<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="3370" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/3370?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T01:46:20+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="13281">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/95667e7fe122b70c513d93aca18b9cc0.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4e36a11449436d27755fc59e8a62f9d1</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="12129">
                  <text>oface

Panther pride, ~

B

e
I

I

I

I

l_

Brothers
indicted in
Middleport
armed
robbery

OBITUARIES
Page A2
• Randal Browning

SPORTS
• Reds win again,
beat Cubs 3-2 in 1Oth.
See Page 81

BY B RIAN

J.

R EED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Less
than a week after the
armed robbery of a
Middleport convenience
store. the Meigs County
Grand Jury has issued
indictments against the
two Mason. W.Va. brothers charged in the crime.
Alexander J. Chandler,
, 22. and Shane M.
I Chandler. 20. both of
'------~------,...-----:----------------------....J Mason.
W.Va.,
are
Charlene Hoeflichlphotos
charged with robbing the
The flag corps leads the way in marching practice.
TNT Pit Stop store at
knifepoint. The Meigs
County Grand Jury, convening
Wednesday,
returned identical threecount indictments against
each of the men.
Both m:e charged with
aggravated robbery. robbery and grand theft in
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
the
robbery of the store.
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
located on Ohio 7 just
outside
Middleport.
POMEROY The
Investigators
ha\'e not
temperature was moving
reported the amount of
up as the sun was beating
money stolen m the rob.
down Thursday morning
ber:&gt;. but the charges of
but the Meigs Marauder
grand theft against the
Band members didn't
men contain a specificaseem to notice. They
that the rnofle\
tion
were concentrating on
stolen from the store wa~"
instructions from director
greater than $500 but less
Toney Dingess.
than $5 .000.
It's band camp week
A frightened store clerk
for the 90 or so students,
first
called
the
many new to the band
this year. and practice
Please see lndided, Al
sessions are taking place
every day on the school
parking lot.
Band members played
their instruments as they
marched in step around
the lot and executed formations as directed by
Above:
Dingess who walked
When
the
about giving encourage. \
d1rector .
ment. making corrections and changes. offerspeaks,
ing a bit of constructive
the
criticism. all the while
students
maintaining his usual
'The right people
listen.
mild manner. And the
were there'
students seemed intent
Left :
B
Y
B RIAN J . R EED
on getting it right.
Drums
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM
The 2010 band's first
provide
appearance will be in·
the beat
RLTLAND - Meigs
Saturday's July Fourth
to march
Countv
Commissioners
parade in Rutland. Then
by.
\\ ith
1 met Wednesday
on Sunday they will
Mayor
Lowell
Vance.
march in the Middleport
!legislati\ e representaparade.
tives and staff from state
agencies to discuss how
costs associated \vith
Rutland's beleaguered
\Vater and sewer system
nught be reduced.
Villagers pay around
$1 00 per month for their
talked to six victims \\ ater and sewer ser\'ice.
B Y DELYSSA HUFFMAN
DHUFFMAN@MYDAILYREGISTERCOM
of the alleged fraud Board President Thomas
\nderson said. and one
and expect~ to inter\ ie•v more people. He of the topics discussed at
POINT PLEASANT. W.Va. - A
meetm!!
said that the allega- Wednesda\ 's
member of the Mason County
tions do not involve was hov. · those costs
(W.Va.) Board of Education was
any inmates at Lakin might be reduced.
arrested Thursday and charged with
B Y B ETH SERGENT
Board President Tom
one felony count of fraudulent . . __ __ _J CoiTectional Facility,
BSERGENT ''MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
Anderson
said the group
schemes by the West Virginia State
Warner
where Wamcr is
employed as an adult discussed -a number of
Police.
RACINE - The Southern
pos,1ble remedies to
State Police took Teresa Warner. basic education and GED teacher.
Local Board of Education
problems \&gt;. ith the vilvendetta
that
is
..
This
is
a
personal
50, Point Pleasant, W.Va., into cus
recently met to approve the foltody Thursday morning. She posted retaliator:&gt; and political." Warner lage's operation of its 20
lowing contracts and personnel a $20,000 bond in Mason Co . said Tuesday evening after the in\'es- year-old sewer system.
agreements.
and a current arranoeMagistrate Court. Authorities said tigation became public knowledge.
The Board approved the
ment that allows Rutl~d
Shaw.
James
Casey
and
Michael
the arrest was the result of an invesreturn from sabbatical for Ann tigation being conducted by Cpl. attorne:&gt;s representing Warner. had to purchase its water
Ohlinger to her former position K.M. Gilley.
no comment on the case. Officials from Leading Creek
as science teacher at Southern
Gilley stated that several alleged from Lakin Correction Facility also Conser\'anC\' District and
High School. Alicia Ngo was incidents of fraud pertaining to declined to comment.
re-sell it to· villa!:!e residents.
~
hired as a math teacher for a
Torn Nunnery. president of the
GED tests in Mason County were
one-year limited contract.
Last
month.
LCCD
uncovered during the investigation. Mason Co. Board of Education. and
The following individuals which has been in progress for the William Capehart, superintendent threatened to cut otT the
were appro_ved for supplemental past month. He said Wameralleged- of Mason County Schools, were not village's \\ ater supply
due to a delinquent
contracts for 20 l 0- 11 school ly accepted about $1.000 for giving available for comment.
year: Ryan Lemley. varsity base- passing grades on GED tests from
Within 20 days. Warner will have $8.000 water bill. The
ball. reserve volleyball; Alan 2002 to 2010. That action then led a preliminary hearii1g in magistrate village was able to issue
Crisp. athletic director; Kim to fraudulent GED diplomas being court. The case may be bound over a pa)·mem and keep the
water flowing. but the
Romine. curriculum supervisor.
to the grand jury if enough evidence
awarded.
Please see Rutland, Al
Gilley said that State Police have is presented.
Please see Southern, Al

Band·_
camp ending today
First appearance in Fourth parades

• Corps of Engineers
urges caution around
dams. See Page A2
• OU receives
$426,000 federal
grant to fund
research on
muscle weakness.
See Page A3
• A Hunger for More.
See Page A6
• Some things are
better left behind.
See Page A7.
• Red Hats lunch
at Holzer Clinic.
See Page AS

•~==
WEATHER

Southern Mason Co. BOE member
approves charged in GED fraud case
contracts,
personnel

High: Lower 80s.
Low: Lower 50s.

INDEX
2 SFCTJO~S- 16 PAGES

Calendars
• ssifieds
Comics
Editorials
Faith
jNASCAR

l:;ports

Possible
remedies
discussed for
Rutland water,
sewer crisis

A3
Bs-6
B7

A4
As-7

88
B Section

c 2010 Ohw \'alley Pubhslung Co. 11

li.I.IJ ,I !I!I. ! 1 ! 11~ .

•

•
I

'

�·-- ~ ~

'

Friday, July 2, 2010

Deaths

.......

·-~---------------------------IIIIWII

Corps of Engineers urges caution around dams
HUNTINGTON,
W.Va. - The summer
~cason
means more
boaters out enjoying
recreation on the river~.
but the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineer:-., Huntington
District. is reminding
tho~e boater~ to u~c caution when they're near
one of the Locks and
Dams on the Ohio and
Kana\vha Rivers.
The area~ immediately
upstream and downstream of navigation
dams hm e been designated "Restricted Areas."
Accidents have occulTed
in the pa~t when vessels
violated existing regulation~ and entered \hose
areas.
Vessel operators who
enter the~e areas ri k
their live~ and property
and can affect nece~s:uy

Rev. Rondal C. Browning
Re\. Ronda! C. Bn.m ning. 79. of Mason. W.Va.
died June 30, 2010. Visitation wll be held from 6 to 9
p.m. Friday at the MtNm United i'vlethodist Church.
'I ht: funeral service \\ill be at I p.m. Saturday. July 3
at the church w1th burial in the Sunrise Memorial
Gardens. The Rev. Scott Knowlton and the Rev.
M~h in "Duke" Browning will officiate at the service.
ln lieu of nowcrs donations may be made to Mason.
Good Shepherd, lklkmead or Heights United
!\1ethodist Church~.

Local Briefs
Ice cream social
SALEM CENTER - Salem Township Volunteer
Fire Department will hold its 32nd annual ice cream
social from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Jut) 17. at the fire
station on Ohio 124.
The menu v. ill include 12 fta\ ors of homemade ice
cream. roast beef sandwiches. hot dogs. potato salad
and macaroni &lt;;alad. cole s)a\\. baked beans and pies
and other items.

·For the Record
911
PO,\IEROY- :-oteigs County 911 dispatched the
followmg emergency calls:
.
" H-erb~e~day
.
. .
t! .49 a.m., ~.ark~n St!eet. Rutl,m~ .. laceratwn.
:"~0 a.m., Oh1o L4. M1~~leport. sm~tde.;ttempt:
6.17 p.m .. Ohto 7. Reeds\ 1lle, nausea. 10.-9 p.m..
l:ong Run Road. ~ong Bottom: unknown emergency:
East Memonal Dnve, chest pam.

I!

Common Pleas
POMEROY - The foliO\\ ing actions were journalIzed in the office of Clerk of Courts Diane Lvnch:
Dome., tic
• Dh orcc action tiled by l~tmara Shumaker. against
Brent E. Shumaker.
• Divorce granted to Melissa Durham from Thomas
Conklin.
Criminal
• Tasha Adams arraigned on indictment charging theft
of Pcrcocet, public delendcr appointed. personal recognizance and $1.000 surety bond. trial set for Sept. 14.
Cil'if
• C1vil action filed by Monte J. Riftle against Donna
Burns. and others. alleging personal injury.

Commissioners

gate operations on the
Some dams have Areas and banks near the
locks and dams. When h) droelectric
power waterway may be slipnavigating the v. atcrways plants, and the turbines pery. If you fall into the
of the rivers, boaters in the plant increase water near the dam. you
should be aware of the ~peed when more elec- mav be carried over the
dangers near the locks tricity is needed. During da1i1. The current near
and dams. The restricted this time. the current and ·the top of the dam is
areas have signs posted turbulence become more ·very strong and even the
that show where poten- powerful
and
can be~t swimmers may •
increase the Janger have the strength to
tial dangers are located.
back to the ed~ge of t
Ncar the dmns. strong around the nrea.
Boating near a :-,pillway water.
reverse currents are present at the spillways. At of a dam is dangerous
When you navigate the ,
these points. whirlpools bccau~c if large debris rivers. pay close attention
can also occur. These washe~ over the dam, it to the warning signs
.strong and unpredictable could sudden!) crash into around the lock and
currents on both sides of your watercraft. Never dams. N:eglecting to do
the dams can cau~e anchor near the ~pillwa) so could re~ult in injury.
immediate danger if of a dam because the per:-.onal loss of waterunpredictable craft and even death.
approached too closely. strong.
Currents can rapidly water levels could pull Following the signs will
keep you out of harm's
cany a watercraft over your boat under.
Even in the summer wav.
the edge of the dam.
i"or
information,
Restricted area buovs are months. the cold water
located at a safe distance released dunng the lock- please contact rhe Public
from the area and keep ing process could send Affairs Office at 304.swimmers into :,hock. 399-5353.
you away from danger.

Rutland from Page At
notice was. Vance said valves and other equip- of Publ1c Affm1s in
last month. a sign of big- ment must be installed to Middleport for several
ger problems.
meet district require- )Cars prior to his eleL·tion
to county office.
According
to ments.
Anderson said LCCD
Anderson. those at the
Rutland'~ i~ a grm it)meeting discussed a sci!- might also handle billing flow system. \\ ithout lift
nario in \\hich Leading for the sewer operation. stations.
and
was
Creek
Consen uncv reducing costs eYen fur- designed "on the cheap''
District would pro,·iuc ther. That ~ewer sYstem, because
of
an
water directly to the vii- v. hich uses grind~rs at Em iron mental Protection
!age customers, eliminat- each residence. is outdat- Agenc) mandate. Many
in I! the need to re-treat ed and incrcasinglv resident objected to its
the water once it is expensive to operate. ~ · installation to begin\\ ith.
1 pumped to the \ illage as
"The sewer svstem
There are only 210 cus-.
well as cosh associated itself is at the heart "of the tomers on the system.
problem," Anderson said. The delinquenc) rate is
with billing.
' Because the village is ·"It was not a good sys_tem high. and the village i:-.
re-selling water that has when it was installed and bleeding money trying to
already been te~ted for now it is co:-,ting the vii- keep the sy~tem up
safety, it must test 1t lagc more and ~more all
''It is a problem :t'\sociagain before it arrives at thc time to keep it run- ated with a small population," Anderson said.
taps. Vance said, at a cost ning.''
of around SI ,500.
The grinder:-. cost "The money is Jll'&gt;t not
LCCD has not commit- around S300 each to there to maintain and
ted to that arrangement. replace when the system operate these expensive
but Andcrs'on said the was first designed and S) stem:-.. But we will find
working
district's
m&lt;u:agcr. installed. Now, that cost · a solution
Martin
Broderick. has risen to S1.500 each. together.''
Anderson said there
expressed a willingness and the village is replacto work with the district ing broken grinders with has been some discussion
to reduce costs. If that used grinders gleaned of the formation of a
propo~al were to be serifrom \"acant properties. count)'-\\ ide sev. er sysously considered howev- according to Anderson. tem in order to help the
er, new merers, check who ...erved on the Board system operate more

!

i

POMEROY
Meeting in recessed se~sion
Thursday. Meigs County Commissioners approved
pa) ment of bill~ in the amount of $296,310.24.

· d
Z00 says eIephant keeper •InJUre
TOLEDO (AP) -The Toledo Zoo says an elephant
keeper has been inured while interacting with an
African elephant at the zoo.
Spokeswoman Andi Norman says the trainer was
hurt at about 3:45 p.m. Thursday and was conscious
and coherent ""hen taken to the University of Toledo
Medical Center.
'the 7-yt~ar-old male elephant named Louie has
been under the keeper's care since it was born at the
1.00 in 2003.
.Nonnan says the zoo plans to keep elephants on
exhibit and v. ill investigate what led to the injmy and
work on a plan to manage the elephants.

Indicted from Page AI
~1iddleport

The Daily Sentinel • Page A2

www.mydailyscntinel.com

Police Department on the e\ening of June

25 to report the robbery, stating that the two alleged
robbers had brandished butcher knhes and demanded
money The county :-,heriff's department soon took the
lead in the im estigation.
Sheriff Robert Beegle said earlier this week investigqtors had u:-.ed surveillance video to identify the
men. as v. 011 as a desaiption of their vehicle. Beegle
smd Shane Chand ler's clothing was later found on
lowt.!r Ohio 7 ncar the Gallia County line. and that he
v.,ts located there and arrested.
Both men appeared earlier this week before Meigs
County Colllt Judge Steven d •. Story. but have not
been arrai~ned on the indictments tiled yesterday.
They rcmam in jail. Alexander Chandler on a bond of
$35.000. with 10 percent cash allowed. and Shane
Chandler on a bond of $45.000. with 10 percent cash
allov.ed. Those bonds were set b) Story.

Southern from Page At
librarian (10 extended stipend in the amount of
days). district nev.sleuer: $300 for Andrea Teaford
Diane Dunfee, home eco- \\a:-, approved for Ohio
nomics (10 extended Graduation Test preparadays): Ra~hel Yates, tion cla~ses; the transfer
vocational agriculture (40 of Rachel Farcas from
extended days): Jennifer ~ocwl worker to middle
Holt. guidance counselor school I!Uidance counselor was approved;
(1/9 salary).
I0
more
Also approved: Kathy appro\·cd
Miller on a pupil service extended days at per
contract as transportation diem rate for Vicki
supervisor;
Nicholc Northup.
The following conWhobrey,
substitute
• aide/secretary; Christi tracts and service agreeHendrix. assistant tlea- ments were apprO\ed.
Dr.
Chantel
surer for a two-vear contract .starting 'Aug 1. Weiselmuller for professtarting salary. $35,000: sional psychological ~er­
Sara Partlow, substitute \ ices in accordance with
elementary and· ~ec­
bus monitor.
Hired as part of the ondarv counseling grant
Meigs
County for Julv 1-June 30. '2011
Department or Job and in the amount of
family Services summer $10,000; agreement ""ith
employment program at Ohio Universitv for ath$8 per hour for 32 hours letic trainer services for
a week for II \Veeks: Aug. 1-.Junc I. 2011. no
Justin Engle. Brandon price wa~ listed: Study
Marcinko,
Colby Island services for May
Roseberry,
Cii!ITa 1.3 - May 13. 20 II for
Marcinko.
Cody $10.123.20: membership
into the Ohio Coalition
Williams. Devin Brown.
A leave of absence for for Equity &amp; Adequacy
Deborah Harris for 12 of School Funding for the
days (dock da)s) was 20 I 0-11 school year at
apprO\ ed for Sept. 23- 50 cents per AD~1 for a
0ct. 8; a 5ummcr school total of $384.50: Pepsi-

Cola Bottling Company
agreement for Sept. 1Aug. 31, 2015 for vending sen ice-;, no pnce was
I istetl: Oracle Ele\ a tor
Compan) ma1nt1!nance
agreement for 20 I 0-11 .
$2.432.54,
Master
D1strict
Softwari! scrvi&lt;.:e a~rcc­
ment with Southca~tern
Ohio
Voluntarv
Education Cooperative
for fi~cal year 20 I 0 include~. bnsic sen iceS I
per
pupil.
capital
imprO\ ement. 50 cents
per pupil. fiscal software
:-.en icc. $4.50 per pupil,
$125 per bu1lding. EMIS
sen icc. $3.50 per pupil.
$125
per
bu !ding,
Information
Student
S) stem. $520 per pupil

HOME

RACINE &amp; SYRACUSE

Q

mJt

MCGRATII TRUCK &amp; TRACTOR
SPECIALIZING IN

Only a short dnve away

r __ .!..O,Ei~~!,.i.U,Si.2~Qia.£!.E;l.§.e~U,.!y~~0.£!. __ ,
1 $5.00

SALES &amp; SERVICE
US do the shopping for you.

39170 STATE ROUTE 681 ALBANY, OHIO 45710

~musser

(740)696-0358

'-&amp;&amp;t

-

off any service

1 41tb Meigs County Fair

August 16-21
Mon., Aug. 16......Truck &amp; Car Demo Derby
Tues., Aug ... 17..... Love and Theft
Wed., Aug .. 18...... Horse- Pull
Thurs., Aug .. 19.... Motorcross/Trador Pull
Fri., Aug .. 20........Tough Track

MCGRATH69@ YAI-IOO.COl\1

••

.

'
•
-

'

7 40-446-241 2
304 .. 738·2120
606-833-1408 .

200 Washington St. Ravenswood 304-786·6100

FORD • MASSY • LONG
PARTS A\'AILABU: ~lOST MAKES &amp; 1\tODLES

C~ommunications

Company for June 30June 30. 2011 for district
te leco m m u ni ca tton s
equipment for $2.839.
The Board also amended the school calendar
for 2010-ll. adding Jan.
3, 20 II to the holiday
break and extending the
.school vear to Mav 26.
20 II: approved agreement with William:-.
In~urance &amp; Consultmc
for district's life ,nsur:
ance plan at 11 cents pet
S1.000. retlecti ng a
three-year rate.
•

It's all about you.'
1~anii:ures,
Pedicures &amp;
Acrylics
We do it all!

NATIONAL BANK

We've Got Itt
--- 949-2210 • Racine, OH
992·6333 • Syracuse, OH m.m

plus S 125 per building:
to Coalition
of Rural and Appalachian
Schools for Jul\ I - June
30. 20 11. $325: sen ice
agreement with Advance
member~hip

G3llipons. OH
Huntington, WV
Gf'loonyp Co., KY

..

Grang,

affordably. but he said a
regional system. which
would allow Rutland to
connect to another village's system. might be •
another possible remed.
~ow. there are no co
crete :-,olutions to the
problem. but Anderson ·
said a re-finance of the
village's remaining debt
for the svstem 's con- ·
struction is- in order. and
could reduce the interest
paid by as much as five
percent. He said that refinancing will be fairly
easy to arrange.
Tho~e attending the
meeting. which included
representatives of the
economic development
office. elected state and
federal officials' representatives and water and
sewer experts from the
state. will continue to
mull remedies to the
problem.
"The right people were
there. and there is a commitment to do everything
we can to help those people out.'" Anderson ·

�PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 2,

Birth announced

2010

Panther pride

RACINE - Andi and Donald Barnett of Racine
announce the birth of a son, Tucker Owen Barnett, at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital in Athens.

ASK DR. BROTHERS

• yfriend leaves her cold
Dear Dr. Brothers:
The guy I've been dating
for six months is a really
great person, and 1
thought we might get
serious in the future. But
after last night, I'm not so ·
sure. While we were
relaxing and watching
TV. I went to lay my head
on his lap. He looked disgusted and said, 'T m not
your pillow." I couldn't
believe my ears! I just
want to make sure, before
I do anything drastic cart unaffectionate people
ever change?- C.L.
Dear C.L.: It sounds
as t ough you are the
type of person to whom
snuggling ana affectionate gestures are very
important. Many women
fit
this
description,
although it is not out of
ordinary to find men
are the same way.
•
ers men ·and
women alike - are less
demonstrative when it
comes to frequent displays of affection. They
tend to compartmentalize
their lives, and when it is
time for watching TV,
they only want to watch
TV. When it is time for
snuggling or sex, they
like to get right down to
it. In fact, it may be just
the opposite - there is a
chance
that
your
boyfriend finds you so
arousing that having your
head on his lap would be
too much for him to
resist, if he really just
wanted to watch TV at
that moment.
So, as you can see, this
one incident can have
many
interpretations,
including the one that
s the most obvious
ikely - that he just
d you a bit annoying
whatever reason, and
was rather thoughtless
about brushing you off.
' In that case. J wouldn't
wotry so much about him
being
unaffectionate,
unless this kind of thing
is a regular occurrence,
or if he never holds your
hand or gives you pecks
on the cheek or whatever
your affection needs call
for. If you feel you're
getting the cold shoulder
from him, it may be that
he is just not going to be
the right guy for you in
the long run. And if his
lack of affection includes
sex, that should be the
clincher.

summer or hung around
the house I was
always looking to make
a buck with a lemonade
stand or whatever. My
boyfriend works part
time and lies around
playing video games the
rest of the time. It really
drives my crazy to hear
him complain about his
little job. We have just
enough money to get by,
but he never seems to
want more. Do you
think he will ever
change? - G.K.
Dear G.K.: It must be
frustrating to look ahead
to the future and just see
more of the same - you
working day and night,
and your boyfriend relaxing at home with his
meager salary, not doing
much for either of you. I
would suggest that you
have different attitudes
toward money - you
value it greatly and have
always tried to accumulate more of it through
creativity and hard work;
your boyf~iend, on the
other hand, seems to
value his leisure time
much more than you do
yours. He is willing to
work just enough to pay
the rent and maybe buy
some video games, and
he really isn't more
ambitious than that.
What i~ really boils
down to is whether the
two of you can coexist
like this for the long haul,
because neither of you is
too likely to change your
outlook on life and work.
What I foresee happening is you growing
resentful and
angry
toward your boyfriend,
and him feeling pressure
to do more with his life
and start pulling his own
weight, assuming you
pay for most things. He
will want to continue to
live simply, and you
might like to upgrade in
some areas l;&gt;ut can't
•••
afford it. So, unless you
Dear Dr. Brothers: I have some tremendous
work very hard at two bond, it doesn't look too
jobs, and enjoy every good to me.
(c) 2010 by King
minute of it. I never
.
t to camp in the Features Syndicate

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations
Tuesday, July 6

POMEROY - ~eig~
Band Boofters. 6 p.m,
Tuesday, in the band
room at the high school.
MIDDLEPORT
Regular stated meeting
of Middleport Lodge 363,
7:30 p.m. Refreshments
6:30. Bring non-perish-

able item for food bank.
Thursday, July 8

CHESTER - Regular
stated meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453, 7:30
p.m., to conduct business
and confer Master Mason
degree on one candidate.
~ aster Masons invit.
(efreshments follow.

Public
meetings
Friday, July 2

LETART FALLS
Letart Township Trustees,
5 p.m., at office building.
Monday, July 5

SYRACUSE - Sutton
Township Trustees, 7
p.m. at Syracuse Village
Hall.

Tuesday, July 6

TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Local Board of
Education, special session, 6:30 p.m., approve
annual appropriations
an~ anv other business
to come before the
board.
Wednesday, July 7

PAGEVILLE - Scipio
Township Trustees, 6:30
p.m., Pageville Town Hall.
MIDDLEPORT
Special
meeting
of
Middleport
Village
Council, 7 p.m., to
approve 2011 budget.
POMEROY - Meigs
County Board of Health,
regular meeting, 5 p.m.,
conference room, Meigs
County
Health
Department.

Church events

.

Thursday, July 8

RUTLAND "The
Movement, The Moment"
worship and prayer conference, 7 p.m., tonightSaturday,
Rutland
Church of God, featuring
speakers Jessica Haggy
(Thursday), Jana Mitten
(Friday) and Carolyn
Smith (Saturday).

Beth Sergentlphoto

The Pomeroy High School Class of 1960 recently made a $600 donation to the Meigs Local Enrichment
Foundation's capital campaign. The campaign is meant to raise money to improve and construct educational
and sports facilities in the Meigs Local School District. Pictured (left) MLEF Spokesperson Mike Bartrum and
(right) Paul Roush, PHS Class of 1960.

•

Local Stocks
AEP (NYSE) - 32.22
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 53.05
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) 45.49
Big lots (NYSE) - 32.70
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) 24.56
BorgWarner (NYSE) 38.12
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)- 8.68
Champion (NASDAQ) 1.60
Charming Shops (NAS·

DAQ)- 3.57
City Holding (NASDAQ) 27.15
Collins (NYSE) - 52.68
DuPont (NYSE) - 34.49
US Bank (NYSE) - 22.33
General Electric (NYSE) 14.12
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 22.21
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 36.08
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.01
Ltd Brands (NVSE) - 22.71
Norfolk So (NYSE)- 52.70

Ohio Valley Bane Corp
(NASDAQ) - 16.48
BBT (NYSE) - 26.43
Peoples (NASDAQ) 13.97
Pepsico (NYSE) - 61.52
Premier (NASDAQ) - 7.95
Rockwell (NYSE) - 49.08
Rocky Boots (NASDAQ) 6.50
Royal Dutch Shell - 49.53
Sears Holding (NASDAQ)
-64.75
Wai·Mart 'NYSE) - 48.34

OU receives $426,000 federal grant
to fund research on muscle weakness
ATHENS
Ohio
University has been
awarded a $426.000
Recovery grant from the
U.S. Department of
Health
and
Human
Servies (HHS) for its ·
research
project.
Intracortical Mechamsms
of Muscle Weakness.
The award is being
made by the Eunice
Kennedy
Shriver
National Institute of
Child Health and Human
Development. a division
within HHS. according to
-an announcemnt from
Congressman
Chari ie
Wilson (OH-6) .
'Tm so proud of the
good work being done at
Ohio University," Wilson
said. "The money is being
used to hire talented
researchers and to do ·
valuable
medical
research. That's a win-win
and is exactly the type of
sound
investment
I
expected would be made
in our region when I voted
for the Recovery Act."
Brian Clark, Ph.D.,
assistant professor of
physiology at the Ohio
University College of
Osteopathic Medicine
(OU-COM), is the principal investigator on the
winning project. His
research revolves around
the question: What causes the loss of muscle
strength and reductions
in our ability to control
our voluntary movement:-., and can these
losses be prevented? He
studies the neurological
aspects of muscle weakness and performance, or
how the brain controls
our muscles.
In this project Clark
investigates muscle weakness related to aging and
disuse. He utilizes transcranial magnetic stimulation, a non-invasive
method of exciting neurons in the brain, to assess
the excitability of the patt
of the brain that controls
our limb muscles.
"Aging-related muscle
weakness limits independence and contributes to
the development of agerelated
disabilities,"
Clark said. "We hope to
better understand the

physiology behind loss of
muscle strength, in order
to contribute to the development of better treatments and rehabilitation
methods that promote
healthy muscle function."
The grant will help
cover the cost of three
faculty salaries at Ohio
University, and one or
two full time research
technicians for three
years. The research \&gt;\'ill
take place m the Institute
for Neuromusculoskeletal
Research
at · Ohio
University. Clark will
work with two faculty coinvestigators.
James
Thomas and David Russ,
from the Ohio University
School
of
Physical
Therapy.
·'This is an impottant
award for Dr. Clark and
for OU-COM." satd OUCOM Dean Jack Brose.
D.O. '"Dr. Clark's achieve-

ment reflects a strong college eff01t to increase NIH
research funding. His
award marks the fifth
grant received by our facultv as a result of federal
sti{nulus
(American
Recovery
and
Reinvestment Act) funds. I
am vel) proud of the outstanding research conducted by Dr. Clark and his
colleagues in the institute
for Neuromusculoskelctal
Research."

Wendy's (NYSE) - 4.01
WesBanco (NYSE) - 16.98
Worthington (NYSE) ...
12.47
Daily stock reports are the
4 p.m. ET closing quotes of
transactions for July 1,
2010, 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.

Internet
ISEIVlNGIP1&gt;111ER'OYl
Unhm~ours ,

No Co:1tracts!

$f.95J8
• fRfE 2411 Ttchnl~l Support
• lr&gt;lit."l! ~ 98QII19 - i&lt;oep yoor bUddy IISC

• •o&amp;111al eder~$ O'lth 1'/~too:nat
• Custam Strt P~

r &gt;er &amp; mo-e•

"'l''r$. !l"••

.#:rPR/..£F
(

Silrf vp to 25x fasler!.J.
jl.$1'3 """"

Sign Up Online! www.LoeaiNet com

-Reliable Internet Access Since 1994-

• Home • Auto
• Health &amp; more
Ashlce

En~len

740-992-9784 or 877-992-9784
505 Mulberrr Hei hts, Pomero , Oh 45769

Leon Seiter
With Country 5

5:00 - 9:00pm
July Z_, 2010
Riverway Cafe • ~)·racuse. OH
~lichigan's own Leon Seiter {pronouncel.l
like "citkr") ha~ been ~inging in honkytt)nks ~mcc the carl\ 60's. !'his traditional
country artist began receiving national

•

:11tention in country music circle-.; when hi-.

record. Sentenced to Live , rccei,ed national airplay in the United States. Canada,
Gennany. and France. Leon has since had five nationally charting single:-.. including
"You Can Always Count on Me". ··Lme Is Just a Game". and ··under Your Spell
Again'' from his current album, In the Shadows of a Honky Tonk.
In the early 70's, Leon recorded "Rags to Riches", which made countt) charts
across the nation. Leon ha:-. had numerous other records, such as Mr. Jones.\\ hat Is
This Man. Someone On Your Phone. and. in 1984. To Make My World Go Round.
which also made Billboard's single reviews. In 1992. "You Can Always Count On
Me.. made it to the Top 15
Leon has had the pleasure of opening major concert tours across the nation \\ Jth
several top entertainers in the world of country mu:-.ic, such as George Jones. Hank
Willtams Jr.. Porter Wagoner. Tanya Tucker. Tom T. Hall, Tamm) Wynettc, ~lei
Tillis, Loretta Lynn, Little Jimmy Dickens. and Tcx Ritter. Citing Hank Williams.
Ernest Tubb. Marty Robbins, and Johnny Cash as lm inspirations. Leon's songs of
pain, sorrov,:, love, and country life arc a refreshing addition to the countr) pop
artists on today\ country radio.
Leon's wit and charm ha'. landed him on count les!' tcle\ tsion and radio talk·
shows. includmg The Ralph Emcry'Shm'. It aho aided in his inductit)n in to the
Michigan Country ~usic Hall of Fame in June of 2000 and in to Amcnca·,. Old
Time Country tv1usic Hall of Fmite in 2004.
\
Currently. Leon is out promoting his current single. ''I've Seen the Devil Have H1s
Way." off his In the Shadows of a Honky Tonk CD.

�------------------------...

....

- ---- -~ - -~------

~

PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ,
Sammy M. Lopez
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor
Pam Caldwell
Adyertising Director
Congress shall make no /au• respecting a11
establishment of religion, or prohibitiug tlte free
exercise thereof; or abridgin.f! the free{iom of"
speech, or of the press; or the r({!ltt of tlze people
peaceably to assemble, and to petition the
Governmeut for a redress of griet,atrces.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN

HISTOI~Y

oday is Friday, July 2, the 183rd day of 2010.
There are 182 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On July 2, 1937, aviator Amelia Earhart and navigator Fred Noonan disappeared over the Pacific
Ocean while attempting to make the first roundthe-world flight along the equator.
this date:
In 1776, the Continental Congress passed a resolution saying that "these United Colonies are, and
of right ought to be, free and independent States."
In 1881, President James A. Garfield was shot by
Charles J. Guiteau at the Washington railroad station: Garfield died the following September.
(Guiteau was hanged in June 1882.)
In 1890, President Benjamin Harrison signed into
law the Sherman Antitrust Act
In 1917, rioting erupted in East St. Louis, Ill. as ·
white mobs attacked black residents; nearly 50
people, most of them black, are believed to have
died in the violence.
In 1926, the United States Army Air Corps was
created.
In 1961, author Ernest Hemingway shot himself
to death at his home in Ketchum, Idaho.
In 1964, ,President Lyndon B. Johnson signed
into law a sweeping civil rights bill passed by
Congress.
In 1980, President Jimmy Carter signed a proclamation reviving draft registration.
In 1990, more than 1 ,400 Muslim pilgrims were
killed in a stampede inside a pedestrian tunnel in
Saudi Arabia.
In 1994, a USAir DC-9 crashed in poor weather
at Charlotte-Douglas International Airport in North
Carolina, killing 37 of the 57 people aboard.
Ten years ago: Opposition candidate Vicente Fox
won Mexico's presidential elections, ending the 71year reign of the Institutional Revolutionary Party
(PRI).
Five years ago: Shasta Groene. an 8-year-old girl
kidnapped six weeks earlier, was rescued at a
restaurant in · Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; the man with
her, Joseph Edward Duncan Ill. was arrested and
accused of kidnapping Shasta as well as killing
members of her family. (Duncan later received
three death sentences and multiple life sentences.)
Egypt's top envoy to post-Saddam Hussein Iraq
(lhab ai-Sherif) was kidnapped in Baghdad (aiQaida later announced it had killed him).
One year ago: Thousands of U.S. Marines
poured into Taliban-ccntrolled villages in southern
·Afghanistan in the first major operation under
President Barack Obama's strategy to-stabilize the
'country. North Korea test-fired two short-range
missiles. Federal marshals took possession of disgraced financier Bernard Madoff's $7 million
Manhattan penthouse, forcing Madoff's wife, Ruth,
to move elsewhere.
Thought for Today: "No great man lives in
vain. The history of the world is but the biography of great men."- Thomas Carlyle, Scottish
critic and historian (1795-1881).

Om

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words. All letters
are subject to editing, must be signed and include address 'and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wiU be published.
Letters should be in good ta$te, addressing issues. not person·
alities. "Thank You" letters will not be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel'
Reader Services

(usPs 213-9so&gt;

Correction Policy
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Our main concern in all stories is Published Tuesday through Friday,
to be accurate. If you know of an 111 Court Street. Pomeroy. Ohio_
~ror in a story, call the newsroom Second-class postage paid at
Pomeroy.
at (740) 992·2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and
the Ohio
Newspaper
Our main number is
Associalton.
(740) 992-2156.
Postmaster: Send addresscorrec• Department extensions are: lions to The Daily Sentinel, P.O
Box 729. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

News

,
'

•
1

:

Subscription Rates
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext 12
By carrier or motor route
Reporter: Brian Reed. Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13 4 weeks .•.••......'11.30
52 weeks •..••••..'128.85
Daily •...........•..•.so•
Advertising
Senior Citizen rates
Advertising Director: Pam
26 weeks ••••.....•'59.61
Caldwell, 740-446·2342. Ext. 17
52 weeks •..•..•..'116.90
Retail: Matt Rodgers, Ext. 15
Subscribers should rerTIII in advance
Retail:. Brenda Davis, Ext 16
d•rect to The Daily Sentinel. No sub·
ClassJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10 scription by mail permitted in areas
where home carrier service Is avail·
Circulation
able.
-Circulation Manager: 740-446·
2.342, Ext. 11
Mail Subscription
Inside Meigs County
General Manager
12 Weeks ....•..•..'35.26
• Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
26 Weeks . . .•.....' 70.70
52 Weeks . . . • . . .1140.11
. I
E·mail:
mdsnews@ mydailysenl!nel.com
Outside Meigs County
12 Weeks • • . . • . • . .'56.55
Web:
26 Weeks
. . .'113.60
52 Weeks
. . . . .1227.21
wwwmydailysentinel.com

Fr iday, July 2,

2010

John Hancock:
Neglected A merican Hero ·
BY DR. GARY Scon SMITH
CENTER FOR VISION &amp; VALUES

As we celebrate the Fourth of
July this year, our attention will
once again turn to such luminaries as George Washington.
Benjamin Franklin. Thomas
Jefferson. John Adams, and
Samuel Adams. However, another founder who made substantial
contributions to American independence, John Hancock, is typically overlooked and underap'preciated. Although he served as
the first president of the
Continental Congress, did more
than any other man except
Robert Morris to finance the
American Revolution. presided
over the Massachusetts· com·ention that ratified the Constitution.
and played a major r9le in the
state's politics for two decades,
Hancock has been overshadowed
by many other founders.
As a Boston selectman, the
president of the Massachusetts
Provincial Congress. a delegate
to the Continental Congress.
Massachusetts' first governor
who served 11 years. and one of
the richest merchants in the
colonies, Hancock had tremendous influence. Hancock's support of the Revolution cost him
much of his fo1tune and put his
life at risk. but the patriot victory
gave him great political power,
international acclaim. the gratitude of many Americans. and the
deep affection of most residents
of Massachusetts.
Today. a Boston-based company uses his name and occupies
the most prominent building in
the city, and a World War Il aircraft carrier and dozens of streets
bear his name, but at best. most
Americans know that his signature is by far the largest on the
Declaration of Independence.
Hancock had no connections to
the company named for him John
Hancock
Financial
Services, Inc. The enterprise
chose his name because he was a
famous founder, Massachusetts'
first governor. and a very generous philanthropist who assi~ted
many whose houses and businesses were destroyed by
Boston's numerous fires and
helped rebuild the city after the
e_~vastation of the Revolutionary
war.
Moreover. Hancock has usually remained on the sidelines in
the often· heated debate over how
to classify the religious beliefs of
the founders. He has not been
identified as either a devout

Christian (as have John Jay.
Patrick
Henry.
John
Witherspoon, Elias Boudinot.
Roger Sherman. Samuel Adams.
and Charles Carroll) or as a deist
(as have Washington. John
Adams. Jefferson. Franklin.
Thomas Paine. and Gouverneur
Morris).
Neither scholars nor popularizers have paid much attention to
Hancock's faith even though it
strongly shaped his view of the
world and his actions. A life-long
member of the Brattle Street
(Congregationalist) Church in
Boston. Hancock frequently used
biblical arguments to justify
America's revolt against England
and providentialist language to
describe its battle to obtain inde- ·
pendence. In addition, while
serving as Massachusetts' governor. he repeatedly thanked God
for blessing its residents, exhorted them to repent of their sins,
and strove to base state policies
on his understanding of the biblical norms of justice and fairness.
Convinced that moral conduct
oepended on Christian commitment, he supported the establishment of Congregationalism in
Massachusetts and the strict
observance of the Sabbath.
ln numerous statements as
president of the Congress and
governor of Massachusetts,
Hancock asserted that God was
sovereign over earthly affairs and
reassured Americans of His
blessings. Writing to the leaders
of the Continental Arm) in
March 1776, Hancock proclaimed that the same God who
had baffled the British attempt to
conquer Massachusetts would
defeat their "deep-laid scheme"
against other colonies. In an
appeal to all the states in
September 1776. he declared that
members of Congress relied
firmly "on Heaven for the justice
of our cause." "I am persuaded,"
he added. that "under the gracious smiles of Providence.
assisted by our own most strenuous endeavors_ we shall finally
succeed." In his inaugural
address as governor in 1780.
Hancock praised God for "the
peaceable and auspicious" adoption of a state constitution. In
1782 Hancock assured members
of the Massachusetts legislature
that "the favor of heaven'' would
eventually establish America's
righteous claims. Hancock's
Thanksgiving proclamation .the
next year exhorted citizens to
express their gratitude for God's

numerous blessings and to rec.
nize their "entire Dependence"
on "His Goodness and Bounty."
Hancock's contributions to
American independence and to
the political foundation and success of rhe new nation were monumental. As the president of the
Continental Congress for twoand-a-half grueling years, he
effectively mediated between
various factions and helped convince them to work together.
When competing interests threatened to tear the fledgling country
apart, Hancock supplied a symbol of stability, moderation, and
compromise
that
enabled
Americans to elevate their mutual goals above their selfish
desires. His effective leadership
helped preserve the unity essential to winning the war against
Britain. He guided delegates
through numerous crises, including resolving their 15-month
debate over ·the Articles •
Confederation. As govern
Hancock helped persuade the
Massachusetts
constitutional
convention to support the Bill of
Rights, contributing to 'its passage.
While Hancock did not possess
Washington's character, John
Adams' intellect, or Jefferson's
eloquence, he played the principal role in Massachusetts politics
for almost a quarter of a century
and did much to attain and preserve American independence.
Although Hancock's vanity, lavish lifestyle, and some of his
business practices conflicted
with Christian principles, his
faith appeared to be genuine and
helped motivate his sacrifices for
his nation and his concern for the
poor. and needy and informed his
political philosophy and service.
Many of his letters, speeches.
relationships, and actions clear!)
testify to his religious com, .
ment.
.
So as we celebrate our natio
independence, let us give
Hancock the acclaim he so richly
deserves.
(Dr. Gal)' Scott Smith is a fellow for faith and the presidency
with The Center for Vision &amp;
Values and chairs the history
department at Grove City
College. He is author of "Faith
and the Presidency: From George
Washington to George W. Bush,"
Oxford University Press, 2009.)

Don )t let alcohol or other drugs
ruin your fun this holiday weekend
COURTESY D RUG-F REE
ACTION A LLIANCE

also at great risk. Balance is
majorly affected by alcohol and
other drugs . Combine that with a
rocking boat and the chance for
falling overboard and drowning
increases. Not to mention the sunfactor. which increases the dehydration caused b) alcohol. resulting in a higher level of impairment.
TIP: The. Ohio Department of
Natural Resources advocates
alcohol and drug-free boating and
suggests packmg plenty of nonalcoholic beverages to stay wellhydrated. taking the pa1ty ashore
if alcohol does become a part of
the celebration and ahvays wearing a properly fitting life jacket.

FffiEWORKS

The Fourth wouldn't be the
Fourth without fireworks . •
each year, especially surroun
While the Fourth of July is a
this holiday weekend, thousands
high-time for celebrating, it also
of
people end up in the emergency
presents many potential dangers.
room
due to fireworks-related
especially when alcohol or other
injuries:
burns, blindness and
drugs are in the mix. Whether you
even
death
(In 2008, there were
find yourself in a car, on a boat,
9,000
fireworks-related
injuries,
lounging around a pool or enjo)including
seven
fatalities).
ing a fireworks display this holiTIP: The U.S. Consumer
day weekend. there are some safeProduct
Safety Commission says
ty issues to keep in mind.
and other drugs must
alcohol
DRIVING
never
become
part of the mix
Impaired driving is one of
when
using
fireworks
and furtherAmerica's dead I iest problems.
more, urges individuals and famiThis weekend is an especially
lies to leave the fireworks disIisky time to be on the roads. In
plays to the trained professionals.
2008, while 32 percent of all vehiThey strongly advise fami lies not
SWI.t'VIMING
cle fatalities in the U.S. involved
to allow children to play with or
For those poolside this holiday,
an intoxic_ated driver or motorcyignite fireworks and to use
cle rider, that number increased to take into consideration that 111 extreme caution even with
43 percent during· the Fourth of 2007, there \\ere 3.443 uninten- sparklers. While a favorite holitional drownings in the United
July holiday period.
day pastime. sparklers actually
TIP: The National Highway , States. While most unintentional account for the majority of
Traffic Safety Administration drownings involve unsupen ised injuries to children under five, as
encourages personal responsibili- children. under the age of five. they bum at very high temperaty this weekend (and all year alcohol use plays a major role (up
tures (up to 2.000 deg!
tl1rough); make sure children are to 50 percent) of all adolescent Fahrenheit), with the potenti
properly
secured
in
car and adult deaths associated with easily set clothes on fire and ca se
seats/booster seats. buckle up and water recreation.
permanent eye damage .
TIP: The Centers for Diseases
give the keys to someone else if
As you gather with friends and
you have had any alcoholic bever- Control and Prevention ad\ ises family this holiday weekend to
everyone to avoid drinking alco- celebrate our count!) 's freedom,
ages. ·
hol before or during S\\imming. Drug-Free
BOATING
Action
Alliance
and
to not drink alcohol while encourages you to take time to
Operating a boat while under
the influence i~ an equally dan- supen ising children. An intoxi- celebrate your freedom to make
gerous practice. Across our nation cated parent (or caregiver) cannot safe and drug-free choices for a
in 2008. 17 percent of all recre- provide appropriate supervision, fun and memorable Fourth of
ational boating fatalities involved especially around .water. \\hen July.
(For
information
VISit
alcohol or other drugs. On the under the influence of alcohol or
\I 11'11 ·DrugFreeActionAlliance .org .)
water. an impaired passenger is other drugs.

�Friday, July 2, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

F~llowtshio

10:45 a '11 Sunda} E1emrg ·6:00pm,
Pallor: Don \\ alke•

Apos olfc

l'hurt•h or je\U\ ('hrbt \po\IOik
\'anZandt dlld \\ IJ'd Rd J'a.,tor Jart&gt;es
~hiler, Sunday School
10.30 m
E&gt;entnt 1 30 pm
Ri1er \'aile)
Ri1er \'aiJ•y Apo&lt;toh&lt; \\or&lt;hip Center
SB S 1rd '\1e , \hddkll&lt;ln. Rt1
\hchacl llr:tdfonJ, Pa;tor, SunJa) 10.10
a.m. Tu~' 6.10 pra)er. \\~d. 7 pm Btble
StUd)
Emmanuel Apo,tolic lahernadr Inc.
l.o&lt;1p Rd off "ie11 Ltma Rd Rutlanc,
Str\Jce&gt;' Sun 10:().1 a ~1. ~ 7 30 p m.
Thu" 7 00 p.m., Pa,tor \I n) R llunon

Assembly of God
l.ibert) ..\\\embiJ or God
P.O Bo' 467 Dudding L:tne, .\Ia''"
W,\'a., PNor ,\ctl Tennant. Sunda)
SeT\ ice&gt;· 10:00 a.m .md 7 p.m.

Baptist
Page1illr Frte11ill Bapti't Church
P..htor. FIO)d Ro''· Sunday School9 lit to
10:.10 am, 1\o,.,htp 'CTitCe IOJO to I :()()
am. Wed. prea&lt;htng 6 pm

Rull.uul Frc't' \\ill Rapt hi
SJle'll St , Pasto cd Barne) Sunda)
S,hool II' a 11. henm~ 7 p n
\\ednesda) Sen ,.., , p.rr
St·c-onrll!apli,tl ~urch
Ra•cns11ood, \\\, Sunda) &gt;&lt;hoollO am
\f, mtn • ll~r,htp ll m E1enmg 7 pm
\\edn 5i..&gt;) 7 o"'
••r-1 llapq,t Church of \lason. \\\
Independent il•&gt;tt&gt;tl
)R 6~2 nd \nd&lt;mm St Pustor Robert
Gradj Sunday ,.;boo: 10 ,,m Morntn~
.burch 1• am Sunday .l.ntn£6plll, \led.
Bible StUd) 7 pm

Catholic
Sacred ll~url l'atlwli&lt; ('hutch
161 \lulbeTT) Ave. Pome•o) \192 5898
PJ\Ior Rev \\,..Iter E. llemz \JI Con
1·4&gt;-5·1 Sp.m: \las&gt; ' '0 p .n Sun
Con ·S 4~-9 &gt; 1m , Sun \fa,, q .•0
a.m. Dali) \Ia" 8·10 am

Church of Christ
\\&lt;'hide Church of Chri'l
&gt;Ito Ill&lt; Rd PonlCrO) 01{
(on tact 7~0 Q92 3S47 Sunua) mot ning
10 ~0. St(n mo11nng B ble 'tUd)
f•JII0111ng IIOT&gt;Iup Sun. &lt;I'C 6:00 pm.
1\cd htb!, 'tud} 7 pm
132~6 Ch1'urcn

Carpenter lndcpendentllapti1t Chunh
Semce !0:30am. bcmng S~'\ke
7:00pm, \\edne..da) Bible Stud) 7:00pm,

•

Chr•hire Bapti11 Church
Pa&gt;tor Steve Ltlll&lt;·. 740 367-7801. H.
1
ol0-992-754~. C 7ol0-64' 25~7. Sunday
School: 9:.10 am, \lommg Wor,htp: .:J:'O
am. Youth &amp; Btble Buddte' 6: 10 pm,
chotr pracucc 7~10: Sr&lt;cial da)&gt; of month
I. L.ndies of GrJCe 7 pm ~nd .\lunda)
\len·, Fello" &gt;hip 7 pm .1rd T.t~
Hope Bapti~t Church (Southern 1
570 Grant St., \hddlepon. Sunda) &gt;cbool
·9:30a.m. \\oo.htp. II am an 6 p.m.
Wcdne&gt;da) Sen..:e. 7 pm. Pa,tor GaT)
Elli&gt;
Rutland l'ir,tllaptht Church
Sund." Scnool - 9 lO u.m, \\or,hip ·
10:~5 a.m.
Pomcro) Firo;t Baptist
Pa.,tor Jon Bro.:ken. East ~lam St"
Sunday S&lt;h. 9.30 dllt \\or,h•p 10:30 am
.-;,.,,Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Sunda) S.;hool •
9:30 a.'ll. \\ot&gt;hip 9:45am~ 7:00 p.n
Wedne-da) Sen ices 7:00 p.m Pastor.
Davtd Bnunard
f'iT&gt;t Bapti'l Church
Pastor: BiJy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St •
~liddlepon, Sunday s,·hool 9:15 •.m,
Wo"h1p
10:15 a.m. 7:00 p.m .•
Wedne..day Semcc· 7:00p.m
Racine First Baptist
Pa"or R) an Eaton, pa\tor • Sunda}
School- 9.30 a.m .. WoT&gt;hlp • 10:40 a.m,
6:00 p.m, Wednesda) Sen tees 7 00
p.m.

I

Siller Run Baptist
PaMor· John $\\anson. Sunda} S,hool •
LOa.m. 1\orshtp - lam 7:00 p m
.Wednesday Scnxc'· 7..JO p.m.
\It.l'nion Baptist
Pastor: Dcnnt&gt; Weaver Sunda} School9:45 a.m Erenmg • 6:.30 p m •
Wcdne&gt;da) SeT\ tees • 6 10p m
Bethlehem Bapti'l Church
Great Bend Route I~4 Ra&lt;~ne OH
Pastor; , Sunday S&lt;hooi 9:30 o.m
Sunday Wof'htp -10:.10 a.m ... Wedncsda)
Btble Stud) • 7:00 ~.m.
Old Bethel Free\\ ill Baptht Church
28601 St. R1. 7, \l•ddlepon. Sunda)
Service • 10 a.m .. 6:00 p.m, Tuesday
Sef\Ke&gt; -6:00
Hill,ide Baptht Chunh
St Rt. 143 just oft Rt 7. Pastor Re1.
lame' R A.:rec. Sr Sunda) Untfied
Sen ice. \\orship • 10·30 .m , b p m .
Wedne&gt;day SeTI ice&gt; •7 p.m

•

\'ictory Baptist Independent
5~5 "-'·2nd S1. .\ltddlepon. Pastor: James
E. Kee&gt;ee. Wo"htp IOa.m .• 7 p m..
Wednelday Scn'ict' • 7 p.m.
Faith Baptl't Church
Railroad St., ~Ia,on. Sunda) School • 10
a.m .. Worsh.p
II a.m .• 6 p m.
Wednesday Semce&gt; 7 p m.
Forest Run Bapli,t- Pom~ro)
Rev Joseph Woods. Sunda) School • '0
a.m .. Worship· II )() a.m:
.\fl. \loriah Bapti't
Founh &amp; ~latn St . \liddkport Sunda)
School 9·30 a.m., \\or&gt;h1p 10:45 Jm
Pa\lor: Rev. Michael AThomp&gt;&lt;;&gt;n. Sr.

Antiquit) Baptist
Sunda) School • 9: lO a.m • \\orship •

The Dally Sentinel • Page AS ·

\It \loriah Church of God
\1 e H1ll Rd. Racme, Pastor James

Satterftcld \und ) School 9:45 .m ,
bellini: n p.m \\~dnc;d.,, ~ef\ ce' 7
'nl

Rutland Church ur Lod
P tor. Shane M llm1 1 ng Sunda)
\\or!lup 1r. m , b r f11 • 1\'ednelda)
Smtces 7 p 'II
S\ rantsl' fint Chun:h ul t.od

Tupper., Pl.tln-. Sr.l,uul

.'tppte d :,ccon ~b ""' r R•• [) 1
Ru,scll, Sunda1 S,hool and 1\ot,htp l'l
• m. f:vcn•ns Sen tees h lO p rn
\\eJnesd ) SCTIIctS f. ~~ p.m

lttn Cotbm ~unda Sd100l 'I
'!I \\orshtp
" m 1ue •) Servtccs
7.~0pJit .
Central Clu&lt;ter
AsbuT) •~)racuse), P•&lt;tor Bo~ Robinson,
Sund.1) School ~:45 .m, \\J'fSh•p II
m. \\ednesda) Scnt&lt;e' 7·liJ p.m.

fore\! Run
Pasto Bob Robin,on. Sunda) School· rO
am .. Wor&gt;htp 9 a.m.

I'rinit) Church
Paster· Re1 Tom John,on. Se.-ond &amp;
L) m• P•&gt;tner•&gt;y Pastor • \VoT&gt;h•p 10.25
a.m.

Episcopal

Heath t\liddleporll
Pastor. Bnan Dunham, Sunday S&lt;hool
10:00 ~.m.. Wo"h'P • II 00 d.m
.\&lt;bur) S)racu&gt;e
Pa,tor. Bob Robinson. Sunda) School •
9:30 .m. WoT\htp · 10:30 a.m.
Pearl Chllpel
SunJa) S,hool • 9 •.m .. \\or,htp 10 a.m

Grace Epi'&gt;Copall'hunh
E \lam St.. Pomcro1,
Holy
tuchaJN II ,0 a.m Sunda) &amp; 5.,3() pm
\led. R&lt;1 Le»•e Fk'"'mmg
3~6

Holiness

Ponterol Church ufChrht
212 \\ \l,m St. Suntia) School ~·10
m. \\'or,htp- 10 Ju d m 6 p.m .•
\\eJne..d:.) SeT\ tee&gt; 7 p m

Da111 ille Holint&gt;, Church
31057 Stare Route &gt;25, ...ang&gt;~ lie p._,toJ
Rnan llatle), Sunda) &gt;&lt;ho&lt;'l 9:30 a.m.
Suoday 11o"htp • 10:30 d.m &amp; 7 'lJn,
Wedne,Ja) pta)&lt;r 'c" "e 7 pJ11.

\liddleporl Church ~f Chri't
5th and \Jam. Pastor. AI lla.hon
Chtldren&gt; DJTector. Shorol Sayre. Teen
DJTcctor· Oodgcr \aug han Sunday S,bool
9: JO a. n. Wor&gt;htp· ~:15, 10· 3( a.m. 7
p.m. 1\edne&gt;da} Sen ces I p '11.

Flaii\Cl&lt;ld'
Paste!' De"ayne Stuttler. Sunday S&lt;hool
lOam., \\oT&gt;h1p II a.m

Congregational

Communi!) (burch
PJ..&lt;tot Stele Tomek \lam Street,
Rutland. Sunda1 \\ol'-hJP-10:00 am.,
Sundav ;;cr.~ .ce 7 p.n.

l'omero) Weo.bide Church of Chri&gt;l •
11226 Ch1.dren' llome Rd • Sunda•
S,ftool • II a~~- \\orsh•p. 10aJt1., 6 p m.
\\'ednc&gt;&lt;la) Sen''"' • 7 p.m.

't'

Church of (,odor l'rophl'l:)
OJ \\hncRd offSt Rt IW,Pa&lt;tor:PJ
Chapman, Sunday School
10 a:m.
\\''t&gt;htp- 1. .m \\ec.nesda~ Servtces 7
pm

Gr01 e ('hri\tian Chur~·h
l-r.,) Rro11 1. \\o"htp 9.30
Ill Sunda) S,hool 1\l·.'l a.m. Rtble
• Stud)- 7 p.lT'

Hemloc~

\ftn~&gt;ter

Pastor: !Xnztl \:ull. Wor,htp 9:30a.m.
Sunda) SchOQI 10:30 a.m.
LongBottom
Sundal Sd10ol q10 Jm \\'oMtp •
lc 10a.m
Reed\\ille
llut&gt;h1p 9:j0 m Sunday Sdtool •
10 10 am • first Sundal of Month 7-00
p.m SC:f\ICC P~tor Gene Goodwtn

:O.e\1 Bc-ginninJ:' Church
Pomero)
P.astor: Bnan Dunham. WoT\hip • Y·15
a.m .. Sunda) School- 10:45 a.m.
Rock Spring,
Pa,tor Della)ne Stutler Sunday School·
~:00 a rr .. Wor,hip
10 a.m .. Youth
Fello11ship, Sunday 6 p.m. bart) Sunday
\\tJT\ht~ 8 Lr Lc •..r.J l..eilhett

Callar) Pilgrim Chapel
Harrt&gt;Oil\U'e Roau, Pastor Chark&lt;
\kl\enl!e, Sunda) Schoot 9:30 a.m .•
Worshto • II a.nt.. 1:00 p tn., Wedne,da)
Smtce· 7:00p.m

Rutland
Pa,tor· John Chapman, Sunda) School
9:.10 am. \\orshtp · 10:10 a.m. Thur..da)
SeTIJCes- 7 p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: 1\llham K ~lmhall. Sunday
Sd&gt;wl- 10:15 a.m., Wo"h•p· 9:15a.m ..
B1ble Stud): ~londa) 7:00pm
Snon1ille
Sunda) School- 10 a.m.. \\or,h•p. 9 am.

Ro'c of Sharon Holinc" Church
l..eadmg Creek Rd .. Rutland. Pastor· Re1
De~&gt;&lt;) Kmg. Sunda) &gt;ebool· 9:'10 dJtl.
Sund.y " ''hip 7 p m.. 1\edne..da)
pra)er llleCtrng 7 p.m.

Keno Church ol Christ
Wor,htp 9:30 a.fT' . Sun:!a) School
IO·&lt;o am. Pa,tor JctTrt) \\allare. ht and
1rd Sunda)

Pinr Gro1~ Bible Holine-. Chunh
I 2 mtle ff Rt J:!5. !'astor . Sunda)
s~hool 9:30 l.ffi. \\o,.,hip. 10:10 om
6:00p.m \\cdne..day &gt;mtce 7:00 p..n.

Bear&gt;tallow Ridge Chun:h or Chrbt
P.Mor.Bruce Ten) Sunday School -9:30
a.m.
\\orshtp
Ir &lt;o a m 6· .10 p n.
\\C&lt;Jnesda) S..-vtcc' 6 30 f m.

\\'c,fe)an Bible lloline" Churfh
"5 Pear St \hdalepon P»tor· Dcug
Cox. Sunday S&lt;hool 10 ".n: Wor,htp
10:45 p.m. Sunda)' E'e 6:00 p.m ..
\\'ednesda} Semcc 7:00 y.m.

/inn Church of C1ri'l
Pomero), Harn,on\llle Ru tRt 14:1).
p.,tor: Rc~er Wat,on, Sunliay Schuol
9·10 a.m 1\'or,htp 1 ·:o m • 7:00
p m , \\ednesda) Sc" ''"' 7 p.m.

11)'"11 Run Communill Church
Pa&gt;tor. Rfl Latr) Lemle): Sunda) School
• 9:30a.m. 1\o"htp 10 45 am .. 7 p.m.
Thur..dav Bible Stuay rutu Y&lt;&gt;uth. 7 p.m.

~lorning Star
Pastor: John Rozewt&lt;z Sunday School •
~.m. \\v,.,hip · 10 a.m.

Laurel ClifT Frte \ Iethodi&gt;l Chunh
Pa&gt;tor: Glen \kCiung SunJa) S.:hool
9:10 .m, \\or,hip !') 10 a~t. and 6
p.m.,\\cdnesd:ly Se"tce ·" 00 p.m

Ea&lt;t Letart
Pa&gt;tor· Bill ~larshall Sunday School •
9a.m .. Wof'hrp • 10.a.m. 1st Sunda)
&lt;ICT) month e1en1ng \ef\ICC 7:()() p.m ..
\\edne&gt;day 7 pm.

ruppcr. Plain Church of Chri&lt;l
ln&lt;trume~tal Wor,htp Se•\lce 9 • m..
Commumon 10 a.m ~urJa) S,hool •
10.1' m.• kutb 5·30 pm S~nda) Bt~le
Stud) \\cdne,Ja} pm
Bradbur) Chur~ ofChri\t
\ltmster Ju,tm Roush 19558 Bradbur)
Road. \hddlc(X'n. Sunda) &gt;chool. 9:1(1
a.m.
\lo.&gt;htp ,0:30 JJil.
Rutland Church ot l.'hri't
Sund,l} S.:h&lt;xd 9:.10 m . \\or;htp and
Commu111on • 10 1L a m Da11d
\\ J'enl.Jn, M1m,ter

Bethany
Pa&gt;tor John Roze\\tCZ, Suuda) S&lt;hool •
10 am. \\of\hlp . 9 a.m .. Wedne&gt;day
Sef\t.-e,. 10 .m.
Carmel-Sutton
Carmel .\c B3'han Rd&gt; Ro 1ne. Ohio.
Pa,tor: John Rozewicz Sunday School •
9:45a.m .. 1\oT\bip !':00 ... m. Bible
Stud) Wed. 7:.'10 pm

Latter-Day Saints

Racine
· Pa-tor Re1 \\dham ~lmhall. Sunda)
School
10 am.. \\or&gt;h1p • II
a.m.\\ednesda) SeTitCe&gt; 6 pm: Thur Bible
Stud) 7 pm

The Church of .le&gt;u'
Chri'l of Lattcr-Da) Saini\
St Rt 16&lt;'. 4~6-6247 or 4-16-7486,
Sunda) School '0:10 II a.m .. Rehef
Soctel) Prie&lt;Jhood II OS-11:00 noon,
Sa,nment Ser\lce 9-10 IS am ,
Hornemaktng meeting. 1'1 Thltf'. • 7 p.m

Cooh ille l'oiled \lethodi1t Pari'h
Pa&gt;tor: llelen K,ine. Coolville Church
\&gt;lain &amp; Ftfth St Sun S.:hool 10 a.m
\l'oT&gt;hip · 9 a.m. Tue&gt; SeTI•ce'. 7 p.m.

Lutheran
Sl. John Lutheran Church
Pme Grove \lor&gt;htp • 9:()(1 a.m , Sunda)

Bethel Chunh
To11n,hip Rd. 468C Sunda) School. 9
a.m. \\'o"hip , 10 J m.. \\'edne&gt;day
SeT\· tee'. 10 a.m

School 10:00 a."l Pa,tor
Bradford Church of Christ
(&lt;llner of St Rt. 24 &amp; Hradbuf) Rd
\lint&lt;ter Dcug Shunbtm \outb \lml\ter
Btll.-\mberter Sunday School- 9.30 am
1\or,h•p • ~-()() d.m , llUO 1.m. 7 00
~ m. \\edne,Ja) ~e" tee&lt;
·UIJ pnt
Hickot) Hill~ Church or Chri'l
Tuppm P1.1Jn,, P~stcr \like \!oort, B1ble
class. Y a.m. Sund~): wor;hip 10 a.m
Sunda): 11.-rsh1p 6: 1C pm ~unda). Bible
c1 ' ' , pm \\ed.
Retd11ille Church orChrht
Pastor: Jack Co1gro1c, Sunda) School·
9:1t) a.m, \\oT\hip Se!Vtcc· 10.10 am .•
Btble Stud) Wedne..d:.). 6:30pm
De\ler Church of (hri\t
Sunda) ,chool ~-10 a '11. Sunda) 11orsh•p
- 10:30 am
Th~ Church of Chrbl of Pom~ro)
lnter,cwon 1 ~nd 124 \\ E1angeh,t.
Dcnn" -'&gt;a1'8ent. Suuda) Bible Stud)
9·30 am., \\~T\htp· 10:){1 •.m. and 6:30
p.m , 1\cdnelda) B•bk Stud). 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Church of Chri't in •
Chri&gt;llan l"nion
ll.llltord \\ \J. Pa&gt;tor. \ltke !'udell,
Sunda) S.:hool • Y·10 a.m \\or,blp
I 0 10 J .m 7:00 ~ m , \\edne,da)
SeNtces 7 00 P•'11

Our Sa1 iour I.uth~ran Church
\\alnut and Henry Sh. Ra1en,wood.
\\ \a. p.,tor: Da11d Ru,ell. Sunday
S.:hool 10:00 a.m. \\o"h1p II •.m.

Hockin~port Church
Kathf)n W•le), Sunday .School 9:30
am, \\'oT\h1p 10:30 a.m .• Pastor Philhp
Bell
Tonh Church
Co. Rd. 63, Sunday S.:hool • 9:30 a.m .•
Wot&gt;h1p 0:.10 a.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Church
Co•ner S) camoro &amp;: Second St • Pomeroy.
Sun Sc~ool· 9:45a.m \\orshtp. I I a.m.

United Methodist
Graham l'nited \lcthodist
Wor&gt;htp II a m. Pa,tor Rtt·hard :-&lt;ease
Bcchtell nited \lethodist
!'ie11 Ha1en Rtchard :\ea'&lt; Pa,tor.
Sunda) "or&gt;htp 9: lO a.m f uc' 6.30
prayer and lltble Stud)

Nazarene
,

Point Rock Church of the :oiazarene
Route 689. Alban). Rev Lloyd Grimm,
pastor. Sunda1 School 10 am: worhsip
&lt;eTI1Ce II am. e•ening &gt;emce 7 pnt. \led.
. pra)er meeung 7 pm

\II. Oli\C L'nited \lclhodist
Of( 124 !&gt;ehmu \\ lke'lllk Pastor: Re'
Ralph Sptre,, Sunda) S.:ho&lt;'t 9:30 a m
\\'or,htp • 10:~0 a.m, 7 p m. Thur'da)
Sef\tce' • 7 p.m

\liddlep&lt;~rt Chunh of the Nazarene
Pa,tor· Leonard Po\\el' Sunda) School9:JO a.m.,\\or.-hip · 10:.10 a.m 6:.10 p.m.,
\\'edne&gt;da)' Se£\ tee\ • 7 p m.•

\leifl' Cooperath e Parbb
'&gt;&lt;&gt;nhea&gt;t Clu&gt;ter. Alfred. PNor: Gene
Goodwm. Sunda) Sch&lt;lQI 9:30 a.m.,
Wor;htp-11 a.m .• 6:30pm

ReedSiiUe Fello"'hlp
Church of the :\.zarenc, Pastor: Ru~&lt;ell
Car,on • Sunday School · 9:30 a.m ..
Wor,hip • 10.4) am , 7 p.m., \\edne'da)
Servtcc' • -; p.m .

9:30 a.m., Worship • 10: 10 a.m. and 6
p.m .• Wednesday Serv•ces • 7 p.m.

Che1ter Church of the Sa,~ rene
Pa&gt;tor: Re' Warren Lukens. Sunday
School • q-30 a.m • \\on;htp • 10: JO a.m.,
Sunda) CICmng 6 pm
Rutland Church of the Suarene
Pastor: Goorge Stadler, Sunda) .School •
g-10 a.m \\of\h1p • 10·10 am. fdO
p.m \\edneS&lt;Jy Sen tees 7 p n

Other Churches

Whitt'\ Chapel We~leyan

Road. Pastor: Rev. Charle&gt;
Sun. S&lt;:bool • 930 a !!I •
Wo,.,htp-10 30 am .• Wed Service· 7 pm
~farunc;ale

fain ie11 Bibl~ Cbunh
Letan, W.V~ Rt. I .'Paslor: Brian ~ay.
Sunda) S•hool ·9:30am.. \\orshtp. 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Bible Stud) • 7:00p.m.
Faith FciiOII Ihlp Cru~de tor Cbri~t
Pa\lor: Rev. Frankhn Dtekens, Service.
Fnda). 7 pm
Calvary Bible Church
Pomer&lt;&gt;) Pike Co. Rd .. Pastor· Rev
Black\\ood, Sunda) School -9:30a.m ..
Wor&lt;h p 10:~0 am .. 7:30 p m.•
Wedneiday Sen1ce 7:30p.m.
Sli-er&gt;&gt;ille Community Churcb
Sunda) S.:hooiiO:oqam, Sunda) wo,.,btp
II:()() am, Wedne,day 7:00 pm Pastor
Bryan &amp; \iiss) DJtk)

Oasis Chri&lt;lian Fell•lll &lt;hip
(!'ion-denominJtional iello11ship)
Mceung in the \leig' \Iiddie School
Cafetena Pa1tor: Chris Stewart
10:00 ~m- '-'oon Sunda): Informal
Wonhip. Children's ministl)
Communi!) of Christ
Ponland-Racine Rd., Pas101. Jim Proffitt,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m. Wor&lt;htp •
10:.10 a.m., Wednesda) Serrice; - 7:00
p.m.
Bethel Worship Center
39782 St Rt. 7. 2 mile&gt; SOlth &lt;&gt;f 1\tppe"
Plain' OH. :-lon·denominattonal with
Contemporary Pr:t1se &amp; WoT\hip. Pastor
Rob Barber. A\Soc Pastor Karyn DaviS.
Youlh Director Bell) Fulb. Sunday
services: I0 am Worship &amp; 6 pm Family
Life Cla"c', Wed &amp;: Thar night life
Groups at 7 pm, T-hu" mommg lad•e,·
:..ife Group at 10. Outer Limts Youth Life
Group on Wed.e1ening from 6:30 t&lt;&gt; 8:30.
Vistru, onhne atwww.bethe'wc.org.
Mh Street Churtb
398 Ash St.. \liddleport·Pa\lors Mark
,\lorro11 &amp; Rodney Walter Sunda)
S~hool 930 a.m., ~lomi1g Worship 10:'10 am. &amp; 6:30pm. \\edne&gt;day Sen tee
• 6:~ p.m. Youth SeTiice- 7:00p.m.
-~~ape Life Center
"Fuii-Go,pel Church'', Pastor, John &amp;
Pall) Wade 603 Second A1e. \la10n. 7735017. Serv1ce ume' Sunday 10:30 a.m ..
Wednesda) 7 pm
Abundant Grate
923 S. Third St. \l,ddlepon. Pa,tor Tert&gt;a
Davi&lt; Sunda) 'ervtce. 10 a.m
Wedne&lt;da) sef\tce. 7 p.m.
Faith Full GQ,pel Church
Long Bottom, Pa&gt;tor: S1e1e Reed. Sunda)
School • 9:30 a.m, Worshn • 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m .. Wednesda) 7 pm .. Fnday •
fellow,hip sen ice 7 pm.
Harr!som ille Communi:y Church
Pa~tor: Theron Durham. Sunda) • 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m .. \\edne&gt;da) • 7 p.m.
~liddleporl Communi!) Church
575 Pearl St.. ~liddleport . Past&lt;&gt;r: Sam
Anderson Sunda) School 10 a.m ..
Elening • 7·10 p.m.. 1\'cdnesda} SeTI·ice •
7:30pm.

Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Baile) Run Road, Pa&gt;tor· Re1. Elnmett
Ra.,&gt;on, Sunday E1eotng 7 p.m ..
Thursday Sen ice- 7 p.m.
SyTacuse \li~1ion
1411 Bridgeman St .. Syr:t&lt;as&lt;. Pa\lor ·
Rev. Roy Thompson. Sunda1 School 10
a.m. Evening· 6 p.m .• \\'edn:sda) Sm.ce
-7p.m.
Hazel Community Church
Off Rt 1~4. Past()r: Ed,el Hart. Su'nda}
School-9:30a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m ..
7:30p.m.
Dyes1 ille Communi!) Churtb
Sunday School · 9:30 a.n:.. Wot&gt;hip .
10:30 a.m .. 7 p.m.
~loT'e Chapel Church
Sunday school • 10 a.m., Wot&gt;lup - II
a.m .. Wednesda) Seflice • 7 p.m.
Faith Gospel Chlll'tb
Long Bottom Sunday Sch&lt;xl· 9:30a.m ..
\\'o"h•p
10:45 J.m .. 7:30 p.m .•
Wcdnelday 7:30p.m.

Pa&lt;wr. Jtm Corb!lt \1\&gt;r,hip • 9 a.m,
Sunda1 School • 10 a.m.. Thur'da)
Sen tee&gt; 7 p m

Full Gospel Li~hth•JU&lt;e
3.JO.I5 Htland Road. PomeroJ. Pastor: Roy
Hunter. Sunday School 10 a.m .. &amp; 7:30
Wedne..day Evemng 7:30 p.iTI.,

Joppa

Pomero) Church of the :-.uarene
Pastor· Jan I a1 ender Sunda} School •

South Bethel Communi!) Church
Siller Ridge· Pastor Lmda Dame11ood,
SdShl9
Wh$ec

Church of God

Carleton Interdenominational Church•
Kmgsbury Road. Pastor. Ro~n Vance,
Sunda) School • 9.30 a.m .. \\orsh1p
Sen ce 10.30 am .. Evenmg Serv:ce 6
p.m.
freedom Gospel \1l"lon
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31, Pastor· Rev.
Roger \\tllfor~ Sunday Sc-hool - 9·30
a.m. 1\orsbtp· 7 p.m

Cool1~le

Common Ground \fl"ion~
P.t.sto" Denm&lt; Moore &amp; Rtck Ltttle
Sunda) 10.00 a.m.
TeamJe,us
Pastor· EddJe Baer.Sun. \\orsh1p II am
333 \lechanic St Pcmeroy
:\ew Hope Church
Old American Legton Hall.
Founh Ale. \liddlep&lt;~n. Sunday 5 p.m.
Syracuse Communlt) Church
!480 Se.:ond St., S)racuse. OH
Sun School tO am. Sundy night6JO pm
Pastor Joe Gwtnn
A1\ew Beginning
!Full Gospel ChurCh I Hmisonville,
Pa;tor,; Bob and Ka) ~·larshall,
Thurs. 7 p.m.
Amazing Grace Commu1ity Chunb
Pa&gt;tor \layne Dun!Jp,State Rt. 681.
Tuppe" Platn\, Sun. Wor,~ip: 10 am 6:
6:10pm,. Wed. Bible Stucy 7:00p.m.

Syracuse.Chun:h of the :\azarene
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m .. Wor&gt;htp
10:30 am.. ~ p.m .. \\ea Sci'\ ICe,· 7 p.m.

Che't~r

10 a.m 2nd and 4th Sunday

Rejoicing Life Chunh
500 :\ 2nd A1·e .. ~ftddlepon. Pa.tor;
~f1ke Foreman. Paslor Ernentu. Lawrence
Foreman. Wo"h•p· 10:00 am
Wednesday SeT\ tee&gt;.- 7 p.m.
Clihon Tabernacle Cbunh
Clifton. \\' Va. Sunda) Scht&gt;OI • 10 d.ll) ..
Wo"hip • 7 p.m .• Wedne1da) SeNJce. 7
p.m
Full Gospel Chunh
or the Li'in~ Sa•ior
Rt.338. Antiqu•l), Pastor Je,.,. \1om&gt;.
Sen ice.: Saturday 2:00p.m.
Solem Community Church
Back of \\e&gt;t Columbta. WV•.om L1e\1ng
Road. Pa&gt;tor: Charles Roush (3\).j) 6752288, Sunda)· School 9:30 am. Sunda)
evening service 7:00 pm, Bibly Stud~
V.ednesday senice 7;00 pm
• Hobson Christian Fellow, hip Church
Pastor· Herschel White. Sunday School10 am, Sunda) Church 'en1ce • 6:30pm
Wednesda) 1 pm
Re5toralion Christian Fellowship
9365 Hooper Road. Athen&gt;. Pastor
Lonnte Coat,, Sunda)' \\orship 10:00 am.
WedllC'.day. 7 pm
House or Healing \lini&gt;tries
St. Rt. 124 Langs•ille. OH
Full Gospel. Cl Pa;tot&gt; Roben &amp; Roben~
~lusser. Sunda) School 9·30 am.
Worshtp 10:30 am - 7:00 pm. \\ed.
Servt.:e 7·00 Pill
Team Je5us \linhlrie.
Pa.-.t~r: Eddie Baer, \lecting 333
~lechamc Street. Pomeroy. OH
Ser11ce e~eT) Sunda) I I:00 am.

Pentecostal
PentKostal .\s&lt;&gt;cmbly
Pa&gt;tor: St. Rt. 1~4. Racme lomado Rd.
Sunda) School · 10 a.m .. E1ening • 7
p.m .. Wedne,da) Serv.ce,- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrhon1ille Presb~terian Church
Pastor: Re1 Da11d faul~ner. Worship·
9:00a.m. Sunday
~liddleport Pre:.byterian
Pastor: Jame&gt; Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m .. WOT\hip -.en oCe 11 am

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se1eoth-Da) Ad&gt;tntist
\lulberry Ht&gt;. Rd. Pomeroy, Sa1urday
Sen ices. Sabbath School • 2 p.m ..
Wot&gt;htp - 3 pm

United Brethren
~tt. Hermon l

nited B~th~n
in Christ Church
Texas Community 36411 Wickham Rd.
Pa;~or· Peter ~1anindale. Sunda) School·
9:30 a.m. Worship 10 30 a.m., 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Semces · 7·00 p.m.
Youth group meeung 1nd &amp; 4th Sunday,
7p.m.
Eden l'nited Brethren in Christ
State Route 124, between Retdsl'ille &amp;
Hockmgpon. Sunda) School - 10 a.m ..
Sunday Wot&gt;hip. 11:00 a.m. Wednesda)
Senices • 7:00 p.m .. Pastor- \1. Adam
Will

.

Church announcements sponsored by these area merchants
your light so shine before
. that they may see
works and glorif) yo
Father in heaven."
Mattl}ew 5: 16

1s(Jer, :dnbn~on, .fllcDilmel

jfuner,ll I!'ome
'liddleport,OH

740-992·5141

James Andmon, \dam :\lcDaniei-

499 Richland A\enue, .\thens
740-594-6333
1-800-451-9806

Oirectors
Pomero).OH

740·992·54-'4

Commit thy works
If ye abide in .We, and My
words abide in you, ye shall unto the Lord, and thy
ask what ye will, and it shall
thoughts shall be
be done unto you.
established.
John15:7
Bill Qu ickel

.·

992·6677

Proverbs 16:3

II
-...:..-'

www.Th~Pharmacy4U.com

Prescription Ph. 992-2955

Len·our light so shine before
men. tltat they may see yo11r
good works and glorify your
Father in heavelz."
Mattheu 5:16

For God so loved the
that he gave his only
begotten son ...
Jolm3:16

White Funeral Home "For God so loved the
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep ~
Since 1858
my co1~science clear before ~ 'L.tt cur {amilgfufv
-world that he ga\e his one
in
heart;
for
they
prott&lt;l ywr {az·. ·~
9 Fifth Street
God and man.''
and only Son ..."
Suppre~ston • E\tingut'hers • Sprinkle~&gt;
sha,ll
see
God.
Coolville, Ohio
• Sc.:urit'
John3:16
Acts 24:16 172 ~-2nd Ave.
\tJodlepon. OH
5:8
Matthew
740-667-3110
353-0837 Fax: (740)

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Oh1o
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-740-667-3156
"Still small
to care"

MY erace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness.
t t Cor. 12:9
The Lord does not look at the things
man looks at, man looks at the
outward appearance, the Lord looks
'at the heart.
2 Samuel l6-7b

�...-

.....

~.,~ - ~~~--·--~------------

----~-----

PageA6

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 2,

A Hunger for More
"But I'm almost done
even remotely as critiwith college and God
cal (anti wonderful) as
still hasn't done ·anyour relationship \vith
thing," protested the
God. Remember that
young woman across
the
''Greatest
from me in the campus
Commandment'' is to
coffee shop where I
"love the Lord your
often
held "office
God with all your heart,
hours" as a campus passoul. and mind" (see
tor. Her voice was loudl'v1atthew 22:38) and it
er than she had intended
is to a true relationship
and people at nearby
with God that you have
been called.
tables cast a glance in
Thom Mollohan
our direction. Heedless - - - - - - - - - The fact is that many
of what others were
people are looking to
thinking, she went on.
another man or woman
..You say that God has a plan for to provide what only God can.
me, but I don't see it. I want to be Unconditional love and acceptance.
with someone so badly and it feels however, cannot be truly found in
like God doesn't care," she said.
any human relationship (no matter
''But He does care," I replied. ''Just what movies or songs tell us). unless
think of His promise in Romans they are first grounded in the love of
8:32, 'He did not spare His own Son. God Who has loved us unconditionbut gave Him up for us all - how ally and accepts us with all our faults
will He not also, along with Him, - as Jesus' dying in our place
graciously give us all things?''
proves.
"Well, I don't know," she r~spond­
But secondly, our singleness will
ed. "I feel like I've got to do some- be a place where we exercise the
thing."
faith to which we have been called.
We talked a little more, then Consider what is at stake. God has a
prayed and parted company with plan especially crafted for a "special
very little resolved. unless it was the you" and your spiritual enemy would
resolve that she already had in pur- like for nothing more (and wants
suing a relationship that was not nothing Jess) than for you to be
Christ-centered.
derailed from that plan. partly to steal
My heart hurt for that Christian your joy and peace, but also to try to
woman, partly for the pain of her sabotage.your fmitfulness for God.
Solomon's wisdom was known far
loneliness, but mostly for the pain I
was sure that she would suffer in and wide, but he gave his heart away
forging her own path outside of to women wbo did not share his love
God's plan for her: it. seemed to me for God (it just made sense from ~l
that her life was about to turn a trag- worldly perspective). In cons~­
tc direction.
quence. his heart turned away from
Sadly. it did go the way I was the Lord and.he forfeited. wise as he
afraid it would for her as it has for once was, the fullness of God's
some other men and women I have blessing in his life and the lives of
known in the last twenry years. The his children (see 1 Kings II).
paths that they have chosen have
l am not saying that if you are sinbeen full of heartache and broken- gle that God is necessarily going to
ness although, 1 am glad to say, that bring the man or woman of your
in some cases. God has brought good dreams into your life, but if you v,•i.ll
out of tragedy.
not succumb to the unbelief that
Still, I pray for those who suffer impatience and desperation will fosfrom the snare of loneliness that ter in you. then you are infinitdy
be~ets men and women today (and
better positioned for God to bless
not just college-age ones) and the you and increase your joy and peace.
strength it has in turning people's
Besides, if the Lord has in His plan
hearts away from God.
for you that "special someone,'' then
Trusting God with our relation- that "special someone'' shares your
ships seems to be a tricky thing. I calling ... a common vision and a
:imagine that it is in part due to the common mission to know God and
fact that the world (the devil's mega- make Him known.
·phone) likes to tell us that if we are
"So do not throw away your confisingle then something is wrong with dence: it will be richly rewarded.
us, either in looks or in per'ionality. You need to persevere so that when
We are filled with impatience as it you have done the will of God. you
seems that everyone around us has will receive what He has promised"
"someone special" with whom he or (Hebrews 10:35 NIV).
she is living life. Impatience mutates
(Thom Mollohan and his fi11nily
'into desperation which, in turn, have ministered in southern Ohio tJle
becomes blinders upon our eyes, and past I 5 years and is the author of
The Fail}' Tale Parables. He is the
·leads us from the path of faith.
But our relationships (or lack pastor of Pathway Community
thereof) are a very special place to Church and may be reachedfi&gt;r cot'lexperience the love of God. First, it ments or questions by email at pas:anows us to celebrate the ..centrality torthom @pathwaygallipolis .com.)
Copyright© 201/), Thom
:of Christ." I simply mean the fact
:that there is no relationship that is
Mollohan.

Protesters end sit-in at
clo ing Cleveland church
CLEVELAND (AP)
- Carrying U.S. and
Hunganan flags. pari-.hioncrs ended a I 6-hour
sit-in at a Cleveland
Catholic church that is
closing after police told
them Thursday they
would be trespassing if
they did not J~ave.
The protesters staged a
vigil
at
midnight
Wednesday at the I 06year-old St. Emcric
Church near downtown
Cleveland, then remained
through about 4 p.m .
The historic Hungarian
church is the last qf 50

parishes to be clo~ed by
local diocese. Bishop
K1chard Lennon has
agreed to meet with protesters, police and protesters said. No date had
been set.
The protest ended after
police had entered the
church several times and
spoken with parishioners
by cell phone. Police
Commander Keith Sulzer
said six prote~ters were
inside the church. No one
was arrested.
The protesters had
locked themselves inside
and declared that they

were well-stocked with
food and ready to stay
"for a long time" in order
to save their church.
John Yuhasl, a pari
member and
leader. emerged from the
church and said it was
important to challenge
the closings.
'·Somewhere along the
\\ ay. someone had to take
a stand in opposition for
justice for all the parishioners. for all those bro- •
ken souls who were
thrown out of those
parishes to have a chance
at reconciliation," he said.

th~

Search the Scriptures
the scriptures daily .. ::
.~~these were more noble ... they searched
.

Last week's article
introduced the statement.
used by many religious
teachers, "I want to be
saved like the thief on the
cross!'' If you read last
week's
article.
vou
learned several Bible
facts about the thief and
about Jesus· power to forgive sins while He was on
earth. This week let's continue thinking about the
thief on the cross. in the
light of God's·Word.
To be saved like the thief
on the cross. each of us
would have to be a criminal. Mark 15:27 says the
two who were crucified
with Jesus were "thieves."
Fmther. to be saved like
the thief on the cross. each
of us would have to be
nailed to a cross. For each
one who desires salvation.
Jesus would have to retum
to earth, and endure the
agonies of the cross. Are
you beginning to see the
impossibility of any person
today being saved "like the
thief on the cross'?"
There is a more important reason none today
can be saved "like the
thief on the cross:" the
Ia\\ of God under which
the thieves. and Jesus,
lived was done awav at
Jesus' death. To be saved
"like the thief on the
cross,'' the old law would
have to be restored and
would have to be
changed to include not
only the Israelite people
but all Gentiles. rather
than only the Israelites
and those proselytiLed to
become Israelites.
The New Testament
book of Hebrews sheds
much light on the old law.

Point I: under the old
law, only the descendants
of Levi could be priests'
(Heb. 7:5:11, 12). Levi
was a son of Jacob;
Jacob's
name
\Vas
changed to Israel. and all
Israelite people carne
through Jacob's 12 sons.
Point 2: in addition to
being limited to applying
only to the Israelites.
Heb. 7: 19 tells us the old
lm\ made nothing perft:cl. Tn his lellt:r to the
churches of Galatia. Paul
tells us the old law was
our ··schoolmaster. to
bring us unto Christ ...
but ~after faith is come.
we are no longer under a
schoolmaster"~(3:24. 25).
During Paul's period of
time. a . schoolmaster
accompanied a child to
school. assuring his safet) while on the\~·ay.
When Christ came, setting up His new Ia\\. there
was no longer any need
for the "schoolmaster"
role for the old la\v. Back
to Hebrews, read: ''But
now hath he (Jesus: comment by author) obtained
a more excellent ministn.
by how much also he Is
the mediator of a better
CO\ enant. which
was
establisht;d upon better
promises. For if that first
covenant had been faultless. then should no place
have been sought for the
second" (Heb. 8:6, 7).
Having established the
New Testament fact that
the old Ia\\' has been
replaced by the new law.
it is important to search
the scriptures to see \Vhen
Christ died, when the new
hm (also called a "testament'' - see Heb. 9:15-

17) came into effect. At
about the sixth hour (noon
our time) Jesus forgave
the thief's sins and told
· the thief he would be with
Him in paradise (Luke
23:43. 44). At the ninth'
hour (3 p.m. our time),
Jesus died (Mark 15:33.
37).· Remembering th
fact that one ·s testament
(or. v. ill) doesn't take
effect until after one's
death. it is easv to see the
thief lived under the old
law. In the brief time
between Jesus· death (3
p.m.) and the time the
thief died. the thief had
the assurance he had been
forgiven. Also. the thief
wotlld be in Paradise with
Je.sus "today." not at some
future time. The question
for next week's article
will be: when did Jesus'
ne\\ law come into effect?
Once one understands the
con·ect division between
the old law and the new
law. there will be no
desire on any person's
pa11 to be saved "like the
thief on the cross!"
A regular reader of the
"Search the Scriptures"
columns sees the impol
tance of not accepting an
man's teachine; it is vita
to go directly to the sctiptures for God's will on
any subject. Bring your
Bible, come to the assemblies of the , church of
Christ (the church meets
at 234 Chapel Drive. off
Bulaville Road). and
search the scriptures with
us. The mission of the
church is . to draw every
person to God's Word. so
he can be saved!
\'is ir:
\I'H'H'.chapelhillchurclwfchrist.org.

The sponsors of this church page do so with pri~e in our community

••

77le l~ght oftlre eyes
rejoices the heart,
and good !leU'S
refreshes the bones.

R.S. VProverbs 15·30

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

~
~~
~;;:~~
Short &amp; Long Term &amp;
Respite Care • Rehab Senices
Available
""".onrbrookrehabilitationcenter.com
333 Page Street
(740) 992·6472
Mtddleoort. OH

llarm Friwdl)'
Atmotphere

Hour'
6.un·8pm

Mif[ie's 2(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home CooArd .Heals &amp; Dai/.r Specials

Open 7 day' a wet'k
740-992-7713

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH
n the universal language of facial expressions, a smile almost
invariably expresses goodwill. Asmile Jells slrangers that we are
friendly and confirms to friends and fami~ that they are in our good
graces or that we are there to help. It costs nothing and yet confer:s
benefits far beyond the small effort required to turn a frown into a smile.
Smiles are contagious, spreading happiness like a bf'nefirial virus. 'I11ere
is even evidence that smiles make their wearers happier. perhaps by
supplying the brain \\~lh feedback from the face. How it works doesn't
matter; what does maHer is !hal smiling makes us feel happy and makes
those around us feel happy too. Call to mind all that you have to be happy
about and let yourself smile accordingly. Even better, smile at someone
and spread the good feeling. And, if you don't have mucn tu smile ebout
at the moment, take heart and know lha' your problems are temporaty
and that God loves you

I

•:t. _ _ _ _ _ _ __

'-~------

2010

740-949-2217

Jfye abide in .\le, and My
word~· abide in you; ye shall
ask what ye will. and it shall
be done unto you.
Johnl5:7

S11es available Sx10 to 10 x 20

"Let your light so shine before
men. that the) may ~ee your
good \\'Orks and glorif) your
Father in heaven."
.\btthew 5: 16

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 ~lulberry Hei~hts
Pomero), Ohio 45769 ~
(740) 992-3279
'!!Y
Tol Free 1-877-58.3·2433

MIDDLEPORT
TROPJIIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second St.

Middleport, OH

740·992·6128
Local source for trophies,
olaaues t-shirts and more
(740) 992·6451

�PageA7.

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 2,

Some things are
etter left behind
Last week Tcrr)' and I
were left in control of a
rare occasron. A II the
boys were out of the
house and away on a
church youth trip. Since
we had the house to our- .
selves \Vith wonderful
peace and quiet for a
change. I suggested offthe-cuff that the two of us
take advantage of the situation .. Thus we did by
getting out of town for
two days!
Nothing like a change
of scenery. for a brief
respite for a married couple with active children
still at home. As part of
our "away" activities. we
took our bikes to ride
g an easy river trail.
ne point on our firsty ride, we stopped and
sat on a grassy spot under
an abundance of shade.
Both of us waxed mellow
as we observed the lush
scenery, which . recalled
certain memories of our
college courting days and
the first two years of our
marriage.
Terry snickered as she
started the memory road
with, "Do you remember
when we used to go to
Antietam Battlefield and
down along the Potomac
River. and take with us a
picnic snack of crackers.
longhorn cheese. and a
jar of Penrose sausages?"
J
gre\v
up
in

f

1

debilitating indigestion.
It is one of those deals
where you still like to
ingest certain items but
they do not like you
because the cast-iron
stomach works of youth
seem to ha\e gotten
rather rusted-out in older
age.·
As our laughter waned,
TetTY remarked, "It just
Ron Branch
goes to show that some
things are better left
Wardensville. on such behind."
In a moment. her comfare as the Rinard boys
and I \\ould often take it ment set me to thinking
with us when we hung about something the
out along the Capon Apostle Paul said. I have
Ri vcr on lazy summer been contemplating it
ever since.
days.
Paul stated. '·But, this
Antietam Battlefield is
located
close
to one thing I do. I forget
Sharpsburg. Md ., about those things which are
four miles from where behind ... " In so many
we \\ent to school at terms. Paul used himself
Shepherd University in as an example to say that
Shepherdstown. The part some things are better
of the pattlefield we par- left behind. What was it
ticularly enjoyed was that he instructs us about
atop the ridgcline that even today'?
According to Scripture.
O\ erlooks
Burnside's
Bridge. Regardless of before Paul became a
there or along the Christian. he held a cerPotomac. our snack tain status about which
added to the joy of those he was very. very proud.
Furthermore. he did cermoments.
But.
the
noshing tain anti-Christ things
remembrance gave us a that for all points-andhearty laugh, and it was purposes were purposely
simply because neither of done in an effort to
us can feast on those thwart the Christian
sausages any longer movement of the early
without experiencing the church.
'repercussions of ~dire,
But. when he received

Christ as personal Lord
and Savior. the status of
those things about which
he had been so proud he
eventually determined
were better left behind.
Furthermore, any residue
of bad conscience for
what he had previously
done against Christ that
could possibly hold him
back in his Christian life
and ministry he eventually determined was better
left behind.
Jn other words, he had
become
spiritually
mature enough in Jesus
Christ that he was not
going to let anything in
his past hinder him from
fully serving the One v.ho
had died and risen from
the dead for him. Instead,
having determined that
some things are better left
behind, he simultaneously determined that he
would "reach forth .. to do
the will of Christ. ''Reach
forth" refers to a racer
going hard for the finish
line.
Perhaps you are one
who allows your past to
hinder you from being
the front-line Christians
God wants you to be.
Paul is your example to
emulate. Get out of the
past. Serve Christ well
now!
(Rev. Ron B,anch is
pastor of Faith Baptist
Church in Mason, W.Va.)

Freedom: A sacred trust

"HAPPY ANNIVERSARY!" 234 years ago
this Sunday. a few good
men signed the document which would forever · establish
the
Thirteen Colonies as
one, free and independent nation.
That's the "upside" of
their story. Much less
knov.n is what subsequently happened to
Tom Johnson
them. the suffering a
number of them endured
by way of a penalty paid tion of the Declaration
for their patriotic deed.
and the revelation of the
The signers of the signatories, the lives of
Declaration
of those men were forever
Independence were bold, changed.
courageous and, above
Some had known great
all, intrepid; in signing
wealth; they lost most. if
this document they 1ike- not aiL of what the) had
wise signed their own
had. Many were forced
death warrant. Each
to
flee for their lives,
, as he stepped forand were kept on the run
d to sign. did so with
• oluteness and convic- for the longer part of the
tion in his eyes - imme- War
Were their \Vherediately obvious to those
abouts
to become know.
presiding over the pro·they
could
expect no
ceedings.
These men were acting mercy from the soiJiers
in neither a rash nor an of the King. Nor were
impetuous manner; their family member&lt;; of these
purpose was fixed, and men spared from the
their motives pure. To consequences of their
blatantly
defy
the act. Wives, and even
heretofore unchallenged children. were accorded
authority of the all- the same hostile treatsupreme
King
of ment by the K.ng's
England was treason of Armv - and more than
the most damnable kind. a feV. were hounded to
and there were certain to an early grave as a
be radical and severe result.
J have to wonder how
consequences.
The foregoing is an many bona fide, legitiunderstatement if ever mate Amencan citizcm
there was one'. By and toda) J...:now and apprecilarge, with the publica- ate what those wonder-

ful gentlemen did for us,
in 177 6 '? r m not talking
"lip service," as though
what they did is some-.
thing to be trivialized
and~ they themselves
patronized.
God forbid their sacrifices and noble actions
ever be minimized or
forgotten. These were
men - godly and Godfearing men, the very
best in America at that
time. Some gave their
all. but to a man all of
them gave up something.
That said, I also wonder how many people in
this Country appreciate
that not all recent high
school graduates will be
entering college or a
trade school anytime
soon. and' that not all
college graduates will be
entering the career field
of their choice. Instead.
many of these young
men and women have
chosen to serve in this
Country's militar)
and I sa), "God Bless
them. everyone!"
Honestly, I do not
believe the vast majority
of people in America
care all that much about
what is going on outside
their own, selfish little
spheres . of influence.
The adjective applied
most often in the '60's to
the American way of life
was "decadent." and it
occurs to me the same
still applies - yet more
so.
Someone
recently
spoke 111 favor of rc-

..

,.

..

instating the draft, the
idea being that if more
parents had to experience the pain and the
trauma of seeing their
sons and daughters go
off to war they would be
more likely to care about
our Country. and the
direction in which it is
headed.
"Boots on the ground"
means a whole lot more
to people when they
know it is their son's or
daughter's feet which
are in those boots.
roliticians make poliCICS, but they do so in
relative safety these days
- unlike soldiers on the
field of battle, and
unlike our Founding
Fathers in '76.
As David and Goliath
did battle. the Philistines
were ~onfident. of the
outcome (1 Sam. 17:455 I). Yet, there was
another "giant'' present
that
day
i.e.,
Almighty God. in whom
David !1ad put his trust.
Like
David.
our
Forefathers
believed
God was on their side,
and so He was.
Freedom is more than
a word, a concept, an
ideal; it's a sacred trust.
It's neither easy to
obtain. nor is it entirely
free to those who possess it. Thank God - for
those who defend it for
us.
(Re\'. ·Tom Johnson is
the pastor of Trinity
Church in Pomeroy,
Ohio.)

t

a a t

2010

CHURCH PROFILE

Syracuse
Cotntnunity
.Church
Syracuse Community Church is an old-fashioned, fundamentaL King James Version Bible
believing church.
The church was built in I 870, but SCC was
established in 2006. God's hands have been in it
from the beginning. We are seeing sinners .
saved, believers sanctified, many baptized in
water in the name of the Father, the Son and the ·
Holy Ghost. And many healed.
We have spirit-filled music and an aciive
youth group (SCY) that meets one evening
every week and does special things through the
year and even have summer camp.
Our number one mission for the church: To •
win souls to Christ and to be a Hghthouse in the
community. Remember the verse in Proverbs ·
29:18, where there is no vision, the people
ish. Come worship with us.
Sunday school for all ages at 10 a.m.: Sunday
evening at 6:30 p.m. and Bible study on
Wednesday at 7 p.m.
Syracuse Community Church is located at.
2480 Second St. in Syracuse. The pastor is Rev.
Joe Gwinn. The phone number is (740) 9923893.
.
(The Church Profile for Syracuse Community
Church first appeared in the 2010 edition of
Ohio Valley Publishing's Faith &amp; Family maga:::ine.)

per-

If Life Were All

~

BY DOROTHY LANIER WHITTINGTON

Only one life, twill soon be past,
..
Only what's done for Christ will last.
Paul the Apostle in Philippians 1:21, said,
''For to me to live is Christ. and to die is gain."
If life were all, and death is certain end; if·
nothing lured the soul to higher aims; if what .
we cherish here and guard and tend, were crown
and summit of all life attains, rewards so small
and space repaid the battle life sustains, if life
were all.
·
Were there no faith that on another shore
beyond the distance of this life's upmost scope,
lay Beulah lands, where joy reigns evermore,
surpassing life's pall it were not well, for these
vain years to grope, if life were all.
If life were all, and amid its wild alarms no
cross, no blood shone through its awful years. If •
through its darkness no outreached arms, beckoned the woeful forsake his fears, its floodtide
of tears. If life were all.
Yet if life really ended aiL I believe it would
still be worthwhile to live it for Jesus. If there
were no hereafter, I'd certainly want to be a Christian of faith, anyway. But thanks be to .
God, this does not end it all.
,
.
Bu thanks be to God - we can shun hell and
gain a Home called Heaven. Real freedom is in.
the love of Christ. Walking and talking with .
Him the Great I Am.
Many cheers for the red, white &amp;nd blue.

....

Patriotic celebration

CROWN CITY - Crown City Wesleyan
Church will host a patriotic celebration from 9:30
a.m.-5 p.m., Sunday. July 4. Events include a choir.
cantata. picnic, games, etc. The church is located at.:
26144 Ohio 7. Crown City. For information, call ..
(740) 256-6993.

Patriotic service
GALLTPOLIS - First Church of God will host
a patriotic service at 10:25 a.m., Sunday, July 4.
The church is located at 1723 Ohio 141. Gallipolis.
For information, call446-4404.

Worship, prayer conference
RUTLAND - The Movement, The Moment:
Worship and Prayer Conference will be held at 7 ..
p.m., July 8-10 at the Rutland Church of God.
Three nights of powerful preaching and life changing worship · will take place w'ith Jessica Haggy, .
who is a local evangelist attending World Harvest .
Bible College; Jana Mitten. who is affiliated with·
Solid Rock Church in Monroe: and Carolyn Smith,
v. ho is co-pastor at the Cross Road Church of God
in Dayton.

trmtre Ott' u ·e 2

t 'O ·r t t •

+cat "

*n

rt

trt~rtb

reo rt

'

t·

�_

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

,

,

_

-

-

~

-

-

~

·

~

~

.

-

~

-

-

~

-

______ _____ __..__......___.....
......

..,..

Page AS

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 2,

2010

.

Red Hats lunch at Holzer Clinic
Get information on joint replacements

Local Briefs

'

GALLIPOLIS
Thirteen members of the
Red Hot Flashes Chapter
of the Red Hat Soc1ety
recently attended a luncheon at Holzer Clinic
followed by a question
and answer session with
the Regional Orthopedic
Center
Their medical questions
answered by Orthopedic
Surgeons and Physical
Medicine
physicians
attended an informal
meeting. J .T. Holland,
Holzer Clinic manager of

the
Department
of
01thopedics. opened the
meeting.
Dr. Bruce Haupt. Board
Certified
Orthopedic
Surgeon: Dr. Daniel
Black, Board Certified
Physical Medicine and
Rehabilitation Physician:
and Dorothy B. Lollathin,
Physician
Assistant
attended the meeting.
The ladies of the Red
Hot Flashes came prepared with a number of
questions ranging from
partial and total joint

replacement surgery to
rehabilitation and cortisone injections.
Topi&lt;A&lt;&gt;
discussed
included the newly developed Holzer Center for
Joint Replacement in
Jackson, the Stryker
Computer Navigated Joint
Replacement System. partial joint replacement, the
recovery process, rehabili
tation options and general
orthopedic health.
Holzer Clinic offers the
opportunity for members
of the community to have

lunch and chat with
physicians in an informal
setting. These events
allow the pa1ticipants to
ask questions and get to
know Hol:ter Clinic
Physicians and their
practice on a more personal level. If you or
your local organization
would like to meet with a
Holzer Clinic Physician,
Department or its staff
over
lunch
contact
MarJean Kennedy, 740441-3288
or
Maria
Ramsey: 740-446-5184.

•

Lakeside Leader's 4-H Club News
Plans
for
Meigs
County Fair participation
has been a topic of discussion at recent meetings of the Lakeside
Leader's 4-H Club members. The fair will be held
Aug. 15-21.
The deadline for turning in applications for
king and queen and
prince and princesses has
already passed. Members
were reminded of judging week which has been
set for July 12-16
The health and safety

speaking contest · were
held on June 14 and the
demonstration contest
will be at 3 p.m. on July
14. The advisor urged
members to participate.
Plans were discussed
for building and decorating a fair parade float following the Aug. 6 club
meeting at the Powell
residence.
Discussed at a recent
meeting were the TK
Fundraising items and the
sale of t-shirts. It was
noted that extras are avail-

able for sale at $12 each or
2 for $20. Lindsay Hupp
gave a safety repo1t on
"Swimming Pool Tips."
Demonstrations and
talks were given by
Elayna Bissell on putting
together an outfit for her
''It's Time For Clothing''
project, Lindsay Hupp on
"Scrap boo}ting," Allie
Grueser on Veggie Dip
for her "Food and Fitness
For Fun'' project, Kristen
King on ''Scrap booking''
and Tyler Barber on
Poisonous Snakes for his

"Let's
Explore
the
Outdoors'' project.
At the June 6 meeting
held at Forked Run State
Park,
demonstrations
were given by Tyler
Davis, Caitlyn Cowdery,
Katelynn
Chevalier,
Kaitlyn Hawk, Mark
Gibbs, Austin Ross,
Baylee Collins, Owen
Arix, Ally Barber, Lauren
Boggess,
Taylor
Chevalier, Cera Grueser,
Sam
Jones,
Cody
Rayburn, Colten Rayburn
and Taiton Sarver.

FINANCIAL H ·ELP FOR SENIORS
Senior citizens and others living on a fixed or
low income know how
difficult it is to make ends
meet, especially when
costs for essentials like
health care, food and energy increase faster than
their sources of income.
Here are a few costsaving benefits available to people on fixed
incomes - especially
seniors:
Prescription
Drug
Assistance
Programs.
Most
pharmaceutical
companies offer patient
assistance
programs
(PAPs) that provide uninsured and low-income
people access to prescription drugs they couldn't
otherwise afford. Ask
your doctor. pharmacist
or health clinic for details.
Other good resources
include:
Medicare's
alphabetical list of drugs
available through PAPs,
with links to detailed eligibility
information
(www.medicare.gov/pap/i
ndex.asp); Pmtnership for
Prescription Assistance
(www.pparx.org);
RxAssist
(www.rxassist.org); and
N e e d y M e d s
(www.needymeds .com).
Other money-saving
ideas
for
medical
expenses include:
• • Government-provided
programs that help people
• with limited income and
resources pay for medical
coverage,
including
Medicaid and Medicare.
For a good round-up of
these programs, go to
www.medicare.gov and
click on "Get Financial
Help."
• Ask your doctor about
using lower-cost generic
drugs and providing cash
discounts for expenses not
covered by your insurance.
• Several provisions of
the recently signed health
care reform bill will gradually reduce Medicare drug
costs between now and
2020. For example, ttiis
year seniors who reach the
so-called "doughnut hole"
coverage gap ($2,380 in
20 10) will receive a $250
rebate to lessen the financial burden.
Tax advantages. The
IRS tax code includes
several benefits that target seniors (and often,
other lower-income taxpayers), including:
• A higher standard
deduction amount for
most people who don't
itemize deductions, if
they and/or their spouse
are over 65 or blind.
• An additional tax
credit for lower-income
people who are over 65 or
disabled and file a 1040
or 1040A tax form. (For
full details and eligibility,
see IRS Publication 524
at www.irs.gov.)

Jason Alderman
• Certain home improvements made to accommodate medical conditions or
disabilities with a doctor's
recommendation may be
deducted if you itemize
deductions. Rules are comread
IRS
plex, so
502
at
Publication
www.irs.gov and consult a
tax advisor before claiming such deductions.
• Free tax return preparation assistance and
counseling from IRStrained volunteers is available tJJ people over age
60, as well as low-to-moderate income folks and
military families (search
''Free Tax Preparation" at
www.irs.gov).
• Publication 554 contains additional help for
seniors when preparing
their tax retums.
Government
programs. Many government-sponsored benefits, grants and financial
aid programs exist to
help seniors, low-income
families and others pay
their bills, including:
• LIHEAP, · the LowIncome Home Energy
Assistance
Program,

which provides grants to
help pay utility bills. To
see if you qualify, go to
www.acf.hhs .gov /programs/ocs/liheap.
• SNAP, the USDA's
Supplemental Nutrition
Assistance Program (formerly known as food
stamps), helps millions
of
,ower-income
Americans buy nutritious
food each month. Visit
www.fns.usda.gov/snap
for qualification requirements.
• Rental assistance for
low-income families is
available from several U.S.
Department of Housing
and Urban Development
programs as well as other

state and local agencies
(see www.hud.gov/renting/index.cfm for details).
•
Go
to
www.usa.gov/Citizen!To
pics/Benefits.shtml for a
comprehensive overview
of additional aid programs.
.
And of course, don't forget to ask about senior discount&lt;; whenever you shop,
travel or buy insurance I 0 percent here and there
can really add up.
(Jason
Alderman
directs Visa's financial
education programs. To
Follow Jason Alderman
on
Twitter:
wHw.twitter.com!Practic
a/Money.)

Cheshire resident
receives scholarship
CHESHIRE - Cheshire re~ident Carol Davey was
among those who received awards and scholarship.
this spring totaling more than S I 00.000 for outstam
ing achievement in Berea's academic. !abo•·. and ~e•
vice programs for the 2009-10 academic year.
Carol received a Communication Scholan;hip first
place for excellence in speech communication.
Berea is a non-denominational, comprehensive college that offers Bachelors degrees in 32 majors: inclild ·
ing arts and sciences and select professional programs
as well as independent and student designed major::..
Every student receives a tuition !&gt;Cholar~hip and works
at least 10 hours a week to pay living expenses.

Martindale makes dean's list
POMEROY - Sarah Francis Martindale of
Pomeroy who attends Huntington Univer-;ity 111
Huntington, Ind. has been named to the dcan':-list for
the spring semester.
The dean's list is published twice a year. The honor
recogni:tes students for outstanding acud~mic
achievement during the previous seme~tcr
Honorees must be classified as regular studl!nts, he
enrolled full-time with a load of 12 hours or more in
graded courses, and mu!&gt;t achieve a semester graJe
point average of at least 3.50 on a 4 .0 scale.
Martindale is pursuing a bachelor of arts degree in
public relations. She is the daughter of Peter and
Elizabeth Martindale of Pomeroy.

•

Meigs County Forecast

Friday...Sunny. Highs in the lower 80s. 1'\mtheast
winds around 5 mph.
Friday'night...Clear. Lows in the 10\ver 50s.
Saturday.••Suony. Highs in the upper 8Ds. East
winds around 5 mph ... Becoming south around 5 mph
in the afternoon.
Saturday night .•.Mostly clear. Lows in the upper
50s. East winds around 5 mph.
Independence Day and Sunday night...~1ostl)
clear. Hot. Highs around 90. Lows in the lo\\er 60s.
Monday through Tuesday night ...Partly cloudy.
Hot. Highs in the lower 90s. Lows in the upper 60s.
Wednesday and Wednesday night ... Mostly
cloudy. Hot. Highs around 90. Lows in the upper 60s.

Marine Services

WE'RE BACK. ..
AN[)_ RfAVY TO SfRV/Cf YOUR BOAT!
Full stock ofparts • Certified mechanic an duty
"'
• 30+ years experieua

2131 Karr Street • S}racuse, OH
Call our ne\\ number 740-992-02SO

'n!d·•
. . .. ' 1!4-n.-. ~~:·~ . • ·~'·-~
1~·; ·enour s \.laa ~fVlce.r,.

·R~:-;idcntial

Your FUTURE within REACH
MEIGS CENTER

•!lome
• Fm·;11

•Industry

www.rio.edu
42377

•C'nnun~rcial
•Bulk &amp; l3t..)ltlcd

Charles Chancey Drive • Pomeroy, OH

•Repair.
. .J', ~
•Sales and Serv1ce~ .· ··
•Vented &amp; Unventedf.'~~?,
.
.\, Jl
Heaters
·· . ,·
•Empire &amp; Free Stan.4jn'g
Fireplaces _·,·.A·~J

( 740)-985- 3307 • P.&lt;Y. Box~~~5)
~~
~~

I \tV. Main Stn:ct~ C'hcstc1·, f~l~~,
'

740-992-1880
~~~

un"'t

un

~----..~

on

A9tn~ \nc..

~UGSWEI.l.ME.~- 992-2681

aa--

OFFq..tNGoc
~nat 't"r.~~tn

ong

\..tf-t,.t• Mana~lm'IM\'

4'-UMf&gt;A
~?10

C.\..J'E:.~£'5

Laa:gest: selection of'E.:i:ercise F ..qu.ipn&gt;.enr
in Meigs C'ol.u-,ty.
"'OP£.1'-1 10 J1&gt;.G.£$ l$ and OL.Detz:·
OPERATIN'G HOURS:
Mondao( - 't"htlc&amp;da-i t.o:~.a.n - "7:oopnl
Fc•d:a-f v:"iSoarn - 4:oopm
' ~a-lucc\a'(

9eOO.illlnl

-

l2.:00\M'al.

-.,

T

Marcum Construction

Commercial &amp; Residential

• Room additions • Roofing • Garages
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Horse Barns
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416·1834
We encourage buildi11g materit1ls be pw'Ciwsed locall_\.

,,

lccul

Full)' insured
1
Free cstitnutcs .. 25+ )'ears experience
,
(Not &lt;tlliliall•d with Mike Marcum Roofing &amp; Rcmodclin~)

(

t
-~·

·:

1

July 3rd, 4th, and Sth
Main Facility
Meigs Facility
Jackson Facility
Athens Facility

1pm-9pm
11am-9pm
11am-9pm
9am-9p~.

HOLZER
CLINIC

J

�Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
.\1anuel suspended 1 game, Page B2
Wooing LeBron, Page B3
Teen sailor describes voyage, Page B4

Friday, July 2, 2010
:.

;AL SCHEDGLE
fJll!iiY. July_2

Post 27 at Ashland Tournament
Post 39 at Athens Tournament
llaturdJiY,.Iuly_3
Post 27 at Ashland Tournament
Post 39 at Athens Tournament

Sulll1liY..,luJlLA
Post 27 at Ashland Tournament
Post 39 at Athens Tournament

Momlay. JW.U
Post 2? at Logan. 6 p.m.
IYfi!iay.~

Hillsboro at Post 27, 6 p.m.
Beverly Lowell at Post 39. 6 p.m.
W~.J.ula

Post 27 at Marietta (DH). 5:30 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

BBYFL signups
MIDDLEPORT. Ohio

- The Big Bend Youth
Football League will be
holding sign~ps for the
20 I 0 football season
Saturday in July
I I a.m. to 1 p.m. at
•
the Veterans Memorial
Stadium in Middleport,
• Ohio.
All interested
players and cheerleaders
are encouraged to sign
up. Players will be fitted
for equipment at that
time.
football
and
Cheerleading Camp will
begin August 2.
. For more information
contact Dave at 304-6745178. Sarah at 740-6984054. or Regina at 740698-2804.

Co-ed softball
Tournament
SYRACUSE. Ohio
A co-ed softball tournament will be held to ben-

efit the BBYFL on July
n 'lnd 18 at the Syracuse
Fields. reams will
ive and five with a
~ . ) enti') fee. To register a team or for more
information
contact
Reoina at 740-698-2804
or~::&lt; Sarah at 740-6984054. The top two teams
\\ill receive prit.es

I

Southern HS
Yolleyball Camp
RACINE. Ohio
Souther'n High School
will be offering a volleyball camp for girls going
into grades 3-8 from
August 2-5. in the high
school gym. This learning experience will be a
chance for girls to interact with high school
coaches and players and
develop an understandof
volleyball
ing
mechanics and fundaals through drills,
·hes. games. and
ests. Each camper
will receive a free T-shirt
•and have the opportunity
to win several other
prizes.
The camp will by split
in to two groups. \Vith
girls from 3rd to 5th
~rades from 9 to II :30
a.m. and girls .6th lO 8th
grades from I to 4 p.m.
There is a fee of $35 p~r
camper or $60 for a fam. ily of two. Campers are
asked to bring knee pads
and a water bottle. and
arc asked to arrive early
on the first day for registration.
To preregister call
Coach Dickson at 740525-2500.

WahamaHOF·
meeting

•

ASO~.

W.Va. Wahama Athletic
l-lall of Fame Board of
Trustees and the Voting
Committee will meet on
Tuesday. July 6, at the
high school at 6:30p.m.
The voting process for
prospective
inaugural
t:la!-.s of the WHS Hall of
Fame will be discussed.
All Board of Trustee and
voting committee members ;re urged to attend
this
. vcrv important meetlllg.

.

.

j

.

Age~t:

Scott accepts Cavs' job

CLEVELAND (AP)
- With LeBron or without him. Byron Scott has
decided to get back on an
NBA sideline.
Scott
accepted
Cleveland's coaching job
just as LeBron James
officially became a free
agent and no longer property of the Cavaliers.
who are hoping that landing the best coach available will convince the
two-time MVP to stay
home and try to win a
title.
Scott's agent, Brian
Mcinerney, said in an email to The Associated
Press that he and the
Cavs
are
working
through some final
details, but doesn't
expect any problems and
that Scott has agreed to
become Clevelan~d 's next
coach. The team is
expected to announce
Scott's
hiring
later
Thursday. just as James

Iistens to offers from the
New Jersey Nets and
New York Knicks.
Scott. who previously
coached in New Jersey
and New Orleans, may
not know for some time
if he'll have James on his
roster. But after working
as a TV analyst. the 49year-old has decided it's
time to get back to doing
what he loves most.
The Cavs have been
looking for a coach since
Mike Brown was fired
May 24. ending a fiveyear run with the club.
Brown guided James and
his teammates through
the most successful run
111 tranch1se histoi:y. but
fell short of winning a
championship.
Scott's hiring ends a
twisting drama to the
Cavs' coaching search.
Los Angeles Lakers
assistant Brian Shaw
appeared to be the
favorite
to
become

Cleveland's coach after
an impressive two-day
meeting with the club
earlier this week As of
Tuesday. Shaw was.
reported to be assembling a staff to bring to
Cleveland.
'But
despite
the
Cavaliers
seemingly
moving toward a deal
with Shaw - to the point
where Mcinerney sent
out a congratulatory email to Shaw through
several news outlets general manager Chris
Grant reopened talks
with
Scott
on
Wednesday.
Scott's dream has been
to coach the Lakers, but
with Phil Jackson possibly returning to the
champions he has decidKhampha Bouaphanh!Fort Worth Star-Telegram/MCT
ed to take on the Cavs.
who could be better posi- Former New Orleans Hornets hea.d coach Byron
tioned to re-sign James Scott watches first half action against the Dallas
with Scott on the side- Mavericks in Game 4 of the first round of the NBA'

Please see Scott, Bl

Western Conference Playoffs at the American Airlines
Center in Dallas, Texas, Sunday, April 27, 2008.

Reds win again, beat Cubs 3-2 in 1Oth
CHICAGO (AP) Disgruntled fans· bade a
not:'so-fond farewell to
Dusty Baker after the
Cubs sent him packing.
Four years later, he has
returned to ,Chicago for a
little revenge.
Now he's managing the
first-place
Cincinnati
Reds. And when his new
club beat his old one 3-2
in I 0 innings Thursday.
fans at Wrigley Field

CLEVELAND (AP)
Even when the
Cleveland Indians lost
their season~ worst seventh in a
row last
week.
manager
Manny
Acta keep
believing
6
in
his
team.
Acta's
faith
in
his players seems
to be ha\e
paid off.
Behind
Justin
Masterson ·s pitching and
Matt LaP01ta ·s slugging.
the Indians beat the
Toronto Blue Jays 6-1
Thursday for their season-high fifth straight
win.
The Indians. with several young players in
their everyday lineup.
skidded on the road
before closing the trip -..
with a win in Cincinnati
on Sunday. Cleveland
returned home i\1onda\
and sent the Blue Jay~"
out of tO\vn with a fourgame sweep.
"I felt we were our own
worst enem) in those
games:' Acta said. "We

seemed angrier than ever.

Baker said he'd rather
look forward to a promising future than back at
what
happened
in
Chicago. where he guided the Cubs within five
outs of the 2003 World
Series but where th.ngs
eventually ended unhappily - "kind of like a
very good marriage gone
bad," he said.
Asked. if bringing a
division-leading team
into Wrigley gave him
extra satisfaction, Baker
said: "It would give more
satisfaction if we were
still in first when we
leave."
Pinch-hitter Miguel
Cairo singfed in the lOth
and scored when the
Cubs tried to turn a double play on Drew Stubbs·
grounder.
~ With their ninth consecutive extra-innings
road victory - a streak
that dates to June 2009
an&lt;! the NL's longest
since Atlanta won nine
straight in 1999-2000 Baker's Reds moved a
season-high 10 games
over .soo.·
"There's no surprise
there at all," Cubs first

Please see Reds, Bl

Indians sweep
Blue Jays, win ·
fifth straight

1

had an opportunity to win

Scott Strazzante/Chicago Tribune/MCT

Cincinnati Reds' Scott Rolen follows the flight of his RBI triple off of Chicago Cubs'
Carlos Silva in the first inning at Wrigley Field in Chicago, Illinois, on Thursday.

four of them. We felt we
were \ ery close from
having a good road trip."
The Indians combined
solid starting pitching.
good work ~ from the
bullpen and time!) hitting against the Blue
Please see Tribe, Bl

S.Williams to face Zvonareva in Wimbledon final
WIMBLEDON.
England (AP) - After
Serena Williams moved
within a victory of her
fourth
Wimbledon
championship and 13th
Grand Slam title overall,
she was asked to as~ess
the woman she '11 face in
Saturday's final. littleknown Vera Zvonareva
of Russia.
"I don't think she does
anything terrible. I think
that's the best way tu
describe her game,"
Williams said. ''She does
everything good."
That's a fair, if not
necessarily charitable,
scouting report. Minutes
later came a follow up:
Is . there
anything
Williams herself does
''terrible" in tennis or in
life?
She hemmed and
hawed, then replied. "I
don't know. That\ a
good question. I'm

stumped."
It's difficult to find
any flaws in Williams·
play right now. The No.
)-ranked ~merican has
won all 12 sets she's
played this fortnight, set
a Wimbledon record
with 80 aces in the tournament, and reached a
third consecutive final at
the All England Club by
beating Petra K vitova of
the Czech Republic 7-6
(5), 6-2

Thur~day.

"Well," the defending
champion sai'd, ''I'm
hoping to still. peak in
the final."
That must be a daunting prospect for the 21stranked Zvonareva, who
eliminated
Tsvetana
Pironkova of Bulgaria 36, 6-3. 6-2 in Thursday's
other semifinal.
Zvonareva is the second lowest-ranked

Please see Final, Bl

Kathy Kmonlcek/NewsdayMCT

Vera Zvonareva of Russia returns the ball to Flavia Pennetta of Italy during the US
Open at the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, Sunday, September 6,
2009 in Flushing Meadows, New York.

.

'

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

OVP Sports Briels
Hinote joins Blue Jackets staff

Final
from Page BJ

woman to reach a
Wimbledon final. had
never gotten past the
fourth round here, and
will be pia) ing in 41 title
match for the first time
in 30 Grand Slam tournaments .
1
•
'"I a ways bcltevc in
1
myself.
don't care
about what everyone
says," said Zvonareva.
\\'ho drape:-. a pink. ycllow and blue Wimbledon
towel over her head dur1
i~g cha~gcO\:~rs to bl&lt;~ck
Phillies l\1anuel suspended 1 game dtstracttons.
I know tf I
'EW YORK (AP) -- Phtladelphia Phillies man- pia) my best tennis, I .
ager Charlie ~1anucl has been suspended for one can beat anyone. ... I
never look at any odds
game for making contact with an ump1re.
or comparison:.."
Major League Baseball announced Thursda) that
So she might not know
Manuel \\as scheduled to miss that night's game at that Williams b 12-3 in
Pittsburgh and was fined an undisclosed amount.
major finals.
Manuel was ejected in the top of the 'I Oth inning
Or care that W1 I hams
during Tuesday\ 9-6 victory over the Reds in has won five of their
Cincinnati. Manuel was arguing balls and strikes previous six meetings.
during the ''inning rail). C.B. Buck nor motioned
'"On paper, it looks
that Manuel bumped his forehead with the brim of like I should win," said
Williams. who is \\Carhis cap while he complained.
· ing glittering, si lver nail
polish that sometimes
Cairo singled off Bob reflects the sun's rays.
Howry ( 1-2) with one out "But Vera, she's beaten
in the lOth and went to some good people. Her
third on Bmcc 's hit-and- last two matches. ::.he's
from Page Bl
run single. Stubbs then been down a set. so she's
grounded to second base- obviously a fighter."
baseman Derrck Lee man Ryan Theriot. who 1 For Williams, it actusatd "Dust) knows how thrC\\ to shortstop Starlin ally might be refreshing
to get the best out of his Castro for an out. With a to look across the Centre
gu)s. He's proven that sliding Bruce beuing·l Court net and sec :-.ome0\er the \ears ."
down, however. Ca::.tro one other than her older
The Reds arc locked in dropped the ball before sister Venus.
a tJght race with St. Louis he could make the relay
Serena never has beatin the i'\ L Central but are throw.
en
an) one other than
10 1/2 games ahead of
"You're
taught
to
play
Venus
in a Wimbledon
the fourth -place Cubs. a certain way." Bruce
Ch1cago dropped II said. "That's the way we
game:. below the break- play on this team. It does
even mark, it'\ lowest help
\\in games.''
point since finishing
Indeed.
while the Cubs
2006 at 66-96 - kading
from Page Bl
lead
the
majors
with 19
to Baker's dismissal.
one-run
losses,
the
Red:.
The Cubs have lost II
stra1ght series opent:rs are best in baseball with Jays.
"It was an outstaading
and ha\e scored two runs 15 final-at-bat wins.
Jordan Smith ( 1-0) series by the kids," Acta
or fewer in I 0 of their
last 12 games. They were pitched a perfect ninth said.
The mood down the
booed throughout by for the victory. Francbco
impatient fans who Cordero worked the lOth hall in the Blue Javs'
expected more from a for his 22nd save. getting clubhouse wa:-. decidedly
tl'am w1th baseball's Tyler Colvin to ground different. Toronto ha:-.
into a game-ending dou- lost five in a nm. matchthird-highest payroll.
ble
pia).
"We just don't seem to
ing its worst slump this
Wood allowed only year. and has dropped
come up \\ ith the big hit
\\hen \\e need it,'' Cub two hits and one walk in nine of I I.
manager Lou Piniella seven shutout innimb but
A::.ked to describe his
said. -.:It's been a recur- was removed after he team's pia) in the series.
opened the eighth by Toronto manager Cito
ring theme." ·
Baker said managing walking Geovany Soto Gaston gave a blunt
the Cubs. who last \\Oil and Custro.
assessment.
•
After
Kosuke
the World Series in 1908.
"Terrible. awful. we
b difficult "because Fukudome sacrificed to played terrible.'' he said.
nob.ody let::. anything go advance both runners,
Masterson took a
Colvin singled off Nick , shutout
from the past."
into the ninth
") was here four out of Masse! to make it 2-all. inning and
LaPorta
the 100 years.'' he said. Colvin took second on homered for the third
"Most people act like I the throw to the plate and straight game.
was here the whole hun- went to third on .\1ike
Masterson
(3-7)
Fontenot's pinch-single blanked the Blue Jays
dred."
Criticl!ed in Chicago before Lee grounded into until Jose Bautbta led off
for refu~ing to use young a double play.
ninth \\ ith a double
Carlos Silva allowed a the
players and for failing to
and Aaron Hill hit an
instill proper fundamen- season-high I I hits in 7 RBI single with one out.
tals , Baker has thrived in 2-3 innings but kept the Prank Herrmann relic\ ed
Cincmnati because his Cubs in the game by with the bases loaded and
repeatedly pitching out got Jose Molina to
youngster~ have excelled
and his team ha" been of trouble.
NOTES: Piniella said
fundamentally ~ound.
Travis Wood, 23, Carlos Zambrano likely
pitched :.even ~trong will need some minor
innings in his major leal!ue rehab work when
league debut Thursda). the~ Cubs are ready to
Jay Bruce, 23. made the have him pitch again.
''inning run po~sible Zambrano was suspendwith a picture-perfect ed by the team after he
shde to break up a double loudly criticized teamplay. Stubbs, 25. drove in mates in the dugout durthat ntn. Emerging star ing his June 25 start. The
Joey Votto, 26. had two team said he is undergoing counseling for anger
hih.
.
The Reds. who lead the issues and won't return
league 111 fielding. also until some time after the
turned huge double plays All-Star break .... Votta
in the eighth and lOth has reached base in 39
inmngs . Veteran second consccuti' c games. the
baseman
Brandon majors· longest streak
Phillips keyed both.
this season.

COLU.M BCS. Ohio (AP) - Former NHL veteran Dan Hinote (liiGH'-note) has been hired as an
assistant coach by the Columbus Blue Jackets.
The club announced the hiring on Thursday.
Hmotc helped the Colorado Avalanche win the
2001 Stanley Cup.
_
Hinote will be the second member of new coach
Scott Arniel's coaching stu.ff. joining Brad Berry.
The. 33-) car-old Hinott: wrappt:d up his career last
sca:)Oil \\ 1th !\1odo in the Swedish Elite League. He
spc['lt ntne sea..,ons With the Avalanche and St.
Louis Blue", scoring 38 goals with 52 assists in
503 games.

Reds

Tribe

m£

INGELS

CARPET
rork Ingels, Owller

175 No!th 2nd Ave • Middleport, OH

2010

fmal,
w,innin2:
all- ball to chatr umpire Eva enough to make adjustWilliams matchup~ in A:.deraki,
who ments. hitting deeper
2002. 2003 and 2009. announced. ''LadJC' and into the court and chargFi\e-timc
champion gentlemen. the ball is ing forward more and
Venu:. got the better of broken, and according to more.
It took 59 minutes for
Serena in the 2008 the rules, \\e will replay
Zvonareva to earn a
championship match at the point."
There also ''as a glitch break point. \\ hich she
the grass-court tournadunng
the second ~emi­ did in the second set's
ment.
''That's interesting. I final. when the speed sixth game by returning
guess the crowd should meter momentarily went a 117 mph serve. then
like that - not another out of kilter and showed watching Pironkova put
l
Williams-Williams," that Williams smacked a a backhand into the ne.
said their mother and serve at 13X mph. then Zvonarcva 's groun
coach. Oracene Price.
Kvitova hit one at 145 stroke winner maae it
At least one of her mph - which. if cor- 2, and she shook her
daughter:-. has reached rect, would have sur- fist.
the Wimbledon final in passed the women's
Zvonareva took 10 of
10 of the past II years. record, by far.
the last 13 games. After
.Not facing Venus on
Pironkova never made producing eight winners
Saturday "makes it easi- it past the ...econd round in the first set. she
cr'' for Serena to gh e it in 18 prc\wus Grand totaled 23 the rest of the
her all. Price said.
Slam appearances, and match. In all. Zvonareva
Venus isn't even in she ha:-.n 't been a final- ''on 29 of 35 points
England: she flew home ist at any tour e\ ent. But when she went to the
to Florida. She lost in she didn't shO\\ nerves net.
Tuesda) 's quarterfinals early on, hrer.king
''She was playing very
to the 82nd-ranked Z-vonareva's :.erve 10 aggressive. and she was
Pironkova. \\ ho along lead 4-2.
pushing me all the
with the 62nd-ranked
Throughout the first time." Pironkova said.
z,onareva lost five of
K vitova was tr) ing to set. Pironkova successbecome the first unseed- full)
emplo) eel the seven matches heading
ed women's finalist at same formula she used to Wimbledon. but she's
Wimbledon.
to upset Venus Williams nO\\ on quite a run.
Pironl-:ova ·s
match and 2007 Wimbledon including getting past
against Zvonareva began runner-up
Marion former No. 1s Jelena
and
Kim
with dozens of empty Bartoli: mixing speeds Jankovic
green seats in the stands. and limiting her mis- Clijsters : Plus, she
already owns one victoperhaps because of the takes.
When Zvonareva net- ry this week over ,
lunchtime start - or the
low-wattage names on ted a backhand to end Williams - over both.
that set. she began ges- actually - by teamin.
the marquee.
Still. the tennis was turing &lt;tnd muttering. with Elena Vesnina
entertaining. '' ith both She's been known as eliminate the top-seede
women pounding shots. one of tennis' most tem- sisters in the doubles
player-;, quarterfinals.
There was an odd delav peramental
The Williams sisters
in the second game. prone to sobbing on
when z,onareva·s ~back­ court when things don't didn't show up for a '
hand landed in the net. go according to plan. news conference after
and she immediatelv .Now 25. she insi:-.ts that loss and were fined
grabbed the ball and she's more ma1urc. and $4.000 each. something
squeezed. showing it it sho\\ed Thursday. Serena said she was
was flat. She handed the \\hen she sta) ed calm "shocked to hear."
bounce into a double
play for his first major
league save.
Masterson gave up
eight hits. walke.d none
and struck out five.
" He was very good,"
Acta satd. "He was just
short of dominant.''
Masterson gave most
of the credit to hi::. teammates.
"It helps out when
you're pitching and you
get a big inning like we
did,'' Masterson said. "I
had the ~reat defen~e
behind me~and there was
great bullpen \\ ork. It all
worked out to~ether."
Shawn Marcum (7-4)
didn't allO\\ a hit in the
first three innings. but
fell apart in a six-run
fourth. The inning started
\\ ith walks to Shin-Soo
and
Carlos
Choo
Santana, and .a pair of
wild pitches moved the
runners into scoting position. After Travis Hafner
struck out. LaPorta
homered.
LaPotta. recalled from
Triple-A Columbus on
June 27 when first ba~e­
man Russell Branvan
was traded to Seattle. 'has
hit four home runs .

]iw.J,-yq}g,£ L[MBLR COMP.A~'

740-992-7028

Friday, July 2,

Shelley Duncan folltmed
with a solo homer. the
first time the Indians
have hit back-to·back
home runs this st.:ason.
"Walks obviouslv kill
you and then it kilis you
even more .when you
don't locate a pitch and
they hit it for a three-run
homer.'' Marcum said.
Marcum's problems
weren't 0\ er, either.
Andy ~1nrte singled and
scored
\\hen
Jason
Donald's single bounced
past left fielder Fred
Le\\is. Donald went to
second on the error and
scored
on
Trevor
Crowe's bloop single to
center.
Marcum, \\ ho allowed
six run~ and live hits:
didn't come out for the
fifth. He lost for the first
time since June 9.
"I think guys pitched
pretty good. except for
today.'' Gaston said. "We
did not swing the bats
well at all. The pitchers
did go~d three out of the
four games." ..
Gaston has seen his
offense come to a complete stop. Toronto has
been shut out t\\ ice and
·scored two or fewer runs

six times in its last 11
games. The Blue Jays,
who lead the majors
with 115 home runs.
failed to homer in the
series Toronto hit five
home runs when it swept
a three-game series in
Cleveland in Ma).
'"We were able to keep
them in the ballpark.
'' hich is something we
\\eren 't able to do the
first time." Acta said. "It

was big.''
, .
NOTES: Gaston stm
ed Bautista.\\ ho usual
plays right field. at thir
base. Bautista misplayed
a ground ball for an error
in the fifth. De\\ avne
Wise started in right
field. ... Indians OF
Austin Kearns was given
the day off .. . Home
plate
umpire
Mike
Reilly was hit on the left
arm b) a Masterson
pitch in the third inning. •
but stayed in the game.
... Cleveland last swept a
four-game series from
Toronto in August 1995.
... The Blue Jays. who
fell to .500 for the first
time since May 2. open a
three-game series in
Yankee Stadium on
Friday.

Hurt at Work?
Let us help you get. ''Back" to work fast!
For more information contact

634 E. Main St, Pomeroy, OH.

Bend Area Chiropractic
304-773-5773

740-992-5500

Go 10 our webslle www.drkelsevchiro.com
or see Bend Area Chiropractic on tacebook

DON'TMI$$
OUT ON OUR EXTRA
MONEY $AVINCi
COUPON$
THI$WEEK
..
IN$IDE
$UNDA Y'$ PAPER!!!
~unbap \!time~ ~entinel

�Friday, July 2, 2010
d 'I
~~~~----~~--~~-------------------~-----·m~y_a_t~y~s_c_n_t~in~c=l~.c~o:m:_
__________________~TI~1:e~D:a:il~y~Se:~~n~fu~1~cl~·~P~a~g~e~B~3.

Nets K · k.

Na Yeon Choi shoots 64
to lead Farr by a stroke
SYLVANIA.
Ohio
(AP) - ~a Yeon Choi
took a step toward for.
getttng what happened
a week. ago
.
After missing
an
LPGA cut for the first
ti
in more than 2 1/2
Cho·
, to slhoco·1tla~lgc7't1
.
,
u er 64 and take a
one-shot
lead
in
Thursday's
opening
round of the Jamie Farr
Owens Corning Classic.
"Aft
h
f
er t ~lt, 1 c-c 1 I
need, ,.to t1us~ ~~self
more. ~he satd. So I
changed putters for u
} od t
•·
go
se up.
It sure worked. She
needed JUst 26 putt in a
~areer-best round that
1 d d · h b' d'
mc u e CJg t . tr tes
and a bogey at Highland
Meadows Golf Club.
The South K01:ean
had mad~ 64 cuts tn a
row dat!r:g to 2007
before fatlmg to get to
play on the ~'eckend at
last
~eek ~
L~GA
~ham~10ns~1p. . ~hts
~ear. she w,1s ~0 tot .10
Ill ~uts made, mcludmg
a tie ~or second at the
~ann.
.
01.
whose
only
vtc•
tory was at the 2009
Samsu~g
.
\\'orld
Champw~::.htp. . lea~~
the tou~ ·~ b1rd1es tht~
year. ~11ssm~ that cut at
the. season. s second
maJ~&gt;r pr~v1des plenty
of mcentave to make
m~re of them.
For me to be able to
come back. the next
week and wm the tournament \\.?uld m~an. a
lot to me, she smd. '.It
would go a l~ng. way 111
terms of btll.!dmg my
trust bac~ up.
Cant~dtan

Al~na

Sharp.
cclehrattng
Canada Day. was a shot
back after u 65.
Ne~er better than seventh •.n a tournament in
her stx years on tour,
she birdied the first
and neve~ took. a
. back, clost.ng With
1es on her fmnl two
holes. Sharp aid one of
the reasons she played
~o well was because she
IS s.o close to a ho~t
famtly:
"It JUSt fe~.ls like. a
. :ec_ond h.ome. she satd.
It s easter to play golf
when you're, really
comfortable. I v~ had
good rounds here 1n the
past. I birdied the first
hole and holed out on
the fourth ~ole .from a
plugged lte 111 .the
~unker and I w_as_ltke.
We~}: maybe thts 1:-. my
day.
. Marisa Baena. playmg even though she
says she has officially
retired from competi-

I

,

• from
Scott
Page Bl

1

line.
James has said he
would like to play for a
former NBA player, and
Scott's resume includes
14 pro seusons II
with the Lakcrs - and
three titles. He wns a
teammate of Magic
Johnson and Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar on L.A.'s
famed
"Showtime''
teams under coach Pill
Riley and later with
Kobe Bryant. He knowl&gt;
what it takes to win it all.
As a coach, Scott led
some lesser-talented Nets
teams to the finals and
had a solid relationship
with star Ja::.on Kidd that
unraveled toward the end
of the point guard's time
in New Jersey. In New
Scott took the

I

tive olf, \\as at 66 fli.r~atious courtship, medin.frenalongg with Chr" f . Z) and global even« rolled mto a .
Kim and S\\ 't e Its tdn.a p~ckage unprecedented in sport~ ~~~~l,!l~
I t. r an s lu~tory
•
Karinc Icher.
;,
·
.
. . .
I he rccn11tmcnt of LcHron
8 acna was a nsmg James the NBA
t
.
star during her colle&lt;&gt;e I reigniJ~g MVP
I ~
\\ rtl~lC
da) s at Arizona b~t
~.
.
anc P ~ycr ot~ t 1e
in'ured her sh ld. h
ages. has becom~ an l.ntcrna~tOn. .I .
· ou er er al soap opera ieCl!urmg pnvate
J·lhtn~t:r year band salid jets. closed-door meetings and
s c s never een t 1e
h
·
same. She collected ~~~lo~·~~o~~t~elt~~~ng~~1t~~:angct~~
almost $2 million since w ·ld C
·
s ' tng
e
199 9 , but hasn't w 11
OI
• u~. W1mhl~don and t~le
tournament
in ~iv: ud :-pd! lUI ~~~&lt;H.lllllc:-., &lt;lllU lls
years. Upset that she is cthoncllusJOn. mb.t)l not only alter
.
·
e eague s a ance or power
1 dealing \~ith but also mean tens of millions ot:
constan.t)
health tssu~s and tired dollars more in revenues for the
of not playmg well. she winnin&lt;&gt;0 cit .
came
to
suburban
All ba 1'J tyh K'
0. t 1
'I' 1 d f
.
c mg. 1 a east
o e o . rom her nattve make him an offer.
Colombta because she
On Thursda
Jame b
has always enjoyed the the most ce.lcbr.~ted fre~ 't&lt;&gt;cecnati~~
stop.
our t 1'me tou~h· 11 g ff ~ e
lt'
"I ·
.
c 1
o ,1 mu tJUst came here million-dollar bidding war that
because I love the tour-· be&lt;&gt;an with the New Jcr~ey N •ts
nament.'' she said after led by billionaire Ru ·a
' c ··
1
playing in just her third Mikhail Prokhorovs:-. ; ~Jw~,~r
tour event of the year. mo&lt;&gt;ul Jav-Z Th ·y \\ , ·e f 1~
'Tm a~ healthy as I've Jow~d by "the ·Newc YorkciKnicoks
been tn many years · making presentations to the 25because I've pretty year-old superstar. who must
much almos~ taken the decide if it's time to leave home.
y~a: off. I JUSt started
. In the next few days, at least
htttmg balls about a s1x teams, including the sentin;ont~ ago. ... I know mental hometown favorite~. the
I m JUSt ~ot ready to Cleveland Cavalicr"i, will have
play full ttme. I played audiences with James and try to
Ron Cortes/Philadelphia lnquirer/MCT
hurt f?r too ma~y years. convince him that he should join
and I m not wtlhng to them to satisfv his ambition of Cle~eland Cavaliers' LeBron James dunks the ball in the third quarter
do that anymore."
\vinning a champiOnship and aga1nst the Philadelphia 76ers on Wednesday, December 16 2009 at
Wachovia Center in Philadelphia, Pennsylvama.
'
'
. She now. spends her becoming a billionaire.
ttme workmg with 11- 1 The .l\ets will try to :-.ell him he leaves. but we're used to it.'' Bo h.
!o 16-) ear-old golfers Brooklyn - not the bridge but :-.aid Eric Riley. a Cle'\eland
"It went \\ell.'' ' ets coach
m her homeland.
their next home.
'
native and former ); BA pia) er. A\ er) Johnson said.
. Dt;fendi~g
champ
The Knicks will entice hun who stopped on a downtO\\ n
Ja) -Z sta) cd behind. perhaps
E_unJung Yt had a 71. as \\ ith
basketball's
Mecca, sidewalk to watch the commo- for a pmate talk with James. a
d1d Paula Creamer. the Madison Square Garden. and the tion surrounding the wooing of longtime friend. But when hip2008
Farr . win~er. brightest lights.
northeastern Ohio ·s most famou-. hop's biggest star was pullin&lt;&gt;
Creamer, makmg JUSt
The Chicago Bulls cnn offer a son.
out of the parking garage in the
her fourth start of the talented roster anti the chance to
Cleveland also stands to lose hack seat of a luxur) sedan. he
year, .continues to play walk in Michael Jordan's foot- tens of millions of dollars from pas:-.ed the Knick·,' entoura(Te as
t.n pam as she recovers steps.
·
its alre~dy-ra:·aged economy by it arri,ed 111 a four-\elJJcle
from surgery on her left
The Miami Heat are counting one esttmate tf James decide!-&gt; to motorcade for its audience '' ith
thumb.
on South Beach, a favorable skip town. In larger markets like James.
"I struggled a bit income tax climate and the pos- New York or Chicago, he could
The K nicks' crevl included
today. I just didn't give sibility of teaming up with fel- bring in hundreds of millions of owner James Dolan, president
n~y.self..eno~gh opportu- low free agent Dw}ane Wade to dollars to businesses.
Donnie Walsh. coach !-.1ike
nlttes. satd Creamer. lure him from Ohio\ snow.
The scene \Vas surreal outside D' t\ntoni and former Knicks ,
who opened with a
The Los Angeles Clippers can IMG 's international headquar- guard Allan Houston. Walsh was
career-best
60
t\VO offer Hoi I) wood and the chance ters Thursday as the mitial hours brought into the building in a.
yea~s ago. ''I'm just to do the unthinkable: make of \Vhat some ha\ e called "The wheelchair followul!!
recent
cxeitctl to be ~,&gt;ut here them a winucr.
Summer of LeBron'' got under neck surger}.
~
competing:·
And then there's the Cavs, his wa). TV camera crews, photogThis was 'ew York's moment
1\lorgan . Pressel. a team for the past seven seasons, raphers. reporter~ and curious one the franchtse hao;; been buildrunner-up m two of the who can onl) hope that his heatl onlooker~ crowded the side\\ alks ing toward for more than t\\ o
last three Farrs. sagged makes his heart sta) close to his of East 9th Street and St. Clair years. The Knicks ha' e endured
to a 74.
Akron home.
waiting for James to arri\e.
a franchi~e-record nine strai!!ht ..
Man) of the top playCleveland can offer James,
All that w a~ mil&gt;sing \\as the losing seasons but gutted th~eir
ers are bypassing the who \yas already a national fig- red carpet.
roster with the hope of signing
tournament to prepare ure before he graduated from St.
. James. '\.hose I 0-&lt;;tory-tall James. who ''as m Greenwich
for next week's U.S. Vincent-St. ~1ar) High School. likeness has adorned the side of Village last'' eekend looking at a
Women's
Open
at $30 million more than any other a building across from Quicken lu-.;ury apartment - a sid1tin!!
Oakmont. Only ~me of team, t~anks to t.hc NBA pla}ers' Loans Arena for the pa~t few that some took to mean he ''a~
the top seven m the collecttvc bargaltling agreement. years, arrived at 10:58 a.m. in a leamng tO\\UI:d Gotham.
.
world rankings a~d just
Money. though. is not all the 6- white Cadillac SU\'. Wearing a
The Knicks have been hoping
three of the top 10 on foot-8. 260-pound player \Vants. gray, Nike T-shirt. s\\•eat pants to get James into a i\ew York
the LPGA money list He's after titles. lob of them.
and sunglasses. he was hanllv state of mind. with Mayor
are in the field.
While he has led the Cavs dressed for the occasion and diti- ~vtichael Hlonmberg taklllg part
It was announced on through their most successful n't seem fazed by the magnitude in a "C'~'Ion LeBron" campaign
Wedne:-.day that the stretch in team hi~;tory. Jame:-. of the moment.
. designed for the Ohio-born· '
tournament would take has come up short in his pursuit
·
f
J ames rna d e a b 11e stop in the superstar.
a
one-year
hiatus of a championship to solidify his lobb)
before heading
an clc''I think it \\ent \\ell."
because many of the legacy. Clevelund was bounced vator to Suite 823. th~e 111
headquar
D'Antoni told The Associated
organi~:ers and sponsors , in the second round of the plav- ters of LRMR Marketing, the Pre~s after the Knick:-. completed
will be involved in the offs this season b) the Bostl;n company he started with~ bo\ _ their t\\ o-hours-plu.., session
20 II U.S. Senior Open Celtic:,. who have v. on 17 titles. hood friend Maverick Carter and Wllh James ''But Ob\ iou ... l\
at Inverness Club in That's 17 more than the t\\ o other longtime pals. A~ e' er)'onc thnt gets the chance to
Toledo.
Cavaliers.
probabl) ~a)!
James' decision. wh1ch isn't James exited the corridor. a pap- talk to him
parazzi-like
phalanx
of
photogsame
the
same
thing.''
expected to be announced for at
James follo\\ed ti1e Knick" out
Hornets on a surprising least another \\eek. ha~ many raphers clicked their cameras
run to the Western fans in this city fearing the through the building\ front v. in- the door. He didn't ... a, ,tm thing
to reporters. presumabl) dri' ing
Conference finals and worst. After all, this is where dO\vs.
Moments
later.
ProkhorO\.
back to his 40.000-...quare-foot
\\as..close with guard sports heartbreak has taken up
Chns Paul. who is permanent residence. Ask all\- \\hose worth has been estimated mansion in Bath. Oh10. \\here
James· best friend in the one from Cleveland to recite the at nearly $10 billion. confidently he'll rest up before Friday·::league.
local teams' misery since the strolled in alongside Jay~Z. one ~chcduled 'isih b\ the Heat.and
The Cavs had an Browns won the NFL title in of the Nets' part O\\ ners. Others Clippers. As he left. a pack of
unsuccessful pursuit of 1964. and they'll roll their eyes in New Jersey's delecation car- photographers and reporters
Michigan State's Tom before rattling off nicknames ried luggage and ~computer chase~! his 'chicle. hotling for
It.zo, who rejected a given to the most gut-wrenching equipment for a high-tech visual one stgnature -.hot or a clue to
\\hat he's think.inc.
reported $30 million to losses by the Indians, Browns display to James.
stay with the Spartans. and Cavaliers.
About 90 minutes later. the
None came, at~d for no\\. no
Cleveland had several
Losing James might top them Nets packed up and left town, one ·l&gt; sure - maybe not e\ en
discussions with Scott. all.
headed
ro Chicago
for a meeunn
LeBron
him~elf
''here he's
•
..,;..:
t::l
•
who flew himself to
"They'll be heartbroken here if wtth Wade and forward Chris gomg next.
Michil.!an and met with
owner Dan Gilbert on
BRIA~ WHALFY
BRENT\\ HALEY
Father's Day.
Shaw emerged as a
MON. • WED. • FRI.
lending candidate but
then something pushed
5:30 -6:30
the Ca\ s back to Scott.
landing him just m time Chris Poe· instructor- $5.00/per person
to make an impression on
James, who will hear presentations from the Nets
44706'Resort Rd.· Racine,1lhio
and New York Kmcks on
740-992-6488
the first day of free
I

1

~~

328 South
Church St.
Ripley, WV
· Tues.-Friday

~

''ill

WATER AEROBICS

Kountrv Resort Campground

a~ency.

~~~
• www.goldlggers.us
~

CLE\'EL:ND

NBA' L B
(A~ICit's~ woo
s e ron James

• Repairs Done In Store
• Cash for Gold
• Class Rings
• Same Day Cleaning
ez Repairs
• Masonic Rings
&amp; Eastern Star
9-5 • Saturday 1 0-2

www.krccamplng.com
....._I!

.. rl:

~
Muale foundation
2010 Foothill.\· Blues &amp; Arts Festiml
August 27th &amp; 28th
St. Rt. 143 ncar Harrisonville, Ohio
on Shct.•ts Farm

New Construction and
Replacement Vinyl Windows

CONTRACTOR WINDOW SUPPlY
&amp; MANUFACTURING.UC
AND SIDING INSTAllATION

�--Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

-- .--~....--,----~--------~-!'"'--11111!1!'1-----..-.'-'!-----------·

www.mydailysentinel.com

.

, Friday, July 2,

2010

jfeen sailor describes· pride, fear of solo voyage
• MARINA DEL REY.
Calif. (.AP) ·- Abby
Sunderland said Tuesday
she faced down moments
of teJTor on the high seas
when her boat was rolled
over by a rogue wave as
she tried to sail mound
the \\Orld.
Still. the 16-\ear-old
was proud of h~r effort.
hoped it might inspire
others and wasn't ready
to abandon sailing.
.
: "The past few weeks
have been really crazy
for me." said Sunderland.
who looked poised and
cQmfortable as she sat
1~t to her 18-year-old
brother Zac at a news
CoJlference in Marina del
~~y. where sh~ set sail in
~amtary.

··Sunderland tlev.· back
oome Monday after
being rescued from the
Indian Ocean by a fishing
boat. She was about
tlalfway through her
journey when a fierce
storm battered her 40foot boat Wild Eyes. A
rogue wave capsized the
bo~at and destroyed its
mast.
: :·As you probably all
l'eally know. I'd much
rather be sailing Wild
Eyes back in here. But
tbe plane was really comf~rtable,"
she deadp:'lnned.
- ·ln her first statements
s•ilce returning home,
.SlJnderland said she was
belov. deck working on
her boat as the storm was
letting up .
. "The storm I was in did
ilOt roll my boat. I was hit
by a rogue wave once the
'stonn was already dying
down," she said. "I didn't
iu'lve a lot of warning.''
Since her voyage went
awry. Sunderland's parents have come under
relentless criticism for
.allowing the teenager to
set sail alone.
Sunderland once again
defended her attempt.
;;~:i ng the question of her
:;:ige should have been setiled after she became the
~·oungest perso~1 to sail
solo around Cape Horn.
··Growing up on boats
and feeling, you knmv.
• that you know what to do
in case of an emergency.
it .really helps," she said.
"I knew \vhen I headed
out for th.is trip that I was
going to be testing
myself. and I was going
tb have to push myself to
.mv limits.''
. ;Sunderland acknowledged. however. there
were moments when she
was ten-ilied.
"You get scared and
then you have to get over
it because being scared, it
doesn't do ~ anything
.good." she ,said. ''It just

Cleveland fans
· to LeBron:
Stay home
'CLEVELAND (AP) Hundreds of hometown
:CeBron James fans made
&lt;lTI appeal to keep him in a
Cleveland uniform with a
single word: Home.
The word ·'Home" was
held
aloft
on cue
:1'bursdat nioht on some
-of the 20.006' posters that
were expected to be distributed to people attend. ing Cleveland's annual
July 4th \'oeekend conceit
:by
the
Cleveland
Orchestra and fireworks
.d~play .
.. A lot more than he
realizes - the hotels.
bars and restaurants will
suffer,'' Anthony Petrella.
a 23-year-old fan of
James from Middleburg
Heights. said a couple
hours before the display
·of affection downtcl\vn.
· '~he Cavaliers will suf. fer."
The
addition
of
"Home"
to
James'
themes, which he has
used repeatedly -Team.
Commitment.
Family,
Community and Mission
• =- invoked hb ties to
: €Jeveland and his ne&lt;u·by
• nometown of Akron.
- The appeal. \vhich
.included a video montage
of people encouraging
•James to stay. was
arranged by the orchestra
, and the Fans for LeBron
Committee and its web-

s

i

t

MoreThanAPlayer.org.

~

makes ) ou hesitate and
makes more pwblcm:-.
start &lt;:oming.''
Sunderland's mother is
pregnant w1th her eighth
child. and the sailor told
reporters she might have
a ne" ltttle brother
btofon: the nev. s conference ended. ·
ramily
spokesman
Lyall 1\lercer . said the
baby would be named
Paul in honor of the captain of the boat that rescued Sunderland.
Sunderland's parents
were unable to attend the
news conference because
of the pregnancy. They
issued a statement saymg
the) have been subjected
to intense personal critici~m that has cros!led the
line of decencv.
"To hear the intcnsit)
of the personal hatred
spe\\ ed b)· some in the
media and on blogs was
shucking
to
us,"
Laurence
Sunderland
said in the statement.
"Abby should not be subjected to these hurtful
attacks against members
of her falnily. especially
ris what was being said
was based. at best. on
twistin!:! facts out of context and, at \VOrst, On
total faoricated lie!~ ...
The statement ddded.

In this January
12, 2010 photograph, Abby
Sunderland,
16, prepares
to sail her 40-

foot sail boat
"Wild Eyes" in
the Pacific
Ocean out .
Marina Del
Rey for a sea
trial to get the
ship tuned and
ready as she
plans to set
sail on a nonstop unassisted global circumnavigation
voyage.

JIM

AI Selbl
Los Angeles
Tlmes/MCT

however. that the family
\\as willing to forgive
critics who don't know
their family or understand the experience and
ambition of the two siblings.
Zac Sunderland. 18.
successfully completed a
round-the-world voyage
last year. briefly becoming the youngest person
to do so. His record has
since been broken.

Abby Sunderland said
she was as prepared as
possiblr; for the trip.
Every sailor knows there
is risk in trying to sail
around the world, she
added.
She said she wasn't
"majorly hurt" when the
rogue wave hit. but her
boat was.
She set off her emergenc) beacons and waited. She was amazed

when a plane dispatched
from Australia to find her
flew overhead the next
day. Two days later the
fishing boat arrived.
Sunderland thanked
her rescuers and other
people who helped with
her trip. She singled out
her brother as someone
who had helped inspire
her.
'Tm living proof that
things don't always work

out the way you plan, but
you can only plan so far
in an adventure," she
said. "You can reduce
risk but you can never
completely eliminate it."
Sunderland plans to
keep sailing but for now
has other things to do.
'T m just going to be
focusing on school. a~
­
ver's license. all that,
ting back to a no
life." she said .

FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

SATURDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

�------~ -~-

~-

~ -- - ~~

-~~~-

Friday, July 2, 2010

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

-------_.......- ,.------

www.mydailysentinel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

~--------------------------------------\~tribune - Sentinel - l\egtster

CLASS I F-1 ED

?&gt;~!&amp;

'''it
fk
~

· Meigs County, OH

Websites
In One Week With Us
www.mydailytribune.com
mdtclassified~~y~!il}tribune.com REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS www.mydailysentinel.com
www.mydailyregister.com
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
l\egi~ter
To Place
\lrributte
Sentinel
Your Ad, (740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333
ca II Today... Or Fax To (740) 446·3008 . Or Fax To (740) 992·2157
Or Fax To (304) 67&amp;.5234

Oet~.tlliru
Word Ads
Display Ads

/Jiftu IfoW
Monday thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
HOW TO WRITE AN AD
Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

300

Services

Lawn Service
Yard work, mow1ng,
tree work; carpentry,
roofing. &amp; wilt haul off
unwanted items. 740·
367·7550 or 740·367·
0291.
500

Education

Business &amp; Trade
School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To
Home)
Call Today! 740·446·
4367
1·800·214·0452
• gallopoloscareercollege.edu
Accredrted Member
Accredotong .Councol tor
Independent Colleges and
Schools 12748

SELL YOUR
EXCESS
ITEMS
WITH A
CLASSIFIED
AD

Dally In-Column: 9:00 ~.m.
Monday-Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In·Column: 9:00 a.m.
Friday For Sundays Paper

l&gt;e$crlption • tndu4e A Prk~ • Avoi&lt;l Abb1eviations
• Include Phone Number And Address Wben Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Day&amp;

700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment

1000

Recreati.onal
Veh1cles

740-446·2412
900

3500

Real Estate
Rentals

Merchandise

. Want To Buy
Absolute Top Dollar
silver/gold coins, any
10KI14KI18K
gold
jewelry, dental gold, pre
1935 US currency.
proof/mint
sets.
diamonds, MTS Coin
Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446·2842

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

Apartments/
Townhouses

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
j ~
Borders$3.00/perad
E!1
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

accep1s only help ~¥rtrlled ad$ mtltllng EOE etandard$. We will not knoovtngly acx:epl any advenlslng lo ylolallon ot the raw. WIU nol be rtspOnlible tor any
errore to an ad token over the phollll.

Apartments/
Townhouses

4000

400

...

There's
Something
For
Everyone

Money To Len~ :

The•.•

Manufactu~ed

Housmg

Financial

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 lender is properly
licensed. (This is .a
public
servtce
announcement from the
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

In

Rentals
2BR Mobile Home
water, sewer, trash pd.
No pets, Johnson's
Mobile Home Park
740·446·3160

Animals

600

livestock
FREE -min.
304-812-5173

3BR mobile home in
the country 740·256·
6574.

Sales
Second floor 1 B.A.
6000
Employment
200 Announcements
apartment overlooking
"The Proctorville
Gallipolis City Park,
Difference"
L.R.,Kitchen/dinning
Help WantedLost &amp; Found
$1 and a deed is all
area, bath, washer &amp;
General
dryer $400.00 mo. call you need to own your
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= . Lost set of keys at
740·446-4425 or 740· dream home. Call Now!
Accepting resumes for Holzer Clinic. 740Freedom Homes
446·2325.
experienced full-time 441·0212 reward
888-565-0167
Subway Manager at
Notices
Gallipolis Ferry. WV
location, Salary and
benefits at interview. NOTICE
OHIO
Send
resume
to VALLEY PUBLISHING
CO.
recommends
that
Manager
24968
Lashley Road Quaker you do business with
City, Ohio 43773 or people you know, and
apply
online
at NOT to send money
www.parmarstores com through the mail until
you have investigating
the offering.
Medical
Pictures that
have been
Taking applications for
HHA, FT PT or PAN for placed in ads at
the Gallia area. Call
the Gallipolis
740·446·3808 or 7·80().
Daily Tribune
759·5383
must be picked
within 30 days.
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center is
Any pictures
currently,
accepting
that are not
resumes
for
the
picked up will
position
of activity
be
director. The qualified
discarded.
applicant will possess
the
following
requirements:
Must
Wanted
have strong written and
oral
communication GREEN
LAWN
skills,
must
have Mowing
304-675·
excellent organizational 1610 or 304-593·
skills. knowledge of
1960 No job too big
MDS and Slate/F~deral
regulations, must be or small! creative and
have
experience working in 300
Services
an activity program or
have
an
activity
certilication
Please
Health
send
resumes
to
Are you interested in
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center, a rewarding position?
Attn: Charla Brown· PAIS is currently
McGuire, 333 Page accepting
Street, Middleport, Oh applications for the
45760.
Overbrook following positions:
Rehabilitation Center IS
DIRECT
CAREan
EOE
and
a
participant in the Drug Part·time direct care
Free
Workplace position
for
RAVENSWOOD,WV
program.
prov1d1ng. commun1ty
skill training wlth an
Servic.e I Bus. individual
with
9000
Directory MRIDD.
Mon-Fri
9am·noon.DIAECT
CARE-A . part time
direct care position
Boats
for
RIPLEY,WV
providing community
1987 Four Winns 215 skill training with an
with
Sundowner 21 ft. boat individual
Mon.Thur.
w/Mercruiser 260 hp MR/DD.
9am-noon
V.8 Comes with trailer Fri.
7am·
and a full camper top. Tues.Wed
Ready for the water 1pm.DIRECT CARE740·256·6160
JS Part time direct care
Marine

u..,....;;:.=o••--•

\ltbe ~aUipoiis llntlv U::rtbune
~be ~otnt ~Ieas,utt 3Rrgister
The Daily Sentinel

.. __..,,,.

goat

Pets

EMPLOYMENT

Stay Informed ...

. VISA .

POLICIES: Ol'io Valley Publilllllng MerYes the rlgllt to edlt. rejeCt. or canceltny lid at any tlme. Errore mlllt ~reponed on the forlt day of plilllc«Ucn and the
Trlb~nllnei-Regl!ller v.ill be responsible lor no more than the cost of the space cx:cupled by theetror and only the flrtt lneertlon. We shett nol be liable fot
anyiQ811 or exparnM tha1 resYlt&amp;lrcxnlhe publianloo or oml8810rl of an a&lt;1Yertl88ment Corredion 111111 bf made in the 1!111t avtlltbte edltiQO. ·Box numb« Ida
are always con!ldeotial • Cwrent rate card appllell • AllrMI estate advenlseml!llls are 8\lbje&lt;:t to the Federal Flit Houetng Act of 1968. • ThiS newspap«

New 2br apt. WID
Campers/ RVs &amp; Hookup
appl.
inc.
· Rio/Jackson
area
Trailers
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; $525.mo + dep. call
Prime river lot for rent, 740·645·1286.
beautiful beach. plenty
of shade, for info call Efficiency apartment for
rent. 1624 Chatham
740·992-5782
Ave. (Rear) • No Pets
RV
No stairs· 1 or 2 people
Service at Carmichael only $500/month (inc.
Trailers
water,sewer,garbage,
740-446·3825
gas &amp;electric) available
RV
Service
at July 1st. 740·446·4234
Carmichael
Trailers or 740·208·7861

EBY,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS.
CARGO
EXPRESS
&amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSIO
N TRAILERS. B+W
GOOSENECK
FLATBED
$3999
740·446-3825
VIEW OUR ENTIRE
TRAILER INVENTORY
Real Estate
3000
AT
Sales
WWWCARMICHAELT
RAILERS.COM
740·
446·3825
Houses For Sale
Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be 03 Oak Wood 28x40
surprised! C1cck out 3BR, 2BA, w/ 16x40
our used mventory at deck, needs work. must
be moved, $7900 304·
www.CAREQ.com.
Carmichael Equipment 633·6536.

•

GET YOUR CLASSJFIED LINE AD NOTICED

· • All ads must be prepaicr

• Start Your Ads With A Keyword • Include Complete

JUST SAY
CHARGE LTJ

a

on

AKC Boston Terrier
pups 2 f,1 m, shots,
wormed, healthy ,
position
for
crate &amp; pad trained
PT.PLEASANT,WV
$400. 304·419-2504
providing
residential/communi! Free to good Home
y skill training with an Female Collie mix
all
shots,
individual
with 1yr.
MRIDD.
Mon, spaded. 740· 7093:30- 9158
Tue,Thurs
9pm.DIRECT CARE- free kittens
Part time direct care
Spanial
positions
for Cocker
Puppies for sale $75
MASON,WV
Full Blooded, buff
providing
residentiartcommunit color 740-388-0401.
y skill training with
AKC Boston Terriers,
individuals
with
Mom &amp; Dad &amp; 4 wk.
MR/DD.
Mon-Fri
pup male, selling due
various
day
&amp;
to health, must take
evening shifts. For all
all $250. for all 740·
positions:
High
388·8743 call after
School diploma or
5pm.
GED
required.
Criminal background
Siamesecheck required. Must Unique
kittens,. 2
have
reliable blend
transportation &amp; valid females, also black &amp;
auto
insurance. white male kitten,
litter
Hourly rate starting affectionate,
at $8.00-$9.50 hr trained, ready for a
based
on loving home,' 740·
experience.
Apply 992-3216
Health

at
online
Female
http://www.paiswv.co FREE
shephard
m or call 304-373· German
mix 3 yrs spade.304·
1011
444·4416
Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing
Unconditional lifetime
guarantee. Local
references furnished.
Established 1975. Call
24 Hrs. 740·446·0870,
Rogers Basement
Watereroofing.
Lawn Service
Call
for
FREE
Estimates.
Lawn
mowing and weed
eating.
740·388-

700

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
STIHL Sales &amp; SerVice
Now
Available
at
Carmichael Equipment
740-446·2412

Garden &amp; Produce

~03!!!2~0~====~ Home grown sweet
&amp;
com
vegetables. McKean
Pet Cremations. Call Farm, Centenary Rd.
740·446-3745
740-446-9442
Other Services

Professional Services
900
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY
SSI
No Fee Unles~ We
Win!
1·888·582·3345
SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallia Co. OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans Jackson, OH
800-537·9528

Merchandise

Furniture

For Sale office desk,
cherry
finish
excellent
condit.lon
$250. call 740·4418299 or 7 40-4415472

&amp;0

1

�1"""'-----------------~--- ~----

- ----www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel
Miacellaneous

Recreational
Vehicles

1000

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp;
rebijllt In stock. Call
ATVs
Ron Evans 1-8()()..
537-9528
Talon
GSA
150
Carter
Go
Cart,
Yard Sale
ask1ng $975, $3500
new 740-379-9515,
Yard Sale Jay Dnve 740 _339•2043.
lot 28 Fn &amp; Sat
~===~=~
Campers / RVs &amp;
3 Family garage sale
Trailers
July 1-2, 341 Rutland ~====~:;:;;;;
Street,
Middleport 2005 Jayco Eagle
20 inch lawn mower, Gooseneck
H1tch,
variety.
sleeps six Excellent
condition.
Asking
See
3 Family Yard Sale $19,900.
at
1451:
e
Bethel photos
WWW,\(aiiDili!W!lltraile
Churc;h Ad July 2·3
740-44610am-? Tiller, medal ~
2412
detector, tools, etc.
July 1·3, 9·3 Cedar
Knoll Cab1n 747
Ad
Cadn)us
Weekend giveaway
74D-379·2524 for dir.
Yard. Sale
1294
Kemper Hollow Ad
Frl &amp; Sat 9am-?

Engineer- Learn skills for the field
of engineering through scrv11.:c 111
the National Guard

~....,-.....,-­

Twm Rivers Tower 1s
accepting applications
for waiting list for HUD
subsidized,
1-BR
apartment
for
the
elderly/disabled, call
675 6679
'

FOR SALE 05 KIA
AMANT!
SEDAN
4D,V6 3.51iter Auto
65,000 miles New
battery
&amp;
Tires
$8500.00 304·593·
Fri-Sat,
TV,S, 0237
PLEASE
furniture,electronics, LEAVE NAME &amp;
home decor, kids NUMBER
stuff, antique look,
wood
telephone,
Trucks
fishing poles, 2208 ;;;;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;;;;;
SA 588
112 mile 2000 GMC Seirra
pass
McCormick 1500 Ext cab 4x4
Road
Loaded looks good
Inside and out, hao
2021 Chatham Ave. some rust, 170.000
SaL 3,5,6 9am-6pm highway
mtles,
we!lmaintatned 20•
271 Georges Creek wheels &amp; t1res, looks
Ad.
7/2 thru 713 and runs great 7409am-?
256-6160.
1.2 miles out route 3000
218 Thurs. Fri, and
Sat.
•
3 Family, July 2-3
Little Bullskin Ad.
across from F1re
Dept. boys &amp; g1rls
clothes, plus size
women
clothes,
tools,
huntington
supplies, misc.
7- Family Garage
Sale 214 Magnolia
Drive
behind
Domino's
Pizza
Fri!Sat 2&amp;3
3 family yard sale,
Saturday only, July
3rd, 43190 Smith
Goeglein
Aoed,
Pomeroy,
off
of
Flatwoods
Road,
minutes from Route
7, some furniture
clothes &amp; toys.
S.
3rd,
918
Middleport,
Thurs
July 1st-Sat. July
3rd, 9am-4pm, rain
or shine

Real Estate
Sales

Houses For Sale
3 bedroom, 2 bath,
located on the corner
of
Second
&amp;
Worchester St near
Hubbard's
greenhouse
1n
Syracuse. All major
appliances included.
Newly
installed
heating &amp; cooling
un1t. Conta1ns a
recently constru~ted
20x24 Single vehicle
garage.
Interested
buyers may contact
us at 740•992_1820
Small
Farm
8.2
acres.
Located
18982 St. At 141 .
beatiful 3 BA, 2 BA
home
2
112
overs1zed
Garage
lurn1ture,
Most
equipment, and tools
stay.
Ask1ng
$105,000. Call 740·
379·2726 after 8pm
or keep trying.

Carport sale, July For Sale or Rent
2nd, 1/2 mile past 3BA, 2BA, DoubleAlligator Jacks on wide,
in
Green
Township, close to
Laurel Cliff
740-446•
schools.
Family yard sale- 7209,740-645-7113.
July 3 Saturday only,
Texas Ad, Pomeroy,
Land {Acreage)
3rd house on left off
of Flatwoods, x- 4+ acres, 1ncludes
smalllsmall women's 1976 mobLe home
asking $40,000 376
scrubs. boys sz. 1214, g1r1s SZ. 4, m1sc. Woods M1ll Ad. next
to B1dwell 74Q-55QJuly 2·3, Oam, 2101 1266
Karr, Syracuse, toys,
Real Estate
bike, 1999 Camara, 3500
Rentals
misc. household
Garage
sale,
Saturday only July 3,
nding lawn mower &amp;
lots of m1sc. last
house on Lee Rd.
Pomeroy, Oh
- - ----Huge Multi Family
garage sale, clothes,
furniture, tools &amp;
more, Saturday only
8aQ-I-4pm Old Crew
Ad,'
Fri:Sat. 9-5 at 35670
St. At. 7
6 Family Yard Sale
Across from TNT
P1titop
Chester.
ChJidren
Clothing,
toys, Mtsc. 9-5 Frl &amp;
SAl Rain Cancels

Apartmenh/
Townhouses

PSI CONSTRUCTION

SGT CHASE GARR ETT
304.932.2529
charlcs.garrctt20·us.ann) .mil
To learn more, v isit
NationaiGua rd .com

Specializing in Insurance Jobs including,
storm, wind &amp; water damage.
Room Additions, Remodeling, Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs, New Homes, Siding,
Decks, Bathroom Remodeling.
Licensed &amp; Insured

Formerly Robie.\ 'Con.struction

FAMILYOWNED AND OPERATED
~H

4000

Manufactured
Housing

Sales
;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;::;;;;;;;;;
NEW
NEED
A
HOME? we help w1th
many
flnancmg
programs for most
cred1t situations Call
for appt. (888)736_
3332.MODULAA
HOME With 2-car
garage Will custom
build on your lost call
Clayton
Homes
B'ville
304 _733 _
HOME

Help W anted ·
General

WV#040954 Ceii74Q.-416·2960
740-992-0730

2 BA apt. 6 mi from Truck
Dnver/Part·
Holzer. $400 + dep. time, class B COL
Some utilities pd. send resumes To·
740-418-5288
or PO.
Box
43
740·g88-6130
Gallipolis Ferry WV
25515
Modern 1 BR apt.
740-446-0390.

0 " ner: Sam Smith. ;\lason. WV

HRS Repall'.

A Celebration Of ..-- - - - - - -- - -- - - .
Lf
Overbrook
1 e. .. .
1-740-992-3061
Carter Located At
20+ yrs exp
333 Page Street
Service~
&amp;
M1d:lleport, Ohto Is
CurrePUy Accepting
Applications
For
Heatpump~)
D1e·et1c Techntclan,
RegiStered
Tankte~s
Responstblhtles
Include Mamta1ning
Opttmal
Nutntlonal
Status Of Residents
Throuigh
Aestdent
And
Family Flat 45 00 hrly Rate+ 10.00 Tnp Chrg.
Interaction,
Assessments
And
Interdisciplinary
Teamwork, Stop By
And Fill Out An
Application,
M·F
9am-5pm, EOE &amp; A
"' Prompt and Q ua lit) Work
Participant Of The
Drug· Free
Reasona ble Rates
Workplace Program
Insured Experienced
------References A\ ailahle!
Service I Bus.
9000
Call Gar~ Stante)
Directory

Most Hcatmg
Cooling S) 'item (including
and Controls
Hot Water Heater
Change-outsl Replacementc;.
Whole House Water Purifiers
(helps against C8 intake)

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SERVICE
• Room Additions &amp; Remodeling
• !lie'' Gnragc~ • Electrical &amp;
l'l umhing • Roofing &amp; Gutters
• \ in) I Siding &amp; l'ainting • Patio and
Porch DC&lt;.'kS WV 036725

V.C. YOUNG Ill
'

IJ92-(t215 740-591-0195
Pomeroy, Ohio
36 Years Local Experience

Stanlev Tree
Trimming &amp; Removal
*

*

ROBfi!T BISSfLL
CONSTRUCTION
• New Homes • Garages
• Complete Remodeling

*

740-992-1671

ceu740-591-8044

Stop &amp; Compare

e;;;;
ou;;;;s;;;;;i;;;;;;
•--;;;;;M;;;;is;;;el;;la;;n;;;;
Please leave message
Jores Tree serv~ce ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:.;._ ___.
co:1plete tree care - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
stu11p gnnding bucket
R AVENS\VOOD
truCK &amp; crane InsCHIROPR ACTIC CE~TER
Worker Comp
740367.0266,
740·339· If we can't help you l\e K'ill
3366
find you the help you need
Auto ,\ccidents • \\ ork
Injuries • :-.;eck &amp; Rack Pain•
Shoulder, \rm. Hip &amp; Leg
J&gt;ain • Headache~ • Massagl'
Thcrap~ • ,\cupuncturc
Nell' F..xt&lt;'llded !tows·,\/ I·:
Dl'. Kcll) K.
Sat. &amp; en·ning~ enu'Tii&lt;'IICI&lt;'5 .June,, D.(.
M tI
A
t d

Ath,ens-Me1gs
The
Educat1ona1 Servtce
Center
has
ANTICIPATED
position opemngs for
Full-Time and Part·
Time Itinerant nndfor
Integrated Preschool
Teachers 10 both
Athens and Metgs
Counties for the
2010-2011
School
Year.
Applicants
be
New 2 BR 1BA must
apartment for rent 1n certif1edflicensed as
Porter
Heatpump, an Early Childhood
$500.mo+dep. Must Intervention
or be
have excellent ref. Specialist
eligible to get a
740~6-2801 .
Supplemental
These
- - - - - - - License.
are
9·
Middleport 1 &amp; 2 br. positions
furnished apts, no month contracts pets, dep. .&amp; ref , Fuii·Time PoSJtion(s)
with Board approved
740-992-0165
benefits. Part-Time
no
- - : - - - - - , _ , - Position(s)
Middleport,
Beech benef1ts. Salary will
St., 2 br. furnished be
based
on
apt., util. pd, no pets, experience
and
deposit/references,
certification
740-992·0165
accord1ng to salary
schedule.
Subm1t
Middleport
Beech letter of interest to
St., 2 br. furnished John D. Costanzo,
apt., utiht1es paid, No Superintendent,
pets. dep &amp; ref, 74Q- Athens-Meigs
Educational Serv1ce
992-0165
Center. 507 Richland
Avenue, Su1te #108,
·s-p-nn..g...;..V_a_
lle_y_ G-re_e_n Athens. OH 45701
Apartments 1 BA at Application Deadline
$395+2 BR at $470 July 16, 2010, 12:00
Month 446-1599.
NOON. The AMESC
is
an
Equal
~=C;;;;o;;;;m;;;;m;;;;e;;;;rc;;;;ia;;;;l::;:;;;;; Opportunity
For rent- Approx. Employer/Prov1der.
tt.
2000
sq.
retail/office
space
Help Wanted·
facing Ohio River in
General
downtown Pomeroy:
store-front &amp; private
back
entrances;
pnvate
restrooms;
public
parking;;
immediate
occupancy; must be
wilhnQ to sign 1-year
lease. Contact 740992·6624 for more
Info.

ADECCO 1s now
hinng 75 associates!
In the Jackson OH,
area 75 ProductiOn
laborers
needed
mu"t bo able to
commumcate
clfect1vely, work In a
safe manner, be a

Houses For Rent

team player and
have
good
attendance and work
history. Must be able
to
lift
351bs.
sometimes
repettvely. Also able
to reach,
stoop.
kneel or EjiBnd and
other such positions
1.e. push,pull. Have
dexterous use of
both hands, good
viSIOn, able to work
w1th min. supervision
and perform requ.~ed
phys1cat
dulles
Adecco IS an EOE
and drug free work
place H mterested
please call (304)522·
6623 speak With
Mike or Lisa

CONCRETE CONSTRL'CTION
Concrete Removal 'and Replacement

\111) pes Of Concrete Work

30 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971

304-273-5321
316 Washington St. ·Ravenswood

Immaculate 2 BR apt
in country.
New
carpet and cabniets.
Freshly
painted.
WID
appliances,
hookups water/trash
pa1d.
Beautiful
country setting only
10 mtnutes from
town
Must see to
appreciate. $425/mo
614·595-7773
or
740·645-5953.

LEWIS

.

Education
Public Notice
The Bedford Town·
ahlp Budget HearIng meeting will be
held on July 13,
2010, 7:00 p.m. at
the town hall, for
the year 2011.
Barbara J. Grueser,
Fiscal Officer
Bedford Board of
Trustees: John W.
Dean, Jack
A.
Welker, and Roger
R. Ziegler
(7) 2

Years Experience

304-773-5441
or 304-593-8458

Rick Price - 17 yrs. Experience

2BA, n•ce,PP area
$465-Homestead
2BR APT.Cioso to Reality Ask for Nancy
Holzer Hospital on SR 304·675-0799or 67516 CIA. 1740) 441 " 5540
~~~~~-0194
CONVENIENTLY
------LOCATED
&amp; Home for Lease in
AFFOROABLEI
Rio Gande city limits.
Townhouse
2 story, 3200 sq•tt.
apartments,
and/or Rent $1500. Call
small houses for rent.
Call 740-441-1111 for 740-645-3980 for an
application
&amp; appointment
&amp;
Information.
app,.1cat.10ns.
cedarvalleyestates.n
2br
apt.
$450
mo.+dep. Kanauga et
total elec. 740-339- - - - - - - 3224
S4 25mo.
2BR
1br apt. total ele. S400.dep+ult. HUD
$350mo +dep. Porter ok, ready 740-645·
OH 740·339·3224
1646

°

A part time

career "'ith full ume rewards. Call
10day for details.

-1B
""A
, ..._U_p-st_a_
trs- ap-t.
720 Second Ave.
Gallipolis,
New
carpet &amp; paint NC
~
Water, sewer &amp; trash
Autos
pd. W/D inc.
No
smoking
05 Ford Freestyle pets/no
Employment
Limited AWD Blk $375 dep/$375.mo 6000
single,
$395
ExVBik Lea. lnVIow
mileage
Excellent dep/$395mo couple.
Ref, Day 740-645- Child/ Elderly Care
Condition/Loaded
with options 304 _ 2192. After 6 740Need woman to stay
675·0180 after 6pm 446-0101.
w1th an elderly lady.
for pricing
Expect
hght
housekeeping,
93
Oldsmobile Attractive,
one ass1sting 1n prepanng
Regency 98, auto. unfurnished,
$1300
obo
97 bedroom apt. 2nd meals &amp; personal
Intrepid, auto, $1600. floor, corner Second care as needed.
obo
256·1652 and Pine. No pets Expenence
References reqwed. preferred.
or256-1233
Secunty
deposit, References reqwred,
2009 Ltncoln T-Car $325 per month, Salary
negotiable,
Signature
Senes. water tncluded. call
phone 740·541-4279
Books $29.455 Pnce 740~6~25
or
Neg. 22 Kmiles 740- 740-446-3936.
=~~~~=
Drivers &amp; Delivery
446·1759

FAI-SAT, TV furn.
electronics,
home
decor, kids stuff,
antiques, 2208 SA
588

Help Wanted

NATIONAl GUARD'S.

Free Rent Special
I !I
2&amp;3BR apts S395 and
up Central Air, WID
hookup tenant pays
electnc Call between
tho hours of 8A-8P
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
(304)882-3017

Yard Sale 1&amp;2 off 388·0011 or 740·
218 on Kriner lot of 44
~~1~-7~8~7"""'0.....,......,......,...,
tools, motor cycles,
dvd &amp; players, lots
more;
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;

Sat 3rd.
Frl 2nd
8am-5pm
Rodney
Village II 3rd Street
3rd house on right.
follow s1gns, tread
mtll, excercise equip,
womens
clothes,
toddler girl clothes,
tools, carpet cleaner,
muc~ more.

Help Wanted

Apartmenh/
Townhouses

2006 Jayco Eagle,
28', ex. con., slide·
out, $16,500 OBO,
740·992.0707, 416- 1 BA and bath. frrst
5573
months
rent
&amp;
deposit. references
WantTo Buy
reqwred, No Pets
;;;;
O;;;;
Ile
;;;;r::;;;;;;;;
s n;;;;
ow
::;;;;;;;;
b;i;:
uyJ
;;;;n;;;;;
g ar'd clean. 740-441junk vehicles 740- 0245

3 Family yard sale
July 2nd 19329 St.
At. 141.
------July
4-5-6
bed
· spreads,
lamps,
table~. dishes, knick
199
knacks etc.
Hemfock Road off
Evergreen.

~-----------~~-------

wv

I nsured
Free Est1mate'i

eat£ Marcum Construction
Cmnmercial &amp; Reside11rial

• Room addition' • Roofing •
• General Remodeling • Pole &amp; Hor&lt;,('
Burn~ • \in) I &amp; \\ood fencing
Foundation'
MIKE W. MARCUM, OWNER
47239 Riebel Rd., Long Bottom, OH
740-985-4141
740-416-1834
Full) in~'Ured
Free t'slimatc' • 25+) ears expt:ricnce
t\ ol arrdi:llcd "illo Mikr Marrum RoM&gt;Iing .~ Rrmodtlm::•

With
many
choices, it's easy to
get carried avvay
vvith our
Merchandise listings
1n the classifieds!

�Friday, July 2, 201 0

www.mydailysentinel.com

BLONDIE

CROSSWORD

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

Tom Batiuk

Bor AS ";;,(X)N AS
"1. CAk&gt; GEf fO A
PI-IOivE, :Z:'l..L..

FIGURE If oor.

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

Chris Browne

COME 8ACK Wrr,J A CJEe!J TO A
WATE~FI&lt;oNi Pf&lt;opeRTY IN MY
NAM&amp; ANP W£'/lE IN ~IJ!?IJIES6 ! I

/

HI &amp; LOIS

By THOMAS
ACROSS
1 Stand-up
guy?
6 Up
11 Some
Japanese
films
12 Combing
spot
13 Family
car
14 Davis of .
film
15 Secreted
16 Uncle, in
Acapulco
18 Father's
Day gift
19 Building
wing
20 Play
part
21 Early
horror
name
22 Jacket
part
24 Crook
25 Encouraging words
to Spot
27Toe woe
29 Shred
32 From- Z
33 Brief bit
34- tear
35 Singer
Reed
36 Avril
follower
37 Battleship
letters
38 Summer
of song
40 Less

JOSEP H
42 Church
off1c1al
43 Poet
Breton
44 Bowler's
button
45 Surgery
tool
DOWN
1 Redeems, 7 Course
as a
need
check
8 Areas of.
2 "Ah, Wilconflict
derness!" 9 Director's
author
cry
3 Areas of 10 Last
comprowords,
mise
often
4"17 Summer
Believer''
quaff
5 Peso part 23 Long time
6 Monk's
24 Frilly
leader
wrap

NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (check/m.o.) to
Thomas Joseph Book 1. P.O Box 536475, Orlando. FL 32853-6475
10
11

1-~--+--+--i-,--+-­

13

,"

15

7-2

Brian and Greg Walker

THELOCKHORNS

MUTTS

26 It has a
point
27 Mobile
artist
28 "Becket"
actor
30 Skeptical
31 Quarterback, at
times
33 Bright
39 Onc'e
called
41- tizzy

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

"WA'O THE 'OTEAK'£ FINAL REQUE'OT TO BE CREMA ED'?"

ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

Tire Stars Slrow tire Kind of Day You 'II
f-!avc: 5-Dynamic; 4-Posllwe; 3-Average;
2 So-so; 1-Difficu/t

6
2 1

7 3

2

~

.;

4

9
1

6

1l

8

9

2

4
"All that's left of my pizza
are the bones."

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

4

~

"

****

6 G 9

v

9 8 B

I ~::;
\...

v

11-IIS W£1&lt;:E A R&amp;:STAURANI, J•p GIV!;i:

;;

Q

0

~ 89178 ~L9G6
{ 9 '6 ~ 8
G L 9 B
f GL89968v ~

A FIVE"-SnlR' RATING! II

"'E

~!!

3 1
1

llifficult) I cvel

i.

..

7
7 2

J
"'e

8

5

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for Frida);. July
2, 2010:
•
This year, you are able to follow •
your intuition and your higher mind.
Together they function as one. Your
ability to detach drclws a lot of people
to you. Some want your·opinions,
while others just want to be close to
vou. Communication can be difficult
~~limes. When angl)~ you easily
could lose your temper and become
accident-prone. Learn more healthy
ways of expressing yourself. Physical
exercise could be more important than
you realize. If you are single, you
· attrad someone unu&lt;:ual and interesting. Be open to a different type of person. U you are attached, a trip planned
by the two of you will bond you on a
much closer le\'el. PISCES helps you
see the big picture.

~

L
'

ARIES (March 21-April 19)
***Take vour lime rather than
go with your first impulse. A discussion needs to happen, but you will
call the shots. Don'! underestimate the
long-tem1 ramifications of how you
appro.1ch the situation. Tonight: A
good night's sleep.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
*****Someone might disagK&gt;e
'";th you, or \'i~ \'ersa, but \'OU .u-e on
the ,,;ay to finding a solution. Realize
that sometimes through disagreement
a better ide,, surf.:u:es. This could be
one of those occasions. Tonight: Sc1y
goodbye to the work week.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
**** Take charge if you hil\'e
any hope of clearing out eMly. f\'ote
the juggling of milny different concerns. Prioritize rcllner than juggle; the
end results will be far better. E\'en if
your words fall on deaf ears, your
o.;mile and atlittlde won't. 1onight:
Happily heading home.
CANCER (June 21-Jul) 22)
**** Keep reaching out pnst the
ob\ ious. You w,mt ,u&lt;.o.;wers th,\t work,
rn&lt;~ke ~ense ,md ro1.1l l&gt;Ut the true
issue. Don't illlt•\\ ,, mL1ment of anger
to c.1use c1 tl.ue-up. Do more listening.
!(might: \'\'here there is musk.
LEO (July23-Aug. 22)
****Deal with t•lhers on an
indi\'idualle\'el if you want positive
feedback. Use care with spending.
Re\'eal your true thoughts to a ke)
person. This person wants and needs
to h~ar them. Tension builds in a key
relationship. 'li.might: Dinner with a

friend.
VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
•
****You cannot !'uppress whatyou really feel, but on the other hand,
you could be unusually frustrated
dealing with others. Stay !~vel.
Recognize a tendency to feel hurt
more often right now. You could be
taking certain issues personally.
Tonight: Say "yes" to an invitation
that gets you out and about.
LffiRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)
**** Otllers still dominate and
make you wonder which way to go.
Taking the lead and having an important discussion with a respected
authority figure help you decide. Cse
your innate charisma if need be.
Tonight: Relax. Only with fa\'Orite
people.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-1'\ov. 21)
*** You have many answers, but
someone would be hc1rd-pressed to
come. to that conclusion. A meeting
could be decisive and difficult. You
also could be irritated by a boss who '
is a little too nice. Tonight. Charge out
of the office .
SAGIITARIUS (f\'ov. 22-Dec. 21)
*** You could be too tired to deal
with evel)·thing that comes up. Oose •
your door and get as much done as •
humanly poc;.;ible. Some of you, if you
Cdn, will want to work from home.
That might be the perfect solution.
'!bnight: Someone at a distance makes
an extra effort.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
****You might want to rethink
a com·eTS.ltion. Try to breilk through a
restriction or boundary. You don't
need to ha\·e the only answer; the
more options the better. A partner
might withhold something. Tonight:
Catch up on someone's week.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
*** Be more aware of ~pending
and vour choices. You could find
another way to resolve an issue, but
might decide to go along with a comb,lti\·e or overly clsserti\·e associ,\te.
Let go of irustration. "lbnight: Where
vour friend~ are.
•
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
****You h,we a way of drawing
~ut the best in others, though one
'
might be hard-pressed to .see that
l~1da). A p.lrlner or associate displays
his or her true colors so that e\'eryone
can see his or her mood. 1bnight: Do ~
for you.

jacque/me Btgar z:; 011 the lntrmct
ell ltlll'://wu•w.jacqrtrlincl,igar.com.

�Page BS • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Fr iday, July 2,

2010

NASCAR THIS WEEK
SPRINT CUP SCHEDULE
AND STANDINGS
Feb. 6- x-Budweeser Shootoul (Kevin HaMel&lt;)

Feb. 11 - x-Gatorade Duel 1 (Jomm;e Jonnson)
Feb 11 - x-Gatorade Duel 2 (Kasey Kahne)
Feb. 14- Daytona 500 (Jamie McMurray)
Feb. 21 -Auto Club 500 (Jimmie Johnson)
Feb 28- Shelby Amelican, Las Vegas (Jimmie John-

son)
March 7- Koban Tools 500 (Kurt Busch)
March 21 -Food Crty 500, Bristol. Tenn. (Jimmie

Johnson)
March 26- Goody's Fast

PaJn Relief 500, Mar·
ti'lSville, Va. (Denny Hamlin)
Apnl10- Subway Fresh Frt 600. A'IOOdale, Ariz.
(Ryan Newman)
Apnl16 -Samsung Mobile500, Fort Worth. Texas
(Denny Hamlin)
Apnl25- Aaron's 499, Talladega, Ala (Kevin HaMel&lt;)
May 1 - Heath Calhoun 400, RIChmond, Va (Kyle
Buscl1)
~ 8 - Southern 500, Darlington, S.C. (Denny HamIii)

May 16- Autism Speaks 400. OOYer, Del. (Kyle
Busch)
May 22 - x·Spnnt Soo.vctown, Conco&lt;d, N C. (Martin

Truex Jr.)

May 22- x-NASCAR Sprint Aft-Star Ra&lt;:G. Concord,
N.C. (Kurt Busch)
May 30- Coca-Cola 600, Conco&lt;d, N.C. (Kurt Busch)
June 6- Gillette Fusion ProGiide 500. long Pond,

Pa. (Denny Hamlin)
June 13- Heluva Good! Sour Cream Dips 400,
Brooklyn, Mich. (Denny Hamlin)
June 20- Toyota/Saw Man350, Sonoma. Calif (JrnmieJolvlson)
June 27 -lenox Industrial Tots 301 loudon, N.H.
(Jimmie Johnson)
Jcey 3 - Coke Zero 400 Fl:&gt;wered By Coca-Cola. Day·
tona Bea&lt;:h, Fla.
July 10- Ufelock.com 400, Johellll.
July 25- Brickyard 400. IndianapoliS
Aug. 1 -Pennsylvania 500, long Pond, Pa.
Aug. 8 - Heluva Good' Sour Cream Dips at The Glen,
Watl&lt;ifts Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 15- Cartax 400, Brooklyn, Mich.
twg, 21 -lrwtn Tools Ntght Ra&lt;:G, Bristol. Tem.
Sep. 5- Labor Day Classic 500, Hampton, Ga.
Sep. 11 - Richmond 400. RIChmond, Va
Sep. 19- Sy!vanoa 300, Loudon. N.H.
Se!f.26'&lt;-AAA 400, OOYElr, Del.
Oct."3-"' PrieeChopper400. Kansas Crty, Kan.
Oct. 10- Pepsi Max 400, Fontana, Calrt
Oct. 16- NASCAR Banking 500, Concord, N.C.
Oct. 24- TUMS Fast Relief 500, Maninsllille, Va.
Oct. 31 -AMP Energy 500. TaDadega. Ala.
Nov. 7 -lone Star 500, Fort Wooh, Texas
Nov. 14- Arizona 500, AIIOI1dale, Ariz.
Nov 21 -Ford 400, Homestead. Fla.
x·non-points race

2010 Driver Standings
1 Kevin HaMel&lt;. 2.489
2. Jmmie Johnson, 2.384
3. Kyle Busch. 2,328
4. Denny Hamlin, 2.304
5. Jeff Gordon, 2,302
6. Kur1 Bucch, 2,288

7. Matt K.enseth. 2,204

8. Jeff Burton, 2,159
9. Tony Stewart, 2,158

10. Greg Biffle, 2,126
11. Marl&lt; Maron. ;?,047
12. Ca~ Edwards. 2,020
13. Dale Earnhardt Jr., 2,017

14 Ryan Newman, 2,005
15. Chnt Bowyer, 2.004
16. Joey Logano. 1,921

17.Jamie McMurray, 1,899
18. MartJn Truex Jr., 1,872
19. David Reuttmam, 1,870

20. Kasey Kahne, 1,846

NATIClNWDE SERIES
SCHEDULE AND STAJIO'GS

Feb 13- DRIVE4COPO 300 (Tony Stewal1)
Feb 20- Stater Bros. 300 (K~ Busd"l)
Feb 27- Sam'S TOMI300, las Vegas (Ksvi1 Halvick)
March 20- Scotts T~ Buider 300 (Justn ftJigaiel)
, Apni 3- Nashvle 300.1.ebanon. Tem. (KsW1 HaMel&lt;)
Ap&lt;i 9 - Bashas' Supoonarkats 200, Avondale, Ariz.
(K~Busch)

Apli19- O'Reilly Auto Parts 3:)(), Fort Wo&lt;lh, Texas
(~Busd"l)

Apri 25- Aaron's 312, Talladega. Ala (Brad Keselowskl)

Ap&lt;i 30- Bubba Burger 250, Richmond, Va. {Brad
Keselo.Yski)
May 7 - R&lt;1taJ Purple 200, Darlington, S.C. (Denny
Hamill)
May 15- H&lt;lllMI Good! 200, Doo.er, Del. (Kyle Busd"l)
May 29 -Tech-Net PU.o Service 300. Coroord, N.C.

(Kyle Busch)
June 5- Fede&lt;ated Auto Parts 3:Xl. lebanon. Tenn.
(Brad Keselo.Yski)

June 12- ~ 3:Xl, Sparta, Ky (Joey Logano)
June 19 - Bucyrus 200, Ei&lt;hart l.al&lt;,e, Wrs. (Carl
Edwards)
June 26- NEw Er1QIIInd 200. loodon, NH (I&lt;~ Busdl)
July 2 - SuD.vay Jalapeno 250, Daytona Beadl. Aa.
.uy 9 - Dollar General 300, Joliet. II.
July 17-Mossoun-lllnois Dodge Dealers 250. Madison,

lB.

July 24 -Kmg6r 200, lrdanapolos
July 31 -lofla 250, Newton. Iowa
Aug 7 - Z4lPO 200 at The Glen. Walkins Glen, N.Y.
Aug. 14-Carfax250, Brooklyn, Mrch.
Aug 20- Food City 250, Bristol. Tem.
Aug. 29- NAPA PU.o Parts 200. Montreal
Sep. 4- Attanla 3:Xl, ~on. Ga
Sep. 10-Vrginia 529 College Sailings 250, Richmond.

Newcars giving Nationwide nee~ed buzz
Bv Wn..L

GRAVES

ASSOCIATED PRESS

There was a ti'mc, when
NASCAR 's brightest stars weren't
the guys in the driver's seat but the
cars they drove to Victory Lane.
Richard Petty changed all that.
his larger-than-life persona giving the fledgling spo11 a national
presence 40 years ago and
paving the way for the likes of
Dale Earnhardt Sr. and Jimmie
Johnson to hog center stage
while the cars were relegated to
secondary roles.
NASCAR will start swinging
the pendulum back the other way
when the Nationwjde Series'
revamped car makes its debut at
Daytona on Friday. It's a welcome move long overdue said
Jamie Allison, Ford's director of
North American motors ports.
"We have gone through an era
where obviously it was a manufacturer's battle, and then gone
to an era where the drivers were
the stars." he said. "Now we are
entering an era where the cars
are the stars, and I think it's good
for the sport."
Ford
(Mustang),
Dodge
(Challenger), Toyota (Camry)
and Chevrolet (Impala) will all
have their respective versions of
the new car on display Friday.
the first of four races for the new
car this season before it becomes
fully integrated in 2011.
Officials are quick to point out
the new rides are not to be confused with the Car of Tomorrow.
a moniker bestowe.d upon the
safe but somewhat clunky platform currently used in the Cup
Series.
Maybe that's because what
Nationwide is using is really the
Car of Yesterday.
Save for the paint job. the
Dodge Challenger that series
points leader Brad Keselowski
will take to the track on Friday
looks like the one found on the
sales floor at your neighborhood
dealer. Same goes for the
Mustang, which will have the
familiar silver pony logo on the
grille.
.
Though the makeovers given
to the Camry and Impala are
more subtle, the new designs are
a decided departure from the
homogenized look NASCAR's
two top series have adopted in
.recent years. where sometimes
the only way to tell a car's man-

Jeff Slner/Charlot1e Observer/MCT

NASCAR Nationwide Series driver Kyle Busch celebrates his victory
in the Tech-Net Auto Service 300 by doing a burnout at Charlotte
Motor Speedway in Concord, North Carolina, Saturday, May 29.

ufacturer is to catch a glimpse of
the sticker on the hood.
"The cars look."very sexy," said
Keselowski. "They look like a
production car you always wanted to drive. Some of that has
been lost over the last decade or
so in NASCAR .... We think this
is going to be a big burst of energy for the sport."
The cars feature many of the
same safety characteristics of the
Cup cars on the inside. namely
the centering of the driver's seat.
The body changes, however,
allow the Nationwide Series to
sell a distinct brand.
"It's given .us the ability to
kind of take a vision to give the
Nationwide Series its own
unique look and have our vehicle
drive different thm1 the other
race cars that we see that race (in
Cup)," said Nationwide Series
director Joe Balash.
The move also levels the playing field in the series. Testing in
the new car has been limited.
Keselowski doesn't see that as a
problem. Of course. he has the
benefit of holding a 247-point
lead over Carl Edwards.
"You're just going to have to
show up and figure it out on the
fly." he said. "It's kind of like
back on the old davs. where
you· d have a Mario Andretti
show up and get in the Sprint car
after being in an Indy car."
Cup star Kevin Harvick sees
the new car .as a chance to catch
up to Kyle Busch.
Though Keselowski is running
away with the points title, Busch

has been dominant whenever he
shows up to drive his No. 18
Toyota for Joe Gibbs Racing.
Busch has six wins in 13 statts
this year, including last week in
New Hampshire.
"The best part about· it is that
18 car won't have those cars to
race any more, so hopefully we
can close that competition gap
on the Nationwide side and close
that up a little bit:' Harvick said.
Longtime NASCAR owner
Roger Penske thinks the
redesigned car will make it easier for teams to cut costs while
also attracting new investors.
"With the advanced chassis that
you run (in Cup), ha'-'ing it be the
same that we can run in
Nationwide, you're going to have
some of these cars that we might
run on Sunday then can be sold or
handed down to smaller teams."
he said. "I think that's a real
advantage to get more people in
the sport. We couldn't do (that)
now because there's a difference."
Above alL however. the new
design has given the Nationwide
Series some much-needed buzz
while harkening back to the ''win
on Sunday, sell on Monday"
model the sport was built on.
If one of the new cars wins this
weekend. the exposure could be
felt in the showroom a few days
later. In the current economy.
that's never a bad thing.
"There will be a spike (in
interest) after the race," said
Dodge president and CEO Ralph
Gilles. "And we will watch this
weekend very carefully."

va:.

Sep. 25- Doo.er 200, Doo.er, Del.
Oct. 2 - Kansas L.ooery 300. Kansas C«y, Kan.
Oct. 9- Canl)ing WOOd 300, Fontana. Calif.
Oct. 15- Dollar General 3:Xl, Coroord, N.C.
Oct. 23- Gat6way 250, Madson, II.
Nov. 6 - O'Reilly tv.o Parts Chalenge, Fort Wo&lt;lh.

·rexas

Nov. 13-Arizona 200, Avondale. Ariz.
Nov. 20 - Ford 3:)(), Homestead. Fla.
2010 Driver Standings

Kansas Speedway petitions for 2nd race in 2011
BY

MARK

LONG

ASSOCIATED PRESS

1 Dradl&lt;eselowslo,2,641

2. Ca~ Edwards. 2,394
3. Justn AJigaier, 2.201
4. Kyle Busd"l, 2.140

5. Kew1 Harvick. 2.003
6. f&gt;atA Menard, 1.998
7 Brendan Gat.rglan. 1,819
e. Steve Walac:e. 1.804
9. Joey Logano. 1 ,758

10. Trevor Bayne. 1,721
11. Jason Leltler, 1,718
12.TonyRai1es.1,613
13. Bnan Scott, 1,603

14. MichaeiAmett. 1,595
15. Reed Sorenson, 1.548
16. Kenny Wal1ace, 1,494

17. M4&lt;e WaAac:e, 1.464
18 Mi&lt;e Blss, 1,380
19. Greg Biffle. 1.368
20. Michael McOowel. 1,363

CAMPING WORLD TRUCK
STANDINGS

2010 Oriver Standings
1 ToddBoOOe, 1,443

2. /&gt;¢ Amrola. 1.388
3. Tmothy Peters, 1.278
4. Ron f-jomaday.k., 1,273
5. Johnny Sauter, 1,179
6 Mi&lt;&amp;SI&lt;mer, 1,171
7.JasonWhde. 1,145
a. David Starr. 1,132

9 Rlcky Can'nic:l-', 1'107
10. Matt cranon. 1.098
11' AusUl Oilon, 1,093
12. Justn Lotkln, 995
13. K~ Busch. fJ51
14 Mario Gosseln, 949
15. Ryan Slag, 883
16. Brett B&lt;Aiolr, 842
17. Jemrter Jo Collb, 840
18.,James Buesctoet,834
19 Norm Bemng, WJ7

20. Tayler Malsam, 796

DAYTONA BEACH. Fla.
Kansas Speedway's new look
could lead to a new elate.
International Speedway Corp.
formally petitioned NASCAR on
Thursday to give the Kansas City
track a second Sp1int Cup race as
early as 2011.
ISC
spokesman
Lenny
Santiago said he expects an
answer later this summer, before
NASCAR unveils next year's
schedule. Santiago declined to
talk about details of the petition,
which includes a potential date
and likely eliminates a race. at
another ISC track.
"We're hopefuL" Santiago said
at
Daytona
International
Speedway. "We've been working
with NASCAR and recently
made our formal request to them.
We're not discussing the details
of where the date may come from
or anything like that. but we have
made the request and we'll v.ait
for their decision."

tie Gas

Ru

Serving you for over 60 years

4

1·

4 ...2§11

217

www.rutlandbottlegas.com
Gallipolis • The Plains • Jackson
Torch •
• McConnelsville • Rutland

Santiago believes Kansas is a
strong candidat~ to get a second
race because of the track's history of well-attended events and
the construction of a $521 million hotel and casino overlooking
turn two. It also could help that
NASCAR 's primary sponsor,
Sprint. is headquartered in
Overland Park, Kan.
"It's a great facility and a great
market." he said. "It's an important market for our sponsors and
our drivers. and the fact that
Sprint .s headquartered there is
one of the key reasons."
It's unclear how the Cup schedule would shake out if NASCAR
grants Kansas another race, but
aspects of the proposal seem
obvious.
Cons1dering potential weather
issues, the date probably wouldn't be in February or March.
And si1ce the speedway's current race happens in early
October. during the 10-race
Chase for the Sprint Cup championship, a second date would
need to be early in the season,

probably in April.
The track also hosts an IndyCar
race in early Ma).
Since NASCAR has no plans
to expand its 36-rac:e Cup schedule, ISC's plan likely includes
taking a date from one of its other
tracks.
Those tracks are Daytona.
Talladega, Auto Club Speedway
(Fontana, Calif.). Martinsville,
Richmond. Michigan, Phoenix,
Watkins
Glen,
Darlington,
Chicagoland and HomesteadM iami.
Auto Club, which has races in
February and October. would
seem like the obvious choice
since attendance has slumped in
northern California. ISC could
dump the Febtuaf) race there.
move a Phoenix race into that
slot and then give Kansas that
open spot in April.
It's all conjecture now, but it\
unlikely ISC - ~ASCAR's sister company - would have submitted a forma l petition without
some inkling it would be
approved.

Mid-Atlantic
Construction, Inc.
General ~ Mechanical Contractors
Rt. 1 Box 119, Old Town Road
Point Pleasant, WV

Auto
Racing
Glance
SPRINT CUP
COKE ZERO 400
Site· Davtona Beach. Fla.
Schedule. Thursday, practiCe
(Speed 4-5 30 p.m 6.30·8
p.m.); Fnda~. qualtfytng &lt;SPf'rm
4·7:30 p.m. :Saturday race
7:30p.m. ( NT 6.3Q-11 p.m.)
Track Daytona lnternalional
Speedway (tri·oval, 2.5 rrsle&gt;s)
Race distance 400 mtles. •60
laps
Last year Tony Stewart held on
to win after making late cor&gt;tact
wsth Kyle Busch. After slight contact on lhe'last lap.. Busch slid
low, then moved up into Stewart
hooktng Busch's nght corner
and sendtng htm Into the wall
Busch ftnished 14th
Last week: Jimmse Johnsor
raced to hts second straight VIC·
lory and fifth of the season.
bumping hss way past Kur•
Busch with two laps left at "Jew
Hampshire Motqr Speedway.
Stewart was second. and K~:r1
Busch third.
Fast facts Harvsck leads fourtime defending senes champ1on
Johnson by 105 points Harvtcl&lt;
the 2007 Davtona 500 wtnner,
raced to his lone victory o• the
season in April at Talladega He
also won the preseasof' Budweiser Shootout tn February at
Daytona. Johnson and Denny
Hamlin are tied for the series
victory lead with five. Each v ctary is worth 10 bonus potnts In
the Chase... Jamie McMur'ay
won the season·opentng Daytona 500.... Dale Earnharc~ Jr.
winless in 74 races. ts 13th in
the standings - three potnts
behind Carl Edwards tn the race
for the final Chase spot
Next race: Lifelock.com 400
.luly 10 Chtcagoland Speedway.
Joliet. 111.
Online http://www nascar COf"l
NATIONWIDE
SUBWAY JALAPENO 250
Site: Daytona Beach, Fa
Schedule: Wednesday. practice·
Thursday. practice \ESPN2
5:30·6:30 p.m.). Friday. qua11fy
tng (ESPN2, 1·4 p.m.). race, 8
p.m. (ESPN, 7:30·10:30 p.m.}.
Track: Daytona lnternationa'
Speedway (tri·oval. 2 5 msles)
Race distance: 250 mtles, 100
laps.
Last year: Clint Bowyer beat
Kyle Busch and Carl Edwards tn
a green·whtte·checker ftntsr to
give Richard Chtldress RaCing
its first victory of the seasor
Last week: Busch raced to tis
stxlh Nationwide· vtctory of the
year and 36th overall, wtnrung at
New Hampshire Motor Speed
way. Busch also broke Mark
Martin's series record tor caree'
laps led With 8. 118.
Fast facts The race 1s the In st
lor the series' new car rrodel
The car also will be used at
Michigan, RIChmond and Char
lotte before being fully lntegr..
tn 2011. Ford also s movmg
from Fusion to Mustanq, and
Dodge frofTI Ctlarger to Ct'al
Ienger. Dale Earnhard' ..r ts
driving the No. 3 Wran~le
Chevrolet in mefi'IOry o, 111s
father.... Brad Keselow~ 1 leads
the season standt1'1QS 247
points ahead of Carl Edwarcs
Tony Stewart won tne seasonopenmg race at Daytona .
Kenny Schrader is dr v ng tt-E'
No. 09 RAB Aactng Ford
Next race: Dollar General 300,
Ju!Y 9, Chscagolard Speedway
Johet, 'II.
INDYCAR
CAMPING WOR LD GRAND
PRIX AT THE GLEN
Site Watkins Glen, N.Y
Schedule. Friday, practrce. Sat·
urday. practice. qualifymg, Sun·
day. race. 3:55 p.rr (ABC, 3:3Q6p.m.).

Track· Watkins Glen lnter'lation·
al (road course. 3 4 miles)
Race distance: 204 mtles. 60
laps.
Last year· Justm Wilson gave
team owner Dale Coyne his first
vtctory after 25 years of trying,
leading 49 of 60 laps Coyne's
vtctory came tn his 558\h entry
as an owner-dnver Ryan
Briscoe finished second.
Last race: Andrett1 Aulosport's
Tony Kanaan won the Iowa 250
on June 20 !or hts first vtctory 1r
nearly two years. passtng Heho
Castroneves w1th 10 laps left.
Fast facts: Penske's Will Po~·
leads the season standtngs. 11 •
points ahead of Scott Dsxon and
14 in front of Indianapolis 500
winner Dario Franch1tts Power
won the season·opentng road
races tn Sao Paulo and St
Petersburg.... Castroneves
(Alabama) and Ryan HurterReay (Long Beach) also have
road-course victories th1s sea·
son.... Dixon swept the 2005·07
races at Watkins Glen ... Dantca
Patrick was 30th last week in the
NASCAR Nationwide SE:·ie~
race in New Harrpshtre.
PORTSMOUTH RACEWAY
PARK
·Coming Sunday. July 4. lJcas
Otl Late Model Sertes 50·lap.
S10.000 to win late model race.
Modified racing as well with 20·
lap feature paytng S1,000 to wtn

j

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="571">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10022">
                <text>07. July</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="12131">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="12130">
              <text>July 2, 2010</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="221">
      <name>browning</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
