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log onto www.mydailysentinel.com for archive • games • features • e-edition • polls &amp; more

Middleport•Pomeroy, Ohio

INSIDE STORY
Ground broken for
new First Baptist
Church facility
.... Page 3

WEATHER

SPORTS

Mostly cloudy.
High of 86. Low of
67 ........ Page 2

Larkin inducted
into hall of fame
.... Page 6
50 cents daily

FRIDAY, JULY 20, 2012

Vol. 62, No. 124

Signs, signs, everywhere a political sign
Where to put them and where not to
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY — While the
November election is more
than three months away,
political signs are springing up across the county —
many in illegal places.
The Ohio Department of

Transportation has a “Mind
your Signs” program in
place as a way of keeping
them off the highway rightof-ways, and both Middleport and Pomeroy have ordinances that specify where
political signs can be placed
and where they can’t, and
give the timing as to when

they can go up and when
they must come down.
According to Ohio law,
highway right-of-ways are
to be used exclusively for
public highway purposes.
Political signs do not met
that legal criteria. Only uniform marking guides and
warning signs are permitted
on the state’s highway rightof-way. The Ohio Revised
Code says that “no individu-

al, firm or corporation shall
place or maintain any post,
sign, or obstruction within
the bounds of any road or
highway without first obtaining the consent and approval of the director.”
Now for signs that go up
without approval, Brenna
Slavens, public information
officer for ODOT District
10 advised earlier this year
that ODOT highway crews

will remove illegally placed
signs and take them to the
county garage. Owners have
a 30-day period in which to
retrieve them. After that
they are disposed of.
As for both Pomeroy and
Middleport,
ordinances
spell out the when and
where of putting up political signs, as well as the time
structure after the election
for taking them down.

According to Pomeroy
Village Council’s amendment to Zoning Ordinance
593 which was passed on
July 21, 2008, political
signs shall be erected not
sooner than 30 days prior
to the date of the election
for which the office is to be
filled or the issue decided,
and shall not be greater
See SIGNS ‌| 2

Meigs EMA director
calls for damage
assessments
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

Charlene Hoeflich/photos

Fire Chief Jeff Darst gives a lesson in fire safety.

Bucket rides for Bible School kids
MIDDLEPORT — As a special treat for the
First Baptist Church Bible school kids, Fire
Chief Jeff Darst and Fireman Cody Davidson
brought the Middleport Fire Department ladder truck to the church.
After giving the children a lesson in fire safety and a demonstration on the workings of
a fire truck, they offered rides in the ladder
bucket truck.
Some accepted, others didn’t, but those who
did were taken high enough to reach out and
touch the cross on top of the church steeple.
“Jesus to the Rescue” was the theme of the
Bible school which kicked off Sunday with a
pizza party and concludes today with a pool
party at the home of John and Crystal Hood.

choeflich@mydailysentinel.com

POMEROY — On Wednesday, Aug.
21, 1912, a 16-year-old boy scout of
Troop 1 in Oceanside, N.Y. received
a letter from the then Chief Scout Executive, James E. West, that he was
to receive the very first Eagle Scout
Award in the quite new history of the
Boy Scouts of America.
His name was Arthur Rose Eldred
and his son, Bill, would continue the

HNB donates to
back-to-school
shoe program
Staff Report

mdsnews@mydailysentinel.com

Olivia Davis and Aubrie Lyons riding high

Eagle Scouts inducted at
Trinity Congregational Church
Charlene Hoeflich

POMEROY — Robert
Byer, director of the Meigs
County Emergency Management Agency, is asking
that townships and villages
call or send in their force account figures from the June
29 storm.
“We cannot expect any assistance until all figures are
in,” said Byer.
According to the EMA director, Meigs County must
meet a figure of $3.39 per
capita in order to qualify.
That would be $80,600 in

legacy earning his Eagle in 1944.
This is the centennial year of that
first Eagle event. Statistic reveal that
only two out of 100 scouts ever complete the Eagle trail and earn scouting’s highest rank.
Thursday, July 5, 2012, marked the
presentation of three new Eagle Scouts
at Trinity Congregational Church. The
three young men are the first recipients from Troop 235 since 1985.
The three receiving the Eagle award
were Marshall Stephen Aanestad,

damages to public property
or force account costs in
clean up.
“Townships and villages
should complete a force account to track work they
have done to clear roads,
trees and debris. This would
include any overtime, extra
help, and equipment usage
along with regular hours
of personnel. The overtime
and extra help are the only
two items eligible for funding. The regular hours and
overtime are used to calculate and verify the equipSee EMA ‌| 2

RACINE — With the
school year just over a
month away, the Meigs
Cooperative Parish is preparing to help children in
need of shoes for “back to
school.”
Students in Meigs, Southern and Eastern school districts were eligible to sign
up for a program which
provides gift cards for the
purchase of shoes to kids in
need.
Don Shaffer from the Co-

operative Parish said that
the gift cards will be given
to those who have already
signed up on July 28. Gift
cards can be used toward
the purchase of shoes at
Shoe Show.
Home National Bank of
Racine and Syracuse recently presented Shaffer with a
$500 donation toward the
program.
In addition to the donation for the shoe program,
Shaffer noted that the bank
had donated food from recent food drives to the Cooperative Parrish.

Shannon Michael Brown, and Ethan
Jacob Nottingham, all students of
Eastern High School.
Aanestad and Nottingham will be
seniors there this fall. Brown recently
graduated and will be attending Ohio
University this fall.
Erik Aanestad, scoutmaster and a
former Eagle Scout (1977) officiated
the ceremony attended by more than a
Submitted photo
hundred family members and guests.
Mark Morris, Air Force Lt. Col. Ret., Home National Bank President Bill Nease, left, presents a check
in the amount of $500 to Don Shaffer for the Meigs Cooperative
See SCOUTS |‌ 2 Parrish back to school shoe program.

�Friday, July 20, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

Church Events
Revival
RUTLAND — A revival
will be held at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church July
16-21. The services will be
at 7 p.m. each evening with
Evangelists Brother Tommy
and Tim Stevens singing.
Bible story hour
POMEROY — A children’s
Bible story hour will be held
every Thursday in July at 1
p.m. at the Mulberry Community Center. There will be
a Bible story, a craft and game
with a snack every week.
Biker Sunday
MASON, W.Va. — Soul
Harvest Church in Mason,
W.Va., will host Biker Sunday
at 10 a.m. on July 22, with
guest speaker Russ Clear.
Clear is a former member of
two well known gangs, former WWE Superstar, six time
world power lifting champion,
and evangelist. Free coffee and
donuts before the service, with
food and entertainment for all
ages after. For more information call (304) 593-9523.
Vacation Bible Schools
RACINE — Antiquity Baptist Church will have Bible
School, 6 to 8:30 p.m. July 2327. Theme is “IncrediWorld
Amazement Park.” Supper
will be served each evening
from 5 to 6 p.m. The church is
located at 47860 State Route
124, Racine.
MIDDLEPORT — The

Middleport Nazarene Church
will host Son Surf Beach Bash
VBS from 6-8 p.m., July 23-27.
MIDDLEPORT — Saddle
Up for VBX will be held from
6-8:30 p.m., July 23-27 at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Ages 3 through high school
are welcome. Participants
may register online at www.
middleportchurch.org.
MIDDLEPORT —The Victory Baptist Church of 525
N. Second St., Middleport, is
having Bible School from 6
to 8:30 p.m. through Friday.
Team Jesus is the theme of the
school which is open to children four years of age through
the 12th grade. For more information call 992-7111.
MIDDLEPORT — Middleport First Baptist Church,
corner of Sixth and Palmer
Streets, Vacation Bible School,
6 to 8:30 p.m., July 16-20.
Theme is “Jesus to the Rescue.”
POMEROY — Carleton
Church will host Vacation
Bible School with the theme
“Bug Zone” from 6-8:30 p.m.,
July 16-20.
POMEROY — First Southern Baptist Church, Vacation
Bible School, 6 to 9 p.m., July
16-20. Ages 3 through sixth
grade. Theme “Amazing Wonders Aviation.” Transportation available, call 992-6779.

EMA

Meigs County
Community Calendar
Friday, July 20
POMEROY — The
Pomeroy High School
Class of 1959 will be having their “3rd Friday”
lunch at noon at the Wild
Horse Café in Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT — A
free community dinner
will be served at 5 p.m. at
the Middleport Church of
Christ Family Life Center.
Dinner will include barbecued pork sandwiches,
chips, slaw, corn and dessert.
Saturday, July 21
SALEM CENTER —
Star Grange #778 and
Star Junior grange #878
will have a work session
at 1 p.m., followed by fun
night and potluck at 6:30
p.m. All members and interested persons are invited and urged to attend.
Monday, July 23
RACINE — The Southern Local Board of Education will hold its regular
meeting at 8 p.m. in the
high school media center.
POMEROY — Meigs
County Library Board,
regular meeting, 3:30 p.m.
at the Middleport Library.

age is available at the EMA
office and can be faxed to
the political sub-division.
Should anyone have a
question Byer asked that
they come into the office at
117 East Memorial Drive
Suite 4 or call the EMA office at (740) 992-4541.

Tuesday, July 24
CHESTER —Shade River Lodge 453 will meet in
special session, 7 p.m., to
confer the Master Masoin
degree on one candidate.
All Master Masons invited. Refreshments.
Thursday, July 26

740-416-4650
Friday 10-5 • Sat &amp; Sunday 9-5

POMEROY - The Meigs
Soil and Water Conservation District Board of
Supervisors will meet in
regular session Thursday,
11:30 a.m. at the district
office at 33101 Hiland
Road.

From Page 1
ment hours, he explained.
If equipment is used for
ten hours, then employees’
hours worked need to match
equipment. An up to date
FEMA rate schedule for
equipment including fuel us-

Live Music First Sunday of Every Month!

Amish Made Storage Buildings 304-488-7662
SR7 - Pomeroy, Ohio

60330306

ASSURANCE &amp; cOMFORT
When You Need it Most
Since 1937
Anderson McDaniel Funeral Home
Has Served your Community

Put Your Trust in us...
TRADITION-VALUE-SERVICE

Anderson McDaniel
Funeral Home

POMEROY — Free
health screenings will be
offered through the Ohio
University Heritage College
of Osteopathic Medicine’s
Community Health Programs, on Tuesday, July 24,
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the
mobile health van parked at
the Meigs County Health
Department,
Memorial
Drive, Pomeroy.
Free Pap tests, pelvic
and breast examinations,
breast health education,
and appointments for mammograms will be provided
STARTS

8PM
FREE

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 42.00
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 17.58
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 69.36
Big Lots (NYSE) — 39.16
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 40.79
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 65.30
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 6.50
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.29
Charming Shoppes (NASDAQ) — 0.00
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 33.88
Collins (NYSE) — 50.63
DuPont (NYSE) — 49.20
US Bank (NYSE) — 33.80
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 19.80
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 44.78
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 34.46
Kroger (NYSE) — 21.59
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 47.14
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 74.18
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 19.18

Sunday, July 29
RACINE — The Deem
Family Reunion will be
held at 11 a.m. at the Carmel Church Annex building. For more information
call (740) 949-2388 or
(412) 614-0379.
Friday: A chance of showTuesday, July 31
ers and thunderstorms.
Mostly cloudy, with a high
JACKSON — PERI Dis- near 86. Calm wind becomtrict 7 (Gallia, Jackson, ing southwest around 6 mph
Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, in the afternoon. Chance of
Ross, Scioto, and Vinton precipitation is 50 percent.
counties) will have the New rainfall amounts beannual district meeting at tween a quarter and half of
the Holzer Medical Cen- an inch possible.
ter off Ohio 32 at BurlFriday Night: A chance
ington Road in Jackson. of showers and thunderRegistration is at 10 a.m. storms, mainly before 11
and the presentation by p.m. Mostly cloudy, with a
OPERS on HealthCare low around 67. Light north
begins at 10:30 a.m. All wind. Chance of precipiPERI members are wel- tation is 40 percent. New
come to attend. For fur- rainfall amounts of less than
ther information contact a tenth of an inch, except
Carolyn Waddle, District higher amounts possible in
Representative, at (740) thunderstorms.
533-9376.

BBT (NYSE) — 32.00
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 22.23
Pepsico (NYSE) — 70.42
Premier (NASDAQ) — 7.29
Rockwell (NYSE) — 65.90
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.02
Royal Dutch Shell — 69.69
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 54.06
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 71.53
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 4.72
WesBanco (NYSE) — 22.17
Worthington (NYSE) — 22.71
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m. ET
closing quotes of transactions for July
19, 2012, provided by Edward Jones
financial advisors Isaac Mills in Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

Ohio Valley Forecast

Wednesday, Aug. 1
SALEM CENTER —
An American Red Cross
blood drive will be held
from 2-7 p.m. at the Star
Grange Hall on Salem
School Lot Road, three
miles north of Salem Center. The blood drive is
sponsored by Star Grange
778. Appointments are
not necessary, but are
appreciated and can be
made by calling (740-6694245 or by going to redcrossblood.org.

Signs
From Page 1

than 12 square feet in sign
area, nor located closer than
10 feet to any public rightof-way.
It also states that political
signs shall not be erected
on village property, including parks, parking lot, amphitheater, village hall nor
along East Main Street adjacent to the walking path.
As for removal of signs,
the ordinance states that
all political signs shall be
removed within seven days
after the day of election.
Middleport Village Council has no requirement as to
the time before an election

Rhythm

when political signs can go
up in residential areas.
The original ordinance
passed by Council in 1965
which included a 30-day
time frame before an election for putting up political
signs, was eliminated by an
amendment in 2006.
The ordinance does require that political advertising signs be not in excess of
12 square feet, and that they
must be removed within a
10 day period following the
election.
The amended ordinance
states that Village Council
found it in the best interest
of the village to make the
amendment.

Scouts

to uninsured and under-inFrom Page 1
sured women.
Appointments are required. interested persons graduate of Meigs High
should call 1-800-844-2654 School and a former Eagle
or 740-593-2432 to schedule Scout (1975), was the
speaker emeritus. Pastor
an appointment.
The health screenings are Tom Johnson, troop chapprovided as a community lain, gave the invocation
service by the Ohio Univer- and benediction.
Aanestad and Nottingsity Heritage College of Osteopathic Medicine’s Com- ham joined the troop when
munity Health Programs, it was reactivated in 2005
Breast and Cervical Cancer and Brown joined in 2008.
Projects of Southeast Ohio, All three attended the naand the Susan G. Komen tional jamboree at Fort A.P.
Hill in Virginia where the
For The Cure Columbus.
100th anniversary of Boy
Scouts of America was celebrated.
2012

ON THE RIVER
SUMMER MUSIC SERIES

Saturday: Partly sunny,
with a high near 85. North
wind 3 to 5 mph.
Saturday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
65.
Sunday: Mostly sunny,
with a high near 90.
Sunday Night: Partly
cloudy, with a low around
69.
Monday: A chance of
showers
and
thunderstorms. Mostly sunny, with
a high near 90. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.
Monday Night: A chance
of showers and thunderstorms. Mostly cloudy, with
a low around 70. Chance of
precipitation is 30 percent.

Marshall will return to
the 2013 National Jamboree
as junior assistant scoutmaster at the Bechtal Family High Adventure Camp
called “The Summit” near
Beckley, W.Va.
Both Aanestad and Nottingham have been American Legion Buckeye Boy’s
State delegates. Brown
in 2011 participated in a
wide range of extra-curricular activities. Aanestad and Nottingham will
continue in scouting to
their 18th birthday working
on Eagle Palms.

BROUGHT TO YOU BY:

RIVERSIDE AMPHITHEATER

DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO
JULY 6
JULY 13
JULY 20
AUGUST 3
AUGUST 10

Pomeroy
Racine
740-992-5444 740-949-2300
60328032

Friday, July 27
MARIETTA — The
Regional Advisory Council for the Area Agency
on Aging will meet at 10
a.m. in the Buckeye HillsHVRDD Area Agency on
Aging office in Marietta,
Ohio.

Free health
screenings offered

ADAM mCDANIEL • jAMES ANDERSON
DIRECTORS
Middleport
740-992-5141

The Daily Sentinel • Page 2

60333113

JOHNNY RAWLS
THE GAS HOUSE GORILLAS
CLARENCE SPACY
GIZZAE
GRADY CHAMPION

INFO. 877-MEIGS-CO

www.pomeroyblues.org

x

for VB
July 23rd – 27th

6Pm – 8:30pm
3 years – through high school

Middleport Church of Christ
437 Main St.
Middleport, OH 45760

992-2914

register on-line at
www.middleportchurch.org
If you need a ride call
or email us!!

60336050

60336035

�Friday, July 20, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 3

Soul Harvest to host Biker Sunday URG/RGCC hosts
MASON — Biker Sunday events seem to
go hand-in-hand with Jesus’ teachings about
refraining from judging others, mostly because bikers are often judged on looks alone.
“We’re very open and willing to accept
people just the way they are…that’s why
we’ve got a heart for biker too,” Rochelle
Lamm of Soul Harvest Church said.
Soul Harvest Church of Mason is hosting its first Biker Sunday at 10 a.m., July 22
with guest speaker Evangelist Russ Clear, a
former WWE superstar and six time world
power lifting champion. There will be free
coffee and donuts before the service and a
bike ride as well as food and entertainment
for all ages after the service to coincide with
the church’s annual Fun Day Sunday from
noon - 4 p.m. at the Mason park.
Clear has also, no doubt, been judged a
time or two in his life based on his looks.
A six-time world champion in the bench
press and the strict curl, Clear has been
recognized as pound for pound, the world’s
strongest man in an all-natural competition.
With stints working as a bodyguard for national pro-life leaders, he has also been an
occasional actor, scoring appearances in the
television drama “Walker, Texas Ranger,”
and a major role in the movie “A Song for
Momma.” A former member of the Hell’s
Angels motorcycle gang, Clear has been

shot in the head three times, and stabbed
eight times. He spent over 15 years of his
life in correctional institutions, and became
committed to Christ during his last six
months at the infamous San Quentin State
Prison in California.
Choosing to walk away from what could
have been a long, lucrative career as a World
Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) superstar, because, in his own words, “you cannot serve two masters,” Clear redirected his
energies for good, and instead dedicated his
life to reaching others with the life-changing
message of the gospel, presented in a powerful and compelling way. Clear is also a
member of the Faith Force and Power Force
teams which minister to teens.
Lamm, who had previously heard Clear
speak, said despite Clear’s big and burly
appearance, “he has a heart and awesome
testimony.”
Lamm explained: “Every time I hear his
story, it makes me cry. He’s come so far.
If we would’ve known him years ago, we
would’ve thought Jesus could never reach
him…that he was too far gone.”
Lamm said despite all that was going
against him, Clear was not so far that Jesus
couldn’t reach him which to her means no
one is too far gone either.
“Everyone has a chance, no matter what
you’ve done,” Lamm said.
Biker Sunday is not just for bikers and
everyone is welcome.

summer band camps

RIO GRANDE — The
University of Rio Grande/Rio
Grande Community College
is welcoming high school students from around the region
to campus this summer for its
annual summer band camp
season.
Each summer, bands from
across Ohio and West Virginia
come to Rio Grande to spend
a week preparing for the fall
marching band season.
Gary Stewart, Director
of Bands at Rio Grande, has
served as the Director of Summer Band Camps on campus
for the last 11 years. Each year,
Stewart organizes the band
camps, and sometimes even
helps out with the bands. Before beginning his tenure at
Rio Grande, Stewart served
for many years as a high school
band director, and he has a
great deal of experience coordinating the summer camps.
The camps this year started
during the week of July 8-13
and will continue through the
week of Aug. 5-10.
The bands visiting Rio
Grande for the camps this
summer come from high
schools such as Liberty Union,
Licking Valley, Northridge,
Middletown, Tipp City, Zane
Trace, Groveport, Tri-Valley,
Maysville, Celina, Troy, Sherman, W.Va., Point Pleasant,
W.Va., Lancaster, London,
Waynesville, Mt. Gilead, West
Union, Franklin Heights and
Logan Elm.
Each week, a different group
of bands arrives on campus on
Sunday and stays through Friday afternoon. While they are
on campus, they are very busy.
“They march every morning,” Stewart explained. Most
bands start their days around
Submitted photo
7:30 a.m. and go out on to the
Ground was broken Sunday, July 15 for the Gallipolis First Baptist Church’s new multi-purpose
practice fields around 8:30
building to benefit/house First Baptist Church as well as the Ohio Valley Christian School. Taking
a.m. so that they can learn and
part in the ceremony were project volunteer committee members, front row, from left: Pastor
perfect their marching rouAlvis Pollard; Ed Swisher, project chairman; Bob Hood; Larry Miller; Patrick O’Donnell, OVCS adtines when the temperatures
ministrator; Ron Keenan and Todd Townsend; back row: Mike Davis; Bill Davis; Larry Marr; David
Tope; Steve Jenkins; Tim Snedaker; Marsha Smith; Jeff Smith; Joe Harkleroad; Youth Pastor Da- are cooler. Many of the routines are intricate and tough
vid Harkleroad; Jim Irish; Jeff Snedaker; Wendell Thomas and Kent Shawver.
to learn, so the bands need a
great deal of time to get the
steps down correctly.
After the morning practices,
the bands are all given lunch
and then they break up into
small groups so that the students who play the same in-

Ground broken for new
First Baptist Church facility
GALLIPOLIS — Ground
was broken Sunday, July
15, for the new multi-purpose building to benefit/
house First Baptist Church
as well as the Ohio Valley Christian School, 1100
Fourth Avenue, Gallipolis.
Builder for the new facility will be Brentwood
Builders, Cedarville, Ohio.
The structure, located next
to the church, will contain
16,500 square feet.

It will also contain a
1,500 foot youth room, a
regulation high school gym
with a competition wood
floor.
Space will be (shelled in)
for four additional classrooms to benefit the church
and school. The new gym
will house the OVCS Defenders basketball and volleyball teams.
Planning and preparation
for the facility has been a

two-year project from inception, guided by building
committee chairman Ed
Swisher.
The project is expected
to be completed within six
to nine months.
Prior to the groundbreaking ceremony, Pastor Alvis
Pollard and Mr. Swisher delivered a few remarks with
a huge crowd of church
members looking on.

Meigs County Local Briefs
Tax bills mailed out
POMEROY — Tax bills
for the second half of 2011
have been mailed out by the
office of Meigs County Treasurer Peggy Yost. Those
who did not receive their
tax statements are asked
to contact the treasurer’s
office at 992-2004. Yost reports that several could not
be delivered by the post office and were returned to
the treasurer’s office. The
deadline for payment to
avoid a penalty is Aug. 10.
LEPC meeting
date changed
POMEROY — A change
in the meeting date for the
Meigs County Local Emergency Planning Committee
(LEPC) has been made.
The meeting will be 11:30
a.m. Tuesday, July 31, in the
Senior Citizens Conference
Room. Lunch will be available.
Horse Fun Show
PORTLAND
—There
will be a horse fun show at
the Portland Community
Center’s horse park Saturday. The show starts at 11
a.m. Warmups will be at 10
a.m. Food will be sold by
the center. Proceeds from
the show will go to maintain the Center. Rain could
cancel the horse show. Anyone with questions regarding the show can call Bruce
McKelvey at 740 590 9936.
Everyone is welcome.
MHS juniors
into fundraising
POMEROY
—
The

Meigs High junior class is
in the process of holding
several fundraising projects
for school activities. Saturday they will have a car
wash at McDonalds, 10 a.m.
to 2 p.m., and Aug. 4 there
will be a “back to school”
yard sale in front of the high
school. Junior students are
asked to donate items for

the yard sale. Spaces will
also be available for others
to rent. Cost is $5 a table.
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The give-away of a wellfilled basket valued at $750
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The ticket sale will begin
August.

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struments can rehearse together to learn their music. These
small groups of students are
found all across campus, sometimes inside buildings and
sometimes under the shade of
the many trees.
Once the afternoon sessions
are finished, the students are
treated to dinner and then the
bands reform again out on the
practice fields in the evening
to work once again on their fall
shows. These rehearsals usually combine the music and the
marches.
After the bands are finished
rehearsing each evening, Rio
Grande treats them to different activities that Stewart organizes. Special events such
as pizza parties, movie nights,
ice cream parties and even
talent shows are held during
the week for the students.
The high school students also
have access to the Rio Grande
swimming pool, the Lyne Center gymnasium and the entertainment options inside the
Davis University Center.
The Rio Grande Bookstore
is also open throughout the
week for the students.
Stewart enjoys hosting the
many bands on campus each
summer, and is proud that so

many high schools choose to
return to Rio Grande every
year to prepare for their fall
shows. The summer camps
give the bands the opportunity to get to know each other
and become friends while they
learn their shows. The students work hard while they
are on campus, but they have
a good time during camp, too.
So far this summer, Stewart
has been very impressed by
the talents of the bands that
have already visited campus.
He is anxious to see the rest
of the bands this summer, and
he always tries to follow them
during the school year to see
how they do in their shows
and competitions.
In addition, many of the
students who took part in
band camps at Rio Grande in
previous years are now Rio
Grande students, and Stewart
is pleased to see so many high
school students choose Rio
Grande for their academic futures.
For more information on the
summer band camps or on the
music program at Rio Grande,
call Gary Stewart at 1-800-2827201.

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Beth Sergent

�The Daily Sentinel

Faith and Family

Time is a great investment
As summer continues,
it will not be long before
school starts. The stores
are already starting to put
the latest back-to-school
gear out. The school bell
will ring before we know it.
It never ceases to amaze
me how long June seems to
drag along, but July quickly
flies by. It seems that once
we reach Independence
Day, everything goes by so
quickly. The fair is fast approaching and right behind
it comes the start of school.
So many projects are
planned, and yet they seem
to never quite get completed. Summer is just not endless.
Time seems to be a great
commodity that slips away.
It is like a fish that appears
to be caught, but always
manages to wiggle loose
and flop out of the boat.
Recently I heard a woman
on the radio talking about
her daughter. The family
was dealing with the death
of the father. The mother
was struggling with her oldest, a daughter. The young
woman had become increasingly disrespectful and there
were quite a few problems
which were now impacting
the younger children.
As I listened to the woman and the pastor who was
trying to give her advice,
there was one thing I kept
thinking. I wonder how
much time the mother spent
with the daughter before? I
wonder how much time she
spent truly listening to her

Carrie Wolfe
daughter. I wonder.
We tend to think we are
going to have all the time
in the world, and yet, I can
remember my grandparents
remarking how quickly the
years seemed to go by.
We have so many minutes, so many hours, so
many days to walk this
earth. What will we do with
it?
I wonder how many children would be in the juvenile justice system if they
had parents that spent real
time with them? I wonder
how many criminals would
be sitting in our prisons had
there been parents and even
grandparents who stopped
worrying about themselves
and were more concerned
with loving the gift of human life in their families. If
they were willing to do what
was right over what was
convenient or self-serving?
I wonder how many teenagers would be doing drugs

and drinking had their parents turned off some silly
and utterly meaningless
television program to play a
board game? Or take them
to church? Pray with them?
Pray for them?
Not every thing can be
solved with just spending
time with someone, but
how much could be prevented if we stopped being
so superficial and started
focusing on being a society
of worth again?
Time is one of the greatest investments you can
make. Time spent loving
and training a child in the
way they should go will never be wasted. It will produce
abundant fruit for generations to come. So too will
time spent with the Word
of God.
The more time we spend
with our families, the more
we know them, the greater
the bond. The more time
we spent studying our faith,
the scriptures and time in
prayer, the more we will
know God. Time is a precious gift once squandered,
it is eternally lost.
Spend time with your
family and spend time with
the Lord. So many things
can steal our time, but we
must be aware and steadfast. We must remember
how precious family and
faith are. Make the investment of time with loved
ones and with the Lord. You
will not regret it and you
will truly live a life of Grace
Out Loud!

Search the Scriptures
“…These were more noble…they
searched the scriptures daily…”
“I have found a friend in Jesus,” say the
words of one popular hymn, and many
people take comfort from the thought
that when all others have deserted them,
Jesus is still there as a friend and a
brother. The proverbs state, “A man of
many companions may come to ruin, but
there is a friend who sticks closer than a
brother.” (Proverbs 18:24, ESV) Earthly
friends may forsake us, prove weak, prove
themselves untrustworthy, or otherwise
be unable or unwilling to help us when
we need it most. The friendship of Jesus is not of such a caliber. He will never
leave or forsake His friends (cf. Hebrews
13:5). When we have a difficulty, there
is nothing too great for Him to help us
with, for with God nothing is impossible
(cf. Matthew 19:26). Nor should we ever
doubt the sincerity and affection of the
one who was willing to go to the cross
for us. As He himself observed, there is
no greater love than to lay down one’s
life for his friends (John 15:13).
Yet one must wonder how many
friends Jesus actually has?
Friendship, to be effective, is a two
way street. We all resent fair-weather
friends, or even worse, those pretend
friends who are only in a friendship
because they think that they can get
something. As the proverbs wryly observe, “the rich has many friends.” (cf,
Proverbs 14:20) There is none so rich
and powerful as the Son of God who has
rightly been given all authority in heaven and on earth (cf. Matthew 28:18) and
for whom, as we have already observed,
all things are possible. How many latch
onto His friendship solely because they
think that He will be able to do things
for them. When they pray, they think
that the kindness and benevolence of
Jesus will grant them whatsoever their
hearts desire.
We should not think that God is so
easily mocked, nor that Jesus desires the
sort of friends that are rightly and universally scorned, even within the pages

of God’s Word. Christ Himself told His
apostles that He would know who His
friends really were. That’s not His exact
words. To be precise, He said, “You are
my friends if you do whatever I command you.” (John 15:14)
We are told elsewhere, “For this is the
love of God, that we keep His commandments.” (1 John 5:3) John, in writing
this, was writing nothing new. He was
merely repeating that which God had
always said (cf. Deuteronomy 5:10, 7:9)
He was echoing the words of Christ, who
connected friendship with the Divine to
obedience. When one thinks about it
practically, how else should God determine who has true love for Him and His
words except by looking at their actions
towards Him and His commands? Thus
we shall be judged by the things we have
done in the body, both good and bad. (cf.
2 Corinthians 5:10)
We should never doubt that Jesus is
going to be a better friend to us than we
are to Him. He is faithful and true, faithful even when our own faith falters. Yet
at the same time, in any friendship, if it
is genuine and to last, the affection must
go both ways. It is a wonderful thought
to think that we have a friend in Jesus,
but it is, for some, an erroneous thought,
for they do not prove themselves to be
friends towards Jesus. They ignore His
commands and His will. They seldom
speak to Him unless they want something from Him. They fail to give Him
thanks or praise for His manifold blessings and mercies. They are, in short, exactly the sort of friends Jesus does not
want and they will, unfortunately, on
that last day as they say, “Lord, Lord,”
hear the reply, “Depart from me, I do not
know you.” (cf. Matthew 7:21-23). Let
us make sure that if we wish for Jesus
to be our friend that we strive always to
prove ourselves His friends. We invite
you to come and worship with us at the
church of Christ, 197 Chapel Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio.

Do we have your attention now?
Advertise your business in
this space, or bigger
Call us at:

The Daily Sentinel
740.992.2155

Page 4
Friday, July 20, 2012

Once a nation embraces
homosexuality as a norm,
its end is inevitable
“God works in mysteriacross.
ous ways, His wonders to
It’s not ignorance that
perform.” You may be oneguides what they do; it’s
up on me and know who
more an “intentional falshould be credited for this
lacy” — a lie, based on
particular quote; I have no
their own selfish and selfidea.
serving biases, and targetMy mother said it more
ing our naïveté. In other
than once, but I’m certain
words, it’s nothing less
it didn’t originate with
than their blatant attempt
her. I may have heard it
to manipulate us.
said in seminary, but even
Did you hear on the
there it wasn’t said in the
news last week of the
context of some esoteric
1,000 or so Christians
insight.
Thomas Johnson slaughtered in Somalia
One more time: “God
by the radical Muslims
Pastor
works in mysterious ways,
there—in part, for their
His wonders to perform.”
faith? No, you didn’t.
Here is an idea so simple and straightNeither did the U.S. State Departforward it’s easy to wrap your mind ment condemn it.
around.
Yet we need not venture far afield
So as to not go off on a tangent and to find multitudes living, to some
waste precious time, let’s not obsess degree, in ignorance of God. Or, as I
about that word “mysterious.” Any- suspect is more often true, people are
one who reads surely has read at least indifferent about God.
one mystery, but let us focus more on
For people such as this, God is
praising God for His love of us in Je- more-or-less irrelevant and insignifisus Christ than on trying to grasp the cant, someone or some entity whose
mystery of who, what, when, where, very existence they can deny without
why and how we might attach to Him. any penalty attached. In their denial,
Those preceding six words govern they then imagine themselves free to
the work reporters do and, if memory behave in just about any manner and
serves correctly, likewise distinguish way they choose.
the work of a good writer from that
Let’s drop back ten yards, and punt.
of a mediocre one. Attention to these Last week’s article highlighted the
guiding principles makes for a bet- recent wedding of our older daughter, more enjoyable and informative ter, which was in full conformity to
article.
the Biblical concept of what God deHowever, none of us has been called signed marriage to be — i.e., between
to “report” on God’s various activi- a man and a woman.
ties, at least not in the literal sense
God blesses those whose faith is
of that term. Rather, it is for us to say in Him, and who evidence their faith
what needs to be said, that God loves through their obedience to Him. You
those He has created, and that Jesus know the way, “trust and obey” —
died in our stead so we can be right and if not, there it is!
with our Creator.
As I write this I’m sitting in a chair.
Of course, much of the world Were I to say otherwise, or call my
couldn’t care less about our God, let chair something else, my butt is in
alone the passion, crucifixion, and this chair. Though my imagination
resurrection of Jesus Christ—which runs rampant, reality still will be what
is the story we are to tell “to the na- it is.
tions.” Strange, isn’t it, that what is
So it is with God: deny His existo us obviously Good News tends to tence, disregard His authority, even
be denounced and dismissed by whole dismiss His Word as irrelevant and
entire peoples as anathema, blasphe- out-of-date … but, still—God isn’t dimy and heresy?
minished, defeated, done away with,
Forget those who are most vocal in doesn’t stop loving His Creation.
their opposition to the Gospel, such Even so, only fools will presume upon
as Muslims, Buddhists, the Chinese
God’s goodness and mercy.
Communists, etc. You’re not likely to
Those of us who are His people, on
hear much on the national news about
the
other hand, will want to re-read
the overt harassment and persecution
Romans
1: 18-31. One crucial lesson
of Christians, because our secular mefrom
history
is this, that once a nation
dia doesn’t care to report such stuff.
embraces
homosexuality
as a norm,
So much for the old news adage —
its
end
is
inevitable.
Now
is the time
“If it bleeds, it leads.” Instead, you’ll
hear what the media moguls want you for us to get back to God; we’ve been
to hear, in a way that gets their point away too long!

Overcoming The
Legalist Within – Part 3
Last week we learned
that a legalist is anyone
who behaves as if he or she
can earn God’s approval
and forgiveness through
performance. At its heart
legalism is self-atonement
for the purpose of self-glorification and ultimately
self-worship. Many of us
can approach legalism casually but legalism is a serous trap and it is deadly.
Every day we are all
challenged and confronted by the legalist within.
Therefore, in order to defeat this sinful tendency
in our hearts, it is critical
for us to stay planted in
the full gospel and continue in the message we
began with – Jesus Christ
and Him crucified.
It is imperative to remember that our acceptance is all based on the
finished work of Christ. It
is done! As Christians we
have been forgiven, made
free, and accepted in the
beloved Christ the Lord
(Ephesians 1:6). God has
given us His Word to live
victoriously in this earth
by applying the truth
therein which removes
and defeats the lurking legalist within.
Here are three ways you

Alex Colon
Pastor

can seek to remain planted in the full gospel on a
daily basis.
First, remember the
cross as Paul reminded
the Galatians. Recognize
the tendency to be a legalist and remind yourself
of the meaning of the finished work of Christ.
Secondly, recall your
conversion. Paul asked
the believers: “Did you receive the Spirit by works
of the law or by hearing
with faith?” With this
question Paul points us
back to the foundation of
Christianity. So remind
yourself of God’s grace
and recall the time your
nature was changed when

you became a child of
God.
Thirdly, review your
hope. “Having begun by
the Spirit, are you now
being perfected by the
flesh?” (Galatians 3:3).
Remember that your hope
is not in what you will do
for God, but in what God
has done for you. You will
never be more justified,
more accepted by God
and more righteous in his
sight than you are right
now.
Our hope for each day is
not in trying to earn God’s
forgiveness or acceptance,
but our hope is in the fact
that to them that receive
the abundance of God’s
grace and of the gift of His
righteousness will reign
in life through Christ Jesus. (Romans 5:17)
There is truly a great
hope in the full gospel of
Christ. The gospel helps
us break free from legalism. The gospel takes my
eyes off myself and puts
them on God. So in your
fight against the lurking
legalist within, remember the cross, recall your
new birth and review your
hope.
Make it a Great Day!

�Friday, July 13, 2012
Friday,
2012
Friday, March
July 20,2,2012
Friday, February 24, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailysentinel.com
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WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK
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Fellowship Apostolic
FellowshipFellowship
Apostolic Apostolic

a.m.; Sunday mass, 9:30 a.m.; daily mass,
8:30 a.m.Westside Church of Christ
Church ofHome
ChristRoad,
33226 Children’s
Church
of Jesus
Jesus
Christ
Apostolic
Pomeroy.
(740) 992-3847. Sunday
Church
of
Apostolic
Church
of Christ
Church
of Christ
Jesus Christ
Apostolic
service, Church
10 a.m.;ofBible
Van
Zandt
andWard
Ward
Road.Pastor:
Pastor:
Westside
Christstudy followVan
Zandt
and
Road.
Van
Zandt
and
Ward
Road.
Pastor:
ing worship;
evening
service,
6 p.m.;
James
Miller.
Sunday
school,
10:30a.m.;
a.m.;
33226
Children’s
Home
Road,
Pomeroy.
James
Miller.
Sunday
school,
10:30
James
Miller.
Sunday
school,
10:30
Westside
Church
of Christ
Wednesday
Bible
study,
7 Pomeroy.
p.m.
evening,
7:30
p.m.
(740)
992-3847.
Sunday
service,
10
a.m.; 7:30
evening,
evening,
p.m. 7:30 p.m.
33226 Children’s Home Road,
a.m.; 992-3847.
Bible studySunday
following
worship;
(740)
service,
10 a.m.;
Hemlock
Grove
Christian
Church
evening
service,
6 p.m.;
Wednesday
River
Valley
Apostolic
Worship
Center
River
valley
Apostolic
Worship
Center Bible
River
Valley
Apostolic
Worship
Center
study
following
worship;
evening
Worship,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
school,
Bible
study,
7
p.m.
873
South
Third
Ave.,
Middleport.
873
South
Third
Ave.,
Middleport.
873 South Third Ave., Middleport. Pastor:
service, a.m.;
6 p.m.;Bible
Wednesday
study,
study,Bible
7 p.m.
Pastor:
Rev.
Michael
Bradford.
Sunday,
Pastor:
Rev.
Michael
Bradford.
Sun- 710:30
Rev.
Michael
Bradford.
Sunday,
10:30
p.m.
10:30
a.m.;
6:30Wednesday
p.m.;6:30 p.m.;
Hemlock Grove Christian Church
day,
10:30Tuesday,
a.m.;p.m.;
Tuesday,
a.m.;
Tuesday,
6:30
Christ
Wednesday
study,
7 p.m.7 p.m.
Worship,Pomeroy
9:30 a.m.;Church
Sundayofschool,
Wednesday
Bible
study,
Bible
study, 7Bible
p.m.
Hemlock
Grove
Church
212 West
MainChristian
Street.
Sunday
10:30
a.m.; Bible
study,
7 p.m.
Worship,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
school,
10:30
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
Emmanuel
Apostolic
Tabernacle,
Emmanuel
Apostolic
Tabernacle,
Inc. Inc.
Emmanuel
Apostolic
Tabernacle,
Inc.
a.m.
a.m. andChurch
6 p.m.;
services,
Loop
Road
Loop
Road
off off
NewNew
LimaLima
Road,Road,
Pomeroy
ofWednesday
Christ
7 p.m.
Loop
Road offPastor:
New Lima
Road,
Rutland.
Marty
R. Rutland.
Hutton.
Rutland.
Pastor: Marty
R. Hutton.
212 West Main Street. Sunday school,
Pastor:
Marty
R. Hutton.
services,
Pomeroy
Church
Christ
Sunday
services,
10Sunday
a.m.
and
7:30
Sunday
services,
10 a.m.
and 7:30
p.m.;
9:30 a.m.;
worship,ofChurch
10:30
a.m.
and
6
Middleport
of school,
Christ
10Thursday,
a.m.
and
7:30
p.m.;
Thursday,
7
p.m.
212
West
Main Street.
Sunday
p.m.; Thursday,
7 p.m. 7 p.m.
p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
Fifth
andworship,
Main Street.
Pastor:
9:30
a.m.;
10:30 a.m.
and 6Al
Harston.
Children’s
Director:
Assembly of Assembly
God
p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
7 p.m. Doug
of God
Middleport
of Christ
Shamblin.Church
Teen Director:
Dodger
Fifth
and
Main
Street.
Pastor:
Al a.m.;
Vaughan. Church
Sundayofschool,
9:30
Liberty
of
Middleport
ChristDoug
Liberty Assembly
Harston.
Children’s
Director:
LibertyAssembly
Assembly
of God
God of God
worship,
8:15Street.
a.m.,Pastor:
10:30 Al
a.m.,
7
Dudding
Lane,
Mason,
W.Va.
Pastor:
Fifth
and
Main
Harston.
Dudding
Lane,
Mason,
W.Va.
Pastor:
Shamblin.
Teen Director:
Dodger
Dudding Lane, Mason, W.Va. Pastor:
p.m.; Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
Neil
Tennant.
Sunday
services,
Neil
Tennant.
Sunday
services,
1010a.m.
Children’s
Director:
Doug
Shamblin.
Vaughan. Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Neil
Tennant.
Sunday
services,
a.m.
10
a.m.
and
7 7p.m.
Teen
Director:
Dodger
Vaughan.
worship,
8:15 a.m.,
10:30
a.m., 7Sunday
p.m.;
and
p.m. and 7 p.m.
school,
9:30 services,
a.m.; worship,
Wednesday
7 p.m.8:15 a.m.,
Baptist
10:30 a.m.,Keno
7 p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
Baptist
Church
of Christ
7Keno
p.m. Church
Pastor:
Jeffrey
Wallace. First and
of Christ
Pageville
Freewill
Baptist
Pageville
Freewill
Baptist
ChurchChurch
Third Jeffrey
Sunday.
Worship,
a.m.;
Pastor:
Wallace.
First9:30
and Third
Pageville
Freewill
Baptist
Church
Pastor:
Floyd
Ross.
Sunday
school, Keno
Pastor:
Floyd
Ross.
Sunday
school,
Church
of
Christ
SundayWorship,
school,9:30
10:30
a.m.
Sunday.
a.m.;
Sunday
Pastor:
Floyd Ross.
Sunday
school,
9:30-10:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30-11
9:30-10:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30-11
a.m.;
Pastor:
Jeffrey
Wallace.
First
and
Third
school, 10:30 a.m.
9:30-10:30
a.m.; worship,
10:30-116a.m.;
a.m.; Wednesday
preaching,
p.m. Sunday.
Wednesday
Worship,Ridge
9:30 a.m.;
Sunday
Bearwallow
Church
of Christ
Wednesdaypreaching,
preaching,6 6p.m.
p.m.
school,
10:30
a.m.
Pastor:
Bruce
Terry.
Sunday
school,
Bearwallow
Ridge
Church
of Christ
Carpenter
Independent
Baptist
Church
Carpenter
Baptist
Church
9:30 a.m.;
10:30school,
a.m. and
Pastor:
Bruceworship,
Terry. Sunday
9:30
Carpenter
Independent
Church
SundayIndependent
school, 9:30Baptist
a.m.; preaching
6:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
preaching
Bearwallow
Ridge
Church
of
Christ
worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.;
Sunday
school,
a.m.;
preaching
service,
10:309:30
a.m.;
evening
service, a.m.;
6:30
p.m.
service,
10:30
a.m.;
evening
service,
7
Pastor:
Bruce
Terry.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Wednesday services, 6:30 p.m.
service,
a.m.; evening
7 p.m.;10:30
Wednesday
Bibleservice, 7
p.m.;
Wednesday
a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.;
p.m.;
Wednesday
Biblestudy,
study,7 7p.m.
p.m.
study,
7 p.m.Bible
Zion
Church
Christ
Wednesday
services,
6:30ofp.m.
Zion Church
of Christ
Harrisonville
Road,
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Cheshire
Church
Cheshire
Baptist Church
Harrisonville
Road,
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
CheshireBaptist
Baptist
Church
Roger
Watson.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Pastor:
Steve
Little.
(740)
367-7801,
Church
ofSunday
Christ
Pastor:
Steve
Little.
(740)
367-7801, Zion
Roger
Watson.
school,
9:30
Pastor:
Steve
Little.
(740)
367-7801,
a.m.; worship,
10:30 a.m. Pastor:
and 7 p.m.;
(740)
992-7542
oror(740)
645-2527.
(740)
992-7542
or (740)
645-2527. Harrisonville
a.m.;
worship,Road,
10:30Pomeroy.
a.m.7and
7 p.m.;
(740)
992-7542
(740)
645-2527.
Wednesday
services,
p.m.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
morning Roger
Watson.
Sunday7 school,
Wednesday
services,
p.m. 9:30
Sunday
school,
9:30a.m.;
a.m.;morning
morning
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
youth
and Bible a.m.; Tuppers
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
youth
and
worship, Plains
10:30 a.m.
and 7ofp.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
youth
andBible
Bible
Church
Christ
buddies,
6:30
p.m.;
choir
practice,
buddies,
6:30
p.m.;
choir
practice,
7:30
Wednesday
services,
p.m.
Tuppers
Plains
Church
of Christ
buddies,
6:30
p.m.;
choir
practice,
7:30
Worship
service,
97 a.m.;
communion,
7:30
p.m.;
Ladies
of
Grace,
7
p.m.,
p.m.;
Worship
service,
9 a.m.;
communion,
10
p.m.;Ladies
LadiesofofGrace,
Grace,77p.m.,
p.m.,second
second
10
a.m.;
Sunday
school,
10:15
a.m.;
secondMen’s
Monday;
Men’s77Fellowship,
Monday;
Fellowship,
p.m.,
Plains
Church
of Christ
a.m.;
Sunday
10:15
a.m.; youth,
Monday;
Men’s
Fellowship,
p.m.,third
third 7 Tuppers
youth,
5:50school,
p.m.;
Wednesday
Bible
p.m.,
third
Tuesday.
Tuesday.
Worship
service,
9
a.m.;
communion,
10
5:50
p.m.;
Wednesday Bible study, 7
Tuesday.
study,
7 p.m.
a.m.;
p.m. Sunday school, 10:15 a.m.; youth,
Hope
Baptist
(Southern)
Hope
Church
(Southern)
5:50 p.m.;
Wednesday
Bibleofstudy,
7 p.m.
HopeBaptist
Baptist
ChurchChurch
Bradbury
Church
Christ
570
Grant
Street,
Middleport.
Pas570
Grant
Street,
Middleport.
Pastor:
Church ofRoad,
Christ Middleport.
570
Grant
Street,
Middleport.
Pastor:9:30 Bradbury
39558 Bradbury
tor:
Gary
Ellis.
Sunday
school,
Gary
Ellis.
Sunday
Bradbury
Church
of
Christ
Minister:
Justin
Roush.
Sunday
39558
Bradbury
Road,
Middleport.
Gary
Ellis.
Sundayschool,
school,
9:30
a.m.;
a.m.;
worship,
11
a.m.9:30
anda.m.;
6 p.m.;
worship,
1111a.m.
6 6p.m.;
39558
Bradbury
Road,
Middleport.
school,
9:30
worship,
Minister:
Justina.m.;
Roush.
Sunday10:30
school,
worship,
a.m.and
p.m.;Wednesday,
Wednesday,
Wednesday,
7and
p.m.
a.m.a.m.;Justin
7 7p.m.
Minister:
Roush.
Sunday
9:30
worship,
10:30
a.m. school,
p.m.
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
Rutland First Baptist Church
Rutland
First
Baptist
Church
Rutland Rutland
Church ofChurch
Christ of Christ
Rutland
First
Church
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.; worship,
Minister:
David
Sunday
Sunday
Rutland
Church
ofWiseman.
Christ Sunday
Minister:
David
Wiseman.
Sunday
school,
9:30a.m.;
a.m.;worship,
worship,10:45
10:45school,
a.m. 9:30
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship
coma.m.
school, 9:30
a.m.;
worship
and andschool,
10:45 a.m.
Minister:
David
Wiseman.
Sunday
munion,
10:30
communion,
10:30a.m.
a.m.communion,
9:30
a.m.; worship
and
Pomeroy First Baptist
Pomeroy
First
Baptist
Pomeroy
FirstStreet,
Baptist Pomeroy. Pastor: 10:30 a.m.
East Main
Bradford
Bradford
Church ofChurch
Christ of Christ
East
Main
Street,
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
East
Main
Street,
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Jon
Jon
Brocket.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Ohio124
124
and
Bradbury
Road.
MinOhio
and
Bradbury
Road.
Minister:
Jon
Brocket.
Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.;
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
Brocket.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Bradford
Church
of Christ
ister:
Russ
Moore.
Sunday
school,
Russ
Moore.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,10:30
10:30a.m.
a.m.
worship,
Ohio
124
and
Bradbury
Road.
Minister:
9:30 a.m.;
worship,
8 a.m.
and 10:30
First Southern Baptist
worship,
8 a.m.
and
10:30
a.m.;
Russ
Moore.
Sunday
school,
9:30Sunday
a.m.;
a.m.;
Sunday
evening
service,
6 p.m.;
41872
Pomeroy
Pike. Pastor: David worship,
evening
service,
6 p.m.;
Wednesday
First
Southern
Baptist
First
Southern
Baptist
8 a.m.adult
and
10:30
a.m.;
Sunday
Wednesday
Bible
study
and
Brainard.
Sunday
school,
9:30
adult
Bible
study
and
youth
meeting,
41872
Pomeroy
Pike.Pastor:
Pastor:
David
41872
Pomeroy
Pike.
David
evening
service,
6
p.m.;
Wednesday
adult
youth meeting, 6:30 p.m.
a.m.; worship,
9:45 a.m.
and
7 p.m.; Bible
6:30 p.m.
Brainard.
Sundayschool,
school,
9:30a.m.;
a.m.;
Brainard.
Sunday
9:30
study and youth meeting, 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
worship,9:45
9:45a.m.
a.m.and
and7 7p.m.;
p.m.;
worship,
Hickory Hills Church of Christ
Hickory
Church
ofofChrist
Wednesday,7 7p.m.
p.m.
Wednesday,
Hickory
Hills
Church
Christ
TuppersHills
Plains.
Pastor:
Mike Moore.
First
Baptist
Church
Tuppers
Plains.
Pastor:
MikeMoore.
Moore.
First
Baptist
Church
First Baptist Church
Plains.
Mike
Bible class,
9 Pastor:
a.m.;
Sunday
worship,
Sixth
Palmer
Street,
Middleport. Tuppers
Bible
class,
9
a.m.;
Sunday
worship, 10
10
Sixth
andand
Palmer
Street,
Middleport.
Sixth
and
Palmer
Street,
Middleport.
Bible
class,
9
a.m.;
Sunday
worship,
10 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.; Wednesday
Pastor:
Billy
Zuspan.
Sunday
school,
a.m.
and
6:30p.m.;
p.m.;
WednesdayBible
Bible
Pastor:Billy
BillyZuspan.
Zuspan.Sunday
Sundayschool,
school,9:15
Pastor:
Bible
class,
7
p.m.
a.m.
and
6:30
Wednesday
9:15
a.m.;
worship,
10:15
a.m.
and
7
class, 77 p.m.
p.m.
9:15worship,
a.m.; worship,
10:15and
a.m.
and 7
a.m.;
10:15 a.m.
7 p.m.;
class,
p.m.;
Wednesday,
7 p.m.
p.m.;
Wednesday,
Reedsville Church of Christ
Wednesday,
7 p.m. 7 p.m.
Reedsville
Church
ofofChrist
Pastor:
Colgrove.
Sunday
ReedsvilleJack
Church
Christ
Racine First Baptist
school,
9:30
a.m.; worship
service,
Pastor:
Jack
Colgrove.
Sundayschool,
school,
Racine
First
Baptist
Racine
First
Baptist
Jack
Colgrove.
Sunday
Pastor:
Ryan
Eaton. Sunday school, Pastor:
10:30
a.m.;
Wednesday
Biblea.m.;
study,
9:30
a.m.;
worship
service, 10:30
10:30
a.m.;
Pastor:
RyanEaton.
Eaton.
Sunday
school,
9:30 6 9:30
Pastor:
Sunday
school,
a.m.;
worship
service,
9:30Ryan
a.m.;
worship,
10:40
a.m.9:30
and
6:30 p.m. Bible
Wednesday
Bible study,
study, 6:30
6:30 p.m.
p.m.
a.m.;
worship,
10:40a.m.
a.m.
and6 6p.m.;
p.m.;
a.m.;
worship,
10:40
and
Wednesday
p.m.;
Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Wednesday,7 7p.m.
p.m.
Wednesday,
Dexterof
Dexter Church
Church
Christ
Silver Run Baptist
Dexter
ofChurch
Christof Christ
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
Silver
Run
Baptist
Pastor:
Swanson. Sunday
Silver
Run John
Baptist
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
worship,
10:30
a.m.
worship,
10:30
a.m.
Pastor:
John
Swanson.
Sundayschool,
school,
school,
10
a.m.; evening,
6:30
p.m.; worship,
Pastor:
John
Swanson.
Sunday
10:30
a.m.
a.m.;evening,
evening,
6:30p.m.;
p.m.;
Wednesday
Wednesday
services,
6:30
p.m.
1010a.m.;
6:30
Wednesday
of of
Christ
of Pomeroy
services,6:30
6:30p.m.
p.m.
ChurchChurch
of
Christ
Pomeroy
services,
Church
ofand
Christ
of
Pomeroy
Ohio7 7and
124
West.
Evangelist
Ohio
124
West.
Evangelist
Dennis
Mount Union Baptist
Ohio
7
and
124
West.
Evangelist
Dennis
Dennis Sunday
Sargent.
Sunday
Bible
study,
Pastor:
Dennis
Weaver. Sunday
Sargent.
Bible
study,9:30
9:30a.m.;
Mount
Union
Baptist
Mount
Union
Baptist
Sargent.
Sunday
Bible
study,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.a.m.;
and
school,
9:45
a.m.;
evening,
6:30
p.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
and
6:30
p.m.;
Pastor:
Dennis
Weaver.
Sunday
Pastor: Dennis Weaver. Sunday school,
worship,
10:30
a.m. and 6:30
p.m.;
6:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
Bible
study,
Wednesday
services,
6:30
p.m.
Wednesday
Bible study,
study, 77 p.m.
p.m.
school,
a.m.;
evening,
6:30
p.m.;
9:45
a.m.;9:45
evening,
6:30 p.m.;
Wednesday
Wednesday
7 p.m. Bible
Wednesday
6:30 p.m.
services,
6:30services,
p.m.
Bethlehem
Baptist Church
Christian Union
Great Bend,
Route
124, Racine. Sun- Christian Union
Bethlehem
Baptist
Church
Bethlehem
Baptist
day Bend,
school,
9:30Church
a.m.,
worship,
10:30 Hartford
Great
Route
124,
Racine.
Sunday
Church
ofofChrist
Christ
Hartford Church
Church of
ininChristian
Union
Great
Bend,
Route 124,Bible
Racine.
Sunday
Christ
inChristian
Christian
a.m.;
Wednesday
study,
7 p.m. Hartford
school,
9:30
a.m.,worship,
worship,10:30
10:30
a.m.;
Union
Hartford, W.Va. Pastor: Mike
school,
9:30
a.m.,
a.m.;
Union
Wednesday
Bible
study,
7
p.m.
Hartford,
W.Va.
Pastor:
Mike
Puckett.
Puckett.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Wednesday
BibleFree
study,Will
7 p.m.
W.Va. Pastor: Mike Puckett.
Old Bethel
Baptist Church Hartford,
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
worship,
10:30
a.m.
and
7 p.m.;10:30
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
28601
Ohio
Middleport.
Sunday Sunday
a.m.
and77p.m.;
p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
Old
Bethel
Free 7,
Will
Baptist Church
Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
Old
Bethel
Free
Will
Baptist
Church
a.m.
and
Wednesday
services,
service,
10
a.m.
and
6
p.m.;
Tuesday
7
p.m.
28601
Ohio
7,
Middleport.
Sunday
28601
Ohio 7,6 Middleport.
Sunday
7 p.m.
services,
p.m.
service,1010a.m.
a.m.and
and6 6p.m.;
p.m.;Tuesday
Tuesday
service,
services,
6
p.m.
Church of God
Hillside
Baptist
Church
services, 6 p.m.
Special
services
every
Church of God
Mount Moriah Church of God
Ohio night,
143 just
offCall
of Ohio
7. Pastor:
Saturday
6 p.m.
for more
info,
Mile
Hill
Road,
Racine.
Pastor:
Hillside
Baptist
Mount Moriah Church
of God
rev.388-8075.
James
R.Church
Acree, Sr. Sunday uni- Mount
(740)
Moriah Church
of God
James
eld. Sunday
Ohio
just off
of Ohio 7.10:30
Pastor:
Mile
HillSatterfi
Road, Racine.
Pastor:school,
James
fied143
service.
Worship,
a.m. and Mile
Hill
Road,
Racine.
Pastor:
James
9:45 a.m.;Sunday
evening
service,
p.m.;
rev.
James
R. Acree,
Sr. services,
Sunday unified
Satterfield.
school,
9:456a.m.;
6 p.m.;
Wednesday
7 p.m. Satterfield.
Hillside
Baptist
Church
Sunday
school,
9:45
a.m.;
Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
service. Worship, 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
evening
service,
6 p.m.; Wednesday
Ohio 143 just off of Ohio 7. Pastor:
evening
service,
6
p.m.;
Wednesday
Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
services, 7 p.m.
Victory
Baptist
Independent
rev. James
R. Acree,
Sr. Sunday
unified
services, 7Rutland
p.m.
Church of God
525 North
Second
Street,
service.
Worship,
10:30 a.m.
and Middle6 p.m.;
Pastor:Church
Larry Shreffl
Victory
Baptist
Independent
Rutland
of God er. Sunday worport. Pastor:
James
E. Keesee. Wor- Rutland
Wednesday
services,
7
p.m.
Church
of
ship, 10
a.m.Shreffler.
and God
6 p.m.;
Wednesday
525
North
Street,
Middleport.
Pastor:
Larry
Sunday
worship,
ship,
10 Second
a.m. and
7 p.m.;
Wednesday Pastor:
Shreffler.
Sunday worship,
services,
Pastor:
James
E. Keesee. Worship, 10
10
a.m.Larry
and7 6p.m.
p.m.; Wednesday
services,
services,
7
p.m.
Victory
Baptist
Independent
10
a.m.
and
6
p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Wednesday services,
7 p.m.
Syracuse
First
Church
of
God
525
North
Second
Street,
Middleport.
7
p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
7 p.m.
Apple and
Second
Streets.
Pastor:
Pastor:
JamesStreet,
E. Keesee.
Worship,
10
Railroad
Mason.
Sunday
Syracuse
FirstRussell.
Church of
God school
Rev.
David
Sunday
a.m.
and
7 p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
Church
of God
school,
10 Church
a.m.;
worship,
11 a.m. and Syracuse
Faith
Baptist
Apple
andFirst
Second
Streets.
Pastor: serand worship,
10Streets.
a.m.; evening
7 Railroad
p.m.
and Second
Rev.
6 p.m.;Street,
Wednesday
7 p.m. Apple
Mason.services,
Sunday school,
Rev.
David
SundayPastor:
schoolservices,
and
vices,
6:30Russell.
p.m.;
Wednesday
David
Russell.
Sunday
school
and 6:30
10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.;
worship,
10 a.m.; evening services,
6:30
p.m.
Faith
Baptist
Church
worship,
10
a.m.;
evening
services,
6:30
Forest
Run
Baptist
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
p.m.; Wednesday services, 6:30 p.m.
Railroad
Street,Pastor:
Mason.Rev.
Sunday
school,
services, 6:30 p.m.
Pomeroy.
Joseph
Woods. p.m.; Wednesday
Church
of
God
of
Prophecy
10Forest
a.m.;
worship,
11 a.m.
and 6worship,
p.m.;
Sunday
school,
10 a.m.;
Run
Baptist
Church
of God
of Prophecy
O.J. White
Road
off Ohio 160. Pas11:30 a.m.
Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
Church
God
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Rev.
Joseph Woods.
O.J.
White
RoadofoffProphecy
Ohio
160. Pastor:
tor:White
P.J.ofChapman.
Sunday
school, 10
O.J.
Road
off
Ohio
160.
Pastor:
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11:30
P.J.
Chapman.
Sunday
school,
10
a.m.;
a.m.;
worship,
11
a.m.;
Wednesday
Mount
Moriah
Baptist
Forest
Run
Baptist
P.J.
Chapman.
Sunday
school,
10
a.m.;
a.m.
worship,
services,117 a.m.;
p.m.Wednesday services,
FourthPastor:
and Main
Street,Woods.
Middleport. worship,
Pomeroy.
Rev. Joseph
11
a.m.;
Wednesday
services,
7 p.m.
Pastor:
Rev. Michael
A. Thompson,
Sunday
school,
a.m.; worship,
11:30
7 p.m.
Mount
Moriah10
Baptist
Sr. Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.; wora.m.
Fourth
and
Main
Street,
Middleport.
Congregational
ship, 10:45 a.m.
Congregational
Trinity Church
Pastor: Rev. Michael A. Thompson,
Mount
Moriah
Baptist
SecondChurch
and Lynn Streets, Pomeroy.
Sr. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.;
worship,
Trinity
Antiquity
Baptist
Fourth
and
Main
Street,
Middleport.
Trinity
Church
Pastor:
Rev.
Tom
Johnson.
Worship,
10:45
a.m.Don Walker. Sunday school,
Second and Lynn
Streets,
Pomeroy.
Pastor
Pastor:
Michael
A. Thompson,
Sr.Sun- Second
Pomeroy.
10:25 and
a.m.
Pastor:
Rev.Lynn
Tom Streets,
Johnson.
Worship,
9:30Rev.
a.m.;
worship,
10:45 a.m.;
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.; worship, 10:45
Pastor:
Rev. Tom Johnson. Worship,
Antiquity
Baptist
10:25 a.m.
day evening,
6 p.m.
a.m.
10:25 a.m.
Pastor Don Walker. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m.;Rutland
worship,Freewill
10:45 a.m.;
Sunday
Episcopal
Baptist
Antiquity
EpiscopalGrace Episcopal Church
evening,
p.m. Rutland. Sunday
Salem 6Baptist
Street,
326 East
MainChurch
Street, Pomeroy. Rev.
Pastor
Don 10
Walker.
school,
Episcopal
school,
a.m.;Sunday
worship,
11:30 a.m Grace
Leslie
Flemming.
Holy
Eucharist,
9:30
a.m.;6Freewill
worship,
10:45 a.m.; services,
Sunday
Grace
Episcopal
Church
. and
p.m.; Wednesday
Rutland
Baptist
326
East
Main Street,
Pomeroy.
Rev.
11:30
a.m.;
Wednesday,
5:30Rev.
p.m.
evening,
6 p.m. Rutland. Sunday school,
326
East
Main Street,
Pomeroy.
6 p.m.
Salem
Street,
Leslie
Flemming.
Holy
Eucharist,
11:30
Leslie
Flemming. Holy
Eucharist, 11:30
10 a.m.; worship, 11:30 a.m . and 6
a.m.; Wednesday,
5:30 p.m.
Second
Baptist
Church
Rutland
Freewill
Baptist
a.m.; Wednesday, 5:30 p.m.
p.m.; Youth meeting, Sunday, 7 p.m.;
Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Sunday
school,
Salem
Street, services,
Rutland.
school,
Wednesday
7Sunday
p.m.
HolinessChurch
Community
10 a.m.;
worship,
10 a.m.;
worship,
11:3011
a.ma.m.;
. andevening,
6 p.m.; 7 Holiness
Main Street, Rutland. Pastor: Steve
p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Wednesday
services,
6 p.m.
Second
Baptist
Church
Community
Church
Tomek. Sunday worship, 10 a.m.;
Community
Church
Ravenswood, W.Va. Sunday school, 10
Main
Street,
Rutland.
Pastor: Steve
Sunday
services,
7 p.m.
First
Baptist11
Church
of Mason,
W.Va. Main
Second
Baptist
Church
Street,
Rutland.
Pastor:
Steve
a.m.;
worship,
a.m.; evening,
7 p.m.;
Tomek.
Sunday
worship,
10 a.m.;
W.Va.
Route
652
and
Anderson
Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Sunday
school,
10
Tomek.
Sunday
worship,
Sunday
Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Sunday services,
p.m. 10 a.m.;
Danville7Holiness
Church
Street.
Pastor:
Robert
Grady.
Sunday services,
a.m.;
worship,
11 a.m.;
evening,
7 p.m.;
7
p.m.
31057 Ohio 325, Langsville. Pastor:
school,
10
a.m.;
morning
church,
11
Wednesday,
7 p.m.
First
Baptist
Church
of Mason,
W.Va.
Danville
Holiness
Churchschool, 9:30
Brian Bailey.
Sunday
a.m.;
evening,
6 p.m.;
Wednesday
Danville
Holiness
Church 10:30
W.Va.
Route
6527and
Anderson Street.
31057
325,worship,
Langsville.
Pastor:
a.m.; Ohio
Sunday
a.m.
Bible
study,
p.m.
First
Baptist
Church
Mason,
W.Va.10
and 7Bailey.
p.m.;
Wednesday
Pastor:
Robert
Grady.ofSunday
school,
31057
Ohio
325,
Langsville.
Pastor:
Brian
Sunday
school,prayer
9:30 a.m.;
service,
7 p.m.
W.Va.
652church,
and Anderson
a.m.; Route
morning
11 a.m.;Street.
evening,
Sunday
worship,
10:30
a.m. and
p.m.;
Brian
Bailey.
Sunday
school,
9:307a.m.;
Pastor:
Grady.Bible
Sunday
school,
10
6 p.m.;Robert
Wednesday
study,
7 p.m.
Wednesday
prayer
service,
p.m.
Sunday
worship,
10:30
a.m.7and
7 p.m.;
Calvary
Pilgrim
Chapel
a.m.; morning
church,
11
a.m.;
evening,
6
Wednesday
prayer
service,
7
p.m.
Sacred Heart Catholic Church
Harrisonville
Road. Pastor: Charles
Catholic
Pilgrim Chapel
p.m.;
Wednesday
Bible
study,
7 p.m. Pastor: Calvary
161
Mulberry
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
McKenzie.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Harrisonville
Road.
Pastor:
Charles
Calvary
Pilgrim
Chapel
Rev. Walter E. Heinz. (740) 992a.m.;
worship,
11school,
a.m. and
7a.m.;
p.m.;
Sacred
Catholic
Church
McKenzie. Sunday
9:30
Catholic
Harrisonville
Road.
Pastor:
Charles
5898.Heart
Saturday
confessional
4:45Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.
161
Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy.
Pastor:
worship,
11Sunday
a.m.
and
7 p.m.;
Wednesday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
5:15
p.m.; mass,
5:30 p.m.;
Sunday McKenzie.
Rev.
Tim
Kozak.
(740) Church
992-5898.
service, 711p.m.
Sacred
Heart
Catholic
confessional,
8:45-9:15
a.m.; Sunday worship,
and 7 p.m.; Wednesday
Rose
ofa.m.
Sharon
Holiness Church
Saturday
confessional
4:45-5:15
p.m.;
mass,
9:30
a.m.;Pomeroy.
daily
mass,
8:30
a.m. service,
161
Mulberry
Ave.,
Pastor:
Rev.
7 p.m.
Leading
Creek
Road, Rutland.
mass,
5:30 (740)
p.m.; Sunday
confessional,
Rose of Sharon Holiness
Church
Tim
Kozak.
992-5898.
Saturday
Pastor: Creek
Rev. Dewey
King.
Sunday
8:45-9:15 a.m.;
Sundayp.m.;
mass,
9:305:30
a.m.;
Leading
Road,
Rutland.
Pastor:
confessional
4:45-5:15
mass,
Rose
of Sharon
Holiness
Church
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
worship,
dailySunday
mass, 8:30
a.m.
Rev. Dewey
King.
Sunday
school,
p.m.;
confessional,
8:45-9:15
Leading
Creek
Road,
Rutland.
Pastor:

Fellowship Apostolic

Assembly of God

Baptist

Christian Union

Church of God

Congregational

Episcopal

Holiness

Catholic

Church of Christ

Rev. Dewey King. Sunday school, 9:30

a.m.;
Sunday
worship,
7 p.m.;
79:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
prayer
meeting,
Morning Star
a.m.;
Sunday
worship,
7 p.m.;
Wednesday Morning
MorningStar
Star
prayer
meeting, 7 p.m.
Pastor:
Arland
school,
11
7Wednesday
p.m. meeting,
Pastor:
King.
Sunday
school,
prayer
7 p.m.
Pastor:Arland
ArlandKing.
King.Sunday
Sunday
school,
11
a.m.;
worship,
10
11
a.m.;
worship,
10
a.m.;
worship,
10a.m.
a.m.a.m.
Pine
Grove
Bible
Holiness
Church
Pine
Grove
Bible
Holiness
Church
Pine
Grove
Bible
Holiness
Church
One
halfmile
mile
off
of
Ohio
325.
East Letart
One
off
325.
Sunday
East
One half
half mile
offof
ofOhio
Ohio
325.
Sunday
EastLetart
Letart
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
Pastor:
Bill
Marshall.Sunday
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
Pastor:
Bill
Marshall.
school,
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
Pastor:
Bill
Marshall.
Sunday
school,
10:30
a.m. Wednesday
and 6 p.m.;service,
Wednesday
school,
9worship,
a.m.; worship,
10 a.m.;
and
66 p.m.;
77 p.m.
99a.m.;
10
a.m.;
First
Sunday
and
p.m.;
Wednesday
service,
p.m.
a.m.;
worship,
10
a.m.;
First
Sunday
service, 7 p.m.
First
Sunday
evening
service,
7 p.m.;
evening
service,
7
p.m.;
Wednesday,
evening service,
7 p.m.; Wednesday, 7
Wednesday,
7 p.m.
7
p.m.
Wesleyan
Bible
Holiness
Church
Wesleyan
Bible
Holiness
Church
p.m.
Wesleyan
Bible
Holiness
Church
75 Pearl Street, Middleport. Pastor:
75 Pearl
Pearl Street,
Middleport. Pastor:
75
Pas-Doug Racine
Racine
Doug
Cox.Street,
SundayMiddleport.
school, 10 a.m.;
Cox.Doug
Sunday
school,
10 a.m.;
worship,
Racine
tor:
Cox.
Sunday
school,
10 6
Pastor:
Rev.
Marshall.
worship,
10:45
a.m.;
Sunday
evening,
Pastor:
Rev. William
William Marshall.
Sunday
10:45
a.m.;
Sunday
evening,
6
p.m.;
Pastor:
Rev.
William
Marshall.
a.m.;
worship,
10:45
a.m.;
Sunday
Sunday
school,
10 a.m.;
worship,
11
p.m.; Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
school, 10 a.m.; worship,
11
a.m.;Sunday
Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.
school,
10
a.m.;
worship,
11
a.m.;
evening,
6 p.m.;
Wednesday
service, a.m.;
Wednesday
services,
6
p.m.;
Wednesday services, 6 p.m.; Thursday
7Hysell
p.m.Run Community Church
Thursday
Bible
study,
7 p.m.
Wednesday
6 p.m.;
Thursday
Bible
study,
7services,
p.m.

7:30 p.m.

Faith
Valley
Tabernacle
Church
Faith
Valley
Tabernacle
Church
Bailey
Run
Road.
Pastor:
Emmett
Bailey
Run
Road.
Pastor:Rev.
Rev.
EmFaith
Valley
Tabernacle
Church
Rawson.
Sunday
evening,
7 Rev.
p.m.;Emmett
mett
Rawson.
Sunday
evening,
7
Bailey
Run
Road.
Pastor:
p.m.;
Thursday
service,
Thursday
service,
7evening,
p.m.7 p.m.
Rawson.
Sunday
7 p.m.;

Thursday service, Mission
7 p.m.
Syracuse Syracuse
Mission
1411
Bridgeman
Street,Syracuse.
Syracuse.
1411
Bridgeman
Street,
Syracuse
Mission
Pastor:
Rev.
Sunday
Pastor:
Rev.Roy
Roy Thompson.
Thompson.
Sunday
141110
Bridgeman
Street, Syracuse.
school,
a.m.;
evening,
p.m.; Pastor:
school,
10 a.m.;
evening,Sunday
66p.m.;
Rev. Roy
Thompson.
school, 10
Wednesday
service,
7
p.m.
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

a.m.; evening, 6 p.m.; Wednesday service,
7 p.m.
Community
HazelHazel
Community
ChurchChurch
Off
Pastor:Edsel
EdselHart.
Hart.
Offroute
route 124.
124. Pastor:
Hazel
Community
Church
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
worship,
Offa.m.
route
124.
Pastor:
Sunday
10:30
and
7:30
p.m.Edsel Hart.10:30
a.m.
and
7:30
p.m.
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
Hysell Run
Community
Church
Bible study, 7 p.m.
Pastor:
Rev.
Larry
Lemley.
Sunday
Hysell
Run
Community
Church
Coolville
United
Methodist
Church
Dyesville
Community
Church
and
7:30
p.m.
Pastor:
Rev.
Larry
Lemley.
Sunday
school, 9:30
worship,
10:45
a.m.
Coolville
Methodist
Church
Dyesville
Community
Church
Pastor:
Rev.a.m.;
Larry
Lemley.
Sunday
Main
andUnited
Fifth
Street.
Pastor:
Helen Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.;
worship,
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:45
a.m.
Coolville
United
Methodist
Church
and
7 p.m.;
Bible study
and
Main
and
Fifth
Street.
Pastor:
Helen
Sunday
school,
a.m.; worship, 10:30
school,
9:30Thursday
a.m.; worship,
10:45
Kline.
Sunday
school,
10 a.m.;
wor10:30
a.m.
and
79:30
p.m.
Dyesville
Community
Church
and
7
p.m.;
Thursday
Bible
study
and
Main
and
Fifth
Street.
Pastor:
Helen
youth,and
7 p.m.
Kline.9 Sunday
school, 10
a.m.; worship,
a.m. and 7 p.m.
a.m.
7
p.m.;
Thursday
Bible
ship,
a.m.;
Tuesday
services,
7
p.m.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
youth, 7 p.m.
Sunday school,
107a.m.;
9Kline.
a.m.; Tuesday
services,
p.m. worship, 9
study and youth, 7 p.m.
Morse
Chapel Church
a.m. and
7 p.m.
a.m.; Tuesday services, 7 p.m.
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
Morse
Chapel
Bethel
Church
Sunday
school,Church
10 a.m.; worship, 11
Laurel Glen
Cliff McClung.
Free Methodist
Church
Pastor:
Sunday
school,
Bethel
Church
Sunday
school,
10service,
a.m.; worship,
LaurelGlen
CliffMcClung.
Free Methodist
Church
Township
Road 468C. Pastor:
a.m.;
Wednesday
p.m.11
Morse
Chapel service,
Church 77p.m.
Pastor:
Sunday
school,
Bethel Church
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
and
6
Township
Road
468C.school,
Pastor: 9Phillip
a.m.;
Wednesday
Pastor:
Glen
McClung.
Sunday
Phillip
Bell.
Sunday
a.m.;
Sunday
school,
10
a.m.;
worship,
11 a.m.;
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
and
6
Township
Road
468C.
Pastor:
Phillip
p.m.; Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.
Bell. Sunday
school,
school,
9:30 a.m.;
worship,
10:30
worship,
10:30
a.m.9 a.m.; worship,
Faith service,
Gospel Church
Wednesday
p.m. 9:30
p.m.;and
Wednesday
7 p.m.service,
Bell. a.m.
Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship,
10:30
Faith
Gospel Church
a.m.
6 p.m.; service,
Wednesday
Long
Bottom.
Sunday7 school,
10:30 a.m.
Latter-Day Saints
Long
Bottom. 10:45
Sundaya.m.
school,
7 p.m.
Hockingport Church
a.m.;
worship,
and9:30
7:30
Faith
Gospel10:45
Church
Latter-Day Saints
Hockingport
Church
a.m.;
worship,
a.m.
and 7:30 p.m.;
Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.; worship,
p.m.;
Wednesday,
7:30
p.m.
Long Bottom.
Hockingport
10:30
a.m.
Sunday
school, Church
9:30 a.m.; worship,
Wednesday,
7:30Sunday
p.m. school, 9:30
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
a.m.;Full
worship,
10:45
a.m. and 7:30 p.m.;
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day
Gospel
Lighthouse
10:30
a.m.
Saints
a.m.
Wednesday,
7:30 p.m.
Saints160.
Church
of Jesus
of Latter-Day
Torch Church
33045
HilandLighthouse
Road,
Pomeroy. PasOhio
(740)Christ
446-6247
or (740) Saints
Full
Gospel
Ohio 160.
(740)
or (740)
446Ohio
160.Sunday
(740)446-6247
446-6247
or (740)
County
Road 63. Sunday school,
tor:
RoyHiland
Hunter.
Sunday
school,
446-7486.
school, 10:20-11
a.m.;
Torch Church
33045
Road,
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Torch
Full
Gospel
Lighthouse
7486.society/priesthood,
Sunday
school,school,
10:20-11
a.m.;
446-7486.
Sunday
10:20-11
9:30
am.;Church
worship,
10:30school,
a.m. 9:30
10Roy
a.m.
and
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
relief
11:05
a.m.-12
County
Road
63. Sunday
Hunter.
Sunday
school,
10 a.m. and
County
Road10:30
63. Sunday
33045
Hiland
Road, evening,
Pomeroy.7:30
Pastor:
relief sacrament
society/priesthood,
11:05 a.m.-12
a.m.;
relief
society/priesthood,
11:05 am.;
evening,
7:30
p.m.
p.m.;
service, 9-10-15
a.m.;
worship,
a.m. school, 9:30
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
p.m.
am.; worship, 10:30 a.m.
a.m.-12
p.m.;meeting
sacrament
service,
Roy Hunter. Sunday school, 10 a.m. and
p.m.; sacrament
service,
9-10-15
a.m.;
homecoming
first
Thursday,
9-10-15
a.m.;
homecoming
meeting
South
Bethel
Community
Church
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
evening,
7:30
p.m.
homecoming
meeting
first
Thursday,
7
7 p.m.
Nazarene
South Bethel Community Church
fip.m.
rst Thursday, 7 p.m.
Point
Rock Church of the Nazarene Silver
LindaDamewood.
DameNazarene
SilverRidge.
Ridge. Pastor:
Pastor: Linda
Route
689, Church
Albany.ofPastor:
Rev.
wood.
Sunday
9 a.m.;Church
South
Bethelschool,
Lutheran
Sunday
school,
9Community
a.m.; worship,
10 a.m.
Point Rock
the Nazarene
Lloyd
Sunday
school,
worship,
10
a.m.
Second
andDamewood.
fourth
PointGrimm.
Rock
Church
of the
Nazarene
Silverand
Ridge.
Pastor:
Linda
Lutheran
Second
fourth
Sundays.
Route
689,
Albany.
Pastor:
Rev.
Lloyd
10
a.m.;
worship
service,
11
a.m.;
Sundays.
Route 689,
Albany.
Pastor:a.m.;
Rev.worship
Lloyd
Sunday school, 9 a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.
Saint Saint
John Lutheran
Church Church
Grimm.
Sunday
school,
Lutheran
evening
service,
6school,
p.m.;1010
Wednesday
Grimm.11
Sunday
a.m.; 6worship
SecondInterdenominational
and fourth Sundays.
SaintGrove.
John John
Lutheran
Pine
9Church
a.m.;
Sunday
service,
a.m.; evening
p.m.; Carleton
Carleton
Pine
Grove.Worship,
Worship,
9 a.m.;
Sunday prayer
meeting,
7evening
p.m. service,
InterdenominationalChurch
Church
service,
11
a.m.;
service,
6
p.m.;
Pine
Grove.
Worship,
9
a.m.;
Sunday
school, 10
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7 p.m.
Kingsbury Road.
Road. Pastor:
school,
10a.m.
a.m.
Kingsbury
Pastor:Robert
RobertVance.
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7 p.m.
Carleton
Interdenominational
Church
school, 10
a.m.
Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.;
worship
Middleport Church of the Nazarene Vance.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Kingsbury
Pastor:
Robert
Vance.
service,
10:30Road.
a.m.;
evening
service,
Our Savior
Lutheran
Church Church
Middleport
Church
of the Sunday
Nazarene
Our Savior
Lutheran
Pastor:
Leonard
Powell.
worship
service,
10:30
a.m.;
evening
Middleport
Church
ofSunday
the Nazarene
Sunday
school, 9:30 a.m.; worship
Our Savior
Lutheran
Church
6 p.m.
Walnut
and
Streets,
Ravenswood,
Pastor:
Leonard
Powell.
school, service,
Walnut
andHenry
Henry
Streets,
Ravenschool,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
6 p.m.
Pastor:
Powell.
Sunday
service, 10:30 a.m.; evening service, 6
Walnut
and
Henry
Streets,
Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Pastor:
David
Russell.
Sunday
9:30
a.m.;Leonard
worship,
10:30
a.m. andschool,
6:30
swood,
W.Va.
Pastor:
David
Russell. a.m.
and
6:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
9:30 Wednesday
a.m.;
worship,
10:30 7a.m.
p.m.Freedom
W.Va. Pastor:
David
Sunday
school,
10school,
a.m.;
worship,
a.m.
p.m.;
services,
p.m.and 6:30
Freedom
GospelGospel
MissionMission
Sunday
10 Russell.
a.m.;11worship,
services,
7 p.m.
p.m.; Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
school,
BaldKnob
Knobon
on County
County Road
Pastor:
11
a.m.10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
Bald
Road31.31.
Freedom
Gospel
Mission
rev.
Roger
Willford.
Sunday school,
9:30
Saint Paul Lutheran Church
Reedsville
Fellowship
Reedsville Fellowship
Pastor: rev. Roger Willford.
Sunday
Reedsville
Fellowship
Baldworship,
Knoba.m.;
on7 County
Road
Pastor:
SaintSaint
Paul
Lutheran
Church
a.m.;
p.m.
Corner
Syracuse
Second
Street,
Pastor:
Russell
Carson.
school,
Pauland
Lutheran
Church
Pastor:
Russell
Carson.Sunday
Sunday
school,
9:30
worship,
7 31.
p.m.
Pastor:
Russell
Carson.
school,
rev. Roger Willford. Sunday school, 9:30
Corner Syracuse
Second
Pomeroy.
Sundayand
school,
9:45Street,
a.m.;
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:45Sunday
a.m.10:45
and
7
Corner
Syracuse
and
Second
Street, school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:45 7a.m.
and 7
a.m.;
worship,
7 p.m.Wesleyan
Pomeroy.11
Sunday
9:45
a.m.;
Pomeroy.
Sunday
school,
9:45
a.m.; a.m.
and
7 p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
White’s
worship,
a.m. school,
p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
p.m.
White’s
ChapelChapel
Wesleyan
p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
7
p.m.
worship,
11a.m.
a.m.
7 p.m.
Coolville
Rev.Charles
Charles
worship, 11
CoolvilleRoad.
Road. Pastor:
Pastor: Rev.
Martindale.
Sunday
school,9:30
9:30
White’s Chapel
Martindale.
SundayWesleyan
school,
a.m.;
United Methodist
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
Syracuse
Church
of the
theNazarene
Nazarene
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.;Rev.
WednesSyracuse
Church
of
Coolville
Road.
Pastor:
Charles
United Methodist
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
Wednesday
service,
Pastor:
Shannon
Hutchison.
Sunday
Graham
Methodist
Pastor:
Hutchison.
Sunday day
service, 7 p.m.
Pastor:Shannon
Shannon
Hutchison.
Sunday
Martindale.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.;
7 p.m.
worship,
10:30 a.m.
and 6 p.m.;
Graham
United United
Methodist
Pastor:
Richard
Nease.
Worship,
11
worship,
a.m.
and
p.m.;
worship,10:30
10:30
a.m. 7and
66p.m.;
worship, 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday service,
Wednesday
services,
p.m.
Pastor:
Richard
Worship,
11 a.m.
Graham
UnitedNease.
Methodist
a.m.
Wednesday
services,
7
p.m.
Fairview
Bible Church
Wednesday services, 7 p.m.
7 p.m. Bible Church
Fairview
Pastor: Richard Nease. Worship, 11 a.m.
Letart,
Pastor:Brian
Brian
Letart,W.Va.,
W.Va., Route
Route 1.1.Pastor:
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
Bechtel United Methodist
Bechtel
United
Methodist
Pomeroy
Church
ofthe
theNazarene
Nazarene
May.
Sunday
school,
9:30a.m.;
a.m.;
worMay.
SundayBible
school,
9:30
worship,
Pastor:
William
Justis.
Sunday
school,
New
Haven.
Pastor:
Richard
Nease.
Pomeroy
Church
of
Fairview
Church
Bechtel
United
Methodist
New
Haven.
Pastor:
Richard
Nease.
Pastor:
William
Justis.
Sunday
ship,
7
p.m.;
Wednesday
Bible
study,
7 p.m.;
Bible
study, 7Brian
p.m. May.
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m. and
6
Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.;
Tuesday
Pastor:
William
Justis.
Sunday
school,
Letart,Wednesday
W.Va., Route
1. Pastor:
New Haven.
Pastor:
Richard
Nease.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Tuesday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
7
p.m.
services,
p.m.and 6
prayer
6:30
9:30 Wednesday
a.m.; worship,
10:30 6a.m.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 7
Sundaymeeting
school, and
9:30Bible
a.m.;study,
Tuesday
prayer p.m.;
prayer
meeting
and
Bible
study,
a.m.
and
6
p.m.;
Wednesday
services,
Faith
Fellowship
Crusade
for Christ
p.m.
p.m.; Wednesday services, 6 p.m.
p.m.;
Wednesday
Bible study,
7 p.m.
meeting
and Bible study, 6:30 p.m.
6:30
p.m.
6Chester
p.m.
Faith
Fellowship
Crusade
for Christ
Pastor:
Rev.Franklin
Franklin
Dickens.
Church of the Nazarene
Pastor:
Rev.
Dickens.Friday,
Friday,
7
p.m.
Pastor:
Rev.
Warren
Lukens.
Sunday
Mount
Olive
United
Methodist
Chester
Church
of
the
Nazarene
Faith
Fellowship
Crusade
for
Christ
Mount
Olive
United
Methodist
Mount
Olive
United
Methodist
Chester Church of the Nazarene
7 p.m.
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
Off
of
124
behind
Wilkesville.
Pastor:
Pastor:
Rev.
Warren
Lukens.
Sunday
Pastor:
Rev.
Franklin
Dickens.
Friday,
Off
of
124
behind
Wilkesville.
Pastor:
Off of 124 behind Wilkesville.
Pastor: Rev. Warren Lukens. Sunday
Sunday
evening,
6 p.m.
Calvary
Bible Church
Rev.
Spires.
Sunday
school,
9:30
school,9:30
9:30a.m.;
a.m.;
worship, 10:30
7 p.m.Calvary
Rev.Ralph
Ralph
Spires.
Sunday
school,
9:30
Pastor:
Rev.
Ralph
Spires.
Sunday
school,
worship,
10:30a.m.;
Bible Church
Pomeroy.Pastor:
Pastor: Rev.
Rev. Blackwood.
a.m.;
10:30
a.m.
Sunday
evening,
6 p.m. 6 p.m.
a.m.; worship,
worship,
10:30worship,
a.m. and
and 710:30
7 p.m.;
p.m.;
school,
9:30 a.m.;
a.m.;
Sunday
evening,
Pomeroy.
Blackwood.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
10:30
Thursday
77 p.m.
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Calvary
Bible9:30
Church
Thursday
services,
p.m.
a.m.
and 7services,
p.m.; Thursday
services,
Sunday
school,
a.m.;worship,
worship,
a.m.
and
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
service,
Pastor:
George
Stadler.
Sunday
school,
Rutland
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Blackwood.
7 p.m.
RutlandChurch
Church of
ofthe
theNazarene
Nazarene
10:30
a.m. and
7:30Rev.
p.m.;
Wednesday
7:30
p.m.
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
Sunday
Meigs
Cooperative
Parish
Pastor:
Ann
Forbes.
Sunday
school,
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
Meigs Cooperative Parish
Pastor: George Stadler. Sunday
service, 7:30 p.m.
evening,
6 p.m.
Northeast
Cluster,
Alfred. Pastor:
Pastor:
Gene
Meigs
Cooperative
ParishGene
9:30 a.m.;
worship,
10:30 a.m.;
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.; worship,
10:30
a.m. and 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday service,
Northeast
Cluster,
Alfred.
Stiversville
Church
Goodwin.
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Northeast
Cluster,
Alfred.
a.m.;
Sunday
evening, 6 p.m.
Stiversville
Community
Church
evening,
6 p.m.
7:30
p.m. Community
Goodwin. Sunday
Sunday
school,
9:30Pastor:
a.m.;
Pastor:Bryan
Bryan and
and Missy
Sunday
worship,
11
6:30
Non-Denominational
Gene
Goodwin.
Sunday
school, 9:30
Pastor:
MissyDailey.
Dailey.
worship,
11 a.m.
a.m. and
and
6:30 p.m.
p.m.
school,
11
a.m.;
worship,
11
a.m.; 11
a.m.; worship, 11 a.m. and 6:30 p.m.
Sunday
school,
11
a.m.;
worship,
Non-Denominational
Stiversville Community Church
a.m.;
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
Wednesday,
7
p.m.
Chester
Common
Ground
Missions
Pastor: Bryan and Missy Dailey. Sunday
Chester
Chester
Common
Ground
Missions
Pastor:
Worship, 99 a.m.;
a.m.;
Pastor:
Dennis
Moore
and
Rick Little.
Common
Ground
Missions
school, 11 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
Pastor: Jim
Jim Corbitt.
Corbitt.
Worship,
Pastor:
Jim
Corbitt.
Worship,
andRick
RickLittle.
Rejoicing
Life Church
Rejoicing
Life 7Church
Sunday
10
Thursday
Sunday,
10
a.m. Moore
Pastor:Dennis
Dennis
Moore and
Wednesday,
p.m.
Sunday school,
school,
10 a.m.;
a.m.;
Thursday9 a.m.; Pastor:
Sunday
school,
10
a.m.;
Thursday
Little.
Sunday,
10
a.m.
500
Ave.,Middleport.
Middleport.
500North
NorthSecond
Second Ave.,
services,
Sunday, 10 a.m.
services, 77 p.m.
p.m.
services, 7 p.m.
Team
Jesus
Ministries
Pastor:
Mike
Foreman.
PastorEmeritus:
EmeriPastor:
MikeLife
Foreman.
Pastor
Team Jesus Ministries
Rejoicing
Church
333
Mechanic
Street,Pomeroy.
Pomeroy.
tus:
Lawrence
Foreman.
Worship,
10
Lawrence
Foreman.
Worship,
10 a.m.;
Joppa
333
Mechanic
Street,
Pastor:
Team
Jesus Ministries
500
North
Second
Ave.,
Middleport.
Joppa
Joppa
Pastor:
EddieSunday
Baer.
Sunday
worship,
a.m.;
Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.
Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.Pastor
Pastor:
Null.
Worship,
9:30
a.m.;
Eddie
Baer.
worship,
11
a.m.
333
Mechanic
Street,
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Pastor: Mike
Foreman.
Emeritus:
Pastor: Denzil
Denzil
Null.
Worship,
9:309:30
a.m.;
Pastor:
Denzil
Null.
Worship,
11
a.m.
Sunday
school,
10:30
Eddie Baer. Sunday worship, 11 a.m.
Lawrence
Foreman.
Worship,
Sunday
school,school,
10:30 a.m.
a.m.
a.m.;
Sunday
10:30 a.m.
Clifton
Tabernacle
Church10 a.m.;
Clifton
Tabernacle
Church
New Hope Church
Wednesday
service,
7 school,
p.m.
New
Hope
Church
Clifton,
W.Va.
Sunday
Clifton, W.Va. Sunday school, 10 10
a.m.;
Long
Old
American
Legion Hall, Fourth Ave.,
New
Hope Church
LongBottom
BottomLong Bottom
Old
American
Legion
Hall, Fourth
a.m.;
worship,
7 p.m.;
Wednesday
worship,
7Tabernacle
p.m.;
Wednesday
service,
Sunday
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
Middleport.
Sunday,
5 p.m.
Old Middleport.
American
Legion
Hall, Fourth
Ave., service,
Clifton
Church
Sunday school,
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30 Ave.,
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
Sunday,
5
p.m.
7 p.m.
7
p.m.
10:30
a.m.
Middleport. Sunday, 5 p.m.
Clifton, W.Va. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
a.m. a.m.
10:30
Syracuse
Community
Church
worship,
7 p.m.; of
Wednesday
service,
7
Syracuse
Community
Church
Full
Gospel
Church
the Living
Savior
Full
Gospel
Church of the
Living
Savior
Reedsville
2480
Second
Street,
Syracuse.
Pastor:
Syracuse
Community
Church
p.m.
Reedsville
Reedsville
2480 Second Street, Syracuse. PasRoute
338, Antiquity.
Pastor:
Jesse
Route 338,
Antiquity.
Pastor: Jesse
Pastor:
Worship,
9:30
Joe
Gwinn.
Sunday
school,
10 a.m.;
2480
Second
Street,
Syracuse.
Pastor:
Pastor:
GeneGoodwin.
Goodwin.
Worship,
tor:
Joe
Gwinn.
Sunday
school,
10
Morris.
Saturday,
2 p.m.
Pastor: Gene
Gene
Goodwin.
Worship,
9:30
Morris.
Saturday,
2 p.m.of the Living
a.m.;
Sunday
school,
10:30
first
Sunday
evening,
6:30 p.m.
9:30
Sunday
10:30
Sunday
6:30 p.m.
Markco
Pritt.evening,
Sunday
school,
10 a.m.;
Full Gospel
Church
a.m.;a.m.;
Sunday
school,school,
10:30 a.m.;
a.m.;
firsta.m.; a.m.;
of
77 p.m.
fiSunday
rst Sunday
of
the month,
Salem Community Church
Sunday evening, 6:30 p.m. Thursday
Savior
Sunday
of the
the month,
month,
p.m. 7 p.m.
Salem
NewBeginning
Beginning
AAevening
Road,
WestChurch
Columbia,
New
service, 7(Full
p.m.Gospel Church). Lieving
RouteCommunity
338, Antiquity.
Pastor: Jesse
Lieving
Road,
West 2Columbia,
Tuppers
Plains
(Full Gospel Church).
Harrisonville.
Tuppers
Plains
Saint Paul
Pastor:
Charles
Roush.W.Va.
(304)
Harrisonville.
Pastors:
Bob and Kay W.Va.
Morris.
Saturday,
p.m.
Tuppers
PlainsSaint
SaintPaul
Paul
Pastor: Charles
Roush.
(304)
675-2288.
Pastor:
Sunday
school,
Pastors:
and Kay 7
Marshall.
Pastor:
JimCorbitt.
Corbitt.
Sunday
school,
675-2288.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Marshall.
Thursday,
p.m.
A New Bob
Beginning
Pastor: Jim
Jim
Corbitt.
Sunday
school,
99
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
Sunday
a.m.;
worship,
10
a.m.;
Tuesday
services,
Thursday,
7
p.m.
9a.m.;
a.m.;
worship,
10 a.m.;
Tuesday
Sunday
evening,
7 p.m.;
Wednesday
(Full Gospel Church). Harrisonville.
Salem
Community
Church
worship,
10 a.m.;
Tuesday
services,
evening,
7
p.m.;
Wednesday
Bible
study,
7:30
p.m.
services,
7:30
p.m.
Bible
study,
7
p.m.
Amazing
Grace
Community
Church
Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshall. Thursday,
Lieving Road, West Columbia, W.Va.
7:30 p.m.
7 p.m.
Amazing
Community
Church
Ohio
681,Grace
Tuppers
Plains. Pastor:
7 p.m.
Pastor: Charles Roush. (304) 675-2288.
Central
Ohio 681,
Tuppers
Plains. worship,
Pastor: 10
Central Chister
Hobson
Fellowship
Church
Wayne
Dunlap.
Sunday
SundayChristian
school, 9:30
a.m.; Sunday
CentralChister
Chister
Asbury
(Syracuse).
Pastor:
Herschel
White.
Sunday
a.m.
andDunlap.
6:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
Hobson
Christian
Fellowship
Church
Asbury (Syracuse).
Pastor:
BobBob
Wayne
Sunday
worship,Church
10Bible
a.m. Pastor:
Amazing
Grace
Community
evening,
7 p.m.;
Wednesday
Bible study,
Asbury (Syracuse).
Pastor:
Bob
Robinson.
Sunday
school,
9:45
school,
10
a.m.;
6:30
p.m.;
Wednesstudy,
7
p.m.
Pastor:
Herschel White. Sunday school,
Robinson. Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.;
and
6:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
study,
Ohio
681,
Tuppers
Plains.Bible
Pastor:
Wayne day,
7 p.m.
Robinson.
Sunday school,
9:45 a.m.;
a.m.;
worship,
a.m.; Wednesday
p.m.
10 7a.m.;
6:30 p.m.; Wednesday, 7 p.m.
worship,
11 a.m.;11
Wednesday
services,
7Dunlap.
p.m. Sunday worship, 10 a.m. and
worship,
a.m.;
Wednesday services,
services,
7:30
p.m.
Oasis Christian Fellowship
7:30
p.m. 11
6:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
Bible
study,
7
p.m.
Hobson
Christian Fellowship Church
7:30 p.m.
(Non-denominational
fellowship).
Restoration Christian Fellowship
Oasis Christian Fellowship
Pastor:
Herschel
Sunday
school,
Flatwoods
Meeting
in the Meigs
Middle School
9365
Hooper
Road,White.
Athens.
Pastor:
Flatwoods
(Non-denominational
fellowship).
Oasis Christian
Fellowship
10 a.m.;
6:30Sunday
p.m.; Wednesday,
p.m.
Flatwoods
Pastor:
DewayneStuttler.
Stuttler.
Sunday
cafeteria.
Pastor:
Christ
Stewart.
Lonnie
Coats.
worship, 107a.m.;
Pastor:
Dewayne
Sunday
Meeting
in
the Meigs
Middle
School
(Non-denominational
fellowship).
Pastor: 10
Dewayne
Stuttler.
Sunday
school, Sunday,
school,
10a.m.;
a.m.;worship,
worship,
11
Restoration
Christian Fellowship
10
a.m.-12
p.m.
Wednesday,
7 p.m.
school,
11
a.m.a.m.
cafeteria.
Pastor:
Christ
Stewart.
Meeting
in
the
Meigs
Middle
School
Restoration
Christian
Fellowship
10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
9365 Hooper Road, Athens. Pastor:
Sunday, 10 a.m.-12 p.m.
cafeteria.
Pastor: Christ
Stewart. Sunday, Lonnie
9365Coats.
Hooper
Road,
Athens.
Pastor:
Forest Run
Sunday
worship,
10
Community
of Christ
House
of
Healing
Ministries
Forest Run
Pastor:
Bob
Robinson.
Sunday
10
a.m.-12
p.m.
a.m.;
Wednesday,
7 124,
p.m.Langsville.
Portland-Racine
Road.
Pastor:
Jim
Lonnie
Coats.
Sunday
worship, 10 a.m.;
Forest
Run
(Full
Gospel)
Ohio
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday school,
Community of Christ
school,
10
a.m.;
9 a.m.
tt. SundayRoad.
school,
9:30Jim
a.m.;
Wednesday,
7 and
p.m.Roberta Musser.
Pastor:
Robinson.
school, 10 Proffi
Pastors:
Robert
10
a.m.;Bob
worship,
9worship,
a.m.Sunday
Portland-Racine
Pastor:
House
of Healing
Ministries
worship,
10:30ofa.m.;
Wednesday
Community
Christ
a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.
Sunday
school,
9:30124,
a.m.;Langsville.
worship, 10:30
Proffitt.
Sunday
school,
9:30 a.m.;
Heath (Middleport)
(Full
Gospel)
Ohio
services,
7
p.m.
Portland-Racine
Road.
Pastor: Jim
House
Healing
Ministries
a.m.
and
7ofp.m.;
Wednesday
service,
worship,
10:30 a.m.;
Wednesday
Heath (Middleport)
Pastor:
Brian Dunham. Sunday
Pastors:
Robert
and
Roberta
Musser.
Proffitt.
Sunday
school,
9:30
a.m.;
(Full
Gospel)
Ohio
124,
Heath
(Middleport)
7 p.m. school, 9:30 a.m.;Langsville.
services,Bethel
7 p.m.Worship Center
Pastor: Brian
Dunham.
Sunday11
school,
school,
9:45 a.m.;
worship,
a.m.
Sunday
worship,
worship,
10:30
a.m.;
Wednesday
services,
Pastors:
Robert
and
Roberta
Musser.
Pastor:
Brian
Dunham.
Sunday
school,
9:45 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.
10:30
a.m.
and
7
p.m.;
Wednesday
39782
Ohio
7
(two
miles
south
of
7 p.m.Worship Center
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30
9:45 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m. Alive at Five
Bethel
Asbury
Syracuse
service,
7
p.m.
Tuppers
Plains).
Pastor:
Rob
Barber;
a.m. and 7 p.m.;
Wednesday service, 7
worship,Syracuse
5 p.m.
Pentecostal
39782and
Ohioworship
7 (two miles
south
of and
Asbury
Pastor:
Bob Robinson. Sunday
praise
led by
Otis
Bethel Worship
Center
p.m.
Tuppers
Plains).
Pastor:
Rob Barber;
Pastor: Bob
Robinson.
Sunday10:30
school,
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
Ivy
Crockton;
Youth
Pastor:
Kris
39782and
Ohio
7 (twoled
miles
southand
of Ivy
Asbury
Pentecostal Assembly
praise
worship
by Otis
9:30
a.m.;Syracuse
worship, 10:30 a.m.
a.m.
Butcher.
(740)
667-6793.
Sunday
10
Tuppers
Pastor:
Rob
Barber;
Pastor: Bob Robinson. Sunday school,
Tornado Road, Racine. Sunday school,
Crockron;
Youth Pastor:
Kris
Butcher.
a.m.;
teenPlains).
ministry,
6:30
Wednesday.
praise
and
worship
led
by
Otis
and
Ivy
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.
10Pentecostal
a.m.;Pentecostal
evening, 7 p.m.;
Wednesday
(740)
667-6793.
SundayFamily
10 a.m.;of
teen
Pearl Chapel Pearl Chapel
Affl
iated
with SOMA
Assembly
Crockron;
Youth
Pastor:
Kris
Butcher.
services,Road,
7 p.m.Racine. Sunday
ministry, 6:30
Wednesday.Bethelwc.org.
Affliated with Tornado
Sunday school,
worship,
10 a.m.
Sunday
school,9 a.m.;
9 a.m.;
worship,
10
Ministries,
Chillicothe.
(740) 667-6793.
Sunday 10 Chillicothe.
a.m.; teen
Pentecostal
Pearl Chapel
a.m.
school,
10 a.m.;Assembly
evening, 7 p.m.;
SOMA
Family of Ministries,
ministry, Ash
6:30Street
Wednesday.
Affliated with Wednesday
Tornado Road,
Racine.
Sunday school,
Sunday
school, 9Church
a.m.; worship, 10 a.m.
services,
7 p.m.
Church
Presbyterian
Bethelwc.org.
New
Beginnings
SOMA
Ministries, Chillicothe.
10 a.m.; evening, 7 p.m.; Wednesday
New
Beginnings
Church
398
Ash Family
Street,of
Middleport.
Pastor:
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Brian Dunham.
Bethelwc.org.
services,
7
p.m.
New
Beginnings
Church
Pomeroy.
Pastor:
Mark
Morrow.
Sunday school, 9:30
Harrisonville Presbyterian Church
Ash Street
Church
Worship, 9:25
a.m.; Brian
SundayDunham.
school,
Pomeroy.
BrianSunday
Dunham.
Worship,
9:25 a.m.;
school,
a.m.;
morning
10:30
a.m.
398 Ash
Street,worship,
Middleport.
Pastor:
Pastor: Rev. David Faulkner. Sunday
10:45
a.m.Pastor:
Ash
Street
Church
Presbyterian
10:45
a.m.
Harrisonville
6:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
Worship,
9:25 a.m.; Sunday school, 10:45 and
Mark
Morrow.
Sunday
school,service,
9:30 a.m.;
worship
9 a.m. Presbyterian Church
Pastor: Rev. David Faulkner. Sunday
6:30
youthMiddleport.
service,
6:30
398p.m.;
Ashworship,
Street,
Pastor:
a.m. Springs
morning
10:30 a.m.
andp.m.
6:30
Rock
RockStuttler.
Springs
9 a.m.
MarkWednesday
Morrow. Sunday
9:30 a.m.; worship
Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church
p.m.;
service,school,
6:30 p.m.;
Middleport
Presbyterian
Pastor: Dewayne
Sunday
Pastor:
Stuttler.
Sunday
Agape
Center
morning
worship,
10:30
a.m. and 6:30
Pastor:James
Rev. Snyder.
David Faulkner.
Sunday10
Rock Springs
youth
service,
6:30Life
p.m.
Pastor:
Sunday school,
school,
9Dewayne
a.m.; worship,
10 a.m.;
youth
school,
9
a.m.;
worship,
10
a.m.;
Middleport
Presbyterian
(Full
Gospel
church).
603
Second
p.m.;
Wednesday
service,
6:30
p.m.;
worship
9
a.m.
Pastor:
Dewayne
Stuttler.
Sunday
a.m.; worship service,
11 a.m.
fellowship, 6 p.m.; early Sunday worship,
youth
6 p.m.;
earlyyouth
Sun- Ave.,
Mason.
Pastors:
John and Patty Pastor: James Snyder. Sunday
youth
service,
6:30 p.m.
9 a.m.; worship,
10 a.m.;
Agape
Life
Center
8school,
a.m. fellowship,
day
worship,
8 a.m.
10 a.m.;Presbyterian
worship
service, 11
(304) church).
773-5017.
10:30 school,
Middleport
fellowship,
6 p.m.;
early Sunday worship, Wade.
(Full Gospel
603Sunday
Second Ave.,
Adventist
a.m.Pastor: Seventh-Day
a.m.;
Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Agape
Life Center
James Snyder. Sunday school, 10
8 a.m.
Mason.
Pastors:
John
and
Patty
Wade.
Rutland
RutlandSunday school,
(Full 773-5017.
Gospel church).
603
Second
a.m.; worship
service, 11 a.m.
(304)
Sunday
10:30
a.m.;Ave.,
Seventh-Day
Adventist
Pastor: John
Pastor:
JohnChapman.
Chapman.
Sunday
Abundant
Grace
Mason. Pastors:
and Patty Wade.
Rutland
Wednesday,
7 p.m.John
Mulberry Heights Road, Pomeroy.
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.;10:30
Thursday 923
school,
9:30
a.m.;
worship,
South
Third
Street,
Middleport.
(304)
773-5017.
Sunday
10:30
a.m.;
Seventh-Day
Adventist
Pastor:
Mark
Brookins.
Sunday
school,
Sabbath
school, 2 p.m.
Saturday,
services,
7 p.m. services, 7 p.m.
a.m.;
Thursday
Pastor:
Teresa7 Davis.
Sunday service,
Seventh-Day
Adventist
Wednesday,
9:30 a.m.; worship, 10:30 a.m.; Thursday 10
Abundant
Gracep.m. service, 7 p.m.
worship, 3Heights
p.m.
a.m.; Wednesday
Mulberry
Road, Pomeroy.
Seventh-Day
Adventist
services,
7 p.m.
923
South
Third
Street,
Middleport.
Salem
Center
Salem Center
Sabbath school, 2 p.m. Saturday,
Abundant
Grace
Mulberry
Heights
Road, Pomeroy.
Teresa
Davis.
Sunday
service, 10 worship,
United Brethren
Pastor: William
Marshall.
Sunday
Pastor:
WilliamK.K.
Marshall.
Sunday Pastor:
Faith
Full
Gospel
Church
3 p.m.
923 Bottom.
South
Third
Street,Steve
Middleport.
Sabbath school, 2 p.m. Saturday, worship,
Salem Center
a.m.;
Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.
school,
10:15
worship,
9:159:15
a.m.;
school,
10:15a.m.;
a.m.;
worship,
Long
Pastor:
Reed.
Pastor:
Teresa
Davis.
Sunday
service,
10
3
p.m.
Pastor:
JohnMonday
Chapman.
Sunday7 school,
Bible
study,
7 p.m.
Mouth Hermon United Brethren in
a.m.;
Bible
study,
Monday
p.m.
Sunday school, 9:30 a.m.; worship,
a.m.;
Wednesday
service,
7 p.m.
10:15 a.m.; worship, 9:15 a.m.; Bible
Faith
Full
Gospel
Church
Christ Church
9:30
a.m.
and
7 p.m.;
Wednesday,
United
Brethren
study, Monday Snowville
7 p.m.
Steveservice,
Reed. 7
36411
Wickham
Road.
Peterin
Snowville
7Long
p.m.;Bottom.
Friday Pastor:
fellowship
Mouth
Hermon
UnitedPastor:
Brethren
Faith Full
Gospel
Sunday
school,
9:30 Church
a.m.; worship, 9:30
Martindael.Christ
SundayChurch
school, 9:30
Sunday school,
a.m.;
worship,
9 a.m.
Sunday
school,1010
a.m.;
worship,
9
p.m.
a.m.
Wickham
Road.
Peterin
Long
Bottom.
Steve 7Reed.
Mouth
Hermon
United
Brethren
a.m.
and
7 p.m.;Pastor:
Wednesday,
p.m.;Sunday36411
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.Pastor:
and
7 p.m.;
Snowville
Harrisonville
Community
Church
Martindael.
Sunday
9:30group
school,
9:30 a.m.;
worship,
9:30
a.m.
Friday
fellowship
service,
7 p.m.
Wednesday
service, 7school,
p.m.; youth
Bethany
Christ Church
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship, 9 a.m.
Bethany
Pastor:
Durham.7 Sunday,
a.m.;
worship,
10:30
a.m.Pastor:
and
7Peter
p.m.;
meeting
second
and
fourth
Sunday,
7
Pastor: Arland King.
Sunday school,
and 7 Theron
p.m.; Wednesday,
p.m.; Friday
36411
Wickham
Road.
Pastor:
school, 9:30
a.m. and
7 p.m.;
Wednesday,
Wednesday
service,
p.m.; youth
Harrisonville
Community
Church
p.m.
10
a.m.; Arland
worship,King.
9 a.m.;Sunday
Wednesday
fellowship
service,
7 p.m.
Martindael.
Sunday7 school,
9:30
Bethany
10
a.m.;Arland
worship,
a.m.; Wednesday
7Pastor:
p.m. Theron Durham. Sunday, 9:30
group
meeting
and and
fourth
services,
10
a.m.
a.m.;
worship,second
10:30 a.m.
7 p.m.;
Pastor:
King.9 Sunday
school,
services,
10 a.m.9 a.m.; Wednesday
Sunday,
7 p.m.Brethren
a.m.
and 7 p.m.;Community
Wednesday, Church
7 p.m.
Eden
United
Christ
Harrisonville
Wednesday
service, 7inp.m.;
youth group
10 a.m.; worship,
Middleport
Community
Church
Ohio
124, between
Reedsville
and 7 p.m.
Carmel-Sutton
Pastor: Theron Durham. Sunday, 9:30
meeting
second and
fourth Sunday,
services, 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sutton
575
Pearl
Middleport.
Pastor:
Eden UnitedPastor:
Brethren
in Christ
Middleport
Church
Hockingport.
M. Adam
Will.
Carmel and Bashan
Roads, Racine.
a.m.
and Street,
7 Community
p.m.; Wednesday,
7 p.m.
Carmel
and Bashan
Roads,school,
Racine.
Sam
Anderson.
school,
10
Ohio
124,school,
between
Reedsville
and
575 Pearl
Street, Sunday
Middleport.
Pastor:
Sunday
10
a.m.;
worship,
11
Pastor:
Arland
King. Sunday
Eden
United
Brethren
in Christ
Carmel-Sutton
Pastor:
Arland
King.
Sunday
school,
a.m.;
evening,
7:30
p.m.;
Wednesday
Hockingport.
Pastor:
M.
Adam
Will.
Sam
Anderson.
Sunday school,
10 a.m.;
a.m.;
Wednesday
service,
7 p.m. and
9:45
a.m.;
worship,
a.m.;Racine.
Wednesday
Middleport
Community
Church
Ohio
124, between
Reedsville
Carmel
and
Bashan11
Roads,
9:45
a.m.;
worship,
11
a.m.;
Wednesservice,
7:30
p.m.
Sunday
school,
10
a.m.;
worship,
11
evening,
7:30
p.m.;Middleport.
WednesdayPastor:
service,
Bible
study,
7:30
p.m.Sunday school, 9:45
575 Pearl
Street,
Hockingport.
M. Adam
Pastor:
Arland
King.
day
Bible
study,
7:30 p.m.
a.m.;
WednesdayPastor:
service,
7 p.m.Will.
7:30
Samp.m.
Anderson. Sunday school, 10 a.m.;
Sunday school, 10 a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.;
a.m.; worship, 11 a.m.; Wednesday Bible
evening, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday service,
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
study, 7:30 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

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“If ye abide in Me, and My
words abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and
it shall be ”
John 15:7

“For God so loved the
world that he gave his
one and only Son..”
John 3:16

“So I strive always to
keep my conscience clear
before God and man”
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“Let your light so shine before
men, that they may see your
good works and glorify
your Father in heaven.”
Matthew 5:16

“Commit thy works unto
the Lord, and thy thoughts
shall be established”
Proverbs 16:3

�The Daily Sentinel

FRIDAY,
JULY 20, 2012

Sports

mdssports@heartlandpublications.com

Big Ten may give commish power to fire coaches
Larry Lage

Associated Press

In the wake of the scandal
at Penn State, the Big Ten
Conference is considering
a plan to give its commissioner the power to punish
schools with financial sanctions, suspensions and even
the ability to fire coaches.
An 18-page plan being
circulated among Big Ten
leadership raises the possibility of giving Commissioner Jim Delany such
authority, the Chronicle of
Higher Education reported

Thursday, citing a document it had obtained.
The Big Ten did not respond to requests for comment, but confirmed that
the proposal — titled “Standards and Procedures for
Safeguarding Institutional
Control of Intercollegiate
Athletics” — is being discussed.
“It is a working document intended to generate
ideas, not draw conclusions,” according to an
email sent from Big Ten
headquarters to people in

the league. “One provision
in the document addresses
‘emergency authority of the
commissioner’ - it is just
one of many ideas.”
Former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry
Sandusky was recently
convicted of sexually abusing 10 boys, sometimes on
campus. A report commissioned by Penn State said
school leaders, including
the late coach Joe Paterno,
ignored allegations more
than a decade ago to avoid
bad publicity, allowing San-

dusky to prey on other boys
for years. Paterno’s family
said he never participated
in an attempt to cover up
wrongdoing.
The NCAA and U.S. Education Department are investigating Penn State for
potential rules and policy
violations; the issue of “institutional control” is believed to be a key part of the
NCAA probe, since problems there can lead to athletic penalties. The Chronicle said the Big Ten is still
discussing how to handle

fallout from the scandal at
one of its member schools;
currently, its 12-member
Council of Presidents and
Chancellors must approve
any decision to suspend or
expel one of the league’s
schools.
Whether Delany would
ever be granted the power
to fire coaches or punish
schools was unknown. The
Big Ten email said the council would have to approve
such a sweeping change.
Michigan athletic director Dave Brandon said the

scandal has school presidents and ADs looking at
ways to improve oversight
and control.
“A lot of things have been
discussed, but I have not
been party to any conversation that would suggest
the commissioner would
have unilateral power to fire
coaches,” Brandon told The
Associated Press. “That’s
kind of out of left field, and
I don’t think the commissioner would want that kind
of power. But what sounds
See TEN ‌| 8

Phil Masturzo/Akron Beacon Journal/MCT photo

Adam Scott pumps his fist after making a birdie putt on the
final hole to finish at 17-under at the World Golf Championships
Bridgestone Invitational at Firestone Country Club in Akron,
Ohio, on Sunday, August 7, 2011.

Scott ties course
record with 64
at British Open
LYTHAM ST. ANNES,
England (AP) — Adam
Scott had a chance at history.
He gladly settled for tying
a course record.
Scott equaled the lowest
British Open score at Royal
Lytham &amp; St. Annes, taking
advantage of prime conditions to rip off eight birdies
on the way to a 6-under 64
in the opening round Thursday.
He wasn’t the only one
going low. Paul Lawrie,
Zach Johnson and Nicolas Colsaerts each shot 65.
Brandt Snedeker turned in a
66 as the light faded. Tiger
Woods and Rory McIlroy
were among a logjam at 67.
“It’s pretty benign out
there,” Woods said of the
conditions, which were especially kind for the morning players.
Scott, a 31-year-old Australian, bounced back from
an early bogey with a dazzling display — his drives
accurate, his irons precise,
his long putter reliable.
When he arrived at the 17th
hole, his score was at 7 under, putting him in position
to tie the record for lowest
score in the Open or any

other major (63), or even
break the hallowed mark
with one more birdie.
Scott settled for par at
the 17th, then took a bogey
on the final hole after an errant tee shot into the thick
rough. Still, he went to the
clubhouse having tied the
64 that Tom Lehman shot at
Royal Lytham in 1996.
“I’m very pleased with the
start,” said Scott, who had
never shot better than 68
in 12 previous Opens. “It’s
nice just to take advantage
of the calm conditions today. It was surprising but
very pleasing to go out and
play some solid golf. It’s
what I haven’t done in the
first rounds of the majors
this year, and that was my
goal here, starting the week,
was to play today like it was
Sunday and there was no tomorrow.
“I did a good job of that,
and now I’ve got my work
cut out for me the next couple of days to keep myself in
a similar kind of position.”
Woods spent some time
atop the leaderboard, a
once-familiar sight at the
major championships. He
played the first 14 holes at
See SCOTT ‌| 8

Chris Lee/St. Louis Post-Dispatch/MCT photo

Cincinnati shortstop Barry Larkin grimaces as he runs for third base on a single by Sean Casey in the second inning of his
team’s game against the St. Louis Cardinals on Tuesday, May 13, 2003 at Busch Stadium.

Barry Larkin likely to fight
his emotions at induction
COOPERSTOWN, N.Y. (AP) —
When Barry Larkin takes the podium to speak at his Baseball Hall of
Fame induction, his emotions likely
will be off the charts.
Not only will his mother and father be front and center, his teenage
daughter, Cymber, will sing the national anthem Sunday.
“I’m really excited about it. It’s
definitely something special, but I’ll
be nervous as heck for her,” the former Cincinnati Reds shortstop said
Tuesday on a conference call. “I’ve
heard just about everybody in the
world is stopping by.”
Larkin, who retired after the 2004
season with a .295 career average,
2,340 hits, 1,329 runs scored and
379 stolen bases, was elected this
year on his third try, receiving 495
votes (86.4 percent). He’ll be inducted along with the late Ron Santo, a
star third baseman for 15 years with
the Chicago Cubs and a longtime

broadcaster for the team after he
retired in 1974. Santo died in 2010
at age 70.
Larkin, whose father, Robert,
coached him in several sports, was
an honor student and a two-sport
standout in his senior year at Cincinnati’s Moeller High School. Although he wanted to go to college,
Larkin said he was torn because his
hometown Reds drafted him in the
second round of the 1982 draft, and
they offered more than his family
ever dreamed of.
“They were throwing money at
me that we had not seen,” he said.
“That was really the tough part for
me. I remember asking my mom and
dad, ‘You guys need this money? Do
you want this money?’ They were
like, ‘No!’ Once they said no, it was
very easy for me to go to college.”
So, Larkin went to Michigan on a
football scholarship to play for coach
Bo Schembechler’s Wolverines. But

Larkin’s dream of becoming a standout defensive back was doused when
Schembechler redshirted him as a
freshman, and he quickly gravitated
toward baseball.
Much to the chagrin of an incredulous Schembechler, Larkin walked
away from football for good when his
baseball skills improved during that
year away from the gridiron, and he
became a two-time All-American
who appeared in two College World
Series for the Wolverines. Still, despite his accomplishments, Larkin
said his experience in Los Angeles
on the 1984 U.S. Olympic baseball
team spurred him to become great.
He played in only three of the team’s
five games and batted a woeful .143.
“That really upset me, made me
tell myself, ‘All right, I’m not playing around anymore. I’m going to
be much better. I’m going to make

WVU QB Geno
Smith tabbed US men’s Olympic basketball beats Britain
for Big 12 honor
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
— West Virginia quarterback Geno Smith is the
Big 12 preseason Offensive Player of the Year,
beating out Oklahoma’s
Landry Jones.
The league on Wednesday released its preseason
All-Big 12 teams, selected
by media members who
cover the conference.
Texas lineman Alex
Okafor is the preseason
Defensive Player of the
Year and is one of three
Longhorn defenders se-

lected to the all-league
team.
Oklahoma State’s Joseph
Randle and Texas’s Malcolm
Brown earned nods at running back, with Oklahoma’s
Kenny Stills picked at wide
receiver.
Iowa State’s linebacker
duo of Jake Knott and A.J.
Klein both made the cut
along with Kansas State’s
Arthur Brown.
Freshman wide receiver
Trey Metoyer of Oklahoma
is the preseason Newcomer
of the Year.

MANCHESTER, England (AP) —
Carmelo Anthony and Deron Williams
responded to a lineup change with
19 points apiece, and the U.S. men’s
Olympic basketball team beat Britain
118-78 on Thursday in an exhibition
game.
LeBron James added 16 points
and Russell Westbrook had 15 for the
Americans, who built a 40-point lead
early in the fourth quarter against
their inexperienced and overmatched
opponent, and every basket from there
seemed to be a dunk.
U.S. coach Mike Krzyzewski
changed up his starting lineup, inserting Kevin Durant for Anthony, and
Williams for Chris Paul, and both Anthony and Williams flourished in their
new roles.
Williams, who couldn’t scrimmage

with the Americans when they opened
camp because he hadn’t signed his $98
million extension with the Nets yet,
made 7-of-8 shots, going 5 of 6 from
3-point range and adding five assists.
Anthony came in for Durant in the
first quarter — apparently unnoticed
to the PA announcer, who credited
Durant with the Knicks forward’s first
basket — and shook off the change
well after being a starter in three previous years with the national team
and both exhibitions this year. He rebounded from a poor game in Washington by shooting 8 of 10 from the
field.
Chicago Bulls All-Star Luol Deng
scored 25 points for Britain.
Britain’s home game was similar to
the Americans’ opener against China
in the Beijing Olympics, where plays

See LARKIN ‌| 10

for both teams were loudly cheered.
The boos were brief, when a light
“USA!” chant broke out in the fourth
quarter.
Basketball has little place in British
sports, but with the national team returning to the Olympics this year as
the games’ host, the sport got some attention with a visit from the powerful
U.S. squad.
In an unusual pregame scene, the
crowd didn’t seem interested in the
home team’s strange set of pregame
warm-up exercises, choosing instead
to watch the Americans’ practice
dunks, oohing and aahing along the
way.
The rules of the game were then
written shown on the overhead video
See OLYMPIC ‌| 10

�Friday, July 20, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

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Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $425+2 BR at
$475 Month. 446-1599.

Syracuse Village has two
openings: Fiscal Officer: Must
be courteous and professional.
Apply by July 27at Mayor’s
Office, 2581 3rd St. 8–4:30
M–F. Council Member: submit
letters of interest by Aug 3 to
Mayor Cunningham PO Box
266 Syracuse OH 45779.

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Legals
Sheriff's Sale of Real Estate
Revised Code, Section
2329.25
The State of Ohio, Meigs
County
MidFirst Bank
Plaintiff
vs. No. 09-CV-164
Robert A. Hayes, et al.
Defendant
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale in the above entitled action, I will offer for sale at
public auction, held at Megis
County Courthouse, in the
second floor lobby of the
Courthouse Located at 100
East 2nd Street Pomeroy OH,
45769, in the above named
County on Friday, the 3rd day
of August, 2012 at 10:00AM
the following described real
estate, situate in the County of
Meigs
and State of Ohio, and Village
of Syracuse, to wit:
The following real estate
Situate in the Village of
Syracuse, in the County of
Meigs and State of Ohio and
being in 100 Acre Lot No. 297
in said Village and being Lots
Nos. 53 and 54 in Carleton's
Second Addition to said Village. Excepting the coal underlying said premises with the
right to mine and remove the
same without injury to the
surface. Subject to all legal
easements and leases.
Said Premises Located at
2292 Sixth Street, Syracuse,
OH 45779
PPN 2000369000 and
2000368000
Said Premises Appraised at
$25,000.00 and cannot be sold
for less than two-thirds of that
amount.
TERMS OF SALE: 10% deposit
Robert E. Beegle
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
David F. Hanson
Attorney
7/13 7/20 7/27

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Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
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300

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ANIMALS

Gallia County Veterans Special
Meeting to be held Monday
July 23rd at 7pm at the amvets building.

LG. Garage Sale 671 Gooch
Rd., near Tycoon Lake. Fri/Sat
20th &amp; 21st. of July from 9-5
RECREATIONAL VEHICLES
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1997 Chevy Cavalier has new
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plus. price is $1,400. Call 740339-3006
2005 Chevy Impala 4-door,
79,000 miles. Red. Cold air &amp;
clean car. $7800. 304-6756555 or 740-208-0028.
Nissan Rogue SL sport,
24,300mi, Loaded, ex. cond
$16,900. 304-675-0225
Want To Buy
Oiler's Towing now buying
Junk Cars Paying $1.00 to
$700.00
388-0011
or
441-7870
REAL ESTATE SALES
Cemetery Plots
For Sale 1 space In the
Chapel Mausoleum at Meigs
Memory Gardens For more
info 740-992-4025
Houses For Sale
2 BR earth-berm home, approx 4 acres, energy eff living,
short drive to Pomeroy on
paved road. $70,000. 740-5903596
600

LAND FOR SALE

Farm Land for Sale/Lease.
approx 130 acres to Lease or
Sale. Rt 7 S., 5 miles below
Town. Raynor Peach Orchard,
Due to Death. 740-446-48017
REAL ESTATE RENTALS

GIVEAWAY - 2 - 7week old
beagle puppies to a good
home. Call 379-2282
GIVEAWAY To a GOOD
HOME Black, Black &amp; Gray
tabby, calico. KITTENS, Liter
trained and wormed. Call 4463897 or 446-1282.

MERCHANDISE

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that
you do business with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the mail until you have investigating the offering.

Annual Yard Sale @ 1686
Lincoln Pike , July 21, 9am 2pm. China Cabinet,
recliner,table &amp; chairs, rainbow vacuum, other household
items, men's,womens,and
girls(justice &amp; gymboree).
clothing, crafts,and supplies,
more. Rain cancels.

Pets

Lost &amp; Found

Notices

Yard Sale
3 FAMILY, 7/20 &amp; 7/21, 660
High St, Middleport, 8am-?.
Boys, girls clothes, baby-12yrs,
appliances, furn, electronics

FINANCIAL

AGRICULTURE

Missing since 7/16/12. Small
male yellow terrier (curly).
Goes by the name "Bodee"
Call 304-675-3152

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

Other Services

ANNOUNCEMENTS

2 dogs missing, 40lb husky &amp;
20lb black w/brown markings.
Reward offered. 304-593-6894

Want to buy Junk Cars, Call
740-388-0884

Fuel / Oil / Coal / Wood / Gas

TOTAL WOOD HEAT. Safe,
clean, efficient and comfortable OUTDOOR WOOD FURNACE from Central Boiler. Altizer
Farm
Supply
740-245-5193

Apartments/Townhouses
1 bedroom upstairs Apartment
in Gallipolis - NO PETS References required Call 3392584
2 &amp; 3 BR apts, $385 &amp; up, sec
dep $300 &amp; up AC, W/D hookup tenant pays elec, EHO
Ellm View Apts 304-882-3017
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
Apts - Racine, Ohio.
Furnished - $450 &amp; Up
w/s/g incl. No Pets
740-591-5174

Miscellaneous
Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

MOVING SALE:(all antiques)
3 pc oak BR suite, oak buffet,
hutch, DR table w/4 chairs &amp;
leaf, mirror, grandfather clock,
washer/dryer, pots &amp; pans and
much more. 740-245-5515

RENT
SPECIALS
Jordan Landing Apts-2, 3 &amp; 4
BR units avail. Rent plus dep &amp;
elec. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets
304-674-0023
304-444-4268

Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR apartment
for the elderly/disabled, call
304-675-6679
Commercial
Clean attractive Commercial
Property for Rent near Holzer
Hospital Rt Business 35. 3
Rms., Kitchenette, with attached Garage. 304-657-6378
Houses For Rent
1 BR &amp; 4 BR, NO PETS, Syracuse, OH. 304-675-5332 or
740-591-0265
2BR, 1 BA upstairs, Lg LR, Sm
DR, Kit furn, no smoking, no
pets, $450 mo, $300 dep, 319
Rutland St, Middleport, OH.
740-992-3764
MANUFACTURED HOUSING

Rentals
2 Br 1 Ba. total electric,
Cheshire Area, no pets, Ref.
req. $425.00 month-$425.00
Dep.740-367-7025
2 Br mobile home - newly remodeled - with deck - $400
mo. &amp; Dep. - married couple or
individual - 3 minutes from
Walmart - NO PETS - 740-367
-7760

Medical
Full time medical assistant in
doctors office. Experience required. Mon-Fri with some late
hours. Very busy practice so
serious inquiries only. Send
resume to: Robert Holley M.D.,
C/O: Melinda Hall, 2500 Jefferson Ave, Pt Pleasant, WV
25550 or Fax 304-675-3713
Needed HHA, STNA, CNA in
the Middleport, Racine,
Pomeroy Area. Please Call
740-446-3808.

WANTED: Part-time positions
available to assist individuals
with developmental disabilities
at a group home in Bidwell:
(1) 35 hrs: 11p-8:30a Th; 11p9a F; Sat 7p-8:30a Sun
(2) 35 hrs: 9a-5p Sun; 4-9p M;
4-12p W; 4-11p Tu/Th.
High school diploma/GED,
valid driver's license and three
years good driving experience
required. $9.25/hr, after
training. Pre-employment
Drug Testing. Send resume
to: Buckeye Community
Services, P.O. Box 604,
Jackson, OH 45640 or e-mail
to: beyecserv@yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants:
7/20/12. EOE

OFFICE SPACE, 2400 sq ft,
reception area, 7 offices, 2
conf rooms, kitchen, 2 BA, off
street parking in downtown
Middleport, ground level. 740992-2459
Sales
Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Call

RESORT PROPERTY
EMPLOYMENT
Drivers &amp; Delivery
Class A CDL Driver wanted
with a minimum of 3 years
experience hauling Heavy
Equipment. The Area covers
the Eastern half of the U.S.
and is based out of New
Haven, WV. Seldom requires
more than 1 or 2 nights per
week away from home.
Competitive wages and benefits for qualified applicants.
Send resumes to:
Lowboy Driver
PO Box 309
Mason, WV 25260.
Class A CDL Driver wanted
with a minimum of 3 years
experience hauling Heavy
Equipment. The Area covers
the Eastern half of the U.S.
and is based out of New
Haven, WV. Seldom requires
more than 1 or 2 nights per
week away from home.
Competitive wages and benefits for qualified applicants.
Send resumes to:
Lowboy Driver
PO Box 309
Mason, WV 25260.
Class A CDL Driver wanted
with a minimum of 3 years
experience hauling Heavy
Equipment. The Area covers
the Eastern half of the U.S.
and is based out of New
Haven, WV. Seldom requires
more than 1 or 2 nights per
week away from home.
Competitive wages and benefits for qualified applicants.
Send resumes to:
Lowboy Driver
PO Box 309
Mason, WV 25260.

R &amp; J Trucking in Marietta, OH
is hiring CDL A Drivers for
local &amp; Regional Routes. Applicants must be at least 23 yrs
have min of 2 yr of commercial driving exp. Clean
MVR, Haz-mat Cert. Excellent
health &amp; dental insurance,
401(K), Vacation, Bonus pays
and safety awards. Contact
Kenton at 1-800-462-9365
E.O.E.

SERVICE / BUSINESS DIRECTORY

Handyman
Roof repair, driveway repair &amp;
seal coating, power washing,
light hauling &amp; misc odd jobs.
Sr. Discount. 25yrs exp. Licensed &amp; bonded. 304-8823959
Manufactured Homes
$0 Down with your Land - get a
new Mobile Home 3,4 or 5BR
740-446-3570
2-BR 1 bath small mobile
home for rent. 1-2 persons
only. Water/Trash paid. NO
PETS! Great Location @
Johnsons Mobile Home Park!
Call 740-446-3160.
Miscellaneous
BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

www.mydailysentinel.com

Mike W. Marcum - Owner

The Daily Sentinel • Page 7

�Friday, July 20, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 8

Scott

Ten
From Page 1
reasonable to me is to create a mechanism in which
the commissioner along
with a committee of presidents and athletic directors
had more oversight and control.”
Illinois Chancellor Phyllis
Wise called the Penn State
scandal
“unprecedented”
and wasn’t sure what the
Big Ten will do.
“Since the document related to the issue is in draft
form, I don’t know what it
will say when it’s finalized,”
she said.
Illini athletic director
Miek Thomas called the
proposal “a work in progress.”
“I don’t know the exact
language but I know there
was some language in there
related to personnel matters
and consequences, should
there be issues of a certain
magnitude that requires action,” Thomas said.
Thomas wasn’t prepared
to endorse the idea of
coaches or other officials
potentially being fired by
the commissioner.
“Generally I’m supportive

of a concept that might include different safeguards
and controls and best practices,” he said.
The idea was brought up
at SEC media days, where
Commissioner Mike Slive
said simply: “I really make it
my business not to discuss
other people’s issues.”
Mississippi athletic director Ross Bjork said such
a move would need study,
saying “I don’t think anyone
has proposed anything like
that before in college athletics.”
Georgia coach Mark Richt
said he didn’t see a problem
with giving a league commissioner such power.
“I would think the commissioner is going to do
what’s in the best interest of
the league, in the best interest of the people involved,”
he said. “I would say for him
to have the right to do that,
for her to have the right
to do that, is fine. Doesn’t
mean they have to, but they
would have the right to do
that. It’s just one more check
and balance in a system that
certainly — I would just say
it would make sense to me.”

Visit us at

www.mydailysentinel.com

From Page 1
4 under, finally stumbling after he sprayed his tee shot at
the 15th into the thick rough.
He needed two whacks to get
out and wound up taking bogey.
Still, he finished within
three shots of the leader, positioning himself nicely for
another run at his 15th major championship. Woods is
looking to break a drought in
the biggest tournaments that
dates back to the 2008 U.S.
Open, before he was slowed
by injuries and his personal
life crumbled.
He certainly had a swagger
in his step and showed plenty
of emotion, strolling the
grounds like he owned the
place, mixed in with some
anguished looks every time a
shot didn’t go exactly where
he wanted. Woods played
it safe, largely sticking with
irons off the tee to avoid the
tall, thick rough and devilish
bunkers.
He just left a few putts
short.
“I really hit it well,” Woods
said. “I was very close to
making a few more putts. Every ball was starting right on
my line. I was very pleased
with that. I’ve just got to hit
the putts a little harder.”
The morning conditions
couldn’t have been any better
for going low. An early sprinkle gave way to dry weather,
the sun even making an appearance through the lowhanging clouds. There was
hardly any breeze blowing in

off the nearby Irish Sea, the
flags atop the 18th grandstand barely rippling.
Showing excellent control
off the tee — a must at Royal
Lytham — Woods got rolling
with a birdie at the opening
par-3, rapped in another at
the fourth, then grabbed the
outright lead with a 20-footer
at No. 6. He grimaced after
each of his first two shots at
the par-5 seventh, but was
still in good shape, just short
of a greenside pot bunker. He
deftly chipped right up next
to the flag and tapped in for
another birdie.
A host of major champions
took advantage of a course
ripe for the taking. Lawrie,
who won a British Open best
remembered for Jean Van de
Velde’s historic meltdown on
the 72nd hole, was perhaps
the biggest surprise. Masters
winners Johnson and Bubba
Watson (67) were right in
the thick of things. So too
were U.S. Open champions McIlroy, Ernie Els and
Graeme McDowell, all at 67.
Watson, whose gambling
style seemed ill-suited for a
British Open, was downright
steady — heck, even a little
boring. He rapped in birdies when he had the chance
and generally stayed out of
trouble.
Colsaerts, a big hitter from
Belgium, might’ve had the
best round of the day, considering the breeze picked up
and the rain returned in the
afternoon. He holed out for
an eagle at No. 2 and was 2
under on the tougher back

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

side.
McIlroy wasn’t too shabby,
either. He rallied for birdies
on two of the last three holes
after an errant tee shot at the
15th struck a spectator in
the back of the head, the ball
ricocheting out of bounds behind a hamburger stand. He
had to tee off again and took
a double-bogey.
“If he could have headed
it the other way, it would
have been better,” McIlroy
quipped.
The 16-year-old fan, who
was attending his first British Open, had his head bandaged up and appeared a bit
woozy. Fortunately, he wasn’t
seriously injured. McIlroy
came over to check on his
condition and give him an
autographed glove that said
“Sorry” and included a smiley face.
“The most important
thing was that he was OK,”
McIlroy said. “I would have
felt terrible if it was worse
than it was.”
Not everyone had a smiley
face. Defending Open champion Darren Clarke struggled
to a 76. Lee Westwood, the
English favorite and best
player without a major title,
got off to a sluggish start
with a 73.
“I’ve got to go and practice,” Clarke said. “I’m basically disgusted with myself
for shooting 6 over.”
World No. 1 Luke Donald,
who’s never been much of a
factor in the majors, got off to
a respectable start with a 70.
But Phil Mickelson, the run-

ner-up a year ago at Royal St.
George’s, made a total mess
of things at the far end of the
course. He took double-bogey at the seventh after needing two swings to escape the
punishing rough, and he bogeyed the eighth after hitting
into a bunker, then popping
out into another deep patch
of rough, forcing him to take
an unplayable lie. He finished
with an ugly 73.
Royal Lytham is the shortest course on the Open rotation over the last decade, and
it’s on the smallest piece of
property, tucked a mile or so
away from the Irish Sea and
surrounded by homes and a
railway. Accuracy off the tee
was at a premium on a layout
that featured 206 bunkers,
and the persistent rain left
the rough even thicker than
usual.
The list of Open champions at Royal Lytham is impressive — David Duval and
Lehman, both formerly No. 1
in the world, won the last two
times. The rest of the winners showcased in the brick
clubhouse are in the World
Golf Hall of Fame.
Then again, trying to figure out the next winner isn’t
that simple.
Besides
the
massive
amount of bunkers, the number getting the most attention at this major is 15 — the
number of players who have
won the last 15 majors. An
even greater sign of parity is that the last nine major
champions had never won a
major before.

�Friday, July 20, 2012

ComiCs/EntErtainmEnt
www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

Friday, July 20, 2012

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

The Daily Sentinel • Page 9

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s Horoscope

zITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Friday, July
20, 2012:
This year you become more verbal
and very upbeat, so it seems. You
simply are revealing more of yourself.
Communication flourishes, and there
is much more kindness exchanged
between you and others. If you are
single, be sure to date before you
commit. Mr. or Ms. Right is likely
to appear, but not in 2012. If you
are attached, the two of you seem
to experience more mutuality. Plan
weekends away as a couple in order
to bond you closer. LEO makes you
smile more often than not.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
HHHHH Everything about you
radiates the fact that the weekend is
near. Your intuition mixes with ingenuity and finally allows you to move a
difficult person away from his or her
position. This person might not even
notice this change in stance until later.
Tonight: Let the good times roll.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
HHH Your inclination to stay
close to home might be the perfect
plan if you can adapt your schedule
accordingly. Listen to your instincts,
and what you hoped would be the
outcome of an effort very well could
be. Tonight: Invite friends over for a
special TGIF.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
HHHHH Your words fall on deaf
ears ... or so you think. Certain events
indicate a greater receptivity from
others than you were aware of. A
child or loved one still might be difficult, but you now know that you can
subtly influence this person. Tonight:
Consider something calm and quiet.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
HHH Your tendency to overindulge, and perhaps be a little more
carefree than usual, emerges. Others
might be delighted by this personality revision. You, however, might not
be, as you note a tendency to go
overboard. Tonight: Tap into your
imagination.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
HHHHH You bloom in the present
atmosphere. Others remain responsive, and even a touchy person allows
his or her caring to peek through.
Your intuition helps guide you if you
decide to break tradition. Tonight:
Invite a couple of friends over to christen the weekend with you.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
HHH A lot is happening that you
easily might choose to keep hushhush. Whether you feel as if you will
jinx yourself by spilling the beans or
are just discreet makes no difference.
You decide the less that is said, the
better. Use care with a budget matter.
Tonight: Count on going solo.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
HHHHH Aim for exactly what you
want. Do not hesitate, and you will hit
a home run. In general, you naturally
do well with people. In this case, you
seem to be holding court; many people seek you out. Place limits on your
popularity until you complete a mustdo task. Tonight: Where people are.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
HHHH You might be a little too
aware of your image and the power
you yield. Others sense that attitude
and how it doesn’t have much to do
with your authentic self; therefore,
allow greater give-and-take. You will
be happier. Tonight: Join a family
member for dinner.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
HHHHH Attempt to find an unusual solution when all other ideas hit a
brick wall. If you use your imagination
in a brainstorming session or two,
success is very likely. Getting away
from your routine proves quite helpful.
Tonight: Opt for something different.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
HHHH Someone has a way of
reeling you in that you like, yet you
pretend not to be aware of it. Know
that you can’t shake off a serious
element tied to this situation. Are you
ready to deal with that? You seem
to avoid this person until you make a
decision. Tonight: Deal with a problem
first.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
HHHH Understanding evolves,
as a key person displays his or her
true colors. Decide not to judge, and
see what more could pop up. Your
verbalized thoughts could result in
shutting down this person who you
are delighted to see finally open up.
Tonight: Chat over dinner.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
HHHH Your efforts to contact a
friend or loved one to open up a conversation appear to work. You could
witness this person closing him- or
herself off when you least expect this
reaction. Tonight: Just hang in there.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Friday, July 20, 2012

www.mydailysentinel.com

OVP Sports Briefs
RV mandatory OHSAA
Fall Sports Meeting
BIDWELL, Ohio — River Valley High School and
Middle School will be holding their annual mandated
OHSAA Fall Sports Parent
Meeting at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, Aug. 7, in the RVHS
cafeteria. All parents of fall
athletes are required to be
present and take part in video presentations mandated
by the OHSAA. Required
paperwork necessary for
athletes to participate in fall
sports will be completed at
this time, as well as having
a meeting with your child’s
respective coach. Participants will also be given a
short presentation on the
new River Valley athletic
website.
GA Football
Helmet Fittings
CENTENARY, Ohio —
Mandatory helmet fitting
for seventh and eighth grade
football will be held at 10
a.m. on Thursday, Aug. 2,
at the visitors locker room
at Memorial Field. Any student in grades 7-12 wanting
to participate in athletics at
Gallia Academy needs to
have their physical completed before they may participate. Forms can be picked
up at the high school.

Wahama Helmet Fitting
MASON, W.Va. — Helmet
fitting and equipment distribution for Wahama varsity
football players will be held
at 9:30 a.m. on July 24th. All
players need to return their
physical forms at that time.
At 6 p.m. on July 24th the

60331157

GA mandatory OHSAA
Fall Sports Meeting
CENTENARY, Ohio —

Any student in grades 7-12
wanting to play a fall sport at
Gallia Academy must attend
a mandatory Fall Sports Orientation at Gallia Academy
High School. The meeting
will be at 6 p.m. on Monday,
Aug. 6. The student and at
least one parent or guardian
must attend the meeting.
^
Gallia Academy
reserved seating
CENTENARY, Ohio —
Gallia Academy Football
Reserved seats will go on
sale Monday, August 6th for
the Athletic Boosters Super
Boosters. They will be sold
on a first come first served
basis. Parents of players,
cheerleaders, and band
members will be able to purchase tickets on Tuesday,
August 7th, on a first come
first served basis. Wednesday August 8th the general
public will be able to purchase tickets on a first come
first served basis. Tickets
may be purchased at Gallia
Academy High School from
8:00 am - 3:00 pm. There is a
limit to ten seats purchased
per customer.

507 Mulberry Heights,
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Call Now For An Appointment

1-800-634-5265

required parent meeting will
be held. There will be code
of conduct, drug testing, and
contact forms to complete at
that time. Directly following
the parent meeting will be a
booster meeting to prepare
for the upcoming fall seasons of cheer, football, golf,
and volleyball. All parents of
Wahama Athletes are boosters and are asked to help in
any way they can.
Wahama Golf
eam Meeting
MASON W.Va. — An informational meeting for all
candidates for the Wahama
High School Varsity Golf
Team will be held Tuesday,
July 24, 2012 at the Riverside Golf Course picnic
shelter area at 6 p.m. Practice will begin Monday, July
30, at 8 a.m. at the Riverside Golf Course. Parents
are welcome to attend the
informational meeting. All
candidates are reminded
that physical exams must be
completed before becoming
a team member. Additional
information can be obtained
by calling Bob Blessing at
(304) 675-6135.
Meigs Football/Parent
Meeting
ROCKSPRINGS,
Ohio
— A meeting for all Meigs
football players and parents
grades 7-12 will be held at
6 p.m. on Friday, July 20 at
the new Farmers Bank Stadium/Holzer Field.
Farmers Bank Stadium
Open House
ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio —
An open house will be held
at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, July
20 at the new Farmers Bank
Stadium/Holzer Field. The
football stadium, concession
stand, restrooms, press box,
locker rooms, weight room
and track will be open to the
public. Food and drinks will
be served.

The Daily Sentinel • Page 10

Phillips’ 5 RBIs help Reds
rally past D-Backs 7-6
CINCINNATI (AP) — Brandon Phillips
homered and had five RBIs, then scored
the go-ahead run in the seventh inning on
Todd Frazier’s single to help the Cincinnati
Reds rally from a six-run deficit to pull out
a 7-6 win over the Arizona Diamondbacks
on Thursday.
Arizona led, 6-3,with one out in the
seventh when reliever Bryan Shaw (1-4)
walked pinch-hitter Xavier Paul and leadoff batter Drew Stubbs. Wilson Valdez’s
grounder skipped under the glove of first
baseman Paul Goldschmidt for a run-scoring error, setting up Phillips’ game-tying
two-run double to left-center field. Phillips
moved to third on Jay Bruce’s groundout to
Goldschmidt against reliever Mike Zagurski and scored on Frazier’s single to left off
of reliever Brad Ziegler.
Alfredo Simon (2-1) allowed one hit in
1 2-3 innings for the win. Logan Ondrusek
and Sean Marshall combined to pitch a
scoreless eighth and Aroldis Chapman
pitched the ninth for his 15th save.
The Reds improved to 2-2 in their first
four games without All-Star first baseman
Joey Votto, who underwent arthroscopic
surgery on Tuesday to repair a torn meniscus in his left knee.
The Diamondbacks scored in the first
inning for the third time in the four-game
series. Willie Bloomquist led off the game
with a single to right field, stole second as
Aaron Hill was striking out and scored on
Goldschmidt’s two-out single to center.
They made it 2-0 in the third on
Bloomquist’s leadoff double to right field
and Hill’s RBI single to right. extending his
hitting streak to 10 games.

Hill added his 13th homer of the season,
a 395-foot solo shot into the left field seats,
with one out in the fifth. The Diamondbacks
added three in the sixth, including Henry
Blanco’s two-run homer, his first since Sept.
28 against the Dodgers.
Stubbs and Valdez led off the sixth with
singles before Phillips crushed a 1-1 pitch
428 feet into the second deck in left field for
his 11th homer of the season.
Arizona starter Joe Saunders allowed
one hit in five innings before wilting in the
sixth. The left-hander allowed four hits and
three runs with three walks and five strikeouts in six innings.
Cincinnati starter Mike Leake tied his career high by allowing 11 hits and his season
high with six runs before being lifted with
one out in the sixth inning. Leake finished
with two strikeouts and a walk.
NOTES: Reds All-Star OF Jay Bruce
went 0 for 4 to extend his hitless streak to
18 at bats. … Hill’s homer extended to 72
the number of consecutive games in which
at least one home run has been hit at Great
American Ball Park, the longest active
streak. … After going 2-5 on the road trip,
the Diamondbacks are scheduled to open a
10-game homestand Friday against Houston. RHP Trevor Cahill, Arizona’s projected
starter, is 1-3 with a 4.63 ERA over his last
four starts. … RHP Homer Bailey, who won
his last three starts, is scheduled to start for
the Reds against Milwaukee Friday at Cincinnati. Bailey never has won four straight
starts.

Larkin
From Page 1
them have to play me,’”
Larkin said. “I think that’s
when it really clicked for
me. After that, I felt like I
got a lot better, a lot more
focused.”
Drafted again by the Reds
in 1985, this time the fourth
pick overall, Larkin finished
seventh in the National
League Rookie of the Year
voting in 1986 despite playing just 41 games.
In his speech on Sunday,
Larkin likely will pay tribute to the man he replaced
at shortstop — Dave Concepcion — and other former teammates like Buddy
Bell who helped him adjust
to major league life as a
rookie.
“When I got to the big
leagues, I still needed some

Football officials
training class
The Ohio-Kanawha Rivers Football Officials Association is planning to conduct
a New Officials Training
Program for individuals
who may be interested in
officiating football this fall.
Interested individuals must
be at least 18 years of age,
have a genuine interest in
the game of football, and be
willing to devote the time
necessary to the training
class and learning the rules
of the game. The class will
tentatively start July 25.
Anyone interested can con- From Page 1
tact Kevin Durst at 304-5932544 or Scott King at 304- scoreboard and explained
882-3392.
by the public address announcer before play began.
Middleport Fall Ball
The British, also inMIDDLEPORT,
Ohio cluding the Portland Trail
— The Middleport Youth Blazers’ Joel Freeland and
League is holding Fall Ball coached by Houston Rocksignups for boys and girls ets assistant Chris Finch,
from ages 6-16. Signups will hung with the Americans
be held August 4th and 11th for 10-plus minutes before
at the Middleport Ball Fields the visitors’ athleticism ran
from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. For them off the floor.
any information call Dave at
Coming off a tough test
740-590-0438, Jackie 740416-1261, or Tanya at 740- against Brazil in an 80-69
victory Monday in Wash416-1952.

fine-tuning,” said Larkin,
who, as a child and Cincinnati fan, practiced sliding
headfirst like Pete Rose,
wielded his bat like Tony
Perez, and practiced onehop throws to first base on
concrete, imagining he was
Concepcion.
“My learning curve was
pretty steep. Davey knew I
was gunning for his job. I
could not believe how much
he welcomed me, accepted
me and helped me.”
Though Larkin played his
entire 19-year career with
the Reds, he was nearly
traded toward the end.
But he nixed a deal in July
2000 that would have sent
him to the Mets because
he wanted a three-year contract and New York refused.
Of course, that wasn’t the
first time Larkin’s name sur-

faced in a prospective trade.
The previous year, he was
caught off-guard while on a
road trip to Los Angeles.
“The
clubhouse
kid
comes over to me and gives
me a jersey with Larkin on
the back, and it was a Dodger jersey,” he said. “I asked
him, ‘What is that? Do you
have somebody named Larkin in your franchise?’ He
said, ‘No. It’s for you. We
were that close to a deal and
they had told us to make
up the jersey because the
press conference was going to take place in a couple
of days and they wanted to
make sure that we were prepared for it.’”
The deal, of course, didn’t
pan out. Much to the benefit of the Reds.
“I had no idea,” Larkin
said, “I had no clue.”

ington in which they trailed
by 10 after one quarter, the
Americans led by only three
inside 1 1/2 minutes left in
the opening period. They
closed with 10 straight
points, with Anthony nailing consecutive 3-pointers
that made it 33-20.
Krzyzewski went with an
explosive lineup of Durant,
Kobe Bryant, James and Anthony — four of the NBA’s
top six scorers — and Paul
late in the second quarter,
and James scored twice on

feeds from Anthony and
set up Durant for another
basket in an 8-0 spurt that
extended a 10-point lead to
18, and the game was never
close again. The U.S. led by
as much as 47.
This was possibly the
Americans’ last easy game
before London, with exhibitions remaining in Barcelona against 2008 bronze
medalist Argentina and
Spain, the team they beat
in the gold-medal game four
years ago.

Olympic

WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM/CREATECONNECTPROMOTE

60334888

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