<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5801" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/5801?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-04T04:07:46+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15731">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/1a0ce218e19caf758cf6bf13e7dc85ce.pdf</src>
      <authentication>3b64a9f1c09831dc397df38b1b87ff56</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="19521">
                  <text>Page B&amp; • The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, July 24, 2003

--

www.mydallysentinel.com _

(.

Contest .invite~ommunities
to improve disa~led access
.

DEAR ABBY: Somewhere
in this great country there's a
town or city th\11 will win
$25.000 and national recogni·
lion by entering the National
Organization on Disability's
2003 Accessible America
contest. Anyone who feels
that his or her community is a
model of accessibility - a
place where people with dis·
abilities can fully participate
just like anyone else should encourage the mayor
to enter the contest before the
Oct. 31, 2003, deadline.
When communities make
the commitment to improve
accessibility, all of their citi·
zens and visitors benefit. One·
fifth of all Americans have
some sort of disability. That's
why it is crucial that communitie ~ ensure a safe and welco ming environment. The
Accessible America contest
puts a spotlight on those cities
and towns that are leaders in
improving the quality of life
for people with disabilities.
As vice chairman of the
National Organization on
Disability (NOD), l urge may--brs in towns large and small to
place a priority on creating a
level playing field for all citizens by providing equal
access to their services and
facilities. I encourage them

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
not only to share their suc·
cesses by entering the contest,
but also to join NOD' s
Community
Partnership
Program on behalf of their
constituents. It's a great way
to learn how best to comply
with the Americans With
Disabilities Act and to get tips
on maximizing access and
opportunities. -CHRISTO·
PHERREEVE
DEAR CHRISTOPHER:
Count me among your many
fa ns. I'm pleased to publicize
such a worthwhile endeavor.
Readers ,
the
NOD
Community
Partnership
Program is sponsored by the
Alcoa Foundation, and the
Accessi ble America contest is
sponsored by UPS. l salute
both for their community
involvement.
To Jearn more about the
contest, call (202) 293-5960
or visit the NOD Web site:

www.nod.org. I' II put the
name of the winning entrant
in my column in Dece mber.
DEAR ABBY: I am 16 and
attending summer school. My
sister, "Maria," is a year older
than me. She's new to our
sc hool becau se she ju st
moved here to live with our
mom and me. (She was living
with Dad, but he kicked her
out.)
Since the day Maria set foot
on campus, every guy here is
after her -- and I know why.
She wears skimpy clothes and
has a big chest.
·
Now every boy I like ends
up liking Maria instead of me.
I'm sick of it. There's only so
much a person can take, and
I've reached my limit. Do you
hav e any advice for me,
Abby? - EXASPERATED
IN NEW MEXICO
DEAR EXASPERATED:
1')1 begin with some words for
your mother, because she is
the perso n who is · going to
have to deal with your sister.
There is a time and a place for
everything. Maria is crying
out· for attention. but she's
getting the wrong kind- and
unless there is intervention,
she'll wind up in trouble.
Your mother should make it
her business to find out what
is proper attire at your school

ACROSS

42 Freudian
topics
1 Office subs 43 Cabin
6 Traffic
46 In and ofIndicator
48 Squirrel ·
11 Unmoving ·
food
12 - Kea
50 list price
54 Relax
volcano
13 Shining
In the pool
15 Portray
55 - fatale
16 Brawl
56 Steamy
18 After
d.ance
deductions 57 Stumbles
19 Hot tub
21 "The King
DOWN
and I"
name
1 Aunt,
22 Thick slice
in Madrid
23 Norwegian 2 High school
monarch
sub].
25 Hostel
3 Director
28 Nanny
- Brooks
30 Engage
4 Inexpensive
In rivalry
housing
31 Sign before 5 Marshal's
VIrgo
badge
32 Qty.
6 Iowa
33 Casual
7 Kind
farewell
of she
35 Mandate
8 Breakdown
37 Some MDs 9 A single
38 Folksinger
time
-tves
10 Light bulb
40 Garden tool
measure
41 Country
14 Famous
addr.
clinic

I

and enforce the dress code .
· Now. some advice for you:
Sibling rivalry is normal the attention your sister is
attracting
is
transitory.
Concentrate on your grades
and on activities at which you
can excel. That way, you'll be
an outstanding individual in
your own right and not just
"somebody 's sister." Trust
me, it'll pay off in the end.
P.S . Please clip this column
and show it to your mom.

under lights, B1

•
15 Tibet'sLama
Rain
drains
Slouch .
Pieces
Hitch
Service
charge
Homer
opus
Bottle tops
Make
mention of
Recede
Mongol
dwellings
Hobo
Suggestive

17

19
20
22
24

!Y

(Dear Abby is wrillert by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded by her mother,
Pauline Phillips. Write Dear
Abby at www. DearAbby.com
or P. 0. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.)

Kishbaugh, her
art at vas, A2

OUtoopen

25

26
27

29
34
.

36
39

look
43 Knife handle
44 Pac·1 o team
45 Saturday
morning
fare
46 Gung·ho

about
47 Took off
49 Old cloth
51 Yvette 's
boyfriend
52 Bratty kid
53 "Miserables"

Sports
• Crocker among
unsigned . See Page 81
• Pirates beat Reds.
See Page 81

The
newspaper
is a valuable
learning tool
for students
~~ of all ages .
It connects
the principles
and facts they learn in the
classroom with stories
and events that are
happening here and
around the world.

Sentencing postponed in terrorism case
COLUMBUS (A P) - An
Ohio man who pleaded guilty
to helping the al-Qaida terrorist network ha s been placed
on a suicide watch and is on
medication for mental health
problems, hi s attorney says.
A judge has delayed the
scheduled sentencing of
lyman Faris while a mental
health evaluation is done.
Faris, 34, of Columbus, was
sc heduled to be sentenced
Aug. 1 in federal court in
Alexandria, Va .. on two counts

of providing aid to al-Qaida.
U.S. District Judge Leonie
Brinkema on Thursday granted Faris' request for a psychological or psyc hiatric
e valuation.
.
Faris has been placed on a
suicide
watch
at
the
Alexandria, Va., city jail and
is taking Prozac, · an antidepressant, to allow him to func tion within "normal" limits,
according to a motion filed by
Faris' attorney, Fred Sinclair.
in federal court Thursday.

There's plenty of room for
improvement in the year
ahead, so sort out what is
important to you. The changes
may come about slowly, but
with patience, things will
change.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) -learn up with an associate if
you find you are in need of a
few
good
suggestions.
Anyone would be flattered to
be included in your plans.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- A major objective can be
accomplished today, but
you'll have a few rough spots
to clear up first. Success will
depend on your preparation.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
Don't allow another to
speak for you. You're the one
who can make the best pre·
sentatioo. Sell it yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) Your position will
actually be stronger than that
of yot!r counterpart, so don't
let the other guy or gal dictate
all the terms of the transac·
liiCI&lt;.~. A~ 'ltU EKm\HC:t

~

·~

"=
IJ
~

YoUR 9.!M\&lt;\ER

tion.
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21) -It is rarely wi se to
rush to judgment, and today is
no exception. If you want to
make smart decisions. take
time to consider all the angles
on all the issues.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
Jan. 19) - Be protective of
your career interests today.
Attention and prudence will
prevent any mishaps.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- Subdue your assertiveness today when dealing with
associ ate s on a one-to-one
basis . If you get pushy, you'll
not win their support.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March
20) - This can be a productive day for you, provided you
avoid false starts. Identify
your priorities and concentrate only on them.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) A plan you've had
doubts about is feasible today.
Get over your · fears. Any
kinks you encounter can easi·
be worked out.

TAURUS (April fO-May
20) - Your possibilities for
personal gain are very good,
even if early indicators appear
questionable. If you don't
throw in the towel, you can
realize a profit.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) - If you're not diligent,
the control ' of an important
matter will slip from your
grasp. Don't be indifferent to
indicators; you're the one who
can make things happen.
CANCER (June 21-July
22) - Don't be so quick to
alter eve nts if you get a bit
doubtful. As the clock ticks
on, you'll see things begin-

Tryin g to patch up a broken
romance? Tile Astro.Grapil
Matchmaker wheel can help , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
you understand what to do to
~~~oRO@@@
make the relationship work.
f ,l '
S C R I M M ~ G E•
Mail $2.75 to Matchmaker.
\!Y
P.O. Box 167, Wickliffe, OH
••ooWN
44092 -0167. Visit www.bernice4u.comfor more advice.

(j)@@ @@

0000000

t[)\!N\t[\fy\@@fi:'.
~v.:5'CJ~

Cover All The

Major Subjectsl
. L--...:.---~--...1

2nd DOWN :

22

• 117

41hOOWN

AVERAGE GAME 160-170

•.,.,.,

JUDD'S TOTAL

"

-

28

250

to

AVERAGE GAME IIG-120

by JUDD HAMBRICK

Scrim-

0
0
0

4tll DOWN

FotiR PLAY TOTAl
TIME LIMIT: 20 MIN

College Oidiooary.

• Olevia Roush, 98
• Marcia Denison, 94

• Overcoming persistent
sadness . See Page A2
• Religion briefs See
PageA2
• Community calendar
SeePage AS

Volunteers needed to transport Confederate cavalry

=

Weather

DIRECTIONS! Make a 2· to 7-letter word from lhfl letters on eadl yardlin&amp;.
Add points to sach word or tatter uSing sconng directiOns at right. Sewn-letter
woras get a 60-polnl bonus. A ll worels can be tound 1n Webster's New World

mag~ ·

Page AS

Inside

JfdOOWN

41hDownTola!

•lOPo1n1s.

previous
Word

0t

Obituaries

2oooJDOWN

@@g~~g~ .
00
0
2~ 92
®&lt;9@@@@@

Answer

1SIOOWN

'0 :·:.,oro:;,;""

@@@@®®@ ;1~ ~~:~~Tooal

NEWSPAPERS

®
·:....!!l...
E.® 3odD~

L/'J

0000000

1'\'IJI\D SCRIMMAGE" SOlUTION BY JUDD HAMBRICK
f
C' 2003 Ul'lll.cl fiMUI'I S.,ntlll:.l . Inc.

T.

attempt. She said Thursday
he needs' such an evaluation.
"By the history I've had
Wi th him, I would say, yes. he
does," she said. The couple
divorced in 2000 after five
years of marriage.
Faris. a U.S . citi zen from
Pakistan, pleaded g uilty in
May to providing slee ping
bags, cell phones and cash to
al-Qaida. He faces up to 20'
years in prison and a
$500,000 fine.

POMEROY- For more
than a dozen years, Rita
and Junior White have
been entertai ning at the
Meigs County Sen ior
Citizens Center once or
twice a month.
They were there
Thurs day playing and
s inging the old songs like "Dream ", "Hey
Good Lookin " and
" Harbor Lights " - to
the delight of the
Center's lu ncheon
crowd.
The seniors sang along
with the Whites and
danced to their music
making it apparent that
this was a time of fun
for everyone .'
(P hotos by Charlene
Hoeflich)

ning to work themselves out.

i:

be co nfident he's able to
a'sist me in preparation of his
defense for se ntenc in g or
whatever lies ahead."
The government did not
oppose the request. The evalu·
ation is expected to delay sentencing by several weeks. No
date for the evaluation was set.
Faris' ex-wife. Geneva
Bowling, of Columbus, says
her former husband suffe red
from depression and was
treated at a Col umbus mental
hospital after a suic ide

Whites entertain at Senior Citizens Center

Astrograph.
BY BERNICE BEDE 0SDL

Sinclair said he's had. trouble co mmuni cating with
Faris about legal documents
presented for review.
Sinclair requested a medical eva lumion 10 determine
whether Faris is competent to
assi st in hi s defense.
In a phone interview. Sinclair
said Faris has pre-existing
mental problems that haven't
been properly addressed.
"He's presently of a state of
mind he needs some evaluat ion," Sinclair said. "I want to

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

JUDO'S SOLUT10N TOMORROW
e 2000 Unlit!! Future Syndltatt, Inc .

hoefl ich@ mydailysentinel.com

Sunny, HI: SO., Low: SO.

r=---.,

POMEROY - When the
Morgan 's Raid re-enactors
arrive in Wilkesville on Sept.
3 for the first night of their
encampment,
they
will
unload their horses and gear
and then move their vehicles
with trailers to Bashan for the
trip home after the 2 p.m.
Sunday skirmish there .
Since the Ohio Bicentennial
feature event starts from

k-5~&gt;---'

'4t4\\0t-\ '::&gt;

'

E-

' LL lll E~E lliJTEL5 WRWIIIE
11)65 ON VACATIO~.

NO LEAPIN~ ON lliE SED W11!1
ITET.
NO 5LOS&amp;R1Nfr WIITER ALL !1/ER ThE tLOOR.

ELECTRA, AS LON~ A5 ~OU
USE 6A51C

MO

PLA~II'lfr 11i r&gt;&lt;r~

W\111 'lliE NICE llli!.IEL5.

NO EATIM6 "l\IE lfol· ROOM BROCHURES.
NO LEI\VIN 6 SU M~ RAWHIOE5 ON 111( tUR~ITUR L

NO tl05E ~INTo ON ThE WINDOW~ .
NO MlllUNo £ACH TINIE nERE'S Afol ANI NIAL ON 1'J.

~OU

GJ\LL li4AT

Wtlkesville and the re-en&lt;K.'Iors '
vehicles will be parked at
Bashan, volunteers are needed to
drive
the
Confederate
Cavalrymen back to their campsite in Vinton County that
Wednesday evening.
It is approximately 30 miles
and will require numerous vehicles. The route back is County
Road 321 (Eagle Ridge Road)
to Ohio 7 to Ohio 124. The time
involved to make the trip is
about 45 minutes, according to
Gemld Powell , who is assisting
with making the tmnsportation

in participating as militia or a
Union infantryman are invited to attend a training worl}sho p which has been planned
for Aug. 17 on the Pickens
farm near Five Points.
Registration starts at 8 a.m.
and the workshop will be held
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There
will be a $ 10 registration fee.
For further informatio n
about the workshop, co ntac t
Darrell Markijohn , Morgan 's
Re-e nactment event coordinator, (330) 492-7107, eLocal indi vid uals interested mail eds harp@ad l. co m. or

arrangements.
Anyone willing to assist is
asked to register with Powell
at 992-2622, Jane Ann Burns
at 669-3915 o r David Stiffler
at 669-46 71.
The vehicles with tra ilers
making
the
trip
from
Wilkesville to Ba,han wiU be
escorted by the Goldwing Road
Riders, Chapter E3 of Pomeroy.

Be a re-enactor

call Bob Vance, commander.
(614) 477-937 1.
Participants must be at least
16 years old to serve as soldiers, use weapons, or be pre·
sen t at the battle area. They
must
also
demonstrate
knowledge of proper drill and
safety.
The militia participants are
to be dressed as the local civil·
ians. Garments worn by the
militia mu st be made by period pattern of materials closely
resembling those avai lable in
the late 1850s to 1860s.

A

' VACAitOt-1" 7 ~
0
0
Q

Carleton requests two-mill levy; 10 staff members laid off

Beau Diddle
Southern Elementary

BY BRIAN

J.

REED

breed@ mydailysentinel.com

Index
l Slldlons - 12 Pages

AtiAl.•

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
.
pear Abby
Editorials
~Faith• Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries
Sports

A2
83·5
86
86
A4
A2

AS
A6

AS
81 ·3

0 2003 Ohio V11lley Publishing)Co.

SYRACUSE- The Meigs County
Board of Mental Retardation and
Developmental Di sabilities will
~gain seek a two-mill ievy in
November.
The levy request, made to the
Meigs Co unty Commissioners o n
Thursday, follows the layoff of I 0
employees earli~:r this week.
The MR/DD Board, which oversees the operation of .the Carleton
School and Meigs Industries adult
workshop, has tried to pass the levy
seven times since 1998.
"Those unsuccessful attempts have
re sulted in extre mely tight budgets
and caused the board to eli minate 13
positions through attrition, resulting
in a reduction of services," Executive

•

.

'.

''

'&lt;'"·: 1;,-.~lillillli.,~~~M•IIi~!Or'
~·

Director Steve Beha said Thursday.
The board 's financial difficulties
have forced the layoff of I0 employees, 'effective Aug. 3 1, Beha said.
Four veh icle assistants. two regi stered . adult services workers, a van
driver. a physical therapi st, a therapy
assistant and an adapti ve physical
. , education position have been eliminated , and will not be re-hired unless
the levy is approved.
The levy. if passed, would generate
$500,000 per year for opera tions,
enoug h to offset losses from state
budget cuts totaling $109,000 in
2003 and 2004, a projected defline in
local property tax proceeds of
$77.000 in 2003 , and increases in
em ployee insurance, vehicl e and liability insurance premiums of
$84,000 .
Beha said the board may be forced

to study the possibility of closing the
school and work shop on Ct. ~ain days
and ot her budget c uts between now
and Dec . 3 1.
"I cannot overstate how important
the passage of the Nov. 4 lcvy is to the
well-bei ng of the program, and to the
continuation and restoration of ser· '
vices next year for students and adults
with developmental disabilities,'' Beha
said.
The Rev. Walter Heinz, chairman of
the MRIDD. Board, said this eighth ,
last-ditch effort to pass the live-year
levy wi II likely seal the fate of many of
the school's programs.
''If this levy doesn't pass thi s time.
the program will no longer be recog·
nizable," Hein z said.

Area
Did you know that the Ohio Bureau of Workers' Compensalion is
offering grant monies for Transitional Work Programs?
'Did you know this program can reduce your workers' camp costs?
Call Holzer Work Link to see how this program can be provided at
;;:;;.._.__ _P'P"'!II......
no~ch!.!!a~r~ge to state funded employers.

MOM ~Nf ME
AN OI.D BLANKET

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover the Holzer Difference

Call

Holler
Work l.~lnk

446·5733 or
toll •••• ·1 ~866-308·2266

www.holzer.org
,•

------0

"

'

�Faith • Values

The Daily Sentinel

Art and Shirley Kishbaugh of
Colorado Springs, Colo. will be
at the Middleport Church of the
Nazarene, 980 General
Hartinger Parkway, Middleport.
for vacation Bible school next
week. Classes to be held from
6:30 to ,8 p.m. Monday through
Friday, will feature songs, skits,
puppet shows, and treasure
chest surprises from the
Kishbaughs. Pastor Allen
Midcap invites boys and gins of
all ages to attend the Bible
school. Mrs. Kishbaugh, pictured here, is the former Shirley
Gilkey ot'lVIiddleport.

Religion briefs

MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene will have a 75th
anniversary celebration August
2 and 3 at the church located
at 980 General Hartinger
Parkway in Middleport.
The event will kickoff with a
cookout at noon on Aug. 2.
Those anending are to take a
covered dish.
On Aug. 3 at 10:30 a.m. former supply pastor, the Rev.
Bob Stewart, will speak. At the
6:30 p.m. service, the Rev.
Greg Cundiff, pastor from 1993
to 1999, will speak. There will
be special singing at both services by the Bev Adkins and
Tammy Black. Pastor Allen
Midcap welcomes the public to
JOin the church in celebrating
the mjlestone.

Presley tribute
set for Sunday

•

TUPPERS PLAINS
Elvis Presley tribute artist
Dwight Icenhower will perform a program of gospel
music at 3 p.m. on Sunday at
the South Bethel Community
Church, located on Silver
Ridge Road, across Ohio 7
from Eastern High School. A
freewill offering will be collected
for
Icenhower.
Refreshments will be served
following the program.

Quartet to give
concert
POMEROY- HeavenBound
Quartet will be in concert at 6
p.m. Sunday at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodst Church. Free will
offering will be taken.

CARPENTER AU-day
homecoming starting with
Sunday School at 9:45 a.m.
will be held al the Mt. Union
Baptist
Church.
Guest
singers will be Earthen
Vessel and The Gabriels.
Rev. Mark Morrow to speak.
Dinner at noon. Pastor David
Wiseman invites the public.

vacation Bible school to be
held 6 to 8:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday of next week
at the Syracuse First Church
of God. There will be games,
crafts, and snacks. For more
information call992·1734.
CHESTER
Vacation
Bible school will be held at
the Chester United Methodist
Church , 6:30 to 8 p.m. Aug. 37. Theme will be "Follow Me."
SYRACUSE Vacation
Bible School will be held 6 to
MIDDLEPORT - Vacation 8:30 p.m. Monday through
Bible school will be held 6 to Friday at the
Syracuse
8:30 p.m. Monday through Nazarene Church. The program
Friday, Aug. 1, at the will be on Aug. 3 adt 10:30 p.m.
Middleport First
Baptist
• • _
Church, Sixth and Palmer~ ....
Streets.
Theme will be '-'UUl
"Jesus To the Rescue." .
RACINE - Vacat1on B1ble
school will be held from 6 to 9
SYRACUSE - The conp.m. Monday through Friday
gregations . of Forest Run,
at
the
Racine
United
Syracuse
and Minersville will
Methodist Church. The Zoom
have a combined worship
Zone will be the theme.
so;~rvice
at 11 a.m. Sunday at
MIDDLEPORT Heath
Syracuse
United
United Methodist Church will the
Methodist
Church.
hold a community Vacation
Bible School from 6 to 8:30
The Rev. Jack Lethenstrom
p.m., July 28 to Aug. 1 at the of St. Cloud, Fla. will be
church. Classes will be held preaching at the service. He
for kindergarten through sixth will join his brother-in-law, the
grade. The theme is "The Rev. Bob Robinson, pastor of
G real Kingdom Caper." All the churches, in serving comyouth of the community are
munion. For the children, the
invited. Information is availRev. and Mrs. Lethenstrom will
able by calling 992-2909.
POMEROY - Mt. Hermon do a puppet show.

Vacation Bible
schools

"J
biftea
Service planned

United Brethren in Christ
Church will hold its vacation
Bible' school, 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. Monday through Friday
of next week. The theme will
be "Dive into God's Love" at
S.C.U.B.A. A super cool
undersea Bible adventure will
provide fun, memorable biblelearning activities for all ages.
Anyone with questions can
call 985-4346 or 985-9837.
SYRACUSE - ''Treasures
of the Nile on an Expedition
to Jesus" will be the theme of

WORS·HIP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, July 25, 2003

In last week 's column, it
If Jesus Chri st joyfully
was noted how Psalms 42
overcame, for our sakes, the
suggests how to overcome a
prospects of the Cross, it
persi stent
sadness . The
should be readily recognized
that we, too, can overcome
beginning point identified
inadequacies of the soul.
any source of sadness that
But;'there is more.
Ron
confronts us.
Within the context of
Branch
Furthermore, when one
resolving persistent sadness,
considers the spiritual difference the Resurrection makes,
the Psalmist reveals the
necessity of not forwarding
our sense of misery may disaccusing questions .
sipate like the mists of the
There are three questions fail. "
mornmgs.
It is far too painful to the
Confidence in the Lord is
directed to God. " When shall
?"
human
existence
to
stay
peralso
a proper principle to
I Come before You God
'
·
Next, "Where are
you,
petually sad. Practice the ~ractice as 11 involves God's
God?" Lastly, " Why have proper principle of worship oving-kindness, the promisyou forgotten me, God'?"
and escape from the grip of es of prayer, and the soothing
These are questions typi- sadness'
song of the Lord that comes
cally accusatory of God.
Another clue to the prac- at night. The Psalmist careSuch questions clouded his tice of proper principles i s fully directs our spiritual
judgment in such a way so as found in his determination to . energies, just like he did.
• 1·
G d f' h'
remember some snecific ,
One last clue the Psalmist
to tmp tcate o or lm not powerful demonstrations of reveals to us is to hold onto
bein~ able tod rise above his God. Said the Psalmist, " I the hope. He speaks to his •
persistent sa ness.
'I
b
h f
h own soul, and safs, "Hope
In much the same way, WI 1 remem er t ee rom t e
these are questions which land of Jordan."
thou in God, for shall yet
·
f
Our
point
of
remembrance
praise
Him for the help of
d
I
h b
sa peop e, on t e asr s 0 reference should always be His countenance, who i s the
self-pity,
. o f health of my countenance."
E often direct toward the Cross and Resurrecuon
The countenance of God is
God. ach is inane because Jesus Christ. Indeed, Jesus
d.
S .
a holy qualt'ty that rubs off on
we may always have access Chr'
·h
1st, accor mg to cnpture,
God G0 d · 1
· to
·
IS a ways Wit
was a man of sorrow and us. It is comparative to being
. us. God never forgets us.·
. d wn
· h gne
· f.
around · one whose J·oyful
acquamte
A ccusatory
questions
Yet, the writer of Hebrews character is contagious. One
merely extend a persistent says
about
the
Lord. cannot help being the same.
sense of sadness. Quit
asking
"L
k
'
J
In much the same way, God's
·
oo mg unto esu s, th e
sue h sense Iess quesuons.
author and finisher of our countenance is a help to us. His
h f
h ·
h
countenance 1
·s the source of
Another clue the Psalmi st f · h
·
h 1
· 1
h
a1t , w o or t e JOY t at
g1ves to e P us mvo ves t e was set before Him endured health for our own counte:
practice of the proper princi- the Cross, despising the nance. The quality of His hope
pies, such as the critical prin- shame, and is set down at the rubs off on us to negate nagging
ciple of worship. " I went right hand of the throne of sadness. God loves you. Do not
with them to the house of God."
be always sad.
God, with the voice of joy r-----.......,,.--- - - - - - - - - - - - - and praise, with a multitude
that kept holy day."
It is incredible that people
place worship at the bottom
Reader Services
(UsPs 213-960)
· of the list of priorities when
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
they experience a time of criCorrection Polley
Published
every
alternoon,
sis. Rather, we should rush to Our main concern in all stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 Courl
worship where we can cor- accurate. If you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy. Ohio. PeriodiCal
porately come into contact sfol)l, call the newsroom at (74{)) 992- postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
·
with God .
and
the Ohio Newspaper
Someone
powerfully
Association .
Our main number Is
described worship as "the
Postmaster: Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
sight of God seen through
tions to The Daily Senlinel, 111
Department extensions are:
Courl Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
earthly circumstances ; the
45769.
glory of God shining through
the darkness; the power of
News
, Subscription Rates
God when all other strengths Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, EMt. 12
By carrier or motor route
Reporter: Brion Raed, EMI. t4
One month ......... ... '9.95
Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Exl. 13
One year .. . ....... ..'119.40
Dally .. .... .. ...... .. .. 50'
Senior Cltlzen roteo
Advertising
·,;. ,
One month ......... . . .'8.95
Outolde Solei: Dave Harris, Exl. 15
One year .............'96.70
Subscribers should remit in
ClsosJCirc.: Judy Clark, EJ&lt;t. 10
advance direct to The Daily
Sentinel. No subscriplion by mail

The Daily Sentinel

Gospel sings

Circulation

MIDDLEPORT - A benefit
gospel sing for the Middleport
Community Church will be
held at 7 p.m. at the church .
The Rollins Family, Charlene
Fry,
Josie · and
Erica
Cremeans, and Together 4
Christ will be singing. Pastor
Sam Anderson invites the
public to attend. For more
information call 304-883-2606.

permitted in areas where home
carrier service is available.

Dlotrlct Mgr.: TBA , EM!. 17

Mall Subscription
Inside Melp County
13 Weeks . . . ....... .. .'30.15
26 Weeks ...... . . . . ... '60.00
52 Weeks .... ... ..... ' 118.80

General Manager

\'

The Daily Sentiif.el .

Cho~ene

Hoelllch, Ext. 12

Sub~cribe wday • 992,2~56

www.mydailyserltinel,.com

E-moll:
news 0 mydallysentinel .com

Aatea Outside Melga County
13 Weeks . . .... . .. ... .'50.05
26 Weeks .... . ....... '1 00.1 0
52 Weeks .. . . .. ...... '200.20

Web:
WVM.mydailysentinel.com

F~llowship

Co n. -8:45-9: l 5 a.m ... Sun . Mass - 9:30

Apostolfc

a.m .. Dailey

Church of J esus Christ Apostolic

Rh·e r Valley

l'omuoy C hu rc h of Christ
Mi n i ~ t e r : Antho ny

212 W. M:a in St.,
Morri~

'

- ~ : :\0 a.m.. WurshiplO :JO 11 .rn .. 6 p.m .. Wed nesday ScrYk cs 7 p. m

S e rv ic~·s : Sun IO :OU tuu &amp; 7:JO p.m ..

Thu rs . 7:00p .m .. Pa~t m Many R. Hu uon

Pomeroy Westside C hurrh of Christ

Libf:rly Assembly o(God
P.O. Box 467, Duddi11 g Lane, Maso n.

W. Va .. l'asror · Nl·r l Tc rm omt , Sunda)'
Se n· i ~:c~ - 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Middleport Chu~h of Chris l
.'ith il nd Main. P a~ l ur · AI 1-ht rtsun. Yout h
Mini ~ t c r : Bi ll Fra;:icr, Sunt'lay Schoo l ·
1J:JO a.m .. Wo rsh ip- 8: l.'i . 10 :30 a.m .. 7
p.m .. Wcdncstlay Se r vio;&gt;~ - 7 p.m.

Baptist
!Southern~

570 Grant Sr .. Mitld lcpon . P&lt;~s t o r - Rl' \'.
Da~ id Brya n. Sund:1y !&gt;C hool - 9:30a.m..

Keno C hurch or Chrisl
Wo r.; hip - ~ ::\0 &lt;t .m ., S unday School HU O a.m. , Pustor-Jc ffrey Wallace, 1st Jnd

Rutland t' lrsl Buptist Chur"h
S unday Schoo l - lj-] 0 a_m _, Wors hip 10:-!S ~- 111 .

or

Bearwollow Ridge Church Christ
Pastor:Bruce Te rry. Sund .l}' Schuol -Y:J O

a.m.

Sunday St·hool - tJ:Jil a.m .. Wors hip HU ll a. m.

Wcdnc~d uy S cr~· i ccs -

Wo rsh ip -

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

i

r

r

r

r

r

·r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

r

·r

O'Bryanl. Su nday Sd1nol - Y:JU a.m.,
Wnr\hip - K: 15 a.m ., Y:4:i um &amp; 7:00 p.m.,
Wednc~d a y Se rvices . 7: ll0 p.m.

p.m ..

St .

Middl eport. Sund uy Sc hool - 9: 15 a.nJ.,
Worship
10: 15 o1. m .. 7:0 0 p. m ..
Wednesda y Sc rvil'c- 7: 1~ 1 p.m

Road, MiJdl cpu11 , Su m.h1y Scht)OI - 9::\0

a.m., W\1rs hip - 10:40 u._m., 7:00p .m ..
Wt:dncsda y Service• - 7: 0U p 111

a.m.
Worship - II U O a ,m

Sliver Run Baptist
Pn.-;tor: J,1hn Swa n.-.n n. Sunday Sd1oul -

Rutland C hurch of Christ
S unda y SdJOn [ - ~ J O &lt;1 m.. Worshi p and
Co mmun ion - HUO a.m .. Uoh J. Werry,

IOa .m., Worship
l lu. m .. 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesday Serv1c:cs - 7 :0(] p.m.

Hill Arnhcrger. S undily Sdtno l - 9:30 a.m.
Wurship - 8;()() a.m ., 10:30 ~. m ., 7:00

Bethlehem Bapllst Church
Grea t Be nd , Rout e I N. Ra ti ne. 01-1 .
Pa~ tur . D ~mi cl Mecca , Sunda y Sc hool 9:30a.m .. S unday Wo rship - 10:30 a.m ..
We dnc .~d ay Di!-11 ~ Study-6:00p.m.

p.m.. WedtJcsda y ScrY iccs - 7:00 p.m
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Ev an g cti ~ t llik e Moore, Sunduy Schoo l 9 a.m .. Wurs hil' - 10 a.m., 6 :3 0 p.m .
Wednesday Servkes- 7 p.m.

Old Bethel 1-' ree Will Baptist Ch1.rch
28601 S1. Rl. 7. Middleport , Su nday
Schnol · 10 a.m .. Eve ning · 7: 00 p.m..
Thumluy Se rvices- 7:00

Reedsville Chun:h of Christ
Pastor: Ph ilip Sturm. Sunday School: 9 :30
a. m ., Wors hip Service: 10:] 0 a.m .. Bihlc
Stw.ly, Wcdn e~da y, 6:30 p.m.

Hillside Baptlsl Church
St. RL 14 3 j u~ t nll Rt . 7. Pa stor: Re\'.
Jame s R. Acree, Sr., Sunday Unified
Sc rv i ~e. Wors hip - 10:.'0 ll.m.. 6 p.m ..
Wedne!iday S~rv i c~s -7 p.m.

Dexter ~hurcb of Christ
Pastor: Bill E shelman, Su nday school 9:30
a.m .. Norm a n Will, supcrintcndenl.
Su nduy worshi p- 10:30 a.m.

Victory Bapllst lndependt'nt
52 5 N. 2nd S1. Middleport , Pasto r: Jam e~
E. Keesee . Worship - IOll . m~ . 7 p.m ..
Wed nt"sday Se rvil.:e~- 7 p.m.

Church of Chrlsl
lnl ent:(.: li un 7 and 124 W, Eva n~di ~ t :
Denni S Sarg ent. Sunday Bible Study 9 :30 a. m., Wo rship: 10 :~ 0 a.m. ~n d 6 :30
p .m., Wed nesday Bible Study · 7 p.m.

faith Bepllst Churth •
Ra il rvud St., Muson, Sund ay School - 10

Christian Union

p .m.

Young's Carpenter Service
2~ ~aaln

local buslnuli

Roofing &amp; Building Work
Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215

Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va ., Pas tor :David Greer,
Sund ay School · 9 :30 a.m ., Worship 10 :3 0 a .m .. 7:00 p .m .. WeUnesda y
Srrvict:s- 7: 00p.m .

Acts 24:16

WILLIAMS &amp; ASSOC.
INSURANCE

106 Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy, OH

740·992-2121
Fax 740.992·2122
Ben H. Ewing

1122 E. Main Sl. Pomeroy, OH 45769
Before you pay your ne xt home or
auto premium, check out rates !

Licensed Embalmer, Funeral Director
Licensed Pre-Need Insurance

Call: Judy, Brandi, or Jane Ann
992-3985 (Pomeruy) 594·0660 (Athens)

Soeclalisl

Every move mu!lllotlow tilt plan of the
·
II not, an unlllablellruclure might resuK. Extra expense
and poulblt dllllltel' could be tiN! reaun ol veertng from the architect's dellgn,
tor he or llhe has apurpose lor avery rt11l1c on tiN! bluepl'lnt. Awtae
conotructlon engineer will consul! wtlh the designer It In doubt,
Perhlpt we might consider thla analogy when dtctdlng llow we ahould live.
God lsllle 11ntor '"'hhect, lor He Cntltad the universe and uo. Our Creator
Shared with uo Hla plan tor our uv... Romine 8:28 explains ... "We knowtlltt In
tverylhlng God WOII&lt;stor goocl wl1ll thole whO IOvt Him, who aro called
according IO HII purpou,"
God hu given ,. Hla plan In the Holy Bible. When we follow Hlo dellgn for
our lim we wtll be ftllad with peace and joy. II we do not underat;nd God'o
plsn, we Shou!Otalk to Him, tor often wt1t1n we ere contused, free will tat&lt;n over,
and our llvot can suner.
"CommK Y""' work to the lord, and your pions will be eotabllahed. The Lord
has made everything for HI purpose." (Prov- 16:3--4)
11 there oomethlng you wotlld llkt to Ull your Maker? VIlli Him tilts WNI&lt; Ill
your Church olayn~gogut. I.Hm lllOUI God'aopoclal plan tor you.

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

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

G
-

Jeanie Howell

rot a who le

Coy's VCR Repair
" If your VCR's in trouble
bring it to me the double"
34549 Ball Run Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

(740) 992-4507

ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
"Old fll!~hlonid Compasston - Modem Care ..
Nestled inn beautifu l country sening rSR
50/32 Ea!'.IJ and ea~il y acce:\~i h le from the
Appal uc hmn

new you

33334 Hysell Run Rd.
Pon1eroy. OH 45769
740-992-7996

Hours

Warm Friendly
Almosphen•

209 Third
Ractne, OH

6am · 8pm

'Jrfi{fie's 1&lt;!staurant

·

Mt. Moriah Church of God
Mil e Hill Rd .. Rac in e. Pastor: Jnm es
S uttc rric ld . Sund ay Sc hool - 9:45 a.m.,

Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Special:;:
Open 7 days a week

"A Home Bank lor

740-992-7713

Hills Self Storage

Birchfield funeral

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

Home
212 Main St- P.O. Box 188
Rulland. OH 45775

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x10 to

10 x 20

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPI:

a

399 W. Main'S!.
Pomeroy, Oh
(740)' 992-2164

Purina
" Stull" For Polo, Farm Anlm•l• &amp;
Tropical Flaho Full Line of Purina
•
Flllr

" Let your light so shine before
men, ·that they may see your
good works ' and glorify your
Fat,her in heave n."

Manhcw 5: 16

www.herbsndiet.com

'

740·742-2333
Our Carina

Wa~s

HelP families

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second

St. Middleport, OH
740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
nl.
•-~flirt~ ~&gt;nrl more

Carolln11 Antlq~
&amp; Craft Mall
312 6th St. Point Ple•eant
675-1160
V3riety of furniture, glilssware, craft s,
collection of bottl es &amp; primitiveOutside fl ea marker Apri l- Oct.

lavawavs Available

H ighw:~y.

MustC ond An Theruptcs
Hospice a nd Rclipite Care

740-667-3156 Fu : 740-667-0080
Phy ~ical, (A:cupational and Speech Tirrapies
We Accept Medicare. Medicald. &amp; Insurance

··---

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

Danville Holiness Church
] Hl57 Stale Route 325. Lang.~v lle , Pastor:
Gary l &lt;l~·kson , Sunday Sl'hool - 9J O a. m. ,

Forest Run
Pastor: Bob Robin§On, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a .m.

p.m
Rolland Churth or God
Ron He ath, S u nday Wor~ hip - Ill
a. m., 6 p.m .. Wed ne~ du y Se rvice s - 7
P ~stor:

Rutland Free Will Baptist
Sa lem St. , P11stor: Jamie Fonner. Sunday
S ~: hu ul · 10 a.m., E\'e ning - 7 p .m.,
Wednesday Scrvkes - 7 p.m.

Sfl:ond Baptist C hu~h
Ra venswood, WV, Stm d'ay School 10 nrn• Morni ng worship II am Eveni ng.- 7 pm.
Wed nesday 7 p.m.

Catholic

your light so shine hefore
thai lhcy may see
work s and glorify
I F:otloeo in heaven.'' Matthew 5: 16

Portland First C hun:b uf the Nlll.llrt'ne
Pastor: William Jusli s. Sunday School 10:00 a.m.. Mommg Worship - 1U : -' ~ a.m ..
Sunday Sen•ice - 6:3U p.m.

F1ilh F~lluws htp Cruade for t:hrisl
Pastor: Rc\' Franklin Dickens. S~n· i c e

Pastor: Rod Brower. Sunday s·chool - 9:30
a.m .• Worship- I I :00 a.m.

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Road, Pa~tor : Charles

Minersville
Pa stor: Bob Robinson, Sunday School - 9
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.

1\.kKenzie. Sunday Sc hoo l 9:30 a.m ..
Wor~ h i p - II a.m., 7:00 p. m ., Wednesday
Service - 7:00p.m.
Rosf' of Sharon Holiness Church
Leading Cree k Rd., Rutland. Pastor: Rev.
Ocwey King. Sunday school- 9:]0 a.m..
Sunday
worship -7 p. m., Wednesday
pra}·er meeting- 7 p.m.
Pint' Grove Bibb~ Holiness Churth
l/2 mil e oil Rt. 325 . .-ustor: Rev. O'Dell
Mank y. Su nday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Wo rship - 10::\0 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wedn e~Ju y Se r.·ice- 7:30 p.m.
Wesleyan Blblr Holiness Church
75 Pearl St.. Middleport Pastor: Rev.
D-.:r vid Gilbert , Sunday School · 10 a.m .
Wors hip - 10:45 p.m.. Sunday EYe . 7:00
p.m..

Wed nc~ay

Service-7:30p.m.

H}'scll Run Holiness Chu~h
Sunday School - 9: 30 a.m., Wors hip 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m., Thursday Bible Study
and Youlll - 7 p.m.
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Churth
Re v. Les Strand! and Myra L. Strand! ,
Sun day Sc ho ol - 9: JO a.m., Worship 10:30 a.m. and 6 p. m.. Wednesday Service
. 7:(1() p.m.

The Churth or Je!JUS
Christ of Lattu-Day Saints
St. Rt. 160 . 446-6247 or 446-7486.
S unday Schuol 10:20- 11 a.m., Relief
Soc ie ty/Priesthood II :OS- 12 :00 noon.
Sac rament Scr\'i ce 9 - 10:15 a .m .•
Homemaking meeting , lsi Thurs. - 7 p.m'

Lutheran

Bethel Worship Cenlt'r
Chester Sc hool , Pastol': Ro b Ba rbe r,
Assistant Pastor: Karen Dav is, Sunday
Worship: I 0 am. Evening Worshi p: 6 pm.
Youth gro up 6 pm, Wedllesday : Powe r in
Prayer , and Bible Stud y - 7 pm
Asb Street Church
Ash St., Middleport - S unday S~:hool · 9::\0
a.m .. Morning Worsh ip - 10:30 a. m. &amp; 1
pm , Wedne~ d ~y Se n.·ice -7: 00pm ., Youth
Service- 7:00p.m.

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

Agape Lifr Center
· "Full -Gospel C hurch". Pustors Juhn &amp;
Pany Wade, 603 Second_Ave. Mason, 77 .\ -

Pomeroy
Pastor : Rod Brower. Worship - 9 :30a.m ..
S unday School- 10:35 a.m.
Rock Sprinp
Pastor: Keith Rader. Sunday School . 9 :15
a .m .. Wo rs hip
I 0 a. m ..
Fellowship, Sunday- 6 p. m.

Youth

Rudand
Sunda y Sc hool - 9:30 a.m., Wo rshi p 10:30 a.m., Thursday Services- 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pasto r: William K. Marshall, Sund ay
School - 10: IS a.m., Worship - 9: 15 a. m.,
Bible Study : Monday 7:00 pm
Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a.m .• Worship - 9 a.m.
Bethany
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler, Sunday School 10 a.m.. Wo rship - 9 a.m .. Wednesday
s ~ rvi ccs - 10 a.m.
Carmei-Sunon .
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine, Ohi o,
Pastor: Dewayne Stutler, Sunday School 9 :;\0 a.m. , Worship- 10:45 a.m . , Bihlc
Study Wed. 7:00p.m.
Momin1 Star
P.dstor: Oewayne Stuller, Sunday School II a.m .. Worship - 10 a.m.

Our Saviour Lulheran Qlurch
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pastor: David Russell. Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m., Worship ~ I I a,m.
St. Paul Lutheran Churth
Come r Sycamon:: &amp; Set:.:ond St. , Pomeroy,
Sunday School - 9 :45 n. m ., Worship - II
a.m. Pastor: James P. Brady

United Methodist
Grllh11m United Methodist
Worship - 9 :30a.m. (l si &amp; 2nd Sun )..
7:30 p.m. (Jrd &amp; 4th Sun ),Wednesda.y
Serv ice -7:30p.m.
MI. Olin Unlled Mcthocllsl
Off 124 behind Wi lkesville. Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spires. Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
Wors hip - I 0: 30 a.m., 7 p.m., Thursday

Pastor: Brian Harkness, Sunday School 10 a.m., WOitihip- 9 u.m., Wednesday · 7

Wedn esday · 7 p .m. &amp;

Full Gospt'l Church of tht'
Savior

l . h·in~:

Salrm Community Church
Li ev i11g Road , We st Cnl umbiu, W.Va ..

The Belirvers' Fellowship Ministry
New Lime Rd .. Rutl and . Pastor : Rc\',
Marg are t J. Rn hin so n, Ser v ice s :

am. Sunday evening service
Wedne5day servil-e 7 pm

Wednesday. 7:30p.m .. Sur)day. 2: :\0 p. m

Hobson Christian 1-' ellowship Church
Pastor: Hc rSl'hel White, S u n d ~y S..:hooltO am. Sundtry Church ~C I"Y icc · h:'l n pm

Harrison\·ille Community Churrh
Pastor: Theron Durham , Sunday - 9 :3 0
a.m. and 7 p.m.. Wedn csduy - 7 p. m
Mlddlrpor1 Community Churrh
575 Pearl St.. Middlepbrt . Pns10r: Sam
Andc tson , Sund ay School 10 a .m ..
Evening- 7:30 p.m.. Wednesday Scrvke ·

Jcs~· M o rri .~.

Pustor: C lydi! Ferrell. Sundu)' School 9:30
6 pm,

Weduesday 7 Jllll
He"toration Christian 1-' ellnwship
9365 Hoo per Ruad. Athens. P11stur:
L\mni e Coat s. Sunday Wo rship 10:00 am,
Wedni.'sday: 7 pm

1 Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Buiky Run Road . Pastor : RC\'_ F mmcll

Langsville Christian Church
Full Gospel. Pastor: Rnhcrt Mu ~~ c r.
Sunday School 9 ::\0 am . . Wor.; hrp lOJO
am - 7: 00 pm. Wednc o;day Scn- rce 7: lHl

Rawson. Sund ay

pm

7: 30 p.m.

'

Evenin g

7 p. m ..

Thursday Service- 7 p.m.
S)'racuSf MIS5k&gt;n
1411 Bridge man St., Syradhe, Sunday
6 p.m.,
School - 10 a.m. Evening
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Pen1ecos1al Assembly
St. Rt. 124 . Racine, Pastor: Willillm
Huhuck , Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.,
EYening - 7 p.m .. Wednesday Se rvices - 7

p.m

Syracuse First United Presbyterian
Pastor: Robert Crow, Worship - II ~ . m .

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Pasmr: Helen Kline. Coolville Church.
Main &amp; Fifth St ., Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m., Tuesday Services -

Dyesvllle Community Church
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m .. Worship I 0:30a.m .. 7 p.m.

HarrlsonYIIIe Presbyterian Church
Pastor: Robert C row . Worship - II a. m.

7 p.m.

Morse ChaJHI Church
Sunday school • 10 a.m., Worshi p a.m .. Wednesday Ser\'ice- 7 p. m.

l\-llddleport Presbyterian
Pastor: Rober Crow., Worship - 10 a.m.

Pastor: Brian Hlll'kness, Sunday School 10 a.m .• Worship · I I a.m., Wednesday 7
p.m.

Bethel Church
Township Rd., 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m, Worship - 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services - lOa.m.
HocklnliiPOrt Chun:h
Grand Street, Sunday School - 9: 1.5 a.m.,
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., Pastor Phillip De ll
Torth Clmrth
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday School - 9:30a.m ..
Worship - IO:JO a.m.

II

Middleport Chun:h of the Nuarene
Pastor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,Worship • 10:30 a.m., 6 :30 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m ., Pastor:

Wednesday 7:30 p.m .
Mt. Olive Community Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bu sh. Sunday School 9:30 ll.m., E\'t:ning - 6:30p.m .. Wedneda y
Service - 7 p.m.

Church of .the Nazarenr, Pastor: Teresa
Waldeck, Sunda)' S~ hoo l - 9 :30 a.m..
Worship· 10 : 4~ a.m., 7 p.m ., Wednesday

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se1'-enth-1Jey Adnntl~t
Mulberry Ht s. Rd., Po meroy. Pastor: Ruy
Lawinsky, Saturday Services: Sahbath
School - 2 p.m.. Wo r~h ip ·-' p. m.

United Brethren
MI. Hennon Unltrd Brtthn:n
In Christ Churt h
Texas Commllnit y 3641 1 Wickht~ m Rd,

Full Gospt!l L111hthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Pomeroy, Pastor: Roy
Hunter. Sunday School - 10 a.m .. Ewning
7 :'30 p.m ., Tuesday &amp; Thursday - 7: W
p.m .

'

Rttdnllle FeUowahlp

Presbyterian

Faith Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom. Sunday School - 9:30 a .m..
Wor ship - 10 :45 a. m .. 7 :30 p .m .,

South Bet~el Community Chun:h
Sil ver Ridge - Pastor Linda Dame wood.
Sunday Sc hool - !.J a.m.• Worship Service
10 a.m.
Carleton lnterdt'nomlnatlonal Churrh
Kingsbury Ro&lt;~d. PastOr: Robert Vance.
Sund ay Schoo l
9: 30 a .m .. Worship
Ser v ic~

a .m., Wo rship - IO:J O a.m ., 6 p.m ..
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Freedom Gospel MIS.'lion
Bald Knob, on Cu . Rd. Jl, Pastor: Rev.

Pomeroy Church of the Nazartne
Pastor : Jan Lavender, Sunday School -

Worship- 7 p.m

9:30 a.m., Wor!\hip - 10:30 a. m . and 6
p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p .m .

White's Chapel Wesleyan
Cool ville Ro ad , P!ls tuJ; Rev. Phillip

C hupnliln . Sund ay School - 10 a .m ..
Worship . I I a. m .. We d nc .~day Serv ices -

p.m

and 7 p. m., Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday fe llnwshill ser\·ict: 7 p.m.

Syracuse Church or lht Nazartnt
Pas tor Mike Adkins, Sunday School - 9:30

Church or God of Pmphecy
O .J. White Rd . niT St. Rt. 161). Pastor: P.J .

Clirtun Tahernadt' Churt'h
Cli fton, W. Vtr.. Su nday Sc hoo l · 10 il .lll ..
Wor5hi p- 7 p.m.. Wctlnc:;day Servil-e- 7

RUJR. An t i~ui t y. P a~t ur :
Sen ·il·es: Saturda y 2:00 P- 111

ll. m.

Sund ay ~c hoo l · 9:) 0 a. m .. Worship •
10:30 a.m.
Reidsville
Wonhip · 9 :3 0 a. m .. Sunday Scbool l 0:30 a.m., Firs! Sunday of Month - 7:00

Rejoidng L~ft' C hurth
500 N 2nd Aw .. Middlcpun. Pa~ tu r :
Mtk.e Fo rem&lt;~n , Pastnr: Em critll~
Lawrcoct': Fore man. Worshtp- lil:f~l am
Wetl n ~~d&lt;~y Scn· i l·c~ . 7 p.m.

Faith full C.o~pel Churrh
Pa~ l or: S tc ~·t: Reed . Surldily
Se houl - () :.\() il. m. Worship - 9:~ 0 a.m.

Syracuse First Church of God
Appl e 11 nd Second Sts.. Pa~ t or: Rev_ David
Russell, Sunday Sl·hool and Worship- 10

LonliiBoUom

p.m.

Long Bol1o m.

Services· 7 p.m.

a.m.

SliVt'rsvillt Community C hurt'h
PasLOr: Wayne R. Jewell. Sunday S!!r\· icc ~
- 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:00p. m .. Thur~day - 7:00

&lt;t.m . &amp; 7 r. m
Yuuth 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pasto r: Doh Randolph , Worship - 9:30
10 :.~

p.rn.

Ahundanl Gract' R.f: I .
923 S. Third St .. :vliddleport. Pastnr Teresa
Da vis . Sun ll a y s er v i ~e. l U (.!. Ill..
Wcdnt-sday se ryi ~·c. 7 p.m.

Allen Mideap

Sunday School -

Worsh ip
1!1:3! 1 il .m ..
7:.10
WeJ 11t:sday Sen il-e · 7:)0 p.m

Nt'w Life Victory Center
3773 Georges C•ce J.. Road. G~ llipo lis. OH
Pastor: Bi ll Staten , Sunday Serv ice s · lO

Nazarene

Cbetter
Pastor: Jane 8 cal1i e, Wo rship - 9 a.m .,
Su nday Sc hool - 10 11. .m . , Thursday
Services- 7 p. m.

Calnry Rihle Churth
Po rnt:JU)' Pike , c~ · Rd. Pastor: R L"\'
Bla~ k wood, Sunday School - 9JO a.m ..

Hazel Community Chu~h
Off Rt. 124, Pastor: Edsel Hart , S unday
School .. 9:30 a.m., Worsh ip- 10:30 a.m..
7 :30p.m.

Rldnt

Services - 7 p.m.
Meip Cooperatln Parllh
Northe a ~t Cluster. Alfred, Paslor: Jane
Be 11 tt ie , Sunday Sc hoo l - 9: 30 a.m. ,
Worship - II a.m .. 6:30p.m.

Friday. 7 p.m

Pentecostal
Eut Letart

p.m.

Sl. John Lutheran Chun:h
Pine G rove. Worship - 9 :00 a .m.. Sunday
Sc hool - 10:00 a.m . Pasto r: Jamu P.
Brady

Worship - 10:30 1un. , Wednesday Serv1ct'

50 17. Se rvice ti me Sun day 10:30 a.m ..
Wedn~!&gt;d&lt;~y 7 pm

p.m.

a .m.
Eve ning Serv ices- 6 :30 p.m., Wednesday
Se rvices- 6:]0 p. m.

Sacred Heart Catholic Chut'fh
161 Mul hcrry Ave .. Po111croy. 992-~89 H.
Pastor: Rev. Wa lter E. Hei nz. Sat. Con .
4: --1 5-5 : I Sp.m.: M ~ss - i:JO p.m ., Sl) n

Fainiew Bible C hlh'Ch
Letart . W.Va. Rt. I. PustOl': Briun fl.1&lt;ly,
Sunday School - 9:.'0 u.m .. WOf'S h l~ - 7 lXI
p.m .. Wednesday Bi ble Study · 7:00p.m

p.m

Heath (Middleport)

Sunday worshi p - 10:.'0 a. m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wednesd ~y prayer service- 7 p.m.

Evening - 6 p.m ., Wednesday Serv ices - 1

Sunday Sc hool - () :30 11. m .. Worship 1 0 :4 ~ a. m .. Sunday E\·e ning · 6: 00 p. m.,
Pastor. Mark McComas

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

7 40-949-221 0
Home People"

'~~·~lht~.revlews the plans.

Church of God

Rutland Chun:h ot lhe Nazartnr
Pas tor: H. ~\' . L um~ S. Sraulls. S unday
Sc hool · 9:30 &lt;t.m ., Wo rship - 10:30 &lt;1 .111 .•
6:30 p.m., Wednesday Serv ices- 7 p.m .

&lt;:ommunlty of Christ
Portl and-H.atine Rd .. Pa stor: Jcrr)' Singer.
S_u mlay Sc huul - 9:30 a. m., Wu r ~h ip ·
10:30 a.m.. Wedncsduy Se rvices - 7:00

Hartford Chun:h of Christ In

Antlquil)' Baptist

EWING FUNERAL HOME

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

S~: h uol

C ommunity C hurtb
Pastor: Steve Tomek, Main Street,
Rutland, Sunday Wo rship--1 0:00 a.m.,
Sunday Scrvn:e-7 p.m.

- 9:30 a.m..

- 7 p.m.

Other Churches
Flatwoods

Latter-Day Saints
Bradford Church of Chrisl
C orn er t•f SL Rt. 124 &amp; llradhury Rd.,
Mi nister: Doug S l_1amhlin. Youth Ministe r:

Enterprise
Pasto r: Arland King, Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m .. Bibl e Study Wed.

Pnsmr: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 10
a. m., Won h ip - I I a.m.

Mmistcr

Mt. l Jniun Huptist
P ii~ tur : IJa ., rd Wi ~~ n w n . Sund:1y School():45 a .m., El'c niu g - 6:~ 0 p. m ..
Wcdnc:ill.1y St: rv i cc~ - (d[Jp.m.

C«ntrlll Clwkr
Asbury (Syrucuse), Pa~; tor : Bob Robinsoo,
Sunday School - 9 :45 a. m., Worship - II
a.m. , Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.

Holiness

Scr" ir.:es . 7 p.m.

Bradbury C hurch of Chri~t
Mini ster: To rn Ru ny un . _,':1 55H Bradbury

Rucine First Buplist
Ki&lt;·k Rul e. Su nday Sdmul - lJ :30

Rev. Gilbert Cntig, Jr., Su nda y
9: JOa .m .. Worsh ip - 10:4 ~ a.m.

Wed n e~d&lt;Jy

Thppers Plain Church of Chrisl
Instrumental. Wors htp Se rvrc~ - 9 il rn.
Cnmmuninn - 10 tun ., Sund:r y School 10: 15 ~ . m., Youth - 5:30 prn Sunda y, Bi ble
Stu dy Wednesday 7 pm

Mt. Morhth Bapdst
Fou-rth &amp; Mni n St., Middl crmrt, P t~stor:

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

a . m .. 6:30 p .m .
(d O p. m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pome roy, Harr ison \·ill c Rd . ( Rt . l 4~ t .
Pastor: Roger Watso n. S unday S~ h oo l 9:~0 ot m.. w~tr,. hi p - 10:30 a.m., 7:00

•' ir!il Southern Baptist
4 1872 Pome roy Pi ke, P a ~ IOr: E. La mar

a .m .. Worship - II a. m.. 6
Wednesday Servil'es- 7 p.m.

10 : .~0

Pas1or: J ane Beauie, Sunday School - 9
a.m .. WoNhip - IO.a.m.. T uuQay Scl'\'ic~s
-7:30 p.m.

J.(Jdenuur, Sunday School

Paswr: Re v. Herbert Grate, Sunday Sehoul
- 9:30 a.m .. Worship - I I 11. m ., 6 p.m ..
Wednesday ServKes - 7 p.m.

7:30

~ rd S u n d~ y

Pomt'roy t' if!i t Baptist
Past&lt;lr J on Brnd ;e rt . Eas t Ma in St..

P a~to r:

Episcopal
Grace Episcopal Churth
.ILl&gt; E Main Sl. , Pomeroy, Rev. James
Bernacki. Rev. Kiltharin Frn;tcr, Sunday

H arri ~o nv il le

Worship - II a. m. and 6 p.m .. Wed11esday
Servin· - 7 p.m.

Jo'ir!it HaJJtlst Church
Pa;wr : .VI ;1rk MtliTliW. hth and Palmer

Trinit}' Church
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy, Pastor: Re\'.
Jack. Noble, Worshi p 10:25 a.m.. Sunday
School 9: 15 n.m .

S~ h oul

33226 Chil d re n ·~ Home Rd ., Sunduy
Sl:hool - I L a.m .• Worshi p - IOa. m.. 6 p. m.
Wcdncsdu y SerYicc~ - 7 p.m.

Assembly of God

Congregational

School and Holy Eucharist I I :00 a.m.

S un da~

Emmanuel Apostolic ·ra bermacle IlK·.
Lotlp Rd uiT New Li ma Rd . Rutla nd .

Tuppen Plains SL P11ul

K:JO a.m

Hl'mlork Gmvr C hristian Churrh
Mini slr: r: Larry Brown. Wor~ h ip - 9:30
a.m.
Su n d&lt;~y Schnol - I lUll a. m., Bible St udy 7 p.m

Ap!lS!O ii(' wm~h !p Cc lllcr. 1!73 S. 3n.l
A,·e., Mrdd h:pun, Kev in Konkk. P a~ l or.
Sunday, I I a.m. Wc d nc~da y. 7 00 p.m.:
Ynu th Fri 7::\0 p.m

Hope Baptist C hu~h

M as~ -

Church of Christ

VanZanJt and Watd Rd ., Pastu r: James
IO:_W u.rn ..
Miller. Su nday School
Eveni ng - 7 ] 0 p.m

Fortsl Run Rapllil
Pastor . Arius Hurt, Sunday St"hou l · 10
a. m .. Wo rship · II a. m.

r

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Overcoming persistent sadness

Art and Kishbaugh

Church to
celebrate 75th
anniversary

PageA2

Pastor: Peter Mnnindale. Sunday School 9 :30 a.m. , Worship - 10:30 ~. nt.. 7.00
p.m .. Wednesday Se rvices - 7:00 p. m.
Youth group me et in s 2nd &amp; 4th Sun da~· s
7 p.m.
Eden United Brethren In Christ
St ate Rou te 124. Reedsvi ll e. Su nday
Sc hool · 11 a.m., Sunday Wo rship - IO ·tKI
a. m. &amp; 7:00 p.m . We dnesda y St"l"\ ' i~·c~ 7: 00 p.m .• Wednesday Yo uth Se rvice 7:(10 p.m.

10 30 a.m., Eve ning Se r" ice fl

p.m.

Rogc:r Willford. Sunday School - 9 :30a.m.

p.m. servtcc
Chester Church of the Nazartne

7 p.m.

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

..
----·· ......
.1ilbrr .funeral J10111!

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

t•

" .,.IIHMI

. . l . . ._

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITTION CENTER
care you deserve, close to home
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

~r"·..,~

Family Reslaurant
"Featuring Kentucky Fried
Chicken"

w. Main St., Pomeroy

Meigs Coumy's OldeSI Flori &gt;~
East Main

J11:A
W

' Lot " ""d ' "'thou&amp;"'' wtth ' "''''' "~·
992_5432 ,
740-992-2644 740-992-6298
~----------~~=-------4-----------~----------~-----------+~
Davis-Quickel Agency Inc.
\!reaforb
Brogan-Warner
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
For Gop so lo ved the world
URANCE
Full line ol
Insurance
&amp;_,4(u &amp; ~
l\ea( Qfstate
~~~~~~NE~E
PHAttMACY
that he gave his only
Products +

·

.

.

992-3785

. F1naneial
ENCIES Inc . Se!Vices
992-ssn

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

,,

216 E7.4SeOc;,o9n2d3P3o25meroy

...

-

Mar~i~~: i91{rty
';u-~t-e~tal

';iltJ.,e

174 Layne Street"
New Haven , WV 25265
James H. Anderson
Licensed Director Fax:

JUIII_..

214 E. Main

992-5130

~

Pomeroy

" 740-992-6606

WPereFsllclr.DI_poctti'oonrss'

992·2955

Pomeroy

Shear Illusions "So I strive always to keep
Beauty &amp; Nails Salon my conscience clear before
293 South Second Ave.
God and man."
Middlcpon. OH 45760
(740) 991-lSSO

Lyons (Owner) Janice Otimm

son .. .
John 3:16

Acts 24:16

&amp;nouffrr'li

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

;tire &amp; &amp;nfrtp
-rou.nu

.....,_._

.... o.. .................v - .......

93 Mill St. Middleport, OH

(740) 992-9513
I &amp;

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

�• •

1n1on

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • POmeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Charlene Hoeflich
General manager and news editor

•

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, July 25. the 206th day of 2003. There are ,
I 59 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History : On July 25, 1956, 51 people
died when the Italian liner Andrea Doria sank after colliding
with the Swedis)l ship Stockholm off the New England coast.
On this date: In I 593 , France 's King Henry IV converted
from Protestantism to Roman Catholicism.
In 1866, Ulysses S. Grant was named general of the Army,
the first officer to hold the rank.
In 1868. Congres s passed an act creating the Wyoming
Territory.
In 1943, Benito Mussolini was dismissed as premier of Italy
by King Victor Emmanuel Ill, and placed under arrest.
Mussolini was later rescued by the Nazis, and reasserted his
authority.
In 1946, the United States detonated an atomic bomb at
Bikini Atoll in the Pacific in the first underwater test of the
device.
In 1952, Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth of the United States.
In 1963, the United States, the Soviet Union and Britain initialed a treaty in Moscow prohibiting the testing of nuclear
weapons in the atmosphere. in space or underwater.
In 1978, Louise Joy Brown. the first "test-tube baby," was
born in Oldham, England; she'd been conceived throu gh invitro fertilization.
In 1994, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Jordan's
King Hussein signed a declaration at the White House ending
their countries' 46-year-old formal state of war. .
In 2000, a New York-bound Air France Concorde crashed
outside Paris shortly after takeoff, killing all 109 people on
board and four people on the ground.
Ten years ago: Israelis launched a week of raids on guerrilla bases in south Lebanon, while guerri llas fired rockets into
Israel: the fighting ended July 3 1 with a U.S.-brokered ceasetire.
Five years ago: Two government officials revealed that special prosecutor Kenneth Starr had subpoenaed President
Clinton to testify before a federa l grand jury about the Monica
Lewinsky case. The U.S. Capitol was reopened, a day after a
gunman killed two police officers.
One year ago: Encouraged by a tinny tapping sound coming
up from the depths, rescuers in Somerset, Pa., brought in a
huge drill in a race to save nine coal miners trapped 240 feet
underground by a flooded shaft. Zacarias Moussaoui declared
he was guilty of conspi racy in the Sept. II attacks, then dramatically withdrew his plea at his arraignment in Alexandria,
Va.
Today 's Birthdays: Actress Estelle Getty is 80. Actress
Barbara Harris is 68. Rock musician Verdine White (Earth,
Wind &amp; Fire) is 52 . Model-actress !man is 48. Cartoonist Ray
Billingsley ("Curtis" ) is 46. Rock musician Thurston Moore
(Sonic Youth) is 45. Actress Illeana Douglas is 38. Country
singer Marty Brown is 38. Actor Matt LeBlanc is 36. Actor
Brad Renfro is 21.
Thought for Today: "Love is as strong as death; jealousy is
as cruel as the grave." - 'From the Bible. The Song of
Solomon, 8:6.

Moderately Confused
IS THERE
A NATIONAL
DO-NOT-

SPAM
LIST?

~f(. 7122
~ 2003 by NEA. Inc.

•

'

:PROUD TO BE APART OF YOUR LIFE.
•

The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today • 992-2156
www.mydailysentinel.com-

PageA4
Friday, July 25, 2003

Liberia is no place for US. to go solo
By Manthla Dlawara
Los Angeles Times
Among the consequences of
the invasion of Iraq by the
United States ,and its small
coalition of "the willing" is the
undennining of the authority of
the United Nations and its
Secretary-General Kofi Annan,
as well as the spread of mistmsl around the world.
Given that the United
Nations could not prevent the
invasion, it is now difficult for
the world assembly to muster
the authority needed to put
together an impartial peacekeeping force to curtail the
humanitarian disaster Liberia
is suffering at the hands of its
president, Charles Taylor. In
fact, the Taylors of the world
can go on butchering their own
people, running guns, drugging
and arming child-soldiers and
smuggling "blood diamonds"
without fear of the world's
mom! authority.
Like Saddam Hussein, Taylor
·is considered a megalomaniac
by many nations, a monstrous
killer who sometimes sees himself a~ a prophet in direct communication with God.
He ha~ backed rebel forces in
neighboring ·countries, contributing to me destabilization
of the entire West African
region. A U.N. tribunal has
indicted him for supplying
guns to the Revolutionary

United Front in Sierra Leone,
fueling a war that killed more
than 500,000 and mutilated
many more. In Liberia, the
rebel group Liberians United
for
Reconciliation
and
Democracy is in Monrovia, the
capital city, ready to anack the
presidential palace and kick
Taylor out.
·
The problem now is how to
get rid of Taylor without further bloodshed and without a
repeat of his horritic crimes.
Should a U.N. coalition force
of Atrican peacekeepers establish order and arrest Taylor to
put him on trial? Or should
Washington alone act as peace)&lt;:eeper until a peaceful solution
is found?
Ironically, even though
Annan has been among those
objecting to U.S. unilateral
actions, he is now suggesting
that because of historical ties
between the United States and
Liberia, the Bush administration should be solely responsi:
ble for sending in troops to
secure the peace.
Taylor and the rebels have also
called on Washington for help,
and even the other West African
leaders believe that the United
States must step in to solve the
problem in Liberia. Nigeria has
offered asylum to Taylor, hoping
to make the job easier for the
Bush administration.
Only Thabo Mbeki, the president of South Africa. seems

reluctant to endorse such U.S.
intervention in Liberia. (He
may be worried about setting a
precedent that would allow
Britain to send troops to invade
Zimbabwe. South Africa's
next-door neighbor, to forcibly
remove dictator
Robert
Mugabe
from
power.
Zimbabwe is a former British
colony.)
There is no doubt that
Taylor's regime, like Saddam's
in Iraq, is a threat to world
peace and democracy.
A continuing crisis in Liberia
only adds to the troubles of all
of West Africa, which is
already ·grappling with anarchy, tribalism and corruption in
Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone,
Guinea and Liberia and with
weal&lt; democracies in Senegal,
Ghana, Mali and. Benin. A
failed state in Liberia would
allow for money-laundering by
terrorists there and would force
more African flight from
Africa to Europe and the
United States.
Despite such a catastrophic
scenario and despite the various pleas for U.S. action, this
country should not intervene
unilaterally in Liberia. Sending
American troops alone to
Liberia will only temporarily
solve the problem.
Further. even with Annan's
blessing, relying on the United
States to rescue Liberia, as
France and Britain have done

Friday, July 25, 2003

•

Obituaries

"
"

Marcia Denison

in the past in their old colonies
of Ivory Coast and Sierra.
Leone, only affums neocolo-·
nial intervention in Africa. I(
points to the failure of Atiicans
to resolve their own problems
and to the ineffectiveness of the
United Nations in contlict resolutions. Ultimately, it height-'
ens the chances that any major
power will intervene where it
deems another country is a·
failed or rogue state.
·
Instead, the United States·
should move into the back-•
ground, taking a role in an
impartial U.N.-Ied coalition of
African
peacekeepers in
Liberia, which should be
formed in conjunction with the
newly organized African Union.
It should send arms and aid to
the effort, but not soldiers.
This is not only the best
course of action for a lasting
solution in Liberia and for the
future of Africa. it is the best
way for the United States to
defend its own interests. · By
working within a U.N.-led
effort, the United States would
position itself to gain the broad
coalition it now says it needs to
reconstruct Iraq and create an
opportu11ity for the United
Nations to regain its moral
legitimacy in the eyes of
Americans and the world.
(Diawara is a professor of
comparative literature and
African studies at New York·
University)

I'M DE:VELOPIN5

A RAPPORT WITH
THE lOCALS.

RUTLAND Marcia
Mae (Myers) Denison, age
94, of Rutland, died Tuesday,
July 22, 2003, at her home.
She was born Feb. 25, 1909
in Pomeroy, and was the second of six children of the late
Lee and Lucille (Grueser)
Myers.
Marcia was a graduate of
Rutland High School, class
of 1926. and lived most of
her adult life in the Rutland
Community. She was active
f0r over 50 years in the
Rutland Garden Club, and
the
Rutland
Methodist
Church. At the Church, she
had been a member of the
choir, church treasurer, member of the WSCS, Sunday
School teacher for preschoolers, and church organist for more than 50 years.
, She was preceded in death

Community calendar
by Carl, her husband of 60
years, and by her two sisters
and three brothers.
She is survived by her sons
Bob (wife Virginia) and Jack.
She is also survived by seven
grandchildren; Jeff Denison,
Eric Denison (wife Laurie),
Greg Denison (wife Pat),
Kelly Davis (husband Tony),
Rod Denison (wife Kathy),
Mark Denison and Kevin
Denison, as well as eight
grandchildren; Jamie, Julia,
Madeline, Alex, Kara and
Sophia
Denison,
and
Corrinne and Evan Davis;
and her "honorary" family,
Dennis. Paula, Brandy, Josh,
and Caleb Stanley.
She was a much beloved
and admired wife; mother,
grandmother, great-grandmother and friend.
The memorial service will
be Sunday July 27 at 2 p.m.
at the Rutland Methodist
Church. Everyone is invited

to attend.
,
Arrangements are by the
Birchfield Funeral Home of
Rutland.

Olevia Roush
NEW HAVEN - Olevia
Elizabeth "GaGa" Roush, 98,
of New Haven, W. Va. died
Thursday, July 24, 2003 at
the Pl~asant Valley Hospital.
Born on April II, 1905 at
Southside, W. Va.. she was
the daughter of Boyd Wears
and Mary Taylor Wears.
She was preceded in death
by her husband Johnie D.
Roush.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at t)!e
Foglesong-Tucker Funeral
J-lome. Friends may call there
from t p.m. to the time of services. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery, New
Haven.

Court News
Meigs County
Court
POMEROY
Cases
resolved in the Meigs County
Court of Judge Steve Story
between June II and July 17
are as follows:
· Misty D. Coates, Long
Bottom, tinted glass, $20 and
costs, display plates/valid
sticker, $20 and costs; Victor J.
Cpates, Long Bottom, tinted
glass, $20 and costs; Andrew
B. Coffman, Gallipolis, speeding, $30 and costs: Ronald L.
Collins, Langley, Ky., speeding, $30 and costs;
C.
Converse,
Larry
Columbus, seatbelt, $30 and
costs, left of center, $20 and
costs; Blaine G. Cornwell,
Joplin, speeding, $30 and

costs; Lindsey M. Corsi,
Blacklick, speeding, $50 and
costs; William C. Coverby,
speeding, Ravenna, $32 and
costs; Elijah D. Cmig, Racine,
seatbelt, $30 and costs; Leona
· M. Crist, Athens, Speeding,
$30 and costs;
Catherine J. Cugavic, Dublin,
speeding, $30 and costs; Hobert
Cundiff, Middleport, speeding,
$45 and costs; Erek A. Daniels,
Middleport, speeding, $30 and
costs; Andrew E. Davis,
Pomeroy, speeding, $30 and
costs, seatbelt, $30 and costs;
Evan W. Davis, Columbus,
speeding, $45 and costs, seatbelt, $30 and costs; Leah A.
Davis, Hamden, speeding, $30
and costs;
Shawn P. Davis, Lancaster,
speeding, $45 and costs;
William H. Dawson, East

Liverpool, speeding, $50 and
costs; Justin T. Diddle, Racine,
speeding, $30 and costs;
B.
Diddle.
Thomas
Portersville, speeding, $30 and
costs; Karen S. Dillon, Poca,
W.Va., speeding, $30 and costs:
limothy R. Dillon. Racine.
speeding, $30 and costs, seatbelt, $30 and costs; Scott B.
Dolan, Amherst, speeding, $30
and costs; Isaac Dunkle, Logan,
seatbelt, $30 and costs; William
Jan W. Durst, Pomeroy, seatbelt, $20 and costs; Chadwick 1.
Dyar, Beverly, speeding, $30
and costs;
Steven L. Dye, Lexington,
Ky., speeding, $30 and costs;
Regina R. Eakins, Pomeroy,
failure/stop/public
safety
vehicle, $35 and costs;
Thomas]. Eakins, Syracuse,
stop sign, $20 and costs.

Judge temporarily bars
Kanawha smoking ban pr~vision ·

Presumption
By Tim Rutten
Los Angeles Times
If Scott Peterson is keeping
score, he should award Kobe
Bryant an a~sist.
The onetime Modesto, Calif.,
fertilizer salesman accused of
killing his wife and unborn
child wa~ set to become the plat
du jour in this summer's annual
media feeding frenzy. Then, last
week, a Colorado prosecutor
charged the Laker star with sexually assaulting a 19-year-&lt;Jid
woman employed at a resort
hotel where he was staying
before knee surgery.
The rest, to gloss the familiar
phrase, is hysteria.
Piry the reportorial remnants
sti U stuck in Stanislaus Counry,
Calif.-if there are any-because,
at the end of the day, their only
claim on their audience's attention is a suburban murder with a
little low-rent infidelity thrown
in for titillation. Their Colorado
colleagues, by contrast, are riding a real Rocky Mountain
high-that most intoxicating of
journalistic phenomena, a
crossover story.
Bryant's ca-;e cuts in as many
directions as a newspaper has
sections: There's the news coverage, of course, legal analysis
and an endless supply of sports
stories and columns. This time
around, tliere are even stories
for the financial pages, si nee
Bryant reportedly makes as
much as $13 million a year
from endorsements and Iast
month ·signed a four-year, $40
million deal to promote Nike
shoes.
•
"Should Brands Bryant
Endorses Keep Him On?"
demanded a headline on the
front page of Tuesday's Wall
Streef Journal Marketplace section.
Then there are all the probing
lifestyle features to be written
'

.

about the scene of the alleged
cTime, Eagle County, Colo. Is it
really an idyllic Alpine community of rough-hewn, plain-spaken cowboys and amiable, laidback ski bums? Or is it a small
town riven by petty jealousies,
where bored teen-agers are
drawn to the high-octane drugand-alcohol-fueled party scene
at the tony resorts nearby? All
this will be fodder for an
unimaginable number of op-ed
pieces and televised commentaries.
You, of course, may feel that
you've heard it all before with
other names and faces, but in
the minds of assignment editors
and producers, familiarity
breeds content.
The top story in Tuesday's
New York Tunes sports section,
for example, was a rhapsodic
portraitofMarkD. Hurlbert, the
34-year-&lt;Jld district attorney
who will prosecute Bryant.
"Prosecutor
Ready
for
Spotlight," went the headline,
"Undaunted b~ Attention and
Moneyed Defense in Bryant
Case."
In "a two-hour interview at
his office on Sunday," Hurlbert
said he "has heard all the daunting tales about small-town ,cash-poor district attorney's
offices taking on legal dream
teams" but takes solace from
recent conversatiOns ' with the
Connecticut state's attorney
who successfully prosecuted
Kennedy relative Michael C.
Skakel. "That gives me hope,"
Hurlliert said.
(Bryant happens to have hired
two prominent Denver defense
attomeys, hardly a dream team.)
Clearly the Colorado DA,
who is "6 feet, 3 inches tall and
sinewy," did something for the
two New York limes writers,
who described him as having
"those ice-blue eyes and sandyblond hair belonging to a number of Colorado ski gods who

, ...

""

. ..... .

'

of innocence
seem to have been hatched from
inside the same Alpine cave."
Really?
The prosecutor's hometown
newspaper, the Vail Daily, was
similarly concerned about the
imbalance between Hurlbert's
finances and ·Bryant's. In a
front-page story Tuesday, it
reported that the prosecutor "is
trying to determine how to best
pit his relatively paltry $2 million budget against NBA basketball star Kobe Bryant's $13
million annual salary." The
Daily went on to note that
"Attorneys, sports experts and
many others speculate (Bryant)
will throw any amount of
money he can toward the case
to clear his name."
How sinister.
There was a bromide widely
circulated among commentators at the time of OJ.
Simpson's trial, that celebrities,
particularly star athletes, are
really the only people who actually enjoy the presumption of
innocence to which aU
Americans · accused of crimes
are constitutionally entitled.
It was baloney then, and it's
baloney now. · For most
Americans-and panici.llarly for
savvy, world-weary journaliststhe phrase "innocent until
proven guilty" is simply rhetorical salve used to grease the rails
that line the road to conviction.
In Bryant's case, the pretrial
abrasion of his presumed innocence has been magnified by
two factors: One is his previously spotless record, which per'ersely has made him a greater
object of attention than he otheiWise would have been. Every
aspect of this 24-year-&lt;Jid man's
heretofore unblemished record
of precocious success is being
subjected to a kind of revisionist
consideration that more closely
resembles vivisection than journalism.
His penchant for privacy, his

........ ....... ·'.""" _.....

..

'·

intense selt~discipline, his selfpossession and measured distance from teammates and club
executives suddenly have taken
on a different cast. Maybe he
isn't a preternaturally gitied
young man with an extraordinary sense of focus and self.
Maybe he's, well you know.
weird.
Meanwhile, the cone of
silence,
which
recently
retormed criminal statutes and
modem media custom reserved
for women who lodge allegations of sexual assault, shield~
Bryant's accuser from anything
even remotely approaching the.
scnitiny to w~ich his entire life·
now is being subjected;
Mainstream media outlets;
including the Los Angeles
Tunes, for now have placed off~
limits widely reported information that m~y shed light on the
young woman's personal situation and emotional state at the
time she made her complaint.
To note this is not to argue
that she should not be entitled td
such privacy unti I a court deems
the information relevant and ' •
admissible. But the question is;
where is the similar deference to
which Bryant is entitled?
•
After it hears all the evidence
in his case, a Colomdo jury maY:
convict Bryant. Or, if its 12 mert
and wome11 "cannot say they,
feel an abiding conviction of the
truth of the charge"-which is
what the law defines as reasonable doubt-they may find him
not guilty.
· But his fame and the presumption of innocence notwithstanding, Bryant and his
lawyers are about to discover·
that by the time.they get to trial,
their first task will be to dig him
out from under the rock pile of
innu_endo tmd suspicion created
by all the rhetorical stones cast.
his way.
(Rutten writes a bow the
media for The Times)

. ..

..

.

~

'..

• .... .. • ~..

·- til

The Daily Sentinel• Page A5

www.mydailysentinel.com

CHARLESTON,
W.Va. effect until King rules on the
(AP) - Kanawha County petition.
restaurants that serve alcohol
A hearing· is set for Aug.
can choose not to enforce a 21. The court could make one
new county smoking ban of several decisions, includat least for now.
ing whether to make the
A Kanawha County circuit injunction ·
permanent,
judge on Thursday temporar- according to the order.
"We're going to defend this
ily barred the KanawhaDr.
Kerry
Charleston Board of Health regulation,"
from enforcing the ban in any Gateley, executive director of
facilities that are licensed by . the
Kanawha-Charleston
the state Alcohol Beverage Health Department, said
Control Administration to Thursday. "We're going to do
serve alcohol or beer.
what we need to do to protect
The preliminary injunction the public's health."
granted · by Judge Charles E.
The board has until Aug. 8
King Jr. came in a petition filed to file a reply with King.
by David Dryden of St. Albans.
Gateley said the board may
Dryden's petition argued that take more inunediate action
the board overstepped its and file an appeal to the state
bounds because its authority Supreme Court.
ends with food service.
The court already has
The smoking ban, which agreed to hear a challenge of
has been in effect since July 2, a similar smoking ban in
permits smoking in establish- Cabell County. At least 47 of
ments where alco hol makes West Virginia's 55 counties
up more tl],an 80 percent of have some type of indoor air
sales. Race tracks and gam- regulation.
Meanwhile,
Outback
bling facilities licensed by the
Steakhouse in Charleston
state are also exempted.
The injunction remains in plans to allow smoking in its

bar . and lounge area - but
not in the restaurant, said
Jessica Hatcher, an employee
with managerial and bartending duties.
"I think it's a good thing
personally," Hatcher said of
Thursday's decision.
"I don't smoke," she said.
But, "I believe it's a freedom
that people are given."
Hatcher said the smoki ng
ban has hurt the restaurant's
bar business. ·
"There were regulars that
have been coming here for
four years that quit coming
here because of it," she said.
"They'll come in once every
two weeks," instead of every
day.
Gateley, who planned to
meet with board of health
members Thursday to discuss
the order, stood by the county
smoking ban. ·
"I think that from a public
health standpoi nt this regulation was and is the right thing
to do," he said. "It's my position.

Public meetings

.Free Methods! Church. Free
will oHering will be taken .

Monday, July 28
POMEROY - Veterans
Service Commission will
meet at 9 a.m. at the 117
Memorial Drive.

Homecom,ings/
Reunions

Clubs and
Organizations
Saturday, July 26
ROCKSPRINGS - Girl
Scciut Sports Day will be
held from 10a.m. until2 p.m.
on
Saturday
at
the
Rocksprings Fairgrounds.
Registration is $3 for registered girl scouts and $10 for
non-registered girl scouts .
Information is available from
Tami Putman, at 378-6422,
Amy Markworth at 6691320,
or
Jerrena
Eberesbach at 992-7747.
Monday, July 28
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
will meet at 11 a.m. at the
Harrisonville firehouse . All
seniors are invited . There will
be a potluck dinner and blood
pressures will be taken.

Concerts,
Shows
Sunday, July 27
MIDDLEPORT
- Ttle
Riverbend Community Band
will perform at 2 p.m. on
Sunday at the Middleport
High School building.
POMEROY
HeavenBound Quartet will
be in concert at 6 p.m.
Sunday at the Laurel CliH

Saturday, July 26
ALBANY - Staneart family reunion, at Lake Snowden,
Route 50, Albany, potluck
dinner at noon. Take a picnic
lunch and lawn chair.
Sunday, July 27
REEDSVILLE- The 67th
annual Charles Wesley and
Elsie Florence Buckley
reunion will be held at the
Forked. Run State Park,
south of Reedsville. A covered dish dinner will be
served at 1 p.m. A tree will
be planted to honor the
Buckley '
descendants.
Family and friends welcome.
CARPENTER - Ali-day
homecoming starting with
Sunday School at 9:45 a.m.
will be held at the Mt. Union
Baptist Church. Guest
singers will be Earthen
Vessel and The Gabriels.
Rev. Mark Morrow to speak.
Dinner at noon. Pastor David
Wiseman invites the public.
GALLIPOLIS
Descendants of Levi Campbell
and Nancy R~e Jones will hold
their 68th family reunion at noon
at the home of Dick and Mary
· Groves at 338 Debbie Drive,
Gallipolis. Pot luck and auction.

Other events
Saturday, July 26
SYRACUSE -Free food
and clothing give-away will
be held at the First Church of

Local Briefs
Reunion
planned
REEDSVILLE
' Family and friends of John
and Laura Wells are inviled to the annual Wells
reunion at Forked Run
State Park on Aug. 2, with
a potluck dinner at noon.

closed from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m.
daily
through
Wednesday, July 30, to
allow for bridge work in
conjunction with Athens
to Darwin Connector construct ion. The time extension is necessary due to
recent inclement weather.

Tne Daily Se[ltiner·
740-992-2156 . ,,

-

Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church

JOHNNY ENGLISH (PGI
1:10 3:10
LEAGUE OF
EXTRAORDINARY .
GENTLEMEN (PG-131
7:10 &amp; 9:20
PIRATES OF THE
CARIBBEAN (PG-131
1:00, 3:30, 7:00 &amp; 9:30

Sunday, July 27th .
6:00p.m.
"Where jesus Christ is Lord-- 2417"
40792 Lo.urel Cliff Road ~ Pomeroy, OH
Cal/740-992-3573 or 992-2224
· -For Directions &amp; More Information
Freewill Offering Will Be Taken.

•

THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS.
Complete line of medical equipment &amp; 24-hour emergency service
'

• Pleasant Valley Horne Medical Equipment

• Medical Equipment Resources

• Continuity or Care

10 II Vil:ind Street
Point Pleasant, WV 2~550

Rt. I, Box 63 Clay lick Road
Ripley, WV 2?271

790 North Second Ave .
Middleport, Ohi o 45760

1-800-675-7846
304-675-6100

1-800-485-1440
304-372-5393

l-800-873-4663
740-992-2310

Accredited by the Joint Commission for Accreditation of Healtllcare Organizatimu (}CAHO J
- "'r\ r--·· ·- .....- - - · · - - - ---·- -

- --

'

'

.....___ _,_ _ _ _ __ _ __

·&lt;:c

. In Concert At The

SPY KlDS 3-D (PGI
1:00, 3:00, 7:00 &amp; 9:00

HOW TO DEAL (PG-131
7:20&amp; 9:20

'

c

The Heaven Bound Quartet

WED · SUN ONLY

BOX OFFICE OPENS
6:30PM MON-TUES &amp;
12:30 PM WED- SUN

BAD BOYS ll (RI
1:00, 3:40, 7:00 &amp; 9:40

. days with you! ·,'

Subscribe today • 992-2~56·

POMEROY
The
Ohio . Department of
Transportation announces
that State Route 681, just
west of U.S. 33 at the
Darwin area, will remain

28 DAYS LATER (RI
1:20, 3:30, 7:20 &amp; 9:30

~·

Proud to be apart of
your.life. . ·

Ohio 681
daytime
closure
extended

RAIDER: THE
(PG-131
1:15,3:30,7115 &amp; 9:30

~ Celebrating_· spedal·

God, Second and Apple
Streets, Syracuse, 11 a.m to
noon. Messages can be left
at 992-1734.
Sunday, July 27
SYRACUSE - Combined
worship service for the congregations of Syracuse,
Forest Run and Minersville,
at 11 a.m. at the Syracuse ·
United Methodist Church.
The Rev. .Jack Lethenstrom
of St. Cloud, Fla. tro preach.
He and his wife will also present a puppet show for the
youth. Communion will be
served by Lethenstrom and
his brother-in-law, the Rev.
Bob Robinson, local pastor.
Monday, July 28
CHESTER -Tuberculosis
clinic will be at the Chester
Fire Department from 4:30
to 6 p.m. to give T.B. tests.
Reading will be done from
4:30 to 5:30 on Wednesday.
All food handlers must have
the test.
RACINE - Seventh and
eighth-grade boys interested
in playing football in
Southern Local are asked to
attend a meeting at 7:30
p.m. on Monday at the field.
Thursday, July 31
LONG BOTIOM -Judy
Peters will be sworn in as
Long Bottom Postmaster on
July 3 t , at a reception to be
held from 10:30 a.m. until
12:30 p.m. at the Long Bottom
Community Building. Ughl
refreshments will be served,
and the public is invited.

·- --------- ---

' .

~
. ----- ·-·-----

.•, .~

PLEASANT
VALLEY
HOSPITAL
•- '

.,

�Inside:

www.mydailysentinel.com
•

Scoreboard, Page B2
'Kidd re-signs with Nets, Page B3

The Daily Sentinel
PageBl
Friday, July 25, 2003

Bobcats set football game ,_
times, open under ligt!ts
·

• II you have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1893. Gastonia. NC 28053
V\IIN~Jt)N

ClJP

What: Pennsylvania 500
Where: Pocono Raceway,
Long Pond, Pa. (2.5 miles ).
200 Japs/500 miles
When: Green flag drops at 1
p.m. Sunday
Last year's winner: Bil l Elliott
Qualifying record: Tony Stewart, Pontiac, 172.391 mph,
July 21, 2000
Race record: Rusty Wallace,
Ford, 144.892 mph, July 21,
1996
Moat recent race: The New
England 300 was a tale of
two teammates. One (Jimmie Johnson) made all the
right moves and won , and
the other (Jeff Gordon) made
all the right moves except
the ones that counted. Johnson won for the second time

~.t

UU

~

HUSCH St::t-llf'S

this season and, in the
process, handed Chevrolet
it!\ 400th victory of
NASCAR's modern era
(1972-present). Gordon,
who Jed 133 of the 300
laps, pitted on lap 196,
meaning that hiS Chevy did
not have enough fuel to go
the remaining 104 laps.
What ignited Johnson 's victory was the fact that his
Chevrolet managed to make
it to lap 208 before stopping
for fuel. Gordon eventually
made his final pit stop under
a yellow flag at lap 235, but
at that point, track position
was gone forever. Johnson
won and moved up from
sixth to fifth in the points
standings.
IN

GREG BIFFLE,

What: TnmSpa Dream Body
250
Where: Pikes Peak InternatiOnal Raceway, Fountain ,
Colo. (1 mile), 250
laqs/250 miles
When: 3:30 p.m. Saturday
Laet year's winner: Hank
Parker Jr.
Track qualifying record: Jeff
Pur•is, Pontiac, 135.629
mph, July 21, 2000
Race record: Jeff Purvis,
Chevrolet, 120.160 mph ,
July 28, 2001
Moat recent race: Former series champion David Green ,
in a Pontiac, won Saturday's
New England 200. Green
was forced to fend off a
hard-charging Kevin Harvick,
who finished second.

What: Sears 200

Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn (2
miles), 100 laps/200 miles
W...: 1 p.m. Saturday
Latl year's winner: Robert
Pressley
Track qualifying record:
Jamie McMurray, Dodge.
177.414 mph, July 21,
2000
.
Race record: Robert Pressley, Dodge, 142.208 mph,
July 27, 2002
Most recent race: Brendan
Gaughan, in a Oodge, won
Saturday night's race in
Madison. Ill , He beat Jason
Leffler by half of a truck·
length . Travis Kvapil was
third, followed by Carl Edwards and Rick Crawford.

Slaff report

Where:

lt-tE SPOTLIGH'T

"

Days Until
High School
Football
Season!!!
Hunter wraps
up summer
league play
FEUO Of THE WEEK

•

v

WINSTON CUP SERIES

E
R

s

'

John
Andrettl

Daytona victory finally gave Biffle's team the jolt it needed
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

G

reg Biffle, the rookie driver
from Vancouver, Wash., is still
digesting the effects of the
2003 season's biggest upset to date.
Biffle, 33, surprised virtually every·
one by driving his Ford to victory in
the July 5 Pepsi 400 at Daytona International Raceway.
.
"It's given us a lot of momentum,"
Biffle said. "The team is excited because we know we're capable of win·
ning races. It seems like you see a
team do a lot better after they win a
race, and it's not because you didn't
know you could, but because you kind
of proved that you can.
"I'm pretty excited about it be·
cause I thought this team was capable
of winning a race or two this season
and didn't really think we'd win at a
restrictor-plate track."
No one is overly surprised that Biffle, who drives for Roush Racing, is
leading the race for Raybestos Rookie of the Year. He has already won
championships in both the Craftsman
Truck and Busch series.
Now he's looking forward to racing
at Indianapolis Motor Speedway for
the first time Aug. 3. ·
"It was pretty neat to go around
there for the first time," Biffle said,
referring to a recent test session. "It
was a lot of fun. I'm really looking
forward to going back. I know I probably don't stand a chance of winning
my first time there, but I think we've
got a good opportunity to run up in
the top 10."
With his first victory behind him,
Biffle expects the hard work by his
team during the first half of the sea·
son to kick in.
"It just so happens that we've got·
ten to the point where we're getting
better race cars to bring to the track
every week," Biffle said. "We're
starting to turu that corner right now.
... You need really good race cars to
be competitive today.
"I like to use Bobby Labonte as an

lJ

s

Jimmy
Spencer

Contact from Jimmy Spencer's
Dodge sent John Andrelti's Pontiac
spinning into the wall on the eighth
lap of Sunday's New England 300 at
New Hampshire International Speed- ·
way in Loudon.
"It drives me nuts to think that
another guy would do that." Andrettl
said. "The last time he hit me, it was
like it was to get me out of the way.
We had a good car and got taken out
for no reason. It's not right. The way I
. feel , I think it was real intentional."
Andrelti ended up 41st. Spencer
finished a respectable 15th.
NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton -'v" hit take: ·one cancertainly sympathize with Andretti's frustration. He lost his longtime ride with
Petty Enterprises and is running two
races with Haas CNC Racing as the
re_placement for Jack Sprague. The
race had barely started when Andrei·
ti was out of it."
YOUR TURN
LETIERS FROM OUR READERS

Coke or Pepsi?

I

have been a NASCAR tan since the
'60s. I'm 80 years old but still never miss a race on TV. I used to go
to Daytona and miss the live races,
but there's no way to get tickets now.
It turns my stomach to see the
winner of the Pepsi 400 (Greg Biffle)
drinking a Coke.
I remember Jeff Gordon doing the
same thing when he won before.
That is about as insulting to a sponsor as you can get. If they (the winners) don't want to drink Pepsi, then
give them water.
Where do they th1nk their winning
money comes from? Pepsi should,
wake up and put it in their NASCAR
contiact - no free advertising for
Coca-Cola.
Janice N. Dudley.
Evansville, Ind.

John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

Greg Biffle, a former champion of the Busch and Craftsman Truck series,
won his first Winston Cup race In the July 5 Pepsi 400 at Daytona.

example. He was running 18th in
.
points (he actually finished 16th) last
year and they didn't run real strong.
They haven't changed anything this
year, and they've got a couple of
poles and a win and he's running real·
ly weU. What we're driving means so
much to our success, and our team is
working hard to get that."
Contact Monte Dutton at tug50@aol.com.

Rookie of the year race
Driver
1. Greg Biffle
2. Jamie McMurray
3. Casey Mears
4. Jack Sprague
5. Tony Raines
6. Larry Foyt

Tha nks fo r your comments. The
sponsorship wars and the large
amount of money involved is what
keeps NASCAR going.

I AN

Points
201

190
162
152
148

91

I ' II_.S

NASCAR's Green brothers .,.. Jeff,
David and Mark"- will host their
fourth annual charity golf tournament
in their hometown of Owensboro, Ky. ,
on July 30 at Summtt Country Club.
The tournament has raised ·
$250,000 In Its first three years and
will feature celebrity players such as
Darrell Waltrip, Larry McReynolds,
Jeff Hammond, Michael Waltrip and
others.
The Waltrlps also are natives of
Owensboro.

Valley
'

&amp; Supply
Co.
992-6611

Gallipolis OH
• ~;

\

---~·--------------------------~-----------------•

CINCINNATI (AP)- The
Cincinnati
Bengals
on
Thursday signed college free
agent Noah Happe, a defensive end from Oregcm State.
Happe played his junior
season at Oregon State in

. DENVER (AI?) - The
Denver Broncos waived
Terrell Davis, one of the most
popular players in team history, on Thursday after learning
the star running back would
not pass hi s physical.
Davi s has been rehabilitating in Phoenix in an attempt
to. return to the NFL, but
recently told Broncos coach
Mike Shanahan he didn't
think his battered knees
would allow him to pass a
physical before the start of
traming camp on Friday.

Main Street, • Rutland, Ohio

740-742-2289 . or 1-800-837-8217
for hours or

-

Bengals sign
Oregon State
DE Noah Happe

Broncos release
Terrell Davis

252 Upper River Rd.
•

JACKSONVILLE, Fla.
(AP) - The Jacksonville
Jaguars signed their secondround draft pick, defensive
back Rashean Mathis, on
Thursday but remain without
a deal. for top pick Byron
Leftwich.
Mathis signed a four-year
contract worth $3.17 mil,
lion. Also signing Thursday
were safety David Young,
defensive end Brandon
Green offensive tackle
Marques Ogden, all sixth- .
round picks.
Players report to training .
camp on Friday. Leftwich's
agent, Tom Condon, was in
town Thursday talking with
Paul Vance. the team's contract negotiator. Neither
immediately returned messages left by The Associated
Press.

The Bengals open their
training camp Sunday at
Georgetown College 111
Georgetown, Ky.

/

'1

Mathis signed,
Leftwich still
looking for deal

2002.

555 Park St • Middleport.

--

BOSTON - Former Ohio
Bobcat Brandon Hunter's
first foray into professional
basketball has ended the
same way his collegiate
career did - a success.
The three-time All· Mid·
American Conference selection and Ohio's all-time lead·
ing rebounder was named to
the Reebok Summer League's
second team last week after
leading the Celtics to a 2-4
record.
After coming off the bench
for 19 minutes in the opener,
Hunter played no less than 30
minutes in a starting role in
the next five games. He was
second on the team in scoring
at 16.3 points per game,
while grabbing a team-best
8.2 rebounds.
The Cincinnati native
topped double figures in
scoring five times, while
adding at least I 0 rebounds
for a double-double in three
of those . More impressively,
Hunter shot 66.7 percent
from the field and 74.3 percent at the free throw line.

•

an

'
"

ATHENS- The Ohio Athletic s
Department announced game
times for the 2003 football season
which begins under the light s
Thursday, Aug. 28 with a home
contest
against
Southeast
Missouri State.
The Bobcats, contest with
SEMO will start at 7 p.m. and be
part of Communiversity Day festivities at Peden ·' Stadium.
Communi versity Day is a promotion focused on attracting more
residents of southeast Ohio to
campus for a day.
"This region is very communi·
ty-oriented, and ·we want more of
those communities to take owner-

ship in the Bobcats," said Derek
Scott,
Director
of
Communication s
for
Ohio
Athletics. "Communiversity Day
gives us a chance to work with
groups from ~II over the region In
a. w~y that 1s mutually benef1 CJ~h- A hi . . ", . ,
IO
t eucs IS partpe r~ng
Wllh groups from _s urroundwg
commumtles to sell tickets for the
contest, allowing the groups to
use their share of the proceeds as
a fundraising opportunity.
"We're working with organizalions ranging from youth football
teams to volunteer fire departments and we ' re looking for
more ~artners," added Scott.
Any group or organization
looking for a fundraising oppor-

tunity is encouraged to contact
the Ohio Athletics Department by
calling 1-800-575 -CATS .
As for the remainder of the
home schedule. September games
again st Minnesota and Western
Michigan will begin at I p.m. and
4 p.m., respectively, before the
starting time switches to 2 p.m.
for the three remaining hom
e
ga~es.
.
.
Kickoff times for the six road
game s are also now tentatively
set.
.
Season tickets for the 2003
Ohto football season are on sale
now. For more information , call
the Ohio Athletics Ticket Office
at 740-593-1300 or 1-800-575CATS.

Pirates to Reds Crocker

among
unsigned
rookies

BY JOE KAY •

Associated Press
CINCINNATI - As soon
as the Pittsburgh Pirates
wrapped up another win, outfielder Brian Gile's met with
his agent to get an update on
trade rumors.
It's become a daily routine
for the Pirates: win a game,
then try to figure out who's
leaving next.
Matt Stairs had an
double in the lith in~t'~t,:~~·~,
the trade·9ecimated
completed li)IOther sw~p ac
Great American Ball Park by "
beating the Cincinnati Reds
7·5 on Thursday.
The Pirates .have gone 4-1
in t.he !~tf!te...~y&amp; -~:Whil.l&lt;
tradmf: ail'il\&gt;';;ihetr top two
relievers and two regulars in
three separ;lte deals.
Giles, who could be one of
the nexHo go, had a sacrifice
fly and an RBI double. He
then met agent Joe Bick in
the clubhouse waiting room
for an update.
·
Bick
hasn't
been
approached by general manager Dave Littlefield about a
trade. He said a report that
Giles had blocked trades was
untrue.
Then, Giles headed back .10
a clutihouse that has been '
remarkably resilient, refusing _.·
to give up even as the front- ~
office writes off the
"We've always
hard," Giles said.
been
~~~~l~'~
haven 't
enough. You can say \\
er you want about our team,
but we always compete.
"We've been pla~ing good
for a month-plus. It sa shame
we couldn't have moved a little bit closer before the dead·
line (to start making trades),
and we had to lose some guys .
that can help out down the

WITHERS
Associated Press

BY TOM

BEREA - The Cleveland Browns will
officially open training camp for their veterans with a much-anticipated quarterback
controversy- and a surprising one at center.
The club has yet to sign any of its 2003
draft picks, including center Jeff Faine, a
first-round selection
expected to start the
season as snapper
for either Tim
Couch or Kelly
Holcomb.
The Browns concluded their third
day of rookie train·
ing camp on Thursday with all seven of their
draft picks unsigned as contract holdouts.
Also unsigned is third-round pick Chris
Crocker, a free safety from Marshall.
Coach Butch Davis, who began the week
seemingly unconcerned about the absence of
so many first-year players, has become
increasi ngly irritated by the situation.
"They are not helping themselves," Davis
said, "and they are not helping the Cleveland
Browns. "

road ."

Stairs hit a ninth-inning
homer Wednesday night as
the Pirates won the opener of
the two-game series, and had
a pair of run-scoring d~\!!&gt;les
to complete a sw~fast- Cincinnati Reds Jose Guillen slides safely into home as Pittsburgh Pirates
catcher Jason Kendall waits for the throw on a flyout by Jason LaRue in the
Piuse see Reds, 82
forth inning in Cincinnati Thursday. (AP)

Davis warned the holdouts that every day
they miss diminishes their chances of making the 53-man roster.
"As the veterans start to report, these rook·
ies are going to get a sense that if they are ·
going to be a part of the team, they need to
get here," Davis said. "If the rookies don't
show. we are more than prepared to make
changes as we need to have the starting lineup."
Of the draft picks, Faine, the 21st overall
pick from Notre Dame, is the only one being
counted on to stan immediately. Until he
arrives, Davis said right guard Shaun O' Hara
will move to cente r.
Davis remains optimistic the rookies will
sign soon. He said the club has made fair
offers and is continuing an open line of communication with the player's agents .
'There 's dialogue," he said. "They're fax-

Please see Unslped, Bl

Sabathia struggles against Tigers
BY JOE MIUCIA

Associated Press
CLEVELAND - C.C. Sabathia
has suddenly lost the form that made
him a first-time All-Star last week .
The big left-bander lost for just the
second time in his career to the
Detroit Tigers, getting knocked
around for nine hits in Cleveland's 7•
4 loss Thursday night.
" I didn't throw strikes all night. It
was just a matter of time until they
started hitting them," Sabathia said.
"I just couldn't throw my fastball
over the plate."
Craig Monroe homered and Ben
· Petrick and Dmitri Young each had a
pair of RBis as the Tigers ended a
six-game losing streak.
"It's huge," Tigers manager Alan

Sabathla

"I didn't
throw strikes
all nip~. It .
was JUSt a
matter of
time until
they started
hitting them."

Tri}tnmell said . ''The wins have been
few and far between."
Sabathia (8-6) retired lhe first
seven batters, but lost hi s command
after the Tigers scored an unearned
run on third baseman Casey Blake·s
error in the third inning.
"It looked ' like maybe he lost hi s
rhythm," Trammell said.

-----------

The Tigers broke away by scoring pitches because we don't do it very
four nms with two outs in the fifth . often," he said.
.
Petrick and Young each drove in a
The win snapped- Detroit's six·
run. then Monroe hit a two-run shot. · game
losing streak
against
hi s IOth. for _a 5-1 lead.
Cleveland.
Nate Cornejo (5 -8) scattered nine
Sabathia Went 6 1-3 innings.
allowing six runs. five earned. l:Je is hits over 6 2-3 innings, giving up
0-3 in his last three starts with a 6.05 three runs. He had a season-high four
ERA after winning eight · of nine strikeouts and walked none.
decisions.
He's 2· 1 with a 2.57 ERA in his last
"He's our No. I guy - in good three starts after losing five straight.
outings and tough outings," Indians
"He was good enough," Trammell
manager Eric Wedge said. "Nobody said. "He's kind of rebounded and
is more disappointed than he is."
given us good performances."
.
Sabathia was 2-0 w·ith a 1.50 ERA Cornejo. who lost his last start after
against the Tigers this season enter- taking a no-hitter into the seventh
ing Thursday ' night's game, and 6-1 inning against the White Sox, said it
with a 3.50 ERA in nine career starts. was nice to get run suppon.
Trammell said the four-run tifth
"It was good to see the guys battle
was the key.
.
like that." he said.
"It's just nice to ...be able to talk
Chri s Mears pitched the final I 2-3
about · capitalizing on a couple of innings for his fifth save.

------•-- --

--

- - -- - --------- -..

---·~-------~

--

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Scoreboard
· Baseball
Frontier League
Eut Dlvlolon
W L Pet.
Evans'llille
35 19 .648
Chillicothe
33 18 .647

.'

Natl0f181 ~ut

GB

',
31 22 .585 3'1

Washington

Richmond
Kalamazoo
Florence

Eut Dfv181oii.

Allanta

31 24 .564 4',
21 33 .389 14
12 42 .222 23
Weat Olvlalon
W L Pet GB
30 22 .sn 30 23 .566 ~

Gateway

Rocidord
Kenosha

PN-Iphla

florl!la

22 32 .407 9
20 35 .364 11 '1,

River City

Mid-Missouri

Tburaday'l GIIMI
Cook COunty 5, Roctdord 4
Aorence 10, Chillicothe 2

Washington 4, Kalamazoo 0
Kenosha 3, Mld-Mi850url 2
Evansville 4, Richmond 3
Gateway 3, River Ctty 2
Fr1day'a Oamee

Cook County at Roctdord

I

Florence at Chillicothe

Kalamazoo at Washington
Kenosha at Mid-Missouri
Richmond at Evansville
River City at Gateway

Slturdly'a 01me1
Cook COunty at Rockford
A_prence at Chillicothe
Kalamazoo at Washington
Kenosha at Mid-Missouri
Richmond at Evansville

River Qlty al Gateway

International League
North Dlvlelon
WLPctGB
Buffalo {Indians)
57 44 .564 Pawtucket (RodS&lt;»&lt;) 57 46 .553 1
Ottawa (Ork&gt;les)
55 49 .529
Scranton (Phlllles) 53 51 .510 5 ~,

I '

3'

Rochester (Twins)
50 54 .481 8'1,
Syracuse (Blue Jays) 45 55 .450 11 '1,
South Division

WLPct.GB

Durham (Devil Rays) 53 4B .525 Charlotte (White So~t)SO 54 .481 4 ~
Norfolk (Mets)
49 55 .471 5~
Richmond (Braves) 49 57 .•.462 6 ',
West DlvLJon

W L Pet GB

Louisville (Reds)
61 44 .581 Toledo (Tigers)
51 53 .490 9'1
Columbus (Yankees) 49 56 467 12

Thursday's Oamet

Midwest League
Eastern Dlvialon
WLPct.GB
South Bend (Dbacks) 19 14 .576 Dayton (Redsl
16 17 .485 3
x-Fort Wayne (Paci'es)16 18 .471 3',
WestM~hgan(Tigors)16 18 .471 3',

BASEBALL
CHICAGO WHITE SOX- Sent OF
A.merlcan League

Anthony Webster, RHP Frankie Francisco
and AHP Josh Rupe to the Te1&lt;as Rangers
to complete the July 1 trade for OF Carl
Everett.

OAKLAND ATHLETICS-Pieced INF

Frank Menechino on the bereavement lis!.

Recalled INF Esteban German from
Sacramento of the PCL.

13
13
14
15

BASKETBALL

National Basketball Alloclation
NBA- Announced a three-team trade in
which the Sacramento Kings acquired C
· Brad Miller lrom the Indiana Pacers for C
Scot Pollard . San Antonio acquired F
Hedo Turkogiu from Sacramento and G
Ron Mercer froro Indiana and sent F
Danny Ferry to the Pacers.

WLPct.GB

21
21
20
19

.618 -

.618 588 1
.559 2
.529 3

Cedar Rapids (AngeiS)tB 16
Quad City(Twins) 15 19 .44t 6

Burlington (Royals) 13 21 382 8
Wisconsin (Mariners) 12 21 .364 a',
K-won first half

Thursday's Games
Battle Creek 9, West Michigan 1
Beloit 7. Burlington 4
Clinton 7, South Bend 5
Kane County 6, Dayton 1
Fort Wayne B. Lansing 4
Peoria 6. Wisconsin 5
Cedar Rapids 2, Quad City 1
Friday's Gamaa

INDIANA PACERS-Signed C Bred
Miller to a seven.year contract.
LOS ANGELES LAKERS-5igned F~
Jamaal Sampson .
FOOTBALL
National Football League
CINCINNATI BENGALS- Signed DE
Noah Happe.
DALLAS COWBOYS- Agreed to terms
with CB Terence Newman on a sevenyear contract .

DB Rashean Mathis to a four-year con·
tract and S David Young.

MIAMI OOLPHINS-Re·signed DE

Adewale Ogunleye to a on&amp;-year contract.
Signed LB Eddie Moore to a five-year
contract and OT Tim Provost, DT Davern
Williams and S Yeremiah Bell to threeyear contracts. Signed K Rob Hart. Placed
DE David Bowens on the ActiveNon-

from Page 81
fading Cincinnati.
The Pirates opened Great American with a
three-game sweep from March 31-April 3.
They' re 5-0 at the ballpark, the lirst time
they ' ve won five consecutive games in
Cincinnati since 199 L
The Reds have played themselves out of
contention since the All-Star break, going 1-7
on a homestand to fall a season-high 13 games
under .500. After a 6-5 loss on Wednesday
night, starter Ryan Dempster criticized manager Bob Boone for taking him out after five
innings and 10 l pitches.
Cincinnati 's rotation has the NL's worst
earned run average at 6.30, and the defense
leads the majors with 97 errors in I0 I games-

Unsigned
from Page 81
ing proposals, talking to agents back and
forth . We need somebody to break, somebody
to sign. A lot of these guys will eventually
sign contracts pretty close to what we're
offering now."
Faine's agents, Jim Steiner and Ben Dogra,
did not return phone messages seeking comment.
Cleveland's veterans have been slowly
trickling in all week, and Thursday underwent
physicals. On Friday, they'll weigh-in beginning at 6 a.m., followed by a I 10-yard conditioning test at 7.
Then, after morning meetings and lunch,
the Browns will take the field for their first
practice at 3:30p.m. For the next two hours,
the attention of fans and media members wi II
tum to the quarterbacks.
The Couch vs. Holcomb matchup has been
the 1alk of Cleveland for months. It began last
season when Holcomb, a career backup,
·I

.:

e:a

38

110 41
52;· SO.
,... $1
'38 14.

.820 -

.-. n
.510 11
.• 13~
•.3110 "211 '

on the physically-unable·to·pertorm list .
Signed CB Nnamdl Asomugha and OL
Tyler Brayton to six-year contracts. Signed

WR Teyo Johnson, LB Sam Williams. RB

Justin Fargas, DE Shurron Pierson, WR
Doug Gabriel, T Dustin Rykert, S Jeremy
Shabazz and WA Ryan Hoag.

PHILADELPHIA EAGLE5-Signed TE
PITTSBURGH STEELERS- Released

LJ. Smith and WR Billy McMullen.

WA Phil Braden. Signed WR Lamar
Slade.
,

ST. LOUIS RAMS-Signed Lij Pisa
SAN FRANCISCO 49ER5-Signod OT

Tlnolsemoa.

Anthony Adams, WR Amaz Battle, WR
Brandon lloyd, TE Aaron Walker and DE
Andrew Williams.

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS-Signed CB
a five-year contract.
TENNESSEE TITANS-Agreed to

Marcus Trufant to

terms with WA Andre Woolfolk to a fiveyear contract and P Brian Holmes.

WASHINGTON REOSKINS- Agreed to

terms with QB Gibran Hamdan . Signed
Dl Bernard Holsey. Released DB Brian
Mance and DE Jace Sayler.

HOCKEY
National Hockey Looguo
ATLANTA THRASHERS-Agreed to

•

is harmful rather than having
the manufacturer prove it is
safe. as with drugs.
McClellan said the agency
has new evidence, including
studies on the herb and health
complaints submitted to companies that use it in th~ products, that may suppon a ban
under the law.
On Wednesday, Health and
Human Services Secretary
Tommy Thompson said makers of dietary supplements
should have to tell the FDA
about potential side·effects, as
do drug-makers. He urged
Congress to revise the 1994
law.
During two days of hearings, lawmakers heard from
scientists, health officials, the
parents of two people who
died after taking ephedra, representatives of pro sports
leagues and players, and officials from companies that
make products with ephedra.
The head of the major
league baseball players' union
told lawmakers Thursday that
the sport should not ban
dietary supplements containing ephedra unless the government does.

"The position of the players' association has long been
that players should not be
prohibited from using any
substances that the United
States government has effectively determined are not
unsafe for consumption by
other American consumers,"
said Eugene Orza, · associate
general counsel of the Major
League Baseball Players
Association.
The issue is particularly relevant to baseball because of
Bechler's death, after which
commiSSIOner Bud Selig
banned players with minor
league contracts from taking
ephedra.
After the hearing Thursday,
Selig issued a statement urging Congress to regulate
ephedra and to re-examine the
1994 law. "The proper venue
for the regulation of these
dangerous supplements is in
Congress," he said.
Other sports leagues do ban
ephedrd and test players to
make sure they are not using
the product. They include the
NFL and MLS , both of which
sent
representatives
to
Thursday's hearing.

Attorney says agreement reached
with Reds minority owner
CINCINNATI (AP)
Cincinnati Reds minority
owner Marge Schott has settled
her lawsuit with the club over
seats allocated to her al the
team's new ballpark, an attorney said.
"We have reached a settlement but have agreed to keep it
confidential," Jim Burke, attorney for the Great American
Insurance Co., said after a
meeting Wednesday between

ately return a call Thursday to
his office seeking comment.
The case will not officially be
dismissed until both sides file
the necessary paperwork.
The lawsuit, filed in
February, asked that the court
determine the seats Schott is
entitled to in the new stadium.
She said the 1999 sale of her
1999.
majority interest in the Reds
Schott's attorney, Mark guarantees her use of premiumWassennan, did not immedi- section seats at the stadium.
lawyers for both sides and
Hamilton County Common
Pleas Judge Fred Nelson.
The chairman of the company, which has naming rights to
Great American Ball Park, is
Cincinnati businessman Carl
Lindner, who bought control of
the Reds when Major League
Baseball forced Schott to sell in

terms with C Brian Swanson and F Kamll
Pires.

COLUMBUS BLUE JACKETS- Re·

signed F David Ling and F Brad Moran.
DALLAS STARs-Agreed to terms with
D Stephana Aobidas on a one-year contract.

FLORIDA PANTHER5-Re-algned LW

Darcy Hordichuk and AW Denis Shvldki to
one-year contracts. Signed AW Lee
Goren to a one-year contract.

LOS ANGELES KING5-Signed LW
NASHVILLE PREDATOR5-Signed F
Farrell.
·
DENVER BRONC05-Released RB Mike
NEW
JERSEY
DEVILS-Signed
D
Terrell Davis.
Sean Brown.
DETROIT LIONS- Signed WR T.C. NEW YORK ISLANDERs-,Named Curt
Taylor and DT David Viger.
Fraser and Jeff Jack son assistant coach·
INDIANAPCLIS COLTS- Agreed to OS.
terms Ol Steve Sciullo, OL Makoa
NEW YORK RANGERS-Agreed to
Freitas. LB Keyon Whiteside, DE Robert terms with LW Richard Scott.
Mathis and LB Cato Ju.
JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS-Signed OTTAWA SENATORS-Re·slgnad 'F

Reds
•

. . Dh1110h
'
,W L
Pct • QI

57 43 .s7o e~ Botton
' 53 49 .520 14\ T0100to.
52 so .510 15~ 'lllltlmQre
42 II&amp; .418 25
Tlrnpallly

Transactions

Battle Creek ('mnkees)lS 18 .455 4
Lansing (Cubs)
15 19 .441 4\
Western Oivlalon
Beloit (Brewers)
Clinton {Rangers)
Peoria (Cardinals)
K·Kane County (A's)

AI'MI'Iellln ~ • ',

W L
Pet 01
87 34 , .883 - · New 'ltrlt

South Bend at Lansing
Saturday's Gamea
Beloit at Kane County
Cedar Rapids at Wisconsin
Clinton at Battle Creek
Dayton at Peoria
Fort Wayne at West Michigan
Quad City at Burlington
South Bend at Lansing

lndlafl8j)Oiis (Brewers) 45 58 .437 15
Syracuse 5, Buffalo 2, 1st game
Syracuse 5, Buffalo 2, 2nd game
Columbus 5. Charlene 3
Durham 9, Ottawa 5
tndlanapolis 6, Richmond 1
Louisville 7, Rochester 3
Toledo 8, ~awtucket 4 .
ScrantonWIIkes-Barre 7, Norfolk 3
Friday's Gamet
Buffalo at Pawtucket
Charlene at Louisville
Columbus at Norfolk, 1sl game
Columbus at Nor1olk, 2nd game
Indianapolis at Durham
Onawa at ScramoMVilkes-Barre
Aichmc:1d at Toledo
Rochester at Syracuse, t st game
Rochester at Syracuse, 2nd game
Saturday's Games
BuHalo at Pawtucket
Charlotte at Louisville
Cofumbus at Norfolk
Indianapolis at Durham
Ottawa at ScrantonWilkes·Barre
Richmond at Toledo
Rochester at Syracuse

•'

FDA considering
banning ephedra

WASHINGTON (AP)
The government is building a
C..troiDIVIIIon
.
Cftil Div~MN! '
case
that could lead to banWL
PctOI
WL
PctGI
HOuston
58 46 .549 ~ City
58 45 .550 ning ephedra, an herbal stimStlouit
52 49 .515 · 3~ Chicago ..,
&amp;:a I5Q .010 4
ulant used 10 Jose weight and
Chicago
so
51 .495 5 ~ M l . SO 51· . .ol86 5~
Plltsllurgh
46 · 53 .465 8~ ~ · ' .! o42 ljO ..(1Z 14 .
boost athletic performance
C~nnall
44 fl7 :438 11 ~ 1letrolt , &lt;•• ~ 7S ··:270 28 :
that
has been linked to scores
Mllwa\Aktt .•
41 so .406 14~
' - Divllkln
of
deaths,
the head of the
· W L
Pet Ql
WL Pet 08 Slatla
81
&lt;10 .804 - ·.
Food
and
Drug
Siln f'lenclloo 65 37 .637 -"
OekWod '
' ~7 44 ·.~ 4
Administration told lawmakArizDna
54 48 .529 11 Ana..,., · ' !1 49 · .6Hi a~
~~
53 48. .525 11 ~ T! 41 DO .406 20
ers
Thursday.
Colorado . 52 53 .495 14~ '
. .
The
FDA in February
. Son Diego ' 311 64 .379 26~
.
~· ~
Tampa Bey 18, ~ ~·
ordered labels to be put on
Mi!"-6.~
Clty~3
products with ephedra warn• P.lltoburoh~··7, Cincmnati 5. 11 Innings
lllltitllbro
5.1'1.Y.'tlon'Atianta 5, Florida 2
·
"Detroit 7; ca.v.tani:i flo
~
ing of the possibility of heart
P!\llldelphla 14, ChiCIQQ Cube 8
Ch~ While SQx ~;Toronto 3, i 13
attacks.
strokes or death. The
~"" Arveleo 1, Colollldo o. 11 innlnga lnnlriga ·
· .: .
.
move came two weeks after
Son Ftancloro 3, AriZQna 2
•
.......,.,"' 1~; r- 8
Montnial6, N.Y.Meli 1
Oeld«nn! 3..~ 0
•
the death of 23-year-old
MIIWI'*M 2, Houst-" 1
F.... 0...
,
Baltimore Orioles pitcher
Frldlly.. 8oltitno&lt;t (Johnoon 11-4) .at ~
A
. tlanta (Ramirez 8·3) .at Montreal .(Lidi&lt;H!J,B), ~ · ,
·
Steve
Bechler, who was takf&lt;:argu•e-6). 7:~ p.m.
N.Y. ~ . .
12.3). at Botto&lt;i'
ing
a
supplement containing
Cincinnati (Graves 4·10) at N.Y. Moll (P.Mor1inJI: Hl;1i05 p.m. ·,
(Loltal' 8-5), 7:10p.m.
MintleiOti (fl0a&lt;HI8o5) II~
ephedra.
· Phl~ia (Myers 1o.8) at F\Orlda ~5--4).'7:011 p.m.
Under pointed questioning
(WliHs 9-2), 7:35p.m.
KanMI City (A.~ 4-3) at
Chloag&lt;1 Cub• (Zambrano Nil at Dttloll (~' »l• 7:06p.m.
from House members, FDA
~QUoton (W.MIIIer ~.Q), 8:06p.m.
~ ~~ ~n .at ·Qt\lcago
Commissioner
Mark
PiUaburgh (Wellt 4-4) at St. lOtll$ Wllltt $01&lt; .(t .. 112~. 'lllllltp.m. 1
(f'i!lUMI 1·2), 8:10p.m.
. ' T- (EIIil 0&lt;41) Iii 84iiottte.(Mbyer 12•
McClellan said Thursday the
Milwaukee (Obermuoller 0~) at 5),'10:05 p.m.
. · • , ·
agency
is looking at taking
Colorado (T..o CHl), 9:06 p.m.
. Oakland · (LHty W) at Ana~olm .
Loo Angeles (Od.Poiez 8-8) at : (IJ!&lt;;I&lt;ey 7-ll), 10:06 p.m.
stiffer action.
Arlzcna (Johnson 1·3). 10:06 p.m.
·
"A ban on ephedra use is in
San Diego (Eatpn 5·7) 11 San
FranciOQO (Rueter 7·3), 10:15 p.m. ·
the range of options we are
considering," he said.
Beloit at Kane County
Football injury list.
A 19941aw left dietary supCedar Raptds at Wisconsin
MINNESOTA VIKINGS- Signed P plements largely unregulated.
Clinton at Battle Creek
Eddie Johnson.
Dayton at Peoria
OAKLAND RAIDERS- Placed TE The statute requires the FDA
Mondriel Fulcher, DB Clarence Love, C
Fort Wayne at West Michigan
to prove a dietary supplement
Barrett Robbins and TE Roland Williams
Quad City at Burlington
Moc\b!IIJ
New 'Illite

28 24 .538 2
28 27 .509 3\

Cook Coumy

Friday, July 25, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Luc Robitaille to a one-year contract.

Josh Langfeld and 0 Wade Brookbank to
multiyear contracts.

PHILADELPHIA FLYERS-Signed D

Randy Jones, LW Mark Murphy and AW
Mike Peluso.

TORONTO MAPLE LEAFS-51gned F
Harold Oruken to a one·year contract.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS-Re·slgned
RW Mike

~rier

to a one-year contract. .

WEB SITE DIRECTORY
Jim's Farm Equipment

www.jimsfarmequipmenlcom

played well in two games while filling in for
an injured Couch. The controversy then
picked up steam when Holcomb passed for
429 yards in an opening-round playoff loss to
Pittsburgh.
Davis is on record saying he will pick his
starter 'before the third rreseason game at
Detroit on Aug. 23. Unti he decides, every
one of Couch and Holcomb's plays will be
analyzed endlessly.
Wtll it be Couch? Or Holcomb? The controversy even followed Davis on a family
summer vacation.
"Do r,ou know • they asked me that in
.Alaska? ' Davis said. "I told them who will be
the starter, but it will. take 12 weeks to get
here. They're bringing it by canoe."
Another of the b1g issues facing the Browns
in camp is the health of defensive end
Counney Brown, a former No. I overall draft
pick who. has mi ssed 16 games the past two
seasons because of injuries.
.
Brown's 2002 season ended prematurely
when he injured his left knee, eventuall y
requiring microfracture surgery - a radical
procedure which involves holes being drilled
mto the knee to promote.cartilage growth.

'

•

It's official: Jason Kidd Bryant's accuser placed
re-signs with Nets
in hospital last winter
Bv WAYNE PARRY
Associated Press
EAST RUTHERFORD ,
N.J.- Jason Kidd re-signed
with the New Jersey Nets on
Thursday. returning to the
team he helped re scue from
the bottom of the standings
and Jed to two straight NBA
Finals appearances.
The contract is for six
years and $103 million, Nets
president and general manager Rod Thorn said .
Thedoint guard was considere the biggest catch in
this year's free agent market
and was heavily recruited by
San Antonio, which beat
New Jersey to win this
year's title.
In the end, he decided to
stay in New Jersey and try
for a title with teammates
Alonzo Mourning. Kenyon
Martin , Richard Jefferson
and olhers . He announced
hi s decision last week, the
same day the team agreed on
a four-year deal that lured
Mourning from Miami.
"It would have been easy
to go to San Antonio and
play with Tim Duncan and
those guys," Kidd said at
new s conference at the
team' s practice facility
Thursday. "I have some·

www.bluestarr.net

AUTOMOTIVE
.

Norris Northup Dodge

www.norrisnorthupdodge.com

Holzer Medical Center

www.holzer.org
Turnpike Ford of Gallipolis

Holzer Clinic

www.holzerclinic.com
Pleasant Valley Hospital

www.pvalley.org

ENTERTAINMENT
Charter Communications

www.charter.com
GIFTS &amp; COLLECTIBLES
Precious Memories

www.photosonchina.com
HOME IMPROVEMENT
Quality Window Systems, Inc.

www.qualitywindowsystems.com

Jason not the only Kidd
to choose New Jersey
EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (AP) - Jason Kidd
considered more than just
hi s options when deciding
whether to re- sign with the
New Jersey Nets or accept
an offer from San Antonio.
Kidd weighed which
team afforded him the best
chance to win an NBA title
and who would be his
coach. But he was also
influenced by another
opinion - that of his 4year-old son, TJ.
"He did get a vote," Kidd
said at a news conference
Thursday after signing a
six-year de'al to remain
unfinished business and that
is to win a championship in
this lea~ue and win il as a
Net. Tht s is the best chance
for me to win a championship."
Kidd and head coach
Byron Scott refu sed to
answer que stions about published reports that Kidd
demanded Scott be replaced
in order for Kidd to re-sign.

with the Nets. "He was all
for staying' in New Jersey.
He loves his school and
friends. He didn' t want to
go down to the Alamo and
pick out new friends.
"He also enjoys his golf
coach. You know, it's hard
to find a good golf instructor for a 4 year old."
Kidd's
$103-million
contract should ensure
TJ .'s golf game thrives.
The pact, slightly more
than Kidd could have
received from the Spurs,
wasn't the only reason
Kidd decided to stay in
New Jersey.
Kidd, however, said the
reports were untrue.
"That whole thing about
me coming in and . demanding stuff, that 's not my personality or my agenda,"
Kidd said. "That story came
out and it was wrong . If
there's any question about
coach and (my) relationship,
it's great and we plan to
move forward."

BY STEVE WILSTEIN
Associated Press
EAGLE, Colo. - Scrutiny of Kobe
Bryant's accuser intensified Thursday as
authorities said she had been hospitalized as
a "danger to herself' four months before the
alleged sexual assault.
University of Northern Colorado police
chief Terry Urista said campus police
received a call about 9 p.m. on Feb . 25
re§arding a woman in a dormitory room.
·
'An officer determined she was a danger
to herself," he said. "It's classified as a mental health issue."
The woman was transported by ambulance
to N nrth Colorado Medical Center of
Greeley, Urista said. He refused to say
whether it was a suicide attempt.
Lindsey McKinney, who hved with the
woman this spring before the two had a
falling out, said her friend tried to kill herself
at school this winter and again in May in
Eagle. She said the woman tried to overdose
on sleeping pills.
Prosecutors and an attorney for Bryant's
19-year-old accuser have declined to d1scuss
details of the case or the background of the
woman. Records relating to the case were
sealed.
Robert Pugsley, a criminal law professor at
Southwestern University in Los Angeles,
said if the two incidents turn out to be suicide attempts it could weaken the prosecution's case.
"The more these indications of instability
emerge, the more difficult it might prove for
the prosecutor to persuade the jury beyond a
'

reasonable doubt that this xoung woman did
not misinterpret the event, ' he said.
Another legal expert said the suicide
attempt claims may never be heard at trial.
Christopher Mueller, a law professor at the
University of Colorado in Boulder, said.
judges can exclude evidence that exposes a·
witness to undue embarrassment if it isn't
essential to the charges.
"When there is no connection proven, that
argument becomes pretty difficult," he said.
"A coun may very well bar it."
Mueller also said the defense will think
"long and hard" about whether to label
Bryant's accuser unstable and suicidal. "To
attack a person who comes into a coun as a
victim is always a tricky thing," he said.
Bryant was charged with felony sexual
assault after his accuser told authorities he
attacked her at an Edwards reson June 30.
Bryant said the sex was consensuaL
Meanwhile, Eagle County Judge Fred
Gannett issued an order limiting public comment about the case by attorneys, authorities
and others involved m the case. including
·
.
Bryant and any witnesses.
Citing concern about pretrial news coverage, the judge said it was his duty to try to,
guarantee a fair triaL
"Where the case is a notorious one, that
burden on the court is heavy," Gannett.
wrote.
Before the judge's ruling, Eagle County
Sh~riff Joe Hoy dismissed speculation by at
least one of the woman's fnends that she is
having second thoughts about going forward
with the case.
.
"As far as I've heard, .that is just plain·
rumor," Hoy said. "That is just off-board."

Indiana's Miller goes to Kings in three-team swap
BY GREG BEACHAM
Associated Press
SACRAMENTO. Calif. - The
Sacramento Kings couldn't sit still
while the rest of the Western
Conference's elite teams got better.
and the Indiana Pacers didn't want to
Jet All-Star center Brad Miller leave
town for nothing.
So the clubs joined with the San
Antonio Spurs in a three-team, five-

player trade on Thursday that sent
Miller to the Kings moments after he
signed a seven-year, $68 million contract
The Kings traded backup center
Scot Pollard to the Pacers. They also
sent promising forward Hedo
Turkoglu to the Spurs, who traded forward Danny Ferry to Indiana. In addition, San Antonio got well-traveled
guard Ron Mercer !rom the Pacers.
"We· re very excited to add an AllStar-caliber player to our team," Kings

wesident of basketball operations
Geoff Petrie said. "He's a young, versatile player who should be a great
addition to our team and our ongoing
success."
The fast-developing trade was
Sacramento's response to the summer
of sharp improvements by West contenders Minnesota, San Antonio and
the Los Angeles Lakers. The Kings
also hope they got their center of the
future, since aging veteran Vlade
Divac is entering the final year of his

contract.
The deal was costly to the Kings'
famed depth, however: Sacramento
lost Turkoglu, widely thought to be a
future star, and Pollard, the eccentric
bi~ man who was a fan favorite and a
pnzed reserve.
As recently as last weekend, Petrie
didn't think the Kings would be able
to swing another big deal Jhis offseason. It came together when the Pacers
decided they would rather get sof(lething instead of allowing Miller to

leave as a free agent.
Pacers CEO Donnie Walsh said the
team also received a trade exception
worth about $4 million . Walsh
believes Indiana now has the room to
re-sign five-time All-Star Reggie
Miller and possibly another free agent.
"We wanled to get somebody who
could play cel!ter and fit in with the
team," Walsh said of Pollard. "In
man~ ways, I think he is a perfect fit
- hke 'Brad Miller was in a lot of
ways."

E·-mail your sports ne.ws to: sports@mydailysentinel.com
For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

BlueStarr Network

MEDICAL

The Daily Sentinel• Page 83

www.mydallysentlnel.com

National Basketball Association

INTERNET SERVICES

AGRICULTURE

www.turnpikeflm.com

"I think it's apparent that we' ve got a lot of
issues on this team," infielder Aaron Boone
said. "We just give up too many runs. As much
as people blame the pitching, we don't catch
the ball too well either. Good teams make
plays - run down balls, close up holes - .and
we don't."
Pittsburgh blew three leads with shoddy
plays, the last one when Stairs dove · for
Boone's sinking liner in righ,t field with ·two
outs in the eighth and let it get past him for an
RBI triple that tied it at 5.
,
"I screwed up," said Stairs, who failed to
keep the ball in front of him and save a run. "I
had to make up for it somehow, I guess."
Boone's throwing error at shonstop set up
the winning rally off Chris Reitsma (7-3).
Stairs' double put Pittsburgh ahead. and Jose
Hernandez had a sacritice fly off Ryan Wagner.
Mike Lincoln ( 1-0) pitched the last two ,
innings to get the victory, one day after he
saved the series opener.
,

Friday, July 25, 2003

NEWSPAPERS

COURT OF COMMON
PLEAS MEIGS COUI'ITY, OHIO
JP Morgan Chase
Bank Ike The Chase
Manhattan Bank, as
Trustee of IMC Home
Equity Loan Trust
1997-5 under the
pooling snd servicing
agreement dated as
of September 1, 1997
c/o Fairbanks Capital
Corporation
Plaintiff
vs
William K. Cogar, et al
Defendants
Case l'lo.: o3-cv-os5
Judge: Fred W. Crow .
NOTICE IN SUIT FOR
FORECLOSURE OF
MORTGAGE
Mary E. Cogsr and

lor rellel of which
pleading Is to lorecloae the lien of
plalntlff'a mortgage
recorded upon the
following described
real estate to wit:
Properly Address:
42838 St. Rt. 124,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
and being more pertlcularty described In
plaintiff's mortgage
recorded In Mortgage
Book 50, page 111, or
this
County
Recorder's Office.
All of the above
named defendants
are required to
answer within lwenlyetght (28) days sfler ·
last
publication,
which shslt be pub-

John Doe, unknown

lished once a week
for six consecutive

spouse o{ Bonnie S.

Gallipolis Daily Tribune

Freeman, at 'time of

conveyance on June

www.mydailytribune.com

5, 1990, whose lsat

known address for

www.mydailysentinel.com

Mary E. Cogar Is P.O.
Box 303, Racine, OH
45771 and for John

Point Pleasant Register

spouse ol Bonnie S.
Freeman, at time of

The Daily Sentinel

unknown

conveyance on June

(513) 241 -3100
(7) 25, (8), 1, 8, 15, 22,

5, 1990 Address
Unknown, and lhe
unknown

5480
29

heirs,

devisees, legatees,
exacutors, adminis-

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS A HIT!!

Lerner, Sampson &amp;

Rothfuss
Attorneys for Plaintiff
P.O. box 5480
Cincinnati, OH 45201·

Doe,

www.mydailyregister.com

weeks, or they might
be denied a hearing
In thla cal8.

Public Notice

trators, ·apousea and

assigns and the .
unknown guardians
ol minor and/or
lncompet.nt helro of
Mary E. Cogar and
John Doti, unknown
apou11 of llonnls S.

Take your business into the homes
of over 40,000 consumers in
Gallia, Mason, Meigs Counties
EVERYDAY with a listing of
your web address In our

Freeman, at time of

conveyance on June
5, 1990, all of whooa
realdencaa
re
unknown and cannot

·WEBSITE
DIRECTORY

be reaaonablo diligence be ucor·
telned, will take
notice that on Ute
23rd day of May, 2003,
JPMorgan
Chase
Bank lka The Chase
Manhattan Bank, as
Truotee of IMC Home
Equity Loan Truat
1997-5 under the
pooling and aervlclng
agreement dsled 11
of September 1, 11l97
c/o Falrbsnke C~pltal
Corporation flied Its
complaint In the common Pleas Court of
Malgo County, Ohio
In C11a No. 03-CV155, on the dockat of
the Court, and the
ob]ect and demand

for only a $1 a day.

•

I

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
AMERICAI'I GENERAL FINANCIAL SEAVICES, II'IC.
PLAINTIFF
vs.
JOSEPH W- PULLINS,
ETAL
DEFENDANTS
Cooa l'lo. 03-CV-Q65
NOTICE OF PUBLICATION
TO: Joyce Joy; Judy
Hart aka Judy Eliot;
the apouns, If any,
widower•, If any,
helra, devisees, and

next ol kin of Joyce
Joy and Judy Hart
aka Judy Eliot;
widow/widower ,
halre, davi-S, and

next of kin of Joseph
W. Pullins, deceased,
and E. Faye_ Pullins
atul Edyth F. Pullins,
decaa*ad, all of
wholl name• and/or
addre~&amp;oa
are
unknown to Plaintiff;
last known addreoo

of 47t 55 Booth Road,
Coolville, Ohio; you
are hereby notlllad
that you have been
named Defendants In
a legal action entitled .
American General
Financial Servlcas,
tnc. vs. Joseph W.

Drive, New Lexington,
Ohio 43764 and the
VIllage Office.
Each bidder Is
required to lurnlsh
with Ita aubmlaalon
olthe fully complated
Public Nollce
Bid Documenta, a Bid
Secretary In accordance with Section
Pullins, deceased, et •VIllage of Pomeroy
153.54 of tho Ohio
al, Defendants. This Meigs County
Notice- Revleed Coda. Bid
action has been Legal
oacurlty furnished In
assigned ·ease num- Invitation to bid.
ber 03-CV-Q65 and Ia Sealed bids will be Bond form (Bid
and
pending In the Court received lor lurnloh· Guarantee
and
of -Common Pleas, lng all labor, materi- Contract
Meigs County In als Jllnd equipment Performance Bond aa
Pomeroy, Ohio 45679. necessary to com- provided In Section
The object of the plete a proJect known 153.71.1 of tha Ol)lo
Complaint Is to lore- as VIllage of Pomeroy Revlaed Coda~ muat
Treatment be laaued by a Surely
close on a tract of Water
cir
real estate located In Plant at !he VIllage of Company
(the Corporation llcanMeigs
County, Pomeroy
Orange Township, "Owner"), the Vlllsge In the Stela of Ohio to
being 5.8.004 acree +1- Office, 320 E. Main provide oald Surely.
, address: 47155 Street, P.O. Box 666, Thooo bldcltra that
Booth
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 elect to aubmlt bid
Coolville, Ohio and until 10:30 A.M. local guaranty In the fonn
take possession of a time on Tuesday, of a certified check,
1987 Nashua mobile September 2nd 2003, cashiers check or lalhomes against any and at said time and tor of credit purausnl
right, IIIIo, or claim of plsce
publicly to Chapter 1305 of
the Defendants.
opened and read the Ohio Rovlsod
You are required to aloud. Bids may be
Coda and In accoramswer the Complaint mailed or dellvared In dance with Section
wHhln 28 days after advance to the public 153.54 (C) of the Ohio
the last publication of opening at the abova Revl- Code. Any
this Notice which will address. A prepaid auch IaUer of credit
be published once meeting will be held ahall be revocabla
each weak for six Tuesday, August 19, only altho 10% oltha
consecutive weeks. 2003 at the Village Bid and tho aucceaaThe last publication Offlca at 10:30 A.M.
lui Bidder will be
will be made on The WOrk COVe!Bd by required to ~bmlt a
Auguat 1, 2003 and the
Contract bond In the lonn protho 28 daya for Document• conoltlll vldtd In 153.57 of the
anawer will com- of conotructlon of a Ohio Rtvi-Coclt In
mence on that data.
new 650,000 OPD Iron conjunction with the
In caaa Of your fail- and
mang1n11e execution of the
ure to anower qr oth- removal and eoltan- Contract.
erwlae reopond ao lng wotar treatment Eech propoool unit
required by the Ohio plant. Work will alto mull conhlln tho full
RUlli
of
Civil Include wattr wall nemo of the J)lrty or
Procodure, )udgmenl modification• end partial oubmlttlng
by default will be tltctrlcol work.
lht
Bidding
anllrod ogolnll you Bid
document• Document• ond ell
for the rallof demand· Include tho Bid poroono lntireled
ad In 1111 Complaint.
Requirement
and therein. Elch bldcltr
Datod:Juno 4.7, Contract Oocumtnll muot · aubmll avl·
( lhet Include all bid dence of 118 exporJ.
2003
oheeto, plana, opec anceo on pro]ICte of
Donald A Cox
Attorney for Plaintiff
and any oddanda) olmllor olze and com·
239 E&amp;at'Maln Street can be obtained from plexlty. The Owner
Jaekeon, Ohio 45640 M•E Companlao, Inc. lntonclt that thlo pro]·
(6) 27, (7) 4,11 , 18, 25, (the Engineer), 635 eel be cornptotecl no
(8) 1
•
Brookaodgo Blvd., lettr than the 111111
Woslarvllla, OH 43081 period Ia HI forth In
- - - - - - - ' wl1h non ralundabla Article 4 of the
payment ol $175.00 Standord Form of
Public Notlee
par aot. Chacko Agreeman1 Be-n
and
ohould be made Owner
VIllage
ol payable to M•E Contrector on the
Middleport will hold 1 Companlta, Inc. Bid Boolo of • Stipulated
public meeting on Documento wUI aloo Price.
August 28, 2003 at be on fila In lhe plan Each bidder muot
thot all
5:30 p.m. In Council room of the F.w. lnoura
Chambers to review Dodge Corporation amployeal ond appllOrdinance !'lumbar and M.E. Companlao, cento lor employment
0203 to adopt regula· lnc.,399 Lincoln l'llrk 111'1 not dlecrlmlntllod
lions for mobile
homes In the VIllage
of Middleport.
(7) 25, 28, 29

ogalnll because of
race, color, religion,
aex, · national origin,
handicap, ancestry or
age.
All contractora and
sub con Ira cl or s
lnvolvad wHh the
proJect shall to the
extent practicable,
uoe Ohio products,
materials, oervlces
and labor In the
Implementation of
lhelr
proJect.
Oomolllc Steel Use
Requirements
as
apecllled In section
143,011 of the Ohio
Aevl18d Code apply
to thla proJect.
Coplea of Section
153,011 of the Ohio
Revl- Code can be
obtained from any of
the offlcao of the
Deportment
of
A.d mlnlstratlve
Sorvlceo.
Additionally, contractor compliance with
tho equal employmant opportunity
requirements of Ohio
Admlnlatratlve Code,
Chapter 123, lhe
Govarnor's Executive
Order of 1972, and
Governor's Executive
Order 84-9 ohall be
raqulrad.
Blddera muat comply
. wllh the prevailing
· woga ratao on Public
lmprovemanto
In
Molgo County ••
dettrmlnod by the
Ohio Department of
Commerce, Olvlolon
of Labor and Worker
Solely • Woge and
Hour.
The Englnotr'o 1111mate lor thla pro]oct
II •1,4110,000.
The Vlllege of
Pomeroy NIIII'V811ho
right to welve ony
lnlonnalltloa or lrregularltlll- The VIllage
- • the right to
N]ICt any or all bldo
or to lncriiH or
dtc:rMH or omit any
llem or lln\11 ondlor
IWird tho bid to the
lowell, reeponalva
ond reoponolble bld-

Looking for a new
house, pet or career?
.

'

Trying to sniff out the
best buys in the area?

Find them in the
Classifieds!!!

dtr.

By order of lhe
Vllloge of Pomeroy
located 11 320 E. Main
Street,
Pomeroy,
Ohio, 457811, County
of Moigo, lhll 22nd
day of July.
7125103
8/1103

-------- ·

�www.mydallysentlnel.com

Sentinel - ll\.e
CLASSIFIED
~ribune

lwln Rivers Tower •• accept1ijg applk:attons for waiting
list for Hud·SubSIZed, 1· br,
aPartment, call 675-6679

I!HO

t
'

FORI...EAsE

~8700

Movlng-24x32 year old
garage·$2,000. l~rm, siding
on 60x30 house. bow win dow, garden window, atrium
door, colonial storm door,
variOus sized windows, hick ory k1tchen cabinets. carpet.
relr~gerator, electnc stove,
torm1ca cabinet top, warm
morning heater, 740-367-

$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS.
Hondas,
chevys,
etcl
cars/trucks from $500. For
listings 1·800-719·3001 ext
3901
1989 black Ford Probe
(turbo), ale, $700 OBO, call
(740)992-0664 after 6:30pm

sq ft oft"e
13l.111d1ng Drlve-thru parkmg 7~

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
ei....US .YQU.B AD
'OI:rtbune
Sentinel

To

Place
Ad---

Otftfee #o~..s'
Sbrt Your Ad• With A K•yword • lnclud• Compl•t•
P••c:rlptlon • J:nc:lud• A Prlc:• • ""Did Abbr•"l•tton•

• lnclud• Phon• Number And Addr••• Wh•n N-d.cl
• Ad• Should Run 7 D•y•

...
r=~------------~L.,r:
1
.r

I \ 11 ' 1 I )) \ II \ I
.._ IIH III .._

Y•MW--•SM£
....

~

ANNouNCIMFNfS

YARDSALE·

•

~,_ _oiGiiiAIJJroiiiiiiiiLISiiil-,.l

AdoptiOn · A 1ov1ng couple
Woutd like to adopt your
newborn W1ll provide a
!'lome filled With JDY . happiness, financial secunty and
a great education Fe el confident In knowmg because of
your brave decls•on your
baby could look forward to e
br111ht
·=- and wonderful future
E~epenses pa1d Call toll free
1-866-731·7625
Barbara
and Michael.

'
381 D1llon Ad 1hls w... ekend
Clothes, toys, household,
some 1tems free w1th pur·
chase
FAMILY YARD SALE
Daylight to Dark
Today, Saturday &amp; Sunday
39 Center Street RIO
Grande
Stop By

C-1 Beer Carry Out perm it

for sale. Chester Township

Inside
&amp;
out
1699
Me1gs County. send letters McCormick Ad 4 rooms full ,
ol mterest to . The Da1ly lots of everythmg, 10- ?
Sentmel, PO B o~~: 729-20 Thursday &amp; Fnday
0~10

Pomeroy,

lrm"a~--...,

45769
Saturday on ly. 1 mile down
on left on 218 tools b1cy·
cles, TV's, Lev1e Jeans,

FREQUENT HEADACHES?
You may qualify lor FREE
assessment Call 740·5931060 S1udy Sponsored by
Ohio Unlvers1ty and the
Nat1onallnst1tutes of Health.

m'sc
Thurs· Fn-Sat,
Bam-?,
Holcomb H1ll, k•ds cloth•ng,
moped b1kes, and beame
bab•es

Athens, Oh

Lost wallet, on 7·23 dollar
Qenerat JICinlty Would hke Yard Sale Sat. July 26,
personal 1tems returned 9am-2pm only 575 Jay
Please Call (304)675-7195 Drive, baby items and toddler boys clothing, everyMens softball tournament thmg clean and gently worn
1 0 0 Mcintyre Park 8/2-8/3
$80.00 Ch ns Howell 441 - YARD SALE. collectibles 6 1
1010 or 379-2485
Hubbard St. Kanauga Fri Sat 9-5
PUBLIC AUCTION. 24 Log
6 "aARD ,\1..!:.
Homes Packages to be
Pr. I'LF.o\SANT
offered Saturday, August
r
2nd. 11 00 AM Charleston,
WV Rogers Reality &amp; 6 Family Yard Sale- 86
Auction Co, N C L1c #813 Burdette Addition. 9am-?
Free brochure. Buffalo Log Fnday 25th &amp; Saturday 26th
Homes, 1-688-562-2246 or
www auciJOnloghomes com Co ll ectables , games, puzzles,chnstmas 1tems&amp; more,
lots of lreeb1es Fr1 &amp; Sat 8-?
GIVEAWAY
1209 Ma1n St

r

s

r

llliLPWAN'rED

AVON! All Areas' To Buy or
Sell
Shirley Spears, 304675-t429.
Res1dent
&amp;
CNA 's
Ass1stants lnterv1ews Are
Now Be1ng Conducted For
CNA &amp; Res1dent Ass1stant
Pos111ons If You Are A
Ca rmg ,
EnthusiaStiC,
Dependable Person Then
We Want You To Jam Our
Team Come On Over &amp;
Check Us Out! You'll Be
Glad You Dldl Compe1111ve
CNA
Wages,
Paid
Vacations , Paid Meals Many
Other Benefits, Ravenswood
Care
Center,
1113
St.,
Washington
Ravenswood. WV. {Across
A1!Ch1e Bridge, Rt. 2 North.
Last Business On A1ght)
References Req u ~red
E~tper •e nced

lead carpenters-must be fam111ar with all
phases of residential remodeling. valid dnvers license,
too ls, transpo rtation. and
references. Local work pay
e~tper~ence .
based
on
Applications ava1lable at
Chnst1ans
Construction.
1403
Eastern
Ave
Gallipolis. 446-4514
Fast growmg business
full &amp; part-tune bookkeeper,
~

full,&amp; part-time cashiers,
Send resume to
The Da11y Sentinel
PO Box 729-8
Pomeroy, Oh 45769

L.,li •o-HELP-•W•ANJ-ID-•II.Ii,•IO-IIELP-•W.Ii__
ANIW .,.I1'40
Gat11a·Me•gs
Commun1ty
ActiOn is accepting applications lor tobacco educator
for Meigs County. Position
requ~res public presentation
and speak1ng engagements
to vanous size groups, abili·
ty to work with persons of
all age groups and soclo·
econom1c levels Mlmmum
qua!•hcat1ons H1gh School
Oiploma-2 year college
degree preferred. expenence working with a non·
profit computer skills, detail
onented, 1nterpersonat communicatiOn, orga mzatlonal
Skltl s, valid drivers license,
can work wllh m1n1met
supervision and be bondable. EKperlance providing
tobacco education pre ferred . Travel occasional
evenmg and weekend hours
req u1red
Resumes and
applications will be accepted
at the Chesh~re off•ce until
4:00pm. Monday, August 4
2003 1s an EOE

GROUNDSKEEPER

Now hiring receplonlst/
cashier apply In person ask
for Katie McCo~ Turnpike
Office experience, computer
skills, hllng, accounts recewable. apply with-In,
740·
446-6700
OFFICE WORKER
To work In busy health Care
off•ce E~tperlenc8 with
office mach1nes, supervision of employees, payroll.
billmg and scheduling
One year Health Care office
B)Cpenence requested
Benefits too numerous to
print 800-759-5383

The Umversity of Aio
Grande rnv1tes applicatiOns
lor the pOSition of
Groundskeeper.

Respons•ble female non
smoker, to care for elderly
lady part-11me, m her home,
(740)667-6235 leave message.

Respons•b•lit1es of th1s lull
t1me twelve-month posl110n
mclude, bur nor limited to,
preforming grounds maintenance: grounds •nspect10n
remov1ng and dispOsing of
liner. debris snow, trash,
1ce etc, setting up and takIng down equipment for
campus events. rece1v1ng
and dehvenng shipments
moving and stor1ng ofM'e
equipment and othe r duties
as assigned Position available Immediately.

RNILPN (HOME HEALTH)
Part or Full t1me . per v1s11 or
hourly,401k, cafetena plan,
m11eage, un1form
allowances, CEU reimbursement, Sam's club,
Health &amp; Life 1ns FITO
which accumulates from
f1rst work day Top pay 1n TriState S1gn on bonus. 800759-5;J83
EOE

NQI

....

I

woaD

II,
O R.orrcng•
!ertera
11:ramblttd
four

of th•
b•

four

slmplo words.

l

I·•
UTL V~

h::--r.;;,S_C;-;.;H_,.;z.S..;E;.--11

l

f
...~

' How &lt;lid you become so
~ 1 1 15 I
wealthy?' the fellow asked his
. . . . l . idol. 'I must conte&amp;S,' the tdol
r----------:--,laughed, "I'm lazy, so I found the

leasiestwaytaachieve ~ ---· --.'
f-..,.,r--ilrlll.;;...,,.:...;.,-=-.,.,.,.,-1 Coooplltla Ill• ch..ckle quotod

't

I

N I S C I E'

•

•

•

•

•

e

by

hlling In rho

i-...J.-...L.....JL-....1.-.1.......1 you dovolop

D g~fc:~~~~ mrm ~o I

milling

'""'d'

from st"'l No. 3 below.

I I I

I
Yesterday's SCI 1 M-Lm ANSWUS

III

. Oriole- Sulky- Waltz · Donkey· DAY'S WORK
A motivational speaker appeared before a group of
civic minded 'individuals."lf having faith helps us rnove ·
mountains," the man told the group, "JUSt th ink what a
·hard DAY'S WORK will ao. '"

J

oa

wv.

ooa

-rdJ

low to form

Many Benefits, Competitive
Pay, Prolesslonal Applicants
May Apply
11y, Mon.-Sun .,
9-4pm, AavenswOQd Care
Center, , 11 3 wash ington
Ravenswood ,
St ,
(Across Ritchie Br~dge, At 2
N , Last
1ness on Right)
Come Jo 1n Our Teaml You H
Be Glad You D•d' •
--------Maintenance Person needed, part-time, Valley V1ew
800 State
Apartments,
Route 325, Thurman, Ohio.
Apply at off•ce or subm1t
resume 740-245-9170

Educational Serv.ce Center
has a position opening for
an Intervention Specialist
who Will serve high school
students With emotional dlsabilities at the Me1gs County
Intervention
School.
Appl icants must have certlll·
cat•on . or be Willing to get a
Temp"orar~
Teaching
Cerflflcate as required for
th1s position. Th1s is a full time position with benefits.
Salary w111 be based on
traimng and experience .
Subm1t a teller of interest.
resume, and referenceS to

Medi Home He"alth Agency, John
D.
Costanzo,
Superintendent,
AthensInc . seekmg a PAN Speech Me•gs Educat•onal Service
Therap1st for the Gallipolis, Center, PO Box GB4, 320 112
OhiO area We offer a Com·
pet1tive salary. benef1ts E Main St ' Pomeroy, Oh
package, and 401K E 0 E 45769 Application deadline
Please send resume to 430 Unlit position IS filled The
Second Avenue , Gallipolis AMESC Is an equal opportuOh 45631
Attn· Diana nlty emptoyerlprovlder
Harless, Chf'!ICBI Manager

Wanted lull time waitress,
Need to consolidate or start apply In person Holiday Inn,
Call Gallipolis
a new busmessNational Bank loll free 1866-699-3064 Good credit,
no·credlt, bankruptcy
Need to earn Money? Lets
talk the tifW Avon Call
Marilyn, 304-882-2645 to
leam all the ways 11 can work

far you .
R1vers1de
Golf
Course
Mason. WV (304)773·5354
Now accepting applications
for full lime and pan time
pos•fiOns at ~ar~ ·s Tee T1m8
Grill Please apply on·slte

•

•

HoMES
FUR SALE

1"6

roBuv

'I.'

B~

'flwNING

NORRIS NORTHUP
Galllpolla C.nttr Collage
(Careers Close To Home)
DODGE
Full Time Sales Peraon
Call Todayl 740446-4367,
LOCATION 252 UPPER
t·800-2t4.Q452
~IVER RD. www.galllpollscareercollege com
GAlliPOLIS OHIO
Rep N~5·t274B.
UNLIMITED INCOME
PRTENnAL
MlscFJJANEous
NO EXPERIENCE
REQUIRED
-IIAD CREDIT???·
Must poses good people
CAU
1-866-261Hl331
skills, ambitious attllude,
Low lnl,.ll·vlrloua Loans
and the desire to succeed

Seeking MA, LPN, to worl&lt;
Homemakers needed to
part time In a family practice
prov1de m home serv1ces, 1n Must have h1gh school
off1ce in Jackson , Ohio.
the Ripley &amp; Cottageville diploma or equivalent.
Must know medical terms
4 adorable little lad ies and Yard Sale July 25 &amp; 26 1418
areas, (304)295-0890
and be familiar with back
Prefer prev1ous e11perience
mother 1n search of a goo'tl Oh10 St 9-? Ra1n Cancel
off1ce dut1es please fax
with grounds work
home 740-256-1092
resume to 74Q-288-4466-or
Currently
All applicants must submit a ma1 l to' 1)375 Mt Zion Ad
accepting
IeMar of1n1rest and resume Jackson, oh io 45640
Border Co ll1e, m1xed pupmdUdmg the names of
The
Athens-Meigs
24 Log Home Packages to
anymore
pie s. call 256-1652
three references on or
be offered at publlc" auct•on,
Educational SerVIce Center
applications for
before August 1,2003 to
has a position opening for
August
2nd,
Free 1 t week old k11ten Very Saturday,
11
OOam,
Hurricane,
WV,
the position or
Ms Phyllis Mason, SAHP,
an Intervention Specialist
gentle &amp; friendly (304)67501rector at Human
Rogers
Realty
&amp;
Aucllan
,
who
Will serve elementary
7077
Receptionist/
L1c 813, Free brochure,
Resources. UmverSity of
students with emotional dlsCashier
Buffalo Log Homes 1 -888A•o Grande, PO Bolt 500
abilities a.1 the Cooperative
Free to good home, 2 walker
Rio Grande, OH 45674; fa)( ED umt at Eastern L.ocal
562-2246 or www auciiOnWE THANK ALL
puppieS 1 male, 1 female ,
number 740-245- 4909;
School District. Applicants
E omescom
740-245-5186
WHO APPLIED
ema•t pmason@no edu
must have certification, or
WANJ'IoD
be w1Uing to get a Temporary
Applications Wilt be
Insulated Dog house free for
Teachin~ Certif1cate as
reviewed as rece1ved.
pockup (304 )675-5999
EEO/AA Employer
required for 1h1s position
3 to 5 acres w1thln 50 m11es
Help wanted ca nng for the Th1s is a full-time position
of Gallipoli s. Flat or woods.
195 Upper River
elderly, Darst Group Home, with benelits. Salary will be
no swamp No restncted
now pay1ng mm1mum wage based on tram1ng and eKpeGallipolis,
Ohio
area K'aren Carman 608
new shtfls· 7am-3pm, 7am- rience. Submit a killer of
Lost 5 month k1tten black on South Washington Street.
5pm, 3pm-11pm, 11pm- mterest, resume and referk.lp white on bottom wh1te Greenfield
OhiO 45 123
7am, call 740-992-5023
ences to. John D. Costanzo,
patch on back, p1nk nose 937-98t-3287
Full t1me secretary for law
Supennlendent.
Athensw/black
spot
MI.
offiCe legal experience pre- Live •n Careg1ver needed for Me•gs Educational Serv•ce
Vernon/Lincoln area $25
ferred, but not reqUifed elderly lady who reqwres Center. PO Box 684, 320 1/2
Reward (304)675-3853 or Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. Must have good computer ass1stance fda11y act1v1t1es E Ma n St., Pomeroy, Oh
1
(304)593·3354
S1lver.
Gold
Co1ns. and commumcahon skills Ca ll
(304)6'75-2178
or 45769 Application deadline .
Proofsets Diamonds. Gold Send resume to EB 24 200 (304)675·5578
Unt•t poslt1on IS filled The
M•ss•ng Beegle, last seen on A1ngs ,
U S Currency.- Main St Pt Pleasant Wv LPNIFT, LPN Desired EnJOY AME SC IS an equal opportuMill-Creek Ad II found con- MTS Com Shop, 151 25550
FieKible Scheduling &amp; A mty emptoyerfprov1der
tact us 740-441-Q546 or Second Avenue, GallipoliS,
Aewardmg Career In A
740-446-0185
740·446·2842
Homelike
Atmosphere, The
..Athens-Meigs

t

puter control filter
Automatic transm•ss•on out
ol9t S-1 0 304-674-0698

r

~r conditioner. cools 4
Paoms. $125, new pool
~limp/filter $75, garden tiller Block. brick, sewer pipes,
$100,4 guns. 74().446-1127 windows. lintels. etc craude
,,
Wmters Aio Grande, OH
Coleman heat-pump good Call740-245-5t2t .

•ny •d •• •ny lim• l!rrar• mu•t to. ,..ported on lh• firM d•y af
·~· oocu111led by tr.e error •nd only tr.• flr•t lnMrtlan We
en edveniMment Carr..,llon will to. mect.ln , ... flr•t •v•ll•ble ecUllan
•dvertl•emente •••
Ia tr.e
I Hou•lng Acl of 11M•·
low

•

\'\\ 01 \ ( I \ II \ I '

3aegi~ter

Up To 15 Words, 3 Days
Over 15 Words 20¢ Per Word
Ad• Must Be Prepaid

Monday thru Friday
8 : 0 0 a.rn. to 5:00 p.m.
AD:

.

Visit us at 111 Court Straet, Pomeroy · VIsit us at: 200 Main Street, Pt. Pleasant
Call us at: (304) 675-1333
Call us at: (740) 992-2155
Pax us at: (304) 675-5234
Fax us at: (740) 992-2157
E-mail us at:
E-mail us at:
claaalfled@mydallyreglatar.corn
classified@
nel.corn

Visit us at: 825 Third Avenue, Gallipolis
Call us at: (740) 446-2342
Pax us at: (740) 446-3008
E - maU us at:
classified@ rnydallytrlbune.corn

Your

1990 Toyota CeiiCB GT. 5
speed, needs body work
~rage
NEW AND USED STEEL (304)675·5844
Steel Beams, P•pe Rebar
~11,250sq«
Angle 1991 Astra Van $1,495,
For
Concrete,
warehouse. Formerly ~The
Channe l. Flat Bar, Steel 1992 Cavalier SIW loaded
~ed Stop·
For
Ora1ns, $1 795 . 19Q5 Grandam 20
Grating
Dnveways &amp; Walkways L&amp;L $2 795 . 1997 Honda CwiC
~Oitice
Scrap Metals Open Monday, $4,795 We take trades
$pace with 10.000 sq ft
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; COOK MOTORS 741).«6.
tttpdlng d~. Spac1ous ofiFnday, Bam-4:30pm Closed 0103
SIIaet park1ng
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
t992 Chevy Geo-Prlsm, t
Sunday. (7 40)446-7300
owner, 4dr, 103,784 m11es,
Water softener out11t, salt asking $999 . call 740-446lank 20 gal water tank, com- 9709

It

3 bedroom house, 4 1/2
acres, double garage, sever·
al sheds, central ale
Eastern School District, TPC water (·740)985-4288

MOBILE HOMIS
FOR SALE

It

1980 clean used mob1le
home, pnce to sell, 1·800837 -3238
- - - - - -- - ,990 14K52 mobile hOme,
will
help
w/de livery,
3 Bedroom newly remod - (740)385-2434
efed, in Middleport, cal l Tom
Anderson after 5 p m
1995 Clayton 14x70, 3 bed992·3348
room, 2 bath , heat pump,
_ _ _ _ __,_ _ _ .located In Clifton. WV
4 bedroom, 2 story house, (304 )773·6074

cond. $200 .. Englander pellet stove exc cond $500
740-44t-0906

Lors&amp;
ACREAGE

4 Commercial lots for
sale/lease/rent. 1410 Lewl~
St PI Pl. all ullllly hookups.
Also 1 small house call after
5pm. (304)550·0906
Approx 3 acres Clendenin
D1strh:~t approK 1/2 mde oH
RT2 $6500. 304-675·1638

For Sale 2 or 4 Cemetery
lots Evergreen Cemetery, in
letar t. ' For
mlo
Call
out of h1gh water, gas heater
Nowly approved program• &amp; ale, (740)992·2529 lor 2001 16x80 Skyline w/near (304)743·0144
acre ground on Ohio RIVer 1n
dealgnod for YOU
appointment to Inspect.
WV 3br 2ba. all upgrades Lot lor sa le in Racine ,
Colll-111111·2611-11331 X1. 24
(740)992-5858
lhroughout. (304)773·5808
HRS
Nice mobile home lots, quiet
4br 4ba house
country senlng, $115 per
2S Se~OUI People Wonlod
foreclosure only $9 900.
month, mciudes water,
Who want to LOSE we1ght
1·8()().719·3001 Ex1 F144
sewer, trash, 740-332-2167
We Pay You Cash for the
pounds you LOSE!
91 Clayton Amhurst 14K70
1( 1 ' ' 1.1 '
All 1'8al estate advertising
Safe, Natural, No Drugs
mobile home, central a1r,
In thle newspaper Ia
800-201.()832
28A, 2BA, never smoked 1n
eubJKt to the Flldel'tll
Large 12x50 L-shaped deck
Fair
Housing
Act
or
1168
Lincoln Arc-WUder 16 horse·
Must see to apprec•ate,
which make• h Illegal to
powO&lt; onglno, $1200. 080
FORREN'r
$13,500 740-446-9370 or
adnrtl•
"any
740·367·7893
740-446-459t
preference, limitation or
1·3 bedrooms foreclosures·
dlacrlmlnatlon baaed on
Say good bye to high phone
home from $199 month 4%
Blue
Lake
Camp,
12K60
.-.ce,
ector,
1'811glcn,
MX
bills! New local phone servmobile home, 2 lots, block down 30 years at 8.5°/o APA
t.mlllal atatua or n.tlcn.t
tee with FREE unt1m11ed
garage , workshop, new fo r listing call 1·800-319origin,
or
any
Intention
to
nat1on w1de long d1stance 1n.kl any,IUCh
appliances, heat pump &amp; 3323 exl.1709
800·635-2908 or www lreepreference, limitation or
A!C, porc hes/screened, on
dommovl8 comfltpaysyou
dlacrlmlnatlon."
Bear Run Rd. &amp; Blue Lake 3 BR house, free water &amp;
180
WANillD
Or w~end or year round sewer, no pets $450. month,
Thla newspaper will not
$40,000
740·256·8t38 $400-deposol 74o-245·5064
.
ToDo
knowingly ucepa
leave message
House for rent, 3 roo m, 1
lldvertll1menta for re•l
bedroom on 2003 Madison
D&amp;J Picky Palntoro
estate which Ia In
Cole's Mob1le Homes an
Ave. Electnc heat, window
violation of the law. Our
Free Estimates. lntenor an
assembled team w1th over
rude,.. are hereby
ak. (304)674-047 t
e11.terior oalntrng G1ve your
120 years of hous1ng e~epen­
Informed that all
home or gara ge a fresh
ence Patr~ot Homes out· HOUSE FOR RENT- 2 BAS
dwelling• advertlaed In
new look. We pamt homes,
standing t/5 year warranty, Great m-town locatio n.
thla
newspaper
are
garages, mobile homes.
sh1ngtes 8. InsulatiOn by $475 00 per month-' Deposit
available on an equal
bulldn-.gs, barns and roofs
Owens Corn1ng, v•nyl Siding &amp; references required Call
opportunity
(Call M.S. H)
by V1pco James Hard1e Sid· Wiseman Real Estate-740(3041895-3074
lng available, low ~E~ ther- 448·3644
20 Veal'l experience
Historic 3BR log home, 40
mopane w1ndows by Kinro
acres, Cote Valley Ad ,
and referencea.
carriage 'carpets &amp; lloonng HOUSE FOR RENT· 2 BRS
$175,000
Holleys
Great in-town location
In home care for an elderly Assoc•ates call 740-988· by Congoled, appliances b~ $475.00 per month Depos1t
General
Electric,
faucets
by
person. Wanting 5 days a t030
Glacier Bay &amp; Moen, light &amp; references required. Call '"
week. Hours 7am-Spm No
Wiseman Real Estate-740Home from $199/month fixtures, cabinet pulls &amp; 446·36'\4
weekends. (740) 949·2722
•
foreclosure
homes 4'% knobs d lrec' from Home
Kmghts Excavating, site· down, 30 years at 8.5% apr Depot (easy to match just a
developments. ponds, we do 4 hst•ngs call 800-319-3323 few good reasons why your
1·
ne~el new home should be
dirt, no JOb to small, all work exl1709
from. Cole's Mobile Homes.
guaranteed, lulty-•nsured
740·682-3168
740-645- House lor sale 6 rm 3 3/4 15266 us o East, Athens. 2 BR. perfect a1r, porch ,
Oh 1o,
1-740-592 _1972 , very mce 740-446·2003 or
0639
basement, 2 yr old gar
740-4 46-1409_ _ _ _..,
~where
you get your ~iit-.;;.;;;,;;;;;;:
28x32 on 3 acres Lieving
LAWN CAREt
APAR1MENTS
Ad, West Columbia, WV , morley's worth"
You tell me what you pay
(304)773-5343
FORRENf
Cole's Mobile Homes
·
and we'll do it for less!
Same day service in most
Letart Falls, OH, 3 bedroom US 50 East, A1hens, Ohio, 1 and 2 bedroom apart- 1
cases. (304)372·8634 leave house, 1 bath, detached 45701 ' 740·592·1972
ments, furnished and unfurmessage. or (304)273·4511 garage, new roof, s1ding,
Good
used
14x70 nished, secunty depoSit
windows, carpet, &amp; kitchen,
Fleetwood, 2 bedroom. 1 reqUired, no pets, 740-992$65.000.00 (740)247·2000
W1tl pressure wash homes,
bath, only $9995, Includes 2218
trailers, decks, metal builddel•very, Call N1kk1 740-385·
NEW HOUSE Debboe Drl110
4 rooms a~d bath, all utilities
ings and guners Call (740)
7671
3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
paid,
$400 month 46 Olive
446-0151 ask tor Ro n or
$t29,000. 74o-9268
Land Home Packages avail- Slreel (740)446-3945
leave a message
able. In your area (740)446Nice country home, private,
BEAUTIFUL
APART·
II \ \ \( l \1
3384
great place to raise children.
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
6 bedrooms, 2 baths New 14' w1de only $899 PRICES AT JACKSON
kitchen w/apphanc~s . dining down &amp; only $159 65 per ESTATES, 52 Westwood
room, liv1ng room. central a1r month, call Harold 740-385- Drive from $297 to $383
&amp; gas furnace, part1al base- 767t
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Cell
INOTICEI
ment. 2+ acres, $69.000
740-446·2568
Equal
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH· (740)742· t049
New 2003 Doublew1de 3 BR Hous1ng Opportunlt)/
lNG CO recommends that
&amp; 2 Bath. On~ $t695 down
you Clo bus1ness wtth people Older 7 room house to be and &amp;295/m o 1-800-691- Extra n1ce qu•el, 2·3 bedyou know, and NOT to send torn down &amp; remo\led from 6777
room apartment. Forced a1r
heaUAC, kitchen appliances
money through the ma11 unlit property
You pay me
you have lnvestiQated the $3000 and haul It away
furnished, deposit &amp; referBUSINESS
offer~ng
ences reqwred (304)675740·446-1822 call early or
o\ND BtJIIDINC.S
7628
late
25 Serloue People Wlnltd
Private club for sale all GraCIOUS 11v1ng 1 and 2 bedWho want to LOSE weight Public Auction- 24 tog
stock, coolers, machines. room apartments at Village
We Pay You Cash for the homes packages to be
land &amp; furniture included, Manor
and
Alvers•de
pounds you LOSEI Safe, offered Saturday, August
senous 1nqu1res only 304· Apartmen ts m Middleport
Natural, No Drugs. 1·800· 2nd, 11 .00am, Hurricane
882·2099 or 304·682·2875
From $278-$348 Cell 740.
203·9604 .
WV. Rogers Realty &amp;
992-5084 Equal Housing
Lors&amp;
Auction Co., N C Lie. 11813
Need an extra $36,000.00 a
Opportunities
Free brochure. Buffalo Log
ACREAGE
year? Vending route for sale
Homes, 1-888·562·2246 or
Modern 1 br apt . (740)44&amp;Cool ssooo.oo Help lind
www.auctlonloghomes.com ,,2 acre lot, 1Vcoon ~ke on 0390
m188ln~ children t-800-853·
7, 55
or
www.webde- River Front~~ge 11/2 acres Eagte Road, City water, no New Haven- 1 br furnished
septic, n1ce shade trees,
aign199.com
more or less. 3BR 2 Bath. asking $8500, (740)247· apt also has w/d, deposit &amp;
references,
no
pets,
master su1te wljacuzzi, full 11 ()()
(740)992·0t65
basement, 2 decks w/nver
view, 2 docks, 111oating 740·
33 WOODED ACRES
Now Takrng Application~ '
446.()531.
Great homesite with added 35 West 2
Bedroom
TURNED DOWN ON
bonus of hun11ng out your Townho use
Apartmen ts,
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
back door Only $43.000 , Inc ludes Water Sewage,
No Fee Unless We W1n!
contract available Trash $350/Mo. 740-446land
t-888-582·3345
'
Gallia County, 15 mmutes · 0008
HI \ I I ~ I \ I I
1978 Wmdsor 12x70 + add from Holzer Other properTownhouse.
ji;:j~;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; on room 12x26 bOth '" exc t1es located m Meigs, V1nton . Tara
10
cond 3b r, 2ba, new a~r, all Athens, Jackso n, Monroe. Apa rtments , Very Spacious,
wood Must be moved - Belmont and Washington 2 Bedrooms, 2 Floors. CA, 1
,
$7,000 (740)388-8070
Counties Ca ll for free maps. 1/2 Bath. Newly Carpeted,
Adult Poo l &amp; Baby Pool,
(3)FHA &amp; VA homos set 141
BIJ0.213-836S
Patio, Start $385/Mo No
for 1mmect1ate possession all 1980 14K60 Mobile Home, 2
w 1thln 15 min of downlown BR. central heal and a~r, lots 4 acres Eagle A1dge Rd , Pets, Lease Plus Secunty
Gallipolis Rates as low as of extras. $6,500 740-441 - e~ecavated . electric, sept1c Depos it Requi red , Da)ls:
9259
perm1t &amp; water available, 740-446-3481, Even1ngs
6% (740)446·3218.
(740)992.0031
740·367.()502

HOl5ES

1

a ....

rM~~~~

r

I
t

r

r

t~l

r

HOMES
1.,--..;,IURiiiiiiiSiiAIJ':iiii--J

..

Good Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and
Guaranteed
Washe rs ,
Drye rs,
Ranges,
and
Refrigerators, Some start at
$95 Skaggs Appliances, 76
Vono Sl , (740)446·7398

r

PETs
FOR SALE

AKC Lab pups, Vet checked.
dews removed, 1st shots
yollow·$350 . black·$300
74Q.44t-Ot30
Chocolate Male Lab puppies, seven weeks old, AKC
registered ,
shots
and
wormed call740-245-5585

Grey Berber carpet 80 sq
fl , only one year old, ong•nalty cost $1680.00, will sell
CKC registered Boston
for $500.00 740-446-1964
Terner. brindle and white 4
months old, $175 74()...441 M1d summer furniture sale.
couch &amp; chair $100, swivel 0182 after 5 30pm leave
rocker $35, overstuffed chair message

$20, 2 nice rocker recliners
For Sale 1/2 Blue Heeler,
$50, lull size bed $125, dining table/6 chairs $95 ,
dresser/ matchmg mght
stand $95 ,TV stands $15
Qil~h. S'oggs Appliances,
7&amp; VIne Sl. 740·448·7398
Mollohan Carpel , 202 Clark
Chapel Road Porter. Oh1o
(740)446·7444 1-877-830·
9162 Free Estimates, Easy
Hnancmg, 90 days same as
cash V1sa! Master Card
r&gt;nve- a- little save alot
New sage green couc h.
$499 or will trade for new
complete
twm
berl ,
(740)992-0523
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repair·675·7388. For sale,
re·cond1tloned automatic
washers &amp; dryers. refngerators, gas and etectnc
ranges, Sir cond1l1oners, and
wnnger washers W111 d•
repairs on major brands •n
Shop

1/2 Shelt1e pups, $35. each
740·379-2836

For sale- pygmy goats, $50:
pony $400: ferrets , $80;
guinea pigs, $10. ham5teJS,
$3 ; (740)992-9475
Pekmgese pup tor sale,
$t50 00 740·379·2522

i

AmlQUES

son
Troyers Woodcraft 9
2001 Ford EICI&gt;Iorer Sport,
m11es west of Gallipolis
white With gray trim , leather
along StAt 14 1
mt, sunroof, CD player,AIC,
24,000 BTU wmdow a1r con·
t \tn t ... ll't't tl "exc cond. 25,000 miles.
diboner $100, Kmg size
,\ I I \ I .._ II U 1-..
$16,500 (740)446-6783
mattress &amp; box spnngs $50.
24ft.- pool , all accessories
solar/wmter covers,chem•cals, all $600 or sell seperato, 74o-388·9306
60 gallon air compressor,
bought new In Oct, for $349.
used 3 hours , $275 740·
256·61t5

JET
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In Ford 1520, hydrostat 4Stock. Call Ron Evens. 1- wheel drive tractor, 5 root
800·537·9528
blade, 60"' belly mower w1th
a 4 '~e6' t1p tra1ter/8 HP Troy
buill rototlller 740-446-0208
Office Furniture
after 5·oo p m
New. scratch &amp; Dent
Save 70% 1-800-527-4662
I...IVFS"'UL"K
Argonaut 5 t 9 Bridge Street,
GuyandoMe/Huntlngton MIF 1,~------_.1

i

1988 Ford Mallard Sprinter
27 ft 47.000 miles loaded
eKe cond pay off $,1 ,000
304-451!·2566
1999 Vrking pop-up e~ecel·
lent condttion, NC, refng
microwave
74Q-388-8128
after 6pm
200 1 Keystone Camper,
EKcellent Condition. $9,800.
Call (304)675·6436
Camper for sate. ,999 Terry
Wllh slide-ou1 , like new, no
pets, non-smoker, 740·446·
6223

ROBERT
BISSEll
COimiiTION
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

W'l6re the oosromer
C0/716$ tinf1

Under New
Man•s•1•m•nt

Cellular

A vuttl)' of ~anmunail'
(' lnchm ~ end huntin&amp;

equlpmem

Jeff Warner Ins.
992-5479

Nl'w ltr1m Atldi"d m,.kly
16198 Pta rh Farlt Rd .

Pomrror. Olrio, 45769

Stop &amp; Compare

1·7 40-992·7007

SMALL
ENGINE
REPAIR

BISSEll

Hour• 10-4 pm
Clo•ed Sund.-ya

BUILDERS IDC.

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • Ne~&lt; Garages
• Rcplacemenl

I Makes &amp; Models
Free Estimates
Fast Turnaround

Windows • Roofing
COMMERCIAL and
RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMATES

WE REPAIR
• Lawn Mowers
• Power Mowers
•Chain Saws
• Snow Blowers
• Weed Eaters
• Tillers • Edgers
• Go Karts • Mini
Bikes

740-992-7599

JIM'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
32119 Welshlown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Septic Systems.
Footers and
Concrete,
Excavation, Utilities,
Back hoe and
Dozer, Ponds.

PC DOCTOR

HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

Computers, Repairs,
Upgrades, Networks

992·7953
591-7002
591·4641

www.wvpcdr.com
cdoctorOwv cdr.com

740-992-2432
Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171
Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday
Doors Open 4:30
Early birds start
6:30
L~l Thursday of
every month
All pack $5.00
Bring lhis coupon
Buy $5.00
Bonanza Get
SFREE

Tree Service

k

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

• BuckEt Truck

We Make House Calls

(304) 675-5282

.Gravely

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

Free Estimates

Snapper

GRAVELY TRACTOR

DeanHW
New It Used
475 South Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor Slreet

Pomeroy. Ohio

992-2975
Lawn and Garden Equipment i~ orrr
bu.si11ess, not our ~·idelir~e

IU

1-800-822-0417
"W.V's # I Chevy. Pontiac. Buick, Olds
&amp; Custum Van Dealer"

992-7953
591-4641
591·7002

I

ll$)1

Pamara~ OH
740.992 CASH (2274)

I I "ill I-I old J-'.11· .Ill

Dol) '-'

Hill's Self
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohoo
45771

740·949·2217

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINO
Unconditional lllet1me guar·
antee Local references fur·
nlshed Established 1975.
Call ' 24 Hr&amp; {740) 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterptooflng

IMPORTS
Athens

IJ -- ----1

'i

HOWARDL.
WRITESEL

•ROORIG
' dOME

V.w;&amp;

4-WDs

.SEAMlESS

(740)742-92t7
'

3 yr. old Jersey cow &amp; calf. 7 1995 Ford E-350 Van, 14ft.
yr old mule (broke for buggy, high cube box, eKcellenl
cond 740·446·9416

'
I

GmEI
*Fi'll Elllm. .*

949-1405

and Financial Services
Bo• 189 Middlej&gt;C!rt

(740) 843-5264
General
Contracting
New
Construction,
Remodeling,
Backhoe and
Do2erWork.
Roofing.
HOME CREEK
ENT., INC.

Take the PAIN
out of PAINTING

1

Let me Jc. 1' I :1 y:u

992-7953

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Bryan Reeves
New Homes, Room Additions,
Garages, Pole Buildings, Roofs,
Siding, Decks, Kitchens, Drywall &amp;
- More

• Room AddiUonal
A•modellng
• New G1r1""
• Eloctrlool Plumbing
• Roonng Outtoro
• VInyl Siding I Polnllng
• Patio and Porch Dlclca

FREE ESTIMATES!
740-742-3411

MIIIIHNANCE

t988 Ranger, V·6. good
tran. &amp; engine. good tires,

I

Sunset Home
Construction

Advertise
in this
space for $25
per month.

a
a

Free Estimates

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215

519-814

Pomero~

01'110

MYERS PIVIIG
Henderson, WV

178-2417 or 448-2111
Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675·2457

In Loving Memory

of
CHARLES G.
DILL
1918-1993
H•ppy Bi rthd•y I
~miss you.

...

JONES'

DURO-LAST
' - ~ Don't leave lhe debl of
fJr11NC; IN H ilS AD
ROOFING
i
I -, \
burial and ffnal expenses
Flat Roof
fOR ONLY Sl:l 00 PER HUNDRE D
·: ·~
;;;. ~· ,_"' ~ for your family and
Specialists·
loved ones.
I _. INSTA-CA$H )f. I .. \ •.0) ,. . _,
Commercial and
Residential
·'
·
Let tne show you how
Get Cash Today
Saves on Cooling_ 1
affordable and -y Ills 10
Bring your
1
Metal and Mobile
get lhe coverage you need.
I
•Last checking statement
I
home roofs· No
I
•Laal pay chock stub
Problem_15-Year
•Pholo I.D. •Phone Bill with name and address 1
Rocky Hupp Insurance
1
I
Guarantee
116 Main St.

96 Ford XLT super cab short
bed $7,500 4-wheel drive
(304)882-3338

r

WILSON'

.\101\ Sl'ltl'l .l S

748-992-1m

C&amp;C
General
Home
Maintenance- Painting , vinyl
siding, ca rpentry, doors,
windows, baths, mob1le
home repa1 r and more For
free estimate call Chat, 740·
992·8323.

Cool Downtt
Central
Cooling Sys tem s, New and
Used Installed (740)446·
6308

93 Dodge Caravan. needs
transmission ,
$500,
(740)992·33t7

-

,,..,_

Announcement•
American Legion

Your Loving

BINGO

Rlmily

Card Df Thenka

&lt;

forgotten. May God
hold you m the palm
ofH1 s hand

1118/63-7127102
Forever missed, never

\

TRUCKS

i

John W. Thttle

_,_,

t Bo!.~s~(110151

r

&gt;

ILl ·

For Sale 2003 Suzuki Z-400.
$4,250 exc. cond. 740· 3799150 call after 4pm.

t'\=1

Ill.

0
0

2003 Yamaha TIA·90,
Electnc
starUautomatic
clutch, 6 weeks old Son lost
1nterest pa1d $1 ,700, sell
$1 ,300 hrm 740-742-2348

$3,500 OBO, 740-446-9370
Johnson 19ft, Trl haul, seats
Rat Terror pupp1es full or 740-446-4591
9 wltraller/ect Has new outblooded, no papers, $75.
drive plus origin al 0/0
Z·28
hOod
lor
80's
$100
each Parents on premises.
$2,500. Jon boat w/tra1ler
Cad
can
be
demo
1980
304-882 -3340
$300
See at Lucas Lane 1/4
derby car or will sell 403
mile on right. (304)675·6236
eng1ne
&amp;
uans
$200
1984
Reg•stered
Pomeranian
pups, 6-wee ks -old, parents T·Bird, suitable tor dragon Site, 1 Sl ~hots/wormed, racer, $400, have 357C
ready July 28 $300 740- Ford eng1ne w/2x4 carbs &amp;
race ready $2200. 1982
441-0368
1969 Toyota Camry 2.5 V6,
Ford Escort wagon, for parts
(wrecked) Good motor,
MuSICAL
$75 . 1980 Camaro $300 .
1989 1-ton GMC van, no transmiSSIOn parts, etc
INsniUMENTS
title , $200, several 400
Wurt1tzer piano for sale. Pont1ac engines &amp; 400 auto
e~tcellent
condition . trans . 740-446-1822. early
or tate
(740)949-25t8

or at your home

In Memory

1997 Honda Rebel 3,000
miles like new $2,200 OBO
1992 Harley Low Alder factory Candy Apple Red over
S4,000 in extras 20.000
miloo $12,000 1740)4460213

1983 ,8ft Galaxy 12o-HP.
1994 Oldsmobile Cutlass 1/0, open valve, new lntenor,
Supreme, red, 2dr, 3 4 runs good, ready to go
motor AJC, moon roof, $2,300 388-9789
leather , loaded $3,000 .00
1991 25-1/2~ Wellscratt,
740-441·9317
1/2·cab•n. 454-motor, eKe.
1995 Mazda-MX -3
cond $12,500 call740-367·
Excellent cond.. great on 7272 after 6 740-441 · 1283
gas, recent tune-up and
body-work, AC, 5-speed .
Must sell! call 740-446- 1992 Yamaha VRX -650
Wave Runner, exc. cond. ,
8222
low hours, double trailer.
1996 Pontiac Grand PriK SE runs great. $1 .800 388-9789
4
door-auto-power-A/C.
121,000 miles $3295 day· 1994 t7 1/ 211. Dynasty
740·446·t615 after 7pm Runabout Jet Drive Boat,
w/Bimlni Top, oil Injected,
740·446·t244
90HP. seats 6 Comfortably,
1997 Chrysler Concord LX very clean, garage kept,
e11c. cond. 70,000 miles pwr. winterized, comes w/trailer
window/locks, seats. tilt and many other accessories lnctud•ng Boat Cover
wheel. 740-«1-0906
Asking $5 ,500 OBO 74o1998 Neon 4dr. 130,000 441-1461
miles, runs good, good
43
cond. $t,800 OBO 740- 85 4-Winns 19ft
Mercrulser engine Ali new
258-1652
Interior,
must see to
1999 Grand Am , red, auto, appreciate. $6,000.
2-door. V6, sunroof, spoiler, 675-489t or 674-2 t34
crUise, till, c-d, pw, pi, air,
low mites, garage kept . 91 Yamaha waverunner ret
ski. Looks &amp; runs excellent
$8.200 74o-388·8498
w llh trai ler $1500. obo.
2000 Ford W1nstar, leather, (304)773-5103
quads, loaded, exc. cond.
askong
$14,900
NADA Bass boat, 1986 Fisher
$17,000 call740-446-6491 Marine, 70 horse Johnson
motor gUide trolling motor,
90 Cad1lac Eldorado, runs depth Iinder &amp; galvaf'\iZBd
$3500
080.
great, AJC blows cold, all trailer,
power, real pretty car (740)992·370t

w urlitzer p1ano Mahogany
S
Used FurOiture Store, 130 finish $1500 neg. Town &amp; ~---IURiiiiiiiiAJEiOiiilto-rJ
Bulaville P1ke, mattresses, Country Rea l Estate 304- dresse rs, couches , bunr 675-5548
1990 Chevy-Stepside. auto,
beds
bedroom
SUites, lllir;.;.~~--:~-., loaded. rebu11t 350, well
Fauns &amp;
maintained, runs and looks
recliners, grave monuments
740·446· 4782, Galllpohs, •-•VtioiiEGiii~'Tiii\BiiiiJ!Siii-.,1 good $3,000 388·9789
IOI'ih~H.;r.•;;·.;1.;0.
· 4..;S.;Iop;;;.;B;,:y_.., '
Black Bern as, Fnendly 1991 GMC Sierra 4~e4, SLE,
Ridge, $12 00 gallon, 256- pwr wmdowllocks, cru•seltllt
1145, please leave messe~e wheellrunn•ng boards, hitch
bed rails, e11.c cond. 65,000
Buy or sell
Riverine Blackbemes lor sale 304- actual m11es, 740-441-0906
~_nhques , 1124 East Mam
895· 39t1
1995 Dodge Ram 1500, 4x4
on SA 124 E Pomeroy, 740~92·2526
Russ Moore
Country·Produca Market Club Cab, lowing package,
Potatoes,
Tomatoes, oxc co nd. $10,500 OBO,
Melons, Corn, etc. 1n sea- 740.J88·83t9

r

1982 Suzuki _.SO motorcycle. SS50. call (740)992·
7789

Rutland Post 467
Paying 80.00 or
mora par game.
Several special
games lor extra
money. All pack
you can play lor
$20.00. Starting
time 6:30 p.m.
Starburst $800.00
2 or3 $300
Luck Ball Games
Everyone
Welcome

Saturday, July 26
6:30pm
All the packs you can play $15.00

Starburst $2,000.00
Hot Ball $1,200.00
"Musl be 181o play or to be on hall"
American Legion Middleport

BINGO
Tuesday, July 29
6:30pm
All the packs you ca~ play $15.00

Starburst $1,050.00
"Must be 18 to play or lp be In hair

American Legion
Middleport

NELSON'S LAWN
CARE .
Res1den1ial•
Commercial Mowing
• Mulching • Edging
• Fertillzation • Leaf

Removal• Prumng
• Landscape
Malnlenance Spring
and Fall cleanup

(740) 985-9829
(740) 591-3891

THE 944
STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp; Cars
County Rd . #35
Racine, Ohio

(7.40) 517-9138
or
(7 40) 949-:0020

~~~

High&amp; Dry
Self-Storage
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-994-5232

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
• Roads t Streets
WV Contractors Lie. #003506

MANLEYS
SELF STORAGE
97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(10'x10' 610'x20')'

(740) 992-3194
992-6635

Ri HT\\ : I\
( "ak
In Syracuse
( Fonnerly Whitney's)

Under new ownorihip
and new manaaomcnt.

COME JOIN US
7 Days A Weeki
Momlna

�Page B8 • The Dally Sentinel

••

www.'!lydallys~ntlnal.com

Friday, July 25, 2003

Dating boss's daughter,
but craving sex from ex
DEAR ABBY: Three
months ago, my longtime
!&gt;oyfriend, "Ma\ok," broke up
with me. We had planned to
be married. II took me a long
"time to get back to being my
old self.
Right after our breakup,
Mark began dating his boss's
daughter. I'll call her
"Carrie." I accepted it because
I care about Mark and want
him to be happy.
My problem is, for the past
month, Mark has called me
frequently in the middle of the
night to tell me he "misses
me" and how much he "continues to love me," He's even
said he still wants to marry
me.
Every time Mark calls, he
invites me to come over and
sleep with him. I have refused
because of Carrie. I feel sorry
for her.
Abby, I cannot imagine
being with a man who is still
in love with someone else.
'Should I tell Carrie what
-Mark is up to - or should I
stay out of it? I am awaiting
your reply. - MARK'S EX
DEAR EX: The first thing
you should do is fall on your
knees and give thanks that

Dear
Abby
ADVICE
you are no longer engaged to
this two-timing user. If you
are wise, you will stop all
contact with him. That said, if
you try to warn his boss's
daughter. she will probably
interpret it as jealousy and not
believe you. She needs to find
out about him on her own.
And when she does. Mark
will be looking for another
job and another gullible
woman.
DEAR ABBY: Our family
recently attended my daughter's high school graduation.
Seated next to us was a couple
who talked to each other during the entire commencement
- until the man's cell phone
began ringing. Then he continued to carry on a loud con'
versation over the phone .
Needless to say, it was a

major distraction for all of us
who were seated near him .
This is not the first time
such a thing has happened,
and I know it won't be the
last. People who talk while
others are trying to listen do
not seem to care that they're
disruptive and disrespectful.
This happens everywhere
nowadays - church, business
meetings. movies and plays.
Growing up, I was taught to
listen with respect and never
interrupt others.
I have tried to politely ask
the offender to "keep it
down," or have gotten up and
moved to a quieter location.
but sometimes it's impossible.
Has our society golten so
"me-oriented" that we· ve forgollen the common courtesy
of being quiet while others are
speaking·J Maybe you or your
readers can share what works
for them in order to stay calm
during situations like this. LOSING MY COOL IN
LYNCHBURG, VA.
DEAR LOSING MY
COOL: Cell phones are a
boon to many people. But
used thoughtlessly, they also
create very real problems. Of
COURSE people should

ACROSS
1 Mercedes
rival

4 Pot top
7 Grey Cup
sports org.
10 Bleacher
shout
11 Qatar ruler
13 17th state
14 Dell bread
15 Cathedral
part
16 Sour pickle
17 Lure
19 "Cope

observe the rules of common
courtesy and turn them off at
public events. And people
who converse on their cell
phones in public 'places
should remember to do so discreetly - not only because to
do otherwise is inconsiderate
of those around'them, but also
because they can unwittingly
reveal personal information
that could come back to haunt
them.

Book" IUnl
20
21
23
26

Electees

Scrapes
Hack
Haughty
people
Cash
substitute
Jeans
partner
Ties
VlceIronic
Louis XIV,
e.g,

28
29
30

34

(Dear Abby is writren by
Abigail Van Burell , also
knpwn as Jeanne Pili/lips, and
was founded by her mother.
Pauline Phillips. Wri:e Dear
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P. 0 . Box 69440, Los
A11ge/es, CA 90069.)

36
38

39 Ann~ed
41 Gayle a ala
42 Dolinger
painting
44 Badge

wearer

46 Head cover·
lng
47 Globe substitutes
51 Partly open
52 Champagne

Reds sb ugllng, fall to

word

parent
56 Waist
clncher

57 Eventful

'

bo~rislln

58
59 Toady's

13 Forsyih's
"The File"
18 Walter's
reward
DOWN
22 With
proficiency
Subzero
23 104, to Uvy
comment
24 Ground
Pyramid
breaker
builder
25 Not Just my
Sharpen
27 Salamander
Find out
Dead end
29 GWTW
plantation
Kind
31 Howl
ol)ockey
32 Very long
Peep
time
Thin
33 Parson's
coatings
Falana or
tQplc
35 Mountain
Montez
Back (praf.)
chain

answer
6D Md.
neighbor

1
2

:1
4
5

6
7

8
9
12

37 Hermit
40 Halk
wearer•
41 Hl·fl
recorda
42 "Wheel of
Fortune"
host
43 Florida port
45 Cuss words
46 Smoke·
house
h~ers

carrier
49 -out
(made do
with)
50 Bone-dry
54 8 pts.

48 F

It could pay to be a joiner in
the year ahead. Your options
will multiply by involving
yourself with large clubs or
organizations.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Lady Luck will be operating
in several areas of your life.
--rSpend your day concentrating
on those things that are
important to you so she can
play a part in them.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
- Several meaningful goals
can be attained today. Things
will go your way and you'll be
able to ac£omplish all that
you want.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)
- If you're making plans
with friends, depart from your
usual patterns and go someplace different. Fun things
could happen in new settings.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov.
22) - Collective endeavors
are quite fortunate for you.
You can be part of a winning
team if you and the other parties ate prepared to lend your

talents to the same objective.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23Dec. 21)- Even though your
own iQeas are quite good, they
can be improved upon by an
intelligent and creative associate. Keep an open mind and
be wi)ling to listen.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22Jan. 19) - You could be
exceptionally lucky today and
gain from what another
already has under way. This
person may invite you to participate in the action.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
19)- If you've been wanting
to meet someone new with
whom you can connect
romantically, this just may be
your day. Bernice4u.com
( w w w. bern i c e4u. com)
addresses many of your
romantic needs.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March
20) - All negativism you
may have harbored should go
out the window today when
good things begin to happen
for you. Hang onto your
hopes and dreams. All should

1 Sllffi:&gt;5£ I COULD EI-.T ~IM.
rn M 1\l'r.\-1 !'0

work out well at this time.
ARIES (March 21-April
19) - No one is better at
knowing how to relax and
enjoy life than you. This marvelous attitude will have a
positive effect on all who
share your day.
TAURUS (April 20-May
20)- You're in a pretty lucky
financial cycle, so don't waste
time on other interests. Be
alert for opportunities that can
increase your earnings or add
to your resources.
GEMINI (May 21-June
20) - You are what actors
refer to as a quick study. ·
You'll instinctively under-

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

• Leftwich still holding out
Jags camp See Page 6
• American Legion Baseball
action See Page 6

in tune with
what's happening
now, whether
it's across the
globe or in your
oiMl backyard.

I"

~OOJ

~~ ~

_

• so Po~"

(9@@@(9@@
2
,
2 2 2
'·""•oDoP:::;
....,,r
£~~~~~~

do
newspaper,
Box
167,tl1is
Wickliffe,
OHP.O.
44092-

M'i5Ell''

~~~2~g~ !'i~.~:,r~•l 0

2ndDOWN

=~

Jrd DOWN

=_!!_

4th' OOWN

•_lL

to
previous
Word
Scrim·
mag\! ·

177

by

JUDD HAMBRICK

...

fOUR PLAY TOTAL
TIME UMIT: 20 MIN

Inside
• Galia County flag donation. See Page 2
• Table gains new life at
4H junior fair. See Page 2

=

DIRECTIONS: Mike a 2· to 7-letler word from the letters on e.tcn )lflrdlirl&amp;
Add points lo each IIVOrd Of, lener usWlg scoring dlreclions a1 nl(ll. saverl-le"er
words ~~ a 6Q-poinl DOOU5 . AI word!! can ll4t !Ot.nd in WebSter's New Worid

College Olcllooary
,_...,

JUDO'S SOLUTION TOMORROW

Weather
Sunny and hot, HI: 90s, Low: 60tt

P1101l\JGT~ ~OU

Qtlo\NDTI£S YOU
AA~NOI/IAY OF

SiOII.INIO1

Lr., A

~mPtE

m~

ooc;'

r--'

:J'

WooD
cwood@mydailytribune.com

;..w'IJ'hlW'' ~

VAc.AllON WITH

time," according to neighbor 431 of the Rio Grnnde \blunteer
Chuck Williams.
Ftre Depurtment. was treated at
cwood@ mydailytribune.com
McConnick said firemen the scene after suffering from
would remain on the 5CeJte to heat exhaustion, said Rio Grande
CENlERVILLE,
OH- completely .extinguish the fire. Chief Bob Brandeberry. The
"Suspicious" was the word With the combination of insula- condition of Kemper was not
Centetville Assistant Ftre Chief lion and wood, he said hot spots known at press time. ·
Jim McConnick used to describe woold present problems for fire.
The Rio Grande Department
the fire Friday near the village in fighters.
·
responded with 6, 700 gallons of
western Gallta County.
McCormick said this fire dif- water and refilled anothe.r I,&lt;XXJ
The Centerville \blanteer Ftre Cered drastically from the house gallons at Centerville. The
Department along with Rio fire his department responded to Centerville
Department
Grande
Volunteer
Ftre along with the Rio Grande and resppnded with 2,500 gallons of
Department responded to the Greenfield departments on water.
blaze about 6 p.m. Frida~ a! the Wednesdathe
McConnick said
expectone-Ri~stocyRoadstnJc!t!!C ~ -IJ .~ ]ek _ -"~ ffi Y ~WhatGrande) diddi:d eel to qse !Ill of that
more ro
.
was an o ense.
we
completely put out lhe lire.'More
cCormick was the fir$ fire. today was a defense. I would · than 500 feet of hose was used.
man on the scene. He said the rather fi!lht offense and get · The firemen had to refill in
house, an old log cabin remolded inside," McConnick said.
Centerville since there were no
ro appear more modem. was
The structure was • fully dry hydrants in the area
fully engulfed in flames.
involved and entry was not pos- Williams said the house was
"It i~ suspiciru~... McCormick sible, he said.
being cared for by Cathy Baxter:
said. "We're just ~tting it out It
Concern about the possibility
A root cellar and an outbuild·
went up pretty qutck."
of a basement.wider the house ing also burned.lfhe house was
The house was uninhabited also kept firemen back Wllil a a tolalloss.
Firemen from Centerville and Rio Gtande Volunteer Fire
and had recently been put up for better assessment could be made.
"Its just too far gone," Departments work to extinguish the fire In the remains of
sale after being vacant for''a long
Firefighter Eric Kemper, Unit McCormick said.
the house at 1176 Tick Ridge Road. (Carrie Ann WoOd)
ANN Woo~

Bv CARRIE ANN

-,..

AT

about 150 teet UJXUl on the river
side a lix~ or two otr the edge of
the walk way. tu'tmling to the
project supervi"'-&gt;r.
As for the completion date "lute
September. etuiy CA:tober", said
Buckley.
Con11~11.1or on tl1e ruject is
Ptder Corpot~ttio11 o Tltppen&gt;
Plains. Bucklev Stud that tdl of the
workers on tl,e mnstrltction job
are Meigs Countitms.
Originally the totalL'Ost of the
project wa' exp.:cled to be about
$1iXJ.!XXJ 1dd1ough thtit incremed
when the pltu~ were changed lo
take care of erosion and other
problems.
Pomeroy received a $130.00J
gmnt tium the Cle:U1 Ohio Rails
Fund on the project. In addition to
that the village committed
$1 OO.OCO tor the lighting JXtck- Construction of Pomeroy's riverfront walkway is underway.
a~e. acL'tl!tling to John Musser, Dozers began moving dirt between the highway and the riverv1Uage coonlin;ltnr.
bank this week. ·(Charlene Hoeflich)

Family thankful for community after house fire

OO!J'T NEE!&gt;, IN

ASOUT 1/AUJE,

~

E:J~~~~~~

The 8,00.! teet of wtdkway will
extend from the Watenvorks Ptd
near the inte~-ction of Route JJ
ruld 124 to the upper parking lot in
downtown Pnmemy.
Kenneth Buckley. the on' site
project supervioorforODOT. said
Friday that tin;t 5.800 teet from
the parking 101 end will be five
teet wide in mncrete while the
remainder will be :&lt; ix teet in
a.'phalt. 'That's nec7'smy
because of some erosion mld
other problems." he said.
l-Ie also said du1t dlCre will be
about 3,(00 teet of handmiling
along the wtdkway on the river
side in L-ertain sections where the
walking path is close to the river
bank. Buckley also noted that the
guard railing now in ploce will
remain.
·
About 50 decorative period
light' similar to d1ose which line
the parking lots will be installed

- ON P~Q\\IUIII

SCl\lePWM
!MY NaT CAitE

=,. . ___.,.
~

• Charlie Frazier, 79
• Harry L. Siders, 74
• Jerry A. Bass, 84
• Charles Jenkins, 76
• Kaylee Ruth Rice

AVERAGE GAME 27D-280

I!UT 1 PO!

~ lb TALl&lt;
~ 10'

0

41t1DOWN

=...l!!L

W~":J

·I

POMEROY, Ohio - After a
delay of several weeks.
Pomemy's riverfront walkway
g01 under consnuction this week.
The delay was necessitated
when it W'dS detcnnined by the
Ohio
Department
of
Transportation (ODO'I) that it
could not be con&gt;bUcted us originally planrxrl
Revisions included reducing
the walkway's width lium six teet
to five feet in Some Hre&lt;IS along the
river and exchanging asphalt for
concrete in severnl places.
While the changes necessitated
additional
cost~.
Ohio
Department of Transp,ortation
District 10 Deputy Director
George Collins said that would be
"negotiated between OOOT and
the village of Pomeroy."

Bv CARRIE

Page A5

31d00WN

R2 U U I, A

N

0167·

JUOO'S TOTAL

~·•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH

. hoellich@mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

2nd00WN

Answer

AVERAGE GAME 110.120
' "~'

o
oo WN

'"Down r"'''

Get a jump on life by understanding tire influences which
are goveming you in the year
a/read. Send for your AstroGraph year-ahc~•dpredictions
by mailing $2 to Astro-Grap!r,

Unllell J . .Turt S yndic Ill Tnt

JOOT Thi..I&lt;\1-\G Ia

~ 1-\0~

WORD @@@f.\0-..t.;.,f.'\@@
S C R \.!)
G E ..
"'
000000 0
fiiV'c;'l@@
\C9&amp; E. @@@
0000000
0

WINIII SCRIMMAGE" SOLUTION BY JUDO HAMBRICK

Or\, S&lt;~R'I, ... l

:::5 1-\WE.

r=:;;;:;~~~~~~====~~====:,

JU~T

'Tl1£
CQc, 1111\VEL

fOLLO\I.l

I

OOC.·f~ltNOL~

HaTELL.

lli ~-,_ .

[)()(,· FRIENOL~

CRUI~ES ...

DO~ · fRIENOL~

BEI\CHEL
&gt;I'A5 ...

DO~· FRIENOL~

Ur.lk~

1'0 :

DOU 'TNAVEL PRODIJGT~ ...

COMPIIRE ~E
ll06- ·FRIE~I:I.~

-me

OO&lt;, TRIIVEL TIP5 ...
fO~Um~ ..
TRI&lt;JE L •tOJ:.tE\ltR~ ...
TR1111EL OOIL~ ...

00V TRAVEL

OOC7
0017

F~l(, BUT ~EVER
~E~LL'I

"Off L€115H ·~
0

D&lt;X7 TRMtL I'OVICE.. .

0

00~

0

TRAVEL 5TORit5 ....

KodiColley
Bidwell

Index
1 Sections - 10 Paps

mf

50 CENTS • Vol . 1 , No. 48

Pomeroy • Middleport • Gallipolis • Point Pleasant • Saturday, July 26, 2001

Work underway at Pomeroy's riverfront wal

Sports

~[K
~;::,~t:J,:e~keeps
"1 you
and

in ways quite fortunate for
you.
CANCER (June 21-July
22)- The unselfishness.you
display is a beautiful quality
that'll be greatly admired
today. Let your heart rule and
it'll bring you much happiness.

nt

Hometown News for Gallia, Mason &amp; Meigs counties

Reading the

stand and be able to expand
upon the bright ideas of others

I

am

Astrograph
BY BERNICE BEDE OsoL

on Annsbong's lead, 10

6

•

53 Barbecue
extra
55 lnfonnal

Ullrich cuts two seconds

Calendars

3

Classifieds

7-8

Comics

9

Dear Abby

9

Editorials

4

Movies

2

Obituaries

5

Sports

6,10

Weather
C.· 2003 Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

2

Kiss mobile coming
,-··-·····-·~·····--'·-

STAFF REPORT

I

news@ mydailytribune.com

PATRIOT - The only thing
Theresa Spencer could do was
pray after she found out
Wednesday that lightning
struck home she rents with her
husband, Hogan .
She said she prayed' all the
way from her workplace ,
Turnpike Ford in Galhpolis,
that the tire was contained in
the attic.
Her prayers were answered.
The Rio Grande Volunteer
Fire Department. with the
assistance of Centerville and
Greenfield, kept the blaze
confined to the attic. Even
though the fire was kept to the
attic, the hou se sustained
water damage through the
second floor to the third tloor.
About a year ago, the
Spencers moved to Patriot
from North Carolina. She said
the family came to live in
Gallia County after she lost
her job in North Carolina. Her
husband had rented a small
house from Hope Burnett of
Patriot for hunting. While visiting the area, she found a job
at Turnpike Ford. Although
Please see Th•nkful. 3

GALLIPOLIS. Ohio - The
Hershey's Kissmobile uuiser,
the chocolate lover's dream
machine, ts rolling intn
Gallipolis from 10' a.m. to
noon Monday at Wai-Mart.
The Kissmobile will he in
Gallipolis sharing cho~olate
with the public while rai si ng
awareness and donations for
the
Children's
Miracle
Network (CMN). One hundred
percent of all donations raised
in the Gallipolis arc will go
directly to Children's Hospital
in Columbus.
The ~ruiser is an 11 -foot
long, custom-made vehide
resembling three Hershey 's
Ki sses. A classic Hershey's
Kisses chocolate. a Hershc·y\
Kiss wit~ :tlmonds and a
Hershey's Rich Dark chocolate are all represented on the
Kissmobile. It has been traveling the country celehrating
kids. "beca use every kid
deserve s Hugs and Ki sses."
The Kissmobilc c:trrics
more than 230,000 Hershey 's
lteesa ~ trtJs trl Sdli'g~ 1o t-er cy 1'8' art. Gbla fidans. The Hugs and Kisses in its refrilletdTg wcs hcrg,Tg m a ~ IEstro,W til fire fial1 Ire &lt;tit Ma 9:J\J:ttll erated compart me111 located 111
aMJi ~ ri m sre wcs Ellie to sa.e it n-e ~ ID tl)e ro.re sre the rear Hershey's Hug seL·IM:ld nl'&lt;lth t-er fmi~ ca1 be seen n1te ~- ICa'rie 1\rn WxxJl
tion . The load is almost one
~

FREE

S~rgicai · W~ight

.

-···

..

~

i

What's up:

I

What: Her.;hey's Kis.~mobile i
Where: Gallipolis Wal-Mart (
When: 10 a.m. to noon,
Monday. July 28
How much: no charge, taking donations for Children's :
Miracle Nerwork
Want to know more? Call :
l-888-499-KISS or visit the ,
Web site at www.hersheys.com ;

I

1

l

-·---~-------------·-··-~-

------~

tun of chocolate.
The_middle section of the
Kissmobile features a big
screen television with closed
captioning. a DVD player and
a built-in PA system. In the
multi -media center, children
~an play an audience participation racing game called "The
Greal Ki ss Race" to learn how
Kisses are made and sing-along with the Kissmobile
Kids Kamke system .·
1l1e Kissmohile is driven br
two "Cho~olate Ambassadors.'
CMN is affiliated with more
than 170 children's hospitals
anJ hospi tal foundation s tn the
United Stales and Canada. Its
goal is to ensure that each hospital wi 11 treat all children
regardless of a family's ability
to pay.

Loss Seminar_

Are you 100 pounds overweight? Why weight?
'

'

Call NOW and make a rJ)servation to attend one of the sessions lhat is most convenient for you!

.In -Jackson. OH
Friday; August 1 · 6:00 - 7:30 PM and 8:00 - 9:30 PM
Holzer Medical Center - Jackson
:-- -- jrij?i-rici[jbii[g;wy ---- 1 !~ ---- -j0Ai6iiij: OH- -----: :----in Huritiiioion:wv-- --;
•
•
:

Wednesday, July 30

:

:

Thursday, July 31

: ; ·

: 6:00 • 7:30 PM and 8:00 · '9:30 PM :

; 6 :00 - 7:00PM and 1!:00 • 9:00PM :

:

1

Holiday Inn · Parkersburg

:

Athans Community Center ·

Saturday. August 2

;

Noon - 1:30 PM
Holiday Inn - Hur~tington

:
•

1-866-821-4541

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="480">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9928">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="19523">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="19522">
              <text>July 25, 2003</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2108">
      <name>denison</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="408">
      <name>myers</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4">
      <name>wears</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
