia mond to his ace-, covering the
possibility tllat West had !he blank queen.
Now the club 10 went to East's ace, an d
· he defended well, return 1ng a diamon d,
but Meckstroth knew exactly what to do.

fo.IE.t.t&gt;TOGO
01'\ 1-- t&gt;il::.\ ... ~:::::--~~

Dauld R. Deal
Director/Licensee In Charge
Charlie Huber, Director
Josh Billings Rssoc.

.ROBERT
BISSEll
CINSTRICnDII

~~U~:o..,

lead: •

queen-low. one does not play high-low.)
West shifted to a trump, which was revealing. Clearly West did not have the aceking or king-queen of clubs. ~aybe he
had the ace-queen. perhaps only the ace
'
or king.

t])ea[ ![unera[:Home

25 Years Experience
David Lewis
740-992-6971

AAuroC'~~

Opening

4

shout ·

30 Med.
staffers
32 Hooray tor
me! (hyph.)
34 Hull plank
36 Big League
events
38 Under par

as a parka

44 Investment ·
return
45 Reminds
too often
46 Completed
47 Clothing
category
48 Nolhlng
co~thanger
whatsoever
28 Slill
49 Length x
31 Polo need
wldlh
33 Hirl and
50 Fish lung ·
Gore
51 Mach 3 flier
54 Morse
35 Famed
lioness
syllable
37 Inversion
problem

sui t being obv1ous when East played the
queen. (Remember, with a doubleton

"FAMILY OWNED"

r

''""

East
I NT
4 .. .
Pa!&lt;&gt;s

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

AstrcGraph
-.r'lllrthday :

Satuiday, Dec. 17, 2005
By Bernice Bade Oaol
There are always chan ges in the maK inQ
and you will have your lair share ol them in
th(l year ahead.· However, one particular
change could do wonders lbr your psyche
and yolJr ul1imate good.
SAGtTIARI !JS (Nov . 23-0ec . 21)- Today.
try to make 111ings better than they're projected to be. You have the atlility 10 take the
insignificant and !urn It into $0mething of
great value.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan . ,9)-11 won't
offend yolJ today if it turns out tha t your
partner in a joint effort has a better Way ol
doing things than you . In tact. you' ll welcome any advice th at propels you forward
taste~.
.
AOU~AIUS (Jan . 20-Fetl. 19) - One of
the things you'll enjoy the most today is
performing little tasks for those who are
near and dear to you. Working on their
behalf makes life worth al l the hard work
you put in.'
PISCES (Fetl. 20·March 20) - You might
have a difficult time concealing yotJr feelin9s tor those yolJ love ~oday. but tMt
shouldn't be any protllem. Those who love
you will welcome the reasSurance of your
arrectlons.
ARIES (March 21-Aprit 19) -Whenever
you're aole to get in a situation where yolJ
can exercise your inlluence tod ay, you'll
jump at the chance . You'll find such activities very satisfying.
·
TAURUS (Aprii2Q-May 20)- You may teel
a l:lit sluggish today. BlJt an opportunity to
engage in some mental gymnastics will ge t
you back on track.
GEMINI (May 2 1:June 20) - Your percep·
!i ons reg arding fi nancial situations cou l\1
be rigllt on target today, so don't hesitate to
follow your instincts when you find yourself
in a negotiating position where the stakes ,
are h1gh.
CANCER (June 21-Juty 22)- As long as
you are the person whO cans the shots ,
most any project or endeavor you lind
yourself in today should work ou1 Quite
successfu lly. Don't abdicate your leadersh ip role .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) .:... Normally you're
a,l lJn-loving person who wants t_o be where
all the action is, but today you could be
more at peace socializing 1n quiet places
with clOse friends or family.
·
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - It'll be Important to you today to be yery selective of
your friends and activ1!ie s You'll want to tle
certain your friends enJOY the same types
of social outlets as you do.
LIBRA (Sep!. 23-0ct. 23) - Testy situa·
tions are likely to bring out the best in you
·today. You will be able to overcome obstacles .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22)- oa'n•t hesitate to give advice when asked today,
because you will have the ability to hOne in
on the source of a problem wit11oUt being
ilJdgmental and thereby offer sound counseling.
·

by Luis Campos

Celeoriiy Cipner cry~r ams are creal!!d kom qulllo110ns ll'j tamous people. PMI ard pr&amp;SMI
Each letter on 11111 opher s\3~s tor a110ther

Today's cJue: I equals P

" O' L

BEH

UBAZWBHUC

Z E D DN X E EC ' K

IWHZ

HE

SWLU

IWOBSTD .

FWLOU

DUU

A~ LL~

l:aRGE 1-teaD BLo~l(eD 1\-IE
WINNI~G fiELD GOAL I'

~~.'

'®"

.

St. Rt. 124 Chester 985-3301
~

.... .

OK
HJWPOA ."

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "I should be glad if something occurred to me as
ma in idea that occurs to DvoraK only by the way.'' - Johannes Brahms

UMI .-

. IUUUI

Ofour
Riorran;e lethns
ocrombled
kJw to

a

rou

· TJIAT 041Lr

torm lour

of the

WOtdl be·
alrnple words .

PRIEIH

I
I~I. :,:. :. .,.I,1,:--r--ll ·
ERp T c

On of my very favorite
stickers I saw on a pi_ck up
truck. II read: ''Keep Your

I
I 'I\

RE T0 N

I~-~-==
I .,- =·==·=-~ Distancc!.Don'tyoub~a-I ~v~:kerl"

s Ro N Nu

.
1

...,.,-) () Complole

h•..--,.-.,,-:~,....,,-"tl~·
•

_

_

_

_

•

'--.l..-'-..1.-.L.......L-' you

Ihe chuc k It qvofed

by l ill1ng in rh'e mlstlnQI WOtdl
develop hom step No.~ be~ .

&amp;ll PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
'&lt;:1
THESE SQUARES

€) u~~~e~N~~~E

LETTERS

1 1 1 1 1 1 ·· 1

_
SCRAMLETS 12/ll/Ol
Sluice- Jabot- Basis - Queasy- JEALOUSY
My roommate spends a lol of time in front of the

mirror. I think that those who are stuck on themselv~
have no cause for JEALOUSY.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

His

'\l;BMMOTES

AAe

CaRR~ iNG HiM OFF

THE FIELDiP cr,

'--""---'~~~~~

•

~

I
I'

•e
'-"= ' -.;-] '

BAUM LUMBER

PE DCU B

ATJHOK

SOUP TO NUTZ
SlE"""n Pasris'

MN

L N K H. 0 A W D

SWLU .

KELUHOLUK

putt ing up his king to drop the queen. Plus
620 gave USA1 11 international match

£EWIS
CONCRETE
CONSTRUCTION

F40

Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

records

42 Opens,

went one dOW!l in four hea rts.
Once Meckstroth (South) doubled one notrump, he was committed to showing his

OHice: (740) 992C2804 Cell: (740) 517-688)

Dump

~orth

40 1950s

The big match in the last round o1 the
qualifying stage of the Bermuda BoWl in
Portugal was between Italy and USA1.
were the pre-tournament favorites,
and the Americans were the defending
champions. The deals were wild, and the
20th a'nd last featured some instructive
declarer play by Jeff Meckstroth
At the other table, Bob Hamman (West)

TRI-STATE MOBILE POWER WASH
AND LAWN CARE
Owner: Jeff

West

39 Quick-dry
fabrics

1 Gu11el
41 Wagon-lraln
4 Slronghold
team
8 Canteen
43 Furtive
lnlllals
·44 Poelic
11 Magrltte or
adverb
Russo
45 Hlnerant
12 Ottoman
48 Rickrack
title
patterns
13 Slesle
52 Wide st.
14 i..ean toward 53 - fixe
' 15 VHamln
55 Rainbow
supplement
goddess
16 Keogh
56 Army VIP
relative
57 Tilled man
17 Knickknack 58 Throw
10 Gemstone
stand
rocks at
19 " Fausl"
59 Almost
11 Tpk.
18 Harmful
c ha racter
grads
21 Morn 's
60 Booted
20 Revise
22 Sit down
counterpart. 61 Mr. Mineo
22 C,heckers
23 Promise
side
DOWN
so lemnly
23 " Aida "
24 Joie de
composer
1 Bump Into
vlvre
2 .. _26 Zodiac
25 Depend on
twins
Karen ina"
26 Wildebees1S
29 Pamplona
3 Jammed
27 Makeshift

Gain information,
find the card

"Middleport's only
Self-Storage•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references furniShed. Established 1975
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

The Dai,ly. Se~tinel -

JONES'

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring••

IMI'Rm~

--:.1

Db I.

/&gt;-':At&gt; 1»-'L..

992-3194
or 992-6635

LUll

Oealcr: Wcs l

10x10x10x:ZO

HOME

J

t AKJ

www.holzerclinic.com

Middleport. OH

"I I(\ 11 I"

s2e.oo .-r•eli

.J

.~HOLZER CLINIC

:Lfl'(I:U:IIJ:I~

BUDGET
TRANSMIS·
SIONS, All types. (740)245·
5677 or (740)645-7400

AS LOW

. AKIOK5:l

"J

~

BUCKEYE Sanitation

• 9 7 .'i 2
. AQ!1117~

South

Point -.ant. WV

IHentlan
Meigs Ca. Residents!!!

.. Q

Vulnerable : Both

'""""'~

e a

• Qz

• Ka

Box 189
Middleport-OH 45760 , ·
843
'
I

imbrj

(304)67s-z630

·sltcft

P.ast

[j

. AK109652
• Q 10

and Financial Services

,..,. s....
cMJ&gt;..

c""'"

1701 Jefferson Blvd.

·1
98 Chevy E:KI. Cargo work
WI "
mt es.
Van New Trans Great $4900.
CARMICHAEL
Engine VB.
56900. 740- EQUIPMENT.
(740)446·
675-4218
2412.

ONTHIS.P

Carl r. s....

II:Mf•ral"
IM&lt;I•

2003 Suzuki . 4WD Vinson

::,---,---,--,,-------Plush , t ull size 1993 IUlwry
van.
Great
condition .
Mechanic owned. Built -in
solar recharging sys1e1,11.
77,400 miles. Must see.
$5,499. Call John (740)645·
6378.

uow-Hussell
Funeral Home, Inc.

.

loimL""""' u

CWfllpplt'f

Wcsl

Rocky Hupp Insurance

"When• Qualily,Compaulon And Integrity Com e Tognher"

"Where Quality and
Sen·ice (I-futters"

.!I

II li 4 3

• 4 '

South

.

500 AJV

L70,;,oiiiiiM,;,US1iiiiiiiCALiiii.iiiio_.l

•

10x15, 10x20,
10x30
Janet .letlel'li
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

OHIO
95 F250 4x4 Supercab
He avy-Duty. New transmlssian, gooseneck towing
package 79,000 miles. Great
sllape
$8,000
080.
(740)245·9142 .

Phone
(740) 992-5232
SxlO, lOxJO,

45771

7.3 Diesel, '90 F-250 XLT,
Cruise, Air, Heavy Duty, Pull
Anything , $3950
OBO.
(740)245·9142.

·Storage

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

condition , 71,000 miles . .
18121mpg, $13,000 OBO.
(7 40)446-3861.

Items Rhodes (740)379-9110.

Ave. Kitchen with stove &amp; startin g 81 · 99 e &amp; up
(304)675-7999
refrigerato r, hookup for - - -- - - - - washer/dryer, $ 385 /mo nth Childrens Captains bed wltl1
plus utilities. deposit, refer- storage in the bottom. All

CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality

FlO.

02

2 room efficiency apartmen t

GENERAL

1211105

• J 7 4
• 6 i 43

Blgb and Dry

H1ll s Self
Storage

TRIMMING&amp;

va.

SPACE

2 bedroom apt upstairs,
refrigerator, stove. water,
trash fUrni shed. Deposit . . _ _ _ _
required
rent
$310.
(740)446-7620 or (740)44 1. Antique maple butcher block
tabl e 30x34. $250 OBO.
9872 leave message.
(740)446-7665.
2 BA apt 4 rent. W/D hookup - - - - - - - - $400, trash. waler. sewer
pd.
1740)367-7015,
1740)367 -7746, (740)446Appliance
4734

STANLEY TREE

1 \ IIO\

24th,
tri -color,
Shots,
· wormed ,
$100.
Steve 01 greenFordF150XLT4dr,
Stapleton (740)256-1619 or auto, 5.4L:,
bedcover,
(740)446·4172 .
6CD player, sunroof, good

AKG Bleck Lab puppies 4
males.
6 weeks at
Christm
as.
Adorable.
Ta ra
Townhouse
Apartments, very Spacious, Shots,- wormed. $,250.
2 Bedroom s, CIA, 1 1/2
AKC Golden Retriever pupBath, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
pies . POP. One golden litter,
Pool, Patio, Start $395/Mo.
one blonde litter. $250-$350.
No
Pels, ·Lease
Plus
Security Dep9$it Required, No Sunday calls ·(740)2455358.
(740)367-7086.
--------- - - - - - - - - AKC Labra dor Aetriever with
Twin Rivers Tower is accept - lleld and waterfowl hunting
'ing applications for waiting bloodli nes that are calm and
list lor Hud-subsized. 1· br, lamily oriented. Can hold
apa rtment, call &amp;75·6679
c•.. ns
· 1mas. 17401418•
un 11
I
EHO
-

.i

1\'orlh

sition easy calving .
KUHlSANGUS@chartar.net .
(304)949-1401 .
-~

JET
Auros
Furnished Eft. Apartment ,
AERATION MOTORS
lit:JRSALE
1br. Pt. ~leasant. all Utilities Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
For rent: 2 story home, 3BR, Paid peposit
Required Stock. Call Ron !;vans. 1· $5001 Police lmpoundsl
NC. $500/ month: $500 (304}675-7783 ·
800· 537·9528:
Cars from $500. For li stings
deposit. (740)446-3481 .
600-391 -5227 ext. 390~
:. -_a_n_
d_U,-e~d. -F--Newly remodeled house in Furnished upstairs. 3 rooms -N-ew
&amp; oath. Clean, ret &amp; dep.
urnaces. OS Chevy Cobalt 4dr 4Cyl 5·
Gall ipolis,
S49Simontn
required. No pets. (740 )446• Installation
available. speed 40 mpg air, low, all
Brand new 2BR house in l5t9.
(740}441·2667.
hwy miles. asking $12,700
Gallipolis,
$495/month
NEW AND USED STEEL (740)245 -5661 evenings
l740)44t - 1t84 ; (740)441Gracious living. 1 and i bed·
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
()1 94.
1988 VW 13olf:Gas. 40mpg.
room apartments at Village
For
Concrete,
Angle,
(740)256- 1375.
Stop rentin g Buy 4 bedroom Mano r
and Riverside
Cll an nel, . Flat Bar, Sleel
, breclosure $15,000. For Jist- Apartments in Middleport.
Qrating
For
Drains, 1999 Dodge Dakota Ext.
1.,-gs 800-391 -5228 ext. From $295-$444. Call 740·
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L Cab 4X4 Sharp, Loaded
1709.
992:-5064. E:qual Housing
Scrap Metals Open Monday, $8495.0\J .
1991 Ford
Opportunities.
Tuesday, Wedn {!sday &amp; Ranger Ext. Cab · 4X4
Friday. Sam-4:30pm. Closed $2995.00, and many more 2
MOK11.E HOMES
Immaculate
Bedroom
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp; wheel &amp; 4 wlleel drives to
FOR RENT
Apartment, Newly carpeted ,
Sunday. (740)446-7300
choose
from
Riverside
freshly painted and decoratJ4x70.
280,
2Ba. ed, WID Hook- up. Privacy New paint surplus $6/gallon. Motors 2 blocks above
stove/refrigerato r.
CiA, · Fence, 12 minlJtes from Rio Ca ll Mollohans (740)446· McDonalds, Pomeroy, Ot1io
740-992-3490.
propane heat, very nice. Grande, Must See to appre- 7444.
$375/month, deposit, rele~- ciate. $325/mo. (614)595· ~s-,.--on_ed_O::-a::-k-a-n::-d::-H::-Ic_ko_r_
y 2001
Pontiac
Sunfire.
5
ences, no · pets. (740)388· 7n3, ,1·800-798-4686
51,000 miles, $3.500 080.'
firewood. (740)245·9 162.
9686
Lg. 2BA apt. Close to ho spiCall (740)256-6Hl9.
28e droom tra1 er n .uppers
Pl ains
Has nice porch .
$300 00 rent plus deposit
and utilities. 740-667-3487.

Phillip
Alder

on rebuilt engine . For more
details or to see contact (call
evenings or Saturday)David
Troyer, 148 Remblewood Dr.
Patrio t, OH 45658.

i

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

3!1R. LR, DR; 1.5ba.tl'1. rec. Beautiful 2-story townhouse Tt1ompsons Appliance &amp;
rQOm , den , AC, private drive, overlooking Gallipolis city Repa,ir-675·7388. For sale,
garage , deposit requ1red . park . Kitchen, DR, LA, re-conditioned
autometlc
$'750/month. (740}441·05 14. study, 2 baths, la'undry area . washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- Case 810 track loader with
"A Christmas special 1st References requ1rad, securi· tors, gas and electric forks &amp; tlucJi:et has low hours

ty depos1t. no pets. S900 mo. ranges, air conditioners, and
.vear of homeowners insurCall
(740)446·2325
or wringer washers . Will do
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(740)446-4425.
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Beautiful ~-story townhouse - - - - - - - - reof, windows, sidin~ and overlooking Gallipolis City Used Furniture Store, 130
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The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentinel.com

�'
Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.coip

Friday, December 16, 2005

LeBron leads Cavaliers past Anthony, Nuggets
Bv JOE MILICIA
(

ASSOC IATED PRESS

CLEVELAND-· Chalk up
a win for LeBron James in his
friendly rivalry with Carmela
Anthony.
A bruised James outplayed
Anthony by scorin g 26 points
and getting hi s ·teammates
involved with nine assists to
lead the Cleveland Cavaliers
past tlie Denver Nuggets 9485 on Thursday night.
James and Anthony have
met five times since they
were drafted No. I and No. 3
overall in 2003. Denver leads
Cleveland 3-2 in the LeBron
vs. Carmela era, a matchup
that so far has lacked the
intensity needed to . become
the NBA's next great rivalry.
Anthony had 23 points but
shot just 8-of-23 after scoring
a career-high 42 points in a
victorv over Charlotte on
Tuesday night.
Despite bruising his left
shin and hobbling to the locker room late in the first half,
James was able to come back
and create open looks for his

teammates.
"That's something he does
every night," Anthony said .
"They've got shooters out
there who can knock down
open shots, and he put them
in a .~real position w hit
shots.
Damon Jones &gt;eored 17
points and Donyell Marshall
II. Both hit big 3-pointers as
the Cavalie rs ended a threegame losi,,g streak.
Greg Bu ckner· added 15
points and Earl Watson 14 for
the Nuggets. who shot 38 percent to (::leveland's 53 percent. The Nuggets had won
fo ur of five.
"We got stops and made
shots when it counted,"
James said. "When you hold
a team to 38 percent from the
fie ld you give yourself a pretty good ·chance of winning."
In other games, it was: San
Antonio 90, Minnesota 88;
and Houston I04, Seattle 98.
The Nuggets played without Marcus Camby, inactive
with a sprai ned right pinkie,
and pari Boykin s, who
missed his second game with
a left hamstring strain .

Boykins is a Cleveland
native who~pent two seasons
with the Cavaliers. He's hurt
them more than Anthony in
the past, leading the Nuggets
in scoring in two of their wins
over the Cleveland the last
two seasons.
"We've been fighting with
injuries all year," Anthony
said . "So we· ve got to do
what we did tonight, go with
who 's going to go out th.ere
and play."
James ended a stretch of six
games with 30 or more
points. That could be good
news for the Cavaliers, who
went 1-5 with him carrying
the load .
James, who declared the
team was in a funk following
Tuesday night's loss to
Atlanta, added nine assists,
including a no-look pass to
Alan Henderson that thrilled
the crowd.
Zydrunas llgauskas ·scored
16 points and gave Cleveland
a presence inside with three
blocks after missing one
game with a sprained right
knee.
Marshall hit a 3-pointer to

.
/
see how it reacts nine rebounds, missing four
Saturday (against Miami) ."
of his seven free-throw
James played the enti(e sec- , attempts. He was- 5-for-20
ond half and said if he had sat from the foul -line in his preout it likely would have stiff- vious two games.
ened ·up.
- The Spurs, who improved
Neither team could estab- to 18-4, are 16-0 when they
!ish control early as the shoot 45 percent or better
Nuggets opened with a 17-7 from the field.
Rockets . I 04, SuperSonics
lead, then missed their next
II shots as the Cavaliers put 98
together a 22-2 run.
At Seattle, Tracy McGrady
James took a breather and took over down the stretch,
the Nuggets started a 14-0 run scori ri~ 14 of his 34 points in
to go up 39-33 late in the first the fourth quarter, and
half. The Cavaliers were Hou ston won its fifth straight.
A night after playing nearly
ahead 44-40 at halftime, led
by James' 17 points.
46 minute s : in an overtime
Spurs 90, Timberwolves 88 win at Golden State,
At Minneapolis, Michael McGrady played all but 18
Finley scored 21 points, . ·seconds as the Rockets
including the last six for San improved to 4-0 on their sixAnto!.Jio, to help the_ Spurs game road trip. It was
· Houston's first win after
hold off Minnesota.
Kevin Garnett. got the best g\)ing 0-4 in the second game
of Tim Duncan with 24 points of a back-to-b,ack.
and a season-high 21
Yao Ming added 26 points
7-for- 10 shooting, and 10
rebounds,
but
the
Timberwolves dropped their rebounds.
Ray Allen scored 30 points
third straight when Troy
I-Judson 's off-balance , run- but'Couldn 't match McGrady
ning jumper in traffic at the in the closing moments as
buzzer fell short.
Seattle lost its fourth straight
Duncan had 13 points and at home.

cap a 12-4 run for an 8-3-76 and,
lead with 3:46 left as the
Cavaliers took control. He
made another with 1:5lleft to
finish off Denver.
·" I blame it on the NBA
game being too long,"
Nuggets coach George Karl
said. "We played well for 42,
43 minutes. We ran out of gas
a little."
Marshall, who also had a·
season-high 12 rebounds. was
2-of-4 fro m beyond the 3point arc. Jones went 5-of-11 .
" It was a testament to our
ability to share the basketball ," Cavaliers coach Mike
Brown said. "Those guys are
shooters. That' s what they
do ."
Despite his injury, James
still showed quickness, ~teal­
ing an inbounds pass for an
easy slam to end the third
·quarter with Cleveland ahead
66-65.
"It really didn't bother me,"
said James, adding that he
originally got hurt running
into Atlanta's Royal lvey on
Tuesday
night.
"Andre
(Miller) !meed me in the shin.
I just have to take care of it

on

No. 3 LSU takes down No. 4 Lady Buckeyes, 64-48
Bv RUSTY MILLER
ASSOCIAT ED PRESS

COLUMBUS - A new
year, same old talented LSU.
Seimone Augustus, last
year's player of the year,
scored six of her 21 points
during a 13-0 first-half run to
lead the third-ranked Lady
Tigers to a 64-48 victory over
No. 4 Ohio State on Thursday
night.
When she wasn ' t making
huge plays, 6-foot-6 running
mate Sylvia Fowles was.
Fowles scored a career-high
25 points and had 16
rebounds. missing only four
ofh~r 15 shots from the field.
· Their play completely
deflated an Ohio State team

that felt it was ready to step elite programs in the country
into the big time.
. - LSU has made trips to the
"Yoto could see their inten- Final Four the last two years
sity going down," Augustus - against an Ohio State team
said . "It's difficult when you which has dominated in its
make a run and a team stops region but longs to move into
yo ur momentum and then the national hierarchy.
goes on a run of its own."
"I think this team's chem· The Lady Tigers (6-0) never istry is totally different from
trailed after the opening 6 the other two (Final Four)
minutes and their lead never teams," Augustus said. "This
dropped below double figures is a young team and there's a
in the final 24 minutes.. They lot for everyone to learn. We
led by as many as 25 points wouldn't be the No.3 team if
before coasting to the finish.. we didn' t have people who
'That was probably our best wanted to get better and waingame of the season," said ed to make the team better."
Augustus, who scored in douJessica Davenport led Ohio
ble figures for the 68th game State (6- 1) with 14 points but
in a ro}v. "We were complete was constantly confronted
on the offensive and defen-· with Fo',Vles and at least one
sive ends."
other defender every time she
The game pitted one of the touched the ball. Brandie

Hoskins added 13 points.
With the score tied at I 0,
"We knew she (Davenport) the Lady Tigers ran otf the
was the head of the snake," next 13 points - ·with
Fowles said. "We went under Augustus hitting three baskets
the assumption that if we took and Fowles adding five
het away ... if we could slow points.
her down, it would affect their
"''ve never played against
team."
someone as big as Jessica, so
LSU took over the game I think this was my best
with its defense. The first time game," Fowles said.
down the floor, the Buckeyes
Ohio State , which had won
got the ball into Davenport's · its last 21 home games,
hands and Fowles promptly missed its seven shots from
swatted her shot. away. It was the field during the drought.
a bad omen for an Ohio State Meanwhile,
the
Tigers
offense which is predicated looked stronger inside and
on looking inside to its first- quicker outside, hitting 6 of 8
team All-American center.
from the field.
"Everybody stuck to the
Ahead 33-15 at the half,
defensive scheme, which was the Lady Tigers scored seven
to limit Jess' touches. We of the next nine points for a
wanted to make it difficult for 40-17 lead. Ohio State never
her," Augustus said.
got closer than 12 points

agaon.
"It was pretty physical otit
there," Davenport said.
"Everybody's game plan is to
try to crowd me and make
other players beat them."
Despite suffering their
worst honie loss since a 20point setback to UC-Santa
Barbara four years ago,
Buckeyes coach Jim Foster.
joked that the future wasn 't
entirely bleak for his team . ·
"It's very obvious that the
chance of having an upside
or improving are greater than
theirs," he said: " Because
Augustus and Fowles aren't
getting any better. That's a
fact. They 're the tirst players
taken the next two years in
the· professional draft."

.~~·

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