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---------"!1-----------~~--~~-- ~-

.New title office, A6

,.
D

Brown Agency

Nationwide•
On Your Side

w

•

Serving Galli CO!Itt Since 1950 •How S.vklg Meigs CWity
~
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990 State Route 160
Gallip&lt;1lis, OH 45631
740-446·1960

3J I 05 Hiland RP Suite I

l'11mcroy, 01145769
740.991·1.'18

••
..

...

Printed on 100%

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

Recycled Newsprint

BY BRIAN·J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - A Pomeroy man
will spend at least three yea~s in
prison for fleeing from police officers and an escape from the Meigs
County Jail in August.
Emest M. Roach. 34, appeared
before Judge Fred W. Crow lli and
entered guilty pleas to charges of
failure to comply and escape,
Prosecuting Attorney Colleen

Ohio
Valley
Publishing invites you
to contribute your stories of faith to the 20 10
edition of Faith and
Family magazine.
Share with your friends
and neighbors around the
tri-county area what God
is doing in your life.
We're looking for testia nonies of salvation •
. . .evivul, mimcles, healing
and much more.
E-mail your stories of
faith to Andrew Carter at
mdtnews@mydailytribune.com. Be sure to
wtite "AITN: AndrewFaith and Family" in the
subject line. For information, call (740) 4462342. ext. 18.
The submi:-~sion dead! ine for stories to be
included in the 2010
edition of Ohio Valley
Publishing's Faith and
Family magaz.ine is
Friday, Dec. 31.

EITC program
awareness
meeting set
'

Williams said. The failure to comply, or felony fleeing. charge was
filed in connection with a July 13
incident in which Roach operated a
motor vehicle so as to willfully
elude or flee a police officer and in
doing so, caused a substantial risk
of serious physical harm to persons
or prope1ty.
The jail escape. with two other
inmates in the county jail. to'o k
place Aug. 17.
'
Judge Fred W. Crow III sentenced

Roach to three years on the escape
charge. and continued sentencing
on the ch,a rge of failure to comply
pending completion of a pre-sentence investigation. Roach was
remanded to sheriff's custody and
has begun his sentence.
Williams also reported these other
criminal proceedings:
·
• Chasity James, West Columbia,
W.Va., was sentenced to one year on
a charge of theft and will be sentenced later for theft of a fireann.

resulting from items being stolen
from a former employer. She was
sentenced to a tenn of one year on the
count of theft. Sentencing on the theft
of a firearm charge was continued.
James was also ordered to pay
restitution of $2,105.
• Chris Wood. 45. Trotwood. pleaded guilty to non-support of dependents. His sentencing was continued
to January. He remains free on bond.

Gett'ng Cti'ative u1ith gourds

Meigs residents
low in participation

SPORTS
• Lady Eagles soar past
81

Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY Meigs
County has been identified
as having one the lowest
taxpayer participation rates
in the state of Ohio in the
Earned Income Tax Credit
(EITC) program.
Meigs was identified as
among the lowest by the
Govemor's Office on Faith
Based and Community
Initiatives in a state-wide
study on return rates.
according to Kevin L.
Boyce. Ohio treasurer.
In a release from the state
treasurer's office. the lack
of participation is attributed.
in part, to the lack of knowledge about the program. To
help increase awareness in
the county. an organizational meeting of community
leaders has been set for 11
a.m. Tuesday. Dec. 15 . .at
the Pomeroy Public Library.
There the emphasis will be
on getting the community
involved in assisting with

POMEROY - Around
I .000 customers purchase
water from the Village of
Pomeroy and all of those
customers will soon receive
digital water meters.
About half of those cushave
already
tomers
received the meters. according to Mayor John Musser.
Musser said the contract
with installers is to have the
project completed no later
than March 23. though it's
possible the job could be
completed even sooner.
weather permitting.
Back in July. when the
issue was before Pomeroy
Council
for
Village
approval, the entire meter
replacement project had an
estimated cost of $269.469
with the village receiving
$188.430.20 in federal stimulus grant money. otherwise
known as the American
Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009.
Also back in July. council
approved a bid by Buckeye
Pipe from Marietta for
$180.413.76 for the actual
supply of digital meters.
while
local contractor
Jeffers Excavating's bid of
$38,860.10 was approved
for the actual installation of
meters.
The federal grant is a
70/30 match. meaning
Pomeroy haa to take out a
loan for roughly $81.000

~mployment

program

Page AS

John Redovian Jr., 71 •

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Funding
from the State of Ohio for
subsidized employment programs will benefit township
operations next &amp;ummer.
Meeting Thursday, Meigs
County
Commissioners
approved
a
resolution
approving a new summer
employment program. which
will place income-eligible
workers in townships to
assist trustees with road
improvements, cemetery
maintenance and other work.
Chris Shank. director of
the
Meigs
County
Department of Job and
Family Services, told commissioners Thursday the
funding was awarded to 47
counties in Ohio who
applied for it. Meigs County
will receive $67,000 to subsidize wages for workers
assigned by the DJPS.
''This program will not
cost the township trustees or
the citizens who live in
these communities anything. and the communities
will benefit,'' Shank said.
"The program also creates a
fair way to distribute the
funding all over the county,
where it is needed."

WEATHER

Details on Page A6

INDEX
2 S£CTIOSS- 12 PAGES

Calendars

As

Classifieds

B3-4

Bs

mics
Faith
Sports

A2-4

B Section

@ 2009 Ohio Valley Publi~hing Co.

~1 4 1!1JI9 1 1111
1 1 1 1111
8 11

Other business
.

Commis:-.ioncrs opened a
bid from Bildit Group. New

I

Please see Commission, AS

I

•

Digital water
meters
installed in
Pomeroy

SENTINEL STAFF

Commissioners
approve new
summer
OBITUARIES

Please see Sentenced, AS

MDSNEWS@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Please see EITC, AS

.

Dfl'

August jail escapee sentenced to prison

Faith and
Family 201 0:
Tell us your
stories of faith

.

a

"

Charlene Hoeflich/photo

Take an ordinary garden gourd. any size, any shape, sand it until it's nice and
smooth, and t en stain it or paint it with any pattern or design you'd like. That's the
word from Janet Bolin of Rutland who is known for her creative skills with things of
nature. At the recenttChristmas flower show, she displayed examples of gourd artsmall ones made into tree ornaments, painted as Santas or snowmen, larger ones
into bird houses to add charm to a backyard, and still others into useful containers
for flowers or fruit.

Please see Meters, AS

Most excellent: Southern recognized by state
Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

RACINE - On Thursday
the Southern Local School
District
received
its
"Distrkt of Excellence"
award and banner from the
Ohio
Department
of
Education. making it the
only district' in Meigs
County to receive a most
"excellent" rating for the
2008-09 school year.
Danny Greene, a member
of the ODE, presented the
District of Excellence
Award on behalf of the ODE
to Southem. Accepting on
behalf of the staff and
administration of Southern
Local were Superintendent
D~em.
Southern
Tony
Middle School Principal
Kent Wolfe, Southern High
School Principal Daniel
Otto
and
Southern
Elementary
School
Principal Scott Wolfe.
"It is truly an honor to
receive this award." Deem
said . "This is a result of
hard work and great team
Submitted photo
work among administration.
teachers. support staff. par- On Thursday. the Ohio Department of Education presented the Southern Local School
District with its "District of Excellence" award. Pictured. from left, Southern Elementary
ents. and students."
School Principal Scott Wolfe, Superintendent Tony Deem, Southern High School Principal
.Please see Southern, AS Daniel Otto, ODE's Danny Greene, Southern Middle School Principal Kent Wolfe.

�PageA2• The Dally SentiWORSH/P GO/ejeliffis
10 45 am , Sunda) Everung - 6.00 p.m ,
Pastor. Don Wal~cr

F£11owship
Apostolic
Church of Jesus Chrlst,\postollc
\ 4nlandt and \\ IUd Rd • Pastor James
~hiler S~.;nda) SchOOJ
10 lO a.m •
E\'erung 'I 30 p m
Rhtr \'nil~

R1'cr Valley ApoMohc \\t'rshlp Center.
873 S ~rd Ale, \llddlepon. Rc1
M1dl c1 Bradford, l'n~tor, Sunday. 10·30
• m Tt1c• &lt;r~o rr•yet \\ed 7 rm ll•l&gt;le
Study
hnmnnnl'l \11&lt;1\lnlk 'luhnnadr lnr.
Lo.10p Rd oft ~c" L tma Rd. Rutland,
'ien•ce•. Sun 10 00 am. &amp; 7..30 p.m.
fhur&gt; 7 00 p m , Pnsl&lt;lr MJrty R Hutton

Assembly of God

I ib(r1) \~cmbl) of God
PO Bt&gt;' 461, Dudding Lane Ma\011,
\\ \a Pastor llic Tennant, Sund.ly
Scmccs Jll.OO m :!&lt;! "p.m

Rolland .-~ Will Baptist
Salem St , Pastor Ed Bame) , SundJ)'
School - 10 a.m E.\enmg • 7 p m..
Wednesday Service~- 7 p.m
S~nd Baptist Chul'\'h
Ravens\\ood, WV. Sunda) School 10 am
Morning wor.-bip II am E1enmg • 7 pm,
Wcdnc\lla) 7 p.m.
t1r-t Buptist Cllur~h of \1a.•on, \\ \
(Independent Bapust)
SR b52 unu A ndcf'on St, Pa,tor. Robert
Grad). Sunday school 10 am, \lurn111g
church II .sm, Sunday c\cnmg (&gt; pm, \\eJ.
Btble Srudy 7 pm

Catholic
Sacred Heart Catholic Chun:h
It'I Mulberr) A•e Pt:'rncroy, 992·589S.
Pastor: Re' \\alter P Hemz, Sat Con
4.45 S ISp m.: Mas.· S 30 p.m Sun
Con 8.45 9·15 am , Sun ),tass • 9 10
.m , Da1l) M"'S • 8:30 a m

Church of Christ

Baptist
P~e1illr

fret'" ill Baptl\tl'hurch
Pastor f-lo) d RO$S Sunday '&gt;chool9·30 to
10 10 am. \\oo.lup set\ ce 10 lO to 11 00
am \\ ed prcxhmg 6 pm
Carpenter lndeptn&lt;lent Rnptlst Church
&lt;;,hoot
9 30am. Preaching
Scr\lce
0 10am. I l"emng Scrv1ce
7 OOpm. \\ednesda) B•ble Study 7 00 pm.
Pastor
S~ndJY

l'hc,hire ll•tpll\l Church
J&gt;a,tur. Stl'\e Ltttlc 740·Jt&gt;7-71!01 II
740 9'12·7542. &lt;.. 74Cl·6.t5 2527, Sumi.Jy
School &lt;1 30 dm, \lurmng Wo~htp: 10:~0
dm, Youth &amp; Btble Buddtes o: lO pm,
chott pracucc 7 '0: SJX."Ctal da&gt; s of month
1 Lad1e~ of Grace 7 pm 2nd Mon~). 2.
Men's fellow,htp pm 1rd T\lcs
Hope Baptht Qhurch tSouthcrn)
570 Grant St , M ddleport S~ondJv s.hool
9 3(&gt; .m, \\orshtp ·II a~ and 6 p
\\Cdncsda) Sen tee • 7 pm Pastor. 6:u)
E
Rutland First Bapll~t Chun:h
Sunda) '&gt;chool 9 JO a.m , Worshtp

West,lde Church of Christ
33226 Cluldrcn's Home Rd Pomeroy, OH
Contact 740-992-3847 s~~da) momtog
10 00, Sun morn1ng B1ble study.
folio\\ mg worship. Sun. e~e 6 00 pm.
\\ed btblc stud) 7 pm
Hemlock Gro'e Chri,lian Churt:h
.\hm&lt;ter. Larr) Brown. W.&gt;rshtp - 'J 30
am Sund.l) Sehool 10:30 a.m , Rtble
Stud) - 7 p.m.
Pomero) Church of Chrht
212 W Mam St.. Sunda) School 9:JII
a.m .. Wor;htp· 10:30 am. 6 p.m ..
Wednesda&gt; Semce' • 7 p.m.
Pomero) \\e&lt;ot,ide Church of Chri•t
33226 Chudren'• Home Rd , Sunda)
S•hool II a.m .. \\or-lup- !Oa.m , 6 p m,
\\edoesda) Sei'YJCC\- 7 p.m
Middleport Church of Christ
Sth nd Mam. Pastor: AI Hansot!,
Ch1ldrens Director. Sharon Sa)rc. fcen
Dtrector Dodger Vaughan, Sunday School
9 30 am .. \\orship- 8 IS. JOl:lO am , 7
p.m , Wcdnesda) Scr\1CCS • 7 p.m

•I0.4~a.m

l'omcro) nrst Baptist
Jo:! Bracken E.lst \lam St ,
Sunday 'ic" &lt;;·30 :am. \\or hlp 10:30 am
Pa~tor

tlrst southern llnplist
41872 l'·mero~ P1ke .Sunda) Sd1ool •
9·30 am, \\orslup • 'J 45 dm &amp; 7:00p.m..
\\ednc:&lt;day Scn•ce• • 7{)0 p.m Pastor
Da\1&lt;1 Rr:unard
J.ir\l llnpthl Churdl
Paslnr· Dtll) /uspan 6th und Palmer St..
\i1ddltpmt :Sunda) School 9:15 a.m ..
Wor~htp
10 i ~ a.m., 7 00 p m .
Wcdn, '&lt;Ia) Sen ICC· 7 00 p.m
Radne t lrst Raptl't
Pastor Ryan L.lton, pastl'r , Sunda)
'icboo 9 30 a.m , \\.)f')lup 10.40 am
6 00 p 1:! \\edncsd3) Sef\ ~ees • 7·00
pm
&lt;;ih tr Run Jlaptlst
Pastor John S\\ son, Sunday School
lOa m \\llr h1p - II am • 1 00 p m.
,\\edncsda) &amp;met\· 7:00pm
MI.\ nlon llnptlst
Pa tor O.:nms We.:.1er Sunday School
9 45 am E'entng
6.30 p m .
\\Gd!!cs.la) Serv1ces- 6.30p m
Bt•lhkhem Bapti't Church
BcnCI, Route 124, kn,rne. (lll,
Pastor
SundJy s,·hool I)· 30 a Ill •
Sunday Wm~hl[l IO·JQ n m..: Wedn~sday
lltble ~tud&gt; 71Kl p.m.

Grc~!

Old Ucth..l I r~c Wlllllaptht t'hur&lt;·h
28601 &lt;;• Rt 7, l\ltddlcpon, Sunda)
Semcc 10 am., 6 00 p m.. Tuesday
'im c~ -600
llillsid~ Jlaptist Churrh
&lt;;t Rl '4J JUSt off Rt I, Pastor Re•
James R Ac ee, Sr, Sunday U01'1ed
Sen•ce \\orshtp JC 10 am , 6 p m,
\\Cdnc&lt;;day Sci'\ ces 1 p m

\ ictor) llapti't lndrpendcnt
.S2~ N 2nd !lt \llddlepon. Pastor. James
E Kee~e. \\orsh'1p - I(Ja m , 7 p m..
\\ edncsday Sen .ce' :l p m
Fnltb Dapt ist Cllul'\'h
Ro1lroad St , MJwn, 'iunday S•hool 10
a m , \\orsh1p
11 am 6 p.m.
Wcdn~ny Serv1ccs • 7 p.m
t 'orest Run llaptl,l· l'mneroy
Rev Joseph Woods, Sund.1y S.;hool • 10
a.m .. Wotshtp II 30 a.rn
\It. \ lorlah llaptlst
Fourth &amp; Mam St , ~t1ddlepon, Sunday
School- 9 lO a.m., \\onhtp- 10;45 11m.
Pauor Rev M.chael AThompson, Sr
AntiQUil) Baptbt
Sunday &lt;;chuol 9 30 o 1!:, \\orsh1p -

Keno Chul'\'b of Chri•t
Worsh ;&gt; - 9:30 am , Sunda) School
-10:30 a.m , Pastor-Jeffrey Walla..e ht and
Jrd Sunda)

Mt, Morl11h C'hurch of God
~hie Ht.l Rd , Rac1ne, Pastor Jame5
Satterfield. Sunday School - 9·45 a.m
c\emng 6 p m , \\ednesd:ly Semccs 7
pm.
Rutland ( burch of God
Pastor Shaoe M Bowhng, Sunday
Worshtp :o a m , 6 p.m \\ednesda)
Servtccs 7 p.m
~~ rucuw •lrst Church uf (,,&gt;d
1\pplc nnd Second Sts I'astor Rc' Da' 1d
Rus,cll, Sund.sy SchO&lt;•I and \\or&gt;htp· IU
am. l'vcmng :i&lt;'f\ rres o:~O p m •
Wednc~lay Sen ice• tdO p.m
('hurch

nr &lt;:·~1 &lt;If l'rophcc)

OJ Whnc Rd. (l[f Sl Rt. IW. I'J.\IIIr' I'J

Chapman, Sunday Schllol • 10 am.
\\.;,rshtp II a.m , Wednesda) "icmrc' 7
pm

Congregational
Trinlt) Churrh
Pa\to; Rc'' 10m Johnson Second &amp;
Lyan. Pomcr&lt;) Pa5tor , Worslup 10.25
a.m'

Episcopal

Grace J' plscnpal Church
'26 h Matn St , Pomcro),
Hoi)
Eucharist 11.30 a.m SundJy &amp; 5 '10 pm
V.ed Re1 l.e$hc Flcmmmg

Holiness
l'ummunlt~

l'hurrh
l'nstor Stc1·e Tomek, Mam \treet
Rutl.111d, Sunday \\orshifl' 10.00 a.m.,
Sunday Servtcc 7 p m
J&gt;unvlll~ Jlollnr~'

Chur'h

31057 Stare Route l2.5. L•lllll'vll~. Pa,tor·
llnan Bailey, Sunday 'chool • 9JO a.m ..
SunJa) \lnl'l&gt;lnp • Hl:JO 11 m. &amp; 7 p.m ..
Wednesday pmyer scmce, 7 p.m.
('ohar) Pilgrim Cha~l
Hamsonv1llc Road, Pastor Cltlll'les
\lcKenzte, ~unday School 9 lO am •
\\orshtp II am" 7 00 p.m . Wednesday
Semce 7 00 pm
Rose of Sharon Holiness ( hun:h
Lc:admg Creek Rd , Rutland ra.tor Rev
De"cy King. Sunday school- 9 30 a.m ,
Sunday \\l'!Shtp -7 pm. \\ednesday
pra)"er mectmg- 7 pm
Pine Gro,t· Bibl~ llolinrss Church
I 2 m1lc off Rt 325 Pastor Rc\ O'De:.
l\13nlcy, SunJay School
9:30 .1.m..
\\orshtp
1030 am 600 p.m.
V.Cdnc\day 5--..r.tce- 7 00 p.m

Bear,.allo~&lt;

Ridgt Church of Chrhl
Pa•tor:Bruce Terry Sunda) School ·9·30

a.m
Wor,hip - 10:30 a.m .. &lt;dO p.m.
Wednesday Ser;ices - 6:30 p.m.
Zion Church of Christ
P•&gt;memy Harrisonvilte Rd . (Rt 143\,
Pastor· Roger Wat&gt;on Sunday School
9.30 am , Wor;h'P - 10 30 a.m 7 00
pm , Wedn&lt;:sday Sen tees - 7 p.m
• TnpJM:"' Plain &lt;..'burch of Chrio;t
lhstrumental, Wor-;h1p Serv1ce - 9 a.m
Commuruon - 10 am .• Sunday School •
10.15 am, Youth·).]{) p.":l Sunda), B·"le
Stud~ Wednesda) 7 pm
Bradhul') Church of Christ
!\1 !USter Tom Run) on 39558 Bradbury
Road, \hddleport. Sunday School 9 ;o
am
Wol\lup - I0 30 a n:.
Rutland Church of Christ
Sunday School - 9.30 am .. Worship 1111d
Commun•on - 10:30 a m.. Davtd
\\iscman, Mmi,ter
Bradford Church of Christ
Corner of St. Rt. I24 &amp; Bradbury Rd ,
,\!mister. Doug Shamblin, Youth Mtni,ter:
B,IJ,.\mbcrger. Sunda~ School • 9.JO am,
\\onh1p ti:OO am .. 10·30 am , 7 00
p.m ..\\ednesda) Ser.1ce' - 7 00 p m

\\~lc) un l!ihlc lloline" Church
75 Pearl St .. .\ltdd)eport l'a\tor DouG
Cox, Sunday School · 10 a.m. Worshtp •
10•45 p.m.. Sunduy I've 6:00 p.m.
Wednesday Stf\'tce • 7:(10 p.m.

llystll Run ('mnmunlt~ Church
l'asto•r: Rev.l..ury l.emlcy. Sunday School
9 .!0 a .!I'. Wor.ohtp 10·4S u.m, 7 p.m,
ThuMa) B.!lle Swdy and Youth 7 p.m
l.au"'l ClifT f "'e Methodist &lt;..'burch •
Pastor Glen McClung, Sund.l) 'icbool •
9 30 am . \\;&gt;~hlp 10·30 a m and 6
p.m \\ednesda) Servile 7·00 pm

Latter-Day Saints
Tht· Church of Jesu'
('bri.st of LaUl'f'l)a) Saints
St Rt 160, 446 6247 or 446-7486
Sunda) School 10·20 II am, Re 1e~
SOl. let) PneMhoo4 II 05 12 00 noon
SacrJment Sei"\J.e 9 10 IS am
llomemak.r.g meeung. 1st l'hun.- 7 p m

Luther an
St. Juhn l.utht·ran ('burch
l'mc Gro1·c, \\or-h1p - 11 00 a 111 , Sunda)
School IO:!Kl a.m. l'a,tor·
Our Sa' lour l.ulhfrun Church
Walnul and Henry :&gt;ts • Raven,wood,
\\,\'a .. Pastor. Da"d Russell, Sunday
s.hool- 10.00 a.m., Worship II a.m.

Hkkor) HiJh Ch~h of Chri«
Tuppers Plus, Pastor .\ltke Moore, B1ble
cla\s, 9 a.m. Sunday \\orshtp 10 am
Sunday, v.orslup 6.30 pm Sunday 81ble
class 7 pm Wed.

Corner 'iyc:amore &amp; Se~.ond St , Pomeroy,
Sun Sc ool 9 45 a m , \\or;lup II n m

Ree&lt;b1ille Church of Christ
Pastor J~ck Colzro,c. Sund&amp;) Sc"ool
9 30 am .. Wor,hip Ser~ tee 10:30 D m
B1ble Study, Wedncsda). 6: lOp m

Gmham l nited \1ttbodl•t
Worslup II am Pastllr R1chard Nuse
llccbtd l nltrd Methodist
!'&gt;e" H~'en, R1chard "ease, Pastor
SJnd3) ~&lt;orsh1p 9 30 a r:c Tiles 6·10
pr11)er and B1ble Study

J.Huer Cburt:h of Christ
Sunda~ school 9:30am. Sunday wol"ihlp
10:10 a.m
The Chun:h of Christ nf Pomero)
lnter\Cctlon 7 and 124 W Evangelist
Dcnnt' Sargenl. Sunday Btble Study •
9;30 a.m .. Worshtp: 10:;10 a.m. and 6:30
p.m., Wednesday Bible S1udy- 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Hartford Chun:h of Chri~tln
Christian Union
Hanford, W.Va., Pastor: Mtke Puckett,
Sunda) School - 9·30 a.m .. WorJhlp
10:30 a.m., 7;00 p m . \\c:dnesday
Scmces- 7:00p.m.

:it. Pllul Lutheran thurch

United Methodist

\lt. OhH· l nitrd "•thodi«
Off 124 bch·nd \\ llkcs\llle. Pastor. Rev
Rolph' Sptrcs Sunda) School 9.30 a.m
Worshtp 10:30'" m., 7 p.m, Thursda}
Serv.ce.s 7 I' .m.
\lelg' Coop~rathe Parbh
Northen'l Clu"er, Alfred, Pa&gt;tor: J1m
Corbitt, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m ..
Worslup • II n.m., 6:30p.m
Chr~ler

Putor. J:m Corbllt, Worsh•p • 9 a.m ,
Sunda) School - 10 a m , Thwsda)
Scrvtces - 7 p.m

Church of God

Joppa
Pastor: Dcoz1l Null, Worship • 9 30 am.
SundJy S.:hool 10·30 om
LongBottom
Sunday Sdlool - 9 30 a.m • Wonlup •
J0·30am.
Ret&gt;ib\ille
Wcmlup 9 30 a.r.c , Sund.:l) School
10:30 am , FirM Sunday or Month 7:00
pm.sen1ce
Tupper- Plain' :;t,l'aul
Pastor: Jsm Corbttt .s~nday SchQI'If 9
a.m .. Wo,.,.hsp 10 a.m , Tn~w•y ServtCe.\
-7..'0 p.m.
Central Cluster
A'bury (Syracu,c), Pa,tor· Boll Rohmsou,
Sunday S~hool 'lAS am . Wor'hlp II
a.m. Wedncsda) Ser•1ces • 7.30 r•n .

W££iida~ December 11 , 2oog
10 30 a.m, 6 p.m, Wednesday Scmces7 p.m.

Sunda~ S•hool- 9 l"m. WcmbJp Scmcc

Pomrro) Chun:h of the l'iazartne
Pastor Jan La•ender, Sunda) School •
9 JO a.m Wonh1p - 10:30 a.m and 6
p.m , Wednc&gt;da) Services 7 p.m

CarJdQn lnttrdtnomlnallonal &lt;..'bU«h
Kmgsbury Road, Pastot Robcn Vance.
Sunday School
9·30 a m • \\orshtp
Servace '0:30 a.m E.•emng Serv ce 6
p.m
f'reedom GOloJI&lt;I ~Union
Bald Knob. on Co Rd 31 Pastor Rev.
Rogr• Wtllford Sunday Schoo • 9 30
am Wmsht~ 7prr.

10 am .2nd and 4th Suoda~

Chesler &lt;''burch of tbe ~a1anne
Pastor Re• \\uren L~kens, Stoda)
S~hO&lt;'I 9 10 a m , \\orshtp 10 10 am •
Sunda) ~\cntng (, pm
Rutlnnd ( 'hurch nf the ~111arrne
l'u,tnr George Stadler, Sunday Schc10l • &lt;Hn a m , Wor&gt;htJl HUO 11 m , 6· 30
Jl·~'·• \ltcdnew&lt;~y Sc•Vt&lt;C~ -7 1&gt; rn

\\hile's C'h&lt;~pd \\e.k)an
•
Coolvtlk Roilu, l'a!le&gt;r Rev Chari
Martindale. Sunday Scho&lt;•l 'I 10 aJn.
Wol'&gt;hip- 10: 1Q u m, Wedne~Jay Semce
-7p.m

Other Churches
:'lOt\\ lin~ C'hun·h
Old Amcncan l.tg10n Hall
F-oiWhA\c ,M,ddJeport Sund.ly ~ p.m
S)rntuse Common II) Chun·h
2480 Second St , Syracuse OH
Sun School 10 am, Sundy n:ght 6 JO pm
Pastor Joe G"mn
A 'lOt~&lt; Rcainnlng
(full Go.~l Chun:h) HllfTlsom'hle,
Pastors. Bob and Kay llloll'\ba!l
Thurs 7 p.m

Ftat"ooch
Pastor De10aync Stuttlcr. Sund3y School·
10 ar , \\orshtp 1: am
f'o~ Run
Pastor Bob Robtnson. Sunda) School 10
a.m , WDr'ihip- 9 a.m.

Hrath (\liddteport)
Pastor· Bnan Dunham. Sunda)' School •
IO:OOa.m .. Worslup • 11.00&amp; m

tainicw llibl,• Church
Lc:tan, \\ Va Rt I Pa~tor. Bnan May,
Sun&lt;l.ly School -9 '10 • m •\\onhtp 7 00
p m . Wcdnc\lla) Btblc Study 7·00 pm
t'alth Fello~&lt;shlp Cruwdt- for Christ
Pastor Rev Frank' ~ O~tlens, Serv, c
Fnday 7pm
Cahaf) Bible Churt"h
Pomeroy P1kc Ct' Rd Pasror Rev
Blacl.;\\ood, Sunday '&gt;c oo • 9:30 am •
\\ors"1p 10 30 a m 7 30 p.m •
V. ednesda)' Sen ICC • 7 :lQ p rr.

Am:11ing Gnce Communi!) Church
Pastor: \\~)11C Dunlap, State Rt. 68 ,
Tuppers Plaans. Sun WoN!Jp: 10 am &amp;
b. lO pm., Wed Btble Study 7 00 p m

:\llntrs•llle
Pastor Bob Robmson, Sunday School 9
n.m , Wor,htp 10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Sund:ly School 9 am., Wor;bip • ,() u.m

Sti\ trS\ llle C.ommunlt) Church
Sunda) S.hool 10.00 am, Sunday \\orsh1p
11.00 am \\edncsday 1 00 pm Pastor.
8rydn 8t MISsy Oatley

0&amp;\is Christian Fello~&lt; 'hip
(Non-denonunauonal fello\\Shtp)
.\lccllng m the Metgs Middle School
Culctcna l'~to~ Chris Stewart
I0:00 am • Noon Sunda); Informal
Wor&lt;hip, Ch1ldren's mini•try

Beginning' Chun:h
Pomero)
Pastor; Brian Dunham, Wur~hip • 9:25
am., Sunday School- 10.45 u m.
:'lit\\

Conununlt~ or Chri~t
l'on!and·Raclne ku. , Pa,tor: Jim Profiin,
Sunday School - 9·30 am , \\ors:~1p 10 30 a m , Wcdnesda) Semccs - 7 00

Rock Spring'
Pastor: Dewa) ne Stutler Sunday School •
9:00 a.m . Worship • I 0 a rn Youth
Fe' o.,.slup, Sunda) - b p.m l'.arly Sunday
worship ~ :am Lenora Lc:1fhett

Clifton Tabernacle Church
Clifton.\\ \a. Sunday School • 10 am .•
Worsh1p - 7 p m.. Wednesday Servtce • •
p.m.
The Ark t'hun:h
3773 Georges Creel Ro;ld GalltpoliS OH
Pastor Janue \\ rreman, Sunday ServiCe)·
10:30 am V.ednesday 7 p m ThursdJ)
Pra)er &amp; Praise at 6 pm Classes for all
ages e•ery Sunday &amp; \\ednc~y
"ww.lhcarkchmcb.nc!

pm

'
Rtlhel \\orship Center
39782 St Rt 7, 2 nules south of Tuppers
PlaJn,, OH :&gt;:on-denot:' n:monal IHth
C'ontempomr) Plinse &amp; Wonh1p. Pastor
Rob Barber Assoc Pastor Karyn Da',;
Youth Duector Betty 1-ulks. Sunda)
serv1ces 10 am \\ershtp &amp; 6 pr:: Famtl)
L.fe ClllSSC&gt;, V.ed &amp; Th~:• I! ght Ufe
Groups at 7 pm Thurs momtn~ ladtes'
Lt'e Group at 10 Outer U:."!lns Youth life
Group on \\ed C\enm~ from 6·30 to 8·30
\ "11 us online at www bcthel10c org

Rutland
Pastor. John Chapr.an Sunda) School
9:30am.. \\orsh1p 10 30 am , Thursday
S.:mces - 7 p.m
Saltm Center
Pastor: \\1lliam K. Marshall, Sunday
School 10:15 a.m. \\'orslup • 9:15am,
B1ble Stud)· !\londay 7·00 pm
SDOI\\flle
Sunda) School 10 a m., Wor\htp • 9 a m

run G~~l Churt:b
or tbt- l.hing Sa\iOr
RtJ3S, AnLqUit). Pastor Jesse Moms.
Scmcesc Saturday 2.00 p m

\sh Stn'dl'hun:h
398 A•h St .. !lluldlcpott-Pastors .\lark
Morrow &amp; Rodne) \\alker Sunday
School • 9:30 a.m , Momtng \\or-hip I!L30 11.111. &amp; 7:\)0 pm. Wednesday Sen·tce
-7:00p.m., Youlb Scr\·ice- 7·00 p.m.
\ gape I ifc Center
"l'ull.(1ospcl Chur,·h", P.-to" John &amp;
Patty Wade, 603 Sccnnd Ave • .\lil'iOn. 773~0 17, Sen tee t1me: Suntla) 10.30 n.m ..
Wednesda) 7 pm

Bethan)
Pastor: John Roze\\1CZ Sunday School •
10 a.m . Worsh1p 9 a.m .. Weo.Jncsday
Servu:es- 10 a.m.
Carmel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Roc1ne. Ohm.
Pa,tor: John Rotewicl, Sunday School •
9·45 o~.m .. Wor,hip - 11:00 a.m , R1blc
Srud&gt; Wed. 7..&gt;0 p.m

Salem Communi!) ( 'hun:h
Back of West Columh1a. \\'\'a om LJC\ mg
Road, Pastor Charles Roush 1.304) 675
2288, Sunda) S&lt;·hool 9 30 am, Sunda)
evening ..enke 7 1)0 pm, ll1bi) Srud)
Wednesday -en1ce 7:00pm
Hobwn Chri,tian ftllu~&lt;ship Chur(h
Pa,tor· Her-chel \\ hlle SundJy School10 :am. Sunda) Chun:~ \CI'\Ite • b·;() pm

,\hundant Graa
92J S. Thttd St., Mtd&lt;! epon. ~lor Terc.a
Davas Sunday ser\lce. 10 a.m.,
\\ Cdncsd.ly sen JC'e, 7 p m.

\lominl! SU.r
Pastor. John Rozel' tel. Sunday School
II am.\\orslup-lOam
East Letart
Pastor: Bill \larsball Sunday School •
9a m. Wo.-b!p 10 a.m. 1st Sunday
e\ tf) month e,-ehmg serv ce 7·00 p m. •
Wedncsday-7pm
Racine
Pastor Rev \\ 1lliam 1\lanhall, Sunda)
Scbool - 10 a m , \\ orshtp • II
a.o We~y Semces 6 pm; Thur 81ble
SCUd) i pm

W~sday7pm

Re&gt;toratlon Christian f'cllo" sblp
9!65 Hooper Road. Athens, Pastor
Lonruc Coats, Sunday Worship 10:00 dm.
\\edne&gt;da) 1 P'-'

t'alth t'ull Gospel Cburcb
Long Bottom, Pastor Steve Reed. Sunda)
School - 'J JO ~.m. \\orsh1p - 9·3() am
and 7 p.m., Wednes.b) - 7 p r:: Frtda) •
fellowship 5Cr\ 1ce 7 p m

Jlo~otllralingMinlstrlrs
~t.Rt.l24Langs,lllc,Oil

\tiddleJl&lt;lfl Communit) Chul'\'b
575 Pearl St .. ~ltddlep&lt;&gt;n , Pa~ror S:un
Anderson, Sunda) :;~hool 10 a.m.,
henlng 7:30 p.l!l .• W~dnesday Serv1cc •
7:30p.m

Bethel Church
T"wnship Rd 41i~C, Sunday Sch&lt;)(li 'J
a.m. Worship
10 am , Wedne.,d.ly
S.:n.1ces • 10 am

faith \aile) labernarle Church
Raile) Run Ruad. J&gt;a,lllr Re1 Emmell
Ral•&gt;on, SunJay !Ovcnmg 7 p.m.,
l1111"da) Smtcc • 7 p.m

Hockingport Chun:h
Kathryn \V ey. S~!!da) Sc!Jool - 9 30
m .. Wor:-hip 10 JO a.m . Pa•tor Ph· ·;~
Bell
foreh l.11UT("b
Co. Rd 63 Sunda) School - 9 JO am •.
V.or-h1p 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene

Point Rock Cbul'\'h of the :'liazaJ'\'ne
Route 61;9. Alban). Re' lJt')d Gnmm,
pastor Sunda) School 10 am, "orhstp
SCf\ !t'r Jl am. tl tntng SCI'\ ICC 7 pm. \\ W
pra) cr m«ting 7 pm
\fiddle port Church or the :-lotil"'n''
Po&gt;tor: Leonard Powell, Sunday S,hO&lt;.•I •
9:30 a.m.,Worship IO:JO.n.m, 6:30p.m ..
Wednesday s~nl&lt;'eS 7 p.m ..
Reedsville Frtlon ship
Church of the !\azarene, Pa,tor· Rus~etl
Carson . Sunday School - 9 30 am ..
Wo,...hip • 10:-1.5 a.m., 7 p.m, Wednesday
Sei"\1Ce&gt; • 7 p.m.
Syra~ Cbur&lt;"b or the :-lazartne
Sunday School - 9 30 a.o \\orsh1p -

.....

~

FUL Gospet, Cl Pastors Robcn &amp; Robcna
Musser. Sunda) School 9 .J() am .
Worsl:·p 10·11.' am
7 00 pm. \\~
Servtee 7il0 pm
Team Jesu.• Minhtrit'S
Pastor- Edd.e Baer. Mecung '11
;\lcchamc Street. Pomcro),Oil Serv1ce
el"el') Sunda) II 00 am. Hoi) Smoke
Sen.ce 6 pm

HarrisoDI illr Communi!) Church
Pa1tor. Theron Durham. suLda) - 9:30
am and 7 p.m . Wednesda) • 7 p.m

Cool•illr t'niled .\lethodht Pari\h
Pa,tor· Helen Kline. Coohtlle Church,
Mam &amp; Fifth St.. Sun. School - 10 om ,
Wol"ihip- 9 a.m .. Tues. Service'- 7 p.m.

•

Rejoicingl.ifr thun·h
500 :\ 2nd A\e , Mtddleport. ra~tor;
Mike Foreman,l'a•tor Ementu~ IJ•WTen'e
Foreman. Wo~h•fl' 10.00 am
Wednesday Serv.ces - 7 p m

Pentecostal
Pcntecn~tali\,wmhl)

Pastor· St Rt. 124, R~cme, Tornado Rd.
Sunday School - !0 a.m., t\en ng - 7
p m., Wednesday Sen1ccs • 7 p m.

Presbyterian
Harrisonr!Uc Pmbyterlan Church
Pastor. Roben Mmhall. \\orshtp • 9:00
am Sunda)

S)rPWSt' \liS!oion
1411 Bndgeman St,., Syracuse. Pastor
Re\ Ro) Thompson. Sond:ly Sc!!ool 10
am. E1e111ng- 6 p ~ , Wednesday Semce
-7pm.

,

tfazet Communi!'. Church
Off Rt 124. Pastor Ed\CI Han, Sund.l)
Sehool- 9 30 a ~ Worship 10·30 am.
7'0pm
l&gt;)l"lo\ llle (.'ommunit} Chun·h
\unda) School - 9 30 am . Won.':.p
10. 'JO um , 7 p.m.
\lur'e fha~l Chul'\'h
Sunda) school • 10 a m.. Worsh1p
11
urn .. Wednesday Sen1,e -7 p.m.

SeYenth-Day Ad,·entist
::&gt;e•enth-Da~ Ad\fntl&gt;t
Mulbcrr) !Its Rd Pomeroy. Saturda)
Sen ace&lt; Sabbatll 8c""t'l • 2 p m ,
;.vorshtp • 3 p.m.

~~?~~!!~n !~!~~~~~~ •

..

Folth Go,pel Church
Long Bottom, Sunda)· School - 9;30 a.m ..
Wor~hiJ&gt; - 10:45 a.m. 7:30 p.m.,
Wedn&lt;'day 7·.10 p.m.
t ull Go~~ll.lghthou~
3JO.IS lltland Ro~d. Pomero). Pastor Roy
Hunter, Sundav School- 10 a.m .. E1ening
7 30 p m., ~y &amp; Thurs. - 7:30p.m.
South Bethel Community Church
S1lver R d e P sto L nda DameViood

Middlepor1 l'mb)lerbn
Pastor. J.:::cs Sn)ikr 'iunda) School 10
a m. "il!'lih1p serviCe 11 ~

in Chrl!.t Chnl'\'h
Texas Commumty 36J II Wtckham Rd.
Pa&gt;tor Peter :&gt;i01rttndale. Sund3y ~chool •
9:30 a m.. Wor,htp - 10.30 a.m 7:00
p.m .. Wednesda) Semces • 7:00 p.m.
Youth group n1eet1ng 2nd &amp; 4th Sunda&gt;'
7 p.m.
Eden l:nited R"'thren in C'hrht
Slate Route 124. bct\\een ReedS\'!lle &amp;:
Ho.::kmgpon. Sunda) School 10 n.m.,
Sanda) \\or~htp- II 00 am WednesdAy
Sen 1C"CS - 7.00 p m . Panor- M. Adam
Will

Church announcements sponsored by these area merchan ts
"Let your light so shine before
men, that they may sec your
good '' orks and glorify your
Father in heaven.''
Matthew 5:16

jftshcr, ~nbcrson, JflcDamcl
jfuncrnl jt}omc
Middleport, OH

Let your light .\O ~hine before
men, that they may see your
good \vurks and glorify your
Father in lteavm."
Jlcmhew 5:16

740-992·5 141

James Anderson, Adam McDanlel-

499 Richland .·\nnue, Athens
740-594-6333

1-800-451-9806

Dirc..:tors
Pomero), 0 11

740-992-544-l

www

Commit thy works
If ye abide in Me, alld My
words abide in you, ye shall unto the Lord, and thy
ask what ye will, and it shall
thoughts shall be
be dolle unto you.
· established.
John15:7
Proverbs 16:3

SWISHER
&amp; LOHSE
www, ThePharmacy4 U.com

Prescription Ph. 992-2955

White Funeral Home ''For God so loved the
Blessed are the pure "So I strive always to keep
Since 1858
world that he gave his one
in heart; for they my conscience clear before
9 Fifth Street
God and man."
and only Son .. .''
shall
see
God.
Coolville, Ohio
John 3:16
Act.\ 24:16
Matth
ew
5:8
740-667-3110

•

For God so loved the H'OJ
that he gm•c his only
begotten son ...
Jo/111 3: I 6

-

"l.tt c~rJl:mil'l ~tfp
preted your {.urtify•

SuppreSSton • Extinguisher; • Spnnkler!i
• SecUlJI}

172 N. 2nd A\ e. l'ltUdlepon. OH

(800) 353-0l&gt;37 Fax:

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
located Je,., than 30 mmutes from
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1·7-'0·667-3156
"Still small
ro care"

MY grace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
strength is made
Perfect in weakness.
11 Cor. 12:9
The Lord does not look at the thing~
man looks at, man looks at the
om ward appcarancr, the l.ord look~
at the heart.

1 Samuel 16·7 b

�PageA3

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, December 11,

Come! Let us adore him!
L~t·:-;

begin today with the
that where t\\O or
three of the Lord's followers
gather together in His name
the Lord is himself immediately present in their midst.
So. then. the Lord is here
!&gt;.1ith lb -- in our homes. our
wns and our villages. "0
ttle town of Pomeroy ... '?!?"
Or. ~liddlcport'? I low about
R.tcine. Rutland. etc.'? Why
not! Is there not a ··song m
the Air" that is common all
believers.
everywhere?
Come. let us all s111g together
our praises of God!
Unlike the adhercnt:s of
Islam, better known to us m;
Muslims - who are required
to joumey to their revered
site of i\kcca at least once in
their lifetime - God's people really don't have to go
anvwhere. Travelmg to such
pi~lce~ in the Middie East as
Bethlehem. N;wtreth. of
e\ en Jcm~alem are always
option~ the followers of
Jesus may choose. Should
we never see them. heaven
will still be open to us.
I don't travel much the~e
days. Hm\cver. when I was
younger 1 traveled rather
extensivt!ly over the course
of &lt;iix years - thanks. in
)art. to your financial suppot1 (think: your tax- dollars
at work!). I worked my way
from port-to-port. as the
means of my transportation
consisted of three sea-wmthy
and combat-read\ vessels
supplied by the l'.S. Navy.
Each of those ships took me
'anous place~ in the wo'rld.
with some cruises lasting
lon~er than others. Some
place~ \\ere more enjoy able
than others. :-.uch as the
Parthenon and the Acropolis.
in Greece. Cannes. France
was super, a-; were Abidjan on

alive and well. I also have
this mental picture of that
same Christ child asleep on
the }1ay. while the bright star
hovered above and illuminated the scene below.
God used that Christmas
Eve of 1972. far removed as
I was from my parents and
home. to speak to my heart
in a way I had nevet: experienced Him before. That was
the Christmas I really
appreciated the Christ of the
world in his first Advent. as
through his Spirit he made
himself known to me.
You might say that was my
first Epiphany: I've since had
others. After the Navy I went
back to college and majored
in Religion. and learned
about the various religions
I'd observed in those foreign
countries. To this day rm
learning about Jesus. and I'm
working on that obstinate
part of me which insists on
doing things my way, instead
of tmsting the Lord and relying on Him for my "daily
bread." Fottunately, God is
patient: indeed, "He's still
working on me!"
Of course. I'll never know
evetything about the Lord;
but, He never told me I had
to. All He ever said was,
"Follow Me." Point: life isn't
about you or me, or whatever hoopla and nonsense the
world puts forth. Neither is it
about what we want to be, or
what we want out of life. It's
about God in Christ. and loving and serving Him with
heart and soul. We don't have
to go to Bethlehem to find
Jesus; He's right here! So Come. let us adore Him.''
(The Rev. Tom Johnson is
pastor of the Trinity
Congregatit:mal Church in
Pomeroy.)

obv10u~.

to

•

Rev.
Tom
Johnson

the lvory Coast. Singapore.
Sti Lanka, anJ the Seychelles
Islands - to mm1e a few of
the more exotic ports 1 visited.
Yet. as is the case with the
majority of active-duty personneL I missed out on n lot
of t~tmily get-togethers and
holidays.
Of
the
six
Chtistmases that came and
went during my enlistment. I
got horne for one-seven
months prior to my discharge!
However, it was the
Christmas I spent in the
Middle East. in '72. that
impacted me most. and
which
was the
most
poignant of all - until our
children were born, that is.
To this day I remember that
Christmas Eve worship service in the chapel on the Navy
base, at Manama. Bahrain.
The setting was quiet and
subdued. serene and altogether spiritual in its essence. I
couldn't help but think of
what that first Christmas must
have been like for Joseph and
Mary. with the Christ child
lying there in the mange~. in
the company of the vanous
animals. and with the adoring
shepherds likewise sharing
that time and space.
Even now, as I'm writing
this. I .imagine the baby
Jesu~ crying out for the first
time. assuring Joseph and
Mary their son - the child
promised Mary by the angel.
Gabriel - was very much

Iraqi refugee group seeks Mass. cultural
center to teach ancient Mandaean religion
BOSTON
(AP&gt;
Refuc:ee activists arc developing plans to build a
l\1andacan cultural center
me\\here in Massachusetts
o the increasing number of
Iraqi Mandaeans settling in
the area can try to preserve
their rapidly disappearing
·t\VO-millennia-old religion.
Mandaean doctor Wisam
Breegi said activists hope to
raise $2.5 million for a cultural center in Boston or
Worcester to offer job training to Mandaean refugees
and teach Mandaean religiOn to refugee children. ·
Mandaeanism is a tiny.
ancient religiOn that views

ts leading efforts to create a
center. "It will probably take
a long time, but I trunk we
can do this."
,
Breegi said organizers are
looking at a number of
potential sites located beside
a running body of water - a
requirement for a Mandaean
house of worship.
The rei igion does not
allow converts, and those
who marry non-Mandaeans
are no longer considered
Mandaean to some. In the
1990s
about
70,000
Mandaeans lived in Iraq.
Today. only around 3,000 or
so remain and another 5,000
to 10,000 live in Iran.

John the Baptist as its great
teacher. Around 60.000
Mandaeans remain in the
world after fleeing Iraq and
iran because of persecution.
Breegi said a center could
attract one of the world's two
dozen remaining Mandaean
priests to Massachusetts,
where more than 100 families have re!)ettled. making
the state home to one of the
largest Mandaean settlements in the United States.
"We're getting to be diluted
and we're going to lose our
identity if we don't do something;· said Breegi. who has
helped hundreds of refugees
resettle in Massachusetts and

A Hunger For More
In the Ohio River Valley,
December is a peculiar
month. When we think of
December we tend to visualize snow. the perfect backdrol? for a Bing Crosby
Cbnstmas movie marathon.
Yet, as was demonstrated
this past week. each day is a
pot luck adventure when it
comes to weather.
Some December days are
dry and some are wet. Some
are frigid, but some are
almost ~balmy. Some are
bright and some are dark.
And as far as it being bright
or not, people aren't the
only ones who are a bit confused by the tricky weather
we've been having.
On Monday evening. for
example, I noticed that the
modest array of Christmas
lights on our front porch did
not turn on when dusk had
fallen. At first, I assumed
that something was wrong
with the lights themselves. I
tinkered for awhile with
them and finally realized
that the problem was not
with the lights per se. but
with sunlight (or the Jack of
it actually). I' unplugged
them and then replugged
them into their receptacle
and they were then fine. It
was then that I recalled how
dark it had been on Monday.
Heavy, low-hanging clouds
had
been
ponderously
rolling across the sky all
day long. The sensors in the
Christmas lights had simply
never detected the arrival of
day and therefore had not
reset so that they were ready
for the coming of another
nightfall.
Monday was a dark day
literally and December is a
dark month, or at least
would seem so with its ever
shortening days. except for
the fact that the glittering
glow of Christmas season
lights have a way livening
things up.
Be that as it may, darkness has a way of creeping
into our hearts. Physically,
we need some exposure to
sunlight so we can be
healthy and whole. I n fact.
you can order an personal
artificial sunlight lamp from
Target if you are so inclined
to combat that pesky thing
we now call "Seasonal
Affective Disorder" (or
"SAD"). But since the Ohio
River is neither in nor near
the Arctic Circle, perhaps
you will forgo this trendy
little item.
Spiritually speaking, we
need light, too. for just as
literal .darkness suppresses
our physical well-being,
spiritual darkness does so
with our souls. The sun and

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

its various benefits to us are
illustrative of God's Son
and the light that He shines
into our lives if we will
open our hearts to Him.
For some reason, when
we think about light and
darkness
during
the
Christmas season,~ images
of Rudolph come to mind
and our children think of
him as being the one who
''saves'' Christmas. Why?
Because his "very shiny
nose'' can lead Santa's
sleigh through the darkest
and stormiest night that the
North Pole has ever seen.
Rudolph ·s story reminds
me a little of Jesu~· love.
Before you say, '·Yeah.
right," bear with me just a
moment.
The Bible says in John
1:9-1 3, that "The true light
that gives light to every
man was coming into the
world. He was in the world,
and though the world was
made through Him, the
world did not recognize
Him. He came to that which
was His own. but His own
did not receive Him. Yet to
all who received Him. to
those who believed in His
name, He gave the right to
become the children of God
born not of natural
descent. nor of human decision or a husband's will. but
born of God."
Light coming into the
world? Not received by His
own? Kind of like Rudolph
being called names and not
being allowed to play in the
reindeer games. don't you
think?
But deadlier even than
the storm that nearly cancels Santa's Christmas Eve
toy delivery are the thick,
black clouds of selfishness.
hurt. anger. and fear that
constantly roll across our
lives. threatening to choke
out hope, purpose. and
fruitfulness.
And let's face it: some
days are darker than others.
Some people are nearly
overcome with hopelessness stemming from the
weight of financial cares.
struggles with health. or the
breakup of relationships.
For many. this is a very dark
time indeed. For many,
there is no joy in Christmas

for . they've either never
seen in their own hearts the
light of Je-;us' love shining
through or they've forgotten
how bright His love is.
Many arc stranded on their
own versions of the Island
of Misfit Toys. vapors and
fogs of doubt and fear
screening from eyes of faith
the reality that God is on
His way. or that He is in fact
already present with them.
Yet there is no sin and
despair that the laser light of
Jesus' forgiveness cannot
pierce it and eradicate it
with the light of hope. And
when I say ·'hope" I mean
that it's a guaranteed thing
with God. The Scriptures
tell us that IF we receive
Him as Lord and Savior.
then He WILL gne us the
right of relationship with
Himself through the Son.
So whatever clouds may
be hanging low in your life
right now (or at any time for
that matter). you have the
prom1se of a light that will
guide you faithfully home
to the Father's heart with all
the joy, peace, and love that
comes from knowing Him.
If you need that kind of
hope right now. then you
perhaps need to pray to
Him, "Jesus. with Your love
so bright. won't Yop drive
away my night~" As you
trust Him and yield yourself
to that kind of love (the ]0\ e
that took Jesus to the cross
of Calvary in your place),
you '11 find that there is no
darkness that cannot be
,overcome.
(Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministered in.
sollfhern Ohio the past 14 ?
years and is the author of
The Fairv Tale Parable'i.
He is the pastor of Pathway
Community Church and
ma} ·be reached for comments or questions by email
at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis .com.)
Copyright © 2009. Thom
Mollohan.

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

Guard Your Eyes
The

eye~

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at. Desire is truly the source of
mosr of our suffering, and
improper dcs.ires are a great ..ource
ot human evil. Consider aU the
pain and suftcri ng caused by
greed and lmt. whirh arc often
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something thar evoked desire. So,
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which we know will evoke unwholesome desire~. 'Jhe t')'CS are
indeed, the w1ndows of rhc soul, and everything thar we arc
exposed to \isually. somehow enters or tou~hes the soul.~~ the
philosopha Niet7.S(hc put it, "if you gazt roo long into an ahys\,
the .lb)'s~ gazc5 abo into you." 'lint\ we should guard our snub by
guJrding our eye~. l:.xerdse a wholesome chastity oft he eyes.

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PageA4

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, December 11,

Sitting and sipping specialty
coffee will probably taste better
Every year, usuall) within two weeks uf the 25th,
Terry and 1 have a day out
together just to shop for
Christmas. I actually think
it is her favonte clay of the
year, although the actuul
day vanes from year toyear according to our
schedules. This is a joyful
outing for her about which
she seriously engage~ in
some lengthy mvestigation.
She labors - joyfully.
mind you - over the sales
paper that come out each
week
after
the
Thanksgiving holiday and
gets involved in inquir)
from the giftees she has m
mtnd for fulfilling the
objective of her one-day
quest.
. For the longest time. !"-.he
always consulted me for
input for which gifts to
look concerning the boys
and for others. However, it
began to occur to me that.
regardless of what I suggested in response to her
questions. there was always
a ''but, what about this'?" or
"I believe I have a better
suggestion." It got to the
point that I realized my
ideas carried little merit
with her because she
already had her purchasmg
agenda in mind. l felt like
one-\\ as-company,
buttwo-was-a-crowd. I followed dutifully from store
to store, only to wear
myself out uselessly.
So, I formulated my own
Christmas shoppmg agenda
one year, and I have -;tuck
to the same ever since.
First, I drive her to the preicribed gift sources according to her research. But,
then once inside. I treat
myself to a specialty cof-

· stores that want to sell to us
at Christmas time.
It is found in the fact how
many businesses have
observed so many unChrist-like
attitudes conPastor
cerning Christmas from
Branch
people nssoL·iatcd with the
church at large. People of
the church have fussed and
complained so long about
the Christmas season in
fee. I purchase a crossword general that businesses are
puzzle book and 1 find a assured we do not any more
comfortable
place
to have heart for the real
sit ....and wait. Of course. meaning of Christmas.
when she acquires too
In due course. we have
many packages in hand, I come to realize that many
will carry them out to the busine'\st;s care vef) little
car. When she is read) for a for the real reason of the
meal. I eat wilh her. If she ~cason anyway. Man) bustwants to see a movie later nc~s owner~ and leadership
on. I take her to the movte. obviou!))y do not want to be
But, other than that. I let
associated with Jesu~ Christ
her have at it.
or offend people of other
Now. she still asks for
input from me. Since we religious groups, which
went the cell-phone route a defy and deny Christian
few vears back, she will beliefs about Christ.
That is why saying
st iII call from \ arious mall
"Merry
Chri&lt;&gt;tmas'' in the
locntions for a consultaconfines
of such businesses
tion. But. the tactful
has
been
eliminated from
de\ eloped
response I
company
policy. Such
remains the same. "Well.
my lovely darling, what do companies have become
you think?" What a won- arrogant in their perceived
that
the
derful que:-tion. because assurance
Christma~
season
i~
no
she always seem to come
longer
Christ-centered
by
to a joyful concluston when
the people of the church.
I a&lt;&gt;k it.
This is where I make a They have observed our
risky judgment. Why does apparent attitude concernshe continue to ask me for ing the birth of the Savior.
input? I think she wants to and the season is merely
be assured that I do not part of the yearly accountwant to be per:-onally ing for them and nothing
more than "have to'' for us.
involved.
Why cannot we return to
However, if this is true.
the position I have been the right perspective that
taking is considerably more Christmas IS "good tidings
poignant because my atti- of great joy'!" Maybe my
tude unfortunately repre- specialty coffee will taste
sents where our Christian better as J jo) fully considsocial dilemma present!) er Christ more conscienstands concerning the tious!).

River Valley· FCA members

enjoy retreat at Canter's Cave
The teens spent the
RIVER VALLEY FCA
evening eating, worshipping. and listening to differJACKSON - On Nov. ent
speakers,
Seth
13-14, the River Valley Montgomery. Pastor Carl
High School Fellowship of Wttrd and River Valley
Christian Athletes hosted its alumni David Holliday and
second annual winter retreat Ben Shrock.
at Canter'~ Cave 4-H Camp.
Around midnight, the stuThe theme of the retreat dents hiked to~ the pond.
was ·•rupple.'' Students dis- where they lit candles and
cussed how accepting Christ sane praise songs and ga\ e
as your Savior is like tossing per~onal testimonies under
a stone into the water- that a starry sky. To finish off the
one decision affects every night. they were entertained
other aspect of your life.
and inspired by Roman's
BY CARISSA WOLFE

Highv.ay.
The retreat was "simply
amazing,'' said FCA member Jade Williams.
"It wa!) a wonderful experk-nce," senior Brad Harless
agre~d. "Thanks to the
retreat, I feel closer to God
and to my classmat~s."
The retreat b the result of
efforts and support from
various area churches
Oak
including
White
Enterprise Baptist, Vinton
Bapti&lt;&gt;t and
Elizabeth
Chapel.

Point Pleasant Nazarene Church
holds annual Christmas dinner
POINT
PLEASANT. Barbara Oliver. Belva Bruce,
and
Barbara
W.Va. - The Ftrst Church Kiser. Sharon McCallister, Mitchell. John.
Gina,
of the Nazarene recently Dee Harbrecht, Gcnny Peyton. unci Ethan Jordan,
held their annual Christma~ Holley. Charles Cobb, Dave, Katrina, llillary. and
dinner. The Martha Gro~1p Dotty Rickard. Pastor Jim. Kristin Reigel. Garnett
#3 was in charge.
Cheryl and Jay Ellis. Emily Fislwr. Judy Hills, Gary and
The tables were beautiful- Fowler.. Larry Coder. Casey Dee Rickard, Mary Vickers,
ly decorated and the dinner McCallister, Ann and Barry Abram, Dcnni~ • .lack. and
was delicious.
bpling. Judy Dennis, Roy Lois Pyles, Amy, Brian. and
The group v. as enter- and Pam Hay, Doris Caitlin Carney. Charlie and
tained \\ ith singing by Deweese, Marv Deweese, Jchn Ann Pittman, Staci and
Casey McCallister. Miriam Bill and Betty' Jo Crump. Caleb Grimm. Jenny and
Gordon, Miranda Haubaker. Lmda Fisher, Brett, Paula. Lloyd Roach. Tim, Melissa.
and Adam Roush. Jack Alan, Kimberly. Andrew, Aaron. Allison. and Kaylee
Pyles read the Chnstmas and Deloris Jones. Bonnie. Holle). Clifton. L)dta,
stof)' and Charlie Pittman Scott,
and
Cassie Mtric~m,
and
Samuel
offered prayer before din- Goldsberry. Shane. Loretta, Gordon. Seth Thaxton,
~er.
and Miranda Haubaker, Greg and Judy Fowler,
: Those attending were Adam Roush. Wendy and Tammy. Brandon, Alana
Marylin
Higginbotham, Joshua Meadows, Becky. Welch and Fred Kristen.

2009

I Church Notebook
Squire Parsons in
concert at Cheshire
Baptist' Church

1

CHESHIRE - Southern gospel legend
Squire Parsons will be in concert at 7 p.m.,
Saturday. Dec. 12 at Cheshire Baptist
Church.
Parsons has been ministerin~ as a solo
&lt;U1ist since 1979. He has wnttell many
gospel music classics, includmg his best
known piece. "Sweet Beu I ah Land,"
\vhich was the Singing News song of the
year in J98 J •
The native of West Virginia was inducted into the Southern Gospel Music
Association Hall of Fame on Oct. 9. 2008.
Pastor Steve Little invites the public to
attend.

Christmas program
at River of Life UMC
ADDISON - River of Life United
Church will present its annual
youth Christmas program at 2 p.m ..
Sunday. Dec. 13.
Cookies and punch will he served following the program. The public is invited.
River of Life UMC is located at 35
Hillview Drive, Addison.
~lethodist

Refreshments will be sen ed following
the service.
,
River of Life UMC is located nt 35
•
Hillview Drive. just off Addison Pike.

Christ UMC
meeting times
GALLIPOLIS
Christ United,
t-.lcthodist Church in Gallipolis meets for
services every Sunday and Wednesday. .
Sunday school begins at 9:30 a.m..
Morning worship and Children's Church
arc held at 10:30 a.m. Sunday. The
Wednesday Night Kids meeting runs from•
4 to 6 p.m. Bible &lt;&gt;tudy is held from 6:30
to 8 p.m. each Wednesda).
Christ United Methodist Church is
located at 9688 Ohio 7, !)Outh of
Gallipolis. The Re'. Kandy Nuce 1 the
senior pastor.

Church meeting
times posted

GALLIPOLIS - Nashville recording
artist The Lebeaus will be in concert at 6
p.m .. Sunday. Dec. 13 at College Hill
Church in Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va. Pastor
Darrell Johnson invites the public to
attend.

GALLIPOLIS - The church of Chri~t
in Gallipolis meets at 234 Chapel Drive. ,
Sunday meeting times are: 9:30 a.m .,
Bible cla~s; 10:30 a.m .. W()rship: 5 p.m .. ·
C\cning assernbl). Lewis Mikell is the .
speaker. The church meets at 7 p.m.·
Wednesday for Bible study.
In keeping with :-.lew Testament teach_:
ing and example, the Lord's Supper is
remembered each first day of the wee.
and singing is vocal, with no instrument&amp;
accompaniment.
free Bible courses are offered by mail,.
· or there are Chri~tians who would be glad
to study the Bible with you personally in
)OUr home. Send )OUr name and postal
address to the address above. or call 4461494 to take advantage of etther scn·ice.

Community Christmas
at River of Life UMC

Healing ·room open at
Garden of My Heart

ADDISO~ River of Life t;mtcd
1\lethodist Church will host a Commumty
Christmas Celebration at 7 p.m. on
Tuesday. Dec. 22. Special music includes
the cantata ''Hope Has Hands'' und the
combined choirs of River of l.1fc UMC
and Cheshire Baptist Church.

BIDWELL - Garden of :\ly Heart
Holy Tabemacle im ites the public to it
healing room. which 'is open from 6 to
7:30 p m. each Tuesday. The church is .
located on Ohio 850 in Bidwell.
For information. call 388-0414 or (304) '
675-0660.

Lebeaus in concert at
College Hill Church

Mattl1ew 1:23
Behold, a virgin shall be
ith child and shall bnng
forth a :-on. and they shall
caiJ his name Im-man-u-el.
which being interpreted is:
God is wrth us.
The annual cycle of
advent and Christmas
reminds us in earthly
hopes. dreams. struggle:and joy~: we need Him
with us to be cleansed of
our sin and to be filled w1th
the confident hope of eternal salvation.
This is whv the faithful
look forward to the coming
l\·tessiah and \Vhv we celebrate His coming in the
person of Jesu~. ~
As a child wounds up hi'&gt;
toy train. watches as it goe
around the track. through
the dark tunnel. and out
agam into the hght. he get$
up and goes out of the
room. but the little train
keeps running until it finally \vounds down and stops.
Some people think God
also set everything into
motion and that we are
no"' left alone to wind
down and even totally stop.
That view of God is not
true. God has always
desired to be with us. his
human creation.

Rev.
Bobby L.
Woods

the pagan empire to be ,,
instrument of fulfilling f
prophecies.
As Christmas approaches. man) will be on the
road. traveling to see family. The word Exodus can
be translated as "the journe) out'' or "departure." As
God's people wa~ leaving
Egypt. God was with them
in a pillur of cloud by day
and pillar of fire by night.
• Remember when our
days our happy and bright, •
or with difficulties. Jesus is
with us by da) and night.
Jesus was born into this
sin-darkened v.orld to shed
light and sah ation to all
who walk in darknes~ . But
thank God's Son \\ ho lay
in Bethlehem·s manger, for
He has touched us with a
mountain of His 10\e and
grace.
Lord Jesu . the light of
the world. \\e thank you
that your birth fills
heart with the brightness 1
your loving presence. ~1ay
your light shine through
my words and actions
among my family and i
that I meet.
(Re1•. Bobbv Uhod' is a
rew·ed United Metlwc/i.,r

Advent whets our anticipation of God coming
among us, just as He has
~aid, "Immanuel, God is
with us.'' Christmas is all
about the coming of Christ
to restore communion
God
and
between
humankind.
And so in the promi-;e of
hope. God foretold that a
Savror v.ould come to walk
with us, to emsh the power
of Satan. In the sacrament~.
we are gi\~en confidence of
hope of his forgiving pres-·
cncc as we read about the
amazing pro\ idence of God.
The Messiah ''as to be of
the family of David and to
be born in Bethlehem. but
the chosen parents lived in
Nazareth. I00 miles from
lkthlchl·m. A decree of
Rome required the parents
to go to Bethlehem, thu~
God makes the decree of m i11 ist er.)

n.

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Friday, December 11,

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www .mydailysentinel.com

2 009

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

Sheriff reports newest scam alert·

Obituaries
John Redovian, Jr.

received a telephone call
Tuesday from a woman
alleging to be an attorney
POMEROY - A local for her grandson. The
resident lost thousands of caller told the local woman
dollars in a recent telephone her grandson was in jail in
scam, Sheriff Robert Beegle Quebec, Canada, due to an
said Thursd~y. and the ca:;e automobile accident in a
has bcen turned over to the rental car, and that cash
of was required for his
Federal
Bureau
release.
I nvcst igat ion . .
The caller also advised
H~.:cglc said the resident
SENTINEL STAFF

MDSNEWSOMYDAILVSENTINELCOM

John Rcdovian Jr. of
Pomero). Ohio, a retired
teacher and guidance counselor. entered into rest on
Dec. 10, 2009 at Mount
Carn1el St. Ann's Hospital in
Westerville, Ohio.} le was 71.
he son of the late John
Anastasia Rcdovian, h~
• •ts born on Feb. 3, 193R in
Wolf Run, Ohio.
· After graduating from
Ohio Uni\ersity in llJ60. he
began his lifelong teaching
career at Middleport High
School. He left teaching
brief!) to "erve in the t:.S.
John Redovian, J r.
COLU~lBtJS- Treasurer
Army Intelligence Corps
Kevin L. Boyce announced
from 1961-1966 completing a tour of duty in the Republic today that the U.S Census
of Korea and achte\ ing the rank of Captain before retum- Bureau will hire 24,000
ing to teaching.
Ohioans to make sure everyHe made his home in Pomeroy, Ohio and attended the one is counted during the
Middleport Pre~byterian Church. He enjoyed readmg and 2010 Census. Nationwide.
talking about car&lt;;, traveling with his wife. and spending
The Bureau is seeking to
time\\ ith his grandchtldrcn in the Da)~ton area.
I hire hundreds of thousands of
He was a Jo, ing husband, father and grandfather.
census takers to help locate
He will be missed b) his wife of 43 years, Rosetta households anti conduct brief
''Tunic" Lisle Rcdovian and his two children: Leigh Anne personal interviews with resiBierstine, her husband Jim Bierstine Jr.. Lt. Col., USAF dents in an effort to ensure
(Ret.). and their sons Benjamin (6) and Nicholas (3) of 1 that everyone is. counted in
Dayton, Ohto: and Amy Ward and her husband Robe11, and the 2010 Decennwl Census.
their three chi ldren. Morgan (8). Emma (7) and Lucas (2),
These shol1-termjobs will
of Springboro, Ohio.
Visitation will bl' hl'ld on Saturdav, Dec. 12. from 4-8
p.m. at the Anderson McDaniel Funcr:al Home( 590 E Main
St., Pomerov. Ohio 45769. Funeral Services will be held on
Sunday. Dec. 13 at 2 p.m. also at the Anderson McDaniel
meral Home. Burial services will follow at Meigs
•
emory Gardens .
·
,
Memorial contributions may be made to the Mulberry
Community Center in care of ''God:-.net'' (God's
'eighborhood Escape fo~ Teens Youth Center) at ::!60
Mulberr) A\enuc. Pomeroy. OH 45769.
Monday, Dec. 14
An on-line registr) 1s available by logging onto
HARRISONVILLE
www.andersonmcdanicl.com.
Harrisonville 225 O.E.S.,
past
matrons
annual
Christmas party, 6 p.m. at
the Middleport Church of

the young man had suffered
a broken jaw. and that she
was calling on. his behalf
because he was having difticulty speaking.
The woman used an
electronic fund transfer at
Wai-Mart to send the
fund::. to Canada. The next
day, Beegle said, the
woman called her grandson and learned he had

been working and not in
Canada. at all.
Beegle said the case was
referred to the FBI because
it involved parties from outside the United States. He
issued yet another advisory
to the public to be wary of
any attempts to collect
money or any requests to
wire or send money unlel'ls
facts arc verified.

Census Bureau taking job applications
offer good pay, paid training
and reimbursement for
work related expenses. such
as mileage incurred while
conducting census work.
The treasurer pointed out
that :;chedules are flexible,
and could range from 20 to
40 hours per week. Some
assignments could last until
June 2010.
"Ohio, like manv other
states across the US have
witnessed an increase in jobless rates, "said Treasurer
Boyce. "These census jobs

not only offer residents the
opportunity to work, while
they arc 111 tranc;ition, but
allow these workers to perfOtm an important service
fur tbetr community.''
The 20 I 0 censu:- will
determine the distribution of
$400 billion annually of
~ovcrnment funding for critICal community services. As
chair of the 20 I 0 complete
count committee. Treasurer
Boyce said the data collected for the Census will also
help to decide Ohio's repre-

sentation in the U.S. House
of Representatives during
the next decade.
The employment test consi&lt;;ts of 28 multiple-choice
questions designed to measure the applicants skills and
abilities required to pcrfonn
a variety of census job:-.
To be scheduled for a test
immediately. contact: 1866-261-2010 or visit:
www.20 I Ocensusjobs .gov ,.
For n Jist of available jobs,
visit:
ww\v.ohiomeansjobs.corn.

Church
events

Sunday, Dec. 13
POMEROY - The Rev.
Jerry Fredericks will speak
at the Old Bethel Freewill
Baptist Church, at 6 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 14
RUTLAND - Commumty
Church of Rutland w111 present "Christmas Peace" 7
p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Center.

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations

Local Briefs

Forest trails closing
. Dec. 15
NELSONVILLE - Motorited trail riders, mountain bikers, und horseback rider~ IHtVC until Tuesday, Dec. 15
before the Wayne National Forest closes its designated
trails for the ~cason. Trails will remain open for hikers only.
In 2009, it's ~timatcd over 14,000 riders purchased trail
penmts to ride the Wayne National Forest's designated trail
sy:-.tem. The figure is comparable to last year, \Vhen 15.000
permits were sold.
During the off-~cason. the trail system is recovering from
the riding season and the Forest takes the opportunity to
make improvements to the trails. The off-season b also a
'ning opportunity for the Forest Volunteer Trail Patrol
gram. A training class for new recruits is being planned
the Ironton Ranger District for February.
The Forest ''ill reopen th~ trails on Ap~l 15, 2010. Leam
~o.~ about t~e many rec!'!atton opportumtrcs on the Forest by
vtsttmg the Forest web sttc at http://www.fsfed.us/r9/wayne/.

Modern Woodmen
POMEROY
The Modern Woodmen will meet for
breakfast at the Meigs .\1useum annex on Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. The cost for udults and children to attend will be
$1 with tht: Woodmen to pay thc balance.
The breakfast is one of two events being held as a
"matching fumJ" project to raise money for the Meigs
County liistorical Society. In addition to Saturday's breakfast, the recent Chri:-.tmas dinner there was a part of the project. The Woodmen will match up to $2.500 whatever is
raised through the two events.

'

• Ri&lt;.:k E. Hawley. 45.
Middleport. cntc;red a guilty
plea to a count of receiving
stolen property. Sentencing
was continued to January.
He remains free on bond
pending sentencing.
• Samara A. Stone, 25.

For the Record

InVeS IQa IOn

Middleport. pleaded guilty
to one count of burglary,
and two counts of possession of Oxycodone and
Hydrocodone. Sentences
would be served consecutively for a total of seven
years. Williams said.

Hunter will be sentenced in
February. Their bonds were
continued. Thev
were
charged as the rc~ult of an
investigation into illegai
drug activity in Middleport
conducted in Augu~t by the
police department there.

Meters from Page At

,

I from the Ohio Water Supply 60 payments to pay off it off parked in different neigh~ Revolving Loan Account

which is at zero interest.
Approximately $35,000 in
contingency muncy was to
be set aside for water well
and meter base replacements if needed. Back in
July. Musser said if this
money isn't used. it is then
deducted from the balance
of the loan. If the loan
relllains
at
$81 ,000,
Pomeroy will be looking at

with payment-; of $1.350
being made semi-annually.
Once the di!!ital meters
are installed, an employee
with the water department
will dtive to different neighborhoods with a machine
that reads the meters without that employee having to
lift a meter ltd. Basically,
there is a computer/device
inside the village truck that
takes the readings while

matter of four hours.
borhoods. Each meter i~
In addition, Musser said
numbered to match the the digital meters ''ill proaccount to which it belongs. vide more accurate readm~s
Musser satd one of the for customers and the VJIbtg~est benefits to having
Jage. In same cases where
digttal meters i:; it ''ill free older, defective meters have
up employees. saying in the been in place, this could
past a team of three to four mean more additional rc\~
employees would read the enue for the village when
meters in the village, taking customers are charged lor
around two days. .i\ow, what they actually us~:,
those same meters can be making it fair to all water
read by one employee in a customers.

Southern rrom Page AI
report card's statistics
include: a graduation rate
where Southem scored 98
percent. well above the state
requirement of 90 percent.
Southern also scored a 95.1
percent for its attendance
rate compared to the state'~
requirement of 93 pacent .
Southern
eleventh
graders who took the Ohio
Graduation Test also scored
above the state's requirement of 85 percent in all
but one category. science.
where they scored 84.9 percent. just missing the cut
off. Eleventh
~rader:;
scored 98.1 percent m reading, 86.8 percent in mathematics, 98.1 percent in
writing, 88.7 percent in
social studies.
Southern's
se\ enth
graders met the state

Commission from Page At

EITC

• Joshua T.H. Hunter. 26,
Middleport, pleaded guilty
to one count of burglary and
three counts of possession
of
Oxycodone
and
Hyd~ocodone. He could be
sentenced to eight year:;.
Williams said Stone and

,

According to ODE. more
than 85 percent of school
districts and almost 72 percent of school buildmgs
received ratings of effective
or higher on this year's
report cards. For the 2008POMEROY
The traditional Breakfast with Santa 09 school year. Eastern
A ervance will be held from 9 to II a.m. at the Meigs Local
School
Di~trict
. :tseum annex. Included in the activities will be a craft received an effective rating
session conducted by the teenage 4-H leaders.
while the Meigs [ocal
School District received a
continuous improvement
rating. There are six ratings
school districts can receive
and include (from hi~heo;;t to
t"
lowest) excellent wtth dis.
t
I t!nction, ~xcellen.t, effect1ve, contmuous Improve.
. .
.
. MIDDLEPORT - The State F1re Marsha~ 1s mvesug~t-~ ment, academic watch, aca=
m~ the cause of a housefire on South Thtrd Avenue m demic emergency.
.
Southern's rating was
Middleport early Tuesday.
Shane Cartmill. a spokesman for the office, satd a :;tate based on its latest district
inspector visned the home on Tuesday. and has revisited it report card for the 2008-09
si.nce then. He said the investigation is centering around the schopl year. Some of the
knchen area of the home, but the state agency has not yet
detennined where or how the fire started.
The home is a rental, O\\ned by John Blake. The tenants
who Jived there were not at home ~t the time of the fire,
Cartmill said. There were no injuries.
Matamoras, in the amount
of$29,250, for repairs at the
Middleport firehou~e on
from Page AI
Race Street. The fundmg for
the work was awarded earlideveloping an actwn plan which will include free, high er this year through the
ity tax preparation assistance.
commissioners' Community
E·arncd Income Tax Credit is a federal tax benefit for Development Block Grant
ng people who earn low and moderate incomes. The fomutla program.
credit reduces the amount ol income taxes v.'orkers owe. Even
Commissivners tabled
if their earnings are too low to owe income tax, workers may actiOn on the bid pending
qualify for and receive a refund. according to the release.
approval
by
Grants
The treasurer explained that to claim the EITC. a tax Administrator Jean Trussell.
return must be liled. He satd "Very often taxpayers get tax The bid calls for exterior
preparation help from commercial services that charge and intcnor painting, roof
them high preparation fees. Then the service offers them repairs, new down-spouting
quick cash in the fonn of high interest refund anticipation and gutters, and electrical
loans (RAL). Taking out a RAL and paying for tax prepa- upgrades and new lighting.
ration adds up to Jess mone) 111 the pockets of those who
The company was the
need it mo~t."
only finn submitting a bid

Breakfast with Santa

Friday, Dec. 11
LONG BOTIOM - Faith
Full Gospel Church at Long
Bottom, 7 p.m. hymn sing
featuring
Day
Spring
Singers.

Sentenced rrom Page At

Christmas Eve service
RACINE- The Christmas Eve candlelight service at the
St. John Lutheran Church on Pine Grove Road will be held
at 7 p.m. Linea Wannke will be the speaker.

Christ social room. Secret
sisters to be revealed.
Tuesday. Dec. 15
POMEROY
Drew
Webster
Post
39,
American Legion will have
a Christmas dinner tor
post members, wives and
guests, 7 p.m. at the post
home on Pomeroy Pike
Rd.

for the work.
Commissioners also:
• Appointed Jane Banks
of the DJFS to the
Workforce Investment A&lt;.:t
board, effective Jan. I, to
replace Barbara Chapman,
who is retiring. She wil l
represent the Temporary
Assistance
to
Needy
Families program.
• Recessed until 10 a.m.
Monday for the payment of
bills.
Present
\\ere
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport,
pre .. ident,
Thorpas Ander~on and
Michael Bartrum. and Clerk
Gloria Kloes.

requirement of 75 percent,
including a.9J,1 percent in
reading, 93.3 percent in
mathematics. 84.4 percent
in writing. Sixth grtlders
met the state requirement of
75 percent by scoring 82.7
percent in reading, 75 percent in mathematics.
Other stattsttcs from
Southern's state grade card
are: 98.1 percent of teachers have a least a bachelor's degree, 28.2 percent
of teachers have at least a
master's 'degree, 98.4 percent of core academic subject elementary and secondary classes taught by
properly cenified teachers.
Southern's average daily
enrollment was 709 with

97.7 percent being white,
non-hispanic: 64.8 percent
of students were classified
as economically disadvnn~
taged: 15.9 percent ''ere
classified as ha\ ing dis~
abilitie:-..

�TATE

The. Daily Sentinel

Rescued mutt
adopted Thursday
Bv ELIZABETH RIGEL
EAIGEL@MYDAILYTAIBUNE.COM
GALLIPOUS - A shepherd-husky mixed dog
dubbed Nemo that was rescued from rising flood
waters Wednesday morning
has already been adopted
from the Gal lia County
Animal Shelter.
Middleport firefighters
responded to a Cheshire residence after a passing
motorist reported that a dog
was stuck in a kennel near a
rising creek. Firefighters
arrived to find Nemo tied
with a chain in his kennel in
one foot of water.
Following the rescue,
Nemo's owner. who was
away from home when firefighters arrived, decided to
leave the dog in the custody
of the animal shelter.
Dog
Warden/Shelter
Manager Jean Daniels said
a Meigs County couple read
about Nemo 's story and was
prompted to travel to Gallia
County to adopt the lucky
dog on Thursday.
commended
Daniels

Local Stocks

2009

New title office

441-0207.

victed on two misdemeanor
ethics charges involving
taking income from his son
while he was a member of
the University of Akron
board of trustees.
Morrison is awaiting a
ruling from the Ohio
Supreme Court. where he
Brunner's
challenged
authority to dismiss him.
Justices on the court are
Republican. Brunner is a
Democrat.

Meigs County Forecast
Friday...Sunny. Highs in
the lower 30s. West winds 5
to 10 mph.
Friday night ..•Mostly
clear. Cold with lows
around ·17. Southwest winds
5 to 10 mph.
Saturday...Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 30s. East
winds around 5 mph.
Saturday night...Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
chance of freezing rain. Not
as cool with lows in the
lower 30s. Southeast winds
around 5 mph.
Sunday•••CJoudy with a
50 percent chance of rain.
Highs in the mid 40s.
Sunday night ...Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 30s.
Monday••.Mostly c.loudy
with a 30 percent chance of
rain. Highs in the lower 50s.
' Monday night ...Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of rain showers.
Lows in the mid 30s.
Thesday...Mostly cloudy
with a 30 percent chance of
rain showers. Highs in the

Friday, December u,

Meigs
County
firefighters
and
the Meigs
County
Humane
Society in
this intercounty
_:...-....,. effort.
Nemo
s h e
added that there are always
plenty of dogs at the shelter
in need of a good home.
Right now there are quite a
few puppies housed there
that could make nice
Christmas presents for area
families.
Daniels also advised that
the shelter's dog drop off is
cuJTently locked and citi:zens wishing to drop off
dogs must do so during regular shelter hours or by
appointment.
The shelter office. located
at I 86 Shawnee Lane near
Spring Valley. is open
Monday through Friday
from 10 a.m .. to I p.m. and
can be reached by phone at

Ohio elections chief removes
county board member
COLUMBUS (AP) Ohio Secretary of State
Jennifer Brunner (BROO'rtur) has removed the head
of a county elections board
who was convicted in July
on ethics charges.
~ Brunner sent a letter to
Jack Morrison Jr.. chairman
of the Summit County
Board of EJections in
Akron, on Wednesday. She
made the removal effective
immediately. He was con-

PageA6

mid 40s.
Tuesday night through
Thursday...Mostly cloudy.
Lows in the mid 20s. Highs
in the upper 30s.

Brian J. Reed/photo

Meigs County Clerk of Courts Diane Lynch has relocated the title division of her office to a new and larger area just inside
the main courthouse entrance. Lynch, pictured with title clerks Cindy Capehart and Robin Werry and Custodian Jim
Hudson, who oversaw the office's renovation, credited Tr asurer Peggy Yost, also pictured, with providing the space. The
new office also offers an ATM machine for convenience of title customers.

Merchants cookie contest saturday Internet
POMEROY - The cookie contest of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association will
be held Saturday at the Ohio
Valley
Bank
in
the
Foodland Save-a-Lot Store
in Pomeroy.
The winner of the contest
which will be judged at
noon will receive a $50
check and the runner-up
will be presented a gift from
the Bank. Cookies are to be
taken to the bank sometime
before noon Saturday.
Winners will be notified by.

phone after completion of anytime next week for a display in the lobby prior to the
the judging.
Participants are to submit judging. Again the winner
five cookies on a paper will receive $50 and the
plate with the name, runnerup will receive a gift
address, and telephone from the bank.
number of the baker on the
bottom. Also the recipe used
for making the cookies is to
be attached.
The
third
of
the
Merchants' annual contests
The Daily Sentinel
is for homematle items or
crafts and will be held Dec.
Subscribe today • 992-2155
19 at Farmers Bank. Items
www.mydailysentinel.com
can be taken to the bank

PROUD TO BEA
PART OF YOUR LIFE.

YOUR DAllY NEWSPAPERS ENCOURAGES YOU TO SHOPS SUPPORT
THESE lOCAl BUSINESSES

f:

Middleton

AEP (NYSE) - 34.92
Akzo (NASDAQ) - 63.20
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 38.34
Big Lots (NYSE) - 28.34
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 26.51
BorgWarner (NYSE) - 30.52
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)
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Champion (NASDAQ)- 1.78
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) 5.14
City Holding (NASDAQ) - 32.11
Collins (NYSE) - 55.44
DuPont (NYSE) - 31.91
US Bank (NYSE) - 23.03
Gannett (NYSE) - 12.84
General Electric (NYSE) - 15.61
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) 27.02
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 41.27
Kroger (NYSE) - 20.06
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 18.36
Norfolk Southern (NYSE) 52.24
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Sears Holding (NASDAQ) 73.35
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Dally stock reports are the 4
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Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and
L;esley Marrero In Point Pleasant
at (304) 674-0174. Member SIPC.

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Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Inside
Kelly ucccpts Notre Dame job, Page 82

Bro" ns shock Stl'Ciers. Page 86

Friday, December 11,2009

Meigs rolls to victory
over Lady Vikings, 68-56

LoCAL SCHEDUI.E
POMEROY -A scl'oduiG ol upcoming 'ti!lh j
hool vara,ly sporting evonts Involving
"' Moigs, Mason und Gnllia coun11~s

teams

•

friday, Dcc:cmber 11

Boys Basketball
Easter., at Tnmble, 6:30 p.m.
Southerr at Waterford, 6:30 p.m.
Alexander at Meigs, 5 p'TI
Rock Hill at South Gotha, 6 pm
'(&gt;'ahama at Teays Val ay ChriStian, 7 30
p.m.
Girls Basketball
Pont Pleasant at Hann :'1, 6 pm
Wc..~ama at Teays Valley Ctonstlan, 6
p.m
Wrestling
~~~~'f:t at Outback Steakhouse ~
Slll.urday.~ 12
Boys Basketball
Eastern vs Huntington Ross at OU.
~!~f .rcadcmy at Athens, 6 p.m
Fed Hock at RIVer Valley, 6 p.m
Wahama at Wood Courty Onstlan, 6
p.m.
Girls Basketball
Logan at Galha Academy, 6 pm.
South Gall.a at Coal Grove, 6 pm
Herbert Hoover at Point Pleasant, 5 45
p.m.
wresutng
Me.igs. River Valley,
Gall/a Academy at
Warren lnv1te, TBA
Po1nt Pleasant at Outback Steakhouse
Classic, TBA
Mon&lt;tay.~mbcr.H

Girls Basketball
Gallla Academy at Fatrtand, 6 p.l"'l
Fed Hock at R1ver Vall~ 6 pm
at Wellston, 6 p.m

Lady Raiders
top Rock
Hill, 64-37

I
1
,

I

I
l

I
j

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BW.ALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM
ROCKSPRINGS
Someone was coming away
from Larry R. Morn~on
with its first victory of the
season. Host Meigs was
more than eager to be that
someone.
The Lady Marauders shot
61 percent overall from the
field and had four players
reach double figures en
route to a 68-56 victory o\'er
visiting Vinton County in a
Tri-Valley Conference Ohio
Division matchup.
The Lady Marauders ( 1-2.
1-0 TYC Ohio) stormed out
or the gates quickly during
their first triumph or the season, establishing a 22-13
advantage after eight minutes of play. The hosts continued that trend into the
second canto, going on a 129 spurt to take a 34·22 cush-

Bryan
Walters/

photo

1

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Meigs
Morgan
Howard,
middle, is
tripleteamed
by Vinton
County
defenders
during
the SeC·
ond half
of
Th ursday
night's
TVC Ohio
girls bas·
ketball
game at
Larry A
·
Morrison
Gymnasium in
Rock·
Springs.

ion into the intermission.
The Ladv Vikings C0-4, 02) made their biggest surge
of the night out of the break,
going on a 10-2 run in the
opening minutes of the second half to pull within four
at 36-32.
The hosts retaliated with
a 15-5 charge during the
rest of the canto to take a
51-37 lead into the finale.
VCHS outscored Meigs
18-17 in the final period,
but never came within two
possessions of the hosts
down the stretch - allowing the Maroon and Gold to
secure both their first
league and overall victories
of the season.
Meigs went 27-of-44 from
the field o\'erall. including
3-of-4 from three-point territory for 75 percent. The
hosts were also 11-of-16 at

Please see Meigs, Bl

Lady Eagles storm
past Southern, 61-18
BY SARAH HAWLEY
SHAWLEY@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

PEDRO - After three
consecutive home games to 1 TUPPERS PLAINS
start the 2009-10 basketball The Eastern Lady Eagle~
campaign, the Ri\'er Valley improved to 3-0 on the seagirls basketball team got to son (2-0 TYC Hocking)
off a good ~tart in its road with a commanding victory
schedule Thursday night as over the Southern Lady
the Lad.y Raiders claimed u Tornadoes.
convincmg 64·37 decision
Eastern lead early in the
Turley
Dunn
ove_r host Rock Hill in the game, controling the game
Ohro Valley Conference the re~t of the way. Eastern
opener for both clubs.
jumped out to an early 21-2 Tucker added two points
each.
The Lady Raiders (3-1. 1- lead in the first.
Eastern won the two quar0 OVC) fought hard with
Eastern continued to
the Redwomen (0-2. 0-1) increase their lead in the ter junior varsity game by a
during the opening eight second. makin2: the score score of 28-2. Eastern was
'nutes, takmg a small 10-7 39-8 at the half~
led in scoring by Savannah
antage after one period.
Southern held Eastern to a Hawley with 11 points, and
he Silver and Black. game low six points in the Southern was led by Kelly
however, made their big third quarter, but could only Humphrey and
Angie
charge of the night o~er the put four on the board them- Eynon with one points each.
next two quarters. gomg on selves. The fourth went
Southern hosts Federal
a 40· II run to turn that slim much the ~arne as the rest. Hocking on Thur~day
three-point edge into a com- with Eastern putting 16 evening at 6 p.m.
manding 50-18 cushion more on the board.
Ea~tern. after .defeating
headed into the finale.
The Lady Eagles won by Trimble last week, will take
RVHS went on a 19-8 a score of 61-18 over their their undefeated TVC
Hocking record into their
surge in the second canto in-county rival.
for a 29-15 advantage at the
Eastern was led in scoring next contest, a home game
half, then followed that up by Kasey Turley \vith 14 against Miller on Dec. 17.
with a dominant 21-3 points. Emeri Connery had
showing in the third for the 12
points,
Audrionna EASTERN 61, SOUTHERN 18
2
6 4
6 - 18
'
32-point lead headed into Pullins had 10 points, Southern
Eastern 21 18 6 16 - 61
the fourth.
Ashley Putnam added eight
(1-4): Kelsey Strang 1 ()..()
RHHS outscored the points, Brenna Holter 2SOUTHERN
.. Cheyeno Durn 3 o-1 6, Ltndsay
guests 19· 14 in the finale. scored seven points, Allie Tealord 0 ().() o. Courtney Thomas 3 ()..()
but never came closer than Rawson had six points. Tori 6, Emtly Ash 0 ()..() 0, Kelly Humphrey 0
()..() 0, Jessica R1ffle 1 o-2 2. Maggie
25 points down the stretch Goble added two points. Cumm
ns 0 ().() 0. Lynzee Tucker 1 ()..() 2.
allowing the Lady and Brooke Johnson and Angle Eynon 0 ()..() 0 TOTALS: 9 0.3 18
Three-point
goals: Nono.
Raiders to pick up their first Sh~lby Smith each had one EASTERN (3.0):
Brenna Holter 3 1-1 7, •
pomt.
Beverly Maxson 0 0.0 0, Audrlonna
road victory of the season.
Pull ns 5 ()..() 10, Kelsey Myers 0 ()..() 0.
Jenna Ward led River
Southern was led in scor- KaseyTurloy
7 0.1 14, Emen Connery 3
Valley and all scorers with a ing by Cheyene Dunn and 6·6 12. Ashley Putnam 3 2·2 8, Brooke
Bryan Walters/photo
game-high 18 points, nine Courtney Thomas with six Johnson 0 1·2 1, Alhe Rawson 2 2·2 6, Eastern's Emeri Connery drives to the basket as Southern defender Kelsey Strang tires to
Docz1 0 ()..() 0, Shelby Sm1th 0 stop a layup attempt during the second half of Thursday night's TVC Hocking match up in
•
points each. Kelse) Strang, Cheyenne
1·2 1, Torte Goble 1 ().() 2 TOTALS: 24
.lease see Ra1ders, B6
Jessica Riffle, and Lynzee 13·16 61 Th~eo-pomt goals None.
Tuppers Plains.

Newt Oliver Coaches
Classic opens today
SENTINEL STAFF
MOSSPORTSOMYOAJLYSEWINEL COil

.RIO GRANDE
The
Universit) of R10 Gra!'de
will host the !'lewt Oliver
Coaches Classic this weekend at the Ne\\ t Oliver Arena.
The RedStorm women will
start the weekend at 6 p.m.
today
versuh
Malone
Univen.ity. Rio Grande (6-4)
enters the game coming olf a
huge win over NAIA
'sion II No. 7 College of
rday~s action ir~cludcs
the Rio Grande alumm game
at noon. The Rio Grande
men's team will tip-off
against arch-mal Shawnee.
State at 6 .m. Saturday and
the defenlng Ohio Division
IV state champion Oak Hill
Oaks will play Huntingto.n St.
Joseph at 8 pJn. in the mghtcap.
Rio Grande (4-6) hopes to

stop a two-game losing skid
and alSO get &lt;\Oine revenge On
the Bears (2-8). who beat Rio
Grande 87-77. Nov. 17 in
Portsmouth.
"With Oak Hill and
Huntington St. Joe playing
after u&lt;;. hopefully we 'II get a
decent crowd and it should be
a good game.'· French added.
"(Rio Grande and Shawnee
State) will be hungry for
wins. Going into this weekend they've only won two
games and one of them was
against us. They beat ~Iount
Vernon and played really
well against M_oun_t Vernon."
.?ne ofth~hrg~lrght~ of the
~cwt »'eekt:nd t~ rcconne~t­
rng wrth_ alums and R10
G~nde \\111 be a?le to do that
wrth the alumm game and
with t~e fact that high school
coachmg legend and URG
alum Norm Persin pilots Oak
Hill High School.

•

Jlln 6vening rwith Santa
The Pabte k t'o~at~ trvlterl
• Thursday, December 17, 2009
• 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m.
• Pleasant Valley Hospital Main Lobby
• FREE Refreshments
• FREE Pictures with Santa &amp; Mrs. Claus
(While supplies last - One picture per child)

• Santa will be available to hear the
Christmas lists of all good boys &amp; girls
This l'eiJ' special event is sponsored by the PVH Auxiliary, PVH Medical Staff
&amp; PVH Communi(l' Relations Department
r~--

------

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•

�Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Cincinnati's Brian Kelly
:heading to Notre Dame
CINCINNATI (AP)
Notre Dame has settled on
Brian Kelly as the man who
Can restore its faded glory,
Just as he turned Cincinnati
mto a national title contender.
' Just 10 days after Charlie
Weis was fired. it's up to
Kelly to revive the fortunes of
a team that just completed the
\VOt'St decade of football in the
j1i~tory of the storied program
wtth a 70-52 record and three
losing seasons.
Kelly got a five-year deal
from Notre Dame and will be
introduL·cd as coach in South
;Bend on Friday afternoon. He
declined to comment in
Cincinnati,
where
he
infonned his players of the
move after thetr football·banyuet Thursday night. He
won't coach them in the
Su!!ar Bowl
'~I am very pleased that a
thorough and extensive
search has led us to a new
head coach in Brian Kelly.
who I am confident will help
us accomplish our goal of
competing for national champiC?nships:· Non·e Dame a_thkttcs dtrector Jack Swarbnck
said in a statement.
The news didn't play well
with Kelly's current team.
Bcarcat players were led into
a meeting room. where Kelly
tbld them he wm; leaving and
thanked them for making his
opp011unity possible. ~One
·minute into the meeting, the
door opened and receiver
Mardy Gilyard \\'alked O\.l!
angry and alone, save his
MVPtrophy.
"He \Vent for the money.''
Gilyard told The Associated
Press. 'Tm fairly disgusted
with the situation, that they let
it last this long."
Players weren't told of
Kelly's decision until the banquet ended. nearly three hours
after the news first broke. A
few blinked back tears as they
left.
.
· ''We already knew what he
wa' going to say~ We weren't
giving him a round of
applause or anything," tight
end Ben Guidueli said. "It's
like somebodv ~turned their
back on us . We brought thb
whole thing this far. We've
'come this far. To have someone walk out now is disappointing."
Offensive coordinator Jeff
Quinn will coach the No . 4
Bearcats in their first Sugar
Bowl game against Florida.
Quinn has been one of Kelly's
I

assistants for 22 yeat-s, moving with him from Grand
Valley State to Central
Michtgan and Cincinnati.
1ne 47-ycar'-old Kelly was
34-6 in three seasom at
Cincinnati, leading
the
Bearcats to back-to-back Big
East titles and two straight
Bowl Championship Series
be11hs . The Bearcats set a
school record last season for
victoties with an 11-3 record.
then topped that with a 12-0
mark this season.
Notre Dame has been
:-.earching for a coach for
about a week and a half since
firing Weis, who failed to lift
the Irish out of mediocrity.
much like his two predecessors.
Players had assumed from
Kelly's statements to the team
last week that he was staying
in Cincinnati.
"I don't like it." Gilyard
said before the banquet. "I
feel there was a little lying in
the thing. I feel like he'd
known thls the whole time.
Everybody knows Notre
Dame's got the money. I kind
of had a gut feeling he was
going to stay just because he
told !!le he was going to be
here.
Quarterback Tony Pike said
Kelly told them last week.
before their title-clinching
win over Pittsbur~h. that he
was happy in Cinc1nnati.
"The Tuesday when we
were
practicing
for
Pittsburgh. he saia he loves it
here and he loves this team
and loves coaching here and
his family loves it here," Pike
:-;aid.
Kelly has long admired
Notre Dame, which seemed
to be the perfect fit for an Irish
Catholic coach raised in the
Boston area. His name first
popped up as a possible candidate last season before
Notre Dame said Weis would
be back for a fifth year.
When Kelly arrived in
Cincinnati three years ago,
then-university
president
Nancy Zimpher told Kelly
she expected him to tum the
footbaU program into a Top
25 mainstay, win a Big East
title ri~ht away and make sure
his players graduate. He' 11
face even higher expectations
at Notre Dame.
It won't be easy; the Irish
have a 16-21 record over the
past three seasons. And he'll
have to do it without two of
Notre Dame's best players.

Friday, December 11,

2009

Coaches: Contad us with game results.
mdssports@mydailysentinel.com
Call us at 446-2342 ext. 33 OR fax to 446-3008

D N'TAIIISS
OUT ON OUR EXTRA
AIIONEY SA VINCi
COUPONS
THIS Y,EEK
INSIDE
SUNDAY'S PAPER!!!
~unbap

W::imes ~entinel

FRIDAY TELEVISION GUIDE

SATURDAY TELEVISION GUIDE
Bryan Walters/photo

Meigs Miranda Grueser dribbles past Vinton County
defender Kelsey Griffith, right, during the second half of
Thursday night's TVC Ohio girls basketball game at Larry
A. Morrison Gymnasium in Rocksprings.

Meigs
from Page Bl
the free throw line for 69
percent, compared to just 6of-9 at the charity stripe for
Vinton County.
· Morgan Howard led MHS
and all scorers with a gamehigh 21 points, follo\N':"ed by
Miranda Grueser with 15
markers. Tricia Smith anJ
M ick1 Barnes both added I0
points apiece to the winning
cause. Ho\\ard also had a
double-double with a game.high 17 rebounds.
Shanalle Smith added
eight points for MHS,
whi le Ghandra Stanley
rounded things out with
four markers.
Tori Dixon - who was
held to just two first half
·points · - led Vinton
County with 16 points, followed by Allison Graves
with I0 and both Adrienne
Say lor and Chelsey Taborn
with eight each.

Meigs claimed an evening
sweep with a 29-22 victory
in the junior varsity contest.
Dani Cullums led the JV
Marauders with a gamehigh I3 points. while the
duo of Johna Remy and
Kim KaLec each led the JV
Vikings with seven markers.
The Lady Marauders
return to TVC Ohio action
on Monday when it travels
to Wellston for a 6 p.m. contest.
MEIGS
Vinton Co
Me•gs

68, V INTON Co 56
13 9
22 12

15 18 17 17 -

56
68

VINTON COUNTY (0·4, 0·2.TVC Ohio),
Caltlyn Owings 2 0·0 4, Britlany Stewart
2 0·1 5, Briana Thompson 1 0-0 3. Sara
Kingsbury 0 o-o o. Allison Graves 4 2·3
10. Adrienne Saylor 3 2·2 8, Chelsey
Taborn 3 2·3 8, Tori Dixon 6 0·0 16,
Kelsey.Griffith 1 0-0 2, Donyel Castor 0
Q-0 0. TOTALS: 22 6·9 56. Three-point
goals: 6 (Dixon 4, Stewart, Thompson).
MEIGS (1·2, 1·0 TVC Ohio): Mickl
Barnes42·210, MeriVanMeter00·1 0,
Tricia Smith 31·2 10, Emalee Glass 0 0·
0 o, Kelsey Shuler 0 0·0 o. Shanalle
Smith 4 O·P 8, M1randa Grueser 7 H
15, Shellie Bailey 0 0·0 0, Morgan
Howard 7 7·10 21, Chandra Stanley 2 0·
0 4, Alaine Arnold 0 0-0 0. TOTALS: 27
11·16 68. Three·point goals: 3 (T Smith
3) •

___________________________________________ _

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newspepe
ccepts only hel
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will
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dvertisement
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or Fax To (740) 44wooa

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All Display: 12 Noon 2
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sunday Olsplaya 1:00 p.m.
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• Ads Should Run 7 Dave

Now you con hove borders and graphics
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POIJCIE8: Ohio ..-uey PubiiSill~ rellefvM lht right to edlf. .-.joct or cencelany lid ateny lime. Errore mu• be reported oo the finn day ot publlcatloo eod the
Trlb~ntlnel~lster wtll be rteponalblelor no moretllan tho COif of the spece oeoup'-d by the error and only the 1111t lntertlon. Weeh:l'l nol bellablo tor
any lo• or ~I*'M thllt results trorn till p~bllcatlon or omtlllon of •nechertlccment Corr.ct•oo wtll be mtdtln tnt ftftl available ecll!lon • eox number lido
ore elwaye con!lderO!l • Cll'rent rile cerd appnu • All real etate IKivelltiOmtntl are euDject lo lht Federal Fatr H0111ing Aet ol 1868 • Thlt ~per
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KIT &amp; CARLYLE
~00

Announcements

Wanted

Professional Services

f
'J'C'-.al sen J,&gt;«Jum.af
f:Jrd.:t&gt;le lwldvman r"er
Notice1
»ashmg. gunm Jd ,oc,,
t'IJ SlP NW
NOTICE OHIO VALLEY l().l.St2 ,3;.)()4
PuaUSH ~G CO. rec·
orrrrends t'lat you do
bus1ness Wtth people you
Services
know, and NOT to sand 300
rroney through the ma;l
t..rtil yot.. have ;nvest;gatBuilding Materials
;ng tho offer-rg

SEPTIC
PUMPING
Gallla
Co.
OH
and
Mason Co. WV
Ron
E~ans
JaCkson,
OH
SD0-537-9528

Steel Arch Buildings
3
Repo'd
Bwldings
20x30, 30x30 must sell
before going to auction
will
sell
for balance
owed. Display discounts
GUN SHOW, Chillicothe.
available
Sat Dec 12. 9·5 &amp; Sun
1-866-352·0469.
Doc 13, 9·3. St. At. 35 lo
St. At. 104. Ross Co
Child / Elderly Care
Fa;rgro~;nds. Adm S4 6'
TblS S35 140-667..()412
I walll to take ca,re of the
elderly in their hOIT'e
have
ref.
call
304·675-8634.

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Oivi·
sion of F;nancial lnstitu·
ttons Off;ce of Consumer
Affairs BEFORE you refi·
nance your home or ob·
ta•n a loan. BEWARE of
requests for ary large
advance
payments
of
fees or 1nslfrance Call
the OffiCe of Consumer
Aff1ars
loll
free
at
1-866·278.0003 to learn
If ttre mortgage broker or
lender IS property II·
censed. (Thts ts a p;,.bllc
servtce
announcement
from l'le 01110 Valley
Publishing Company)

Grave Blankets $5-$30:
live Wreaths S10 &amp; up;
Suo's 47310 Morn;ngstar
Oh
Ad.,
Racine,
740·949·2115

Pictures that
have been
placed in ads at
the Gallipolis
Daily Tribune
must be picked
within 30 days.
Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be
discarded.

Wanted to do honest, reliable exp. house cleantng,
have
ref.
304-674·6056.

Home Improvements
Basement
Waterproofing

400

legals ...........................................................100
Announcements .......................................... 200
Birthday/Annivcrsary.................................. 205
Happy Ads .................................................... 210
lost &amp; Found ............................................... 215
Memory/Thank Vou ..................................... 220
Notlces ......................................................... 225
Personals ..................................................... 230
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Services ....................................................... 300
Appliance Servlce ....................................... 302
Automotive .................................................. 304
Building Materia's ....................................... 306
Buslness ...................................................... 308
Catcrlng ........................................................310
Child/Elderly Carc ....................................... 312
Computers ................................................... 314
Contractors ..................................................316
Domestics/Janitorial ................................... 318
Electrical ...................................................... 320
Financial .......................................................322
Health .............: ............................................. 326
Heating &amp; Coollng ....................................... 328
Home Improvements 330
Insurance ..................................................... 332
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334
Muslc/Dance/Drama ....................................336
Other Scrvlces .............................................338
Plumblng/Eicctrlcal ..................................... 340
Professional Servlces................................. 342
Repairs ......................................................... 344
Roofing .........................................................346
Security ........................................................348
Tax!Accounting ........................................... 350
TraveVEntertolnment ..................................352
Flnanciol.......................................................400
Financial Scrvlcos .......................................405
Insurance .................................................... 410
Money to lcnd.............................................415
Educatlon ..................................................... 500
Business &amp; Trade School........................... 505
Instruction &amp; Trninlng ................................. 510
lessons ......................................................515
Pcrsonol ....................................................... 520
Anlmals ........................................................ 600
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605
Horses .......................................................... 610
llvestock ......................................................615
Pets...............................................................620
Want to buy..................................................625
Agriculture ................................................... 700
Farm Equlpment ..........................................705
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................710
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............................... 715
Hunting &amp; Land ........................................... 720
to buy..................................................725
MC•ICflRnllll~te.,,. ..,.,.,,..,,.,.,.,.,.,.,.,,..,.,.,..,...,... 900
Antiques ....................................................... 90S
Appllance ..................................................... 910
Auctions ....................................................... 915
Bargain Basement .......................................920
Collectibles .................................................. 925
Computers ................................................... 930
Equlpment!Suppllcs....................................935
Flea Markets ................................................ 940
Fuel 011 CoaiM'ood/Gas ............................. 945
Furniture .................................................... 950
Hobby/Hunt &amp; Sport....................................955
Kid's Corner .................................................960
Miscellaneous .............................................965
Want to buy.................................................. 970
Yard Sale ... _................................................ 975

3000

Financial

tl.· II

~

www.comics.com

Other Service1
Pet
Cremations.
740·446-3745

Call

Professional Services

TURNED oowN oN
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We W;nl
1-888·582·3345

600

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740·446·4367
I ·800·214·0452

Collegos and Schools 1274B

Recreational Vehlcles ............................... 1000
ATV ............................................................. 1005
Bicycles......................................................1010
Boats/Accessories .................................... 1015
Camper/RVs &amp; Trailers ............................. 1020
Motorcycles ............................................... 1025
Other ..........................................................1030
Want to buy .........................- .................... 1035
Automotive ................................................ 2000
Auto RentaVlease ..................................... 2005
Autos .......................................................... 2010
Classic/Antiques ....................................... 2015
Commercial/Industrial .............................. 2020
Parts &amp; Accessories ..................................2025
Sports Utillty......- ...................................... 2030
Trucks ......................................................... 2035
Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Vans ............................................................2045
Want to buy ............................................... 2050
Real Estate Sales ....................................... 3000
Cemetery Plots .......................................... 3005
Commercial ................................................301 0
Condominiums ................... ,...................... 3015
For Sale by Owner.....................................3020
Houses for Sale ......................................... 3025
Land (Acreage) .......................................... 3030
Lots .,.......................................................... 3035
Want to buy................................................ 3040
Real Estate Rentals ...................................3500
Apartments/Townhouses ......................... 3505
Commercial ................................................351 0
Condomlniums .......................................... 3515
Houses for Rent ........................................ 3520
Land {Acreage) .......................................... 3525
Storage ....................................................... 3535
Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Manufactured Houslng ............................. 4000
Lots.............................................................4005
Movers ........................................................4010
Rentals ....................................................... 4015
Sales ...........................................................4020
Supplies ..................................................... 4025
Want to Buy ............................................... 4030
Resort Property......................................... 5000
Resort Property for sale ........................... 5025
Resort Property for rent ........................... 5050
Employment............................................... 6000
Accounting/Financlal ................................ 6002
Adminlstratlve/Professlonal ..................... 6004
Cashler/Cierk ............................................. 6006
Chlfd/Eiderly Care ..................................... 6008
Clerical ................................, ...................... 6010
Constructlon .............................................. 6012
Drivers &amp; Dellvery ..................................... 6014
Educatlon ................................................... 6016
Electrical Plumblng ...................................6018
Employment Agencles .............................. 6020
Entertainment ............................................6022
Food Servlces............................................6024
Government &amp; Federal Jobs .................... 6026
Help anted- General .................................. 6028
Law Enforcement ...................................... 6030
Maintenance/Domestic ............................. 6032
Management/Supervisory ........................ 6034
Mechanics ..................................................6036
Medical ....................................................... 6038
Musical .......................................................6040
Part·Time-Temporaries ............................. 6042
Restaurants ............................................... 6044
Sales ...........................................................6048
Technical Trades ....................................... 6050
Textlles/Factory ......................................... 6052

Ammals

Farm Equipment

Have you priced a John
Deere lately? You'll be
Livestock
surpnsed! Check out our
used
uwentory
at
Reg.
Black Limousine www.CAREQ.com.
Car·
Bull $1250. Call JR michael
Equ;pment
304·751-6874
or 74Q-446·2412
740·256·8160
Pets

Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain

CKC
Cocker
Spaniel
puppies, black, buff &amp;
partt, vet checked, shots,
tails docked &amp; dewclaws
removed, asking $250,
call
304-882-2440
or
304·674·5966

Ground ear corn, S7 hundred, in your sacks. call
after 6, Long Bottom, Oh
740·985-3581

galnpohsceroereol;oge.edu
Accred~e&lt;J Member Accredll·
org Co~ncll for Independent

2BR APT Close to HOI·
zer Hospital on SA 160
CIA (740)441 -0194

Free adorable pupp;es. 5
wks. part Jack Russell.
brlwh,
short/long hair,
740-742·2486 after 5pm

900

Merchand;se

Fuel / Oil / Coal /
Wood/Gas

Seasoned flfewood.
P•e Christmas sale· Toy All Hardwood.
Poodle
puppies
CKC, 740-853-2439
or
lads docked. deciaws re· 740-446-9204
moved, shots, wormed &amp;
wellness
checked
all
Miscellaneous
done by our local vet, we
have black, appncot &amp;
Jet Aeration Motors
chocolate, females $250,
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt
males $200, also one
In stock. Call Ron
black
male
m;mture Evans 1-800·537-g528
$200, Call740·992-7007
6 week old mixed pup· File Cab;net S 15, Com·
pies free to good home puler DesKs, lg. $50,
(740) 446·9552
Sm $15, Sm Kitchen Ap·
AKC Golden Retreiver pliances $15 ea. Bedside
pupp1es
$275
(740) &amp; Chairs1de Tables·$15
ea. luggage $15, Christ·
256·16876.
mas Decorations S2 ea.
AKC mimature Schnau- ladies Sm. Clothes S2
zers. Parti &amp; Chocolates. ea. Lad1es Srr: Coats S5
on
prem;ses. ea. 740·446-4333
Parents
740-441·1657.
CKC Maltese Pups F For sale Playstalion 3.
Playstabon Guitar Hero
$450 M $400. AKC M1n1
Dachshund
S350. game w/ 2 guttars , 3
Playstation games. Un·
74Q-25&amp;-1498
charted 2, Call of Duty 5,
For sale Reg Maltese pup Resident Evil 5, wf 2
pres I st ~hots &amp; v. ormcd. controllers all in exc.
10 v. eels old 2 male, cond. for $325.00 OBO
S-100.00 each 30-l-SS6-2S03
304-675-3471 evenings.
7 00

Agriculture

Farm Equipment
EBV,
INTEGRITY,
KIEFER BUILT,
VALLEY
HORSE/LIVESTOCK
TRAILERS,
LOAD
MAX
EQUIPMENT
TRAILERS,
CARGO
EXPRESS &amp;
HOMESTEADER
CARGO/CONCESSION
B+W
TRAILERS.
GOOSENECK FLATBED
$3999 VIEW OUR EN·
NIE TRAILER INVEN·
TORY AT
WWW.CAAMICHAEL·
TRAILERS. COM
740-446·3825

home
and
Beauliful
Free Rent Special !II
hunter's
dream.
For 2&amp;3BR apts $395 and
go
more
details.
to up, Central Air, WID
www.orvb.com
or
call hookvp,
tenant
pays
740·794·1132.
electric.
Call between
the hours ot 8A·8P
Houses For Sale
EHO
Ellm View Apts.
FOR SALE 2 story 3
(304)882-3017
112 br. 2 ba. on Broad
Rt.n Rd Letart partially Twin Rrvers Tower is ac·
reModeled lloonng, heat· cepting appl:cat;ons lOr
mg/coohng
&amp;
more w811ing hst for HUD sub$55,000. no land con· sidiZed, 1·BR apartment
tract
for more 1n!o call for the e!der'y'disableQ.
304·882·8224.
call675-6679
Land (Aaeage)

ti)

C 2009 by NEA, Inc

Education

Busineu &amp; Trade
School

Apartments/
Townhouses

12 Unit Apt. Complex.
446-0390.
CONVENIENTLY
LO·
CATEO
&amp;
AFFORDABLE~ TownhOIJSC apM·
House 4 sale by owner ments.
and/or
sm~l
1093 2nd St Mason VN houses lo; rent. Call
25260 (304)812-4635
74Q-441·1111 for apph·
cation &amp; ;nforl'lalion.
'

Money To lend

500

Real Estate
Sales

For Sale By Owner

Urconditionallifeti~e

guarantee. local refer·
ences fum1shed. Estab·
hshed 1975. Call 24 Hrs.
740-446·0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

:!I

Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

Oeatl4irl4
Display Ads

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

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....,:

W~bsites:

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

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The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

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Friday, December 11, 2009

F-uton couch w new full
'"e mat~&gt; S200.00
ladie' I 7' Nke \Iango Key·
we't Crutser Toucan 3 spd
SIOO Dell 948 ph&lt;lto pnnlor
wtgadiets
S50.00
t\lt
ho&lt;:l..ey table gentk·u,ed
like ilev. ~150.00 Pia&gt; Sia
uon 2 v./ lots nf game&gt; &amp;
c&lt;Juit. S&lt;r~.oo· Tl);ng '" gc;
money for Chrisrmas •
080 for arl J().I.Wl447n

Sale-Berber carpet $5.95
yd. Also, specials on vi·
nyl &amp; laminate in stock.
Mollohan Carpet 2212
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis,
OH (740) 446-7444

W11rlpool app. Electnc
range $300. 4 yrs. otd.
Mrcrowave range hood
STIHL Safes &amp; Service $150, 1 yr old. DishNow AvaUable at Carm.- washer S150. 2 yrs old.
chael
Equipment Black
In
color
74().446-2412
74Q-992-6150.

For sale- 76 acres on 1 BR 8J'd bath. l;rst
Bailey Run Ad. Pomeroy
months rent &amp; depostt
Oh. call740-992·3174
references reqwred, No
WantTo Buy
Pets
and
clean.
lots
Absolute Top Dollar • stl·
74Q-441..()245
ver/gold
coins.
any
Beautifully
kept
OhiO Middleport Beech St., -2
10K/14K/18K gold jew·
River lot, 740-416-7170
br , furnished apts. Ull'!lelry, dental gold, pre
ties paid, dep. &amp; ref., No
1935
US
currency.
Real Estate
Pets(740)992·0165
•
proofim1nt
sets,
dia· 3500
Rentals
monds, MTS Co;n Shop.
1
BEQ·
MIDDLPORT,
151 2nd Avenue, Galli·
ROOM
APARTMEN:r.
polis. 446·2842
APPLIANCES
FUf\,.
Apartments/
NISHED.
NO
PET~.
Townhouses
Yard Sale
NON SMOKING NICE.
74Q-856-8863
•
Lg. indoor Sale
chnsl·
mas trimming , new gifts,
Apartrrent available now
rent, must move in by
new embroidery items &amp;
A;verbend
Apts.
Ne}v
January 1st.
much more 6 m;les out
Haven WV Now accept·
ural
Oevelopmen mg
Jenys Run Rd Apple·
f~
applicatrons
roperty currently rent HUD-siJbsidiZed,
grove Dec. 14·19
one
ng
1
&amp;
2
BR
ulllls.
Spa
304-576·2635.
Bedroom Apts. UtuotiE!S
rous floor plans, ra
nctuded. Based on 30%
Recreational
townhome style liv of adJUSted InCOMe. Call
1000
Vehicles
ng, playground &amp; bas
ava;~;e
304·882.:3121,
etball
court,
on-s;t
for Senior and Orsabled
undry
faellity.
24h people
Campe11 / RVs &amp;
mergency
mainte
ance, quiet country
Traile11
lion close to majo Beautiful 2 BR apt far
RV Service at Ca•m;ed;cal fac;hties, phar htghly qualifred pe~n Q1
ct&gt;ael
Trailers
couple. W/0 tlooK~;p -&amp;
groce
740-446-3825
dishwasher. Inc
watlff.
tore. just
minute
way from other maJO sewage &amp; trast' Central
RV
hopp;ng rn the area t&gt;eattng &amp; a;r No pots
Service at Carm;chael Please contact Sher
S560/mo.
KellY
Tra;lers
740-645-6378.
@ (740) 446-3344
740·446·3825
Honeysuckle Hills
Beautiful Apts at JacRApartments
son Estates. 52 West·
Motorcycles
266 Colonial Drive R113
wood Dr., from $365 lo
Bidwell, Oh10 45614
1995 Roadking $9000
$560
740-446·2568
740·446-3344
firm
New
Windshield,
Equal Hous;ng OpportuOff;ce
Hours,
Tue
&amp;
new seat, new tires, new
nity. This InstitutiOn IS an
Thurs 9am-5pm
o;l all synthetiC lots of ex·
Equal Opportumty PrO·
Th;s facility Is a equal
tras. Garage kept call
vider and Employer.
opportunity proVIder,
Rod
Cornell
(740)
For Rent. 2 BR. Duplex
employer
256·6361. New handle
1n
town,
$475/rro
bars &amp; now lowering
OeP+•ef. No pets. Oulet
kil·lols of chrome
1 and 2 bedroorr apts., place. 446-1271
furrished
and
unfur2000
Automotive n;shed. ard houses in f~m upsm I t-r Pt Pie:~ .....
~ul pd no JX'ls
ll.. :1g
Pomeroy and Mddleport. rene 485 (){'+ ·h~ 00 dcp
secunty depos;t reqwed. olfl 'iprr. 3CI-l·6'~·7JQ9
Autos
no pets. 74Q-992·2218
Gracious Living 1 and ~
03 Cavalier 3000. 03
Bedroom Apts. at Vi :~ge
Cava11er 3500, 04 Cava· 1 BR Apt. S4C.5imo. Manor
and
RIVerstde
Includes wa·
~er 3500, OS Cav;:; 1er $405/dep.
Apts. '" M;ddh;pon lrorn
tor/trash.
Steady
worl&lt;
4000. 256-6169
S327
to
$592
history. Solid references.
74Q-992-5064
Eq1..,_11
1993 Chevy blaz.er
2 Ca11 446-4639
Houstng Opport~n;ty.
wheel dr. $800.00, 1994
Pont;ac Grard Prix 4 dr.
Island View Motel h~
needs
work 1 BR apt. by Walrr~art. vacanc1es
S35 00 N ght.
304-882·1107
or W1D hookup, ref &amp; stove 740-446·0406
•
Ulil.
incl.
Rei
req.
304-593·2998.
Mode:-n 1BR apt. Call
$525/mo./$150/dep.
Grand
Marquee 740·245·5555
1097
or 740·446·0390
92,000 miles, good cond. 441·5105.
Nice 1 BR wash-dry
$3000.00 304·895·3929.
Stove &amp; Fndge All UltJI2006 Buick Lacrosse ga·
1 br. Apt. rn Pt Pleasant, Iies. Call 74Q-446·9585.
rage kept 27.000 rniles
fum. has washer/dryer, $600/IT'O. ·S500 dop
will sacraflce S12 500.00
no pets, non·srrokers Spnng
Val!ey
Green
304·675·2563.
call 304·675·1386.
Apartrrents 1 BR
Pontiac
G6
2008
$395+2 BR at $470
$14,000. 304·812·0095
Month. 740-446-1599
238 1st Ave Lg. Upsta;·s
We nave a full tnventory apt.
overlooking
river. Tara
Townhouse
ol cars &amp; trucks startrng Fum kilchen 2 persons. ~IS • 2BR, 15
$1700
Caval ers. S-425+util. Dep. 111q. Aef beth, 'back patio poo_f,
at
Sunlues, Buicks. Satums Call 446-4926
playgro~nd. (trash, sa~·
&amp; n'Orel Cook Motors.
age, water pd.)No pe~s
328
Jackson
PtKe
allowed.
S450 rent,
(740)446..()1 03.
Modem
BR
apt. S4501sec
dep
Ca t
446-3736.
140.645-8599

at

:J

�Commercial
3000 sq. It build in Por·
ter
$500/mo.
740·339·3224.
Houses For Rent
lbr. h&lt;'use in M.Mn handi
car acce&gt;'.,
ri\cr "e"
q~5.00 :omon. dcp. II; rd.
crctht ck 749-416-&lt;JJU?.
2 BR 1 BA 1 Story
House. Elect. &amp; gas ·Xtra
Nice. No Pets. Lg Utility
Room $500/mo plus utih·
ties 1636 Chatham Ave·
nue (740)446·4234 or
(740)208·7861.
2·Story house 5 br. 2 ba
wl acre yard $600.00 a
mon + $600.00 dep.
304·688·5966.

+

4 Rms
Ba. Stove &amp;
fridge. 50 Olive St. No
pets. $450/mo + dep.
446-3945.
615 Third Ave. Gallipolis,
3 BR house, no trig.
$600/mo, dep. &amp; ref. re·
qUired Call 446·0555 be·
tween Sam &amp; 3pm for ap·
plication.
7 Am House. 2 SA, Gas
Furnace.
.
$550/mo+S500/dep.
5
Rm. House. 1 BA. Gas
Furnace.
$450/mo+$400/dep.
Drilled wells, Kerr Rd. No
pets. alcohol, drugs or
smoking. 740·245·5064
Jlou'e ror rem or ,aJe on
land contract 1!\6 ~ Park Dr
Pt
Plea&gt;. 30-i-675-56-10
leave me".
Sale or Rent, 2 BR
Newly
Remodeled
on
Skidmore Rd. 441·0568
after 4 pm.
Wiseman Real Estate-4
rentals
available-call
446·3644 for more info.
All
in·town-vanous
prices-references &amp; sec.
deposits required.

4000

Friday, December 11, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel
Manufactured
Housing

Sales

6000

Employment

Country living· 3·5BR,
2·3 BA on property.
Education
Many floor plans! Easy
Rentals
Financing' We own the
Call
today! Part-lime
instructors
2 BR Mobile Home, No bank.
needed during the day
pets. Water, sewer trash 866·215·5774
in: mathematics.
eco·
included. At Johnson's
nomics, and accountmg
Mobile
Home
Park.
Flatwoods Mathematics and eco·
740·645·0506.
Doublewide,
- - - - - - - - Rd.. Pomeroy, 3 br., 2 nomic instructors must
2 BR, 1 BA, 14x70 bth.
1 acre, asking have a master's degree
in the discipline. II Inter·
$475/mo. 367·7762.
$65,000, 740·992·5989
ested please email a re·
- .....- - - - - 2
Trailer
Lots
for
sume and cover letter to
Rent-Addison
_ _A_A_A_N_e_w_2_0_10 - - jdanicki@gallipolisca·
1
Pike·S SO/mo
+
sec.
4BR Doublewide
reercollege .edu
dep.
Water
pd.
Onl.U47~651
446•3644·
2011) Singlewide
Help Wanted· General
2BR Ideal for 1 or 2 peo·
ln!O!edlble Sl9.995
Quality Control, earn up
pie, S3001month,
Re·
Handyman Spec1al
to $15 an hour, evaluate
femces. No Pets, NO
3JI.edroQffi.S5.91.9
retail stores, training pro·
CALLS
after
7pm
ONLY at MIDWEST
vided,
call
740·441-0181
mymicmesthome.com
1·800-901·2694
2750
740
828
2 BR all electric mobile
·
·

=-=-=-=-=-=-=--

home in country,
Pets, 740·742·2014

No - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -..........
OHIO'S
AVONI All Areas! To Buy
or Sell Shirley Spears
Trailer in town Racine, 2
BEST BUYS
304·675·1429
br., 1 bath, all electric,
2010 3BR Doublewide
carport, large front porch,
$39,977
Bookkeeper/ Tax Pre·
close to school, library &amp;
HUGE 2010 4br/2ba
parer for local accounting
park, $425 deposit, $425
FI-'A $349 mo
office send resume to
per month water &amp; gar·
2010 3brl2ba Single
PO Box 805 Gallipolis
bage included. NO Pets,
from $199 mo
Ohio 45631 or fax to
740·949-2217
MIOWESTHOMES
304·273·1130.
3BR Mobile Home in mymidwesthomes.com
Racine.
S325tmo+S325
740.828.2750
Do you enjoy helping
dep. 1 yr lease. No Pets.
people? If so, I will give
No calls after 9PM.
- - - - - - - - you FREE RENT AND
740·992·5097
The BIG Sale
FREE UTILITIES plus an
Used Homes &amp; Owner
income just for moving in
4br. 2 ba in Gallipolis
Financing • New 2010
and helping my 87 year
Ferry
WV
$650.00
Doublewide $37,989
old mother You will live
304-962·0167
Ask about $8,000 Re·
here as if it were your
For rent 3 br. in Hartford
bates
own home. mmus the ex·
WV no pets for more 1nfo
mymicwesthome.com
penses. 740·416·3130.
call 304·882·11 07.
740-828-2750
-----~--

Mobile home for rent.
Hud accept. call before
9pm 304·675·3423.
Own a New 3BR, 2 BA
w/1 acre. 5% down. $525
mo. WAC. Near Holzer.
740.446-3570.

Help Wanted· General
MARSHALL
COMMU·
NITY
&amp;
TECHNICAL
COLLEGE
ADJUNCT
FACULTY
INSTRUCTORS
Marshall Community &amp;
Technical Collega ts currently accept1ng applica·
lions for qualified indi·
viduals to teach on a - - - - - - - - - .
YOUNG'S
part-time basis in the fol·
J&amp;L
lowing subject areas:
•
Carpenter Service
Construction · Room Additions &amp;
Art
Communications
• VInyl Siding
Remodeling
English
'
• Replacement
· New Ga1ages
Geography
• Electrlcel &amp; Plumbing
Windows
History
·Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Roofing
Polit1cal Sc1ence
· Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
·Decks
·Pallo and Porch Decks
Psychology
·Garages
WV036725
Reading
Religion
• Pole Buildings
V.C. YOUNG Ill
Sociology
• Room Additions
992·6215
Theatre
Owner:
740·591·0195
Mathematics
James Keesee II
Pomeroy, Ohio
P.hysics
30 Years Local Experience
742-2332
Early Childhood Educa·
FULLY INSURED
tlon
Required
Qualifications
include a Masters degree
in
related
field.
College-level ,
teaching
exp. Knowledge of or
exp. in implementing a
variety of teachmg strate·
gies. Evidence of eHec·
live communication ( in·
terpersonal,
speaking
and writing) skills. Duties
Wfi'IW.timbf:.t'Cl'eekcabb'Aaey.com
1nclude preparing and
teach1ng courses at the
mason County Career
Center. Part-time faculty
2459 St. Rt. 160 • Gallipolis
maintain
accurate
re·
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATES
cords on students, de·
velop new educational
materials and media and
assist with curriculum re·
CONSTRUCTION
view.To apply submit let·
ter of application, resume
Remodeling,
unofficial transcripts, and
Roofs, Garages,
names of three profes·
Pole Buildings,
• New Homes
sional ref., via e mail to
JObs@mctc.edu or via
Siding, Decks,
• Garages
mail to:
• Complete
Drywall, Additions
Stephanie A. Neal, Di·
Remodeling
and
New
Homes.
rector
Human
Resources
&amp;
Insured- Free
Employee Development
Estimates
Marshall Community &amp;
Stop &amp; Compare
Technical College
1 John Marshall Or.
Huntmgton
wv
25755·2710
Replacement
info. Help Wanted· General
additional
For

Advertise your
business on this page

foraslowas

35.00

per month!

The Daily Sentinel

992-2155

Friday, Dec. 11th

&amp;
Saturday, Dec. 12th

PERFECT GIFT FOR
CHRISTMAS!

Country Roads

Virginia Beach Getaway

Sat., Dec. 19th

June 3, 2010
to June 6, 2010

Come out &amp; enjoy
the music

PEAK SEASON
Chartered Coach
OCEANFRONT rooms at the
Marriott Fairfield Inn &amp; Suites
$415/person (quad)
$445/person (triple)
$510/person (double)
$775/person (single)
Limited seats!
No refunds
If purchasing for a Christmas
gift, we can provide
a certificate for presentation
Cash, check. credit cards and
money orders accepted
Passengers of all ages
welcome
To make reservations please
call PVH Community
Relations
(304) 675-4340, Ext. 1326

Members &amp; Guests
welcome!

MIZWAY
Thurs- Pool Tournament 7 pm
Friday· Karaoke 9-11
Saturday- AM IX· 91
SR 143 Pomeroy, OH

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Electric, Plumbing,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions

29625 Bashan Road
Racine, OH 45771

740-949-2217

Local Contractor

7 40-367-0544
Free Estimates

7 40-367-0536

~lnsuraneecenter.cpm

304-773-1111

ROBERT
BISSEll

Ill Erie

~ Insurance"

CONSTRUCTION

740-992-1671

740-742-3411

rector
Human
Resources
&amp;
Employee Development
Marshall Community &amp;
Technical College
1 John Marshall Dr.
Huntington
wv
25755·271Q
For additional informs·
tion,
please
call
304·696·3787
MARSHALL
COMMU·
NITY
&amp;
TECHNICAL
COLLEGE ,
IS
AN
f;.EO/AA EMPLOYER
Mechanics
Qualified Auto &amp; Diesel
Technicians. Call (740)
388·8547
Medical
Overbrook Rehabilitation
Center is currently seek·
ing someone with a Train
the Trainer Certification
to teach CNA classes. All
interested
applicants
should pick up an appli·
cation
at 333 Page
Street, Middleport, Oh.
Overbrook is an EOE
and a Participant in the
Drug
Free Workplace
Program.
---~~~-~

Need a LPN for respite
care
Call
(740)
446-3808.

mp
on
SAVINGS

• Siding • Vin)'l
Windows • Metal
and Shingle Roofs
• Decks • Additions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

740-416-2575

Racine, Ohio 740·247·2019
Owners:
Jon Van Meter
Paul Rowe

Cell: 740-416-5047
email:
jrshadfrm@aol.com

&amp;

MIKE MARCUM

Room Additions. Remodeling. Metal &amp;
Shingle Roofs. New Homes. Siding. Decks,

Dump Truck
Senice
We do drh;cwa)'s
Limestone • Gravel
Top Soil • Fill Dirt

WV#040954 Cell740-416·2960 740·992-0730

ROOFING &amp; REMODELING CO.

PSI CONSTRUCTION
Bathroom Remodeling. Licensed &amp; Insured
Rick Price- 17 yrs. Experience

740-985-4422
740-856-2609
Cell

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removal

H&amp;H
Guttering

BA"'IKS
CO:'\STRUCTION

Seamless Gutters
Roofing, Siding, Gutters
Insured &amp; Bonded
740·653·9657

£·;~~

CI.AS$1C C\~ RF.SrootAnllt' ji ~urn!
•~t~ tpa''it«d"

~O\\ Selling:
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft
Parts • Engine,,
Transfer Cases &amp;
Tnmsmissions
• Aftermarket
Replacement She&lt;!t
;...tetal &amp; Componems
r·or All \lake' of Vdoi&lt;:b
Racine, Ohio

7-10-949-1956

We are looking for someone skilled and
experienced in both page design and copy
editing. This person will need to design
front pages, paginate inside pages, and
write great headlines. Experience with

co.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Commercial •
Residential
• Free Estimates

(740) 992-5009
Custom Home Building
Steel Frame Buildings
Buildmg. Remodeling
General repair
"" \\ .bank~cclb.com
Free Estimates for
• Backhoe • Trenching
• Brush Hoaalllll
• Portable Bandmm
Tree Trimming • Setting
Poles &amp; Trusses

Call 740-992·9572

(3af£ Marcum Construction

Commercial &amp; Residential
For: • Room additions • Roofing •
Garages • General. Remodeling •
Pole Barns • Vinvl &amp; wood siding
MICIIAEL'S
SERVICE CE:-.ITER
1555 :-.lYE Ave.
Pomerov. OH
• Oil &amp; filter change
•Tune Up'
• Brake Servil-e
• AC Recharge
• M nor exhaust
repair • Tire Repair
• Transmi,,ion Filtt:r
&amp; Fluid Change
• General Me.:hanic
work

1740) 992·0910

LEWIS
1976
Ford
F-150
F11 VEC02676
The Home National
Bank reserves the right
to reject any and all
bids. All vehicles are
sold, as is where Is,
with no warranties ex·
pressed or implied. For
an appointment to see,
call 949·221 0, ask for
Sheila.
(12) 9, 10, 11

Drywall/Repair

R.L. Hollon
Trucking

:Jieartland Publications
Copy Editc;»r/Page Designer

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Attn.: Pam Caldwell or email
pcaldwell@heartlandpubllcations.com

Owner
Amy Veteran
Tom Wolfe

Barns/Metal Roofs
Fire &amp; Water Damage

Pole

Rubber Roofing, Room Additions, Decks, Shingles,
Siding, Windows. Pole Barns, Garages,
Insurance Work. Residential &amp; Commercial
740·245·0437
Licensed &amp; Bonded
30 Years
Free Estimates
Experience

Help Wanted

f.B,llltpohs Ilillll' ~nbun~
825 Thlrd 'Avenue

•

__ __ ~

BAD CREDIT?
NO CREDIT?
BANKRUPTCY?
We can help!
Call out Toll Free
866-564-8679
LUV HOMES

740-591-8044

layout, knowledge of Quark and
PhotoShop is a must. Full time position
with benefits. Flexibility with work schedule
is a must.
Send a cover letter and resume to: '

~~~

Total Construction

1-0.......:..ne~C-al.._l_to_D
__o_lt_A_ll_

Windows and
Vinyl Siding
Specialists, LTD
(740) 742-2563

*Prompt and Quality
Work
*Reasonable Rates
*lnsun:d
*Exper,l!nced
Reference~ Available I
Call Gary Stanley @•

Help Wanted

The Home National
Bank will auction the
following Item on Sat·
urday, December 12,
2009, at 10:00 a.m. at
the Bank's parking lot.
2005 Chevy Cobalt
1 G1 AK52F757616749
2002 Pontiac Sunflre
1G2JB124727491038
2008 Ford Ranger
1FTYR1 OD28PA90767
2004 Chevy Malibu
1G1 ND52F646M11165

I

740.446.9200

Welcomes

Broadside

[~I

(that's easy on your wallet)
Hometown Insurance Center

Please leave message

Pomeroy Eagles

. ~ill
l '1i. · HiII

Great coverage and
superior service

BULLETIN BOARD

WV State Farm Museum
Annual Christmas Party
will be Sunday
Dec. 13th at 1 pm
Bring covered dish

. 'I

Hardwood CabJneiry And fuPiJJttJfe

SUNSET

Great part time oppor·
tunlty. A fast growing
The Proctorville
textile
company
ur·
Difference"
gently require the serv·
S1 and a deed is all you
need to own your dream ices· of part time Ac·
count/Payroll Office. In·
home. Call Now!
terested
persons
Freedom Homes
should contact us im·
:::~~~~~~~
888·565·0167
mediately
via
email.
Sales
Please note that Phone
1987-Cta~1on 3BR, 2BA. Trade 1n your old single· Inquiries will not be ac·
Fully remodeled. saooo. wide for a new home. 0 cepted. Forward your
resume to Jensen Ed·
367·7762
money down. 446·3570.
win
@
jensen.edwln@live.co
m. Do include your
phone number when
please
forwarding the resume.
call
304·696·3787
ResCare is accepting apQuality Control
plications for a Sup·
EAR:-l up to S15.00 un hr.•
ported Living Manager
cvaluutc retail •tore&gt;, tram·
for Gallia and Meigs
ing rrovided 877-766-950'/
Count1es.
Qualifications
Prep
cook. Apply in per·
1nclude: High School Di·
ploma/GED.
Bachelors son. Jimanetti's Pizza.
Degree preferred or mini· Rio Grande.
mum of 1 year experi· MARSHALL
COMMU·
ence in the MRIDD f1eld NITY
TECHNICAL
&amp;
and valid dr. licenses COLLEGE
with good driving record. ADJUNCT
FACUILTY&amp;
Fulltime, benefits with INSTRUCTORS ALLIED
mileage
reimbursement. HEALTH &amp; LIFE SCI·
Hour flexible with on call ENCES DIVISION
responsibilities.
Inter- Marshall Community &amp;
ested applicants may ap- Technical College is curply
on
line
at rently accepting applica·
ResCare.com, click un· lions for qualified ind1·
der careers.
viduals to teach on a part
time basis in the follow·
ResCare
of
Southern ing subject areas:
Ohio is accepting appli· • Biological Sciencescations for a QMRP. general.
environmental
BA!BS in Human Service sciences and anatomy &amp;
field with 2 years expefi· physiology
ence providing supports • Microbiology
and services to individu· • Clinical ass1stanVclini·
ats with MRIDD. Must be cal labortory sciences
proficient
in
Microsoft (ASCP or NCA )
Word and Excel with •
Health
information
good
organizatioQal technician
(RHIT
or
skills. Skill concentration RHIA )
on paperwork. Know!· •
Medical
assistant
edge of Federal, State (CMA)
and Local regulations. In· • Pharmacy Technician
terested applicants may (CPht)
apply
on
line
at Required
qualifications
Rescare.com, click under include a Bachelor's de·
careers.
gree, Masters preferred,
appropiate national ere·
dentials or state licens·
1ng. Desired qualifica·
Get Your Message Across W'rth A Daily sentinel
lions mclude teaching
experience either in the
clinic or in a classroom.
To apply. submit letter of
'13"'column 'nch weekdafs
application, resume, un·
v.!2',. column 1nch Sunday
off1cial transcnpts, and
CALL OUR OFFICE AT 992·2155
names of three profes·
s1onal
references
via
email to jobs@mtct.edu
or via mail to :
Stephanie A. Neal, Dl·

rtl

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�-----------------....-------....

-------~-------- - - · -~The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, December 11, 2009

BLONDIE
By THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Sntde
1 Skin art,
look
s la ngtly
40 Cold War
5 Sa lsa
side
legend
41 Roughly
Puente
DOWN
9 Radio
1 Subject
station
2 Like
s ign
some
1 1 "Pa l Joey"
Todav's Answers
writer
watches
26 "Ed
3 Drummer 10 Second
13 Golfer
d rink
Wood"
for tho
Stewa rt
12 Starts
Oscar
14 C onFoo
winner
a
Fighters
tribute to
27 Writer
hand
4 Immoral
a fund
Follett
17 Snaky
15 Suffering
Act
28 Vestiges
fish
16 Ranch
5 Dnnks
19 Spanish 30 Cap part
area
6 ·"1f - a
31 First
aunts
18 PlayHammer"
month, tn
22 Saucy
7 "New
g round
Madrid
24 Tropical
ge rms
Moon"
33 A bunch
fruits
actor
20 Flamenco
8 Red-and- 2 5 Assumed 37 One, for
cry
Juan
name
black brrd
21 Greasyspoon
NEW CROSSWORD BOOK! Send $4.75 (checKtm.o.) to
fixture
ThOr.lliS Josllltl Book 1, PO. Box 536475, Orlando, fl 32853·6475
22 VP's boss
23 Movie
computer
24 Tillis o r
Torme
25 Sighed
c ry
27 Gold
measure
29 Rule
30 Business
gamble
32 Notion
34 Salon
offering
35 "Seeya!"
36 Pound
part

Mort W alker

BEETLE BAILEY

Tom Batiuk

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

-

Chris Browne

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

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38 Domingo
1 ? -11

William H oest

THE LOCKHORNS
Brian and Greg Wal~er

HI &amp; LOIS
v-MA'f pO y'Qt)
W/ANI FOR

Cll.~6'f~ CHIP

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Bil Keane

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CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

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DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum
Difficulty Level
ll/01

"' If 'YOU CAN•T &lt;:.~1 ON 11-l&amp;G RASS, 140 WPIP

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"But they HAFTA go home. Grandma
wants to clean her OWN house
for a change."

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Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

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11-lAT S IGN Gt:'fil-IERE:'-?"

"'IF YOU'RE WRITING YOUR AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
VOO SHOUL-D START WITH CHAPTER ll."

Patrick McDonnell

MUTTS

****

4

2

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1.!111

• • • •

IJ.\:YJ Al[OJ!Jjl(j

&lt;;haring. Tonight: TGIF. EnJOY your fnends and ,m)HAPPY BIRTHDAY for friday, Dec 11, 2009:
one you meet on the way
This year, don't lose sight of your long-term goals,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
especially if you are making a decision. \\'hat you
*** Be aware of how much you are spending
might think is iinpossible could happen when you
and where your budget might be exploding. Admire
least anticipate it. 1'-:etwork and expand your Immesomeone and be dear as to whidt way you w.mt to
diate circle of friends this year. Much that happens go. Let more humor into your life. Under$anding
especially concerning romance, children and creative
evohes to a new level. Tonight: Out and about
intereslc;- could be out of your control Vt-rualize
LIBRA (Sept. 2'3-0ct. 22)
more of what you desire. Letting others kno'' what
**** You might want to try another appro.1ch or
you want is the fil'!'t step in making it a realit\'. If you
do ~omething \'ery differently. Yow personality melt.:;
are single, you can have what you w.mL Be aware of
barners and helps open up other people. Experienre
those desires. If you are attached. The two of }'OU
less pre.-.sure and be more in touch with your longopen up to better communication. Work together for
term desireS. Tonight You could go overbo.ud.
something you want, and you will make it a re.1litv.
SCORPIO (Oct 23-1'\0\. 21)
LIBRA proves to be your friend &lt;~g.,in and ,,g.tm.
*** 'lake your time making a decision. Not
DJe Stars Shtm•the Kind of Day )~u'/1 Hav~": 5e\eryone t~ m s)nC with your ide,,s. Li-;ten to feed·
Dynamic; 4-Positcve; 3·Alll'rll,l(t~; 2-So-sa; 1·D!fficult
b.Kk from !iomeone you trusL Your ability to read
ARIES (Jvfarch 21-Apnll9)
·
between the lines but sav little counts. 'tonight: All
**** Be more imagin,lth·e when de,11ing with
smiles as you greet the ~·eekend.
key associates. Understand what is happening
SAGIITARIUS (1'\o,·. 22·Dt&gt;c. 21)
behind the scenes. Your visibility ,md .1bilitv to work
***** Keep the big pidure in mind. Y&lt;JU diswith others pay off, Much goes on Mound you
cover how important follow-through re.1lly is. Don't
Tonight: Stay on top of you !I game.
TAURUS (Aprif20-Mav 20)
push limits, ,md underst,md when enough is enough.
Com ersations relea&lt;;e unusu.Jl creal!" ity. Tonh;ht
***** Defer to others, as they will w,mt everything their\\ ay Consider this a bre,Jk from your
T.1ke a night oft.
demands. With any luck, you rould le.we ,,;ork early,
CAPRI CO&amp;-.. (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
* ** * Your take-charge attitude draw!" resullo;.
if you want. Take ad,·antage ot the s1tu.1tion ...nd perYou feel good where,·er you are. Follow through or at
haps dean up your desk. Tonight: Just don't be
least present an idea to others. What seemed impo si
alone.
ble JUst might not be. A meeting could de' el"'J' into&lt;,
GE:\11:-.11 (May 21-June 20}
***** You ea-;ily find anc;wers when others run \ ery luppy e\·enl Tonight Where the .1ction IS.
AQliARl t..:S (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
around in circles. Understand what ic; happemng in
your imme..iiate circle. Your energy, ideac; ana mag·
****'* Keep re.1ehmg out for someone you mre
netism appear to be well received. Start thinking
about. Your sen&lt;;e of humor eme~ when looking ,,t
about the weekend. and make plans ASAP. limight:
poss1bihhes for a getawa}' Know that not e' eryone
Let the good times rock and roll.
,
gets the &amp;"lme laugh out of a ironic situation. fomght:
CANCER (June 21-Julv 22)
Let your mind wander.
*** If you can work 'from home, ple..,se do. 'lou
PISCES (Feb. l9·March 20)
***** Deal directly w1th a partner or different
might ha,·e pushed .too h.mi to 9et your way .md
now have to deal w1th someone s strong readion.
...ltuations. You are likely to pull a matter .tpart &lt;ll1d
Know and understand your limils and others bound- .continue to pull it ap.ut O\ er and O\ er. Kirk bark and
aries. Tonight Happy to be home
take in the big pJCture. 'lou could hm e quite are\ ela
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
tion. 'llmight Choose somethmg dtlferent.
***** Keep comersations movmg, e\'t'n if you
don't feel comfortable with them. Don't t,1ke a st,md,
f.1rqurime Brgar 1&gt; Dll II&lt;" ln•~nze 1
rather, do a better job of listening to wh,,t.&lt;.onwmw h;
nt httpfl;c·wrt•jacqur!m brsar.rom.
-"I

)

�.
.

: Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Browns sack Steelers in
CLEVELAND (AP) There's nothing Super about
the Pittsburgh Stcelcrs any,
more.
.
:rhe defendmg .1'\FL chnmpions lost their fifth straight
and had their pia) off hopes
sacked hy tht.•
lowly
Cleveland llrowns, who
ended a 12-gamc losing
streak against their bitter
rival by beating the Stcclcrs
13-6 on Thursday night in
subzero wind chills.
Ben Rocthlisbcrgcr was
sacked eight times and lost
for the first time in II career
games against the Browns
who
extended
(2-11 ).
Pittsbur~h 's longest losing
streak 111 six years and
defeated the Steeler::- (6-7) at
home for the first time .since

2000.
"A long time coming,''
Browns quarterback Brady
Quinn said.
Pittsburgh's post~eason
chances are in peril - if not
over
completely.
The
Steelers are going to need
help to make the postseason,
a stunning freefall for a team
that hit'the season's halfway
point at 6-2.
Unexpected losses to
Kansas City, Oakland and
Cleveland - three of the
NFL's worst teams with a
combined record of 9-2R have pushed Pittsburgh to
the brink.
Chris Jennings, who
began the season on
Cleveland's practice squad
scored on a I 0-yard run and
Phil Dawson kicked a pair of
29-yard field goals for the
Browns. who snapped a
seven-game lo~ing streak, a
to-game slide at home and
beat the Steclers for just the
second time in 20 games.
Roethlisberger tried to
rally the Steelers. but his
fourth-do,vn
pass
to
Santonio Holmes with less
than two minutes lelt was
knocked down by linebacker
David Bowens.
When Holmes was tackled
on a punt return and the final
second ticked off the scoreboard's
clock,
frozen

shocke~

Browns fans, who were
'\lcarly outnumbered by
T~rrible

Friday, December u,

13-6 McCoy highlights big

awards night for Big 12

'

Towel-wavi~g

Pttts~urgh fans. danced m

the msles. Several Cleveland
players sprinted down field
and jumped into the Dawg
Pound section to celebrate.~
The win was just the second for Cleveland's embattied first-year coach Eric
Mangini, who certainly
helped his job security by
beating Pittsburgh. something no Browns coach had
done since Chris Palmc~
nine years ago.
Josh Cribbs, Cleveland's.
Mr. Everything. rushed for
87 yards out of the wildcat
formation. had I 04 return
yards and caught one pass
for 9 yards. Cribbs picked up
a big fiN down on a 14-yard
run m the fourth quarter
when the Browns were trying to milk the clock.
Still, the Steelers managed
to get the ball back with 6: 16
left at their own 21. 13-0 late in the -;ccond quarRoethlisberger. who has bro- ter. With their defense stuffken Cleveland's heans ing the Steclers and the tembefore. began working his perature
dropping,
the
team down field with short Browns' lead seemed insurpasses. But he was sacked at mountable.
m~dfield in the fi~al .~wo
But the Stcclers drove 58
m1nutes and had h1s tmal yards in 41 seconds and got
pass batted away.
a 27-yard field goal from
Quinn, making his first Jeff Reed as time expired to
career
start
against close within 13-3 at halfPittsburgh. completed just time.
one pass in the second half
Reed's second field goal
and finished 6 of 19 for 90
with
8 seconds left in the
yards.
third
brought the Steelers
Roethlisberger went 18 of
within
a touchdown.
32 for 20 I yards. He had
But Pittsburgh was unable
trouble throwing in the
swirling winds that consis- to put together a scoring
tently blew over 20 mph and drive in the fourth. and now
the Steclers were never able the Steelers find themselves
to establish their running in more trouble than they
game against the Browns' could have imagined.
This Js certainly not what
defense. which came in
Pittsburgh coach Mike
ranked 32nd overall.
Cleveland's defense domi- Tomlin had in mind when he
nated the first half. sacking promised his team would
Roethlisberger five times "unleash hell'' in December.
Cribbs, who has burned
and pressuring him on ncarly every snap.
Pittsburgh before with three
Jennings' I 0-yard scamper career TO kickoff returns
around right end - the first against the Stcelers. took
TO scored by a Cleveland back a punt 55 yards to set
running back in more than a up Dawson 's first field goal
year - put the Browns up in the first quarter.

We remember those who have passed away
and are especially dear to us.

Cleveland
Browns
cornerback
LAKE BUENA VISTA. defensive player, and took
Hank
Fla. (AP) - Colt McCoy's home the Outland Trophy for
Poteat (23) near blunder in the final sec- the best interior lineman. He
onds of the Big 12 title game previously won the Lombardi
and linehasn't costothim on the awards Award as the nation's top
b k
lineman
and
Bronko
circuit so far.
ac .~r
0 avl
It hasn't hUit the confer- Nagurski Trophy as the
ence, either.
natron's top defensive player.
Bowens
McCoy capped a big
Cincinnati's Brian Kelly
celebrate
•
Thursday
night
for
the
Big
12,
won
the Coach of the Ye&lt;.r
after stopwinning
the
Maxwell
Award
award
on the same dtty he t&lt;&gt;l
Pl.ng the
honoring the nation's best all- his team he was leaving fo
Pittsburgh
around player.
Notre Dame. Stanford's Toby
Steelers
It was just the latest in a Gerhart won the Doak Walker
on fourth
series of postseason honors Award for the nation's best
down late
for McCoy, who also b a running back. Tennessee star
in the
finalist for the Heisman Eric Beny accepted the Jim
fourth
Trophy. He won the Walter Thorpe Award honoring the
Camp Football Foundation's best aefensive back.
quarter of
player of the year award for
Notre Dame's Golden Tate
an NFL
the second consecutive sea- won the Biletnikoff Award as
football
son earlier in the day.
the best receiver. UCLA's Kai
game
Before he beat out fetlow Forbath took home the Lou
Thursday
Heisman finalists Mark Groza Award for the be t
in
Ingram of Alabama and Tim kicker.
Cleveland.
Tebow of Florida for the
Georgia's Drew Butler won
Maxwell, he picked up the the Ray Guy Award honoring
AP photo
Davey O'Brien Award at the the nation's best punter.
annual
college football Boston College linebacker
Browns safety
Hank awards at Disney World, Mark Herz.lich has won the
Poteat's
sack
of given to the nation's best Disney Spirit Award given to
college football's most inSJ&gt;iRoethlisbergcr backed the quarterback.
Nebraska's Ndamukong rational figure. Hcrzlich overSteelers up to the 3-yard
line,
forcing
Daniel Suh, also a Heisman finalist, came a rare form of bone canSepulveda to punt from the won the Chuck Bednarik cer and is expected to rell(tn
back of his end zone. He got Award as the nation's best next season.
off a 60-yard punt that
Cribbs dropped before pickstripe for 60 percent.
ing it up. finding a few
Rock Hill did salvage a
blockers and returning down
split
with a 32-1 1 victory in •
the right ;ideline to the 8.
the junior varsity contest.
from Page Bl
The Browns lost yardage
River Valley returns to
on a holding penalty before
~ction
.Monday when it
Dawson drilled his kick of which came in the fourth
through winds that swayed quarter. Brooke Marcum hosts Federal Hocking in
non-confcrcrll.:c
the goal posts.
was next with 12 points. a
matchup
at
6 p.m.
followed by Alii 1'\eville
~OTES: Steelers WR
Hines Ward played despite a with nine markers and
RIVER VALLEY 64,
hamstring injury and caught Tracy Roberts with eight.
RocK HrLL 37
four passes for 21 yards ....
Jessica Hager and Cady
A Valley 10 19 21 14 - 64
Holm~s.
the MVP in Gilmore both added six Rock
Hill 7 8 3 19 - 37
Pittsburg~ 's Super Bowl win
points to the winning cause,
over Anzona, surpassed whi le Kelsey Sands round- RIVER VALLEY (3·1, 1·0 OVC)· Jessaca
3 0.2 6, Cady Gilmore 1 4-4 6,
1,000 receiving yards for the ed things out with five Hager
Kelsey Sands 2 1·3 5, Alb Nevalle 2 5·9
first time in four seasons .... points. The Lady Raiders 9. Jenna Ward 7 3·7 18, Tracy Roberts 3
Browns DE Robaire Smith were 17-of-32 at the free 2·5 8, Brooke Marcum 5 2·2 12
TOTALS: 23 17·32 64. Threo-poant
injured his hip in the first throw line for 53 percent.
goals: 1 (Ward).
half but returned.
Rock Hill was led by ROCK HILL (0.2, 0·1 OVC): Courtney
Jennings previously played Chelsea Harper with 15 Duncan 2 2·4 6, Chelsea Harper 5 1·3
15, Nicole Stamper 1 0.0 3, Tailor Guy 1
followed
by 0·0
for Montreal in the Canadian points,'
2. Brittany Thompson 3 3·3 9. Dana
League.
Football
Brittany Thompson with Crabtree 1 0·0 2. Katie Johnson 0 0..() 0,
Cleveland's offensive line nine and Courtney Duncan Ashley Malone 0 o-o o. Brooke Knipp 0
o. Tomi Butler 0 0.0 0, Kayla Wright
went sleeveless in the bone- with six markers. The hosts 0-9
0 0.0 0. TOTALS· 13 6·10 37 Three·
chilling weather.
were 6-of-1 0 at the charity point goals: 5 (Harper 4. Stamper).

Raiders

&amp;ay Merry Christmas
t~ &amp;omeone &amp;pecial with a
&amp;ntinel Christmas An8el·
I

On Thursday, December 24, we will publish a special page devoted to those who are gone but not
forgotten. They will be similar to the sample below:

David C. Andrews
July

{o, 1961-May 5, 1980

May God's angels
guide you and
protect you
throughout time.
Always in our hearts,
John and Mona Andrews
and family

If you \\ish, select one of the folio" ing FREE 'erses belo" to
accompany your tribute.
I. We hold ~ ou in our thoughb and memories fore\ er
2 May God cradle you mHis arms. nov. and fore,er
3. Fore\er missed. ne,er forgotten. Ma) God hold )OU mthe palm of
Hi~ hand.
4 Thank )OU for the v.onderful da)S v.e shared together. M) prn)ers
will be v.tth ~ou unul v.e meet agam.
5. The day~ \\e ~bared v.ere sv.eet.Jipng to~ )OU ngam in God's
heavenly glo~.
6. Your courage and bravef) sull inspire us all. and the memol) of)OUr
smile fill~ u~ with joy and laughter
7. Though out of sight, you'll forem be mr.:l}' heart and nun d.
8. The day~ may come and go. but the ume~ 1\e shared \\Ill ah\a)s remain
9. May the light of peace shine on your face for elemity.
10. May God's angels guide you and protect you throughout time.
II You were a light in our life that bums.forevcr in our hea11s
12. May God's grace&gt; shine over you for all time.
•
13. You are in our thoughts and praye~&gt; from morning to night and from
year to year.
14 We send thi~ message With a lo11ng ki's tor eternal res1 and happmes,,
15 .\lay 1he Lord bles&gt; you \\ith His graces nnd warm.lo~lllg heart.

TO REME~IBER YOUR LOVED ONE IIX THIS SPECIAt WA\~
SEND $10.00 PER LISTI~G • $15 IF PICTCRE I~CLUOED
Fill out the form helow and drop off to:

The Daily Sentinel
With Fondest Men1.oric~
Ill Court St .• Pomeroy, OH 45769

DEADLil\'E: FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18TH

r-------------------------------------,
Please publi\h my tribute in the 'pecial Memory Page on Thursday. D~ct!mber 24th.

Example: Actual Size

~ONLY~

~sao

fer Picture
Prepaid

Gryphon Thomas
"Merry Christmas"
Nana &amp;.. Papal •

* Actual Size 1x3
*Runs Thursday. December 24th
* Deadline for entry December 19th at 5:00
l\1ail or drop off at :

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