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I

Pw B8 • The Daily Seutitd

. 'l1ua

www~finrlaam

More seeking shelter
from eaJnomy
in discounters, A8

Warren outlasts Blue Devils for third in SEOAL
vidod the evmtual gamewinning beroics with a twoRBI single - whim gave
VINCENT - A tbme-,run the hosts a 6-5 edge through
sixlb inniug allowed host six coillplete.
.
Warren to nlly back from a
WHS
staner l&gt;aniel
S-3 deficit and claim thinl- Wagner - wbo ~ the

ecc

ovecall in the
ubt.astero Obio Atblelic
League with a 6-5 victory
over
visiting
Gallia
Academy on Wednesday
during tbe SEOAL Day of

·

Ownvions.
TheWarriors (16-7) led 30 tbroiWl ooe full flame,
bul the Blue Devils (13-9)
rallied with five consecutive
runs over their next four
innings at tbe plate to take a
5-3 advantage after five
complete. GAHS scored
onoe in the second, twice in
the fOUJ1h and added two
more in the fifth to establish
their only lead of the nig!tt
Warren pulled to widrio
one (5-4) m the bottom of
tbe sixth, then with two on
and two out TYler Spence
came to the plate .and pro-

distance for the winning
decision - shut down the
Devils ·in the seventh, ~
serving the one-run decision
and allowing die hosts to
walk away with thinl.place
in tbe SEOAL Wagner surreud'ered four hits and a
walk over seven fuunes
while f.anoiog five for the
victors.
Gallia Academy starter
Nicll Stevens took the
tough-luck loss, allowing
nine ruts and six walks ov«
six innings while striking
out three. The guests had
one etror in !lie contest, .
while Warren bad four field·
ing miscnes. ·
The hosts jumped out to a tri\unpl;t. . .
three-runrusbion in the botOther SEOAL Day of
tom of tbe first wben Jeremy Champions results included::
MII!PhY belted a lbree-ruo Jackson defeated Zanesville

Southern

s

WP -

_

-

POMEROY

Coosuuaion QD new paveIDCllt as well as pani.al roail
aligmnent oear the new
· Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge
, !I)O!st!lwllicm wdl begin on
Mooilay.
AOOOI'ding to the Ohio
Depattment
·
of
Tl:llll&amp;pmtation -this wod::

1.: ~ ~ ·.·, .•
r.

,. ,,

! '

Apparent
dmwning
stiDanopen
· r•gation
mves

OBnuARIHS
.. . . A3
.•James C. Cine, 74
•MJI.,IIIiibotleu, 83

INsiDE
• 4dia Col.ncil pi
~

TODAY'S

_lP - I..ogue.

Tdling

F? •
Aupero111cs
AI seed

Jlt .... 5INet. c ..I . ,

.S eeft!F..U
:-. A Hl.llgert:'« More.

.seer...u

INGROIJND6
ABOVE em£

Llfe(A.
IIJ
Aa•tt't4cJ
. ._.a cl!rielm ace

052
19 13 1

WP- Ccmmlno; lP- Embrey.

435'1. Sr t'O"d A'ftiUie

and students at Southern
Elemetitary have been busy

BY BIIM J. REED
BREEDOMVDAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY
- Meigs
County
Commissioners
approved
a
contract
Thursday with the Ohio
P-ublic Defender's Office
that reflects a slight decrease
in cost to the county.
Michael Westfall of the
OPD's multi-county office,
based in Athens, presented
a contract to provide indi·
gent representation for
criminal defendants. The
county has operated under a
comract with the state pubHe defender since 1991, .
using local attorneys in
most cases who are paid by
the public defender's office.
In ·aome cases, such as
those pre&amp;etlting conflicts,
Westfall lakes the cases.
The contract commissioners II{'PI'OVed at their regular
meetrng yesterday calls for
a total contract amount of
$$60,924, $460 less . than
last year's contract. It is the
first year since 1994 that the
county' will see. a reduction
in the cost.
Westfall said tlie savings
is the result of a ·number of
factors .
The
Ohio
Legislature ·has passed a
new law which sets aside
court costs in DUI cases for
reimbursement of public
defender fees . The office
alro had a $1,100 ca11)10ver
from the last contract with
Meigs County; Westfall
said, and there has been a
slight decrease in the caseload here over past years.
The county's sbare of the
contract has been rel:luced
from 75 percent to 73, and
the state's has been

for moms across Meigs ·County
making gifts for Moltler's Da~.
Pictured are Austin ROOsh, 11,
Zac laudermilt, 10 and Deven
James, 7, holding handmade
bouquets for their moms Elsie,
lon5lta .and Jennifer, respectively. ~lso pictu1l!d ale secotld
and third fl' aders who planted
'lllllrigolds, wrcte messages of
thanks and Cl9llted cards "to

t!Onor their mutt oets on Sunday.
iU I
- . •.

ICiyaoa Lewis, 2, is
• r iCiil eo hawe dwwued m
. , (lliD liwr'
·Mdl U;

-

..... 2

~:;.;::,;;::;--:.;:
-

llmDJ b~ iiliiliDI

·'

'•

_'I ,""\',

from 1be flmily's e ' " ..
011 Soulll Ftoat SaM Her
&amp;lba:, ........, l'CIIQI'teddiHjj
anlP .t o lic police
dcplnmalt It .8:36 p.m.,
appnaimMdy 30 minutes
~ 1ibe was firstdiloowmt
milifiing fmm the bome.
~ officers, m lkpmtmatt volunteeD and neighbors assisted in I search of
dJe rivt.t batik ad neigbhnrbood, and found dJe child in
dJe lliV« at 9106 .p.m. CPR • L."";.,-_,.
was administered at the
ficale and 1bc chikl was taken
to Pleesam Valley Hospital
where sbe was
dead at 1 a.m. on Friday.
While Lewis's death has
been called a drowniJ1g,
Swift said liD Ultimate delcrmination cannot be made

~

"

(740) 446-761'9

program, noting however
that the "()o your Best on
the Test" tutoring is separate
RACINE - Test scores from the 21 st Century after
of Southern students who school program.
·
participated in the "Do Your
"We have some stability
Best on tbe Test" tutoring once
again . here
at ..._.
program was proof of ·fbe -· SOuthern." sa:ld Wolfe. "Mr.
'
value of the intervention .(Tony) Deem,.the board. and
'program, according to the administrntion fully supPrincipal Shawn Bush and port programs such as the
Federal Programs D~r "Do Your Best on the Test"
Scott Wolfe.
tutoring. We woo 't stop
The program was beld working hard until we know ·
four days a week from thai our students are
March 31-April 24 for 3rd absolutely getting the best
through 8th grades w1th 94 •education. Then we will
students particip_atiog. The work harder to stay there."
program was gtven .1:J1gh
The tutoring was intense
success rai!Dgs by Bush and and contained a review of
Wolfe who said they "high: · state standards covered earlily reco~DD:~eoded ~tude~ts to er in the year. lt also built
attend this tulonng mter· upon skills that are learned in
vention program to he~p the regulll£ classroom. After.
them pass the state test this school lessons were based on
~ool year."
, past tests, involved test-tak·
It was a ~~ge ~uccess,
ing skiUs, critical thinking
noted Bush .. Our students skills. and lessons that
wmted ~ard m the program ·involved writing prompts .
~d I think our,. test scores
On test questions that
require an explanation, stu·
will reflect ~t.
. Wolfe exp~ that bus- dents were taught to
mg was provided lhrougb
·
the 21st CentuJy after scbool PI
I - SIA a. AI

. 175 wat u-. sanet

INDEX
Aimie's
Mailbox
A2
.
.
Calendars
A2
Cassifieds
Bs-6

' RAiiEI.tT'S

ore:.

Yolll' AMI's #1 Floor
Coveriltg Ihtzkr!

Comics

Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
As-7
Kovies
A3
.
NASCAR
83
'
Obituaries
A3
8 Section
~
A2
Weather

Stlawc.rpotiiiiii..._C I

Rnidi!Dtlai •

c-merc:w •

Wha'rs•lr • Rdall

•
01'7 SWe --~"
Gd'r ",&lt;*o
;-·ONo
..._,.,
..... "1

...... ...
1·----.l'wD

'e:triea ,

-.

87

11 ,,. '" 1111

EastemRigh
Sc:hool-studetlti
· and meuiMsd
the oommunily
doiiiiW blood
and blood prod-

ucts at an
American Red

em.

Bloodmobile visit
at the school
Thursday. The
blood
held .
in the school

drive:

gymnasium, -

iipOi tBOred by
lhe FI tatn

Student Council.
11r11n J. AuWpl ala

&gt;

•

a
c

.

\

&gt; •

'

Usact.AS

Southern students
complete tutoring program
NEWSOMYDAILYSENTINEL:COM

\ • Sllcnotni- •• · -

MQ I OVTI&amp;T,

I 1-C

STAR'-AEPORT

ATHENS

,•

1bursday with a road game
at Trimble. Stan time for .
ibe TVC Hocking contest
~ill be 5 p.m.
·
-

MIDDlEPORT -The
MiddlepOrt .
(&gt;{)lice
Department ronsidcrs tbe.
' m~on into an :apparent drownillg &gt;OpeD while
awaiting a medical examjn«'s ·repllllt.
Police Chief Bruce Swift
said .an aul0pSy ~from
Kanawha County, W.Va. has
DClll yet been reoeived, ad
IIDiiJ it is, 1be meUrr will
mnNnllllder ~

594-3571

errors. "
.
: Eastern is back in action

-

This Sunday is a special day

Bloodmobile visits EHS

riwnif • • '' 5' "
~

· Miller finished with five
bits, three of which came in
!fie third . inning, and two

3X

M.A. ·&lt;:x:DA
Owner it
Audiologist

'JNSTALUNG

ooe eJI!l)f.

00

fl8

is made
said
toxirology tests pr.lfiJfllled
as part of the autopsy routinely tiE six to ei&amp;Jlt weeks
to ~· and until they
- RICC!ved, be will not C011sider the uiatter closed.

Diane McVey

NOW

Collins plaJ..~ the flex posiJioin for ·
tern, covering
first base and not batting.
: Cleland finished wi'th two
hits, two RBis, and two
walks, and Carnahan went
i-for·2 with a double, two
RBis, and two walks.
: The Lady Eagles had f3
hits total and committed just

-1·.-·

lv'l O M

avai~

RBI, llld Bland bad a single
to go with bet ilome run.

000

t]{orwn ·

8Y BN•II ,J. REED

untilthefull

The four seniors who batted combined for six ltits
ind eillht RB Is.
Davts finished with a hit
and four RBis, while
Hauber had a hit. two RBb,
and a wallt. Holttt went 2far-3 witb a -dou!Jle and 111

0(15)1

PD ·contract·
provides for ·
cost decrease

pt-•maon

madetoo~edlid

.

MHS

• AlDIIilgn
........;,iage.....,

7tl ... . . .,

ly changed allowing con- side begins to take shape.
slructiion worlcers to .work The road beneath the new
in · mu•lti:p!e l0CIItions. A1 bridge wiU be for through
some pomt motorists will traffiC towards Middleport
alNO be driving ·on at least and/or Pomeroy v.itile the
some of the new pavement road against the retaining
before the entire project is wall will be for .those wish·
ing ro cross the bridge.
finished.
Filson said the retaining
Filson saitl the seoond
phase of the approach work wan is almost finisbeil
won't happen for at least with a clear finish remainanother month when new ing to be applied to the
roail alignment on the Ohio concrete walL

IIREEDOtMli.ILVSEN1'1NEL.COM

. rfla:

~····

....

EHS

· aclvlties See , . . Al
• Dol ApaSt tlOlldcJis
ma• See,.Al
s.uday. See . . ..U
• Ca• n ohle d1
iUIIc'
for mill
dlagmed .,....,
auiser. See Plwe A3
~ Good news. bad
news. See . . A5
• Mclaren .ns
duthes IB t11011e
beyord charily.
,See PJFAS

f ......... , . , ,
CPAP" till u

game.

fB

• Jl ... UAlY8rlly

NUIIBERIS:

1365

ln the ~ .alone,
Eastern gOl hits from Bland,
Davis, Hauber, Rawson,
Holter,
and freshman
Jessica Cleland, as well as ·
walks from Cummins,
Cleland, Hauber, Bland, and
freshmen Britney MmriSOJ:I;
and Megan Carnahan All
but Cummins, Rawson. and
Monison !iOO!'ed twice.
In the thiro, Cummins led
off with a single and scored
the Lady Eagles' 16th run
when Davis drove her in
two batters later.
· Holter and
Rawson
opened ·the fourth with
back-to-back
doubles.
Rawson's shot to center
scored Holter for her sixth
RBI. Bland also had a single, and Carnahan had a
two-RBI double that sent
Bland and Morrison home
for runs l8 and 19.
After Collins made the
first out of the fiftb by hef.t'
self, Cummins had back -toback shutouts to end the

will be_gin near tbe Save-~­ lliBn workers and their
LAll StiR :a1oog West Main equipment to progress with
Street &lt;md at the interfiec- ~e .appt'oaches on both
llioo of Ohio 833 and W.V.a. sides of the Ohio River.
According to Stephanie
62 on die \Vetil Vuginia
side. DuriJig this ~ of Filson, ODOT's public
-~on, cxistmg traf. infOillllltion officer fm disfie Ilanes will l!e ~ but trict ~(), this proJect will ~o
with a !~foot width ;restJic- through many phases while
OOn ~ may :alfect wide- keeping lanes of traffic
IWIII "drieles. The width open in the area. In crder to
n:Siri.ction is t0 aNow keep .traffic flowing, traffic
~ room for .o onstruc· patterns may be periodical-

it

Gne3.Seer.at

·Soemum11,8lilpi'8J
020 001 HS
203 503

'

Pavement, ·alignment ~of new .roads set

• ~ Homets bailie

P.l AY COVERALL BINGO

gle to reach the I0-run
mercy at 13-3.
.
Taylor led Soutbem hitting with anolhor perfect 3lni8bt with a home run and
four RB~. Marnhout,
Manuel aDd Klesld each
had singles. ·
Belpre
b.i~rs
we~e
Markie Tate with a siJigle
and Jared Azar with two
singles and a double.
Man11el was the winning
pitcber for Southern with
one strikeout and three
walks. Ryan Cbapman
came on to clean-up in the
Belpre sixth. Jolin Logue
suffered )he loss for Belpre
with help from Wadeker
. and Walkef. Together they
fanned four strikeouts and
six walks.
Southern is idle Thursday,
then hosts Wellston on
Friday.

rough up
Cavs for 2-o lead, Bt

.

WIN UP TO $1,000 ! !!

rnmPageBI

B

bonw:r, but the Devils quickIy teSpOIIded in the ~
whm Dave Rumley hit his
first bona of the season a solo sbol - to out the
deficit to 3-1.
.
The soore remained lbat
way until the top of the
fowth, when a two-RBI
double by Shawn 1bompsoo
allowed · both Stevens and
Beau Whaley to &lt;OIRe plateward fur a dJree,all oontest
Stevens gave GAHS its ODiy
lead ooe inning later with :a
two-out, two-IUU bomer making it a 5-3 contest
through five compiete.
Stevens had two hits and
two RBis to lead the visiting
offense, while . Thompson
and Rumley each provided
one safety. ThoDIJlSOII bad
twoRBlsandRum1eydmve
in one.
Nine diffeROt players had
a bit eaoh for Warren in the

Celti~

"

•

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i

"

'

•

. .
~

'
)

•

•• •

•

f,

~

.,t

�. Set yourselffree ·
from freeloading son
AND MAReT SliGAR

:.,;;1;...,

~nSw=•~

'!lJ

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

me fmm aoq~ces who

de~"l lmo~ my bistoty by
I rod my ;goU~g hdund my back t0
lftSCliJI husband, "'Tom,~ Jl ask them oot 10 offer me
few months ~r my · aloohol_ ~use r~ . an
div(U'ce, and he •s everydling alooholi':. Thts feels like :II!'
I ever dreamed of in a bus- · ·e xtreme mvaSJOO of_my pnbmd. Right IOOW, we live 00 vacy. It .also undemuDC'i my
miles .apart because of our aulbo!iity :over the problem
jabs. lbm will retire next and establishes a negative
year .and wants to live first impression dtat is rom..taere I am, but be 'll med p]etely unw:arrmted. Sarah
to sell bis house. The probs msa,grees, sayin~ sbe is sim-Ian is his 21 -year'Old ·soo., J)ly iUying to bolp me avoid
'Orip.,~ Who -lives wi1b bim. unpleasantness. I say llhere
Oiip \lives in .dle base-- is .a reason why i.t is ailed
meot, which ~odks like a Aloobolics ~Anoncus."
~sty. He doesn't wmt., has Yoor 1hoogbts7 - • · - sly
trcquem parties Jllld ttasbes S J11 u
lhe bouse -on w.eekends
Dear PI dly Soohu.men we aren' I there. He Sarah is ·dispLayin:,g pasadmits he does drugs, which sive-.aggressive behli'Vior.
makes it .bard to get a job Under 1be gnise ef 4iieodhocanse -of 1he drug rests. I ship,~ she is actually trying
would throw Chip out and to embarrass you. She
change lite locks.. but Tom enjoys the fact that you
can' t 1ieei11 to go the teugb don't tike it Tell her to stop
lave route.
i]!11!11"Aiately. ·
I refuse to stay in Tom' s
De. AIPiie: I read the
boose because I'm afurid of !crier tlrom "Thumbelina,"
Chip. The ]Qd ibas .an anger who lest .4() peuods and was
probleiD. and he shows no having a problem with her
respect for his father:. Tom appearance.
actual!~ ~ps ·witb his bedI lost over 100 pounds
rnmn door locked .and .a big and :have kept .it ·o ff for siK
board up against iL
·years. I. too, expected lots
Tom says he's afraid if be of positives for the "new"
ticks Chip out of the bouse, me.. Wbat I got instead was
be will demolish the place jealousy and suspicion.
· before be goes. ·I lave my Women wh0 were once my
husband, but feel so hepe- friends wanted nothing to
less. Tom is only 58, but has do with me. My in-laws
high blood pressure. I wony theught I was gaing to
all rth.is stress will kill him. have an affair.
How can I help?. I have sagging skin, but I
W411'1'ied Wd'e
use weights to tone up. I
Dar Wtfe: Tom shonld have a hard time looking in
inform Chip that l:te' s the mirtor, but my husband
putting the bause on !J:be lleeps telling me ·bm,_beans
Dllldret within the year. He tiful I :am. l'·d like to tell
can then make it clear that if Thumhelina to keep focusOrip trashes it, it will lower ing oo dJe wonderful bealth
the selling price, which · benefit of 'h er weight loss.
means less money for Chip As far as I know, saggy
in the long run, since we skin doesn' t cause heart
assume Dad will oontinue to attacks or strokes. - Ileal
help support · him. Chip '~'~left., Fdt Like 'l1ult ill
might have enoogh sense to ·N urill
respond to that, but even if
De. Nwdl D • • · It
he doesn't, a lower ·selling tOok a lot ef hard ·w mt to
price is · better than none. p wbr&lt;~ you ,1 £ today.
Tom needs to set himself CongnluJations on lr«pinJl
free, and his SGD needs to a positive attirude. ·
grow up. All you can do is · ~\ " • u ; is llrit"
-enoourage them both.
a ~ K l'!i llijl! t • De. Anz'r: I will celo- ft' g s.a-; lo4r' ,.,.,
brate .my nintll year · of fan ef tie. A- I ·dm
sobriety - ·next
month. ...t.=· ft r e
1,..,
Mit:aculously, .' do not have
~
the urge to drink, nor am I
.,. .n.t
unoomfortable around pros to: A.tulk'r " W r, 1!0.
pie who do. When placed in Bu 111191, a+ ga;, 1£
the position of ha\iog to fllffL Je jiM ,.. rdut~e a glass, I do so bY 8Mt AliiUe 'f Mribx,
firmly stating that I do n01 . - ,_., , a . , .._.
drink.. I don't feel the need 0 r t • Sy 5 t ttriters
to elaborate.
, .M
·m, 1isit t»
11te problem is my friend
S.r'i
Wet
"Sarah.~ She feels it is her ,.e c
r 1

De. A

1

:

D•l••

J::':'.. :;•mriL

"'*'
c:r-r.n

-.a

•z c•

.cent.

Friday ~t Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
dumce of showers. Lows in
me lower 50s. North winds
5 to 10 mph.
Saturday-.Part! y sunny
with a 30 peroeot chance of
·Showers. Highs around 70.
North winds around 5 mph.
Saturday aipt. ..Partly
cloudy
in
the
evening ... Then becoming
mostly cloudy. Lows in the
tUppel' 40s.

·

. SP..,..y_s~owers likely
1
I

TownlAU,p Trustees will
meet 7 p.tJ. at i!he town ball
SYRAOJSE _ s~
Omunuoity CWrter Boatd '
of D.immn, 7/ p.m. ,at lhe
Omn1111nity Center.
POMEROY Meigs
C»unty &amp;ard of BeotiuDs,
regular """"iing 8:3Cl a .m.
'

,...__....

Qurdtenu&amp;

and

'-AUlD

I

. s.ta~May ••
POMERO -Christian

M0t0rcyde A-ssooiatiicm, ·
"Deeiveredn Oblq:Jter, m_gus
lar meeting, 5 p..ll't..,
Common Gr-ounds, new
members wcloome.

I'll day, May ll
POMEROY Meigs

S'

County R:epubliam P.aitty,
7:30 p .m. 'Meigs County

u

6;:, llay It ·

. ·.P.\RKEX.SBLJit w.v~.
POMEROY Jerri -Ndfie !AumilW -..iill.celo.b'lr:r field representative •••* b:r. . hidMay OJi
, ;, ~

'11

US. R-ep. Oharlie )by 10. Cards may be SCiit
Wilson, I),Bridgepmt,, will 110• -4002 ' ~s St~
bold office :hours from -4-16 p.m.odwo.b W.~

fm-

Cowdlout~e.

POMEROY -Big Bend
Farm Antiques &lt;Jiu'b, 7:30

Lydia Cot1ncil plans activities POMEROY -

A dooation toward new wind0ws iiO
be installed in me cbnrdl
later Ulis year -11118de iby
the Lydia Council of die
BradfOJid Omrob of OJrist
during :a Tecent meet:iqg.
Plans were completed fur
the Ladies Qay banquet 110
be held at noon Saturday at
l!he Bradford Cburcb of
Christ using ilhe liheme
"~earts Quilled together
with Love.~ Reports were
given on . 1be mentMing
progr,am for .yauih, the
recent re'llival, :and mission
projects,
idong
wi:th
progress on Dllily Vacation
Bible SChool to be held
June l6--.19..
Sherry Shamblin said
Bible school plans are moviog fuFwani .ootitlg lhat all
the ,teaChers are lined up.
Deoor.atioos are needed .and

es IJICDCd ilhe JTICY!!ing wifh
Shamblin giving pr.ayer.
Officers' 11epmts were
given. Thank you .cm:ds
were .read, and it was decid-ed woo weuld 8et sun~ne
P.fts i!his month. A VJSttGrs
lfist was -ruculated 111 was
ooted that illO meals are
. needed at :this time for
Shutins.
Carolyn Nir:bolson .and
Sbcny Smith were the ib~stesses for the May -~1bey had .an Hawamm
Atoba i!heme set up With
Hawaiian sllliCk:s mil .deoo!Cations. T hey greeted
everyone ll1 1he door ·and
pUt Leis aroond evecyone• s
,q ed. Shamblin displayed a
dress :arul man's shirt that
she and her h_usband :~
made iforthemm Haw.an m
1967 ~n tibey were •there
for a mp ;and ta1ked some

meiUlws ¥RK ;asbld 110 ~
suggestions. ~ will 1Je a
VDS mcetiq ~
later in
QMn•l•. ·
AS for !De mcnllJJin.g pit-;grJI!Il for yoolh, Mw1ii!C
Painter .and J.aoe Uyidlllad
a iesson oo llc;&gt;memade _..
illes for 1he yootb llri1h 'SOllie
adUlts takiin;g palt in me
class. 1he next m +•i:!g
clllss will take plaoe in Juty.
. R:evi.,.al ~ lridl

me

~eHall~~lllel'vice!; -weot we1l, d _ ,
rcpm'ICd, with 'jl""i•l omsk
before tbe !ICIPJices lheiD,g
pre!iCiltCd by nub
Qf
di1Ielieot dw• '~~'""'
.
As for die QliJo •loa .of

•s

jars d' _p:lllll ~ 10 ibe
,sem m Hlili, tbe dmre ~
been e•" W 1t0 ~ 18m

andiJI!Uomadl.dlepof
300 jars.
.
Prayer reQUClStS and pl111r
1

'Marshall co I I

II '

about dlcir vi-sit , ldtere.
· Carolyn II'Clld Geae!i1s I:J6
and alw lbad :a llelilmg
aboat N~ &amp;odcwcll. ,
Stuun.blin ~ some
health _infOI'Illllb.oo oo lbeart
oond.itlans .and the 'Sl,gl!S (}f
problems. ~ shared Slime
0f !her ea:pmenoe _of ilhrt;i:
years .ago, ;JUJd 1illid :sbe 'IS
glad . sbe paui at:tenlltoo to
the s1gns..
.
Atten:l the , meetmg
were 8
Bolin, D1ana
Maxwe'll; 8edky Ambetger,
Jane Hy~ ~yll1s Baker,
Jan
Hendricks, Cheri
WilliamSI!n,
Sherry
Shambln,
Charlotte
Hanning, N.eva Oluqnnan,
IBrittllny Celli!'li, biane
M:il1inln, Madelme P.amter,
Gerr_r l:..ighlfMt, Nancy
Moms, ~d . hestesses,
Carolyn J'liChol~n and
Sbemy Snuth.

ncement Sato••l•y

HIJN11NG'OON, W. V.a. rcoci~ .ascorilre d! g1 es.
- More thaa 2,., !ii:Qdents
Ala qudenrs t:q'«tCld to
will grwtnare ~ Marsball grad!JI!e wOh 4JO ;gnde
Univen;jty 1011 Saturday, · point a¥erages are :Aiy1iSII
May m when the university ~e brille of (':q~J]i,pofis
cele'bmtes its I 71 st oom- and I tFtta Rae 8rillhll1t of
llleiiCeiiiCtll at the Big Sandy Point Ple.asant, W.Va.
Supcnt~![e Arena. The ccm-- · In .all, 591 mJ«btts will
mony hegins -at 9 a.m.
graduate wid! honors. N"me:y
The total of2,fl22 Andc:nts will gnvlnate
wm
receiving degrees includes laude (3.85 to 4.0 GPA), 177
l ,529 undergraduates, 946 magna cum laude (3.-6 m
graduales, 43 from me 3.84 GPA), .and .306 ann
School ofMedicine.and1'1M laude (3.3 ro3.59GPA).OIIC

stMern JICCeiving an associ· she will receive &lt;COOgillllllaa degrrr will graduate with tians and .a scmll from the
bighbooors, 1IIld 17 asoociate Marshall
Mumni
degme recipiciits -will gradu' Associatien. Any\'lne who
ate 1li.ith hon!'lrs.
bas earned a rdc:grce since
Continuing a practice that July 2007 IIII8Y Jllll'icipate in
began in 2()(i)(i, each commencement.
. .
· Mamba~~ :graduate attendiqg
Marshall also will recog-oonm enorment 'Will be t:eCs nire its gradualing · ibonor
.ogoired during lhe remmo- students
dutin;g comoy. Eiach graduate :will walk: mel)cement.
to tbe area in front of lhe
!ltage, 'Where his or her name
willibe:announced and be or

"''DDI'III

OOMEROY
Past noted and refreshments
Councilor' s Club of Chester were Serv-ed by Jean Welsh
with a -c:bance of :thunder- council 323, Daughters of and Mary Jo Blllliillger.
sttlml!i. Highs in the upper America, met recently :at &gt;the ·! ]ames were. conducted by
{i(k. &lt;Jhance of rain 70 perhall with Julie Fleming pre- Opal Hollon and Dl:.wodly
cent.
Myers.
S fay z'g.,. Mostly siding.
Attending were Eslher
Scripture
reading,
the
cloody -with showers likely.
Lord's
·
P
rayer,
and
pledge
to
Smith,
Gary
Halter,
Lows in the upper 40s.
Chance of rain 60 percent. . the flag opened the meeting. Charlotte Grant, Julie·
M f y-Mostly cloudy For roll call members com- Aeming, Jo Aon Ritchie,
with a 40 pe:tcent chance of mented on SOJIICthing April Goldie Fredoricik, Mary K.
showers. Highs in the upper showers bring. The spring Holier, Dorotby Myers,
rally held Saturday was Jean Welsh, Rutb Smith,
60s.
Moaday Diglrt....Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s.
tuesday aDd 'IUesday
z'g' ' Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 7Gs. Lows
around 50.
We.Snesday ••• Partly
sunny with a 30 percent
.chance of showers. Highs in

Opal Hol'lon, Thelma
White, Doris Gruescir, Laura
MliCl Nice, Opal Eichinger,
Mary Jo. Barringer, and a
visiror, Sandy White.

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it 's not clear if be was alive
or already dead when
l.ronton . police Officer
Ridh.ard Fouts' cnriser drove
over &lt;the man on a ·snowcovered streel and dragged
him for about a tuilf mile.
Fouts said be dido't realize

respond fully and in-depth,
and to make sure the_y are
answering "what the question is as1dng." The main
focus of the tutoring was
constructed around .p assing
the Ohio Achievement Test.
A portion of the program
was used for Study lsland, a
program made up of past
()AT';; 1ests.
Before the students If:ft
for home on the last week of
tutoring, pep rallies were
held and spc:cial .guests
made presentations. Special
recognition as given "Mr.
Quadrilateral, (Alan Crisp)

· • KACINE- 'The A1bens Meigs ESC Pre School at ·
Elemeot.a!y will lbe having another registration
b DCl'lit ·Jidlodl year &lt;011 May 27, at the elementary building
-l jdwcco 6c bours,d9 a.m. ilO 3 p .m. You must make_ an
lli'JlOiuiDklUt for me tKJremiog by calling the followmg
'SIIbiiiltl&amp;d -pllailo
numbr:r. H you ;m, ~interested or 'have any questiotis, please Alan Crisp and his "Quadrilateral Kids•teamEfd up 1o tack·
oonlal:llkfi_y Niooilr:mus :at 992-1740.
1e many different kinds of math problems found on 1he OAT
· Also, pe-adtool tmd pc-K resource bags are available at (Ohio Achievement Test) .
die Sou1bem Local ,pamnt«somce center, ar by calling
V:iclci NGidJ+:It949 4222 En. U25.
• Opened bids for a
..,.d
bridge Teplacement project
•:wf•MDJC~
to be completed through
the
county
highway
fromPageAl
POMERO" -The Meigs County Health ~partmenl
department.
will bald .a cltildhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
Present
_
were
. ~ l-3 p .m. on l'ue&amp;day.
increased from 25 to 27 per· Commissioners
Mick:
cent, Westfall said. The con- Davenport and Jim Sheets
tract in the , past has also and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
included a clause providing
for
a $910 ' charge for
·1UPPE.Rs PLAINS - . Eastenn High School's prom
appeals
cases, but that
queen, Heaven Westfall, is idle daughter of Roger and Sheila
Westfall of Reedsville. iJ1he prom king, Kyle Gordon, js the· clause was eliminated from
the new contract, and counson of ·Rodney and Debbie Gordon ofCoolville.
sel · required for appeals
cases will be assigned as
·needed.
Commissioners also: .
. POMEROY. Me~gs,COIIJlty Oog W!!£tlen Tom Proffitt
· • Approvecl a
liquor
llllll01lnced sunuoet twurs atdte dog shelter at Rocksprmgs. license transfer' !Tom J.D.
1be shelter will be open'for adoptions from 8:30to II a.m., Drilling Co., Pomeroy, to
Monday through Saturday, and 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. on Twin Oaks Store. LLC.
(fuesday and Thursday.
Pomeroy.
in
Chester
Township.

"'udlem

.

Contract

di .

and to Southern E lementary
math
coach.
Trisha
McNickle.
When ask ed what th e1
liked about Do My Best On
The Test Tutorin g the stu dents' comments included
"I like working with differ- ent teachers". "11 was fun"
"I liked the fraction
squares", "I liked th e
snacks". "I am bener prepared for the. test.'' and " 1
loved the games."
The tutoring session wa'
free to all Southern Local
Students.

m.r.At .

'

•

investigation snow~ the case
was an accid ent. a nd a
grand jury this week decided not to return an indict·
ment against Fouts.
Fouts resigned from the
department and ·has mov ed
out of the area.-

the man was underneath the
cruiser until he arrived at the
police department.
The autopsy~ released
Tuesday also said Thomas
bad been intoxicated.
Lawrence County proses
cutor U3. Collier says an

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Home
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Singles · ~ ·944-- -.
by Joel Whitbum,
ranked Amo1d 1he No. I
oountry singer lin, llelllns of
•a verall success 'Oil t he
IBillbaard country charts.
··ne
Nidk!Oamed
Plowboy,"
Tennessee
Mn01d iliirst gained notice
voith awearances -on 'the
Grand Ole Opry in 'the early
l 940s. He &lt;debuted on the
charts in '945 w.itb ''llarih
Minute Seems a Million
Years,~ and began 'bis string
of 28 No. l country 'bits
IMith "What ts Life Wrthout
Lave~ in early a947. Hi~
succes~
bclped
make
Nashville an -importanl
~ecording industry ibub,
according to Sony IBMG
Nashville, parent · of his
.longtime label, RCA.
.
Other bits included 'Gittle
Call," "The Last Word in
!Lonesome
Is
Me,"
"Anytime,' ' "Bouquet of
\Roses," "What's He Doing :in
My World'?" '1 W.ant to Go
Wllh You," "Somebody Like
Me," "Lonely ·Again" and
''T1Ul111he Wonld Around.~
"When I ·was about 15
years -o ld; all I ever sang
was Eddy Arnold 's stuff 'Room Ftill 0f Rl'lses, ' "I'm
Throwing Rice; I remember all of his songs," said
country legend GeQrge
Jones. "lt would be · just

Oountry

1

D:l''*lttMYIE)-·;18

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::; POMEROY -Jerri Dahler, field representative for U.S.
~- Charlie WJ.Ison, 0-Bri.dgeport, will conduct office
hours for area residents from 4--6 p :m. on the second
Tuesday of each moiJ-th, May 13, June 10 and July 8, at the
~igs County Library in Pomeroy.

Olllo Vllllllr iiMic Calp. (M"S-

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.aboot my WhOle show until remember him." Galame
mheard Hllllk WiiOiams .~
said.
Over the years. he i nve~t ·
Mast &lt;lf Arnold's ihits
were done in .association ed wisely, especiall y in real
with if.amed guitarim CbeJ . estme in the Nashvi lle area,
Aik!ins, the prOducer on and was regarded as one of
most of 1he recording sell· ·the wealthieSl men in country music. He once had this
sioos.
The Late · Dinah Shore advice for young singers:
once described Ibis vaice as 'IGet .a good lawyer. a good
1~ "warm !butter .and S.Yfl\P accountant and be on time:·
Friends said his wife
being poured over wonderful buttennilk pancakes."
helped handle hi ' busines;,
Reflecting on ibis career, dealings and was the inspi·
'he said he never capied ~y­ ratioo for many of hi s love
one.
S0Jigs.
"What hurt s me more
"I Teally bad .an idea about
how m wanted ito si11g from than anything else is that he
died of a broken heart." said
:the ·~ 'beginning.~ be said.
He :rcvita'lized bis career in Gr.and Ole Opry star Jim Ed
i!he N60s by adding strings, Brown, a fri end. "1 don' t
a controversial 11110ve for a think he ever recovered
countty ,aJtist back then.
from that."
Arnold was born Mav I 5.
't g01 to ~. if~ just
took. the same kind of 5011gs 1918, on a far m ' near
[' d been singing .and added Henderson, Tenn ., the son
violins to 1hem, if d have a of .a sharecropper. He sang
new sound," be teld The on radio stations in Jackson,
Associated !Press in 2002 : Tenn .• Memphis, Tenn ., and
"They cussed me. but 1be disc St. Louis before becoming
jockeys ;grabbed it. ... The . nationall y known .
Early in his career. his
artists be;gan to say, 'Aww,
be's left liS.' lbcn wiihin a manager was Col. Tom
Parker, who later became
year, they were doing 1t1"
;\mong his Teceot lilbums Elvis Presley's manager.
His image was always
were •'Looking IBack,"
2002, and "After All These that of a modest. clean-cut
Years,~ 2005.
.country boy.
"You cannm satisfy all the
Joe Galante, obairman of
Sony IBMG Nashville, said people," h e once' said "They
be wa.~ talking about mak- have an image of me. Some .
ing another just 11 few weeks people think 1' m Billy
~o. "There was a special Graham's half brother. but
kind of happiness about ;him T'm not. 1 want people 10 gel
whenever he talked about this hero thing off their mmd
music, and that is bow I will and just let me be me:·

Cause of death unclear for man dragged beneath cruiser

:~' T

P

1te ""liS 1l:be :first person to
receive the cntettainer of the
yearawardfrom1heCoumty
Music Association.

S.•llllllflrhours

-:11.- =,:: -~'i7-=.12

e tJW ••

OJ

NASHVDLE, 1Jenn. Eddy Arnold, 1\J/hose mellew baritone oo ~ngs . 'like
"Make the World Go Aw.ay"
made him one of i1be most
suooessful oo1111tly 1illlgers
in !history, !died Thursday
mm:ning, &lt;day~ Sbmt &lt;0f Ibis
9(i)tb bitlthday.
Amol d died .a1 .t .care
facility ncar NaSh'&lt;i:l le, -said
Don i(]usic, :a professor at
Belmont Uni versi~ .and
author of the lbio;gr.apby
"Iiddy Arnold: f ll Hold You
-in My HelllC His wlfe .of
fl6 years, 'SJIIly, lhad .died in
M.arc'h, and -in 1he same
month, Arnold fell outside
his !home, injuring 'his hip.
Am0ld's voclils on s0ngs
like 'tbe I %5 "'Make :the
Werld G o Away," .a top 10
'JlOP lbit ,as :well as a No. 1
country bit, .niade 'him one
:Qf;tbe :most successful country singers lin !history.
lfio1ksy yet s!'J{ihisiicfted,
he !became a pioneer of
"The Nashville Sound,"
4lls0 called "oeuntty,politan," a minure of cauntry
ani! pop styles. His
crossover success pav.ed the
w.ay .f or later singers such as
Kenny Rogers.
"1 sing a little oounny, I
sin:,g a little :pop and I sing a
little folk, and i t all goes
together." be said in 1970.
He was elected to the
: MINER.'SVILLE - M_:y!\t!le Violet bnboilen, 83, of Country M.usk !Hall of 'Fame
M'nasville, devoted ~ 11001het:, grandmother and friend in 1966. The fo~owing year
iiO ;all :MJo came t0 blow bel:, went home to •be with the
Loot &lt;011 May 6, 2008 after ;a lbRef illness .a1 Doctor's West
Hotpta'l in (J(')1umbus.
"
·
· · She w.as 100m :qo Aprlill9, 1925, lin Syracuse, to the late
'HtUllDiaD and Laura Ma111.in. She :was a member of the
IRONTON (AP) - A
Middlqlmt Clburch
Nar.areoe.
coroner says he can' t .deters
· 8esi6e5 ~ -she w.as pre.ceded in 'death 'by !her mine the cause of death for
buN! a, Oacar VemoJ) Imboden. Sr.:; 'SODS, Oscar .fir., and a southern Ohio man
ll0iqllllmboden; gnmddB!It"ter, Cynthia l:tnboden~ sisters, dragged h\!neath a police
Garwt 1\Jt;ts, Mmy (lox, Kilda MaJtio .and Shirley Martin; cruiser in March.
build*', Thwman Mmin .lr., i01Hnslaw, Rei( Brown Sr.
The autopsy report on 46·SIJe ris sllTViiv.ell'by: 1!0DS. iReland lnlbaden &lt;Of Ranger. year--old Guy Thomas says
Ga.., R'Odger (N&lt;mnie~ ~bOOeD ¢Cmtersville, Ga.~ A~bert
I 11i•i&amp;o of Minersville,I ~1 '(Gale) Imboden of !Payne,
hnLs r(P.aula~ lniboden .&amp;1Lllliiii'IAn. and RandalllmOOden
ofSolllh P,asedeoa., Aa.~ daugbters. Linda (Dennie) !Roe of
Columbus, and RO!leilllll)' Brown o0f Gilbert. W.Va.; sisters,
Amla Roosh of St. P.etersbllrg, IFla~ Bemice (Dana)
W!dtthewer of 'S~se, Eima lmbaden of Pilreten. ())ra BassofSynlouse, 8dty Widcs efLaocaster, Margaret (Jim)
Glined'Bevcdy.; 19;granddbildreo;.30great grandchildren:
many friends .and eJC1etlded family; and two pets, Amber
and Gunner.
IFunerlll will •he beld at I iJl.'lil. on Saturday, May I 0, 2008
at ~McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with.
R-e,v. P.au1 lmbodcn !ilfficialling. IBUllial will follow at
Gilmore (Jemcteey.
. libe family will eoeive friends fmm 2-4 and ·6--8 p .m. on
liriday at the funcnil twme. A mgistry is available online at
, www.mdersonmcdaoi.ei.COOl.

•

Local Stocks
Nfll' .( WYSE)- 4U2

•

•

PO~Ji'~O!d

•

•

PtdtM• edi..a;s
,

Country music superstar Eddy Arnold me, at 89

Obit•m•ks

lh .... C

Dof A past councilors meet

Local Weather
Friday-.Cloudy.
A
chance of showers 1n ·the
_ moming ... Then a ·s lighf
chance of showers in the
afternoon. Highs in the mid
60s. West winds 1I1'0illld 5
111Ph-Chance of rain 50 per-

~

•

Canmunity Calendar

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

lh Klmfr MiiOFI

,...,.• ,..

BYTHEB1$ND

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily 'Serttinel • 1'4&lt; A:s

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from freeloading son
AND MAReT SliGAR

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me fmm aoq~ces who

de~"l lmo~ my bistoty by
I rod my ;goU~g hdund my back t0
lftSCliJI husband, "'Tom,~ Jl ask them oot 10 offer me
few months ~r my · aloohol_ ~use r~ . an
div(U'ce, and he •s everydling alooholi':. Thts feels like :II!'
I ever dreamed of in a bus- · ·e xtreme mvaSJOO of_my pnbmd. Right IOOW, we live 00 vacy. It .also undemuDC'i my
miles .apart because of our aulbo!iity :over the problem
jabs. lbm will retire next and establishes a negative
year .and wants to live first impression dtat is rom..taere I am, but be 'll med p]etely unw:arrmted. Sarah
to sell bis house. The probs msa,grees, sayin~ sbe is sim-Ian is his 21 -year'Old ·soo., J)ly iUying to bolp me avoid
'Orip.,~ Who -lives wi1b bim. unpleasantness. I say llhere
Oiip \lives in .dle base-- is .a reason why i.t is ailed
meot, which ~odks like a Aloobolics ~Anoncus."
~sty. He doesn't wmt., has Yoor 1hoogbts7 - • · - sly
trcquem parties Jllld ttasbes S J11 u
lhe bouse -on w.eekends
Dear PI dly Soohu.men we aren' I there. He Sarah is ·dispLayin:,g pasadmits he does drugs, which sive-.aggressive behli'Vior.
makes it .bard to get a job Under 1be gnise ef 4iieodhocanse -of 1he drug rests. I ship,~ she is actually trying
would throw Chip out and to embarrass you. She
change lite locks.. but Tom enjoys the fact that you
can' t 1ieei11 to go the teugb don't tike it Tell her to stop
lave route.
i]!11!11"Aiately. ·
I refuse to stay in Tom' s
De. AIPiie: I read the
boose because I'm afurid of !crier tlrom "Thumbelina,"
Chip. The ]Qd ibas .an anger who lest .4() peuods and was
probleiD. and he shows no having a problem with her
respect for his father:. Tom appearance.
actual!~ ~ps ·witb his bedI lost over 100 pounds
rnmn door locked .and .a big and :have kept .it ·o ff for siK
board up against iL
·years. I. too, expected lots
Tom says he's afraid if be of positives for the "new"
ticks Chip out of the bouse, me.. Wbat I got instead was
be will demolish the place jealousy and suspicion.
· before be goes. ·I lave my Women wh0 were once my
husband, but feel so hepe- friends wanted nothing to
less. Tom is only 58, but has do with me. My in-laws
high blood pressure. I wony theught I was gaing to
all rth.is stress will kill him. have an affair.
How can I help?. I have sagging skin, but I
W411'1'ied Wd'e
use weights to tone up. I
Dar Wtfe: Tom shonld have a hard time looking in
inform Chip that l:te' s the mirtor, but my husband
putting the bause on !J:be lleeps telling me ·bm,_beans
Dllldret within the year. He tiful I :am. l'·d like to tell
can then make it clear that if Thumhelina to keep focusOrip trashes it, it will lower ing oo dJe wonderful bealth
the selling price, which · benefit of 'h er weight loss.
means less money for Chip As far as I know, saggy
in the long run, since we skin doesn' t cause heart
assume Dad will oontinue to attacks or strokes. - Ileal
help support · him. Chip '~'~left., Fdt Like 'l1ult ill
might have enoogh sense to ·N urill
respond to that, but even if
De. Nwdl D • • · It
he doesn't, a lower ·selling tOok a lot ef hard ·w mt to
price is · better than none. p wbr&lt;~ you ,1 £ today.
Tom needs to set himself CongnluJations on lr«pinJl
free, and his SGD needs to a positive attirude. ·
grow up. All you can do is · ~\ " • u ; is llrit"
-enoourage them both.
a ~ K l'!i llijl! t • De. Anz'r: I will celo- ft' g s.a-; lo4r' ,.,.,
brate .my nintll year · of fan ef tie. A- I ·dm
sobriety - ·next
month. ...t.=· ft r e
1,..,
Mit:aculously, .' do not have
~
the urge to drink, nor am I
.,. .n.t
unoomfortable around pros to: A.tulk'r " W r, 1!0.
pie who do. When placed in Bu 111191, a+ ga;, 1£
the position of ha\iog to fllffL Je jiM ,.. rdut~e a glass, I do so bY 8Mt AliiUe 'f Mribx,
firmly stating that I do n01 . - ,_., , a . , .._.
drink.. I don't feel the need 0 r t • Sy 5 t ttriters
to elaborate.
, .M
·m, 1isit t»
11te problem is my friend
S.r'i
Wet
"Sarah.~ She feels it is her ,.e c
r 1

De. A

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.cent.

Friday ~t Mostly
cloudy with a 40 percent
dumce of showers. Lows in
me lower 50s. North winds
5 to 10 mph.
Saturday-.Part! y sunny
with a 30 peroeot chance of
·Showers. Highs around 70.
North winds around 5 mph.
Saturday aipt. ..Partly
cloudy
in
the
evening ... Then becoming
mostly cloudy. Lows in the
tUppel' 40s.

·

. SP..,..y_s~owers likely
1
I

TownlAU,p Trustees will
meet 7 p.tJ. at i!he town ball
SYRAOJSE _ s~
Omunuoity CWrter Boatd '
of D.immn, 7/ p.m. ,at lhe
Omn1111nity Center.
POMEROY Meigs
C»unty &amp;ard of BeotiuDs,
regular """"iing 8:3Cl a .m.
'

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Qurdtenu&amp;

and

'-AUlD

I

. s.ta~May ••
POMERO -Christian

M0t0rcyde A-ssooiatiicm, ·
"Deeiveredn Oblq:Jter, m_gus
lar meeting, 5 p..ll't..,
Common Gr-ounds, new
members wcloome.

I'll day, May ll
POMEROY Meigs

S'

County R:epubliam P.aitty,
7:30 p .m. 'Meigs County

u

6;:, llay It ·

. ·.P.\RKEX.SBLJit w.v~.
POMEROY Jerri -Ndfie !AumilW -..iill.celo.b'lr:r field representative •••* b:r. . hidMay OJi
, ;, ~

'11

US. R-ep. Oharlie )by 10. Cards may be SCiit
Wilson, I),Bridgepmt,, will 110• -4002 ' ~s St~
bold office :hours from -4-16 p.m.odwo.b W.~

fm-

Cowdlout~e.

POMEROY -Big Bend
Farm Antiques &lt;Jiu'b, 7:30

Lydia Cot1ncil plans activities POMEROY -

A dooation toward new wind0ws iiO
be installed in me cbnrdl
later Ulis year -11118de iby
the Lydia Council of die
BradfOJid Omrob of OJrist
during :a Tecent meet:iqg.
Plans were completed fur
the Ladies Qay banquet 110
be held at noon Saturday at
l!he Bradford Cburcb of
Christ using ilhe liheme
"~earts Quilled together
with Love.~ Reports were
given on . 1be mentMing
progr,am for .yauih, the
recent re'llival, :and mission
projects,
idong
wi:th
progress on Dllily Vacation
Bible SChool to be held
June l6--.19..
Sherry Shamblin said
Bible school plans are moviog fuFwani .ootitlg lhat all
the ,teaChers are lined up.
Deoor.atioos are needed .and

es IJICDCd ilhe JTICY!!ing wifh
Shamblin giving pr.ayer.
Officers' 11epmts were
given. Thank you .cm:ds
were .read, and it was decid-ed woo weuld 8et sun~ne
P.fts i!his month. A VJSttGrs
lfist was -ruculated 111 was
ooted that illO meals are
. needed at :this time for
Shutins.
Carolyn Nir:bolson .and
Sbcny Smith were the ib~stesses for the May -~1bey had .an Hawamm
Atoba i!heme set up With
Hawaiian sllliCk:s mil .deoo!Cations. T hey greeted
everyone ll1 1he door ·and
pUt Leis aroond evecyone• s
,q ed. Shamblin displayed a
dress :arul man's shirt that
she and her h_usband :~
made iforthemm Haw.an m
1967 ~n tibey were •there
for a mp ;and ta1ked some

meiUlws ¥RK ;asbld 110 ~
suggestions. ~ will 1Je a
VDS mcetiq ~
later in
QMn•l•. ·
AS for !De mcnllJJin.g pit-;grJI!Il for yoolh, Mw1ii!C
Painter .and J.aoe Uyidlllad
a iesson oo llc;&gt;memade _..
illes for 1he yootb llri1h 'SOllie
adUlts takiin;g palt in me
class. 1he next m +•i:!g
clllss will take plaoe in Juty.
. R:evi.,.al ~ lridl

me

~eHall~~lllel'vice!; -weot we1l, d _ ,
rcpm'ICd, with 'jl""i•l omsk
before tbe !ICIPJices lheiD,g
pre!iCiltCd by nub
Qf
di1Ielieot dw• '~~'""'
.
As for die QliJo •loa .of

•s

jars d' _p:lllll ~ 10 ibe
,sem m Hlili, tbe dmre ~
been e•" W 1t0 ~ 18m

andiJI!Uomadl.dlepof
300 jars.
.
Prayer reQUClStS and pl111r
1

'Marshall co I I

II '

about dlcir vi-sit , ldtere.
· Carolyn II'Clld Geae!i1s I:J6
and alw lbad :a llelilmg
aboat N~ &amp;odcwcll. ,
Stuun.blin ~ some
health _infOI'Illllb.oo oo lbeart
oond.itlans .and the 'Sl,gl!S (}f
problems. ~ shared Slime
0f !her ea:pmenoe _of ilhrt;i:
years .ago, ;JUJd 1illid :sbe 'IS
glad . sbe paui at:tenlltoo to
the s1gns..
.
Atten:l the , meetmg
were 8
Bolin, D1ana
Maxwe'll; 8edky Ambetger,
Jane Hy~ ~yll1s Baker,
Jan
Hendricks, Cheri
WilliamSI!n,
Sherry
Shambln,
Charlotte
Hanning, N.eva Oluqnnan,
IBrittllny Celli!'li, biane
M:il1inln, Madelme P.amter,
Gerr_r l:..ighlfMt, Nancy
Moms, ~d . hestesses,
Carolyn J'liChol~n and
Sbemy Snuth.

ncement Sato••l•y

HIJN11NG'OON, W. V.a. rcoci~ .ascorilre d! g1 es.
- More thaa 2,., !ii:Qdents
Ala qudenrs t:q'«tCld to
will grwtnare ~ Marsball grad!JI!e wOh 4JO ;gnde
Univen;jty 1011 Saturday, · point a¥erages are :Aiy1iSII
May m when the university ~e brille of (':q~J]i,pofis
cele'bmtes its I 71 st oom- and I tFtta Rae 8rillhll1t of
llleiiCeiiiCtll at the Big Sandy Point Ple.asant, W.Va.
Supcnt~![e Arena. The ccm-- · In .all, 591 mJ«btts will
mony hegins -at 9 a.m.
graduate wid! honors. N"me:y
The total of2,fl22 Andc:nts will gnvlnate
wm
receiving degrees includes laude (3.85 to 4.0 GPA), 177
l ,529 undergraduates, 946 magna cum laude (3.-6 m
graduales, 43 from me 3.84 GPA), .and .306 ann
School ofMedicine.and1'1M laude (3.3 ro3.59GPA).OIIC

stMern JICCeiving an associ· she will receive &lt;COOgillllllaa degrrr will graduate with tians and .a scmll from the
bighbooors, 1IIld 17 asoociate Marshall
Mumni
degme recipiciits -will gradu' Associatien. Any\'lne who
ate 1li.ith hon!'lrs.
bas earned a rdc:grce since
Continuing a practice that July 2007 IIII8Y Jllll'icipate in
began in 2()(i)(i, each commencement.
. .
· Mamba~~ :graduate attendiqg
Marshall also will recog-oonm enorment 'Will be t:eCs nire its gradualing · ibonor
.ogoired during lhe remmo- students
dutin;g comoy. Eiach graduate :will walk: mel)cement.
to tbe area in front of lhe
!ltage, 'Where his or her name
willibe:announced and be or

"''DDI'III

OOMEROY
Past noted and refreshments
Councilor' s Club of Chester were Serv-ed by Jean Welsh
with a -c:bance of :thunder- council 323, Daughters of and Mary Jo Blllliillger.
sttlml!i. Highs in the upper America, met recently :at &gt;the ·! ]ames were. conducted by
{i(k. &lt;Jhance of rain 70 perhall with Julie Fleming pre- Opal Hollon and Dl:.wodly
cent.
Myers.
S fay z'g.,. Mostly siding.
Attending were Eslher
Scripture
reading,
the
cloody -with showers likely.
Lord's
·
P
rayer,
and
pledge
to
Smith,
Gary
Halter,
Lows in the upper 40s.
Chance of rain 60 percent. . the flag opened the meeting. Charlotte Grant, Julie·
M f y-Mostly cloudy For roll call members com- Aeming, Jo Aon Ritchie,
with a 40 pe:tcent chance of mented on SOJIICthing April Goldie Fredoricik, Mary K.
showers. Highs in the upper showers bring. The spring Holier, Dorotby Myers,
rally held Saturday was Jean Welsh, Rutb Smith,
60s.
Moaday Diglrt....Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s.
tuesday aDd 'IUesday
z'g' ' Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 7Gs. Lows
around 50.
We.Snesday ••• Partly
sunny with a 30 percent
.chance of showers. Highs in

Opal Hol'lon, Thelma
White, Doris Gruescir, Laura
MliCl Nice, Opal Eichinger,
Mary Jo. Barringer, and a
visiror, Sandy White.

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it 's not clear if be was alive
or already dead when
l.ronton . police Officer
Ridh.ard Fouts' cnriser drove
over &lt;the man on a ·snowcovered streel and dragged
him for about a tuilf mile.
Fouts said be dido't realize

respond fully and in-depth,
and to make sure the_y are
answering "what the question is as1dng." The main
focus of the tutoring was
constructed around .p assing
the Ohio Achievement Test.
A portion of the program
was used for Study lsland, a
program made up of past
()AT';; 1ests.
Before the students If:ft
for home on the last week of
tutoring, pep rallies were
held and spc:cial .guests
made presentations. Special
recognition as given "Mr.
Quadrilateral, (Alan Crisp)

· • KACINE- 'The A1bens Meigs ESC Pre School at ·
Elemeot.a!y will lbe having another registration
b DCl'lit ·Jidlodl year &lt;011 May 27, at the elementary building
-l jdwcco 6c bours,d9 a.m. ilO 3 p .m. You must make_ an
lli'JlOiuiDklUt for me tKJremiog by calling the followmg
'SIIbiiiltl&amp;d -pllailo
numbr:r. H you ;m, ~interested or 'have any questiotis, please Alan Crisp and his "Quadrilateral Kids•teamEfd up 1o tack·
oonlal:llkfi_y Niooilr:mus :at 992-1740.
1e many different kinds of math problems found on 1he OAT
· Also, pe-adtool tmd pc-K resource bags are available at (Ohio Achievement Test) .
die Sou1bem Local ,pamnt«somce center, ar by calling
V:iclci NGidJ+:It949 4222 En. U25.
• Opened bids for a
..,.d
bridge Teplacement project
•:wf•MDJC~
to be completed through
the
county
highway
fromPageAl
POMERO" -The Meigs County Health ~partmenl
department.
will bald .a cltildhood immunization clinic from 9-11 a.m.
Present
_
were
. ~ l-3 p .m. on l'ue&amp;day.
increased from 25 to 27 per· Commissioners
Mick:
cent, Westfall said. The con- Davenport and Jim Sheets
tract in the , past has also and Clerk Gloria Kloes.
included a clause providing
for
a $910 ' charge for
·1UPPE.Rs PLAINS - . Eastenn High School's prom
appeals
cases, but that
queen, Heaven Westfall, is idle daughter of Roger and Sheila
Westfall of Reedsville. iJ1he prom king, Kyle Gordon, js the· clause was eliminated from
the new contract, and counson of ·Rodney and Debbie Gordon ofCoolville.
sel · required for appeals
cases will be assigned as
·needed.
Commissioners also: .
. POMEROY. Me~gs,COIIJlty Oog W!!£tlen Tom Proffitt
· • Approvecl a
liquor
llllll01lnced sunuoet twurs atdte dog shelter at Rocksprmgs. license transfer' !Tom J.D.
1be shelter will be open'for adoptions from 8:30to II a.m., Drilling Co., Pomeroy, to
Monday through Saturday, and 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. on Twin Oaks Store. LLC.
(fuesday and Thursday.
Pomeroy.
in
Chester
Township.

"'udlem

.

Contract

di .

and to Southern E lementary
math
coach.
Trisha
McNickle.
When ask ed what th e1
liked about Do My Best On
The Test Tutorin g the stu dents' comments included
"I like working with differ- ent teachers". "11 was fun"
"I liked the fraction
squares", "I liked th e
snacks". "I am bener prepared for the. test.'' and " 1
loved the games."
The tutoring session wa'
free to all Southern Local
Students.

m.r.At .

'

•

investigation snow~ the case
was an accid ent. a nd a
grand jury this week decided not to return an indict·
ment against Fouts.
Fouts resigned from the
department and ·has mov ed
out of the area.-

the man was underneath the
cruiser until he arrived at the
police department.
The autopsy~ released
Tuesday also said Thomas
bad been intoxicated.
Lawrence County proses
cutor U3. Collier says an

Southem

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Doors oPen 7pm
- OIJJce: -2nd Aw.
ll •• 1111, &lt;OH (7411) JI46.Afl1'!i

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Need a grrat Auto

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Jessica .~
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lnsurane&lt; Group
oi visH us on the web- www.reedbaUI .com
Home
Alrto Farm Business

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(IIPM¥Q) 12.10
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211.32

w ..-INYIEI- aut

Singles · ~ ·944-- -.
by Joel Whitbum,
ranked Amo1d 1he No. I
oountry singer lin, llelllns of
•a verall success 'Oil t he
IBillbaard country charts.
··ne
Nidk!Oamed
Plowboy,"
Tennessee
Mn01d iliirst gained notice
voith awearances -on 'the
Grand Ole Opry in 'the early
l 940s. He &lt;debuted on the
charts in '945 w.itb ''llarih
Minute Seems a Million
Years,~ and began 'bis string
of 28 No. l country 'bits
IMith "What ts Life Wrthout
Lave~ in early a947. Hi~
succes~
bclped
make
Nashville an -importanl
~ecording industry ibub,
according to Sony IBMG
Nashville, parent · of his
.longtime label, RCA.
.
Other bits included 'Gittle
Call," "The Last Word in
!Lonesome
Is
Me,"
"Anytime,' ' "Bouquet of
\Roses," "What's He Doing :in
My World'?" '1 W.ant to Go
Wllh You," "Somebody Like
Me," "Lonely ·Again" and
''T1Ul111he Wonld Around.~
"When I ·was about 15
years -o ld; all I ever sang
was Eddy Arnold 's stuff 'Room Ftill 0f Rl'lses, ' "I'm
Throwing Rice; I remember all of his songs," said
country legend GeQrge
Jones. "lt would be · just

Oountry

1

D:l''*lttMYIE)-·;18

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wme

::; POMEROY -Jerri Dahler, field representative for U.S.
~- Charlie WJ.Ison, 0-Bri.dgeport, will conduct office
hours for area residents from 4--6 p :m. on the second
Tuesday of each moiJ-th, May 13, June 10 and July 8, at the
~igs County Library in Pomeroy.

Olllo Vllllllr iiMic Calp. (M"S-

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1lbe mereoce lbook ~r~

.aboot my WhOle show until remember him." Galame
mheard Hllllk WiiOiams .~
said.
Over the years. he i nve~t ·
Mast &lt;lf Arnold's ihits
were done in .association ed wisely, especiall y in real
with if.amed guitarim CbeJ . estme in the Nashvi lle area,
Aik!ins, the prOducer on and was regarded as one of
most of 1he recording sell· ·the wealthieSl men in country music. He once had this
sioos.
The Late · Dinah Shore advice for young singers:
once described Ibis vaice as 'IGet .a good lawyer. a good
1~ "warm !butter .and S.Yfl\P accountant and be on time:·
Friends said his wife
being poured over wonderful buttennilk pancakes."
helped handle hi ' busines;,
Reflecting on ibis career, dealings and was the inspi·
'he said he never capied ~y­ ratioo for many of hi s love
one.
S0Jigs.
"What hurt s me more
"I Teally bad .an idea about
how m wanted ito si11g from than anything else is that he
died of a broken heart." said
:the ·~ 'beginning.~ be said.
He :rcvita'lized bis career in Gr.and Ole Opry star Jim Ed
i!he N60s by adding strings, Brown, a fri end. "1 don' t
a controversial 11110ve for a think he ever recovered
countty ,aJtist back then.
from that."
Arnold was born Mav I 5.
't g01 to ~. if~ just
took. the same kind of 5011gs 1918, on a far m ' near
[' d been singing .and added Henderson, Tenn ., the son
violins to 1hem, if d have a of .a sharecropper. He sang
new sound," be teld The on radio stations in Jackson,
Associated !Press in 2002 : Tenn .• Memphis, Tenn ., and
"They cussed me. but 1be disc St. Louis before becoming
jockeys ;grabbed it. ... The . nationall y known .
Early in his career. his
artists be;gan to say, 'Aww,
be's left liS.' lbcn wiihin a manager was Col. Tom
Parker, who later became
year, they were doing 1t1"
;\mong his Teceot lilbums Elvis Presley's manager.
His image was always
were •'Looking IBack,"
2002, and "After All These that of a modest. clean-cut
Years,~ 2005.
.country boy.
"You cannm satisfy all the
Joe Galante, obairman of
Sony IBMG Nashville, said people," h e once' said "They
be wa.~ talking about mak- have an image of me. Some .
ing another just 11 few weeks people think 1' m Billy
~o. "There was a special Graham's half brother. but
kind of happiness about ;him T'm not. 1 want people 10 gel
whenever he talked about this hero thing off their mmd
music, and that is bow I will and just let me be me:·

Cause of death unclear for man dragged beneath cruiser

:~' T

P

1te ""liS 1l:be :first person to
receive the cntettainer of the
yearawardfrom1heCoumty
Music Association.

S.•llllllflrhours

-:11.- =,:: -~'i7-=.12

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OJ

NASHVDLE, 1Jenn. Eddy Arnold, 1\J/hose mellew baritone oo ~ngs . 'like
"Make the World Go Aw.ay"
made him one of i1be most
suooessful oo1111tly 1illlgers
in !history, !died Thursday
mm:ning, &lt;day~ Sbmt &lt;0f Ibis
9(i)tb bitlthday.
Amol d died .a1 .t .care
facility ncar NaSh'&lt;i:l le, -said
Don i(]usic, :a professor at
Belmont Uni versi~ .and
author of the lbio;gr.apby
"Iiddy Arnold: f ll Hold You
-in My HelllC His wlfe .of
fl6 years, 'SJIIly, lhad .died in
M.arc'h, and -in 1he same
month, Arnold fell outside
his !home, injuring 'his hip.
Am0ld's voclils on s0ngs
like 'tbe I %5 "'Make :the
Werld G o Away," .a top 10
'JlOP lbit ,as :well as a No. 1
country bit, .niade 'him one
:Qf;tbe :most successful country singers lin !history.
lfio1ksy yet s!'J{ihisiicfted,
he !became a pioneer of
"The Nashville Sound,"
4lls0 called "oeuntty,politan," a minure of cauntry
ani! pop styles. His
crossover success pav.ed the
w.ay .f or later singers such as
Kenny Rogers.
"1 sing a little oounny, I
sin:,g a little :pop and I sing a
little folk, and i t all goes
together." be said in 1970.
He was elected to the
: MINER.'SVILLE - M_:y!\t!le Violet bnboilen, 83, of Country M.usk !Hall of 'Fame
M'nasville, devoted ~ 11001het:, grandmother and friend in 1966. The fo~owing year
iiO ;all :MJo came t0 blow bel:, went home to •be with the
Loot &lt;011 May 6, 2008 after ;a lbRef illness .a1 Doctor's West
Hotpta'l in (J(')1umbus.
"
·
· · She w.as 100m :qo Aprlill9, 1925, lin Syracuse, to the late
'HtUllDiaD and Laura Ma111.in. She :was a member of the
IRONTON (AP) - A
Middlqlmt Clburch
Nar.areoe.
coroner says he can' t .deters
· 8esi6e5 ~ -she w.as pre.ceded in 'death 'by !her mine the cause of death for
buN! a, Oacar VemoJ) Imboden. Sr.:; 'SODS, Oscar .fir., and a southern Ohio man
ll0iqllllmboden; gnmddB!It"ter, Cynthia l:tnboden~ sisters, dragged h\!neath a police
Garwt 1\Jt;ts, Mmy (lox, Kilda MaJtio .and Shirley Martin; cruiser in March.
build*', Thwman Mmin .lr., i01Hnslaw, Rei( Brown Sr.
The autopsy report on 46·SIJe ris sllTViiv.ell'by: 1!0DS. iReland lnlbaden &lt;Of Ranger. year--old Guy Thomas says
Ga.., R'Odger (N&lt;mnie~ ~bOOeD ¢Cmtersville, Ga.~ A~bert
I 11i•i&amp;o of Minersville,I ~1 '(Gale) Imboden of !Payne,
hnLs r(P.aula~ lniboden .&amp;1Lllliiii'IAn. and RandalllmOOden
ofSolllh P,asedeoa., Aa.~ daugbters. Linda (Dennie) !Roe of
Columbus, and RO!leilllll)' Brown o0f Gilbert. W.Va.; sisters,
Amla Roosh of St. P.etersbllrg, IFla~ Bemice (Dana)
W!dtthewer of 'S~se, Eima lmbaden of Pilreten. ())ra BassofSynlouse, 8dty Widcs efLaocaster, Margaret (Jim)
Glined'Bevcdy.; 19;granddbildreo;.30great grandchildren:
many friends .and eJC1etlded family; and two pets, Amber
and Gunner.
IFunerlll will •he beld at I iJl.'lil. on Saturday, May I 0, 2008
at ~McDaniel Funeral Home in Pomeroy, with.
R-e,v. P.au1 lmbodcn !ilfficialling. IBUllial will follow at
Gilmore (Jemcteey.
. libe family will eoeive friends fmm 2-4 and ·6--8 p .m. on
liriday at the funcnil twme. A mgistry is available online at
, www.mdersonmcdaoi.ei.COOl.

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Local Weather
Friday-.Cloudy.
A
chance of showers 1n ·the
_ moming ... Then a ·s lighf
chance of showers in the
afternoon. Highs in the mid
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111Ph-Chance of rain 50 per-

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OPINION

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free aerdse ~- ·dti.Jfia,g dt:t~
.ofsfWd, « of • prus; .,.. du ri,gflt "!{ du
people pe40MIIf to "''h':JJ u,, -:I u, ,matfu ~~- .. tMfal "!{,~.
- 1be Rnlt_Ani6tdiiM•tct llw U.S. CwasUtution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, May 9, the Bath day of 2(i)()8. There are
236 days left in the y.ear.
Today's Highlight in Histocy:OnMay 9, 1754, a cartoon
in Benjamin Franklin's iPennsyl:v.ania Gazette ·Showed a
snake cut into sectians, each part representing an American
colony; the caption :read, "JOIN, ,or l)j)ffi."
On this date: In 1883, Spanish philosopher 3ose0rtega y
Gasset was born in Madrid.
ln 1936, Italy annexed IE.thiopia..
In 1945, U.S. officials .announced .that a midnight entertainment curfew was 'being lifted immediately.
In 1958·, "Vertigo," Alfred H:itdhcock' s eerie thriller statring James Stewart and Kim Novak, premiered in San
Francisco, the movie's setting.
·
ln 1961, iflGC chairnum Newtan N. Minow decried the
majqrity of television programming as a 'Wast wasteland"
in a speech to the National Associlttion of !Broadcasters.
ln 1974, the !House Judiciary Committee opened public
hearings on whether to recommend the impeachment of
President Nixon.
In 1978, the bullet-riddled body of former iltalian ,prime
minister Aldo Morn, who'd been .abducted hy :tbe IRed
Brigades, was found in .an automobile in the center of Rome.
In 1980, 35 people were .killed when a freighter rammed
the Sunshine SkyWay iBr:idge o:v.er lflill\Jla !Bay in !Florida,
causing a 1.~foot section to collllpse.
·
·
In 1982, the musical "Nine;'' in~Wired by 1he iFederico
Fellini film "8 1/2," opened on Broadway.
In 1987, 183 people were killed when a New Yo:dc:-bound
Polish jetliner crashed while attempting .an emergency
return to Wari&gt;aw.
One year ago: Vice IP.resident Dick Cheney pressed Jraq·•s
leaders to do more to reduce violence..and achieve political
reconciliation in a visit to Bagbdad that was punctuated by
an explosion that shook windows at the .U.S. Embassy
where Cheney w.as visiting. Pope !Benedict XVI began his
first trip to Latin Ame!;ica as he &amp;n:ived in •Brazil.
Today's Birthdays: &lt;OBS News correspondent Mike
Wallace is 90. Actress Genildine MdEwan is 76. Actorwriter Alan Bennett is 74. Actress-turned-politician Glenda
Jackson is 72. Musician Sonny Curtis CBuddy Holly .and
the Crickets) is 71. Producer-.director ~ames L. Brooks is
68. Singer Tommy Roe is 66. Singer-musician Richie
Furay (Buffalo ·Springfield and P.oco) is 04. Actress
Candice Bergen is '62. Pop singer Clint Holmes is 62.
Singer Billy !Jael is 59. iBlnes singer-musician Bob
Margolin is 59. Roolc' singer-musician Tom Peters son
(Cheap Trick) is 58. Actress Alley Mills ~s. 57. Actor John
Corbett is 47. Singer .Oave Gahan (Dcpeche Mode) is 46.
Rapper Ghostface Killab is 38. Country · musician Mike
Myerson (Heartland) is 37. Rhythm-and-blues iiinger
Tamia is 33. Rock musician Dan Regan (.Reel Big Fish) is
31. Rook singer. Pierre Bouvier (Simple Plan) is 29. Actress
Rosario Dawson is 29. Actress Rachel Boston is 26. TV
· .
personality Audrina Patridge is 23. ·
Thought for Today: "We canilot put off living until we
are ready." - Jose Ortega y Gasset, Spanish philosopher
(1883-1955).

~~ 11Jw9, zooR

ti there's one thing other
Christians know about the
ancient churches of the
East, it ~~ that Orthodox
believers usually get to buy
their Easter candy at closeout prices.
This year, the gap
betwan the two Easter
dates was ·so large - ' five
weeks - 'that :the leftover
ch11CQ]ate eggs had been
cleaned 'out 'by A:pril27 and
the great Orthodox feast
called Pascha tGJ-eCk. t:.or
'
"P.assovei").
'"It' s true that When -the

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after the fil'lit full moon that
comes . after ·the vernal
·
d
f
th
egwnox an .a ter
e

Passover.
· Jewish
The bottom line, however,
is that the !Julian and
~~~~ =~· ;: Gregorian calendars are
about J 3 days apart, and this
wbole lflallrom Card, gap will .continue growing
Easter bunny side of at the rate of about a week
things,"
said
Father per millennium.
Alexander IRentel, ·professor
All of that can be hard to
of !Byuotine Studies at St. explain, noted IRen~l. when
Vladimir's · Seminary in a child at school hands
Crestwood, N.Y. · "That another child an invitation
we'[!: on a different scbed- to an Easter ·party.
ule can nuike it easier to for
'101e kid says, 'Happy
us to concentrate on what Easter!' and then your kid
we're supposed to be con- · says, 'Actually, we haven't
centratiog on - which is celebrated Easter yet.' Then
what the season means in the o!her kid says, • un.
... JJY
the first place."
not?' and then that leads off
Why are the dates for into all kinds of conversaEaster and Pascha usually tions that can either be good
different? The short answer or bad, . depending on how
is that . all the Eastern comfortable your children
Orthodox churches use the ar-e when they're talking
ancient aulian calendar about what they believe and
when caloulati:ng the date why:"
for this season, while ·the
ln other words, he said,
Western church began using answering questions about
the Gregorian calendar in why your church celebrates
_the 16th century. A more Easter on a different Sunday
complex answer is to say is similar to answering
that, for the Orthodox, questions about why your
'Pascha is the first Sunday family fasts from meat and

·.

dairy for long periods of
time, or why you go to confession, or why yo11 make
the sign of the cross and
pray before eating Junch in
the school cafeteria. Any
strong belief that clashes
with the surrounding culture
is going to lead to questions.
"These are questiOn,~
about who we ·really are,
said !Rentel.
Identity questions Can be
.especially complex for the
.Orthodox in North America.
Tht:re Die 250 million
Orthodox believers worldwide - the second lar~est .
Christian church - but
only 5 million in the United
States. The Orthodox floclc
in the "new world" remains
divided into a dozen jurisdictions, each with ethnic
and historical ties to a moth-e r church abroad.
· Thus, there are times
when it's hard to draw a line
between ethnic traditions
and Orthodox traditions. It's
easy for the rites of Holy
!P.ascha to turn into My Big
Fat Greek - or Russian, or
Lebanese, or Bulgarian - Easter. Someday, the parish- ·
es founded by converts into
'Orthodoxy (like rny own
near Balti,more) may be
tempted to celebrate My
Big Fat Ex-Evangelical
Protestant Easter. It could
happen.
What the Orthodm; call
the "small t" traditions are .
important, said Rente!. The
family baskets packed with
. holiday foods, the blood-red

10U YAHOO.

.By

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·
A ;te· m'.,·norl'ty natron.

&lt;

;•'A••

DouG

STOCKTON

We· ve all chuckled when
someone tells a "good news,
bad news" joke. You can
almost guess the punch line
before it arrives:
Lawyer: 1 have some
good news and some bad
news. Which one do you
WI!Ot to hear first?
Client: Give me the bad
news frrst.
Lawyer: The bad news is
that DNA tests show your
blood is all over the crime
, scene.
Client: Oli, oo. I'm in big
trouble .' What's the good
news?
Lawyer: The good news is
that your cholesterol is
down to about 120.
·
Or how about this familiar one:
-Doctor: I have some good
news and some bad news.
Patient: What's the good
news?
Doctor: The good news is

that your tests show you
have 24 hours to live.
Patient: That's the good
news? What 's the bad
news?
Doctor: The bad news is
that J forgot to call you yesterday!
"Good news, bad news"
jokes are only funny when
they aren't happening to us.
But, I have ·found as a
Christian, l am not immune
to these types of experiences. For instance, 1 have
good news and bad news for
every Christian . The good
news-is Jesus Christ died for
our sins and has been raised
so that we will have eternal
life in glory with Him. The
bad news is that while we
live on this side of glory, we
will all go througli times of
spiritual dolt:frums in which
God may seem distant to us.
It doesn't mean we ha:v.e lost
hold of the Good News of
Jesus Christ for our lives. It
means we have allowed the

cares of this world to distance us from spiritual inti. macy with God.
When I think of this spiritually-draining experience
that every Christilln sometimes goes through, I am
reminded of the story of the
elderly couple whp went out
for a drive. During their 50
years of marriage, they
often would go on drives
together. As they pull up to
an intersection. they stop for
the red traffic light. While
waiting for the signal to
change another couple pulls
up next to them to wait also.
This pair is quite a bit
younger. Thi s twenty-something couple - cuddles and
kisses as they wait for the
light tQ change. .
Upon looking over at the
young romantic pair, the
wife of .50 years says to her
husband, "Isn't that sweet?
They're so in love ."
To which her husband
replies, " Yup."

"Do you remember when
· we used to be just like them'!"
"Vup_,, "Now look at us. You sitting way over there behind
the wheel and me all the
way over here."
"Yup."

"What happened to us?"
she asks with a sigh.
To which her husband
responds, "Well, 1 didn't

What it is to be a mom
It 'is having a new baby
Laid in yOw- arms .
And your frrst thought is
To love it and keep it from
all harm. ·

A-nd when you Jook in
that dear little face
You know no other could
move."
.
take its. place
As Christians, we all go · Ten perfect fingers and I 0
through times in our spiritu- perfect toes
al lives where God feels far
And would you believe
away. The good news is that that little button nose ?
God ha~n ' t moved. The bad
news is that we are the ones
And for your linle one to
who have moved. During give you a hand fuU of weeds
those times of feeling spiriAnd say, " Mommy. here
tually distant, God's desire are sOme flowers." .
for us is to simply slide back
You would ~mile , a~ you
over closer to Him through kissed their cheek
And say,' ''These . are the
regular times of prayer.
prettiest I ev«r did see ."
bible study, and worship. .
And to ypu they really
(The Rev. Doug Sroc/..1on
is · pasror of Grace United would be.
Methodist
Church
in
Or to sit with a sick child
Gallipolis.)

Two Convenient Locations

J!omo--•• .

www.m;.,•••.com
'

-.

'
)•

day and night
While your heart is filled
with such fright
But then you say a prayer
to God before dawn
And soon your fears are
all gone.
For you know His hand is
uponJou
An He will surely see
you through .
That is when you know
God did His !lest
And made you a mom so
that you may be blessed.
. Being a mom can bring
such joy
But it can also b~O;Il ~
. and sorrow.
·
That is when we place it
in God.'s himds
And pray for a 'b etter
tomorrow.
·
M.a ry E. ·(Klein)
Gerlacb

on over to Bob's..•

·.·. ·. ·. ·. ·.::: ·.·.
....,.a........_

o.w,_. ···········

·

May 9. 2008

I 600GLE,

oa ily Sen tin"
. .e I_: "

·*••

Friday,

·THJS .VJILL ·NEVER WORK,

A

=-

FAITH • ·FAMILY

eggs, the joyous dances and ·
the other ties that bind are
important. !But what cannot
be sacrificed are the "Big T''
traditions found in the 500plus pages ;of prayers, scriptures and rituals that guide
the spiritual journey from
Palm Sunday to Holy
Paseha.
The final sermon is
always the Same - year
after year, ceotuty after century - no matter where·
Pascha services are held. All .
Orthodox priests, by traditioil, read ;the Easter sermon
of St. John Chrysostom:
which dates to about A.D.
400 As the sermon ends, the
preacher called "the golden
mouthed" sums everything
up:
· "'() death, where is thy
sting? Q .hell, where is thy
victocy? Christ is risen, ana
you, o death, are annihilated! Christ is risen, and the'
evil ones are .cast down!
Christ is risen, and the
angels rejoice! Christ is
risen, and life is liberated!
Christ is Risen, .and the
tomb is emptied of its dead;
for Christ having risen froin '
the dead, is become the
first-fr.uits of those who
have fallen asleep."
(Terry Mattingly is director of ihe Washington
Journalism ·Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads '
the
GetReligion.org project to·
study religion and the
news.)

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should ·be less
than 300words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
4
signed, and include .address arui telephone number. 'No
. lllfDnrA •
f II
~
unsigned letters will be p.ublished. Leners should be in
. . , f Jl..-1 R.-&amp;.1;.
14/1 ~ .
.
, i . .
. . '
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leners of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· in lhe May 4 New York
reported accounts for a full nance io American society
ed for publication.
'· · ·
Times, columnist F11111k
·half of the nation's popula- will almost certainly not
tion growth since 2000). result in -dominance by a ·
Rich asserts &lt;that "Anyone .
r'------------,---...:.·--~--,..--,
who doos the math blows
,
'
Can we assume that this coalition of racial and ethwill automatically make nic minorities. Each of
that A;merica is on track to
become a white-minority
common
cause with (sayl these will be competing for
William
· nation in three to four
the black population tA power and influence in a
Reader Services ·
(USPS21....,1
decades."
R~er
overthrow white domi- mixed society in which by
Oonedluo1 Polley
P~_! lllf'"!'llllhiii!IM~ , :c ~ This is · technically cornance'! We must be careful far . the biggest . minority
Our main mnoem in all S1Diias is to -~- ~ry ~~moon, a•.,.~ I '~NC(. and for liberals like
here,
for the Hispanic bloc · bloc will still tie - you
be accurate. · «you tmow of"""""' thPomorough FOhloru:tav.,~. ~~-~ !.,~· · · ' u,u.h it · is a cons_umma
. tion
h;ls
several
very different guessed it - the whites.
.
1
rov. . ,....~-.-~11'1 t. ~
'"a
slory. calllhe -room at ( 411) paid at ,p011 .,~
·
~'~Dully to ·be WIShed. For
fa~asy, the hostility to components: people. who Their influence, is quite
992-2156.
,
, • *"'·Tho '""• i tsJ 1'niii1 om I.'Jwc~s .assume - that all white
dommance
in speak Spamsh but nghtly ' likely to continue to be
1he0hiot•ue:
Mlivu. .
~~.~ethnic minorities
America that is a quiet regard the'!lselves ·as thor00""".
Our ...m- ·1 •
••· Send __,_ , •,•\"blac"
Hispanic ' component of the liberal ' oughly white; people who dominant ·ror the foreseetiono to Tlw Doll!&lt; 'Sontinel, 111 Court
•' \•
.._,
able future.
,__ !7411)~~Stnoot. ""'-oy; Ohi&gt;4S761i.
Ohr~~J 1 Native American, worldview. Most liberals speak Spanish (or even
all, the whites will
...,... •••t•&amp;
w at,~~ -you- are auto- detest lhe value-syslllm that English) but are iodis- beAfter
~sy playing coalition 7
StAIMWIPI • • mati~ . hostile to the the whites who moved to . putably black; and so on. politics, too . The~ can, c
lit' ......,. oo- - white lll!i~ty. It follows
New World brought Certainly, the white campo- and undoubtedly will, use '
Oow ·-·· ......... ..'10.27 that, if tiley,e,ver collective- the
. , _, Chal1ene Hoellicll. £111. 12
with them, and look for- nent of this bloc won't their influence to recruit
:-:.~.
:~~S.: ly .come to,, represent a ward to the racial and eth- throw in its lot with an anti- allies · and defeat oppo- :
11 p .., : Brian · Ext. 14
maJonty of the l'\merican. Die
...... ... Beth s..vam. &amp;1. 13
they white coalition.
neots among the smaller
Oow•w=••• ..... -.....'10.27 population, they will gang assumehodgepodge
may someday
Similarly,
Asian- groups.
~
.....
1 11
.&gt;touo
up_on the whites and put an replace it culturally.
· Americans seem ·at least as
Rich and his fellow lib- :
....wat I •
-...... - In end to the latter·•s. domt·But it is a fantasy, · likely to identify theii- inter- erals had better -calm ·
o.q !? ..._, .o.r.. Hlirrio, &amp;1. 15 •••n... l l i l y - . No oubocripo, $ lj ....., Davio, &amp;$1tl lion by mailpo!H- in nance in Our SOCiety.. nonetheless. For it rests oo ests with those of the whites down. They are not going ;
n
'*
Wouldn't
that be fun?
that root assumption that all as with those of the black to overthrow white domi, .
~: ~CIIIll&lt;.&amp;t. 10
.. We could have a black
of
America,'&amp; minorities population. And the blacks, na'nce in America in "thret
....,. r;u '
~
- . . . . , c "lJ
president: a predominantly would cheerfully join hands in tum, will not necessarily to_f~ decades," or any: :
Gtti641M
2
• ·
Spanish-speaking Congress, to overthrow white domi- conclude that they would be thmg _like it.
13 w.u
Chariane , _, .Eid. 12
~
.
·
•
'
·
·
·
·
•
·
·
·
·
·
'32.26
a
Chinese-American nance. But would they?
26 Weel&lt;s ' .. ' ... .. .. ' .'64.20
better off in an America · (William Rusher is an ~
5 2 - . . ..........'127.11
Secretary of State, an • In three to four decades, . dominated by a mixed-race
~:
allthor, for- ;_
iroquois Speaker &lt;if the by far the largest "minority coalition than in the white- accomplished
mer
'IJublisher
of the ;
Ol111dl-.. Counlr
House and so on. The racial or ethnic group" in dominated society we cur- National Review andfol"'ffler:
13 Weel&lt;s .......... . : .'53.55
damned . whites could go . the eountry \j'ill consist of reotly have.
2 6 - . . . ' ........'107.10
'vice . . chainrjlln of . the :
take a rest somewhere.
52 w.aa ........... '21421
Hispanics
{which
the
In short, the technical end Amencan
Conservatiw ;
lt isn't hard to see, in this Census Bureau recently of majority-white domi - · Union.)

11

.

Orthodox traditions stand the test .oftime

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR .

·The

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Sentinel
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2400 Eastern Avenue
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OPINION

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*'

Cmt~ sfeJJ ......
Lnv fall~ a
.est.abfishtnd of Mi~ ., pmliifiiacg •

free aerdse ~- ·dti.Jfia,g dt:t~
.ofsfWd, « of • prus; .,.. du ri,gflt "!{ du
people pe40MIIf to "''h':JJ u,, -:I u, ,matfu ~~- .. tMfal "!{,~.
- 1be Rnlt_Ani6tdiiM•tct llw U.S. CwasUtution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, May 9, the Bath day of 2(i)()8. There are
236 days left in the y.ear.
Today's Highlight in Histocy:OnMay 9, 1754, a cartoon
in Benjamin Franklin's iPennsyl:v.ania Gazette ·Showed a
snake cut into sectians, each part representing an American
colony; the caption :read, "JOIN, ,or l)j)ffi."
On this date: In 1883, Spanish philosopher 3ose0rtega y
Gasset was born in Madrid.
ln 1936, Italy annexed IE.thiopia..
In 1945, U.S. officials .announced .that a midnight entertainment curfew was 'being lifted immediately.
In 1958·, "Vertigo," Alfred H:itdhcock' s eerie thriller statring James Stewart and Kim Novak, premiered in San
Francisco, the movie's setting.
·
ln 1961, iflGC chairnum Newtan N. Minow decried the
majqrity of television programming as a 'Wast wasteland"
in a speech to the National Associlttion of !Broadcasters.
ln 1974, the !House Judiciary Committee opened public
hearings on whether to recommend the impeachment of
President Nixon.
In 1978, the bullet-riddled body of former iltalian ,prime
minister Aldo Morn, who'd been .abducted hy :tbe IRed
Brigades, was found in .an automobile in the center of Rome.
In 1980, 35 people were .killed when a freighter rammed
the Sunshine SkyWay iBr:idge o:v.er lflill\Jla !Bay in !Florida,
causing a 1.~foot section to collllpse.
·
·
In 1982, the musical "Nine;'' in~Wired by 1he iFederico
Fellini film "8 1/2," opened on Broadway.
In 1987, 183 people were killed when a New Yo:dc:-bound
Polish jetliner crashed while attempting .an emergency
return to Wari&gt;aw.
One year ago: Vice IP.resident Dick Cheney pressed Jraq·•s
leaders to do more to reduce violence..and achieve political
reconciliation in a visit to Bagbdad that was punctuated by
an explosion that shook windows at the .U.S. Embassy
where Cheney w.as visiting. Pope !Benedict XVI began his
first trip to Latin Ame!;ica as he &amp;n:ived in •Brazil.
Today's Birthdays: &lt;OBS News correspondent Mike
Wallace is 90. Actress Genildine MdEwan is 76. Actorwriter Alan Bennett is 74. Actress-turned-politician Glenda
Jackson is 72. Musician Sonny Curtis CBuddy Holly .and
the Crickets) is 71. Producer-.director ~ames L. Brooks is
68. Singer Tommy Roe is 66. Singer-musician Richie
Furay (Buffalo ·Springfield and P.oco) is 04. Actress
Candice Bergen is '62. Pop singer Clint Holmes is 62.
Singer Billy !Jael is 59. iBlnes singer-musician Bob
Margolin is 59. Roolc' singer-musician Tom Peters son
(Cheap Trick) is 58. Actress Alley Mills ~s. 57. Actor John
Corbett is 47. Singer .Oave Gahan (Dcpeche Mode) is 46.
Rapper Ghostface Killab is 38. Country · musician Mike
Myerson (Heartland) is 37. Rhythm-and-blues iiinger
Tamia is 33. Rock musician Dan Regan (.Reel Big Fish) is
31. Rook singer. Pierre Bouvier (Simple Plan) is 29. Actress
Rosario Dawson is 29. Actress Rachel Boston is 26. TV
· .
personality Audrina Patridge is 23. ·
Thought for Today: "We canilot put off living until we
are ready." - Jose Ortega y Gasset, Spanish philosopher
(1883-1955).

~~ 11Jw9, zooR

ti there's one thing other
Christians know about the
ancient churches of the
East, it ~~ that Orthodox
believers usually get to buy
their Easter candy at closeout prices.
This year, the gap
betwan the two Easter
dates was ·so large - ' five
weeks - 'that :the leftover
ch11CQ]ate eggs had been
cleaned 'out 'by A:pril27 and
the great Orthodox feast
called Pascha tGJ-eCk. t:.or
'
"P.assovei").
'"It' s true that When -the

Teny

•n lliaoytv

after the fil'lit full moon that
comes . after ·the vernal
·
d
f
th
egwnox an .a ter
e

Passover.
· Jewish
The bottom line, however,
is that the !Julian and
~~~~ =~· ;: Gregorian calendars are
about J 3 days apart, and this
wbole lflallrom Card, gap will .continue growing
Easter bunny side of at the rate of about a week
things,"
said
Father per millennium.
Alexander IRentel, ·professor
All of that can be hard to
of !Byuotine Studies at St. explain, noted IRen~l. when
Vladimir's · Seminary in a child at school hands
Crestwood, N.Y. · "That another child an invitation
we'[!: on a different scbed- to an Easter ·party.
ule can nuike it easier to for
'101e kid says, 'Happy
us to concentrate on what Easter!' and then your kid
we're supposed to be con- · says, 'Actually, we haven't
centratiog on - which is celebrated Easter yet.' Then
what the season means in the o!her kid says, • un.
... JJY
the first place."
not?' and then that leads off
Why are the dates for into all kinds of conversaEaster and Pascha usually tions that can either be good
different? The short answer or bad, . depending on how
is that . all the Eastern comfortable your children
Orthodox churches use the ar-e when they're talking
ancient aulian calendar about what they believe and
when caloulati:ng the date why:"
for this season, while ·the
ln other words, he said,
Western church began using answering questions about
the Gregorian calendar in why your church celebrates
_the 16th century. A more Easter on a different Sunday
complex answer is to say is similar to answering
that, for the Orthodox, questions about why your
'Pascha is the first Sunday family fasts from meat and

·.

dairy for long periods of
time, or why you go to confession, or why yo11 make
the sign of the cross and
pray before eating Junch in
the school cafeteria. Any
strong belief that clashes
with the surrounding culture
is going to lead to questions.
"These are questiOn,~
about who we ·really are,
said !Rentel.
Identity questions Can be
.especially complex for the
.Orthodox in North America.
Tht:re Die 250 million
Orthodox believers worldwide - the second lar~est .
Christian church - but
only 5 million in the United
States. The Orthodox floclc
in the "new world" remains
divided into a dozen jurisdictions, each with ethnic
and historical ties to a moth-e r church abroad.
· Thus, there are times
when it's hard to draw a line
between ethnic traditions
and Orthodox traditions. It's
easy for the rites of Holy
!P.ascha to turn into My Big
Fat Greek - or Russian, or
Lebanese, or Bulgarian - Easter. Someday, the parish- ·
es founded by converts into
'Orthodoxy (like rny own
near Balti,more) may be
tempted to celebrate My
Big Fat Ex-Evangelical
Protestant Easter. It could
happen.
What the Orthodm; call
the "small t" traditions are .
important, said Rente!. The
family baskets packed with
. holiday foods, the blood-red

10U YAHOO.

.By

I\

h
·
A ;te· m'.,·norl'ty natron.

&lt;

;•'A••

DouG

STOCKTON

We· ve all chuckled when
someone tells a "good news,
bad news" joke. You can
almost guess the punch line
before it arrives:
Lawyer: 1 have some
good news and some bad
news. Which one do you
WI!Ot to hear first?
Client: Give me the bad
news frrst.
Lawyer: The bad news is
that DNA tests show your
blood is all over the crime
, scene.
Client: Oli, oo. I'm in big
trouble .' What's the good
news?
Lawyer: The good news is
that your cholesterol is
down to about 120.
·
Or how about this familiar one:
-Doctor: I have some good
news and some bad news.
Patient: What's the good
news?
Doctor: The good news is

that your tests show you
have 24 hours to live.
Patient: That's the good
news? What 's the bad
news?
Doctor: The bad news is
that J forgot to call you yesterday!
"Good news, bad news"
jokes are only funny when
they aren't happening to us.
But, I have ·found as a
Christian, l am not immune
to these types of experiences. For instance, 1 have
good news and bad news for
every Christian . The good
news-is Jesus Christ died for
our sins and has been raised
so that we will have eternal
life in glory with Him. The
bad news is that while we
live on this side of glory, we
will all go througli times of
spiritual dolt:frums in which
God may seem distant to us.
It doesn't mean we ha:v.e lost
hold of the Good News of
Jesus Christ for our lives. It
means we have allowed the

cares of this world to distance us from spiritual inti. macy with God.
When I think of this spiritually-draining experience
that every Christilln sometimes goes through, I am
reminded of the story of the
elderly couple whp went out
for a drive. During their 50
years of marriage, they
often would go on drives
together. As they pull up to
an intersection. they stop for
the red traffic light. While
waiting for the signal to
change another couple pulls
up next to them to wait also.
This pair is quite a bit
younger. Thi s twenty-something couple - cuddles and
kisses as they wait for the
light tQ change. .
Upon looking over at the
young romantic pair, the
wife of .50 years says to her
husband, "Isn't that sweet?
They're so in love ."
To which her husband
replies, " Yup."

"Do you remember when
· we used to be just like them'!"
"Vup_,, "Now look at us. You sitting way over there behind
the wheel and me all the
way over here."
"Yup."

"What happened to us?"
she asks with a sigh.
To which her husband
responds, "Well, 1 didn't

What it is to be a mom
It 'is having a new baby
Laid in yOw- arms .
And your frrst thought is
To love it and keep it from
all harm. ·

A-nd when you Jook in
that dear little face
You know no other could
move."
.
take its. place
As Christians, we all go · Ten perfect fingers and I 0
through times in our spiritu- perfect toes
al lives where God feels far
And would you believe
away. The good news is that that little button nose ?
God ha~n ' t moved. The bad
news is that we are the ones
And for your linle one to
who have moved. During give you a hand fuU of weeds
those times of feeling spiriAnd say, " Mommy. here
tually distant, God's desire are sOme flowers." .
for us is to simply slide back
You would ~mile , a~ you
over closer to Him through kissed their cheek
And say,' ''These . are the
regular times of prayer.
prettiest I ev«r did see ."
bible study, and worship. .
And to ypu they really
(The Rev. Doug Sroc/..1on
is · pasror of Grace United would be.
Methodist
Church
in
Or to sit with a sick child
Gallipolis.)

Two Convenient Locations

J!omo--•• .

www.m;.,•••.com
'

-.

'
)•

day and night
While your heart is filled
with such fright
But then you say a prayer
to God before dawn
And soon your fears are
all gone.
For you know His hand is
uponJou
An He will surely see
you through .
That is when you know
God did His !lest
And made you a mom so
that you may be blessed.
. Being a mom can bring
such joy
But it can also b~O;Il ~
. and sorrow.
·
That is when we place it
in God.'s himds
And pray for a 'b etter
tomorrow.
·
M.a ry E. ·(Klein)
Gerlacb

on over to Bob's..•

·.·. ·. ·. ·. ·.::: ·.·.
....,.a........_

o.w,_. ···········

·

May 9. 2008

I 600GLE,

oa ily Sen tin"
. .e I_: "

·*••

Friday,

·THJS .VJILL ·NEVER WORK,

A

=-

FAITH • ·FAMILY

eggs, the joyous dances and ·
the other ties that bind are
important. !But what cannot
be sacrificed are the "Big T''
traditions found in the 500plus pages ;of prayers, scriptures and rituals that guide
the spiritual journey from
Palm Sunday to Holy
Paseha.
The final sermon is
always the Same - year
after year, ceotuty after century - no matter where·
Pascha services are held. All .
Orthodox priests, by traditioil, read ;the Easter sermon
of St. John Chrysostom:
which dates to about A.D.
400 As the sermon ends, the
preacher called "the golden
mouthed" sums everything
up:
· "'() death, where is thy
sting? Q .hell, where is thy
victocy? Christ is risen, ana
you, o death, are annihilated! Christ is risen, and the'
evil ones are .cast down!
Christ is risen, and the
angels rejoice! Christ is
risen, and life is liberated!
Christ is Risen, .and the
tomb is emptied of its dead;
for Christ having risen froin '
the dead, is become the
first-fr.uits of those who
have fallen asleep."
(Terry Mattingly is director of ihe Washington
Journalism ·Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads '
the
GetReligion.org project to·
study religion and the
news.)

Leners to the editor are welcome. They should ·be less
than 300words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
4
signed, and include .address arui telephone number. 'No
. lllfDnrA •
f II
~
unsigned letters will be p.ublished. Leners should be in
. . , f Jl..-1 R.-&amp;.1;.
14/1 ~ .
.
, i . .
. . '
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leners of
thanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept· in lhe May 4 New York
reported accounts for a full nance io American society
ed for publication.
'· · ·
Times, columnist F11111k
·half of the nation's popula- will almost certainly not
tion growth since 2000). result in -dominance by a ·
Rich asserts &lt;that "Anyone .
r'------------,---...:.·--~--,..--,
who doos the math blows
,
'
Can we assume that this coalition of racial and ethwill automatically make nic minorities. Each of
that A;merica is on track to
become a white-minority
common
cause with (sayl these will be competing for
William
· nation in three to four
the black population tA power and influence in a
Reader Services ·
(USPS21....,1
decades."
R~er
overthrow white domi- mixed society in which by
Oonedluo1 Polley
P~_! lllf'"!'llllhiii!IM~ , :c ~ This is · technically cornance'! We must be careful far . the biggest . minority
Our main mnoem in all S1Diias is to -~- ~ry ~~moon, a•.,.~ I '~NC(. and for liberals like
here,
for the Hispanic bloc · bloc will still tie - you
be accurate. · «you tmow of"""""' thPomorough FOhloru:tav.,~. ~~-~ !.,~· · · ' u,u.h it · is a cons_umma
. tion
h;ls
several
very different guessed it - the whites.
.
1
rov. . ,....~-.-~11'1 t. ~
'"a
slory. calllhe -room at ( 411) paid at ,p011 .,~
·
~'~Dully to ·be WIShed. For
fa~asy, the hostility to components: people. who Their influence, is quite
992-2156.
,
, • *"'·Tho '""• i tsJ 1'niii1 om I.'Jwc~s .assume - that all white
dommance
in speak Spamsh but nghtly ' likely to continue to be
1he0hiot•ue:
Mlivu. .
~~.~ethnic minorities
America that is a quiet regard the'!lselves ·as thor00""".
Our ...m- ·1 •
••· Send __,_ , •,•\"blac"
Hispanic ' component of the liberal ' oughly white; people who dominant ·ror the foreseetiono to Tlw Doll!&lt; 'Sontinel, 111 Court
•' \•
.._,
able future.
,__ !7411)~~Stnoot. ""'-oy; Ohi&gt;4S761i.
Ohr~~J 1 Native American, worldview. Most liberals speak Spanish (or even
all, the whites will
...,... •••t•&amp;
w at,~~ -you- are auto- detest lhe value-syslllm that English) but are iodis- beAfter
~sy playing coalition 7
StAIMWIPI • • mati~ . hostile to the the whites who moved to . putably black; and so on. politics, too . The~ can, c
lit' ......,. oo- - white lll!i~ty. It follows
New World brought Certainly, the white campo- and undoubtedly will, use '
Oow ·-·· ......... ..'10.27 that, if tiley,e,ver collective- the
. , _, Chal1ene Hoellicll. £111. 12
with them, and look for- nent of this bloc won't their influence to recruit
:-:.~.
:~~S.: ly .come to,, represent a ward to the racial and eth- throw in its lot with an anti- allies · and defeat oppo- :
11 p .., : Brian · Ext. 14
maJonty of the l'\merican. Die
...... ... Beth s..vam. &amp;1. 13
they white coalition.
neots among the smaller
Oow•w=••• ..... -.....'10.27 population, they will gang assumehodgepodge
may someday
Similarly,
Asian- groups.
~
.....
1 11
.&gt;touo
up_on the whites and put an replace it culturally.
· Americans seem ·at least as
Rich and his fellow lib- :
....wat I •
-...... - In end to the latter·•s. domt·But it is a fantasy, · likely to identify theii- inter- erals had better -calm ·
o.q !? ..._, .o.r.. Hlirrio, &amp;1. 15 •••n... l l i l y - . No oubocripo, $ lj ....., Davio, &amp;$1tl lion by mailpo!H- in nance in Our SOCiety.. nonetheless. For it rests oo ests with those of the whites down. They are not going ;
n
'*
Wouldn't
that be fun?
that root assumption that all as with those of the black to overthrow white domi, .
~: ~CIIIll&lt;.&amp;t. 10
.. We could have a black
of
America,'&amp; minorities population. And the blacks, na'nce in America in "thret
....,. r;u '
~
- . . . . , c "lJ
president: a predominantly would cheerfully join hands in tum, will not necessarily to_f~ decades," or any: :
Gtti641M
2
• ·
Spanish-speaking Congress, to overthrow white domi- conclude that they would be thmg _like it.
13 w.u
Chariane , _, .Eid. 12
~
.
·
•
'
·
·
·
·
•
·
·
·
·
·
'32.26
a
Chinese-American nance. But would they?
26 Weel&lt;s ' .. ' ... .. .. ' .'64.20
better off in an America · (William Rusher is an ~
5 2 - . . ..........'127.11
Secretary of State, an • In three to four decades, . dominated by a mixed-race
~:
allthor, for- ;_
iroquois Speaker &lt;if the by far the largest "minority coalition than in the white- accomplished
mer
'IJublisher
of the ;
Ol111dl-.. Counlr
House and so on. The racial or ethnic group" in dominated society we cur- National Review andfol"'ffler:
13 Weel&lt;s .......... . : .'53.55
damned . whites could go . the eountry \j'ill consist of reotly have.
2 6 - . . . ' ........'107.10
'vice . . chainrjlln of . the :
take a rest somewhere.
52 w.aa ........... '21421
Hispanics
{which
the
In short, the technical end Amencan
Conservatiw ;
lt isn't hard to see, in this Census Bureau recently of majority-white domi - · Union.)

11

.

Orthodox traditions stand the test .oftime

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR .

·The

The Daily
Sentinel
'

Page As

2400 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
(740) 446-1711

•

\

�..

FAITH • VALUES

The DaiJy Sentinel

I learned sornetbing new
tbis week. I learn many new
things eyery week. but this
•.~
·--•· 's lesson ....,..:•·es
me as
""'""
!Wticularly compelling.

Past

Andl'mouriou. show~

rigbts activitist - disappeared into the duSlbins of
history until a few people
remembered her after her
death. What was the civil
. right ~r which Mildred
fought? The rigbt to marry
the man she chose- even
if that man was of a different race than herself.
· Mildred Jeter and Richard
l.oYing were married in
1958. She was 18; be was
23. But VIrginia law did not
recognize their marriage
because be was white and
• she was black. The prohibi·tion against mixed marriages had ellisted in various
fOIUls since 1691. So a few
weeks after the Lovings
were married, they were
awakened at 2 a.m.' by the
count~ sheriff and his
depuues surrounding their
bed and arrested for unlawful cohabitation. Their
Washington, · DC&gt; issued
marriage license was · not
recognized as valid by
VIrginian authorities. ·
Under a plea bargain, the
Lovings were released from
jail and told not to rerum .to
Virginia together. They
moved back to Washingto11;
but were never happy there.
•ln 1963, Mildred wrote a
letter to Robert F. Kennedy,
then the U.S . Attorney
General, asking for assis-

couples t:hat ll100w just got
married a few years ago. He
Was a fellow student with
me in semin•n~;
She was
~0
already a clergyperson in
Ohio. He's black; she's
wh1·te. Both are 1· ncr-~'bly

or

Keny

"

Wood

""'

One cmnOl ~

_.,,_of UM!IIbedloo4.
"'"'Y ~'l&gt;

Nor can one fathom die
·unsearohable dcpCbs of His
__ .. •
· Hi'

Prrtor

" _ ....bishop·• Communion call up• to· lnl'al bishops

~'\:0

·V '-'

WASHJNGlON (APj Wuerl wrote in his archwashington Roman Catholic diocesan newspaper column
Archbishop Donald Wued, that he does not believe the
responding · to questions Washington Mchdiocese
about the pro-abortion rights should intervene when such
Catholic · politicians who a public figure is taking
accepted Holy Communion Communion in the nation's
during Pope Benedict XVf's capital. He suggested that
American visit, said any doing so would supersede
decision about denying the the authority of those politisacrament to those polilii- cians' bishops in their home
cians should be made in their districts.
·
bome dioceses.
"A decision regarding the

· ·

refusal 'Of Holy Communion
to an individual is one that
should be made only aliter
clear efforts to persuade .and
convince the person that their
aclions are wrong and bear
moral consequences," Wuerl
wrote. ''Presumably this is
done in the home diocese
where the bishops and priests,
the pastors of souls, engage
the members of their flock in
this type 'Of discussioa."

from a ·o omJpted wol'lc!.
And iloi!estily, the spiritual
adversary that me Bible
... ..._
k:i t oon
""lSCfii""S.a s see ng 0 ' •
s me •'-e WIWary (I Pe•5~8) ·~1 · ·1
·~

b

~o~ fua~'' ~o~~~~gmu~.
.r ank high on his priority list
for spiritual attaok. If he
can influence me culture,
which' sbapes the attitudes
·o f ~pie and the m-esulting
p0l1cies 'Of d!Gse people's
soc;;iety, he can ·distract
mothers trom llheir .awesome mi'ssion of r.earing
t!bei1 children in a holy reverence of G 0d. He can
deg:rade their sense of dignity and wmth and convince them to spend themse'lves on things ether than
raising l!heir children to
w31k with Jesus. And be
can destroy the .naJTow window of opportunity tlhat
mothers have in the years
!!hat their cbi!dl'en are
younll and ;open, IFCSUiti.ng
10 f 31ture to preplll'e them
for me spiril!ual and ii:IIOOII
battiles that are rll,pidly
beading meir way.
It really is time for us
reclaim motlher'hood as
Ged'stterritory. Let us realize the power and signiJiicanoe of godly mothering
and let us ~ook w l'be Lord
in helping us «Jdo just that:
Consider for ,a m(l)lllent the
s1rateg.ic ~nvolvement of
God in the .a ppointment and
preparatiGn of mothers who
would infiluence ilbe wotid.
They became tools in His
hand to steer people back to
faith in God and @bedience
to His · will. Sarah, the
mother of · Isaac, was
groomed for faith so that
ber son and then her san's
sons would know Wihat
faith is (Genesis 21 :1-7).
Moses' mother, through her
w atchM wi~Jingness . to

~·-~..-,.

v..i.2lndl and 'Wtrd Rd... PMtor: Jllml5
Miller, Sunday Schnol - .JOJO a.m .•

'et

......

......_
••-"

Ualld? rn

anyone kid you: motbering
is four or five fuUtimc
careen all wrapped up into
one. There is oothif18 •that
can oo.., ......,. with ,narem
..-· to ~--hood's·-potential
1~
t'he world . .for etemity M
even .alter die course of lhe
generation dut is being
raised up for its tum at die
helm of wmlld eveots.
The first roles that God
instituted after He bad
made the first m.an -and the

·Jose ber son in Olldorto uve
•••s di·~--•y ---·-..
UJlllt ftG
.-~ " " " " " " " " "
as lhe tiUk one's ~ver
-~ ..__,
.. _-:"""·..._ ___ a
"""' ""' "''ljm .,.,.,....,., .
mighty means of deliver£
"'~.a·s """ple
ance .or uuw
r-v
(EJtadus 2:1-IOl.
Maooah's wife was called first woman, were husband
•t o boly [iVii.ng so that .alega- · and wife. 1be NEXT 1'0les,
cy o f power would endure naturally ifl(!)wing from itlie
· L - ~~·s ""e (1'n «ni•• Gf flfSI two, were father .and
m
~u • ..,,
~r "' •
m"'·'"-. No 'office t'IT !Iitle
his own mora'! deficiencies),
uu•~
providing .aid .and eooour- bestowed •o r .OFC.atcGI since
agement at a !lime !'hat the ~n the normal .oonventi1111s
.~le (Yf Israel were espe- of any !human ~ely have
daily vutnerable {Judges · been so signtficant; If
13:2-25).
Or 'flanmlh, ~·re a mother, you'Ye
Samuel's . mother, whose
n •g.iYen such a lliremennfl
"ogg-..
pers't stence i.n dous rposition of ~ ueooe
~.pray;"l'eSu1ted inablessm
. · g that mere · wol'ds cannot
from God that oot1&gt;1\ly pro- eqmess its worth. Seek tO
vided ber what she wanted, be ·the kind of woman that
but gave the world a God can use . 'Depend on
prophet wbo would unite Him for ilhe patience, loYe,
!!he Lor.d's .people and and energy necessary to be
anoint a lineage from which the \ind of mo1her you
God's •Own Son would want to be: even if yeu !feel
descerul in 'human foon (1 ~ike you can't measure up,
Samuel U-28, 16:1-! 3, ,remember that God bas
Matthew U-!7).
chosen YOU to be His speAnd 1hen, of course; cia! ambassador to
mere was Mary, the bumble child. If you've
young woman that God blessed with a godly mothchose to be tlhe one to er, take time to honor God
miraculously give birth to, by honGring her -not just
.love, and nu!Wre His own on Mother's 'Day but in
beloved Son. A godly general. U your mother has
III0ther is w011lh far ml'lre fallen significant:ly short,
than ber weight in gold: ber then seek to fOI'giYe ber and
·worth can't .even be con- · remember lhnt yl'lu still
tained by all the bank have a Father ·in he.aven
'yaults •on elll\llh (Proveibs Who ~oves you and will be
31 :I0-31l. The on1y place all and more than you could
large em!mgb is the treas~Fe eYer ask .in a parent. God's
bouse of heaven its~lf. ls people :today need to honor
this then a .pressure •t o be a mothellhood, protect it; ad
"perfect" mother? Nope. support it. It's time that we
There isn' t any such thing. esteem it and restore it to its
What's necessary isn't per· plaoe of pi'Ominenoe in the
fection, ·b ut an understand- list of vocations a ·woman
ing and lq)pfeciation of the pursues.
wonde!ful assignment that ·
And again, it is definitely
God has given a mother. time for us .reclaim it as
1'be lcind of understanding God's territory. It was, after
ani!! appreciation that I'm
His idea in the first
tal'kring about gene~ate place.
.
·dependence on God to le.ad
(llroM 114161;6• al leU ·
the war in baw to rear a faMily MH .a.irt rM Ul
mother s child. l'hey pro- sfllllllent
12duoe determined commit- Ill yt~t~n IUI4 u tlte •.,.or
men( to so. cherish the pre- of ."l'Jte . F.U, T.U
· cious life entrusted to her P.-.llks." Be is
that she constantly wrestles
Co.••llity
with God in prayer for her
wllidt .ae«s M
child. And they result i.n a
~ fit 455
personal surrender to the n.inl .tve. Be _ , be
Lord tbat is renewed each ·rw~elled /« - • «
day. As 'her life is inereas- q~~emo., ,#Jy ~lilt=·
ingly .a ligned with the will tortlwM@plllll-n•'...
of God in all the spheres of tis.c;omj.
·
L:-,·

•=

- - - -1:30pm.

-~

~ver v.lley Aposmlic Wcnbip Cemcr,

i73 S. 3rd
Ave .• 'M~Icport. Rev.
Mic.tiiBl Bndford. Pu&amp;or. Sunday, 10:30
a.m . Tues . 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm litHe
Study

LoQp Rii otT 'New Lilns Rd . Rutland,
Servioe£: Slm 10:00 a.m . 1:. 7:10 p.m.,
'Jbun;.1:001':rn., Pastor Marty R. Hutton

Asg ·mbly of God
~·
''atiGed
P.O. Bw. 46'7, .Duddillg Lane.

"

'

.

-

........

.......

~

.Putor. Floyd IWH, S"""'y School 9:30 to
10:30 am, Wor&amp;hip 8Crvlce 10:30 IO11 :00
am . Wed. preaching 6pm
I! d

..-c-...u.

..

~ ..... Ciowdo
Pastor: Stew: l...iUJe,,Suaday School: 9:30
UD , Muming Worship: 10;30 1m .
Wednesday Bible Study 6:30pm: choir

practice 7 ~ : youth and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m . 'f'!un . I prn book study

'370 Grain St., Middlcpclt. Sunday·school
- 9:30a.m., Wondliip - II a.m . and 6 p.m.,
_Wcdnolday Service .· .7 p.m. Plltor: Gary
·· Ellis
....... Fna ..... O...
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .• Worship -

-..,.nnor...-.
Pastor Joo Bmcken, East Main St..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am. Won.hip 10:30 am

llniSoollten •llopJilt
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Sunda)' SclJool 9:30a.m., Won.hip · 9;~5 am &amp; 7:00p.m ._.
Wednesday Servicei - 7:00p.m.
flni ..... CbPastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St..
'Middleport . Su11.day Sd\onl · 9:15 a.m:.
Wonhip • 10 :15 a.m .. 7:00 p.m .•
Wlllinesday Servia:- 7:00p.m .

__...,

Pastor: Ryan Eaton. pastor . Sunday
School · 9:30 a.m., Won.hip - 10~ a.m ..
6:00 p.m .. Wedneiday Services - 7:00
pm .

___ ....,..

Pa!tor: John Swanscm , Sua~y School •

let'' m ......-cllllaodl
Glut Bend, Route 124 , Racine ; OH,
Pastor: Ed Caner. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m ., Swuiay Worship - 10:30 a.m . ,~! 7
pm: Wedfte&amp;day Bible Study - 7:00l!.m.
I

'
0111-FneWIIIIopllot~

28601 St. R.t . 7 , Mlddlepon , Sunday
Service · 10 a.m.. 6:00 p.m .. TUesday
Sen-ices -6:00

.. ...... II

I

E. Keesee. Wonhlp · !Oa .m., 7 p.m.,
Wc:dne&amp;day ~icc~ . 7 p.m .

,

cI

~ . . . ..,.liJIIdl

* .... ,

,. ....,..._..,* r
. . . . . ., . . . ,

•

I

lfle

Lord,--

. , .... , . , . . . , •

I.U M I

. , • •. ,

_,_.,...,._;....
JI:S-f

Midlelle Kennedy
Director of Marketing and Adrni.,ions ·
I

We Sell +tomes at

4•

,,
••

6am - 8

TEAFORD REAL ESfAlE
Members of the 'MLS and REALTOR"

9tliffie's 1(estaurant

216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

740--949-2210

740-192..3325

"A Hr:me&amp;nt for

www.teafordrealestate .net

t.bJW: lti::t*.

·Hills SeU Storage
29670·8ashan ~·
Racine, ott

740-949-2217

....

Homemade Desserts Made Dally·
-

n.a, s,.a.lr
Open 1 days a week

CINlluiMM/s A

740-992-n13

,

740-9115-3581
992·1550

S.S • Serwlce • Pll'tl
All tlnhll
"-n811dAdlm

If yl tibille ill Ale, a4 My ,
wonls tlbile ill yo;, ye sW
ask wluu ye will, 111111 it sW
.be liMe • • ]OM.

Jolua 15:7

l'ROP~
•

•

190 N. SeOond St.

--~Qoorda
Minister: Larry .Brown, Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School . 10:30 a.m., Bible:
Study - 7 p!!D.

-.yo..a orQNI
212 W. Main St.. Swtday School - 9:30
a .m .. Worship- 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m.,
WednesdaY Services - 7 p.m.
.
-..w-·~orClorill

33226 Childnm) Home Rd .. Sunday
School - II a.m .. Worship - IQa.m .. 6 p.m.
Wedladay Services - 7 p.m .

mt·· a

tCJ.i-daflc.t.~

5th and Main , Pastor: A.! HKn11un,
Childreru; Director: SharOO Sayre, Tr~en
llir"ectoc Dodger Vaughan ..Sunda}' School
- 9:30 11.m .. Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m .• Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Kmoa-.b ...~
Worship · 9:30 .a.m.• Sunday ~chool 10:30 a.m .• Pascor-Jcffrey Wallace. 1st and
3n1 Sunday

a-dlefGel flPt ,;
OJ . Wbhe Rd. off st. Rt. 160, Poolor. PJ .
·aupman, ·Sunday ~School • 10 Lm.,
.t Worthip - II a.m., Wednesday Setvices - 7
:p.m.
I

GinlltFp I I I~
326 E. Main SI., Pomemy , Sullday School
and HOly Eucbarist 11:00 un Rev.
Ed..... Poyno

.., ailrdl

Steve

Thnt.ek,

Main

Strcot,

Rutland, Sllllday Wortbip-'10:00 a.m.,

--Cttordt

31057 SUI&lt; Rotlle

m .LaqsvDe. Putoc

Batjatioin Cntwfmd. Sunday • !1:30
a.m., Sunday worship • 10:30 a.m. &amp;: 7
p.m., Wednciday prayer tii:JVioe . 7 p.m.
c.t....y ....... a...,l
Kanisonville Road. Pastor: Owles
McKcnrie. Sllllda.y Scbo01 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - II a.m ., 7:00p.m., Wednesday
Se:rwice- 7:00p.m
ltd., Rlldad. Pulor: R&lt;v.
-·--~

.Lading~

Dewey ~. Sunday school· .9:JO •-!D-··
• Sunday WOI'1lhip -7 p.in ., Wednesday
ptayer ~- 7 p.m.

ll't.eGJM- -Cltordt
112 mile off Rt. 325. I'Utoc R&lt;v. O'Ocll
Manley, Samd.ay School - 9:30 un_;
Wonbip - 10:30 am ., 7:30 pm .•
~y
7:30p.m.

--Cltordt

7S IUrl St., Middlq&gt;on. Putor: llwg

Worship - 10 :30 a.m .. 6:30 p.m.
WcdDC!Iday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Cox., Sunday School · 10 a.m. Worslrip iOi45 p.m., Su*y Eve . 7:00 pm .,
Wednelday Servio: - 7:30 )i!ID.

..,.. -c

1, C1tordt

. Paslor. R&lt;v: Larry L&lt;m)cy: SutMioy School
- 9:30a.m., Won.hip - 10&lt;45 a.m., 7 p.m .,
Thunday Bib}e Srudy m1 Youth - 7 p.m.
t.-.~PnrM"

lnstrv.menrJ.I, Worship Senlce · 9 a.m ..
COmmunion ~ 10 a.ni .• Sunday School 10:15 a.m.. Yootb- 5:30Pm Sunday. Bibk
Study Wednelday 7 ~

Putor: Gle11n Ro.we, Sunda~ School a.m .• Wonbip · 10:30 a.m . Ud 6
p.m.•~ Service . 7:00p.m.

l,atfer.Day Saints

7 yo.rdrl flan.t
Minister: Tom Runyon, 39538 Brwlbury

WOJShip • 10:30 a.m.

. - c..... or~
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Wonbip ud
ColtUI1UDion - 10:30 a.m .. Bob 1. Werry,
MiniRcr
-C-uiCComer of St . .R.t. 124 &amp;. Bl'ldbury R.d .,
Mm;..,, llwg Sbambli&gt;, YOIIlb
Bill AmbetJet, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m .
Woribi'p - 8:00 a.m.. 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.rn ..Wcmtetday Services - 7:00pm

Mini_,

-.., -ct.ado tiOrlot
T\ipperi Plains, Putor Mike Moon: , BibJ.:
class, 9 a.m. Sunday; worship 10 a,m.
Sunday; wDr'Ship 6 :30 pm Sunday; Bibk
cJu.s 7 pm Wed.

:rea...-..

St. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20..11 a.m., Rchcf
Society/Priesthood · I 1:05-12:00 .noon ,
Sacrament Service 9-~0 : 15 a .m.,
lturnemakiq meeting, l st Thurs. • 7 p.m.

•elllln*
~Grove , Wonbip ·9:00a.m., Suaday
School - 10:00 i..m. Putcn-:
St. .......,

LdJano
Cltordt
Walnut
andHenry
Su ., Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pastor: David Ru11ell . SUIIday
School· 10:00 a.m .. Wonhip-_11 a.m .

s-"

St.Poui ......... Chodt
eo....
So&lt;oad St.. Pomeroy,
SUII. School · 9:4!!i a.m .•.Worsbip · 11 a.m .

"'CMill

CIHado
Slllday iChool 9:30a.m., Sunday wtmbip
- 10:30 a.m .

n.: ~ orCIIrlotor.-.,.
. Jnterflcction 7 and ~ 2 4 W. Evangelill :
Dennis Sal)ent, Sunday Bible Study ·
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. ud 6:30
pm., Wedae&amp;day Bi!* Stud)· - 7 p.m.

. CllrMian Union
-~orDriollo

Ctturdl ofGGd
- - o.dtorlloi

lliiiW. w· thr
:Wmmip • ll a.m. l'uloro IUdwd Nouc
....,.......,, IS'

New Haven, Richud Nase, Putor,
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. '{'ate, . f;:'JO
prayer and Bibk: StiKiy.

,..,I " 5

Ml.Oiw u....
Off 124 behind W'tlkes\'ille, Putor; Rcw .
Ralph Spires, S1111day Sc~Mlol - 9:JO a.m .,
Worship - 10:3Q a.m.; 7 p.m:. Thunday
Services · 7 p.m.

.... c 1 adte .....
Northeast Clu&amp;ter, Alfred, '-Putor: Jim
Corbin, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
Wonllip · II a.m., 6:30p.m.

.

lbunda~

~
Pu1or: Denzil Null, Wonhip • 9:30a.m.

Sunday kbool - 10:30 a.m ..

740182-6128
Local source tOr tmphie&amp;,
8 t irts and

P.O; BoK683

Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Letan , W.Va . Rt. I. PastOr: Brian May,
Sunday Sdlooi - 9:30 lin .. Wonbip • 7!00
p.m., ~y Bible Study · 7:00p.m .
, ..... , . c:r..le r..on.
Pastor:· Re\'.'Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday. 7 p.m.

13 o.dl

24Sl Second St .• S}'I'ICWIC. OH
,
SUD. School. 10 am, Slmdy night 6:30 pn

Pastor. Joe Gwinn
4Ne.' I
I

l'llloc Dewayoc Stutllor, s-,. ScUtl IOI.m., Wanhip - 11 am.

(N Gooool c.-do) HonUonviU.,
,.,_, Bcb mel KAy Marsball, ·

Cohoory -Bordo
Pomeroy Pike . Co . k d .. Palitar: Rev.
Blaokwood, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship 10 :30 a .m.. 7:30 p.m .,
~y Service . 7:30p.m .

Suaday Service. 2 p.m.

F-aPulor: Bob Robinson . Sunday School- '10

. ·BIIda(M'W I t)
Putor: Brian Dlmblm, Slmdly School 9:30a.m .. Wonbip- 11:00 a.m.

r, o.a

"--1 Gtatr:

Pastor: Wayne Dunlap, Smte Rt. 681 .
Thpf'en Plains. Sun. Wonltip: IO.em &amp;

StiVf:l'llvtllr ·C ..uuulty ~

6:30pm,. Wed. BibleSwdy 7:00p.m.
-~,..

.

Sunday School 10:00 am. Sunday Worahip
II :00 am. WedneiKiay 7:00 pm Putor. ·
Brym &amp; Missy Dailey

llllp '

( N o o - fellowshi]&gt;l

•••

Mcetins in the 'M cip Middle School

Putoc Bob Robimon. Sunday School - 9
a.m., Worahip - 10 a.m .

ll&lt;)aldoc Llk ~

Cdclcria. Pumr: Chris Ste-wart .
10:00 am - Noon Sunda_y; lnfonnal
~ . Cbildn:n's minimy

S00 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport. PUtor:
MW: Fon::man , Pa.uor Emeritus Lawu:nce

Pwlllta(tal

c

Sunday Sdlool - 9 a.m., Wontlip . 10 a.m.

-...

Pastor:' Brian Dunham, Wonllip - 9:30
a.m., Sadly Sc:bool- 10::35 a.m.

-.......

Putor: Dewaynr Statler, Sunday School •
9:00 a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m ., Vou.dl
Fellowdtip, s-,.- fi pm. Early Sllltdoy
wonhip 8 am· Jeani DuDbam
. ......

••

, 1.

Putor: Rick Bourne, Samday ScbooJ •
9:30am., Wordrip- 10:30 a.m., '11111nday
Service!i . 7 p.m.

-c-

Pam'Jr: W'tlliam K. Mmbdl, S..tay
School • 10:1.S a.m., Wmmip - 9:l!!i a.m.,

Bible Study: Moodey 7:00pm
Sac . .
SUJ?C!ay School - 10 a.m., Wonbip - 9 a.m .

_,

~tor:

Pmland-bciiiiC Rd., Pmor: lim Proffrtr. ,
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m., Worship •
10:30 a.m .. \\ledne&amp;dly Services . 7:00

p.m.

C'llhea tWNs rt Cllllrdl
Clifton. W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m .,
Worsbip · 7 p.m .. Wednesday Service • 7
p.m.

--....c-

39782 St. R1. 7 , 2 miles south of Tuppers
Plains, OH . Non-denominational with
Contcmporal}' Prai~e 1: Worship. Pastor
Rob Barber. Assoc . Pastor Karyn Davis .
Youth Director Betty Fulb. Sunda}'
aervices: 10 am Wonhip 1:. 6 piD Family
Life Claues, We4.. 1:. Thur night Life
Grotlpi at 7 pm. lbm momillg ladies '
Life Group a1 10. Oua Limits Yuudl Life
Group oo Wed . eveu.ing from 6 :30 to 8:30.
Visit us C»lioe.lll: www.betbelwc.org.

3773 ~ C.... Rood. Goll;pol~. OH
Pastor: Jamie Wireman, Sunday Services 10:30 a.m. Wednesday . 7 p.m . Thursday
.
Prayer &amp;. Pr'li.sc: at 6 pm. ClasiCS for all
ages e"ery Sunday &amp;: Wedaetday .
.datkc:hurch.net

a.m., Worship .. 9 a.m ., WcdaesdayServiccs- lO,a.m.

Fldl~~

.Aili-·Qon:lo
398 Alb St .. Middlepon-Pastors Muk
Morrow II. Rodllc:y Walker Sunday
School - 9:30 un ., Morning WDI'Ihip •
10:30 a.m. ~7 :00pm. Wedaelday Service
- 7:00p.m., Youth Sen-ice· 7:00p.m.

Servic::es: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Solem c--w.y Clton:lo
Back of We11 Columbia, W.Va.om Ueving
Road, PlSlOr: Clwtes Roush (304) 67-32288, Sunday School 9:30 am. Suaday
eveaing fiCrvice 7:'?0 pm. Bibly Study
Wedne!iday !lef'Vicr 7:00pm

..Fuii-Gospel Church". Pastors Jebn &amp;.
Patty WICk:. ti03 SccorldA't'e . Muon. 7735017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wednelday 7 pm

C&amp;IIIIS
Carmel ,._ Buhan Rib. Racine, Ohia,
G~. Sunday School •
9:45a.m., Wonhip- 11:00 1.m . , Bible
SIUdy Wed. 7:30p.m.

PallOr: John

Putor: Johrl Gilmol'c, SUIIdly School - II
a.m ., Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Paator: Bill Manball ·Sunday School •
9a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m., 1st Suaday
every mondl cweniq acrvice 7:00 p.m.;
Wecmclday - 7p.m.

-

AI

C1tr1oll.. F~ Cltun:h
Pastor: Herschel White . Sunday School10 am. Sunday Churcb service - 6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm •

s;,.GnDtu. l.

923 S. Third St•• Middleport. Pastor Teresa
Davis . Sunday aerwice . 10 a.m..
Wecba:lay aervioe •..., p.m.

-Cioriotlu .F ""-loip
9365 Hooper Road . A.thens, Pastor:
LoMie Coats, Sunday Worship 10:00 am .
Wednesday: 7 pm

Foldt..-.. Gooool a.-dt
Loag Booom, Paslor: Sle't'C -Recd, Sunday
School · 9:10 a.m. Wonhip .- 9:3b a.m .
and 1 p.m .. %&amp;- d•y . 7 p.m .• Friday felloWihiJliCfVicc l p.m.

H~ ~Hftlh&amp; Mbdlirifs

BauJwa•• C
... ,. Cftrdl
· Putor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m.llld 7 p.m., Wednesday- 7 p.m ,
tCCet 2

l'uloro Kcny Wood, Somday 5dtoo! · 10.
a.m .•. Worlbip - ·n am.w 1 'ay
Services 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm

ac

4•ya..n:.

515 Pem-1 St., M~ , P~lor : Sam
Andenon . Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Ew:niq. 7:30p.m., WtdDelday Service .
7:30pm.

n ,,,......_.

Putor: Hden Klillr:, Coolville Church,
a: Fifth St., Sun. Sc:bool - ·to a.m.,
Wonbip- 9a.m., Tlleli.Services. 7 p.m.

Main

llelltolCltordt
Townslrip Rd.• 4611C, Sunday School • 9
a .m . Worship • 10 a.~ ., Wednelday .

Servia!s - 10 a.m.

twdoQon:lo
Co. Rd . 63, SUDday School-9:30a.m.,
Wonbip · I0:30a.m.

I

.r.t.itlle4~flfMitN · mr
Route 689, Albay, R.e\&lt;. Uoyd Grimm,

llaniloa\'llt P'Jub)IUiw Cluardl ·
Pastor: Robert Crow. Wanlup · 9a.m.

s,--1411 Bricteeman St .. S)'l'ICUJe, Sullllay
SciiOOI - 10 a.m. Bvenirl.g - 6 p.m ..
Wednclday Service. 7 p.m.

Mlddl tpOit Ptubyteriu
Pastor: James Snyikr, Sunday School 10
a.m ., wOJShip seivice 11 am .

y_. C
l•y CIMucb
Oft' Rt 124, Pu1or: Ediel Hart. Sunday
Scbool - 9:30 a.m ., "worship- 10:30 a.m .,
7:30p.m.

~.

'Suaday Sclwol 10 ~; worhaip
ltJI'Vice ll am, eYeaing !lle1'\'ice 7 pm.. Wed.
pntyer ..-... 7 pm

P!'IS t t~.r~N . w
" ' -: Leounl PowcU . Sunday School •
9:30 a.m.,Wuwbip • 10:30 a.m., f;:)() p.JO.,
WedMiday ServM:es- 7 p.m .•

•

Seventh~Day AdYentist

--Doy,.._

Mulberry Hts . Rd;. Pomeroy. Saturday
Services: Sabbath School · 2 p.m ..
worsnq) . 3 p.m.

'Ja-rdt

United Brethren
Mt. Jta:me. u.tk!d . , . _

-Ciooool~ '

Slmday scbool - 10 a.m ., Wonhip - 11
a.m,.. Woclocsaay Service - 7 p.m.
F-~~

Loq Bottom, SLllllily School - ~ :3Q a.m .,
Worship · 10:4S a.m ., 7 :30 p.m .,
Wednelday 7:30p.m.

-

7

• •

Goopoll .... I

a-:.-, Sllllday School - io a.m., Ewaing

FA: llt1p

Cbu:rcb of tile Naz.mate, Pastor: Rus.eU

7:30p.m .. Tue:sday,lt. lburs.- 7:30p.m:

Canoo , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .,
Wonbip - 10:4!\i a.m ., 6 p.m., We' rt·Y

s.lllediiiC
'ty·DIIn:*
Silver Ridp- .Pastor Linda Damewood .
Suadly Scbool • 9 am., Wonhip ~ce
10 a.m. .200 aad 4th Slllliay

~ - 7p.m .

S,...... a..dlfl.a.N
cw ·
P&amp;aiJIT Mike A.dkias, Suaday School 9:30

---y

Pentecostal ·

Presbyterian

Suaday School - 9:30 a.m .• Worship 10:10 a.m., 7 p.m .

Nazarme

SL Rl. 1l4 Looopdl&lt;, 0H
Full Gospel, Cl Psstun. Robert &amp; Robena
MuSser, ·Sunda y ,Sctlool 9:30 am , ,
Worstlip 10 :30 am - 1:00 pm, Wed.
Servie1: 7:00 pm
T6¥D J..u; MiDiatrirs
Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Center Gymhss ium . Psstur Eddie B~.
Service e"ery Tuesday 6:30pm

Pastor: St. Rt . 124, Racine . Tornado Rd.
Sunday School • 10 a.m .• E"enins • 7
p.m., Wednesday Servitu - 7 p.m.

, . . VIIIIJ' T 2
Ollrdl
Bailey Rim Roul, Putar: Rev. Emmen
Raw1on, Sunday Evenins 7 p.m ..
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

~c

'i--·

"'*'u.locRt.338. Antiquity. Pastor. Jesse: Morris..

"-u.c-

John Gilmore, Sunday School, · 10

~ ·u.lledl'

· Foreman , Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesdl.y ScntiCa' • 7 p.m.

) .rCiailt

•••n ...._ . ...._

7.5,..6333

1 Ill tsl-11116

IS I 7 I 1,011 7~141
wa,.W.. M1P

. . . . . ..

I

r

loC-C&gt;ord&gt;
Texas Commun i1y 36411 Wickham Rd. ·
Putor. Pelcr Martind.ale, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Services. - ?:00 p .m.
Youth groUp meeting 2nd &amp;: :4th Sundays
7p.m.
-U--IoCbriol
Slate Route 124, between Reedsville 4 ·
HooUngport. Sunday ·School - 10 a.m .,
Sunday Worsb!p · II :OO a.m. Wcdoclday
Stnice5 • 7: 00p .m., Pa!lot· M. Adam
.Will

Coolvilfe, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersbtug

I

INt-.

P

1-7~·3156

0),0117.-.m.SUI

slUIJ

-&amp;LOll•
PIU•VY
W, Fill iDaclcn'

Pmducta i
Financial
AOEIIOES Inc . ServiQes

,_.or

Pm aiplioM
'

-

... .. [l l kC.... ) ..

t. ""!

h ·\. H \' ""'11

slulll see God.

IGIXI and man."

Mlltdtew ...&lt;,l

).

•

God so loved the wn1"/.d I
~

'

Acts 24 :

gave his only

lbt!rt&gt;"•m son ...

: Blessed .fin t1te pfu.e . "So I strive always to keep
;, lwm; for dt.ty my conscience clear befiiJI'C)

' '

740-667-3110

..

........

s,r- c

CENTER .

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

"""'
,....llla1rr
.,., ..
m-•
if I' .c. ,

............... a...rll .

A~ADIA,t4URSING ·.

lnsuranca

-

rm

, _ s.._. S~noc~Jy Scltool - 9:30
a.m ., Wonlttp - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m ..
Wedllelc:lay Ser:vica: - l p.m .

7

Full

i

..._.a.rdl~6et '

Cool,illr Road. Pastar: Re\'. Charles
Mlftindale, Sunday School - 9:30 A..m-1'
Wonbip - 10:30 a.~ .. Wednesday Servk:e
. 7 p.m .

Otber Chunitc:s

-AiliOdlbw.~ Sdoool- 9:30
a.m., 'Warlhip - ·10:30 a.m .. 33105 Hi1ud
lbl."'-roy

•

Sct.ool - 10 a.m.•
Servit,cs - 7 p.m.

.W&gt;IOr'&gt;Ciooool w..,..

ScbooJ.- 9:30a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m .,
s""""y .....mg 6 pm

......

~

Pastor: Jim Corbin , Wonbip - 9 a.m.,
Sunda~

-

3304l Hilad Rood. Pumoroy. Pasto" Roy

I TEEs
Middlepoft, OH

---

!Ailoooy '~I. -BobRobiDoao,

.......,_._ !1:45 ''"'• Wmmi]&gt; - II
611.,-.· ., 's l.vicii--·7:3op.m.

Grand Street, Slmday Scboo1 - 9:30.a.m ..
Wonbip - IO:lOa.m., PulorPhillip.Bdl

~u-.

Hartford , W.Va., Putor:Dawid Gmer,
Sunday Scbool - 9:30 a.ni .. Wonbip • .
10:30 a .m .. 7 :00 p.m .. Wednadly
Scrviocl - 7:00p.m.

F.-G-.o~ ·-

Bald Knob, on Co . Rd . 31, Paswr: Rev.
RoJer Willford . Sunday School - 9:30 ·
a.m . Worship- 7 p.m.

_ . . , .....,Cltordt

United Methodist
~

I olle Oandltlekilt
Pbilip Swnn, Somday School o~, 30
a.m .• Warsbip Service: 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Stlld._y.Wodlleiday. 6:30 p.m.

pm.

Pos~«o

-'-

n.: Clton:lt " ' - .
Cltdotui~Doy-

w

O..'CIIInla.ttltt'

9:30

•

a.m.

-y

..... ,.

Putor: Jan lAvender, SLIDCiay Sclllool 9:30 a.m., Wonbip - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wedacld.)' ~ . 7 p.m .

~----~

Ki•Jsbury Road . P.utor: 'Robert \'moe,
Sunday School • 9 :30 a .m., Wonbip
Sernce 10:30 a.m., E\'enina Service 6

Putor: lle\'. Curtis ltmdolph . ·Suaday

,..,., lim
Sc:llool - 9
a.m .. 'Wtnbip - lOIIll., 'nleldly Srnicel
- UOjUD.

11411

am .

nwen l'lolo Cloordo orClorill

,._.,.c::a.n~~

....,._Ill._
c.nm.

Sunday Ser.ta,..7 p.m.

sen.la: .

ZO.CloadlorCbriol
Pomeroy, HarrisonYille Rd. (Rt .143),
Pastor: Roger WatJOD. Sunday School 9:30 a:m .• Worabip • 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m., Wedftt:Wy Sentice5- 7 p.m.

-

a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

~iJM'Ri

w..,..

~

Wonbip • lt:lO .un., Saday School •
10:10 a.a., P'U'Jt s..day ofMo.dt • 7:00
p.m . aenioe

7

nially a.rdt
Second &amp;. Lyon , 'Ponaoy, Pastor: Rev.
Bob Wannow:h. Wonbip 10:25 a.m..

Pwor:

S-y School · 9,30 lJI) ..
lb:lOa.m.

,

Congreptional

, ~tiolpo.n:toorCbriol
Pastor:Bruce Tcny, S011day School -9:30

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

your light so shine befclfCI
1men, that they may see
lg(Mxl works and glorify
IF:Illhl,..in heaven."
Matthew

Rui!Jell, Sunday sa.Ool and Worship- 10
a .m. E"en ing Services- 6:30 p.m .•
WcdDe&amp;da}' Scrvia:s - 6:30p.m.

•

Sunday School .' 9:30 a.m.. Worabip 10:45 .1.m., Sunday E"ening - 6:00p.m.,
Putor. Don Wolkm

MIDDLEPORT ·

IIEIQS FN&amp;"/ flECME, lLC
A. JACKION :PM a, 00
.

Poat !I 0)', OWo 45'78 .l"fr:-..
1741) 99%-32'79
~'-!!~'

R.e-\'. JIM'ph Woods, Sunday School - 10
30
a~ .. Wriip - 11 : a.m .

S-fllnla..dtor.C.
w Socood Sis., Puur. ltev. Oav;.l

Apple

l1J

Mile Hill Rd .. Raciae , Putor: J.ame1

Sizes available 5K1 0 to 10 K 20 .

n.e....-e ..

10:00 . Sun morninc Bible study :
following worship, Sun. e"e -6:00 pm,
Wed 'bible slUdy 7 pm

M t . - .......
Fourth &amp; Main St. , Midd.lcpon . Sunday
School · 9:30a.m .. Wonbip • 10:4S a.m.
Pa&amp;tor. Rev. Michael L Thamp.un, Jr.

Houn

Mbrm Fn'endl,v r
!&amp;rmosphert

Pick up a color Bmchurel

Foldt ....... Bordo
Railroad St., Na!iOII., Sunday Scbool • 10
a.m., Worship • II a.m ., 6 p.m.
Wcdaesday Services · 7 p.m.

r-••llopllot·"-"f

..

lUI F- 1477·Sil-U33

,,

. ·,

Pulor: .tloo Hr:atb, Sunday Worship • I0
a.m .. 6 p.m ., ~DeMlay Sentia:5 - 7
p.m.

Epi800plll

•

I

p.m.

ChurdtofCbr&amp;

Road . Midd~pon. Sundly School - 9:30
Mt.Ualoallopdot
Ptilor: Dennis Waver Sunday School9:45 a .m.. Even\n·g • 6:30 p.m..
~y Sm:vices - 6:30p.m.

n5 N. 2nd St. Middlepon , Pastor: Jamei

MIIJtlaew 5:8

!-ve., Pomeroy, 992-5898,
Pastor: R.e". walter E . Heinz , Sat. Con.
4 :45-S:lSp.m.; Mass- :5:30 p.m.. Sun.
Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m ... SWI . Mus- 9:30
a.m .. Dll.ily Mass · 8:30a.m.

IOa .m., Wonh"ip • lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
.W~y Servioell- 7:00p.m.

~

slulllseeGod.

1611r4ul~

10;45 a.m .

a.m ..

We Clln learn much from our 1111/thm besides.such wise adrice as to eat a
good bre~~kjast and tn wash our hrmds aften. While It is true thllt mothers
usually know o lot of good pradiClll JtlJjf. -injin~ly more important than their
practical wisdom is thrir solicitous Ctlrt and unconditiorral 1M. ,WOJS most
of the animal kingdom. arrd almost unim:saUy among
mammals, .we set in motherltood an instilldJJal Cllrt arrd '
~ protection of their young. For example. think of
the mother bear and the rr~~ming tn
/lft'er rome behreen a bear arrd htr
cu!IJ. Good mothers trill dejerrd ltltfr
young agoinst almost any threat,
ofttn ot grrot risk to themselvn.
' and usually attend til thtir
chiilirrn's Cllre and /Hding
·before they ottend to their
own. Good mothers 1110, ltwe
their youngstm mn wllen
they haw gone ostray: this
uiiCOIIditianlll ll!atnnolltwe is perllaps
the deDrest lfjlection of God's
uriCOIIditionalllwe. In the sa~ rrf1Y
. thor a goad IIIOftler.wiU tr/1 G dtild !hilt
is bting punished 11r11t this dorsn't
they ~ Jowd cmy len. so too does Gad
chttstisf His cmldm!. telling US that Gad is ltwe arrd everything He dots ISa
IIMiiftiWiion of !hot - . including His punishment. This !lather's Ooy. we
should 11/1«! on ,_our mother's ltwe mirrors Ws ltwe for us, even in
thtM tiiiN!S . , she is COO'ICting us.

·s.c..OI-~c.a

a.r...-. Cloon:h (s-t1ion)

,.

. lllloidt ...... C .......
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt . .7 , 'PKstor: Re'\o·.
Jame' R. Acree, Sr., Sunday Uriified
Senoicc. Worship - 10:30
6 p.m ..
Wrrlncsday Services · 7 p.m.

The Virtues of Motherhood

Calholic

33226 Cbtldr'en 111 Homr.ltd , Pnmeroy, OH
ConlaC1 740-441 -1296 Sunday moraing

Sunday Scbool • 9olO.m, ,...,ing
Sc:rvior: 10:30am, Evening Service
7:60pm, Wed.esday Bible Study 7:00 pm.
iPutor.

tlte,..,.

.. f&amp; ..

Firwl..,_
0...,.........

Mason ~

&amp;.pliR

c.-:.--1 I .£

s.-y

~rl

a..~~

- WV,
·....
Ra\'eflswood,
Sundll,y School 10 am•Mantia&amp; wmtqp JL.am EvcniD&amp; - 7 p-n.
Wet ...y1p.ra.
Don&lt;o or-.wv
Bopitl)
'SR 65.2 and ~'St . •Pastor: Raben
Grwly. ~unda)' &amp;ehool 10 .am, Morning
church 11 am, Suaday evening 6 pm, Wed.
Bible SIUdy 7 pm

' .

Olticl*,...

.Bksse4~~re the pare
ill ltetut; for IMy

s.llem 'St., Putor. 'Ed Bamey , Sunday
School - ib J .m ., E-vening • 1 p.m .,
'W ' d.+_y'Semca - 7pm.

W.Va .. 'Pastor: Neil Teount. Sunday
Services- 10:00 LtD. and 7 p.m.

an.

'&amp;,.'::J::••Y.

l~tabe&amp;IOIIIICitiDc.

-

C

a

a.m ., 'Worlhip - 10:30 a.m., '6 p.m.•
Tt' 1 day Semces - 7 pm .

P'se"S.W:. - 7

c.·n-.o

•creA'Illon "' ""' ·-·· ...,..

The o.IIJ Sentinel ·Pap A7

WWW.m,1J 'IJt I 111111... CCIIR

WORS1'HP
WEEK
___....,.. e._.._,,•.,.,.,cGOD 111IS
..__

ber life, ber wid. as motft.
·
'th lhe power
er
ms •·• cu WI
love, .and wisdom ~-•
sary to parent the w.ay .t hat
the Lotd does. Don't

the wisdom
die..
·
-~ Of
.... _Gocl
..,...,in __

imelligeiit. art!iculate, com- ~.;:'':f~~!
passionate, and spiri'tual
people.
.dle,
·
"" -~• dlrouf
rbi~
0
Joncetoldhimtbatl ·saw Wbat
· ~~~
-.,_
.
_,
.
~~-·
·-- ..-".·.
~lll"' ......
..........,.
!:Jim primarily as a man of ful wOI'th has &lt;OUr God
God. not as a man ·o f color. al!t.aObod to ml'llheihood!
. From my perspeollive, his .,.,.__.
.~·llinw ·
skin oould have been char- nom an awesome~ mt
treuse. and 1 wouldn't care: is to be die vessels ~
_.._,.... ,..__._ ,..,_.. """',..
And yet. it was important •t o wuwu 'UI'" """ ' ,....... ..--hun
· 'ormetoreco·gn1···1'-at expressionsofHisUWilkwe
•·
~ '" '
-"il ..-......,_..
he IS African-American. He as "'' wo;n are n ...... ,..,..,
didn't want me to be oolor- taught. and oomf(!)l1fed!
God created III0tbedmod ·
blind. but color-aware. Our with .etemal ·thin~s in mind.·
racial heritages are impor- 8
th
. .
, e stgnt
tcance o f
tan! and Should be consid- · ut.... rh
d I''· " the
ered; but they should never . mouue oo , t ..e a a . rbe defining .
hood, .bas become oonp
fused, distorted by w.~
The Aposr1e :au1 wrote perspecliives libat racbate

·-"-Association, wuu reviewed
!be case and decided to take
rt
' • On June 12. 1967 . .... us
-we
Supreme Coon. in Loving
ealth f
vs. the Commonw
o
VIrginia.
unanimously
SQUCk down Vuginia·s law
as a "iolatioo of the 14th
Amendment to' the United
stales
Co tJ·tun·
ns
on.
Miscegenation - the mixing of whites with other
nt:es _ coold no longer be
banned by any state. •
. about how thhoseld ...:ho _.are
Not only bad J never Christians s ou
partllcuheard of Mildred Loving, I larly be aware that in God's
had ne\·er L--d of the word eyes. there are no I~Jnger
,IC4J·
defin1'ng differences among
~ 1·
. n~ before
3 t10
emJ
.th sceger
.. eAnn d I think of us: "You are all chi'ldren of
myself as having a large God through faith in Omist
vocabulary! What ·makes Jesus, for all of you who
this history and language were baptized into Ohrist
lesson so compelling for.me have clothed yourselves
is that 1 wonder whether or With &lt;Chnst. There ''neither
·not 1 am unique in needing Jew nor Greek., slave nor .
sucb a lesson.
free, male nor· fet;nale, for
It has been a long ·IJime you .~~~ ~II ~ne m Clmist
since !felt like a youngster. Jesus. ·(Galattans 3 . 2~-28) .
Being in the midst of my . So 1111 an area ·o f0hlo1ilat
4th decade probably has a IS ~reater than 90 percent
Jot to do with that. Back in wh1te, how do we see pe.othe 1960s, I was .not think- pie whose skllll c?lor IS d~fing about marriage; I cared ferenl than our own? Do
more about toys, snacks and we acknowledge these dtfavoiding afternoon nap~ !
ferences .. honor them, 'but
But t0day, marriage is not hm11 ourselves by
extremely impo!ltllllt to me, them? Is II poss1ble to ereand so is eqUality. I~ work ate a w0r.Jd where vocabuvery hard at being .unbiased I~ry lessom on m1soegena- .
by skin color, national ori- tton are no longer neces~Po. age and gender. W·hile sary? Or d(r we need to
rnter-racial marriages are ·:retain the lesson so that ,we
not very oommGn, i have can kn.?w how far we ve
known several couples of come · m ~reatmg a land
mixed race .. Nothing about ffee of ractal p~ejudwe?
their marriages bothered
{~ ~IS tlte fiiiSiit!"
me. ln the hack of my mind, of lldcine Vrril«l Ill~
I probably knew there was a Owtr:ll, 818 Elm SPwl' ur
time when that might not lllJciae. Siuuloy'ti!OI'Sftipisat
have been legal, hut 1 never ll&amp;flf. Ptzstor «erry 0t111 file
gave that a second thought. FWJCW at racinelunc@slltlOne of tlhe mi~ted-.race ,4enJUrk.flet.)

•

f• •lilly I, 2001

Friday, May 9. .,o8

"""'F"'!t,

tance. Sbe was referred to
the American Civil Liberties

fiW

A Hunger For More

A LDving mtiiTiage IIUlde more difficult

feel about it.
Mildred Jeter Loving died
last Friday. Obituaries were
""
. 'nted tn '!he New Yori.:
.,..
Times, the Los Angeles
Times. ..e Washington
Post, .:and seYeral other.
maior media. Obviously,
'
she was a pretty important
person to .get stories in all
those newspapers, but I had
never heard of her.
lf I say Manin Luther
King, Jr. or Rosa Parts. you
will probably think of Ci•il
Rights
pioneers.
But
Wldred Loving - " 'ho
never intended to be a civil

PageA6

John 3:16

to Clln"

"'.for
arace
sufficient
thee: for
my
strenath is made
Perfect in waknes5.
II Cor. I 2:9 .

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-t N. 2nd Ave.

llktdleport, OH
992-6376 .

r

�..

FAITH • VALUES

The DaiJy Sentinel

I learned sornetbing new
tbis week. I learn many new
things eyery week. but this
•.~
·--•· 's lesson ....,..:•·es
me as
""'""
!Wticularly compelling.

Past

Andl'mouriou. show~

rigbts activitist - disappeared into the duSlbins of
history until a few people
remembered her after her
death. What was the civil
. right ~r which Mildred
fought? The rigbt to marry
the man she chose- even
if that man was of a different race than herself.
· Mildred Jeter and Richard
l.oYing were married in
1958. She was 18; be was
23. But VIrginia law did not
recognize their marriage
because be was white and
• she was black. The prohibi·tion against mixed marriages had ellisted in various
fOIUls since 1691. So a few
weeks after the Lovings
were married, they were
awakened at 2 a.m.' by the
count~ sheriff and his
depuues surrounding their
bed and arrested for unlawful cohabitation. Their
Washington, · DC&gt; issued
marriage license was · not
recognized as valid by
VIrginian authorities. ·
Under a plea bargain, the
Lovings were released from
jail and told not to rerum .to
Virginia together. They
moved back to Washingto11;
but were never happy there.
•ln 1963, Mildred wrote a
letter to Robert F. Kennedy,
then the U.S . Attorney
General, asking for assis-

couples t:hat ll100w just got
married a few years ago. He
Was a fellow student with
me in semin•n~;
She was
~0
already a clergyperson in
Ohio. He's black; she's
wh1·te. Both are 1· ncr-~'bly

or

Keny

"

Wood

""'

One cmnOl ~

_.,,_of UM!IIbedloo4.
"'"'Y ~'l&gt;

Nor can one fathom die
·unsearohable dcpCbs of His
__ .. •
· Hi'

Prrtor

" _ ....bishop·• Communion call up• to· lnl'al bishops

~'\:0

·V '-'

WASHJNGlON (APj Wuerl wrote in his archwashington Roman Catholic diocesan newspaper column
Archbishop Donald Wued, that he does not believe the
responding · to questions Washington Mchdiocese
about the pro-abortion rights should intervene when such
Catholic · politicians who a public figure is taking
accepted Holy Communion Communion in the nation's
during Pope Benedict XVf's capital. He suggested that
American visit, said any doing so would supersede
decision about denying the the authority of those politisacrament to those polilii- cians' bishops in their home
cians should be made in their districts.
·
bome dioceses.
"A decision regarding the

· ·

refusal 'Of Holy Communion
to an individual is one that
should be made only aliter
clear efforts to persuade .and
convince the person that their
aclions are wrong and bear
moral consequences," Wuerl
wrote. ''Presumably this is
done in the home diocese
where the bishops and priests,
the pastors of souls, engage
the members of their flock in
this type 'Of discussioa."

from a ·o omJpted wol'lc!.
And iloi!estily, the spiritual
adversary that me Bible
... ..._
k:i t oon
""lSCfii""S.a s see ng 0 ' •
s me •'-e WIWary (I Pe•5~8) ·~1 · ·1
·~

b

~o~ fua~'' ~o~~~~gmu~.
.r ank high on his priority list
for spiritual attaok. If he
can influence me culture,
which' sbapes the attitudes
·o f ~pie and the m-esulting
p0l1cies 'Of d!Gse people's
soc;;iety, he can ·distract
mothers trom llheir .awesome mi'ssion of r.earing
t!bei1 children in a holy reverence of G 0d. He can
deg:rade their sense of dignity and wmth and convince them to spend themse'lves on things ether than
raising l!heir children to
w31k with Jesus. And be
can destroy the .naJTow window of opportunity tlhat
mothers have in the years
!!hat their cbi!dl'en are
younll and ;open, IFCSUiti.ng
10 f 31ture to preplll'e them
for me spiril!ual and ii:IIOOII
battiles that are rll,pidly
beading meir way.
It really is time for us
reclaim motlher'hood as
Ged'stterritory. Let us realize the power and signiJiicanoe of godly mothering
and let us ~ook w l'be Lord
in helping us «Jdo just that:
Consider for ,a m(l)lllent the
s1rateg.ic ~nvolvement of
God in the .a ppointment and
preparatiGn of mothers who
would infiluence ilbe wotid.
They became tools in His
hand to steer people back to
faith in God and @bedience
to His · will. Sarah, the
mother of · Isaac, was
groomed for faith so that
ber son and then her san's
sons would know Wihat
faith is (Genesis 21 :1-7).
Moses' mother, through her
w atchM wi~Jingness . to

~·-~..-,.

v..i.2lndl and 'Wtrd Rd... PMtor: Jllml5
Miller, Sunday Schnol - .JOJO a.m .•

'et

......

......_
••-"

Ualld? rn

anyone kid you: motbering
is four or five fuUtimc
careen all wrapped up into
one. There is oothif18 •that
can oo.., ......,. with ,narem
..-· to ~--hood's·-potential
1~
t'he world . .for etemity M
even .alter die course of lhe
generation dut is being
raised up for its tum at die
helm of wmlld eveots.
The first roles that God
instituted after He bad
made the first m.an -and the

·Jose ber son in Olldorto uve
•••s di·~--•y ---·-..
UJlllt ftG
.-~ " " " " " " " " "
as lhe tiUk one's ~ver
-~ ..__,
.. _-:"""·..._ ___ a
"""' ""' "''ljm .,.,.,....,., .
mighty means of deliver£
"'~.a·s """ple
ance .or uuw
r-v
(EJtadus 2:1-IOl.
Maooah's wife was called first woman, were husband
•t o boly [iVii.ng so that .alega- · and wife. 1be NEXT 1'0les,
cy o f power would endure naturally ifl(!)wing from itlie
· L - ~~·s ""e (1'n «ni•• Gf flfSI two, were father .and
m
~u • ..,,
~r "' •
m"'·'"-. No 'office t'IT !Iitle
his own mora'! deficiencies),
uu•~
providing .aid .and eooour- bestowed •o r .OFC.atcGI since
agement at a !lime !'hat the ~n the normal .oonventi1111s
.~le (Yf Israel were espe- of any !human ~ely have
daily vutnerable {Judges · been so signtficant; If
13:2-25).
Or 'flanmlh, ~·re a mother, you'Ye
Samuel's . mother, whose
n •g.iYen such a lliremennfl
"ogg-..
pers't stence i.n dous rposition of ~ ueooe
~.pray;"l'eSu1ted inablessm
. · g that mere · wol'ds cannot
from God that oot1&gt;1\ly pro- eqmess its worth. Seek tO
vided ber what she wanted, be ·the kind of woman that
but gave the world a God can use . 'Depend on
prophet wbo would unite Him for ilhe patience, loYe,
!!he Lor.d's .people and and energy necessary to be
anoint a lineage from which the \ind of mo1her you
God's •Own Son would want to be: even if yeu !feel
descerul in 'human foon (1 ~ike you can't measure up,
Samuel U-28, 16:1-! 3, ,remember that God bas
Matthew U-!7).
chosen YOU to be His speAnd 1hen, of course; cia! ambassador to
mere was Mary, the bumble child. If you've
young woman that God blessed with a godly mothchose to be tlhe one to er, take time to honor God
miraculously give birth to, by honGring her -not just
.love, and nu!Wre His own on Mother's 'Day but in
beloved Son. A godly general. U your mother has
III0ther is w011lh far ml'lre fallen significant:ly short,
than ber weight in gold: ber then seek to fOI'giYe ber and
·worth can't .even be con- · remember lhnt yl'lu still
tained by all the bank have a Father ·in he.aven
'yaults •on elll\llh (Proveibs Who ~oves you and will be
31 :I0-31l. The on1y place all and more than you could
large em!mgb is the treas~Fe eYer ask .in a parent. God's
bouse of heaven its~lf. ls people :today need to honor
this then a .pressure •t o be a mothellhood, protect it; ad
"perfect" mother? Nope. support it. It's time that we
There isn' t any such thing. esteem it and restore it to its
What's necessary isn't per· plaoe of pi'Ominenoe in the
fection, ·b ut an understand- list of vocations a ·woman
ing and lq)pfeciation of the pursues.
wonde!ful assignment that ·
And again, it is definitely
God has given a mother. time for us .reclaim it as
1'be lcind of understanding God's territory. It was, after
ani!! appreciation that I'm
His idea in the first
tal'kring about gene~ate place.
.
·dependence on God to le.ad
(llroM 114161;6• al leU ·
the war in baw to rear a faMily MH .a.irt rM Ul
mother s child. l'hey pro- sfllllllent
12duoe determined commit- Ill yt~t~n IUI4 u tlte •.,.or
men( to so. cherish the pre- of ."l'Jte . F.U, T.U
· cious life entrusted to her P.-.llks." Be is
that she constantly wrestles
Co.••llity
with God in prayer for her
wllidt .ae«s M
child. And they result i.n a
~ fit 455
personal surrender to the n.inl .tve. Be _ , be
Lord tbat is renewed each ·rw~elled /« - • «
day. As 'her life is inereas- q~~emo., ,#Jy ~lilt=·
ingly .a ligned with the will tortlwM@plllll-n•'...
of God in all the spheres of tis.c;omj.
·
L:-,·

•=

- - - -1:30pm.

-~

~ver v.lley Aposmlic Wcnbip Cemcr,

i73 S. 3rd
Ave .• 'M~Icport. Rev.
Mic.tiiBl Bndford. Pu&amp;or. Sunday, 10:30
a.m . Tues . 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm litHe
Study

LoQp Rii otT 'New Lilns Rd . Rutland,
Servioe£: Slm 10:00 a.m . 1:. 7:10 p.m.,
'Jbun;.1:001':rn., Pastor Marty R. Hutton

Asg ·mbly of God
~·
''atiGed
P.O. Bw. 46'7, .Duddillg Lane.

"

'

.

-

........

.......

~

.Putor. Floyd IWH, S"""'y School 9:30 to
10:30 am, Wor&amp;hip 8Crvlce 10:30 IO11 :00
am . Wed. preaching 6pm
I! d

..-c-...u.

..

~ ..... Ciowdo
Pastor: Stew: l...iUJe,,Suaday School: 9:30
UD , Muming Worship: 10;30 1m .
Wednesday Bible Study 6:30pm: choir

practice 7 ~ : youth and Bible Buddies
6:30p.m . 'f'!un . I prn book study

'370 Grain St., Middlcpclt. Sunday·school
- 9:30a.m., Wondliip - II a.m . and 6 p.m.,
_Wcdnolday Service .· .7 p.m. Plltor: Gary
·· Ellis
....... Fna ..... O...
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .• Worship -

-..,.nnor...-.
Pastor Joo Bmcken, East Main St..
Sunday Sch. 9:30am. Won.hip 10:30 am

llniSoollten •llopJilt
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Sunda)' SclJool 9:30a.m., Won.hip · 9;~5 am &amp; 7:00p.m ._.
Wednesday Servicei - 7:00p.m.
flni ..... CbPastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St..
'Middleport . Su11.day Sd\onl · 9:15 a.m:.
Wonhip • 10 :15 a.m .. 7:00 p.m .•
Wlllinesday Servia:- 7:00p.m .

__...,

Pastor: Ryan Eaton. pastor . Sunday
School · 9:30 a.m., Won.hip - 10~ a.m ..
6:00 p.m .. Wedneiday Services - 7:00
pm .

___ ....,..

Pa!tor: John Swanscm , Sua~y School •

let'' m ......-cllllaodl
Glut Bend, Route 124 , Racine ; OH,
Pastor: Ed Caner. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m ., Swuiay Worship - 10:30 a.m . ,~! 7
pm: Wedfte&amp;day Bible Study - 7:00l!.m.
I

'
0111-FneWIIIIopllot~

28601 St. R.t . 7 , Mlddlepon , Sunday
Service · 10 a.m.. 6:00 p.m .. TUesday
Sen-ices -6:00

.. ...... II

I

E. Keesee. Wonhlp · !Oa .m., 7 p.m.,
Wc:dne&amp;day ~icc~ . 7 p.m .

,

cI

~ . . . ..,.liJIIdl

* .... ,

,. ....,..._..,* r
. . . . . ., . . . ,

•

I

lfle

Lord,--

. , .... , . , . . . , •

I.U M I

. , • •. ,

_,_.,...,._;....
JI:S-f

Midlelle Kennedy
Director of Marketing and Adrni.,ions ·
I

We Sell +tomes at

4•

,,
••

6am - 8

TEAFORD REAL ESfAlE
Members of the 'MLS and REALTOR"

9tliffie's 1(estaurant

216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

740--949-2210

740-192..3325

"A Hr:me&amp;nt for

www.teafordrealestate .net

t.bJW: lti::t*.

·Hills SeU Storage
29670·8ashan ~·
Racine, ott

740-949-2217

....

Homemade Desserts Made Dally·
-

n.a, s,.a.lr
Open 1 days a week

CINlluiMM/s A

740-992-n13

,

740-9115-3581
992·1550

S.S • Serwlce • Pll'tl
All tlnhll
"-n811dAdlm

If yl tibille ill Ale, a4 My ,
wonls tlbile ill yo;, ye sW
ask wluu ye will, 111111 it sW
.be liMe • • ]OM.

Jolua 15:7

l'ROP~
•

•

190 N. SeOond St.

--~Qoorda
Minister: Larry .Brown, Worship - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School . 10:30 a.m., Bible:
Study - 7 p!!D.

-.yo..a orQNI
212 W. Main St.. Swtday School - 9:30
a .m .. Worship- 10:30 a.m.• 6 p.m.,
WednesdaY Services - 7 p.m.
.
-..w-·~orClorill

33226 Childnm) Home Rd .. Sunday
School - II a.m .. Worship - IQa.m .. 6 p.m.
Wedladay Services - 7 p.m .

mt·· a

tCJ.i-daflc.t.~

5th and Main , Pastor: A.! HKn11un,
Childreru; Director: SharOO Sayre, Tr~en
llir"ectoc Dodger Vaughan ..Sunda}' School
- 9:30 11.m .. Worship- 8:15, 10:30 a.m., 7
p.m .• Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Kmoa-.b ...~
Worship · 9:30 .a.m.• Sunday ~chool 10:30 a.m .• Pascor-Jcffrey Wallace. 1st and
3n1 Sunday

a-dlefGel flPt ,;
OJ . Wbhe Rd. off st. Rt. 160, Poolor. PJ .
·aupman, ·Sunday ~School • 10 Lm.,
.t Worthip - II a.m., Wednesday Setvices - 7
:p.m.
I

GinlltFp I I I~
326 E. Main SI., Pomemy , Sullday School
and HOly Eucbarist 11:00 un Rev.
Ed..... Poyno

.., ailrdl

Steve

Thnt.ek,

Main

Strcot,

Rutland, Sllllday Wortbip-'10:00 a.m.,

--Cttordt

31057 SUI&lt; Rotlle

m .LaqsvDe. Putoc

Batjatioin Cntwfmd. Sunday • !1:30
a.m., Sunday worship • 10:30 a.m. &amp;: 7
p.m., Wednciday prayer tii:JVioe . 7 p.m.
c.t....y ....... a...,l
Kanisonville Road. Pastor: Owles
McKcnrie. Sllllda.y Scbo01 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - II a.m ., 7:00p.m., Wednesday
Se:rwice- 7:00p.m
ltd., Rlldad. Pulor: R&lt;v.
-·--~

.Lading~

Dewey ~. Sunday school· .9:JO •-!D-··
• Sunday WOI'1lhip -7 p.in ., Wednesday
ptayer ~- 7 p.m.

ll't.eGJM- -Cltordt
112 mile off Rt. 325. I'Utoc R&lt;v. O'Ocll
Manley, Samd.ay School - 9:30 un_;
Wonbip - 10:30 am ., 7:30 pm .•
~y
7:30p.m.

--Cltordt

7S IUrl St., Middlq&gt;on. Putor: llwg

Worship - 10 :30 a.m .. 6:30 p.m.
WcdDC!Iday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Cox., Sunday School · 10 a.m. Worslrip iOi45 p.m., Su*y Eve . 7:00 pm .,
Wednelday Servio: - 7:30 )i!ID.

..,.. -c

1, C1tordt

. Paslor. R&lt;v: Larry L&lt;m)cy: SutMioy School
- 9:30a.m., Won.hip - 10&lt;45 a.m., 7 p.m .,
Thunday Bib}e Srudy m1 Youth - 7 p.m.
t.-.~PnrM"

lnstrv.menrJ.I, Worship Senlce · 9 a.m ..
COmmunion ~ 10 a.ni .• Sunday School 10:15 a.m.. Yootb- 5:30Pm Sunday. Bibk
Study Wednelday 7 ~

Putor: Gle11n Ro.we, Sunda~ School a.m .• Wonbip · 10:30 a.m . Ud 6
p.m.•~ Service . 7:00p.m.

l,atfer.Day Saints

7 yo.rdrl flan.t
Minister: Tom Runyon, 39538 Brwlbury

WOJShip • 10:30 a.m.

. - c..... or~
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Wonbip ud
ColtUI1UDion - 10:30 a.m .. Bob 1. Werry,
MiniRcr
-C-uiCComer of St . .R.t. 124 &amp;. Bl'ldbury R.d .,
Mm;..,, llwg Sbambli&gt;, YOIIlb
Bill AmbetJet, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m .
Woribi'p - 8:00 a.m.. 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.rn ..Wcmtetday Services - 7:00pm

Mini_,

-.., -ct.ado tiOrlot
T\ipperi Plains, Putor Mike Moon: , BibJ.:
class, 9 a.m. Sunday; worship 10 a,m.
Sunday; wDr'Ship 6 :30 pm Sunday; Bibk
cJu.s 7 pm Wed.

:rea...-..

St. Rt. 160. 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20..11 a.m., Rchcf
Society/Priesthood · I 1:05-12:00 .noon ,
Sacrament Service 9-~0 : 15 a .m.,
lturnemakiq meeting, l st Thurs. • 7 p.m.

•elllln*
~Grove , Wonbip ·9:00a.m., Suaday
School - 10:00 i..m. Putcn-:
St. .......,

LdJano
Cltordt
Walnut
andHenry
Su ., Ravenswood,
W.Va .. Pastor: David Ru11ell . SUIIday
School· 10:00 a.m .. Wonhip-_11 a.m .

s-"

St.Poui ......... Chodt
eo....
So&lt;oad St.. Pomeroy,
SUII. School · 9:4!!i a.m .•.Worsbip · 11 a.m .

"'CMill

CIHado
Slllday iChool 9:30a.m., Sunday wtmbip
- 10:30 a.m .

n.: ~ orCIIrlotor.-.,.
. Jnterflcction 7 and ~ 2 4 W. Evangelill :
Dennis Sal)ent, Sunday Bible Study ·
9:30 a.m., Worship: 10:30 a.m. ud 6:30
pm., Wedae&amp;day Bi!* Stud)· - 7 p.m.

. CllrMian Union
-~orDriollo

Ctturdl ofGGd
- - o.dtorlloi

lliiiW. w· thr
:Wmmip • ll a.m. l'uloro IUdwd Nouc
....,.......,, IS'

New Haven, Richud Nase, Putor,
Sunday worship 9:30 a.m. '{'ate, . f;:'JO
prayer and Bibk: StiKiy.

,..,I " 5

Ml.Oiw u....
Off 124 behind W'tlkes\'ille, Putor; Rcw .
Ralph Spires, S1111day Sc~Mlol - 9:JO a.m .,
Worship - 10:3Q a.m.; 7 p.m:. Thunday
Services · 7 p.m.

.... c 1 adte .....
Northeast Clu&amp;ter, Alfred, '-Putor: Jim
Corbin, Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.,
Wonllip · II a.m., 6:30p.m.

.

lbunda~

~
Pu1or: Denzil Null, Wonhip • 9:30a.m.

Sunday kbool - 10:30 a.m ..

740182-6128
Local source tOr tmphie&amp;,
8 t irts and

P.O; BoK683

Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Letan , W.Va . Rt. I. PastOr: Brian May,
Sunday Sdlooi - 9:30 lin .. Wonbip • 7!00
p.m., ~y Bible Study · 7:00p.m .
, ..... , . c:r..le r..on.
Pastor:· Re\'.'Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday. 7 p.m.

13 o.dl

24Sl Second St .• S}'I'ICWIC. OH
,
SUD. School. 10 am, Slmdy night 6:30 pn

Pastor. Joe Gwinn
4Ne.' I
I

l'llloc Dewayoc Stutllor, s-,. ScUtl IOI.m., Wanhip - 11 am.

(N Gooool c.-do) HonUonviU.,
,.,_, Bcb mel KAy Marsball, ·

Cohoory -Bordo
Pomeroy Pike . Co . k d .. Palitar: Rev.
Blaokwood, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,
Worship 10 :30 a .m.. 7:30 p.m .,
~y Service . 7:30p.m .

Suaday Service. 2 p.m.

F-aPulor: Bob Robinson . Sunday School- '10

. ·BIIda(M'W I t)
Putor: Brian Dlmblm, Slmdly School 9:30a.m .. Wonbip- 11:00 a.m.

r, o.a

"--1 Gtatr:

Pastor: Wayne Dunlap, Smte Rt. 681 .
Thpf'en Plains. Sun. Wonltip: IO.em &amp;

StiVf:l'llvtllr ·C ..uuulty ~

6:30pm,. Wed. BibleSwdy 7:00p.m.
-~,..

.

Sunday School 10:00 am. Sunday Worahip
II :00 am. WedneiKiay 7:00 pm Putor. ·
Brym &amp; Missy Dailey

llllp '

( N o o - fellowshi]&gt;l

•••

Mcetins in the 'M cip Middle School

Putoc Bob Robimon. Sunday School - 9
a.m., Worahip - 10 a.m .

ll&lt;)aldoc Llk ~

Cdclcria. Pumr: Chris Ste-wart .
10:00 am - Noon Sunda_y; lnfonnal
~ . Cbildn:n's minimy

S00 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport. PUtor:
MW: Fon::man , Pa.uor Emeritus Lawu:nce

Pwlllta(tal

c

Sunday Sdlool - 9 a.m., Wontlip . 10 a.m.

-...

Pastor:' Brian Dunham, Wonllip - 9:30
a.m., Sadly Sc:bool- 10::35 a.m.

-.......

Putor: Dewaynr Statler, Sunday School •
9:00 a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m ., Vou.dl
Fellowdtip, s-,.- fi pm. Early Sllltdoy
wonhip 8 am· Jeani DuDbam
. ......

••

, 1.

Putor: Rick Bourne, Samday ScbooJ •
9:30am., Wordrip- 10:30 a.m., '11111nday
Service!i . 7 p.m.

-c-

Pam'Jr: W'tlliam K. Mmbdl, S..tay
School • 10:1.S a.m., Wmmip - 9:l!!i a.m.,

Bible Study: Moodey 7:00pm
Sac . .
SUJ?C!ay School - 10 a.m., Wonbip - 9 a.m .

_,

~tor:

Pmland-bciiiiC Rd., Pmor: lim Proffrtr. ,
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m., Worship •
10:30 a.m .. \\ledne&amp;dly Services . 7:00

p.m.

C'llhea tWNs rt Cllllrdl
Clifton. W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 a.m .,
Worsbip · 7 p.m .. Wednesday Service • 7
p.m.

--....c-

39782 St. R1. 7 , 2 miles south of Tuppers
Plains, OH . Non-denominational with
Contcmporal}' Prai~e 1: Worship. Pastor
Rob Barber. Assoc . Pastor Karyn Davis .
Youth Director Betty Fulb. Sunda}'
aervices: 10 am Wonhip 1:. 6 piD Family
Life Claues, We4.. 1:. Thur night Life
Grotlpi at 7 pm. lbm momillg ladies '
Life Group a1 10. Oua Limits Yuudl Life
Group oo Wed . eveu.ing from 6 :30 to 8:30.
Visit us C»lioe.lll: www.betbelwc.org.

3773 ~ C.... Rood. Goll;pol~. OH
Pastor: Jamie Wireman, Sunday Services 10:30 a.m. Wednesday . 7 p.m . Thursday
.
Prayer &amp;. Pr'li.sc: at 6 pm. ClasiCS for all
ages e"ery Sunday &amp;: Wedaetday .
.datkc:hurch.net

a.m., Worship .. 9 a.m ., WcdaesdayServiccs- lO,a.m.

Fldl~~

.Aili-·Qon:lo
398 Alb St .. Middlepon-Pastors Muk
Morrow II. Rodllc:y Walker Sunday
School - 9:30 un ., Morning WDI'Ihip •
10:30 a.m. ~7 :00pm. Wedaelday Service
- 7:00p.m., Youth Sen-ice· 7:00p.m.

Servic::es: Saturday 2:00p.m.

Solem c--w.y Clton:lo
Back of We11 Columbia, W.Va.om Ueving
Road, PlSlOr: Clwtes Roush (304) 67-32288, Sunday School 9:30 am. Suaday
eveaing fiCrvice 7:'?0 pm. Bibly Study
Wedne!iday !lef'Vicr 7:00pm

..Fuii-Gospel Church". Pastors Jebn &amp;.
Patty WICk:. ti03 SccorldA't'e . Muon. 7735017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wednelday 7 pm

C&amp;IIIIS
Carmel ,._ Buhan Rib. Racine, Ohia,
G~. Sunday School •
9:45a.m., Wonhip- 11:00 1.m . , Bible
SIUdy Wed. 7:30p.m.

PallOr: John

Putor: Johrl Gilmol'c, SUIIdly School - II
a.m ., Wonhip - 10 a.m.

Paator: Bill Manball ·Sunday School •
9a.m., Wonhip - 10 a.m., 1st Suaday
every mondl cweniq acrvice 7:00 p.m.;
Wecmclday - 7p.m.

-

AI

C1tr1oll.. F~ Cltun:h
Pastor: Herschel White . Sunday School10 am. Sunday Churcb service - 6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm •

s;,.GnDtu. l.

923 S. Third St•• Middleport. Pastor Teresa
Davis . Sunday aerwice . 10 a.m..
Wecba:lay aervioe •..., p.m.

-Cioriotlu .F ""-loip
9365 Hooper Road . A.thens, Pastor:
LoMie Coats, Sunday Worship 10:00 am .
Wednesday: 7 pm

Foldt..-.. Gooool a.-dt
Loag Booom, Paslor: Sle't'C -Recd, Sunday
School · 9:10 a.m. Wonhip .- 9:3b a.m .
and 1 p.m .. %&amp;- d•y . 7 p.m .• Friday felloWihiJliCfVicc l p.m.

H~ ~Hftlh&amp; Mbdlirifs

BauJwa•• C
... ,. Cftrdl
· Putor: Theron Durham, Sunday • 9:30
a.m.llld 7 p.m., Wednesday- 7 p.m ,
tCCet 2

l'uloro Kcny Wood, Somday 5dtoo! · 10.
a.m .•. Worlbip - ·n am.w 1 'ay
Services 6 pm; Thur Bible Study 7 pm

ac

4•ya..n:.

515 Pem-1 St., M~ , P~lor : Sam
Andenon . Sunday School 10 a.m.,
Ew:niq. 7:30p.m., WtdDelday Service .
7:30pm.

n ,,,......_.

Putor: Hden Klillr:, Coolville Church,
a: Fifth St., Sun. Sc:bool - ·to a.m.,
Wonbip- 9a.m., Tlleli.Services. 7 p.m.

Main

llelltolCltordt
Townslrip Rd.• 4611C, Sunday School • 9
a .m . Worship • 10 a.~ ., Wednelday .

Servia!s - 10 a.m.

twdoQon:lo
Co. Rd . 63, SUDday School-9:30a.m.,
Wonbip · I0:30a.m.

I

.r.t.itlle4~flfMitN · mr
Route 689, Albay, R.e\&lt;. Uoyd Grimm,

llaniloa\'llt P'Jub)IUiw Cluardl ·
Pastor: Robert Crow. Wanlup · 9a.m.

s,--1411 Bricteeman St .. S)'l'ICUJe, Sullllay
SciiOOI - 10 a.m. Bvenirl.g - 6 p.m ..
Wednclday Service. 7 p.m.

Mlddl tpOit Ptubyteriu
Pastor: James Snyikr, Sunday School 10
a.m ., wOJShip seivice 11 am .

y_. C
l•y CIMucb
Oft' Rt 124, Pu1or: Ediel Hart. Sunday
Scbool - 9:30 a.m ., "worship- 10:30 a.m .,
7:30p.m.

~.

'Suaday Sclwol 10 ~; worhaip
ltJI'Vice ll am, eYeaing !lle1'\'ice 7 pm.. Wed.
pntyer ..-... 7 pm

P!'IS t t~.r~N . w
" ' -: Leounl PowcU . Sunday School •
9:30 a.m.,Wuwbip • 10:30 a.m., f;:)() p.JO.,
WedMiday ServM:es- 7 p.m .•

•

Seventh~Day AdYentist

--Doy,.._

Mulberry Hts . Rd;. Pomeroy. Saturday
Services: Sabbath School · 2 p.m ..
worsnq) . 3 p.m.

'Ja-rdt

United Brethren
Mt. Jta:me. u.tk!d . , . _

-Ciooool~ '

Slmday scbool - 10 a.m ., Wonhip - 11
a.m,.. Woclocsaay Service - 7 p.m.
F-~~

Loq Bottom, SLllllily School - ~ :3Q a.m .,
Worship · 10:4S a.m ., 7 :30 p.m .,
Wednelday 7:30p.m.

-

7

• •

Goopoll .... I

a-:.-, Sllllday School - io a.m., Ewaing

FA: llt1p

Cbu:rcb of tile Naz.mate, Pastor: Rus.eU

7:30p.m .. Tue:sday,lt. lburs.- 7:30p.m:

Canoo , Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .,
Wonbip - 10:4!\i a.m ., 6 p.m., We' rt·Y

s.lllediiiC
'ty·DIIn:*
Silver Ridp- .Pastor Linda Damewood .
Suadly Scbool • 9 am., Wonhip ~ce
10 a.m. .200 aad 4th Slllliay

~ - 7p.m .

S,...... a..dlfl.a.N
cw ·
P&amp;aiJIT Mike A.dkias, Suaday School 9:30

---y

Pentecostal ·

Presbyterian

Suaday School - 9:30 a.m .• Worship 10:10 a.m., 7 p.m .

Nazarme

SL Rl. 1l4 Looopdl&lt;, 0H
Full Gospel, Cl Psstun. Robert &amp; Robena
MuSser, ·Sunda y ,Sctlool 9:30 am , ,
Worstlip 10 :30 am - 1:00 pm, Wed.
Servie1: 7:00 pm
T6¥D J..u; MiDiatrirs
Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Center Gymhss ium . Psstur Eddie B~.
Service e"ery Tuesday 6:30pm

Pastor: St. Rt . 124, Racine . Tornado Rd.
Sunday School • 10 a.m .• E"enins • 7
p.m., Wednesday Servitu - 7 p.m.

, . . VIIIIJ' T 2
Ollrdl
Bailey Rim Roul, Putar: Rev. Emmen
Raw1on, Sunday Evenins 7 p.m ..
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

~c

'i--·

"'*'u.locRt.338. Antiquity. Pastor. Jesse: Morris..

"-u.c-

John Gilmore, Sunday School, · 10

~ ·u.lledl'

· Foreman , Worship- 10:00 am
Wednesdl.y ScntiCa' • 7 p.m.

) .rCiailt

•••n ...._ . ...._

7.5,..6333

1 Ill tsl-11116

IS I 7 I 1,011 7~141
wa,.W.. M1P

. . . . . ..

I

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loC-C&gt;ord&gt;
Texas Commun i1y 36411 Wickham Rd. ·
Putor. Pelcr Martind.ale, Sunday School •
9:30 a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Services. - ?:00 p .m.
Youth groUp meeting 2nd &amp;: :4th Sundays
7p.m.
-U--IoCbriol
Slate Route 124, between Reedsville 4 ·
HooUngport. Sunday ·School - 10 a.m .,
Sunday Worsb!p · II :OO a.m. Wcdoclday
Stnice5 • 7: 00p .m., Pa!lot· M. Adam
.Will

Coolvilfe, Ohio
Located less than 30 minutes from
Athens. Pomeroy or Parkersbtug

I

INt-.

P

1-7~·3156

0),0117.-.m.SUI

slUIJ

-&amp;LOll•
PIU•VY
W, Fill iDaclcn'

Pmducta i
Financial
AOEIIOES Inc . ServiQes

,_.or

Pm aiplioM
'

-

... .. [l l kC.... ) ..

t. ""!

h ·\. H \' ""'11

slulll see God.

IGIXI and man."

Mlltdtew ...&lt;,l

).

•

God so loved the wn1"/.d I
~

'

Acts 24 :

gave his only

lbt!rt&gt;"•m son ...

: Blessed .fin t1te pfu.e . "So I strive always to keep
;, lwm; for dt.ty my conscience clear befiiJI'C)

' '

740-667-3110

..

........

s,r- c

CENTER .

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio

"""'
,....llla1rr
.,., ..
m-•
if I' .c. ,

............... a...rll .

A~ADIA,t4URSING ·.

lnsuranca

-

rm

, _ s.._. S~noc~Jy Scltool - 9:30
a.m ., Wonlttp - 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.m ..
Wedllelc:lay Ser:vica: - l p.m .

7

Full

i

..._.a.rdl~6et '

Cool,illr Road. Pastar: Re\'. Charles
Mlftindale, Sunday School - 9:30 A..m-1'
Wonbip - 10:30 a.~ .. Wednesday Servk:e
. 7 p.m .

Otber Chunitc:s

-AiliOdlbw.~ Sdoool- 9:30
a.m., 'Warlhip - ·10:30 a.m .. 33105 Hi1ud
lbl."'-roy

•

Sct.ool - 10 a.m.•
Servit,cs - 7 p.m.

.W&gt;IOr'&gt;Ciooool w..,..

ScbooJ.- 9:30a.m., Worship- 10:30 a.m .,
s""""y .....mg 6 pm

......

~

Pastor: Jim Corbin , Wonbip - 9 a.m.,
Sunda~

-

3304l Hilad Rood. Pumoroy. Pasto" Roy

I TEEs
Middlepoft, OH

---

!Ailoooy '~I. -BobRobiDoao,

.......,_._ !1:45 ''"'• Wmmi]&gt; - II
611.,-.· ., 's l.vicii--·7:3op.m.

Grand Street, Slmday Scboo1 - 9:30.a.m ..
Wonbip - IO:lOa.m., PulorPhillip.Bdl

~u-.

Hartford , W.Va., Putor:Dawid Gmer,
Sunday Scbool - 9:30 a.ni .. Wonbip • .
10:30 a .m .. 7 :00 p.m .. Wednadly
Scrviocl - 7:00p.m.

F.-G-.o~ ·-

Bald Knob, on Co . Rd . 31, Paswr: Rev.
RoJer Willford . Sunday School - 9:30 ·
a.m . Worship- 7 p.m.

_ . . , .....,Cltordt

United Methodist
~

I olle Oandltlekilt
Pbilip Swnn, Somday School o~, 30
a.m .• Warsbip Service: 10:30 a.m.. Bible
Stlld._y.Wodlleiday. 6:30 p.m.

pm.

Pos~«o

-'-

n.: Clton:lt " ' - .
Cltdotui~Doy-

w

O..'CIIInla.ttltt'

9:30

•

a.m.

-y

..... ,.

Putor: Jan lAvender, SLIDCiay Sclllool 9:30 a.m., Wonbip - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wedacld.)' ~ . 7 p.m .

~----~

Ki•Jsbury Road . P.utor: 'Robert \'moe,
Sunday School • 9 :30 a .m., Wonbip
Sernce 10:30 a.m., E\'enina Service 6

Putor: lle\'. Curtis ltmdolph . ·Suaday

,..,., lim
Sc:llool - 9
a.m .. 'Wtnbip - lOIIll., 'nleldly Srnicel
- UOjUD.

11411

am .

nwen l'lolo Cloordo orClorill

,._.,.c::a.n~~

....,._Ill._
c.nm.

Sunday Ser.ta,..7 p.m.

sen.la: .

ZO.CloadlorCbriol
Pomeroy, HarrisonYille Rd. (Rt .143),
Pastor: Roger WatJOD. Sunday School 9:30 a:m .• Worabip • 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p.m., Wedftt:Wy Sentice5- 7 p.m.

-

a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

~iJM'Ri

w..,..

~

Wonbip • lt:lO .un., Saday School •
10:10 a.a., P'U'Jt s..day ofMo.dt • 7:00
p.m . aenioe

7

nially a.rdt
Second &amp;. Lyon , 'Ponaoy, Pastor: Rev.
Bob Wannow:h. Wonbip 10:25 a.m..

Pwor:

S-y School · 9,30 lJI) ..
lb:lOa.m.

,

Congreptional

, ~tiolpo.n:toorCbriol
Pastor:Bruce Tcny, S011day School -9:30

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

your light so shine befclfCI
1men, that they may see
lg(Mxl works and glorify
IF:Illhl,..in heaven."
Matthew

Rui!Jell, Sunday sa.Ool and Worship- 10
a .m. E"en ing Services- 6:30 p.m .•
WcdDe&amp;da}' Scrvia:s - 6:30p.m.

•

Sunday School .' 9:30 a.m.. Worabip 10:45 .1.m., Sunday E"ening - 6:00p.m.,
Putor. Don Wolkm

MIDDLEPORT ·

IIEIQS FN&amp;"/ flECME, lLC
A. JACKION :PM a, 00
.

Poat !I 0)', OWo 45'78 .l"fr:-..
1741) 99%-32'79
~'-!!~'

R.e-\'. JIM'ph Woods, Sunday School - 10
30
a~ .. Wriip - 11 : a.m .

S-fllnla..dtor.C.
w Socood Sis., Puur. ltev. Oav;.l

Apple

l1J

Mile Hill Rd .. Raciae , Putor: J.ame1

Sizes available 5K1 0 to 10 K 20 .

n.e....-e ..

10:00 . Sun morninc Bible study :
following worship, Sun. e"e -6:00 pm,
Wed 'bible slUdy 7 pm

M t . - .......
Fourth &amp; Main St. , Midd.lcpon . Sunday
School · 9:30a.m .. Wonbip • 10:4S a.m.
Pa&amp;tor. Rev. Michael L Thamp.un, Jr.

Houn

Mbrm Fn'endl,v r
!&amp;rmosphert

Pick up a color Bmchurel

Foldt ....... Bordo
Railroad St., Na!iOII., Sunday Scbool • 10
a.m., Worship • II a.m ., 6 p.m.
Wcdaesday Services · 7 p.m.

r-••llopllot·"-"f

..

lUI F- 1477·Sil-U33

,,

. ·,

Pulor: .tloo Hr:atb, Sunday Worship • I0
a.m .. 6 p.m ., ~DeMlay Sentia:5 - 7
p.m.

Epi800plll

•

I

p.m.

ChurdtofCbr&amp;

Road . Midd~pon. Sundly School - 9:30
Mt.Ualoallopdot
Ptilor: Dennis Waver Sunday School9:45 a .m.. Even\n·g • 6:30 p.m..
~y Sm:vices - 6:30p.m.

n5 N. 2nd St. Middlepon , Pastor: Jamei

MIIJtlaew 5:8

!-ve., Pomeroy, 992-5898,
Pastor: R.e". walter E . Heinz , Sat. Con.
4 :45-S:lSp.m.; Mass- :5:30 p.m.. Sun.
Con. -8:45-9:15 a.m ... SWI . Mus- 9:30
a.m .. Dll.ily Mass · 8:30a.m.

IOa .m., Wonh"ip • lla.m., 7:00 p.m.
.W~y Servioell- 7:00p.m.

~

slulllseeGod.

1611r4ul~

10;45 a.m .

a.m ..

We Clln learn much from our 1111/thm besides.such wise adrice as to eat a
good bre~~kjast and tn wash our hrmds aften. While It is true thllt mothers
usually know o lot of good pradiClll JtlJjf. -injin~ly more important than their
practical wisdom is thrir solicitous Ctlrt and unconditiorral 1M. ,WOJS most
of the animal kingdom. arrd almost unim:saUy among
mammals, .we set in motherltood an instilldJJal Cllrt arrd '
~ protection of their young. For example. think of
the mother bear and the rr~~ming tn
/lft'er rome behreen a bear arrd htr
cu!IJ. Good mothers trill dejerrd ltltfr
young agoinst almost any threat,
ofttn ot grrot risk to themselvn.
' and usually attend til thtir
chiilirrn's Cllre and /Hding
·before they ottend to their
own. Good mothers 1110, ltwe
their youngstm mn wllen
they haw gone ostray: this
uiiCOIIditianlll ll!atnnolltwe is perllaps
the deDrest lfjlection of God's
uriCOIIditionalllwe. In the sa~ rrf1Y
. thor a goad IIIOftler.wiU tr/1 G dtild !hilt
is bting punished 11r11t this dorsn't
they ~ Jowd cmy len. so too does Gad
chttstisf His cmldm!. telling US that Gad is ltwe arrd everything He dots ISa
IIMiiftiWiion of !hot - . including His punishment. This !lather's Ooy. we
should 11/1«! on ,_our mother's ltwe mirrors Ws ltwe for us, even in
thtM tiiiN!S . , she is COO'ICting us.

·s.c..OI-~c.a

a.r...-. Cloon:h (s-t1ion)

,.

. lllloidt ...... C .......
St. Rt. 143 just off Rt . .7 , 'PKstor: Re'\o·.
Jame' R. Acree, Sr., Sunday Uriified
Senoicc. Worship - 10:30
6 p.m ..
Wrrlncsday Services · 7 p.m.

The Virtues of Motherhood

Calholic

33226 Cbtldr'en 111 Homr.ltd , Pnmeroy, OH
ConlaC1 740-441 -1296 Sunday moraing

Sunday Scbool • 9olO.m, ,...,ing
Sc:rvior: 10:30am, Evening Service
7:60pm, Wed.esday Bible Study 7:00 pm.
iPutor.

tlte,..,.

.. f&amp; ..

Firwl..,_
0...,.........

Mason ~

&amp;.pliR

c.-:.--1 I .£

s.-y

~rl

a..~~

- WV,
·....
Ra\'eflswood,
Sundll,y School 10 am•Mantia&amp; wmtqp JL.am EvcniD&amp; - 7 p-n.
Wet ...y1p.ra.
Don&lt;o or-.wv
Bopitl)
'SR 65.2 and ~'St . •Pastor: Raben
Grwly. ~unda)' &amp;ehool 10 .am, Morning
church 11 am, Suaday evening 6 pm, Wed.
Bible SIUdy 7 pm

' .

Olticl*,...

.Bksse4~~re the pare
ill ltetut; for IMy

s.llem 'St., Putor. 'Ed Bamey , Sunday
School - ib J .m ., E-vening • 1 p.m .,
'W ' d.+_y'Semca - 7pm.

W.Va .. 'Pastor: Neil Teount. Sunday
Services- 10:00 LtD. and 7 p.m.

an.

'&amp;,.'::J::••Y.

l~tabe&amp;IOIIIICitiDc.

-

C

a

a.m ., 'Worlhip - 10:30 a.m., '6 p.m.•
Tt' 1 day Semces - 7 pm .

P'se"S.W:. - 7

c.·n-.o

•creA'Illon "' ""' ·-·· ...,..

The o.IIJ Sentinel ·Pap A7

WWW.m,1J 'IJt I 111111... CCIIR

WORS1'HP
WEEK
___....,.. e._.._,,•.,.,.,cGOD 111IS
..__

ber life, ber wid. as motft.
·
'th lhe power
er
ms •·• cu WI
love, .and wisdom ~-•
sary to parent the w.ay .t hat
the Lotd does. Don't

the wisdom
die..
·
-~ Of
.... _Gocl
..,...,in __

imelligeiit. art!iculate, com- ~.;:'':f~~!
passionate, and spiri'tual
people.
.dle,
·
"" -~• dlrouf
rbi~
0
Joncetoldhimtbatl ·saw Wbat
· ~~~
-.,_
.
_,
.
~~-·
·-- ..-".·.
~lll"' ......
..........,.
!:Jim primarily as a man of ful wOI'th has &lt;OUr God
God. not as a man ·o f color. al!t.aObod to ml'llheihood!
. From my perspeollive, his .,.,.__.
.~·llinw ·
skin oould have been char- nom an awesome~ mt
treuse. and 1 wouldn't care: is to be die vessels ~
_.._,.... ,..__._ ,..,_.. """',..
And yet. it was important •t o wuwu 'UI'" """ ' ,....... ..--hun
· 'ormetoreco·gn1···1'-at expressionsofHisUWilkwe
•·
~ '" '
-"il ..-......,_..
he IS African-American. He as "'' wo;n are n ...... ,..,..,
didn't want me to be oolor- taught. and oomf(!)l1fed!
God created III0tbedmod ·
blind. but color-aware. Our with .etemal ·thin~s in mind.·
racial heritages are impor- 8
th
. .
, e stgnt
tcance o f
tan! and Should be consid- · ut.... rh
d I''· " the
ered; but they should never . mouue oo , t ..e a a . rbe defining .
hood, .bas become oonp
fused, distorted by w.~
The Aposr1e :au1 wrote perspecliives libat racbate

·-"-Association, wuu reviewed
!be case and decided to take
rt
' • On June 12. 1967 . .... us
-we
Supreme Coon. in Loving
ealth f
vs. the Commonw
o
VIrginia.
unanimously
SQUCk down Vuginia·s law
as a "iolatioo of the 14th
Amendment to' the United
stales
Co tJ·tun·
ns
on.
Miscegenation - the mixing of whites with other
nt:es _ coold no longer be
banned by any state. •
. about how thhoseld ...:ho _.are
Not only bad J never Christians s ou
partllcuheard of Mildred Loving, I larly be aware that in God's
had ne\·er L--d of the word eyes. there are no I~Jnger
,IC4J·
defin1'ng differences among
~ 1·
. n~ before
3 t10
emJ
.th sceger
.. eAnn d I think of us: "You are all chi'ldren of
myself as having a large God through faith in Omist
vocabulary! What ·makes Jesus, for all of you who
this history and language were baptized into Ohrist
lesson so compelling for.me have clothed yourselves
is that 1 wonder whether or With &lt;Chnst. There ''neither
·not 1 am unique in needing Jew nor Greek., slave nor .
sucb a lesson.
free, male nor· fet;nale, for
It has been a long ·IJime you .~~~ ~II ~ne m Clmist
since !felt like a youngster. Jesus. ·(Galattans 3 . 2~-28) .
Being in the midst of my . So 1111 an area ·o f0hlo1ilat
4th decade probably has a IS ~reater than 90 percent
Jot to do with that. Back in wh1te, how do we see pe.othe 1960s, I was .not think- pie whose skllll c?lor IS d~fing about marriage; I cared ferenl than our own? Do
more about toys, snacks and we acknowledge these dtfavoiding afternoon nap~ !
ferences .. honor them, 'but
But t0day, marriage is not hm11 ourselves by
extremely impo!ltllllt to me, them? Is II poss1ble to ereand so is eqUality. I~ work ate a w0r.Jd where vocabuvery hard at being .unbiased I~ry lessom on m1soegena- .
by skin color, national ori- tton are no longer neces~Po. age and gender. W·hile sary? Or d(r we need to
rnter-racial marriages are ·:retain the lesson so that ,we
not very oommGn, i have can kn.?w how far we ve
known several couples of come · m ~reatmg a land
mixed race .. Nothing about ffee of ractal p~ejudwe?
their marriages bothered
{~ ~IS tlte fiiiSiit!"
me. ln the hack of my mind, of lldcine Vrril«l Ill~
I probably knew there was a Owtr:ll, 818 Elm SPwl' ur
time when that might not lllJciae. Siuuloy'ti!OI'Sftipisat
have been legal, hut 1 never ll&amp;flf. Ptzstor «erry 0t111 file
gave that a second thought. FWJCW at racinelunc@slltlOne of tlhe mi~ted-.race ,4enJUrk.flet.)

•

f• •lilly I, 2001

Friday, May 9. .,o8

"""'F"'!t,

tance. Sbe was referred to
the American Civil Liberties

fiW

A Hunger For More

A LDving mtiiTiage IIUlde more difficult

feel about it.
Mildred Jeter Loving died
last Friday. Obituaries were
""
. 'nted tn '!he New Yori.:
.,..
Times, the Los Angeles
Times. ..e Washington
Post, .:and seYeral other.
maior media. Obviously,
'
she was a pretty important
person to .get stories in all
those newspapers, but I had
never heard of her.
lf I say Manin Luther
King, Jr. or Rosa Parts. you
will probably think of Ci•il
Rights
pioneers.
But
Wldred Loving - " 'ho
never intended to be a civil

PageA6

John 3:16

to Clln"

"'.for
arace
sufficient
thee: for
my
strenath is made
Perfect in waknes5.
II Cor. I 2:9 .

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-t N. 2nd Ave.

llktdleport, OH
992-6376 .

r

�The Daily Sentinel
.

'

NATION • ·W oRLD

Page AS

1St big foreign aid

flights finally let in
byM
junta

BY ANNE D'lllltH ENZIO
AP.BUSINESS WRITER

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 9, zoo8
.

G %a hen
,..
...

' w4 to kftp !alkin&amp;,

~llat nil pbymHiac, . . . B8

Friday, May 9, 2008

.

lilcAL ScHEDULE
.

.

POUE""" _.._ .......... """""'""' h&lt;gh
lldtool varslfr llpOrtlng ..,.nte inwolvfng
....... """'""""' County.

All

..

...

. , . .

Spurs recover at home, take
Game 3 from New Orleans

--

· EuWn at 14-bd. s p.m.
wotla1Dn at Southam. 5 p.m.

BY 8

tz•IE11I

Wlm:

ASSOCI.\1£0 PRESS

"-"at wa-.t, 5 p.m.
WlilltltDn at Southam. 5 p.m.

SAN ANTONIO -lbere
was no third-quarter breakdown for the San Antonio
&amp;ova1II Mw10
7
Spurs on Thursday night,
F- CAtholic(just the desperate play of a
~.1p.m.
team whose ~ for a sec~·•••Vollorat5ouihem(­
_ ,, 1p.m.
· ond straight
A title was
on the line.
•...,.,
a ss . •z
Tony Parker and Manu
'
7
Ginobill. both' scored 31
(5) Moigl at (4) w-.ty, S p.m.
points to lead the SpW1l to a
:· a t Molgo, 5 p.m.
110-99 victory over the New
Orleans Hornets in Game 3
of the Western Conference
Euiom,Molga, Southern at
semifinals.
II I ""illo-'lbi1i-1VC-.4p.m.
With the win, the · Spurs
.,
5$ ' " U
avoided falling into an ominous 0-3 hole from which no
. · ..
~~.~at (3) w-ly, 5 p.m.
NBA team · has never
,... 5 . , , .
returned. .
...,., I
Chris Paul led the
Winner ol Tl'i!iblo-Soutn Gollla game at
Hornets,
who·still hold a 2-1
(2) Soi4lhom. 5 p.m.
series
lead,
with 35 points
WlnNr ol W.teo1ofd.MQie&lt; gamo at (1)
. Sp.m .
and nine assists. David West

-II

'*

'New
Orleans
Hornets' .
Chris Paul
(3) drives
past San
Antonio
Spurs·
Tony
Par1\er (9),
of France.
during the
first
quarter of
Game 3 in
an NBA
Western
Conference
semifinal
basketball
series
Thursday
in San
Antonio.

7

$

t

------a

had 23 points and 12
rebounds for New Orleans,
which was dominant in the
fin;t two games of the series.
Game 4 is Sunday night in
San Antonio.
With the Sp~m' win, the
home teams are I 0-0 in the
four conference semifinal
series.
After trading leads all
'ght, the S
led 83 78
m
purs quarter.
entering
the fourth
Gioobili · led a Spurs
~barge early in the final
period. L:ft alone, he hit a
wide-open 3 and was fouled
by Bonzi Wells. who Scrambled at him to guard the
shot. Ginobili's free lhrPw
put San Antonio up 87-82•
and another 3 by Ginobili 38
· seconds later made it 90-84.
New Orleans got within
90-88 before the Spurs took

Mn•
'

.

Sf

AP~ .

s. ..

· -.Moilo.
Soulhemat
.
NIIIDt •*·'t6tte. ;- lVC Meet, 4 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Pierce, Allen lead Celtics to G:ame 2 victory
BY ,_,GoiBI

Skyline Speedway
~rand

Re-Opening"

STEWART Skyline
Speedway will make a second attempt at its ·"Grand
Re-Opening"
festivities
today after a rain out last·
Friday at the historic dirt
ttack.
.
Rain-checks are good for
e&lt;ither of the next two
Weeks.
· As~ of "Family Fun"
night, one lucky child 12
and UDder will win an electric scooter valued at over
$400. Children must rel!ister at the gate to be eligtble
lO win.
Skvline Speedway races
410 Outlaw sprint cars, late
models; modifieds, street
stoct.s, pure stocks, four
cylinders, and mini-wedges
each Friday night lhrPugh
the fall. Gates open at 4:30
p.m., hot Ia_ps are at 7 p.m.,
IIJid racing 1s at 8 p.m.
:. :Skyline Speedway is
lo;;ated off SR 50 betw~n
:Athens and Coolville on
Bethany Ridge Road-Co. ·
Rd 53 neaJ' Stewart. For furtber information, please call
140-662-4lll or 304-5428322.

lOth Annual Eagle;
...
U
1
8 as..
etba Camp
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Eastern High School will be
holdini its lOth Anml.al .
Eagle aslretball Camp on ·
May 27 through 30 from 9
a.m. to noon for boys and
girls entering griu:les 4, 5,
and 6.
· Camp staff will include
players and coac~ from
· the 2007-08 EHS boys and
girls basketball teams. The
camp will focus on funda~
lllentals.• most of which are
used by players of all levels,
that are essential for producing winning basketball
Cost per player will be

$l:S pre-registration or $45
fmt day of . camp.
lJM&lt;luded in the cost will tie

~

a

T-llhirt.
should be made
~s to Eastern Athletic ·
. Checks md regis- .
Jrllion forms lbould be sent
tb Howie Caldwell at 40878

-:~u

~

· Seven
Road,
Reedsville, OH 45772 or at
!iastcm Hilih School, 38900
SR 7, lteedsville, &lt;&gt;H
~5772.
••

··.
~NrACrUS
--1-7.0 448 3008

.--.,..myd!i.__.oom

......
. ,""'.

. l!ric Ralllalph, Sporla Wtlin:
(140) • 16 2342, ..n. S3

-ld&lt;Nt··~·"""'

...,.. ...._., Spol1s Wlftlr
(100)

-.234:1..... il3

bllwt.L:aO~.com

I.M1y Cnlm, Sporla Wrtllr
(100) &lt;106-2342, .... il3

iorumO""""'' ;I II .com

: c
•

•

ASSOCilll£0 PRESS

BOSTON - Paul Pierce
and Ray Allen found their
shooting touch. L:Bron
James can only bope he left
his in Cleveland
Pierce scored .19 points,
Kevin Garnett added 13
with 12 reb\iunds, and Allen
broke out of a seven-quarter
scoring drought with 16
points to help 1be Boston
Celtics beat the Cavaliers
89-73 on Thdrsday night
and take a 2.{) lead in the
Eastern Conference semifi·
nals.
One game after going 2for-18 from the field and
missing his last ·six shots,
including a layup to tie the
game with 8.5 seconds left,
James missed his first three
tries and fmished with 21
points on 6-for-24 ~.
"I'm a little shocked that
he's 8-for-42, .but this is
what we wade on. We work
on trying to contain him,"
said Pierce, who was 2-for14 in Game l. "L:Bron is
what makes them go. And if
we can somehow control
him, we control their team.
And with the help of the
guys al'Ound me, we've
been able to do that."
Game 3 is Satwday night ·
in Cleveland. tbe Cavaliers
will need ~if crowd to pull
them out of their funt
because the Celtics are 6-0
in the .playoffs in Boston,
and they ·would have the
bomecourt
advantage
through the NBA finals . .
"Being down 0-2, that's a
tough hole to ·dig yourself
out of. But if we want to
win the series we've got to
do it," James said, noting
the Cavaliers lost the first
.
.
.
.
AP photo
two games to Detroit in last ··Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James looks off toward the fans during the Cavaliers'
89-73 loss to the Boston Celtics in Game 2 of an NBA Eastern Conference semifinal basketball series in Boston on Thursday.

Rio softball

opens tourney
play with split
BY MARK W• I •AMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

NORTH CANTON The University of Rio
Grande women's softball
team, the No. 2 seed at the
NAIA
Region . !XIX
Tournament began the postsc&lt;ason with an 8-0 victory
over No . 7 St. Joseph's
(VT) in six innings, in the
opening round of the tournament on Wednesday
morning at Malone College,
then lost to Notre Dame
College in the second game,
7-6 in II innings.
.
ay winning the first
game, Rio Grande stayed in
the winner's bracket and
faced No. 3 Notre Dame
College, who had knocked
off No. 6 seed Point Park, in
the second game of the day
at Walsh.
·
Sophomore
pitcher
Sophia Young had a relatively easy time with St.
Joes, who possessed a very
strong hitting team. Young
improves to 10-10 on the
season.
Senior centerfielder and
lead-off hitter Jessica Ross
set the table for the
Redwomen , going 4-for-4
and scoring two runs.
The Redwomen missed
put Ppportunities to score in
the first two innings, not
being able to get that timely
hit. Rio finally · broke
through in the third and the
game was theirs after that.
St. Joseph 's falls to 13-6
on the season and will face
dimination in the loser 's
bracket game. .
Rio faced Notre Dame
College in the second game
and fell behind early 2-0 as
..............1

Wahama's Smith signs
with Salem International
.., !..AMY ClluM
LCRUMOMYOAILYREGISTER.COM.

MASON, W.Va. ~Want
proof that hard work ·and
dedication actually do pay
off in .the end7 ·
Just 115k · Wahama senior
Jordan Smith.
Smith sigped his letter of
intent to play basketball at
Salem
International
University on Thursday.
realiz.ing a dream he has had
since he was young to continue his hoops career at the
next level.
"lt is great . I have
dreamed about this since I
was little and I couldn't wait
for this day to come and it is
finally here." Smith said. "I
am ready to take my talent ·
'to the ne~t level .and show
people I can play."
.
~
LMTy~ .
Smith has been a member
Wahama senior Jordan..St:pith (center), flanked by head coach James loth (left) and assiS- of the wtiite Falcon bask-ettant coach Ml~e Wolfe, signs his letter of intent to play basketball for Salem International' .ball team for the past two
University Thursday afternoon In Mason, W.va.
seasons, transferring from

Meigs High School during
bis sophomore year. During
his time at Wahama, the
Falcons have accrued a 3116 record and have· set new
marks at tlie school for wins
and have come very close to
making it out of regionals
and into the state toumament the past two seasons.
"Two years ago when he
transferned over here from
Meigs we didn 't know what
we had. We knew we had a
great athlete and thought we
had a good basketball player
and he proved us right," said
Wahama head coach James
Toth. "He is just a . tremendous young man. I would
say he is probably one of the
hardest working kids we
have ever had as far as the
offseason.
"And the thing about him
is that he set a goal and
wanted thi s and now he has
PI MD 5 11.. 111

=

'

�The Daily Sentinel
.

'

NATION • ·W oRLD

Page AS

1St big foreign aid

flights finally let in
byM
junta

BY ANNE D'lllltH ENZIO
AP.BUSINESS WRITER

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 9, zoo8
.

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~llat nil pbymHiac, . . . B8

Friday, May 9, 2008

.

lilcAL ScHEDULE
.

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lldtool varslfr llpOrtlng ..,.nte inwolvfng
....... """'""""' County.

All

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. , . .

Spurs recover at home, take
Game 3 from New Orleans

--

· EuWn at 14-bd. s p.m.
wotla1Dn at Southam. 5 p.m.

BY 8

tz•IE11I

Wlm:

ASSOCI.\1£0 PRESS

"-"at wa-.t, 5 p.m.
WlilltltDn at Southam. 5 p.m.

SAN ANTONIO -lbere
was no third-quarter breakdown for the San Antonio
&amp;ova1II Mw10
7
Spurs on Thursday night,
F- CAtholic(just the desperate play of a
~.1p.m.
team whose ~ for a sec~·•••Vollorat5ouihem(­
_ ,, 1p.m.
· ond straight
A title was
on the line.
•...,.,
a ss . •z
Tony Parker and Manu
'
7
Ginobill. both' scored 31
(5) Moigl at (4) w-.ty, S p.m.
points to lead the SpW1l to a
:· a t Molgo, 5 p.m.
110-99 victory over the New
Orleans Hornets in Game 3
of the Western Conference
Euiom,Molga, Southern at
semifinals.
II I ""illo-'lbi1i-1VC-.4p.m.
With the win, the · Spurs
.,
5$ ' " U
avoided falling into an ominous 0-3 hole from which no
. · ..
~~.~at (3) w-ly, 5 p.m.
NBA team · has never
,... 5 . , , .
returned. .
...,., I
Chris Paul led the
Winner ol Tl'i!iblo-Soutn Gollla game at
Hornets,
who·still hold a 2-1
(2) Soi4lhom. 5 p.m.
series
lead,
with 35 points
WlnNr ol W.teo1ofd.MQie&lt; gamo at (1)
. Sp.m .
and nine assists. David West

-II

'*

'New
Orleans
Hornets' .
Chris Paul
(3) drives
past San
Antonio
Spurs·
Tony
Par1\er (9),
of France.
during the
first
quarter of
Game 3 in
an NBA
Western
Conference
semifinal
basketball
series
Thursday
in San
Antonio.

7

$

t

------a

had 23 points and 12
rebounds for New Orleans,
which was dominant in the
fin;t two games of the series.
Game 4 is Sunday night in
San Antonio.
With the Sp~m' win, the
home teams are I 0-0 in the
four conference semifinal
series.
After trading leads all
'ght, the S
led 83 78
m
purs quarter.
entering
the fourth
Gioobili · led a Spurs
~barge early in the final
period. L:ft alone, he hit a
wide-open 3 and was fouled
by Bonzi Wells. who Scrambled at him to guard the
shot. Ginobili's free lhrPw
put San Antonio up 87-82•
and another 3 by Ginobili 38
· seconds later made it 90-84.
New Orleans got within
90-88 before the Spurs took

Mn•
'

.

Sf

AP~ .

s. ..

· -.Moilo.
Soulhemat
.
NIIIDt •*·'t6tte. ;- lVC Meet, 4 p.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Pierce, Allen lead Celtics to G:ame 2 victory
BY ,_,GoiBI

Skyline Speedway
~rand

Re-Opening"

STEWART Skyline
Speedway will make a second attempt at its ·"Grand
Re-Opening"
festivities
today after a rain out last·
Friday at the historic dirt
ttack.
.
Rain-checks are good for
e&lt;ither of the next two
Weeks.
· As~ of "Family Fun"
night, one lucky child 12
and UDder will win an electric scooter valued at over
$400. Children must rel!ister at the gate to be eligtble
lO win.
Skvline Speedway races
410 Outlaw sprint cars, late
models; modifieds, street
stoct.s, pure stocks, four
cylinders, and mini-wedges
each Friday night lhrPugh
the fall. Gates open at 4:30
p.m., hot Ia_ps are at 7 p.m.,
IIJid racing 1s at 8 p.m.
:. :Skyline Speedway is
lo;;ated off SR 50 betw~n
:Athens and Coolville on
Bethany Ridge Road-Co. ·
Rd 53 neaJ' Stewart. For furtber information, please call
140-662-4lll or 304-5428322.

lOth Annual Eagle;
...
U
1
8 as..
etba Camp
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Eastern High School will be
holdini its lOth Anml.al .
Eagle aslretball Camp on ·
May 27 through 30 from 9
a.m. to noon for boys and
girls entering griu:les 4, 5,
and 6.
· Camp staff will include
players and coac~ from
· the 2007-08 EHS boys and
girls basketball teams. The
camp will focus on funda~
lllentals.• most of which are
used by players of all levels,
that are essential for producing winning basketball
Cost per player will be

$l:S pre-registration or $45
fmt day of . camp.
lJM&lt;luded in the cost will tie

~

a

T-llhirt.
should be made
~s to Eastern Athletic ·
. Checks md regis- .
Jrllion forms lbould be sent
tb Howie Caldwell at 40878

-:~u

~

· Seven
Road,
Reedsville, OH 45772 or at
!iastcm Hilih School, 38900
SR 7, lteedsville, &lt;&gt;H
~5772.
••

··.
~NrACrUS
--1-7.0 448 3008

.--.,..myd!i.__.oom

......
. ,""'.

. l!ric Ralllalph, Sporla Wtlin:
(140) • 16 2342, ..n. S3

-ld&lt;Nt··~·"""'

...,.. ...._., Spol1s Wlftlr
(100)

-.234:1..... il3

bllwt.L:aO~.com

I.M1y Cnlm, Sporla Wrtllr
(100) &lt;106-2342, .... il3

iorumO""""'' ;I II .com

: c
•

•

ASSOCilll£0 PRESS

BOSTON - Paul Pierce
and Ray Allen found their
shooting touch. L:Bron
James can only bope he left
his in Cleveland
Pierce scored .19 points,
Kevin Garnett added 13
with 12 reb\iunds, and Allen
broke out of a seven-quarter
scoring drought with 16
points to help 1be Boston
Celtics beat the Cavaliers
89-73 on Thdrsday night
and take a 2.{) lead in the
Eastern Conference semifi·
nals.
One game after going 2for-18 from the field and
missing his last ·six shots,
including a layup to tie the
game with 8.5 seconds left,
James missed his first three
tries and fmished with 21
points on 6-for-24 ~.
"I'm a little shocked that
he's 8-for-42, .but this is
what we wade on. We work
on trying to contain him,"
said Pierce, who was 2-for14 in Game l. "L:Bron is
what makes them go. And if
we can somehow control
him, we control their team.
And with the help of the
guys al'Ound me, we've
been able to do that."
Game 3 is Satwday night ·
in Cleveland. tbe Cavaliers
will need ~if crowd to pull
them out of their funt
because the Celtics are 6-0
in the .playoffs in Boston,
and they ·would have the
bomecourt
advantage
through the NBA finals . .
"Being down 0-2, that's a
tough hole to ·dig yourself
out of. But if we want to
win the series we've got to
do it," James said, noting
the Cavaliers lost the first
.
.
.
.
AP photo
two games to Detroit in last ··Cleveland Cavaliers forward LeBron James looks off toward the fans during the Cavaliers'
89-73 loss to the Boston Celtics in Game 2 of an NBA Eastern Conference semifinal basketball series in Boston on Thursday.

Rio softball

opens tourney
play with split
BY MARK W• I •AMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTINEL

NORTH CANTON The University of Rio
Grande women's softball
team, the No. 2 seed at the
NAIA
Region . !XIX
Tournament began the postsc&lt;ason with an 8-0 victory
over No . 7 St. Joseph's
(VT) in six innings, in the
opening round of the tournament on Wednesday
morning at Malone College,
then lost to Notre Dame
College in the second game,
7-6 in II innings.
.
ay winning the first
game, Rio Grande stayed in
the winner's bracket and
faced No. 3 Notre Dame
College, who had knocked
off No. 6 seed Point Park, in
the second game of the day
at Walsh.
·
Sophomore
pitcher
Sophia Young had a relatively easy time with St.
Joes, who possessed a very
strong hitting team. Young
improves to 10-10 on the
season.
Senior centerfielder and
lead-off hitter Jessica Ross
set the table for the
Redwomen , going 4-for-4
and scoring two runs.
The Redwomen missed
put Ppportunities to score in
the first two innings, not
being able to get that timely
hit. Rio finally · broke
through in the third and the
game was theirs after that.
St. Joseph 's falls to 13-6
on the season and will face
dimination in the loser 's
bracket game. .
Rio faced Notre Dame
College in the second game
and fell behind early 2-0 as
..............1

Wahama's Smith signs
with Salem International
.., !..AMY ClluM
LCRUMOMYOAILYREGISTER.COM.

MASON, W.Va. ~Want
proof that hard work ·and
dedication actually do pay
off in .the end7 ·
Just 115k · Wahama senior
Jordan Smith.
Smith sigped his letter of
intent to play basketball at
Salem
International
University on Thursday.
realiz.ing a dream he has had
since he was young to continue his hoops career at the
next level.
"lt is great . I have
dreamed about this since I
was little and I couldn't wait
for this day to come and it is
finally here." Smith said. "I
am ready to take my talent ·
'to the ne~t level .and show
people I can play."
.
~
LMTy~ .
Smith has been a member
Wahama senior Jordan..St:pith (center), flanked by head coach James loth (left) and assiS- of the wtiite Falcon bask-ettant coach Ml~e Wolfe, signs his letter of intent to play basketball for Salem International' .ball team for the past two
University Thursday afternoon In Mason, W.va.
seasons, transferring from

Meigs High School during
bis sophomore year. During
his time at Wahama, the
Falcons have accrued a 3116 record and have· set new
marks at tlie school for wins
and have come very close to
making it out of regionals
and into the state toumament the past two seasons.
"Two years ago when he
transferned over here from
Meigs we didn 't know what
we had. We knew we had a
great athlete and thought we
had a good basketball player
and he proved us right," said
Wahama head coach James
Toth. "He is just a . tremendous young man. I would
say he is probably one of the
hardest working kids we
have ever had as far as the
offseason.
"And the thing about him
is that he set a goal and
wanted thi s and now he has
PI MD 5 11.. 111

=

'

�l

•

l

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 9, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.rom

Red Wings roll past Stars 4-1 in West finals opener
BY LARRY LADE

second-seeded San Jose
Sharks after starting both
series with two road wins.
DETROIT
Johan
The way the Franzen-led
Franzen. Brian Rafalski and Red Wings are playing Tomas Holmstrom scored winning seven straight power-play goals for the they're going to be rough to
Detroit Red Wings, who . beat in any rink.
·
built a big lead in the second
Franzen's 12th goal
period and coasted to a 4-1 extended his team postseawin over the Dallas Stats in son scoring record, and the
Game I of the Western player known as Mule
Conference
finals
on matched another club mark
Thursday night
by finding the net for a fifth
After Valtteri Filppula put straight game.
the top-seeded Red Wings
Gordie :Howe pulled off
ahead 4-0, Brenden Morrow the feat in 1949 and '64_ Ted
scored with a minute left in Lindsay scored in five conthe second period to .prevent secutive games in 1952. ·
the fifth-seeded Stats from . Franzen has 15 points in
getting .shut out.
the playoffs, tying Jaromir
Game 2 is Saturday night Jagr of the already-eliminatat Joe Louis Arena, .wl)ere ed New York Rangers.
Stars ~oalie Marty Turco is
The Red Wings .were so
0-8-2 m his NHL career.
dominant in the fust two
Turco made 27 saves, and periods ·it looked as though
Detroit's Chris Osgood they had a man advantage in
.turned away 20 shots.
even-strength siwations.
Dallas upset the defending They ·.also created scoring
Stan ley Cup champion chances while killing penalAnaheim Ducks. in the, first ties.
round and then topped the
The Stars struggled to
ASSOCIATED PRESS

skate with Detroit, leading
to early hooking and holding penalties that were costly.
With Detroit enjoying a
two-man
advantage,
Rafalski scored 4:28 into
the game after a shot by
Nicklas Lidstrom caromed
off the post directly to him
between the circles.
·
Franzen and Holmstrom
both scored by s~ding in
front and reduectmg shots
past Turco, who .was serenaded .with jeers of "Tumco! Tum-co!" by fans early
and often.
Detroit showed it :could
score ·at even strength, too,
when two long passes set up
Filppula to flick in a shot
Morrow, a key player
against San Jose. scored his
eighth goal. of the postseason off a rebound late in the
second . .
Notes: Dallas did beat
Detroit at something, signing Swedish free agent
Fabian Brunnstrom after he
.was wooed by a handful of

NHL teams. ... The Stars
were with()Ut Philippe
Boucher (hip) and Stu
Barnes
(concussion).
Detroit had two bangCl$1-up
players, Chris Chelios
(lower body) and Filppula
(leg), in the lineup. ... In a
slight surprise, Detroit's
Darren McCarty was a
healthy. scratch and was
replaced · by Kirk Maltby
(hamstring), who played for
the first time in the playoffs.
... Franzen is the first player
to score 12 playoff goals in.
two years . ... Detroit is 3-0
in
three
postseason
matchups against Dallas,
most recently winning the
1998 conference fmals en
route to hoisting the Stanley
Cup for a second straight
year. ... Faces in the crowd
included Jason Giambi and
Johnny Damon of the New
York Yankees, who start a
series against the Tigers on
Friday. ... While in goal for
the Michigan Wolverines,
Turco was 18-5 at Joe Louis
Arena.

...,.~

Detroit Red
Wings winger
Henrik
Zetterberg (40),
left, and teammate Tomas
Holmstrom (96),
crowd iri front of
Dallas Stars
goalie Marty
Turco (35) and
Stars defenseman Trevor
Daley (6) duriQg
Game 1 of the ·
Western
CQnference .
hockey finals iiJ
Detroit
Thursday,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~--_J~~

Rio
from Page HI
the Falcons scored two runs
in the first inning. Anna Ball
led off the game with a
home run off Rio's senior
hurler Miranda Laws.
The Redwomen were
their own worst enemy in
this game with shaky

defense. Three .key errors
led to runs in 11- ~ first and
third frames for the Falcons
upping the lead to 6-0.
Rio was able to score a
run in the bottom of the
third on an RBI single off
the bat of sophomore first
baseman Mimi Mahon. She
plated freshman left fielder
Kaci Dunn, who had doubled .with two outs.
The Redwomen tried to

come off the mat late in the
game, seoring five runs in
the sixth inning w tie the
game at 6-6 after two .were
out. Junior right fielder
Amanda Stevens had the
big hit in the inning with a
two-run .triple. She later
scored on a bunt single by
Ross.
Rio surrendered a run in
the 11th inning and fell 7-6.
Laws (16-6) suffered the

loss.
Rio Grande .(26-16) will
now slide. inm the loser's
bracket and face No. 4 seed
Ohio Dominican at 10 a.m.
at Thursday morning in an
elimination gaine.
Rio Grande was 3-1 versus ODU this seaaon. ·N otte
Dame (31-11) .will face No.
. I Walsh in the W"Ulhet~s
' bracket final on Thursday at
12:30 p.m.

·smith
fromPageBl

achieved that goal and we
are really happy for him."
Smith averaged 17.8
points per · game in his
senior season, by far the
leading scorer for the White
Falcons. He also helped his
team post an impressive 159 .record this season along
with fellow seniors Keith
Pearson, Justin Arnold,
Kerry Gibbs, Jo~h Pa!Jiey
and Casey Hamson - a
group that will go down as
one of the greatest senior
squads in school history.
"This is one of the greatest group of kids I have ever
had. All of those kids have
contributed tremendously
over the past few years,"
Toth added. ·
. And that exposure as a
member of a state-ranked
squad, combined .with his
close relationship with his
coaches, has allowed Smith
to continue playing the
game he loves when he
starts school in Salem later
this year.
':I appreciate coach Toth
more than anything. He has
been like a father to me,"
. Smith said.
And Toth is just one of the
people that have helped
. Smith make it this far.
"I would like to thank my
grandma, coach Toth and
coach Wolfe, as well as
everyone behind the scenes
that helped me out," Smith
added.
.
Smith's signing to play
basketball at -the next level
has· been a positive for the
school as well, shining a

: Friday, May 9, 2008

positive light on the WHS
hoops program.
·
"We think this is good for
our program, it is good for
the school and for the community. Anytime a kid can
go to the next level that
means he is, first, a good
student, second, it is dear to
his heart and third it just
makes everyone happy and
proud to be a part of
Waharoa basketball," Toth
said.
•
"This is the first step
toward what .we hope will
be a career thing for Jordan.
We .want him to know he
needs to use basketball· to
further his education and
better his life and it is an
opponunity for him to
become sometl).ing," Toth
said. "We expect him to
become a produ~tive citizen
and .someone that people
·can look up to."
.
And more than anything,
Smith .wants to use this
accomplishment as
a
reminder to others that talent is only part of the equation, it takes plenty of hard
work off the court as well to
be able to reach for ·your
dreams.
"I don't want anyone io
ever think that I was .just
gifted at basketball and I
never worked hard. It took a
lot of haid work for me ~~
be able to do this," Smith
said.
Salem
International
University is au NCAA
Division II school and is .a
member of the West
Virginia
Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference. The
Fighting Tigers, coached by
Andy Sorine, posted a 4-24
record last season.

The Daily Sentinel•

www.mydailysentinel.com

.,. If JOU have a question ar a i:omment, write: NASCAR This Week. r;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538. Gastonia, NC 28053

•

Sprint Cup

1

..

. Ill the cenlrll themes Of
. . lhe ..n: 1hltJe t..ir( !loin
·"' do lilt a bortrW race inlllloe: It's
~

• " -: Dodge Challenger 500 right up ootil the loss or air in a
aWIIonl: Da~ington (S.C)
. tire cost him a race he seemed
Raceway (1.366 miles). 367
incapable of losing. There was.
laps/501.322 miles.
·
however. joy for Clint Bowyer.
a WileR: Saturday. May10.
who inhe!ited the Dan Lowry
a !.at rul'l ..._: Jeff Gor· 400 as mudl as if he'd been
don, Chevrolet.
'
named heir to a long-lost retaaQ'n"'JJne ~:ward Bur· live's fortune . Earnhardt Jr.
ton, Pootiac,173.797 mph,
could've brol&lt;en a 71&lt;ace los
ing streak at Richmond on Sat·
Marro22. 1996.
• "-e -.1: Dale Earnurday nigllt. He inherited the
haJdt. Chevrole~ 139.958
lead from Hamlin, only to fall
mph, Man:h 28. 1993.
. into the clutches of Hamlin 's
a !.at llllllk: ~was Clint who
teammate. Kyle Busch. who.
won the race . not Casey. but .. . while trying to ·pass him. put
truly. there was no joy in RichEarnhardt's Che'ly in the wall
mond- or, presumably.
on lap 398. Busch . who called
Mudville- when Dale Earnit -just good. hard racing,- lost
hard! Jr. spun out. Nor was
the lead to BO\\yer and any
there joy fdr hometown hero
semblance of affection from a
Denny Hamlin, who had utterly packed crowd of more than
dominated the Dan lowry 400 106,000.

c

_au rC:hOw often aerythitC
- I t lhe lind:

..•

' • The illst'line

'

D!ld••·-

. • O.liCflliils the sport's tno.il&gt;
. i!!it . . The ladrCe-ls
· ilo mo1U1811a Si.le 111 When

a R-: Diamond Hill Ply·

a "-e: Not1l1 Carolina Education Lottery 200
wood200
a Wllonl: Lowe ·s Mot04'
aWIIonl: Da~ington IS.C)
Raceway (1.366 miles!. 147 SpeeOo&amp;y, Concord. N.C.
laps/ 200.802 miles.
(1.5 miles I. 1341aps/2D1
a -: Friday. May 9.
miles.
a !.at rul'l ,.._,Den~ • - : Niday, May 16.
a !at_.. wn.: Ron
Hamlin. Chevrolet.
Hornaday Jr.. Chevrolet
• Qlolltf;i~C -.1: Ryan
Newman. Ford. 170.301
• QM RJiiiC NCOrd: Mike
Skinner.Toyota, 183.051
mph. Marctl16. 2001.
a liKe -.1: Michael WBI· mph , May 19, 2005 .
trip, Pontiac. 138.140 mph. a"-e -.1: Kyle Busch.
Ch«Mole.t. 124.845 mph,
Sept. 5. 1992.
• Lat WMI&lt;: Den~ Hamlin May19; 2006.
drove a TOI(&gt;ta to first place a !at.-: Ron Hornaday
Jr., in a Chevrolet, won at
in the Lipton Tea 250 at
Richmond . holdir"4! off Chevy Kansas Speedway, with
driver Kevin HarVie!&lt;.
teammate Jack S~ue ftn. islling second .

JJJ -rJ-JZ

CLINT. BOWYER

.• &gt;:!(lnll.lhelliOrt.flllmllltd
~ ~ hilfier !1-lhi~ ullihes.
- £!11i1ct 11101e ollhe same.

Cntftsman Truck

Nationwide

~? c..rflJs-d-J-f

·

MaylO .

mlleOYal

., •• 11 I •...:1,229 ft.
tf' II

~

J

No. 07 BB&amp;T CHEVROLET

SPRINT CuP SERIES

.

~~~~with most Olher

trades~

' ... Jell' Gonion, suPelb at Daltilll... ton, Mills a victory or, at the
VI!X"f least, .. ~per·
romlllfiOe. At Riet•nond, Gonion
fell a tap down before lhe race
• -50 laps old. &amp;lrprislrc no
"• .one, Gonion lllltied.to finish
: ~· niliiL That tucki dog.
:~ • The dod&lt; Is already ~to
: 1• tiel&lt; on lhe ~ hopes of Matt

CONGRATULATIONS

Kyle Busdl YS.
Dille brnUrdt Jr.
Earnhardt inhe&lt;ited the lead late
in the Rtchmond race when Denny
Hamli n's car had tire trouble. He
hadn 't won in two years and was racing at the site of h1s most recent victory.·The crowd went wild. He and
Busch crashed, ractng for the wtn.
The crowo went wilder.

.·'.~ • KenWth,
. 1\Urt QUSCh and casey
Me;n_

).Ryan Chapman and
Butch Marnhout of
the Southern
Tornadoes signing
with the University
of Rio Grande Baseball.
Best of luck from the·
Racine Downtown.Athletic Club

..

: : .•llle·~

!lASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutten gives his take: "A case can
be made that blame for the crash
should be shated . ~usch's ca• was
well underneath Earnhardt 's when

. i • ~u~e· -1hat the Dan Lowry

i)

400 went 10 laps past its

:: si:heduted distance. l11at's the

.,. mo&amp;lMr.

1~ j.. 5mCe Rldtlnoud became a
!' · .7~ II1IQ( in 1988, Denny

they made contact . Botn drivers
went for part of the same piece of

:: : Hamlin's 3811aps ted repre-

;; : senll!d the most dominant per·
:&amp;•. folmance Mr. Unfortunately,
~ ' Hamlin didn't wtn lhe ,_,
.: ~ Unlit lhe VI!X"f end, the horne: ••• loWn helli was virtually alone at
'I •
'
'. " the front. He couldn't have been
:; beatl!n brt a rellfj team of all·

pavement. Like him or not. if a race
ts on the line. Busch ts gotng to go
- for it:"

P!lotos bi CIA Stocl&lt; Photos

c

To tile llldar "' .. Dan ._, 400 In llld-ld (Cint llawJer) went tile spols.

time fl'eaiS. He could be beat·
, !·en, hal euer.~aftattire.
:: ·.. liP! Busch's IM!I'llge finish a\

I

I

::. finish.

·: : ;. flowwe&lt;has finished in the top
· ~· 10 lri!eYen of the season's 10
:· : fiDeS.

.

•

:: • ~~~II haSnt won,
•• andliil's-wonaraceat

::: o.•et.un.
·.·
.:&lt;

..•.•.
.··~
....

.•

·

'

.
::,;$21-t-. /~ J"J.srf

-

.~·..~ ;.SJ JD }/J-l 0~3

=

J

!:if

;

: •;... .... IIIII -llfle Busch has
.;. lillillwld fil'lt, second, third
:~: IIIII 10th In lhe la5t'1oor

·:• ~.... aint Bowyer's Rtot~-

,.; mond '**"!' lf1lllllld him from
! _..., foUr1ll in the poin!s

•.,,
...
....

. .......
i~WICIIICS.

•

.

;t; -•!'On-

·h,.••
:t:,spa111(12111

--•

~ to Ullhlln

:t 411111111+

t•-·IWI

. •au.aflfel•

11.,.,.10
[f:aa !

II(A!Itlfted

While others scuffled, Bowyersnuck into the lead. when it counted
Br Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

...

,:f'.

••

.r ~_) _u;~

.r U .t -: J J '

c ~-~· f9 ; - · . i-;1')1.1 )

!; J ;·.

RICHMOND , va:- The timing of
Clint Bowyer's second career victory
was almost as good as the first.
When Bowyer made the 2007 Chase,
be entered as the only driver in the
field of 12 without a victory. He
promptly won the first Chase race.
This time, though, at Richmond International Raceway, it was timing of a
different sort.
Bowyer kept his cool and watched
from a safe distance as first the tire
went flat on Denny Hamlin's dominant
car and then the other two drivers in
front of him, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and
Kyle Busch, crashed with less than
four laps left in the scheduled distanee.
That left Bowyer to inherit the victory and move up to fourth in the

Busch, who finished second despite
Sprint Cup poil)ts standings.
the
crash, bore the brunt of the critiRichard Childress, owner of
Bowyer's No. 07 Chevrolet, ebalked it cism from fans for the crash, which
relegated Earnhardt to 15th place.
up to "good preparation."
"A lot of people may say we backed
"That means opportunity, and he
(Bowyer) was prepared tonight, and into the win," said Bowyer's crew
the opportunity was there," said Chil- chief, Gil Martin. "(But) we started
.31st and drove our way up to 16th or
dress. "He won by being there ..."
Bowyer, among the more good-na- 17th before the first (pit) stop.· We
tured of NASCAR drivers, said he had were coming all along, and Clint just
been watchin.g Earnhardt and Busch needed track position."
"You just have to be patient," said
with interest.
"Yeah, they were putting on a show Bowyer. "We had a.fast race car, but,
for a while;" said Bowyer, smiling . you know, too many times, I've seen
"They were racing hard. That's what people, and I've done it myself, push
racing at Richmond is all about, in my too hard1 spin their tires, and sooner
opinion. It just didn't work out. I told or later, you're really loose and don't
the cops .. . I don't know why they have any forward drive and can't
were escorting !De in here (to the pass an~ody . ... That's the hardest
post-race press conference). I told thing."
· them, they better get on and escort
You can reach Monte Dutton at
. Kyle Busch out of here.
mdutton@gastongazette.com
"It was meant to be, I guess."

L W~ won't NASCAR al low fuel·
injection engines? ·
2. W~ ts the yellow ltne at some.
tracks and not others?
3. Do the same NASCAR officials
travel from Daytona to other tracks?
4. When a driver wms the race.
does he get the whole purse?
· 5. If 75 cars show up to qual ify.
why not let them all run?
6. Why isn't there a brake ltght tn
the rear window?
. 7. Whal about a turn-signal light
for gotng to the ptts?
8. Why not air·cond1tio11 the cars
· So the drivers can stay cool?
Claude Grimes
Lakeland. Fla.

NASCAR officials C(lnsJder fuel-in·
jectwn engines more d1tf1cult to police and monitor and are comfortable
with the present configuralion. The
ye llow lines only exist at Daytona aoo

Talladega and are considered a safety
precaulion. A rotation is'in place for
NASCAR officials, ailowmg time off;
the same team isn't in place for every
race ..T, e driver doesn 't get all the
money but only a snare del ermined
by t he de tails of lrtis contract. At short
·tracks. larger flelrfs would create too
much congest1on. so the field is set at
a standard 43 for alllhe races. Brake
lights and wrn signals would have
less 'usefulness ar the speeds at
.which races are run. or at least that's
the prevailing ~ie\\ . Drivers use a vari
ety of means ro ·sray cool. and air con·
ditioning might affect

perlormance~

•

-. -

·The Daily.Sentinel
111 Court St.
.

P_O!fleroy, OH

1

I

(740) 992-2155

LiM,
-

•

'

t

', )

.... bumlllg questions

:• Rietonoudls now 5.6. yet he
: has lliM!r wcin a race there.
:• . This marloed ~is third runner-up

--

-

I - .,.

I

____ J...

.

AUTDrvlClTIVF:

W'"r tAIRESI'OIAntllll a PIII'IS

Let's Go Racin!!

·s ..,M~., ,..:1/a~

Now selling:
I'
• Ford &amp; Motorcraft Parta .
• Engines, Transfer c - &amp; Trwtamlsslons.
• Aftennarket Replacement Shwt Met8l A Como.pot:111M11181nllttta
'

• For All Makes of Vehicle a

HOLZER CLINIC

.

�l

•

l

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 9, 2008

www.mydailysentinel.rom

Red Wings roll past Stars 4-1 in West finals opener
BY LARRY LADE

second-seeded San Jose
Sharks after starting both
series with two road wins.
DETROIT
Johan
The way the Franzen-led
Franzen. Brian Rafalski and Red Wings are playing Tomas Holmstrom scored winning seven straight power-play goals for the they're going to be rough to
Detroit Red Wings, who . beat in any rink.
·
built a big lead in the second
Franzen's 12th goal
period and coasted to a 4-1 extended his team postseawin over the Dallas Stats in son scoring record, and the
Game I of the Western player known as Mule
Conference
finals
on matched another club mark
Thursday night
by finding the net for a fifth
After Valtteri Filppula put straight game.
the top-seeded Red Wings
Gordie :Howe pulled off
ahead 4-0, Brenden Morrow the feat in 1949 and '64_ Ted
scored with a minute left in Lindsay scored in five conthe second period to .prevent secutive games in 1952. ·
the fifth-seeded Stats from . Franzen has 15 points in
getting .shut out.
the playoffs, tying Jaromir
Game 2 is Saturday night Jagr of the already-eliminatat Joe Louis Arena, .wl)ere ed New York Rangers.
Stars ~oalie Marty Turco is
The Red Wings .were so
0-8-2 m his NHL career.
dominant in the fust two
Turco made 27 saves, and periods ·it looked as though
Detroit's Chris Osgood they had a man advantage in
.turned away 20 shots.
even-strength siwations.
Dallas upset the defending They ·.also created scoring
Stan ley Cup champion chances while killing penalAnaheim Ducks. in the, first ties.
round and then topped the
The Stars struggled to
ASSOCIATED PRESS

skate with Detroit, leading
to early hooking and holding penalties that were costly.
With Detroit enjoying a
two-man
advantage,
Rafalski scored 4:28 into
the game after a shot by
Nicklas Lidstrom caromed
off the post directly to him
between the circles.
·
Franzen and Holmstrom
both scored by s~ding in
front and reduectmg shots
past Turco, who .was serenaded .with jeers of "Tumco! Tum-co!" by fans early
and often.
Detroit showed it :could
score ·at even strength, too,
when two long passes set up
Filppula to flick in a shot
Morrow, a key player
against San Jose. scored his
eighth goal. of the postseason off a rebound late in the
second . .
Notes: Dallas did beat
Detroit at something, signing Swedish free agent
Fabian Brunnstrom after he
.was wooed by a handful of

NHL teams. ... The Stars
were with()Ut Philippe
Boucher (hip) and Stu
Barnes
(concussion).
Detroit had two bangCl$1-up
players, Chris Chelios
(lower body) and Filppula
(leg), in the lineup. ... In a
slight surprise, Detroit's
Darren McCarty was a
healthy. scratch and was
replaced · by Kirk Maltby
(hamstring), who played for
the first time in the playoffs.
... Franzen is the first player
to score 12 playoff goals in.
two years . ... Detroit is 3-0
in
three
postseason
matchups against Dallas,
most recently winning the
1998 conference fmals en
route to hoisting the Stanley
Cup for a second straight
year. ... Faces in the crowd
included Jason Giambi and
Johnny Damon of the New
York Yankees, who start a
series against the Tigers on
Friday. ... While in goal for
the Michigan Wolverines,
Turco was 18-5 at Joe Louis
Arena.

...,.~

Detroit Red
Wings winger
Henrik
Zetterberg (40),
left, and teammate Tomas
Holmstrom (96),
crowd iri front of
Dallas Stars
goalie Marty
Turco (35) and
Stars defenseman Trevor
Daley (6) duriQg
Game 1 of the ·
Western
CQnference .
hockey finals iiJ
Detroit
Thursday,

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~--~--_J~~

Rio
from Page HI
the Falcons scored two runs
in the first inning. Anna Ball
led off the game with a
home run off Rio's senior
hurler Miranda Laws.
The Redwomen were
their own worst enemy in
this game with shaky

defense. Three .key errors
led to runs in 11- ~ first and
third frames for the Falcons
upping the lead to 6-0.
Rio was able to score a
run in the bottom of the
third on an RBI single off
the bat of sophomore first
baseman Mimi Mahon. She
plated freshman left fielder
Kaci Dunn, who had doubled .with two outs.
The Redwomen tried to

come off the mat late in the
game, seoring five runs in
the sixth inning w tie the
game at 6-6 after two .were
out. Junior right fielder
Amanda Stevens had the
big hit in the inning with a
two-run .triple. She later
scored on a bunt single by
Ross.
Rio surrendered a run in
the 11th inning and fell 7-6.
Laws (16-6) suffered the

loss.
Rio Grande .(26-16) will
now slide. inm the loser's
bracket and face No. 4 seed
Ohio Dominican at 10 a.m.
at Thursday morning in an
elimination gaine.
Rio Grande was 3-1 versus ODU this seaaon. ·N otte
Dame (31-11) .will face No.
. I Walsh in the W"Ulhet~s
' bracket final on Thursday at
12:30 p.m.

·smith
fromPageBl

achieved that goal and we
are really happy for him."
Smith averaged 17.8
points per · game in his
senior season, by far the
leading scorer for the White
Falcons. He also helped his
team post an impressive 159 .record this season along
with fellow seniors Keith
Pearson, Justin Arnold,
Kerry Gibbs, Jo~h Pa!Jiey
and Casey Hamson - a
group that will go down as
one of the greatest senior
squads in school history.
"This is one of the greatest group of kids I have ever
had. All of those kids have
contributed tremendously
over the past few years,"
Toth added. ·
. And that exposure as a
member of a state-ranked
squad, combined .with his
close relationship with his
coaches, has allowed Smith
to continue playing the
game he loves when he
starts school in Salem later
this year.
':I appreciate coach Toth
more than anything. He has
been like a father to me,"
. Smith said.
And Toth is just one of the
people that have helped
. Smith make it this far.
"I would like to thank my
grandma, coach Toth and
coach Wolfe, as well as
everyone behind the scenes
that helped me out," Smith
added.
.
Smith's signing to play
basketball at -the next level
has· been a positive for the
school as well, shining a

: Friday, May 9, 2008

positive light on the WHS
hoops program.
·
"We think this is good for
our program, it is good for
the school and for the community. Anytime a kid can
go to the next level that
means he is, first, a good
student, second, it is dear to
his heart and third it just
makes everyone happy and
proud to be a part of
Waharoa basketball," Toth
said.
•
"This is the first step
toward what .we hope will
be a career thing for Jordan.
We .want him to know he
needs to use basketball· to
further his education and
better his life and it is an
opponunity for him to
become sometl).ing," Toth
said. "We expect him to
become a produ~tive citizen
and .someone that people
·can look up to."
.
And more than anything,
Smith .wants to use this
accomplishment as
a
reminder to others that talent is only part of the equation, it takes plenty of hard
work off the court as well to
be able to reach for ·your
dreams.
"I don't want anyone io
ever think that I was .just
gifted at basketball and I
never worked hard. It took a
lot of haid work for me ~~
be able to do this," Smith
said.
Salem
International
University is au NCAA
Division II school and is .a
member of the West
Virginia
Intercollegiate
Athletic Conference. The
Fighting Tigers, coached by
Andy Sorine, posted a 4-24
record last season.

The Daily Sentinel•

www.mydailysentinel.com

.,. If JOU have a question ar a i:omment, write: NASCAR This Week. r;o The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box 1538. Gastonia, NC 28053

•

Sprint Cup

1

..

. Ill the cenlrll themes Of
. . lhe ..n: 1hltJe t..ir( !loin
·"' do lilt a bortrW race inlllloe: It's
~

• " -: Dodge Challenger 500 right up ootil the loss or air in a
aWIIonl: Da~ington (S.C)
. tire cost him a race he seemed
Raceway (1.366 miles). 367
incapable of losing. There was.
laps/501.322 miles.
·
however. joy for Clint Bowyer.
a WileR: Saturday. May10.
who inhe!ited the Dan Lowry
a !.at rul'l ..._: Jeff Gor· 400 as mudl as if he'd been
don, Chevrolet.
'
named heir to a long-lost retaaQ'n"'JJne ~:ward Bur· live's fortune . Earnhardt Jr.
ton, Pootiac,173.797 mph,
could've brol&lt;en a 71&lt;ace los
ing streak at Richmond on Sat·
Marro22. 1996.
• "-e -.1: Dale Earnurday nigllt. He inherited the
haJdt. Chevrole~ 139.958
lead from Hamlin, only to fall
mph, Man:h 28. 1993.
. into the clutches of Hamlin 's
a !.at llllllk: ~was Clint who
teammate. Kyle Busch. who.
won the race . not Casey. but .. . while trying to ·pass him. put
truly. there was no joy in RichEarnhardt's Che'ly in the wall
mond- or, presumably.
on lap 398. Busch . who called
Mudville- when Dale Earnit -just good. hard racing,- lost
hard! Jr. spun out. Nor was
the lead to BO\\yer and any
there joy fdr hometown hero
semblance of affection from a
Denny Hamlin, who had utterly packed crowd of more than
dominated the Dan lowry 400 106,000.

c

_au rC:hOw often aerythitC
- I t lhe lind:

..•

' • The illst'line

'

D!ld••·-

. • O.liCflliils the sport's tno.il&gt;
. i!!it . . The ladrCe-ls
· ilo mo1U1811a Si.le 111 When

a R-: Diamond Hill Ply·

a "-e: Not1l1 Carolina Education Lottery 200
wood200
a Wllonl: Lowe ·s Mot04'
aWIIonl: Da~ington IS.C)
Raceway (1.366 miles!. 147 SpeeOo&amp;y, Concord. N.C.
laps/ 200.802 miles.
(1.5 miles I. 1341aps/2D1
a -: Friday. May 9.
miles.
a !.at rul'l ,.._,Den~ • - : Niday, May 16.
a !at_.. wn.: Ron
Hamlin. Chevrolet.
Hornaday Jr.. Chevrolet
• Qlolltf;i~C -.1: Ryan
Newman. Ford. 170.301
• QM RJiiiC NCOrd: Mike
Skinner.Toyota, 183.051
mph. Marctl16. 2001.
a liKe -.1: Michael WBI· mph , May 19, 2005 .
trip, Pontiac. 138.140 mph. a"-e -.1: Kyle Busch.
Ch«Mole.t. 124.845 mph,
Sept. 5. 1992.
• Lat WMI&lt;: Den~ Hamlin May19; 2006.
drove a TOI(&gt;ta to first place a !at.-: Ron Hornaday
Jr., in a Chevrolet, won at
in the Lipton Tea 250 at
Richmond . holdir"4! off Chevy Kansas Speedway, with
driver Kevin HarVie!&lt;.
teammate Jack S~ue ftn. islling second .

JJJ -rJ-JZ

CLINT. BOWYER

.• &gt;:!(lnll.lhelliOrt.flllmllltd
~ ~ hilfier !1-lhi~ ullihes.
- £!11i1ct 11101e ollhe same.

Cntftsman Truck

Nationwide

~? c..rflJs-d-J-f

·

MaylO .

mlleOYal

., •• 11 I •...:1,229 ft.
tf' II

~

J

No. 07 BB&amp;T CHEVROLET

SPRINT CuP SERIES

.

~~~~with most Olher

trades~

' ... Jell' Gonion, suPelb at Daltilll... ton, Mills a victory or, at the
VI!X"f least, .. ~per·
romlllfiOe. At Riet•nond, Gonion
fell a tap down before lhe race
• -50 laps old. &amp;lrprislrc no
"• .one, Gonion lllltied.to finish
: ~· niliiL That tucki dog.
:~ • The dod&lt; Is already ~to
: 1• tiel&lt; on lhe ~ hopes of Matt

CONGRATULATIONS

Kyle Busdl YS.
Dille brnUrdt Jr.
Earnhardt inhe&lt;ited the lead late
in the Rtchmond race when Denny
Hamli n's car had tire trouble. He
hadn 't won in two years and was racing at the site of h1s most recent victory.·The crowd went wild. He and
Busch crashed, ractng for the wtn.
The crowo went wilder.

.·'.~ • KenWth,
. 1\Urt QUSCh and casey
Me;n_

).Ryan Chapman and
Butch Marnhout of
the Southern
Tornadoes signing
with the University
of Rio Grande Baseball.
Best of luck from the·
Racine Downtown.Athletic Club

..

: : .•llle·~

!lASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutten gives his take: "A case can
be made that blame for the crash
should be shated . ~usch's ca• was
well underneath Earnhardt 's when

. i • ~u~e· -1hat the Dan Lowry

i)

400 went 10 laps past its

:: si:heduted distance. l11at's the

.,. mo&amp;lMr.

1~ j.. 5mCe Rldtlnoud became a
!' · .7~ II1IQ( in 1988, Denny

they made contact . Botn drivers
went for part of the same piece of

:: : Hamlin's 3811aps ted repre-

;; : senll!d the most dominant per·
:&amp;•. folmance Mr. Unfortunately,
~ ' Hamlin didn't wtn lhe ,_,
.: ~ Unlit lhe VI!X"f end, the horne: ••• loWn helli was virtually alone at
'I •
'
'. " the front. He couldn't have been
:; beatl!n brt a rellfj team of all·

pavement. Like him or not. if a race
ts on the line. Busch ts gotng to go
- for it:"

P!lotos bi CIA Stocl&lt; Photos

c

To tile llldar "' .. Dan ._, 400 In llld-ld (Cint llawJer) went tile spols.

time fl'eaiS. He could be beat·
, !·en, hal euer.~aftattire.
:: ·.. liP! Busch's IM!I'llge finish a\

I

I

::. finish.

·: : ;. flowwe&lt;has finished in the top
· ~· 10 lri!eYen of the season's 10
:· : fiDeS.

.

•

:: • ~~~II haSnt won,
•• andliil's-wonaraceat

::: o.•et.un.
·.·
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: •;... .... IIIII -llfle Busch has
.;. lillillwld fil'lt, second, third
:~: IIIII 10th In lhe la5t'1oor

·:• ~.... aint Bowyer's Rtot~-

,.; mond '**"!' lf1lllllld him from
! _..., foUr1ll in the poin!s

•.,,
...
....

. .......
i~WICIIICS.

•

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;t; -•!'On-

·h,.••
:t:,spa111(12111

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:t 411111111+

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11.,.,.10
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II(A!Itlfted

While others scuffled, Bowyersnuck into the lead. when it counted
Br Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

...

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!; J ;·.

RICHMOND , va:- The timing of
Clint Bowyer's second career victory
was almost as good as the first.
When Bowyer made the 2007 Chase,
be entered as the only driver in the
field of 12 without a victory. He
promptly won the first Chase race.
This time, though, at Richmond International Raceway, it was timing of a
different sort.
Bowyer kept his cool and watched
from a safe distance as first the tire
went flat on Denny Hamlin's dominant
car and then the other two drivers in
front of him, Dale Earnhardt Jr. and
Kyle Busch, crashed with less than
four laps left in the scheduled distanee.
That left Bowyer to inherit the victory and move up to fourth in the

Busch, who finished second despite
Sprint Cup poil)ts standings.
the
crash, bore the brunt of the critiRichard Childress, owner of
Bowyer's No. 07 Chevrolet, ebalked it cism from fans for the crash, which
relegated Earnhardt to 15th place.
up to "good preparation."
"A lot of people may say we backed
"That means opportunity, and he
(Bowyer) was prepared tonight, and into the win," said Bowyer's crew
the opportunity was there," said Chil- chief, Gil Martin. "(But) we started
.31st and drove our way up to 16th or
dress. "He won by being there ..."
Bowyer, among the more good-na- 17th before the first (pit) stop.· We
tured of NASCAR drivers, said he had were coming all along, and Clint just
been watchin.g Earnhardt and Busch needed track position."
"You just have to be patient," said
with interest.
"Yeah, they were putting on a show Bowyer. "We had a.fast race car, but,
for a while;" said Bowyer, smiling . you know, too many times, I've seen
"They were racing hard. That's what people, and I've done it myself, push
racing at Richmond is all about, in my too hard1 spin their tires, and sooner
opinion. It just didn't work out. I told or later, you're really loose and don't
the cops .. . I don't know why they have any forward drive and can't
were escorting !De in here (to the pass an~ody . ... That's the hardest
post-race press conference). I told thing."
· them, they better get on and escort
You can reach Monte Dutton at
. Kyle Busch out of here.
mdutton@gastongazette.com
"It was meant to be, I guess."

L W~ won't NASCAR al low fuel·
injection engines? ·
2. W~ ts the yellow ltne at some.
tracks and not others?
3. Do the same NASCAR officials
travel from Daytona to other tracks?
4. When a driver wms the race.
does he get the whole purse?
· 5. If 75 cars show up to qual ify.
why not let them all run?
6. Why isn't there a brake ltght tn
the rear window?
. 7. Whal about a turn-signal light
for gotng to the ptts?
8. Why not air·cond1tio11 the cars
· So the drivers can stay cool?
Claude Grimes
Lakeland. Fla.

NASCAR officials C(lnsJder fuel-in·
jectwn engines more d1tf1cult to police and monitor and are comfortable
with the present configuralion. The
ye llow lines only exist at Daytona aoo

Talladega and are considered a safety
precaulion. A rotation is'in place for
NASCAR officials, ailowmg time off;
the same team isn't in place for every
race ..T, e driver doesn 't get all the
money but only a snare del ermined
by t he de tails of lrtis contract. At short
·tracks. larger flelrfs would create too
much congest1on. so the field is set at
a standard 43 for alllhe races. Brake
lights and wrn signals would have
less 'usefulness ar the speeds at
.which races are run. or at least that's
the prevailing ~ie\\ . Drivers use a vari
ety of means ro ·sray cool. and air con·
ditioning might affect

perlormance~

•

-. -

·The Daily.Sentinel
111 Court St.
.

P_O!fleroy, OH

1

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(740) 992-2155

LiM,
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.... bumlllg questions

:• Rietonoudls now 5.6. yet he
: has lliM!r wcin a race there.
:• . This marloed ~is third runner-up

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�I

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 9, 2008

-.mydailysen,.tineLcom

Guillen .talking himself Of1t of ajob
BY ,_l..mcE

er room to break the slump,
Back then, Guillen could
AP SPORTS COLUMNIST
be every bit as entel1aining
Guillen defended tbe stunt.
"Some people like stuff," with his mouth as he was
It may be too late for the he said one more time, with a glove. He grew up in
White Sox to get a refund ··some don "Ln
Venezuela dreaming about
for the sensitivity training
the
day he would follqw in
If the White Smr were a
they were ordered to put college pl;Ogram instead of a the fOOlSteps oftwo previous
manager Ozzie Guillen pro baseball team, the orga- White Sox shortstops, Chico
through two summers ago. nization would already be on Carrasquel
and
.Luis
The man seems more deter- double-secrerprobation for Aparicio, who became legmined than ever to taJk. his what the NCAA calls "a lack ends back home. And just
way out of a job.
of institutional control." like tbem, Guillen arrived oo
"Those people are gonna Instead of apologizing for these shores as a teenager,
make me a lot of money any of it, Guillen resorted to trying to learn English in the
later. Because as soon as I'm an old ruse, suggtsting ooe Sometimes-crude environs
done."
Guillen • said more time there is a method of a locker room. The differThursday,
referring
to to his madness.
ence is that once Guillen figreJX&gt;ners, ''I' II be the only
"Who cares about Britney ured out he could make
manager they remember."
Spears? . But she's on TV audienres liner by dropping
·'Who's' the manager they every day. Why do you think f-bombs and wholesale
remember the most?" he people give a ... about Jose insults, be couldn' t stop
asked a moment later, not Canseco? That ... sells," unloading them,
waiting for an answer. " Billy Guillen said, ·
The shame is that like a lot
Manin. They don't remem- .It also ends careers prema- of class clowns, Guillen isn't
ber Sparky Anderson. They turely, somethi~tg lhat seems just fearless, he's smart The
· remember Billy Martin to have been on Guillen's same impulsive qualities
because he was the crazy mind almost since the begin- that made him a headline
one.
ning of his tenure in charge writer's dream also made
In the news business, we of the White Sox. Every him look like a , pretty
call this becoming the ally of manager knows he's hired to shrewd manager - once.
your gravedigger. If most of be fired, but few get their
Rewind back to the World
us had a stretch on the job fii'St shot in a town so ready Series-winning season of
like the one Guillen is in !be to embrace them.
2005 and what you' II find is
midst of, the last thing we' d
A crowd of almost 38,000 a guy leading a ballclub with
do is call attention to it. Not sprung to its feet when a series of inspired bunches.
the Wizard of Oz.
Guillen was introduced on In what might have been the
While his ballclub was April 13, 2004 for bis firSt pivotal
game
against
plummeting in tbe American borne game as manager. Houston, Guillen passed up
League Central, Guillen was Many of them no doubt his regular closer in the late
complaining about the Cubs remembered the mercurial, · innings three times in favor
always being the darlings of slick~fielding shortstop who of relievers who hadn't
the Chicago media While had made his debut there as worked, on average, in a
his sorry hitters were defl3t- a player nearly '20 seasons monlh. Then, be got the
ing faster than the blow-up earlier and went on to game-winning home run
dolls they posed in the lock- become Rookie of the Year. ftom Geoff Blum, who bad

..

Celtics
from Page 81 '
year's playoffs but won four
straight to reach the NBA
finals.
"We've been in this situation before," said James,
who offered encouragement along tbe bencb as the
final seconds ticked off.
"I:ve got to let them know
that I'm not frustrated."
The message was NOT
received.
"He's got to be frustrated," Cavaliers guard Wally
Szczerbiak said. "He's such
a good player. He puts so
much on his shoulders."

James will have a more
welcoming crowd for the
next two games than the
Boston fans who serenaded
him with a chant of ''Overrated!'' as he weni 1-fm-11
over the second and third
quarters.
This .t ime, the poor
shooting was .contagious:
The Cavaliers shot 35.6
percent in the game, hitting
just 11.8 percent in the second quarter as Boston
turned
an
eight-point
deficit into a . nine-point
lead. From early in the second quarter to early in the
third, a span of 13:41,
Boston
outscored
Cleveland 36-10.
Zydrunas Ilgauskas had
19 points for the Cavaliers,

and reserve Anderson
Varejao had 10 rebounds in
32 minutes . after forward
Ben Wallace went to the
locker room Just 3:40 into
the game due to dizziness.
Wallace, who atuibuted
the problem to allergies, sat
on the bench for the second
quarter and took some
during halftime
shots
warmups, but did not return
to the game.
"As bad as my head was
hurting me, it's always hard
to be out there and see your
teammates struggling,:' he
said.
Wallace will be re-evaluated when the team returns
to Cleveland, Cavaliers
spokesman Tad Carper
said.

Spots
fromPageBI

'"'-bat

exactly One
the entire
· postseason, and did what he
could to spread the credit
around.
"I've never seen a team as
magical as this one," Guillen
said at the time, and he
turned out to be right
By !be following July, the
White Sox were in a tailspin
that left them some 25
~ames below .500, and notbmg Guillen bas done or said
since has accomplished anylhing. He fii'St threatened to
walk away from baseball if
the White Sox won it all
toward the end of that magical 2005 season and he's
repeated it several times
now. In between, he's feuded with players, cursed
reporters and forced the
. White Sox brass to explain
away one embarrassment
after another.
How much of a toll it's
taken already is somelhing
only Guillen or owner Jerry
Reinsdorf know. The owner
once referred to his manager
as " the Hispanic Jackie
Mason," and. just extended
his contract through 2012.
What they seem to .have
forgotten, !hough, is that
laughing at the hijinks,
insults and all that foul Ian~age would be a lot easier
if it wasn't for all that losing.

over, playing out the fourth
quarter better than they
have played all series,
San Antonio went on an
11-0
burst
featuring
Ginobili, Parker and Tim
Duncan to take a 101-88
lead with 5:57 to play.
The Spurs .couldn't stop
Paul, but West missed three
of four free throws and the
Hornets got no closer than
I0 poiilts in the latter half of
. the quarter.
The Spurs outsoored the
Hornets 27-21 in the fourth
with. Parker and Ginobili
combining for 17 points.
Duncan had 16 pc)ints and
13 rebounds . .
The Hornets took an 8-0
lead in the first quarter
before the Spurs evened
things and started the second quarter down 23-21.
While Bruce Bowen was
lilrgely successful in cootaining 3-point sharpshooter
Peja Stojakovic in the flf'St
half, West · and Paul, the
stars of Games I and 2,
were . let loose and shot a
combined
14-of-21
to
account for 30 of the
Hornets' points at halftime.
Tyson Chandler dunked
alley-oop passes from West,
Paul and Wells in tbe first
half, ~h lime quieting the
raucous Spurs crowd .t hat
took to booing both the officials
and the Hornets.
Jim lit~ is a 11111ional
The Spurs led by as
sporrs columnist for Tlu!
Associated Press. WrirL w as four points in tile second
quarter
after Michael
him m j(#rk.eap.org

many

Pierce and Allen (0-for-4
in Game I) snapped out of
whatever ailed them. Pierce
did it rijlht away, with
seven pomts in the first
quarter, but Allen took a littie more time.
The thud member of
Boston's Big Three hadn't
scored since hitting a 3pointer with 8:48 left in the
third quarter of Game 7
against Atlanta. Boston fmished off tbe Hawks with
just seven points ftom the,
Allen, who shot 3-foc-12 in
the first-round finale.
He missed his first four
shots Thursday ·but ·SOOftld
11 points in the third quarter, including the first four
of the second half as the
Celtics scored I 0 straight

to take a 54-36 lead. The
Cavaliers c11t it w 12 on
James' only basket of the
quarter, but they spent most
of the fourth quarter !railing by 20.
"It was good 10 see Ray
get it going. I though( that
lifted everybody up on our
team," said Cellics coach
Doc Rivers, who called the
firSt several plays of the
second half for Allen. "I
made a ooncerted effort. I
told the coaches :at .halftime, 'We're going 10 him
over and over again. We've
got to get him going."'
Allen joked that he bad
forgotten what it felt like w
make a basket.
"I think everybody · was
relieved," said the 33-year-

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.corn

Finley, wbo came off the.
bench because usual reservt:
Ginobili started, hit a comei
3 to give San Antonio a 41-i.
371ead.
·.
· Aftec Parker hit a jumper;
with 49 seconds to play in
the first half, Stojakovic and:
Morris Perersoo each hit 3s,
to ~ve the Spurs down 56-~
49 w1th 23 seconds left Bul'
Bowen hit a 3 and Ginobili~
hit a buzzer~be.atin~ jumper;
to bring San Antomo within:
56-54 at halftime.
:
Duncan was quiet in the :
firSt half with · just five;
points as New Orleans' dou-:
ble-teams continued . to;
hamper him.
·
.;
In the third the Spurs did '
not break down as they did ·
in Games I and 2 when '
New Orleans took: cootrot.
Their Big 3 - Duncab,:
Parkec and Ginobili -took
. '
over, scoring all but three of•
San Antonio's 29 points in:
the period_ .
But the Hornets wouldn l
go away as Paul srored II ·
points in the quarter. Late in:
the period he hit a shot;
when he flipped liP the ball;
as he spun around and put·
his back to lhe basket Paul
also got fouled for a threepoint pla~ to bring the
Hornets Within 77-76.
Notes: Paul's shoes read
~Brian!" in white lettering;
in honor of an 8-year-old·
fan with cancel' who was set:
to attend Monday's Game 2
but missed it· with a fever
and died boors lata. ... Paul
was named first-team AllNBA on Thursday. Duncan
was named to the .second
team and Ginoblli the third. ·

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'

tlolnt Jltimant legister

'Ibe Daily Sentinel
740·992-2155

304-675-1333

www.~ydailyregister.com.

Love to cook?
Always
ex.perimenting with new
ideas? 'lbu may be who we
are looking for. A local company is in need of an individ-

ual who is inspired to cook.
Applicant must be able to
organize and -maflage an
industrial kitchen , prepare

and inventory food stCJC:k,,as
well as . man~ge incoming
1o00s.
and . outgomg
lnd' 'd I 'II be
'bl
lVI ua WI , responsl e
for1o0d.pteparation. presenTechnida,n 'lor Farm and/or tation and qua~&lt;n· to ...........ru::l _
La
E · menl repair &amp;
"''
........ .,....
wn quip
ny slandards. " .you are
M
h
"
ma4ntenance.
ust
ave interested in
applying,
~rfence . Must be able 1o'
plea~ send your resume to '
use COTTl&gt;Comll'ler ~-n ~ lrmite&lt;:l P.O. Box 469 , Gallipolis,
basrs.
pellttve wages, Ohr·o 45631 CLA BoK 101
modern shop, continuous

HUGE 4 .fAMILY . YARD needed .
References
"" •mens ~home SALE. MAY 10 , 2ooe FROM ' required. Please call 74010 • 4 1r= •
TO
4 OOPM 709· 1969
9:OOAM
C-' 304-675-816(
:
'
-J .
HOUSE ACAOSS~ FAOM Eouipment ,
Aepa.ir
.,.

, , 1 r.

•

NAME BRAND C1OTHES &amp;
... .
Ohih';Bhua, 1emale, spa)"ed.~ PURSESl
BEDROOM
3 jean; old. 740-645-6987
SUil"ES, GIFT
ITEMS.
~-•
vuror&amp;.

Free kittens. All
7 40- 949-2823 ....

Call HOUSEHOLD
MISC.ITEMS

ITEMS .

BABYCLOTHES.

company sponsore(i ·tra in·
ft8e to good home. Small
ing,
health
insurance,
brown/:whi\9 (F ) young dog. May 8 &amp; 9, rain or shine. matching retirement contri·
Very friendly. 740-446-3009 341 Rutland St., MiddlepOrt, bution and paid holidays.
household ttemS , clothing. Fax 74D-446-9104 or Email
,
Johncarmichael @careq.com
Golden Retriever ~ (M) lots of misc.
to good home . .6.bout 2
mbnthi old. Has shots. 740- Raco scholarship yard sa~- Experienced lruck and Auto
Star Mill Park. May 13 &amp; .14 Mechani c needed . Must own
379-9515 or 6(5-6857.
trom 9 to 4, and May 15 from tools. 740·388·8547
To good home , lOll blooded 9lo 2.May 1S,halfprice
::::::.:..:=.=~.::_
(F) _,.raner, eleel gray, day and dollar a ba g.
FEDERAL
~· 36Hl521 o11er 12 Auction by Dan Smilh will
POSTAL JOBS
noon .
follow
$t7.69·$2B.27/1lr., now hir·
a1 3pm.Thanks for your sup· tng. FOf applicatron and free

r

l..c:JIT ANI
FOOND

Ir

port!\!1\!!l!P!

YARD SALE·

PI.EAsANT

I

Pr.
FOUND; on· 4th Ave Friday
Moy
2.
Small
brownlblaoklwhite
mate Big Sa~ 1 Sa1urday 1001
P\4JPY. 645-7965
Hartford Community Center
Everything! 9am-3pm

'

Meigs lndustries,lnc. is hir·
rng a Janitorial Crew Leader

Must have a wlid Ohio drivers license and High School
diploma or GED. . Send
reiume to :
Meigs
lndustries, lnc. PO. Box307,
Syracuse, Ohio 45n9.

call - - - - - - - , Amencan ~- of Labor 1· Need someone to work On
913-599-8226, 24/hts
serv.

amp. rental houses.Send resume

=..::.._______

Office or apply at 1456
Jackson Plke, phone. 4419263 tor Passport/Private
Care Office. CompetHive
wag;es and benefits includ·
ing he'allh insurance and'
mUeage reimbursement.

Outside S.hts
Repraeeatalive
Ohio Valey Publishing with
offi. n,..,..,,..,.J
~-~.
....... 10
Gallipolis

and Pt. Pleasant

to: Sentinel. P. 0 . Box 729-9.
f'orneroy. OH 45269.

PT LPN ,...
'"of.ICBttOrlS
·
Are
S ·
A
1 d F
A
erng
ccep e
or
PTIPossr'ble FT LPN 2
E venrngs,
·
2 Midnl""l
'tl" s.
Competitive Starlin~: Pay,
Pe V
·
Me 1
100
Di!ou:: '

~~uran~s~

Available .
Interested
Applicants May Appl~ DaHy
9·4, Ravenswood Carl!
Center, 1113 Washington
Sl..
Raven-d . WV
...........

(304)2.73·9236
FAX
Referenoes Required E.O.E.

is a...........rning resumes for a
.......time
...,. outside sates
1ull

"-"""Dump~
RegU...-·
...... ~
representati~~e. Applicants R&amp;J Trucking is seeking
must be organized ,
qualified CDL~A drivers to
crealr·- .~ -"'elo
operate semt·dumps for
•• •rumanage an establ i~ ·- ~gionat routes. ~ ~mure
exoeNenf home ttme heatth
account list while call ing
•
On new customers.
and
dental
insurance,
401(k)
1·
•CandidateS must be
.· vaca iOn, UUI.US pay,
d t.tu
a itied
disciplined, setf·motivated an sa...., awards. ua
and a team J)(ayer that
app&amp;icants must be twer 23
·---'--•.. -....lhe
yrs , have a mintmum of 1

.,,......,.,.,IUD

importance of developing

strong, mutuaHybeneficial
bu&amp;ine&amp;s relationships with
our customer&amp;. Sales

you .
PIease send r91ume, .
COY8f letter and three·
references 10:
GallipolisDaMyTribune
·
Attn: Matt RQdgers

• --

Po
4 89
· ·~
Galipolis,
OH 45631
or email to
mroOOersOmydlllytritlune.com
All r-.~:..s witt be ~,__., in
....,.....
rqn
strict
CDflfidence.

.

year

IOf

&amp;

Trainer Position
Are you interested m a
rewarding position? PAIS is
cummtly seeking a par1 time
staff for Masori and Point

vtolltion of the •

SBITM·

· Our

inton'iwllhlt ..1
. . . . . . .triltiwel in
th• 'naw 1 ; _.

vou

__.....,onenequ.l

:;:::;:;:===~

......_.
l •IVI"'r..l

m LoAN

r"'::;::~~~=~
*•NOTIC::I:** ·

Borrow snlart. 'Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs B'EFORE you refinance your home or
- . , a loan. BEWARE
of requesrs tor any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call the
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1_866 _
278- 0003 to leam If · the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
is
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

at a group home in Bidwell:
Ba-4p
Su;
3: 3 ~ 11 P
M!Tu/Wffh. Mus1 have high
school diplorila!GED. wlid
Driver's license aro three
years good dnving elq)Brience. $7 .75/hr. Excellent
benefits package. Pre~
employment Drug Testing. __
.:w'.JIIIiYIUlo..,
•
Send resume to: BuCkeye
Community Services, P.O ·
TURNED DOWN ON
604 , Jacl&lt;son . OH SOCIAL SECURITI' /SSt?
45&amp;40 or e-mail to: bcyccNo Fee Unless We Win!
servOyahoo.com. Deadline
for applican1s: 5/16/08.
Equal
Opportunity
Employer.
IF-ii:;;;;;;;:11oME'~;;;;~;;·;;;~

~-·
House for sale in Racine
area. Approx 4 acres, all
professionally landscaped.
Ranch sty1e house with 4
bedrooms, living room , dining room, kitchen , large fam·
ily room . central air. gas heat
and 1 fireplace . A.ddit1on o1 a
large Florida room comr
pletely cedar opens onto
patio &amp; pool area _Heated in
ground pool endosed by pri·
vacy fencmg and land·
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage attached to house
and finished &amp; hea1ed 3 car
garage
.unaHached
Excellent condition ready to
move in_ $255.000.00, Call:
(740)949-2217
New log hOme sitting on
1 .66 acres, custom kitchen .
3SR , 2 batl1. $142 .900. Call
740-256-9247

Open House Sat &amp; Sun
5/10&amp;5/11 2pm to 5pm. Buy
Me! Large 211 home in seen~ quiel subd~sioo , groal
for hiking and bitting. 1257
sq. ft . vinyl siding, lots of
storage, 1 112 car garage,
eo..
""'''r8fe driveway. Lots ol
partdng &amp; room br boat. W/1
closet in master BR.
Updates to numei'OU6 to list.
Includes Berber carpet,
kilchen apoliances. AJC &amp;
Heat pump. Movmg, must
Srnoou;:)'KIN
·
.&amp;.,-..,;"iiiiiii
~Ill S"
&lt;
~
iiiii-_.1 sell. Motivateci . Appraised
INrnuJc
1 1f2
•
, lor
......
·o 'down payment. 4 bed· aQo. asking $98,000 .... obo.
Gallipolis
College rooms. large yard. Cowred 740-441 -1171 hm
208(Careers Close To Home) · deQ:.. Attached garage. 740· 9673 Cell. 204 Anri Or. d:ff
Call Today! 740446-4367. 367-7129.
Raccoon Creek Rd.
J-80().214-0452
www.galli[
P1$61college.eou 2000 Custom Bu11t Cape
Accredit.-d t.lflmber Accremtmg Cod . • 4BR 2 BA Fin .

i

I

111

·

1150

1

swe.ooo

years

ear..r

,......._._,

lT.IDLU.AAI"U~A~

dumps and roll-ofts is he~
lut. Corrtact .Kent at aoo462·936 5 or till out apphca· Ful l sized Sertopedic pillow·
tion at www.rjtr\.!C*ing.com top mat1ress, boxspnngs.
EOE
tt
d
lh ha
ma ress pa · qu · s ms
_Soc_u_rity_Ofli_rce_n;_neede
_ _d_ J_n sheets. $75.00. 696-1 ,29.
New H a...en, WV• $7 ·00 • ------~ Movt-. s.1e
$ 7.86 per hour, shift work, ,.....Mid II ";' oo-s '
9
M
·
I c :
:00
flow.
·~TY·
us1
have
a
high
293
Fisho
Sleet
·
di
r r
schOol
ploma or GEO, Thurs. 5-9 thru Fri. 5·10..
clean criminal history, paiS F· ~
I
I
.,,,,.,ure. 1nens, seasons
drug screen and bac:t- Items, exercise equipment
- ' ~. Call 1-80(). C&lt;&gt;lecliblos. desk. Turn
.,_,_
275-835Q M-F a::?O to :00. at Mitch's Flowers go up hill
EEO..~
carrier of 5th and Fisher'
-------1111 J 1 ; t
Town of New HBYOO now
aocepting appUcations tor

Now taking applications for - - - - - - - - life Guards May 26- ~
summer
positions
at Part-ttme Dental Assistant. work at the Swimming PooL
Raccoon Creek Par\( . PiCk experience helpful, but not You may pick ltlem up al City
up and drop ofl applications required, oetiver Resume in HaJI at218 Fifth St or Vines
Mon-Fri at Raccoon Creek pen~on to 2922 Jaoksof1 Aw &amp;'Roses at 401 Fifth St. &amp; l::!;;;~;~r.J
tumed in by May 21st
County Park. 740-379-271, · ask tor Connte

,

MIMe wblcti il in

4

j

•uowlngly , . _

---

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommend
that you do business with
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail until
ha,ve investigated the
offering.

clea~ MV~. r,lliiiii~..
=--~;;:;.
..-.,~-~.....,1 ~G~n~ rn as:=\

e..penenoe

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

p;eterer'IOe, limlta1ion or
di..:rimm.tion:"

ad•tiwl•••ts for,..,

~ commerical driving ~~=dent ......._.... Basement located outside

~~nence

p;ahna;m,limttlrtion or
discrimiNtion baed on.
mcl!!l , color, religion, .ex
t.mllial 8IIIU or n1t1ona1
origin, or any !mention to

Thia new 1 1 r wll not .

duties and interaction wlttl Pl.easant. WV providing resi·
the residents . Applicant denliallcommunity skill trainmu~
be a••e lo -rk ·rnde· ing with individuals with
111
1.11
""'
pendently and have good MRIDD. High school diplopeople skills. Interested ma or GEO required . No
aPPlicants may apply to: el(f)Brience
necessary.
Pe-onnel
,..
, PO
. . Box •••
....,, Criminal background. check
- - - - - - - - ' Gallipolis, OH 45631 by May required. Must have reliabte
transportation and valid auto
Ohio Valley Home Heatth, 28.
Inc. hiring STNA., CNA, - - - - - - - - insurance . Paid training .
Home Health Aides and
POST OFFICE NOW
Hourly rate starting at $7·
$8.00fhour. Please call 1
Persona l Care Aides, Full
HIRING
Time and Per Diem posiAvg . Pay $2011'lr or
304-~73-1 011 or toU tree at
tion.s available. Accepting
$571&lt;/yr, includes
Hn-3)'3,1011
applications lor AN and
·Federal Benefits, OT.
Wanted: FuU-Time position
LPN 's. Apply at 1480
Placecl by adSource, not
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, offered w/ LISPS who hires. availall'e to assist individu·
als wrth mental retardation
phone 441 ·1393 for Skllle.d
1-866-403-2582

and
Substitu1e
Crew
Leaders. Experience in jan·
experience and reliable
itorial/custodlal Work pretransportation necessary.
ferred . Meigs Industries proIf you can sell and you
·
1
fuII t1me
,
vides services tor adutts with , want to
developmental disabilities
would like
- to hear from

~rnem8fll Jofr intO,

Home Health Care Soutn
East Ohio IS cunent!y hiring
Home Healt h A1 des for
Reward: 1yr blacl&lt; male Cat - - - - , -- - - - : - : Metgs Co.. you must be cerbeen neutered Missing on Garage Sale Sat May 10 tified or currently have one
Oenden in Pike. Gallipolis 2008. 8am·? 3221 Jackson y8ar experience, call 1-866368· 1100 loll lree
Forry 304--675·7484
Ave lois of Sluff

I

part -time dehvery person.
Applicant must have a valid
driver's license. have good
customer relation skills and
be able to multi--task well.
. be
Applicants Will
subject to
background cheok before
_._, .
,.
ld l'ke
111nng. " you ~pu
1
to
1
app ly, p ease send your
res ume to : PO
. . Box 469 ,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 CLA

to work odd hours, some
weeke nds. Of . interested,
please apply in ,person by
bringing a resume to : Boggs
Pest Cont rol. Inc . 110 Boggs
Road, Oak Hill, 0H 45656.
NO PHONE CALLS.
Box l01 .

__

. T..-

•

·

AM,VET

I•

1-5, A.ntiques , Tony Slewart pass drug test. Good public
. Cars, Glassware. Clothes
relat ions, self motivated.
Able 'to obtain pes1 control
"' YAKD SAlh · license
with1n the tir:st year
•
Fof,.D}\,,...
.
•
.._..,
•:
11uwut..r. 1 of employment. Must be a~

~ "'' ~

REACH ()y~_: R
17,()()() H()USEHOLDS!

•

ANNolJN!:DiiNJ'
'

Blue recliner -, ~ c0ndi· DO&amp;...LI'\R ·GENE~AL .lN
::. 0· ~. ••• ••96
MASON , WEST VIRGINIA.

\ -.

~be ~allipolis Jlailp ~rlbune
740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com . ~, .

..-

which ........ it !Megill to

be received by 12:00 p.m.
May 19. SUbm~ lo: John D.
Costanzo, Superintendent,
Athens -Meigs Educationa l
Service Center, 320..1/2 E.
Main St .. Pomeroy, OH
45769. Equal Opportunity
Employer/Provider.

·
. 7.W.38B-8~7
- - - - -- - Now hiring emplnuees to set
-,
up and predeliver lawn find
ag equipment. Fax resume
to 74o-446-9104

SWM middle age. tall poi(· Huge yard sa!e 112 mile out Boggs Pesl Control , Inc. is ing, paid vacation, 1~xible
ing SWF, petite, Please no Georges Creek Road. Sat growmg and lOOking 1or Pest schedul ing and competitive

(

interest,~==~~~
· ~~=~

Act"',.

---

, . . tiDuM1g

fits.
of
resume Letter
and referenCJ!
must

100 WORKERS NEEDED

iiir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;I

Place Your Paid Classified Adln Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily.Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It WillRun For FREE In
The Tri~ounty"Marketplace!

1••

~·

'{)

4 1amily yard sate continues
~ 10111 . 1.2 mile oul SA Absolute Top Dollar · sil'-218 •

accepted

certilication and ei!PBri- r.:::--~---....., " Payment could be the
same as .terrt.
ence. This position has
WANm&gt;
Mortgage
Locators.
Board approved bene1Hs.
To Do
(740)367,0000
Let1et of interest, resume
and · relerences mUst . be
Babysit in ·your home, ARC
receiwd by 12:00 noon May certified, Contact Raven at
19. Subm~ loo Jolm D.
.
_
992 7930
CostanzO, Superintendent,
Athens-Me;gs Educational EXPERIENCE PAINTER·
Service Canler. 3201.2 E. INTERIOR / EXTERIOR ,
Main St.. Pomeroy, OH STAINING, OIL, ETC, NO
Al .... .ate .......,..
45769. Equal · Opportunily JOB TO SAMLL ORTO BIG . , tnfbi&amp;,.. I I is
CALL (740)742· 1056 ASK
Employer/Provider.
·~to the Fecler81

0

·'

1

3 family sale, Fri May 9 &amp;
Sat May 10 from Sam lo
5pm at 6847 S1 At 588.
Furniture, clothing and much
more. Will have rain or shine.

grams for you to buy your
home instead of fl!nting.
• 100"'4 financing
• Less than perfect crecit

""--lliiiiiiio-_.1

Cereal. Cedar
Wells
great
Mother's Day Gifts $27 .50
Starling lo sell higll qual~y
knives such as Case, Buok '
&amp; Mossy Oak. Bu"ding is
1ull. Visa and Master Card &amp;
Debit
(304) 550-1616
S1e hen Ree
~ 639
·

G.ul.IPOI.l.~

___

books, okt collections of
every thing ..105 Mill
St . Middlepor\ .2 :00· 7 :00
Wed,Fri ,Sat Ph. 74ll-591·
6453-o378-6262

on

~::::::::~ Wiahing
chan~iae.
YAKD.SM£.

Schwinn Airdine E11.erciser
100's of 33,45,78 records Local company offering "NN
motorcycle &amp; parts, toots, DOWN PAYMENr pro-

The
Athens-Meigs
Educa1MJnal Service Center
Is ~ing an educational
aide fo r Meigs Count~
Schools. Mus1 rneel Highly
OuaJ~-.t Slandard for Ohio
.6.ide
Educational
Certification. Salary based

=,....-----.
. .I
r

young tamale OOg.
May
adopl oul ~ you ..II in love
wHh her but let me
spay/~bias as scheduled.
ReWard f-304-907.()403

=.-

old All-Star, who like'
Garnett arrived in an off-:
season overhaul that helped:
the Celtics post lbe biggest·
single-season turnaround in
league history. "It was as if
I was just traded here all :
over again."
Cleveland took an early ·
eight-point lead, but the:
Celtics erased it with
Garnett and Pierce on the
bench. The Boston subs ·
outscored Clevelarurs 26-4 :
in the first ·half; in fact, the ·
Celtics bench outscored the ·
Celtics starters 26-18 in the ·
half.
The Cavaliers led 21-J(
in the first quarter, and they:
still led by seven in the sec-~
ond before lbeir shooting ·
went cold.

_,

.t~.__·tri iOlNli i i i.\NDi·-o·IJ..t_,.~,;;,.uwiii'I.EAsANTiiisiiiMEiiiii·._..·l KIT lc CARLYLE

*POLICIES*

r~s~l
°...
·

maban· , .~1e'5·

14u' 7 :lb
1
m
. '· 1
100
51
·
·
....,......
Call ·lor an appt. 740-245· to list. Green Terrace . saooo
0 125
obo. 446-0091 or 645-8615
.3br. 2 112 ba, &amp; FR. 2' car 16)(80 3 BedrOOm 2 Bath
nara""" &amp; rn ground """'I on
•
,.,........,.
VInyl Siding. Shingle Root
3.65 ecr es @ Greenbner
Estates on Sandhill Rd ask· $230 per monttt. 740-385·
9948
ing $160.000 304-674-5999 __ _ · - - - - - 1970 2BR. 1 bath, axle and
0, 304-675-t566
lr'...., :.........ude&lt;l..$1200 or bes
'
1
••• ·~·
4bf, 2 AC. Pool. Coumry otfer.
located in Rio Grande.
New Haven, $139 .500 cell 7• " 339·998'.
~
after 6pm W1ll help wtth
•~:... Cost 304 593-8871
1990
14x55 2br 1railer wl
'~' 9
·
apphances, great condrtiOf'l
New Home tor sale. First A.skmg $8500 Call 441 ·
'
Time Home buyers 3br. 2 0918
bath . 1 112 car gar . 2 acres
.,,_. b o-.. ,ood Ad . 0 2 bed. 2 bath. 299 a month.
lot. ,..,1gh
doWn. 30 rear fixed. Low 7 -·3570.
Rate ses.ooo.oo - Cal!
LAND AND HOME, new 3
Steve 01 John 446· 10 18
bed, 2 bam, i'oc4udes land,
HUD Homes! 3 bed, only ready to moYe into. Only 399
$17,000! tor tistings 800· a month (wac). 866·564·
8679. IIUST SALE
62o-4~6 ex ~0 19
·

oca ron .

'

�I

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 9, 2008

-.mydailysen,.tineLcom

Guillen .talking himself Of1t of ajob
BY ,_l..mcE

er room to break the slump,
Back then, Guillen could
AP SPORTS COLUMNIST
be every bit as entel1aining
Guillen defended tbe stunt.
"Some people like stuff," with his mouth as he was
It may be too late for the he said one more time, with a glove. He grew up in
White Sox to get a refund ··some don "Ln
Venezuela dreaming about
for the sensitivity training
the
day he would follqw in
If the White Smr were a
they were ordered to put college pl;Ogram instead of a the fOOlSteps oftwo previous
manager Ozzie Guillen pro baseball team, the orga- White Sox shortstops, Chico
through two summers ago. nization would already be on Carrasquel
and
.Luis
The man seems more deter- double-secrerprobation for Aparicio, who became legmined than ever to taJk. his what the NCAA calls "a lack ends back home. And just
way out of a job.
of institutional control." like tbem, Guillen arrived oo
"Those people are gonna Instead of apologizing for these shores as a teenager,
make me a lot of money any of it, Guillen resorted to trying to learn English in the
later. Because as soon as I'm an old ruse, suggtsting ooe Sometimes-crude environs
done."
Guillen • said more time there is a method of a locker room. The differThursday,
referring
to to his madness.
ence is that once Guillen figreJX&gt;ners, ''I' II be the only
"Who cares about Britney ured out he could make
manager they remember."
Spears? . But she's on TV audienres liner by dropping
·'Who's' the manager they every day. Why do you think f-bombs and wholesale
remember the most?" he people give a ... about Jose insults, be couldn' t stop
asked a moment later, not Canseco? That ... sells," unloading them,
waiting for an answer. " Billy Guillen said, ·
The shame is that like a lot
Manin. They don't remem- .It also ends careers prema- of class clowns, Guillen isn't
ber Sparky Anderson. They turely, somethi~tg lhat seems just fearless, he's smart The
· remember Billy Martin to have been on Guillen's same impulsive qualities
because he was the crazy mind almost since the begin- that made him a headline
one.
ning of his tenure in charge writer's dream also made
In the news business, we of the White Sox. Every him look like a , pretty
call this becoming the ally of manager knows he's hired to shrewd manager - once.
your gravedigger. If most of be fired, but few get their
Rewind back to the World
us had a stretch on the job fii'St shot in a town so ready Series-winning season of
like the one Guillen is in !be to embrace them.
2005 and what you' II find is
midst of, the last thing we' d
A crowd of almost 38,000 a guy leading a ballclub with
do is call attention to it. Not sprung to its feet when a series of inspired bunches.
the Wizard of Oz.
Guillen was introduced on In what might have been the
While his ballclub was April 13, 2004 for bis firSt pivotal
game
against
plummeting in tbe American borne game as manager. Houston, Guillen passed up
League Central, Guillen was Many of them no doubt his regular closer in the late
complaining about the Cubs remembered the mercurial, · innings three times in favor
always being the darlings of slick~fielding shortstop who of relievers who hadn't
the Chicago media While had made his debut there as worked, on average, in a
his sorry hitters were defl3t- a player nearly '20 seasons monlh. Then, be got the
ing faster than the blow-up earlier and went on to game-winning home run
dolls they posed in the lock- become Rookie of the Year. ftom Geoff Blum, who bad

..

Celtics
from Page 81 '
year's playoffs but won four
straight to reach the NBA
finals.
"We've been in this situation before," said James,
who offered encouragement along tbe bencb as the
final seconds ticked off.
"I:ve got to let them know
that I'm not frustrated."
The message was NOT
received.
"He's got to be frustrated," Cavaliers guard Wally
Szczerbiak said. "He's such
a good player. He puts so
much on his shoulders."

James will have a more
welcoming crowd for the
next two games than the
Boston fans who serenaded
him with a chant of ''Overrated!'' as he weni 1-fm-11
over the second and third
quarters.
This .t ime, the poor
shooting was .contagious:
The Cavaliers shot 35.6
percent in the game, hitting
just 11.8 percent in the second quarter as Boston
turned
an
eight-point
deficit into a . nine-point
lead. From early in the second quarter to early in the
third, a span of 13:41,
Boston
outscored
Cleveland 36-10.
Zydrunas Ilgauskas had
19 points for the Cavaliers,

and reserve Anderson
Varejao had 10 rebounds in
32 minutes . after forward
Ben Wallace went to the
locker room Just 3:40 into
the game due to dizziness.
Wallace, who atuibuted
the problem to allergies, sat
on the bench for the second
quarter and took some
during halftime
shots
warmups, but did not return
to the game.
"As bad as my head was
hurting me, it's always hard
to be out there and see your
teammates struggling,:' he
said.
Wallace will be re-evaluated when the team returns
to Cleveland, Cavaliers
spokesman Tad Carper
said.

Spots
fromPageBI

'"'-bat

exactly One
the entire
· postseason, and did what he
could to spread the credit
around.
"I've never seen a team as
magical as this one," Guillen
said at the time, and he
turned out to be right
By !be following July, the
White Sox were in a tailspin
that left them some 25
~ames below .500, and notbmg Guillen bas done or said
since has accomplished anylhing. He fii'St threatened to
walk away from baseball if
the White Sox won it all
toward the end of that magical 2005 season and he's
repeated it several times
now. In between, he's feuded with players, cursed
reporters and forced the
. White Sox brass to explain
away one embarrassment
after another.
How much of a toll it's
taken already is somelhing
only Guillen or owner Jerry
Reinsdorf know. The owner
once referred to his manager
as " the Hispanic Jackie
Mason," and. just extended
his contract through 2012.
What they seem to .have
forgotten, !hough, is that
laughing at the hijinks,
insults and all that foul Ian~age would be a lot easier
if it wasn't for all that losing.

over, playing out the fourth
quarter better than they
have played all series,
San Antonio went on an
11-0
burst
featuring
Ginobili, Parker and Tim
Duncan to take a 101-88
lead with 5:57 to play.
The Spurs .couldn't stop
Paul, but West missed three
of four free throws and the
Hornets got no closer than
I0 poiilts in the latter half of
. the quarter.
The Spurs outsoored the
Hornets 27-21 in the fourth
with. Parker and Ginobili
combining for 17 points.
Duncan had 16 pc)ints and
13 rebounds . .
The Hornets took an 8-0
lead in the first quarter
before the Spurs evened
things and started the second quarter down 23-21.
While Bruce Bowen was
lilrgely successful in cootaining 3-point sharpshooter
Peja Stojakovic in the flf'St
half, West · and Paul, the
stars of Games I and 2,
were . let loose and shot a
combined
14-of-21
to
account for 30 of the
Hornets' points at halftime.
Tyson Chandler dunked
alley-oop passes from West,
Paul and Wells in tbe first
half, ~h lime quieting the
raucous Spurs crowd .t hat
took to booing both the officials
and the Hornets.
Jim lit~ is a 11111ional
The Spurs led by as
sporrs columnist for Tlu!
Associated Press. WrirL w as four points in tile second
quarter
after Michael
him m j(#rk.eap.org

many

Pierce and Allen (0-for-4
in Game I) snapped out of
whatever ailed them. Pierce
did it rijlht away, with
seven pomts in the first
quarter, but Allen took a littie more time.
The thud member of
Boston's Big Three hadn't
scored since hitting a 3pointer with 8:48 left in the
third quarter of Game 7
against Atlanta. Boston fmished off tbe Hawks with
just seven points ftom the,
Allen, who shot 3-foc-12 in
the first-round finale.
He missed his first four
shots Thursday ·but ·SOOftld
11 points in the third quarter, including the first four
of the second half as the
Celtics scored I 0 straight

to take a 54-36 lead. The
Cavaliers c11t it w 12 on
James' only basket of the
quarter, but they spent most
of the fourth quarter !railing by 20.
"It was good 10 see Ray
get it going. I though( that
lifted everybody up on our
team," said Cellics coach
Doc Rivers, who called the
firSt several plays of the
second half for Allen. "I
made a ooncerted effort. I
told the coaches :at .halftime, 'We're going 10 him
over and over again. We've
got to get him going."'
Allen joked that he bad
forgotten what it felt like w
make a basket.
"I think everybody · was
relieved," said the 33-year-

The Daily Sentinel• Page 85

www.mydailysentinel.corn

Finley, wbo came off the.
bench because usual reservt:
Ginobili started, hit a comei
3 to give San Antonio a 41-i.
371ead.
·.
· Aftec Parker hit a jumper;
with 49 seconds to play in
the first half, Stojakovic and:
Morris Perersoo each hit 3s,
to ~ve the Spurs down 56-~
49 w1th 23 seconds left Bul'
Bowen hit a 3 and Ginobili~
hit a buzzer~be.atin~ jumper;
to bring San Antomo within:
56-54 at halftime.
:
Duncan was quiet in the :
firSt half with · just five;
points as New Orleans' dou-:
ble-teams continued . to;
hamper him.
·
.;
In the third the Spurs did '
not break down as they did ·
in Games I and 2 when '
New Orleans took: cootrot.
Their Big 3 - Duncab,:
Parkec and Ginobili -took
. '
over, scoring all but three of•
San Antonio's 29 points in:
the period_ .
But the Hornets wouldn l
go away as Paul srored II ·
points in the quarter. Late in:
the period he hit a shot;
when he flipped liP the ball;
as he spun around and put·
his back to lhe basket Paul
also got fouled for a threepoint pla~ to bring the
Hornets Within 77-76.
Notes: Paul's shoes read
~Brian!" in white lettering;
in honor of an 8-year-old·
fan with cancel' who was set:
to attend Monday's Game 2
but missed it· with a fever
and died boors lata. ... Paul
was named first-team AllNBA on Thursday. Duncan
was named to the .second
team and Ginoblli the third. ·

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

a:oo

OhiaWilor

~

•

11tltll .... .._....
lie righi1D edit,

l&lt;itnc.llrlyl4comcost.net

LOST DOG : Crab Creek Yard Sale Fri. Sat Sun 1sl. ,
area: sweet, shy, shaggy Trailer on'f i~t Greer Road .

....Dr_..,
., .....

Njec:l

r~

r.vum.:r..•

Cross·Crwk Auction Buffalo
Auc1iorl Saturday 6pm
2
•Trailer Loads, uaed mer-

I

V..um SAJ...E

·

~~~
.

I'U'A

r

~":

1

o·

and 'tots more

The
Athens·Meigs FOR TOM OA LEAVE MES·
Educational Service Center _s_AG_E_ _ _ _ _ __
has an avallabte position for
a
Multiple
OisabiiHies
Teacher in Meigs County.
lnterwntion Specialist oer1i- (74016'15-05411
fication is required. Salary
based on certification and
EHq&gt;erience . This position
;;;;;;~
has Board approved ·bune~

ver/gold
coins.
any
lOKI~ 4K/t8K gold j&amp;welry,
dental gold, pre 1935 US
currency. proo1/mint sets,
diamonds. MTS Coin Shop,
151 2nd .6.venue. Gallipolis.
446-2jj42 .

5/10, Bam·? Little -Kyger
Creek Rd , 2 miles 'past
'ffi'HS. Household items,
'fum. brand name C\o!he&amp;,

·

r.::--.:-,____

www.comics.com
6 flmlly sale . Fri&amp;Sa1 8·3. Wanted to buy Junk Cars.
· lndian Creek oli Trails End, call 740·388·0884, if no
-Rio Grande . Furniture, little anSwer, leave a message. ~..--------.
_Ty_ke_._._G_oii_C_I_ubs
_ _ __

luo

Can Call Collect

lllll'WAN'JE)

I ro

lluJoWANDD

IriO

IIEIPWANm&gt;

I

Fri &amp; Sat 9&amp;10. 2 112 mHes
East of Porter on 554 . Gms',
boys , womens &amp; mens ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

-

REACH 3 COUNTIES

1110

cktthes, tractor tires, hoi.ISE!·
t.otd items, 'tarts &amp; candles.

HnP WM.'lf])

Old glassware.

General.farm
·Maintenllnce

Need Som&amp;otN who Lowts Position available tor an
the Outl:locq &amp; A""'-tt, Assistant House manager to
Tractor BKPerience a to do~ on~ AlpK.a work evenings,. nights ancl
plus . Weed Eating, F.,... in the Bend Anti. weekends at a shelter tor

Fri . Sat, Sun, May 9• 10 · 11
lrom 9am to 2;30 a1 1640
Graham
School
Rd.
Gallipolis. Lots

l l:;;iiiii;iiiiii;;;iiiiiiii;;;:l
~

, _______.l
....,

of

Baby

Mowing , Light
Fence Houn .,. flexible. 2-4 women
and
children.
Assemb le crafts, wood Work &amp; Brush Cleaning ~. 2-3 o.yiiWk Call Applicant mus1 have high
304-112~3345
school diploma or equiva·
ttems .To $480/w!l. Materials 304-458-1727 call after
lent. Duties include: Intake
provided. Free information Spm if no answer leave - - - - - - - - procedures, answering crisis
pfl.g. 24H!. 801-428-4649
Non COL driver needed for
_m_e_s_sa_:ge~----- tow truck operator. Will train. calls, shelter housekeeping

ciDthes-boys and girls !rom
newborn to 4T.
· An

e·•" cellenl

way lo ·earn
Help wanted at Darst Home
Th · N A
Garage Sale. Fri
Sat . mom;:y. e ew von.
Group Home . 740-992·5023
Turkey Run Ad , Cheshire, Call Marilyn 304-882"2645
OH • ~. ~ sl--. · - wa••r
Little Caesars is currently in
I7'V - " ' ' " nul
~ AVON ! All Areas! To Buy or' search
of
Assistant
tank, mens, womens , girls Sell. Shirley Spears. 304· Managers for our GaMipolis
clothes,antique dishes, misc6
_7:.:5:_1:_4:::29:::_______
_
·
·
location . We offer pai~ train-

t

head games. Send Recant only.
Control Technicians's , male wages. Please fax resume
?nato ,SI, Letter &amp; ,.............
~
or 1emale no e~tpenence lo.· 7•"88"7425
.....,. ..,.
OJ Bole 21 12 Point Pleasant, Inside at 57 Burn en Ad, required Must have a clean
WV 25550
Mon·Thur·4•7 • Sat 9. 5, 8 ,,.,.
Local Company looking 1or
..... driving record and able to

r
'

.

'

~""

•'

s

Post 12.3
Noalinations and ElBellon of
Officers. N)ay 12th 4t1pm.

i

8 family, Mor'l , Tues. Wed.,
~·v
~
.
Nomr'nalo.v..
behind
Masonic Lodge m
141
UP'\ n.R&gt;I "
...,, ,
· arvt€1ectlon
of Officefli. Mm~
kids, women's, jun.,...
..., Racine,
.
1
121h at Spn:l.
tOrs , pus,
rnen 's, namebrand clolhing, household.
Sa ;all
Clll, •'II 1wnHure. VCR's, chainsaw,

•

-;;;;;;;n;;;c;u.-;;;;;aildttt.m.

7-.742-U71 handmade clod&lt;s, ·to much Courtside Bar and Grill now
T.....,NI&amp;O. You might ::lo:,:li:::sl:.
. - - - - - - seeking qualified applicants
.,lllljjj...;,;III*E1;;;;;.'1;;;11;;;11;;.11_ _., Garage Sale-o by Hemloc:J., tor tmnender and food runG
at c....
' ,.j....,.....
•
tl
.
range
''' res~o....,_ ner. Apply tn person or ca
Gf\.TA.WAY
next ·to Pomeroy American oM~ ·9371 to schedule and
;

•r

~------_.1
~
Legion ,

~

Amer.ican inlervlew. 308 2nd A11e.
L ·
Friday "-· 9 9-4 G II'1 "
2 "bback kittens, t male, 1 c::-Ho+...·
8giOfl
,.... n
, .• . '
'
:2po::="':·:.- - - - u .... 10
felnale about 8 'Weeks old. _~_~·_-•_.._-,_._~_._ _ Dependable
• babysitter

=="

Ca\174()..367-71.15

.....

'

tlolnt Jltimant legister

'Ibe Daily Sentinel
740·992-2155

304-675-1333

www.~ydailyregister.com.

Love to cook?
Always
ex.perimenting with new
ideas? 'lbu may be who we
are looking for. A local company is in need of an individ-

ual who is inspired to cook.
Applicant must be able to
organize and -maflage an
industrial kitchen , prepare

and inventory food stCJC:k,,as
well as . man~ge incoming
1o00s.
and . outgomg
lnd' 'd I 'II be
'bl
lVI ua WI , responsl e
for1o0d.pteparation. presenTechnida,n 'lor Farm and/or tation and qua~&lt;n· to ...........ru::l _
La
E · menl repair &amp;
"''
........ .,....
wn quip
ny slandards. " .you are
M
h
"
ma4ntenance.
ust
ave interested in
applying,
~rfence . Must be able 1o'
plea~ send your resume to '
use COTTl&gt;Comll'ler ~-n ~ lrmite&lt;:l P.O. Box 469 , Gallipolis,
basrs.
pellttve wages, Ohr·o 45631 CLA BoK 101
modern shop, continuous

HUGE 4 .fAMILY . YARD needed .
References
"" •mens ~home SALE. MAY 10 , 2ooe FROM ' required. Please call 74010 • 4 1r= •
TO
4 OOPM 709· 1969
9:OOAM
C-' 304-675-816(
:
'
-J .
HOUSE ACAOSS~ FAOM Eouipment ,
Aepa.ir
.,.

, , 1 r.

•

NAME BRAND C1OTHES &amp;
... .
Ohih';Bhua, 1emale, spa)"ed.~ PURSESl
BEDROOM
3 jean; old. 740-645-6987
SUil"ES, GIFT
ITEMS.
~-•
vuror&amp;.

Free kittens. All
7 40- 949-2823 ....

Call HOUSEHOLD
MISC.ITEMS

ITEMS .

BABYCLOTHES.

company sponsore(i ·tra in·
ft8e to good home. Small
ing,
health
insurance,
brown/:whi\9 (F ) young dog. May 8 &amp; 9, rain or shine. matching retirement contri·
Very friendly. 740-446-3009 341 Rutland St., MiddlepOrt, bution and paid holidays.
household ttemS , clothing. Fax 74D-446-9104 or Email
,
Johncarmichael @careq.com
Golden Retriever ~ (M) lots of misc.
to good home . .6.bout 2
mbnthi old. Has shots. 740- Raco scholarship yard sa~- Experienced lruck and Auto
Star Mill Park. May 13 &amp; .14 Mechani c needed . Must own
379-9515 or 6(5-6857.
trom 9 to 4, and May 15 from tools. 740·388·8547
To good home , lOll blooded 9lo 2.May 1S,halfprice
::::::.:..:=.=~.::_
(F) _,.raner, eleel gray, day and dollar a ba g.
FEDERAL
~· 36Hl521 o11er 12 Auction by Dan Smilh will
POSTAL JOBS
noon .
follow
$t7.69·$2B.27/1lr., now hir·
a1 3pm.Thanks for your sup· tng. FOf applicatron and free

r

l..c:JIT ANI
FOOND

Ir

port!\!1\!!l!P!

YARD SALE·

PI.EAsANT

I

Pr.
FOUND; on· 4th Ave Friday
Moy
2.
Small
brownlblaoklwhite
mate Big Sa~ 1 Sa1urday 1001
P\4JPY. 645-7965
Hartford Community Center
Everything! 9am-3pm

'

Meigs lndustries,lnc. is hir·
rng a Janitorial Crew Leader

Must have a wlid Ohio drivers license and High School
diploma or GED. . Send
reiume to :
Meigs
lndustries, lnc. PO. Box307,
Syracuse, Ohio 45n9.

call - - - - - - - , Amencan ~- of Labor 1· Need someone to work On
913-599-8226, 24/hts
serv.

amp. rental houses.Send resume

=..::.._______

Office or apply at 1456
Jackson Plke, phone. 4419263 tor Passport/Private
Care Office. CompetHive
wag;es and benefits includ·
ing he'allh insurance and'
mUeage reimbursement.

Outside S.hts
Repraeeatalive
Ohio Valey Publishing with
offi. n,..,..,,..,.J
~-~.
....... 10
Gallipolis

and Pt. Pleasant

to: Sentinel. P. 0 . Box 729-9.
f'orneroy. OH 45269.

PT LPN ,...
'"of.ICBttOrlS
·
Are
S ·
A
1 d F
A
erng
ccep e
or
PTIPossr'ble FT LPN 2
E venrngs,
·
2 Midnl""l
'tl" s.
Competitive Starlin~: Pay,
Pe V
·
Me 1
100
Di!ou:: '

~~uran~s~

Available .
Interested
Applicants May Appl~ DaHy
9·4, Ravenswood Carl!
Center, 1113 Washington
Sl..
Raven-d . WV
...........

(304)2.73·9236
FAX
Referenoes Required E.O.E.

is a...........rning resumes for a
.......time
...,. outside sates
1ull

"-"""Dump~
RegU...-·
...... ~
representati~~e. Applicants R&amp;J Trucking is seeking
must be organized ,
qualified CDL~A drivers to
crealr·- .~ -"'elo
operate semt·dumps for
•• •rumanage an establ i~ ·- ~gionat routes. ~ ~mure
exoeNenf home ttme heatth
account list while call ing
•
On new customers.
and
dental
insurance,
401(k)
1·
•CandidateS must be
.· vaca iOn, UUI.US pay,
d t.tu
a itied
disciplined, setf·motivated an sa...., awards. ua
and a team J)(ayer that
app&amp;icants must be twer 23
·---'--•.. -....lhe
yrs , have a mintmum of 1

.,,......,.,.,IUD

importance of developing

strong, mutuaHybeneficial
bu&amp;ine&amp;s relationships with
our customer&amp;. Sales

you .
PIease send r91ume, .
COY8f letter and three·
references 10:
GallipolisDaMyTribune
·
Attn: Matt RQdgers

• --

Po
4 89
· ·~
Galipolis,
OH 45631
or email to
mroOOersOmydlllytritlune.com
All r-.~:..s witt be ~,__., in
....,.....
rqn
strict
CDflfidence.

.

year

IOf

&amp;

Trainer Position
Are you interested m a
rewarding position? PAIS is
cummtly seeking a par1 time
staff for Masori and Point

vtolltion of the •

SBITM·

· Our

inton'iwllhlt ..1
. . . . . . .triltiwel in
th• 'naw 1 ; _.

vou

__.....,onenequ.l

:;:::;:;:===~

......_.
l •IVI"'r..l

m LoAN

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*•NOTIC::I:** ·

Borrow snlart. 'Contact
the Ohio Division of
Financial
Institution's
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs B'EFORE you refinance your home or
- . , a loan. BEWARE
of requesrs tor any large
advance payments of
fees or insurance. Call the
Office
of
Consumer
Affairs toll free at 1_866 _
278- 0003 to leam If · the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
is
properly
licensed. (This is a public
service announcement
from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Company)

at a group home in Bidwell:
Ba-4p
Su;
3: 3 ~ 11 P
M!Tu/Wffh. Mus1 have high
school diplorila!GED. wlid
Driver's license aro three
years good dnving elq)Brience. $7 .75/hr. Excellent
benefits package. Pre~
employment Drug Testing. __
.:w'.JIIIiYIUlo..,
•
Send resume to: BuCkeye
Community Services, P.O ·
TURNED DOWN ON
604 , Jacl&lt;son . OH SOCIAL SECURITI' /SSt?
45&amp;40 or e-mail to: bcyccNo Fee Unless We Win!
servOyahoo.com. Deadline
for applican1s: 5/16/08.
Equal
Opportunity
Employer.
IF-ii:;;;;;;;:11oME'~;;;;~;;·;;;~

~-·
House for sale in Racine
area. Approx 4 acres, all
professionally landscaped.
Ranch sty1e house with 4
bedrooms, living room , dining room, kitchen , large fam·
ily room . central air. gas heat
and 1 fireplace . A.ddit1on o1 a
large Florida room comr
pletely cedar opens onto
patio &amp; pool area _Heated in
ground pool endosed by pri·
vacy fencmg and land·
scaped. Finished 2 car
garage attached to house
and finished &amp; hea1ed 3 car
garage
.unaHached
Excellent condition ready to
move in_ $255.000.00, Call:
(740)949-2217
New log hOme sitting on
1 .66 acres, custom kitchen .
3SR , 2 batl1. $142 .900. Call
740-256-9247

Open House Sat &amp; Sun
5/10&amp;5/11 2pm to 5pm. Buy
Me! Large 211 home in seen~ quiel subd~sioo , groal
for hiking and bitting. 1257
sq. ft . vinyl siding, lots of
storage, 1 112 car garage,
eo..
""'''r8fe driveway. Lots ol
partdng &amp; room br boat. W/1
closet in master BR.
Updates to numei'OU6 to list.
Includes Berber carpet,
kilchen apoliances. AJC &amp;
Heat pump. Movmg, must
Srnoou;:)'KIN
·
.&amp;.,-..,;"iiiiiii
~Ill S"
&lt;
~
iiiii-_.1 sell. Motivateci . Appraised
INrnuJc
1 1f2
•
, lor
......
·o 'down payment. 4 bed· aQo. asking $98,000 .... obo.
Gallipolis
College rooms. large yard. Cowred 740-441 -1171 hm
208(Careers Close To Home) · deQ:.. Attached garage. 740· 9673 Cell. 204 Anri Or. d:ff
Call Today! 740446-4367. 367-7129.
Raccoon Creek Rd.
J-80().214-0452
www.galli[
P1$61college.eou 2000 Custom Bu11t Cape
Accredit.-d t.lflmber Accremtmg Cod . • 4BR 2 BA Fin .

i

I

111

·

1150

1

swe.ooo

years

ear..r

,......._._,

lT.IDLU.AAI"U~A~

dumps and roll-ofts is he~
lut. Corrtact .Kent at aoo462·936 5 or till out apphca· Ful l sized Sertopedic pillow·
tion at www.rjtr\.!C*ing.com top mat1ress, boxspnngs.
EOE
tt
d
lh ha
ma ress pa · qu · s ms
_Soc_u_rity_Ofli_rce_n;_neede
_ _d_ J_n sheets. $75.00. 696-1 ,29.
New H a...en, WV• $7 ·00 • ------~ Movt-. s.1e
$ 7.86 per hour, shift work, ,.....Mid II ";' oo-s '
9
M
·
I c :
:00
flow.
·~TY·
us1
have
a
high
293
Fisho
Sleet
·
di
r r
schOol
ploma or GEO, Thurs. 5-9 thru Fri. 5·10..
clean criminal history, paiS F· ~
I
I
.,,,,.,ure. 1nens, seasons
drug screen and bac:t- Items, exercise equipment
- ' ~. Call 1-80(). C&lt;&gt;lecliblos. desk. Turn
.,_,_
275-835Q M-F a::?O to :00. at Mitch's Flowers go up hill
EEO..~
carrier of 5th and Fisher'
-------1111 J 1 ; t
Town of New HBYOO now
aocepting appUcations tor

Now taking applications for - - - - - - - - life Guards May 26- ~
summer
positions
at Part-ttme Dental Assistant. work at the Swimming PooL
Raccoon Creek Par\( . PiCk experience helpful, but not You may pick ltlem up al City
up and drop ofl applications required, oetiver Resume in HaJI at218 Fifth St or Vines
Mon-Fri at Raccoon Creek pen~on to 2922 Jaoksof1 Aw &amp;'Roses at 401 Fifth St. &amp; l::!;;;~;~r.J
tumed in by May 21st
County Park. 740-379-271, · ask tor Connte

,

MIMe wblcti il in

4

j

•uowlngly , . _

---

•NOTICE•
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO. recommend
that you do business with
people you know. and
NOT to send money
through the mail until
ha,ve investigated the
offering.

clea~ MV~. r,lliiiii~..
=--~;;:;.
..-.,~-~.....,1 ~G~n~ rn as:=\

e..penenoe

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

p;eterer'IOe, limlta1ion or
di..:rimm.tion:"

ad•tiwl•••ts for,..,

~ commerical driving ~~=dent ......._.... Basement located outside

~~nence

p;ahna;m,limttlrtion or
discrimiNtion baed on.
mcl!!l , color, religion, .ex
t.mllial 8IIIU or n1t1ona1
origin, or any !mention to

Thia new 1 1 r wll not .

duties and interaction wlttl Pl.easant. WV providing resi·
the residents . Applicant denliallcommunity skill trainmu~
be a••e lo -rk ·rnde· ing with individuals with
111
1.11
""'
pendently and have good MRIDD. High school diplopeople skills. Interested ma or GEO required . No
aPPlicants may apply to: el(f)Brience
necessary.
Pe-onnel
,..
, PO
. . Box •••
....,, Criminal background. check
- - - - - - - - ' Gallipolis, OH 45631 by May required. Must have reliabte
transportation and valid auto
Ohio Valley Home Heatth, 28.
Inc. hiring STNA., CNA, - - - - - - - - insurance . Paid training .
Home Health Aides and
POST OFFICE NOW
Hourly rate starting at $7·
$8.00fhour. Please call 1
Persona l Care Aides, Full
HIRING
Time and Per Diem posiAvg . Pay $2011'lr or
304-~73-1 011 or toU tree at
tion.s available. Accepting
$571&lt;/yr, includes
Hn-3)'3,1011
applications lor AN and
·Federal Benefits, OT.
Wanted: FuU-Time position
LPN 's. Apply at 1480
Placecl by adSource, not
Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, offered w/ LISPS who hires. availall'e to assist individu·
als wrth mental retardation
phone 441 ·1393 for Skllle.d
1-866-403-2582

and
Substitu1e
Crew
Leaders. Experience in jan·
experience and reliable
itorial/custodlal Work pretransportation necessary.
ferred . Meigs Industries proIf you can sell and you
·
1
fuII t1me
,
vides services tor adutts with , want to
developmental disabilities
would like
- to hear from

~rnem8fll Jofr intO,

Home Health Care Soutn
East Ohio IS cunent!y hiring
Home Healt h A1 des for
Reward: 1yr blacl&lt; male Cat - - - - , -- - - - : - : Metgs Co.. you must be cerbeen neutered Missing on Garage Sale Sat May 10 tified or currently have one
Oenden in Pike. Gallipolis 2008. 8am·? 3221 Jackson y8ar experience, call 1-866368· 1100 loll lree
Forry 304--675·7484
Ave lois of Sluff

I

part -time dehvery person.
Applicant must have a valid
driver's license. have good
customer relation skills and
be able to multi--task well.
. be
Applicants Will
subject to
background cheok before
_._, .
,.
ld l'ke
111nng. " you ~pu
1
to
1
app ly, p ease send your
res ume to : PO
. . Box 469 ,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 CLA

to work odd hours, some
weeke nds. Of . interested,
please apply in ,person by
bringing a resume to : Boggs
Pest Cont rol. Inc . 110 Boggs
Road, Oak Hill, 0H 45656.
NO PHONE CALLS.
Box l01 .

__

. T..-

•

·

AM,VET

I•

1-5, A.ntiques , Tony Slewart pass drug test. Good public
. Cars, Glassware. Clothes
relat ions, self motivated.
Able 'to obtain pes1 control
"' YAKD SAlh · license
with1n the tir:st year
•
Fof,.D}\,,...
.
•
.._..,
•:
11uwut..r. 1 of employment. Must be a~

~ "'' ~

REACH ()y~_: R
17,()()() H()USEHOLDS!

•

ANNolJN!:DiiNJ'
'

Blue recliner -, ~ c0ndi· DO&amp;...LI'\R ·GENE~AL .lN
::. 0· ~. ••• ••96
MASON , WEST VIRGINIA.

\ -.

~be ~allipolis Jlailp ~rlbune
740-446-2342
www.mydailytribune.com . ~, .

..-

which ........ it !Megill to

be received by 12:00 p.m.
May 19. SUbm~ lo: John D.
Costanzo, Superintendent,
Athens -Meigs Educationa l
Service Center, 320..1/2 E.
Main St .. Pomeroy, OH
45769. Equal Opportunity
Employer/Provider.

·
. 7.W.38B-8~7
- - - - -- - Now hiring emplnuees to set
-,
up and predeliver lawn find
ag equipment. Fax resume
to 74o-446-9104

SWM middle age. tall poi(· Huge yard sa!e 112 mile out Boggs Pesl Control , Inc. is ing, paid vacation, 1~xible
ing SWF, petite, Please no Georges Creek Road. Sat growmg and lOOking 1or Pest schedul ing and competitive

(

interest,~==~~~
· ~~=~

Act"',.

---

, . . tiDuM1g

fits.
of
resume Letter
and referenCJ!
must

100 WORKERS NEEDED

iiir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;I

Place Your Paid Classified Adln Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily.Tribune, Point Pleasant Register or
Daily Sentinel, And It WillRun For FREE In
The Tri~ounty"Marketplace!

1••

~·

'{)

4 1amily yard sate continues
~ 10111 . 1.2 mile oul SA Absolute Top Dollar · sil'-218 •

accepted

certilication and ei!PBri- r.:::--~---....., " Payment could be the
same as .terrt.
ence. This position has
WANm&gt;
Mortgage
Locators.
Board approved bene1Hs.
To Do
(740)367,0000
Let1et of interest, resume
and · relerences mUst . be
Babysit in ·your home, ARC
receiwd by 12:00 noon May certified, Contact Raven at
19. Subm~ loo Jolm D.
.
_
992 7930
CostanzO, Superintendent,
Athens-Me;gs Educational EXPERIENCE PAINTER·
Service Canler. 3201.2 E. INTERIOR / EXTERIOR ,
Main St.. Pomeroy, OH STAINING, OIL, ETC, NO
Al .... .ate .......,..
45769. Equal · Opportunily JOB TO SAMLL ORTO BIG . , tnfbi&amp;,.. I I is
CALL (740)742· 1056 ASK
Employer/Provider.
·~to the Fecler81

0

·'

1

3 family sale, Fri May 9 &amp;
Sat May 10 from Sam lo
5pm at 6847 S1 At 588.
Furniture, clothing and much
more. Will have rain or shine.

grams for you to buy your
home instead of fl!nting.
• 100"'4 financing
• Less than perfect crecit

""--lliiiiiiio-_.1

Cereal. Cedar
Wells
great
Mother's Day Gifts $27 .50
Starling lo sell higll qual~y
knives such as Case, Buok '
&amp; Mossy Oak. Bu"ding is
1ull. Visa and Master Card &amp;
Debit
(304) 550-1616
S1e hen Ree
~ 639
·

G.ul.IPOI.l.~

___

books, okt collections of
every thing ..105 Mill
St . Middlepor\ .2 :00· 7 :00
Wed,Fri ,Sat Ph. 74ll-591·
6453-o378-6262

on

~::::::::~ Wiahing
chan~iae.
YAKD.SM£.

Schwinn Airdine E11.erciser
100's of 33,45,78 records Local company offering "NN
motorcycle &amp; parts, toots, DOWN PAYMENr pro-

The
Athens-Meigs
Educa1MJnal Service Center
Is ~ing an educational
aide fo r Meigs Count~
Schools. Mus1 rneel Highly
OuaJ~-.t Slandard for Ohio
.6.ide
Educational
Certification. Salary based

=,....-----.
. .I
r

young tamale OOg.
May
adopl oul ~ you ..II in love
wHh her but let me
spay/~bias as scheduled.
ReWard f-304-907.()403

=.-

old All-Star, who like'
Garnett arrived in an off-:
season overhaul that helped:
the Celtics post lbe biggest·
single-season turnaround in
league history. "It was as if
I was just traded here all :
over again."
Cleveland took an early ·
eight-point lead, but the:
Celtics erased it with
Garnett and Pierce on the
bench. The Boston subs ·
outscored Clevelarurs 26-4 :
in the first ·half; in fact, the ·
Celtics bench outscored the ·
Celtics starters 26-18 in the ·
half.
The Cavaliers led 21-J(
in the first quarter, and they:
still led by seven in the sec-~
ond before lbeir shooting ·
went cold.

_,

.t~.__·tri iOlNli i i i.\NDi·-o·IJ..t_,.~,;;,.uwiii'I.EAsANTiiisiiiMEiiiii·._..·l KIT lc CARLYLE

*POLICIES*

r~s~l
°...
·

maban· , .~1e'5·

14u' 7 :lb
1
m
. '· 1
100
51
·
·
....,......
Call ·lor an appt. 740-245· to list. Green Terrace . saooo
0 125
obo. 446-0091 or 645-8615
.3br. 2 112 ba, &amp; FR. 2' car 16)(80 3 BedrOOm 2 Bath
nara""" &amp; rn ground """'I on
•
,.,........,.
VInyl Siding. Shingle Root
3.65 ecr es @ Greenbner
Estates on Sandhill Rd ask· $230 per monttt. 740-385·
9948
ing $160.000 304-674-5999 __ _ · - - - - - 1970 2BR. 1 bath, axle and
0, 304-675-t566
lr'...., :.........ude&lt;l..$1200 or bes
'
1
••• ·~·
4bf, 2 AC. Pool. Coumry otfer.
located in Rio Grande.
New Haven, $139 .500 cell 7• " 339·998'.
~
after 6pm W1ll help wtth
•~:... Cost 304 593-8871
1990
14x55 2br 1railer wl
'~' 9
·
apphances, great condrtiOf'l
New Home tor sale. First A.skmg $8500 Call 441 ·
'
Time Home buyers 3br. 2 0918
bath . 1 112 car gar . 2 acres
.,,_. b o-.. ,ood Ad . 0 2 bed. 2 bath. 299 a month.
lot. ,..,1gh
doWn. 30 rear fixed. Low 7 -·3570.
Rate ses.ooo.oo - Cal!
LAND AND HOME, new 3
Steve 01 John 446· 10 18
bed, 2 bam, i'oc4udes land,
HUD Homes! 3 bed, only ready to moYe into. Only 399
$17,000! tor tistings 800· a month (wac). 866·564·
8679. IIUST SALE
62o-4~6 ex ~0 19
·

oca ron .

'

�FlaiiJ,..., 9, 21101

. AIIf¥00P

20Q2-""
a...

Nloo QViol 2BR apt
Roforenoes &amp; doposh
Jequired. No""". «&amp;t 271
,Of 709-1657
- - - - - -- - -- - - - - Nioe quiet 2BR apt
OIXIO Ewening 386-8017 w 14K80 Mobile Horne tor rent Rsfarenoe5 &amp; deposit
245-11213
Very Good loco1ion'. 740- IOQUiiad.
446-t271
a;;;;;;;;~;;;-;:;;:::::: 9C~2237.
OJ 709-1657
20011 3 li&amp;dHOh 2 bath SOC· - - - - - - - -homo S27ll per month 2Br a1 Johnsons Mobile Tolling ·~ tor 1BA
7«t-985-7671 .
Home ParK. Call 446-2003
downstairs. util itieS pel.

FloM•-

no

""""'-Groo!Cond. 1SOI&lt;ml. _ _
$4000 obo. 25S-t078
•monl 30U75&lt;!039
AKC llosion Terrlei puwies .
or IOHilllH:MI , _ .
7wks o&lt;d 4F. 5375. 2MSS50 1-rC&gt;'dC"""'"', Y-6...... s1o,80Q
304-458-H)86
erterior &amp; tan Ei:Jrt1 inlerior,
- - - - - -- - oloclrio - · , _ R\1 • ·C.micholl
AK~ r!Qtste:d ~~= engine wtth 70,000 mtts. lfralels

;.;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;

hoond pups, t

,_ tifes &amp; -.y,

, 1,m

-

o..ct. S300 .. Ch 000. 1111nsminion woit&lt; St ,5110 =iijr;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
{7.f0)667-6758
304·882a77'Ur 304-674- •

near ~n. no
·~
AKC 'r'ortl:ie .pups, males .:;~=-----but · eloclrc ~;;-;;;:;;;;;;;;;:-;;;;;; only. 1st shots &amp; wormed 2004 l.incoln fown c.r ·I,-oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,..
Depoal:.

u &amp;ae Ohio'S &amp;argest 2bf, 1ba, w~, every· pets. 26-5B93

' ,

dill&gt;lar. - . , .
2750
llturid 18st.com

ACROSS

_,....,..,.,,.lliir

oaoh 74o-41S-n S7 ,

No--

ii•

7•0--828- 1tllng included
~ month &amp; . . , _ 740- Tal&lt;ing ............... ~ : Modem :$650::.:.:.:304__:-6_75-_7114
_6_ _ .Ultimate, loaded. '"c oond.
446-7227 or 7~1 ~t931 18R. no pets. S2951ret11 CKC Reg. Miniature 57'~ mles, $14.500 abo,

ea

Philip

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

'WAIS!d!tOQFIIG

--=---'----

t

&amp;

_

lr___

:::c: :;..;:;

Aott::::lms:o:::::.!::;;_,.;ll

LOT FOR

WBI.E HOME

7

e•·

-rly/~9 call

40-U&amp;

Taking !IPI'ications loi 28A,
no pms, $275/montn

Jericho Road
:JD4..895.353-' S125 •month

. 1raler Lots

01"1

r

IIIJI1;v;
IUl RINf

l

---Pometi;,y, Ohio

r·

"""'onoes
IOQUiiOd.
304-675-2319

and

Call 2BR Apt£, 6 miles lrom
Some
Holzei.
utilities paid.
2b• Houoe on Redman $400+dep. 74D-4tB-52SB
Aidga 'Rd. $400 doposn. 28AgaragoaptinGallipolis.
$375 montn 304-675-6406 WID hool&lt;up. no pols,
•
dopooil &amp;
S453
Bd. house in Pomeroy.
1852
or 446-2t43
1 112 bath, air, fun base.
-go $650 ·
m.nl ' 2 car go,,.
'
.
2BA upstairs apt. in town.
74D-949-2S03.
New carpet, No pets.
~ 54501••
·
3 Bedroom Houoo in 11450/mon"'
~posn.
Syracuse. $500/montn + 339-2494
H .a.....
dep09i1 ud ...,.... No f'Bis.
.,....
(304)675-53!12 weekends
~- 52 Westwood
740·591·0265
. . - - - - - - - - . Drive. from $365 to $560.

-onoas

j

r

•

_THE

MR'"Ii'IJ 4,-.v:. I!S

~ '~
MlillutuiH:

.

I

.u,a&lt;t"

nno&gt;

&lt;t"-.r.-111. . , .
o&gt;UWJII::Inl,_

J(JR YrJI/!!

r

,

a John

5 Deere lately? You'll bi! sur·
pc
dinene
$30.00. ~isodl Check OU1 our used
r'"
'Microwa-...e $20.00.
King inventory
at

$35.00.

Free-~~~owls ~
dishwasher
~
- IbM'
inst•ution " an Equal $25.00.
DQpportunHy Provide• and Pap machine $200.00. Sola
2BA $450/dop. $450/rent + Employer.
$40.00 Cats 10 ~"' away.
utilities. 645-3592
Call 446-9632

!

priced

Carmichael Equipment 740·

----~--

Jim•s F"m Equipment Inc.
Eastern

Ave,

COIIVEWE!m.Y LOC...T- - - - - -- - - Gallipolis. Dtlio. 740-446£D &amp;N"f'()fH n F!
For 'Side: Cmwnvelch plants, sm . • . 5·, 6 ' and 7' 3PT.

In M1n101y

-=======~
~

Townhouse
Ofllll1menl0, (740)245-9322
and/Or small houaeo FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 -1m
JET
for --.Ilcation &amp; information.
·AERATION MOTORS
"'M""
Repaired, New &amp; RebuiH tn

·EUmYieW
. ."tiiM!nls.
•2&amp;3 badmon1 apartments
•Centmlheal &amp; A/C

.
e

•Owner pays water, MWel',
.

Mom

y..,.....,.....,m...,.

(31M)8112-.30l7

hearts
, y..,'tl always stay
M&gt;vedaad

led
everyday.-util ...
I'd

,.rft lipiD,

\

....vinj:~ry
of Gnoeva Oork

J-16, .,32
May 18,11WT

Satlly • · ed,loved
Kids,

S1ook.- CaU Ron Evans, 1·
BD0-537-9528.
longaberger
Twin
Comforter.
bed
skirt.
-noe &amp; pllow, l8lile runner. new Whn· e ba~room
m
~ 67-5-6937
Mauve &amp; Blue Sofa &amp; Chair$t50, Twin oaf. headboaid .

Electric Start Hfgh &amp; Low
'Transmission, New Rims,
Tires &amp;. Paint. 2002 Hard
Top For CJ7 Jeep, 200:3
Kawasaki mule. Call 949·

Concrete,

r

$4 ,000

000 304-882-1!247

I

Angle, - - - - - - - -

·------,.1

·u.tng t and 2 -Miday. eonH:30pm. Closed
.
Thul8day,
Satuidoy &amp; ~
Bedroom Apts. at Vtllage
Sunday (740}446-?300

=...::::...:·_::.:..:..::__:..:..:..._ 01 ·

Hyundai

Acce nt

$592. 74D-992·5064. Equal vlbralor Call740-245-5!1:35. 65,310 miles. good con&lt;ii_
H_'_:_
ousing Qpflortunily
..:.:._ _._;_·_ _ Ulllhy poles , used goOd coo- tion. """ds calalyl~ con-er. Asking $2200. CaM 74()-Modem 1 Bedroom Apt., ClitiOn, 25'K55' 2.00.2.50 a
-6 _
709 339
Call(740)446-0390
tool --ll247

&lt;-.;;--

*Prompt and Quality

Friday-

•

Karaoke

Saturday (Band)
TuffEnuff

MOTHER'S DAY
SALE

Sunday-

Wori&lt;
*Reasonable Rates

£'

S

'rs

wa

............
._............
.

::.::;::.::::
WWilllal

•Insured
"£•~rieooed
,,...
References Availa!ile!

C

3

'AiN1&gt; ~i~ •loiiAA1f
l lt&gt;lit&gt; ...

1

all Gary · laney@

Sandals &amp; Athletics
for "MOM"

tnJ:Iudlng Clearance!

KIPUNG SHOE CO.
300 2nd Ave.
(Acroee front City l'8rkl
c•~.OH

7404419010
Mon • Fri. 9Mn • 6pm
Sat. 11m • 5pm

~

·a---:~~

4125108 1 m

11

'

Db!.

,

cialiirudc

..

6 •••••·•
diga
7 Urilon
I Sap auok·
lhoclta
lng inMcl
41 llulicill
I Come all In
algn
. pa..
42 lliiallr-112 .CI•+
44 ·liloait-'•
oaloro
13 ~nonllklil

·•• atia •
36 Iller
31 o.alu
31 _ ,

U paw baer :asks,
bid with Bnything

"*'

Pleasant Valley Hospital is cumntly IICilepling

resumes for a per diem .,_armacist: B.S.

Holq)ital

NWH

• •

WYYII."

&lt;lvHe
...........,.
2521 Valey Drive

1 sEE '(001'1/E STM'TED liiEARIHIO
A

SACK!'AC~

TO SCHOOL ..

--·
_,_.

l UKE TO 61'1/E lJ.IE IMPRESSION
,:llAT t'M 60lN6 SOMEPLACE IMPOR1'A.N1

CONSHUGTIO~

you

a filii acmmpli. You'll

.... .,CIAfl.-

Ionas Ill tho
tl J aordi Itt-

iaauea.

I

It

•

J'' ..''
0

•

I

1 ·1'- 1 1
-

-

•

,.INT Nl.lfi"Fiffl

lfTT(IS IN SQUAIES

ARLOlJANIS

r

n you

$

being -

•

C~PRtCORN

(Dec . 22-Jan . 18) Others might hawl to run 1o ,c atch up with
you, beCauee- onqe ~~ , up V,!!Jf
mind to tMe .cUon on eomethlng , there
will. be no atopp1ng you. 'ltlu'll be llll tau.!·
nooa &amp;bout
your p .
AQUARIUS (Jon . 20-F«&lt;. t8) -

--.u

St. Rt. 7 &amp; 143
Pomeroy

740-317-G531

~=me=us

-yau'Ujlnd tho
you _
ploy _
....., .
........,~
_
.,-

s

-

wltllllraw .,. .......,
NOTICE: I&amp; ........, can lt .. prioriOMie.
f'IM:Natice
91-lhManSitluntotr, Furthef, The flttWII C'~AL Y=•-Jp
..., 10, 20111 Ill 10:00 ..... _ . sm;g.
a.m., a public will Ccwo .... I I I I . . . . . . bidl fDr 1113
be llelcl a1 211 w. righiiO.....,. MIY or 1111 food ....., Finl liliCk
Second 91.;
bkla IUb\1 · .
4211 ....,. . . , 150
Olllo. The · F•,_. The llboft duul d mllae. ltiZ7 ,..... 011
Bank and Sa1i'lnp
1 .. ~ auld trucll,
Company II Mllinl for a lo alwe lo ,. "'*- a --._·
~.!'...._~or~~
:=,..~••
od or f« """" k1bnwliuu
, , . . . • • - 0 " ' , _. . . .. , . . _ ,
Cllll 7...,__ or
lng collabtrol:
giMI.
7~ · S.
19911 Chryoler Ctnua f« 1...- lntonnac ~· June 5
L
X
I 1lon. or lor., ltlllDI ot Tlow·· 7:30 '
1C3EJ56HXXN6MI11 1i*rt to h £C*I-· ,..,.,
t'wp.
The F11111111S Banlt and - · pllor ltD eale- \lFD
S•vlngo
C~nr, wnlacl Cyncllo 'or Ken (S) 'e 11 23
Po11111n)J,
Ohio, 1111112~138.
' '
- - the. right to (5) 7, 8,1
bid illlhia - , and to

ir::t=' wtti-.:;

tr

F\)1,.,..,,

:on

_..c. .....,

•••Ill)

11,

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing .. Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Declrs

MID (Mo""' 11-Apfll 111 - "'u'N
..... ftO ODuDt tl'l ... mnd of YDUf-..... you- not 1o ... lndll~- WNn

QR1tZWf118

•

11

..

n oonw

ID OI'IIHI

illttt

you wtM qii!Gidy Pf'CM ,ou'l'e •

~ 10 be'

-

wtll'r .

SOUP TC) NUTZ

IT!
~
Jl'!

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

I1

0.

eo::.

. .

Ql

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom. OH

25+,_s~it!we&lt;Fred"'i

&lt;MCI\Ing "'"' pll.
not ....... 11, ""' .... -

PISCES
(bolng
-. 20_,
- ol
- 20) 8&lt;&gt;•1011·011- II - I n 1ho off·
ing prlmoilly ol . . you
.eq;a idlrd 10 m:IMI n 80. OthMI!fwoMd
wllllio _,...., you ""'"" ong!MOIOd

c.: MARCUM CONSTR.UCDON
Piiluc:Nonce

I'-"" ...

Olholo -

Advertise
in this space for
.$64 r month

..

•

•

-- -

- ~-

r

I

1,

.......

~

____,

-·· 1111 ,_
.~
No. ......

"' •

In

r rrrrrl'rl

·~tETTflsl

find difficult it'll~ be 1un lind game~

you.

_
..,........
I . .. tid•-··

L-1..-I..-I..-,I,_,I...,.J ""' .......... -

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23--Dec. 21) -

to

Pollli:ll ....... tD c:awd,
wrta. of• wid 11 J1111Y

s DJ c 0 E •
1-,...:..;;:..:,.;;:..;::...;r-1
7

CANCER (June 2t..July 22)- You'll be
outstanding at this Ume wtth any effort
lhat requires team ettort. 'ri:MJ •n not only
pull your own weight but you'l INikll certain that all of your Mam!TIMM pull their
weigln. 100.
LEO (July 23-lwg . 221 - ~­
effort and energy will , be cMYot.d to

or

I'

.
l ·ONE.D

Once you put yuur mind to tl , tt.... wit!
be nothing more irrij)Oi tar II to you than ,
money. n won1 be ony1hlng you

740-3174iU

VZFBVZ

I 0 0 RF

ILl
•

uni)ld etQtCtty •

-goofing oil
-*'out wftning .

'*''"'•"*"-

P¥

or eodeawr. 'tbu ha-.. a ,.,. •lent

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -

... ....., . . . . . @

ZNIIYW

BNMW

I I II 11 · ~

engage in serious unden.ldngl or ~W~R-­
IItional pursuit&amp;, you'll t..at .both wtlh the
eame li&amp;ftMiidoul inllenelty. 'Wbu won't

740-653-9657

• KZXJNI

JF· ~z

. 1-,...,..;;S_P;...;Y,...::;I!l_Ur:-:G:,.I

a.n stop you.

Fax1o: (314) 6756f75 ·

-

33 TKOalllcial
35 ......_
'17 Cllmba

NSXFK ZXP

.

tau.

,....----.,.,. , - - - - - - - - - , . UBRA (Sept 23-Dct. 23) - ~
you will find the will to flnallM to your
UMMMM....SO WE l11APPED .-e
aatil1action a ltWIItion 1hat hal gone
THAll NJSSBAUM. TOO.
unrwolved for too long. Once you "*II your top priority, there ill naihlng lhllt

H&amp;H
GutteriAg

CORNER STONE

32 Paotule

G ...... ••......·=..=· ..,...
·.

...,,...,Iring that might appear tot.. .-rv·
mg another's inlereet. In t'MMty, you
alone will realize It can be -.uatly
_.otng lor you, 100.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sopt. 22) - Your - matic behavior ~ atNngth ...:1
stature h t other&amp; cannot compete wlh .
The calmer and more toga.! you .,., 1M
greater clout and broetum.. you galh·
er tn your midat.
·
·

Puhll "
t. wv 255541
Phone: (314)67543441

50 llowlo
54 SUillli filh

:..-: SCC~lA~-4t.~· :

AstroGraph

nMa

Seamteas Gutten;
Rooling, Siding, Gufler&amp;

'Piellsut Valley llo&amp;pitlll

41 1u, in A...

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Paitmg iS silent poelry ' • PlutarCh
·AI graat an eomes from a ol owrage ' · Glenn Close

- · """"' tt h~ polnlo. They will
10 often tel )'0\J who has -

GEMINI (Moy 21....., 20) - Tho flglil ·
· that lie5 donTimlt within you wfU ..aally t..
aroUIIfd the moment you find yoUNatt tn
any · oompetttlve situation, whether It
itwoiY88 aports, cards . romano. or oo.!·

Syslllm • Roofing

Send resumes Lo:

t..l-·
Ilk•=•

VXDDYT NWH..,..

HIMWL 'MWU

KtlCLM -WU

-.-again!
H you count only one ttmg at lhe bridge

ma1ce aure thai lhey'll
you .,wision.

1

. • Hmnes • Septic

on
SAVIIIGS

-.-

uaMiaal)

48

**

'lhat Is ·Ill "-· Souttt
plays a apado Ill ti8 aoe, l'i&lt;liJino lhe long
will drop ... and Mr. Nioe Guy, lhe doll

about making them

~:~

, . . .l6-l436
, ...59.~1

21 Msillw!
Dillon
21 ...... ...
mlnooal
31 Kulaick'e

,,..,

46 Spent

CELEBRITY CIPHER

your DbjectiYes or pr'OOMfuree,·
you'ft have no trouble t:.lng ....rtlve

.... "'

. • Pole ,Boms
Pomeroy, Ohio .
, . .992-7953

43 Piece oil

Normally, ""~ lha a ,priori - '
ha would ""' 1ho apado q_,, llll&lt;ing
tho - · tt hal a 50-50 ihot Ill - . ·
bf Luil Clmpol
c:aohlng lha ... il1l..-mly wins only
Oliildy [)p'w I'Jif*lpnlli'll rnMI trorn QlD*m tl'ftlmous pqlle. pul nl pr..-.
6.22 paiCIII'It allhe
has
Elctl . . ln hr
U10$10r'IIN:tller.
a singleiDn kilg. In thlo deal, lhough,
Tod!!y'&amp;aue: Rf(jOI/s V
who hal '1t1e apado king?
"M C 'XRY UXMWU KX KZY DYYH IKlCBY
Count :lha higkard IJC)inla, Since -

eta~

• Backhoe • Site

PHARMA
. CfST

41 ·NBC lhral
42 ,IClnd oil
fllhy

a player ahould bid dottplle holding a
IIBry- hand. Hole ilanolhof ......
pie:- p a - r - a tal&lt;oout doubla and lhe 11ilfllltder Jlllllllllll. The dou-

lor putting all the p6eoee togaiiW" to form
the neoeAILJY union.

. .......... . _... ,

Preparation • Dozer
. • Garnges • Uti'ffite&amp;

p

This-.... ""'~ atlinol-

. ation

' j r ... ,.. - .....
... ...

""! ..... "':
, : .......

I

titer

John DaiJoiQ Acton, an Engliot1 an who died In 1802. .. 'Be mote
111M11111D lhon 10 aclions; "' not
~- lhe otranglh of lhe !lid .,....
or the u: sale IBIS ol .the gmd:

You
in ...
yeoia-dby-inguoperson In more than one prgmilllng sttu--

rO. I
•fi!Oie Blkullllllillnc••

...

40 lim

JII1TIII
.....
24 Aom1nJ al 45 Naiad

pkee•
'*' •s.r
007.....
5 ....:"
IInder 25 Pull hard

Allpa&amp;

T.WRUS (April 2D-Moy 20) - .0...

•ADaM# '5
·0 ...:

s W.-rior

21 A GouiMin
30'3?'
M 111at11r1o1oog

will'! :"~":.~""'::!.t

Constlu-~lilln

·-

taa1

-cologl11

llokndof, .... 10,-

............
...,., ,
Wil I :
•A . ...

unall8

18 See
20 To dill
DOWN
yau lalBI1
21 .Cede
22 11311
"23 Wind Dilllrlw 1 Lupi role
a FmUellir
nwm.
23 New
a - 11e
2 11ora11y biCI
z 1 111

,,.:

Loclilll Ccwtb-*"

304-675-5463

~ - OJ'\'iO~ ~~~'\'~!

a'-----1

Mizway ·

Mason Co. Fairgrounds
Rt. 62N Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 4:30 pm)

• 10 8 4
• '8 3
• 7 54 2

·amanly 13 · ~- ·mualha\IB'Ihe
1'\'"( ~1lU:1C long. Thtmo being no polnl in 1licing a

i

· tpm

Sat. 5/10/08
6:00pm

"''!( l...Ll~CJ:.,

I

Com Hole Tournament

MOTOCROSS
RACE

"i.~t..l&gt;~~~~~~

74().591 -8044

..,_.dd'ioltKg_.Newa-1 1'1 1

Save 20".4 on

60 111111-

time,--

--- ·-~~oo~n·cn

,l-5116

experience preferred.

Pool Tournament

SERV ICE

Closed Sunday

Melp Wwltld

college m ·university prefetred.

Thursday-

C.'IRr[l, T~r

4 in. fo1iage ·pot
ShrUb&lt; &amp; Azaleas
Open M-S 9·5

;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;

e

17 T..-1

-

.,. : ~ ., c ::

.....

flowering _&amp; :Foliage
Baskets, Bedding &amp;
Vegetable Flats

• 7 52

be(o!e-.goil&lt;ll**l
SIMtl with I top cUl aRd -~~~
a diamond. How.llhould South conlinuo?
The anly ~ il in lha hump suit
Declarer mUIII avoid a 1oM! - . ..

!=~~~~~~~====~~~
Trimming
&amp; AeiDOVal

Phannacy. ur Ph.D. Phannaey from accredited

cjue to the Election .

~~~~·~~~~~~

·Syracusc:. Ohio
Now · ope~~ftw

~

Kill SAJ.E

Middii3JJ0!1:. frum $327 to Small blaokt~ roller wtth Hatctbaclt !:: speed trans.

Tuesday, May 13th has been
rescheduled lor
Tuesday, May 20th

7.·

_._.Tree_,.....

"~'le
~:rn they 'last, o"er
•
2000 to choose from.

~

tllot's par1n01' (known as lhe .,_In
some quariBnl) mUIII bid, _, with zero
poin1s, . . - ha Is long and 11110ng In
lhe IJiliii18B sutt.
Hllni, Soul! mUIII bid·one~ - Than
.Nor1!1 ·llhould jlrnp ·to lour ill**- 'But
lot's ........ lhal Nor1t1 """""' ham
-qllltllilm, UlinG -

·llnltlf Clt.lly Alit ...... I
www.t' 2 w 2 t t ' ' I',..-

HUBBAIIDS

Now $5 .00 ·

Tl¥

Pf~SOtiS"f

..

.... .

This is the.estate of Bernard V. fullz
(Estate II 26-6120011 )

Help Wan...S

ANSV/f~Ui6

N~SSJIIG

sale cash or good checl&lt; with valid ffi . This
·
· L.·
· or sh'rne .
aucbcm
1s
ucmg
cond ucted ram

baler twine, great shape

rou

PltOtif kiTII
..,ll~f AU Of

·John Deere 336 square

1BR. No Pels. Gallipolis, . 5c1ap Metals Open Monday, =iij~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;
Call446-9523
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; ~
Auras

Virginia Slate Fatm MuseLIIIll
monthly BOard Meeting on

/

toys and games, exercise equipment, and
~much more. Come and enjoy the auction
bring a chair, we will have everything in the
garage and under 11 huge tent. Te:nns of the

_230
_ 5 -"'-' 1_
nlo~rm
~
a1i-o·n_.__

Furnished
Apt,
Grating . Flat
For -Bar.Drains,
sale. (740)949·2193
--- 2nd
- -Ave,
- Channel,
Steel Polled
HereforO bulls for
Upsteln;, All UtUitieti pd. D r i - &amp; WaJI&lt;ways. L&amp;L

Menor and Ai...- Apis . in

Fllrftlf 0~ riOT,, f~I-11~.
Nff:l&gt; TO STOP

.,• .,.,..,._.,,SE ·

uptiolsrered

armcha'irs., Lenox figtware pieces. mise-lamps,
Finishing mowen; starting al
small blanket oh.,1 with duck decoy design,
$699.00 and up. Huny While
coffee table, Dowered sofa bed. cloths
1he
.. ~'.:.'":._"-----'-steamer. Queen bedroom 'uite, drop •l..f end
, bl
&amp;...:
•
• '
John· Deer A 1947 Tractor. : ta e, quee.n ~d and dresser, mtsc. tv s misc.

$tO, Changing Table ·St O,
Sliver
TV
lAvtJsroc:K
·atond/Emertainmenl
Center· ' - - - - - ·
$20 304-£74-00SO
~
6 Reg ·Angus Cows with
NEW .Mil) USEO STEEL calves, 1 Re-g Angus Bun
Steel Beams, Pipe Rahal 740-~56-t758
'For

and 1llil'llm, 2 French style

~::!:==~Oh~~i=O~

r

Jo ·n.B. ~ ""
~ems
1 •rn~•

outdoor metal furniture set. mise -kitchenware.
d'
mnerware. and stemware. Sofa and matching
loveseat, Cream Club chair and Ottuman,
enten.ainnient cabinet. Lane Cedar Ohest,
Spinet ·Piano. &lt;G~s top sofa table and
matching ooffoe table, misc. framed artwork

446-24t 2

~- '

.,.....,.
Specials

Univcn;it.v !70th anni•ersary 7 - up bottle.

ww w. c AR Ea . coM

2150

cost

............,,.n,u

bottom c'hairs. French .Provincial Dinning
i'OQID suite, early AmeriCllll maple hutch.
assonrnen1 of blue Fenton coin .glass, Fenton
Lamp. 2 unique lllltique mcking .cbain;, Set of
4 Duc"ks Unlimited framed prints, Ohio

~-..

EQual size bed
HousiRg ~unit~. This stBnding

740--446-2568:

Have you

your existiJ1g roof
InsuIated roofs ,\o
•
save on your Heating
and Air Conditioning

Antique cane bonom chair, Malllle 'lop
antique dry 'ink. Unusual Antique book shelf
that turns into a table, set of ·6 antique cane

.

fRAIIIK &amp; IEARIFSI

plggie"

16HIIII

Opening lead: .. A

Residential and New
Construction
Can-be installed over

E-., A......
Slllunllly May 14111M teAM
44518WIJIIii&lt;RoadP omy,Oioiu

J.,.--iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiitorl -----.,..- - -

-..A-.ot.- ,. __ de9k$20.00.

..

3825

5-,la I

1

....

;==-==--=·==.;:==·=·=·:Ia:•:•=::;

TAAILERS.COM 740-446·

•

llltal

~=======
~~=====:!_
a • .-.....

dresser $100. 446-7485 or TRAILER INVENTORY AT
339--3662
WWW . C ARMICHAi:L ·

•

lbncy Rood'Masoa, ~

r--§iiiP"-1

SSSO. dopo&amp;it

'

57 . , . .

~= ~:.: : =klil'•ion

lil-4. t:!

Wect

Pau

1 bcw•
51 lie II 1C1
52 :...:.·
SSThllpi
55 Oopot lnlo
56 Low voice

15 fii'Y

A 6 49
7 5 s
6 5 2
10' 8

t•

E

' r t Mlllllla

IGYears
] Sf 'flooiJ IO iqr abo.e
Mason GolfCourse

www.sp•lng-valley-prnpor- _3_67_·7_686
_ _ _ _ _ $1800. Bush Hog!!' puR type miles,
blllllklchrome.
$3500. Gravity ·boO!; $350- $t4,000 . 74D-339-tl03t
1bf, House in New Hawn, ties. com or c:aii 339--Q362
Sale: Berber Carpet $5.95 750. 1B' wing type disc $500.
No Pe1s, $300 month plus
,,;, 18111n1intS $40.00 &amp; up. 740 ""'·2265
2 bedroom -rtmenl lor •·
d8posn 304-593-0896
Mollohan Carpet. 221.2 - ~·
-----iOnl in Middleport, no pelS, Eo stem ""'· Gallipolis, Oil EBY. INTEGRITY, KIEFER
Cl AS'SIREOS
2' bodi&lt;XAn ·hoose lor fllnl, .:_
11_40_:_)9_9_2·_58_58
_ ·_ _ _ 74 ().446.7444
BUILT,
VALLEY
FOR
no polS, (7&lt;00)992·5858
2t2 Sid Ave. S rooms and s~
·~L - . HORSE ILIVE ST QCK
BARGAINS

polS ,

aQC:S

46 Juicy pur
47 I'M1r 11'11'

11 · - . . . .

Dealor:Weot
Vulnenble: Eui·Weol

PSI CONSTRUCT/Or.J

•JWl

COl

1/1&lt;111 mo. pd

S-Service

«6-9584

I,

Hours
7l00 All • • • Pll

H-Honesl·

~r=•r.;,;:M&lt;rl'ollcraD'~---~--,~

0173
0 M E SEXPRESS
T E A0 E R
202 Clail&lt; Chapel Rd. 388- H
CARGO
&amp;
c"RGol coN c E s stoN
·~·~
TRAILERS. B+W GOOSE·
~"""""'
NE DK
HITCHES.
~
CARMICHAEL
EQUIPLIQ Spinning Whoel St25. MENT IC AAMI C HAEL
Winder $75. Cradle $100. TRAILERS SALES &amp; SEA'l'ootl1 Bed wl new ma11ress. VICE
SPECIAL 20FT
St25. Jenny Lind ·Bed wl GOOSENECK FLATBED
new full matt•ess $200 . LIQ 53999. VIEW QUA EtffiRE

•
.,
•
•

I· [ntegrily

800-620-4946 ex. A027

· a &lt;lbr tl2•basomerrt.' 11Tl111 yord . \140) 441.0194

•AKQ6!

Briggs Iii: 'Strattoo .

""'!,:.;;;·:•

110

• '6 2

• J 10 7 4

IOraftsman, MID,

m rc:
ns.
ses
Regular gas. 74(}.446-1329

bed&amp;. half bed , recliners, _E_wn
_ in_gs
_. ---.
.
couches, reiTidges, - -·
lmlmo! S bed. 2 bath. pets. 740-992·22t8.
bathroom vanHy &amp; sinks. 720 JD hayblne ' good
4 WRnlas
-Rapol (5"' -.,_ 20
&amp;m • "'"""' V. ..., ld1chen sinks, t&gt;ce used tur- · $8000. NH 850 ll&gt;Und bala• ""',.;;,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;.,-,1
1
I'NIS, 8% APR) lor listings ~o,:;
~·;;;H nHu10. 740-339-2899 or 740- $1BOO. IH combine 2 heads 02 HD UtuB Clue. 24,000

""""'· 2LR's DA.
1 kitchen. 2BA apt -

,..,._
.2117

nn..., 'Mumy,

t986 Dhevy 1500. 4WD. 2
tone brown o&lt;1, tan int.
Auto .,.
1m
'U

......

-.K -

-.&lt;Ottio
-457n

JW-r

D•••
10 llom'e

•J

Tnotor., Mowm, ·

85 GMC Full size pickup,
a~~to &amp; air $1500 obo. 740--

2-&lt;llory hauoo, Main Street. bath, tumishod, no pols. Recliner
"'" &amp; $150.
L,...,
•o50 TRAILERS,
MAX
Mollohan.
EOUt~•ENT LOAD
TRAILERS
Poinl Ploasanl. 3 BRs, 2 Renl• Dep. 740-4&lt;t.Q245
nn
'

•AKQJ
I A KQ

:

Sc:fvicing LaW~~

=:.,..::.:__:=..:;.:_'----

~ :u~;;

.
.

2967'01Ba1ihan Road

MMDNMOWDl
....71'Y.II61
!II 'll'-3!94

2004 Ford F·150• Heritage,
XL, Super Cab, 4:6L, VB,
43,500 miles, 4x4 $14,500
OBO 304-593-1336

4 row AC no till planter wtth
jitp;~;;;;;;;_~-.... dry fertilizer fiberglass bo11es
M-.
rr
.
lbRlloi.D
&amp; monitor, 40ft. gram eleva·
&lt;-1 tor little giant. , row carousel
UU'JI~
1 · and Z bedl'oom apart·
transplante1. gravity box with
ments, furnished and untur- Going out of business-sale· running gear, 1obacco sticks
nislled. and houses in dinning · queen size 6,D00-7,000. (740)256-t352

=

I

~i--------.

AP!WMfNrS
.
ltiJil

I

F.utM
"--oili'QUJPMI;miiiililiiiiiill;;._.;l·
'j j

--- .

--

4
7

• Q J 10 ' 8

a lJuilt lo
lit,_.. -:eds

$t3,000 (304)811208247

;:10~~;;::.---.,

.

RENT, 1091 Georges Creek includes water and saw&amp;!.
Rl1, Ul-1111
$200 dap. 446-~

17

r

675-

-

I

1•

___
~
•
Rebred flatbed true* drNer
oil equipment at "!most 03 Fom F350, v~o Super
Ql';leaway prices 3~75-- duty. whtl:e. ·--«&lt;oof, goose- .
0484
•
neok hitCh, power grill guard

rentat&amp; in Gallipolis Ffrry
and Point P.._asant , Cal! TW!f't RMtrs Tow.er IS accept~3423
inll ,.,.._,. tor ..mng
- - - - - - - ftSt 0 H~. 1--br
Mobile home and dou· apanmem
tor
the

USED ttOMES 'Nioe 3BR
from $1 ,900 down . Sa..,.,
SS.OOOI _ , 740--8282750 qi'TiittMist.c:om

-

-.
-

Allh'''~-

ir:~~-~:·4$5~

few SAl£

=-

1 .Tpswww-

Alder

SJimsGdAG'fsBAIOIS

IT

iodudes water_ $200/dep
304~'-1:3
l!JnconclftitJrW !Hme .JEW~~--2ba 1,700 sq 3 bedroom , 1 bath. s-ao 44S-36l7
Pinschers. 7 WflfH&lt;I old,
~ 1rom $399 mo. t.!idwest i0nl$350deposft. Ca1388- _::..:;.:__ _ _ _ _ shots. wormet1 740·388· S501d&amp;'OohaM. 611c. oond. antee. Local ·- 1 u r·
·
Tara
Townhouse 8768
$1300. 446---iS88
1ni&amp;hed. IESI8blilhld 1975.
7 40-828-275o
9905,
1\partmonls. Very Spacious,
•
Qoll 2. Hos. '(\'«!) 3br WBsher/ Dryer. wfttl a 2 Sudrooms. CIA. 1 112 Male Boston Terrier &amp; Pug Police Impounds'! C.n; tfrom 0870, flogers 8uement
New 3 Bediwm homes from Deck. in Glenwood. big Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby mile ~ 12 weeks old, S500t Honda&amp;, Ottevrs. 1Wcdetpro0fing.
S21U6por month, Includes - : 304'57&amp;2934
Pool, Start $425/tAo. Cal 379-2467
Jeeps. " - . I'"""'' !lor

==&amp;2~r.ery :~:._p..:
t icat. :.:. ion. .:tor_s:._n:._,':;.:..le:. __:. ._in_g =~·~;:~

JIIEA Crossword Puzzle

0\KC 8laok St1tl!&gt;heni pup- Ot l'irobirtl, ~. 200t 211ft " ""' I'll
pleo. ~YIIII- 5/9,QII. $400 PW. I'L. H"", Orul&amp;o. one 11ey11one Spr,..r, ._ .

t41165 •c. cond . SS75
monltt •ole•a- ntQUI!od.
pols, Sandhill Rd
Li1dlfield Homos, 304-67531134

o.dS'Bod
2000 161&lt;70
2 Bod 2 a.tli.
111191&amp;81 Fortooo 3 Bod 2
111111, 1WI t41&lt;70 Qokwood
S.Bod2-. Doybmo 3811-

2

Tbe Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydllyu ltlllll!i.com

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

...

-

IIIII III

�FlaiiJ,..., 9, 21101

. AIIf¥00P

20Q2-""
a...

Nloo QViol 2BR apt
Roforenoes &amp; doposh
Jequired. No""". «&amp;t 271
,Of 709-1657
- - - - - -- - -- - - - - Nioe quiet 2BR apt
OIXIO Ewening 386-8017 w 14K80 Mobile Horne tor rent Rsfarenoe5 &amp; deposit
245-11213
Very Good loco1ion'. 740- IOQUiiad.
446-t271
a;;;;;;;;~;;;-;:;;:::::: 9C~2237.
OJ 709-1657
20011 3 li&amp;dHOh 2 bath SOC· - - - - - - - -homo S27ll per month 2Br a1 Johnsons Mobile Tolling ·~ tor 1BA
7«t-985-7671 .
Home ParK. Call 446-2003
downstairs. util itieS pel.

FloM•-

no

""""'-Groo!Cond. 1SOI&lt;ml. _ _
$4000 obo. 25S-t078
•monl 30U75&lt;!039
AKC llosion Terrlei puwies .
or IOHilllH:MI , _ .
7wks o&lt;d 4F. 5375. 2MSS50 1-rC&gt;'dC"""'"', Y-6...... s1o,80Q
304-458-H)86
erterior &amp; tan Ei:Jrt1 inlerior,
- - - - - -- - oloclrio - · , _ R\1 • ·C.micholl
AK~ r!Qtste:d ~~= engine wtth 70,000 mtts. lfralels

;.;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;

hoond pups, t

,_ tifes &amp; -.y,

, 1,m

-

o..ct. S300 .. Ch 000. 1111nsminion woit&lt; St ,5110 =iijr;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
{7.f0)667-6758
304·882a77'Ur 304-674- •

near ~n. no
·~
AKC 'r'ortl:ie .pups, males .:;~=-----but · eloclrc ~;;-;;;:;;;;;;;;;:-;;;;;; only. 1st shots &amp; wormed 2004 l.incoln fown c.r ·I,-oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,..
Depoal:.

u &amp;ae Ohio'S &amp;argest 2bf, 1ba, w~, every· pets. 26-5B93

' ,

dill&gt;lar. - . , .
2750
llturid 18st.com

ACROSS

_,....,..,.,,.lliir

oaoh 74o-41S-n S7 ,

No--

ii•

7•0--828- 1tllng included
~ month &amp; . . , _ 740- Tal&lt;ing ............... ~ : Modem :$650::.:.:.:304__:-6_75-_7114
_6_ _ .Ultimate, loaded. '"c oond.
446-7227 or 7~1 ~t931 18R. no pets. S2951ret11 CKC Reg. Miniature 57'~ mles, $14.500 abo,

ea

Philip

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

'WAIS!d!tOQFIIG

--=---'----

t

&amp;

_

lr___

:::c: :;..;:;

Aott::::lms:o:::::.!::;;_,.;ll

LOT FOR

WBI.E HOME

7

e•·

-rly/~9 call

40-U&amp;

Taking !IPI'ications loi 28A,
no pms, $275/montn

Jericho Road
:JD4..895.353-' S125 •month

. 1raler Lots

01"1

r

IIIJI1;v;
IUl RINf

l

---Pometi;,y, Ohio

r·

"""'onoes
IOQUiiOd.
304-675-2319

and

Call 2BR Apt£, 6 miles lrom
Some
Holzei.
utilities paid.
2b• Houoe on Redman $400+dep. 74D-4tB-52SB
Aidga 'Rd. $400 doposn. 28AgaragoaptinGallipolis.
$375 montn 304-675-6406 WID hool&lt;up. no pols,
•
dopooil &amp;
S453
Bd. house in Pomeroy.
1852
or 446-2t43
1 112 bath, air, fun base.
-go $650 ·
m.nl ' 2 car go,,.
'
.
2BA upstairs apt. in town.
74D-949-2S03.
New carpet, No pets.
~ 54501••
·
3 Bedroom Houoo in 11450/mon"'
~posn.
Syracuse. $500/montn + 339-2494
H .a.....
dep09i1 ud ...,.... No f'Bis.
.,....
(304)675-53!12 weekends
~- 52 Westwood
740·591·0265
. . - - - - - - - - . Drive. from $365 to $560.

-onoas

j

r

•

_THE

MR'"Ii'IJ 4,-.v:. I!S

~ '~
MlillutuiH:

.

I

.u,a&lt;t"

nno&gt;

&lt;t"-.r.-111. . , .
o&gt;UWJII::Inl,_

J(JR YrJI/!!

r

,

a John

5 Deere lately? You'll bi! sur·
pc
dinene
$30.00. ~isodl Check OU1 our used
r'"
'Microwa-...e $20.00.
King inventory
at

$35.00.

Free-~~~owls ~
dishwasher
~
- IbM'
inst•ution " an Equal $25.00.
DQpportunHy Provide• and Pap machine $200.00. Sola
2BA $450/dop. $450/rent + Employer.
$40.00 Cats 10 ~"' away.
utilities. 645-3592
Call 446-9632

!

priced

Carmichael Equipment 740·

----~--

Jim•s F"m Equipment Inc.
Eastern

Ave,

COIIVEWE!m.Y LOC...T- - - - - -- - - Gallipolis. Dtlio. 740-446£D &amp;N"f'()fH n F!
For 'Side: Cmwnvelch plants, sm . • . 5·, 6 ' and 7' 3PT.

In M1n101y

-=======~
~

Townhouse
Ofllll1menl0, (740)245-9322
and/Or small houaeo FOR
RENT. Call (740)441 -1m
JET
for --.Ilcation &amp; information.
·AERATION MOTORS
"'M""
Repaired, New &amp; RebuiH tn

·EUmYieW
. ."tiiM!nls.
•2&amp;3 badmon1 apartments
•Centmlheal &amp; A/C

.
e

•Owner pays water, MWel',
.

Mom

y..,.....,.....,m...,.

(31M)8112-.30l7

hearts
, y..,'tl always stay
M&gt;vedaad

led
everyday.-util ...
I'd

,.rft lipiD,

\

....vinj:~ry
of Gnoeva Oork

J-16, .,32
May 18,11WT

Satlly • · ed,loved
Kids,

S1ook.- CaU Ron Evans, 1·
BD0-537-9528.
longaberger
Twin
Comforter.
bed
skirt.
-noe &amp; pllow, l8lile runner. new Whn· e ba~room
m
~ 67-5-6937
Mauve &amp; Blue Sofa &amp; Chair$t50, Twin oaf. headboaid .

Electric Start Hfgh &amp; Low
'Transmission, New Rims,
Tires &amp;. Paint. 2002 Hard
Top For CJ7 Jeep, 200:3
Kawasaki mule. Call 949·

Concrete,

r

$4 ,000

000 304-882-1!247

I

Angle, - - - - - - - -

·------,.1

·u.tng t and 2 -Miday. eonH:30pm. Closed
.
Thul8day,
Satuidoy &amp; ~
Bedroom Apts. at Vtllage
Sunday (740}446-?300

=...::::...:·_::.:..:..::__:..:..:..._ 01 ·

Hyundai

Acce nt

$592. 74D-992·5064. Equal vlbralor Call740-245-5!1:35. 65,310 miles. good con&lt;ii_
H_'_:_
ousing Qpflortunily
..:.:._ _._;_·_ _ Ulllhy poles , used goOd coo- tion. """ds calalyl~ con-er. Asking $2200. CaM 74()-Modem 1 Bedroom Apt., ClitiOn, 25'K55' 2.00.2.50 a
-6 _
709 339
Call(740)446-0390
tool --ll247

&lt;-.;;--

*Prompt and Quality

Friday-

•

Karaoke

Saturday (Band)
TuffEnuff

MOTHER'S DAY
SALE

Sunday-

Wori&lt;
*Reasonable Rates

£'

S

'rs

wa

............
._............
.

::.::;::.::::
WWilllal

•Insured
"£•~rieooed
,,...
References Availa!ile!

C

3

'AiN1&gt; ~i~ •loiiAA1f
l lt&gt;lit&gt; ...

1

all Gary · laney@

Sandals &amp; Athletics
for "MOM"

tnJ:Iudlng Clearance!

KIPUNG SHOE CO.
300 2nd Ave.
(Acroee front City l'8rkl
c•~.OH

7404419010
Mon • Fri. 9Mn • 6pm
Sat. 11m • 5pm

~

·a---:~~

4125108 1 m

11

'

Db!.

,

cialiirudc

..

6 •••••·•
diga
7 Urilon
I Sap auok·
lhoclta
lng inMcl
41 llulicill
I Come all In
algn
. pa..
42 lliiallr-112 .CI•+
44 ·liloait-'•
oaloro
13 ~nonllklil

·•• atia •
36 Iller
31 o.alu
31 _ ,

U paw baer :asks,
bid with Bnything

"*'

Pleasant Valley Hospital is cumntly IICilepling

resumes for a per diem .,_armacist: B.S.

Holq)ital

NWH

• •

WYYII."

&lt;lvHe
...........,.
2521 Valey Drive

1 sEE '(001'1/E STM'TED liiEARIHIO
A

SACK!'AC~

TO SCHOOL ..

--·
_,_.

l UKE TO 61'1/E lJ.IE IMPRESSION
,:llAT t'M 60lN6 SOMEPLACE IMPOR1'A.N1

CONSHUGTIO~

you

a filii acmmpli. You'll

.... .,CIAfl.-

Ionas Ill tho
tl J aordi Itt-

iaauea.

I

It

•

J'' ..''
0

•

I

1 ·1'- 1 1
-

-

•

,.INT Nl.lfi"Fiffl

lfTT(IS IN SQUAIES

ARLOlJANIS

r

n you

$

being -

•

C~PRtCORN

(Dec . 22-Jan . 18) Others might hawl to run 1o ,c atch up with
you, beCauee- onqe ~~ , up V,!!Jf
mind to tMe .cUon on eomethlng , there
will. be no atopp1ng you. 'ltlu'll be llll tau.!·
nooa &amp;bout
your p .
AQUARIUS (Jon . 20-F«&lt;. t8) -

--.u

St. Rt. 7 &amp; 143
Pomeroy

740-317-G531

~=me=us

-yau'Ujlnd tho
you _
ploy _
....., .
........,~
_
.,-

s

-

wltllllraw .,. .......,
NOTICE: I&amp; ........, can lt .. prioriOMie.
f'IM:Natice
91-lhManSitluntotr, Furthef, The flttWII C'~AL Y=•-Jp
..., 10, 20111 Ill 10:00 ..... _ . sm;g.
a.m., a public will Ccwo .... I I I I . . . . . . bidl fDr 1113
be llelcl a1 211 w. righiiO.....,. MIY or 1111 food ....., Finl liliCk
Second 91.;
bkla IUb\1 · .
4211 ....,. . . , 150
Olllo. The · F•,_. The llboft duul d mllae. ltiZ7 ,..... 011
Bank and Sa1i'lnp
1 .. ~ auld trucll,
Company II Mllinl for a lo alwe lo ,. "'*- a --._·
~.!'...._~or~~
:=,..~••
od or f« """" k1bnwliuu
, , . . . • • - 0 " ' , _. . . .. , . . _ ,
Cllll 7...,__ or
lng collabtrol:
giMI.
7~ · S.
19911 Chryoler Ctnua f« 1...- lntonnac ~· June 5
L
X
I 1lon. or lor., ltlllDI ot Tlow·· 7:30 '
1C3EJ56HXXN6MI11 1i*rt to h £C*I-· ,..,.,
t'wp.
The F11111111S Banlt and - · pllor ltD eale- \lFD
S•vlngo
C~nr, wnlacl Cyncllo 'or Ken (S) 'e 11 23
Po11111n)J,
Ohio, 1111112~138.
' '
- - the. right to (5) 7, 8,1
bid illlhia - , and to

ir::t=' wtti-.:;

tr

F\)1,.,..,,

:on

_..c. .....,

•••Ill)

11,

• Room Additions • Garages • Vinyl
and Wood Siding • Roofing .. Pole
Barns • Patio's, Porches and Declrs

MID (Mo""' 11-Apfll 111 - "'u'N
..... ftO ODuDt tl'l ... mnd of YDUf-..... you- not 1o ... lndll~- WNn

QR1tZWf118

•

11

..

n oonw

ID OI'IIHI

illttt

you wtM qii!Gidy Pf'CM ,ou'l'e •

~ 10 be'

-

wtll'r .

SOUP TC) NUTZ

IT!
~
Jl'!

740-985-4141
Cell: 740-416-1834

I1

0.

eo::.

. .

Ql

47239 Riebel Road, Long Bottom. OH

25+,_s~it!we&lt;Fred"'i

&lt;MCI\Ing "'"' pll.
not ....... 11, ""' .... -

PISCES
(bolng
-. 20_,
- ol
- 20) 8&lt;&gt;•1011·011- II - I n 1ho off·
ing prlmoilly ol . . you
.eq;a idlrd 10 m:IMI n 80. OthMI!fwoMd
wllllio _,...., you ""'"" ong!MOIOd

c.: MARCUM CONSTR.UCDON
Piiluc:Nonce

I'-"" ...

Olholo -

Advertise
in this space for
.$64 r month

..

•

•

-- -

- ~-

r

I

1,

.......

~

____,

-·· 1111 ,_
.~
No. ......

"' •

In

r rrrrrl'rl

·~tETTflsl

find difficult it'll~ be 1un lind game~

you.

_
..,........
I . .. tid•-··

L-1..-I..-I..-,I,_,I...,.J ""' .......... -

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23--Dec. 21) -

to

Pollli:ll ....... tD c:awd,
wrta. of• wid 11 J1111Y

s DJ c 0 E •
1-,...:..;;:..:,.;;:..;::...;r-1
7

CANCER (June 2t..July 22)- You'll be
outstanding at this Ume wtth any effort
lhat requires team ettort. 'ri:MJ •n not only
pull your own weight but you'l INikll certain that all of your Mam!TIMM pull their
weigln. 100.
LEO (July 23-lwg . 221 - ~­
effort and energy will , be cMYot.d to

or

I'

.
l ·ONE.D

Once you put yuur mind to tl , tt.... wit!
be nothing more irrij)Oi tar II to you than ,
money. n won1 be ony1hlng you

740-3174iU

VZFBVZ

I 0 0 RF

ILl
•

uni)ld etQtCtty •

-goofing oil
-*'out wftning .

'*''"'•"*"-

P¥

or eodeawr. 'tbu ha-.. a ,.,. •lent

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) -

... ....., . . . . . @

ZNIIYW

BNMW

I I II 11 · ~

engage in serious unden.ldngl or ~W~R-­
IItional pursuit&amp;, you'll t..at .both wtlh the
eame li&amp;ftMiidoul inllenelty. 'Wbu won't

740-653-9657

• KZXJNI

JF· ~z

. 1-,...,..;;S_P;...;Y,...::;I!l_Ur:-:G:,.I

a.n stop you.

Fax1o: (314) 6756f75 ·

-

33 TKOalllcial
35 ......_
'17 Cllmba

NSXFK ZXP

.

tau.

,....----.,.,. , - - - - - - - - - , . UBRA (Sept 23-Dct. 23) - ~
you will find the will to flnallM to your
UMMMM....SO WE l11APPED .-e
aatil1action a ltWIItion 1hat hal gone
THAll NJSSBAUM. TOO.
unrwolved for too long. Once you "*II your top priority, there ill naihlng lhllt

H&amp;H
GutteriAg

CORNER STONE

32 Paotule

G ...... ••......·=..=· ..,...
·.

...,,...,Iring that might appear tot.. .-rv·
mg another's inlereet. In t'MMty, you
alone will realize It can be -.uatly
_.otng lor you, 100.
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sopt. 22) - Your - matic behavior ~ atNngth ...:1
stature h t other&amp; cannot compete wlh .
The calmer and more toga.! you .,., 1M
greater clout and broetum.. you galh·
er tn your midat.
·
·

Puhll "
t. wv 255541
Phone: (314)67543441

50 llowlo
54 SUillli filh

:..-: SCC~lA~-4t.~· :

AstroGraph

nMa

Seamteas Gutten;
Rooling, Siding, Gufler&amp;

'Piellsut Valley llo&amp;pitlll

41 1u, in A...

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - 'Paitmg iS silent poelry ' • PlutarCh
·AI graat an eomes from a ol owrage ' · Glenn Close

- · """"' tt h~ polnlo. They will
10 often tel )'0\J who has -

GEMINI (Moy 21....., 20) - Tho flglil ·
· that lie5 donTimlt within you wfU ..aally t..
aroUIIfd the moment you find yoUNatt tn
any · oompetttlve situation, whether It
itwoiY88 aports, cards . romano. or oo.!·

Syslllm • Roofing

Send resumes Lo:

t..l-·
Ilk•=•

VXDDYT NWH..,..

HIMWL 'MWU

KtlCLM -WU

-.-again!
H you count only one ttmg at lhe bridge

ma1ce aure thai lhey'll
you .,wision.

1

. • Hmnes • Septic

on
SAVIIIGS

-.-

uaMiaal)

48

**

'lhat Is ·Ill "-· Souttt
plays a apado Ill ti8 aoe, l'i&lt;liJino lhe long
will drop ... and Mr. Nioe Guy, lhe doll

about making them

~:~

, . . .l6-l436
, ...59.~1

21 Msillw!
Dillon
21 ...... ...
mlnooal
31 Kulaick'e

,,..,

46 Spent

CELEBRITY CIPHER

your DbjectiYes or pr'OOMfuree,·
you'ft have no trouble t:.lng ....rtlve

.... "'

. • Pole ,Boms
Pomeroy, Ohio .
, . .992-7953

43 Piece oil

Normally, ""~ lha a ,priori - '
ha would ""' 1ho apado q_,, llll&lt;ing
tho - · tt hal a 50-50 ihot Ill - . ·
bf Luil Clmpol
c:aohlng lha ... il1l..-mly wins only
Oliildy [)p'w I'Jif*lpnlli'll rnMI trorn QlD*m tl'ftlmous pqlle. pul nl pr..-.
6.22 paiCIII'It allhe
has
Elctl . . ln hr
U10$10r'IIN:tller.
a singleiDn kilg. In thlo deal, lhough,
Tod!!y'&amp;aue: Rf(jOI/s V
who hal '1t1e apado king?
"M C 'XRY UXMWU KX KZY DYYH IKlCBY
Count :lha higkard IJC)inla, Since -

eta~

• Backhoe • Site

PHARMA
. CfST

41 ·NBC lhral
42 ,IClnd oil
fllhy

a player ahould bid dottplle holding a
IIBry- hand. Hole ilanolhof ......
pie:- p a - r - a tal&lt;oout doubla and lhe 11ilfllltder Jlllllllllll. The dou-

lor putting all the p6eoee togaiiW" to form
the neoeAILJY union.

. .......... . _... ,

Preparation • Dozer
. • Garnges • Uti'ffite&amp;

p

This-.... ""'~ atlinol-

. ation

' j r ... ,.. - .....
... ...

""! ..... "':
, : .......

I

titer

John DaiJoiQ Acton, an Engliot1 an who died In 1802. .. 'Be mote
111M11111D lhon 10 aclions; "' not
~- lhe otranglh of lhe !lid .,....
or the u: sale IBIS ol .the gmd:

You
in ...
yeoia-dby-inguoperson In more than one prgmilllng sttu--

rO. I
•fi!Oie Blkullllllillnc••

...

40 lim

JII1TIII
.....
24 Aom1nJ al 45 Naiad

pkee•
'*' •s.r
007.....
5 ....:"
IInder 25 Pull hard

Allpa&amp;

T.WRUS (April 2D-Moy 20) - .0...

•ADaM# '5
·0 ...:

s W.-rior

21 A GouiMin
30'3?'
M 111at11r1o1oog

will'! :"~":.~""'::!.t

Constlu-~lilln

·-

taa1

-cologl11

llokndof, .... 10,-

............
...,., ,
Wil I :
•A . ...

unall8

18 See
20 To dill
DOWN
yau lalBI1
21 .Cede
22 11311
"23 Wind Dilllrlw 1 Lupi role
a FmUellir
nwm.
23 New
a - 11e
2 11ora11y biCI
z 1 111

,,.:

Loclilll Ccwtb-*"

304-675-5463

~ - OJ'\'iO~ ~~~'\'~!

a'-----1

Mizway ·

Mason Co. Fairgrounds
Rt. 62N Pt. Pleasant, WV
(Practice 4:30 pm)

• 10 8 4
• '8 3
• 7 54 2

·amanly 13 · ~- ·mualha\IB'Ihe
1'\'"( ~1lU:1C long. Thtmo being no polnl in 1licing a

i

· tpm

Sat. 5/10/08
6:00pm

"''!( l...Ll~CJ:.,

I

Com Hole Tournament

MOTOCROSS
RACE

"i.~t..l&gt;~~~~~~

74().591 -8044

..,_.dd'ioltKg_.Newa-1 1'1 1

Save 20".4 on

60 111111-

time,--

--- ·-~~oo~n·cn

,l-5116

experience preferred.

Pool Tournament

SERV ICE

Closed Sunday

Melp Wwltld

college m ·university prefetred.

Thursday-

C.'IRr[l, T~r

4 in. fo1iage ·pot
ShrUb&lt; &amp; Azaleas
Open M-S 9·5

;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;

e

17 T..-1

-

.,. : ~ ., c ::

.....

flowering _&amp; :Foliage
Baskets, Bedding &amp;
Vegetable Flats

• 7 52

be(o!e-.goil&lt;ll**l
SIMtl with I top cUl aRd -~~~
a diamond. How.llhould South conlinuo?
The anly ~ il in lha hump suit
Declarer mUIII avoid a 1oM! - . ..

!=~~~~~~~====~~~
Trimming
&amp; AeiDOVal

Phannacy. ur Ph.D. Phannaey from accredited

cjue to the Election .

~~~~·~~~~~~

·Syracusc:. Ohio
Now · ope~~ftw

~

Kill SAJ.E

Middii3JJ0!1:. frum $327 to Small blaokt~ roller wtth Hatctbaclt !:: speed trans.

Tuesday, May 13th has been
rescheduled lor
Tuesday, May 20th

7.·

_._.Tree_,.....

"~'le
~:rn they 'last, o"er
•
2000 to choose from.

~

tllot's par1n01' (known as lhe .,_In
some quariBnl) mUIII bid, _, with zero
poin1s, . . - ha Is long and 11110ng In
lhe IJiliii18B sutt.
Hllni, Soul! mUIII bid·one~ - Than
.Nor1!1 ·llhould jlrnp ·to lour ill**- 'But
lot's ........ lhal Nor1t1 """""' ham
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Now $5 .00 ·

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(Estate II 26-6120011 )

Help Wan...S

ANSV/f~Ui6

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sale cash or good checl&lt; with valid ffi . This
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baler twine, great shape

rou

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Call446-9523
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; ~
Auras

Virginia Slate Fatm MuseLIIIll
monthly BOard Meeting on

/

toys and games, exercise equipment, and
~much more. Come and enjoy the auction
bring a chair, we will have everything in the
garage and under 11 huge tent. Te:nns of the

_230
_ 5 -"'-' 1_
nlo~rm
~
a1i-o·n_.__

Furnished
Apt,
Grating . Flat
For -Bar.Drains,
sale. (740)949·2193
--- 2nd
- -Ave,
- Channel,
Steel Polled
HereforO bulls for
Upsteln;, All UtUitieti pd. D r i - &amp; WaJI&lt;ways. L&amp;L

Menor and Ai...- Apis . in

Fllrftlf 0~ riOT,, f~I-11~.
Nff:l&gt; TO STOP

.,• .,.,..,._.,,SE ·

uptiolsrered

armcha'irs., Lenox figtware pieces. mise-lamps,
Finishing mowen; starting al
small blanket oh.,1 with duck decoy design,
$699.00 and up. Huny While
coffee table, Dowered sofa bed. cloths
1he
.. ~'.:.'":._"-----'-steamer. Queen bedroom 'uite, drop •l..f end
, bl
&amp;...:
•
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John· Deer A 1947 Tractor. : ta e, quee.n ~d and dresser, mtsc. tv s misc.

$tO, Changing Table ·St O,
Sliver
TV
lAvtJsroc:K
·atond/Emertainmenl
Center· ' - - - - - ·
$20 304-£74-00SO
~
6 Reg ·Angus Cows with
NEW .Mil) USEO STEEL calves, 1 Re-g Angus Bun
Steel Beams, Pipe Rahal 740-~56-t758
'For

and 1llil'llm, 2 French style

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Jo ·n.B. ~ ""
~ems
1 •rn~•

outdoor metal furniture set. mise -kitchenware.
d'
mnerware. and stemware. Sofa and matching
loveseat, Cream Club chair and Ottuman,
enten.ainnient cabinet. Lane Cedar Ohest,
Spinet ·Piano. &lt;G~s top sofa table and
matching ooffoe table, misc. framed artwork

446-24t 2

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.,.....,.
Specials

Univcn;it.v !70th anni•ersary 7 - up bottle.

ww w. c AR Ea . coM

2150

cost

............,,.n,u

bottom c'hairs. French .Provincial Dinning
i'OQID suite, early AmeriCllll maple hutch.
assonrnen1 of blue Fenton coin .glass, Fenton
Lamp. 2 unique lllltique mcking .cbain;, Set of
4 Duc"ks Unlimited framed prints, Ohio

~-..

EQual size bed
HousiRg ~unit~. This stBnding

740--446-2568:

Have you

your existiJ1g roof
InsuIated roofs ,\o
•
save on your Heating
and Air Conditioning

Antique cane bonom chair, Malllle 'lop
antique dry 'ink. Unusual Antique book shelf
that turns into a table, set of ·6 antique cane

.

fRAIIIK &amp; IEARIFSI

plggie"

16HIIII

Opening lead: .. A

Residential and New
Construction
Can-be installed over

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couches, reiTidges, - -·
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bathroom vanHy &amp; sinks. 720 JD hayblne ' good
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1 kitchen. 2BA apt -

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MMDNMOWDl
....71'Y.II61
!II 'll'-3!94

2004 Ford F·150• Heritage,
XL, Super Cab, 4:6L, VB,
43,500 miles, 4x4 $14,500
OBO 304-593-1336

4 row AC no till planter wtth
jitp;~;;;;;;;_~-.... dry fertilizer fiberglass bo11es
M-.
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lbRlloi.D
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1 · and Z bedl'oom apart·
transplante1. gravity box with
ments, furnished and untur- Going out of business-sale· running gear, 1obacco sticks
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RENT, 1091 Georges Creek includes water and saw&amp;!.
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Rebred flatbed true* drNer
oil equipment at "!most 03 Fom F350, v~o Super
Ql';leaway prices 3~75-- duty. whtl:e. ·--«&lt;oof, goose- .
0484
•
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rentat&amp; in Gallipolis Ffrry
and Point P.._asant , Cal! TW!f't RMtrs Tow.er IS accept~3423
inll ,.,.._,. tor ..mng
- - - - - - - ftSt 0 H~. 1--br
Mobile home and dou· apanmem
tor
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USED ttOMES 'Nioe 3BR
from $1 ,900 down . Sa..,.,
SS.OOOI _ , 740--8282750 qi'TiittMist.c:om

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Pinschers. 7 WflfH&lt;I old,
~ 1rom $399 mo. t.!idwest i0nl$350deposft. Ca1388- _::..:;.:__ _ _ _ _ shots. wormet1 740·388· S501d&amp;'OohaM. 611c. oond. antee. Local ·- 1 u r·
·
Tara
Townhouse 8768
$1300. 446---iS88
1ni&amp;hed. IESI8blilhld 1975.
7 40-828-275o
9905,
1\partmonls. Very Spacious,
•
Qoll 2. Hos. '(\'«!) 3br WBsher/ Dryer. wfttl a 2 Sudrooms. CIA. 1 112 Male Boston Terrier &amp; Pug Police Impounds'! C.n; tfrom 0870, flogers 8uement
New 3 Bediwm homes from Deck. in Glenwood. big Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby mile ~ 12 weeks old, S500t Honda&amp;, Ottevrs. 1Wcdetpro0fing.
S21U6por month, Includes - : 304'57&amp;2934
Pool, Start $425/tAo. Cal 379-2467
Jeeps. " - . I'"""'' !lor

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2

Tbe Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydllyu ltlllll!i.com

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

...

-

IIIII III

�Pqe B8. The Daily Smtirel

ALONG THE RivER

Crosby content to be a playmaker if Pens keep winning.
BY AIM Ra•IIIDII
-'SSOCIATED PRESS

PIITSBURGH -Sidney
Crosby always has been No.
I.
. 1be No. I most-watched
youth player in Canada. A.
No. I draft pick, No. 1 in
scoring in his second NHL
season. The No. I player in
ti)e league by his fellow
players' voles last season.
, Crosby's · career-long
refusal to be anything but
the best highlights the most
surprising element to the
Pittsburgh Penguins' run to
the Eastern Conference
ftnals that start Friday night
against
Philadelphia.
Evgeni Malkin, not Crosby,
has been their No. I player
in the postseason, and it's
~n eyident. . .
I think Malkin nght now
the best player out of those
~·" FI.yers . defense~
IGmmo T!IDon~n, ~emng
the conference s Big 3 of

doesn't always work out
that way," Crosby said. "I'd
say my ftrst responsibility is
as a playmaker. As long as
I'm doing that and creating
things, it's ftne. ~
Hossa, the All-Star forward added by Pittsburgh at
the February tt:ading deadline, has made up for some
of Crosby's missing goal
production . What bothers
him is be's missed converting some of the chances
Crosby created.
"He's setting me up · so
much, I could have more
goals than 1 have," Hossa
said. "But the thing is we're
winning and that's important. We would like . to
maybe score a little more,
but hopefully we are saving
them for the next series."
What the Flyers must be
wondering is what Crosby
is saving up for them.
· Crosby's IJWn introd';'clion to the Flyers-Pengwns
rivalry came by way of a

well-placed stick to the r:oals-against average in tbe
mouth during his 'rookie playoffs, but lw occasionseason,
courtesy
of ally looked shaky against
defenseman
Derian the Penguins. He bas a II - ·
Hatcher, that chipped some 12-1 record with three ties
reeth and required stitches. and an .898 save percentCrosby's career scoring age against lbem.. .
line reflects his not-warm
"Right now, he is bot, but
feelings for Philly since I lhitlk we can find some
then: 16 goals and 21 weak spots on him,- Staal
assists for 37 points in 20 said. "He's playing configames.
dent and I think the players
"Probably at the time in front of him are playing ·
more so, that game or well, too, so he's gotten it
maybe the game lifter," pretty easy so far. If we're
Crosby said of wanting to playing the same way
pay back the Flyers. "A lot we've been playing this
of things happen over .tbe · whole playoffs, and getlin&amp; .
course of games and it all a lot of shots on net, I know
gets lost and something else we'll find a way to beal
happens and you move on." him."
Seven other Penguins
Even if it's not Crosby
players have as many or taking those shots.
"If we just keep playing
more goals in these playotis as Crosby, and forward the same way we've been
Jordan Slaal thinks that playing, we know we're
depth. will be critical going · to keep. getting
against Flyers
goalie opportunities and keep win- Pittsburgh f&gt;e~Culris' Sidney Crosby, rwtt, talks with teamMartin Biron.
ning, ultimately," Staal mate Evgeni Malkin, of Russia, dunrc hockey practice at
·the Mellon Arena In Pittsburgh wednesday.
. Biron is 8-4 with a 2.72 said. '

.,._

Ovechkin, · Ma.Udn Alex
and • - - - ···' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
Washington's
Crosby. "Out of those guys
I think Malkin bas a little
bit of an edge right now."
It's not as if Sid the Kid is
stuck in some gosh-awful
slump, althoullb he has only
two goals - one an ·emptynetter - · as the Penguins
have won eight of nine
playoff games. His 12
assists lead the playoffs and
his 14 points are one off the
lead.
Still,
Crosby
looks
uncharacteristically sluggish at times, unable to use
his exceptionally strong
lower body to fend off
defenders. He's not been
nearly as explosive in his
skating or on his quick
bursts to the net to snap off
hard wrist shots.
Imagine that: the 20-yearold Crosby is having the
kind of playoffs \&lt;Cry few
players will experience, yet
is being asked if be's off his
game.
"The middle part of the
last series I wasn't where I
wanled to be, but the' last
game I was a lot better,"
Crosby · said Wednesday,
referring to his two-assist
game Sunday as the
Penguins eliminated the
Rangers by winning 3-2 in
overtime. " I think it's just
l&gt;iane Mcvey
one of those things where
M.A.-CXX:-A
Owner&amp;
you ·get a couple of games
AudiologiSt
that are tougher and that's
just tbe case· in .the play-

Kitten setVeS as inspiration
for fostering program/ Cl

Hometown News for GaDia &amp; Meigs counties
11 1 11••\,•llt\~·tii~Jt..,fl•fl~'.lll

SPORTS
• GA baseball coach
Rich Corvin inducted into
-Wellston Athletic HOF.
SeeP¥81

WIN UP TO $1,000 !!!

PLAY COVERALL BINGO

offs ..,

What is uncertain is how
much the high anlde sprain
that sidelined Crosby for 28
of 31 games from midJanuary on is affecting him.
. Crosby .insists he's fine,
but he said the same thing
in the playoffs a year ago,
when he masked a broken
foot until th~ Penguins were
eliminated.
. Penguins goalie MarcAndre Fleury also had a
high ankle sprain in early
December, or five months
.ago, and he occasionally
feels twinges in his ankle
even now.
: "I think Sid's the type of
guy that always goes hard
and he's in the comers, is
always on his feet battling,
and I think those are tough
things for guys with that
ankle," Fleury said. "At the
same time, it's good we
always have a day off
between every game (to
rest), so that's big."
Crosby was the NHL's
leading scorer with 63
points in 46 games before
he was hurt. Since returning, he has 23 points, but
only six goals, in 16games.
. A ~as~n for the Penguins
to be alarmed wi,th only
four victories separating
them from a chance to play
for the Stanley Cup?
Probably not. But a closeto-100 percent Crosby gives
them a much better chance
to eliminate a flyers team
thai beat them •in five of ·
eight regular season games.
With accomplish~ scorers Malkin (6 goals, 14
points), Marian Hossa (5
goals, 10 points) and Petr
Sykora (4 goals, 6 points)
around him, Crosby iso 't
convinced he must be the
top
goal-scorer
for
Pittsburgh to win.
He may be right: Since
the start of the 2006-07 season, Malkin has 86 goalj in
174 games , counting the
playoff,, to Crosby's 65 in ·
146 games.
"I want to score but it

..

R11med

Request FamHy Oxygen

4J5l/z S

d A.~,r:llllle

(740) 446-7619

ATHENS

70 Pine Street• Ci•llipolis

740-446-0007

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594-3571

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.._ __ ..,
Two locatjum

-

Your ....tna's II Floor
Coveriltg lkllkr!

Rn'dentiai•C=m dal•
Wlul + •lldldl

Page AS
• Dewey 'Mack'
· McKinley Horton Jr.
·• Doyle Buford Minnis
: • Gracie May Shuler

c

II$

II

Ollie

D

tTr. "

II

I

REED

POMEROY -The fli'st
part of a study of the role of
federally-subsidi~ed primary care facilities and 24hour emergency rooms is to
be completed in mid-June.
Meigs County received a
$6,000 state grant last
month to study models of
combined .
FedecallyQualified Health Carefamily clinics, like Family
Health Care in Pomeroy,
and emergency room facilities, to determine if such a
combined facility would be
feasible here, and to deter-

mine if it would meet !he
community's health care
needs.
Economic . Development
·Director Perry Varnadoe .
said the .oounty has bired the
Lostiwte
for
Local
Government and Regional
Development at Ohio
University to study models
of combined FQHC clinics
and 24-hour emergency
rooms to determine if such a
oombination wo1:1ld be
effective in providing
increased health care services here.
A 24-bo.ur ·emer~ency
rooin, open to all residents
regBFdl.ess of income, has

'\11,)f1

patients have been seen by a
licensed nurse practitioner.
Beverly Phillips, who can
provide most basic services
a physician can offer. The
clinic has reached its capacity for . patients. but a new
medical school graduate,
Dr. Matthew Weimer, is
ex.pecled to join the pmctice
this summer.
·
In the meantime, the Meigs
County
Community
Improvement Corpomtion
has purchased land near
Meigs High School for possible development as a site for.
a new hospital, emergency
room and outpatient clinic.

BY

1

.

Fll-

WEATHER .

Meigs 'Relay' Annexation may
about hope hinge on feedback
recent
meeting
when
Tackerville resident Rick
Walker and Yellowbush
RACINE -According to Road
resident
Albert
Racine officials, a decision Proffitt spoke to council
·
on the village · annexation about annexation.
proposal may binge on
Proffitt said he was told
feedback from those resi- his property taxes would
dents affected at an upcom- increase by $390 if hi s
ing meeting.
property was annexed and
The meeting date is to be Walker said the majority of
set this
month
and his neighbors didn't want it
announced in an upcoming either. ·
edition of The Daily
Racine Clerk-Treasurer
Sentinel. Mayor Scott Hill Dave Spencer said the vilsuggesled the meeting have !age sent out 119 questionrepresentatives from the naires to those residents livMeigs County Treasurer's ing wititin the proposed
area
and
Office as well as the · annexation
Auditor's Qffice to answer,. received 62 respOnSes. Of
tax questions residents those 62 responses. 44 were
mil,lht have
concerning against annexation while 18
therr property if it were to were for it.
belimits~n. exed into the village
Despite of. or because of
half of the people never
The discussion came at
vi!lage council's most

B¥ BETH SERGENT

BSERGENTIIMVDAILYSENTlNEt.COM

INDEX
4 SllcnONS- 24 PAGilS

A3
C4

Celebrations

D Section

insert

Comics

TODAY'S.
NUMBER IS:

facilities, to determine if
they can be adapted to the
local community.
"The goal will be to find a
successful model ·in a setling close enough to our
own to be effective here,"
Varnadoe said. "That will
include looking at similar
facilities in communities
similar to Meigs County."
Other combined· FQHC
and emergency room facilities have also been successful in urban areas like
Chicago, Davenport said
when the grant was awarded
in April.
Family Health Care
opened. in December, and

..u

Around Town

'

been a goal of county com-.
missioners and a local
health care committee for
several years. The FQHC
clinic, Family Heal.th Care,
offers primary care and
family practice services
regardless of income or
insurance coverage on a
sliding scale fee.
Susan Isaac of ILGARD
attended at National Rural
Health Care Conference last
week, as part of her research
into successful rural health
care models. The grant will
also allow Isaac and local
officials to travel around the
country to study successful
FQHC/emergency
room

INSIDE

Editorials

A4

Movies

C5

Obituaries

As

Sports

Ohio Vdey p,a.!'

@-

•

.... Sergenllpllolo '

BSection

Weather

115-A ShCk Street
Pt. Phu rt, WV 2555t
JIUTS.71l6
Fu:JIUTS.7317
1lwniti

J.

· GALLIPOLIS St.
Louis Catholic Church is
celebrating its 100 year
anniversaryin 2008r, but its
history in Gallipolis goes
back much further than that.
St. Louis has existed to
serve the Roman Catholic
population of Gallia County
·. •'Gallia Chamber of
for more than 1.50 years, but
the
presence of Catholic
. Commerce
faith has existed locally
annual golf scramble is
since the arrival of the
May 22:See Page
French 500 in I79(f"
area long due .t o severe .conIn
1853,
Archbishop
Jean
• Ohio OemOcmts
diti~tns and the lack of an
Baptist
Purcell
of
established
selllement.
strip attorney general
Cincinnati purohased a lot
"We 'have had a presence
of endorsement.
· on Grape Street for the of over 200 years and I'm
. establishment of a church, very proud of that fact,"
SeePage AS
• Nursery programs allow which did not become a . said Monsignor William
reality until a structure was
imprisoned moms.
dedicated in I 858. The Myers, , who came to St.
Grape Street · church oould Louis on March 7, 1·980.
newborns to bond
house about 80 patrons and "The FFencb 500 were priSeePageA5
was used until a second marily Roman Catholics.
church was built on the ·cor- Tbey had a priest come with
Rigel/photo
ner of Fowth Avenue and them when they came here, Sl. Louis Catholic Church celebrates 100 years at
its locaState Street in 1908, though but for about 60 years they
tion
at
the
comer
of
Fourth
Avenue
and
State
Street
in
the oongrega\lon was oliten were secved by missionaries ·
without a resident priest
from up and down the river Gallipolis. St. Louis was first built in 1858 on Grape Street,
bUt moved . it!&gt; location in 1908 to accommodate more
The majority of ·early setPlene
see
Cll•dl.
A1
patrons.
tlers did not remain in this

Classifieds

•

BY BAWl

BREEDIIMYDAILYSENTINELDOM

740·992·5252

HI ttl ~IIJ

'";ll'\lll.~2

ER feasibility study's first part ·due soon

www. f oodfairmarkets .com

'

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ERIGElOMYDAILVTRIB\JNE.boM

700 East Main Street
Pomeroy. OH

4U7 Slllle 11.-ltl

_:. otll"'i

Centennial celebration:

FOODFAIR

WHY PAY MORE .??
EVERY DAY
LOW PRICES!

•IIIJ ~ ol-..\;,\

·Strickland
will tour
St. Louis Catholic Church notes 100 years industrial
EUZABETit RIGa
park, GKN

Powell's
MQJ~IIIC.

l'••llltT•I&gt;•\]Jt\llilf"'!' 1 •(

I

Sure, ·the Meigs County Relay for Life is about ·raising
money to fight .cancer but ultimately it is about giving canA6 cer sutvivors, patients and their families h~ for a cure.
Pictured are sutvivors at this w~end's "Relay" wal~ing
Cu.
the sutvi\lors lap which began the -event ·at the Meigs
County .Fairgrounds. Survivors were later treated to a dinner prepared by ~ae Moo!e. This year's "Relay" was dedi• cated to Moore's late husband, Ferman.

....

BY KEVIN KELLY
KKELLYIIMYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

GALLIPOLIS - Gov.
Ted Strickland's visit to
Gallia County
on Monday is
seen by local
economic
development
officials as a
means of pro'moting what
Gallia
has
availalSle in
jobs
and
industry and
also letting him know what
it.needs .
Strickland is to tour the
Dan Evans Industrial Park
and GKN Sinter Metals, and
will also address local
Democmts later in the day.
"We' re ex.cited, " said
Lynne Crow. executive
director of the Gallia
County
Community
Improvement Corporation.
"Basically, he's coming in
to highlight our businesses
and promote the land we
have available, and answer .
questions that may be presepted to him."
Strickland wi II tour the
Austin Power Red Diamond
plant near McArthur and the
General Mills facility in
Jackson before going to
Gallia County at the invita-.
tion of State Sen . John
Carey,
the
Wellston
Republican · whose 17th
District includes those areas
and Gallia County.
Gallia's CIC, which
serves as the county· s economic development arm,
asked Carey if a local visit
was possible and all parties
Crow
said .
agreed.
Strickland is be at the industrial park near Bidwell from
2 to 3: 15 p.m .. and at GKN
from 3:30 to 4:15p.m.
He will t&gt;e hosted locally
by Crow. CIC President
Ryan Smith. CIC board
member David..Wi ~eman .
and
Gallia
County
Commi ssioners' President
Justin Fallon. Crow said the
visit is another opportunity
for . the CIC to partner on
,. ........... Al

Move to something better.

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Ask us about Farmers Free Checking &amp; Business ~hacking.

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e74.GIIO

.

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