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                  <text>Pap B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

The DIP Scarebaard
Local Boxscores

Ai&lt;r Hoben 80. Parma Padua 56
~Tate 64. lees Creek E. Clinton 45
Bloom~anoll 81, Clrdevillo 40
Gin. Country Day 55. Cincinnab Christian
GAll I&amp;
51
C1n. Finneytown 58, Cln. Deer Park 43
16 13 8
10 - 47
Cin. Indian Hll80. Cln. Mariemonl 51
0 ·~*
2 11 13 13- 39
Cin. Madeira 62, Cm. Wyoming 49
Cin. Walnut HiiJS 54, Mirfotd 49
IRONTON
(12-5,
8 -2
SEOAL): ClarksYille
Clinton-Ma&amp;sie
72.
Crod&lt;ol 4 2·2 11, Cortney Blanchester 54
D
D. Alex Taylor 4 o-o 8, Brea Cle. Hts. Lutheran E. 80, Cle. Horizon
T - 2 4-6 8, Emily U11y 0 Q-0 D. JanMI Science 74
5 2-2 12. Lorna Ceaset 2 •-5 8. Cols, Grandview Hts. 62. Cols. Horizon
TOTALS: 1712·15 47. Tl!,..._point goals: Science 47
•
1 (Crodcel) .
CrooksviKe 43, ThClrrMne Sheridan 41
GALLIA ACADEMY (IG-7, 3-7 SEOAL): Dota Hardin Northern 67. Ridgeway
Somantha 8arnes 2 ().1 4. Twa YoUI19 D Ridgemont 49 ·
Q-0 0, Kari Campbell 0
0, Amy Noe 3 Gahanna Ccts. Academy 79, Heath n ,
4~ 11, Shantelle Rathburn 1 2-2 5, OT
•
Jooes 3 2-2 8, Allie TIQOster 5 1- Gahanna Lrncoln 71 , Col&amp; Mifflin 59
1 11 , Morgan Daniels 0 ().0 0. TOTALS: Hebron Lakewood 62, Newark Cath. 50
14 ll-12 38. Thr""i)iin1 goals: 2 ( -. london Madison Plains 66. Washington
Rathburn).
C. H. Miami Trace 45
Lore City BuCkeye Trail . 64, New
GAHS--.cllvldull-.
Matamoras Frontier 63
Mattins Ferry 47. Steubenville 43
Field goals: 14-43 (.326): Three-point Middletown Fenwick 67, Gin. Purcell
goals: 2.S (.333) ;· Free throws: 9-12 Marian 66
{.750); Total rebounds: 20 (Troesler 6, N. Ridgeville Lake A1dge 42, Cle. St.
6): OtfonsM! rebounds: 7 (Noe 4); Martin De Ftorres 38
: 9 (Jones 3, 8arnes 3); Steals: 4 New Madison Trt-Viollage 67, New Paris
(Barnes 2): Turn&lt;l\/Ors: 14.
National Trail so
New Mkkitetown Spring. 57. Mineral
MEIGS 54, WAHAMA 35
Ridge 40
Rayland Buckeye 47. Cadiz Harrison
Wahama
5 10 12 8 - 35
Cent.«
Meigs
17 8
11 18 - 54
Reading 68, N. Berld Taylor 60
Sha~skte 54. Belmont Union local 41
WAHAMA (5-12): Rellecea Zerkle 0 ().0 Sugar Grove Berne Union 55, Millersport
0. Karista Ferguson 1 Q-1 2. Kali Harris 0 46
G-O 0, Brn1any Jones oo-o O, Amber Tut~
4 ·6-9 18. Deidra Peters 1 1-2 3, Taylor
WEST VIRGINIA
Hysell 5 1-5 11 , Ashley Roach 0 ().() 0,
Alex Wood, o 1-2 1, Katie Davis o o-o.o.
BOYS BASKETBALL
Kayle Lanier D Q-0 0. TOTALS: 11 9-19
as.Th-nl goals: 4 (TuHy 4).
MEIGS (ll-7): Mic(&lt;i Bernes 1 o-o 2, Bridgeport48, Lincoln 36
Adrian Bolin 11-2 3. Tricia Smith 2 0..0 6, Galhoun County 62, Clay Counry 53
Gatie Wolfe 8 s-a 25, S~nalle Smith 2 o- Cameron 60. VaMey Wetzel46
0 &lt;4, Miranda Grueser 1 1-2 3. Shellle Hundred 70, ThcJmas Jetfef'son, Pa. 54
Belley 0
D. Morgan Howard 4 3-4 11, John Marshall84. Uniwrsity 50
Chandra Stanley 0 0..0 0. Alaine Arnold 0 Magnolia 90, Tyler Consolidated 75
Q-0 0, lacie Hawley 0 Q-0 0. TOTALS: 19 Martinsburg 49, Mercersburg' Academy,
1Q-l6 M. Three-point goals: 6 (Wolfe.._, Pa. 27
Parkersburg South 61, Wheeling Park
T. Sm~h 2).
57, OT •

IROHTOH 47,
AcADEMY 39

o-o

o-o

o-o

......taflatlcollndlvlduoiFiald goals: 19-49 (.388); Three-point
goals: 6-13 1.462); Free throws: IG-16
(.825); Total rebounds: 31 (Howard13):
Offensive rebounds: 15 (Howard 6);
A&amp;Sists: 11 (Wolfe 5); Steals: 14 (Wolle 3,
BoUn 3); Turnovers: 17.

Prep Scores
OHIO
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Akr. Coventry 53, Akr. Springfield 39
Akr. Hoban 48, Parma Hts. Holy Name
33
Albany Alexander 82, Nelsonville-York

54
Amande·Ciearcreek 66, Ashville Teays
Valley40
Athens 60, McArthur Vinton County 53
Aurora 54; Orwell Grand Valley 42
Bay Village Bay 51, Fairview 42
Beavercreek 35, Kettering Fairmont 32 ·
Bedfcrd Chanel66, Cle. VASJ ·31
Berea 55, N. Olmsted 45
Berlin Hiland 91, Bowerston Conotton
-Valley 37
Byesville Meadowbrook 56, Cambridge
49
'
Cameron, W.Va. 56, Bridgeport 52
Can. South 60. New Philadelphia 36
Chagrin Falls 50, Burton Berkshire 48
Chardon 55. Cle. His. Beaumont 53
Chesterland W. Geauga 44, Fairport
Harbor Harding 40
Chllllcctha 49, Portsmouth 31
Chillicothe Unioto 52, Greenlleld
McClain 43
Cin. Glen Este 56, Kings Mills Kings 46
Cln. McNk:holas 59, Cln. Purcell Marian
32
Chl . .Princeton 65, Middletown 53
Cin. Sycamore 46, Cln. Colerain 44
ClreleviUe Logan Elm 60, Williamsport
.
·
Weotfal140
Clayton No~hmont 62, Springfield 43
COla. DeSalas 56, Cols. Brookhaven 46
Copley 45, Tallmadge 35. OT
Crooksville 40, New Lexington 39
Cuyahoga Falls Walsh Jesuit 57, Akr.
·svSM41
Day. Chaminade·Julienne 42, Day.
Carroll 38
·
Dresden Tri·Valley 60, Zanesville W.
~uokl ngum 43
E. Can. 53, Peninsula Woodridge 31
E~rla 59, Stow-Munroe Falls 34
Euclid 57, PalnesvUie.Ri\18rslde 37
Fairborn 49, Miamisburg 40
.Fredericktown 50, Mt. Gilead 46
Gatfle!d Hts. 33, Cuyahoga Falls 31
Garrettsville Garfield 4 t ,·Rootstown 39
Aoward E. Knox 50, Johnstown
·
Northridge '31
Huber Ht~. Wayne 43. Centef\lllle 33
Ironton 47, Gallipolis Gallia 39
Kettering Alter 58, Middletown Fenwick
29 '
LaGrange Keystone 48, Medina Buckeye
20
Lockland 63, St. Bernard 51
logan 57. Mar~tla 39
,
London 52, Spring. NE 35
Lorain Admiral King 73. Bedford 36
LoulsvUie 62, Carrollton 43
Lyndhurst Brush 69, Lakewood 40
Macedonia Nordonia 74, Parma 36
Mayfield 54, Brunswick 46
Mentor Lake Cath. 65, Parma Padua 29
rJ]Iddleburg Hts. Midpark 52, Amherst
Steele 40
. MillburY Lake 68. Genoa Area 61
New Matamoras Frontier 51, lore City
Buckeye Trail 38
I
Newcomerstown 43, Malvern 29
Olmsted Falls 59. Avon Lake 53
Orange 36, Middlefield Cardinal 'P
Oregon Clay 69, Tal. Bowsher 51
Oxford Talawanda 54, W. Carrollton 26
Parma Normandy 40, Parma Hts. Valley
Forge 35
Pemberv111e Eastwood 46 . Tontogany
Otsego 41 I
·
·
PhilO 51 , Mc0onnels¥ille Morgen 36
Piqua 67, Sidney 56
Pomeroy Meigs 54, Wfoihama, W.Va. 35
Raceland, Ky. 55, Wheelersburg 49
Ra\lenna 36. Mogadore Fie ld 35
Rocky River 58, Vermilion 30
·
Rocky River Lutheran W. 67. Coluf!'lbia
Station Cotumbia 62
Shaker Hts. 53, Rocky RIYer Magnificat
48
Shaker Hts. Hathaway Brown 73, Cle. St.
Joseph 27
Solon 58. Hudson 45
Spring. Kenton Ridge 46 . Spring .
Greenan 42, OT
Spring . Kenton Ridge 46, Spring.
Greenon 42
Springboro 51,lebanon .15
Sugarcreek GaraWay 40, W. Lafayette
Ridgewood 30
Tot Cent. Cath. 88, Tot. Rogers 56
Tol. .SI. Uroula 53, Tol. Libbey 46
Tal. Start 63, Notre Dame Academy 48
Tot. Walle 85, Tot. Woodward 16
Tot. Whitmer 50, Tol. Scotl 29
Tuscarawas Cent. Cath. 45, Magnolia
Sandy Valley 32
Twinsburg 68, Medina 22
Uhrtchsvllle Claymont 43, Dover 27
Urbana 40, Bellefontaine 31
Vandalia Butler 5·7, Xenia Christian 53
Vandall!. Butler 57, Xenia 53
W. Chester Lakota W. 51 . Uberty T~p.
Lakota E. 24
Wadsworth 62. Aichrield Revere 26
Warsaw River View 47, CoahOC1on 30
Weatervi119"'N . 4 t , Westerville Cent. 38
Williamstown, W.Va. 78, Belpre 39
Zanesville Maysville 67 . New Concord
John Glenn 43

I

BOYS BASKETBALL

Oonatd Brown, db, 6-0. 175, Frostproof
(Fla.! HS
C.J. Crawford, sth, &amp;-2. 200, Hunllngton
(W.Va) HS
Aaron Dobson, wr, 6~ . 185, South
Char1es10n {W Va.) HS
Troy EYans. rb. 5-9. 210. La~ JC,
Qakland, Calif.
Ouanthony Fletcher. lb. 6-1, 245. Krop
HS. Miami
A.J. Graharry. qb. 6-3, 190, Godby HS.
Tallahassee. Fla.
Cottoo Griffis, dl, 6-6, 300, Big Walnut
HS. Sunbury. Ohio
Jordan Jeffries, ol. 6·7. 300, Oswego (til.)
HS
Montarii.IS. Loven. db, 5-10. 155, James
Rickards HS. Tallahassee, F1a.
Carrell Martm, ol, 6·5, 305, Martin luther
King HS. L,ithonia. Ga.
Matt Pickett·, lb. 6-2, 205. Providence HS.
.
Charlene. N.c:
Jamvs Rouse. dl, 6·6. 207, HarrisoP'Iburg
(VB) HS
. Michael Rhynes, wr, , 6-St 205.
Independent&amp; HS, Charlotte, N.. .
Alex Schooler. ol, 6-5. 245, Wichita
(Kan.) Collegiate
Corey Tenney, ol. ~-9, 265, Craig County
HS. Roanoke. Va.
Phil Walker. lb, 6·1. 208. Cypress Bey
HS, Weston, Fla.

WEST VIRGINIA

Shawne Alston. rb. 6-0, 222, Phoebus
HS, Hamptori, Va.
Ta'o'On Auslin, rb. 5-9. 170, Dunbar HS,
BaltirTIQfe
·
Stedman Bailey, wr. 5·11, 183, Miramar
(Fla.) HS)
Cole Bowers. ol, 6-6, 280, Cabal!
Midland HS. Ona, W.Va.
Branko Busick. lb, 6-1, 215. Steubenville
(Oh&lt;o) HS
DarNin Cook. wr, 5·1t, 185, Shaw HS .
East Cleyeland. Ohio
Dominik Davenport, dl, 6-1 . 265,
Phoebus HS, Hampton, Va
Pat Eger, ol, 6·5, 275. Thomas Jefferson
HS. Clairton. Pa .
Curtis Feigt. cl!. 6-6. 270. Mercersburg
(Pa.) Academy
Tevita Finau. dl, 6·5. 290, Phoenix CC
Terence Garvin. db, 8-2, 210. Loyola
Blakefield HS. Baltimore
Daquan Hargrett. rb, 5·10; 190,
Northwestern HS, Miami
.
Logan Heastie, wr, 6·3. 192, Great
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Bridge HS, Chesapeake. Va.
Brodrick Jenkins. wr, 5-10. 170. South
Bridgeport 55, Philip Barbour 25
Fort Myers HS, ForfMyers. Fla.
Cameron 56. Bridgeport, Ohio 52
Nick Kindler. ol , 6-7, 260, Trinity HS,
Clay County 50. South Harrison 33
Camp Hill, Pa.
Clay·BaHelle 43, Valley Wetzel 42
County
67.
Tyler Deon Long, wr, 6·0. H5, Dunbar HS.
Doddridge
Washington, D.C
Consolidated 47
EaSI Hardy 57, Berkeley Springs 55. OT Pat Miller, db. 6·0, 170, Hoo¥er HS.
Birmingham. Ala.
,
Lberty Harrison 54, LewiS 9ounty 40
Morgantown 88, Buckhannon·Upshur 29 Terrance Moore. wr, 6-3, 185, Mesa
[Ariz.) CC
Mountain Ridge, Md. 50, Hampshire 42
Taiga Redman. lb, 6-2, 215, Keyser
North Marion 77. Elkins 45
(W.Va.) HS
Pomeroy Meigs, Ohio 54. Wahama 35
Jonathan Scott, db, 6-4, 190 SeaDreeze
St. Marys 83, RavenSWOOd 44
HS, Day1ona Beach. Fla.
Trinity 41, Grafton 37
Tucker County 63, Pendletdn'· County 40 Eugene Smith. qb, 6-3. 190. Miramar
!Fla.) HS
University
Fairmont Seilior 30
.
Chris Snook, te-fb, 6-3. 220. Highland
Wheeling Central 38, linsly 29
HS, Medina. Ohio
Williamstown 78, Belpre, Oh1o 39
Ryan Spiker, ol. 6-4, 280, Tri·V~IIey HS,
Wirt County 64. Calhoun County 46
Dresden , Ohio
.
Jordan Weingart, oL 6-2. 290. But:hholz
HS, GainesYille, Fla .

n.

College Signings
OHIO STATE

C.J. Barnetl, db, 6-1 , 180, Clayton (Ohio)
Nortnmont HS
Dorian Bell, lb, 6-2, 220. MonrOeYille ·
(Pa.) Gateway HS
.
.
Adam Bellamy, dl, 6·4, 275, Aurora
(Ohio) HS
Jaamal Berry, rb, 5-10, 1115, Miami I Fla.)
PalmeiiO HS
Zac:h Boren, lb, 6·1, 245, Pickeringlon
(Ohio) Central HS
Corey Brown, ath, 6·1, t90, Monroeville
(Pa.) Gateway HS
Duron Carter, wr, 6·3. 185. Ft.
Lauderdale (Fla.) Aquinas HS
Dominic Clarke, db. 5-10, 170, Frederick
(Mel.) Tuscarora HS
MeiYin Fellows. dl, 6·5, 255, Garfield His.
(Ohio) HS
Chris Fields, wr, 6-1, 180, Painesville
(Ohio) Harvey HS
Reid Fragel, te. 6-8, 258, Grosse Ple.
!Mich.) South HS
Kenny Guiton. qb. 6·2, 182, Aldine
(Texas) Eisenhower HS
Jordan Hall, rb, 5·11, 190, Jeannette
(Pa.) HS
.
Marcus Halt. ol, 6-6, 300, Cleveland
(Ohio) Glenville HS
·
Adam Homan, lb, 6·2, 230, Coldwater
(Ohio) HS
Carlos Hyde, rb, 6·1, 235, Naples (Fla.)
HS
James Jackson, wr, 6·0, '175, Grand
Ledge (Mich.). HS
Storm Kieln, tb, 6·2 , 225. Newsrk {Ohio)
Licking Valley HS
Corey Linsley, ol, 6·4. 285, Youngstown
(Ohio} Boardman HS
Sam Longo, ol, 6·5, 270, Bellbrook
(Ohio) HS
Jack MewhDft. ol, 6-6, 285, Toledo {Ohio)
St. John's HS
Jonathan Newsome: lb, 6-3, 230.
Cleveland (Ohio) Glenville HS
·John Simon, dt. 6·3, 265. YounQstown
!Ohio) Mooney HS
Jordah Whiting, lb, 6-1 , 230, Louisville
(Ky.) Trinity HS
Jamie Wood, ath, 6·2, 185, Pickerington
(Ohio) Central HS

OHIO
Skyler Allen, ol, 6·3, 290, Mechcinicsville
(Va.) Fork Union Military Acad.
P~illip Bates, qb, 6-2. 223, Omaha (Neb.)
Iowa StateJOmaha North HS
•
Ryan Boykin, rb, 6-2. 205, Woodstock
!Ga.) Etowah HS
James Davis, ol6·3, 305, Omalla (Neb.)
North HS
Greg Oaylson, de, 6·1, 230, Elyria (Ohio)
HS
Mario Dovell, wr, 6·0, 185. Columbus
(Ohio) Whetstone HS
Tim EDmond, lb, 6-0, 240, Cincinnati
!Ohio) laSelle HS
Gary Fortune, cb. 6·0,155. Indian Head
(Md.) Henry Leckey HS
Jeremy Green, s, 6-0, 180. Keyser
IW.V&amp;.) HS
Troy Hill. le, 6-5, 210, New Kensington
tpa.) Valley HS
Xavier Hughes, s, 6-1. 170, Germantown
(Met) Seneca Valley
Jeffrey Hutchison , te, 6·3, 240, Boca
Raton (Fla.) North Carolina Tech
Sam Johnson, ol, 6-4. 290. Baltimore
(Ohio) Liberty Union HS
Carl Jones. d!. 6-0, 250, Arlington
(Te)(as) Sam Houston HS
J9nathen Lechner. ol, 6-6, 300, Omaha
(Neb.) Creighton Prep
Kadre Pinder, ol, 6·2. 325, Mira mar {Fla.)
Fort Scon CCIEvergladeS; HS
Nlco Price, ID, 5-11 , 235, Mckeesport
(Pa.) McKeesport Area HS
Dylan Reda, lb, 6·3. 225, San Juan
Capistrano (Calif.) San Clemente HS
Jamil Shaw, cb, 6-0, 183, Alexandria
(Va.) Fork Union Military Acad .
John Taylor, dl, 6-5, 275. North Olmsted
(Ohio) HS
Tyler Tenleton. qb. 6-1. 190, Norman
(Okla.) North HS
Je1an1 Woseley, lb, 6·2 , 205, Slaten
Island · (N .Y.) Fork Union Military
Academy

MARSHALL
Marques Aiken, d! , 6·4, 240, Boyd
Anderson HS. Lauderdale lakes, Fla
CartaYious Baldwin, db, 6·1. 180, Glades
Central HS . Belle Glades, Fla. Bio
Za~e Beshir, ib, 6·2, 212, Walnut Ridge
HS, Columbus, Ohio
Trevor Black, lb. 6·2, 195, West
Mecklenburg HS, Char1one . N.C.
Andre Booker, rb, 5-10. 170. RiYerview
HS, Sarasola, Fla.

. CINCINNATI
Blake Annan , te. 6-4, 225, Upper
Mnglon (Ohio) HS
MaE~,Iik Bomar, lb, 6·1, 190, Cincinnati
(Ohio) Winton Woods HS
Austen Bujnoc:h, ol, 6·5, 245, Cincinnati
(Ohio) Elder HS
Ricky Harris, ol, 6·3,~ 280, Westerville
(Ohio) South HS
Michael H~ly. dl, 6-4, 240, PowelliOhio)
Olentangy Uberty HS
Josh Jones, wr, 6-2, 200. Cincinnati
(Ohio) Elder HS
Colin Lozier,. lb. 6·0, 210, Cincirlnatl
(Ohio) Colerain HS
\
Sean McClellan , dt, 6·3, 244, Cincinnati
(Ohio) Moeller HS
Brady Slusher. dVte/lb, 6-2, 200,
Beechwood (Ky.) HS
Dan Sprague, o~. 6·3, 255. Worthington
(Ohio) Kilbourne HS
· ·
Chris Williams, db, 5-11, 185, Cincinnati
(Ohlo} Winton Woods HS
DeMarkus Bracy. te. 6·4, 245, Flint
(Mich.) Southwestern Acad.
Angel Clybourn. lb. 6-1, 225, MBys
Landing (N .J.) Blair Acad .
Andre Cureton, ol, 6·6, 280, Indianapolis
(Ind.) Pike HS
Ramel Dismuke, db. 5-8. 1BO. Cleveland
{Ohio) Benedictine HS
Vidal Hazelton, wr, 6-2, 210, Staten
Island (N.Y.), Hargrave Military Acad.
Everett Horne, db, 5·9, 165, Cincinnati
(Ohio) North College Hill HS
'
Jamar' Howard, wr. 6-4, 210, Cincinnati
{Ohio). College of the Sequoias
Malik James. db. 6·1 . .190, Los Angeles
(Calli.): El Camino CC
·
Reuben Johnson, db, 5-9; 180. Atco
(N.J.) Winslow Township HS
Mitch Kessel. ol. 6·5. 265, Bloomfield
Hills (Mich.) Seaholm HS
Trislin Marvin, lb, 6·3, 220, Cincinnati
(Ohio) Winton Woods HS
Milch Meador, dl, 6-4, 240, Greenwood
(Ind.) Whiteland Community HS
Patrick ODonnell. p, 6-5,2 10, Wellington .
(Fla.) Palm Beach Central HS
Ryan Paxson, dl, 6·6. 220, Brigh ton
(Mich.) HS
.
Will Saddler, db, 6-4, 210, Columbus
(Ind.) East HS
Jordan Stepp. dl. 6·0. 286. Indianapolis
{Jnd.) Ben 0a¥iS HS
Monte Taylor, d1, 6·5, 245, Los Angeles
(Calif.), El Camino CC

Thursday, February 5, 2009

LeBron's 52 leads Cavs past Knicks
NEW YORK (AP) LeBron James couldn't nltch
Kobe Bryant, soh" settled for
matching Michael Jordan.
James scored a season-rugh
52 points in his 21st career
. triple-double, joined Jordan
as the only visiting players
with multiple 50-point games
at the present Madison
Square Garden. and led
Cleveland to a 107-102 victory over New York on
Wednesday night.
1\vo nights after Bryant set
a record at the- present building with 61 points, James was
on pace to break it after scoring 20 in the ftrst quarter. His
.scoring eventually .tailed oft' a
bit. espllCially after he brielly
left the game in the fourth
quarter after cmmping up. but
the skills that make him perhaps the NBA's premier allaround player remained
throughout.
James added II assists and
10 rebounds. becoming the
ftrst player since Kareem
Abdul-Jabbar in 1975 to have
a triple-double in a 50-point
game. James grabbed his
ftnal rebound with under 2
seconds left. then tumbled out
of bounds as time expired.
They were similar numbers
to James ' game here last
March, when he tinished with
50 points, 10 assists and eight
rebounds. Jordan is the only
other visiting player to twice
score 50 here , with a high of
55 that was the opponent
record before Bryant broke it
Monday night.
Zydrunas llgauskas scored
15 points. and Wally
Szczerbiak had 12 points and
13 rebound s for the
·Cavaliers, who have won
four straight and eight of
nine. They are off until a
showdown with Bryant and
the Los Angeles · Lakers on
Sunday in Cleveland. where
·the Cavaliers are 23-0.
AI Harrington scored 39
points for the Knicks. who
fell to 0-2 during they're
referring to as "Dream
Week," games against the
Lakers, Cavs and Boston
Celtics. David Lee had 12

:)0

l'E'IITS •Yo!. .i ~ - :\t •. q•J

In concert
Sunday,A6

l'rinttd "" 100%

-tl)

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

RHyt.·lt-d :\ewsprint .

II{ Ill\\ . I I 1\l{l \1{\ t• . :!OII&lt;l

"'"'-m~tt:~il~"·ntirlt' l.eom

SPORTS
• High school baskelb8JI,
action~ See Pate Bl

To

Special Edition
February 13, 2009

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
Meigs
County's share of money
allocated under the state's.
Neighborhood Stabilization
Program will be used to
demolish up to seven abandoned or foreclosed houses
and to build one new home . .
The efforts will be concentrated in the villages of
Middleport and Pomeroy,
because those two communities have the most fore-

. AP phattl

Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James (23) goes up
for a layup in the fourth quarter of the Cavaliers' 107-102
victory over the Knicks in their NBA basKetball game at
Madison Square Garden in New.·York on Wednesday.
·
points and 10 reoounds.
bers or anything like that. I've
The foqts on James' fin;t never been that type of playtrip here in November was er.''
his free agency in 2010. days
Yet he was looking for his
atier the Knicks made a pair own shot to start and was
of tnldes to clear salary cap ahead of Bryant's pace early
space for a run at him . This on, drainin¥ a jumper at the
time. the building was slill buzzer to gtve him 20 points
buzzing from Bryant's per- in the · first quarter - two
fonnance. and the talk was on more (hllll Bryant had - and
whether James could top it. Cleveland a-36-24 lead.
He said he wouldn't try The Knicks used a 16-3
unless the situation called for spurt to cut a 14-point deficit
it.
' to 43-42 midway through the
"We go out and try to win second. but the Cavs came
ball games. Myself and Kobe out of a timeout with a play
go out_ and win ballgames and that led to an alley -oop pass
somettmes we make games ,for James' dunk. He had 28 in
like that," James said before the halL then fotU~d Ben
the game.
Wallace alone for a layup as.
''It just so happens where time expired that sent
we get high numbers or we Cleveland to the locker rooni
make an unbelievable play. It with a 57-52 advantage.
just · happens thm way. But
James then scored on a
we're out there tirst of \Ill try- drive to give him 50 points,
ing ·to win the basketball and set up llgauskas for a
game. 1 never go into a game bucket that gave the. Cavs
say ing l'ni going to try to put breathing room at 104-100
up a decent amount of num- with 52 seconds remaining.

OTHERS
Ike Ariguzo. wr, 6·6, 210, Columbus
(Ohio) DeSales HS. to Air Force
Ted Bolser, te, 6-5. 210, Cincinnati
(Ohio) Indian H1ll, to Indiana
Ryan Cheek. lb. 6-1. 235, Lancaster
{Ohio) HS, to North Carolina State
Davon Custis, dl, 6-5. 225, Col'umbus
(Ohio) DeSales, lo Northwestern
Jeff Oucl&lt;worth, wr, 6-0, 194, Cindnnati
(Ohio) Princeton HS, to Wi sconsin
Bud Golden. rb. 6·0, 189. Cincinnati
(Ohio) Sycamore HS , to Illinois
Tyler Harrell, dl. 6-3. 230. Dublin (Ohio)
Scioto, lo Iowa
l uke Kuechly, lb, 6- 4, 220, Cincinnati
{Ohio) St.'Xavier HS, to Boston College
Bradley McDougald, rb, 6-1. 185. Dublin
{Ohio) Scioto HS. to Kansas
Pat Muldoon. dl. 6-4. 248, Cincinnati
(Ohio) St. Xavier HS. to Wi sconsin
Dejl Olatoye. db. 6·2, 190, Dublin {Ohio)
Scioto HS, to Colorado
Damon Sims, lb. 6-3, 215, Cincinnati
(Ohio) Colerain HS, to lnd1ana
·
Will Studlien , lb, 6-3. · 225, Sunbury
(Ohto) Big Walnut. to Northwestern
AnthOny Talbert , , te/de. 6·4. 235,
Cincinnati (Ohio) Winton Woods HS, to
North Carolina Slate
Petrick White , db/wr, 6·0, 175,
Picke rin gton \Oh1o) Central HS. to
Michigan State
Brian Wozn iak, te, 6-4, 223. Loveland
(Ohio) HS. to Wisconsin
Denicos Allen, s, 5·10, 205, Hamlhon
(Ohio) HS, lo Michigan State
'
Henry Conway, at, 6-6, 300. Shaker
Heights (Ohio) HS. to Mtchlgan Stale
Oan France. dl . 6-5. 275, North Royalton
(Ohio) HS, to Michigan State
.
Corey Freeman , de, 6·3. 235, Cleveland
Heights (Ohio) HS , to Mich1gan State
Derek Hoebing, le. 6·5, 245. Vermilion
(Ohio) HS, 10 Michtgan State
Nate Klatt, ol. 6-4. 290 , Northwest HS,
CUnlon, Ohio, lo M1ctugan State
Isaiah Bell, db, 6-2 .. 205, Youngslown
(O.hlo) liberty. to Michigan
J.T. Turner, db. 6·2, 165. Massillon (Ohio)
Washington, to Michigan.
Micah Hyde, qb/db, 6-1. 180, Fostorta
(Ohio) Senior HS. to luwa

Concert slated
Saturday, A6

closed properties and the
greatest need.

Meigs County Grants
Adminis.trator Jean Trussell
met with Meigs County
Commissioners Thtmday to
submit a joint cooperation
agreement between Meigs
County and the commissioners in Vinton. Jackson,
Lawrence, Gallia and Scioto
counties and the cities of
Ironton and Portsmouth.
The agreement appoints
Vinton County as the lead
agency in the agreement

Under the agreement. the .
six counties and two cities
will share $1.2 million,
based on foreclosure rates
and other data. Meigs
will . receive
County
$128..000 for clearance of
abandoned condemned or
foreclosed homes. Trussell
said mayors in the villa&amp;es
have identified potenllal
demolition sites.
Trussell said the plan also
calls for purchase of one 9f
the properties through the
Community Actio11 Agency.

construction of a new home
on the lot. and sale of it to a
qualifying first-time homebuyer. That portion of the
project could take up to
fo~r years under the program's tenns.
Unlike many clearance
projects, which allow villages to place liens on properties so demolition costs
can be recovered, no liens
are required under the new
NSP. The property owners
will retain clear deeds to
their properties.

Recovery
funds could
be boon for
local projects
Bv

OBITUARIFS
PageA3
• Ronald Doherty, 58
• Robert Strange, 81

INSIDE
·• W.Va:·plans.,to help
Century employees.
SeePageAJ
• Illegal immigrants
.arrested in drug seizure.
SeePageAJ
• Chemical likely cause
of Ohio water park
illnesses. See Page AJ
• A Hunger For More.
See Page AS
• Ala. church offers
prayers to counter
recession. See Page AS
• Christian rockers,
performance artist
set for Youth Bash.
See Page A6
• Ministry coming
to local church.
See Page A6

Sllllf photo

Though once hayflelds, the site of Gatling, Ohio's Yellowbush Mine, which is still under construction just outside of Racine,
already has around 100 people working on the project. Around 200 people are expected to be employed by.the first of
July. Though the mine is officially called the Yellowbush Mine, the coal prep plani, being built up this road and just over
that hill, will be called the Buckeye Plant. ·

Free h~alth Pomeroy investigating a~cidents
Sc~eenmgs
A. ,
.

fo)}women

BY BETH SeRGENT
I!SEAGENTOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

•
·I
.•,,
POMEROY - Officers
I .'
with the Pomeroy Police
.•'
,,
STAFF REPORT
Department have been busy
MOSNEWSOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM
'
processing the following
'
POMEROY ~ With the traffic accidents, according
to Chief Mark E. Proffitt.
cost of everything on the . Officers recently investi•
...;;
rise · when . a good deal gated a four-car accident on
comes along. especially
when it comes to free health East Main Street near
WEATHER
care, it's hard to pass up.
Sycamore Street. Vehicles
For women of all ages driven·by Jennifer L. Leister,
who are uninsured or Marietta and Richard B . .
underinsured there will be Cogar, Racine, were stopped
free breast and cervical on East Main Street. A vehicancer screenings as well cle driven by Beverly K.
a~ .education provided dur- Skidmore, Albany was
ing a free, mobile clinic "moving slowly forward"
.driven
by
from 9 a.m. - 3 p.m.. when aE vehicle
S
S
March 11.
Victor . tewart, yracuse,
The free screenings will was alle~edly unable to stop.
take place inside the Stewarts vehicle pushed
mobile van of Ohio into Skidmore, Sktdmore
Details on Page A3
University's College of into Cogar and Cogar into
Osteopathic
Medicine Leister. Emergency personCommunity
Health nel with the Pomeroy Fire
Programs which will be Department and Meigs EMS
Beth SergenVphoto
parked ill the Meigs County were also on' scene . The
Health Department.
reports states there were The Pomeroy Police Department has been busy investigat2 StcnONS- l:Z PAGES
The vis1t brings with it "possible injuries."
ing several accidents in the downtown area, including this
free
pap
tests,
pelvic
and
A
vehicle
driven
,
by
one
involving four vehicles on East Main Street.
Annie's Mailbox
A3 breast examinations, breast Contessa J. Fish, Pomeroy,
'
Calendars
A3 health education and was accidentallr backed into A Meigs County Sheriff's ed with a vehicle driven by
for mammo- a concrete wallm the parking Office vehicle driven by Dale Cunningham , Jr.,
Classifieds
' B3-4 appointments
grams will be provided to lot of Save-A-Lot on West Deputy Robert A. Smith, Hartford, W.Va., on West
uninsured and underinsured Main Streel in order to avoid Pomeroy, was involved in a Main Street near the traffic
Comics
women .
another vehicle which \Vas crash while responding to a light at the Bridge of Honor.
A2
Editorials
Appointments
are backing up in the parking lot. call. Sh1ith was heading Btewer was cited for failure
required and interested perKathy Conde, Pomeroy, west to east when he hit ice to yield to left tum.
Faith • Values
A4-6 sons
A vehicle owned by the
would call 1-800-844- reported while driving on and lost control of lhe cur
Movies
A3 2654 or 593-2432 to sched- State Street she hit a patch of . and went off to the right Village of Middleport drian appointment.
ice and went otl the road, side of the road and struck ven by Ray E. Thot)1pson,
Obituaries
A3 uleThe
mobile unit is provid- Iandin~ in a neighbor's yard. an electric pole and Middleport, slid on a patch
B Section ed as a community service No vistble damage was done. guardrail in front of Cash .of ice and into a parked
Sports
by OU's College of
A Village of Pomeroy Land. Smith along with pas- vehicle owned by Erick T.
Weather
A3 Osteopathic
Medicine's vehicle driven by Charles E. senger Depuly Joshua M. Graham, Rulland . The acciHealth Fitchpatrick. Middleport, Ridenour, Chester, were dent occurred when turning
© aoo9 Ohio Valley PubiiBhlng Co. Community · ·
Programs, Breast and accidentally struck a vehicle taken by Sgt. R. Patterson to · off Rut land Street onto
Cervical Cancer Projects of ., driven by Melinda R . . Holzer Hospital for treat- North Third Street in
Southeast Ohio and the Thompson, Leta,rt, W.Va ., ment of possible injuries.
Middleport. The (eporl
. Susan .G. Komen For The on East Main Street . near
A vehicle driven by Diana noted the road was covered
Bun's Party Bam.
S. Brewer. Pomeroy. collid- in ice and snow.
• Cure Columbus.

.

Bs

e&gt;nl!ipolis lllnil1• lCnuunr
446-2342

l~Dint ~lr,,~nnt

Rrnistrr
675-1333

The nally Sentinel
992·2155

Advertising Deadline is Monday, February 9th

BRIAN

J.

REED

BREEDOMYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

INDEx

Don't miss out on this great opportunity to
have your business included!

The Ohio Department or
Development has made the
funds available ro counties
to prevent the blight of
abandoned houses in the
community and provide an
opportunity ' for low and
moderate-income households to buy a home .
Governments can use
their neighborhood stabilization grants to acquire
land and property, demoltsh
or rehabilitate !\bandonetl
Please see ......_ Al

'•

POMEROY - Economic
recovery funds from the
federal government ·
while they last - could
help local communities see
.completion of infrastructure
projects.
Local villages and the
county are stepping up
efforts to make ready water
and sewer upgrades and
other construction projects
that might qualify if and
when
.the . American
Recovery .
and
Reinvestment Act of 2009
is signed into law.
The legislation also proposes over $4 ·million in
funds for educational services
and
facilities
improvements for the three
local sChool districts in
Meigs County.
County Commissioner
Mick Davenport said local
governments are lining up
projects in anticipation of
funding, bec&lt;luse eligible
projects must be "spade
ready" later this year. He
said the anticipated funding
could be a welcome source
of revem1e for local
improvements.
"We hope the program
will be a good resource .
~md we will do anything we
can to ensure th&lt;tt villages
and townships are prepared
in the evenl funds are
available." Davenport said
Thursday.
Duve.npt•rt said lillie
information has come down
to . the county level about
how funds ti·om the legislation will be distrib11ted. or
how they might be applied.
U.S. Rep. Charlie Wilson,
D-Bridgeport, said the
ARRA would make a nearly
$75 million i11vestmen1 in
school districls that make
up
Ohio's
Sixth
Congressional District.
"The American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act has
two purposes: to neate jobs
and to lay the ft\undation for
future economic growth,"
Wilson said. "Th; invest- '
ment th&lt;lt !his plan is making in education accomplisbes both of.those goals."
"Building 21st-century
classrooms is good for
schools. good for jobs and
good for every single tine of
our children who deserve a
first-rate education." .
In total. the ARRA will
provide more than $140 bil.lion 10 improve our nation's
education system and to
make college more affordable and accessible for students and their families .
Specifically. the legislation
proposes $13 billion for
. Title I funding , $13 billion
for special education funding, $20 billion for school
modernization and tepair
· and
$1 billion for new tech'nology investments.

Ple•s• see .Funds. A:S

�.

.

The Daily Sentinel • Pqe A3

-.-,dail;yseatiael.com

Friday, February 6, 2009
J

The Daily Sentinel .

Page.A2

OPINION

FriUy, February6, 2009
•

.
Crowds
at
the
inauguration
showed
real
emotion
The Daily Sentinel ·
-·111 Court Street • ~ Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co __
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manage_r·News Editor

Congress shall malu no law rtspt'cting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting thr
frtr e.'(ercisr thereof,· or abridging thr fnrdom
of speech, or of the prtss; or thr right of the
pt'oplr peaceably to assemble, and to petition
. the Goven1ment for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Feb. 6, the 37th day of2009. There are 328
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 6. 1911. Ronald Wilson Reagan. the 40th president
of the United States. was bom in Tampico. III.
On this date:
In 1756. America's third vice president. AarQn Burr. was
bom in Newark,NJ.
In I778 . .the United States .won official recognition from
Fmnce with the signing of a Treaty of Alliance in Paris ..
In 1788. Massachusens became the sixth state to ratify the
\J. S: Constitution. ·
·
In 1899. a peace treaty between the United States and Spain
was mtified by the U.S. Senate.
In 1933. the 20th Amendment to the Constitution. the socalled "lame du~:k" amendment. was proclaimed in effect by
Secretary of State Henry Stimson, .
In 1952, Britain's King George VI died: he was succeeded
by his daughter, Elizabeth II.
In 1959. the United States successfully test-tired for the
first time u Titan intercontinental ballistic missile from Cape
Canaveral. Flu.
In 1978, Muriel Humphrey took the oath of office us a
United States senator from Minnesota, tilling the seat of her
late husband, former' Vice ·President Hubert Humphrey.
In 1992. 16 people were killed when a C-130 military transport plane crashed in Evansville. Ind.
1
In 1996, a Turkish-owned Boeing 757 jetliner crushed into
the Atlantic Ocean shortly after takeoff from the Dominican
Repubic, killing 189 people. mostly Gennan tourists.
Ten years ago: The public tinally got to see and hear
Monica Lewinsky as e~cerpts of the fortrier White House .
intem 's videotaped testim()ny were shown at President Bill
Clinton's impeachment trial. Clinton requested legislation to
require background checks on buyers at gun shows.
Five years ago: President George W. Bush appointed a
bipartisan· commission to examine intelligence on Iraq's
weapons. An explosion ripped through a Moscow subway car
during rush hour. killing 41 people. Auto mechanic Joseph P.
Smith was charged with murder after authorities in Sarasota,
Fla., found the body of 11-year-old Carlie Brucia, whose kidnapping had been captured by a carwash surveillance camera.
(Smith·was later conv\cted and sentenced to death.)
One year ago: At least 54 deaths were reported after two
days of tornadoes that plowed across Mississippi, Arkansas,
Tennessee, Kentucky and Alabama. The White House
defended the use of the interrogation technique known as
waterboarding, saying it was legal - not torture as critics
argued - and had saved American Jives. The Phoenix Suns
acquired Shaquille O'Neal in a stunning blockbuster.deal that
sent four-time All-Star Shawn Marion and Marcus Banks to
the Miami Heat.
Thought for Today: "Work is much more fun than fun." Sir Noel Coward, British actor, dramatist and songwriter
(1899-1973).

Phyllis TICkle tried to pay
close attention to the
prayer&gt;: at the inauguration
of President Obama. which
i,;n 't surprising since she
has written a whole shelf of
books on riles of public and
private prayer.
The problo:m was that she
didn't hear much in the way
of traditional prayer, in
terms of clergy otlering
words of praise and petition
to God. Instead. the prayers
sounded like lectures or
mini-sermons aimed at the
masses on the National
Mall.
~Did I think the official
prayers were disasters?
No," said Tickle. author of.
among many relevant
works, "Prayer Is a Place:
America ·s
Religious
· Landscape Observed."
"I ju;;t thought that they
lacked the majesty of a
psalm before ·the throne of
God. substituting instead ...
the mundane and plebian
commentary of a human
being to other human beings
about an established list of
errors and of desirable aims,
with a little advice to ·God
thrown in. ... r m not sure
why preachers think they ·
have to do that."
The clergy in the rites surrounding the inauguration.
of course. faced the challenge of praying in a politil'al minefield. On one side
were the atheists .and secularists whose lawsuits failed
·co keep religious language
out of the proceedings. On

loving to everyone you halve

made.»

Terry
IIIMtlngly

the other side were religious
activists - liberals and
conservatives - poised II)
judge whether the prayers
made the grade, poJitically
and doctrinally.
Pity the · poor shepherd
who has to. pie~ his own
!lock and The New York
Times editorial page.
Most of the early analysis
focused on the decision to
invite the Rev. Rick W~n
- an evangelical leader
who rejects Obama 's support for abortion .and gay
rights - to offer the invocation. Warren opened by
blending a theme from his
own
bestseller.
"The
Purpose Driven Life," with
snippets of Jewish and
Muslim prayers.
"Almighty God, our
Father, everything we see
and everything we can't see
e~ists because of you alone .
It all comes from you, lt all
belongs to you. It all exists
for your glory. History is
your story," he said. ·
"Scripture tells us. ·Hear 0
Israe I, the Lord is our God.
The lord is One.' And you
are the compassionate and
merciful one. And you are

The prayer also included
words of thanksgiving for
the election of an AfticanAmerican president. an
appeal for economic justice
and concern for the environment. The California megachurch pastor then dared to
close with clear references
to Jesus - in Hebrew.
Arabic •
Spanish
and
English - and the Lord's
Prayer.
1lte benediction was by
the Rev. Joseph Lowery, a
strong voice from the civil
ljghts movement. He began
with the poetic fmallines of
the
"Negro
National
Anthem," the classic '.'Lift
Every Voice and Sing," and
then ended with an edgy
poem based on the ·work of
blues singer Big Bill
Broonzy.
"Lord, in the memory of
all the saints who from their
labors rest. and in the joy of
a new beginning," he coneluded, "we ask you to help
us work for that day when
black will not be asked to
get back, when brown can
stick around. when yellow
will be mellow, when the
red man can get ahead. man •
and when white will
embrace what is right. Let
all those who do justice and
love mercy say. 'Amen.'..
In between. Lowery
offered sharp shots of political commentary, including
a pronouncement that
America has recently "sown

the seeds of greed.~ blown
by the "wind of greed and

that have
nation to "reap
the whirlwind of social and
economic . . disruption."
Thus. be asked God to "heJp
us to make chokes on the
side of love. not bate: on the
side o(j~~~ilusion. not exclusi~olerance, not intoler,.
~ne of tllis. stressed
TtekJe, was all that unusllll.
Pra
.
~
. .
yers wnnen .or. use tn
these kinds of giut civic
events are almost always
"rather didactic" and ~con­
tent driven." As a rule. they
also tend to be long.
On this historic inauguratioo day. anyone seeking the
most fervent expressions of
faith. hope and love needed
to bear the voices in the
· crowd, not the leaders in the
pulpit.
"The real prayers were
written by the people on
that mall .and· across the
nation, with ,their bodies,
with their voices, with their
cries and with the~ tears,"
said Tickle. "Thai was the
corruption-

·~:aused the

religious ex~rience thar
. really mattered on that day:•
!Terry Mattingly is dirtctor of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion .org project ·to
study religion and the .
news'.) .

•

Raila I 5tranae

CHARLESTON, . W.Va.
Manchin spokesman Man
(AP) - Gov. Joe Manchin Turner said Thursday tbe
has called on state agencies team expects to travel to
WEST COLUMBIA. W.1'a. - Robert Strange. 81. of to create a support team to Ravenswood next .week to
West Columbia, W.Va .. died Thursday morning. Feb. 5. he lp workers na"igate the start providing information
::!009. at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center closure
of
Century and assistance to plant
in Point Pleasant. W.Va.
plant
in workers.
AI uminum 's
Arrangement' are under the direction of Crow-Hussell Ravenswood.
California-based Century
Funer.!.l Home, Pvint Pleasant. An online guest registry is
available at www.crowhussellth.com .

Bv EunBETH RIGa

COOLVILLE - Ronald Dale Doberty, 58. of Arcadia
Nursing Home in Coolville.died Thursday. Feb. 5. 2009 at
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
Visitation will be from 1-3 p.m. on Sundar at WhiteShwarlel Funer.ll Home in Coolville. with servtces by Rev .
George Horner at 3 p.m.
Burial will be at a later time in Rockland Celilelery in Bel~re.
You can sign the online . guestbook . at www.whileschwarlelfuner.tlhorne .com.

ERIGEl.Oo.tVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

.Local Briefs
Report available
POMEROY - Annual financial report ol" the Meigs
County District Public Library is completed and available
for inspection at the oftice of Fiscal Offi~:er Connie l Taylor. 216 W. Main St.. Pvmeroy.

POMEROY - Meigs County Health Dqpartment wil l
conduct a childhood immunization and tlu shot clinic from
9-11 a.m. at1d 1-3 p.m. on Feb. Ill at 112 E. Memorial Dr. .
Pomeroy.
.
Children's shot records are requin;d and children mtist be
accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. Brin~ medica I
and insurance cards, if applicable. $10 donation ts accept.
ed. 'Flu shot administration is $15 without Medicare B o r
Medicaid covemge.

Local Weather
Friday .•.Mostly sunny.
·Highs around 40. Southwest
winds around 5 mph.
.
nigbt •••Partly
. Friday
cloudy. Not as cool with,
lows in the lower 30s. South
winds around 5 mph.
Saturday ...i"&lt;trtly sunny
with a 20 percent chance of
rain showers. Not &lt;tS cool
with highs in the mid 50s.
Southwest winds I0 to 15
mph with gusts up to 25 inph.
Saturday night, •.Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 30s. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday ...Cloudy in the
morning ... Then becoming
partly sunny. A 50 percent
chance of showers. Highs in
the lower 50s.
night
and
Sunday

Monday •• .Mostly cloudy
Lows in .the • lower 30s
Highs ill the lower 50s.
Monday night ...Most! y
cloudy with a 4ll percenI
chance of showers. lows in
the upper 30s.
·
Tuesdlly...Mostly cloud
with a 50 percent chance o~
showers. Highs in the lowe r
50s ...
Tuesday nigbt ...Cloud y
with a 50 percent chance of
showers. lows ·in the lowe r
40s.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday nigbt...Mostly
cloudy wilh a 50 percen I
chance of showers. Highs in
the mid 50s. Lows iti th e
upper 30s.
Thorsday...Cioudy with a
50 percent chance of show
ers. Highs. around 50.

-

Ohio Valley Bene Corp. (NASDAQ)-18.85
BBT (NYSE) - 17.43
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 11.35
Pepsico (NYSE) - 52.35
Premier (NASDAQ) - 5.53
Rockwell (NYSE)-'- 25.13
Rocky Baals (NASDAQ) - 3.3 1
Royal Dutch Shell - 50.64
Seare Holding (NASDAQ) 40.03
.98
City Holding ·(NASDAQ) - 26.07 Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.56
w.ndy'a (NYSE) - 5.34
Collins (NYSE) - 38.11
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 21.57
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Worthington (NYSE) - 10.62
US Bank (NYSE) - 14.99
Dally stock reports ore the 4
Gannett (NYSE) - 4.80
p.m. ET cloalng quotes ot IranS•
Generai·Eiectrlc (NYSE) actions lor Feb. 5, 2009, provld.
10.85
ed by Edward Jones financial
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) adVIsors laaac Milia In
13.08
Galllpolla at (740) 441·9441 an d
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 24.54
Lesley Marrero In Point
Kroger (NYSE) - 22
Pteaaant at (304) 674·0174.
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 8.40
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) - 39.51 ·Member SIPC.

Rendition issue is resolved,for now

Lerters to the editor are 11'elcmue. Thev should be less
than 300 words. Alllerters are subject to.editing, must be
signt·d. cmd im'iuc/e address and telephone number. No
' .
.
unsigned feller., •rill be published. Li:lters should be in
There has been a gqod
will not be held indefinitely
good wste, culclrnsing is.wes, not persontllities. Letters of deal of controversy over
in
American
prisons.
thanks 10 or~cmi:arions and individuals will 1101 be accept- renditions ~ moving capInstead. the Bush adminiseel for publica/ion.
tration's rendition policy
tured terrorists to countries
~
will remain an option,
where they might be lor·
tured.
Human:rights
though
presumably, efforts
William
will be made to ensure that
activists have complained
Rusher
prisoners moved to other
that this has led to abuses,
Reader Services
(USPS 213-960)
·countries
wm not be abused.
and
the
European
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Parliament has gone so · far
As an anonymous Obama
Our main concern in an stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
as
to
condemn
renditions
as
administration
official told a
through Friday. 111 Court Street,
be accUrate. If you know of an error
"an illegal instrument used vital inteiligence sources. So reporter, "Obviously, you
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in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pom'eroy.
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tions to The Daily Senti'nel, 111 Court
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Thus far. even humanallacks against the United sion has contitiued, and
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lively
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Outoldo Meigs County
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. .. ' 56.55
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I
Web:
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s_2_w_._ek_s________·_'_22_7_.2~1
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disclosed withoul revealing been answered . Terrorists tor for Human · Rights

The Daily Sentinel

l ____________________

,.

CROWN CITY - Three
cit izens of Mexico believed
to be illegal immi~rants
were arrested followmg a
cocaine seizure inade at an
0 hio Township residence
s·aturday night.
According lo a· press
re lease issued by the Galli a
county Sheriff's Oftice. a
vehicle was stopped for a
tr·alftc violation on Ohio 7
around 9 p.m. Saturday .
a nd it was determined that
the driver, Felix M. Juarez.
.30, 15568 Ohio 7.. Crown
c ity. was operating the

.. .

vehicle with no driver's
lkense and was also living
in the country illegally. In
addition, ·Juarez
was
accompanied by a IS-yearpld female from Columbus .
who was riding in the passenger seat of the vehicle.
Alter further questioning,
the. deputy
reportedly
received permission to
search the mobile home
where the couple had been
living. Upon the arrival of
law enforcement, two more
male citizens of Mexico
without green ~:ards were
allegedly located along with
a 17-year-old female and an
adult female, bOth of

Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I have never
,.aken
drugs and never will,
but I recently learned that
0 ne of my best guy friends
has been smoking weed .
Annie. we are only 14. I've
told him drugs are bad for
h im. but he keeps assuring
me that he is not addicted
a nd it's not harmful. I haye
no idea how else to rea~:t. I
don 't know how I am going
I o face him anymore, and he
sits ne~t to me in all my
c.lasses.
Would it be t;ight for me
to just forget about what he
I old me and keep being his
best friend? Is he right when
he says weed is not harmf ul? He thinks I'm overreacting if I decide to not be
his friend anymore. - The
Girl Who Doesn't Want
To Lose Her Best Friend
Dear Girl: Ally drug can
be harmful. and weed is a
drug. Your friend might also
be using it as a form of
stress relief. which means he
may IX: covering up some
real emotional issues. You
don't have to give up lhe
friendship so Ion~ .as he
doesn't try to convmce you

to join him. and provided embarrassing them into
you can avoid being influ- being quiet. - Too LQud
enced by him. We also trust
Dear Too Loud: Codes of
you will keep your distance conduct for the workplace
when he's actually smoking. need to be enforced by
Dear Annie: I work in a someone in a position of
spacious oftice without par- authority. If your boss contitions. Two of the people · dones and contributes to the
nearest me are ridiculously level of noise. there isn't
loud. They react audibly to much you can do. One
e-mails and speak to them- · option is to politely ask the
selves as if we are all inter- olfenders to tone it down
ested in the conversation: I because the constant clamor
can hear them clearly when makes it difficult to ~:onl·en­
they talk on the phone. One trdte on your work. Or. if
of them always reacts over- your boss has a supervisor,
the-top. whether it's a hang- you can complain to that
nail or a heart attack. Both person about the lack of
have been known to break prof~ssionalism. Other than
out in son~. which can be that, however, invest in a
fun if you re not trying to better set of sound-blockmg
conc.entrate oil your job. I headphones. Sorry.
listen to my iPod most of
Dear Annie: I read the
the day, but even with the letter from "Worried,"
earbuds in. I can still hear whose boyfriend belittled
her intelligence and said she
them.
You:ve suggested seeing asked too many questions.
supervisors and HR depart- lt's)&gt;een 4ll years smce I fell
ments in the past. But these in love with &lt;I man like that.
people have worked here We are still together. but I
for many · years and their fell out of love with him
decibel level lias become a many years ago. I was inteljoke. Everyone else. includ- I_igent, pretty. talented and
mg my boss. talks over tun to be wtth. but he conother peorle"sdesks as well. vinced me otherwise.
I am lookmg for some office
As the years went by. he
etiquette regarding noise in became more and more critthe workplace in the hope of . ical and judgmental of our

&lt;md urine from swimmers.
The report says trichloramine is the main chloramine found above chlorinated waler surfaces and
ltas been suspected as the
cause of outbreaks of eye
and respiratory irritation.
Federal health officials
said no new cases were
reported al'ter the water ~ark
followed recommendations
for increasi.n~ air movement
and distributiOn at the pool
deck level.
The CDC article added
nothing new to what the
water park had been told. said
Steve Shmtuck. spokesman
for Great Wolf lodge. which
is owned by Madison. Wis .based Great Wolf Resorts Inc .
He said the water park
implemented many of the
recommendation s before
the report was completed.

Community Calendar

Funds

since been put on the three
male sus·pects.
Kreana Kroah Lock. 20.
Columbus. was also arrested at the scene on a charge
of marijuana possession.
The 15-year-old juvenile
was released into the custody of her mother and the
17-year-old juvenile was
released into the custody of
Fr.mklin County Children's
Services.
Sheriff Joe Browning said
that deputies are investigating the tmfticking in drugs
at this location t\lld he asks
that persons wit!) more
information tall the GCSO
tipline at -146-6555 .

chil~n

and me . When I
look back .to ·che beginning
of our relationship. I can
still remember several incidents that should have been
red flags. but I ignored
them . My advice to
"Worried" is to get out now.
before she makes a commitment. It · might be painful.
but not as painful as a lifetime of criticism. - Older
and Wiser
Dear Older and Wiser:
You aren't the only one who
wrote and suggested that
she run far away or at least
recevaluate their commitment. We agree thai belitlling comments do not bode
well .for the future of the
relationship.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors af the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesma!lboxcomcast .n.et, or wnte
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
606ll. To find out mort
about Annie's Mailbox,
and rrad features by other
Crrators Syndicate M-'riters
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page .atll!ww.cnators.com.

Chemical likely cause of
Ohio water park illnesses

. CINCINNATI (AP) Exposure to accumulalions of
a potential irritant known as
trichloramine likely caused
eye and breathing problems
reported by hundreds of visiIors to an indoor Ohio water
park, according to a fedentl'
report released Thun;day.
Insufficient air movement
and distribution likely led
airborne trichloramine to
collect al the park at Great
Wolf lodge near Cincinnati.
I he Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
reported in its Morbidity and
Mortalily Weekly Report.
The park had 665 comfrom Page AI .
plaints of eye and respiratory irritation by visitors and
properties. and. to offer gear. but no tlid was fe(eived Itfeguards in 2007.
down paymenl and closing for that equipmetlt.
Chloramines are created·
Commisswners also:
cost ·assistance to low- to
from the reaction between
• Approved the tirst•ha If chlorine in the water and
. moderate-inl·ome homebuyappropriation
for the . So il nitrogen:containing sweat
ers - those at 120 percent
and Water Conservatio n
of areu median im:ome.
Commissioners opened a District. in the amount of
bid
from
B&amp;C $44.565.75.
• Approved. a $50 approCommunications, Chillicothe.
for mdio equipment for the priation adjustment with in
Scipio Fire Department The their bupget.
• Recessed until 10 u.m
bid. for 10 mdios,
cost of
Tuesday.
for the approval of
$357 .4H. was referred to
JlliSselllix review. The mdios bills.
Present
we re
will be purchased lhrough the
Saturday, Feb. 7
Mi ck
Community 'Dcvelopnl,nt Cotnmlssioners
SALEM CENTER
Block Gmnt fonnula pro- Davenport and Mil·hn el Star Grange #/78 and Star
gmm. The lire department's Burtrum. and Clerk Glor ia Junior Grange #878 meet in
projccl also calls for turnout Kloes.
regular
session.
with
potluck at 6:30 p.m., fol lowed by 7:30 meeting . .
POMEROY - Christian
from Page At
Motorcycle AssoCiation 's
Title I and IDEA fund s lechnologically ~ update d, "Delivered" chapter, regular
will be increased to help 21st-century · classromns meeting. 4 p.m., Common
Grounds, Highland Road .
low-income students u.nd for local students.
.
RACINE
Racine
The economic recove ry
students with disabilities.
I .·. ·Additionally, funding will package is designed, in paIt , Youth league. organizabe provided to help schools to ~:reate millions of jobs by lionul meeting. 3:30 p.m..
repair. rcnovute. and mod- providing increased fundi ng R&lt;~cine American Legion.
·
l\1onday, Feb. 9
ernize their facilities over fur infrastructure impmv eI.
CHAUNCEY - An Area
ttle next two years. which ment&lt; l'enewable ener gy
14
youth council meeting
initiatives
and
other
proje
CIS
Wilson said, will create
will
be held 9 a.m. at the
new construction jobs for · importune to America's lo ng
Athens CDJFS-Chauncey.
local ·workers and provide tenn growth.

'"a

Columbus. Following a
search of the residem:e by ·
deputies and an Ohio State .
Highway Patrol trooper.
approximately 55.5 grams
of cocaine were seized
along with more than
$2.100 cash. according to
the police report.
Juarez was arrested at the
scene and booked into the
Galli a County Jail along
with
Margarito
T.
Gonzalez. 34. and Alberto
J. Juarez . 24. both of 15568
Ohio 7. for possession of a
scredule II narcotic and
tmfticking. The Department
Of Immigration was contacted and holders have

Keep distance when friend smokes

Plan

Watch. tqld the Los Angeles
Times that "under limited
circumstances, there is a
legitimate place" for renditions . "What I heard loud
and clear from the president's order was that they
want to design a system that
doesn't result in people
being sent to foreign dungeons to be . tortured." Fair
enough.
.
Resolving · the problems
involved in this matter of
terrorists has been difficult
and probably isn't over yet.
Obviously, we must abide
by our own constitutional
provisions . But. equally
obvious. we cannol allow
terrorists committed to our
destruction to go about their
busit1ess uninterrupted. The
policies' described above ·
strike a reasonable balance
between individual rights
and our obligation to protect
our country.
(William Rusher is em
llCcomp/islted. author, former publisher of tlte
National Review and farmer
vice •·haimtwt ·of the
American
Conservative
. Union.)

in aluminum prices and
increased oper&lt;thng costs.
Turner said tbe supt?Ort
team will provide a vanety
of services to workers.
including counseling. information about job trdining
and tuition payments.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Immunization clinic

AEP (NYSE) - 33.63 .
AkZo (NASDAQ) - 37.45
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 6.96
Big Lots (NYSE) - 13.74 '
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 19.24
BorgWarne'r (NYSE) - 18.92
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)'
-4.12
Champion (NASDAQ) - 2.92
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

.I

Aluminulll
announced
Wednesday it would lay off
the majority of the plant 's
651 workers and dose the
operation by Feb. 20.
The company says it
decided to close the 51-yearold plant because of a drop

IDegal immigrants arrested in drug seizure

Local Stocks

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

'

Deaths

Clubs'and
organizations

Mei~s
POMEROY County · Relay For Lite,
team captains' meeting.
5:30p.m .. Pomeroy library.

Public meetings
M9nday,Feb.9
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m..
Rulland Fire Stut ion .
Tuesday. Feb. 10
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township. Trustees meet in
regular session, 6:30 p.m ..
Olive Township gumge.
SHADE Bedford
Township Trustees regular
monthly meeting, 7 p.m..
town hall.
Wednesday, Feb. 11
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees meet ut.
· 6:30 p.m.. 111 home ot
Trustee Manning Roush.

• PMI lf.7 Ttcllrllell...,_tt
• l"tt!lr.i ~ . "-11 J(ll.il 000....')'

h~l l

• 1[) •~a~ ildCIKiill wiln Wlt!Jft'l•l~

• Cullum Slwl Pt91•

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The Daily Sentinel • Pqe A3

-.-,dail;yseatiael.com

Friday, February 6, 2009
J

The Daily Sentinel .

Page.A2

OPINION

FriUy, February6, 2009
•

.
Crowds
at
the
inauguration
showed
real
emotion
The Daily Sentinel ·
-·111 Court Street • ~ Ohio

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

Ohio Valley Publishing Co __
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manage_r·News Editor

Congress shall malu no law rtspt'cting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting thr
frtr e.'(ercisr thereof,· or abridging thr fnrdom
of speech, or of the prtss; or thr right of the
pt'oplr peaceably to assemble, and to petition
. the Goven1ment for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday. Feb. 6, the 37th day of2009. There are 328
days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Feb. 6. 1911. Ronald Wilson Reagan. the 40th president
of the United States. was bom in Tampico. III.
On this date:
In 1756. America's third vice president. AarQn Burr. was
bom in Newark,NJ.
In I778 . .the United States .won official recognition from
Fmnce with the signing of a Treaty of Alliance in Paris ..
In 1788. Massachusens became the sixth state to ratify the
\J. S: Constitution. ·
·
In 1899. a peace treaty between the United States and Spain
was mtified by the U.S. Senate.
In 1933. the 20th Amendment to the Constitution. the socalled "lame du~:k" amendment. was proclaimed in effect by
Secretary of State Henry Stimson, .
In 1952, Britain's King George VI died: he was succeeded
by his daughter, Elizabeth II.
In 1959. the United States successfully test-tired for the
first time u Titan intercontinental ballistic missile from Cape
Canaveral. Flu.
In 1978, Muriel Humphrey took the oath of office us a
United States senator from Minnesota, tilling the seat of her
late husband, former' Vice ·President Hubert Humphrey.
In 1992. 16 people were killed when a C-130 military transport plane crashed in Evansville. Ind.
1
In 1996, a Turkish-owned Boeing 757 jetliner crushed into
the Atlantic Ocean shortly after takeoff from the Dominican
Repubic, killing 189 people. mostly Gennan tourists.
Ten years ago: The public tinally got to see and hear
Monica Lewinsky as e~cerpts of the fortrier White House .
intem 's videotaped testim()ny were shown at President Bill
Clinton's impeachment trial. Clinton requested legislation to
require background checks on buyers at gun shows.
Five years ago: President George W. Bush appointed a
bipartisan· commission to examine intelligence on Iraq's
weapons. An explosion ripped through a Moscow subway car
during rush hour. killing 41 people. Auto mechanic Joseph P.
Smith was charged with murder after authorities in Sarasota,
Fla., found the body of 11-year-old Carlie Brucia, whose kidnapping had been captured by a carwash surveillance camera.
(Smith·was later conv\cted and sentenced to death.)
One year ago: At least 54 deaths were reported after two
days of tornadoes that plowed across Mississippi, Arkansas,
Tennessee, Kentucky and Alabama. The White House
defended the use of the interrogation technique known as
waterboarding, saying it was legal - not torture as critics
argued - and had saved American Jives. The Phoenix Suns
acquired Shaquille O'Neal in a stunning blockbuster.deal that
sent four-time All-Star Shawn Marion and Marcus Banks to
the Miami Heat.
Thought for Today: "Work is much more fun than fun." Sir Noel Coward, British actor, dramatist and songwriter
(1899-1973).

Phyllis TICkle tried to pay
close attention to the
prayer&gt;: at the inauguration
of President Obama. which
i,;n 't surprising since she
has written a whole shelf of
books on riles of public and
private prayer.
The problo:m was that she
didn't hear much in the way
of traditional prayer, in
terms of clergy otlering
words of praise and petition
to God. Instead. the prayers
sounded like lectures or
mini-sermons aimed at the
masses on the National
Mall.
~Did I think the official
prayers were disasters?
No," said Tickle. author of.
among many relevant
works, "Prayer Is a Place:
America ·s
Religious
· Landscape Observed."
"I ju;;t thought that they
lacked the majesty of a
psalm before ·the throne of
God. substituting instead ...
the mundane and plebian
commentary of a human
being to other human beings
about an established list of
errors and of desirable aims,
with a little advice to ·God
thrown in. ... r m not sure
why preachers think they ·
have to do that."
The clergy in the rites surrounding the inauguration.
of course. faced the challenge of praying in a politil'al minefield. On one side
were the atheists .and secularists whose lawsuits failed
·co keep religious language
out of the proceedings. On

loving to everyone you halve

made.»

Terry
IIIMtlngly

the other side were religious
activists - liberals and
conservatives - poised II)
judge whether the prayers
made the grade, poJitically
and doctrinally.
Pity the · poor shepherd
who has to. pie~ his own
!lock and The New York
Times editorial page.
Most of the early analysis
focused on the decision to
invite the Rev. Rick W~n
- an evangelical leader
who rejects Obama 's support for abortion .and gay
rights - to offer the invocation. Warren opened by
blending a theme from his
own
bestseller.
"The
Purpose Driven Life," with
snippets of Jewish and
Muslim prayers.
"Almighty God, our
Father, everything we see
and everything we can't see
e~ists because of you alone .
It all comes from you, lt all
belongs to you. It all exists
for your glory. History is
your story," he said. ·
"Scripture tells us. ·Hear 0
Israe I, the Lord is our God.
The lord is One.' And you
are the compassionate and
merciful one. And you are

The prayer also included
words of thanksgiving for
the election of an AfticanAmerican president. an
appeal for economic justice
and concern for the environment. The California megachurch pastor then dared to
close with clear references
to Jesus - in Hebrew.
Arabic •
Spanish
and
English - and the Lord's
Prayer.
1lte benediction was by
the Rev. Joseph Lowery, a
strong voice from the civil
ljghts movement. He began
with the poetic fmallines of
the
"Negro
National
Anthem," the classic '.'Lift
Every Voice and Sing," and
then ended with an edgy
poem based on the ·work of
blues singer Big Bill
Broonzy.
"Lord, in the memory of
all the saints who from their
labors rest. and in the joy of
a new beginning," he coneluded, "we ask you to help
us work for that day when
black will not be asked to
get back, when brown can
stick around. when yellow
will be mellow, when the
red man can get ahead. man •
and when white will
embrace what is right. Let
all those who do justice and
love mercy say. 'Amen.'..
In between. Lowery
offered sharp shots of political commentary, including
a pronouncement that
America has recently "sown

the seeds of greed.~ blown
by the "wind of greed and

that have
nation to "reap
the whirlwind of social and
economic . . disruption."
Thus. be asked God to "heJp
us to make chokes on the
side of love. not bate: on the
side o(j~~~ilusion. not exclusi~olerance, not intoler,.
~ne of tllis. stressed
TtekJe, was all that unusllll.
Pra
.
~
. .
yers wnnen .or. use tn
these kinds of giut civic
events are almost always
"rather didactic" and ~con­
tent driven." As a rule. they
also tend to be long.
On this historic inauguratioo day. anyone seeking the
most fervent expressions of
faith. hope and love needed
to bear the voices in the
· crowd, not the leaders in the
pulpit.
"The real prayers were
written by the people on
that mall .and· across the
nation, with ,their bodies,
with their voices, with their
cries and with the~ tears,"
said Tickle. "Thai was the
corruption-

·~:aused the

religious ex~rience thar
. really mattered on that day:•
!Terry Mattingly is dirtctor of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads
the
GetReligion .org project ·to
study religion and the .
news'.) .

•

Raila I 5tranae

CHARLESTON, . W.Va.
Manchin spokesman Man
(AP) - Gov. Joe Manchin Turner said Thursday tbe
has called on state agencies team expects to travel to
WEST COLUMBIA. W.1'a. - Robert Strange. 81. of to create a support team to Ravenswood next .week to
West Columbia, W.Va .. died Thursday morning. Feb. 5. he lp workers na"igate the start providing information
::!009. at Pleasant Valley Nursing and Rehabilitation Center closure
of
Century and assistance to plant
in Point Pleasant. W.Va.
plant
in workers.
AI uminum 's
Arrangement' are under the direction of Crow-Hussell Ravenswood.
California-based Century
Funer.!.l Home, Pvint Pleasant. An online guest registry is
available at www.crowhussellth.com .

Bv EunBETH RIGa

COOLVILLE - Ronald Dale Doberty, 58. of Arcadia
Nursing Home in Coolville.died Thursday. Feb. 5. 2009 at
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital.
Visitation will be from 1-3 p.m. on Sundar at WhiteShwarlel Funer.ll Home in Coolville. with servtces by Rev .
George Horner at 3 p.m.
Burial will be at a later time in Rockland Celilelery in Bel~re.
You can sign the online . guestbook . at www.whileschwarlelfuner.tlhorne .com.

ERIGEl.Oo.tVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

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Report available
POMEROY - Annual financial report ol" the Meigs
County District Public Library is completed and available
for inspection at the oftice of Fiscal Offi~:er Connie l Taylor. 216 W. Main St.. Pvmeroy.

POMEROY - Meigs County Health Dqpartment wil l
conduct a childhood immunization and tlu shot clinic from
9-11 a.m. at1d 1-3 p.m. on Feb. Ill at 112 E. Memorial Dr. .
Pomeroy.
.
Children's shot records are requin;d and children mtist be
accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. Brin~ medica I
and insurance cards, if applicable. $10 donation ts accept.
ed. 'Flu shot administration is $15 without Medicare B o r
Medicaid covemge.

Local Weather
Friday .•.Mostly sunny.
·Highs around 40. Southwest
winds around 5 mph.
.
nigbt •••Partly
. Friday
cloudy. Not as cool with,
lows in the lower 30s. South
winds around 5 mph.
Saturday ...i"&lt;trtly sunny
with a 20 percent chance of
rain showers. Not &lt;tS cool
with highs in the mid 50s.
Southwest winds I0 to 15
mph with gusts up to 25 inph.
Saturday night, •.Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
chance of showers. Lows in
the upper 30s. Southwest
winds 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday ...Cloudy in the
morning ... Then becoming
partly sunny. A 50 percent
chance of showers. Highs in
the lower 50s.
night
and
Sunday

Monday •• .Mostly cloudy
Lows in .the • lower 30s
Highs ill the lower 50s.
Monday night ...Most! y
cloudy with a 4ll percenI
chance of showers. lows in
the upper 30s.
·
Tuesdlly...Mostly cloud
with a 50 percent chance o~
showers. Highs in the lowe r
50s ...
Tuesday nigbt ...Cloud y
with a 50 percent chance of
showers. lows ·in the lowe r
40s.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday nigbt...Mostly
cloudy wilh a 50 percen I
chance of showers. Highs in
the mid 50s. Lows iti th e
upper 30s.
Thorsday...Cioudy with a
50 percent chance of show
ers. Highs. around 50.

-

Ohio Valley Bene Corp. (NASDAQ)-18.85
BBT (NYSE) - 17.43
Peoples (NASDAQ) - 11.35
Pepsico (NYSE) - 52.35
Premier (NASDAQ) - 5.53
Rockwell (NYSE)-'- 25.13
Rocky Baals (NASDAQ) - 3.3 1
Royal Dutch Shell - 50.64
Seare Holding (NASDAQ) 40.03
.98
City Holding ·(NASDAQ) - 26.07 Wai-Mart (NYSE) - 48.56
w.ndy'a (NYSE) - 5.34
Collins (NYSE) - 38.11
WeaBanco (NYSE) - 21.57
.DuPont (NYSE) - 23.79
Worthington (NYSE) - 10.62
US Bank (NYSE) - 14.99
Dally stock reports ore the 4
Gannett (NYSE) - 4.80
p.m. ET cloalng quotes ot IranS•
Generai·Eiectrlc (NYSE) actions lor Feb. 5, 2009, provld.
10.85
ed by Edward Jones financial
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) adVIsors laaac Milia In
13.08
Galllpolla at (740) 441·9441 an d
JP Morgan (NYSE) - 24.54
Lesley Marrero In Point
Kroger (NYSE) - 22
Pteaaant at (304) 674·0174.
Limited Brands (NYSE) - 8.40
Norfolk Southam (NYSE) - 39.51 ·Member SIPC.

Rendition issue is resolved,for now

Lerters to the editor are 11'elcmue. Thev should be less
than 300 words. Alllerters are subject to.editing, must be
signt·d. cmd im'iuc/e address and telephone number. No
' .
.
unsigned feller., •rill be published. Li:lters should be in
There has been a gqod
will not be held indefinitely
good wste, culclrnsing is.wes, not persontllities. Letters of deal of controversy over
in
American
prisons.
thanks 10 or~cmi:arions and individuals will 1101 be accept- renditions ~ moving capInstead. the Bush adminiseel for publica/ion.
tration's rendition policy
tured terrorists to countries
~
will remain an option,
where they might be lor·
tured.
Human:rights
though
presumably, efforts
William
will be made to ensure that
activists have complained
Rusher
prisoners moved to other
that this has led to abuses,
Reader Services
(USPS 213-960)
·countries
wm not be abused.
and
the
European
Correction Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Parliament has gone so · far
As an anonymous Obama
Our main concern in an stories is to Published every afternoon, Monday
as
to
condemn
renditions
as
administration
official told a
through Friday. 111 Court Street,
be accUrate. If you know of an error
"an illegal instrument used vital inteiligence sources. So reporter, "Obviously, you
Pomeroy. Ohio.· Second-cllss ~stage ·
in a story, call the newsroom at (740) paid at Pom'eroy.
they were sin:tply impris- need to preserve some tools.
·
by the United States."
992-2156
Member: The Associated Press and
oned
without the conven- (Rendition) is controversial
But under executive
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
orders issued recently by tional rights to a fair trial or in some circles and kicked
Poat'malter: Send address correcOur main number Ia
President Burack Obama , it an opportunity to confront up a big storm in Europe.
tions to The Daily Senti'nel, 111 Court
(740) 992-2156.
is clear that the CIA, while their accusers.
But if done within certain
Street , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Department extensions are:
This was obviously .open parameters, it is an acceptno longer imprisoning
Subscription Rates
detainees indefinitely. will to serious constitutional able practice."
By carrier or motor route
News
1
4 weeks ............ . .'11.30 retain the authority to move · objeclions, and these objec- · Moreover, the new rules
Editor: Charlene Hoellich. E~1. 12
52 weeks , , .• , . . .... .'128.85 them as necessary. This is tions have now prevailed. do not prohibit .the CIA from
· Reporter: Brian Reed, E)(!. 14
Dally ..... ...... ........ 50' very detinitely a s1ep in the One possible solution was to holding prisoners "on a
Reporter: Beth Sergen t, Ext. 13
Senior Citizen rates
re111rn them tC)· their native short-term, transitory basis."
right dire.ction.
26 weeks ............ .'59.61
Under the Bush adminis- countries, which could deal In other words, while lerror52 weeks • , ..........'1 t6.90
. .
Ad ver t ISing
. Subscribers shoold romn in advance trntion, the problem of what , with the'm as they wished. ists are nol to be imprisoned
Outside Sl!llee: Dave Harris, E:.t. 15 dlracl to the Daily San~nol. No subscrip·
lo do wilh accused terrorists But it was not always possi- in the United States indefiOulalde Sales: Brenda Oav1s. ht ,6 tion by mail permitted 1n areas where
was a constant issue, ble 10 be sure that they nitely, they can. be detained
ClasaJCirc .: Judy Clark , Ext . 1o
home carrier service is available.
Obviously. they couldn't wouldn 'I be subjected to tor- and perhaps even interrogatsimply be turned loose to ture, or otherwise abused, in ed here pending their trans. Mall Subacrlptlon
Inside
Meigs
County
possibly resume plotting their homelands . So the ten- fer to foreign custody.
General Manager
12
Weeks
.........
.'35.26
Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Thus far. even humanallacks against the United sion has contitiued, and
26 Weeks
.. ' 70.70
there
has
been
a
lively
interStates.
At
the
same
time.tryrights
activists have been
52 Weeks
... : . ..... '140.11
est
in
the
policy
that
the
E·mall:
ing them ·for conventional
cauliously cordial toward
mdSnews@mydailysentinel.com
administration .the !lew policy. Tom
Outoldo Meigs County
crimes was often imposs.ible Obama
12 Weeks
. .. ' 56.55
Malinowski, ·
the
because Jhe evidence of would adopt.
I
Web:
26 Weeks
. .'113.60
Now, that question has Washington advocacy directheir culpability couldn't be
s_2_w_._ek_s________·_'_22_7_.2~1
.....
www.mydailysentinel.com
disclosed withoul revealing been answered . Terrorists tor for Human · Rights

The Daily Sentinel

l ____________________

,.

CROWN CITY - Three
cit izens of Mexico believed
to be illegal immi~rants
were arrested followmg a
cocaine seizure inade at an
0 hio Township residence
s·aturday night.
According lo a· press
re lease issued by the Galli a
county Sheriff's Oftice. a
vehicle was stopped for a
tr·alftc violation on Ohio 7
around 9 p.m. Saturday .
a nd it was determined that
the driver, Felix M. Juarez.
.30, 15568 Ohio 7.. Crown
c ity. was operating the

.. .

vehicle with no driver's
lkense and was also living
in the country illegally. In
addition, ·Juarez
was
accompanied by a IS-yearpld female from Columbus .
who was riding in the passenger seat of the vehicle.
Alter further questioning,
the. deputy
reportedly
received permission to
search the mobile home
where the couple had been
living. Upon the arrival of
law enforcement, two more
male citizens of Mexico
without green ~:ards were
allegedly located along with
a 17-year-old female and an
adult female, bOth of

Bv KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

Dear Annie: I have never
,.aken
drugs and never will,
but I recently learned that
0 ne of my best guy friends
has been smoking weed .
Annie. we are only 14. I've
told him drugs are bad for
h im. but he keeps assuring
me that he is not addicted
a nd it's not harmful. I haye
no idea how else to rea~:t. I
don 't know how I am going
I o face him anymore, and he
sits ne~t to me in all my
c.lasses.
Would it be t;ight for me
to just forget about what he
I old me and keep being his
best friend? Is he right when
he says weed is not harmf ul? He thinks I'm overreacting if I decide to not be
his friend anymore. - The
Girl Who Doesn't Want
To Lose Her Best Friend
Dear Girl: Ally drug can
be harmful. and weed is a
drug. Your friend might also
be using it as a form of
stress relief. which means he
may IX: covering up some
real emotional issues. You
don't have to give up lhe
friendship so Ion~ .as he
doesn't try to convmce you

to join him. and provided embarrassing them into
you can avoid being influ- being quiet. - Too LQud
enced by him. We also trust
Dear Too Loud: Codes of
you will keep your distance conduct for the workplace
when he's actually smoking. need to be enforced by
Dear Annie: I work in a someone in a position of
spacious oftice without par- authority. If your boss contitions. Two of the people · dones and contributes to the
nearest me are ridiculously level of noise. there isn't
loud. They react audibly to much you can do. One
e-mails and speak to them- · option is to politely ask the
selves as if we are all inter- olfenders to tone it down
ested in the conversation: I because the constant clamor
can hear them clearly when makes it difficult to ~:onl·en­
they talk on the phone. One trdte on your work. Or. if
of them always reacts over- your boss has a supervisor,
the-top. whether it's a hang- you can complain to that
nail or a heart attack. Both person about the lack of
have been known to break prof~ssionalism. Other than
out in son~. which can be that, however, invest in a
fun if you re not trying to better set of sound-blockmg
conc.entrate oil your job. I headphones. Sorry.
listen to my iPod most of
Dear Annie: I read the
the day, but even with the letter from "Worried,"
earbuds in. I can still hear whose boyfriend belittled
her intelligence and said she
them.
You:ve suggested seeing asked too many questions.
supervisors and HR depart- lt's)&gt;een 4ll years smce I fell
ments in the past. But these in love with &lt;I man like that.
people have worked here We are still together. but I
for many · years and their fell out of love with him
decibel level lias become a many years ago. I was inteljoke. Everyone else. includ- I_igent, pretty. talented and
mg my boss. talks over tun to be wtth. but he conother peorle"sdesks as well. vinced me otherwise.
I am lookmg for some office
As the years went by. he
etiquette regarding noise in became more and more critthe workplace in the hope of . ical and judgmental of our

&lt;md urine from swimmers.
The report says trichloramine is the main chloramine found above chlorinated waler surfaces and
ltas been suspected as the
cause of outbreaks of eye
and respiratory irritation.
Federal health officials
said no new cases were
reported al'ter the water ~ark
followed recommendations
for increasi.n~ air movement
and distributiOn at the pool
deck level.
The CDC article added
nothing new to what the
water park had been told. said
Steve Shmtuck. spokesman
for Great Wolf lodge. which
is owned by Madison. Wis .based Great Wolf Resorts Inc .
He said the water park
implemented many of the
recommendation s before
the report was completed.

Community Calendar

Funds

since been put on the three
male sus·pects.
Kreana Kroah Lock. 20.
Columbus. was also arrested at the scene on a charge
of marijuana possession.
The 15-year-old juvenile
was released into the custody of her mother and the
17-year-old juvenile was
released into the custody of
Fr.mklin County Children's
Services.
Sheriff Joe Browning said
that deputies are investigating the tmfticking in drugs
at this location t\lld he asks
that persons wit!) more
information tall the GCSO
tipline at -146-6555 .

chil~n

and me . When I
look back .to ·che beginning
of our relationship. I can
still remember several incidents that should have been
red flags. but I ignored
them . My advice to
"Worried" is to get out now.
before she makes a commitment. It · might be painful.
but not as painful as a lifetime of criticism. - Older
and Wiser
Dear Older and Wiser:
You aren't the only one who
wrote and suggested that
she run far away or at least
recevaluate their commitment. We agree thai belitlling comments do not bode
well .for the future of the
relationship.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime edi·
tors af the Ann Landers
column. Please e-mail your
questions to anniesma!lboxcomcast .n.et, or wnte
to: Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, IL
606ll. To find out mort
about Annie's Mailbox,
and rrad features by other
Crrators Syndicate M-'riters
and cartoonists, visit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page .atll!ww.cnators.com.

Chemical likely cause of
Ohio water park illnesses

. CINCINNATI (AP) Exposure to accumulalions of
a potential irritant known as
trichloramine likely caused
eye and breathing problems
reported by hundreds of visiIors to an indoor Ohio water
park, according to a fedentl'
report released Thun;day.
Insufficient air movement
and distribution likely led
airborne trichloramine to
collect al the park at Great
Wolf lodge near Cincinnati.
I he Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention
reported in its Morbidity and
Mortalily Weekly Report.
The park had 665 comfrom Page AI .
plaints of eye and respiratory irritation by visitors and
properties. and. to offer gear. but no tlid was fe(eived Itfeguards in 2007.
down paymenl and closing for that equipmetlt.
Chloramines are created·
Commisswners also:
cost ·assistance to low- to
from the reaction between
• Approved the tirst•ha If chlorine in the water and
. moderate-inl·ome homebuyappropriation
for the . So il nitrogen:containing sweat
ers - those at 120 percent
and Water Conservatio n
of areu median im:ome.
Commissioners opened a District. in the amount of
bid
from
B&amp;C $44.565.75.
• Approved. a $50 approCommunications, Chillicothe.
for mdio equipment for the priation adjustment with in
Scipio Fire Department The their bupget.
• Recessed until 10 u.m
bid. for 10 mdios,
cost of
Tuesday.
for the approval of
$357 .4H. was referred to
JlliSselllix review. The mdios bills.
Present
we re
will be purchased lhrough the
Saturday, Feb. 7
Mi ck
Community 'Dcvelopnl,nt Cotnmlssioners
SALEM CENTER
Block Gmnt fonnula pro- Davenport and Mil·hn el Star Grange #/78 and Star
gmm. The lire department's Burtrum. and Clerk Glor ia Junior Grange #878 meet in
projccl also calls for turnout Kloes.
regular
session.
with
potluck at 6:30 p.m., fol lowed by 7:30 meeting . .
POMEROY - Christian
from Page At
Motorcycle AssoCiation 's
Title I and IDEA fund s lechnologically ~ update d, "Delivered" chapter, regular
will be increased to help 21st-century · classromns meeting. 4 p.m., Common
Grounds, Highland Road .
low-income students u.nd for local students.
.
RACINE
Racine
The economic recove ry
students with disabilities.
I .·. ·Additionally, funding will package is designed, in paIt , Youth league. organizabe provided to help schools to ~:reate millions of jobs by lionul meeting. 3:30 p.m..
repair. rcnovute. and mod- providing increased fundi ng R&lt;~cine American Legion.
·
l\1onday, Feb. 9
ernize their facilities over fur infrastructure impmv eI.
CHAUNCEY - An Area
ttle next two years. which ment&lt; l'enewable ener gy
14
youth council meeting
initiatives
and
other
proje
CIS
Wilson said, will create
will
be held 9 a.m. at the
new construction jobs for · importune to America's lo ng
Athens CDJFS-Chauncey.
local ·workers and provide tenn growth.

'"a

Columbus. Following a
search of the residem:e by ·
deputies and an Ohio State .
Highway Patrol trooper.
approximately 55.5 grams
of cocaine were seized
along with more than
$2.100 cash. according to
the police report.
Juarez was arrested at the
scene and booked into the
Galli a County Jail along
with
Margarito
T.
Gonzalez. 34. and Alberto
J. Juarez . 24. both of 15568
Ohio 7. for possession of a
scredule II narcotic and
tmfticking. The Department
Of Immigration was contacted and holders have

Keep distance when friend smokes

Plan

Watch. tqld the Los Angeles
Times that "under limited
circumstances, there is a
legitimate place" for renditions . "What I heard loud
and clear from the president's order was that they
want to design a system that
doesn't result in people
being sent to foreign dungeons to be . tortured." Fair
enough.
.
Resolving · the problems
involved in this matter of
terrorists has been difficult
and probably isn't over yet.
Obviously, we must abide
by our own constitutional
provisions . But. equally
obvious. we cannol allow
terrorists committed to our
destruction to go about their
busit1ess uninterrupted. The
policies' described above ·
strike a reasonable balance
between individual rights
and our obligation to protect
our country.
(William Rusher is em
llCcomp/islted. author, former publisher of tlte
National Review and farmer
vice •·haimtwt ·of the
American
Conservative
. Union.)

in aluminum prices and
increased oper&lt;thng costs.
Turner said tbe supt?Ort
team will provide a vanety
of services to workers.
including counseling. information about job trdining
and tuition payments.

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Immunization clinic

AEP (NYSE) - 33.63 .
AkZo (NASDAQ) - 37.45
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) - 6.96
Big Lots (NYSE) - 13.74 '
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) - 19.24
BorgWarne'r (NYSE) - 18.92
Century Aluminum (NASDAQ)'
-4.12
Champion (NASDAQ) - 2.92
Charming Shops (NASDAQ) -

.I

Aluminulll
announced
Wednesday it would lay off
the majority of the plant 's
651 workers and dose the
operation by Feb. 20.
The company says it
decided to close the 51-yearold plant because of a drop

IDegal immigrants arrested in drug seizure

Local Stocks

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

'

Deaths

Clubs'and
organizations

Mei~s
POMEROY County · Relay For Lite,
team captains' meeting.
5:30p.m .. Pomeroy library.

Public meetings
M9nday,Feb.9
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m..
Rulland Fire Stut ion .
Tuesday. Feb. 10
REEDSVILLE - Olive
Township. Trustees meet in
regular session, 6:30 p.m ..
Olive Township gumge.
SHADE Bedford
Township Trustees regular
monthly meeting, 7 p.m..
town hall.
Wednesday, Feb. 11
POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees meet ut.
· 6:30 p.m.. 111 home ot
Trustee Manning Roush.

• PMI lf.7 Ttcllrllell...,_tt
• l"tt!lr.i ~ . "-11 J(ll.il 000....')'

h~l l

• 1[) •~a~ ildCIKiill wiln Wlt!Jft'l•l~

• Cullum Slwl Pt91•

""""~·

WNtho;w &amp; IT'()l'el

( z;,~P;6XfrtslrN0
jl'IJi

\J •IOOIV

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H&amp;R BLOCK
618 East Main St.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6674

Mon·Frl. 9:00 • 6:00
Sat. 9:00 - 5:00

Other Hours by _Appointment

To see more ne~sphotos
from our photographers go to
www .mydailysentinel.com
't~a~~~ You can order reprints and
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�•

Pt

M•TMDIItyS.utlnel

WOkSHIP.GODTHIS WEEK
PI.,IUr 1 ,111\~\
f);~nufidU . SunJJ\ s.-hllUI • ~ - H .~ ID •
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V.ZIIIii: aad Ward ""·· I:"J~lor Jiiin6
Suay Schuul
10 lO " Ill .
E'mllot , 7·.l) p.m.

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Sun lOtiO aJn. &amp; 7 Jtl p.tu .

Thtm. 1:fll p.m.. PlisM· M.ut ~ K. HuUtut

Assembly of G~ '-'""1y """...., uf God
P.O. Boll .l67 .. OuJding Lm~. \1a,un .

W.VIl., Pas.tor Ni.'t l Tennam . SwtJ'l~
Sl:nices· IU:I.ll a 111 and 7 p.m

Baptist
t'ruwill &amp;,list nu~h
Pllsror. Floyd RoM~. Sunda~ S..·h..'olll •L11.l tn '
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St't-.. K~·

10:30nm . · E\cning.

7.00pm. Wednesday 8ibll" Smd~ 7;(10 put.

P'asi&lt;Jr:

St~:vt' Ltttlt'. 7,ou..~7 -7 K(JL H .

740-992-7542. C. 7JO.().I.5.~5~7. SunJa~
School: 9:30 am. Murnmg Wontup: 10:_'0
am. Youth &amp; Btblc- Uuddi.: ~ &amp;:JO pm.
• Ct\Qir prut:lll'l!' 7::\1: Sp~: ...·tal Ja._~, vf llliJIIth
1. Ladit&gt; t~f Gr...·e 1 pm ~nU MonJay. 2.
M~ ·~ t-"elluwWp 7 pm ~rd. i"ut:l&gt;.

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)th an&lt;l Mum. Pa"!&gt;tur: AI Harl\011.

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, f\.kl\t'll l it' , ::0U tllhty S.. h1.11)J q:}ll U 11! ..
Wor ~hi p · 1I .1 .111 .. 7 tll p.m .. Wednc..U u~
Scr\ k.: · 7"00 p:tn

C'hiklrelt• Due.;t,w, Sh~run S~~Tl·. T&lt;"~ n
!Ju-...-..:tw Dodg..·r Vaughan . Sunlla&gt; S..· hro~.•l

Sundlly S.:huul - 9 JO a.m . Wor.Jup -

10:45 a.m.

Pomeroy Flnl S.pli&lt;it
Putot Jon llrocktn. EL'-t Maul St..
-Sundlly Sch. ~.30 wn. Wol":lhip lU. ~O :.~m

Ch.urt'h. of Christ
Wl•1~h 1p • l,l ..lll .1 111 . SUt\da~ S;:·hN'II 10 .m a.m.• Pu~toa -J.:O'r.:~ W~llw:•·· I-t anJ

~arwaltow

Midgt Chun:b ol( " hri~t
Pa.;tnr:Bru . .-e Terry. Sund:~~ Sda11.•l . \j : l(t

a.ri.e t'lrsl Bapllst
Putor. Ry an Eaton, pastor . Sunda&gt;
School· 9:30a.m.. WonJup · 10:.j,(J a.m .:
. 6:00 p.m.. W~:U.nesd11y Ser\ices - 1·110

p.m.

· t1

Sllnr RWI Baptist
Pastor· John S'l\·aru;on. Sunday Sdu.10l •
IOa.m.. Worship : I ta.m.. 7:00 p.m.
.W~y Sero.ice~- 7:00p.m.

Mt. Uolonlloptist
Pltstor: Dennts Weall&lt;er Sunday St; houl 9:45 a.m ., Ev.:nmg - 6:.\0 p.m, .
Wtdnesday ~roi~:e~ - 6:30-pm
Btdlarbe. ~ Cburth
Grel:lt Rend . H.oUle 1 2~. bcllu:, OH .
Ptslor: . Sunday School ~ 1}.30 a.m..
Suoday Worsh1p - 10:30 a.m..: Wl!dnesJa~
Biblt S1udy • 7:00 p.l\1
Old ltUltl Fl'ft Will Bapllsl ('h.IM't'h
28601 St. Rt . 7, Middle p~.1rt . Sun.~u:­
Sen"ice • 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m.. Tuesda~ ·

Huliltt'!IS ('hun:b
L~;,~dmg Crt'l.'"k KLI .. Rtnland . Pa,wr: R.: v.
U..·wo:y Ki~ . Su nd a~ "'"·houl- l}· .' tl a.m ..
~ u nd;~v
wor ~hip _., p.m .. Wedut·~Un~·
pra).:r m~h n ~- 7. p m

· Miuctn,ilh:

" und;_t} s•.-h,lnl 9 a.m.. W;:~r.;hip - 10 a.m.

('QIIHIIdil'

Portlan&lt;.1-Rru.:1n~

Zion.( 'lwrth ul t:hri&lt;lt

15 P~tarl St.. ~1n.kll o:)M1

Sltkml'mln
Ptl~ll_)r

TUppd!i Ptai11 Churdt of l '.. rist
ln-munl('r\tal. Wm~hip Sei-vke ~ ~ a .!JI .
lommu nio.J II - IU .1.111 ., SunJa} Sehoul ·
10. 1:; a.m . Yottth- 5:30 p;u Sundu~· - Uibl~
StuJ~ Wt:dfk'"'.l~ y 7 pm

Br11dburY {'hun:h of Christ
Minister: Tum !l.uu}Un. JY:'iSI:I Hr:to.lbur~
Road . Miili.ll~purt . Sunday Sr.:hool • II:JH
a.m
WoNh t p -1 0: 31J~ .m

K. M:n-.hall . Sund:~y
~:h nol - 10: I~ a.m .. Wt'f'ihip - \1:15 ~. Ill ..
Uibk S tuJ ~: Montla) '1 :00pm
SnMrvillf
Suuilily Sdtool - 10 ~ .Ill .. Wor..llip • 9 :.l.lll

P;c, tOI" John Gil mol(, S unJ~ y SdiL&gt;ol • Itt
,1.111 ... Wilf~ ll ip· - Y ;t . lll • WnlnL""'-':JY
St-rvi"e-- - 10 a.rri .

l'a~tur R'-"'. LJ tT) L~·tn l l' ~ ·, Su nda y S~.IR...,t

Rutlud Chun·ll of Christ

Pa~tc•r:

~en-t r e

~25

Yk\ory BaptW IMtptndt-nt
N. 2nd St. Middleport . Pastur: Jamc~

E Ketstt. Worship - JO;••. m.. 7 p.m ..

lll'f'ds\tllr thu.n.·b ufChri."'l
P'u$1or· Philip Stu rm , Sw\day S~o·hool Q .\tl
.1. m .. w.~r~hrp s,·m,·t: 1\1· 10 u m .. Bi t-lc
Study. Wt\lnt!&lt;li:J}. o· _l(l p m.

. Wednesday ~r\U:I'~ - 7 p.m .

·
Failb Baplbt Chun·h
Ra1lf"Oall St . Mason . Sund:J)· Srhiii.Ji - ltl
·a .m .. Wurship · 11 11m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sc.-rvico:~ • 7 p m

foml R\lD BlpUsl• Pemroy

Rev. JO!il;ph

W~. SundllY. ~~:hoo\ ~ 10

a.m., Worship - IUO 1:1 .01.

.

M t . - .......
Fourth tt Main St .. Midd!epm. S~omday
5-;hool- ~. 30 1:1 m .• WOf"oku p- 10:J5 :~. m .
Pastor: Me\·. Michao: l A Tht~mp)illn. Sr.
AnUquUy lbpUst
Sunday School • II:JU l!l.nl • Wnr ~ht p \0:45 a.m.. S um.l~ y b"run~ - tr tiU 1'111 .

your light so shine hd.nrt•l
. that they may see
works a.nd glorify
IF:ath'er in heaven ."
Manhew 5:

Vex~rr

l'hun:h uf Christ

. 10·30 a.m .
'fhr fhun:h ur Chrbt ur Ponwro~

un

lnt.-r ~l'l' ttun

Kalpl; 'lp1r~·~ . Stithlu~ 'irhtH.•I

7 and 1!--l W.

~~ ; u t J;d l ,\ .

llennis Sargl'n l. Sunduy aiblt Stud~
Q:3(l a.m.. w~~r~h ip : tn :.i(J' a.m. lllld 6:.1ll
p.m.. W~dnt:MlJ.~ Biblt Study· 1 p.m.

Christian Union
lbtrl(otd Chu.n;h u( U1rbt Ia

1~_.

bl'h1n.t

W il~ ,.,,,llr: . Pa~wr .- lkl .

•):.\0 tl m .•

\\'1•1'h 1p : ttl "\II am .. 7 p 111.. 11uw"la)

Sci\ 1re• · 1 I' 111
"d):." ( 'ullpt"ralht l"urish
\ ' lu._,.,.t , l.ll1nl. P .t' t~H : Jt1n
SL u al ~~

s~· hv1'1

•

~-

1{) ,J. .m .

Wu~•h1p · 11 .1 m .. 6 J() p.m.
s~·huol ~

lti : W

am .. 7:00 p. tn .

9:.10

~ . m , W1lr~h1p
\\\•drK""'I ;1~

Sen i~.o;-~ - H ill jUt1

Church of God

Chlostn
P.t•l\&gt;1 " Jtill l \11httl. \\ t'l'hrp
Suu~h1 .1 ~dh•nl · lt l ,, U\

\j

lUll ..

So:t\ tn·, • 7 I' nt

&lt;~ .~O:'i

Loug Rvttom. Pasklr: Ste-we Rt.'t.'\.1 . Sundu~
School. - 9:,'0 a.m. Wonhtp- t.,i :JO 11m '·
antl 7 p.m.. Wt'dn~Uu} • 7 p m . Frida}' f~llow s hl~ ~ rrvi~·e 1. p.m.

""""'uf "'.... ~­

St. Rl. 124 L~m~SVWr. OH

t-"uU ('"--...po:L Cl Pa-&gt;rurs 1\00en &amp;. R.*n.
fl.hi·~er. Sundu~· s~·huul 9 ..10 um, ,
Worship Ill JO urn · 7:00 pm . WN.
S('(V[(e _7:00

.

Bell
Tun:h l'hun:h

M~...:ting

l'hunh oflh~ ~a:.an-ne­
R IIut~ NN . t\l bau~. l{..;v Llo)ti G n mm .
p&lt;tq,,t1 Sum.!.•;. s~ h .,t•l Ill ~ m . v.1lrh~tp
,~·r' 1 1.·~· II ant,\''~ ~~~~~ ~ ,,_.,, 1w 7 pm w~-u .

\\'cdu.,.-..&lt;.1;1 ~

l'ar~llll
Wt•I ~l t ip

Janlt'!t Andt•r.:nn,Adum Md)unlrl-

llirt·1.:lurs

ttumrm~· - (lH 740-992-3444

Presbyterian
a.fn . Sunday

·

Insurance
Products+
Financial

AGENCIES Inc.

Servtces

ask wllat ye will, ar1d it sht1ll
be dolle rmtoyou.

John 15:7

Bill

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

~
·.
-

·

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
Pomeroy
992•2955

so many businesses are will help us through these
closing down. and people difficult times."
are being laid off," said
George Binningham. stu·
Jennifer Allen. a church dent pastor at Tuscaloosa
member who brought a let- Church of God. asked memterhead from her employer. hers who brought letters on
Sealy Management. "I company
stationery,
believe in the power of God. brochures and business
and I believe he listens to . cards to Sunday"s service to
people's prayers, and he join him at a table in the

Discrimination
suit settled
WASHINGTON (AP)
The Justice Department has
settled a lawsuit accusing
Washin~:ton 's transit agency
of religtous discrimination.
The complaint filed in
federal court accused Metro
of discriminating against a
woman of the Apostolic ·
Pentecostal faith because
she was unable to comply
with Metro's unifonn policy. She declined to wear
punts. which are pan of the
uniform but are forbidden
by her beliefs.
·
Gloria Jones said she
n 't hired as a bus driver
because her religious beliefs.
The Justice Department
announced Tuesday that
Metro has agreed to pay
more than $47,000 to Jones
· and $2 ~00 each to two oth· ·
ers who say Metro didn't
accommodate their beliefs.
Metro also must imple·
ment a policy to reasonably
accommodate employees'
religious practices and train
its supervisors on religious
discrimination . The agree·
ment still must be approved
by the court.

""*'·

Palin's church
reopens

center of the sanctuary.
He then placed sweet·
scented olive oil on their
hands and anointed each
piece of stationery .. The
prayer reques.ts came from
employees and business
owners, most from the
1\Jscaloosa area but some
from farther away.

WASILLA. Alaska (AP)
- Hundreds of worshippers
llocked to the reopening of
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's
home chun:h, which was
badly damaged in an arson
fire m December.
"We have been blessed by
people's response to us, far
beyond . anything
we

Mlddleporl Preb:-tHiu
Pa~1u r: Jam.:" Snyder. Sunday Sch(lol 10

.uu .. 'o\l)fShip ~f\ i...'t' II am.
Uti Rt. \~4 . P~s. tur : t.dsd H11rt. Sunday

Se\'enth-Day Adnntist

Srhl'l'i . \UIJ am . WtJt ~ hip • ltl:::.O a.m..
7.JO p.m.

Stwath·~Y Advt-ntbt
Mull\t.'rry Ht". RJ .. P\lmci"oy, Saturday
S.:rvicl.'"~ : Sabbuth Sr..:hool - 2 p .m .,

~U-

hith G~ptl n.urch
Sum.ltty s~· h\1\&gt;l - ll.,l\1 !Uil .
~ \0 :..15 a.m., 7 ..lll p,m .

. Wt·J!tl'-'-tluy 7:JO p .m.

ll uutrr. Sun,la~ S..:h t~t•l · HI a.t\\. Evl:'ll tn¥
7..111 11·\ll .. ru. .~du~ &amp; Thu r~ .- 7 }II p.m

Sooth Rrthfl t:omnnmity ("hun:h
Sih'l.'"r Rillgt- Pa.; wr lind;~ Uitntt'wwd ..
Sunday Sthool - ~ 01 m.• Wvn.hip S~' TV ll"t'

Got/so l01wl tile world
lie ga•·e hi.&gt; only
II&gt;I'IWII,f' ll

S0/1...

Jvlln 3:16

I

I

f

I

I

J

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

I

t

I

i

I

I

I

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

United Brethren

lll &lt;to a.m . 1 p m
1\lnrsl" Chaprl Chun·h
Slln\1 ~) '"ht".ol ~ l! l u_m .. Worship · ll
;1m.• We,hw~d;t)' Scn·k:l' - 7 p m.

Wor~hip

I

W;;~h i11 - ~p . m .

Church

Ll't WIIII·Ji~ltt so shine i&gt;&lt;'jln-.
REHABILITATION CENTER "'""· rhmrlt ...1. may see wmr
'l'he &lt;'ttre J'Otl desrn'l', (•lose to hanlt go(}(/ h 'Orh· wul glonJ.i.· y011 ,.
36759 Rocksprl·ngs Rd.
Fmher in ltearrn .·
Pomeroy. OH 45769
Mallhe&lt;t'5.' 16
740·992·6606

PHARMACY

INSURANCE.
SERVICES

deserved.'' Pastor Larry
Kroon. told worshippers at
Wasilla Bible Church.
"God's grace is the one true
renewing resource and it
will never run put:·
Palin.
the
former
Republican vice presidential hopeful. was
in
Washington. D.C .• over the
week.end and did not attend
either of the two Sunday
morning services.
Damage to the chun:h
from the Dec . 12 blaze was
estimated at $1 million .
Five people were inside the
building at the time of the
lire but escaped unharmed .
Investigators say they
have no evidence that
Palin 's link. to the church
was a motive for the t1n:.
Kroon made no mention
of Palin during the service.
However. he said later that
the governor attends occasionally when she is in
Wasilla: her hometown. He
said Palin is not a member.
but her ties to the church
brought widespread publki·
ty and an outpouring of suppon and donations.
Letters from well-wishers
were displayed in a looseleal· notebook at lhe back of
the sanctuary. Many came
from individuals and religious groups who identified •
themse l'les as supporters of
Palin in her vice presiden·
tial bid.

to reconciliation

TUSCALOOSA,
Ala.
(AP)
A Tuscaloosa
church used part of its
Sunday service to anoint
and pray over 40 pieces of
business stationery as members asked God to help ·
those companies and their
employees.
"During these hard times,

tltrnwa l lnlled 8rtthn-n

The Corpor~ Works of Mercy

Te:\.11'- ('ummumty .' bill I W1do.htU'tl Rd.
P" SlllT" Ptter Murtindulc. Sunday School •
~ - ~ () u.m.. \\\\rsh1p - \O:J\) :a .tn .• 7:00
p.m . Wc llne~dll)' S~r' ~~-e~ · '1 :00 p.m.
\ \11.1th gmup mee1ing 2nd &amp; 4th _Su_nJ~ay s
7 pm.
1-:dt:n llnltrd 8rtlh~n in (.'hrlli1
Stnk R11t1te 12-t . b.:-tw.-... n Re-t·dS\'i\le &amp;
H\1\:I.. IIIS,('II.l f\. Su u d~y s~·ht10 l • IU a.ll\ '
Sumla) Wm~ bip • II (l(l &lt;1 .111 W«..nt"!&gt;da~·
Se r\· ke ~ - 7:1){1 p.m.. Pa~ rm - M Adam
W1ll

Th~ c~rpora.l works of mercy, or acts

of men:); as they are so~imes called, are
con&amp;idored &amp;SSential by llie Catholic Church. Other Christian, and noo.Chrislian
denominatioos olso share a belief in these worb of mercy. The corporal wt~~ks of
m~ Gil focus oo bodily needs, lliewot'd "corponJ' deriving from the LM.in
"corpus• meaning body.
Then&gt; are 950 spirit.W
works of mercy, 001 for now,
let us fooos oo the corporal
works of mercy. The SI'Veti
corporal works of mercy are
alm05t Zen-like in their
simplicity, are lllglldbly
S~&gt;l-exJW!aloty, and have a
~r.Biblical basis. They are:
I) Fred llie hungry; 2) Give
drink to the lliirsly; 3) Cbllie
the nakod; 4) Sholtar the
ho~s; 5) Yisitlhe
imprisoned; 6) Visit the aidt;
and 7) 8uty the deo.d. Some
oftheae,aucb u ftedingthe
llungry, are relatively wy to l
calT)" ou\·&amp; Nit oo umall "
scale, though tbey become
more prob~JMI.ic 011 a larger scale. We shoukl
reflect on how we migbt iDCorpom.le these acta of
marcy into ourpenonaltife, and then too, hllW M mi(lllstlJIPorl them on a la.!ler
scale, l"'riiAJ'S by supporting orgGiliationa which fulil their miMion.

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
L&lt;W&lt;~iod le&amp;&lt; than JO minutes from
Alhcns. Pomeroy or rarkcrsburg
I· 740.667-3156

"Still

-+-B-ro-g-an---w-ar-n-er--~-:S~W:-:I::-::S~H::-::E::R:-:&amp;::-:-L':'O:-::H':'SE::-1r-------t~:":ar;::a~ce Is sufficient

D•vls·Oulckel Agency Inc. If ye abidf in Mr. cmd My
INSURANCE
Full line of words abide in ycm, ye slw/1

Carter speaks

Ala. church offers prayers to counter recession

Str«t. F'o&amp;.m:roy.

lbrri&gt;&lt;&gt;ooW. r...byt- Cboartb
P:.~swr : R~•bcn Mllrshllll.·wOrs.hlp • 9:00

1-"ull t:I,).S.prll.ljthlhillN

. Sulll.hl~ Sd!IM.&gt;I - 4 .lU :un ..
- ln:--'5 u.ttL. 7 p.m., W~dnt:M.!u&gt;

goldfish. We. finally caught our lives. and we become
him in the act Of dining on easy ~y when our ''fins"tail of goldfish."
of reltance on God's Spirit
. In the end. we removed the have been stripped from us.
goldfish entirely. although
But before we ~-onclude
BIRMINGHAM.
Ala .
Pastor
one did not survtve the tran- that Chun:h really isn't the (AP) - Former President
ThOm
sition to its new home. I lish tank that we want to be. Jimmy Carter addressed a
Mollohan think my intervention was swimming in. learn a little packed Sixteenth Street
much too .late to do him lesson from the Neon Tetras. Baptist Cbun:h with a mesmuch good. The other one. They band together and sage of racial reconciliation
r m sure you·u be happy to when the big baddies come arid cooperation on social
hear. is doing ·fine (so far).
their way. they simply stay issues .
The three Neons stayed
Anyway. the lllOOII of this t~ether while the aquatic
Some 1.200 people filled .
close together right from the · little t'ish tale is that ne er-do-wells 11\QVe on. ·
start. But later on, when we Christians have within their · Fish obviously aren't the the historic Birmingham
church where four black
ad~ a couple more to the
power the ability to foster best metaphors for Christian girls died in a 1963 Ku Klux
VOUP· they formed a more spiritual life in others or to community. bul there is a Klan bombing.
tmpress.ive s.ciKM.ll that quell it.
.
lesson to be learned about . Carter told a regio~al
seemed .to
intimidate
Consider foc a moment a ~sticking together" and meeting of the New Bap!isl
Stripey enough that he
man who has established his about what kind of fish we Covenant. which he helped
mostly left them alone.
pJocein life, and then !eels it defmitely don't want to be . found last year that there's
We also had an algae
duty to "disciple" anoth· Instead Of "hoondin~" one "no way for us to ignore
his
eater. but he dido "t last too
er.
He
sets to the taslc reli- another to the pomt of Jesus· emphasis on the poor.
long, I'm afraid. Perhaps
there wasn 'I enough algae giously (pun intended). Like eltbaustion oc taling bites the brokenhearted ." .
our little striped 11sh. he ou.t of others with careless oc
He said the evolution of
yet in the water to sustain
hounds her. although she critical words. ''let us con- the covenant is the "hi~h·
him. My children are con- may be wcrdk. oc wounded oc sider how we may spur one
light of my .religious life.·
vinced that I did him in
new
to
the
faith.
Our
another
on
toward
love
and
Carter recalled a time
when cleaning the tank (for
Christian
"disci'pler"
chases
good
deeds.
Let
us
not
give
when
racial prejudice was
the record. rm still claimdown
legalities
in
her
life..
up
meeting
l?¥ether.
as
some
rampant
in Baptist churchin£_inmx:ence).
spells
out
more
and
more
are
in
the
hab1t
of
doing.
but
es. and theologians defendTl,le two goldfish started
"ought"
to
be
let
us
eiii.'OOrage
one
another
things
that
she
ed separate worship.
out all right with their new
doing.
and
never
pennits
the
and
all
the
more
as
you
"The Baptist chun:h was a
roommates. but eventually
young
Or we&lt;\!}' Bdiever u see the Day approaching" stalwart defender of segrewe regan to notice that
gation," he said. "It was
Stripey would pursue them moment to simply "rest" in (Hebrews 10:24·25 NlV).
the
Lord
.
The
.
new
or
The
Church.
as
God
in¥rained in our conaround to the point that it
impressionable
Christian
is
intends
it.
can
be
the
place
sctence."
seemed they had no rest at all.
Caner said the meeting
And then one of them began molded into the belief thut . we most perfectly ex.peri·
Christian
duty
is
all
about
·
ence
the
presence
of
God.
wiU
help churches work
to have little bits of his tail
better
doing."
And
so
there
is
little
·
most
profoundly
hear
the
together.
·
and fins disappearing we
· 10
· he
· · 1n
voice
of
the
Lord.
and
most
"We
don
"t
know
whether
assumed that Stripey was· · or no JOY
r SJllntua 1 e deeply feel the healinr 110d we have a meeting or a
and
no
pleasure
in her "reluresponsible. In fact. after
.
tionship
with
God"
because comfoning touch o · His movement.'' said the Rev.
watching him for long
there
is
no
real
relationship
hand. Let us set our hearts Jimmy Allen. former presimoments chase the goldfish
..
just
a
to-do
list
that
leaves
on
genuine Christian fel· dent of the Southern Baptist
.
back and forth. we put the
lishnet in the water and her feeling run down. wor· lowship. commit ourselves Convention and co-organiz·
"chased" him around until he ried and stressed all the time. to becoming the best part of er of the New Baptist
0r think of a woman who Christian community that Covenant. "What we're
went to sulk in the sunken
h'
· · 1 r~
we can be. anc;l give our- after is a movimient."
1 e ·15 selves
. ship at the bottom of the tank. 1 101;,s h~:r sptntua
unreservedly . to
The Rev. Arthur Price.
It gave the goldfish a feprieve high and li&gt;fly. but is really God's control as He makes
at Six.teenth Street
pastor
for a little while at. least from just entertainmg an illusion our lives a ohannel of bless·
Baptist.
said, "Can you
buoyed up by tearing others
the incessant stalking.
ing throu~h which He bless- imagine that 45 years ago,
But little chunks of the down . Like our little es
His children.
used to gather here
poor little goldfish's tail and Dalmatian fish. she takes a
(Thom Mollohllll and his J)eople
to
strategize
on how to put
fins continued to disappear. bite here and a bite there
with
teeth
of
criticism
and
family
ha"
ministeml
·;,.
110
end
to
racial
inequality T
Finally, we found the real
13
Recalling the church
solllhtl1l Ohio the past •
culprit: the Dalmatian fish . jaws of self-righteousness. 112
bombing.
he said. "Imagine
Although
only
a
comment
Yftts
a1td
is
the
•uthOI"
We knew that he was the
of "The Fairy T11lt that 45 years ago this winmost enthusiastic of the fish here 110d there, she nonethe· JIIII'Gblts." He is lht -stor
dow to my left where Jesus
,...
when it was time to feed less weakens the wounded
o.f Pathway Commu11ily is knocking on the door. the
them and thought it cute or young Christian. Over Cltunh
a11d m11y bl.
that if we touched the sur- · time it lea\'es him vulnera- rraclltd /01" commtllls or face of Christ was blown
face of the water. he· d come· ble to the "sharks.. · that qutsliolls by t·mail 111 ptiS· out. I believe that God was
telling us back then. us he is
up and "nibble" harmlessly inevitably coQle passing 1 th @ th
lliD&lt;
0 ~ om 'JHI wayga •po·
telling
us now. that we are
though
his
life.
"Sharks"'
of
at our finger. But what was.
d
.
lis.com).
more
united
than we are
n' t so harmless was the little temptatiOn, epress1on, or
COPYRIGHTC 2009.
divided."
barracuda's penchant for fear can come into any of
THOM MOLLOHAN

tlllOlt'l t:ontruuaily C!Mlrda

\erl'i.-e) - 7 p.m .

th·,-ds,·lllt• l-'t'lk1•· ~ip
Chm l·h llf 1he N.\l.t fl."ll&lt;: . l'~''''t Ruv,.dl

1\.kchll.tll~

PtntKosbll Assembly
I"•'M. St . Rt 1~-'- R.adl'l:t.:. Tornado Rd .
Sunday Sl·hwl - 10 a .m. E\iening · 1
I'm .. Wr'-!nesda) Xrvic.:s. · 1 p m.

MlssJoo
l~l \ Brid~l.'"m&lt;ln St .. Svru•usc . Sunt!a~·
S&lt;;hool
10 a.m, E'"nmg • 6 p.m..
\\',·,111('-;da) ~n tl'l.' - 7 p.m .

pt;,l~l'1 11\C\',llll!; 7 p m

\liddlelM1rt ( 'hul'\'h llr thr Nw.anmr
PaSI\If" \.~ 11\MI\t 1'•11\l·ll. ~ unda~ Sdl&lt;ll•l •1 ,1() ~ m ,\\\lr\hlp - 111: 10 a.m. 6 _10 p.m ..

.\.U

Friday, February 6, 2009

Religious Briefs

~m

Pentecostal

S~nK·ust

O~·tos,· Uko Cunununlt~·

Nazarene

We recently set up 15 gallon aquarium that had been
given to us some time ago.
Once it was up and running.
we started out with four
·'feeder goldfish." ""Feeder
goldfish" are inex.pensive
fish introduced into the
aquarium to make sure that
it is a safe environment for
the tropical fish with which
we were planning to stock il,
per the helpful advice of the
lady in the pet shop. I under·
stand that it Is not a bad idea
in general. but 1 must admit
that it is probably a very
good idea given m:y having
anything to do wtth their
miniature ecosystem. I
would have hated to have
inadvertently
committed
"ichthydde.. (a word I made
up to describe the murdering
of hapless tropical fish).
·
Anyway .the day canie for
the tropical fish tenants to
arrive. We kept the ·two
smaller goldfish. but gave
the larger ones away when it
was explained 10 us by a
hel!&gt;ful pet shop lady that
the "bodily fum;tions" of
too many goldfish ten\! to
make aquarium water too
acidic for tropical !ish.
.Once all the fish were in.
we watched to see what sort
of "community" the fish
would create for themselves
as they settled into their
new home. Over the nex.t
few weeks. we began to see
different
personalilies
among the little denizens of
our family room aquarium.
The Dalmatian fish (as my
children like to refer to the
black and white mottled
Mollie) quick.ly settled into
a state of being completely
oblivious (so we thought) to
all the other fish . He just
swam around. waiting for
food to magically appear on
the surface of the water. and
all the other fish knew to
simply stay out of his way.
"'Stripey :· a light brown
fish with a black stripe running along the length of his
side seemed to have issues
. . . he would chase all the
other fish (except the
Dalmatian fish who was
generally never in a mood
to be. chased).

OH . Pa~ mr EdWI.'" Ba~· r. Sc-rvt~.: e\'.:r~
Sunday ItU.ll t~ . m .

Sun~la~ s,·hl1\ll - ~.3 0 ~ nf., Wur~ b ip -

Ru~: k

- - - . A Hunger For More---

Tr11m Jnus l\liolstriH

Faith \'alk~- Tlbernttdr Chunh
SJtky Run R.-Wl.d . ·rw.)tor: R~· v . Emnwn
Raw ~ on. Sunday Evl'nin~ 7 p.m..
l ilur)l)ay So:rvk l.'" · 1 p m.

UM'Idni.{PIM.'t Chun·h
-Kuthr}n \\tk) . Sml\1;~) S.- hooi · ~ : .\\1
a.m .. \V~,I ~ h i p - 10:,\IJ a m.. l'u.stor"Ptnllip

~-n h.'CS • 7 (llll .

jf unm1l Jl)omr
Middkpm1 , 011 740·'1'12.·5141
4IJII Kk'hlond Awnuc. Athens
740-594-t\.m
1-N00-4!' 1-~K06

ltrstunaUun Christiaa F•wMI.p
Hoo pt:r Road. 1\tho:ns . Pastor:
LIJI1nil' Co~t ~. Sumli) Worship LO·OO am . ·
We thl~sJay : 7 pr~1

.t.m ..

7·30 p.m.

Rtl .. .tt'&gt;l\l'. Sun._t-Jy S..·hool - Y
u.m. Wul"\hip - Ill u m.. W.:U~a)

' o;J

Jes~ Morris.

WNn.:~y7 p111

J .lA.\..lS ll•l,md Roa?J . Pmul'W) . Pa~ t11r : R1&gt;)

llurthml . W.\'a . P11,11•r: Mike PIKlcu .

Samday

Rr. i.~X. Anti\juit~ - P~stor:

Lim~ til.l!l\)ltl .

~~·nh~·.t\l

Corhttt .

I \~

l 'oohilk ll nit~ \ttlhodlsl Parish
p,,,L•n : lkkn . K\ino:,. Ct"Hll-.ilk Churl·h.
M~m &amp; hUh Sl . Sun. Sl.·lll.'ll..ll - ltl 11 rn ..

Vuinl

Mt. Olin l lnilt'd .\Mhudisl

fullliosptl (.I!Mrt..
uf tk LivYta Savklr

TI)V.D ~ hip

.1m . Wur.. htjJ • II u m.

,Suni.la) o;dtwl Q ~0 J.lll ., S1md..ty "''r~htp

~~ n· k e,

i\IWdhpol'l Ounn~~~nil~' Ch..-ch
~75 P~::u-!'St.. M!l!JiepoJTI . Pa~tnr · S:.~m
.'\nU.:r~m. Sund~) s.,·h\".ll \ll a .m ..
l:!wni~ - 7JU p.m. , W~Jrl('sday S.- n:ke -

IMhrl (.'hun.:h

St. Pllull.ulhttiUil'hun:b

Mtthudlst
Wilt ~h1p - II :uu. l'&lt;hlur· Rid 11m. I Nr:a,.lj,.,·hld l lnitt'd \li.•thodkl
N.-11. Ual t.' tl , R•~h .ud 'll~·,.w . l'&lt;~•t nr.
SLll111 &gt; L~ \.\'U r,hi 1• lJ Jtl ,, 111 ru~·~ fl' JO
pr&lt;lyer ami Bthk· S1u J~

Sllnduy

Kerr) w.,.,&gt;J. SunUay S.-hool · Ill
a m.. Wur-.hip
II u.rn . Wt~.lne..Ja~
S...n·ki:'' 6 pm: Thur lhbk StuUy 7 pm

Wi1r;hip - \)a.m .. Tu.:' . Service~ · 7 ll.ll1 .

&lt;' mnt'r S)l'&lt;llllotC &amp; Sl"lo"l 1 ikl St .. l\1 n~Cru&gt; .

Gnh~tm trnlled

wwv. . tho: ad:.l· hur~· h net

Uarrlsom iUt CtHliWWii&amp;J l'burch

s.. n ,.. e~ - tn a.ll\

United Methodist

IO:JO a 111 WeJnlo'~Y - 1 p.m.. TburWa.y
l'lll}tr &amp; Pruisc at 6 pm. Cla~es fot all
;1 ~e • evl.'r~ Sunday &amp; WNII.:sday.,

F'-clstor: Tho;mn Dmham. Suuda} · IJ:.lO

Pll ~tur :

(Nr Sa''ioor tutber~~n ( 'hun:h ',
Walnut · ,)1\d ~ku r~ St ~. ~J.\'l'tt'-Wt&gt; l1tl.
\\.\'J .. Pa '-hll 11,tlt0 Ru"dl. Su nda~
·htllll . ltl [I( I il.lll . \\\ &gt;r•lllp - ll &lt;1.111

tJA~

Prist~w Jamk W~nlliJl , Sunday Ser'l'k~ ·

Kador

~ - t O· J&lt;i

Sl. Johll l.uthtran l'hun·h
Pul,' (in)l l:'. \\ ilf~h ip -IJ:OO &lt;1m .. Smtd·l~
'\~.· h('lt• ~ . to·tltl .1 m Pa~111t"

Sun Schr11•l

Tht Arl Cllluctl
~77J G~1~~ Cr~k Road. Gallipob.s. OH .

,•.m and 7 p.m . WeUn~~lay • 7 p 111.

~lil\10.

s.

Tuppers Plains.. ~•stof M1kc Mooft.' . Bihk
da~s. II a.m. Sunda): 1\0t~t-up Ill a.nt
Sum.luy: wur~htjJ b .10 11m SunJa). lhhk
d~L'~ 7 pm Wed.

'

Pa~1 ,w Bill Mar~ hll.ll Sunda~ Sr.:hool t.,la.nt.. \\rvuhlp . to tUl1 . ht SundJ.y
~1er~ uwn1h ..; v~:utn g . 'io.'ni~·~1 7·('-1) p.m.:
\\edtl(',da~ · 1 p.m.

Ilk-tory Hills Ch...-~.-h ur fbrist
HllhldolloplbtChu"h

p.m.

lJu~ t '&gt;,

[asl Lftart

Lutheran

Brwltunll."'IM\'h GtCbrist
fornl'r ' ut' St. Rt. IH &amp; BmJblll"y l&lt;d .
Minister; l)uug Sluimblin. YiJutb MiniSh;'!.
Btll Amblerg~r. Sm1day Sr.:hool - 9.30 a.m.
Wor"h1p . S:ll) 11 m .. 10:30 aJn .• 7:fM.I
p.m .,Wl"llncsday Ser,· it,·~ -7:01p.m.

Wut:\hlp . 7 p m .. W~·dneSday 5.;-rvi.l;c - 1

J&gt;uswr: Ji1hn Gilmore , SUnda~· S(hool - I I

a .m..
lh&gt;n1 ~11tJL.m~ mce1lll~ . .l \t I hw ·.·· 7 p m.

Wisc:man. Mintslcr

Bibl"'

a.m. Wo~hip · Ill a.lll .

l'ht' t'hun:h oF JfSUS
l'hrbt ur l.lllltr-Ouy Saiuts
S! I-tt l'tlll , ~4t-. -ll 1-P Ill Hi1· 7--l.~t&gt; .
StmJ~v Sdw"l 1 \1· ~0 - 1 1 a .ll\ . Relie f
S.lr.:t.ttul'UI

Clifton 'l'alwr1111dc Cllu.n.:ll
.('lil"lun. W \ 'a . Sunday So:h~lOI. - 10 a.rn ..

Wedll('"-ta:- ..cr\ it:e. 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

uo

¥.1• r~htp . ll : t~) a m . .

Y.-15 a .m .,

Mike FOrt'mau. p-.~;M E~ritus Lawt'flKe
Foreman . Worsltip- 10.0 0 am
Wcthk''&gt;duy Services · 7 p.m.

Abu.adu.l (;r.," R.Jo'. 1.
Y 2 .~ S Thtrd St . Middlepltrt. P~l11t ll1"rl!''&lt;l "

Stud:- Wt:d . 7..\U p.m

L11wd l 'liff t'rn- Mt'l~isll'hW'\'b
Pa,hw IJku Mc{.'[UJ1)!. S unda~ St..:houl ·
1.1 :.\l.l a.m. Wor-..hlp • Hl:.lll a .m. tm,l b
p.m ..Wc:Jn~~duy S..· r' 11.'e - 7.00 p.111

1t · tl~- 1~

('armd-Sutton
Rds. Radn .... Oh-ro.
John ( ! tlntLlre , SunJay Sr,;bol.1l -

C'arm~l &amp; IJa•hutl

. &lt;J:.\11 a.m . Wnr~h1 p 10 :~~ un .. 7 p.m..
Thur .....h_.~ B1bk StuJ&gt; aml \'utnh - 1 p.m.

R&lt;)ol&lt;"io&amp; Uft Otm~

S.:r\' ice~: Satun.la~· 2:00 p.nl .
Asttt Slmt Chun-lit
. ~~~~ A~h St .. "lidJkgvrt-1:\istor, Matl
Sakm Commuil). Cbu.rt~
Milrrow &amp; RoJnc-y Walkt:r Sunduy
Bar..:l l•t We,r Columbta. W.Va om LievtDg
S.:hool · 1:UU a m.. 't~-~unnnt; Worship •
RuaU . 1-'~~tor Charles Ruu~ tJ04-I 61.5IU: 'tt a.m. &amp; 7: 00 p&amp;n. Wt:\lndday Scr~i~·e
' ~2~8. SunJa~ s~·hoo t Q:JO am . Sunday
- 7·nJ p.111 , Youth Si:'r~i.:e - Hlll p.m.
~:h'ning. ~1: r\•n· 7:00 pm. 8il'&gt;l~ Study
'
"&amp;aaw Uft Cealrr
Wl·~ u~·...u~~ ~mn· 1J() pm
·'fllli -Gl"IX' I Chun·h". Pu~tor-. Jl1 hn ~II,;
Pau~ WaJr: , 60.\ X..,x1tld /we . f\.la~n . 77.lHuh&lt;ooo Utrislilm rntuwl!lliP Cbtu.rdl
~C 11 . St:n·il;e t uu~ Slln&lt;la~ HHO 11.m ..
r-o~..~t,u·: H,.~r..: hd Whit.: . SunJaY s~·hool­
Wo..•due!&gt;Jay 1 pm
ro ~m. Su ndtty (hUI\:h SC f\'ice b.3U pm

Bethail~

P..btOI'.

ltun t'ommw1il~ t'hun·h

s~• rtl'\ ~ l t'l l l'~lhlll.-...1

Servicei-b:OO

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt . '1 , Pa)tor: Rt:\ .
James It Acree, Sr .. Sumlay Unift.:J
Service. Worship - \(Uti a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday ~rvi.:e~ · 7 p m

Willa~

.

~00 N. 2nd Aw .. Middleport. Pastor'.

oH'llrist

lletllt-1 W~pt.:mkr
.ii;-17!12 St. Rt. 7 . 2 mile~ SOOth~ Tu~~
Plain!'&gt;. OH Nun-ili!-nomlnatlonal with
Cunt.:mporMy Praist &amp; Worship . Pastor
Rub Surber. .'\~soc . Pi15M Kar:f'n Oavi~ .
Youth D.ire~· tur B~n y Fulks $tmd u~
-..:nH.:t'~ : IU am Wor:-:hip &amp; b pm fauul ~
Litc Cla)&gt;.~cs. Wed &amp; Thur night Ltfl.'
Uwups. at 7 pm . Thars mofning laJ\c-~ ·
Lifl.' Group at lU. Ou~r Limits Yt&gt;Uth Lik
(in&gt; up uu Wed 0:' cnmg ff0m !'l:Ml to ~ ..\0 .
Vistl u~ online at www.bethdwc .org.

· kutlaiad
Pt! Slor. Juhn C..:hapmall . Sunlta~ S:: hool
9· .'0 aJn .. Wor.-lup - IO:.W am .. ThuNiu)
Scr~oil:c s · 7 p.m.

SIJ•tJSYlllt .cumm..W, CW~d
Su nday Sehoul IO:OOam. SunW.y _Wonhtp
1! .00 :illl. Wedue:.da~ 7:00 pm P~asklr; .
Bl) .u1 &amp; Missy Daile}

!fl.. Pastllr: Jim Prollitt .

Slllld~y S..: beovl - ~:30 11 m • Wllr.ihip •
10~ ~0 u.m.. Wednesday Scr" •~cs · 7:00

Feliov.-.hip. Sunday - 0 p.m. Earl~ Sunday
wt•r~hip S am Jcmn ·Dunham

L&gt;oug
Cu.\ . SunJu) School - lU 11111. Wur-.;hip ·
ltl:-i.5 p.m.. Su nJuy b,. , !lOll p.111 ..
w. .w"'·-.da} ~ ~ 11. e . 7· LM.I p m
H~·scU

9:2 ~

RlX:k. Sprinp
Pa., tol': IR'-' :JYIU: Stutler, SWJd&lt;~y Sc ho.&gt;ol •
tJ:OI.I u.m. Wor~ hip - 10 .a.m.. uYouth

Pm nc rl'~· Hu rll ~\&gt;O\lllc RJ·. tRt.lJ} J.

Pastor: Kogt:r W11t~&lt;•O . Sunda~· Sch''''l 9·JO a.m .. Wl• t ~ hip - HUO a.m.. 7·1111
p.m.. weJnesda} S.:r,•io..i:' • 7 p m.

Sum.l&lt;l) Sc hoo&amp; · 9-;30 Et.m ..
10:30 a.al .. 7: .\l.l p m..
Wedn&lt;!"Sl.luy Ser~k-e · 1 :.~ p.m.

Wo r~ hip

p.lll

"-'•sir.\·au 8ihlt&gt; tluliots.s Chun·h

• 11!:30 a.m .. f:&gt; :.lO p m.
W.:dn.:sdll)' So:r-.'tl'-'"- t:&gt;:.l(l p 1\l.

st..dtw~.

Ou6k Cbristiala •·e~owsa~p
( Non -\kno1ni.nationat tt! Uo w~hip!
Meeting in th~ Mdg~ ,\ h.k.llt:"'schl.'o.ll
faf.:tt:l ia 1-'astur (.'hri s St.:wlll't
10·00 :m1 - Noon Sund~y . blt.('rmal ·
Wor ~hip-. ('hildrt:n' s mini ..ll y ·

!:lob RtJt.inM.JII , Sundu&gt; School · 'l
,1.111 . W01ship . lU a.m.

Pint&gt; Gru•r Uib~ Hulir\t'Sii ('twr-rh
I ~ m!ll.'" nil Kt . _; ~:; , P:r.-lor' Re v. O' Dell
;l,ltutle) . Sum.ht) Sr..:huol • (} ',tl am .:
w,u-.,hip
111:.10 u.m.. &amp;.no 'p nl..
Wnlu,·..Ju:- 5...'1'\' t r.:~· , 7:00 p.m_.

a.rn
Wor ~ h ip

Flnt Bopllst CbW'&lt;b
Pasror: Billy Zuspan blh and Palmer St .
Middlepurt. Sunday School - \U~ a.m .
WQ~ship - · 10: I~ a.m .. 7:IJO p.m .
WcdneSI.Ia~ ServK.·e- 7:00p.m.

R,~·ur Sharun

K~•w

3rd SU!!d:!y

t'lntS....... IIo¢"
41872 Pomeroy Pt~e . S.Undll.~ SchlXil 9:30 ll.tn .. Won.hip - Q:45 am &amp; 7 : (~) p.m..
WCi.hmsdll.y Setv!ce~ • 7: (10 p.m.

l'uhur~

CllhatJ IWirM Ctwnll
Pmnt&gt;ro~ Pilu~ . (.' u. Rd.. Pa.&lt;aor: Rev .

P.J~otor Wayn.: Dunlap, S~:&lt;Jll!' Rt . b8l.
Tupr:rs Plams. Su11 Won.hip: 10 Iilii &amp;
0 ..'0 pm .. Wo:J . Btble Study7:00 p.m.

Pa~1t)r·

Unan Dunham. w.u ~h ip
;1.111 .. Sunday S4:h\~l-- JU·ol'\ ~ 111 .

Fnday. 1 p.m.

Gwttlll

A\t!Uinl Gntt t.:ommMily Cllln...

Brian Dunham. Su nd::ay School -

Pa't~ &gt;r:

""'c-

A:"ri~wiJw~

, ..rtrltopol

\111~7 SUit~· R11Utt:

W~!Ui1c..W~ s~·nt~·._:,

•

pm

lhlnvil~ Hoi~ t' hun·~

. 11:.\0 1.1 m.. Wun. hJp· (:; 15. 10 "\II a Ill . 7
I' m • Wt:o.in&lt;"&lt;W&lt;I:O Scf\ kc., '1 p.m.

EIU.

V.••r•h1p-llhlll a.m..

RullaJtJ . SunJ.11

~ 1: W M;nn S1 . SunJa:-- S.:h11i1l · 9 .1 0

We..in(-.dll~ ~~'t"l!~ - 7 p.m .

SO\"tt.

~

t"oilb ,...,.sbit&gt;t:"""'*

tFul Gosfld (.~lal H~risou~· ilk .
·Pasi\Jf'S· Bob anJ K;~y Marshall.
Sunday ~rlil' t' .~ pJn .

q:,\/Ja.l\1. W~hlp · 1.\ :U(I a.m

t.:hu.rch
h,m, k. Mmn

~unJa~ St: J \ot~' 1

S...:hwl · II J.lll Wo n; hip · lOa:m .. /:1 p.m.

Pa.&lt;ttur: R~: v. 1--ranklin Oi.ck.ens. Service:

P.J stl'r:

llnth t .\liddkpurt I

l\•mmw1i1~
Sl(·~...

· Pa-wr:

StuJy • 7 p.lll .

.~Y!~6 ('h tlt.!ren· , ~lo1m Rd .. Suud.ty

:uo pm

&amp;,

Holiness

111. SunJu~ S.:ho&lt;.JI · I.U::W .t.nL . B1 bk

.~

2480 ~'l:I 11J. St .. S~·r-.h: Wit . UH
Su n. School Ill am. Sund) .uight fdO ptn

Pustor· Bob Rllbinson. Sunday Schl&gt;OI • 1U

P a.~ tvr:

Htmlwk GnM l'bristi¥8 l ' htJn'h
MuliSh!r' LJrr~ Bmwh. Wur~lup \j ._011
J

Sum.la ~

lud1amt I I r.tl J. 111

- 7 p.m

Syr.-ut t:'........._~ ClMlftoft;

"m .. W&lt;.v-Jiip - 9 a.m .

Ht&gt;ly

10:00. S1.1n u1 ollltl1~ Btbk .tuJ:- .
hllh.:-wt ng -...·or-hip . Sun '. e~" 6:00 p111.
Wl'\1-l'lthh: •tudy 7 pm
·

..

wwo.~(·-w..,

Fairvl.ew BiWrt.(."'Nc'
Letart . V'o'.Va . Rt . I. P'oisto~: Brian: May.
Sunday 54:1:100! , lF-30 11.m .. Wonhip • 7:00
p.m.• Wednesday Bible Srudy ~ 1:00 p.m.

r~ltun

GrUI.:t' t:pN:upll'llarch

tnUfllt ll!l

WorshJ!l" 1 p.m.

Coolville Rulli. Pastor. Rev Cbal'l~·
Martindale . Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 1.m..
WOt·!&gt;h ip . 10:30 a.m.. W~l&gt;dll~ ~i:l:c

Other Churches

l''llllwuods
Pa~tor : DewayDt: Stuttln. SunJuy S.:hool 10 a.m .. WL&gt;r.;:hip · II J.m.

Episcopal

Rd . l'omcm). OH

7 ~-4.-1 -1 ~% SonJa~

. 9· .\0 a.m .. W!Jf'Sbip • UJ :JU un ..
Sunday ~v~ning. b pm
btt.d l""hurclt ol ~ N~
· P..c.t~r: Georg._. Stadkr. Sunduy S..:hool •
'-':30 a.m .. Wor,~hi.p - 10:30 a.m.. 6:JO
. ~- m .. Wedne ~y Scr.ic~ - 1 p.m.

A!obur) iSyra...·ul&gt;l!l. Pa~IOI': Bob Rub m ~un .

1\iniay Cbu~·h
P-~t u r· Rt:' Tum Johthun . Second &amp;;
Lynn. Pvmc~'-~ .. 1-'a~ tor: . WuNup 10 :~5
a.m ..

...m

H1)1lk!"

Sdt~)Ol

Congregational

·church of Christ

Hopt Baptisl Chun:·htSoultwrn'

510 Granl St. Mlddkptlrt . Sunday !&gt;1:huul
• 9:30a.m.. Worship · 11 u m. and b p.m..
W~11y

Ma!&lt;.~ - lt :."&gt;~J

BalU KIKJb, on Co Rd . Jl. hs&amp;or: IMt'~'
Roger Willf\:ml. Sundu) ~boul • ljl( 30

C-Chv&lt;b"tto-

aun .. Wc-.Jn":.llliy ~!'\'KII'~- 7:30 p.m.

Pu.ntru_v (' burch ol" l 'hrisl

ClwslUn Baptist nurch
Pasror:

.!.m.. l&gt;.ail~

10:.10 J .m. anJ 6

._.,..._

p.m.

!:iunday School - Y·J~ n.m. Wur'ihip · II

pIll

Pa,tur: R'" V.:~l ter E H&lt;.'tnl . 'S&lt;~t (\m .
-' ~~ - =' 1'p .m.: \l ,h~ - ~ : \tl p 111 . Sun.
l'on. - ~ ..J.~ -'&gt;1 15 J.nl .. Sun. Ma ~5- 9:'i)

w~dt l'tnan:ll of l'hri&gt;l

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It-o I \hl l~ny Ah'. Pnm&lt;'n_'}· ~~~-~ ~~~!(

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............. St. hool
Pu!&gt;lur:- Jim Curbitt. SunJay School • ~
J 111 .. Wurship 10 a.m.. T~U:sd~y Sc-rvke~
.?· 'ilp.nt·

l'hun:h ol Gud vf ~-'
OJ \\ lnt~ RJ 11 ll St Rl lN.I. Pa.--t.ur· P'J
Cho~pm.u \. Sumla~ St:h\lvi - IU , d nL.
\\ nhhtp · II a.m . W~J n~'&gt;lla~ S.."n t~'C' 7

Catholic

Loop fW ull'• Stw ltmii Ri.l RutluuJ.

*....

Paswr: Rt&gt;v. Curti~ &amp;11od~lph , Su nJay

1-• cn utg St'lltl'C'- t.·JU pnr.
Wed 11~·•ll.a' Xr11"11'' · (l :ll pIll

.::hu(\: h lllilll. Sunlby '-'' till II~ o p111. '.\ .:J
l:ltblc SruJy 7 pnt

(."'-tit., . . Nuar8rt

to ,un. !nd wtd --WI SuoWJ.y
C\M'~Htioa lllb!rdlt
•
CWdl
K.mgsbury R®d. Puswr Robt.rt ~·
Su nJ.av S.-hQOI • 9~ 30 ll rn .. WQI'Sbip
Scr'ftC~ !0:30 am . Evemn1 Xf'lllct 6

Page As

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

p.m.. WN.wsUay S.:....-lll:!l- • 1 p.m.

pm.~r--.' t'--.:

~111

Rubo.:rt

Grudy. Sumla~ '-1-:huul 10 um' 1\h.omlllt!

loc.

W.n,lllp • q :]O a m., Su nday School ·
IQ: 11,1 ;~ .m ., FtJ 't Sulhl:l.y Ql Month • 71.111

\ppli: .md s._:._:,,.!J '"' P:1~1lu· Rl'\&gt; Da•·1d
1-t.u•·-dl. Sund.11 &gt;; ~· huo.Jl .tnd \\,lr\htp l\J

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-\nlk r.~•n ~ Pa•t~..- ·

SR M-.2 aii\J

SIU\Jy
E-r·uftA.~ T»bernacW

" p m.

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Pa'-lor Jan L.a v.:-u..Xr. Suru.lu) Schwl

\

~:JO ~.m .. Wor~hlp

s~·rJK*W tiN l'hu.U ol God

Fint BapiW.l'IMln:b uf !\Ja.o;oo, \\"\

-\~e .

873 S. 3N

- 1,1·1() a.m. Wof!.tup -

lO:J(J a.n1.

. M onu n~ -...urhlHp ll w11 bcnmg ':' pm.

llbtr,'llilty
b « Vallty ApoMUlil.: WOI"htp C'l"nter.

Pa~ur· lkn.t.tl Null. \Jio'urship - ioi.JO ;a.m.
StmJa.• S.:hool \UJO a.m.

Wt'\.lnr:-...1&gt;~' ""'"' 11..'1."~ 7 p Ill
R:a~l!nwo(Jt}li .

Syrw..'VMI Ckrc:llt of tilt~
~obM Mil~ Aill.J.n~. ~ Scftool 9:~
am • Wohhlp • 10 3-1) a.m .• b p .ln •
Wl!\lnt-sUay Se:n\~ts- 1 p.m.

({ ,.l..UI~.

pm

•

f.W... · FebruMY 6. 2.001
·-•· _

ydallysentinel com
www.m
~
•

for thee: form~

strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

J~
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

Long Term. Short Term and
Respite Care Available
Call today to sc.ltedule a tour

\\lmn 1-'riemlly
Atmo .~pht'rt'

u,(t~•

• nU.(\t\1

H •~u(~
6am - ~pm

9vfi[[ie's ~estaurant

209 Third St.
Racine, OH

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

740.949-2210

Open 7 days H,\\eek

We 1ve Got It!

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740.949·2217

llumt C{WbJ MtUI!o· &amp; Vail,- .~pt&gt;ciDis

740-992-n13

If ye abide in life. and My
words abide in yo11, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done nnto yon.
· John J.'i:7

Sizes available Sx 10 to 1Qx 20

The Hppllance man
740-985-3561
992·1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam You

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second Sl.

Middleport. Ot-t

740.992-6128
, Local source for trophies,
Ia e I· h'rt n
re

MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, (lhlo 45769 · ;rr:-..
(740) 992·3279
'-!!Y
Tol Free 1·877-583-2433

740·667·3110

...

. ..

P.O. Box 683
Pomero O~io 45769·0683

�•

Pt

M•TMDIItyS.utlnel

WOkSHIP.GODTHIS WEEK
PI.,IUr 1 ,111\~\
f);~nufidU . SunJJ\ s.-hllUI • ~ - H .~ ID •
1::\&lt;.'tllll!,! 6 p m V.c J nc..J;~~ "-'r~1t:t'.,- 7

\oh \11' HJII RoJ .

~"'-"-·-­

V.ZIIIii: aad Ward ""·· I:"J~lor Jiiin6
Suay Schuul
10 lO " Ill .
E'mllot , 7·.l) p.m.

Miller.

Rutland l 'rct Wil BaptiM.
S.tl~m St . l:'a~ll.lf Ed Barllt'Y . S.waJ.. ,
S..;hwl
\U J m . Evi!rung
1 p.m •

'""""""'""'

"und:~-. $..-h~.-&gt;ol

S«voclllo¢" l'll""h

\ltJt.llcP'Ifl. R~··
~I BnuJfool Ptl"J:ur. Sunl.la;. l\1 ."l

W..-Jnc'oi.L&amp;~

'.\ \ . Sun.tii~ S..hul..ll tn

J.lll

V Ill

un. ~ - 6:JO pr&lt;~~c.r. \\t'tl. 7 pm Btblc

t lwJep,.: J t~.lcnl iJ&lt;~PU~t

~i~:

Sun lOtiO aJn. &amp; 7 Jtl p.tu .

Thtm. 1:fll p.m.. PlisM· M.ut ~ K. HuUtut

Assembly of G~ '-'""1y """...., uf God
P.O. Boll .l67 .. OuJding Lm~. \1a,un .

W.VIl., Pas.tor Ni.'t l Tennam . SwtJ'l~
Sl:nices· IU:I.ll a 111 and 7 p.m

Baptist
t'ruwill &amp;,list nu~h
Pllsror. Floyd RoM~. Sunda~ S..·h..'olll •L11.l tn '
!0:30am. Wonhip ~ r \' t~'e IU:}U to I I :(II)

WN . prl:lil."htng fl pm

c~ ·-~ndHt B¥ptisll'burch
Sundlt~

School

Serv•~

lol : ~\lklm .

Pn:lu.-hm~

St't-.. K~·

10:30nm . · E\cning.

7.00pm. Wednesday 8ibll" Smd~ 7;(10 put.

P'asi&lt;Jr:

St~:vt' Ltttlt'. 7,ou..~7 -7 K(JL H .

740-992-7542. C. 7JO.().I.5.~5~7. SunJa~
School: 9:30 am. Murnmg Wontup: 10:_'0
am. Youth &amp; Btblc- Uuddi.: ~ &amp;:JO pm.
• Ct\Qir prut:lll'l!' 7::\1: Sp~: ...·tal Ja._~, vf llliJIIth
1. Ladit&gt; t~f Gr...·e 1 pm ~nU MonJay. 2.
M~ ·~ t-"elluwWp 7 pm ~rd. i"ut:l&gt;.

.\J~1&lt;' (hilo!f('n\

(\mlar.:t

St-rvi&lt;.:e • 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary

125. Lan~'~tk . 1-'-J.•t•&gt;r
U11.111 Ratl ~~. SuuJay "'-·hwl · 1Ll(l J.m ..
SunJa~ ""1-.hi!'
Hi:JO a.1ll . &amp; 7 p m.. ·
'1\,~no: "dll } p rJ~cr '&gt;l'fl il.·~ 1 pIll

111.. w,,,,h-,p· to ·.lu_ :1m . •fl p m .
· 7 p.m.
Ponlef'lly W~L'):idt: {.'h.un-h of l'hrlst

~liddll!port

l 'hureh orCbrlsl:

)th an&lt;l Mum. Pa"!&gt;tur: AI Harl\011.

ril•rin1 Chaprl
Htu"l\'l ' tt 1 tilt'
Rt&gt;atl. Pa\lor: t'hlll'k'
, f\.kl\t'll l it' , ::0U tllhty S.. h1.11)J q:}ll U 11! ..
Wor ~hi p · 1I .1 .111 .. 7 tll p.m .. Wednc..U u~
Scr\ k.: · 7"00 p:tn

C'hiklrelt• Due.;t,w, Sh~run S~~Tl·. T&lt;"~ n
!Ju-...-..:tw Dodg..·r Vaughan . Sunlla&gt; S..· hro~.•l

Sundlly S.:huul - 9 JO a.m . Wor.Jup -

10:45 a.m.

Pomeroy Flnl S.pli&lt;it
Putot Jon llrocktn. EL'-t Maul St..
-Sundlly Sch. ~.30 wn. Wol":lhip lU. ~O :.~m

Ch.urt'h. of Christ
Wl•1~h 1p • l,l ..lll .1 111 . SUt\da~ S;:·hN'II 10 .m a.m.• Pu~toa -J.:O'r.:~ W~llw:•·· I-t anJ

~arwaltow

Midgt Chun:b ol( " hri~t
Pa.;tnr:Bru . .-e Terry. Sund:~~ Sda11.•l . \j : l(t

a.ri.e t'lrsl Bapllst
Putor. Ry an Eaton, pastor . Sunda&gt;
School· 9:30a.m.. WonJup · 10:.j,(J a.m .:
. 6:00 p.m.. W~:U.nesd11y Ser\ices - 1·110

p.m.

· t1

Sllnr RWI Baptist
Pastor· John S'l\·aru;on. Sunday Sdu.10l •
IOa.m.. Worship : I ta.m.. 7:00 p.m.
.W~y Sero.ice~- 7:00p.m.

Mt. Uolonlloptist
Pltstor: Dennts Weall&lt;er Sunday St; houl 9:45 a.m ., Ev.:nmg - 6:.\0 p.m, .
Wtdnesday ~roi~:e~ - 6:30-pm
Btdlarbe. ~ Cburth
Grel:lt Rend . H.oUle 1 2~. bcllu:, OH .
Ptslor: . Sunday School ~ 1}.30 a.m..
Suoday Worsh1p - 10:30 a.m..: Wl!dnesJa~
Biblt S1udy • 7:00 p.l\1
Old ltUltl Fl'ft Will Bapllsl ('h.IM't'h
28601 St. Rt . 7, Middle p~.1rt . Sun.~u:­
Sen"ice • 10 a.m., 6:00 p.m.. Tuesda~ ·

Huliltt'!IS ('hun:b
L~;,~dmg Crt'l.'"k KLI .. Rtnland . Pa,wr: R.: v.
U..·wo:y Ki~ . Su nd a~ "'"·houl- l}· .' tl a.m ..
~ u nd;~v
wor ~hip _., p.m .. Wedut·~Un~·
pra).:r m~h n ~- 7. p m

· Miuctn,ilh:

" und;_t} s•.-h,lnl 9 a.m.. W;:~r.;hip - 10 a.m.

('QIIHIIdil'

Portlan&lt;.1-Rru.:1n~

Zion.( 'lwrth ul t:hri&lt;lt

15 P~tarl St.. ~1n.kll o:)M1

Sltkml'mln
Ptl~ll_)r

TUppd!i Ptai11 Churdt of l '.. rist
ln-munl('r\tal. Wm~hip Sei-vke ~ ~ a .!JI .
lommu nio.J II - IU .1.111 ., SunJa} Sehoul ·
10. 1:; a.m . Yottth- 5:30 p;u Sundu~· - Uibl~
StuJ~ Wt:dfk'"'.l~ y 7 pm

Br11dburY {'hun:h of Christ
Minister: Tum !l.uu}Un. JY:'iSI:I Hr:to.lbur~
Road . Miili.ll~purt . Sunday Sr.:hool • II:JH
a.m
WoNh t p -1 0: 31J~ .m

K. M:n-.hall . Sund:~y
~:h nol - 10: I~ a.m .. Wt'f'ihip - \1:15 ~. Ill ..
Uibk S tuJ ~: Montla) '1 :00pm
SnMrvillf
Suuilily Sdtool - 10 ~ .Ill .. Wor..llip • 9 :.l.lll

P;c, tOI" John Gil mol(, S unJ~ y SdiL&gt;ol • Itt
,1.111 ... Wilf~ ll ip· - Y ;t . lll • WnlnL""'-':JY
St-rvi"e-- - 10 a.rri .

l'a~tur R'-"'. LJ tT) L~·tn l l' ~ ·, Su nda y S~.IR...,t

Rutlud Chun·ll of Christ

Pa~tc•r:

~en-t r e

~25

Yk\ory BaptW IMtptndt-nt
N. 2nd St. Middleport . Pastur: Jamc~

E Ketstt. Worship - JO;••. m.. 7 p.m ..

lll'f'ds\tllr thu.n.·b ufChri."'l
P'u$1or· Philip Stu rm , Sw\day S~o·hool Q .\tl
.1. m .. w.~r~hrp s,·m,·t: 1\1· 10 u m .. Bi t-lc
Study. Wt\lnt!&lt;li:J}. o· _l(l p m.

. Wednesday ~r\U:I'~ - 7 p.m .

·
Failb Baplbt Chun·h
Ra1lf"Oall St . Mason . Sund:J)· Srhiii.Ji - ltl
·a .m .. Wurship · 11 11m .. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Sc.-rvico:~ • 7 p m

foml R\lD BlpUsl• Pemroy

Rev. JO!il;ph

W~. SundllY. ~~:hoo\ ~ 10

a.m., Worship - IUO 1:1 .01.

.

M t . - .......
Fourth tt Main St .. Midd!epm. S~omday
5-;hool- ~. 30 1:1 m .• WOf"oku p- 10:J5 :~. m .
Pastor: Me\·. Michao: l A Tht~mp)illn. Sr.
AnUquUy lbpUst
Sunday School • II:JU l!l.nl • Wnr ~ht p \0:45 a.m.. S um.l~ y b"run~ - tr tiU 1'111 .

your light so shine hd.nrt•l
. that they may see
works a.nd glorify
IF:ath'er in heaven ."
Manhew 5:

Vex~rr

l'hun:h uf Christ

. 10·30 a.m .
'fhr fhun:h ur Chrbt ur Ponwro~

un

lnt.-r ~l'l' ttun

Kalpl; 'lp1r~·~ . Stithlu~ 'irhtH.•I

7 and 1!--l W.

~~ ; u t J;d l ,\ .

llennis Sargl'n l. Sunduy aiblt Stud~
Q:3(l a.m.. w~~r~h ip : tn :.i(J' a.m. lllld 6:.1ll
p.m.. W~dnt:MlJ.~ Biblt Study· 1 p.m.

Christian Union
lbtrl(otd Chu.n;h u( U1rbt Ia

1~_.

bl'h1n.t

W il~ ,.,,,llr: . Pa~wr .- lkl .

•):.\0 tl m .•

\\'1•1'h 1p : ttl "\II am .. 7 p 111.. 11uw"la)

Sci\ 1re• · 1 I' 111
"d):." ( 'ullpt"ralht l"urish
\ ' lu._,.,.t , l.ll1nl. P .t' t~H : Jt1n
SL u al ~~

s~· hv1'1

•

~-

1{) ,J. .m .

Wu~•h1p · 11 .1 m .. 6 J() p.m.
s~·huol ~

lti : W

am .. 7:00 p. tn .

9:.10

~ . m , W1lr~h1p
\\\•drK""'I ;1~

Sen i~.o;-~ - H ill jUt1

Church of God

Chlostn
P.t•l\&gt;1 " Jtill l \11httl. \\ t'l'hrp
Suu~h1 .1 ~dh•nl · lt l ,, U\

\j

lUll ..

So:t\ tn·, • 7 I' nt

&lt;~ .~O:'i

Loug Rvttom. Pasklr: Ste-we Rt.'t.'\.1 . Sundu~
School. - 9:,'0 a.m. Wonhtp- t.,i :JO 11m '·
antl 7 p.m.. Wt'dn~Uu} • 7 p m . Frida}' f~llow s hl~ ~ rrvi~·e 1. p.m.

""""'uf "'.... ~­

St. Rl. 124 L~m~SVWr. OH

t-"uU ('"--...po:L Cl Pa-&gt;rurs 1\00en &amp;. R.*n.
fl.hi·~er. Sundu~· s~·huul 9 ..10 um, ,
Worship Ill JO urn · 7:00 pm . WN.
S('(V[(e _7:00

.

Bell
Tun:h l'hun:h

M~...:ting

l'hunh oflh~ ~a:.an-ne­
R IIut~ NN . t\l bau~. l{..;v Llo)ti G n mm .
p&lt;tq,,t1 Sum.!.•;. s~ h .,t•l Ill ~ m . v.1lrh~tp
,~·r' 1 1.·~· II ant,\''~ ~~~~~ ~ ,,_.,, 1w 7 pm w~-u .

\\'cdu.,.-..&lt;.1;1 ~

l'ar~llll
Wt•I ~l t ip

Janlt'!t Andt•r.:nn,Adum Md)unlrl-

llirt·1.:lurs

ttumrm~· - (lH 740-992-3444

Presbyterian
a.fn . Sunday

·

Insurance
Products+
Financial

AGENCIES Inc.

Servtces

ask wllat ye will, ar1d it sht1ll
be dolle rmtoyou.

John 15:7

Bill

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

214 E. Main
992·5130
Pomeroy

~
·.
-

·

We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
Pomeroy
992•2955

so many businesses are will help us through these
closing down. and people difficult times."
are being laid off," said
George Binningham. stu·
Jennifer Allen. a church dent pastor at Tuscaloosa
member who brought a let- Church of God. asked memterhead from her employer. hers who brought letters on
Sealy Management. "I company
stationery,
believe in the power of God. brochures and business
and I believe he listens to . cards to Sunday"s service to
people's prayers, and he join him at a table in the

Discrimination
suit settled
WASHINGTON (AP)
The Justice Department has
settled a lawsuit accusing
Washin~:ton 's transit agency
of religtous discrimination.
The complaint filed in
federal court accused Metro
of discriminating against a
woman of the Apostolic ·
Pentecostal faith because
she was unable to comply
with Metro's unifonn policy. She declined to wear
punts. which are pan of the
uniform but are forbidden
by her beliefs.
·
Gloria Jones said she
n 't hired as a bus driver
because her religious beliefs.
The Justice Department
announced Tuesday that
Metro has agreed to pay
more than $47,000 to Jones
· and $2 ~00 each to two oth· ·
ers who say Metro didn't
accommodate their beliefs.
Metro also must imple·
ment a policy to reasonably
accommodate employees'
religious practices and train
its supervisors on religious
discrimination . The agree·
ment still must be approved
by the court.

""*'·

Palin's church
reopens

center of the sanctuary.
He then placed sweet·
scented olive oil on their
hands and anointed each
piece of stationery .. The
prayer reques.ts came from
employees and business
owners, most from the
1\Jscaloosa area but some
from farther away.

WASILLA. Alaska (AP)
- Hundreds of worshippers
llocked to the reopening of
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin's
home chun:h, which was
badly damaged in an arson
fire m December.
"We have been blessed by
people's response to us, far
beyond . anything
we

Mlddleporl Preb:-tHiu
Pa~1u r: Jam.:" Snyder. Sunday Sch(lol 10

.uu .. 'o\l)fShip ~f\ i...'t' II am.
Uti Rt. \~4 . P~s. tur : t.dsd H11rt. Sunday

Se\'enth-Day Adnntist

Srhl'l'i . \UIJ am . WtJt ~ hip • ltl:::.O a.m..
7.JO p.m.

Stwath·~Y Advt-ntbt
Mull\t.'rry Ht". RJ .. P\lmci"oy, Saturday
S.:rvicl.'"~ : Sabbuth Sr..:hool - 2 p .m .,

~U-

hith G~ptl n.urch
Sum.ltty s~· h\1\&gt;l - ll.,l\1 !Uil .
~ \0 :..15 a.m., 7 ..lll p,m .

. Wt·J!tl'-'-tluy 7:JO p .m.

ll uutrr. Sun,la~ S..:h t~t•l · HI a.t\\. Evl:'ll tn¥
7..111 11·\ll .. ru. .~du~ &amp; Thu r~ .- 7 }II p.m

Sooth Rrthfl t:omnnmity ("hun:h
Sih'l.'"r Rillgt- Pa.; wr lind;~ Uitntt'wwd ..
Sunday Sthool - ~ 01 m.• Wvn.hip S~' TV ll"t'

Got/so l01wl tile world
lie ga•·e hi.&gt; only
II&gt;I'IWII,f' ll

S0/1...

Jvlln 3:16

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I

I

I

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I

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

United Brethren

lll &lt;to a.m . 1 p m
1\lnrsl" Chaprl Chun·h
Slln\1 ~) '"ht".ol ~ l! l u_m .. Worship · ll
;1m.• We,hw~d;t)' Scn·k:l' - 7 p m.

Wor~hip

I

W;;~h i11 - ~p . m .

Church

Ll't WIIII·Ji~ltt so shine i&gt;&lt;'jln-.
REHABILITATION CENTER "'""· rhmrlt ...1. may see wmr
'l'he &lt;'ttre J'Otl desrn'l', (•lose to hanlt go(}(/ h 'Orh· wul glonJ.i.· y011 ,.
36759 Rocksprl·ngs Rd.
Fmher in ltearrn .·
Pomeroy. OH 45769
Mallhe&lt;t'5.' 16
740·992·6606

PHARMACY

INSURANCE.
SERVICES

deserved.'' Pastor Larry
Kroon. told worshippers at
Wasilla Bible Church.
"God's grace is the one true
renewing resource and it
will never run put:·
Palin.
the
former
Republican vice presidential hopeful. was
in
Washington. D.C .• over the
week.end and did not attend
either of the two Sunday
morning services.
Damage to the chun:h
from the Dec . 12 blaze was
estimated at $1 million .
Five people were inside the
building at the time of the
lire but escaped unharmed .
Investigators say they
have no evidence that
Palin 's link. to the church
was a motive for the t1n:.
Kroon made no mention
of Palin during the service.
However. he said later that
the governor attends occasionally when she is in
Wasilla: her hometown. He
said Palin is not a member.
but her ties to the church
brought widespread publki·
ty and an outpouring of suppon and donations.
Letters from well-wishers
were displayed in a looseleal· notebook at lhe back of
the sanctuary. Many came
from individuals and religious groups who identified •
themse l'les as supporters of
Palin in her vice presiden·
tial bid.

to reconciliation

TUSCALOOSA,
Ala.
(AP)
A Tuscaloosa
church used part of its
Sunday service to anoint
and pray over 40 pieces of
business stationery as members asked God to help ·
those companies and their
employees.
"During these hard times,

tltrnwa l lnlled 8rtthn-n

The Corpor~ Works of Mercy

Te:\.11'- ('ummumty .' bill I W1do.htU'tl Rd.
P" SlllT" Ptter Murtindulc. Sunday School •
~ - ~ () u.m.. \\\\rsh1p - \O:J\) :a .tn .• 7:00
p.m . Wc llne~dll)' S~r' ~~-e~ · '1 :00 p.m.
\ \11.1th gmup mee1ing 2nd &amp; 4th _Su_nJ~ay s
7 pm.
1-:dt:n llnltrd 8rtlh~n in (.'hrlli1
Stnk R11t1te 12-t . b.:-tw.-... n Re-t·dS\'i\le &amp;
H\1\:I.. IIIS,('II.l f\. Su u d~y s~·ht10 l • IU a.ll\ '
Sumla) Wm~ bip • II (l(l &lt;1 .111 W«..nt"!&gt;da~·
Se r\· ke ~ - 7:1){1 p.m.. Pa~ rm - M Adam
W1ll

Th~ c~rpora.l works of mercy, or acts

of men:); as they are so~imes called, are
con&amp;idored &amp;SSential by llie Catholic Church. Other Christian, and noo.Chrislian
denominatioos olso share a belief in these worb of mercy. The corporal wt~~ks of
m~ Gil focus oo bodily needs, lliewot'd "corponJ' deriving from the LM.in
"corpus• meaning body.
Then&gt; are 950 spirit.W
works of mercy, 001 for now,
let us fooos oo the corporal
works of mercy. The SI'Veti
corporal works of mercy are
alm05t Zen-like in their
simplicity, are lllglldbly
S~&gt;l-exJW!aloty, and have a
~r.Biblical basis. They are:
I) Fred llie hungry; 2) Give
drink to the lliirsly; 3) Cbllie
the nakod; 4) Sholtar the
ho~s; 5) Yisitlhe
imprisoned; 6) Visit the aidt;
and 7) 8uty the deo.d. Some
oftheae,aucb u ftedingthe
llungry, are relatively wy to l
calT)" ou\·&amp; Nit oo umall "
scale, though tbey become
more prob~JMI.ic 011 a larger scale. We shoukl
reflect on how we migbt iDCorpom.le these acta of
marcy into ourpenonaltife, and then too, hllW M mi(lllstlJIPorl them on a la.!ler
scale, l"'riiAJ'S by supporting orgGiliationa which fulil their miMion.

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
L&lt;W&lt;~iod le&amp;&lt; than JO minutes from
Alhcns. Pomeroy or rarkcrsburg
I· 740.667-3156

"Still

-+-B-ro-g-an---w-ar-n-er--~-:S~W:-:I::-::S~H::-::E::R:-:&amp;::-:-L':'O:-::H':'SE::-1r-------t~:":ar;::a~ce Is sufficient

D•vls·Oulckel Agency Inc. If ye abidf in Mr. cmd My
INSURANCE
Full line of words abide in ycm, ye slw/1

Carter speaks

Ala. church offers prayers to counter recession

Str«t. F'o&amp;.m:roy.

lbrri&gt;&lt;&gt;ooW. r...byt- Cboartb
P:.~swr : R~•bcn Mllrshllll.·wOrs.hlp • 9:00

1-"ull t:I,).S.prll.ljthlhillN

. Sulll.hl~ Sd!IM.&gt;I - 4 .lU :un ..
- ln:--'5 u.ttL. 7 p.m., W~dnt:M.!u&gt;

goldfish. We. finally caught our lives. and we become
him in the act Of dining on easy ~y when our ''fins"tail of goldfish."
of reltance on God's Spirit
. In the end. we removed the have been stripped from us.
goldfish entirely. although
But before we ~-onclude
BIRMINGHAM.
Ala .
Pastor
one did not survtve the tran- that Chun:h really isn't the (AP) - Former President
ThOm
sition to its new home. I lish tank that we want to be. Jimmy Carter addressed a
Mollohan think my intervention was swimming in. learn a little packed Sixteenth Street
much too .late to do him lesson from the Neon Tetras. Baptist Cbun:h with a mesmuch good. The other one. They band together and sage of racial reconciliation
r m sure you·u be happy to when the big baddies come arid cooperation on social
hear. is doing ·fine (so far).
their way. they simply stay issues .
The three Neons stayed
Anyway. the lllOOII of this t~ether while the aquatic
Some 1.200 people filled .
close together right from the · little t'ish tale is that ne er-do-wells 11\QVe on. ·
start. But later on, when we Christians have within their · Fish obviously aren't the the historic Birmingham
church where four black
ad~ a couple more to the
power the ability to foster best metaphors for Christian girls died in a 1963 Ku Klux
VOUP· they formed a more spiritual life in others or to community. bul there is a Klan bombing.
tmpress.ive s.ciKM.ll that quell it.
.
lesson to be learned about . Carter told a regio~al
seemed .to
intimidate
Consider foc a moment a ~sticking together" and meeting of the New Bap!isl
Stripey enough that he
man who has established his about what kind of fish we Covenant. which he helped
mostly left them alone.
pJocein life, and then !eels it defmitely don't want to be . found last year that there's
We also had an algae
duty to "disciple" anoth· Instead Of "hoondin~" one "no way for us to ignore
his
eater. but he dido "t last too
er.
He
sets to the taslc reli- another to the pomt of Jesus· emphasis on the poor.
long, I'm afraid. Perhaps
there wasn 'I enough algae giously (pun intended). Like eltbaustion oc taling bites the brokenhearted ." .
our little striped 11sh. he ou.t of others with careless oc
He said the evolution of
yet in the water to sustain
hounds her. although she critical words. ''let us con- the covenant is the "hi~h·
him. My children are con- may be wcrdk. oc wounded oc sider how we may spur one
light of my .religious life.·
vinced that I did him in
new
to
the
faith.
Our
another
on
toward
love
and
Carter recalled a time
when cleaning the tank (for
Christian
"disci'pler"
chases
good
deeds.
Let
us
not
give
when
racial prejudice was
the record. rm still claimdown
legalities
in
her
life..
up
meeting
l?¥ether.
as
some
rampant
in Baptist churchin£_inmx:ence).
spells
out
more
and
more
are
in
the
hab1t
of
doing.
but
es. and theologians defendTl,le two goldfish started
"ought"
to
be
let
us
eiii.'OOrage
one
another
things
that
she
ed separate worship.
out all right with their new
doing.
and
never
pennits
the
and
all
the
more
as
you
"The Baptist chun:h was a
roommates. but eventually
young
Or we&lt;\!}' Bdiever u see the Day approaching" stalwart defender of segrewe regan to notice that
gation," he said. "It was
Stripey would pursue them moment to simply "rest" in (Hebrews 10:24·25 NlV).
the
Lord
.
The
.
new
or
The
Church.
as
God
in¥rained in our conaround to the point that it
impressionable
Christian
is
intends
it.
can
be
the
place
sctence."
seemed they had no rest at all.
Caner said the meeting
And then one of them began molded into the belief thut . we most perfectly ex.peri·
Christian
duty
is
all
about
·
ence
the
presence
of
God.
wiU
help churches work
to have little bits of his tail
better
doing."
And
so
there
is
little
·
most
profoundly
hear
the
together.
·
and fins disappearing we
· 10
· he
· · 1n
voice
of
the
Lord.
and
most
"We
don
"t
know
whether
assumed that Stripey was· · or no JOY
r SJllntua 1 e deeply feel the healinr 110d we have a meeting or a
and
no
pleasure
in her "reluresponsible. In fact. after
.
tionship
with
God"
because comfoning touch o · His movement.'' said the Rev.
watching him for long
there
is
no
real
relationship
hand. Let us set our hearts Jimmy Allen. former presimoments chase the goldfish
..
just
a
to-do
list
that
leaves
on
genuine Christian fel· dent of the Southern Baptist
.
back and forth. we put the
lishnet in the water and her feeling run down. wor· lowship. commit ourselves Convention and co-organiz·
"chased" him around until he ried and stressed all the time. to becoming the best part of er of the New Baptist
0r think of a woman who Christian community that Covenant. "What we're
went to sulk in the sunken
h'
· · 1 r~
we can be. anc;l give our- after is a movimient."
1 e ·15 selves
. ship at the bottom of the tank. 1 101;,s h~:r sptntua
unreservedly . to
The Rev. Arthur Price.
It gave the goldfish a feprieve high and li&gt;fly. but is really God's control as He makes
at Six.teenth Street
pastor
for a little while at. least from just entertainmg an illusion our lives a ohannel of bless·
Baptist.
said, "Can you
buoyed up by tearing others
the incessant stalking.
ing throu~h which He bless- imagine that 45 years ago,
But little chunks of the down . Like our little es
His children.
used to gather here
poor little goldfish's tail and Dalmatian fish. she takes a
(Thom Mollohllll and his J)eople
to
strategize
on how to put
fins continued to disappear. bite here and a bite there
with
teeth
of
criticism
and
family
ha"
ministeml
·;,.
110
end
to
racial
inequality T
Finally, we found the real
13
Recalling the church
solllhtl1l Ohio the past •
culprit: the Dalmatian fish . jaws of self-righteousness. 112
bombing.
he said. "Imagine
Although
only
a
comment
Yftts
a1td
is
the
•uthOI"
We knew that he was the
of "The Fairy T11lt that 45 years ago this winmost enthusiastic of the fish here 110d there, she nonethe· JIIII'Gblts." He is lht -stor
dow to my left where Jesus
,...
when it was time to feed less weakens the wounded
o.f Pathway Commu11ily is knocking on the door. the
them and thought it cute or young Christian. Over Cltunh
a11d m11y bl.
that if we touched the sur- · time it lea\'es him vulnera- rraclltd /01" commtllls or face of Christ was blown
face of the water. he· d come· ble to the "sharks.. · that qutsliolls by t·mail 111 ptiS· out. I believe that God was
telling us back then. us he is
up and "nibble" harmlessly inevitably coQle passing 1 th @ th
lliD&lt;
0 ~ om 'JHI wayga •po·
telling
us now. that we are
though
his
life.
"Sharks"'
of
at our finger. But what was.
d
.
lis.com).
more
united
than we are
n' t so harmless was the little temptatiOn, epress1on, or
COPYRIGHTC 2009.
divided."
barracuda's penchant for fear can come into any of
THOM MOLLOHAN

tlllOlt'l t:ontruuaily C!Mlrda

\erl'i.-e) - 7 p.m .

th·,-ds,·lllt• l-'t'lk1•· ~ip
Chm l·h llf 1he N.\l.t fl."ll&lt;: . l'~''''t Ruv,.dl

1\.kchll.tll~

PtntKosbll Assembly
I"•'M. St . Rt 1~-'- R.adl'l:t.:. Tornado Rd .
Sunday Sl·hwl - 10 a .m. E\iening · 1
I'm .. Wr'-!nesda) Xrvic.:s. · 1 p m.

MlssJoo
l~l \ Brid~l.'"m&lt;ln St .. Svru•usc . Sunt!a~·
S&lt;;hool
10 a.m, E'"nmg • 6 p.m..
\\',·,111('-;da) ~n tl'l.' - 7 p.m .

pt;,l~l'1 11\C\',llll!; 7 p m

\liddlelM1rt ( 'hul'\'h llr thr Nw.anmr
PaSI\If" \.~ 11\MI\t 1'•11\l·ll. ~ unda~ Sdl&lt;ll•l •1 ,1() ~ m ,\\\lr\hlp - 111: 10 a.m. 6 _10 p.m ..

.\.U

Friday, February 6, 2009

Religious Briefs

~m

Pentecostal

S~nK·ust

O~·tos,· Uko Cunununlt~·

Nazarene

We recently set up 15 gallon aquarium that had been
given to us some time ago.
Once it was up and running.
we started out with four
·'feeder goldfish." ""Feeder
goldfish" are inex.pensive
fish introduced into the
aquarium to make sure that
it is a safe environment for
the tropical fish with which
we were planning to stock il,
per the helpful advice of the
lady in the pet shop. I under·
stand that it Is not a bad idea
in general. but 1 must admit
that it is probably a very
good idea given m:y having
anything to do wtth their
miniature ecosystem. I
would have hated to have
inadvertently
committed
"ichthydde.. (a word I made
up to describe the murdering
of hapless tropical fish).
·
Anyway .the day canie for
the tropical fish tenants to
arrive. We kept the ·two
smaller goldfish. but gave
the larger ones away when it
was explained 10 us by a
hel!&gt;ful pet shop lady that
the "bodily fum;tions" of
too many goldfish ten\! to
make aquarium water too
acidic for tropical !ish.
.Once all the fish were in.
we watched to see what sort
of "community" the fish
would create for themselves
as they settled into their
new home. Over the nex.t
few weeks. we began to see
different
personalilies
among the little denizens of
our family room aquarium.
The Dalmatian fish (as my
children like to refer to the
black and white mottled
Mollie) quick.ly settled into
a state of being completely
oblivious (so we thought) to
all the other fish . He just
swam around. waiting for
food to magically appear on
the surface of the water. and
all the other fish knew to
simply stay out of his way.
"'Stripey :· a light brown
fish with a black stripe running along the length of his
side seemed to have issues
. . . he would chase all the
other fish (except the
Dalmatian fish who was
generally never in a mood
to be. chased).

OH . Pa~ mr EdWI.'" Ba~· r. Sc-rvt~.: e\'.:r~
Sunday ItU.ll t~ . m .

Sun~la~ s,·hl1\ll - ~.3 0 ~ nf., Wur~ b ip -

Ru~: k

- - - . A Hunger For More---

Tr11m Jnus l\liolstriH

Faith \'alk~- Tlbernttdr Chunh
SJtky Run R.-Wl.d . ·rw.)tor: R~· v . Emnwn
Raw ~ on. Sunday Evl'nin~ 7 p.m..
l ilur)l)ay So:rvk l.'" · 1 p m.

UM'Idni.{PIM.'t Chun·h
-Kuthr}n \\tk) . Sml\1;~) S.- hooi · ~ : .\\1
a.m .. \V~,I ~ h i p - 10:,\IJ a m.. l'u.stor"Ptnllip

~-n h.'CS • 7 (llll .

jf unm1l Jl)omr
Middkpm1 , 011 740·'1'12.·5141
4IJII Kk'hlond Awnuc. Athens
740-594-t\.m
1-N00-4!' 1-~K06

ltrstunaUun Christiaa F•wMI.p
Hoo pt:r Road. 1\tho:ns . Pastor:
LIJI1nil' Co~t ~. Sumli) Worship LO·OO am . ·
We thl~sJay : 7 pr~1

.t.m ..

7·30 p.m.

Rtl .. .tt'&gt;l\l'. Sun._t-Jy S..·hool - Y
u.m. Wul"\hip - Ill u m.. W.:U~a)

' o;J

Jes~ Morris.

WNn.:~y7 p111

J .lA.\..lS ll•l,md Roa?J . Pmul'W) . Pa~ t11r : R1&gt;)

llurthml . W.\'a . P11,11•r: Mike PIKlcu .

Samday

Rr. i.~X. Anti\juit~ - P~stor:

Lim~ til.l!l\)ltl .

~~·nh~·.t\l

Corhttt .

I \~

l 'oohilk ll nit~ \ttlhodlsl Parish
p,,,L•n : lkkn . K\ino:,. Ct"Hll-.ilk Churl·h.
M~m &amp; hUh Sl . Sun. Sl.·lll.'ll..ll - ltl 11 rn ..

Vuinl

Mt. Olin l lnilt'd .\Mhudisl

fullliosptl (.I!Mrt..
uf tk LivYta Savklr

TI)V.D ~ hip

.1m . Wur.. htjJ • II u m.

,Suni.la) o;dtwl Q ~0 J.lll ., S1md..ty "''r~htp

~~ n· k e,

i\IWdhpol'l Ounn~~~nil~' Ch..-ch
~75 P~::u-!'St.. M!l!JiepoJTI . Pa~tnr · S:.~m
.'\nU.:r~m. Sund~) s.,·h\".ll \ll a .m ..
l:!wni~ - 7JU p.m. , W~Jrl('sday S.- n:ke -

IMhrl (.'hun.:h

St. Pllull.ulhttiUil'hun:b

Mtthudlst
Wilt ~h1p - II :uu. l'&lt;hlur· Rid 11m. I Nr:a,.lj,.,·hld l lnitt'd \li.•thodkl
N.-11. Ual t.' tl , R•~h .ud 'll~·,.w . l'&lt;~•t nr.
SLll111 &gt; L~ \.\'U r,hi 1• lJ Jtl ,, 111 ru~·~ fl' JO
pr&lt;lyer ami Bthk· S1u J~

Sllnduy

Kerr) w.,.,&gt;J. SunUay S.-hool · Ill
a m.. Wur-.hip
II u.rn . Wt~.lne..Ja~
S...n·ki:'' 6 pm: Thur lhbk StuUy 7 pm

Wi1r;hip - \)a.m .. Tu.:' . Service~ · 7 ll.ll1 .

&lt;' mnt'r S)l'&lt;llllotC &amp; Sl"lo"l 1 ikl St .. l\1 n~Cru&gt; .

Gnh~tm trnlled

wwv. . tho: ad:.l· hur~· h net

Uarrlsom iUt CtHliWWii&amp;J l'burch

s.. n ,.. e~ - tn a.ll\

United Methodist

IO:JO a 111 WeJnlo'~Y - 1 p.m.. TburWa.y
l'lll}tr &amp; Pruisc at 6 pm. Cla~es fot all
;1 ~e • evl.'r~ Sunday &amp; WNII.:sday.,

F'-clstor: Tho;mn Dmham. Suuda} · IJ:.lO

Pll ~tur :

(Nr Sa''ioor tutber~~n ( 'hun:h ',
Walnut · ,)1\d ~ku r~ St ~. ~J.\'l'tt'-Wt&gt; l1tl.
\\.\'J .. Pa '-hll 11,tlt0 Ru"dl. Su nda~
·htllll . ltl [I( I il.lll . \\\ &gt;r•lllp - ll &lt;1.111

tJA~

Prist~w Jamk W~nlliJl , Sunday Ser'l'k~ ·

Kador

~ - t O· J&lt;i

Sl. Johll l.uthtran l'hun·h
Pul,' (in)l l:'. \\ ilf~h ip -IJ:OO &lt;1m .. Smtd·l~
'\~.· h('lt• ~ . to·tltl .1 m Pa~111t"

Sun Schr11•l

Tht Arl Cllluctl
~77J G~1~~ Cr~k Road. Gallipob.s. OH .

,•.m and 7 p.m . WeUn~~lay • 7 p 111.

~lil\10.

s.

Tuppers Plains.. ~•stof M1kc Mooft.' . Bihk
da~s. II a.m. Sunda): 1\0t~t-up Ill a.nt
Sum.luy: wur~htjJ b .10 11m SunJa). lhhk
d~L'~ 7 pm Wed.

'

Pa~1 ,w Bill Mar~ hll.ll Sunda~ Sr.:hool t.,la.nt.. \\rvuhlp . to tUl1 . ht SundJ.y
~1er~ uwn1h ..; v~:utn g . 'io.'ni~·~1 7·('-1) p.m.:
\\edtl(',da~ · 1 p.m.

Ilk-tory Hills Ch...-~.-h ur fbrist
HllhldolloplbtChu"h

p.m.

lJu~ t '&gt;,

[asl Lftart

Lutheran

Brwltunll."'IM\'h GtCbrist
fornl'r ' ut' St. Rt. IH &amp; BmJblll"y l&lt;d .
Minister; l)uug Sluimblin. YiJutb MiniSh;'!.
Btll Amblerg~r. Sm1day Sr.:hool - 9.30 a.m.
Wor"h1p . S:ll) 11 m .. 10:30 aJn .• 7:fM.I
p.m .,Wl"llncsday Ser,· it,·~ -7:01p.m.

Wut:\hlp . 7 p m .. W~·dneSday 5.;-rvi.l;c - 1

J&gt;uswr: Ji1hn Gilmore , SUnda~· S(hool - I I

a .m..
lh&gt;n1 ~11tJL.m~ mce1lll~ . .l \t I hw ·.·· 7 p m.

Wisc:man. Mintslcr

Bibl"'

a.m. Wo~hip · Ill a.lll .

l'ht' t'hun:h oF JfSUS
l'hrbt ur l.lllltr-Ouy Saiuts
S! I-tt l'tlll , ~4t-. -ll 1-P Ill Hi1· 7--l.~t&gt; .
StmJ~v Sdw"l 1 \1· ~0 - 1 1 a .ll\ . Relie f
S.lr.:t.ttul'UI

Clifton 'l'alwr1111dc Cllu.n.:ll
.('lil"lun. W \ 'a . Sunday So:h~lOI. - 10 a.rn ..

Wedll('"-ta:- ..cr\ it:e. 7 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

uo

¥.1• r~htp . ll : t~) a m . .

Y.-15 a .m .,

Mike FOrt'mau. p-.~;M E~ritus Lawt'flKe
Foreman . Worsltip- 10.0 0 am
Wcthk''&gt;duy Services · 7 p.m.

Abu.adu.l (;r.," R.Jo'. 1.
Y 2 .~ S Thtrd St . Middlepltrt. P~l11t ll1"rl!''&lt;l "

Stud:- Wt:d . 7..\U p.m

L11wd l 'liff t'rn- Mt'l~isll'hW'\'b
Pa,hw IJku Mc{.'[UJ1)!. S unda~ St..:houl ·
1.1 :.\l.l a.m. Wor-..hlp • Hl:.lll a .m. tm,l b
p.m ..Wc:Jn~~duy S..· r' 11.'e - 7.00 p.111

1t · tl~- 1~

('armd-Sutton
Rds. Radn .... Oh-ro.
John ( ! tlntLlre , SunJay Sr,;bol.1l -

C'arm~l &amp; IJa•hutl

. &lt;J:.\11 a.m . Wnr~h1 p 10 :~~ un .. 7 p.m..
Thur .....h_.~ B1bk StuJ&gt; aml \'utnh - 1 p.m.

R&lt;)ol&lt;"io&amp; Uft Otm~

S.:r\' ice~: Satun.la~· 2:00 p.nl .
Asttt Slmt Chun-lit
. ~~~~ A~h St .. "lidJkgvrt-1:\istor, Matl
Sakm Commuil). Cbu.rt~
Milrrow &amp; RoJnc-y Walkt:r Sunduy
Bar..:l l•t We,r Columbta. W.Va om LievtDg
S.:hool · 1:UU a m.. 't~-~unnnt; Worship •
RuaU . 1-'~~tor Charles Ruu~ tJ04-I 61.5IU: 'tt a.m. &amp; 7: 00 p&amp;n. Wt:\lndday Scr~i~·e
' ~2~8. SunJa~ s~·hoo t Q:JO am . Sunday
- 7·nJ p.111 , Youth Si:'r~i.:e - Hlll p.m.
~:h'ning. ~1: r\•n· 7:00 pm. 8il'&gt;l~ Study
'
"&amp;aaw Uft Cealrr
Wl·~ u~·...u~~ ~mn· 1J() pm
·'fllli -Gl"IX' I Chun·h". Pu~tor-. Jl1 hn ~II,;
Pau~ WaJr: , 60.\ X..,x1tld /we . f\.la~n . 77.lHuh&lt;ooo Utrislilm rntuwl!lliP Cbtu.rdl
~C 11 . St:n·il;e t uu~ Slln&lt;la~ HHO 11.m ..
r-o~..~t,u·: H,.~r..: hd Whit.: . SunJaY s~·hool­
Wo..•due!&gt;Jay 1 pm
ro ~m. Su ndtty (hUI\:h SC f\'ice b.3U pm

Bethail~

P..btOI'.

ltun t'ommw1il~ t'hun·h

s~• rtl'\ ~ l t'l l l'~lhlll.-...1

Servicei-b:OO

St. Rt. 143 just off Rt . '1 , Pa)tor: Rt:\ .
James It Acree, Sr .. Sumlay Unift.:J
Service. Worship - \(Uti a.m.. 6 p.m..
Wednesday ~rvi.:e~ · 7 p m

Willa~

.

~00 N. 2nd Aw .. Middleport. Pastor'.

oH'llrist

lletllt-1 W~pt.:mkr
.ii;-17!12 St. Rt. 7 . 2 mile~ SOOth~ Tu~~
Plain!'&gt;. OH Nun-ili!-nomlnatlonal with
Cunt.:mporMy Praist &amp; Worship . Pastor
Rub Surber. .'\~soc . Pi15M Kar:f'n Oavi~ .
Youth D.ire~· tur B~n y Fulks $tmd u~
-..:nH.:t'~ : IU am Wor:-:hip &amp; b pm fauul ~
Litc Cla)&gt;.~cs. Wed &amp; Thur night Ltfl.'
Uwups. at 7 pm . Thars mofning laJ\c-~ ·
Lifl.' Group at lU. Ou~r Limits Yt&gt;Uth Lik
(in&gt; up uu Wed 0:' cnmg ff0m !'l:Ml to ~ ..\0 .
Vistl u~ online at www.bethdwc .org.

· kutlaiad
Pt! Slor. Juhn C..:hapmall . Sunlta~ S:: hool
9· .'0 aJn .. Wor.-lup - IO:.W am .. ThuNiu)
Scr~oil:c s · 7 p.m.

SIJ•tJSYlllt .cumm..W, CW~d
Su nday Sehoul IO:OOam. SunW.y _Wonhtp
1! .00 :illl. Wedue:.da~ 7:00 pm P~asklr; .
Bl) .u1 &amp; Missy Daile}

!fl.. Pastllr: Jim Prollitt .

Slllld~y S..: beovl - ~:30 11 m • Wllr.ihip •
10~ ~0 u.m.. Wednesday Scr" •~cs · 7:00

Feliov.-.hip. Sunday - 0 p.m. Earl~ Sunday
wt•r~hip S am Jcmn ·Dunham

L&gt;oug
Cu.\ . SunJu) School - lU 11111. Wur-.;hip ·
ltl:-i.5 p.m.. Su nJuy b,. , !lOll p.111 ..
w. .w"'·-.da} ~ ~ 11. e . 7· LM.I p m
H~·scU

9:2 ~

RlX:k. Sprinp
Pa., tol': IR'-' :JYIU: Stutler, SWJd&lt;~y Sc ho.&gt;ol •
tJ:OI.I u.m. Wor~ hip - 10 .a.m.. uYouth

Pm nc rl'~· Hu rll ~\&gt;O\lllc RJ·. tRt.lJ} J.

Pastor: Kogt:r W11t~&lt;•O . Sunda~· Sch''''l 9·JO a.m .. Wl• t ~ hip - HUO a.m.. 7·1111
p.m.. weJnesda} S.:r,•io..i:' • 7 p m.

Sum.l&lt;l) Sc hoo&amp; · 9-;30 Et.m ..
10:30 a.al .. 7: .\l.l p m..
Wedn&lt;!"Sl.luy Ser~k-e · 1 :.~ p.m.

Wo r~ hip

p.lll

"-'•sir.\·au 8ihlt&gt; tluliots.s Chun·h

• 11!:30 a.m .. f:&gt; :.lO p m.
W.:dn.:sdll)' So:r-.'tl'-'"- t:&gt;:.l(l p 1\l.

st..dtw~.

Ou6k Cbristiala •·e~owsa~p
( Non -\kno1ni.nationat tt! Uo w~hip!
Meeting in th~ Mdg~ ,\ h.k.llt:"'schl.'o.ll
faf.:tt:l ia 1-'astur (.'hri s St.:wlll't
10·00 :m1 - Noon Sund~y . blt.('rmal ·
Wor ~hip-. ('hildrt:n' s mini ..ll y ·

!:lob RtJt.inM.JII , Sundu&gt; School · 'l
,1.111 . W01ship . lU a.m.

Pint&gt; Gru•r Uib~ Hulir\t'Sii ('twr-rh
I ~ m!ll.'" nil Kt . _; ~:; , P:r.-lor' Re v. O' Dell
;l,ltutle) . Sum.ht) Sr..:huol • (} ',tl am .:
w,u-.,hip
111:.10 u.m.. &amp;.no 'p nl..
Wnlu,·..Ju:- 5...'1'\' t r.:~· , 7:00 p.m_.

a.rn
Wor ~ h ip

Flnt Bopllst CbW'&lt;b
Pasror: Billy Zuspan blh and Palmer St .
Middlepurt. Sunday School - \U~ a.m .
WQ~ship - · 10: I~ a.m .. 7:IJO p.m .
WcdneSI.Ia~ ServK.·e- 7:00p.m.

R,~·ur Sharun

K~•w

3rd SU!!d:!y

t'lntS....... IIo¢"
41872 Pomeroy Pt~e . S.Undll.~ SchlXil 9:30 ll.tn .. Won.hip - Q:45 am &amp; 7 : (~) p.m..
WCi.hmsdll.y Setv!ce~ • 7: (10 p.m.

l'uhur~

CllhatJ IWirM Ctwnll
Pmnt&gt;ro~ Pilu~ . (.' u. Rd.. Pa.&lt;aor: Rev .

P.J~otor Wayn.: Dunlap, S~:&lt;Jll!' Rt . b8l.
Tupr:rs Plams. Su11 Won.hip: 10 Iilii &amp;
0 ..'0 pm .. Wo:J . Btble Study7:00 p.m.

Pa~1t)r·

Unan Dunham. w.u ~h ip
;1.111 .. Sunday S4:h\~l-- JU·ol'\ ~ 111 .

Fnday. 1 p.m.

Gwttlll

A\t!Uinl Gntt t.:ommMily Cllln...

Brian Dunham. Su nd::ay School -

Pa't~ &gt;r:

""'c-

A:"ri~wiJw~

, ..rtrltopol

\111~7 SUit~· R11Utt:

W~!Ui1c..W~ s~·nt~·._:,

•

pm

lhlnvil~ Hoi~ t' hun·~

. 11:.\0 1.1 m.. Wun. hJp· (:; 15. 10 "\II a Ill . 7
I' m • Wt:o.in&lt;"&lt;W&lt;I:O Scf\ kc., '1 p.m.

EIU.

V.••r•h1p-llhlll a.m..

RullaJtJ . SunJ.11

~ 1: W M;nn S1 . SunJa:-- S.:h11i1l · 9 .1 0

We..in(-.dll~ ~~'t"l!~ - 7 p.m .

SO\"tt.

~

t"oilb ,...,.sbit&gt;t:"""'*

tFul Gosfld (.~lal H~risou~· ilk .
·Pasi\Jf'S· Bob anJ K;~y Marshall.
Sunday ~rlil' t' .~ pJn .

q:,\/Ja.l\1. W~hlp · 1.\ :U(I a.m

t.:hu.rch
h,m, k. Mmn

~unJa~ St: J \ot~' 1

S...:hwl · II J.lll Wo n; hip · lOa:m .. /:1 p.m.

Pa.&lt;ttur: R~: v. 1--ranklin Oi.ck.ens. Service:

P.J stl'r:

llnth t .\liddkpurt I

l\•mmw1i1~
Sl(·~...

· Pa-wr:

StuJy • 7 p.lll .

.~Y!~6 ('h tlt.!ren· , ~lo1m Rd .. Suud.ty

:uo pm

&amp;,

Holiness

111. SunJu~ S.:ho&lt;.JI · I.U::W .t.nL . B1 bk

.~

2480 ~'l:I 11J. St .. S~·r-.h: Wit . UH
Su n. School Ill am. Sund) .uight fdO ptn

Pustor· Bob Rllbinson. Sunday Schl&gt;OI • 1U

P a.~ tvr:

Htmlwk GnM l'bristi¥8 l ' htJn'h
MuliSh!r' LJrr~ Bmwh. Wur~lup \j ._011
J

Sum.la ~

lud1amt I I r.tl J. 111

- 7 p.m

Syr.-ut t:'........._~ ClMlftoft;

"m .. W&lt;.v-Jiip - 9 a.m .

Ht&gt;ly

10:00. S1.1n u1 ollltl1~ Btbk .tuJ:- .
hllh.:-wt ng -...·or-hip . Sun '. e~" 6:00 p111.
Wl'\1-l'lthh: •tudy 7 pm
·

..

wwo.~(·-w..,

Fairvl.ew BiWrt.(."'Nc'
Letart . V'o'.Va . Rt . I. P'oisto~: Brian: May.
Sunday 54:1:100! , lF-30 11.m .. Wonhip • 7:00
p.m.• Wednesday Bible Srudy ~ 1:00 p.m.

r~ltun

GrUI.:t' t:pN:upll'llarch

tnUfllt ll!l

WorshJ!l" 1 p.m.

Coolville Rulli. Pastor. Rev Cbal'l~·
Martindale . Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 1.m..
WOt·!&gt;h ip . 10:30 a.m.. W~l&gt;dll~ ~i:l:c

Other Churches

l''llllwuods
Pa~tor : DewayDt: Stuttln. SunJuy S.:hool 10 a.m .. WL&gt;r.;:hip · II J.m.

Episcopal

Rd . l'omcm). OH

7 ~-4.-1 -1 ~% SonJa~

. 9· .\0 a.m .. W!Jf'Sbip • UJ :JU un ..
Sunday ~v~ning. b pm
btt.d l""hurclt ol ~ N~
· P..c.t~r: Georg._. Stadkr. Sunduy S..:hool •
'-':30 a.m .. Wor,~hi.p - 10:30 a.m.. 6:JO
. ~- m .. Wedne ~y Scr.ic~ - 1 p.m.

A!obur) iSyra...·ul&gt;l!l. Pa~IOI': Bob Rub m ~un .

1\iniay Cbu~·h
P-~t u r· Rt:' Tum Johthun . Second &amp;;
Lynn. Pvmc~'-~ .. 1-'a~ tor: . WuNup 10 :~5
a.m ..

...m

H1)1lk!"

Sdt~)Ol

Congregational

·church of Christ

Hopt Baptisl Chun:·htSoultwrn'

510 Granl St. Mlddkptlrt . Sunday !&gt;1:huul
• 9:30a.m.. Worship · 11 u m. and b p.m..
W~11y

Ma!&lt;.~ - lt :."&gt;~J

BalU KIKJb, on Co Rd . Jl. hs&amp;or: IMt'~'
Roger Willf\:ml. Sundu) ~boul • ljl( 30

C-Chv&lt;b"tto-

aun .. Wc-.Jn":.llliy ~!'\'KII'~- 7:30 p.m.

Pu.ntru_v (' burch ol" l 'hrisl

ClwslUn Baptist nurch
Pasror:

.!.m.. l&gt;.ail~

10:.10 J .m. anJ 6

._.,..._

p.m.

!:iunday School - Y·J~ n.m. Wur'ihip · II

pIll

Pa,tur: R'" V.:~l ter E H&lt;.'tnl . 'S&lt;~t (\m .
-' ~~ - =' 1'p .m.: \l ,h~ - ~ : \tl p 111 . Sun.
l'on. - ~ ..J.~ -'&gt;1 15 J.nl .. Sun. Ma ~5- 9:'i)

w~dt l'tnan:ll of l'hri&gt;l

~ilk-

~·

•

S•n:d lleart (;:.r.tllolk l'hun:h
It-o I \hl l~ny Ah'. Pnm&lt;'n_'}· ~~~-~ ~~~!(

~

o~m .

............. St. hool
Pu!&gt;lur:- Jim Curbitt. SunJay School • ~
J 111 .. Wurship 10 a.m.. T~U:sd~y Sc-rvke~
.?· 'ilp.nt·

l'hun:h ol Gud vf ~-'
OJ \\ lnt~ RJ 11 ll St Rl lN.I. Pa.--t.ur· P'J
Cho~pm.u \. Sumla~ St:h\lvi - IU , d nL.
\\ nhhtp · II a.m . W~J n~'&gt;lla~ S.."n t~'C' 7

Catholic

Loop fW ull'• Stw ltmii Ri.l RutluuJ.

*....

Paswr: Rt&gt;v. Curti~ &amp;11od~lph , Su nJay

1-• cn utg St'lltl'C'- t.·JU pnr.
Wed 11~·•ll.a' Xr11"11'' · (l :ll pIll

.::hu(\: h lllilll. Sunlby '-'' till II~ o p111. '.\ .:J
l:ltblc SruJy 7 pnt

(."'-tit., . . Nuar8rt

to ,un. !nd wtd --WI SuoWJ.y
C\M'~Htioa lllb!rdlt
•
CWdl
K.mgsbury R®d. Puswr Robt.rt ~·
Su nJ.av S.-hQOI • 9~ 30 ll rn .. WQI'Sbip
Scr'ftC~ !0:30 am . Evemn1 Xf'lllct 6

Page As

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

p.m.. WN.wsUay S.:....-lll:!l- • 1 p.m.

pm.~r--.' t'--.:

~111

Rubo.:rt

Grudy. Sumla~ '-1-:huul 10 um' 1\h.omlllt!

loc.

W.n,lllp • q :]O a m., Su nday School ·
IQ: 11,1 ;~ .m ., FtJ 't Sulhl:l.y Ql Month • 71.111

\ppli: .md s._:._:,,.!J '"' P:1~1lu· Rl'\&gt; Da•·1d
1-t.u•·-dl. Sund.11 &gt;; ~· huo.Jl .tnd \\,lr\htp l\J

\

-\nlk r.~•n ~ Pa•t~..- ·

SR M-.2 aii\J

SIU\Jy
E-r·uftA.~ T»bernacW

" p m.

~y

Pa'-lor Jan L.a v.:-u..Xr. Suru.lu) Schwl

\

~:JO ~.m .. Wor~hlp

s~·rJK*W tiN l'hu.U ol God

Fint BapiW.l'IMln:b uf !\Ja.o;oo, \\"\

-\~e .

873 S. 3N

- 1,1·1() a.m. Wof!.tup -

lO:J(J a.n1.

. M onu n~ -...urhlHp ll w11 bcnmg ':' pm.

llbtr,'llilty
b « Vallty ApoMUlil.: WOI"htp C'l"nter.

Pa~ur· lkn.t.tl Null. \Jio'urship - ioi.JO ;a.m.
StmJa.• S.:hool \UJO a.m.

Wt'\.lnr:-...1&gt;~' ""'"' 11..'1."~ 7 p Ill
R:a~l!nwo(Jt}li .

Syrw..'VMI Ckrc:llt of tilt~
~obM Mil~ Aill.J.n~. ~ Scftool 9:~
am • Wohhlp • 10 3-1) a.m .• b p .ln •
Wl!\lnt-sUay Se:n\~ts- 1 p.m.

({ ,.l..UI~.

pm

•

f.W... · FebruMY 6. 2.001
·-•· _

ydallysentinel com
www.m
~
•

for thee: form~

strenl!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

J~
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

Long Term. Short Term and
Respite Care Available
Call today to sc.ltedule a tour

\\lmn 1-'riemlly
Atmo .~pht'rt'

u,(t~•

• nU.(\t\1

H •~u(~
6am - ~pm

9vfi[[ie's ~estaurant

209 Third St.
Racine, OH

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

740.949-2210

Open 7 days H,\\eek

We 1ve Got It!

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740.949·2217

llumt C{WbJ MtUI!o· &amp; Vail,- .~pt&gt;ciDis

740-992-n13

If ye abide in life. and My
words abide in yo11, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done nnto yon.
· John J.'i:7

Sizes available Sx 10 to 1Qx 20

The Hppllance man
740-985-3561
992·1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam You

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Second Sl.

Middleport. Ot-t

740.992-6128
, Local source for trophies,
Ia e I· h'rt n
re

MEIGS FAMILY EVECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, (lhlo 45769 · ;rr:-..
(740) 992·3279
'-!!Y
Tol Free 1·877-583-2433

740·667·3110

...

. ..

P.O. Box 683
Pomero O~io 45769·0683

�•

FAITH. FAMILY

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 6, 2009

artist

Friday, February 6, 2009

I

GALLU'()US - Christian rod: plus performaoc:e art eq_~s a night ofbi&amp;h-eaergy pn~se ud
w~p during the Y~th Bash c:am!D&amp; liP on.
~unda&gt;:, ~· 22 at the F~rst Church of~ N.UareDe
111 Gallipobs.
·
., •
Local Olristian band ROillUIS ~ · . ad f)tlfatllliiiCe ~~- and Gallia Cot~~~ty lllfi\'e
QueeD.
.headline the e\'ftling:S •:tivil,ios. whidlgel'under way '

.

LocAL SCIJF.Ul' l E

\

PCUERC"f: - A. ~ d ~ Nclh
ll:hool ..., ~ .... irM!M1g ...,.
kim Glk ............ t.le9 OOWIIIiM.
fa'

'·

Gollio ~ at logon. 6 p.m.

RJ!na.s Highway features ~ mliSicialls RICk

Hope &amp; Foith at CNCS, 8 p.m.

tullinglon St. Joe

p.m

years

·

· Jason Queen is a talented artist ·
experienee includes 1lloltt as a
jxOOilction s~ialist. «:nlative.
production SQeClalist. He ~ ~ ·
artistic talent in a ~tic. ~:
·~al preseq\&amp;liOO that enco~m~ges peorle_to. se4;k a
OOlipolis · ·

. .· '. . '

startS at 6 p.m. on
admiS&amp;i®~. A love._·_---...,
~vent is~· by

Subonlllacl ~

A Gospel bluegrass concert will be held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the Mulberry Community Center. The _concert will feature Hanging Rock Junction. John Dolley &amp; 8rycte. and Truly Saved, the group shown here. The concert IS free bot a love
offering will be taken in support of God's NET. For ~ore information, call (740) 247-2014.

In concert Sunday .

· .the j/Outh .011tteach ann

.COD~S.~ia Of the Nazarene is located at.lllO F'U'St'

A-ve.; Oalli!Qiis~ Yotith
Keviia Plantz can be.· .
.
Ill- (740) 339-3211. . . . .• ' . . ... ' . . .
Pastor
. . '

Bv BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYOAJLYTRIBUNE.COM

........
'* .,,.....,z

Beptislal HaMan. 6 p,m.

'

Both teams scored nine ·
points in the third 10 make it
a 42-28 contest beading into
the finale. FHS .never came
closer than eight points (5143) the rest of the way,
allowing the hosts to pick up
the 11 -point margin ofvictory.
. The Silver and Black had
nine players score in the triumph, including three with
double figures . Jepna Ward
led the balanced attack with
. 12 points, ,followed by
Brooke Marcum with 11 and
Iliana Corfias with 10.
Mackenzie Cluxlon and
Kelsey Sands added eight
and seven points,respective-

River
Valley's
Amanda
Hager
(12)

releases
a layup
attempt
during the
second
haM of
Thursday
night's
ovc girls
basketball
game
against
Fairland
in
Cheshire.

ly, to the winning cause.
RVHS was 20-of-35 at the
free throw line for 57 percent.
Mackenzie Rucker paced
Fairland with a game-high
I &amp; points. followed by
Emily McMaster · with II
and Brianna Day with 10.
FHS was 8-of-20 at the charity stripe for 40 percent.
Fairland did salvage a split
with a 40-Z9 victory in the
junior varsity contest. Kerie
Napier led the JV Dragons
with II , while B-eth Martin
had a game-high 13 for the
Lady Raiders.

Bry~n

Wallei'S
/photo

PluseseeOhlo.BI

•

Snyder to speak
atMGMBig
Green event in
Pt. Pleasant

Ohio Roundup

River Valley, Meigs both
pick up lOth win of season

CHESHIRE - The River
Valley girls basketball team
picked up its lOth victory of
c.dinol Conlononce (!!oint - ··
the season ThlllSday mght
TIIA
with a 58-47 decision over
visiting
Fairland during an
Bop II tl II aM
Gonia Aclldomy 11 Wh-..c..g. ~ p.m. Ohio Valley Conference
Point Ploasont al ~lit. 7:30 matchup in Gallia County.
p.m.
The Lady Raiders ( 10-6,
Gina IMitltbll
LOgon at Golia Acadamy, 6 p.m.
·
4-2
OVC) jumped out to a
Pike Eostom at Soooll Golia, 6 p.m.
13-9
advantage after eight
P!Jint 'Pioasontal~• .,3fl·p.m.
Wlttls1on at Eastern, 1 p.m.
·
minutes, then doubled up the
WIMIIh'll
Lady Dragons (6-9, 1-5) in
Gallia Acadomy, Meigs. RiWr Yalley al
the second canto by a 20-10
John Dono Classic (Athens•. TIIA
margin to take a comfortable
33- 19 advantage into the
intermission.
SPORTS BRIEFS

CoMry

before add_ing Mohr, Mc:~st ~!ftd' ·
ts•Rack

:~~~·

7:30

Girls Prep Basketball -

- I IGaM
E-.
6:30p.m.
... .,....

: Ryan JactSOII to the max. Ryan· Jackson
· J.Uson's brolber.
..

v::=

at. -

Rod&lt; Mil at RNor Yllley. 6 p.m.
_ , al - . . Hockillg. 6:30 p.m.

~~~~~~n=~C.::• .·
111tive rock balld as a duo and mmisteoo tot.lly .fcit
several

.. Uoigs. 6:30 p.m.
.. Gollio. 6 p.m.
.CoMry lloiJtiSiat · 7:3p p.m.
-

-

. ' •.

· ~1"Cksoo (lead vocals/keyboard), ,Sc;dl · M~~
. (lui~). Ouis Mohr (drums), Rex~

9 Ft11nwJ I
' l't , n

ao,&amp; a

t:

:m.

•

Tile Scortboud, ~ Bl

•

set for Youth ,Bash

al6

Bl.

The Daily Sentinel

Inside .

Concert slated Saturda

·Christian rockers,

~tmance

PageA6

Girls Prep Basketball -

West' Virginia Roundup

bovs

Poca:

sweep 'with a 32,24 victory
in the junior varsity conf()INT PLEASANT
test. Amanda Roush led the
POINT
PLEASANT
JV
Knights with nine
The Mason, Gallia and
Meigs Counties (MGM) The smallest of runs ended · points, while Kaitlyn
Big Green Club will host up being the biggest differ- Jenkins had a game-high
.
its annual football dinn.er ence-muker for the Point 12 points for Poca.
girls
basketball
PPHS
returns
to
action
Pleasant
·at Pancho 's Mexican
· Thursday night dur- Saturday when it travels to
Restaurant in Pt. Pleasant team
ing a hard-fought 52-47 Wayne . The JV game will
on Thursday. Feb. 12 .
sotback to visiting Poca.
tip-off at 5:45 p.m.
A social hour will begin
The Lady Knights (6-~)
at 6:00 p.m., with the pro- scrapped and clawed thear WAHAMA HANDLES HANNAN
gram starting at 7 p .m, ·
way through 32 minutes to
Marshall
University keep things dose with the
ASHTON _ A 15-2 first
11 d
head football coach Mark Lady Dots. but it was a
quarter surge . prope e
Snyder will serve as the small five-~oint halftime
visiting Wahama to a com·
feature speaker and sever- advantage t at uIltmate1Y fortable 55~35 victory over
proved to be the ·deciding host Hannan Thursdav
al Thundering Herd assis- factor
in the contest.
'
tant coaches and athletic
Poca jumped out to a night during a non-conferstaff members will be pre- small 13-12 lead after eight ence girls basketball game .
sent. In addition a video of minutes of play, then went b~ween Mason County
the
2009
Marshall on a 12-8 run in the second schools.
The Lady Falcons (6-12)
University
football period to_ take a 25-20
signees who signed on cushion into the intermis- never trailed in the cdntest
National Signing Day will sion. Both teams scored 27 and was never outscored in
points after the break _ any one quarter of play,
be shown ..
Tickets for the event are · mcluding 10 apiece in the although the Lady 'Cats
$15. Students at the third - to make that two- did manage to keep things
Marshall University Mid- possession edge hold up . · even in the second period.
PPHS had its chances
WHS led by 13 after
Ohio Valley Center in Pt. down
the stretch to get eight minutes of play, but
Pleasant may purchase . closer. but made only 1-of- both teams scored 16
tickets for $8 . Table spon- . 5 free throws in the fourth points over the rest of the
sorships are also ava11 · quarter. · The hosts were first half to make it a 31-18
able. For more · informa- also 5-of·l i at the charity contest at the intermission.
tion, or to order tickets. stripe overall for 45. per· The Red · and White
contact J .T. Holland 304- cent.
outscored the hosts 14-10
593-5370. Jim Wilson at
Anna Sommer led Point in the third for a 45-28
304-812-6279 or David Pleasant with 17 pqints, advantage heading into the
Steele at 304-696-2483 .
followed by Kayla Arthur finale .
and Miranda Thompson
Down the stretch. the
with eight markers each . Lady Falcons went on a
Emily Jones and Devin · 10-7 run to wrap up the 20CoNTACI'US
Cottrill also contributed point decision.
six points to the cause, 11nd
Amber.
Tully · led
1•7 40-446-2342 ext 33
Ashley Templeton rounded Wahama and all scorers
Fu- 1·740·446-30011
things out with two mark- with 28 points, followed by
E-matl - mdsaportsOmyaaltysentlnel.com
ers.
Alex Wood with -10 and ·
Adrian
·cunningham Taylor Hysell with eight.
SI&gt;Or!A . S.Uitf
paced the Lady Dots with a WHS .hit five three-pointBryan Walte111, Sports Writer
h1· h 19 · t
(7401446·2342, OKI. 33
gamepom
s. · · · Plust IH Roundup,...
g
· Poca claimed
.an evenang
bwaltersOrnydally1flbune.com
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Submitted photo

The Goodwins will be irtQOncert Sunday, Feb. 8 at 6 p.m. at the First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave., Gallipolis.
The.Goodwins haw~ bjiB~ spreading the gospel through song since 1982, and reorganized recently following a sevenyear hiatus following lbe 'ijeath of baritone Brian Ketron in 2000. Current group members are John Goodwin (tenor),
daughter Martha Omk6 ~ead) and their cousin, Melinda Standiford (alto). The Goodwins, from PQca, W.Va., have over the
years shared the stage with with such artists as The Freemans, The Singing Cookes and The Paynes.

Obama ~(eates faith-based office with wide mission
Bv PHtUP ELLIOTT
states it is very
faith;,: ,&amp;ijc;h as. ·
advice; when it '
thl'l•·walk _not the ta)k.
· is
reli·

'N~w Beg~gs' luncheon held

·I;~~~!?~~~9~
- The United Methodist Women
of River o( Life United Methodist Chlii'Ch
Begin.nings'' !unchec,&gt;n on Saturday, Jan. ·
,
,.
Amencan Gnll. ·
..
·
16 in attendance. The door prize was
'won by Debbie Hushes, and th.e Bible Quiz was· wo,n:
·· bY. Debbie Hughes· and Crystal Cox.
·
•' · .
· Nickie Smitli played the guitar and l~d t11e gro~JJ) in
&amp;\l(l worship songs: Every,OIIf&gt; enjoyed the felfood and fun. and look forwud to the' next ,
.

1

..

ASSOCIATED PRESS.WRITER

WASHINGTON
Declaring that "there- is a
force for good greater than
government,"
P.r¢sident
Barack Obama on Thursday
established a White House
office of faith-based initiatives with a broader mission
than the one overseen by his
Republican predecessor.
Obama said the new office.
which l)e created by executive order, would reach out to
organizations that provide
help "no matter their religious or political beliefs:·
Obama said the office
would work with nonprofit
organizations "both secular
and faith-based" and wou id
help them detem1ine how to
make a bigger impact in their
cities. learn their obligations
under the law und c'ut through
government red tape .
In a time of economic crisis, the president said, it was
important for the government to help di stressed
Americuns but added that
"the change that Amelicans
are looking for will not.&lt;:ome
from government alone ."
Obnma snid the top prior-

ity of the White House scholars around the world."
Office of Faith-Based and
Obama's order expanded
Neighborhood Partnerships and redefined a similar
will be "making community office
established
by
groups- an integral part of President Geoflle W. Bush.
our ecoromic recovery and Focused primanly on faith,
poverty a burden fewer based initiatives, the Bush
have to bear when recovery office sparked-constitutional
is complete."
questions about whether the
To lead the office, Obama separation of church and
appointed Joshua DuBois. a state would be preserved,
26-year-old
Pentecostal particularly if groups receivminister who headed reli- mg tax dollars sought to hire
gimls outreach for Obama's on the basis of religion.
Senate office and his presiGroups that were critical of
de.ntial campaign. He alsq the Bush faith-based office
l1amed 25 religious and sec- - including the American
ular leaders to a new advi- Civil Liberties Union,
sory board.
Americans United for
"·The big pictur&amp; is th11t Separation of Church and
President Obama believes State. and People For the
·faith-based and smaller secu- Plmerican Way - issued
lur neighborllood organiza· . statements
Thursday
tions can play a role in expressing disappointment in
American re~wal. They can the Obama versmn. All said
work with the federal govern- that by failing to repeal Bush
ment to address big prob· policies. the White House
lems," DuBois r said in· an will allow participating reliinterview
with . The gious groups to continue disAssociated Press. "We're also crimination in hiring.
going to make sure we h,itve 'a
The ,ACLU also charged
keener eye toward the ~- tl]al the new advisory countion of church and state.~
cil amounted to "a president
Obamu said the office . giving his favored clergy a
would also work to reaoh out governmental stamp of
overseas "to foster interf'aith approval."
dialogue with leaders' aoo
Before
signing the order.
.
'

at the White House, Obama
told the annual National
Prayer ·Breakfast that the
program would not show
favoritism to any religious
group and ~ould adhere to a
strict separation of church
and state.
Addressing the gathering
of lawmakers. dignitaries and .
world lea~rs. Obama ~poke
of how faath has often been a
divisive tool, responsible for
war and prejudice. But. he
said. "there is no religion
whose central tenet is hate."
'There is no god who condones taking the life of an
innocent human being." he
said, and all religions teach .
people to love and care for
one another. That is the common ground underlying the
faith-based office. he said.
Obama's advisers want to
be certain tax dollars sent to
the faith-based social ser'
vi~:e groups are used for
secular purposes. such as
feeding the hungry or housing the homeless, and not
for religious evangelism.
The administration doesn't
wani to be perceived as
managing the groups · yet
seeks transparency and
accountability.

Bryan Walters/photo
Point Pleasant senior Anna Sommer, middle, was recognized at the start ofThursda_y night's
girls basketball game against visiting P~a for becoming the school 's alhtime leadmg scarer in girls history. Sommer is accompamed by PPHS co~ch, M1tch Meadows, left. and PPHS
Principal Bill Cottrill, right. Sommer broke Tracy Dra1n-Pnce s prev1ous record on January 23
· ts Th urs day, now has .1.203 for her career·
at Herbert Hoover. sommer, w1t· h 17 po1n

Bonds' judge may
exclude positive tests
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) on ' three separate occasions
- A federal judge oversee- in · 2000 and 200'1 for the
ing Barry Bonds· criminal steroid methene lone in urine
case says her "preliminary 'samples: he also tested l;lOSithoughts" are - to exclude tive two of thQse three ttmes
from trial three positive drug for the steroid nandrolone.
tests . though she's inclined
The three drug tests were
to keep a recorded conversa-. some of the strongest evition between Bonds· person· de nee the government had in
al trainer and former person- its _effort to prove Bonds
al assistant discussing knowingly took steroids. · ·
steroid use.
. lllston and the lawyers
U.S. District Judge Susan didn't discuss a fourth posililston said during an evi- tive test- seized in ,2004 from
dentiary hearmg Thursday a lab used by Ma~or League
that she was leaning. toward. Baseball to test Its players
e1.chiding the results seized during anonymous survey
by investi!lators during a • testing in 2003,
BALCO rard unless there is
The judge also said she
direct testimony tying: the was inclined to let the j~ry
urine samples to Bonds . . hear a recorded conversatmn
Bonds is charged with between Bonds' personal
lying to a December 2003 trainer, Greg Anderso~. and
grand jury when he said he former personal asststant
never knowingly used per• Steven Hoskins.
fonnance-enhancing drugs .
Court documents released
Bonds, who pleaded not Wednesday
revealed
guilty to the charges earlier' H~skins , Bonds' childh&lt;J?d
Thursday, stayed for the fnend and personal asslshearing. sitting _quietly at a tant , secretly tape~record.ed
table with sill lawyers for a 2003 conversatmn. wit~
about an hour.
Anderson m the G1ants
According to court documents, Bonds tested positive
Plust Ht Bonds, . .
1

'~-'"

't&gt;.

•I

,.

' ,.•.,.

·,1\Mlt

PVH Mo!Jjc3J Oflia: BniMiug .{: ." ,,
SUite 113

Poa Pk••• .. wv

Appointments:

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FAITH. FAMILY

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 6, 2009

artist

Friday, February 6, 2009

I

GALLU'()US - Christian rod: plus performaoc:e art eq_~s a night ofbi&amp;h-eaergy pn~se ud
w~p during the Y~th Bash c:am!D&amp; liP on.
~unda&gt;:, ~· 22 at the F~rst Church of~ N.UareDe
111 Gallipobs.
·
., •
Local Olristian band ROillUIS ~ · . ad f)tlfatllliiiCe ~~- and Gallia Cot~~~ty lllfi\'e
QueeD.
.headline the e\'ftling:S •:tivil,ios. whidlgel'under way '

.

LocAL SCIJF.Ul' l E

\

PCUERC"f: - A. ~ d ~ Nclh
ll:hool ..., ~ .... irM!M1g ...,.
kim Glk ............ t.le9 OOWIIIiM.
fa'

'·

Gollio ~ at logon. 6 p.m.

RJ!na.s Highway features ~ mliSicialls RICk

Hope &amp; Foith at CNCS, 8 p.m.

tullinglon St. Joe

p.m

years

·

· Jason Queen is a talented artist ·
experienee includes 1lloltt as a
jxOOilction s~ialist. «:nlative.
production SQeClalist. He ~ ~ ·
artistic talent in a ~tic. ~:
·~al preseq\&amp;liOO that enco~m~ges peorle_to. se4;k a
OOlipolis · ·

. .· '. . '

startS at 6 p.m. on
admiS&amp;i®~. A love._·_---...,
~vent is~· by

Subonlllacl ~

A Gospel bluegrass concert will be held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday at the Mulberry Community Center. The _concert will feature Hanging Rock Junction. John Dolley &amp; 8rycte. and Truly Saved, the group shown here. The concert IS free bot a love
offering will be taken in support of God's NET. For ~ore information, call (740) 247-2014.

In concert Sunday .

· .the j/Outh .011tteach ann

.COD~S.~ia Of the Nazarene is located at.lllO F'U'St'

A-ve.; Oalli!Qiis~ Yotith
Keviia Plantz can be.· .
.
Ill- (740) 339-3211. . . . .• ' . . ... ' . . .
Pastor
. . '

Bv BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSOMYOAJLYTRIBUNE.COM

........
'* .,,.....,z

Beptislal HaMan. 6 p,m.

'

Both teams scored nine ·
points in the third 10 make it
a 42-28 contest beading into
the finale. FHS .never came
closer than eight points (5143) the rest of the way,
allowing the hosts to pick up
the 11 -point margin ofvictory.
. The Silver and Black had
nine players score in the triumph, including three with
double figures . Jepna Ward
led the balanced attack with
. 12 points, ,followed by
Brooke Marcum with 11 and
Iliana Corfias with 10.
Mackenzie Cluxlon and
Kelsey Sands added eight
and seven points,respective-

River
Valley's
Amanda
Hager
(12)

releases
a layup
attempt
during the
second
haM of
Thursday
night's
ovc girls
basketball
game
against
Fairland
in
Cheshire.

ly, to the winning cause.
RVHS was 20-of-35 at the
free throw line for 57 percent.
Mackenzie Rucker paced
Fairland with a game-high
I &amp; points. followed by
Emily McMaster · with II
and Brianna Day with 10.
FHS was 8-of-20 at the charity stripe for 40 percent.
Fairland did salvage a split
with a 40-Z9 victory in the
junior varsity contest. Kerie
Napier led the JV Dragons
with II , while B-eth Martin
had a game-high 13 for the
Lady Raiders.

Bry~n

Wallei'S
/photo

PluseseeOhlo.BI

•

Snyder to speak
atMGMBig
Green event in
Pt. Pleasant

Ohio Roundup

River Valley, Meigs both
pick up lOth win of season

CHESHIRE - The River
Valley girls basketball team
picked up its lOth victory of
c.dinol Conlononce (!!oint - ··
the season ThlllSday mght
TIIA
with a 58-47 decision over
visiting
Fairland during an
Bop II tl II aM
Gonia Aclldomy 11 Wh-..c..g. ~ p.m. Ohio Valley Conference
Point Ploasont al ~lit. 7:30 matchup in Gallia County.
p.m.
The Lady Raiders ( 10-6,
Gina IMitltbll
LOgon at Golia Acadamy, 6 p.m.
·
4-2
OVC) jumped out to a
Pike Eostom at Soooll Golia, 6 p.m.
13-9
advantage after eight
P!Jint 'Pioasontal~• .,3fl·p.m.
Wlttls1on at Eastern, 1 p.m.
·
minutes, then doubled up the
WIMIIh'll
Lady Dragons (6-9, 1-5) in
Gallia Acadomy, Meigs. RiWr Yalley al
the second canto by a 20-10
John Dono Classic (Athens•. TIIA
margin to take a comfortable
33- 19 advantage into the
intermission.
SPORTS BRIEFS

CoMry

before add_ing Mohr, Mc:~st ~!ftd' ·
ts•Rack

:~~~·

7:30

Girls Prep Basketball -

- I IGaM
E-.
6:30p.m.
... .,....

: Ryan JactSOII to the max. Ryan· Jackson
· J.Uson's brolber.
..

v::=

at. -

Rod&lt; Mil at RNor Yllley. 6 p.m.
_ , al - . . Hockillg. 6:30 p.m.

~~~~~~n=~C.::• .·
111tive rock balld as a duo and mmisteoo tot.lly .fcit
several

.. Uoigs. 6:30 p.m.
.. Gollio. 6 p.m.
.CoMry lloiJtiSiat · 7:3p p.m.
-

-

. ' •.

· ~1"Cksoo (lead vocals/keyboard), ,Sc;dl · M~~
. (lui~). Ouis Mohr (drums), Rex~

9 Ft11nwJ I
' l't , n

ao,&amp; a

t:

:m.

•

Tile Scortboud, ~ Bl

•

set for Youth ,Bash

al6

Bl.

The Daily Sentinel

Inside .

Concert slated Saturda

·Christian rockers,

~tmance

PageA6

Girls Prep Basketball -

West' Virginia Roundup

bovs

Poca:

sweep 'with a 32,24 victory
in the junior varsity conf()INT PLEASANT
test. Amanda Roush led the
POINT
PLEASANT
JV
Knights with nine
The Mason, Gallia and
Meigs Counties (MGM) The smallest of runs ended · points, while Kaitlyn
Big Green Club will host up being the biggest differ- Jenkins had a game-high
.
its annual football dinn.er ence-muker for the Point 12 points for Poca.
girls
basketball
PPHS
returns
to
action
Pleasant
·at Pancho 's Mexican
· Thursday night dur- Saturday when it travels to
Restaurant in Pt. Pleasant team
ing a hard-fought 52-47 Wayne . The JV game will
on Thursday. Feb. 12 .
sotback to visiting Poca.
tip-off at 5:45 p.m.
A social hour will begin
The Lady Knights (6-~)
at 6:00 p.m., with the pro- scrapped and clawed thear WAHAMA HANDLES HANNAN
gram starting at 7 p .m, ·
way through 32 minutes to
Marshall
University keep things dose with the
ASHTON _ A 15-2 first
11 d
head football coach Mark Lady Dots. but it was a
quarter surge . prope e
Snyder will serve as the small five-~oint halftime
visiting Wahama to a com·
feature speaker and sever- advantage t at uIltmate1Y fortable 55~35 victory over
proved to be the ·deciding host Hannan Thursdav
al Thundering Herd assis- factor
in the contest.
'
tant coaches and athletic
Poca jumped out to a night during a non-conferstaff members will be pre- small 13-12 lead after eight ence girls basketball game .
sent. In addition a video of minutes of play, then went b~ween Mason County
the
2009
Marshall on a 12-8 run in the second schools.
The Lady Falcons (6-12)
University
football period to_ take a 25-20
signees who signed on cushion into the intermis- never trailed in the cdntest
National Signing Day will sion. Both teams scored 27 and was never outscored in
points after the break _ any one quarter of play,
be shown ..
Tickets for the event are · mcluding 10 apiece in the although the Lady 'Cats
$15. Students at the third - to make that two- did manage to keep things
Marshall University Mid- possession edge hold up . · even in the second period.
PPHS had its chances
WHS led by 13 after
Ohio Valley Center in Pt. down
the stretch to get eight minutes of play, but
Pleasant may purchase . closer. but made only 1-of- both teams scored 16
tickets for $8 . Table spon- . 5 free throws in the fourth points over the rest of the
sorships are also ava11 · quarter. · The hosts were first half to make it a 31-18
able. For more · informa- also 5-of·l i at the charity contest at the intermission.
tion, or to order tickets. stripe overall for 45. per· The Red · and White
contact J .T. Holland 304- cent.
outscored the hosts 14-10
593-5370. Jim Wilson at
Anna Sommer led Point in the third for a 45-28
304-812-6279 or David Pleasant with 17 pqints, advantage heading into the
Steele at 304-696-2483 .
followed by Kayla Arthur finale .
and Miranda Thompson
Down the stretch. the
with eight markers each . Lady Falcons went on a
Emily Jones and Devin · 10-7 run to wrap up the 20CoNTACI'US
Cottrill also contributed point decision.
six points to the cause, 11nd
Amber.
Tully · led
1•7 40-446-2342 ext 33
Ashley Templeton rounded Wahama and all scorers
Fu- 1·740·446-30011
things out with two mark- with 28 points, followed by
E-matl - mdsaportsOmyaaltysentlnel.com
ers.
Alex Wood with -10 and ·
Adrian
·cunningham Taylor Hysell with eight.
SI&gt;Or!A . S.Uitf
paced the Lady Dots with a WHS .hit five three-pointBryan Walte111, Sports Writer
h1· h 19 · t
(7401446·2342, OKI. 33
gamepom
s. · · · Plust IH Roundup,...
g
· Poca claimed
.an evenang
bwaltersOrnydally1flbune.com
BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERSOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Submitted photo

The Goodwins will be irtQOncert Sunday, Feb. 8 at 6 p.m. at the First Church of the Nazarene, 1110 First Ave., Gallipolis.
The.Goodwins haw~ bjiB~ spreading the gospel through song since 1982, and reorganized recently following a sevenyear hiatus following lbe 'ijeath of baritone Brian Ketron in 2000. Current group members are John Goodwin (tenor),
daughter Martha Omk6 ~ead) and their cousin, Melinda Standiford (alto). The Goodwins, from PQca, W.Va., have over the
years shared the stage with with such artists as The Freemans, The Singing Cookes and The Paynes.

Obama ~(eates faith-based office with wide mission
Bv PHtUP ELLIOTT
states it is very
faith;,: ,&amp;ijc;h as. ·
advice; when it '
thl'l•·walk _not the ta)k.
· is
reli·

'N~w Beg~gs' luncheon held

·I;~~~!?~~~9~
- The United Methodist Women
of River o( Life United Methodist Chlii'Ch
Begin.nings'' !unchec,&gt;n on Saturday, Jan. ·
,
,.
Amencan Gnll. ·
..
·
16 in attendance. The door prize was
'won by Debbie Hushes, and th.e Bible Quiz was· wo,n:
·· bY. Debbie Hughes· and Crystal Cox.
·
•' · .
· Nickie Smitli played the guitar and l~d t11e gro~JJ) in
&amp;\l(l worship songs: Every,OIIf&gt; enjoyed the felfood and fun. and look forwud to the' next ,
.

1

..

ASSOCIATED PRESS.WRITER

WASHINGTON
Declaring that "there- is a
force for good greater than
government,"
P.r¢sident
Barack Obama on Thursday
established a White House
office of faith-based initiatives with a broader mission
than the one overseen by his
Republican predecessor.
Obama said the new office.
which l)e created by executive order, would reach out to
organizations that provide
help "no matter their religious or political beliefs:·
Obama said the office
would work with nonprofit
organizations "both secular
and faith-based" and wou id
help them detem1ine how to
make a bigger impact in their
cities. learn their obligations
under the law und c'ut through
government red tape .
In a time of economic crisis, the president said, it was
important for the government to help di stressed
Americuns but added that
"the change that Amelicans
are looking for will not.&lt;:ome
from government alone ."
Obnma snid the top prior-

ity of the White House scholars around the world."
Office of Faith-Based and
Obama's order expanded
Neighborhood Partnerships and redefined a similar
will be "making community office
established
by
groups- an integral part of President Geoflle W. Bush.
our ecoromic recovery and Focused primanly on faith,
poverty a burden fewer based initiatives, the Bush
have to bear when recovery office sparked-constitutional
is complete."
questions about whether the
To lead the office, Obama separation of church and
appointed Joshua DuBois. a state would be preserved,
26-year-old
Pentecostal particularly if groups receivminister who headed reli- mg tax dollars sought to hire
gimls outreach for Obama's on the basis of religion.
Senate office and his presiGroups that were critical of
de.ntial campaign. He alsq the Bush faith-based office
l1amed 25 religious and sec- - including the American
ular leaders to a new advi- Civil Liberties Union,
sory board.
Americans United for
"·The big pictur&amp; is th11t Separation of Church and
President Obama believes State. and People For the
·faith-based and smaller secu- Plmerican Way - issued
lur neighborllood organiza· . statements
Thursday
tions can play a role in expressing disappointment in
American re~wal. They can the Obama versmn. All said
work with the federal govern- that by failing to repeal Bush
ment to address big prob· policies. the White House
lems," DuBois r said in· an will allow participating reliinterview
with . The gious groups to continue disAssociated Press. "We're also crimination in hiring.
going to make sure we h,itve 'a
The ,ACLU also charged
keener eye toward the ~- tl]al the new advisory countion of church and state.~
cil amounted to "a president
Obamu said the office . giving his favored clergy a
would also work to reaoh out governmental stamp of
overseas "to foster interf'aith approval."
dialogue with leaders' aoo
Before
signing the order.
.
'

at the White House, Obama
told the annual National
Prayer ·Breakfast that the
program would not show
favoritism to any religious
group and ~ould adhere to a
strict separation of church
and state.
Addressing the gathering
of lawmakers. dignitaries and .
world lea~rs. Obama ~poke
of how faath has often been a
divisive tool, responsible for
war and prejudice. But. he
said. "there is no religion
whose central tenet is hate."
'There is no god who condones taking the life of an
innocent human being." he
said, and all religions teach .
people to love and care for
one another. That is the common ground underlying the
faith-based office. he said.
Obama's advisers want to
be certain tax dollars sent to
the faith-based social ser'
vi~:e groups are used for
secular purposes. such as
feeding the hungry or housing the homeless, and not
for religious evangelism.
The administration doesn't
wani to be perceived as
managing the groups · yet
seeks transparency and
accountability.

Bryan Walters/photo
Point Pleasant senior Anna Sommer, middle, was recognized at the start ofThursda_y night's
girls basketball game against visiting P~a for becoming the school 's alhtime leadmg scarer in girls history. Sommer is accompamed by PPHS co~ch, M1tch Meadows, left. and PPHS
Principal Bill Cottrill, right. Sommer broke Tracy Dra1n-Pnce s prev1ous record on January 23
· ts Th urs day, now has .1.203 for her career·
at Herbert Hoover. sommer, w1t· h 17 po1n

Bonds' judge may
exclude positive tests
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) on ' three separate occasions
- A federal judge oversee- in · 2000 and 200'1 for the
ing Barry Bonds· criminal steroid methene lone in urine
case says her "preliminary 'samples: he also tested l;lOSithoughts" are - to exclude tive two of thQse three ttmes
from trial three positive drug for the steroid nandrolone.
tests . though she's inclined
The three drug tests were
to keep a recorded conversa-. some of the strongest evition between Bonds· person· de nee the government had in
al trainer and former person- its _effort to prove Bonds
al assistant discussing knowingly took steroids. · ·
steroid use.
. lllston and the lawyers
U.S. District Judge Susan didn't discuss a fourth posililston said during an evi- tive test- seized in ,2004 from
dentiary hearmg Thursday a lab used by Ma~or League
that she was leaning. toward. Baseball to test Its players
e1.chiding the results seized during anonymous survey
by investi!lators during a • testing in 2003,
BALCO rard unless there is
The judge also said she
direct testimony tying: the was inclined to let the j~ry
urine samples to Bonds . . hear a recorded conversatmn
Bonds is charged with between Bonds' personal
lying to a December 2003 trainer, Greg Anderso~. and
grand jury when he said he former personal asststant
never knowingly used per• Steven Hoskins.
fonnance-enhancing drugs .
Court documents released
Bonds, who pleaded not Wednesday
revealed
guilty to the charges earlier' H~skins , Bonds' childh&lt;J?d
Thursday, stayed for the fnend and personal asslshearing. sitting _quietly at a tant , secretly tape~record.ed
table with sill lawyers for a 2003 conversatmn. wit~
about an hour.
Anderson m the G1ants
According to court documents, Bonds tested positive
Plust Ht Bonds, . .
1

'~-'"

't&gt;.

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Appointments:

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�Friday, February 6, 2009
Page B2 •

lhe Daily Sentinel

Prep Boxscores
RIVER VALLEY

58,

10
13 20

g

9
9

47
S8

FAIRLAND (6·9. 1·5 OVC) . S!Qrmio

Spitzer o 0-1 0. Mackenzie Rucker 6 4-6
18, 6nanna Day 4 1·2 10, lau,.n Phillips

o. Shelby

Fuller 1 0-3 2 . Kennon Claritson 0 (}() 0.
Sasne Burcham 1 o-2 2, Emily McMaster
3 3-4 11. TOTALS: 17 8-20 47. Threepoint. goals· 5 (Rucker 2. McMaster 2.
08'/).
.
RIVER VALLEY (10-6, 4 ~2 OVq: Jessi
Hager 1 2·2 4. Amanda Hager 0 1-8 1,
Marisa Marcum 1 1"·1 3, K8lsey 5ands 1
5-6 7. Alii N8'.'1lle 0 Q-0 0, ~ Rufll ()..
o 2. Mackenz.1e Cluxton J 2·2 8. lliana
Corfias 4 2·2 10. Jenna Ward 4 2-2 12.
Brooke Marcum 3 5-12 11 . TOTALS: 18

20-35 58 Th~ee-point goals: 2 (Ward 2)
JV SCO!'B - Fairland 40, River Valley 29.
JV leaders- F; Kerie Napier 11 ; RV:
Beth Martin 13.

MEIGS
.Alhens
Meigs

·

63, ATHENS 39
6

12
17 12

9
15

o-

13 8·13 35. ThrM-pomt goals: 1 (Swan).

19 16 -

2 0.2 4, Lou,en Fulks 0 ().{)

12 19 -

40,
CHRISTIAN 25

IRONTON ST. JOSEPH

OHIO VALLEY
ave

2 5 6 12 12 15 13 0 -

ISJ

25

40

OHIO l/ALLEV CHRISTIAN (1·13):
Emoly Carman 1 ~ 2. Maclson Crank I
2·2 4, Andrea VanMeter 2 2-2 7, HaK
Burtoson 3 o-3 e. Jesmlne Owens 2 2-3
6, Tina Sargent 0 o-o 0, Sarah
SctlocJnoVo&lt; 0().0 0, Anne Carman o ().{)
0. TOTALS: 9 &amp;-1025 Th,...point goals:
1 (V.nMeter).

IRONTOO ST. JOSEPH (7-9); Michelle
Staton 6 t-3 13, Sarah Basedow 0 lH 2,
Teresa Kaiset 0 o-o o. Katie H.cker 5 5·
6 15. Kar;e Compston 0 ~ 0. Katie
Schwab 1 1-2 4. Sarah Nell o 0.0
All;son Stump 0 2-3 2..M&amp;Qan F'Je!ds 0 ().
0 o. Kacie Rucker 2 o-o 4, Ivanna
Setnicka 0 Q-0 0. TOTALS: 14 11·16 &lt;40.
Thres-pojnt goals: 1 (Schwab).

o.

POINT PlEASANT 81,

39
63

ATHENS (4-13, 4-6 TVC Ohio): Whitney
Dickens 2 1-2 5. Raven Cline 2 1 ~2 6.
Cindy Willis 2 0-2 4, Caity Willis 0 ().() 0.
A. Barnett oo-o o. Gracie Staten o o-o·o.
Kayla Nicholson 0 0-0 0. Catherine
Carpinelli 0 0-0 0, Adriana leln 3 CHl 7,
·Jamie Sif"'(je!ar 2 4~ 8. Elena Lein 3 3-3
9. TOTALS : 14 9-~3 39. Three-point
goals: 2 (Cline. A. Letn).
MEIGS (1().7, 5-4 TVC Ohio): Mid&lt;i
Barnes 1 0-0 2. Adrian Bolin 2 1·2 5,
Tricia Smith 1 o-o 2, Catie Wolfe 8 4·5
21 . Shanalle Smith 1 1-1 3. Miranda
Gruesar t 0-0 2, Shellia Bailey 2 0-0 4,
M01gan Howard 7 4-7 HI , Cl'landra
Stanley 2 0-0 4. lacie Hawley 1 0-0 2
TOTALS: 26 10-15 63. Three-point goals ·
t (Wolfe).
JV 'score - 'Athens 31 : Meigs 16.
JV leaders- A: Catherine Carpinelli 10:
. M : Fish Jazzman 4, Alaine Arnold 4 .

ROANE

CouNTY 68

20 20
17 14

PP

RC

19 22 _. 81

,, 26 -

68

Field goals: 26·50 (.520); Three-point
goals: 1-11 (.091): Free throws : 10-15
(.667); Total rebounds: 29 (Howard B):
Offensive rebounds: 12 (Howard 3,
Stanley 3); Assists: 12 (Wolfe 4): Ste&amp;ls:

15 (Howard 7); Turnover$: 14.

WAHAMA ,55, HANNAN
14 10 10 7 -

35
55
35

WAHAMA (8-12): Amber Tully 8 8·9 28,
Alex Wood 5 0.0 10, Taylor Hysell 2 3·~
a, Kali Hartis 1 o-o 2. Kalie Davis 1 o-o
2, Kayla Lanier· I 0-D 2, Ashley Roach 0
2·2 2." Rebecoa Zert&lt;le o 1·2 1, Kansto
Fe!QuSOn 0 0-1 0, Oeidra !)et~rs 0 0-0 0.
"(OTALS: 18 14·21 55. Three-POint goals:

5 (Tul~ 4, Hysell).
HANNAN (nla): "Abby Bush 3 5·7 11,

It's

Friday, February 6, 2009

The OVP·Scaraboard
Cols. Bexlroy 54, Plain Cily Jonattoan

OHIO
GIRLS BASKETBALL

AntwBfp 32. Defiance Ayersville 25
Apple Creek Wayroedale 26. DoHun 24
Arcadia SO. COry-Aawson 35
Arl0r1g1on 60, McComb 47
AShland 45, Mansfield Sr. 41

Ashland Crestview 70, New London 50
Batavia 59. Georgetown 36
Beallsville 78, Paden City, W.Va. 42

6ectford 63. Warrensville Hts. 61
B e l - 60, o..... Oekwood 31 .
Beloit W. Branch 44 , Can. South 40
Berlin Center Westeni Reserve 47,
leetonia 40
Bo"'ins 53. Russia 43
Bryan 75. Oetta 33
Byesville Meadowbrook 48 •.' COShocton
33
Caldwell 39, lore City Buckeye Trail 34
Car1iskt 52, Camden Preble Shawnee 36
Custown Miami E. 74, Arcanum 43
Castalia Marga.retta 67. Huron 41
Celina 58. Elida 54
Centerburg ~ . Worthington Cl"'tistian 51
Cheshire River Valley 58, Proctorvilte
Fairland 47
Chillicothe Unioto 63, Bainbridge Patnt
Valley 46
Chillicothe Zane Trace 50, Williamsport
Wesd$1131
·
Circleville 51, Co!s. Hamilton Twp. 32
Cle. John Marshall 65. Cle. East 32 ·
Clyde 53, Oak Harbor 48
.
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 70, Ironton
Rock Hill 33
Coldwater 52. New Knoxville ·43
· Collins Western Reserve 61. Moni'Oe\lille
39

New • Paris National Trail
Aleundria Twin Valley S. 4 l

Plajna 39

Alder 30
Cols. GrandYiow H1s. 49, Sugar GnM1

.._Ross &lt;e, No,_ 41

Berne Union 22
Cols. Ready 6-1 . Balllmore l.brty Union

Honovonon Unl1ed &lt;8, E. Palootine 21

44
Columbus
Torah
Academy
47.
Muskingum Cl'lristian 32
Convoy Cr&amp;St\llow 54. Colooollus Grove

3A
Covington 36. Brad1ord 32
Cres!CIO Norwayna 57, w. Salem NW 43
Cuyah&lt;lga Falls CVCA 53, Massillon
Tuslaw 36
Day. Belmont 76. Day. Northridge 52
Qay. Thurgood Marshall 79, Day. Dunbar
27
Delianc9 46, Kenton 29
Delpllos Jeffersoo 75. Bluffton 34
Doylestown Chippewa 53, JoromeoHiHSdale 44
Etmare Woodmore 51, Bloomdale
ElmWOOd 29
Elyna Ca1h. 62. Garfield H1s. Tnnily 51
Findlay Llberty·Ban!CIO 74, Dola Hardin
Northern a1 ·
Fnmklort Adena 42, Chillicothe
Huntington 24
Franklin Furnace Green 54, Portsmouth

Notreo8me32
Fl. RecoYery 51 . St. Henry 39
Ff. Aeawory 51. 51. Henry 39
Fuchs Mizrachi 25. Cle. Ho&lt;izon Science
24
Gal'larina Christian 52. F'owell Village
Academy 29
Gahanna Lincoln 48, Lanc~~ster 24
Germantown Valley View 39. £alton 32
Gilead Christian 66. Grov&amp;port Madison
Christian 31

Granville 63. Johnstown-Monroe -C8
Greenfield McClain 64. London Madison

-

_ , 62, DeGraff RMHsido 54
E. Knox 56, Cols. Wellinglon 32
HWoon WllA 54.~ Hts. Laure\42
Lebanoo 57. Cin. Toft 14

39

Oberlin FlrelandS 49, N. RidgiNIIIe 38 •
Oregon Strffch 43. Lake- Danbury 42
Pando&lt;a.(littOOB 59. \/!on Bunon 47
Paulding 45, Ada 38
""rrysllurg 57, Bowling Green 3A
Palllsvlle 44, W. Urily Hi11t01&gt; 21

Lees Creek E. Clinton 61 , Williamsburg

39
Leipsic 76, Vanlue 42

L"""'Y:.' 06, Clellr Fctk 41
Lime t1o 60. ClttoWa.Oiander139
Lime Cont. Catlo, 50. Laloyene Allen E.
28
.
Lisbon David Anderson 55. Mineral

Piketon 5~ . Southeastern 33
Pomeroy Meigs 63, Alhons 39
1
Port5mouth Clay 47 , Portsmouth
ScioloYille36
Richmond Edison 63, Cadiz Harrison
Cent. 42
•
Ripley-Union-Lewis-Huntington
75,

58, Kidron Cent.

C1wisllan 42

Lowe!MIIe 65. McDonald 41
Madison 70, New Lebanon DiXie 33
Maria Stein Marton Loeel 63, Roekfon::l

Peelli0$66
S . Point 64, Chesapeake 43
s.Webster 57, Wheelersburg 41
Sardinia Eastern 54 , ¥owrystown

Pa~41

MKhtiiOicsburg 49, Spring. Emmanuel
Chris~.. 40
Metamora Evergreen 49. Swanton 39
Milford
Center
Fairbanks
50,
Waynasfie~n

&lt;8
Millersburg W. Holmes -43, Woos1er 19
Minerva 59, Alliance Marlington SO
Mlnlotd 67, McDermott Scioto NW 43
Minster 34, Versailles 32
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 69, Crestline 29
Mt. Orab Western Brown 74. Bethel-Tate
62
•
New Bremen 42. Delphcs St. John's 21
New Madison Tri·Village 56, NewtQn
Local40
NeW Matamoras Frontier 44, Beverly Ft.
Frye :l8
.
New Middletown Spring. 61 , N. LimaS.
Range 42

W.

Newcomerstown
45,
Bowerston
Cooot10&lt;1 Volley 41 , OT
Now1on Foils 60, warren Champion 52
No&lt;wolk St. Paul 70, G....,...lt:h S. Cant.

Patrick Henry 52, Mcn1polier 35

~~8 . Aquinas

43,

Whiteoak 21

In One Week With Us
m11clag~ d~=ay1ri--..co.: REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW . ONLINE

www.mydailytrtbUne.com
www.mydailysen•nel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

t!rribune

· l\egi~ter

..

McKinley 48, · N. Jackson
JackSOn-Milton 40
Shadysld$ 43, Linsly. W.Va. 30
Sidney Lehman 54, Jackson CenteF &lt;49
Smithville 69, Rittman 35
· . Steubenville 62, E. Liverpool 44
Stewart Federal Hocking 6~ , R~clne
Southern 24
W. liberty·Salem 57. CedarviH&amp; 21
Washington C. H. Miami Trace 51.
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 46
Wa1er1orc1 n, Corning Miller 33
Youngs. Ursunne 61, Youngs. Chaney 32
zanesville Rosecrans 49, Fairfield
Christian 48
.
Zoaf'4ille Tuscarawas V&amp;lley 48. Can.
Timken 31
Sebring

2 2-4 6. tyler Deal 10 2-4 25, Chris
Campbell 1 o-1 2. JaCOO Temp~ton 1 34 17. Cody Greatnouss 2 ()-0 4. Tysoo
Jones 4 1~3 9. TOTALS: 34 S.17 81 .
Three-poinl goals: 4 (Deal 3. lloyd).
ROANE COUNTY (nla): Rhett Atkinson
3 o-3 6. Man Brohard5 1·2 16. Jimmy
Hensley 2 0-0 4.•Trevor Cummings 3 2-2
1o. Logan Cain 0 1 ~2 1, Colter Taylor 5 5·
6 18. Shane Starcher 2 ()..() 6, Alex Mace
1 0·1 2. R.J. Burdette 2 1·2 5, TOTALS:
23 .10·18 68. Three-point goals: 12
(Elrohard 5, Taylor 3, Cummings 2,
Starcher 2).
JV score - F'olnt Pleasant 62, Roane
County 56, OT
JV leade:rs - P~ : Layne Thompson 18.

To Place .

caW"-r:.:::.
·

Fed Hoc~
Southern

••••

Or Fu To

Or Fax To (740)8112-2157

44e-30CI8

OH.tl#.,
Diapta.y
••00 e.m.
luertton

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

Now you ccm have borders and vraphlcs
~.
adclecltoyourclasilfiedads
im
lklrders$3.00/perad
I!

s,;.

Ads

All D ......y1 .1~ N - a
BueltMea Dav- Prtor Ta
Publlc.tloft

•~oo e.m. Thunday
sun&amp;t•y ~~~'::~~~~~
.,._...,

Graphics SOC for small
S1.00for lorve

• AI lldl muat be prepaid"

'lll.ICIH:OHoiiOIIoy,_,.. _ _ .. ,..,. _ _ or_lf¥odlt..,_ lmn-llo-oro1ht
ntbi.N4trtiNi.,._... IIIII It
tDI nD mcnlhlnttll 00111 oftN ~ptc:aoccupild ~tnt erJOf lnd ontr u,e n•t,....lon.
_.., IMt
thll Multi fi'Cli'R h ~IDn or 011llilan Df .. llh~ Corr.a1&lt;1n •• be~ In tt1t ttrtl11..-.. . .lo0n.
n .._,. C10111d Oil. · Cwrtnl .... Clf'd ....... • All Mt . . . . ld'ltnl-... . . . . .,.._ to b Flderal Fair HDu11nQ Act at
oriy,. _ , . _,.. EOE • - Wt.UI"'"
onw M&gt;wdlhQin ,_,., ol1ht ,_ Wll"'" bo
tt11MIIn ll'led tMiwl aw-r ttlt phona.

OJ.,.._

. To Help Get Response .••

-loll

t..·

,_'Ill_,.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

«POLICIES«

Land IAcnaeol

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
lhe rlghllo edit,
re)ecl or cancel any
ad a1 any time.
Errors

Must

eporled on the II
y of publlea11
nd lhe Tribun
tlnei·Reglster wll
responsible for n
ore then lhe cost o
he space oceupl
y lhe arror and onl
he first Insertion. W
hall not be Uable fa
ny loss or expen
hat resuns from I
ubllcallon
minion
of
lsemenl.
rrectlons will
In lhe !Irs
allabla odhlon.

'61
24

FEDERAL HOCKING (15·3, 5·2 TVC
Hocking): Katie Russell 2 o-o 4, Emily
Dunfee 3--6 8, Hannah McKibben ~ 0-1 6,
Mariah Hatfield 0 o-o o. Alisha SlctMer 0
o-o 0, Chanda Cuckler 5 1·4 11 , Julie
Vinson 8 1-4 .17, Iris Butcher 5 o-o 11 ,
Leanne Vinson 1 o-o 2, VanesSa Knopp
1 o-o 2. TOTALS: 25 5-15 61 Three-point
goals: 2 (Ountee. Butcher).
·
SOUT11ERN (3·12 . 1-6 TVC Hoct&lt;ing):
Emma Hunter 1 4~ 6, Brea.nna Taylor 1
2·J 4. Cheyene punn J 1-4 7, Lynz.ee
Tucker 1 ~-2 3, Gabby Johnson 0 0-0 0 ,
Morgan Middleman 0-2 4. Jessica Riffle
0 0·1' 0, Kelly Humphrey 0 0 ~0 0.
TOTALS: 6 8~18 24. Three-point goals;
Nona.

'

To

'
tJt's Vafen- rfime1!'

'

'

.

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

Your Way - On February 13th

'

•

With A Sentinel Love Message!
3INCHAD ... $21.00

2INCHAD ...$15.00

(Approximately 60 words)

40 words)

.

Special Edition
Febr~ary 13, 2009

Friday
FEBRUARY 6, 2009

-----------------------------,1
.

~----------~----~---------------1
----------~-------------------1

--------------------~-----------1I

The Dally Sentinel
992·2155

--------------------------------------1I
Mail Your Love Message and Total Amount Due To:

The Dally Sentinel
P.O. Box 729 or drop off at our office Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
Name:------------------------Address:------------------------

Size of Valentine: __...,;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Advertising Dendline is Mondny. Febnlilry 9th

Total Amount Enclosed:. __________________...,..______

-----------------------

on Buckeye Hills Rd. He
goes by the name or
Prince. if laund please

call
740-645·7085
740·339·3335

or

Found-

&amp;

mal!il

black

while
Cocker
Spaniel
near Gods NfJt, ,call JO 10 ,
Found

pr.

Rut Ea1at
rtlnments a
ubjeclta lha .Federa
air Housing Act o

968.

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Oivi·
sion of Financial Institutions OHice or Consumer

wHhln 30 days.

Affairs BEFORE you reff·
nance your home or ob·
taln a loan . BEWARE ot
requests tor any large
advance paym~nts . of
lees or insuranCe. Call
tl'le Office of Consumer

Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be

Affiars

or

toll

free

Commwdal
3 bay garage wl hoist.
btlum, lg storage area &amp;·
office', prime Pt. Pleasan1

, at

1-866-278·0003 lo loam
If tha mortgage broker Q1'
lender is properly li·

e&gt;;e·glasses at Pt Pleasant Post OHice Sat.
304-675·3359.
.

I

I

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
. PUBLISHING CO. ree·
omm9(ldS that ~you do
business wjth people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mail

Baument .
Waterpraatlng

Unconditional Ufetime
guarantee. Local refer-

ences fumlshed, Established 1975. Call 24 Hrs.

740·446·0870, Rogers

$500

Reward lor Into.
leading 'to arrest &amp; conOther S.Mcea
viction · of person 1hat ::-.=~~~--"":~
bro~e into John Green's ~et
Cremations.
Call
Home &amp; stole 9mm gun. 740·446·3745
GaHia

OHice 446·1221

\

I

location 304-675-4030.

\ \\

446·4333

Noliceo

Contact

\

•

censed. (This ts a public ·
service
announcement
Found around Second ~i;;;;~----~!"'0;;;;;;
from the Ohio Valley
Avenue «&gt;wntown GaiN· ~
polis. mhc.Sd lab puppy. Will take care of your Publishing Company)
loved one at his/her ;,;;;;.;;;;;;::~;;,;;;,;;;:,;..,...,.
Call 740·645·0919
house 12 hours a day.

until you have Investigating the offering.

All

Money To Loncl

the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked

74Q.444-4406

·v~

llvain111 &amp; Trade

Sdlool
Gallipolis Camr
.

www.comlcs.com

~

~

2009 by NEA, Inc

College

(Careers Close To Hom8)
Call Today! 740-446-4367

1·800·214·0452

l

gallipollecareercollega .edu
Accred1t&amp;d Member Accredit·
ing Cooncit for lndl!f)flncl&amp;nt
CoiJsgos and Schools 12748

re·

City
School

+ dep.

•

Sheriffs """"'""'""'""'""'""'""'

L...
S. .
..o....,ona1 Metol

..

This
ccepls only hel
anted ads mu11n
OE standards.

TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY SSI
No Fee Unless We Win !
1·888·582·3345

Read your
ond leorn
todoy!

Appliance Servlce ....................: ...,.............. 302

ADS MUST BE RECEIVED
.. BY 5:00 P.M.

Don't miss out on this great opportunity to
have your business Included!

LOST
Australian
Blue
Healer. last seen Feb 1st

placed In ads at

CLASSIFIED INDEX

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A WONDERFUL
.. LIFE TOGETHER.

.

have been

l.oa1 &amp;·Found

Legals ...........................................................100 Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
Announcements ........... ............................... 200 ATV ................ ............. .. ............ ................. . 1005
Birthday/Annlv•rsary ........... ....................... 205 Bicycles ......................................................101 0
Happy Ad1 ................................:...................21 0 Boat81Acct~ssorleli .................................... 1015
Lost &amp; Found ......... .................... ............ ...... 215 Camp.~r/RVa 6 Trallera ........... .................. 1020
Memory/Thank Vou ..................................... 220' · Matorcyclea ....... ~ ....................................... 1025
Notices ......................................................... 225 Oth•r ..........................................................1030
Personala ............... ...................................... 230 Wen1to buy .............. ............................. .. .. 1035
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Automollve ........ ............ ............... .............. 2000
Servlces .......... :.........................................: .. 300, Auto Aental1Leaae ..................... ~............... 200&amp;

Wriling lhis love message
gives me the opportunity
.to tell·you just how much I
love you and enjoy being
your husband. I know I
sometimes don't show it
but I really do.
Happy Valentine's Dayl

Write your Message Below:

•

We
will
no
nawlngly accept an
vertlsemanl
I
lolation ollhe law.

TO MY HONEY
Happy Valenline's Day
Cupid's arrow is slraighl
and true. In bringing this
thought of love lo you. I'm
sorry about lhe olher
night. Wh~n we had lhal
terrible.fight,
A Sentinel love message
was a good idea. To show
you·jusl how much I love·
· you. Maria

Box number ads a
lways confidential. •

.

.

Examples of Sizes and Prices

@allipoli• ilailp lltrlbunr fi)oint ~lra•ant i\e;isttr
875-1333
448·2342

Wehsltes:

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

SUCCIIIful Ads
Should Include ThMe n-

61, SOUTHERN 24

11 17 15 18 7 6
4 7 -

Sentinel

. HOW J.O WRUE AN AD

.,
FED HocK

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

QI:ribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

POINT PLEASANT (741: B.J. Lioy&lt;t 7 1·
1 .16. Kylenn Criste 1 0:-0 2. Drake Nolan

Melgl statletlcallndlvldualltaders . ·

Wahama
15 16
Harinan . .2 16

o-

l&lt;aLah Perry • 1·2 9, Jennifer Swan 2

0 5, Ka1tlyn Campbell 2 1-2 5 . Cektste
Campbetl t 1-1 3. arinan~ Edmonds 1
0 2. Chnstie Wifliams 0 o- t o. Katie Elhs

0 ().{) 0. Sar.o Arbogast 0 ().{) 0. TOTALS:

FAIRLAND 47
Fautano
R va11ey

www.mydaiJyseotinel.com

www.mydallysentinel.com

-----

AU\00 ...................,.·..................................... 2010

Automotive .................................................. 304 ClaaslciAntlques ....................................... 2015
Building Materials .......·................................ 306 Commerc..lllndUstrlal ........... \,,,,, ............. 2020
Bualneaa ...................................................... 308 Pal'lll &amp; Accesaorles .................................~2025
Caterlng ............................... ,.. , •• ,.............. .... 310 Sporta Utlllty ......................,. ...................... . 2030
Chlki/Eiderly Care .. ..... .......................... .. .. .. 312 Trucka........... . ~............. ..... ,.........................2035
Computera ............. .... .,................. ~ .............. 314 Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Contractorl .......................... ,.............. ......... 316 Vana ............................................................ 2045
Oomeatlcs/Janltorlal .....:...... ..... ............ .... .. 318 Want to buy ................., .............................2050
Electrical ..................... ................. .................. 320 R•al Eatate Salee ..................... ... .............. 3000
Fl.nancla1 .......................................................322 Cemetery Plota ....................... :.................. 3005
Health .. ..... ............... ... ,.. ,............ ................. :328 Commercla1 .......................................... ,..... 3010
Heating &amp; Coo11ng ....................................... 328 Condomlnluma .................... ...................... 3015
Home Improvements :.130
For Sale by Owner .....................................3020
lnaurance ................ .. ................................... 332 Houaeafor 581....................... ,............. ,; ... 3025
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334 Land (Acreage} .......................................... 3030
Mustc/Dance/Drama ... :..... ,.......................... 33~ Lota ............................................................3035
Other Servlcea ....................... ;.,...... ............. 338 Want to buy :........................................ ........ 3040
Plumblng/Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340 Real Estate Rentala .......... .... ............... ... ... 3600
Professional Servlcea .......... :...................... 342 ApartiTiflnta/Townhouae• ....................... ,. 3505
Repalra ......................................................... 344 Commerclal ................................................3510'
Rooflng ......................................................... 346 Condomlnluma ............ ...... .. ...................... 3515
Sec:urlty ........................................................ 348 HOuaesfor Rent ........................................ 3520
Tax/Accountlng ........................................... 350 Land (Acreai;Je) .......................................... 3525
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352 Storage ....................................................... 3535
Flnanclal .................................................. ......400 Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Financial Servlces .......................................405 Manufadured Houalng ........ ...... ............... 4000 .
lnauranca .............................. ... ................... 410 Lote .............................................................4005
Money to Lend ..... ................. ....................... 415 Movers......... ...................................... ; ........ 4010
Education ............. ..... ~ .................................. 500 Rentals .................................... :.................. 4015
Bualneas &amp; Trade School ........................... 505 Salea ........................................................... 4020
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ............................... .. 510 Suppllea ..................................................... 4025
Lessona ........... .............................................515 Want lo Buy ....................... ~ ..... .................. 4030
Personal ............................................ ............ 520 Reaort Property ....:................ .................... 5000
Anlmala ............... ~ ....... ................................. &amp;OO Reeort Property for sale ....... .................... 5025
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605 Resort Property for rent .......................... . 5050
Horses ................ .. ,................ .................. .. .... 610 Employmant ...............................................6000.
Llvestock ........... ...........................................615 Accountlng/Financlal ............ :.....;....... .. .... 6002
Peta ..................................................... .. ........620 Admlnlstratlve/Profe8810nal.. ............ ... .... 6004
Want to buy ......... .........................................625 Caehler/Cie.rk ............. , ......................... ...... 6006
Agrlculture ............. .............. ........................700 ChltdiEiderly Cere ....... ............. ................ . 6008
Farm Equlpment .................................... :..... 705 Clerlcal ......................... :· ·--· ........................ 8010
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................7t0 Conatructlon .............................................. 6012
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............ ....... :........... 715 . Drivers &amp; D,ellvery ..................................... &amp;014
Hunting &amp; Land ....... ...........,........................ 720 Educatlon ..... j ...................... ... .................... 6016
Want to buy ........ ..........................................72:!5 Electrical Plumblng ... ........ ................ ....... . 6018
Merchandlae ............... ........... ............ .. ........ aoo Employment Agantlea ....... .. .............. ....... 6020
Antiques .................................. ......................905 Entartalnment ............................................ &amp;022
Appliance ......... .. .... ................... :.................. 910 Food Servh::ea ............................................&amp;024
Auctlons ................ ................. .......... ............ 915 Government II Federal Joba .................... &amp;026
Barg'aln Baaement. ...................................... 920 Help anted· General .................. ,............... 6028
Collectlblet ........................ ............. ............. 925 Law Enforcement ...... ................................ 6030
computert ... ,............................................... 930 Malntenance1Domeatlc ....... .. .........,.... ...... 6032
·Equtpment1Supplles ....................... , ............ 935 Management/Supervlaory ........................ 8034
Flea Markatt ............................................... : 940 Mechanlcs .................... ~ ..............................I036
Fuel 011 Coai/Yiood/Gat ............................. 945 Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Furnlture·..................................................... ~aso Mualcai ....................................................... &amp;040
Hobby/Hunt &amp; sport ..:.................................
Part-Time-Temporarlea ..... ........................ 6042
t&lt;ld'a Corner...................... ...........................960 Reataurante ............................................ .,, 8044
Mlacellaneoua .............................................. 965 Salea .......... .......... ~ ...................................... 8048
want to buy ................................... ............... 970 Technical Tradee ....................................... I050
Yard Sale ........... .'.. ....................................... 975 Textll.es/Factory ......................................... eOS2

ess

Form Equipment

4000

T'actor 1950 Ford 8 N
Mint concf.lnew $3200.
245·6428

Hay, fHd, Seed, Grain

~~--~~~RV
For sale round bales of SeNice
hay

starting

at

Carmichael

at . $20.00 Trailers

~30:;.;4~·6~75-~~57~24~.~~~= 140.446·3825
AV Service
chae l
740·446-38.25

Auctions

Motorcyclos

Creek Auction, Honda 70CC 1£e new
Buffalo, Saturday 6 pm
$900. 740·379·2317

Crose

========

Large

auction Sat.Kel·
logg's cereal, flav. water,
Auto 110t1vP
Tyson sausage patties, ?000
produce, · ca nned loads
'all in date' used mer·
chandise,
and
much·
Auto&amp;
much more. Master Card ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;.o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
&amp;
Debit
accepted 02 Honda Acco rd 2dr,

304 ·550· 1616

Slephen AT, PS, PB. AC . PW,
s1ans AMIFM/CDICass.
78~.
at 6pm or betore.
$8500 obo. 388·9878

Reedy ,,639

~e

M.Jnu!ac1urec
Hous1 19

�Friday, February 6, 2009
Page B2 •

lhe Daily Sentinel

Prep Boxscores
RIVER VALLEY

58,

10
13 20

g

9
9

47
S8

FAIRLAND (6·9. 1·5 OVC) . S!Qrmio

Spitzer o 0-1 0. Mackenzie Rucker 6 4-6
18, 6nanna Day 4 1·2 10, lau,.n Phillips

o. Shelby

Fuller 1 0-3 2 . Kennon Claritson 0 (}() 0.
Sasne Burcham 1 o-2 2, Emily McMaster
3 3-4 11. TOTALS: 17 8-20 47. Threepoint. goals· 5 (Rucker 2. McMaster 2.
08'/).
.
RIVER VALLEY (10-6, 4 ~2 OVq: Jessi
Hager 1 2·2 4. Amanda Hager 0 1-8 1,
Marisa Marcum 1 1"·1 3, K8lsey 5ands 1
5-6 7. Alii N8'.'1lle 0 Q-0 0, ~ Rufll ()..
o 2. Mackenz.1e Cluxton J 2·2 8. lliana
Corfias 4 2·2 10. Jenna Ward 4 2-2 12.
Brooke Marcum 3 5-12 11 . TOTALS: 18

20-35 58 Th~ee-point goals: 2 (Ward 2)
JV SCO!'B - Fairland 40, River Valley 29.
JV leaders- F; Kerie Napier 11 ; RV:
Beth Martin 13.

MEIGS
.Alhens
Meigs

·

63, ATHENS 39
6

12
17 12

9
15

o-

13 8·13 35. ThrM-pomt goals: 1 (Swan).

19 16 -

2 0.2 4, Lou,en Fulks 0 ().{)

12 19 -

40,
CHRISTIAN 25

IRONTON ST. JOSEPH

OHIO VALLEY
ave

2 5 6 12 12 15 13 0 -

ISJ

25

40

OHIO l/ALLEV CHRISTIAN (1·13):
Emoly Carman 1 ~ 2. Maclson Crank I
2·2 4, Andrea VanMeter 2 2-2 7, HaK
Burtoson 3 o-3 e. Jesmlne Owens 2 2-3
6, Tina Sargent 0 o-o 0, Sarah
SctlocJnoVo&lt; 0().0 0, Anne Carman o ().{)
0. TOTALS: 9 &amp;-1025 Th,...point goals:
1 (V.nMeter).

IRONTOO ST. JOSEPH (7-9); Michelle
Staton 6 t-3 13, Sarah Basedow 0 lH 2,
Teresa Kaiset 0 o-o o. Katie H.cker 5 5·
6 15. Kar;e Compston 0 ~ 0. Katie
Schwab 1 1-2 4. Sarah Nell o 0.0
All;son Stump 0 2-3 2..M&amp;Qan F'Je!ds 0 ().
0 o. Kacie Rucker 2 o-o 4, Ivanna
Setnicka 0 Q-0 0. TOTALS: 14 11·16 &lt;40.
Thres-pojnt goals: 1 (Schwab).

o.

POINT PlEASANT 81,

39
63

ATHENS (4-13, 4-6 TVC Ohio): Whitney
Dickens 2 1-2 5. Raven Cline 2 1 ~2 6.
Cindy Willis 2 0-2 4, Caity Willis 0 ().() 0.
A. Barnett oo-o o. Gracie Staten o o-o·o.
Kayla Nicholson 0 0-0 0. Catherine
Carpinelli 0 0-0 0, Adriana leln 3 CHl 7,
·Jamie Sif"'(je!ar 2 4~ 8. Elena Lein 3 3-3
9. TOTALS : 14 9-~3 39. Three-point
goals: 2 (Cline. A. Letn).
MEIGS (1().7, 5-4 TVC Ohio): Mid&lt;i
Barnes 1 0-0 2. Adrian Bolin 2 1·2 5,
Tricia Smith 1 o-o 2, Catie Wolfe 8 4·5
21 . Shanalle Smith 1 1-1 3. Miranda
Gruesar t 0-0 2, Shellia Bailey 2 0-0 4,
M01gan Howard 7 4-7 HI , Cl'landra
Stanley 2 0-0 4. lacie Hawley 1 0-0 2
TOTALS: 26 10-15 63. Three-point goals ·
t (Wolfe).
JV 'score - 'Athens 31 : Meigs 16.
JV leaders- A: Catherine Carpinelli 10:
. M : Fish Jazzman 4, Alaine Arnold 4 .

ROANE

CouNTY 68

20 20
17 14

PP

RC

19 22 _. 81

,, 26 -

68

Field goals: 26·50 (.520); Three-point
goals: 1-11 (.091): Free throws : 10-15
(.667); Total rebounds: 29 (Howard B):
Offensive rebounds: 12 (Howard 3,
Stanley 3); Assists: 12 (Wolfe 4): Ste&amp;ls:

15 (Howard 7); Turnover$: 14.

WAHAMA ,55, HANNAN
14 10 10 7 -

35
55
35

WAHAMA (8-12): Amber Tully 8 8·9 28,
Alex Wood 5 0.0 10, Taylor Hysell 2 3·~
a, Kali Hartis 1 o-o 2. Kalie Davis 1 o-o
2, Kayla Lanier· I 0-D 2, Ashley Roach 0
2·2 2." Rebecoa Zert&lt;le o 1·2 1, Kansto
Fe!QuSOn 0 0-1 0, Oeidra !)et~rs 0 0-0 0.
"(OTALS: 18 14·21 55. Three-POint goals:

5 (Tul~ 4, Hysell).
HANNAN (nla): "Abby Bush 3 5·7 11,

It's

Friday, February 6, 2009

The OVP·Scaraboard
Cols. Bexlroy 54, Plain Cily Jonattoan

OHIO
GIRLS BASKETBALL

AntwBfp 32. Defiance Ayersville 25
Apple Creek Wayroedale 26. DoHun 24
Arcadia SO. COry-Aawson 35
Arl0r1g1on 60, McComb 47
AShland 45, Mansfield Sr. 41

Ashland Crestview 70, New London 50
Batavia 59. Georgetown 36
Beallsville 78, Paden City, W.Va. 42

6ectford 63. Warrensville Hts. 61
B e l - 60, o..... Oekwood 31 .
Beloit W. Branch 44 , Can. South 40
Berlin Center Westeni Reserve 47,
leetonia 40
Bo"'ins 53. Russia 43
Bryan 75. Oetta 33
Byesville Meadowbrook 48 •.' COShocton
33
Caldwell 39, lore City Buckeye Trail 34
Car1iskt 52, Camden Preble Shawnee 36
Custown Miami E. 74, Arcanum 43
Castalia Marga.retta 67. Huron 41
Celina 58. Elida 54
Centerburg ~ . Worthington Cl"'tistian 51
Cheshire River Valley 58, Proctorvilte
Fairland 47
Chillicothe Unioto 63, Bainbridge Patnt
Valley 46
Chillicothe Zane Trace 50, Williamsport
Wesd$1131
·
Circleville 51, Co!s. Hamilton Twp. 32
Cle. John Marshall 65. Cle. East 32 ·
Clyde 53, Oak Harbor 48
.
Coal Grove Dawson-Bryant 70, Ironton
Rock Hill 33
Coldwater 52. New Knoxville ·43
· Collins Western Reserve 61. Moni'Oe\lille
39

New • Paris National Trail
Aleundria Twin Valley S. 4 l

Plajna 39

Alder 30
Cols. GrandYiow H1s. 49, Sugar GnM1

.._Ross &lt;e, No,_ 41

Berne Union 22
Cols. Ready 6-1 . Balllmore l.brty Union

Honovonon Unl1ed &lt;8, E. Palootine 21

44
Columbus
Torah
Academy
47.
Muskingum Cl'lristian 32
Convoy Cr&amp;St\llow 54. Colooollus Grove

3A
Covington 36. Brad1ord 32
Cres!CIO Norwayna 57, w. Salem NW 43
Cuyah&lt;lga Falls CVCA 53, Massillon
Tuslaw 36
Day. Belmont 76. Day. Northridge 52
Qay. Thurgood Marshall 79, Day. Dunbar
27
Delianc9 46, Kenton 29
Delpllos Jeffersoo 75. Bluffton 34
Doylestown Chippewa 53, JoromeoHiHSdale 44
Etmare Woodmore 51, Bloomdale
ElmWOOd 29
Elyna Ca1h. 62. Garfield H1s. Tnnily 51
Findlay Llberty·Ban!CIO 74, Dola Hardin
Northern a1 ·
Fnmklort Adena 42, Chillicothe
Huntington 24
Franklin Furnace Green 54, Portsmouth

Notreo8me32
Fl. RecoYery 51 . St. Henry 39
Ff. Aeawory 51. 51. Henry 39
Fuchs Mizrachi 25. Cle. Ho&lt;izon Science
24
Gal'larina Christian 52. F'owell Village
Academy 29
Gahanna Lincoln 48, Lanc~~ster 24
Germantown Valley View 39. £alton 32
Gilead Christian 66. Grov&amp;port Madison
Christian 31

Granville 63. Johnstown-Monroe -C8
Greenfield McClain 64. London Madison

-

_ , 62, DeGraff RMHsido 54
E. Knox 56, Cols. Wellinglon 32
HWoon WllA 54.~ Hts. Laure\42
Lebanoo 57. Cin. Toft 14

39

Oberlin FlrelandS 49, N. RidgiNIIIe 38 •
Oregon Strffch 43. Lake- Danbury 42
Pando&lt;a.(littOOB 59. \/!on Bunon 47
Paulding 45, Ada 38
""rrysllurg 57, Bowling Green 3A
Palllsvlle 44, W. Urily Hi11t01&gt; 21

Lees Creek E. Clinton 61 , Williamsburg

39
Leipsic 76, Vanlue 42

L"""'Y:.' 06, Clellr Fctk 41
Lime t1o 60. ClttoWa.Oiander139
Lime Cont. Catlo, 50. Laloyene Allen E.
28
.
Lisbon David Anderson 55. Mineral

Piketon 5~ . Southeastern 33
Pomeroy Meigs 63, Alhons 39
1
Port5mouth Clay 47 , Portsmouth
ScioloYille36
Richmond Edison 63, Cadiz Harrison
Cent. 42
•
Ripley-Union-Lewis-Huntington
75,

58, Kidron Cent.

C1wisllan 42

Lowe!MIIe 65. McDonald 41
Madison 70, New Lebanon DiXie 33
Maria Stein Marton Loeel 63, Roekfon::l

Peelli0$66
S . Point 64, Chesapeake 43
s.Webster 57, Wheelersburg 41
Sardinia Eastern 54 , ¥owrystown

Pa~41

MKhtiiOicsburg 49, Spring. Emmanuel
Chris~.. 40
Metamora Evergreen 49. Swanton 39
Milford
Center
Fairbanks
50,
Waynasfie~n

&lt;8
Millersburg W. Holmes -43, Woos1er 19
Minerva 59, Alliance Marlington SO
Mlnlotd 67, McDermott Scioto NW 43
Minster 34, Versailles 32
Mt. Blanchard Riverdale 69, Crestline 29
Mt. Orab Western Brown 74. Bethel-Tate
62
•
New Bremen 42. Delphcs St. John's 21
New Madison Tri·Village 56, NewtQn
Local40
NeW Matamoras Frontier 44, Beverly Ft.
Frye :l8
.
New Middletown Spring. 61 , N. LimaS.
Range 42

W.

Newcomerstown
45,
Bowerston
Cooot10&lt;1 Volley 41 , OT
Now1on Foils 60, warren Champion 52
No&lt;wolk St. Paul 70, G....,...lt:h S. Cant.

Patrick Henry 52, Mcn1polier 35

~~8 . Aquinas

43,

Whiteoak 21

In One Week With Us
m11clag~ d~=ay1ri--..co.: REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW . ONLINE

www.mydailytrtbUne.com
www.mydailysen•nel.com
www.mydailyregister.com

t!rribune

· l\egi~ter

..

McKinley 48, · N. Jackson
JackSOn-Milton 40
Shadysld$ 43, Linsly. W.Va. 30
Sidney Lehman 54, Jackson CenteF &lt;49
Smithville 69, Rittman 35
· . Steubenville 62, E. Liverpool 44
Stewart Federal Hocking 6~ , R~clne
Southern 24
W. liberty·Salem 57. CedarviH&amp; 21
Washington C. H. Miami Trace 51.
Clarksville Clinton-Massie 46
Wa1er1orc1 n, Corning Miller 33
Youngs. Ursunne 61, Youngs. Chaney 32
zanesville Rosecrans 49, Fairfield
Christian 48
.
Zoaf'4ille Tuscarawas V&amp;lley 48. Can.
Timken 31
Sebring

2 2-4 6. tyler Deal 10 2-4 25, Chris
Campbell 1 o-1 2. JaCOO Temp~ton 1 34 17. Cody Greatnouss 2 ()-0 4. Tysoo
Jones 4 1~3 9. TOTALS: 34 S.17 81 .
Three-poinl goals: 4 (Deal 3. lloyd).
ROANE COUNTY (nla): Rhett Atkinson
3 o-3 6. Man Brohard5 1·2 16. Jimmy
Hensley 2 0-0 4.•Trevor Cummings 3 2-2
1o. Logan Cain 0 1 ~2 1, Colter Taylor 5 5·
6 18. Shane Starcher 2 ()..() 6, Alex Mace
1 0·1 2. R.J. Burdette 2 1·2 5, TOTALS:
23 .10·18 68. Three-point goals: 12
(Elrohard 5, Taylor 3, Cummings 2,
Starcher 2).
JV score - F'olnt Pleasant 62, Roane
County 56, OT
JV leade:rs - P~ : Layne Thompson 18.

To Place .

caW"-r:.:::.
·

Fed Hoc~
Southern

••••

Or Fu To

Or Fax To (740)8112-2157

44e-30CI8

OH.tl#.,
Diapta.y
••00 e.m.
luertton

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

Now you ccm have borders and vraphlcs
~.
adclecltoyourclasilfiedads
im
lklrders$3.00/perad
I!

s,;.

Ads

All D ......y1 .1~ N - a
BueltMea Dav- Prtor Ta
Publlc.tloft

•~oo e.m. Thunday
sun&amp;t•y ~~~'::~~~~~
.,._...,

Graphics SOC for small
S1.00for lorve

• AI lldl muat be prepaid"

'lll.ICIH:OHoiiOIIoy,_,.. _ _ .. ,..,. _ _ or_lf¥odlt..,_ lmn-llo-oro1ht
ntbi.N4trtiNi.,._... IIIII It
tDI nD mcnlhlnttll 00111 oftN ~ptc:aoccupild ~tnt erJOf lnd ontr u,e n•t,....lon.
_.., IMt
thll Multi fi'Cli'R h ~IDn or 011llilan Df .. llh~ Corr.a1&lt;1n •• be~ In tt1t ttrtl11..-.. . .lo0n.
n .._,. C10111d Oil. · Cwrtnl .... Clf'd ....... • All Mt . . . . ld'ltnl-... . . . . .,.._ to b Flderal Fair HDu11nQ Act at
oriy,. _ , . _,.. EOE • - Wt.UI"'"
onw M&gt;wdlhQin ,_,., ol1ht ,_ Wll"'" bo
tt11MIIn ll'led tMiwl aw-r ttlt phona.

OJ.,.._

. To Help Get Response .••

-loll

t..·

,_'Ill_,.

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

«POLICIES«

Land IAcnaeol

Ohio Valley
Publishing reserves
lhe rlghllo edit,
re)ecl or cancel any
ad a1 any time.
Errors

Must

eporled on the II
y of publlea11
nd lhe Tribun
tlnei·Reglster wll
responsible for n
ore then lhe cost o
he space oceupl
y lhe arror and onl
he first Insertion. W
hall not be Uable fa
ny loss or expen
hat resuns from I
ubllcallon
minion
of
lsemenl.
rrectlons will
In lhe !Irs
allabla odhlon.

'61
24

FEDERAL HOCKING (15·3, 5·2 TVC
Hocking): Katie Russell 2 o-o 4, Emily
Dunfee 3--6 8, Hannah McKibben ~ 0-1 6,
Mariah Hatfield 0 o-o o. Alisha SlctMer 0
o-o 0, Chanda Cuckler 5 1·4 11 , Julie
Vinson 8 1-4 .17, Iris Butcher 5 o-o 11 ,
Leanne Vinson 1 o-o 2, VanesSa Knopp
1 o-o 2. TOTALS: 25 5-15 61 Three-point
goals: 2 (Ountee. Butcher).
·
SOUT11ERN (3·12 . 1-6 TVC Hoct&lt;ing):
Emma Hunter 1 4~ 6, Brea.nna Taylor 1
2·J 4. Cheyene punn J 1-4 7, Lynz.ee
Tucker 1 ~-2 3, Gabby Johnson 0 0-0 0 ,
Morgan Middleman 0-2 4. Jessica Riffle
0 0·1' 0, Kelly Humphrey 0 0 ~0 0.
TOTALS: 6 8~18 24. Three-point goals;
Nona.

'

To

'
tJt's Vafen- rfime1!'

'

'

.

Tell Someone You Love Them
In A Special Way

Your Way - On February 13th

'

•

With A Sentinel Love Message!
3INCHAD ... $21.00

2INCHAD ...$15.00

(Approximately 60 words)

40 words)

.

Special Edition
Febr~ary 13, 2009

Friday
FEBRUARY 6, 2009

-----------------------------,1
.

~----------~----~---------------1
----------~-------------------1

--------------------~-----------1I

The Dally Sentinel
992·2155

--------------------------------------1I
Mail Your Love Message and Total Amount Due To:

The Dally Sentinel
P.O. Box 729 or drop off at our office Ill Court St., Pomeroy, OH 45769
Name:------------------------Address:------------------------

Size of Valentine: __...,;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Advertising Dendline is Mondny. Febnlilry 9th

Total Amount Enclosed:. __________________...,..______

-----------------------

on Buckeye Hills Rd. He
goes by the name or
Prince. if laund please

call
740-645·7085
740·339·3335

or

Found-

&amp;

mal!il

black

while
Cocker
Spaniel
near Gods NfJt, ,call JO 10 ,
Found

pr.

Rut Ea1at
rtlnments a
ubjeclta lha .Federa
air Housing Act o

968.

NOTICE Borrow Smart.
Contact the Ohio Oivi·
sion of Financial Institutions OHice or Consumer

wHhln 30 days.

Affairs BEFORE you reff·
nance your home or ob·
taln a loan . BEWARE ot
requests tor any large
advance paym~nts . of
lees or insuranCe. Call
tl'le Office of Consumer

Any pictures
that are not
picked up will be

Affiars

or

toll

free

Commwdal
3 bay garage wl hoist.
btlum, lg storage area &amp;·
office', prime Pt. Pleasan1

, at

1-866-278·0003 lo loam
If tha mortgage broker Q1'
lender is properly li·

e&gt;;e·glasses at Pt Pleasant Post OHice Sat.
304-675·3359.
.

I

I

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
. PUBLISHING CO. ree·
omm9(ldS that ~you do
business wjth people you
know, and NOT to send
money through the mail

Baument .
Waterpraatlng

Unconditional Ufetime
guarantee. Local refer-

ences fumlshed, Established 1975. Call 24 Hrs.

740·446·0870, Rogers

$500

Reward lor Into.
leading 'to arrest &amp; conOther S.Mcea
viction · of person 1hat ::-.=~~~--"":~
bro~e into John Green's ~et
Cremations.
Call
Home &amp; stole 9mm gun. 740·446·3745
GaHia

OHice 446·1221

\

I

location 304-675-4030.

\ \\

446·4333

Noliceo

Contact

\

•

censed. (This ts a public ·
service
announcement
Found around Second ~i;;;;~----~!"'0;;;;;;
from the Ohio Valley
Avenue «&gt;wntown GaiN· ~
polis. mhc.Sd lab puppy. Will take care of your Publishing Company)
loved one at his/her ;,;;;;.;;;;;;::~;;,;;;,;;;:,;..,...,.
Call 740·645·0919
house 12 hours a day.

until you have Investigating the offering.

All

Money To Loncl

the Gallipolis
Dally Tribune
must be picked

74Q.444-4406

·v~

llvain111 &amp; Trade

Sdlool
Gallipolis Camr
.

www.comlcs.com

~

~

2009 by NEA, Inc

College

(Careers Close To Hom8)
Call Today! 740-446-4367

1·800·214·0452

l

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ing Cooncit for lndl!f)flncl&amp;nt
CoiJsgos and Schools 12748

re·

City
School

+ dep.

•

Sheriffs """"'""'""'""'""'""'""'

L...
S. .
..o....,ona1 Metol

..

This
ccepls only hel
anted ads mu11n
OE standards.

TURNED DOWN ON
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Read your
ond leorn
todoy!

Appliance Servlce ....................: ...,.............. 302

ADS MUST BE RECEIVED
.. BY 5:00 P.M.

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have your business Included!

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placed In ads at

CLASSIFIED INDEX

MAY WE ALWAYS
HAVE A WONDERFUL
.. LIFE TOGETHER.

.

have been

l.oa1 &amp;·Found

Legals ...........................................................100 Recreational Vehicles ............................... 1000
Announcements ........... ............................... 200 ATV ................ ............. .. ............ ................. . 1005
Birthday/Annlv•rsary ........... ....................... 205 Bicycles ......................................................101 0
Happy Ad1 ................................:...................21 0 Boat81Acct~ssorleli .................................... 1015
Lost &amp; Found ......... .................... ............ ...... 215 Camp.~r/RVa 6 Trallera ........... .................. 1020
Memory/Thank Vou ..................................... 220' · Matorcyclea ....... ~ ....................................... 1025
Notices ......................................................... 225 Oth•r ..........................................................1030
Personala ............... ...................................... 230 Wen1to buy .............. ............................. .. .. 1035
Wanted ........................................................ 235
Automollve ........ ............ ............... .............. 2000
Servlces .......... :.........................................: .. 300, Auto Aental1Leaae ..................... ~............... 200&amp;

Wriling lhis love message
gives me the opportunity
.to tell·you just how much I
love you and enjoy being
your husband. I know I
sometimes don't show it
but I really do.
Happy Valentine's Dayl

Write your Message Below:

•

We
will
no
nawlngly accept an
vertlsemanl
I
lolation ollhe law.

TO MY HONEY
Happy Valenline's Day
Cupid's arrow is slraighl
and true. In bringing this
thought of love lo you. I'm
sorry about lhe olher
night. Wh~n we had lhal
terrible.fight,
A Sentinel love message
was a good idea. To show
you·jusl how much I love·
· you. Maria

Box number ads a
lways confidential. •

.

.

Examples of Sizes and Prices

@allipoli• ilailp lltrlbunr fi)oint ~lra•ant i\e;isttr
875-1333
448·2342

Wehsltes:

(740) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675-1333

SUCCIIIful Ads
Should Include ThMe n-

61, SOUTHERN 24

11 17 15 18 7 6
4 7 -

Sentinel

. HOW J.O WRUE AN AD

.,
FED HocK

The Daily Sentinel • Page B3

QI:ribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

POINT PLEASANT (741: B.J. Lioy&lt;t 7 1·
1 .16. Kylenn Criste 1 0:-0 2. Drake Nolan

Melgl statletlcallndlvldualltaders . ·

Wahama
15 16
Harinan . .2 16

o-

l&lt;aLah Perry • 1·2 9, Jennifer Swan 2

0 5, Ka1tlyn Campbell 2 1-2 5 . Cektste
Campbetl t 1-1 3. arinan~ Edmonds 1
0 2. Chnstie Wifliams 0 o- t o. Katie Elhs

0 ().{) 0. Sar.o Arbogast 0 ().{) 0. TOTALS:

FAIRLAND 47
Fautano
R va11ey

www.mydaiJyseotinel.com

www.mydallysentinel.com

-----

AU\00 ...................,.·..................................... 2010

Automotive .................................................. 304 ClaaslciAntlques ....................................... 2015
Building Materials .......·................................ 306 Commerc..lllndUstrlal ........... \,,,,, ............. 2020
Bualneaa ...................................................... 308 Pal'lll &amp; Accesaorles .................................~2025
Caterlng ............................... ,.. , •• ,.............. .... 310 Sporta Utlllty ......................,. ...................... . 2030
Chlki/Eiderly Care .. ..... .......................... .. .. .. 312 Trucka........... . ~............. ..... ,.........................2035
Computera ............. .... .,................. ~ .............. 314 Utility Trailers ............................................ 2040
Contractorl .......................... ,.............. ......... 316 Vana ............................................................ 2045
Oomeatlcs/Janltorlal .....:...... ..... ............ .... .. 318 Want to buy ................., .............................2050
Electrical ..................... ................. .................. 320 R•al Eatate Salee ..................... ... .............. 3000
Fl.nancla1 .......................................................322 Cemetery Plota ....................... :.................. 3005
Health .. ..... ............... ... ,.. ,............ ................. :328 Commercla1 .......................................... ,..... 3010
Heating &amp; Coo11ng ....................................... 328 Condomlnluma .................... ...................... 3015
Home Improvements :.130
For Sale by Owner .....................................3020
lnaurance ................ .. ................................... 332 Houaeafor 581....................... ,............. ,; ... 3025
Lawn Servlce ............................................... 334 Land (Acreage} .......................................... 3030
Mustc/Dance/Drama ... :..... ,.......................... 33~ Lota ............................................................3035
Other Servlcea ....................... ;.,...... ............. 338 Want to buy :........................................ ........ 3040
Plumblng/Eiectrlcal ..................................... 340 Real Estate Rentala .......... .... ............... ... ... 3600
Professional Servlcea .......... :...................... 342 ApartiTiflnta/Townhouae• ....................... ,. 3505
Repalra ......................................................... 344 Commerclal ................................................3510'
Rooflng ......................................................... 346 Condomlnluma ............ ...... .. ...................... 3515
Sec:urlty ........................................................ 348 HOuaesfor Rent ........................................ 3520
Tax/Accountlng ........................................... 350 Land (Acreai;Je) .......................................... 3525
TraveVEntertalnment ..................................352 Storage ....................................................... 3535
Flnanclal .................................................. ......400 Want to Rent .............................................. 3540
Financial Servlces .......................................405 Manufadured Houalng ........ ...... ............... 4000 .
lnauranca .............................. ... ................... 410 Lote .............................................................4005
Money to Lend ..... ................. ....................... 415 Movers......... ...................................... ; ........ 4010
Education ............. ..... ~ .................................. 500 Rentals .................................... :.................. 4015
Bualneas &amp; Trade School ........................... 505 Salea ........................................................... 4020
Instruction &amp; Tralnlng ............................... .. 510 Suppllea ..................................................... 4025
Lessona ........... .............................................515 Want lo Buy ....................... ~ ..... .................. 4030
Personal ............................................ ............ 520 Reaort Property ....:................ .................... 5000
Anlmala ............... ~ ....... ................................. &amp;OO Reeort Property for sale ....... .................... 5025
Animal Supplles .......................................... 605 Resort Property for rent .......................... . 5050
Horses ................ .. ,................ .................. .. .... 610 Employmant ...............................................6000.
Llvestock ........... ...........................................615 Accountlng/Financlal ............ :.....;....... .. .... 6002
Peta ..................................................... .. ........620 Admlnlstratlve/Profe8810nal.. ............ ... .... 6004
Want to buy ......... .........................................625 Caehler/Cie.rk ............. , ......................... ...... 6006
Agrlculture ............. .............. ........................700 ChltdiEiderly Cere ....... ............. ................ . 6008
Farm Equlpment .................................... :..... 705 Clerlcal ......................... :· ·--· ........................ 8010
Garden &amp; Produce .......................................7t0 Conatructlon .............................................. 6012
Hay, Feed, Seed, Grain ............ ....... :........... 715 . Drivers &amp; D,ellvery ..................................... &amp;014
Hunting &amp; Land ....... ...........,........................ 720 Educatlon ..... j ...................... ... .................... 6016
Want to buy ........ ..........................................72:!5 Electrical Plumblng ... ........ ................ ....... . 6018
Merchandlae ............... ........... ............ .. ........ aoo Employment Agantlea ....... .. .............. ....... 6020
Antiques .................................. ......................905 Entartalnment ............................................ &amp;022
Appliance ......... .. .... ................... :.................. 910 Food Servh::ea ............................................&amp;024
Auctlons ................ ................. .......... ............ 915 Government II Federal Joba .................... &amp;026
Barg'aln Baaement. ...................................... 920 Help anted· General .................. ,............... 6028
Collectlblet ........................ ............. ............. 925 Law Enforcement ...... ................................ 6030
computert ... ,............................................... 930 Malntenance1Domeatlc ....... .. .........,.... ...... 6032
·Equtpment1Supplles ....................... , ............ 935 Management/Supervlaory ........................ 8034
Flea Markatt ............................................... : 940 Mechanlcs .................... ~ ..............................I036
Fuel 011 Coai/Yiood/Gat ............................. 945 Medlcal ....................................................... 6038
Furnlture·..................................................... ~aso Mualcai ....................................................... &amp;040
Hobby/Hunt &amp; sport ..:.................................
Part-Time-Temporarlea ..... ........................ 6042
t&lt;ld'a Corner...................... ...........................960 Reataurante ............................................ .,, 8044
Mlacellaneoua .............................................. 965 Salea .......... .......... ~ ...................................... 8048
want to buy ................................... ............... 970 Technical Tradee ....................................... I050
Yard Sale ........... .'.. ....................................... 975 Textll.es/Factory ......................................... eOS2

ess

Form Equipment

4000

T'actor 1950 Ford 8 N
Mint concf.lnew $3200.
245·6428

Hay, fHd, Seed, Grain

~~--~~~RV
For sale round bales of SeNice
hay

starting

at

Carmichael

at . $20.00 Trailers

~30:;.;4~·6~75-~~57~24~.~~~= 140.446·3825
AV Service
chae l
740·446-38.25

Auctions

Motorcyclos

Creek Auction, Honda 70CC 1£e new
Buffalo, Saturday 6 pm
$900. 740·379·2317

Crose

========

Large

auction Sat.Kel·
logg's cereal, flav. water,
Auto 110t1vP
Tyson sausage patties, ?000
produce, · ca nned loads
'all in date' used mer·
chandise,
and
much·
Auto&amp;
much more. Master Card ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;.o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
&amp;
Debit
accepted 02 Honda Acco rd 2dr,

304 ·550· 1616

Slephen AT, PS, PB. AC . PW,
s1ans AMIFM/CDICass.
78~.
at 6pm or betore.
$8500 obo. 388·9878

Reedy ,,639

~e

M.Jnu!ac1urec
Hous1 19

�Ptoa B4 • The Daily Sentinel

you 65

..,,nes

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription c:m your
home delivered subscription!

F01 sale 14x72 1997

lhei• - - Galhpcl•s. 000 45631
tesume' and relen!nces Attn: Debbie Saunders.
to
kyge-OIIvo.com. Ubrary Diteetor
No phone, fa&gt;, oc in per· Apjllicalions must be

2br,, 2 ba. ,mobile

son interruptions please.

.,...-~~~~~-

who matiCS

t1me

877·3f!J.2577

$1 and a deed is atl you
need to own your dream
hO&lt;n~. Call No.w!

mattl$natics
Matti&amp;-

candidates

a

must .

Bachelors ~
in · Accounting.

: Address _______________________
I
I

I
I

I

I.
I

'
I
I

I
I

1
I

I

I

.I
I

·-------------------------~-----· ·

(740) 992·Stl09
CU5tom Home Building

ce5sful candidate win

cover high sc/"00 athlelics in the area tor the
daily edition o1 the r.ews·

paper, aS well as assist
with the production of

Buikling. Remodeling
Genero&gt;l repoir

L &amp; L Tift Barn

44087 Wip!* Rd.
Pnmeroy,OH

RV 's.

Kevin Ketly, Managing

(740) 992-5344

or

Editor. Otlio Valley Pulr
iislllng CO., 825 Thinl
Ave., Gallipolis, Qtlio
45631 or kkeUyOmydaflylrlbune.com. No
phone calls please.

Mon-fri

by

Gallipolis company seek· with
ing individual lor compll· .:.'·;;8~66;;-40;;;3-;2582
;;;;!'!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!
all :

ac·

;;i;;;;;;ii;...,...;;;;;;;i 'i;;;;;;;;;;

. eXpenence. 9am-3pm
Please send resume ·to ~Loca
-~-H~o-m-e""'"~H~e"!al~th
CLA BO)( 105, Attn .:. AP Agency
H"mng
Noe
Clerk. P.O. Box 469. STA,N's, CNA's. Home
Gallipolis. Otiio 45631
Health Aid&amp;s. Will provide training. 11 interested
Oorical
counting

1

catl740-44 1·1377.

EKperienced legal secretarytparalegal for Gallipolis law Office. Send re·

sumes to CLA Box 102.
P.O. Bo• 469. Gallipolis
OH 45631 .

.----::==::---

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

~LOQkirig For~

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

for 32 unit taniny Ao
property located in Galli·
""'Is. Prefer previous
P'""
property
management

experience,

preferably

with a Rural Development propel'f'l. Must be
experienced

with

office

equipment, have reliable
transportation, be dependable and like working
wiih the public.
Schedule has some flexi·
billty and is part-time
needing ·. someone for
2'4+ hours per week.
Company otter: compell- .
tiVe salary, health bene·
fits, paid vacation and
· sick leave and 401K.

can

compensation
'also
include housing on-site il
desired. Please contact:·
740-384-6508 to sched·

ule an

GUN SHOOT
February 7th Noon
·. Broad Run Gun Club
12 ga. factory choke
12 ga. Slug guns
Sponsored by Bend Area
C.A.R.E

appointment or

submit resumes to: '
Comniunlty Manager
c/o Sherry House
Wells Mahor Apartmerits
480 , S. Michigan Ave,

Wellston, Ohio 45692
Mechank;o

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

•

• A 7
6 A J 5

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both .

Soul•

Wesl

Nortll

19

1•
Pass
Pass
Pass

••

4 NT
~ NT

••

E-mail:.captblll65@yahoo.com
www.auCtionzip.com
#5548

~OW

CAN YOU tMVt
800 GtG~JYTeS Of
tvlfMOttY Alii&gt; tlOT
fltMEM~fl TO P\JT

Ttte SEAT f&gt;OWN?!
Hardftod c~ AH mkun
.paoelc.c:al\IJMb7.GOIIl

1 TR'f NOT T'GIT ALL
. FOOLISH 'BOUT BU't'IN' STUFF
JEST 'CUZ'A TH' NAME ON TH'
.
LABEL!!

BUT TMIS ONE 1 JEST
CAN'T RESIST !!

·-~

Racine, Ohio 740.247·2019

THE BORN LOSER

rewws,
W~l&gt;..\ 1~ THE. wc:t.W
m.'&lt;ou

Cell; 74D-416:5047
emqll:

jrshaclfrm@aol.com

0

OOlt-16
n\E

Replacement

•

LI&gt;..W~

SO,I'M. &lt;.ot~""'

TI\E St\Ow-""'
~OW~R

(,f&gt;.,IJt OOT ...

M.OWtR~

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

5•
6•

Pass

i

TO~ID/ADW

Tl\t.~W!

14CIIrft
15 Twig
t6 ~
18 Cartoon

20 ,_.

41hendo

4:1 " - ..,
K.44 ......
blocb

........

41 DOint
bD Qll'dln
so 1., Jnzr ...
.an.

52 -!~toft

56 Spltla
57 Coneumt

"'-"
se ""'
I""""""*S9Ciw,a
21 ""'-hlut"
profit
60 ~
23 Ia, to Fritz 61 lind '
24 c.nt.on inltlals
DOWN
25 Sludy ioN
%1 -aul
1 Family docs
(withct.oaa) 2 llocklllUICie
31 ~bay's
chtw

3 Yoltilhltle

4T5 Cat~:Ms ...
6 Murmur of

321~-

EoSI
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

33 Job

An opponent bids
and you splinter

12 Dmring
43 Tllkoutof
11 Pning 1ot 45 Conlann
light
19 Baroing-

4S Funny Lebowitz

along

47 -lind

2t NASA outfit 48 Typo of
· (hyph.)
prot
22 Ciii-&lt;OPing 49 Bulb unit
lMnt
51 Eatem
23 Humongous
pllitooopt
24 West CoM! 53 'Uit~·
sch.
54 CNirgtcl
25 Woody's
Pirlicte
son
55 Prehistoric
28 Corpenter'a

34 Unt• uu~
· 7 o.tor
36 Butter subsh&lt;iwolowns
stltule
Blllnhol
!lld!l8l
31 lis. 'lllll.Ditton
29 Big liooks
39 llneee\lper- 9 Slolh'a
30 Right away
35
40=ol
10=
gan'ltas
m1thlnos
37 Gawkera
~.!!

Opaning lead: • Q

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

• EIKtriCII 6 Plumbing

content

~~

How do you make a splinter biQ w11en an
oppooent overcalls in a suit?
Wllh a jump cue-biQ - as in today's
deal. Altt'oo!lt Nortl1 has oo1y nine high·
caid points. he counts thtee points lot
his singleloo and has ooly six tos.rs,
making his hand worth game in hearts:
And en route to game, he shows his singleton diamond with a four-diamond

jum(l-Qie.
Soulh then launches into Blackwood ·
belore settling Into six hearts.
West leads the spade queen. How·
should Soulh plan the p~y?
.
Teken in isolation, the percentage play
lot no heart losers Is to cash 1he ace. 11
South did that here, though, he would
probably go down.one. los1ng one heart
and one ~ub. (He could eliminate the
spades arid diamonds, take his two ~ub
wirtnetS. and give East his heart ttlck.
Here, East would be ondptayed, lorced
to concede a ruft·and-sluff. But Souttt
would tool&lt; silly nEast had queen-third ol
clubs.) .
However, the contract is guaranteed.
Declarer starts by taking both spade
tricks and the diamond ace belore ruff·
.ing tl1a dlamon(l seven in the dummy.
Then Sou1h calls lor .the heart queen
end finesses (unless easl plays the king,
of course). Here. the finesse wins and
,deciBrer · is playing for an overtrick.
Suppose, though, that West could scoop
up the tnck wtth a singleton heart king .
What can West do? If he shifts to a club.
tt is into South's ace·jack. Or, if he

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos .

.

Celebnty Qp~~et ~ems are c~!ld ITom quotat~nsby lamo~ 0110ple past ana pr8S8!'11.
Each letter 1n the opher stands lor anolhtr

, Today'sclue: VequaiSB

" D

ITMF

YJNP

OEUDTL .

D' Z

SBRU

XMFTJP

GVMBU

GT

LD~UJX

DTENJXDVWP
NMVJNU

WDUUWJ

AGIJN. "

SN .

returns a spade or a diamond, declarer

ruffs in the dummy and discards his low

club. Etther way. South loses no dub
tnck.

• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Metal
· and .Sbingle Roofs
. • Decks • Addilions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

O

BIG NATE

OKI&gt;.Y,
'IOU O::i&gt;.N
ROLL YOUR
E'IE!&gt; NOW .

SunS811101nl
CanSbuellan

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck

PEANUTS
IF I{CJU WANT TO
SE KIN6,1lERE'S '""'tn

New Homes,
Remodeling,

.
semce
We Haul

Limestone- &lt;iroei
Dirt· AK·Lime

l48·l42·34n

740.985·4~~2

Kitchens; Bllths

ONE THAT ISN'T

'lOU COULD DO ..

Addlllons,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding and more.

'

WELL, TJ.IEN, FIND
SO loii6H ..

·Drywall,

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing. Siding, Gutter~
lnsur9d &amp; 8ond9d
740-653·9657

Advertise in
this space for
$35.00 per
month

-

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
·Pole Buildings
• Roof1' Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

...

GARFIELD

7 40·367·0544

'!'HAT WAY t't.!- KNOW

Free Estimates

WHeRE YOU ARe

7 40-367-0536

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removai

I\ itt"''" .ttttl

' Prompt nod Quality
Work

Balli
Prompt. Courteous

Service

25 years experien{;c

Call Gary Stanley @

......1174

740-591·8044
Pl ease· leave messa e

'

GRIZZWELLS

JoY, $&gt;Ill!~ ~\.Y AAtl /liE IH ~Tel\E~

·'lloiE

UVENE

I rr1 1

I
.
Granny

liked to quote a

famous mnn who said,r--------.,

I
9

IN Er RIC WI HI

I0
.

''Imagination is more

important than -·-·- ·."
CompleTe !he chutkls quoted
by filling in toe mi~lll~ words

you develop from stop No. 3 below.

-

~ P~INT NUMSfRED 11
':7 LETTm
.

@)

UNSC~AMBLE

ftNSWE!

roRI

,

IIIIIIIII

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS ']Jj/09

Nimbus - Atlas - Ledge - Farrow- WAG its TAlL
"Money can purchase a dog," gramps told me, "but
only kindness will make it WAG

it~

TAIL."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

SCORPIO. (Oct. 24·Nov.

22)

- •

I DOiliCARE.IFVA.IIPIRE~
AR£ HOT MAll)··:....'_.

OWW!!

I
•

.

.

I~ I' I r I I
KNODYE

SOUP TO NUTZ

oma-. PI(/

.Advertise
in this space for
$70 per month

'

be-

If you're not quite sure you understand
something, don't wing it.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - As
an Archer, you tend to wander off at
times, but don't let this spill over Into the
protection of your valuables. Even If It Is
something small , It'll be a big loss.
CAPRICORN (Dac. 22.Jan. 19) - Keep
In mlnQ that companions might not be as
In love with vour voice or Ideas Bs you
"are; remember not to dominate conver·
aatlone.

•tnsurcd

"'Experienced
References Available!

l~e

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 23) --:- Making a
mountain out of a molehill could Impede
your progress Instead of enhancing II. It
could turn out to be a case of your
tongue. not your toes, tripping you up. ,
Generally, you're a fast learner and a
q uid~ study, but it might be a bit difficult
for you to grasp the essence of ·an idea.

*Reaso nable Rates

For all your plumbing
&amp; heating iteeds

POII.~N

about your projection.

Local Contractor

S(11k won't drain?
Fumace woll'llighl?
CIIR d 1
I ri · ( 'mlllh

Don't think you have IQ make a killing in
order to get some of the good thtngs life
has to offer. Being both penny-wise and
pound-conscious In the year ahead can
quickly add up ro something quite signit·
lcant by year's end.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You've
haard the saying, "Loose lips sink ships ,~
and this could be the case for you. Be
mindful of what you are saying and to
whom, or you could let something slip
out that would be hilrmtul.
PISCES (F~b. 20-March 20) - It's best
not to talk about your wonderful expecta·
tlons, especially at a socli!l gathering. An
unknown competitor might be listening
who will horn in on your good fortune.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) - There's
nothing to be gained by demeaning a
family member who Isn't going along with
your plan..In fact. all it will do Is give him
or her cause to find a way to get even
with you.
TAURUS (Aptll 2D·May 20) - Watch
what you say and hOw you say it
because If you voiCe somethirig tl'lat Is
too vindictive, It won't be easily forgonen ;
you could even lose a good friend.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) - II You find
yourself with someone who insists on
dOing all the talking for you, let this indi·
vidual know, in no uncertain terms, that
your mind is still in good working .order.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You can take
bets that if someone is being far too
inquisitive about Y.OUr personal affairs,
that individual has ulterior motives. Make
sure that you aren't releasing more information about yourseHthan you should.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Don't act
too smart or ·be too wise about an
endeavor in whi ch you rece;ntly got,
Involved, because if It doesn't turn out as
you thought, you could be embarrassed

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
·Doors, Windows;
Electric, Plumbing,

VI OlD
GAM!

low to fcl'tTI four simple words.

you've always wanted.

"'

~:~~:t:~'
'2ltJ\t~lA
-~£~S*
.
.
.Ed1!1d by Cl.ll Y R.
Rearrange klnars of
0 four
scrambled ·words

'l!lrllolll\y:

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Be eXtra
mindful about your spending habits,
because you might find It tar too easy to
shell out money foolishly. In tact, you
could even buy ltlat Brooklyn Bridge

COWandBOY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'To work is to leal alive." - Tony Bennett
"You can page the singer, but not the soog.' - Herry Belalonle

Astro- .
Graph

S.turd.y, Feb. 7, 2001
By Bernice Bed• 0101

We do driveways

PUBLIC NOTICE
available lor public In·
NOTICE: Is hereby apoctlon at tha Fiscal
given that on Saturday, Officer's office In City
February 7, 2009 at lolall at237 Race Stree~
10:00 a.m., a public Middleport, Ohio 45780
sale will beheld at 211 between the hours ol9
W.
Second
St., am and 4 Pm Monday
Pomeroy, Ohio. Tho through Friday.
Farmers Bank and Sav· (2) 4, 5, .,
lnga Company Is sell·
lng lor cash In hand or - - - - - - certified check the lol·
Public Notice
lowing collateral:
2002 Mercury Sable PROBATE COURT OF
1MEFMSOU02A641787 MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
2000 Pontiac Grand IN RE: 'CHANGE OF
P
r
I
x· NAME OF Braden Eu·
1G2WJ52J1YF291437 gene Boyd .to Braden
The Farmers Bank end Eugene Hawley .
Savings
Company, Caae No. 20096003
Pomeroy, Ohio, r&amp;- NOTICE OF HEARING
serves tho right to bid ON CHANGE OF NAME
t~~~~ a1 1hls aale, end to Applicant hereby glvea
withdraw tho above notice to all Interested
collateral prior to sale. parsons and to Jamie
Further, Tho Farmers R. Boyd that the appll•
Bank ·and Savings cant has filed an Appll·
Company reserves the calion lor Change of
rlgh1 to re)ectany or an Name In the Probata
bids submitted.
Court of Melga County,
The above described Ohio, requesting the
collateral wilt be sold change ot nome of
" as ls·where Ia", with Braden Eugene Boyd
no expressed or lrn· to Braden . Eugene
plied warranty .given.
Hawley. the hearing on
For further Information, the application wilt be
or lor an appointment held on 1he 6th day of
to Inspect collateral, March, 2009, at 1:30 o'·
prior to sale date con· clock p.m., In the Protact Cyndle or_Ken at bate Court of Meigs
992·2136.
County, located ot 100
(2) 4, .5, 6
Eaat Second Street,
Courthouee, 2nd Floor,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Public Notice
Sarah Hawley .
43905 Foreat Run Rd.
The 2008 Annual Finan- Racine, Oh 45771
ctal ·Report of tho VII· (2) 6
lege of Middleport Ia

K 0

9 AJ98S2

• Aaoft119 I • Vinyl Sldlnt .. '•lntlng
• Patio and Porch Dtcks

252 Help

9 3 .

Soulh

• Room Addltton• 1
Remodtllng

EMPLOYMENT

•to 'ge4

•

--

13 ·
:ale••

lhrteb

• K4

6 Q lO 8

Stop &amp; Compare

Owners:
Jon Van Meter &amp;
Paul Rowe

·-

• •• a 5 4 3

9 T

•KQJ 531

WINTER RATES
DEC.- TEB

r-------.

QJ

111411 mo. pd

~f'•'

1 ....

ST......
1 VH1 rholl
t1 They...,

EoM

·-

CAll US TOt&gt;AY
TOR RE1JIJCED

CI ~ASSIFIEDS

~

"'"'
6

8:00am . 4:30 prn
Sa1. 8:00am . 12
w~ a
cialt yuur

••· Holp WIIIIIMI • Genoral ·,.,,;;i!;;,o!!i!!!!!!!i!;;;..!!!

cords and assisting
Monogement /
counling dept. and sales Duke cleaners 656 Secc.--..:~ ..
staff. Must have high and Ave. GaiL Ohio. AP·
•..-;;;i
school diploma and ac· ply in person Mon-Fri. Community Mgr. ne8ded

Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

140-41&amp;-1164

changes, small engine
repair.
We service and
winterize boats and
benefits. Interested par- .

••

MHI2·1111

alignments. We also

ties can send resumes to

ilcludes

Pi

IIIII l Gable Jr.

POST
OFFICE
NOW
HIRING avg. Pay S20n'lr

$57Kiyr,

"iJL

6k 7 64t

We buv used tires.
compluer wheel

knoiNtedgn of desktop
publishing are sought.
The position is full time.
40 hours il week, wnh

.lobo

tla10'ld0' :"
"'

•Gallge$
• Complete
Remodelins.

.... h1t' .
II

Norlll
• Al

•Q toT•5

IRIIIneer:

Calls Please.

Go.emrnenl &amp; F.doral

45771
740-949-2217

1

•New Homes

Points)
New &amp; Used Tires.
(5

do Duel's. light

not affiliated
USPS who hires.

payable

Sportswnter. The sue·

. Racine, Ohio

Flft Estimates

mechanic work.
comp lete sef.vice oil

adSOurce,
maintaining

•

.......

29670 Bashan Road

Commerclal
• Resitkntial

sports pages. Excellent

Accounling / Financial Fed.Ben. OT. Placo

and

BANKS
CONSTRUCT!
CO.
Pomeroy, Ollie

writing and English skills,
photography skills end

888·5E5·0167

ing

in me news dept as a

Phillip
Alder

r-------.,

reercollege.edu or rax to
446-4124.
No
Phone

Fr&amp;edom Momes

accoonts,
I
I

Mall or drop oft this coupon along
:
with a copy of your photo tD to
I Ohio Valley Publlahlng P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631
I
.
.
.

have

. gree

I

1

in

--"T!!"he_P_tOC_t_oiV"!i-lle.__ Please e-mail resumes
Difference"
to Jdarncki@galliipolisca·

1

: Phone•--------------~-------

Gallipolis Cateet College
is seeking paft·time in-

buyers
own land or tamHy land have a ·Masters Degree
-o- dwn no clo8ing cosr 1n Mattler'Mtics. Account·
candidates
must
your land · is your credit 1119
first

I

I

Spom-

structors

1

I

The D.illy Senlin!!l • Page 85

'

ACROSS

Stetl Fran-.t Bu.ildings

The 01\lo \/alley Publishing co. is ....ing mofi.
vakld, peop~&amp;-onenkld
indMdual ti ttll a vacancy ·

Go·-it funos avMable to an:d accounMg.

1

I

2008. EOE

trailer only $8000.00
call304·675·3151
9am-2pm &amp; aher 6 (
M-F )

f)oint !llea•ant B.egi•ter
·The Daily Sentinel
6unbap tEtmes -6enttntl
··-----------------------------Subscriber's Name

City/State/Zip - - - - - - - - - ' -

postmarked by Feb. 18,

home w/ lot $23.000

4Jallipoli• JBaHp Qtributte

I

'

BRIDGE

e-mail

74().828-2750

Here's all you
need to do. ~.
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

I

www.mydailya 11dlnel.com

son

dental prac1ice. Aespon· hootS per · Sible tor mutti·provlder mum
wage,
illdudes
--.M~"~
CO&lt;Jn
~~
~ry~l-IV_
ong
_ _ S&lt;hodulo, OEIW pabe&lt;lt OV0!11r&gt;g and - . . !
3 01 4 Bedroom 2 Bath
matl&lt;sbng pttlglam and shifts. Must be a minr
Ownot wilt FinarK:e
re&lt;:epllOn duties. Must be mum
fll (16)
Call to "" 1'18 Oualolied orgalliNd, dtoos proMs· yeatS or age anct peso
SIOIIalty. and posses ••· ~ chock. Job
740-423-9728
ceiient
ccmmuntcatioo ~ and apJllicaskills Dental O&gt;penonce tJOn a - at ibraly
BANK REPO'S I
"iltl llentril&lt; p r - cm:ulatioo deslt. Al&gt;l&gt;lb·
2. 3&amp;4BR
001 not mquited. Prolas· bon must be ma11ed to:
Pfuo--1
slonal training J)fOVoded Bossanl Lil&gt;&lt;aty
Midwestlnte•osted shOOid 7 Sj:wUC6 St
mymidwesthome.OO&lt;n

Senior Discount*

I

Fn.,, februaoy 6, 2009
ALLEYOOP

OBO 740-592-4303

so, you qualify for a

I

'

Oide&lt; 2 bf , I bath mo· Kygoo Dental Assooa...
Bc&amp;sard ' -....,. lit&gt;le """"' very clean. on in Gallipolis ....,. outgO- bra&lt;y ..... lll!&gt;I&lt;Mits
pertect rel)alr senous 1n- tng customer service pet· tor the posffion ol lbaty
0111y,
!3.000
h:&gt;r U1e1r growing Pogo/Sho~Yur. Up to . t 6

or older?

I

Friday, February 6, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

'

'

•'

,.

S~:x:

f

[

Not t iLL

marrieD.

z;.,

�Ptoa B4 • The Daily Sentinel

you 65

..,,nes

when you pay for a 6 or 12
month subscription c:m your
home delivered subscription!

F01 sale 14x72 1997

lhei• - - Galhpcl•s. 000 45631
tesume' and relen!nces Attn: Debbie Saunders.
to
kyge-OIIvo.com. Ubrary Diteetor
No phone, fa&gt;, oc in per· Apjllicalions must be

2br,, 2 ba. ,mobile

son interruptions please.

.,...-~~~~~-

who matiCS

t1me

877·3f!J.2577

$1 and a deed is atl you
need to own your dream
hO&lt;n~. Call No.w!

mattl$natics
Matti&amp;-

candidates

a

must .

Bachelors ~
in · Accounting.

: Address _______________________
I
I

I
I

I

I.
I

'
I
I

I
I

1
I

I

I

.I
I

·-------------------------~-----· ·

(740) 992·Stl09
CU5tom Home Building

ce5sful candidate win

cover high sc/"00 athlelics in the area tor the
daily edition o1 the r.ews·

paper, aS well as assist
with the production of

Buikling. Remodeling
Genero&gt;l repoir

L &amp; L Tift Barn

44087 Wip!* Rd.
Pnmeroy,OH

RV 's.

Kevin Ketly, Managing

(740) 992-5344

or

Editor. Otlio Valley Pulr
iislllng CO., 825 Thinl
Ave., Gallipolis, Qtlio
45631 or kkeUyOmydaflylrlbune.com. No
phone calls please.

Mon-fri

by

Gallipolis company seek· with
ing individual lor compll· .:.'·;;8~66;;-40;;;3-;2582
;;;;!'!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!
all :

ac·

;;i;;;;;;ii;...,...;;;;;;;i 'i;;;;;;;;;;

. eXpenence. 9am-3pm
Please send resume ·to ~Loca
-~-H~o-m-e""'"~H~e"!al~th
CLA BO)( 105, Attn .:. AP Agency
H"mng
Noe
Clerk. P.O. Box 469. STA,N's, CNA's. Home
Gallipolis. Otiio 45631
Health Aid&amp;s. Will provide training. 11 interested
Oorical
counting

1

catl740-44 1·1377.

EKperienced legal secretarytparalegal for Gallipolis law Office. Send re·

sumes to CLA Box 102.
P.O. Bo• 469. Gallipolis
OH 45631 .

.----::==::---

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

~LOQkirig For~

ANew Home?
TrY the
Classifieds!!

for 32 unit taniny Ao
property located in Galli·
""'Is. Prefer previous
P'""
property
management

experience,

preferably

with a Rural Development propel'f'l. Must be
experienced

with

office

equipment, have reliable
transportation, be dependable and like working
wiih the public.
Schedule has some flexi·
billty and is part-time
needing ·. someone for
2'4+ hours per week.
Company otter: compell- .
tiVe salary, health bene·
fits, paid vacation and
· sick leave and 401K.

can

compensation
'also
include housing on-site il
desired. Please contact:·
740-384-6508 to sched·

ule an

GUN SHOOT
February 7th Noon
·. Broad Run Gun Club
12 ga. factory choke
12 ga. Slug guns
Sponsored by Bend Area
C.A.R.E

appointment or

submit resumes to: '
Comniunlty Manager
c/o Sherry House
Wells Mahor Apartmerits
480 , S. Michigan Ave,

Wellston, Ohio 45692
Mechank;o

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

NEA Crossword Puzzle

•

• A 7
6 A J 5

AUCTIONS/ANTIQUES

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both .

Soul•

Wesl

Nortll

19

1•
Pass
Pass
Pass

••

4 NT
~ NT

••

E-mail:.captblll65@yahoo.com
www.auCtionzip.com
#5548

~OW

CAN YOU tMVt
800 GtG~JYTeS Of
tvlfMOttY Alii&gt; tlOT
fltMEM~fl TO P\JT

Ttte SEAT f&gt;OWN?!
Hardftod c~ AH mkun
.paoelc.c:al\IJMb7.GOIIl

1 TR'f NOT T'GIT ALL
. FOOLISH 'BOUT BU't'IN' STUFF
JEST 'CUZ'A TH' NAME ON TH'
.
LABEL!!

BUT TMIS ONE 1 JEST
CAN'T RESIST !!

·-~

Racine, Ohio 740.247·2019

THE BORN LOSER

rewws,
W~l&gt;..\ 1~ THE. wc:t.W
m.'&lt;ou

Cell; 74D-416:5047
emqll:

jrshaclfrm@aol.com

0

OOlt-16
n\E

Replacement

•

LI&gt;..W~

SO,I'M. &lt;.ot~""'

TI\E St\Ow-""'
~OW~R

(,f&gt;.,IJt OOT ...

M.OWtR~

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

5•
6•

Pass

i

TO~ID/ADW

Tl\t.~W!

14CIIrft
15 Twig
t6 ~
18 Cartoon

20 ,_.

41hendo

4:1 " - ..,
K.44 ......
blocb

........

41 DOint
bD Qll'dln
so 1., Jnzr ...
.an.

52 -!~toft

56 Spltla
57 Coneumt

"'-"
se ""'
I""""""*S9Ciw,a
21 ""'-hlut"
profit
60 ~
23 Ia, to Fritz 61 lind '
24 c.nt.on inltlals
DOWN
25 Sludy ioN
%1 -aul
1 Family docs
(withct.oaa) 2 llocklllUICie
31 ~bay's
chtw

3 Yoltilhltle

4T5 Cat~:Ms ...
6 Murmur of

321~-

EoSI
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

33 Job

An opponent bids
and you splinter

12 Dmring
43 Tllkoutof
11 Pning 1ot 45 Conlann
light
19 Baroing-

4S Funny Lebowitz

along

47 -lind

2t NASA outfit 48 Typo of
· (hyph.)
prot
22 Ciii-&lt;OPing 49 Bulb unit
lMnt
51 Eatem
23 Humongous
pllitooopt
24 West CoM! 53 'Uit~·
sch.
54 CNirgtcl
25 Woody's
Pirlicte
son
55 Prehistoric
28 Corpenter'a

34 Unt• uu~
· 7 o.tor
36 Butter subsh&lt;iwolowns
stltule
Blllnhol
!lld!l8l
31 lis. 'lllll.Ditton
29 Big liooks
39 llneee\lper- 9 Slolh'a
30 Right away
35
40=ol
10=
gan'ltas
m1thlnos
37 Gawkera
~.!!

Opaning lead: • Q

FRANK &amp;EARNEST

• EIKtriCII 6 Plumbing

content

~~

How do you make a splinter biQ w11en an
oppooent overcalls in a suit?
Wllh a jump cue-biQ - as in today's
deal. Altt'oo!lt Nortl1 has oo1y nine high·
caid points. he counts thtee points lot
his singleloo and has ooly six tos.rs,
making his hand worth game in hearts:
And en route to game, he shows his singleton diamond with a four-diamond

jum(l-Qie.
Soulh then launches into Blackwood ·
belore settling Into six hearts.
West leads the spade queen. How·
should Soulh plan the p~y?
.
Teken in isolation, the percentage play
lot no heart losers Is to cash 1he ace. 11
South did that here, though, he would
probably go down.one. los1ng one heart
and one ~ub. (He could eliminate the
spades arid diamonds, take his two ~ub
wirtnetS. and give East his heart ttlck.
Here, East would be ondptayed, lorced
to concede a ruft·and-sluff. But Souttt
would tool&lt; silly nEast had queen-third ol
clubs.) .
However, the contract is guaranteed.
Declarer starts by taking both spade
tricks and the diamond ace belore ruff·
.ing tl1a dlamon(l seven in the dummy.
Then Sou1h calls lor .the heart queen
end finesses (unless easl plays the king,
of course). Here. the finesse wins and
,deciBrer · is playing for an overtrick.
Suppose, though, that West could scoop
up the tnck wtth a singleton heart king .
What can West do? If he shifts to a club.
tt is into South's ace·jack. Or, if he

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis campos .

.

Celebnty Qp~~et ~ems are c~!ld ITom quotat~nsby lamo~ 0110ple past ana pr8S8!'11.
Each letter 1n the opher stands lor anolhtr

, Today'sclue: VequaiSB

" D

ITMF

YJNP

OEUDTL .

D' Z

SBRU

XMFTJP

GVMBU

GT

LD~UJX

DTENJXDVWP
NMVJNU

WDUUWJ

AGIJN. "

SN .

returns a spade or a diamond, declarer

ruffs in the dummy and discards his low

club. Etther way. South loses no dub
tnck.

• Siding • Vinyl
Windows • Metal
· and .Sbingle Roofs
. • Decks • Addilions
•Electrical
• Plumbing
• Pole Barns

O

BIG NATE

OKI&gt;.Y,
'IOU O::i&gt;.N
ROLL YOUR
E'IE!&gt; NOW .

SunS811101nl
CanSbuellan

R.L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
Dump truck

PEANUTS
IF I{CJU WANT TO
SE KIN6,1lERE'S '""'tn

New Homes,
Remodeling,

.
semce
We Haul

Limestone- &lt;iroei
Dirt· AK·Lime

l48·l42·34n

740.985·4~~2

Kitchens; Bllths

ONE THAT ISN'T

'lOU COULD DO ..

Addlllons,
Garages, Pole
Buildings, Roofs,
Siding and more.

'

WELL, TJ.IEN, FIND
SO loii6H ..

·Drywall,

H&amp;H
Guttering
Seamless Gutters
Roofing. Siding, Gutter~
lnsur9d &amp; 8ond9d
740-653·9657

Advertise in
this space for
$35.00 per
month

-

J&amp;L
Construction

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

• Vinyl Siding
• Replacement
Windows
·Roofing
·Decks
·Garages
·Pole Buildings
• Roof1' Additions
Owner:
James Keesee II
742·2332

...

GARFIELD

7 40·367·0544

'!'HAT WAY t't.!- KNOW

Free Estimates

WHeRE YOU ARe

7 40-367-0536

Stanley TreeTrimming
&amp; Removai

I\ itt"''" .ttttl

' Prompt nod Quality
Work

Balli
Prompt. Courteous

Service

25 years experien{;c

Call Gary Stanley @

......1174

740-591·8044
Pl ease· leave messa e

'

GRIZZWELLS

JoY, $&gt;Ill!~ ~\.Y AAtl /liE IH ~Tel\E~

·'lloiE

UVENE

I rr1 1

I
.
Granny

liked to quote a

famous mnn who said,r--------.,

I
9

IN Er RIC WI HI

I0
.

''Imagination is more

important than -·-·- ·."
CompleTe !he chutkls quoted
by filling in toe mi~lll~ words

you develop from stop No. 3 below.

-

~ P~INT NUMSfRED 11
':7 LETTm
.

@)

UNSC~AMBLE

ftNSWE!

roRI

,

IIIIIIIII

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS ']Jj/09

Nimbus - Atlas - Ledge - Farrow- WAG its TAlL
"Money can purchase a dog," gramps told me, "but
only kindness will make it WAG

it~

TAIL."

ARLO &amp;JANIS

SCORPIO. (Oct. 24·Nov.

22)

- •

I DOiliCARE.IFVA.IIPIRE~
AR£ HOT MAll)··:....'_.

OWW!!

I
•

.

.

I~ I' I r I I
KNODYE

SOUP TO NUTZ

oma-. PI(/

.Advertise
in this space for
$70 per month

'

be-

If you're not quite sure you understand
something, don't wing it.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) - As
an Archer, you tend to wander off at
times, but don't let this spill over Into the
protection of your valuables. Even If It Is
something small , It'll be a big loss.
CAPRICORN (Dac. 22.Jan. 19) - Keep
In mlnQ that companions might not be as
In love with vour voice or Ideas Bs you
"are; remember not to dominate conver·
aatlone.

•tnsurcd

"'Experienced
References Available!

l~e

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0Ct. 23) --:- Making a
mountain out of a molehill could Impede
your progress Instead of enhancing II. It
could turn out to be a case of your
tongue. not your toes, tripping you up. ,
Generally, you're a fast learner and a
q uid~ study, but it might be a bit difficult
for you to grasp the essence of ·an idea.

*Reaso nable Rates

For all your plumbing
&amp; heating iteeds

POII.~N

about your projection.

Local Contractor

S(11k won't drain?
Fumace woll'llighl?
CIIR d 1
I ri · ( 'mlllh

Don't think you have IQ make a killing in
order to get some of the good thtngs life
has to offer. Being both penny-wise and
pound-conscious In the year ahead can
quickly add up ro something quite signit·
lcant by year's end.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - You've
haard the saying, "Loose lips sink ships ,~
and this could be the case for you. Be
mindful of what you are saying and to
whom, or you could let something slip
out that would be hilrmtul.
PISCES (F~b. 20-March 20) - It's best
not to talk about your wonderful expecta·
tlons, especially at a socli!l gathering. An
unknown competitor might be listening
who will horn in on your good fortune.
ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 19) - There's
nothing to be gained by demeaning a
family member who Isn't going along with
your plan..In fact. all it will do Is give him
or her cause to find a way to get even
with you.
TAURUS (Aptll 2D·May 20) - Watch
what you say and hOw you say it
because If you voiCe somethirig tl'lat Is
too vindictive, It won't be easily forgonen ;
you could even lose a good friend.

CANCER (June 21-July 22) - II You find
yourself with someone who insists on
dOing all the talking for you, let this indi·
vidual know, in no uncertain terms, that
your mind is still in good working .order.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - You can take
bets that if someone is being far too
inquisitive about Y.OUr personal affairs,
that individual has ulterior motives. Make
sure that you aren't releasing more information about yourseHthan you should.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Don't act
too smart or ·be too wise about an
endeavor in whi ch you rece;ntly got,
Involved, because if It doesn't turn out as
you thought, you could be embarrassed

Roofing, Siding,
Soffit, Decks,
·Doors, Windows;
Electric, Plumbing,

VI OlD
GAM!

low to fcl'tTI four simple words.

you've always wanted.

"'

~:~~:t:~'
'2ltJ\t~lA
-~£~S*
.
.
.Ed1!1d by Cl.ll Y R.
Rearrange klnars of
0 four
scrambled ·words

'l!lrllolll\y:

GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Be eXtra
mindful about your spending habits,
because you might find It tar too easy to
shell out money foolishly. In tact, you
could even buy ltlat Brooklyn Bridge

COWandBOY

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: 'To work is to leal alive." - Tony Bennett
"You can page the singer, but not the soog.' - Herry Belalonle

Astro- .
Graph

S.turd.y, Feb. 7, 2001
By Bernice Bed• 0101

We do driveways

PUBLIC NOTICE
available lor public In·
NOTICE: Is hereby apoctlon at tha Fiscal
given that on Saturday, Officer's office In City
February 7, 2009 at lolall at237 Race Stree~
10:00 a.m., a public Middleport, Ohio 45780
sale will beheld at 211 between the hours ol9
W.
Second
St., am and 4 Pm Monday
Pomeroy, Ohio. Tho through Friday.
Farmers Bank and Sav· (2) 4, 5, .,
lnga Company Is sell·
lng lor cash In hand or - - - - - - certified check the lol·
Public Notice
lowing collateral:
2002 Mercury Sable PROBATE COURT OF
1MEFMSOU02A641787 MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
2000 Pontiac Grand IN RE: 'CHANGE OF
P
r
I
x· NAME OF Braden Eu·
1G2WJ52J1YF291437 gene Boyd .to Braden
The Farmers Bank end Eugene Hawley .
Savings
Company, Caae No. 20096003
Pomeroy, Ohio, r&amp;- NOTICE OF HEARING
serves tho right to bid ON CHANGE OF NAME
t~~~~ a1 1hls aale, end to Applicant hereby glvea
withdraw tho above notice to all Interested
collateral prior to sale. parsons and to Jamie
Further, Tho Farmers R. Boyd that the appll•
Bank ·and Savings cant has filed an Appll·
Company reserves the calion lor Change of
rlgh1 to re)ectany or an Name In the Probata
bids submitted.
Court of Melga County,
The above described Ohio, requesting the
collateral wilt be sold change ot nome of
" as ls·where Ia", with Braden Eugene Boyd
no expressed or lrn· to Braden . Eugene
plied warranty .given.
Hawley. the hearing on
For further Information, the application wilt be
or lor an appointment held on 1he 6th day of
to Inspect collateral, March, 2009, at 1:30 o'·
prior to sale date con· clock p.m., In the Protact Cyndle or_Ken at bate Court of Meigs
992·2136.
County, located ot 100
(2) 4, .5, 6
Eaat Second Street,
Courthouee, 2nd Floor,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Public Notice
Sarah Hawley .
43905 Foreat Run Rd.
The 2008 Annual Finan- Racine, Oh 45771
ctal ·Report of tho VII· (2) 6
lege of Middleport Ia

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No
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accoonts,
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Gallipolis Cateet College
is seeking paft·time in-

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own land or tamHy land have a ·Masters Degree
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Spom-

structors

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The D.illy Senlin!!l • Page 85

'

ACROSS

Stetl Fran-.t Bu.ildings

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indMdual ti ttll a vacancy ·

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2008. EOE

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BRIDGE

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Friday, February 6, 2009

www.mydailysentinel.com

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marrieD.

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Pqe 86 • The Daily Sentinel

Bonds

locker, were discussing
steroid injections. and at
one point, they lowered
their voices to a void being
fromPageBl
overheard as players.
The judge will issue a
clubhouse because Hoskins
wriuen
decision later.
wanted to prove to Bonds'
father, Bobby Bond!;, that Bonds· trial is scheduled to
begin March 2. and
his son was using steroids.
Anderson and Hoskins. lawyers estimate it last
who were near Bonds: about a month.

Roundup
fromPageBl
ers in the contest and went
14-of-21 at the free throw
line for 67 percent.
Abby Bush led the Blue
and Gold with II points .
followed by Kalab Perry
· with nine markers. HHS
was 8-of-13 at the charity
stripe for 62 percent.
BLACK KNIGHTS WIN
FIFTH STRAIGHT

SPENCER - The Point
Pleasant boys basketball
team - coming off a 12day lay-off - made the
long journey to Roane
County Thursday night
and came away with its
fifth consecutive victory
during an 81-68 decision
in non-conference action.
Tbe Black Knights (7-4)
jumped out to a 20-17
advantage after eight minutes of play, then went on
im impressive 39-25·
charge over the ne"t two
periods to establish a commanding 59-42 cushion
headed into the finale.
PPHS also led 40-31 at the
intermission.
The Raiders outscored the
Black, Red and White by a
26-22 margin in the fourth.
but the hosts never came
close to being within striking distance.
The Knights had eight
players score in the triumph, including a game-

high 25 points from Tyler
Deal. Jacob Templeton
added a double-double
effort or' 17 points and 17
rebounds, while B.J .
Lloyd finished the night
with 16 markers.
Tyson Jones just missed
a double-double of his
own, posti ng 17 rebounds
and nine points. The
guests were also 9-of- 17 at
the free throw line for 53
percent. Deal and Drake
Nolan both had a teambest six assists, while
Lloyd added a game-high
six steals.
RCHS - which hit 12
tri feC!as in the setback was led by Colter Taylor
with 18 points , followed
by Mall Brohard with 16
and Trevor Cummings
with .10. The hosts were
I 0-of-18 at the charity
stripe for 56 percent.
Point
claimed
an
evening sweep with wins
· -i'n both the junior varsity
and freshmen contests.
The JV Knights. won in
overtime by a 62-56 margin and were led by Layne
Thompson with 18 points.
The Black Knights will
return to action Saturday
when they travel to
Chapmanville
for
a·
Cardinal
Conference
matchup at 5:45 p.m.

MORE LOCAL NEWS.
MORE LOCAL FOLKS.
Subscribe today.
992-U55

•

•

www.mydailysentinel.com
.
. .

Ohio
fromPageBl
MEIGS AVENGES ATHENS

ROCKSPRJNGS - The
Meigs girls basketball team
won its third consecutive
contest - picking up its I Oth
victory of the season in the
process - during a convincmg 63-39 decision Thursday
night against visiting Athens
in a TVC Ohio rnatchup at
Larry
R.
Momson
Gymnasium .
·
. The Lady Marauders ( I().
7, 5-4 TVC Ohio) led start IQ
finish, establishin~ a 17-6 ·
advantage after etght minutes of play. Both the hosts
and the Lady Bulldogs (4-13,
4-6) matched. scores in the
second stanza, as a nine-all
stalemate made it a 29-18
contest at the intermission.
The Maroon and Gold
never .looked back from
there. outscoring the guests
34-21 in the second half including 15-9 in the third to secure the 24-point decision. With the triumph.
Meigs avenged an earlier setback to AHS in The Plains by
a 43-35 margin back on
January 8.
MHS had 10 players score
in the contest, with Catie
Wolfe leadins the charge
with a game-htgh 2.1 points.
Morgan Howard was ne"t
with 18 markers.tollowed by
Adrian Bolin with five.
Shellie Bailey and Chandra
Stanley also added · four
points each to the winning
cause.
Meigs connected on 26-of50 field !loa! atlempts for 52
percefl!, mclitding a dismal
1-of-11 from three-point
range for nine percent. The
hosts also committed · 14
turnovers and went I0-of-15
at the free throw line for .67
percent. ·
Elena Lein paced Athens
with nine markers, followed
by Jamie Sindelar with eight .
and Adriana Lein with seven.
The Green and Gold were 9-

The Meigs County Commissioners wn,uln.
like to thank everyone for all their help
the recent snow and ice storm

•

Friday, February 6, a009

ALONG THE RIVER.

.

• High school ·~
action. See Page
. ' BI .

o;oi:E'N·Ess.
HEALTH SYSTEM

www.OblenessHealthSystem.org

and still hopes to build here .
"Given the stale of the
eeonomy. AEP will not proceed on construction in the
near future, but is still verr,
interested in the project, '
Celona said. "Nothing has
changed."
AEP placed construction
plans on hold two years ago,
when the initial engineering
study .placed costs of construction at over $2 billion.
.In the meantime. commodity
costs. such as those for,building materials and fuel, have
gone down. Celona said.
"The good news is that

construction costs have
gone down," Celona said.
"but given where the econo- .
my is today. it is not feasible
to plan construction now ." ·
In July 2008. AEP Ohio
President Joe Hantrock said
the company was waiting on
results of the state's electric
utility deregulation before
moving forward on the plant.
Senate Bill 221 was s1gned
into law last year, but the legislation left questions about
whether utililles are allowed
to recover costs for construction of new generating facilities. Without cost recovery

allowances, AEP cannot
build here. Hmnrock said.
The state of West Virginia
has approved construction of
an IGCC plant in Mason
County. II would be identical
to that ·proposed for Meigs
County. Virginia. on the other
hand. denied the company's
application for construction.
due primarily to cpst recovery is&gt;ues. Celona said. ·
Originally. AEP hoped to
begin commercial operation
of the plant ne~t year. Now.
Celona said. the company
hopes to at least annoum;e
construction plans by 20 II .

Upgrade

of8so
BY

OBITUARIES

• Alice R..Saunders, 89 ·
• Richard Jay Stettler, 53
• Robert Strange Jr., 81 ·

INSIDE
I

I

• One killed in U.S. 35
accident. See Page A2
.· • Gallia, Gallipolis
proclaim heart month.
SeePageA2
• Sheriff: 1 dead from
Lake Erie ice floe.
SeePageA2
• 9og found after being
,missing for 6 months.
.SeePage AS
• Canine cop visits .
Rotary club. See Page A6
• College application
fair at Meigs Center
Tuesday. See Page A6

ELIZABETH RIGEL

EAIGEL OMYOAILYTAIBUNE.COM

Page AS
• Robert G. Ball, 69
• Robert Brown, 7a
• Lawrence Carpenter, 92
• Geraldine Craft, 75 .
• Beanore.Enevoldsen, 88
. •.Madeleine McNeely, 88
• James Mullens, 88

I

O'Bieness Memorial Hospital's Resident Physicians specialize in the
diagnosis and treatment of various hair, skin and nail conditions
and diseases for patients of all ages.

Protection Agency relating to
the status of the company's
announced plans to locate an
Integrated
Gasifictltion
Combined Cycle plant in
Lebanon Township. ·
The status, he said,
remains the same. Plans are
on hold, but the company
remains hopeful the plant
can be built here.
Plans for the project have
been..placed on hold repeatedly; due to cost recovery
issues, construction costs
and regulatory issues.
Aowever, Celona said, AEP
has not changed its plans,

on track

The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of two public hearings at the
office of the Meigs County Commissioners, Courthouse, Second Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio at a regular commissioners meeting on Thursday, February 19,2009 at 1: 15
P.M., for the purpose of providing pertinent information about the· 2009 CDBG
CHIP Program.

Locally caring for your dermatology needs.

Bv BRIAN J. REED

NEW JUDGE·SWORN lN

The Ohio Department of Development has notified Meigs County of the
availability of · funding for the 2009 CDBG/HOME Community Housing
lmprove!hent Program, under the Community Development Block Grant (CDBG)
Sni.all Cities Program , a federally funded program admini~tered by the State. Meigs
County is eligible for Fiscal Year 2009 CDBG Chip funding in the estimated
amount of $500,000.00, providing the county meets applicable requirements . .

Mick Davenport, President Meigs County Commissioners .

P: Clean coal plant on hold
POMEROY - The state
of the economy has placed
plans for a new American
Electric Power clean-coal
power plant in Meigs
C01.1nty on temporary hold,
but the company's vice
president said it is still interested in locating it here.
David Celona. AEP's vice
president of external affairs,
said Friday the company will
file reports with the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio
and the Ohio .Environmental

•

NOTICE OF CHIP FIRST PUBLIC HEARING .

Written comnients will be accepted untiii:OO P.M., February 19,2009 and may be
mailed to the Meigs County Commissioners, Meigs County Courthouse, Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
·

Hometown News for GaJJia &amp; Meigs counties

BREEDOMYDAILYSE'ITINEL.COM

This program can fund a broad range of activities, including, private owner rehab,
home repair, home ownership, rental rehabilitation, septic repair/tap in, new home
construction, homebuyer counseling. TBRA, and rehabilitation of public residential
facilities. The activities must be designed to primarily benefit low to moderate
income persons.

entiities and individuals who hel1ped
...re:sid«mts of Meigs County for their patience. ·
Thanks Again,
Mick Davenport, Tom Anderson, M;ike Bartrum

m

.

SPORTS

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

If a participant ,will need auxiliary aids (interpreter, brailled or taped materials,
assistive listening device , other) due tQ a disability, please contact Gloria Kloes,
Clerk, prior to February 19., 2009, at 740-992-2895 in order to ensure tha.t your
needs will be accommodated. The Meigs County Courthouse is handicapped
· accessible.
·
·

House of the Week:
Standing the test of time, 01

,

IEWIID
II••.• CUB

Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on February 19,2009. to make
suggestions and comments and to provide public input on various activities whic~
may be underlaken in this program.

LfviNG
.

.
Faith in God, future: St Louis Catholk Church
ulllleils new parish center, a

of-13 at the charity stripe for Federal Hocking Lady Southern couldn't slow
69 pen:ent.
Lancers Thursday night 61- down the high-velocity gait.
Athens did salvage an 24 during a home girls var- Emily Dunfee had all but
evening split with a 31-16 sity basketball contest in one of her eight points in
victory in the junior varsity Hayman gymnasium.
the round. Addttionally,
contest. Cathenne Carpinelli
The Lancers were led by Southern was playin¥ with
ku the JV winners with a Julie Vinson with 17 points, reduced forces with Lmdsey
game-high 10 points. while while Chanda Cuckler and Teaford and Courtney
the duo of Fish Jazzman and Iris Butcher each added II, Thomas having injuries and
Alaine Arnold led Meigs Emily Dunfee had eight, out for the night Southern
with four points.
Hannah McKibben six, got into early foul trouble
Katie Russell four, and two with Tucker and Taylor
OVCS FAUSTO ISJ
each from Leanna Vinson being cited and relegated to
and Vanessa Knopp.
the bench . Federal rolled to
IRONTON Despite
Southern was led by a 28-13 halftime lead.
shutting out host Ironton St. Cheyene Dunn with seven
Foul
trouble
again
Joseph in the fourth quarter, points, Emma Hunter had plagued Southern in _the .
the . Ohio Valley Christian six, Breanna Taylor four, third round. as Federal once
girls basketball team was Morgan McMillan four and again opened up the flood
unable to leave Lawrence Lynze~ Tucker three.
gates. Federal ·blitzed to a
County victorious during a
Federal Hocking has been 43-17 third quarter and 61·
40-25 non-conference set- keepin~ abreast of the top 24 fmale.
back on Thursday night
· spot ,m the Tri-Valley
Southern hit 8-31 . from
The Lady Defenders ( 1- Conference behind league the floor and 8-18 at the line
13) dropped their ninth con- leading Waterford. howev- with 24 reboun\ls (Dunn
secutive decisimi. -falling er, their fast paced game 10). 36 turnovers, 3 steals.
behind 12-2 after eight min- was slowed by · Southern's four assists (Dunn 2). and
utes of play. The Lady Flyers initial game plan. Southern 15 fouls .
(7 -9) increased their lead to slowed the ball down and
Federal Hocking hit 2327-7. at the half with a 15-5 stifled Federal's early 58 from the floor and 5-15
second quarter run. then offense. taking the Lancers at the line. Federal had 32
went on a 13-6 third quarter to a II-7 first quarter score. rebounds
(Butcher 7,
charge to take a 40-13 cushFederal Hocking came Vinson 10), 13 turnovers,
ion into the fmale. ·
out of the gate in full stride 16 steals, II assists, and 20
OVCS nearly matched in the second canto and fouls.
their point total down the
stretch, outscoring the hosts
12-0 in the founh to conclude the 15-point contest.
ISJHS also clauned a season
sweep with a 48-28 decision
back on December 19 in
For infof!llation leading to the in-rest and conviction
Gallipolis.
Andrea VanMeter led .the
of individual(s) who stole a 650 pound capacity
guests with seven points, fulgalvanized gravity deer feeder along with tree
lowed by Hali Burleson and
Jasmine Owens with si"
stands and digital scouting cameras from a property
markers apiece.
Katie
located on Stearns and Bentz Cemetery road -in
Hacker led St. Joe's with a
game-high 15 points, folOrange township, Meigs Co., Ohio Thanksgiving
lowed by Michelle Staton
with 13.
week and on a second occasion between January
18th to t11e 24th. those with infonnation please call:
FED HOCK HANDLES 'DOES,
(304) 372-7004 or (304) 532-7965. Your identity
RACINE;
The
Southern Tornadoes fell to · will remain confidential and be protected. ·

.
Kevin Kelly/photo
Gaflia County Common"Rleas Judge D. -Dean Evans, left, administered the oath of office to the new judge of Gallia's probate-juvenile division, ThofTiaS S. Moulton Jr.. who commences a six-year term on the bench. Moulton, who was elected
without opposition in Noll8mber, was applauded by fl!mily and well-wishers after the Friday swearing-in ceremony.
Moulton's ·father, Thomas Sr.. served on lhe probate-juvenile bench from 1979 to 2003.

Bv

KEVIN KELLY

GALLIPOLIS - Gallia
County
Commissioners
were presented with the
fmalized agreement for the
Southern Ohio Agric.ultural .
Community Development
Foundation State Route 850
Upgrade Project during their
·regular Thursday meeting .
The agreement gives the
county the-authority to write .
·a check to the Ohio
Department
.of
Transportation (ODOT) for
$100.000 in SOACDF grant
funds, which will in tum
leave ODOT responsible for
e"pending the funds for
easement acquisitions needed for this project.
.Plans include upgrading
Ohio 850 from the U.S.
35/0hio · interchange to
Denney Cemetery Road, a
length of 1.4 miles. and
widening 850 to include tum
lanes · into the Dan Evans
Industrial Park and the Bob
Evans Sausage f'lant located
off of Ken· Road on Green
Vall~y Drive. adjacent to the
industrial park.
·
The SOAC DF grant funding will serve as the county's 20 percent local .match
required by $500.000 in ·
Appalachian
Regional

' ..

Please see Upgrade, Al

VINTON
Vinton
,. .
Baptist Church members
'~-~
..
~
' ~·
'
,' ~·: . .
have a long-range ~oal for
the old North Galha High
School building to expand
their outreach to the community.
The bui !ding and the 46
acres on which it's located
were recently purchased by
the church to supplement
and add on to the. services it
provides, which extend to
daycare and changing oil in
automobiles.
Eventually, the church
plans to house a rehabilitation center for recovered
substance abuse addicts, but .
right now, everything is
"very preliminary," said the
Re'v. Chester Hess, Vinton
Baptist's lead pastor.
. .
4 SECI10NS- 24 PAGES
"We looked at it several
A3 years ago when we were
Around To~
planninl,l to build here,"
Kevin Kotlylpholo
C4 Hess satd, referring to the
Celebrations
church thai opened in The old North Gallia High School may have a renewed purpose if nearby Vinton Baptist
Classifieds
D3-5 August 2003 on Ohio 160, .Churc;h can transform the structure into a community outreach center, a proposal current·
insert replacing the old Vinton . ly under study by a church committee.
.Comics
B!!ptist on North M~in
Editorials
A4 Street that had e~isted si nee Cheshire . The building was outreuch to the community." mer bus garage will serve
its oil changing service for
cs the late 1920s . "It didn't sold and sporadically used he said.
Movies
One goal is to use the those in need.
work out then , but we felt over the years, b.ut has been
As now was the time to take the unoccupied for some time. property to aid the housing
Obituaries
The church also operates
A committee of about 20 needs of the elderly. a step a successful
next step."
d~~:Ycare.
Sports
B Section
The former NGHS is church members. some the church has already taken Guarding Angels. us well as
A6 across 160 from the church. well-versed in construction. by affiliating with Habitat ti food bank. Hess said that a
·weather
Opened in .195 7 , it closed in is studying the building to for Humanity . If the old · major initiative, which he
© aoo9 Ohio Valley Publlohlns eo.
1992 when all four of Gallia see if the whole structure or gymnasium can be used. added would be "down the
County Local Schools' high . portions can be remodeled Hess envisions part of the road," is a 24/7 rehab center
schools were at the time and used, Hess said.
Saturday night youth activi consolidated into River
"Eventually, the whole ty called SLAM being for -people in the community
• Valley High School at complex is to be used as an moved there, while the forPlease see Building. A:Z

Pomeroy
inspection
fees up

MOTNEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUN!'.COM

.:

WEATIIER

INDEX

'

,.,._,

.;

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY -Collection
or Pomeroy's rental inspection fees are up. according
to Kath y Hysell. village
ckrk-treasurer.
On Friday. Hysell said
$1 .430 hlls heen co llected in
rent.a\ inspection fees this
year. which is up in comparbon to the $ 1 .200 that was
taken in all or last year.
"People arc responding."
Hvscll saiu. "I wrote out
t\VO receipts toduy."
The deadline to pay the
rental inspection fee was
Feb. I and those who fuil to
wn1ply may i'ai:e a citation
in Pomcrny Mayor's Court.
The
Pomeroy Police
Depurtment oversees the ·
inspc·.:tion process of nearly
.100 units . Chief. Mark E.
Proftltl said fines for noncompliatKc would be issued
to those who haven 't paid
the fcc lo he fair, to those
who haw paid the fees.
The permit fee is $25 per
propert y. or . ir there .are

Please see Inspection. Al

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