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                  <text>Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydaily ~ ntinelcom

Thursday. February I. 2007

lady Eagles fall
to Waterford, Bt

Miami slips past
Cavaliers, Bt

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
,ju(I'\IS•\ol ;;h . :\'o.i :!.-

11&lt;11)\\ , IIBKl \H' :.! . :!uo -

\ \HI\

• Win could catapuH
Manning. See Page B2

•

J.

bolh the land and the
building .
Commissioners transPOMEROY - The . ulti- fered a one-year option to
mate development of a purchase a 13-acre lot outhealth care facility on a site side of Pomeroy to the
purchased by the Meigs CIC a week ago, and the
County
Community CIC executed the option
Improvement Corporation earlier this week. The
will depend on a health care transfer will allow the CIC
organization's commitment to purchase and hold the
to locate there.
land for the county, while
Only
then,
Meig s commissioners await a
County Commissioners proposal from an area
said Thursday, will they be health care organization.
in a position to negotiate
"First, we 'II have to
who finances construction determine what the health
of the facility, who occu- care provider's needs are
pies and staffs it, and who going to be. and then prowill ultimately hold title to ceed
accordingly,"
BY BRIAN

REED

BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINELCOM

Davenport said. He heads a
county committee working
toward improved ·access to
health care.
Commissioners are · no
longer identifying any of
the organizations with
which they have discussed
developing a health care
facility, because of pending
negotiations, but Davenport
said a proposal is expected
from an area health care
provider.
Commissioners hope an
existing hospital organization will lease a building
on the .13-acre si te and
offer a 24-hour emergency
room and other hospital

services. Commissioners
have discussed using revenue from a bond issue to
build the medical facilty
for lease to the health care
agency, but Davenport
said any plans fqr construction mu st wait for a
proposal.
During their bu si ne ss
meeting, commissioners
Davenport and Jim Sheets
approved a resolution
authorizing improvements
to Bashan Road and Locust
Grove Road, using federal
highway fund s.
The resolution authorize s Engineer Eugene
Triplett to re-surface,

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Dorsey Bur1&lt;hammer, 76
• Jerry Carpenter, 63
• Lester 'Pete' Russell, 96

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BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

\ ·~ ; 1 . ·:. ~ '.'

,;~

.,_,., .. '

• Rich in Christ.
See Page A2
• A Hunger For More.
sH Page A2

Also Enjoy Our Orlglna~
And All the Trimmings!

Beth Sercent/photoo

The Meigs Archery Team prepares to attend the first Arnold (Schwarzenegger) Archery Competition in Columbus. Governor
Schwarzenegger will be attending.
\ __/ "
·

228 West Main ·Pomeroy, OH • 740-992-5432

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Annie's Mailbox
A6
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A6
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83-4
Comics
Bs
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
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B Section
Sports
A6
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© 2007 Ohlo Volloy l'ubllshinc Co.

RACINE - The most
recent meeting of the
Southern Local School Board
resulted in approving person·
nel and accepting a donation
of used computers from the
Meigs Local and Teays
Valley School Districts.
The board accepted the
resignation of Richard
Stephens. vocational agriculture teacher at Southern
High School, effective Jan .
12 with 10 extended days.
Brent Bisse ll was approved
as a long term substitute
teacher to replace Stephens.
Katie Sayre was approved
(if needed, pending the .
number of players on the
2007 squad) as the junior
varsity softball coach at
Southern High School. .
The followin g substitute
certified staff list was
approved: Ebenezer Aluma,
Brent
Bi sse ll, Jessica
Marcum . Ross Righter.
Edward Safranek, David
Schleter, Maghan Lunsford,
Kristen Chevalier.
Carlie Lemaster was
approved as a s ubstitut~

archery instructor assisting
the team, said team members are diverse. coming in
RUTLAND - The first
every shape, size, backarchery team from the
ground and home life
Meigs Local School District
though each has archery as
is taking aim at its first offia common denominator.
cial tournament which hap"It (archery) also teachers
pens to be the first Arnold
the kids self discipline and
(Schwarzenegger) Archery
self control," Walker said.
Competition held on March
Team . members are also
Please see Southern. A5
2 at Veteran&gt; Memorial,
required to maintain ~ood
North Hall, in Columbus.
grades and good behav1or.
Meigs Local has been
Instructing the archery
participating in the National
team in the finer points of
Archery in the Schools
competition is Jeff Jones
Program (N ASP) for around
who makes his living as a
three years by Introducing
nurse at St. Joseph's
fourth graders at Meigs
Hospital in Parkersburg,
Intermediate School to
W.Va. but is also a competiarchery as part of their
tive archer with 16 years
physical education curricuexperience. Jones has two
lum. Now those students
sons in the Meigs Local
who began with the proSchool District who are also
gram have returned from
competitive archers and he
Meigs Middle School to
hopes the archery team
Bv JoHN McCARTHY
A.SSOCIA.TED PRESS WRITE;.R
participate on the archery
eventually moves to the
team which totals 40 stuhigh school level.
dents in fourth through
COLUMBUS - Ohio's
For now, Jones is enjoyeighth grades.
ing hi s stint as coach. say- . biggest natural gas provider
The Ohio Department of
ing, ·•[ really like to see the said Thursday the ~:ost of
Natural Resources Division
kids enjoying archery a&gt; replacing potentially faulty
much as I do."
of Wildlife is also sponsorhookups could be $200 miling the state tournament in
Jones went on to explain lion and that it wou ld ask
which 450 students from all
he hoped his years as a state regu lators for permisover Ohio will compete.
competitive archer and sion to recover the cosl
Dan Thomas, who is
.
.
knowledge of the sport from cust o mer~ .
Ph~ s ical
Education for . The Meigs Local School D1strlct has had the National . could help the kids be a
Columbia Gas of Ohio
Progress grants coordinator Archery 1n the Schools Program (NASP) as part of. 1ts better shot as well as give said up to ~00.000 of its 1.4
at Meig s Intermediate physical education cumculum at Meigs Intermediate them insight ihto the pre'- million customers could
sures of competitions and have the hookups. known as
School, helped begin the School for three years.
NASP when he was a physhow to handle it.
risers. that could he prone to
ical education teacher at team performs, possibly the ing archers from all walks
Thomas said the district's failure and develop leaks.
national tournament in of life, even those with dis- arc hery program is more or
the school.
The hookups were installed
abilities to participate.
Thomas. who is also help- Louisville in the spring.
less self-funded and relies by contractors on customers'
"In archery it doesn't mat- on student fundraisers and
"The point of going to the
ing coach the Meigs
property and connect a buildArchery Team, said the 40 tournament is to win but I ter how fast you can run or donations from local busi- ing's gas meter to the compa·
kids earned their spots by think the kids will also have how hard you can hit the nesses.
ny-owned pipes that deliver
a positive experience and ball because everyone is on
Next up for the team the gas. The risers are owned
demonstratin~ consistency
in their shootmg. The team get a chance to interact with a level playing field," besides receiving their by the customers
now practices three days a kids from all over the state Thomas added. " It is a moti- official T-shirts designed
If
regu lators
allow
vating tool that kids carry bv Jan Haddox . an teacher
week after school and will of Ohio." Thomas said.
Columbia
to
recover
the
cost,
Thomas said arche'rv is a over into the classroom."
ai Meigs Intermediate it would add from 51 ~:ents to
continue this schedule up
Karen Walker. a fourth School. is practice. pracuntil the state tournament great equalizer in terins of
ve
sports,
allowtca(·her and level one tice. pra~:tice .
Please see Columbia, AS
competiti
grade
and depending on how the
BY BETH SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

• Holzer Home Health
announces employee of
month. See Page AS
• SUV plans recogn~ion
of last Civil War soldier.
See Page A6

stripe and recondition
berms along 9.51 miles of
roadway.
• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of
$43.001.81.
• Approved a transfer
from county coun into the
sheriff's depanment equipment budget of $3,030.50.
• Approved a $3.000
appropriation for the sheriff's department "web
check" fund .
• Approved a contract for
elevator maintenance at the
Department of Job and
Family Services, with
Dover Elevator, at a cost of
$4.379 34

Southern
approves
personnel,
accepts
computers

lET US HElP PlAN YOUR SUPER BOWl PARTIES

Alaskian noundar

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Commissioners: Many opti~ns for developing health care site

SPORts

636 EAST MAIN STREET
PoMEROY, OHIO 45769
74().992-6121

l!l\il,rr 1 .·o~t'''''

Columbia
says cost to
fix potential
leaks could be
$200 million

•

�Page.A2

FAI1'H. VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 2, 2007

But God. who is rich in
mercy, out of the great love
with which he loved us. even
when we were dead through
our trespasses. made us alive
together with Christ (by
grace you have been saved),
and raised us up with him,
and made us sit with him in
the heavenly places in Christ
Jesus. that in the coming
ages he might show the
immcasumble riches of his
grace in kindness toward us
in Christ Jesus. (Ephesians
2.4-7. RSV)
To string together three
ancient aphorisms. "Wealth
Iightens not the heart and
care of man, for a great fortune is a great slavery.
Riches are gotten with pain ,
kept wi th care, and lost
with grief."
Too true . perhaps, but
how many would pass by
the opportunity to be rich''
In the humorous, albeit
so mewhat questionable,
judgment of Clinton Jones,
"I never been in no situation
where havin' money made it
any worse."
To the injunction of the
Apostle St. Paul that "the
love of money is the root of
an evil." many of us might
quickly respond, "Well , yes.
but money itse lf is not evil
and I'm -not forbidden to
like it!" In an unguarded,
Icss-t ha n-sa nct i mon iou s
moment of truth most of us
would probably admit that
luxurious wealth is an
attractive dream, if not reality, and that we would prefer living in that state seven
times more than that of
material poverty.
However, no matter how
much we may desire atlluence with all of its creature
comforts, and no matter how
much material wealth may
elude some of us, there is
another and far more important prosperity of which the
Christian is already in possession. Each and every sinner saved by grace through
fidth in Christ owns an eternal fortune that never fades
nor fails. This is the truth
taught in Holy Scripture that is, it is present reality.
First, we are rich in
redemption. When our first
parents, Adam and Eve,
rebelled in the Garden the
whole of humanity (and all of
creation) fell into darkness,
sin and death. From that
moment on nien and women
were born and lived in spiritual bankruptcy. But out of
the love of God. our Lord
Jesus Christ conquered sin
and death by His own death
and resurrection, thus opt!ning the way for our "redemp-

(

(

Rev.
Jonathan

Noble
PASTOR.

TRINITY CHURCH

tion through his blood ...
according to the riches of his
grace." (See Ephesians I. 7)
We are also rich in
instruction . God has not left
us blind and ignorant. He
has spoken and continues to
speak to us in and through
ffis Holy Word, by which
the Spirit of the Lord guides
and directs us and makes us
"rich in all wisdom." (See
Colossians 3. 16) It is tragic
so many of us li ve spiritually poverty-stricke n lives
si mpl y because we fail to
open the treasure of Holy
Scripture, an invaluable part
of our inheritance as children of God.
Too, we are (or certainly
should be as Christians) rich
in contentment. Our world.
and especially perhaps our
country, is filled with di scontent. People are dissatisfied
with their homes and families, with their jobs and communities, with their churches
and friends and cars ... and
on and on we can go, straight
down the list. But ge nuine
and end'uri ng contentment is
found in Christ, "for he satisfies the long soul." (Psahn
107.9a, ESV)
Finally, we are rich as
heirs precisely hecause we
are children , by grace
through faith . As we are
taught in the Epistle to the
Romans, "if children, then
heirs - heirs of God and
fellow heirs with Christ...''
(Romans 8.17, ESY) And
who can even begin to fathom what this means? The
love, joy, peace, conlidence
and assurance we now have
is only an indication of what
lies in store for us in the
everlasting presence of our
glorious God!
Lord M ancroft may very
well have been ri~ht when
he said, "Money, tf it does
not bring you happiness,
will at least help you to be
miserable in comfort." But,
then, why should we merely
be content with comfortable
misery when we might as
weft be rich in Christ in the
fullness of all that that
means for us, both now and
forevermore? So, do you
really want to be rich? Then
by all means, be rich in
Christ Jesus, our Lord and
only Saviour!

(

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But just because we have
Such revenge, unlike the
fun my sons were having, the opportunity to work out a
will do as much harm to the little revenge in our words or
avenger as to the one on actions, doesn't mean we
whom he seeks to wreak his need to fall victim to our own
Pastor
vengeance. David, on the bitterness and hand off to our
Thorn
lam for a long time, finds that "adversary" our capacity to
Mollohan the enemy has closed in on be happy. Instead, "do not
him. But, when it turns out repay anyone evil for evil. Be
that the older man doesn't careful to do what is right inJII
realize that David was in the the eyes of everybody. If it is
same cave that he had chosen possible, as far as it depends
one, was apt to destroy him- to uh ... urn, take care of a on you, live al peace with
self in his reckless drive to personal need (see I Samuel everyone. Do not take
murder David. And why 24:3), David's supporters, revenge, my friends, but
was this? It was the result of
hiding with him in the back ·· leave room for God's wrath,
an inward lashing out at of
the cave. attempt to pro- for it is written: ' It is mine to
God, as well as a kind of voke him to get his revenge avenge; I will repay,' says the
madness that besets us when upon Saul. The "natural" and LORD. On the contrary; 'If
we will not humble ouryour enemy is hungry, feed
selves and submit to the "normal" thing to do would him; if he is thirsty, give him
have
been
to
do
just
as
his
lordship of Christ. His beleaurged. something to drink. In doing
guered vision, when looking companions
David's way, could only see Nevertheless, vengeance was this, you will heap burning
the young man's successes not the master of David's coals on his head.' Do not be
through eyes of rationaliza- heart or his head. The grace overcome by evil, but overtion and victimization. of God was. "The LORD for- come evil with good"'
Consequently, each of bid that I should do such a (Romans 13: 17-2 1 NIV).
I Samuel, chapter 24
David's victories was inter- thing to my master, the
Lord's
anointed,
or
lift
my
records
David's incredible
preted through the prism of
opportunity
hand
against
him;
for
he
is
to get even and
Saul's jealous resentment,
throwing fuel on the nasty the anointed of the LORD. get out from under Saul's
suspicion that David was out With the se words David persecution of him. Yet, he
to get him. So ... with each of rebuked his men and did not chose a hi~her, more heavDavid's imaginary conspira- allow them to attack Saul" (I enly-princtpled path that,
althou~h much harder in the
cies, Saul's bitterness grew Samuel 24:6-7a NIY).
Revenge
is
a
ghastly,
douliving 111 the short term, kept
as did his dour-minded plots
ble-edged
sword.
Of
course,
his
conscience clean before
to dispose of him.
my
children
were
simply
Be wary of revenge. It
God.
You might as well know
that an innocent man makes playing a game, but if you promise s satisfaction, but
a handy target. In inno- take out the jovial and fun- only leaves an empty ache
cence, his guard is generally loving nature of what tlley in us no matter how ri~ht ­
down, making him very vul- were doing, it would not eous it may see m. Bestdes
nerable. And the presump- have been long before their ... with the inlinite beauty of
tion that "all is well" per- competitive spirits would the Lord before us to dismits him to walk a long way have led them into hurting cover and celebrate, who
out on the thin ice of human each others ' feelings. In a has so much spare time that
relationships riddled with similar way, our pride and he or she can squander it by
envy, unaware that his hun often move us to quick- plotting out strategies to
world
might
collapse ly formulate strategies for make someone else pay?
beneath him at any moment. retaliation against those who Certainly not you .. . you
And when it does, such an hurt us ... but always to our have better things to do.
(Thom Mollohan and his
episode can leave him feel- own detriment. As long as
ing flabbergasted, exasper- we permit ourselves to be family have ministered in
ated, outraged, hurt, humili- ruled by the compulsion to southern Ohio the past 11
ated and resentful. Before "get even,"we permit some- years. He is the pastor of
Community
he knows it, unless great one to have a power over us. Pathway
care has been taken to avoid We've given to our "adver- Church, which meets on
this situation, he soon finds saries" the keys to our own Sunday mornings at the
himself overflowing with happiness and actually Ariel Theatre. He may be
angry thoughts towards the increased the potential for reg.ched for comments or
person(s) who hurt him and their damage against us, hav- questions by e-mail at pascan fall very easily into a ing given our attackers, as it torthom@pathwayga/lipowere, the keys to our hearts. lis.com).
rnindset of retaliation.

Parents of convicted arsonist visit burned church in Panola
PANOLA, AJa. (AP) The parents of a former
B irmi n~ham- Southern
Colle~e student who pleaded gutlty in a series of rural
church arsons visited with
the congregation of one
burned church, asking for
forgiveness and expressing
remorse.
"My son wants you to
know how sorry he is,"
Mike Cloyd told members
of Galilee Baptist Church

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on Jan. 28.
Mike and Kim Cloyd of
Pelham are the parents of
Matthew Cloyd, one of three
former colle~e students who
pleaded gutlty to federal
charges in the church arsons.
The couple spoke with the
congregation, which is
meeting in a trailer as its
new church building is
being constructed.
The Rev. Bob Little said
he prays for solace for his

r

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congregation, the convicted
arsonists and their families.
"We thank God for the
opportunity to bring about
some healing," Little said.
"We need to embrace each
other in times of trial."
The Cloyds said the visit
to Galilee Baptist, where the
congregation
dedicated
songs and hugged them during two hours of worship, is
part of a pilgrimage to see
the rural churches their son

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admitted to burning in
February 2006.
Matthew Cloyd, 21 ,
Benjamin Moseley, 20, and
Russell DeBusk, 20, await
sentencing in federal court
and also ·face state charges
in the arson case.
Five
churches were
burned in Bibb County on
Feb. 3; the others were
burned four days later in
Oree~e. Pickens and Sumter
counues.

1

1

Fellowship
Apostolfc
Churth of .km\ t:h~ ApoAolk
Vanl...andt llrld Ward Rd , PNOI Janw ~
Mtller, Sunda y 'khool

Ill 30 lim .

ht' nUliJ I 30 p.m
Rher \'aUt}"
RI\"CI Vallt) Apt,..,l\lh.. Wor~ hip Cente r.

H13 S Jrd

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

a .m Tuc~ 6 . 1ll pr.t}er , W.;d 7 pm B1ble
Srudy

Emmanuf'l Apuslolic Tabfrnaclt IDC.
Loop Rd off Ne\1. \.mtil Rd Rut!anJ
&amp; 7 \II p m

Assembly of God
Uhtrt) Aut-n1bl} or Gud

P.O . Bm 467. DuJdmg
W Va .. Pa~ror ·

N~tl

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Ma'&gt;lln.
Sunda~

Sen~ecs · IO:fKI am and 7 p m

r.aevllk Fmw lll H•ptl§l Chun:h
Pntur M•~e Hannon . Sunda) s~·hool
930to IO: ~Oam , Wor..htp -.ero• tcc J0 ·1U

10 II Oil am Wed pre&lt;..:hwg 6 f'!"ll
Cllrpt nlt r Bap1isl Church
Sunday

Sch1\ol

• 4 lO,tm . Pruch tng

Sen.icc Ill .\Oam . E\e TUnll ~nu:e
7:00pm, Wednt!!tda ) B1ble Srud:o 7.00 pm .
lntenm Prr:aclk•r - Flo~d ltm s
Chtshlrt B~pUst C hurch
P..astor: Stt\t Ltnk . Sund"'y School· 9.30
am. Mornitlg WoniHp
It) -'0
am.
WedneMLt.~ Bible SIUd~ 6.) 0pm. chmr
pract1ce 1.JO: youth and Hit"lh: HudJi..:,
ll .\0 p rn Thur) I pm book •li.ld}

HOJW Blilplisl \hurrh rSoulhtrnl
~711

Gran! St . MtdJicj"ll.lft . SunJ,,y "'- h,onl

. IJ )0 u.m., \Nnr~h1p - II 01 m and 6 p.m,

WeOn!!sda)" ~r. 1 cc . 7 filii 1-'a.~r or Gat y
Elhs
Ruthtnd Flnt Baptlst ('hufl· h
Sunday School · 9 .\fJ am .. Wor~ h1p
1!1 45 a.m
Pomeroy nnt Baptl~t
P-.i.Stor Jon l:frockert. Ea:.r Mam St ..
Sund11y Sl"h 9.111 an\. Wur-;h1p 11!:.'0 am

First Southern Baprist
41KI1 Pomeroy l'tke . P11 ~ 1 or E Lamar
O ' Brya m, SLinJay Sdlflul - 9.30 a.m ..
WoP.;htp - 8: 1.5 am . '145 am &amp; 7·00 p.m .
WeJnc ~ Ja) Scrm· e~ - I W p m
First R11ptls1 C'hun·h
Bil ly Zuspan tllh tmd P.tlmcr St .
MtJUiepurt . Sumldy 'ichwl - 'I I 'i ,, m
Wor5ht p . J(J · I.'i am. 1 (l(l p m .
Wedncsduy St rvt..:e - 1.00 p m
Pu ~ tor

Rachw t'lnl Baptbt
Pa~tor . R) an Eaton ,
pa~101 . Sundoy
School · 9· 30 a rn.. Wor~ h 1p · 1n 411 a 111 •
7.00 p.m., Wedllc M.Ia) Se r •u:e~- 700
p.m.
SUvrr N.un Daptit l
Pastor: Jotm Swanson , Sundoy School IOa.m . Worsh1p . I I ii m , I 00 p m
.Wed nesda) Set~ll.'e~ -1 UO p m

There is much to be thankful for every
single day. Indeed, each day ts it~lf
~omt:thtng for v.hich we ~h ould be
thankful. But , how do '~c greet the day .1
Are tht: lirst wun.h. out of our mouths
each morning a complaint, such as ··oh
lord. another day. I really ha te to get
up:· 11ow much better it would be to
stan the day with a pmyer of
thanksgtvmg, such as. "Thank yOu God
for giving rne thi::. day1 I offer up all
of my prayers, works, joy!i and
suUcrings to you. Help me to meet the

MI. l lnlnn Baptl.oil
Pas1or lknms Wea... er Surll.la~ s~hl&gt;Ol 9 :45 am .. E\ emng . 6:30 pIll .
Wednesday Serm't ~- 6 ~Op . m
Btlhlt hem Raplbt C hurch

Greu1 Bend . Route 124. lhcme. OH .
PhtOf Ed t.:artl'r Sundll) Schuul · 4 10
a m , Sundlt} Wm ~ h1p - 10 JO J m .
Wedncsd&lt;ly B1ble Study 7·011 p m
Old Bethel t'fft WUI Baptist Church
28601 St Rt. 7. Middkpml. Su ndu y
SenK(' . Ill an\. tdlll p m , TLH! ~dii }'
Strv 1~c\

.b·oo

Forfst Run lh1ptlst·

Pom~ro)

Rr1 Jos.'ph Wood s. Sunday S.::hool · II!

u m.. Wur~h•r - II 30 u.m

Wann Friend(\'

209 Third
Racine, OH

740-949-2210
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

challenges ot th1s day " There 1s ul"'ays
something tn he thank fu l fm, tmd the

Hills Self Storage

B1ble tells us that v,.c arc what we
prnfess with our mo~th s Even it we arc
expecting our day to be filled with
n01hing hu11nab and trihu!mion". we
should th ank the Lord for the
opportunity to tx· challenged . A nd . tf wr
are really struggli ng \u find something
to he thankfu l for. .wr can play thr
"Glad Dame". That' s the game pl;tycd
hy Pollyanna when thmgs were gomg
poorly. wherein she \\ould find
something to he glad about. Surely.
there ts always somethi ng to he ghtd
ahout, eve n tf 1\ tsn ' t readi ly apparen1.

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

Atmosphefl'

Mt. Moriah Kaptio;t
Fnurth &amp; f\.bin Sl , M•Jdkpnn, Pa ~10r.
Rev Gtlbcrt Croig, Jr., S und~y Schot\1
Q 3iltt m . Wo r~ h ip · 10 ~'i am

Mif[ie)s 'l(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Mtols &amp; DaUy SJ1&lt;ci41!
Open 7 days a week
740-992-7713

Antlquit)' Baptist
S1.1nday School - 9 \II a m , Wur~h • r ·
10:45 a.m, Sundlt)' Ewniii H- 6.00 p.m

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

Church of Christ
Westslrk t.:hurth of l hrlsl
11~~6 l "h&amp;lilrcn, II. orne N.d l'olllll.' rtl\ . 011
Cnntalt 7 -1-1 1--J....ll · l !'16 Sunda~ rnvmm~
10:00 , Sun m.1rn! nf Ii i til e ~ lUi.!) .
fv lln11.1ng ~t•hh&amp;p . ~un c•·"' t\00 pm
Wl'd h1bk l! Ui.l ) 7 p111

I Father in heaven."

Mmhler: l arr) fl.rm~on . Wnr,hrr · 'J .J!I
am Sunda) ~khuol - If! \()am . B1ble
SIU'h I p m

Pontrmy l'lmrch or Chrl.•t
~~ . Su mi J~ s~hool - Y.JO
am Wor .. hrp 10 \U a.m . 6 p.m .
Wednc"l.') \ er\ 1.;,•, 7 p 111
~

Ponwroy WHhidt ( "hun·h of l hrlst
H1!h l"hr lt lren\ Hu1111' H:d . ~unJa)
Sehou l · II a 111 Wur~ h r p I!Ja n• f1 p 111 .
Wed n~'&gt;41 J)' SCf\' 1Ct~ • I p nt
Middleport t' hu rch of l'hrist

5 ih Jnd M,ttn . Pa &lt;i ltH

AI II:Hh• •n
Shawn Sa}ft"". Tc&lt;o'll
Dtrecr"r O.lll l!o::r V,,ughan Sund,t) s~ho.•!
- 'I 'Ill a 111 . Wur\!up· tj l .'i . IIJ..\(1 n 111 7
rIll . Wt•t llll'.,d&lt;l} \c r\' IC&lt;o'~ 7 p m
Ch il tlr~n• D ~r e..: h• r .

K~mJ Chun·h uf l'hri!il
Wt Jhh tp &lt;J ~~~ am ., Sunda; So.·hunl
10· ~U am . l'a, lnr · Jctt~ y Wa llau~ ht an.l
Jrd SuJr,!ay
Ht'M r\~alkJW
Bru~c

Pa •ll•r

Nldgr l'hun-h orChri.r;l
Terr). 'i umlay s~· huu l .1).30
IU 'U .1m . O lil pm.

Karl Kobler III

KEHLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

The Appliance man
740.985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

190 N. Second St.

Lml!(

Tt rm Cart'

Kart Kebler.l lt. CPA. R eg1 ~tcred
Repre sc nlati~e of H.D Vesrlnves rmem
Serv1ces"" Sf!c un11es uttered through H.D. Vest
ln ~rs tment Sen.•icesm. Meml'ler SIPC Ad m OI)
!iefVI("es offered thnough H.D v~ ~~ AdVISOry
Servrl'ts!o.". Non-battk suh.~1d1~nc~ ot Wells
Farx(l &amp;. Comp &lt;~ny. 6).\J Nronh State HWY 161
41h Aom. lmng TX 7SU.l8 (iJ12) 870-600)

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 I'M&gt;.
(740) 992-3279
'-!!Y'
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Trinlly Churtb
Second &amp; L}nn . Pomeroy . P;v.c.or: Rc\

GrlilCe 1-:pi.vopal Church
\~0 E Ma.m S1 , Pomrru~ . Sunday School
and Holy Eu~hansr 11 ·00 a.m. Re\
Edii.af(ll'aynt'

31 0 ~7

~n,IUe Hollnftli Ch•n:h
State Route J25.lang~' II~. Pastor

HenJamtn Crawford . Sundily ...::hool - IJ }!]
a.m. SL&amp;ndaJ wor'&gt;htp - 10.30 .t.m. &amp; 7
p m.• Wedne~ay pra}"~ r ~n· tce - I p.m.

ILarfl,,n \d le Rd O&lt;t 1-1 3).
Sunda y s ~ hool 9 · '0 um Wor~h1p · 10.\0 .tm. 7.00
rIll Wedn~~- ~~ St'f"\ ICC~ - 7 p 111
Pu mcn o~.

p~\ ltLT

H.o~tl Wat ~Ofl.

Tuppers P1aln C~ hu l'fh of Christ
ln ~ln.Jmcnlal Wur&gt;h1p Sen ICC · lJ ,, m
Cmnmuntoo · 10 o1.m ., Strnday School lU 1 .~ u.m .. \"tUIIh· .'i .JO pm Su nda y. Bibl e
Stutl~ \\ edn~ .... !~) 1 pm

Brad bur~ Churt'h ofC..:hrist
M.nl 'i ler T•)lll Nun yll n. '4'i'i~ Bradhury
Ruad , M1Jdleport . Sund11y Scht11•l - 9 ) 0

a.m.
Wor~h1p

· 10· 30 a m

RuUrmd Churt'h of C hrl'i~
Con,fiiUUittll · HI JO am . Ouh J WeH)
Min1 ~1cr

Uradford Chur.:h oft'hrlsl
Cor ner of St. Rt 12-t &amp; Bradiliuy Rd ,
Mm r11er Duug S h~mhl m. Youth Mtm ~ ter
Bill Amhe'l! l'f· Su nday S.:hnol - 9 3011 m.
'Wor ~h1p . 11 111:1 ~ m
10
am . 7 ·00
p.t\L.Wcdne .day S&lt;o'r' 1\' C.~ · 7 OIJ p m

'fl

H kk or~·

Hills L" hun:h uf Chris t
Tupper ~ P lam ~ P.tslor M1ke Moore . Bible
eta~·. ll a 111 Sunday. ~or~hrp IU 11m
Sutll l:l', worship O:JO pm Sunda y: B1 blc
da~~ 7 pm Wed .

Reeds,·it~ Chun·h of C hrist

r ..-.w r

Pllll lll Sturm. Sundu) Sd1uol. ') .10
i1 m. \\.'u1,h1p Set\'I(T 10 Jtl 11m . Hihl~
Swdy. Wednesday. fl ·Jo p m

llu:ter Chu rth ol. Ch rist
Suntiay &gt;eht)()I IJ. \0 a.m , Sundav worsh1p
- HI .\Ou m
The ChuKh of C hrl!i l or Pomeroy
ltHer,~l't i tl n 7 and 124 W. Evu n geh~t :
lk nnis Sargem. Sunday H1ble Study l) JO a.m Wursl1ip 10 J() ,, 111 aud {• :UI
p.m , Wc dn e~d a) B1 hle Smdy - 7 p m.

Christian Union
Uurtrord Church or Christ In
Chrlslian Union
H:1rtlonl. \\/ V;1 . J&gt;,,.., lttr Dav 1d Greer,
Sll ndu_l Slhou l · '}· lo .1. 111 .. Worsh1 11 ·
IIJ ·JII n m . 7·110 r m . Wcdne'itla;.
Scnu.e\ · 7 CKll' ·i\1 .

Church of God
I\h . Morl11h Ch urch of(; od
Mile Hil t Rd . l{a,' ml! . Pa•aor: Jume s
SaU&lt;o'rl"irl d. Su nda ~· Sthuol · ~ - ~'i am
E•enin)! - 6 p m. ~hl n c~J, ,~ Scn· u,:c~ - 7
pm
Rolland Chut"t:h or God

ROS&lt;t- ol Sharon Hollntu l'h11 rch
l.eadmg Cr&lt;o'd, Rt l.. Rllllan~ . Pastor· Rev
l~"' ey - Ktng. Sunda) &gt;il hnol · 9 30 ~ m..
Suntlay \lor,lup -7 pm , WedneMia)
prayer meeting · I p.m
1-'inr lirolt Blhle llo11MM Church
I • ~ nulc otT Rt. .\25, P;~st or: Rr\'. O'Dell
Manle y. Sunday Sehoul
9.30 a.m.,
Wnn.h tp - lfi"JU u m . 7 30 p.m..
W~dnesda~ Scf\ ll"C - 7 ~0 p.rn

Wnlfyan Bible Holiness (."hun:h
Pa~tor · Rtd.
Bourne. Sunday School - 10 a.m Worshtp
- IOA5 pm. Sunda~ Eve 700 p.m .•
Wcdlit:'l.illy Sef\ 1~e- 1 30 p.m
H) !~til Rua Communlly Chun:h
Pastor R_rv Larry L&lt;"mle}. SundJ.IY School
. 9·30 am. Worshtp • 10:45 a.m, 1 p.m ,
Thursdu) Bible Study ,md Youth · 7 p.m.
Laurel ClifT Free Melhodlil Ch un-h
Pastor Glenn R o ~e. Sunduy S~· h oot ·
IJ lCI am . Wonh 1p - 10 JU a m ~nd h
p.m .W~nesday Se rvi~e. 1:00 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The C hurcb of Jesus
Christ or Laller· Dwy Saints
St Rt \(,0 , ~46·6241 nr 446-1 486,
S und ~) Sc hool 10·20- 11 am., Rel1ef
Sol'lci~ I Pri C!i th nod
I I 05 · 12:00 noon .
Siicrarpe nr Serv ice ll- 10· 15 a.m.
Homl!mulo ng ml!r.!Ung. !st Thurs .· I p.m

Lutheran
Sl. John Lutheran Church

Pme Grove. Worshtp - 9 00 a.m.. Sunday
S~ hUtl! - 10 lltl &lt;~ m Pnstor.

Our Sa\·iour Luthrnn Churth
W(llnut and B enr~ St~ .. R a~cnsw ood.
W\'a , Pastor Dav1d Russell , ~u n d&lt;~y
S"ch••ol - IU.OO a.m .. Wo~htp- II 8 m

S1. Paul l.uthenm Chun:h
Comer S~camore &amp; Seetmd St .. Pomemy.
Sun S•hool · 9 45 am ., Wors hi p · II a m

United Methodist
Grahwm l lnitffi Methodist
~kthodisl

New Haven, R1 ~ h ar d Nea~e . Pastor .
S und &lt;~y worship 9.30 a.m. ltJC~ . 6:30
praye r and B1 b l ~ StuJy.

!\11. Olive UniWd Methodist
OIT 12-t bc htnd Witkewtl le. Pa ~l o r : Re~·
Ralph Spt re~. Sund.ty Sc!1 ool - Q ]0 , m
W(lrsl11 p - IO ·JO a.m., I p.m . Thur!iday
Scmt:cs · 7 p m
Meigs Cuoperallvt Purlsh
Northo.::1~ 1 Clu ster, Alfrecl , Pa-;ror Jim
Corhiu . Sundaf S~o' h twl - g J O a.m
Ww-s!1t p . II am , h _l(l pm
Chester
Pastur Jim Cor biu , Worshi p · 9 a.m..
Slmrl ay Schon! - 10 a Ill . . Thu ~da)
Serv tl·e ~ . 1 p m.

Joppa
P•t~ttol
Sm1dll~

DenLil Null , Wor~ htp
s~· h ool - IO.JO a.m.

-

9 .\ 0 a ru .

jftsber jfunrrnl J!ilomr
UIU

l4H8Z-5141
t-800-45 t-9806

Middleport. OH

740.992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues 1-shirts and more
(740) 992-6451

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

•

i@
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOlliE
17.1 Laynt Strttt • PO Box 270

New H•,·en. W\" l5l65

J»ma H.Andenoo. LittiL~ t'~JMr.-1 Dimtor
Hfldi S. Andtrsoo. hrttllough l t'untf"lt Planning

Amuina G~ Community l'hurt'h
Pasror. Wa~oe Dunlap . Stat~ Rt tLKi .
Tupp:r.. l'la.Jns . Sun \\.or!r.h 1p IIJ am&amp;.
6 30 pnr .. Wed B1ble Smd) 1 1U p m

1111111 ............... . . .

741-112-5U4

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

fl"ffdom liospd \1biloa
un Co Rd J l PJ., tu r Rn
R "~ er V. 1llfurd . \un&lt;lla} \,h,JO I 'I 'h
"111 \lror,h1p- 7 p.m
~ nnh

H&lt;tld

"hit• •, Cbatpri \\nlt}tUJ
C•Jull Ill~ Ru.1d P&lt;t ~ l o r Rt'l Ph rl l1p
'J ~~~ d m.
R1denour. "i undOI) \c huol
\\.ur•h1p Il l ~ ~ ~ 111 \\, ~ JII&lt;" ..Ua&gt; ~f\ L~l'
.1 pm
fair' ito~ Hibh: ( 'huKh
Let.u t. W \ " Rl I Pit ~ \ll r Bnan ~~d ~
Sund&lt;t) ~~ h oul 'I \ir J m . \\. v r ~ h 1 1 1 1 tJ(J
p Ill . V.~Jnc\r.la ~ liiblc ~iud ~
~· d tow~hip

!-'with
i'a ~t~&lt;l

R c~

7 m rIll

CrtWtd.r for Chris!

I r&lt;~nllm

Dtc l~n '. S~n k~

p rn

l· n dJ ~ . ,

C.:•hwr) BibW Chu.nh

P1lo&gt; C o RJ Pa,ttJr Re1
Rlilt.k.,.Otxl . ll1.111d!l ~ Sehoul lJ "lU ~ m
Wnr .h tp lf l ~~~ d 111
1 JU p m
WeJn&lt;.' \da\ S&lt;.'n I\&lt;.' . 7 30 p m
Slinrnlllr t :omr.IUnil) ( "hurch

Oasis Christian Fello~&lt;hhip
1 Non-deoommallonal fdt&lt;l\l~h l p l
Mt:ettng 111 the Metgt MtJdk S • h•~ · l
Caletl!n:l Pa.s!Of"" Chri~ St~ v.an
!0 &lt;Xl lint · Noon Sun&amp;~ l nh• ~TII ~I
Wnr!&gt;hlp . lh1ldren · ~ m1 m~ 1r~

Hu ll! IMiddltportJ
Pastor Rn.an Dunham . Sllnday School .
Q 30 ii m , Worsh1p - !I :00 a.II\

Minersville
Putt If· Bub Robmw:on. Sund&lt;ty Sl houl . Q
a.m Worship : 10 a.m

l'omm unity or l'hrilit
Ponland-Ractnr Rd .. Paotor . Jtm Pmft m.
Su nJa) School - IJ· 30 a.m , Wohhlp
IUJO am. Wcdncsda} Ser.t ~e~ - 7·1Kl

Pt:arl Chapel
Sch;)OI- 9 a.m . Worship - 10 a.ru

p.m

........,

Btttttl Won hlp Center
J9781 S.R I. Reed~•· ille. OH -'5 17~ . I•!
milt' north of Eastern Schooh on SR 1 A
Full Go11pel Chur~ h . Pa~ tur RDh Ba rbe r,
AHO.." Iillt Pibtll l K&lt;~r}n O.!V t\ ,,luth

Pa.tur Bnan Dunhiim , Worsh ip - 9 JO
a.m., Sunday Sclloot- IO.JS a .m

l'a~ lor

llu&lt;k Sprl""'
Pii~tor: Keith Radtlr. Sunda~ Schuot 9.15
~ m . Worship 10 a .m
Yuulh
Fctlo~· !ih tp , Sunday - 6 p m.

SuZie I ranCI ~ S1.1nda) 'ernce~

10.00 am v.or~h1p . tr .OU pm Ftuurl ) L1fc
Cla~se ' Wed . Home Cdl Groups 7·00
p m , Outer L1m11~ t"ell Group a1 the
church fl·.10 pm to it.}(J pm

PJ'''''
'L

W&lt;~~ nr

R

J ~~ell

Sundii&gt; \lor\hlp

til l fi m . V. edn l'-.da~ - to tJO p 111 81hk

Stud&gt;

Rejoid•i! Life ('burch,
\" ~nJ .-\1c. MJJJkpon . l' ii~\U r
M1h f urr m.m P.l,h&gt;f i;mtnw' l a... n:ml'
l-\1a·m:..n Wor~ hip· 1{1 IF• o~m
W&lt;o'l.lne ..U.~ ~ Ser. t~.~~ 'p m

~UO

Clifton Twhun16dc Church
Chllon. \\\"a . Su nda.~ s~h\Lnl IU a.m .
\l.or,hlp · 7 p m . Wedne~J&lt;~.~ ~n t cc ·..,
~eYt

\"icror~

Lenttr
Rn.tJ . Giilhpolt, OH
P;L\Inr Rd l St:llcn l!unJ .J ~ Serl. lCt""l · 10
a Ill &amp; 1 p m V. edne~da\ ., r m &amp;.
Y{lulh 7 p rn
Ufr

PI) Cito~e~ (red

Fu.ll GU!lpel Chui"Ch
of"l h' l.i\lng Sa, lor

Rulland

,bh Street Church
J9R A ~h St , ~hdJkpo n Pohlor Jeff Smnh
Sunday Sch(){) l - '1 JO a m . Mmn mg
Worsh1p - \0 .~ 0 ., m &amp; 7 00 pm .
Wrdnesday Serv1ce - 7{10 p.m., Youth

Pastor Rick Bourne, Sunday School 9:30a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m ., Thursday
Servaces - I p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: William K Mmhall, Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m .. Worship tJ: i5 a.m..
Bible Study- Monday 7:00 pm

~f\'lc~-

Snow,·llh:
Sunday School · tOa.m., Worship 9 am

lkthan)
Pasto r: John Gilmore , Sunday School 10
u m , Worshtp - 9 a.m., Wcdnesda)
Sef\1ces- 10 am

Ser1 1Lt:\ s~\UH)Ol )

2:00 p.m.

Salem Communil)" Chul'filr
B,td: of We~t Columbia . W Va om Lu:·• in~
Road . Pastor: Charl e ~ Rollsh tJO-It to75~! 8K. Sunday Schoo l 9:30am . Sunda)
crenrng ~en 1-:r 7"1 ~11 pm Rt hl)" Stud~
Wedncsda\ l&gt;Cn Ill: 7.00 pm
Hoh!i.on t.:hrisUan t"elio" ship Church
Hend1cl Wh1te , Sundil ) S~.·huol 10 am. Sunday Church ~e r'-' l ce 6 J(J pm
Wednc~a) 7 pm

Pii~lu r

Abundllnl Grace M.t'. I.
923 S Thnd St., M1..Wieport , Pa~lor Tcn: ~a
Davl \, S unda ~ 5e rvtce, 10 am .
Wedncr.da) r.en·1ce 7 p m .

Restoration Chrtsllan Fellowship
Ho oper Road. Athen~ . Pastor
Lonn1e Coats. Sund.iy Wor~hip 10 00 &lt;1111 .
WedneMtay 7 pm

936~

Carmei·Sullon
Carme l &amp; Ba!ihan Rds . R ~ ine , Oh 1o,
Pas ror John Gilmore , Sunday Schoo l ·
9·45 a.m . Wnrsh1p - II 00 a.m , Btble
SriJd~ Wed 1 30 p m

fwlh fwt Goopol Church
Long Bonum. Pastor: Steve Reed . Sunda)
Schoo l · 9 JO a.rn. Won h1p - 9 ..\0 a r'll
and 7 p.m .. We\lnesday - 7 p.m., Fnday fellnwlihtp ;cr; 1ce 1 p.m

MomlqSiar
Pa~tor John G1l more, Sunday School - it
am ., Worihip - 10 am.

HarrlsonviUt Community Cburch
Pastor· Theron Durham. Su nday - 9.'0
8.111 Mnd

Eul Lt:lart
Past or. Rill Marshal\ Su nd;~y Schoo l 9a .m., Worship - 10 a.m., 1st Sun d~ y
e~ery mnnth eve mn g ~e rvu·e 7 no p m ;
Wed1tesday - 7 p.m.
R.aelnr
Pastor Kt!rry WooJ, S u nda~ Sdu10\ · \0
a.m., Wor!ilup - II 8 m.Wedne$di!y
Serv1ces 6 pm. Thur B1ble StUd)' 7 pm
Coolville United Methodist Plilrlsh
Past or. Hden Khn c, Conh•1llc Church
Main &amp; Fifth Sr , S1.1n. School · 10 am ..
Worship - 9 a.m., Tues. Scrvkc ~- 1 p.m.

Belhrl Chun:h
Rd., 468C, Sunday S.:hoot IJ
a.m. Worship - 10 a m.. Wednesday
Services- 10 am
Hockingport Ch11rth
Gnmd Street, Sundlly Schoo l · 9 JO a Ul
Wonihtp- 10:30 a.m , Pastor Philhp Belt

7"00 p m

Agapt Life Center
··fu ll-Gospel Church". Pastors John &amp;
Patt y Wade . ((13 Second A\'e. Ma~on . 1H·
~11 . Sen1ce t1mc Sunda y liJ ·JiJ am .
Wednesday 7 pm

•

Wor&gt;hip - II a.m. Pastor: Ru:hard Nease

B«htellJnilcd

pm

('umt'rol

Town~hip

114........ .._ •PI FA till\ II

499 Richland 1\\'enue,Athens

f

Sunda~

Calvary Pilgrim C~•pe l
Hamson,·ille Road . Pastor· Charles
McKenzie . SLinda} Sc hool 9 30 a.m..
Wor\hlp · II .. m . I 0(1 p m . Wcdoestbry
St&gt;n il't' - 7 0\1 p.m

S)rKV!il Community Church
2480 ~ond St Syrao.:u:.c: . OH
Sun SchOlll Ill am Sund) ntght n "\4) pm
L nr.ler the duec.:uun uf Dan &amp; hllh
Hot)man
A. ~ew 8tglnnin1:
(t'ull Goipd ChuKhJ Ham .u n ~1l lc .
Pll!. torv Bob and Ka) Mar&lt;ihall.
S~nday Sef\ tee. ! p m

Fornt Run
Pas lor Bob Robmson . Sunda) School · Ill
am Won.h1p -lla m

Holiness
Community Chun:b
P&lt;~~tor·
Ste•r Tor~L Mam Street ,
RutlllJld, Sumlol) Wor~h 1p-IO 00 a.m ,
Sunda) Stn 1ce- 7 p.nt

Other Churches

Pa~ tor .

Episcopal

or ttw 'lla.rartnt

Pa\tor Reo llc:rbcn Gr.nc . S u O ~ St·honl
9 30 am . Worshrp II a.m . 6 p 1n
Wed Ill:~) kn ICh · I p m
Rutland Church oftlw ~aurtnr
Sun(la) s ~ hool l} 30 a In V. LH\h lp
10 30 am . 6 JO p m . V.cdnc'&gt;dil)
Set"~ ICC' · 7 pm

t:nwrprbt
Arland KmJ! , Sunday Sc hool ·
10:30 am .. Wor~ h1p 'J JO 11 m B1bk
Stlldy Wed 7·10
flatwoocb
Pas10r Ke11h Rader . Sunday School IU
a.m Worsh1p · I I a.m .

Soble \\ or~h1p HJ·2.5 a m ,
St:hnul Q 15 a m

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t llapm.Jn Sund..) School · Ill a m .
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lion Church of l'hr~t

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Sllndii) School 9 3fJ 11m . Worship ·
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Wednesday Scr v i~·c-; - 7 p 111.

Michelle Kennedy

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Matthew 5:8

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St Rt . 14) jus• il ff Rt. 7. ll.tswr Re'
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r

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, February 2, 2007

Rich in Christ - - -A Hunger For More- -Thinking about the .playful pranks that my children
like to pull on each other, I
can see how thing s can
quickly escalate, like little
familial arms' races . My
writing of this week's column is occasioned by my
sons' running through the
house, yelling and cackling
as someone 's playful splash
of cold water turned into
militant attempts to slide ice
cubes down someone else's
shirt. From that first small
smattering into someone's
face came such an escalation, each step a new and
more intense level of conflict until no ohe seemed
any longer to be capable of
stopping (in spite of pleas to
"hold it down: you'll wake
your sister!).
I clomped noisily through
the house, deliberately
attempting to add an ominous sound to each footstep
and hoping to assert some
restraint upon my sons as
their mother worked to get
them settled down enough
for bed. My wife turned to
me with a twinkle in her eye
and said, "Why don't you
write about ' revenge ' this
week 0 That's how they've
gotten so wound up: everybody feels like they' ve got
to get everybody else back!"
It seemed very interesting
that she had said that to me.
I had just been remembering exploring a cave in the
desert in the Middle East
about eight years earlier, a
cave that may have been
very similar to the one that
David, warrior of God, had
used for refuge from his
king. The heart of this king
named Saul, although supported by David in every
way, had tuQJed in resentful
jealously against this young
and lo~al subject.
Davtd had been · running
from Saul for months, partly
to protect his own life, but
also partly because he was
well aware of God's promise
of protection. Saul, a spiritual lemming if ever there was

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9:30 a.m..Worship - \0:.'0 a.m.. 6:30p.m .
Wednesd11y Se rvices - 7 p 111 , Pa.tt1r·
Al len Mrd~ap

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Mlddltpon Communi&amp;)' Churcb
575 Pearl St , Mtddlc[!Cirl . Pastor Sam
Andenon, Sunda) Schuol 10 a.m ,
Evening - 7 30 p.m . . Wedne~day Semce 7:30p.m
Faltb Vall~y Tabernacle Church
Harle~ Run Rofld , Putor: Rev . Emme ll
Raw~o n . Suruhry El·en mg I p m ..
Thur&lt;iday Semce- 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgema n S1., SyractJse. Su nda)
Schoo l - !0 am Evenmg - fl p.m.
Wedner.da y Serncc: - 7 p m.

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Off Rt 124. P&lt;t~ tu r E d~el Hart. SunJa'
School - ') JO i\111. \Vor~h1p · lO .JO a.m .
7:JO p.m.
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Sunda) Sc hool 9 JO &lt;J .m . \Yo r,hip ·
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Sunda) ,c hnol - II! i l m . Vlor~h1 p
II
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Syucwe Church of tht Nuarrnr
P:liitor M1ke Ad.kins, SunJ~ y &amp;:h\llll · 9 .\0
a .m, Worship - 10:30 a .m., 6 p m ,
Wednesday Services -I p.m.

Pomeroy ChWTb of tbe Nuantu
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Full Gos pel. Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Rober1a
Musser: Sunda~ School 9 10 am
;"orsllip 10:)0 am - 7 :00 pm, Wed.
Serv1ce 7.00 pm
Team Jenli Mlnlflries
Meetmg in the Mulberry Commumly
Cemer Gymnasmm . Pasmr Edd1e Baer.
Ser.-tce c \CI) Tuesda) tdU pm

Pentecostal
Penleroslal A~mbly
St Rt 12 4. Renne . Tomad11 Rd Sunda)
School • 10 a.m.• Evening · 7 p.m..
Wednesday Semcc~- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Hlilrrlsonvlllt Presbyterian Church
Pa~ror·

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Middleport PresbyJerian
a.m . wor•h1p ~c r~·u;:e I I am

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7pm
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�Page.A2

FAI1'H. VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 2, 2007

But God. who is rich in
mercy, out of the great love
with which he loved us. even
when we were dead through
our trespasses. made us alive
together with Christ (by
grace you have been saved),
and raised us up with him,
and made us sit with him in
the heavenly places in Christ
Jesus. that in the coming
ages he might show the
immcasumble riches of his
grace in kindness toward us
in Christ Jesus. (Ephesians
2.4-7. RSV)
To string together three
ancient aphorisms. "Wealth
Iightens not the heart and
care of man, for a great fortune is a great slavery.
Riches are gotten with pain ,
kept wi th care, and lost
with grief."
Too true . perhaps, but
how many would pass by
the opportunity to be rich''
In the humorous, albeit
so mewhat questionable,
judgment of Clinton Jones,
"I never been in no situation
where havin' money made it
any worse."
To the injunction of the
Apostle St. Paul that "the
love of money is the root of
an evil." many of us might
quickly respond, "Well , yes.
but money itse lf is not evil
and I'm -not forbidden to
like it!" In an unguarded,
Icss-t ha n-sa nct i mon iou s
moment of truth most of us
would probably admit that
luxurious wealth is an
attractive dream, if not reality, and that we would prefer living in that state seven
times more than that of
material poverty.
However, no matter how
much we may desire atlluence with all of its creature
comforts, and no matter how
much material wealth may
elude some of us, there is
another and far more important prosperity of which the
Christian is already in possession. Each and every sinner saved by grace through
fidth in Christ owns an eternal fortune that never fades
nor fails. This is the truth
taught in Holy Scripture that is, it is present reality.
First, we are rich in
redemption. When our first
parents, Adam and Eve,
rebelled in the Garden the
whole of humanity (and all of
creation) fell into darkness,
sin and death. From that
moment on nien and women
were born and lived in spiritual bankruptcy. But out of
the love of God. our Lord
Jesus Christ conquered sin
and death by His own death
and resurrection, thus opt!ning the way for our "redemp-

(

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Rev.
Jonathan

Noble
PASTOR.

TRINITY CHURCH

tion through his blood ...
according to the riches of his
grace." (See Ephesians I. 7)
We are also rich in
instruction . God has not left
us blind and ignorant. He
has spoken and continues to
speak to us in and through
ffis Holy Word, by which
the Spirit of the Lord guides
and directs us and makes us
"rich in all wisdom." (See
Colossians 3. 16) It is tragic
so many of us li ve spiritually poverty-stricke n lives
si mpl y because we fail to
open the treasure of Holy
Scripture, an invaluable part
of our inheritance as children of God.
Too, we are (or certainly
should be as Christians) rich
in contentment. Our world.
and especially perhaps our
country, is filled with di scontent. People are dissatisfied
with their homes and families, with their jobs and communities, with their churches
and friends and cars ... and
on and on we can go, straight
down the list. But ge nuine
and end'uri ng contentment is
found in Christ, "for he satisfies the long soul." (Psahn
107.9a, ESV)
Finally, we are rich as
heirs precisely hecause we
are children , by grace
through faith . As we are
taught in the Epistle to the
Romans, "if children, then
heirs - heirs of God and
fellow heirs with Christ...''
(Romans 8.17, ESY) And
who can even begin to fathom what this means? The
love, joy, peace, conlidence
and assurance we now have
is only an indication of what
lies in store for us in the
everlasting presence of our
glorious God!
Lord M ancroft may very
well have been ri~ht when
he said, "Money, tf it does
not bring you happiness,
will at least help you to be
miserable in comfort." But,
then, why should we merely
be content with comfortable
misery when we might as
weft be rich in Christ in the
fullness of all that that
means for us, both now and
forevermore? So, do you
really want to be rich? Then
by all means, be rich in
Christ Jesus, our Lord and
only Saviour!

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But just because we have
Such revenge, unlike the
fun my sons were having, the opportunity to work out a
will do as much harm to the little revenge in our words or
avenger as to the one on actions, doesn't mean we
whom he seeks to wreak his need to fall victim to our own
Pastor
vengeance. David, on the bitterness and hand off to our
Thorn
lam for a long time, finds that "adversary" our capacity to
Mollohan the enemy has closed in on be happy. Instead, "do not
him. But, when it turns out repay anyone evil for evil. Be
that the older man doesn't careful to do what is right inJII
realize that David was in the the eyes of everybody. If it is
same cave that he had chosen possible, as far as it depends
one, was apt to destroy him- to uh ... urn, take care of a on you, live al peace with
self in his reckless drive to personal need (see I Samuel everyone. Do not take
murder David. And why 24:3), David's supporters, revenge, my friends, but
was this? It was the result of
hiding with him in the back ·· leave room for God's wrath,
an inward lashing out at of
the cave. attempt to pro- for it is written: ' It is mine to
God, as well as a kind of voke him to get his revenge avenge; I will repay,' says the
madness that besets us when upon Saul. The "natural" and LORD. On the contrary; 'If
we will not humble ouryour enemy is hungry, feed
selves and submit to the "normal" thing to do would him; if he is thirsty, give him
have
been
to
do
just
as
his
lordship of Christ. His beleaurged. something to drink. In doing
guered vision, when looking companions
David's way, could only see Nevertheless, vengeance was this, you will heap burning
the young man's successes not the master of David's coals on his head.' Do not be
through eyes of rationaliza- heart or his head. The grace overcome by evil, but overtion and victimization. of God was. "The LORD for- come evil with good"'
Consequently, each of bid that I should do such a (Romans 13: 17-2 1 NIV).
I Samuel, chapter 24
David's victories was inter- thing to my master, the
Lord's
anointed,
or
lift
my
records
David's incredible
preted through the prism of
opportunity
hand
against
him;
for
he
is
to get even and
Saul's jealous resentment,
throwing fuel on the nasty the anointed of the LORD. get out from under Saul's
suspicion that David was out With the se words David persecution of him. Yet, he
to get him. So ... with each of rebuked his men and did not chose a hi~her, more heavDavid's imaginary conspira- allow them to attack Saul" (I enly-princtpled path that,
althou~h much harder in the
cies, Saul's bitterness grew Samuel 24:6-7a NIY).
Revenge
is
a
ghastly,
douliving 111 the short term, kept
as did his dour-minded plots
ble-edged
sword.
Of
course,
his
conscience clean before
to dispose of him.
my
children
were
simply
Be wary of revenge. It
God.
You might as well know
that an innocent man makes playing a game, but if you promise s satisfaction, but
a handy target. In inno- take out the jovial and fun- only leaves an empty ache
cence, his guard is generally loving nature of what tlley in us no matter how ri~ht ­
down, making him very vul- were doing, it would not eous it may see m. Bestdes
nerable. And the presump- have been long before their ... with the inlinite beauty of
tion that "all is well" per- competitive spirits would the Lord before us to dismits him to walk a long way have led them into hurting cover and celebrate, who
out on the thin ice of human each others ' feelings. In a has so much spare time that
relationships riddled with similar way, our pride and he or she can squander it by
envy, unaware that his hun often move us to quick- plotting out strategies to
world
might
collapse ly formulate strategies for make someone else pay?
beneath him at any moment. retaliation against those who Certainly not you .. . you
And when it does, such an hurt us ... but always to our have better things to do.
(Thom Mollohan and his
episode can leave him feel- own detriment. As long as
ing flabbergasted, exasper- we permit ourselves to be family have ministered in
ated, outraged, hurt, humili- ruled by the compulsion to southern Ohio the past 11
ated and resentful. Before "get even,"we permit some- years. He is the pastor of
Community
he knows it, unless great one to have a power over us. Pathway
care has been taken to avoid We've given to our "adver- Church, which meets on
this situation, he soon finds saries" the keys to our own Sunday mornings at the
himself overflowing with happiness and actually Ariel Theatre. He may be
angry thoughts towards the increased the potential for reg.ched for comments or
person(s) who hurt him and their damage against us, hav- questions by e-mail at pascan fall very easily into a ing given our attackers, as it torthom@pathwayga/lipowere, the keys to our hearts. lis.com).
rnindset of retaliation.

Parents of convicted arsonist visit burned church in Panola
PANOLA, AJa. (AP) The parents of a former
B irmi n~ham- Southern
Colle~e student who pleaded gutlty in a series of rural
church arsons visited with
the congregation of one
burned church, asking for
forgiveness and expressing
remorse.
"My son wants you to
know how sorry he is,"
Mike Cloyd told members
of Galilee Baptist Church

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on Jan. 28.
Mike and Kim Cloyd of
Pelham are the parents of
Matthew Cloyd, one of three
former colle~e students who
pleaded gutlty to federal
charges in the church arsons.
The couple spoke with the
congregation, which is
meeting in a trailer as its
new church building is
being constructed.
The Rev. Bob Little said
he prays for solace for his

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congregation, the convicted
arsonists and their families.
"We thank God for the
opportunity to bring about
some healing," Little said.
"We need to embrace each
other in times of trial."
The Cloyds said the visit
to Galilee Baptist, where the
congregation
dedicated
songs and hugged them during two hours of worship, is
part of a pilgrimage to see
the rural churches their son

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admitted to burning in
February 2006.
Matthew Cloyd, 21 ,
Benjamin Moseley, 20, and
Russell DeBusk, 20, await
sentencing in federal court
and also ·face state charges
in the arson case.
Five
churches were
burned in Bibb County on
Feb. 3; the others were
burned four days later in
Oree~e. Pickens and Sumter
counues.

1

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Fellowship
Apostolfc
Churth of .km\ t:h~ ApoAolk
Vanl...andt llrld Ward Rd , PNOI Janw ~
Mtller, Sunda y 'khool

Ill 30 lim .

ht' nUliJ I 30 p.m
Rher \'aUt}"
RI\"CI Vallt) Apt,..,l\lh.. Wor~ hip Cente r.

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7:00pm, Wednt!!tda ) B1ble Srud:o 7.00 pm .
lntenm Prr:aclk•r - Flo~d ltm s
Chtshlrt B~pUst C hurch
P..astor: Stt\t Ltnk . Sund"'y School· 9.30
am. Mornitlg WoniHp
It) -'0
am.
WedneMLt.~ Bible SIUd~ 6.) 0pm. chmr
pract1ce 1.JO: youth and Hit"lh: HudJi..:,
ll .\0 p rn Thur) I pm book •li.ld}

HOJW Blilplisl \hurrh rSoulhtrnl
~711

Gran! St . MtdJicj"ll.lft . SunJ,,y "'- h,onl

. IJ )0 u.m., \Nnr~h1p - II 01 m and 6 p.m,

WeOn!!sda)" ~r. 1 cc . 7 filii 1-'a.~r or Gat y
Elhs
Ruthtnd Flnt Baptlst ('hufl· h
Sunday School · 9 .\fJ am .. Wor~ h1p
1!1 45 a.m
Pomeroy nnt Baptl~t
P-.i.Stor Jon l:frockert. Ea:.r Mam St ..
Sund11y Sl"h 9.111 an\. Wur-;h1p 11!:.'0 am

First Southern Baprist
41KI1 Pomeroy l'tke . P11 ~ 1 or E Lamar
O ' Brya m, SLinJay Sdlflul - 9.30 a.m ..
WoP.;htp - 8: 1.5 am . '145 am &amp; 7·00 p.m .
WeJnc ~ Ja) Scrm· e~ - I W p m
First R11ptls1 C'hun·h
Bil ly Zuspan tllh tmd P.tlmcr St .
MtJUiepurt . Sumldy 'ichwl - 'I I 'i ,, m
Wor5ht p . J(J · I.'i am. 1 (l(l p m .
Wedncsduy St rvt..:e - 1.00 p m
Pu ~ tor

Rachw t'lnl Baptbt
Pa~tor . R) an Eaton ,
pa~101 . Sundoy
School · 9· 30 a rn.. Wor~ h 1p · 1n 411 a 111 •
7.00 p.m., Wedllc M.Ia) Se r •u:e~- 700
p.m.
SUvrr N.un Daptit l
Pastor: Jotm Swanson , Sundoy School IOa.m . Worsh1p . I I ii m , I 00 p m
.Wed nesda) Set~ll.'e~ -1 UO p m

There is much to be thankful for every
single day. Indeed, each day ts it~lf
~omt:thtng for v.hich we ~h ould be
thankful. But , how do '~c greet the day .1
Are tht: lirst wun.h. out of our mouths
each morning a complaint, such as ··oh
lord. another day. I really ha te to get
up:· 11ow much better it would be to
stan the day with a pmyer of
thanksgtvmg, such as. "Thank yOu God
for giving rne thi::. day1 I offer up all
of my prayers, works, joy!i and
suUcrings to you. Help me to meet the

MI. l lnlnn Baptl.oil
Pas1or lknms Wea... er Surll.la~ s~hl&gt;Ol 9 :45 am .. E\ emng . 6:30 pIll .
Wednesday Serm't ~- 6 ~Op . m
Btlhlt hem Raplbt C hurch

Greu1 Bend . Route 124. lhcme. OH .
PhtOf Ed t.:artl'r Sundll) Schuul · 4 10
a m , Sundlt} Wm ~ h1p - 10 JO J m .
Wedncsd&lt;ly B1ble Study 7·011 p m
Old Bethel t'fft WUI Baptist Church
28601 St Rt. 7. Middkpml. Su ndu y
SenK(' . Ill an\. tdlll p m , TLH! ~dii }'
Strv 1~c\

.b·oo

Forfst Run lh1ptlst·

Pom~ro)

Rr1 Jos.'ph Wood s. Sunday S.::hool · II!

u m.. Wur~h•r - II 30 u.m

Wann Friend(\'

209 Third
Racine, OH

740-949-2210
"A Home Bank for
Home People"

challenges ot th1s day " There 1s ul"'ays
something tn he thank fu l fm, tmd the

Hills Self Storage

B1ble tells us that v,.c arc what we
prnfess with our mo~th s Even it we arc
expecting our day to be filled with
n01hing hu11nab and trihu!mion". we
should th ank the Lord for the
opportunity to tx· challenged . A nd . tf wr
are really struggli ng \u find something
to he thankfu l for. .wr can play thr
"Glad Dame". That' s the game pl;tycd
hy Pollyanna when thmgs were gomg
poorly. wherein she \\ould find
something to he glad about. Surely.
there ts always somethi ng to he ghtd
ahout, eve n tf 1\ tsn ' t readi ly apparen1.

29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-949-2217

Atmosphefl'

Mt. Moriah Kaptio;t
Fnurth &amp; f\.bin Sl , M•Jdkpnn, Pa ~10r.
Rev Gtlbcrt Croig, Jr., S und~y Schot\1
Q 3iltt m . Wo r~ h ip · 10 ~'i am

Mif[ie)s 'l(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Mtols &amp; DaUy SJ1&lt;ci41!
Open 7 days a week
740-992-7713

Antlquit)' Baptist
S1.1nday School - 9 \II a m , Wur~h • r ·
10:45 a.m, Sundlt)' Ewniii H- 6.00 p.m

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

Church of Christ
Westslrk t.:hurth of l hrlsl
11~~6 l "h&amp;lilrcn, II. orne N.d l'olllll.' rtl\ . 011
Cnntalt 7 -1-1 1--J....ll · l !'16 Sunda~ rnvmm~
10:00 , Sun m.1rn! nf Ii i til e ~ lUi.!) .
fv lln11.1ng ~t•hh&amp;p . ~un c•·"' t\00 pm
Wl'd h1bk l! Ui.l ) 7 p111

I Father in heaven."

Mmhler: l arr) fl.rm~on . Wnr,hrr · 'J .J!I
am Sunda) ~khuol - If! \()am . B1ble
SIU'h I p m

Pontrmy l'lmrch or Chrl.•t
~~ . Su mi J~ s~hool - Y.JO
am Wor .. hrp 10 \U a.m . 6 p.m .
Wednc"l.') \ er\ 1.;,•, 7 p 111
~

Ponwroy WHhidt ( "hun·h of l hrlst
H1!h l"hr lt lren\ Hu1111' H:d . ~unJa)
Sehou l · II a 111 Wur~ h r p I!Ja n• f1 p 111 .
Wed n~'&gt;41 J)' SCf\' 1Ct~ • I p nt
Middleport t' hu rch of l'hrist

5 ih Jnd M,ttn . Pa &lt;i ltH

AI II:Hh• •n
Shawn Sa}ft"". Tc&lt;o'll
Dtrecr"r O.lll l!o::r V,,ughan Sund,t) s~ho.•!
- 'I 'Ill a 111 . Wur\!up· tj l .'i . IIJ..\(1 n 111 7
rIll . Wt•t llll'.,d&lt;l} \c r\' IC&lt;o'~ 7 p m
Ch il tlr~n• D ~r e..: h• r .

K~mJ Chun·h uf l'hri!il
Wt Jhh tp &lt;J ~~~ am ., Sunda; So.·hunl
10· ~U am . l'a, lnr · Jctt~ y Wa llau~ ht an.l
Jrd SuJr,!ay
Ht'M r\~alkJW
Bru~c

Pa •ll•r

Nldgr l'hun-h orChri.r;l
Terr). 'i umlay s~· huu l .1).30
IU 'U .1m . O lil pm.

Karl Kobler III

KEHLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

The Appliance man
740.985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

190 N. Second St.

Lml!(

Tt rm Cart'

Kart Kebler.l lt. CPA. R eg1 ~tcred
Repre sc nlati~e of H.D Vesrlnves rmem
Serv1ces"" Sf!c un11es uttered through H.D. Vest
ln ~rs tment Sen.•icesm. Meml'ler SIPC Ad m OI)
!iefVI("es offered thnough H.D v~ ~~ AdVISOry
Servrl'ts!o.". Non-battk suh.~1d1~nc~ ot Wells
Farx(l &amp;. Comp &lt;~ny. 6).\J Nronh State HWY 161
41h Aom. lmng TX 7SU.l8 (iJ12) 870-600)

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 I'M&gt;.
(740) 992-3279
'-!!Y'
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

Trinlly Churtb
Second &amp; L}nn . Pomeroy . P;v.c.or: Rc\

GrlilCe 1-:pi.vopal Church
\~0 E Ma.m S1 , Pomrru~ . Sunday School
and Holy Eu~hansr 11 ·00 a.m. Re\
Edii.af(ll'aynt'

31 0 ~7

~n,IUe Hollnftli Ch•n:h
State Route J25.lang~' II~. Pastor

HenJamtn Crawford . Sundily ...::hool - IJ }!]
a.m. SL&amp;ndaJ wor'&gt;htp - 10.30 .t.m. &amp; 7
p m.• Wedne~ay pra}"~ r ~n· tce - I p.m.

ILarfl,,n \d le Rd O&lt;t 1-1 3).
Sunda y s ~ hool 9 · '0 um Wor~h1p · 10.\0 .tm. 7.00
rIll Wedn~~- ~~ St'f"\ ICC~ - 7 p 111
Pu mcn o~.

p~\ ltLT

H.o~tl Wat ~Ofl.

Tuppers P1aln C~ hu l'fh of Christ
ln ~ln.Jmcnlal Wur&gt;h1p Sen ICC · lJ ,, m
Cmnmuntoo · 10 o1.m ., Strnday School lU 1 .~ u.m .. \"tUIIh· .'i .JO pm Su nda y. Bibl e
Stutl~ \\ edn~ .... !~) 1 pm

Brad bur~ Churt'h ofC..:hrist
M.nl 'i ler T•)lll Nun yll n. '4'i'i~ Bradhury
Ruad , M1Jdleport . Sund11y Scht11•l - 9 ) 0

a.m.
Wor~h1p

· 10· 30 a m

RuUrmd Churt'h of C hrl'i~
Con,fiiUUittll · HI JO am . Ouh J WeH)
Min1 ~1cr

Uradford Chur.:h oft'hrlsl
Cor ner of St. Rt 12-t &amp; Bradiliuy Rd ,
Mm r11er Duug S h~mhl m. Youth Mtm ~ ter
Bill Amhe'l! l'f· Su nday S.:hnol - 9 3011 m.
'Wor ~h1p . 11 111:1 ~ m
10
am . 7 ·00
p.t\L.Wcdne .day S&lt;o'r' 1\' C.~ · 7 OIJ p m

'fl

H kk or~·

Hills L" hun:h uf Chris t
Tupper ~ P lam ~ P.tslor M1ke Moore . Bible
eta~·. ll a 111 Sunday. ~or~hrp IU 11m
Sutll l:l', worship O:JO pm Sunda y: B1 blc
da~~ 7 pm Wed .

Reeds,·it~ Chun·h of C hrist

r ..-.w r

Pllll lll Sturm. Sundu) Sd1uol. ') .10
i1 m. \\.'u1,h1p Set\'I(T 10 Jtl 11m . Hihl~
Swdy. Wednesday. fl ·Jo p m

llu:ter Chu rth ol. Ch rist
Suntiay &gt;eht)()I IJ. \0 a.m , Sundav worsh1p
- HI .\Ou m
The ChuKh of C hrl!i l or Pomeroy
ltHer,~l't i tl n 7 and 124 W. Evu n geh~t :
lk nnis Sargem. Sunday H1ble Study l) JO a.m Wursl1ip 10 J() ,, 111 aud {• :UI
p.m , Wc dn e~d a) B1 hle Smdy - 7 p m.

Christian Union
Uurtrord Church or Christ In
Chrlslian Union
H:1rtlonl. \\/ V;1 . J&gt;,,.., lttr Dav 1d Greer,
Sll ndu_l Slhou l · '}· lo .1. 111 .. Worsh1 11 ·
IIJ ·JII n m . 7·110 r m . Wcdne'itla;.
Scnu.e\ · 7 CKll' ·i\1 .

Church of God
I\h . Morl11h Ch urch of(; od
Mile Hil t Rd . l{a,' ml! . Pa•aor: Jume s
SaU&lt;o'rl"irl d. Su nda ~· Sthuol · ~ - ~'i am
E•enin)! - 6 p m. ~hl n c~J, ,~ Scn· u,:c~ - 7
pm
Rolland Chut"t:h or God

ROS&lt;t- ol Sharon Hollntu l'h11 rch
l.eadmg Cr&lt;o'd, Rt l.. Rllllan~ . Pastor· Rev
l~"' ey - Ktng. Sunda) &gt;il hnol · 9 30 ~ m..
Suntlay \lor,lup -7 pm , WedneMia)
prayer meeting · I p.m
1-'inr lirolt Blhle llo11MM Church
I • ~ nulc otT Rt. .\25, P;~st or: Rr\'. O'Dell
Manle y. Sunday Sehoul
9.30 a.m.,
Wnn.h tp - lfi"JU u m . 7 30 p.m..
W~dnesda~ Scf\ ll"C - 7 ~0 p.rn

Wnlfyan Bible Holiness (."hun:h
Pa~tor · Rtd.
Bourne. Sunday School - 10 a.m Worshtp
- IOA5 pm. Sunda~ Eve 700 p.m .•
Wcdlit:'l.illy Sef\ 1~e- 1 30 p.m
H) !~til Rua Communlly Chun:h
Pastor R_rv Larry L&lt;"mle}. SundJ.IY School
. 9·30 am. Worshtp • 10:45 a.m, 1 p.m ,
Thursdu) Bible Study ,md Youth · 7 p.m.
Laurel ClifT Free Melhodlil Ch un-h
Pastor Glenn R o ~e. Sunduy S~· h oot ·
IJ lCI am . Wonh 1p - 10 JU a m ~nd h
p.m .W~nesday Se rvi~e. 1:00 p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
The C hurcb of Jesus
Christ or Laller· Dwy Saints
St Rt \(,0 , ~46·6241 nr 446-1 486,
S und ~) Sc hool 10·20- 11 am., Rel1ef
Sol'lci~ I Pri C!i th nod
I I 05 · 12:00 noon .
Siicrarpe nr Serv ice ll- 10· 15 a.m.
Homl!mulo ng ml!r.!Ung. !st Thurs .· I p.m

Lutheran
Sl. John Lutheran Church

Pme Grove. Worshtp - 9 00 a.m.. Sunday
S~ hUtl! - 10 lltl &lt;~ m Pnstor.

Our Sa\·iour Luthrnn Churth
W(llnut and B enr~ St~ .. R a~cnsw ood.
W\'a , Pastor Dav1d Russell , ~u n d&lt;~y
S"ch••ol - IU.OO a.m .. Wo~htp- II 8 m

S1. Paul l.uthenm Chun:h
Comer S~camore &amp; Seetmd St .. Pomemy.
Sun S•hool · 9 45 am ., Wors hi p · II a m

United Methodist
Grahwm l lnitffi Methodist
~kthodisl

New Haven, R1 ~ h ar d Nea~e . Pastor .
S und &lt;~y worship 9.30 a.m. ltJC~ . 6:30
praye r and B1 b l ~ StuJy.

!\11. Olive UniWd Methodist
OIT 12-t bc htnd Witkewtl le. Pa ~l o r : Re~·
Ralph Spt re~. Sund.ty Sc!1 ool - Q ]0 , m
W(lrsl11 p - IO ·JO a.m., I p.m . Thur!iday
Scmt:cs · 7 p m
Meigs Cuoperallvt Purlsh
Northo.::1~ 1 Clu ster, Alfrecl , Pa-;ror Jim
Corhiu . Sundaf S~o' h twl - g J O a.m
Ww-s!1t p . II am , h _l(l pm
Chester
Pastur Jim Cor biu , Worshi p · 9 a.m..
Slmrl ay Schon! - 10 a Ill . . Thu ~da)
Serv tl·e ~ . 1 p m.

Joppa
P•t~ttol
Sm1dll~

DenLil Null , Wor~ htp
s~· h ool - IO.JO a.m.

-

9 .\ 0 a ru .

jftsber jfunrrnl J!ilomr
UIU

l4H8Z-5141
t-800-45 t-9806

Middleport. OH

740.992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues 1-shirts and more
(740) 992-6451

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

•

i@
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOlliE
17.1 Laynt Strttt • PO Box 270

New H•,·en. W\" l5l65

J»ma H.Andenoo. LittiL~ t'~JMr.-1 Dimtor
Hfldi S. Andtrsoo. hrttllough l t'untf"lt Planning

Amuina G~ Community l'hurt'h
Pasror. Wa~oe Dunlap . Stat~ Rt tLKi .
Tupp:r.. l'la.Jns . Sun \\.or!r.h 1p IIJ am&amp;.
6 30 pnr .. Wed B1ble Smd) 1 1U p m

1111111 ............... . . .

741-112-5U4

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

fl"ffdom liospd \1biloa
un Co Rd J l PJ., tu r Rn
R "~ er V. 1llfurd . \un&lt;lla} \,h,JO I 'I 'h
"111 \lror,h1p- 7 p.m
~ nnh

H&lt;tld

"hit• •, Cbatpri \\nlt}tUJ
C•Jull Ill~ Ru.1d P&lt;t ~ l o r Rt'l Ph rl l1p
'J ~~~ d m.
R1denour. "i undOI) \c huol
\\.ur•h1p Il l ~ ~ ~ 111 \\, ~ JII&lt;" ..Ua&gt; ~f\ L~l'
.1 pm
fair' ito~ Hibh: ( 'huKh
Let.u t. W \ " Rl I Pit ~ \ll r Bnan ~~d ~
Sund&lt;t) ~~ h oul 'I \ir J m . \\. v r ~ h 1 1 1 1 tJ(J
p Ill . V.~Jnc\r.la ~ liiblc ~iud ~
~· d tow~hip

!-'with
i'a ~t~&lt;l

R c~

7 m rIll

CrtWtd.r for Chris!

I r&lt;~nllm

Dtc l~n '. S~n k~

p rn

l· n dJ ~ . ,

C.:•hwr) BibW Chu.nh

P1lo&gt; C o RJ Pa,ttJr Re1
Rlilt.k.,.Otxl . ll1.111d!l ~ Sehoul lJ "lU ~ m
Wnr .h tp lf l ~~~ d 111
1 JU p m
WeJn&lt;.' \da\ S&lt;.'n I\&lt;.' . 7 30 p m
Slinrnlllr t :omr.IUnil) ( "hurch

Oasis Christian Fello~&lt;hhip
1 Non-deoommallonal fdt&lt;l\l~h l p l
Mt:ettng 111 the Metgt MtJdk S • h•~ · l
Caletl!n:l Pa.s!Of"" Chri~ St~ v.an
!0 &lt;Xl lint · Noon Sun&amp;~ l nh• ~TII ~I
Wnr!&gt;hlp . lh1ldren · ~ m1 m~ 1r~

Hu ll! IMiddltportJ
Pastor Rn.an Dunham . Sllnday School .
Q 30 ii m , Worsh1p - !I :00 a.II\

Minersville
Putt If· Bub Robmw:on. Sund&lt;ty Sl houl . Q
a.m Worship : 10 a.m

l'omm unity or l'hrilit
Ponland-Ractnr Rd .. Paotor . Jtm Pmft m.
Su nJa) School - IJ· 30 a.m , Wohhlp
IUJO am. Wcdncsda} Ser.t ~e~ - 7·1Kl

Pt:arl Chapel
Sch;)OI- 9 a.m . Worship - 10 a.ru

p.m

........,

Btttttl Won hlp Center
J9781 S.R I. Reed~•· ille. OH -'5 17~ . I•!
milt' north of Eastern Schooh on SR 1 A
Full Go11pel Chur~ h . Pa~ tur RDh Ba rbe r,
AHO.." Iillt Pibtll l K&lt;~r}n O.!V t\ ,,luth

Pa.tur Bnan Dunhiim , Worsh ip - 9 JO
a.m., Sunday Sclloot- IO.JS a .m

l'a~ lor

llu&lt;k Sprl""'
Pii~tor: Keith Radtlr. Sunda~ Schuot 9.15
~ m . Worship 10 a .m
Yuulh
Fctlo~· !ih tp , Sunday - 6 p m.

SuZie I ranCI ~ S1.1nda) 'ernce~

10.00 am v.or~h1p . tr .OU pm Ftuurl ) L1fc
Cla~se ' Wed . Home Cdl Groups 7·00
p m , Outer L1m11~ t"ell Group a1 the
church fl·.10 pm to it.}(J pm

PJ'''''
'L

W&lt;~~ nr

R

J ~~ell

Sundii&gt; \lor\hlp

til l fi m . V. edn l'-.da~ - to tJO p 111 81hk

Stud&gt;

Rejoid•i! Life ('burch,
\" ~nJ .-\1c. MJJJkpon . l' ii~\U r
M1h f urr m.m P.l,h&gt;f i;mtnw' l a... n:ml'
l-\1a·m:..n Wor~ hip· 1{1 IF• o~m
W&lt;o'l.lne ..U.~ ~ Ser. t~.~~ 'p m

~UO

Clifton Twhun16dc Church
Chllon. \\\"a . Su nda.~ s~h\Lnl IU a.m .
\l.or,hlp · 7 p m . Wedne~J&lt;~.~ ~n t cc ·..,
~eYt

\"icror~

Lenttr
Rn.tJ . Giilhpolt, OH
P;L\Inr Rd l St:llcn l!unJ .J ~ Serl. lCt""l · 10
a Ill &amp; 1 p m V. edne~da\ ., r m &amp;.
Y{lulh 7 p rn
Ufr

PI) Cito~e~ (red

Fu.ll GU!lpel Chui"Ch
of"l h' l.i\lng Sa, lor

Rulland

,bh Street Church
J9R A ~h St , ~hdJkpo n Pohlor Jeff Smnh
Sunday Sch(){) l - '1 JO a m . Mmn mg
Worsh1p - \0 .~ 0 ., m &amp; 7 00 pm .
Wrdnesday Serv1ce - 7{10 p.m., Youth

Pastor Rick Bourne, Sunday School 9:30a.m., Worship · 10:30 a.m ., Thursday
Servaces - I p.m.
Salem Center
Pastor: William K Mmhall, Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m .. Worship tJ: i5 a.m..
Bible Study- Monday 7:00 pm

~f\'lc~-

Snow,·llh:
Sunday School · tOa.m., Worship 9 am

lkthan)
Pasto r: John Gilmore , Sunday School 10
u m , Worshtp - 9 a.m., Wcdnesda)
Sef\1ces- 10 am

Ser1 1Lt:\ s~\UH)Ol )

2:00 p.m.

Salem Communil)" Chul'filr
B,td: of We~t Columbia . W Va om Lu:·• in~
Road . Pastor: Charl e ~ Rollsh tJO-It to75~! 8K. Sunday Schoo l 9:30am . Sunda)
crenrng ~en 1-:r 7"1 ~11 pm Rt hl)" Stud~
Wedncsda\ l&gt;Cn Ill: 7.00 pm
Hoh!i.on t.:hrisUan t"elio" ship Church
Hend1cl Wh1te , Sundil ) S~.·huol 10 am. Sunday Church ~e r'-' l ce 6 J(J pm
Wednc~a) 7 pm

Pii~lu r

Abundllnl Grace M.t'. I.
923 S Thnd St., M1..Wieport , Pa~lor Tcn: ~a
Davl \, S unda ~ 5e rvtce, 10 am .
Wedncr.da) r.en·1ce 7 p m .

Restoration Chrtsllan Fellowship
Ho oper Road. Athen~ . Pastor
Lonn1e Coats. Sund.iy Wor~hip 10 00 &lt;1111 .
WedneMtay 7 pm

936~

Carmei·Sullon
Carme l &amp; Ba!ihan Rds . R ~ ine , Oh 1o,
Pas ror John Gilmore , Sunday Schoo l ·
9·45 a.m . Wnrsh1p - II 00 a.m , Btble
SriJd~ Wed 1 30 p m

fwlh fwt Goopol Church
Long Bonum. Pastor: Steve Reed . Sunda)
Schoo l · 9 JO a.rn. Won h1p - 9 ..\0 a r'll
and 7 p.m .. We\lnesday - 7 p.m., Fnday fellnwlihtp ;cr; 1ce 1 p.m

MomlqSiar
Pa~tor John G1l more, Sunday School - it
am ., Worihip - 10 am.

HarrlsonviUt Community Cburch
Pastor· Theron Durham. Su nday - 9.'0
8.111 Mnd

Eul Lt:lart
Past or. Rill Marshal\ Su nd;~y Schoo l 9a .m., Worship - 10 a.m., 1st Sun d~ y
e~ery mnnth eve mn g ~e rvu·e 7 no p m ;
Wed1tesday - 7 p.m.
R.aelnr
Pastor Kt!rry WooJ, S u nda~ Sdu10\ · \0
a.m., Wor!ilup - II 8 m.Wedne$di!y
Serv1ces 6 pm. Thur B1ble StUd)' 7 pm
Coolville United Methodist Plilrlsh
Past or. Hden Khn c, Conh•1llc Church
Main &amp; Fifth Sr , S1.1n. School · 10 am ..
Worship - 9 a.m., Tues. Scrvkc ~- 1 p.m.

Belhrl Chun:h
Rd., 468C, Sunday S.:hoot IJ
a.m. Worship - 10 a m.. Wednesday
Services- 10 am
Hockingport Ch11rth
Gnmd Street, Sundlly Schoo l · 9 JO a Ul
Wonihtp- 10:30 a.m , Pastor Philhp Belt

7"00 p m

Agapt Life Center
··fu ll-Gospel Church". Pastors John &amp;
Patt y Wade . ((13 Second A\'e. Ma~on . 1H·
~11 . Sen1ce t1mc Sunda y liJ ·JiJ am .
Wednesday 7 pm

•

Wor&gt;hip - II a.m. Pastor: Ru:hard Nease

B«htellJnilcd

pm

('umt'rol

Town~hip

114........ .._ •PI FA till\ II

499 Richland 1\\'enue,Athens

f

Sunda~

Calvary Pilgrim C~•pe l
Hamson,·ille Road . Pastor· Charles
McKenzie . SLinda} Sc hool 9 30 a.m..
Wor\hlp · II .. m . I 0(1 p m . Wcdoestbry
St&gt;n il't' - 7 0\1 p.m

S)rKV!il Community Church
2480 ~ond St Syrao.:u:.c: . OH
Sun SchOlll Ill am Sund) ntght n "\4) pm
L nr.ler the duec.:uun uf Dan &amp; hllh
Hot)man
A. ~ew 8tglnnin1:
(t'ull Goipd ChuKhJ Ham .u n ~1l lc .
Pll!. torv Bob and Ka) Mar&lt;ihall.
S~nday Sef\ tee. ! p m

Fornt Run
Pas lor Bob Robmson . Sunda) School · Ill
am Won.h1p -lla m

Holiness
Community Chun:b
P&lt;~~tor·
Ste•r Tor~L Mam Street ,
RutlllJld, Sumlol) Wor~h 1p-IO 00 a.m ,
Sunda) Stn 1ce- 7 p.nt

Other Churches

Pa~ tor .

Episcopal

or ttw 'lla.rartnt

Pa\tor Reo llc:rbcn Gr.nc . S u O ~ St·honl
9 30 am . Worshrp II a.m . 6 p 1n
Wed Ill:~) kn ICh · I p m
Rutland Church oftlw ~aurtnr
Sun(la) s ~ hool l} 30 a In V. LH\h lp
10 30 am . 6 JO p m . V.cdnc'&gt;dil)
Set"~ ICC' · 7 pm

t:nwrprbt
Arland KmJ! , Sunday Sc hool ·
10:30 am .. Wor~ h1p 'J JO 11 m B1bk
Stlldy Wed 7·10
flatwoocb
Pas10r Ke11h Rader . Sunday School IU
a.m Worsh1p · I I a.m .

Soble \\ or~h1p HJ·2.5 a m ,
St:hnul Q 15 a m

J nnat~un

Oavls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide i11 Me, a11d My Brogan-Warner
Full line of
INSURANCE
Insurance words abide i11 you, ye shall
SERVICES
Products + ask what ye will, and it shall
Financial
214 E. Main
be done unto you.
Services
AGENCI ES IlK.
992-5130
}oh11 15:7
Pomeroy
992-6677

Roflorerst&lt;, Stt)(·h• BmJtl:r"', M1mml

Funds'. A.mwitie.s•.

Congregational

lnlCiliiUir-llncllr

Mallhew 5:1

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEEs

pm

SunJa~

t:MitK C.:hU«h

lilpp&lt;nPialaiSc . hul
t&gt;astor hm Corblll. Sunda)' ~chool · ~
am . Worship - 10 a rn . Tundly Ser ~icc~
- I JOp.m
Cmlra.ll.lusttr
A~bury tSytaeuie) . Putor Bob R.obiniOfl
Surnlii} Schoo l - 9 45 a rn .. Wur\h tp . II
a.m . Wedoe!Od:iy Scrvlt'tS · I 30 p.m

Church or God of Pruph«-y
OJ Whuc RJ olf St IU . IflO. Pa~ ot : PJ
t llapm.Jn Sund..) School · Ill a m .
Wu"h1p - II " 111 . \\.edocMia) Scf\ tl"C!o 7

/'i Pe;ul St . M1ddlerun

lion Church of l'hr~t

Lon1 Bunom
Sllndii) School 9 3fJ 11m . Worship ·
IU JUa m
RftdniDe
Wohh&amp;p · 9 }(} am ., Sunda) School 10·30 a.m . Ftr~l Sundl!y ot Munth - 700
pm ~I"\ ICC

S} rwu..w First Churth of Ged
..\ppk dOd Second Sb , P;ntor W.e~ Da\ld
Ru -...cll. Sund&lt;~ } School 11nd \Ao'ur,hrp- 10
l m E\entng Sen1~· t s 6 JO p.m .
Wednr-.dli) Ser. t.:c ~ - fi 3U p.m.

12 W MJ1r1

740-594-63.13

Cenlfted Public i\crounlallt
email: kkebter @charler.net
618 E. Main Street
Pomtn&gt;), OH 45769
740-1192-7270

.1m
pm

Ron Heath. Sundny Wor,htp 10
0 p m . Wednc..Ua ~ St:n tee~ · 7

Hrmlock tin1~·r C hrbtitn Church

your light so shi ne belfon' l
1m.en, that they may sec
lg&lt;1od works and glorify

Sizes available 5x 10 to 10 x 20

JRA 's~,

••

,;

Hours
bam ·S pm

Catholic

Sunday S•·hool - 9 '0 a.m . \\or-.htfl tm d

~-alth Bwptlsl Churth
Ra1lmaJ St. Ma~on. SunJ;~y SlhtXJI · IU
a m , Wo rshi p
II a.m., fl p m.
Wednesday Scr v i~·c-; - 7 p 111.

Michelle Kennedy

7p m

SlotCrtd lttart hlbolic lhurcb
161 ~lulherr ~ Alt . Pumcru) •i'H - 'i?l4~
Pa&gt;tul Re 1 W;!ltr r 1·. llt'llll S ;~t Cnn
-l . -1~ - .5 151' m . Ma."
'i 'II p rn . ~un
C ~tn ·ll -'5-1J 1~ am . Sun MJ' '
I) \!1
d m . Dad ~ M .t~• · t1 X),, 111

Baptist

Victor) Bapd!it lndependenl
~ll d di &lt;!J&gt;Iln, !'astor: James
E Keese&lt;". Wor ~ h1p - I0&lt;1111 . 7 p m .
Wedn&lt;"Mhl)' Sen JCt:~ · 7 p m

Director uf Markt!ting and Admissions

Wctlnt~u y

Thurs 7 lkl p • • , Pi!~h lr Man ~ H: ll •ut on

52S N. 2nd Sr.

Blessed q,re the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8

W.ut.b md t" rt:~: \\Ill H.~o~ptkl
.'iakrn St . l'.u. tur J,m\ll' Furlllt'l . SL!Illio )
Sdt011 l - ;! 1 " Ill . l:l ~:tHilJ!
1 pm
\.\ci.Jn..''&gt;lla ) \t:-r-.1~ &lt; • I p 111
Wood 81ptilit Lhurch
W.J \e n ~ 'lt tJo .od . WV. Sunda) St: hou l 10 .. m
Mornm~ 11&gt; n~h 1 p II arn Eltnln¥ 7 pm

Ave . Mllidlcport . Re\

M1 chatl Hr..Jtonl. Putur , S1mday. 10:30

Sel"\'icC) Sun 101.:1 .1111

9 30 J m w.,r)h ip - 10 lO "H1 .tnJ ,.,
p.m . WedneMia~ Sen 1ce, - 7 p m

t·~ ~to r

llilh;ldl' Doptlst C hurch
St Rt . 14) jus• il ff Rt. 7. ll.tswr Re'
James R. ACJel!. Sr. Sunduy Un 11u·J
Service, Wor~ h 1 p - 10 .)0 am . fl p m.
Wedrlesday Sen· k~"; -7 p m

r

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

Friday, February 2, 2007

Rich in Christ - - -A Hunger For More- -Thinking about the .playful pranks that my children
like to pull on each other, I
can see how thing s can
quickly escalate, like little
familial arms' races . My
writing of this week's column is occasioned by my
sons' running through the
house, yelling and cackling
as someone 's playful splash
of cold water turned into
militant attempts to slide ice
cubes down someone else's
shirt. From that first small
smattering into someone's
face came such an escalation, each step a new and
more intense level of conflict until no ohe seemed
any longer to be capable of
stopping (in spite of pleas to
"hold it down: you'll wake
your sister!).
I clomped noisily through
the house, deliberately
attempting to add an ominous sound to each footstep
and hoping to assert some
restraint upon my sons as
their mother worked to get
them settled down enough
for bed. My wife turned to
me with a twinkle in her eye
and said, "Why don't you
write about ' revenge ' this
week 0 That's how they've
gotten so wound up: everybody feels like they' ve got
to get everybody else back!"
It seemed very interesting
that she had said that to me.
I had just been remembering exploring a cave in the
desert in the Middle East
about eight years earlier, a
cave that may have been
very similar to the one that
David, warrior of God, had
used for refuge from his
king. The heart of this king
named Saul, although supported by David in every
way, had tuQJed in resentful
jealously against this young
and lo~al subject.
Davtd had been · running
from Saul for months, partly
to protect his own life, but
also partly because he was
well aware of God's promise
of protection. Saul, a spiritual lemming if ever there was

www.mydallvsentlnel.com

Torch Chun:b
Co. Rd 63 , Sunday School - 9:.\0 u m ,

Worsh1p - IO:JO a.m

Nazarene
Middleport Chun:h of the Nazarenr
Pastor · Allen Mid c11p. Sunday Srhrw.•l
9:30 a.m..Worship - \0:.'0 a.m.. 6:30p.m .
Wednesd11y Se rvices - 7 p 111 , Pa.tt1r·
Al len Mrd~ap

I p m , Wedner.Jay - I p .m .

Mlddltpon Communi&amp;)' Churcb
575 Pearl St , Mtddlc[!Cirl . Pastor Sam
Andenon, Sunda) Schuol 10 a.m ,
Evening - 7 30 p.m . . Wedne~day Semce 7:30p.m
Faltb Vall~y Tabernacle Church
Harle~ Run Rofld , Putor: Rev . Emme ll
Raw~o n . Suruhry El·en mg I p m ..
Thur&lt;iday Semce- 7 p.m.
Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgema n S1., SyractJse. Su nda)
Schoo l - !0 am Evenmg - fl p.m.
Wedner.da y Serncc: - 7 p m.

Hazel Community Chureh
Off Rt 124. P&lt;t~ tu r E d~el Hart. SunJa'
School - ') JO i\111. \Vor~h1p · lO .JO a.m .
7:JO p.m.
Oye'i\' llle ("ommnnh\ Church
Sunda) Sc hool 9 JO &lt;J .m . \Yo r,hip ·
IO .JU J 111 . 7 p n1
:\lorst· t.:hupel C hurch
Sunda) ,c hnol - II! i l m . Vlor~h1 p
II
&lt;1..m . WcJ n ~~Ja) Sen llC - I p m
Faith (~ospe l Church
B&lt;.•llum. SunJa.• Sr hnul - 9 ' 0 ,, m .
Wor ~ h1p .
I U ~' 01111 . 7 · ~o p111..
\\edne sda) 7".~ 11 p m
:\1 t. Hlive t'ommunit~ l"lmn·h
Pa~tnr LIIHen~·~· Bll ~h. Sum!ay S.:htll&gt;l Ll•tl~

9·30 am . F11~nmg - f'".\0 p 111 Wcdn&lt;o'Ja~

Rerdnllll' l' rlln"shlp

\lt'tV I L"C •

7 pIll

Chu rch of the Nazarene, Pastor Ru~sl•tl
Larson . Sunduy S.:hoo l - t;r · .~0 11. m ,

1.111J S lld :&gt;nd Kodd t&gt;onwru) 1'.1'101 I~' ''

Wor§h lp - 10 45 am . 7 p.m . Wed ne~ct .t~

Hunter Sunda y Sdtt&gt;ul- 10 .1.1 11 . hc111H~

Serv1ces - I p.m

7:.\(l p 111.

Syucwe Church of tht Nuarrnr
P:liitor M1ke Ad.kins, SunJ~ y &amp;:h\llll · 9 .\0
a .m, Worship - 10:30 a .m., 6 p m ,
Wednesday Services -I p.m.

Pomeroy ChWTb of tbe Nuantu
l'a•.ror: llln Lavender. Sunda y School •

Full Gospel Ughthou.'i.-

fur~od:ty

&amp;

Tlurr ~

Uol1511' of Hrallna \linistries
St . Rt.124l.a.apvillc ,OH
Full Gos pel. Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Rober1a
Musser: Sunda~ School 9 10 am
;"orsllip 10:)0 am - 7 :00 pm, Wed.
Serv1ce 7.00 pm
Team Jenli Mlnlflries
Meetmg in the Mulberry Commumly
Cemer Gymnasmm . Pasmr Edd1e Baer.
Ser.-tce c \CI) Tuesda) tdU pm

Pentecostal
Penleroslal A~mbly
St Rt 12 4. Renne . Tomad11 Rd Sunda)
School • 10 a.m.• Evening · 7 p.m..
Wednesday Semcc~- 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Hlilrrlsonvlllt Presbyterian Church
Pa~ror·

Rnbe rt

Cro&gt;~ W~h 1 p

· &lt;I a m

Middleport PresbyJerian
a.m . wor•h1p ~c r~·u;:e I I am

Sevenlh-Day Adventisl
\1ulbcrr:.
Sa\ u:e~
w,, r~h 1p -

Ill ~

RJ .. Pomero~. S,nurday
Snhh;1th Schnol
~ p m .
.~ p m

United Brethren
MI. Hermon Llnited Brethren
in Christ Chu rch
T~xa~ Cn mmunt l ~ JMll Wickhiilll Kd .
P&lt;~~ tnr~ Peler Manimla lr . Sunday Sd\11ol9 JO am. Wohhip 10 _,0 a m . H M:l
p.m .. Wr dne sd ,,~ Serv1 ces - 7{10 p m .
Y11uth group mel'trn~ 2nd &amp; -lth S unda y~
7pm
Eden I nlled Hrethll'n in C hrl ~t
S1.nc Rl•ut ~ 1:!4 . beru.t:"e n R etJ~• ri k &amp;
H l":~ mgptl r l. Sund~r Sl'hPol
!0 n 111
~untla\ \\.or~h1p · II 00 ~ . 111 \\ Nhw.;Ja;
"ic fl ICt'• - 7 11(.1

rIll ' P &lt;l~lt'f

M Ad.\111

\\ Ill

- ! .l Op 111

Sooth lklbel Co mmunit~ ( "l"tun·h
S1h·er Ridgr· P&lt;~stl • r L111d,, ll .m1~· •1 ,,,.,,1
Sund~J Sche&lt;ol - Q am ., Wt•r,htp s~·n1.:,·
Ill am 2nd and -lth Sunda\

C11rlt !on lnltrd enominlllionu t C"h11 r'C h
l'a.lm Rtlhc'rt \":uh.t'.

ROCKSPRINGS
Let vour light m shine bejiwe
REHABILITATION CENTER men. that thev mav see your

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

The care you deserve, c/ost to home good works and glor(f; your

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Located lcs~ than 30 minutes from
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740-992-6606

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
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We Fill Doctors'
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992-2955
Pomeroy
So I strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man ."

Acts 24: 16

Father 1n hem·en."
Matthew5 ·16

God so /01·ed tile world
he gave his onlY
gotten son ...
John 3:16

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prt~tw _your fomil_y "

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Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
b

ll.t

""

y J!•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnal.com
hdlip
~ rn.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

""

am .
p.m

&lt;h
ilf,htp
_Htt&gt;k

';u tor

Congress shall make no laiV respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
fru exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemblr, and to petition
the Governmtntfor a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
t , _OH

- 10

:~

,_m &amp;

- ~ ~~

mg

I) 675-

'.unday
c;,IUdy

burch

5.:hool-

" pm

;hip
Pastor
·(){) am .

'
. Wtd .

UniT~·

: B~~er ,

'"'
Sunda ~

7 p .m ..

1Urtb

o.m

ntist
.atun.la}
~

p. m ..

en
'"
lil.nl l-td .

S.:h!ln l 11 .. 7: 00

no p.m
Sunday~

Today is Friday. Feb. 2. the 33rd day of 2007. There are
332 days left in the year. This is Groundhog Day.
Today 's Highlight in History :
On Feb. 2. 1943, the remainder of Nazi forces from the
Battle of Stalingrad surrendered in a major victory for the
Soviets in World War II.
On this date:
In 1536, the Argentine city of Buenos Aires was founded
by Pedro de Mendoza of Spain .
In 1653. New Amsterdam - now New York City - was
incorporated.
·
In 1848. the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the
Mexican War, was signed.
In 1876, the National League of Professional Base Ball
Clubs was formed in New York.
In 1882, Irish poet and novelist James Joyce was born
near Dublin .
In 1897, lire destroyed the Pennsylvania state capitol in
Harrisburg. (A new statehouse was dedicated on the same
site nine years later.)
In 1948. President Truman sent to Congress a 10-point
civil rights program calling for measures against lynching,
poll taxes and job discrimination.
In 1961 , the hijackers of the Portuguese ocean liner the
Santa Maria allowed the passengers and crew to disembark
in Brazil, II days after seizing the ship.
.
In 1987, the White House announced the resignation of
CIA director William Casey. who was hospitalized and had
undergone brain surgery.
In 1996. dancer. actor and choreographer Gene Kelly died
at his Beverly Hills, Calif.. home; he was 83.
Five years ago: Inside the World Economic Forum in New
York, foreign economic leaders criticized the United States
for protectionist policies while outside, thousands of protesters demonstrated against global capitalism. Jim Kelly of
the Buffalo Bills and Pittsburgh Steelers star John
Stallworth were elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
The NHL World All-Stars rallied to defeat North America 8to-5.
One year ago: House Republicans elected John Boehner
of Ohio as their new majority leader to replace the indicted
Tom Delay. Tornadoes tor~ through New Orleans neighborhoods that had been hit hard by Hurricane Katrina five
months earlier.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Elaine Stritch is 82. Actor
Robert Mandan is 75. Comedian Tom Smotherc. is 70. Rock
singer-guitarist Graham Nash is 65. Actor Bo Hopkins is 65.
Television executive Barry Diller is 65. Country singer
Howm·d Bellamy (The Bellamy Brotl1ers) is 61. Actress
Farrah Fawcett is fiO. Actor Jack McGee is 58. Actor Brent
Spiner is SR. Rock musician Ross Valory (Journey) is 58.
Model Christie Brinkley is 53. Actor Michael Talbott is 52.
Actre" Kim Zimmer is 52. Rock musician Robert Deleo
(Army of Anyone and Stone Temple Pilots) is 41. Rock
musician Ben Mizc (Counting Crows) is 36. Rapper T-Mo
is 35. Actress Lori Beth Denberg is 11. Singer Shakira is 30.
, Thought for Today: "The great temptation is to have an
alibi." - George Abbott, American theatrical producer
0887-1995).

Donald Seitz had suffered
through a long dl!y during a
bad week at his office on
Nashville's famous Music
Row.
On his way home from a
business call, he drove past
the Greater Pleasant View
Baptist
Church
in
Brentwood, Tenn. As usual.
the no-tech sign out front
offered a folksy thought for
the week. This one caught
his eye.
"He who kneels before
God can stand before anyone.'' it said. in black, movable lellers inserted by hand
into slots on a plain white
background.
Seitz pulled over and got
out of his car to study the
Sign.
"It's all about timing," l'le
said. "I've driven past thousands of church signs in my
life. but this was the right
sign on the right day. It got
me.
"That's the thing about
these signs. They grab you
when you least expect it.
They move you, somehow."
Before long, the president
of Redbird Music crossed
the line between intrigued
and somewhat obsessed.
Along with his wife and
their young son, he packed
their car full of camera
equipment and "lots of
sippy cups" and hit the road.
His goal was to find as
many of these old-fashioned
signs as possible - the kind
that say things
like

10

l llll .

·dnc••Ja}

I ALlam

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley

(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to

G

Published ellery afternoon, Monday
through Friday. 111 Coul1 Street,
be accurate. If yoi.J know of an error
Pomeroy. Ohio. Second-class postage
in a story, call the newsroom at (740)
paid a! Pomeroy.
992-2156.
Member: The Associa1e~ Press and
the Ohio Newspaper Association.

Our main number is

Postma•ler: Send address correc-

(740) 992-2156.

tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Cour1
Street. Po meroy. Ohio 45769.

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Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, E.lCt. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Advertising

By carrier or motor route

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Mall Sub.crlptlon

lnalde Melga County
13 Weeks .
26 Weeks .
52 Weeks

. . . .... '32 .26
. ...... ~.20
. ..... .. ' 127.11

Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks . .
26 We&lt;~ks .
52 Weeks . .

. .' 53.55
. .'107. 10
. ... ' 2 14.21

South~ast .

Terry
Mattingly

"Coincidence is when God
chooses to remain anonymous," "Exercise dail y.
walk with the Lord." "God
answers knee mail" and
"'Give God what is right, not
what is left."
They spread their trips
over three years. and Seit7
stopped keeping track or the
miles after they passed the
20.000 mark. The resu lt was
"The Great American Book
of Church Signs. " which
contains 100 photographs
taken in nearly 40 states.
The pilgrimage, he said,
was like reading "one long
American sermon."
Seitz did have questions.
He wondered whether these
signs remain common at
rural churches. and whether
they are used by city
megachurches. Also, do
some
denominations
embrace them while others
think they are too simplistic? Would he find a redchurch vs. blue-church pattern? Many of his preconceptions were based on his
experiences living and driving in the Bible Belt, especially two-lane roads in the

"This book could have
been done in Tenne"ee
alone . In fact. I think I could
have done a whole book in
Nashville," said Seitz.
laughing. " In this part of the
world. you can throw a rock
in just about any direction
and hit four or live chmches
that have these signs.
''Church ~ig n' are more

common in

~ome

places

than others. but if you lcc·p
looking you' ll li nd them at
all kinds of churches &lt;ill
over the country."
Thus, the Harmony Hill
Church
of
God
in
Fayetteville. Tenn .. prodaimed , "Faith is a journey,
not a destination ." But Seitz
also found a sign that said.
"Love God with all of your
. heart, then do whatever you
want" in front or the Fifth
Avenue
Pre sbyterian
Church in New York .
The Tompkinsv ille !Ky.)
Church of Chri st's sig n
warned rural drivers that,
··A dam holds water back.
It 's not my last name . God ."
On the other side of the doctrinal aisle, the sign at the
South Church Unitarian
Universalist !-ianctuary in
Portsmouth,
N.H ..
announced - with typically
broad -minded sentiments
- that, "True religion is the
life we lead, not the creed
we profess."
Seitz said h, was surprised that he sJw very few
signs that included political

BAD NEWS!

OUR

ID~

gEEN

STOLEN~

MICROSOFT

VISTA

themes. although it was
~asy to read between the
lines of one that said, "The
Ten Commandment s are
still posted here." It was
also easy to interpret another marquee that stressed,
'·God is not a Republican or
a Democrat. "
This is not advanced theology. The message on a
typical sign is only eight
words long and is the product of a ,-olu~teer's clever
1111a!!iua1iun, research in old
c· hu;ch bulletins or, in the
digi tal age. a quick search
on the World Wide Web .
Most combine a chuck le
with a moral message that
strives to appeal to strangers
as well as members.
After all of (lis travels,
Seitz decided that the arche. typal church-sign message
was this one: ·'Life is fragile . Handle with prayer."
"It's succinct, it has that ·
little pun in there and it's
powerful , if you think about
it for a minute," he said .
'That's the essence of a
good church-sign message.
That's what yuu"re trying to
do- get people to stop and
think for a minute.··
(Ten-r Mattingly is direcror of rhe Wa.1hington
Joumalism Cemer at the
Council jar
Christian
Colleges c111d Unirersities .
and
leads
the
GetRelixion.org project to
.\'Judy religion and the
new.\".)

THE

GOOD

NEWS
IS THAT
IT TOOK
THEM
TWICE
AS LONG,
THOUGH.

2007

Obituaries

CAP meets

COOLVILLE - Dorsey C. Burkhammer, 76, of
Coolville. died Tuesday, Jan . 30, 2007, at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital , Parkersburg, W Va.
He was born Nov. 14, 1930, in Lewis County, W.Va.. son
of the late Ray and Minnie Bennell Burkhammer. He was a
carpenter with Union Local 356 in Mariella, a 1950 graduate of Carthage-Troy School , an Army veteran of the
Korean War, a life member of the Athens VFW, the Athens
Am Vets and the American Legion.
He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Emma Jean
Holcomb Burkhammer: three daughters: Deborah (Don)
Lorentz of Jeannette. Pa.. Lou Ann Burkhammer of
Columbus, and Lori !Mikel Thomas of San Marcos. Tex .;
one granddaughter, Alissa Lorentz; four grandsons.
Zachary Lorentz, Brandon Thomas. Pvt. First Class stationed 10 Germany, Bryan Thomas and Shane Thomas; and
a sister, Helen (Elmer) Kaylor.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a
brother, Richard .
. Service will be held at II a.m. Friday. Feb. 2. 2007. at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, with Pastor
Wendell Stutler officiating. Burial will be in the Coolville
Cemetery, where military rite s will be observed.
Friends may call from 2-8 p.m. on Thursday at the
funeral home
Memorial contributions may be made to the American
Heart Association.
You can £ign the on-line guest book at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.

CHESHIRE - CitiLens Against Pollution meets at 7 p.m.
on the last Tuesday of each month. The public is invited to
auend the meetin g&gt;. Information is avai lable at 367 -0273.

MIDDLEPORT - Jerry Edward Carpenter, 63, of
Middleport. passed away on Feb. I, 2007 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant. W.Va.
He was born June 18, 1943, in Rutland. to Lawrence D
"Smitty" Carpenter of Rutland and the late Lillie Belle
Price Carpenter. He was formerly employed by Burger Boy
Foodaram~ and Goodwill Industries, and auended First
Baptist Church in Pomeroy. He was a 1961 graduate of
Albany High School.
Besides his father, he is survived by his stepmother,
Clarie Carpenter of Rutland; a brother, Harold R. "Bob"
"(Joyce) Carpenter of Pickerington; two aunts, Kathleen
Carpenter of Rutland and Margaret Price of Columbus; and
several nieces, nephews and cousins.
Service will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007.
at Birchfield Funerill Home in Rutland with Lamar
o :Bryant ofl"iciating and burial following in Standish
Cemetery in Dexter. The family will receive friends from
noon until the time of service at the funeral home.

Lester 'Pete' Russell
NEW HAVEN . W.Va. - Lester "Pete" Richard Russell ,
96, of New Haven, W.Va., passed away on Wednesday. Jan.
31,2007, at home in Westerville.
_
He was born June I0, 1910 m West Columbia, W.Va., son
of Henry and Mary Dodd Russell. He was a coal miner.
His wife, Martha Catherine Stewan Russell, preceded
him in death.
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law. Betty (Paul)
Reid of Westerville; a son and daughter-m-law, John
(Janice) Russell of Muskogee, Okla.; a sister-in-law,
Geraldine Greer of New Haven; II grandchildren; 28 great
grandchildren; ~ight great-great grandchildren; and several
nieces and nerhews.
Funeral wil be held at II a.m. on Saturday. Feb. 3, 2007.
at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va .. with
Rev. Joanne Clevenger officiating. Burial will follow at
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call from I0 to II a.m. on Saturday at the
funeral home.

from PageA1

The last shot
After nearly four years of
confusing arguments over
the invasion of Iraq, the
debate has suddenly and
unexpectedly taken on a sort
of weird simplicity.
The Democrats, after
dividing on whether to support the attack when it
began, and then adopting
(individually) almost every
conceivable position regarding it since, have now,
together with Republican
senator Chuck Hagel of
Nebraska, more or less united on a single demand : bring
our troops home, and let the
Middle East settle its own
problems.
And President Bush. after
years of insisting we were
on the path to "victory" and
had only to "stay the
course," has decided to send
an additional 21,500 troops
to Iraq in one last attempt to
impose our will on events
there. As commander in
chief. tha~ decision was his
to make, and surely most
Americans will hope that
this "surge" succeeds. But if
it fails. there is equally little
doubt that our military operations· in Iraq will soon be
winding down, and George
W. Bush's legacy in foreign
allairs will be one of abject

achieve a beller outcome.
All of these will be filibustered to death, if necessary,
by the Senate Republicans,
far more than the necessary
40
of whom are sticking by
William
the president and are in no
Rusher
mood to let the Democrats
indulge in such grandstanding. Even so, however. such
gestures serve to register the
failure.
Democrats' solid agreement
In pure theory, Bush's with most voters, and that
opponents could afford to never hurts.
wish him good luck in the
Meanwhile. outside of
"surge," and simply sit back Congress. the militant ldt.
and wait to see what hap- which privately despises the
pens. If he is successful, the United States and longs for
egg will be on their faces. If its defeat. is busy staging
he isn't, they will be reaping mass rallies in furtherance
the political rewards for of that cause .
years to come.
It is lou early to predict
But the Democrats. per- the comse of events in Iraq.
haps inevitably. have been Certainlv the record of the
unable to resist the tempta- past four years isn't enc&lt;\urtion to go on record as sup- aging. But Bush "s autni sporting what polls indicate sion , in his State of the
is the conclusion of about Union address. that the stratthree-quarters
of
the egy of restraint - of miniAmerican people: ' that the mizing the Am~ric&lt;ui preswar in Iraq isn' t winnable, at ence and pushing the Iraqis.
least at any price in blood prematurely. to assume the
and treasure that they are leading role - sin1ply haswilling to pay. So the con- n't worked. and mu st be
gressional hoppers are full drastically revised. will. in
of "non-binding resolu- and l&gt;f itse lf. generate a diftions" demanding that Bush ferent dynamic, and therequi! now. without a '\urge" fore. just possibly. a differor any other effort to ent result.

Meanwhile the so-called
""insurgents," not to mention
their abettors in Iran and
Syria, are watching the
debate in the United States
with what must surely be
considerable sati sfaction.
They have never imagined
they could defeat this country in a conventional war.
But they learned from
Vietnam, along with the rest
of the world, that tlie
American people have no
stomach for long military
operations against guerillas
who can avoid extinction
and impose fatalities - few.
perhaps. but persistent and
seem ingly endless - 01~
Amerit·an tnx&gt;ps . Sooner or.
later, they are gambling, our
will and patience will give_
out, and our healthy democratic processes will force the
government 10 abandon Iraq
and probably the rest of the
Middle East.
Whether they would be
satisfied wit h that achievement, or simply conclude
that it points the way to the
ultimate Islamic .conquest of
the West. remains to be seen.
( William RtHher is a
Distingwshed Fellow of the
Claremunl lnsriwre {(~r the
Studr of Staresmonshi(J and
Pulirical Philosophy.)

Local Briefs

Jeny Carpenter

custodian and cook.
The board accepted the
donation of 21 Gateway and
Mason computers from the
Teays Valley School District
valued at around $7,530.
The board also accepted the
donation of 19 Gateway
computers from the Meigs
Local School District valued at $8,500.
The board accepted a
donation of $3,000 from the
estate of Eva Robson to be
used as a "one-time" scholarship which will be award-

Columbia
from PageA1
$1.94 to a typical monthly
bill for residential and some
small commercial customers,
company spokesman Ken
Stammen sa1d. The increase
would remain in place until
the riser replacements are
paid off. he said.
Alan Schriber, chairman
of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio. asked
the state's gas utility companies last month to inspect
all hookups and replace
those found to be faulty
Gas companies &lt;md others
have until Monday to
respond to the request.
The replacement cost
could reach several hundred
dollars for eac h faulty
hookup, Stammen said. The
company will ask the
PUCO to recover the costs
from all customers . he said.
Columbia. a division of
Merrillville ,
lnd. -based
NiSource. has customers in
64 of Ohio's 88 counties.
Onlv certain types of plastic pi)les are at risk. Schriber
said. Metal pipes can leak.

•

ed to a graduating senior m
the class of 2007 .
The board approved the
second reading of the new or
revised board polices which
include, but are not limited
to. administrator ethic s,
employment of the superintendent, employment of the
treasurer, staff ethics. use of
medications, vendor relations, bioterrorism, student
abuse and neglect. professional staff. The new and
revised policies require a
third and final reading as
well as a vote for approval.
The next board meeting
is set fur 8 p.m., Monday,
Feb. 26 in the high school
media room.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Dorsey Burkhammer

Southern

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev sho11ld be less
than 300 words. All letter.• are subject to .editing, must be
signed. and include address and telephon e numba No
unsigned letrers will be published Letters should be in
good taste. addressing issues. not personalities. Leuers of
thar1ks co orgmiizatimis and individiwls will not be accepted for pL&lt;blicatioll.

Friday, February 2, 2007

Wayside homilies abundant at Americas churches

i&lt;&gt;
..;\ilk &amp;

PageA4

Friday, February 2,

Senate votes to raise
·minimum wage to $7.25
an hour over 2 years
BY JIM KUHNHENN

fe r them in a seP.arate,
House-initiated tax bill :
In a statement, President
WASHINGTON - The Bu sh encouraged House
Senate voted overwhelm- Democ rats to accept the
ingly Thursday to boost the Senate version of the bill .
federal minimum wage by "The Senate has taken a
$2 .10 to $7.25 an hour over step toward helping maintwo years, but packaged the tain a strong and dynamic
increase with small business labor market and promoting
tax cuts and limits on corpo- continued
economic
rate pay that could compli - growth," Bush said.
cate ns path to become law.
But AFL-CIO President
The increase in the mini- John Sweeney vowed to
mum wage, the lirst in a "turn up the volume" to
decade, was approved 94-3, pass a bill without tax
capping a nine-day debate breaks.
" Minimum wage workers
over how to balance ·the
wage hike with the needs of in this country have waited
businesses that employ low- far too long for a raise,"
Sweeney said in a statement
wage workers .
A top
priority of after the vote. "It 's shameful
Democrats, the wage hike that they must now wait
has both real and symbolic even longer because of the
consequences. It would be Senate's insistence on busione of the first major leg- ness tax giveaways."
The three senators voting
islative successes of the
new Democratic-controlled against the bill were
Republicans Tom Coburn of
Congress.
Oklahoma,
Jon Kyl of
"Passing this wage hike
. represents a small but nec - Arizona and Jim DeMint of
essary step to help lift South Carolina. Absent
vote were
America's working poor . from the
Democrats
Tim
Johnson of
out of the ditches of poverty and onto the road South Dakota and Charles
toward economic prosperi- Schumer of New York and
ty," said Sen . · Edward Republican James lnhofe of
Oklahoma.
Kennedy, D-Mass.
The legislation would
Republicans stressed the
raise
the minimum wage in
importance of the bill's
three
steps. It would go to
business tax breaks, though
$5.85
an hour upon taking
it was a significantly smalleffect
60
days after the preser tax package than
Republicans had sought ident signs it into law, then
during previous attempts to to $6.55 an hour a year later,
and to $7.25 an hour a year
raise the minimum wage.
after
that.
"The Senate's reasonable
An effort by the Senate
approach recognizes that
last
week to end debate on
small businesses have been
the
House
version of the bill
the steady engine of our
failed
when
Democrats
growing economy and that
to
get the 60
were
unable
they have been a source of
new job creation, a source votes needed. But many
of job training," said Sen. Democrats in the House and
Michael Enzi, R-Wyo., who Senate would like to chalhelped manage the debate lenge Republicans to vote
against a clean bill with no
for the GOP
·
The bill must now be rec- tax provisions.
"If
we
go
through
the
onciled with the House verprocess
...
and
the
message
sion PIISSed Jan. 10 that contained no tax provisions. comes back: 'You can have
the minimum wage stripped
House Democrats have down
or not at all,' then
insisted they want a mini- we'll face
another vote,"
mum wage bill with no said Sen. Richard Durbin,
strings attached, though D-Ill., the assistant majority
some have conceded the leader.
need
difficulty of passing the leg- Republicans "We
to pass it. If
islation in the Senate with- they continue to oppose it
out tax breaks.
then it will not pass.'
The measure presents a
Senate Majority Leader
challenge to Democrat s Harry Reid, D-Nev., said
who must navigate between Thursday he did not believe
the demands of labor and the business incentives
other interest groups and the were necessary. 'The minirealities of the Senate. mum wage
will
be
where Republicans hold 49 increased," he said. "The
of I00 votes. House and question is do we need all
Senate Democrats now these business pieces of
must try to negotiate a way sugar or not. We will see."
out of the potential standoff,
A spokesman for Reid
House Speaker Nancy said the tax breaks are needPelosi, D-Calif. , has said ed to overcome a potential
she supports some tax pro- GOP filibuster.
visions in the House package, but said she would pre~SOCIA.TEO

For the Record
Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Kevin Lee Dugan, 39, and Joyce
Lynn Roush. 32, both of Racine. and John Edwin Hunnell .
23, and Krista) Renee Duff, 18, both of Dexter.

Grand Jury
POMEROY on Feb. 28 .

Meigs County Grand Jury will convene

Foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure was issued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to CitiFinanci-al, Inc ., against
Ronnie B. Grimm.

Holzer Home
Health announces
employee.of month
CHESTER
Paula
Gaul, RN , staff nurse for
Holzer Hospice. has been
named
the
December
"SpOtlight Employee of the
Month" for the Holzer
Home Health Services.
A graduate of Hocking
College in 1995 with an
associate's
degree
in
Nursing. she and her husband, Roger reside near
Chester. She has two children, two stepchildren. and
nine grandchildren. Her
nursing experience includes
long-term care. home
health, outpatient surgery
and ICU. and joined Holzer
Hospice in 200 I.
"I knew when I became a
nurse that I wanted to work
as a hospice nurse, and it
has never disappointed me.
I have learned so much
from the patients and their
families and friends. Not
only are you appreciated,
but many times you feel as
if you truly made a difference for the patient and

Paula Gaul

their families during very
difficult times." said Gaul.
" It is the most rewarding
nursing I have experienced,
and I feel truly blessed to
have had the opportunity."
Holzer Hospice cares for
P.atients with a life limiting
illness in Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs and surrounding
counties.

Birthday observed
POMEROY - Krystul
Holley observed her first
birthday with a party at the
Zion Church of Christ fellowship room.
A Wmnie the Pooh theme
was carried out in the decorations and cake which was
served with ice cream. chips
and pop. Gifts were presented to the youngster.
Auendin~ were her parents, Justm Holley and
Brittany Guinther: her
paternal grandparents. Jerry
and Cheryl Holley ; an
uncle, Calvin
Holley ;
maternal
grandparents,
Malcolm and Charlotte
Guinther: an aunt. j&lt;aitie
Guinther; maternal greatgrandmother, Janice Elkins;
paternal great-grandparents,
Harley
and
Kathryn
Johnson.
Also attending were Ida
Muryhy. Kori Neece, Ben
Williams,
_Wilma

PRESS WRITER

I: , I\~,

\ -\ll t

1

A!!~1Krystal Holley

DWIGHT .
ICENHOWER

Gillenwater, Ricky A.
Jeffers, Jr., D. J. Russell ,
Bonnie Lou Allen. Kurtis
RollinS, Amanda Pollock,
Pollock,
Clarissa
M.
Michelle Byrd, Heather
Bable, Tammy Bably, Brad
Smith, Nicole Jones.

"Love Me Tender"
February 10 8 pm
Tickets On Sale Now!

but when they do, the leaks
aren't as dangerous because
they ' re usually not as big.
Ohio's other gas utilities
are Dominion East Ohio,
with about 1.2 million customers; Duke Energy Ohio,
with 415,000; and Vectren
Energy Delivery of Ohio,
with 318.000.
CHESTER - The Chester Township Board of Trustees
The commission likely
will hold hearings and recently re-elected Blair Windon as president and Alan
decide in about six weeks Holter as vice president . Elmer Newell is the thtrd member
whether Columbia's plan on the board. Meetings for 2007 were set for the first
will be approved. Schriber Tuesday of each month, 7 p.m. at the Chester town hall .
The next meeting will be 7 p.m. Tuesday.
said Thursday.
"We'll worry about the
money later. Let's just get
them fixed," Schriber said.
The office of Ohio
Consumers' Counsel. which
Subscribe today • 992·2155
represents residential customers in rate cases, said it
would need to study
Columbia's proposal before
commenting on cost recovery and plans to tile its own
response
by
Monday.
Monday, Feb. 12, 2007
However, spokeswoman
Erin Biehl said it's imporat 6:00
tant that Columbia and
Joy Padgett- Guest Speaker
other providers make whatever changes are necessary.
Meigs High School Cafeteria
"Our office feel s this is an
Tickets ($15.00) being sold by members of
issue that needs to be taken
Republican Executive Committee
care of. Safety has to come
tirst." Biehl said .
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;;;:;;;;;;;-

Officers elected

Proud to be ~partof your life.
LINCOLN DAY DINNER

Classic Movie- Romance
Sunday, Fell. 11 • 2 pm

Classic Movie- K. Hepllum
Sunday. Fell. 18 • 2 pm
The Ariel-Dater Hall

428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH

740-446-ARTS-(2787)

HEALTH FAIR

at the Mulberry Community Center
t'ebruary 10, 2007
9:00am • 11 :OOam
What is offered:

Fastinc Cbolesterols
Non-fasting Cboleste~
Blood Pressure

BMI ,
Glucose
Bone Density
Health Related I nformatioo
AppoU.tJrurtt IIIIISI bt 111ade for IM
FlUting Clwkskrol&amp;
CGil Artdy 8~"4{1111J Ill 740-992~26
to sc~N~luk an appoinllfltfll
tkMidl t'lir if 1t 1 4d ltv
Holm:' MtcMr:a1 Coat- Cc=ww•, Hrallll lllld W~ ~

M.ulktn (.......,..., Cr*r -.1

!do• c;;..., -

t)opt.

7

�OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
b

ll.t

""

y J!•

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnal.com
hdlip
~ rn.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

""

am .
p.m

&lt;h
ilf,htp
_Htt&gt;k

';u tor

Congress shall make no laiV respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
fru exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemblr, and to petition
the Governmtntfor a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
t , _OH

- 10

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mg

I) 675-

'.unday
c;,IUdy

burch

5.:hool-

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Pastor
·(){) am .

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UniT~·

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Sunda ~

7 p .m ..

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lil.nl l-td .

S.:h!ln l 11 .. 7: 00

no p.m
Sunday~

Today is Friday. Feb. 2. the 33rd day of 2007. There are
332 days left in the year. This is Groundhog Day.
Today 's Highlight in History :
On Feb. 2. 1943, the remainder of Nazi forces from the
Battle of Stalingrad surrendered in a major victory for the
Soviets in World War II.
On this date:
In 1536, the Argentine city of Buenos Aires was founded
by Pedro de Mendoza of Spain .
In 1653. New Amsterdam - now New York City - was
incorporated.
·
In 1848. the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the
Mexican War, was signed.
In 1876, the National League of Professional Base Ball
Clubs was formed in New York.
In 1882, Irish poet and novelist James Joyce was born
near Dublin .
In 1897, lire destroyed the Pennsylvania state capitol in
Harrisburg. (A new statehouse was dedicated on the same
site nine years later.)
In 1948. President Truman sent to Congress a 10-point
civil rights program calling for measures against lynching,
poll taxes and job discrimination.
In 1961 , the hijackers of the Portuguese ocean liner the
Santa Maria allowed the passengers and crew to disembark
in Brazil, II days after seizing the ship.
.
In 1987, the White House announced the resignation of
CIA director William Casey. who was hospitalized and had
undergone brain surgery.
In 1996. dancer. actor and choreographer Gene Kelly died
at his Beverly Hills, Calif.. home; he was 83.
Five years ago: Inside the World Economic Forum in New
York, foreign economic leaders criticized the United States
for protectionist policies while outside, thousands of protesters demonstrated against global capitalism. Jim Kelly of
the Buffalo Bills and Pittsburgh Steelers star John
Stallworth were elected to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.
The NHL World All-Stars rallied to defeat North America 8to-5.
One year ago: House Republicans elected John Boehner
of Ohio as their new majority leader to replace the indicted
Tom Delay. Tornadoes tor~ through New Orleans neighborhoods that had been hit hard by Hurricane Katrina five
months earlier.
Today's Birthdays: Actress Elaine Stritch is 82. Actor
Robert Mandan is 75. Comedian Tom Smotherc. is 70. Rock
singer-guitarist Graham Nash is 65. Actor Bo Hopkins is 65.
Television executive Barry Diller is 65. Country singer
Howm·d Bellamy (The Bellamy Brotl1ers) is 61. Actress
Farrah Fawcett is fiO. Actor Jack McGee is 58. Actor Brent
Spiner is SR. Rock musician Ross Valory (Journey) is 58.
Model Christie Brinkley is 53. Actor Michael Talbott is 52.
Actre" Kim Zimmer is 52. Rock musician Robert Deleo
(Army of Anyone and Stone Temple Pilots) is 41. Rock
musician Ben Mizc (Counting Crows) is 36. Rapper T-Mo
is 35. Actress Lori Beth Denberg is 11. Singer Shakira is 30.
, Thought for Today: "The great temptation is to have an
alibi." - George Abbott, American theatrical producer
0887-1995).

Donald Seitz had suffered
through a long dl!y during a
bad week at his office on
Nashville's famous Music
Row.
On his way home from a
business call, he drove past
the Greater Pleasant View
Baptist
Church
in
Brentwood, Tenn. As usual.
the no-tech sign out front
offered a folksy thought for
the week. This one caught
his eye.
"He who kneels before
God can stand before anyone.'' it said. in black, movable lellers inserted by hand
into slots on a plain white
background.
Seitz pulled over and got
out of his car to study the
Sign.
"It's all about timing," l'le
said. "I've driven past thousands of church signs in my
life. but this was the right
sign on the right day. It got
me.
"That's the thing about
these signs. They grab you
when you least expect it.
They move you, somehow."
Before long, the president
of Redbird Music crossed
the line between intrigued
and somewhat obsessed.
Along with his wife and
their young son, he packed
their car full of camera
equipment and "lots of
sippy cups" and hit the road.
His goal was to find as
many of these old-fashioned
signs as possible - the kind
that say things
like

10

l llll .

·dnc••Ja}

I ALlam

The Daily Sentinel
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(USPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern in all stories is to

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News
Editor: Charlene Hoeflich, E.lCt. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
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Mall Sub.crlptlon

lnalde Melga County
13 Weeks .
26 Weeks .
52 Weeks

. . . .... '32 .26
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Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks . .
26 We&lt;~ks .
52 Weeks . .

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South~ast .

Terry
Mattingly

"Coincidence is when God
chooses to remain anonymous," "Exercise dail y.
walk with the Lord." "God
answers knee mail" and
"'Give God what is right, not
what is left."
They spread their trips
over three years. and Seit7
stopped keeping track or the
miles after they passed the
20.000 mark. The resu lt was
"The Great American Book
of Church Signs. " which
contains 100 photographs
taken in nearly 40 states.
The pilgrimage, he said,
was like reading "one long
American sermon."
Seitz did have questions.
He wondered whether these
signs remain common at
rural churches. and whether
they are used by city
megachurches. Also, do
some
denominations
embrace them while others
think they are too simplistic? Would he find a redchurch vs. blue-church pattern? Many of his preconceptions were based on his
experiences living and driving in the Bible Belt, especially two-lane roads in the

"This book could have
been done in Tenne"ee
alone . In fact. I think I could
have done a whole book in
Nashville," said Seitz.
laughing. " In this part of the
world. you can throw a rock
in just about any direction
and hit four or live chmches
that have these signs.
''Church ~ig n' are more

common in

~ome

places

than others. but if you lcc·p
looking you' ll li nd them at
all kinds of churches &lt;ill
over the country."
Thus, the Harmony Hill
Church
of
God
in
Fayetteville. Tenn .. prodaimed , "Faith is a journey,
not a destination ." But Seitz
also found a sign that said.
"Love God with all of your
. heart, then do whatever you
want" in front or the Fifth
Avenue
Pre sbyterian
Church in New York .
The Tompkinsv ille !Ky.)
Church of Chri st's sig n
warned rural drivers that,
··A dam holds water back.
It 's not my last name . God ."
On the other side of the doctrinal aisle, the sign at the
South Church Unitarian
Universalist !-ianctuary in
Portsmouth,
N.H ..
announced - with typically
broad -minded sentiments
- that, "True religion is the
life we lead, not the creed
we profess."
Seitz said h, was surprised that he sJw very few
signs that included political

BAD NEWS!

OUR

ID~

gEEN

STOLEN~

MICROSOFT

VISTA

themes. although it was
~asy to read between the
lines of one that said, "The
Ten Commandment s are
still posted here." It was
also easy to interpret another marquee that stressed,
'·God is not a Republican or
a Democrat. "
This is not advanced theology. The message on a
typical sign is only eight
words long and is the product of a ,-olu~teer's clever
1111a!!iua1iun, research in old
c· hu;ch bulletins or, in the
digi tal age. a quick search
on the World Wide Web .
Most combine a chuck le
with a moral message that
strives to appeal to strangers
as well as members.
After all of (lis travels,
Seitz decided that the arche. typal church-sign message
was this one: ·'Life is fragile . Handle with prayer."
"It's succinct, it has that ·
little pun in there and it's
powerful , if you think about
it for a minute," he said .
'That's the essence of a
good church-sign message.
That's what yuu"re trying to
do- get people to stop and
think for a minute.··
(Ten-r Mattingly is direcror of rhe Wa.1hington
Joumalism Cemer at the
Council jar
Christian
Colleges c111d Unirersities .
and
leads
the
GetRelixion.org project to
.\'Judy religion and the
new.\".)

THE

GOOD

NEWS
IS THAT
IT TOOK
THEM
TWICE
AS LONG,
THOUGH.

2007

Obituaries

CAP meets

COOLVILLE - Dorsey C. Burkhammer, 76, of
Coolville. died Tuesday, Jan . 30, 2007, at Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital , Parkersburg, W Va.
He was born Nov. 14, 1930, in Lewis County, W.Va.. son
of the late Ray and Minnie Bennell Burkhammer. He was a
carpenter with Union Local 356 in Mariella, a 1950 graduate of Carthage-Troy School , an Army veteran of the
Korean War, a life member of the Athens VFW, the Athens
Am Vets and the American Legion.
He is survived by his wife of 53 years, Emma Jean
Holcomb Burkhammer: three daughters: Deborah (Don)
Lorentz of Jeannette. Pa.. Lou Ann Burkhammer of
Columbus, and Lori !Mikel Thomas of San Marcos. Tex .;
one granddaughter, Alissa Lorentz; four grandsons.
Zachary Lorentz, Brandon Thomas. Pvt. First Class stationed 10 Germany, Bryan Thomas and Shane Thomas; and
a sister, Helen (Elmer) Kaylor.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by a
brother, Richard .
. Service will be held at II a.m. Friday. Feb. 2. 2007. at
White-Schwarzel Funeral Home, Coolville, with Pastor
Wendell Stutler officiating. Burial will be in the Coolville
Cemetery, where military rite s will be observed.
Friends may call from 2-8 p.m. on Thursday at the
funeral home
Memorial contributions may be made to the American
Heart Association.
You can £ign the on-line guest book at www.whiteschwarzelfuneralhome.com.

CHESHIRE - CitiLens Against Pollution meets at 7 p.m.
on the last Tuesday of each month. The public is invited to
auend the meetin g&gt;. Information is avai lable at 367 -0273.

MIDDLEPORT - Jerry Edward Carpenter, 63, of
Middleport. passed away on Feb. I, 2007 at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant. W.Va.
He was born June 18, 1943, in Rutland. to Lawrence D
"Smitty" Carpenter of Rutland and the late Lillie Belle
Price Carpenter. He was formerly employed by Burger Boy
Foodaram~ and Goodwill Industries, and auended First
Baptist Church in Pomeroy. He was a 1961 graduate of
Albany High School.
Besides his father, he is survived by his stepmother,
Clarie Carpenter of Rutland; a brother, Harold R. "Bob"
"(Joyce) Carpenter of Pickerington; two aunts, Kathleen
Carpenter of Rutland and Margaret Price of Columbus; and
several nieces, nephews and cousins.
Service will be held at 2 p.m. on Saturday, Feb. 3, 2007.
at Birchfield Funerill Home in Rutland with Lamar
o :Bryant ofl"iciating and burial following in Standish
Cemetery in Dexter. The family will receive friends from
noon until the time of service at the funeral home.

Lester 'Pete' Russell
NEW HAVEN . W.Va. - Lester "Pete" Richard Russell ,
96, of New Haven, W.Va., passed away on Wednesday. Jan.
31,2007, at home in Westerville.
_
He was born June I0, 1910 m West Columbia, W.Va., son
of Henry and Mary Dodd Russell. He was a coal miner.
His wife, Martha Catherine Stewan Russell, preceded
him in death.
Surviving are a daughter and son-in-law. Betty (Paul)
Reid of Westerville; a son and daughter-m-law, John
(Janice) Russell of Muskogee, Okla.; a sister-in-law,
Geraldine Greer of New Haven; II grandchildren; 28 great
grandchildren; ~ight great-great grandchildren; and several
nieces and nerhews.
Funeral wil be held at II a.m. on Saturday. Feb. 3, 2007.
at Foglesong-Tucker Funeral Home in Mason, W.Va .. with
Rev. Joanne Clevenger officiating. Burial will follow at
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call from I0 to II a.m. on Saturday at the
funeral home.

from PageA1

The last shot
After nearly four years of
confusing arguments over
the invasion of Iraq, the
debate has suddenly and
unexpectedly taken on a sort
of weird simplicity.
The Democrats, after
dividing on whether to support the attack when it
began, and then adopting
(individually) almost every
conceivable position regarding it since, have now,
together with Republican
senator Chuck Hagel of
Nebraska, more or less united on a single demand : bring
our troops home, and let the
Middle East settle its own
problems.
And President Bush. after
years of insisting we were
on the path to "victory" and
had only to "stay the
course," has decided to send
an additional 21,500 troops
to Iraq in one last attempt to
impose our will on events
there. As commander in
chief. tha~ decision was his
to make, and surely most
Americans will hope that
this "surge" succeeds. But if
it fails. there is equally little
doubt that our military operations· in Iraq will soon be
winding down, and George
W. Bush's legacy in foreign
allairs will be one of abject

achieve a beller outcome.
All of these will be filibustered to death, if necessary,
by the Senate Republicans,
far more than the necessary
40
of whom are sticking by
William
the president and are in no
Rusher
mood to let the Democrats
indulge in such grandstanding. Even so, however. such
gestures serve to register the
failure.
Democrats' solid agreement
In pure theory, Bush's with most voters, and that
opponents could afford to never hurts.
wish him good luck in the
Meanwhile. outside of
"surge," and simply sit back Congress. the militant ldt.
and wait to see what hap- which privately despises the
pens. If he is successful, the United States and longs for
egg will be on their faces. If its defeat. is busy staging
he isn't, they will be reaping mass rallies in furtherance
the political rewards for of that cause .
years to come.
It is lou early to predict
But the Democrats. per- the comse of events in Iraq.
haps inevitably. have been Certainlv the record of the
unable to resist the tempta- past four years isn't enc&lt;\urtion to go on record as sup- aging. But Bush "s autni sporting what polls indicate sion , in his State of the
is the conclusion of about Union address. that the stratthree-quarters
of
the egy of restraint - of miniAmerican people: ' that the mizing the Am~ric&lt;ui preswar in Iraq isn' t winnable, at ence and pushing the Iraqis.
least at any price in blood prematurely. to assume the
and treasure that they are leading role - sin1ply haswilling to pay. So the con- n't worked. and mu st be
gressional hoppers are full drastically revised. will. in
of "non-binding resolu- and l&gt;f itse lf. generate a diftions" demanding that Bush ferent dynamic, and therequi! now. without a '\urge" fore. just possibly. a differor any other effort to ent result.

Meanwhile the so-called
""insurgents," not to mention
their abettors in Iran and
Syria, are watching the
debate in the United States
with what must surely be
considerable sati sfaction.
They have never imagined
they could defeat this country in a conventional war.
But they learned from
Vietnam, along with the rest
of the world, that tlie
American people have no
stomach for long military
operations against guerillas
who can avoid extinction
and impose fatalities - few.
perhaps. but persistent and
seem ingly endless - 01~
Amerit·an tnx&gt;ps . Sooner or.
later, they are gambling, our
will and patience will give_
out, and our healthy democratic processes will force the
government 10 abandon Iraq
and probably the rest of the
Middle East.
Whether they would be
satisfied wit h that achievement, or simply conclude
that it points the way to the
ultimate Islamic .conquest of
the West. remains to be seen.
( William RtHher is a
Distingwshed Fellow of the
Claremunl lnsriwre {(~r the
Studr of Staresmonshi(J and
Pulirical Philosophy.)

Local Briefs

Jeny Carpenter

custodian and cook.
The board accepted the
donation of 21 Gateway and
Mason computers from the
Teays Valley School District
valued at around $7,530.
The board also accepted the
donation of 19 Gateway
computers from the Meigs
Local School District valued at $8,500.
The board accepted a
donation of $3,000 from the
estate of Eva Robson to be
used as a "one-time" scholarship which will be award-

Columbia
from PageA1
$1.94 to a typical monthly
bill for residential and some
small commercial customers,
company spokesman Ken
Stammen sa1d. The increase
would remain in place until
the riser replacements are
paid off. he said.
Alan Schriber, chairman
of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio. asked
the state's gas utility companies last month to inspect
all hookups and replace
those found to be faulty
Gas companies &lt;md others
have until Monday to
respond to the request.
The replacement cost
could reach several hundred
dollars for eac h faulty
hookup, Stammen said. The
company will ask the
PUCO to recover the costs
from all customers . he said.
Columbia. a division of
Merrillville ,
lnd. -based
NiSource. has customers in
64 of Ohio's 88 counties.
Onlv certain types of plastic pi)les are at risk. Schriber
said. Metal pipes can leak.

•

ed to a graduating senior m
the class of 2007 .
The board approved the
second reading of the new or
revised board polices which
include, but are not limited
to. administrator ethic s,
employment of the superintendent, employment of the
treasurer, staff ethics. use of
medications, vendor relations, bioterrorism, student
abuse and neglect. professional staff. The new and
revised policies require a
third and final reading as
well as a vote for approval.
The next board meeting
is set fur 8 p.m., Monday,
Feb. 26 in the high school
media room.

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Dorsey Burkhammer

Southern

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. Thev sho11ld be less
than 300 words. All letter.• are subject to .editing, must be
signed. and include address and telephon e numba No
unsigned letrers will be published Letters should be in
good taste. addressing issues. not personalities. Leuers of
thar1ks co orgmiizatimis and individiwls will not be accepted for pL&lt;blicatioll.

Friday, February 2, 2007

Wayside homilies abundant at Americas churches

i&lt;&gt;
..;\ilk &amp;

PageA4

Friday, February 2,

Senate votes to raise
·minimum wage to $7.25
an hour over 2 years
BY JIM KUHNHENN

fe r them in a seP.arate,
House-initiated tax bill :
In a statement, President
WASHINGTON - The Bu sh encouraged House
Senate voted overwhelm- Democ rats to accept the
ingly Thursday to boost the Senate version of the bill .
federal minimum wage by "The Senate has taken a
$2 .10 to $7.25 an hour over step toward helping maintwo years, but packaged the tain a strong and dynamic
increase with small business labor market and promoting
tax cuts and limits on corpo- continued
economic
rate pay that could compli - growth," Bush said.
cate ns path to become law.
But AFL-CIO President
The increase in the mini- John Sweeney vowed to
mum wage, the lirst in a "turn up the volume" to
decade, was approved 94-3, pass a bill without tax
capping a nine-day debate breaks.
" Minimum wage workers
over how to balance ·the
wage hike with the needs of in this country have waited
businesses that employ low- far too long for a raise,"
Sweeney said in a statement
wage workers .
A top
priority of after the vote. "It 's shameful
Democrats, the wage hike that they must now wait
has both real and symbolic even longer because of the
consequences. It would be Senate's insistence on busione of the first major leg- ness tax giveaways."
The three senators voting
islative successes of the
new Democratic-controlled against the bill were
Republicans Tom Coburn of
Congress.
Oklahoma,
Jon Kyl of
"Passing this wage hike
. represents a small but nec - Arizona and Jim DeMint of
essary step to help lift South Carolina. Absent
vote were
America's working poor . from the
Democrats
Tim
Johnson of
out of the ditches of poverty and onto the road South Dakota and Charles
toward economic prosperi- Schumer of New York and
ty," said Sen . · Edward Republican James lnhofe of
Oklahoma.
Kennedy, D-Mass.
The legislation would
Republicans stressed the
raise
the minimum wage in
importance of the bill's
three
steps. It would go to
business tax breaks, though
$5.85
an hour upon taking
it was a significantly smalleffect
60
days after the preser tax package than
Republicans had sought ident signs it into law, then
during previous attempts to to $6.55 an hour a year later,
and to $7.25 an hour a year
raise the minimum wage.
after
that.
"The Senate's reasonable
An effort by the Senate
approach recognizes that
last
week to end debate on
small businesses have been
the
House
version of the bill
the steady engine of our
failed
when
Democrats
growing economy and that
to
get the 60
were
unable
they have been a source of
new job creation, a source votes needed. But many
of job training," said Sen. Democrats in the House and
Michael Enzi, R-Wyo., who Senate would like to chalhelped manage the debate lenge Republicans to vote
against a clean bill with no
for the GOP
·
The bill must now be rec- tax provisions.
"If
we
go
through
the
onciled with the House verprocess
...
and
the
message
sion PIISSed Jan. 10 that contained no tax provisions. comes back: 'You can have
the minimum wage stripped
House Democrats have down
or not at all,' then
insisted they want a mini- we'll face
another vote,"
mum wage bill with no said Sen. Richard Durbin,
strings attached, though D-Ill., the assistant majority
some have conceded the leader.
need
difficulty of passing the leg- Republicans "We
to pass it. If
islation in the Senate with- they continue to oppose it
out tax breaks.
then it will not pass.'
The measure presents a
Senate Majority Leader
challenge to Democrat s Harry Reid, D-Nev., said
who must navigate between Thursday he did not believe
the demands of labor and the business incentives
other interest groups and the were necessary. 'The minirealities of the Senate. mum wage
will
be
where Republicans hold 49 increased," he said. "The
of I00 votes. House and question is do we need all
Senate Democrats now these business pieces of
must try to negotiate a way sugar or not. We will see."
out of the potential standoff,
A spokesman for Reid
House Speaker Nancy said the tax breaks are needPelosi, D-Calif. , has said ed to overcome a potential
she supports some tax pro- GOP filibuster.
visions in the House package, but said she would pre~SOCIA.TEO

For the Record
Marriage licenses
POMEROY - Marriage licenses were issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Kevin Lee Dugan, 39, and Joyce
Lynn Roush. 32, both of Racine. and John Edwin Hunnell .
23, and Krista) Renee Duff, 18, both of Dexter.

Grand Jury
POMEROY on Feb. 28 .

Meigs County Grand Jury will convene

Foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure was issued in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court to CitiFinanci-al, Inc ., against
Ronnie B. Grimm.

Holzer Home
Health announces
employee.of month
CHESTER
Paula
Gaul, RN , staff nurse for
Holzer Hospice. has been
named
the
December
"SpOtlight Employee of the
Month" for the Holzer
Home Health Services.
A graduate of Hocking
College in 1995 with an
associate's
degree
in
Nursing. she and her husband, Roger reside near
Chester. She has two children, two stepchildren. and
nine grandchildren. Her
nursing experience includes
long-term care. home
health, outpatient surgery
and ICU. and joined Holzer
Hospice in 200 I.
"I knew when I became a
nurse that I wanted to work
as a hospice nurse, and it
has never disappointed me.
I have learned so much
from the patients and their
families and friends. Not
only are you appreciated,
but many times you feel as
if you truly made a difference for the patient and

Paula Gaul

their families during very
difficult times." said Gaul.
" It is the most rewarding
nursing I have experienced,
and I feel truly blessed to
have had the opportunity."
Holzer Hospice cares for
P.atients with a life limiting
illness in Gallia, Jackson,
Meigs and surrounding
counties.

Birthday observed
POMEROY - Krystul
Holley observed her first
birthday with a party at the
Zion Church of Christ fellowship room.
A Wmnie the Pooh theme
was carried out in the decorations and cake which was
served with ice cream. chips
and pop. Gifts were presented to the youngster.
Auendin~ were her parents, Justm Holley and
Brittany Guinther: her
paternal grandparents. Jerry
and Cheryl Holley ; an
uncle, Calvin
Holley ;
maternal
grandparents,
Malcolm and Charlotte
Guinther: an aunt. j&lt;aitie
Guinther; maternal greatgrandmother, Janice Elkins;
paternal great-grandparents,
Harley
and
Kathryn
Johnson.
Also attending were Ida
Muryhy. Kori Neece, Ben
Williams,
_Wilma

PRESS WRITER

I: , I\~,

\ -\ll t

1

A!!~1Krystal Holley

DWIGHT .
ICENHOWER

Gillenwater, Ricky A.
Jeffers, Jr., D. J. Russell ,
Bonnie Lou Allen. Kurtis
RollinS, Amanda Pollock,
Pollock,
Clarissa
M.
Michelle Byrd, Heather
Bable, Tammy Bably, Brad
Smith, Nicole Jones.

"Love Me Tender"
February 10 8 pm
Tickets On Sale Now!

but when they do, the leaks
aren't as dangerous because
they ' re usually not as big.
Ohio's other gas utilities
are Dominion East Ohio,
with about 1.2 million customers; Duke Energy Ohio,
with 415,000; and Vectren
Energy Delivery of Ohio,
with 318.000.
CHESTER - The Chester Township Board of Trustees
The commission likely
will hold hearings and recently re-elected Blair Windon as president and Alan
decide in about six weeks Holter as vice president . Elmer Newell is the thtrd member
whether Columbia's plan on the board. Meetings for 2007 were set for the first
will be approved. Schriber Tuesday of each month, 7 p.m. at the Chester town hall .
The next meeting will be 7 p.m. Tuesday.
said Thursday.
"We'll worry about the
money later. Let's just get
them fixed," Schriber said.
The office of Ohio
Consumers' Counsel. which
Subscribe today • 992·2155
represents residential customers in rate cases, said it
would need to study
Columbia's proposal before
commenting on cost recovery and plans to tile its own
response
by
Monday.
Monday, Feb. 12, 2007
However, spokeswoman
Erin Biehl said it's imporat 6:00
tant that Columbia and
Joy Padgett- Guest Speaker
other providers make whatever changes are necessary.
Meigs High School Cafeteria
"Our office feel s this is an
Tickets ($15.00) being sold by members of
issue that needs to be taken
Republican Executive Committee
care of. Safety has to come
tirst." Biehl said .
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
;;;:;;;;;;;-

Officers elected

Proud to be ~partof your life.
LINCOLN DAY DINNER

Classic Movie- Romance
Sunday, Fell. 11 • 2 pm

Classic Movie- K. Hepllum
Sunday. Fell. 18 • 2 pm
The Ariel-Dater Hall

428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH

740-446-ARTS-(2787)

HEALTH FAIR

at the Mulberry Community Center
t'ebruary 10, 2007
9:00am • 11 :OOam
What is offered:

Fastinc Cbolesterols
Non-fasting Cboleste~
Blood Pressure

BMI ,
Glucose
Bone Density
Health Related I nformatioo
AppoU.tJrurtt IIIIISI bt 111ade for IM
FlUting Clwkskrol&amp;
CGil Artdy 8~"4{1111J Ill 740-992~26
to sc~N~luk an appoinllfltfll
tkMidl t'lir if 1t 1 4d ltv
Holm:' MtcMr:a1 Coat- Cc=ww•, Hrallll lllld W~ ~

M.ulktn (.......,..., Cr*r -.1

!do• c;;..., -

t)opt.

7

�BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

This retiree met one of the rotten apples
BY KATHY MrrcHEU
AND MARCY SUGAR

beside the point. Thi s man
drinks to excess, is a slob,
seen" 11&gt; be in love with hi'
Dear Annie: I am 65 - cat. and doesn 't treat you as
yeur-old semi-retired female you'd like to be treated. It's
and have met a 68-year-old tim;;; to move on .
Dear Annie: I love my
retired male. ''Richard." My
question is, ;tfter three yogu cla"es. Howe ver, last
months, spending many week there was a very sick
evenings with him and person ·whose mat was two
being physically intimate. I mches from mine, and she
feel he does not treat me the had diny, wet tissues lying
way he did before. Lately. nearby. There was no space
to move except out the door,
he's become very cheap.
Richard has serious health so I made a discreet comproblems. but drinks every plaint to my teacher. I h~ped
would
make
an
day and his house is a pit. he
announcement
that
sick
peoHe has a cat he is devoted to
and calls her "his wife ." He ple should stay home. but, in
see ms immature for his age. fact , he seemed annoyed
I suspect he has been drink- wi th me tilr mentioning it.
A similar thing happened
ing for a very long time and
in
class yesterday. [ don't
it has stunted his emotional
want to antagonize anyone.
development.
I have been through two It's not that I mind speaking
verbally abusive marriages up, but I want to be welami have had cheap come in the class. My only
boyfriends previously, hut choice see ms to be to leave.
what is it with men over 60'' but I'd hate to do that. What
Confused in Soulh would you recommend? Trying lo Slay Healthy in
Dakola
Dear Confused: It has lhe Dark Days
Dear Trying: You can
nothing to do with men over
60, but that seems to be arrive early enough to posiyour dating pool. so you are tion your mat closer to the
more likely to find the rot- wa ll , minimizing your conten apples in that barrel. We tact with others (or late
also don't know what you enough to spot the sick ones
mean by "cheap," but that is and sit elsewhere). You can

wash your hands frequent, ly, drink lots of tluids, or as
re ad e r~
ha '&lt;e "uggest ed.
wear a sur~ical mask. The
bottom line is. 1f the
instructor won ' t ask the
sneeLing. sniftling , coughing people to leave. and the
sick ones don ' t have the
courtesy to stay away, your
choice IS to put up with it or
find another class.
Dear Annie: I have to
respond to "On! y Want The
Truth," whose husband was
a pathological liar. My husband tells people he graduated medical school, that he
was in the Olympics and
that he runs marathons (all
lies). My husband is a
wealthy. self-made man. He
has no reason to lie. yet he
would never adm it he fabricates . When I lovingl y discuss these things with him ,
he accuses me of try ing to
demean him.
It's hard to sit still while
your husband tells people
these whoppers. I even
think he believes hi s stories. He once offered help
on an ai rline flight when
they called for a doctor. I
told him, ''You no longer
have malpractice insurance,
so let someone e lse help. " It
is tragic to have such a need

to make up a past when
there is no need to do it. My
husband i.s an mnazing man
111 real li le.
"Only Wanh the Truth"
might just have to deal with
this and suffer inside . A
friClld of mine recently lost
her husband. He told us he
was in the CIA, was a POW
in Vietnam, etc. When he
was ill and she tried to get
Gl benefits, she found out
he had made it all up. At
least I know my husband is
a liar and won ' t be surprised
later. - Pinocchio 's Wife
Dear Wife : We shudder
to think of the harm your
husband might have &lt;;lone
by passing himself off as a
doctor. Better the devil
you know.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landen
column. Please e·mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0.
Box II 8190, Chicago, l L
606ll. To find out more
about A1111ie 's Mailbox,
a11d read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
a11d cartoonists, risit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Community Calendar
include Valerie Clonc h,
Agapptl Jubilee. Edi son
Spriggs
Singers
and
Thesday, Feb. 6
Forgiven 4. An offering will
PAGEYILLE - Scipio be taken for the family who
Township Trustee will meet lost three children in the
at 6:30p.m. a1 the Pageville recent Huntington fire. For
Town Hall.
more information, call 742- ·
LETART
Letart 2376.
Township Trustees, II a.m.
Salurday, Feb. 3
Appropriations for 2007
POMEROY - A gospel
prior to regular meeting.
bluegrass music concert
Monday, Feb. S
will be held at 6:30 p.m. a\
SYRACUSE - Sutton the Mulberry Community
Township Trustees 7 p.m. Center.
Syracuse Village Hall.
Sunday, Feb. II
Thursday, Feb. 8
POMEROY - Rev. Dr.
POMEROY - Salisbury David Rahamut will speak
Township Trustees, 6:30 at the I0:30 a.m. worship
p.m., town hall.
service at the Laurel Cliff
Friday, Feb. 9
Free Methodist Church. For
MARIETTA
The more information call 3i04Regional Advisory Council 773-5559.
for the Area Agency on
Aging will meet at 10 a .. m.
in the Buckeye HillsHVRDD Area Agency on
Aging office in Marietta.

members welcome, call
992-6626.
RACIN E
Racine
Chapter 134 O.E.S. 7:30
p.m. Mock initiation. All
officers to attend. Potluck.
Tuesday, Feb. 6
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Community
Association, 8:30 a.m.,
Peoples Bank.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge #363,
F&amp;AM. monthly bu sine ss
meetin g,
7:30
p.m.
Refreshments.
CHESTER
- Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, 7 p.m., Maso nic
Hall . Barbara Sargent,
Thelma White , Goldie
Frederick hostesses.
Wednesday, Feb. 7
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club, I
p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Evelyn
Hollon to present program
on
planning a shade garden.
Salurday, Feb. 3
Thursday, Feb. 8
SALEM CENTER
CHESTER
-Shade
Star Grange #778 and Star
River
Lodge
453
will
meet
Junior Grange #878 meet
7:30
p.m.
at
the
Masonic
for potluck supper at 6:30
p.m., with meeting to follow hall. Refreshments.
RACINE Sonshine
at 7:30. Opening and closing team to practice during Circle, 7 p.m. at the Dorcas
Bethany Church.
meeting.
Monday, Feb. S
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
reg ular meeting, noon, conSunday,Feb.4
ference room Meigs County
POMEROY
Senior Citizens Center, ne w Dedication of Mulberry

Clubs and
organizations

Church events
Friday, Feb. 2
RACINE - Hymn sing
at Carmel-Sutton United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m..
Carmel
Community
Building. Carmel Road .
Refreshments.
RUTLAND - A benefit
sing will be held at 7 p.m at
the Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church, Salem Street,
will
Rutland. Singers

Sftlllans
MIDDLEPORT - Plans
to honor Henry Dixon,
Meigs County's last living
Union soldier, were made at
the recent meeting of
Brooks-Gra.nt Camp Sons
of Union Veterans of the
Civil War held at the
Middleport
Masonic
Temple Building.
Keith Ashley, secretary,
reported that contacts are
being made with his
descendants to obtain fami ly information in preparation of the event to be held
on the third Saturday in
May at his burial site.
Officers installed for the
new year were Alan Holter,
commander:
Tom
Galloway, senior vice commander; Scott McElroy,
junior vice commander:
PCC James Mourning.
Keith
treasurer; PDC
Ashley, secretary ; Frank
Sisson. patriotic instructor :
Tom Hopton, chaplain:
PCC Greg Michael. historian; the Rev. John Frank,
camp councilman; Paul
Ditty, guide; and Rhett
Milhoan, guard .
The patriotic instructor's
report included information
that the words "Under God"
had been removed recently
from an oath of the U.S. Air
"'lrce. Also. a U.S. Navy
chaplain had recently been
discharged for praying in

•

Friday, February 2,

Community Center by
Meigs Cooperative Parish,
and blessing by Roman
Catholic Bish_op R. Daniel
Conlon of the Diocese of
Steubenville, 3 p.m.
SYRACUSE Alan
Downie will speak on the
Gideon program at II a.m.
at the Syracuse Community
Church, Second Street.

Birthdays
Thursday, Feb. 8
POMEROY
Alice
Thompson will observe her
85th binhday, Feb. 8. Cards
may be sent to her at 42370
Gun Club Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Salurday, Feb. 10
MIDDLEPORT - Irma
Bales, formerly of the
Ky ger area, will observe her
birthday on Feb. 10. She is
in room 311 at Overbrook
Center, 333 Page St.,
Middleport 45760 and cards
may be sent to her there.

the name of Jesus.
The camp was told that
the
Meigs
County
Commission were going to
rule on the closing of two
roads at Ponland that were
roads present during the
Battle of Buffington Island.
Gerald Crawford of Letart
Falls has represented the
camp in this matter.
The Ohio Historica l
Society is now forming an
"umbrella" group to unite
all gro ups interested in
sav ing the Buffingto n
Island
Battlefield.
It
recently received a federal
grant to study the matter
and make recommendations. Alan Holter, commander. appoi nted Frank
Sisson to represent the
camp in this group.
The recent tire that
destroyed the home of
Tommy Hopton of Racine
was noted with the camp
voting to make a donation
as a member of the camp.
The recent ac tion of a private land developer in diggi ng across the Harpers
Ferry Historical Park in
West Virginia was discussed. The deve loper did
not have permission to do
this. it was reported. and
Civil War hi storians are
outraged. The camp signed
a petition to Congress a'king that an investigation be

soldier

held in the matter and
passed a resolution on thi s
action as welL
The camp voted to hold
' its Civil War knowledge test
again at Meigs High School
and issue a $ 100 cash prize
to the student with the highest score. Interested students may contact the guidance counselors at the high
school to enter the contest.
The camp also noted the
recent return of a 58th Ohio
Volunteer Infantry tlag to
the Ohio Historical Society.
This tlag had been recently
purchased by a private collector for $15.0&lt;l0! It had
been illegally removed at
some ti me from the Ohio
Historical Society and
passed throu gh several
owners 'over the pasl few
years. The collector is not
entitled to repayment of the
money he spent nor any
legal fees he incurred in trying to prevent the flag's
return, it was reported.
Speaker was Harry Bailey
of Miners vilie. who talked
about his grandfather. Pvt.
John Wesley Bailey of the
140th Ohio Volunteer
Infantry. a 100-days unit
that included several companies from Meigs County.
He showed a copy of his
grandfather's discharge and
a pil·tLire of him with some
of his family.

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

NFL News, Page 82

J Sum IIIUI1ed NBA all-stars, Page ll(i
11gerfrustraled al Oubai, Page B6

Today's Forecast
Forecast tor Frtday, Feb. 2

clty/lleglon
High I Low temps

Friday, February 2, 2007

Lady Eagles fall
to Waterford

POMEOOV - A IIChdJIIl ot ~ eo1o1ge
and t-ql achool vatSiy ipOI1i'1g tMW"Itl irM:JM1g
~from Gda .-d UtMg&amp; OCII.IlliM.

Voung.town •
30' I 22"

fddly'IMmtl

Boys Baakolhall
Warertoro ar Southern, 6:30 p.m

STAFF

Vinton County at Me;gs , 6:30p.m.
Athens at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.

O.yton•~
27~ 119" ~

*Columbus o---....__
29' 121 '
~

.....

Girts Bnkotboll

Coal Grove a.t South Gallia, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Cross Lanes, 6:30p.m.

lilt;yrday'l ......
Boyo llnkotboll
Gallia Academy at Wheelersburg , 6
p.m.
Belpre at Eastern, 6:30p.m.

~ Ponamouth•
~d 33" 127"'

I

C 2007 Wutlderii'QU&lt;ld

b....

( __~

Cloudy

~--

--c: · --=:.l

Partl" /.)""-.,. ' ; ' ;7
, L _ _)
Cloudy
--Sho wa rs

...-"2-"~ Flurries r":)r-.......... .
k:.e ~
Of~·
C- 'r. . '~\'c,. .-?""~-c....._
_; ' : ' :: ~.
~
Thunder·

storm s 'T~.,,~~

/~ , ~

R&amp;n

• • •

Snow

•~ ••&amp;

Wealher lk'lderground • AP

Friday ...Cloudy. Snow
showers likely in the morning .. .Then a chance of snow
showers in the afternoon.
Hi ghs in the lower 30s.
West winds arou nJ 5
mph .. .lncrCliSing to 10 to 15
mph in the ufternoon.
Chance of snow 60 percent.
Friday
night ... Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance of
snow showers in the
evening. Colder with lows
around 15. West winds I0 to
15 mph with gusts up to 25
mph . Chance of snow 20
percent.
Saturday... P&lt;Irtly sunny
with a 30 percent chance nf
sno w showers. Highs in the
mid 20s. Southwest winds
I 0 to 15 mph wi th gusts up

to 30 mph.
Saturday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of snow showers.
Cold with lows aro und 12 .
West winds I0 to 15 mph
with gusts up to 25 mph.
Sunday... Partly sunny,
Cold with highs 15 to 20.
Sunday nighi ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of snow
after midnight. Cold with
lows around I0 above.
Chance of snow 40 percent.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of
snow. Cold with highs
around 20.
Monday
night and
Thesday ... Mostly cloudy.
Cold. Lows zero to 5 above
zero. Highs around 15 .

Local Stocks
AEP INYSE) - 43.70
AkJo INASDAQ)- 63.44
Ashland Inc. INYSE)- 69.39
Bt&amp; Lots INYSE)- 28.10
Bob Evans INASDAQ)- 34.14
Bor&amp;Wamer INYSE)- 69.75
Century Aluminum !NASDAQ) 48.50

.

Champion !NASDAQ)- 8 .90
Channtnc Shopa INASDAQ) 13.30

City Holdh.. INASDAQ)- 40.04
Coutno INYSE) - 89.12
Dollar Gonooatl NYSEI - 17.13
DuPont INYSE) - 50.&amp;8
US Bank (NYSE) - 35.59
Gannett INYSE)- 57.94
General Elect~c INYSE) - 36.23
Harley-Davidson INYSE)- 88.76
JP Morpn INYSE) - 111.21
Kroeoo (NYSE) - 25.72
Umltod Branda INYSE)- 28.48
Norfolk Southern INYSEI - 50.35
Oak Hill AnanctaiiNASDAQ) -

Qlrll Boakothall

'- ,:..

Eastern at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m.

Wr.Olllng

Gallia
Academy
at
SEOAl
Tournament. TBA
Melga, River Valley at John Deno Invite.
10a.m
COI\otO Bllkolbo\1
Rio Grande at Mount Vernon, 7:30p.m.
Womon'l COI\otO llnkotboU
Rio Grande at Mount Vernon, 5:30p.m.
llondly'a MDJM

Glrll Bnkotboll

Eastern at Galli&amp; Academy, 6 p.m.

Fairland at OVCS. 6 p.m.

lVC HooPS
STANDINGS
BOYS
Ohio

Divlalon
7.0

Vinton Co
Alexander

5-2
4-3
3-4
2·5
D-7

lle\pro
Nei-York

Wellston
Meigs

15-0
1()-4

H
7-8
3· 13
3·12

Hocking Dlvlo!on
7.0

Fed Hock
Miller
Waterford
SOuthern
Eastern
Trimble

5-2
4-3
3-4
1-6
1-6

13-3
11-4
9-6
5· 12
1-14
2- 12

GIRLS

28.24

Ohto V.t!ey Bane Coop. INASDAQ)

0~\o

-21.08

BBT (NYSE)- 42.83
.... p!eo (NASDAQ)- 28.84
Pepsico INYSE) - 85.38
PoemleoiNASDAQ) - 14.50
Rockwell (NYSE) -62.20
Rocky llooll CNASDAQ) - 15.80
Royal Dutoh ShaH - 89.48
Seara Haldl,/e INASDAQ)-

Alexander"
Vinton Co
Nels-York
Meigs
Wellston
Belpre

9.0
5-2
5·3
3-5
1-7
1-7

17-2
13-3
14-3

9-9
5- 12
1· 16

Hocking Division

178.91

(NYSE) - 47.78
Wendy'oiNYSE)- 33.84
Worthtncton INYSE) - 19.48
DaHy otock oeports - the 4 p.m.
ET ctootnc quot11 ol toanuctlonl
lor Feb. 1, 2007, prowlde&lt;l by
Edward Jones ft.-lal advllora
ts""" Mille In GaH!pol!a at 1740)
441-9441, Trent R-" In
Pomeroy at 1740) 992-3875, and
Lolley Manooo In Paint Pleatanl

Dlvlalon

Wa~Mart

Waterford
Eastern
Fed HOd&lt;
Trimble

Miller
Southern

7-o
5-3
5-3
3-5
2-6
1-6

15-2
1Q-6
1Q-6
7·11
4-13
6·11

REPORT

SPORTS@M'f OAILVSEN TI NEL CO M

Eastern at Trimble, 6:30p.m.
South Gallia at Ironton St. Joe . 6:30
pm.
River Valley at South Floinl, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Cross Lanes, 8 p.m.

Ctnctnnall
• JO·' I 23°

AP phala
Miami Heat 's Dwyane Wade drives past Cleveland Cavaliers' Larry Hughes (32) in ·the first quarter of a
. basketball game in Miami on Thursday.

Miami slips past Cavaliers, 92-89
MIAMI (AP) - Dwyane Wade
turned the ball over more than any
Miami Heat player in hi story
Thursday night. His teammates
will likely forgive him.
Wade had 41 points - including a team-record 24 points in the
final quaner - as Miami came
from behind to beat the Cleveland
Cavaliers 92-89 in a game that
had some bizarre occurrences
down the stretch.
With the Heat up 87-86 with
20.4 seconds left , Wade took a
hard foul in the face, courtesy of
his good friend LeBron James who was called for a flagrant foul
as Wade writhed in pain near midcourt. Wade made · both tree

throws to push the lead to 89-86,
then made one more after being
fouled again 2.4 seconds later.
Wade had 12 turnovers, two
more than his previous careerworst and one more than the dubious mark Kevin Edwards set during the Heat's e)(pansion season
18 years ago. But he more than
atoned for that by making 23 of
24 free throw attempts - and the
Heat needed all of them.
James, bothered by a sprained
right big toe, played 36 minutes
and fini shed with 17 points, nine
assists and six rebounds - but
was 3-for-8 from the line and
missed three free throw s in a span
of 17 .2 seconds late in the game,

includinll one that would have
tied it with 44.8 seconds left.
Shaquille O' Neal had 16 points
before fouling out and Jason
Kapono added 13 for Miami .
Daniel Gibson had 19 points and
Drew Gooden added II for
Cleveland.
After Wade's three-point play
with 46.3 seconds left broke a tie,
James was fouled by James
Posey, a call that incensed Heat
intenm coach Ron Rothstein so
much that he walked over to the
scorers' table and slammed both
fi sts on it.
Rothstein was called for a tech-

PIMHseeC.vs,ll

WATERFORD League-leading
Waterford remained unbeaten in Tri- Valley
Conference Hocking Division action aft«
Thursday's 56-33 girls basketball victor)'
over visiting Eastern.
:
A 21-10 second quarter
run allowed the Lad~
Wildcats ( 15-2, 7-0 TV&lt;;
Hocking) to increase their
lead to 34-17 at imerrni S:.
sian, then a defensive seC:ond half allowed the hosts
to come awav with the 2~
point triumph.
The Lady Eagles ( I0-6,
Weber
5-3) went scoreless for
over five minutes in the
second stanza, falling behind 30-7. EHS
closed out the half on a I0-4 run and cut the
deficit to 13 with under four minutes left in
the third period, but the visitors never came
closer.
The Lady Eag les managed only II tield
goals in the contest and had six players
reach the scori ng col umn.
Only Erin Weber reached double-digits
in the setback, scoring a team-high 10
markers. Katie Hayman was next with nine
and Jenna Hupp followed with seven
points.
Ry an Davis also added four markers,
Jillian Brannon had two and Morgan Werry
rounded out the scoring with one point.
Eastern trailed 44-27 headed into the
final quarter. ·
WHS also had six players reach the scoring column, but half of those reached double ligures.
Sina King posted a game-high 16 points,
followed by Britany Brown with 14 and
Angela Manin with II markers.
Waterford claimed a sweep of the
evening after a 38-21 win in the junior varsity tilt.
Eastern returns to action Saturday when
it travels 10 Cheshire to take on River
Valley in a non-league matchup. The JV
game is scheduled to start at 6 p.m.
WATERFORD &amp;e, EASTERN 33
Eastern
Waterford

7
13

10
21

EASTERN (1o.6,

10
10

5-3 TVC

6
12 -

HOCKING)

0-0 Q_ TOTALS: 11 l 0· 12 33. Three-ppint goals: 1 (Hupp 1).

WATERFORD 115-2, 7-0 TVC HOCKING)

Bethany Amrine 2 o-o 5. Jessi Drayer 3 1-2 7, Tilfany
Wallace 0 0-2 0, Britany Brown 7 0-0 14. Sma K1ng B 0-0 16,
Kaitlyn Stewart 1 2·2 3, Angela Mart1n 5 1-1 11 . Bethany
Dailey 0 o-o o. Ali West o 0-0 o. Janetta Lang o 0-0 0,
Ashleigh Tornes 0 o-o 0. lauren Basner 0 0-0 0. TOTALS: 26
4-7 56. Three-point goals: 1 {Amnne 1).

• - denotes champion

&amp;11304) 874-0174. Member StPC.

CLINIC

•

11ie Jfo{ze·r Clinic ~m6u{atory
Surgery Center
cordia{{y invites you to
attend tlie 'Ri66on Cutting ana Grana Opening
of our new facifity
.J\t Jfo{zer Clinic
go jackson 'Pike
{]a{{i_pofis, Oliio
~onday,

]'efmtary 5,
12:ooym

2007

Reds agree to
minor league deal
with Meadows

doctor

CINCINNATI (AP)
Right-handed
reliever
Brian Meadow s agreed to a
minor league contract with
the Cincinnati Reds on
Thursday and was invited
to spring training.
Meadows appeared in 53
games for Tampa Bay last
season, going 3-6 with
eight saves and a 5.17
ERA. He gave up 14
homers in 69 2-3 innings.
The
.
31-year-old
Meadow s also has pitched
for Florida, San Diego,
Kansas City and Pittsburgh
during his nine-year career.
He
would
get
a
$600,000, one-year contract if added to the major
league rosier and the
chance to earn $ 100,000 in
performance bonuses .

•

CoNTAcrUs

'Refreshments wi{{ 6e sen;ed:

OVP

Sc~Line

cs p.m.-1 o.m.)

1-740.446-2342 ext. 33

jeaturin8 :Mojo's Coffee Sliop

Fu - 1-740-446-3008
E-mau - sportsOmydallysentinel.com

SwrttJiio.!l
Brad Sharllllln, Sports EdHor
(740)44&amp;2342. ext 33

bshermanOmydailytribune.com

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

Lerry Crum, Sports WrHer
(740) 44&amp;2342. ext 23

lcrumOmvdailyregisler.oom

Bryan Walters, Sports WrHer
(740)44&amp;2342, ext 33
bwaltersO~dailysentinel.com

·,

J

CARRIE lOCKHART DillARD. MD

33
56

Katie Hayman 3 3-3 9. Morgan Werry 0 1-2 1. Jillian Brannon
o 2-2 2, Erin Weber 3 4-5 10. Jenna Hupp 3 o-o 7. Ryan
Davis 2 o-o 4, Alyssa Newland 0 0-0 0, AmanOa Durham 0

HOLZER

Other events

ollasl CiVil

2007

Local Weather

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Public meetings

PageA6

- Walk-ins welcome

�BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

This retiree met one of the rotten apples
BY KATHY MrrcHEU
AND MARCY SUGAR

beside the point. Thi s man
drinks to excess, is a slob,
seen" 11&gt; be in love with hi'
Dear Annie: I am 65 - cat. and doesn 't treat you as
yeur-old semi-retired female you'd like to be treated. It's
and have met a 68-year-old tim;;; to move on .
Dear Annie: I love my
retired male. ''Richard." My
question is, ;tfter three yogu cla"es. Howe ver, last
months, spending many week there was a very sick
evenings with him and person ·whose mat was two
being physically intimate. I mches from mine, and she
feel he does not treat me the had diny, wet tissues lying
way he did before. Lately. nearby. There was no space
to move except out the door,
he's become very cheap.
Richard has serious health so I made a discreet comproblems. but drinks every plaint to my teacher. I h~ped
would
make
an
day and his house is a pit. he
announcement
that
sick
peoHe has a cat he is devoted to
and calls her "his wife ." He ple should stay home. but, in
see ms immature for his age. fact , he seemed annoyed
I suspect he has been drink- wi th me tilr mentioning it.
A similar thing happened
ing for a very long time and
in
class yesterday. [ don't
it has stunted his emotional
want to antagonize anyone.
development.
I have been through two It's not that I mind speaking
verbally abusive marriages up, but I want to be welami have had cheap come in the class. My only
boyfriends previously, hut choice see ms to be to leave.
what is it with men over 60'' but I'd hate to do that. What
Confused in Soulh would you recommend? Trying lo Slay Healthy in
Dakola
Dear Confused: It has lhe Dark Days
Dear Trying: You can
nothing to do with men over
60, but that seems to be arrive early enough to posiyour dating pool. so you are tion your mat closer to the
more likely to find the rot- wa ll , minimizing your conten apples in that barrel. We tact with others (or late
also don't know what you enough to spot the sick ones
mean by "cheap," but that is and sit elsewhere). You can

wash your hands frequent, ly, drink lots of tluids, or as
re ad e r~
ha '&lt;e "uggest ed.
wear a sur~ical mask. The
bottom line is. 1f the
instructor won ' t ask the
sneeLing. sniftling , coughing people to leave. and the
sick ones don ' t have the
courtesy to stay away, your
choice IS to put up with it or
find another class.
Dear Annie: I have to
respond to "On! y Want The
Truth," whose husband was
a pathological liar. My husband tells people he graduated medical school, that he
was in the Olympics and
that he runs marathons (all
lies). My husband is a
wealthy. self-made man. He
has no reason to lie. yet he
would never adm it he fabricates . When I lovingl y discuss these things with him ,
he accuses me of try ing to
demean him.
It's hard to sit still while
your husband tells people
these whoppers. I even
think he believes hi s stories. He once offered help
on an ai rline flight when
they called for a doctor. I
told him, ''You no longer
have malpractice insurance,
so let someone e lse help. " It
is tragic to have such a need

to make up a past when
there is no need to do it. My
husband i.s an mnazing man
111 real li le.
"Only Wanh the Truth"
might just have to deal with
this and suffer inside . A
friClld of mine recently lost
her husband. He told us he
was in the CIA, was a POW
in Vietnam, etc. When he
was ill and she tried to get
Gl benefits, she found out
he had made it all up. At
least I know my husband is
a liar and won ' t be surprised
later. - Pinocchio 's Wife
Dear Wife : We shudder
to think of the harm your
husband might have &lt;;lone
by passing himself off as a
doctor. Better the devil
you know.
Annie's Mailbox is writ·
ten by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landen
column. Please e·mail your
questions to anniesmail·
box@comcast.net, or write
to: Annie's Mailbox, P. 0.
Box II 8190, Chicago, l L
606ll. To find out more
about A1111ie 's Mailbox,
a11d read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers
a11d cartoonists, risit the
Creators Syndicate Web
page at www.creators.com.

Community Calendar
include Valerie Clonc h,
Agapptl Jubilee. Edi son
Spriggs
Singers
and
Thesday, Feb. 6
Forgiven 4. An offering will
PAGEYILLE - Scipio be taken for the family who
Township Trustee will meet lost three children in the
at 6:30p.m. a1 the Pageville recent Huntington fire. For
Town Hall.
more information, call 742- ·
LETART
Letart 2376.
Township Trustees, II a.m.
Salurday, Feb. 3
Appropriations for 2007
POMEROY - A gospel
prior to regular meeting.
bluegrass music concert
Monday, Feb. S
will be held at 6:30 p.m. a\
SYRACUSE - Sutton the Mulberry Community
Township Trustees 7 p.m. Center.
Syracuse Village Hall.
Sunday, Feb. II
Thursday, Feb. 8
POMEROY - Rev. Dr.
POMEROY - Salisbury David Rahamut will speak
Township Trustees, 6:30 at the I0:30 a.m. worship
p.m., town hall.
service at the Laurel Cliff
Friday, Feb. 9
Free Methodist Church. For
MARIETTA
The more information call 3i04Regional Advisory Council 773-5559.
for the Area Agency on
Aging will meet at 10 a .. m.
in the Buckeye HillsHVRDD Area Agency on
Aging office in Marietta.

members welcome, call
992-6626.
RACIN E
Racine
Chapter 134 O.E.S. 7:30
p.m. Mock initiation. All
officers to attend. Potluck.
Tuesday, Feb. 6
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Community
Association, 8:30 a.m.,
Peoples Bank.
MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Lodge #363,
F&amp;AM. monthly bu sine ss
meetin g,
7:30
p.m.
Refreshments.
CHESTER
- Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America, 7 p.m., Maso nic
Hall . Barbara Sargent,
Thelma White , Goldie
Frederick hostesses.
Wednesday, Feb. 7
SYRACUSE
Wildwood Garden Club, I
p.m. at the Syracuse
Community Center. Evelyn
Hollon to present program
on
planning a shade garden.
Salurday, Feb. 3
Thursday, Feb. 8
SALEM CENTER
CHESTER
-Shade
Star Grange #778 and Star
River
Lodge
453
will
meet
Junior Grange #878 meet
7:30
p.m.
at
the
Masonic
for potluck supper at 6:30
p.m., with meeting to follow hall. Refreshments.
RACINE Sonshine
at 7:30. Opening and closing team to practice during Circle, 7 p.m. at the Dorcas
Bethany Church.
meeting.
Monday, Feb. S
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Cancer Initiative,
reg ular meeting, noon, conSunday,Feb.4
ference room Meigs County
POMEROY
Senior Citizens Center, ne w Dedication of Mulberry

Clubs and
organizations

Church events
Friday, Feb. 2
RACINE - Hymn sing
at Carmel-Sutton United
Methodist Church, 7 p.m..
Carmel
Community
Building. Carmel Road .
Refreshments.
RUTLAND - A benefit
sing will be held at 7 p.m at
the Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church, Salem Street,
will
Rutland. Singers

Sftlllans
MIDDLEPORT - Plans
to honor Henry Dixon,
Meigs County's last living
Union soldier, were made at
the recent meeting of
Brooks-Gra.nt Camp Sons
of Union Veterans of the
Civil War held at the
Middleport
Masonic
Temple Building.
Keith Ashley, secretary,
reported that contacts are
being made with his
descendants to obtain fami ly information in preparation of the event to be held
on the third Saturday in
May at his burial site.
Officers installed for the
new year were Alan Holter,
commander:
Tom
Galloway, senior vice commander; Scott McElroy,
junior vice commander:
PCC James Mourning.
Keith
treasurer; PDC
Ashley, secretary ; Frank
Sisson. patriotic instructor :
Tom Hopton, chaplain:
PCC Greg Michael. historian; the Rev. John Frank,
camp councilman; Paul
Ditty, guide; and Rhett
Milhoan, guard .
The patriotic instructor's
report included information
that the words "Under God"
had been removed recently
from an oath of the U.S. Air
"'lrce. Also. a U.S. Navy
chaplain had recently been
discharged for praying in

•

Friday, February 2,

Community Center by
Meigs Cooperative Parish,
and blessing by Roman
Catholic Bish_op R. Daniel
Conlon of the Diocese of
Steubenville, 3 p.m.
SYRACUSE Alan
Downie will speak on the
Gideon program at II a.m.
at the Syracuse Community
Church, Second Street.

Birthdays
Thursday, Feb. 8
POMEROY
Alice
Thompson will observe her
85th binhday, Feb. 8. Cards
may be sent to her at 42370
Gun Club Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769.
Salurday, Feb. 10
MIDDLEPORT - Irma
Bales, formerly of the
Ky ger area, will observe her
birthday on Feb. 10. She is
in room 311 at Overbrook
Center, 333 Page St.,
Middleport 45760 and cards
may be sent to her there.

the name of Jesus.
The camp was told that
the
Meigs
County
Commission were going to
rule on the closing of two
roads at Ponland that were
roads present during the
Battle of Buffington Island.
Gerald Crawford of Letart
Falls has represented the
camp in this matter.
The Ohio Historica l
Society is now forming an
"umbrella" group to unite
all gro ups interested in
sav ing the Buffingto n
Island
Battlefield.
It
recently received a federal
grant to study the matter
and make recommendations. Alan Holter, commander. appoi nted Frank
Sisson to represent the
camp in this group.
The recent tire that
destroyed the home of
Tommy Hopton of Racine
was noted with the camp
voting to make a donation
as a member of the camp.
The recent ac tion of a private land developer in diggi ng across the Harpers
Ferry Historical Park in
West Virginia was discussed. The deve loper did
not have permission to do
this. it was reported. and
Civil War hi storians are
outraged. The camp signed
a petition to Congress a'king that an investigation be

soldier

held in the matter and
passed a resolution on thi s
action as welL
The camp voted to hold
' its Civil War knowledge test
again at Meigs High School
and issue a $ 100 cash prize
to the student with the highest score. Interested students may contact the guidance counselors at the high
school to enter the contest.
The camp also noted the
recent return of a 58th Ohio
Volunteer Infantry tlag to
the Ohio Historical Society.
This tlag had been recently
purchased by a private collector for $15.0&lt;l0! It had
been illegally removed at
some ti me from the Ohio
Historical Society and
passed throu gh several
owners 'over the pasl few
years. The collector is not
entitled to repayment of the
money he spent nor any
legal fees he incurred in trying to prevent the flag's
return, it was reported.
Speaker was Harry Bailey
of Miners vilie. who talked
about his grandfather. Pvt.
John Wesley Bailey of the
140th Ohio Volunteer
Infantry. a 100-days unit
that included several companies from Meigs County.
He showed a copy of his
grandfather's discharge and
a pil·tLire of him with some
of his family.

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

NFL News, Page 82

J Sum IIIUI1ed NBA all-stars, Page ll(i
11gerfrustraled al Oubai, Page B6

Today's Forecast
Forecast tor Frtday, Feb. 2

clty/lleglon
High I Low temps

Friday, February 2, 2007

Lady Eagles fall
to Waterford

POMEOOV - A IIChdJIIl ot ~ eo1o1ge
and t-ql achool vatSiy ipOI1i'1g tMW"Itl irM:JM1g
~from Gda .-d UtMg&amp; OCII.IlliM.

Voung.town •
30' I 22"

fddly'IMmtl

Boys Baakolhall
Warertoro ar Southern, 6:30 p.m

STAFF

Vinton County at Me;gs , 6:30p.m.
Athens at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.

O.yton•~
27~ 119" ~

*Columbus o---....__
29' 121 '
~

.....

Girts Bnkotboll

Coal Grove a.t South Gallia, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Cross Lanes, 6:30p.m.

lilt;yrday'l ......
Boyo llnkotboll
Gallia Academy at Wheelersburg , 6
p.m.
Belpre at Eastern, 6:30p.m.

~ Ponamouth•
~d 33" 127"'

I

C 2007 Wutlderii'QU&lt;ld

b....

( __~

Cloudy

~--

--c: · --=:.l

Partl" /.)""-.,. ' ; ' ;7
, L _ _)
Cloudy
--Sho wa rs

...-"2-"~ Flurries r":)r-.......... .
k:.e ~
Of~·
C- 'r. . '~\'c,. .-?""~-c....._
_; ' : ' :: ~.
~
Thunder·

storm s 'T~.,,~~

/~ , ~

R&amp;n

• • •

Snow

•~ ••&amp;

Wealher lk'lderground • AP

Friday ...Cloudy. Snow
showers likely in the morning .. .Then a chance of snow
showers in the afternoon.
Hi ghs in the lower 30s.
West winds arou nJ 5
mph .. .lncrCliSing to 10 to 15
mph in the ufternoon.
Chance of snow 60 percent.
Friday
night ... Mostly
cloudy. A slight chance of
snow showers in the
evening. Colder with lows
around 15. West winds I0 to
15 mph with gusts up to 25
mph . Chance of snow 20
percent.
Saturday... P&lt;Irtly sunny
with a 30 percent chance nf
sno w showers. Highs in the
mid 20s. Southwest winds
I 0 to 15 mph wi th gusts up

to 30 mph.
Saturday night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 30 percent
chance of snow showers.
Cold with lows aro und 12 .
West winds I0 to 15 mph
with gusts up to 25 mph.
Sunday... Partly sunny,
Cold with highs 15 to 20.
Sunday nighi ... Mostly
cloudy. A chance of snow
after midnight. Cold with
lows around I0 above.
Chance of snow 40 percent.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
with a 50 percent chance of
snow. Cold with highs
around 20.
Monday
night and
Thesday ... Mostly cloudy.
Cold. Lows zero to 5 above
zero. Highs around 15 .

Local Stocks
AEP INYSE) - 43.70
AkJo INASDAQ)- 63.44
Ashland Inc. INYSE)- 69.39
Bt&amp; Lots INYSE)- 28.10
Bob Evans INASDAQ)- 34.14
Bor&amp;Wamer INYSE)- 69.75
Century Aluminum !NASDAQ) 48.50

.

Champion !NASDAQ)- 8 .90
Channtnc Shopa INASDAQ) 13.30

City Holdh.. INASDAQ)- 40.04
Coutno INYSE) - 89.12
Dollar Gonooatl NYSEI - 17.13
DuPont INYSE) - 50.&amp;8
US Bank (NYSE) - 35.59
Gannett INYSE)- 57.94
General Elect~c INYSE) - 36.23
Harley-Davidson INYSE)- 88.76
JP Morpn INYSE) - 111.21
Kroeoo (NYSE) - 25.72
Umltod Branda INYSE)- 28.48
Norfolk Southern INYSEI - 50.35
Oak Hill AnanctaiiNASDAQ) -

Qlrll Boakothall

'- ,:..

Eastern at River Valley, 6 p.m.
Vinton County at Meigs, 6 p.m.

Wr.Olllng

Gallia
Academy
at
SEOAl
Tournament. TBA
Melga, River Valley at John Deno Invite.
10a.m
COI\otO Bllkolbo\1
Rio Grande at Mount Vernon, 7:30p.m.
Womon'l COI\otO llnkotboU
Rio Grande at Mount Vernon, 5:30p.m.
llondly'a MDJM

Glrll Bnkotboll

Eastern at Galli&amp; Academy, 6 p.m.

Fairland at OVCS. 6 p.m.

lVC HooPS
STANDINGS
BOYS
Ohio

Divlalon
7.0

Vinton Co
Alexander

5-2
4-3
3-4
2·5
D-7

lle\pro
Nei-York

Wellston
Meigs

15-0
1()-4

H
7-8
3· 13
3·12

Hocking Dlvlo!on
7.0

Fed Hock
Miller
Waterford
SOuthern
Eastern
Trimble

5-2
4-3
3-4
1-6
1-6

13-3
11-4
9-6
5· 12
1-14
2- 12

GIRLS

28.24

Ohto V.t!ey Bane Coop. INASDAQ)

0~\o

-21.08

BBT (NYSE)- 42.83
.... p!eo (NASDAQ)- 28.84
Pepsico INYSE) - 85.38
PoemleoiNASDAQ) - 14.50
Rockwell (NYSE) -62.20
Rocky llooll CNASDAQ) - 15.80
Royal Dutoh ShaH - 89.48
Seara Haldl,/e INASDAQ)-

Alexander"
Vinton Co
Nels-York
Meigs
Wellston
Belpre

9.0
5-2
5·3
3-5
1-7
1-7

17-2
13-3
14-3

9-9
5- 12
1· 16

Hocking Division

178.91

(NYSE) - 47.78
Wendy'oiNYSE)- 33.84
Worthtncton INYSE) - 19.48
DaHy otock oeports - the 4 p.m.
ET ctootnc quot11 ol toanuctlonl
lor Feb. 1, 2007, prowlde&lt;l by
Edward Jones ft.-lal advllora
ts""" Mille In GaH!pol!a at 1740)
441-9441, Trent R-" In
Pomeroy at 1740) 992-3875, and
Lolley Manooo In Paint Pleatanl

Dlvlalon

Wa~Mart

Waterford
Eastern
Fed HOd&lt;
Trimble

Miller
Southern

7-o
5-3
5-3
3-5
2-6
1-6

15-2
1Q-6
1Q-6
7·11
4-13
6·11

REPORT

SPORTS@M'f OAILVSEN TI NEL CO M

Eastern at Trimble, 6:30p.m.
South Gallia at Ironton St. Joe . 6:30
pm.
River Valley at South Floinl, 6 p.m.
OVCS at Cross Lanes, 8 p.m.

Ctnctnnall
• JO·' I 23°

AP phala
Miami Heat 's Dwyane Wade drives past Cleveland Cavaliers' Larry Hughes (32) in ·the first quarter of a
. basketball game in Miami on Thursday.

Miami slips past Cavaliers, 92-89
MIAMI (AP) - Dwyane Wade
turned the ball over more than any
Miami Heat player in hi story
Thursday night. His teammates
will likely forgive him.
Wade had 41 points - including a team-record 24 points in the
final quaner - as Miami came
from behind to beat the Cleveland
Cavaliers 92-89 in a game that
had some bizarre occurrences
down the stretch.
With the Heat up 87-86 with
20.4 seconds left , Wade took a
hard foul in the face, courtesy of
his good friend LeBron James who was called for a flagrant foul
as Wade writhed in pain near midcourt. Wade made · both tree

throws to push the lead to 89-86,
then made one more after being
fouled again 2.4 seconds later.
Wade had 12 turnovers, two
more than his previous careerworst and one more than the dubious mark Kevin Edwards set during the Heat's e)(pansion season
18 years ago. But he more than
atoned for that by making 23 of
24 free throw attempts - and the
Heat needed all of them.
James, bothered by a sprained
right big toe, played 36 minutes
and fini shed with 17 points, nine
assists and six rebounds - but
was 3-for-8 from the line and
missed three free throw s in a span
of 17 .2 seconds late in the game,

includinll one that would have
tied it with 44.8 seconds left.
Shaquille O' Neal had 16 points
before fouling out and Jason
Kapono added 13 for Miami .
Daniel Gibson had 19 points and
Drew Gooden added II for
Cleveland.
After Wade's three-point play
with 46.3 seconds left broke a tie,
James was fouled by James
Posey, a call that incensed Heat
intenm coach Ron Rothstein so
much that he walked over to the
scorers' table and slammed both
fi sts on it.
Rothstein was called for a tech-

PIMHseeC.vs,ll

WATERFORD League-leading
Waterford remained unbeaten in Tri- Valley
Conference Hocking Division action aft«
Thursday's 56-33 girls basketball victor)'
over visiting Eastern.
:
A 21-10 second quarter
run allowed the Lad~
Wildcats ( 15-2, 7-0 TV&lt;;
Hocking) to increase their
lead to 34-17 at imerrni S:.
sian, then a defensive seC:ond half allowed the hosts
to come awav with the 2~
point triumph.
The Lady Eagles ( I0-6,
Weber
5-3) went scoreless for
over five minutes in the
second stanza, falling behind 30-7. EHS
closed out the half on a I0-4 run and cut the
deficit to 13 with under four minutes left in
the third period, but the visitors never came
closer.
The Lady Eag les managed only II tield
goals in the contest and had six players
reach the scori ng col umn.
Only Erin Weber reached double-digits
in the setback, scoring a team-high 10
markers. Katie Hayman was next with nine
and Jenna Hupp followed with seven
points.
Ry an Davis also added four markers,
Jillian Brannon had two and Morgan Werry
rounded out the scoring with one point.
Eastern trailed 44-27 headed into the
final quarter. ·
WHS also had six players reach the scoring column, but half of those reached double ligures.
Sina King posted a game-high 16 points,
followed by Britany Brown with 14 and
Angela Manin with II markers.
Waterford claimed a sweep of the
evening after a 38-21 win in the junior varsity tilt.
Eastern returns to action Saturday when
it travels 10 Cheshire to take on River
Valley in a non-league matchup. The JV
game is scheduled to start at 6 p.m.
WATERFORD &amp;e, EASTERN 33
Eastern
Waterford

7
13

10
21

EASTERN (1o.6,

10
10

5-3 TVC

6
12 -

HOCKING)

0-0 Q_ TOTALS: 11 l 0· 12 33. Three-ppint goals: 1 (Hupp 1).

WATERFORD 115-2, 7-0 TVC HOCKING)

Bethany Amrine 2 o-o 5. Jessi Drayer 3 1-2 7, Tilfany
Wallace 0 0-2 0, Britany Brown 7 0-0 14. Sma K1ng B 0-0 16,
Kaitlyn Stewart 1 2·2 3, Angela Mart1n 5 1-1 11 . Bethany
Dailey 0 o-o o. Ali West o 0-0 o. Janetta Lang o 0-0 0,
Ashleigh Tornes 0 o-o 0. lauren Basner 0 0-0 0. TOTALS: 26
4-7 56. Three-point goals: 1 {Amnne 1).

• - denotes champion

&amp;11304) 874-0174. Member StPC.

CLINIC

•

11ie Jfo{ze·r Clinic ~m6u{atory
Surgery Center
cordia{{y invites you to
attend tlie 'Ri66on Cutting ana Grana Opening
of our new facifity
.J\t Jfo{zer Clinic
go jackson 'Pike
{]a{{i_pofis, Oliio
~onday,

]'efmtary 5,
12:ooym

2007

Reds agree to
minor league deal
with Meadows

doctor

CINCINNATI (AP)
Right-handed
reliever
Brian Meadow s agreed to a
minor league contract with
the Cincinnati Reds on
Thursday and was invited
to spring training.
Meadows appeared in 53
games for Tampa Bay last
season, going 3-6 with
eight saves and a 5.17
ERA. He gave up 14
homers in 69 2-3 innings.
The
.
31-year-old
Meadow s also has pitched
for Florida, San Diego,
Kansas City and Pittsburgh
during his nine-year career.
He
would
get
a
$600,000, one-year contract if added to the major
league rosier and the
chance to earn $ 100,000 in
performance bonuses .

•

CoNTAcrUs

'Refreshments wi{{ 6e sen;ed:

OVP

Sc~Line

cs p.m.-1 o.m.)

1-740.446-2342 ext. 33

jeaturin8 :Mojo's Coffee Sliop

Fu - 1-740-446-3008
E-mau - sportsOmydallysentinel.com

SwrttJiio.!l
Brad Sharllllln, Sports EdHor
(740)44&amp;2342. ext 33

bshermanOmydailytribune.com

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

Lerry Crum, Sports WrHer
(740) 44&amp;2342. ext 23

lcrumOmvdailyregisler.oom

Bryan Walters, Sports WrHer
(740)44&amp;2342, ext 33
bwaltersO~dailysentinel.com

·,

J

CARRIE lOCKHART DillARD. MD

33
56

Katie Hayman 3 3-3 9. Morgan Werry 0 1-2 1. Jillian Brannon
o 2-2 2, Erin Weber 3 4-5 10. Jenna Hupp 3 o-o 7. Ryan
Davis 2 o-o 4, Alyssa Newland 0 0-0 0, AmanOa Durham 0

HOLZER

Other events

ollasl CiVil

2007

Local Weather

ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Public meetings

PageA6

- Walk-ins welcome

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 2,:1007 .

www.mydailyseiitinel.com

www.mydallyeentinel.com

Bears try to emerge from 1985 team's shadow
MIAMI (AP) - Now a
300-pound guard for the
Chicago Bears, Ruben
Brown was big even as a I) year-old Pee Wee League
lineman in I985 .
The Bears were big then,
too. They had Walter
Payton, Jim McMahon and
William ''The Refrigerator"
Perry. a 375-pound defensive tackle who occasionally
doubled as a ball carrier and
became a folk hero.
That's why Brown's Pee
Wee teammates wanted him
to switch positions.
" It was kind of funny.
because ~ople started
AP photo
thinking, Hey, let's put
Ruben at running back," ' Visitors pose for photos with the bronze lions standing outBrown said. "I was one of side the Art Institute of Chicago on Thursda~. The lions were
the biggest kids, and they fitted with oversized helmets to support the Chicago Bears
wanted me to be the and Super Bowl Festlyltles. The Bears will pia~ the
Refrigerator."
Indianapolis Colts in Super .Bowl XLI this Sunday.
Brown declined. He was
"It was probably the first
huge, but Fridge and the '85 game ended.
Bears were larger than life • ''The characters they had time the Super Bowl was
- a team remembered for ... " current Chic&amp;go line- more like a rock concert,"
AP Pli!Mo
its colorful characters, Hall backer Lance Briggs said. said Ron Rivera, a lineIndianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning .signals at of Fame running back and a "When I run into them in a backer for those '85 Bears
the line of scrimmage during the AFC divisional playoff foot- defense that ranks with the bar, they tell stories about and now their defensive
ball game against the Baltimore Ravens in Baltimore in this best ever.
what they did. They were a coordinator. "We didn't have
Jan. 13 file photo.
a curfew until Friday night.
That team also is remem- wild group."
bered for winning the Super
At least two Colts have We had a quarterback who
Bowl, an achievement this ties to the legacy. Indy was fun-lovtng 1111d enjoyed
season's Bears will tty to receiver Aaron Moorehead's himself, and a lot of guys
match Sunday by beating the dad, Emery, was a tight end followed him."
Most teams seem dull in
Indianapolis Colts.
for the '85 Bears. Leslie
"We love the '85 Bears, Frazier, who coaches the comparison, and that's the
but we're trying to make Colts' defensive backs, start- case this week. Instead of
some footprints of our own," ed at cornerback for Chicago stories about bar-hopping
Chicago receiver Bernard in the Super Bowl 21 years Bears, there are profiles of
NEW YORK !AP) - School of Business.
Chicago's Lovie Smith and
Berrian said. "We're going ago.
"People would see hjm as to · be in their shadow until
Indianapolis Colts quarter"The bravado of that team lndy.'s Tony Dungy as laidback Peyton Manning is the white knight riding to the we win this game."
- guys who had so much back coaches who win withalready the NFL's most pro- rescue," Smith said. And that
The '85 Bears are the fran- confidence in their ability," out yelling or cllfSing.
litlc pitchman, but market- would help Manning tran- chise's lone championship Frazier said. "Some were
Their teams ·reflect that
ing expens say a Super Bowl scend the traditional spons team in the past 43 years, bigger than the sport. personality.
win could catapult him to a audience, which is unusual and that's only pan of their McMahon was huge. The
"This Bears team is similevel few gridiron stars have for team-sports players.
legacy. With the Fridge. Fridge was huge in his own lar to us- they're just play"Team-spol1s stars have a nonconformist McMahon way. Just big personalities." ing, doing what they're supever achieved.
In case he wasn't feeling harder time reaching big and fiery coach Mike Ditka,
They were at their best posed to be doing." the
enough pressure about audiences, especially foot- the Bears may have set a during Super Bowl week in Colts' Moorehead said.
Sunday 's game in Miami, ball players who are covered league record for charisma. New Orleans, where the "That Bears team had so
the two-time NFL most valu- in armor," Smith said. "But a
They even came with a national media turned every much personality. Those
able player should consider win will put him on late- soundtrack. The Bears quirky quote and escapade guys are legends. The Bears
this: Expe11s say a win could night talk shows and maga- recorded "The Super Bowl into a headline. Even a could win championships
allow htm to not only triple zines, and gi ve him a chance Shuffle" way before they got closed team practice made for a long time coming, but
his income from endorse- to demonstrate to more peo- to Bourbon Street, and were news when McMahon that team will always be
ment deals but also com- ple that he's witty and still dancing when the big mooned a TV helicopter.
something very special."
mand protit-sharing or own - engaging."
ership stakes from the comManning is already wildly
panies he endorses.
popular. His Q Score is 33,
"With a victory Sunday. he second among active players
will be at the top of his mar- behind Green Bay Packers
keting game," said Henry quarterback and Super Bowl
MIAMI (AP) - A shootand how down with the up-and-comSchafer, executive vice pres- winner Brett Favre's 35. ing death in Denver, a slew
best
to ing superstars. We need to
ident
of
Marketing Woods scores a 40 . of arrests in Cincinnati.
m e e t hear from them and see
Evaluations Inc ., which Mannings' recognition rate
them.
what's making them tick."
This was a black-eye seagtves ratitrgs called "Q among the general public in son for the NFL - someI · m Under the current NFL
Scores" to celebrities based September was near 60 per- thing not lost on its players'
c o n - conduct policy, the penalon their commercial appeal. cent, QScores said.
cerned , ties for first convictions are
union. The New Year's Day
"He will have the platform
Pan of Manning's appeal , murder of Broncos comerconcerned determined by the commisto transcend the spon of say the companies that have back Darrent Williams and
about all sioner, while a second confootball to an even greater worked with him. is the the lengthy rap sheet comthe issues viction bring automatic
Notebook
extent than he does now."
depth of his public persona. piled by the Bengals brought
we saw off suspensions of varying
"He's a rare combination player conduct to the fore in
Manning pocketed $11.5
the field," lengths.
million in endorsements in of an ordinary guy that hap- recent months.
union
president
Troy
Chicago defensive tackle
2005, highest among foot - pens to have an extraordiSoon, leaders at the NFL Vincent said Thursday at the Tank Johnson will play in
hal! players. according to nary talent," said Chris Players Association will NFLPA's annual news con- the Super Bowl on Sunday
Sports lllustntted. New Jogts, vice president of U.S. invite a few stars to its ference. "We can't go home after
receiving
court
England Patriots quarterback brand
marketin~e
at offices to get their opinions with the players, but I hold approval to leave Illinois
Tom Brady, a three-time MasterCard Inc. , whtch uses on the challenges today ' s every player responsible for while awaiting trial on gun
Super Bowl champion who Manning as a "fan of the players face off the field, their actions. We need to sit possession charges . Over a
earned $9 million in fan," cheering on workers at
endorsemenh. was the No. 2 a grocery store and coffee
NFL player on the list. Tiger shop.
Woods led all U.S. athletes
"People love Peyton
with $87 million in endorse- Manning because he is that
mem earnings.
guy next door," said Todd
MIAMI (AP)
He That's part of playing in the play. "He sees things that I
It is unlikely Manning will Krinsky. vice president of points, he ptvots, he barks NFL, and the reason you would not see. because of
approach Woods' marketing sports and entertainment out more orders than a cof- have confidence is because mr. position.
money, said Gary Philpott. marketing at Reebok, the fee shop waiter at lunchtime. of how hard you worked and
'When I am down in my
CEO of E-Poll Market Adidas AG unit which has a
When Peyton Manning is how hard you prepared. I've stance, he can see things so
Research. "Tiger is an icon, long-term
deal
with running the show for the used this quote before, but much better. He does a good
so those numbers are Manning. "His appeal is not Indianapolis Colts, it's diffi- my dad ~ave it to me when I job throughout the week of
untouchable for now."' he being that Hollywood guy, cult to decipher if he is per- was a ktd. It was by Chuck pulling guys aside and saysaid. "Manning will more so people young and old can forming magic or 'just blow- Noll, which said, 'Pressure mg. ' Hey, I see this, or I am
than likely top $30 million." relate to him."
is something that you feel goinll to get to this, do you
in* smoke.
'That would be impossi- only when you don't know like It?' He makes sure that
A dramatic tinish to the
Manning had deals with at
game would help Manning least six companies in 2006, ble to answer without giving what you are doing.' "
as you prepare for the week,
the most, said Dan Smith, a including Gatorade, made by away secrets," Manning said
Do his teammates and you feel comfonable on
marketing professor at PepsiCo Inc., DirecTV with a smile.
coaches know exactly what Sunday of knowing what
Indiana Uni versity 's Kelley Group Inc. and Sony Corp.
When Manning brings his Manning is doing when he checks we are going to go
offense to the line against gestures toward the defense? to."
the Chicago Bears in Or when Manning backs
No other quanerback perSunday's Super Bowl, at away from center Jeff forms all those machmatimes he will resemble a Saturday as if he can't tions. Few - Brett Favre,
maestro conducting a finely remember what he's sup- Tom Brady on occasion tuned orchestra. Other times, posed to do?
call or change plays at the
he'
II
look
like
a
disoriented
"We
work
together
so
line as much ·as Manning. In
COLUMBUS (AP) missed one of the lawsuit's
The widow of Minnesota claims. in which . Kelci traveler seeking directions. often, when you come to the offensive coordinator Tom
"To me, our offense, 'like line of scrimmage, I have a Moore's system, which
Viking s lineman Korey Stringer argued that the NFL
any
offense, is about execu- pretty good feel for what he Manning has played under
Stringer can proceed with didn 't set guidelines for
said the NFL's leading likes, what he sees and if he since he was the No. I overtion."
her negligence lawsuit practicing in the heat or propasser.
"We do call certain is going to check (oft) or all draft choice in 1998,
against the NFL and equip- vide information to coaches
mem 1'Piaker Riddell Inc . and trainers on how to rec- plays at the line of scrim- not," said Saturday, who most of the decision-making
over his heatstroke death ognize , treat and prevent mage, that's no secret there. obviously must be in tune is left in fhe quarterback's
"I think you have to be with whatever concerto hands.
during training camp in .!)eat-related illness.
confident
in your offense. Manning is leading on each
But don't watch the hands
200 I, a federal judge ruled
However, the judge
on Thursday.
allowed the claim that the
Kelci Strin~er sued the league and its subsidiary,
league and Riddell follow- NFL Properties, apr,roved
ing her husband 's death, equipment that dido t proclaiming the NFL hadn't tect players from injury,
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) inconsistent testimony about October. "Por the most part.
done enough to ensure that including heat-related ill- - An assault charge against when she noticed there was she asked me for $50,000. I
equipment used by _players nesses. The claim argues Titans cornerback Adam spit in her hair and wiped it wasn't aoins to give
protected them from mjuries Riddell's helmets and shoul- "Pacman"
Jones
was off, and about when she $50.000."
or deaths caused by heat- der pads are not fit for their dropped Thursday because a knew Jones' identity.
Jones, a former standout at
related illnesses.
intended use.
judge ruled there were too
The judge told Webb that West Virginia,
wasn't
Korey Stringer, a 27-year"We 're gratified that many inconsistencies in the she could still pursue the allowed to play in one game
old, 335-pound lineman Judge Holschuh has held testimony of a woman who case in a civil lawsuit. Webb Nov. S as punishment for the
who played college football that Kelci Stringer deserves claimed Jones spit on her at and her lawyer declined to incident, and the NFL fmed
at Ohio State, died from to take her case before a jury a Nashville night club.
speak to reporters after the him $100.000. But Jones
·
heatstroke after he practiced and show that the NFL, NFL
Jones was accused of spit- ruling.
said he hopes to get that
in the S":eltering heat and Properties and Riddell ting in a woman's face after
"She'll have a real hard money- back now that the
humidity. which pushed hi s should have done more to an argument at Club Mystic time winnin~ the civil suit if charge has been dismissed.
she didn't wm this case right
After the ruling, Jones
body temperature to I08.8 prevent his death," Stringer on Oct. 26.
Judge John Aaron Holt here," said Jones, who had- said he needs to pro!ect
family attorney Paul De
degrees.
said Krystal Webb gave n't spoken to reponers sin9e himself from people who
Judge John Ho bchuh dis- Marw said.

Super Bowl win could
catapult Manning into
endorsement stratosphere

Payton ~ave the '85 Bears
an offenstve weapon difficult to match. One thing
Chicago's only two Super
Bowl teams do have in common ts a dominating
defense.
Perry, Mike Singletary,
Wilber Marshall, Dan
Hampton and Richard Dent
made the Bears the Monsters
of the Midway in 1985.
They shut out back-to-hack
pl ayoff opponents before
overwhelming New England
46- 10 in the Super Bowl.
With Pro Bowl starters
Briggs, Brian Urlacher and
injured Tommie Harns,
defense was again Chicago's
strength. But while the current unit thrives on speed to
force turnovers, the ' 85
Bears were a more bruising
bunch.
"My dad always said the
biggest thing their team tried
to do was take out the starting quarterback every s in~;le
game," Moorehead satd .
"And if they took him out,
they were trying to take out
the backup.
"They were a rock ' em,
sock 'em, kill 'em type of
team. That's not the type of
defense this Bears team
plays. They're good, but it's ,
not knock 'em down, take

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

E-mail
classified@mydailytribune.com

(304) 675-1333
675-5234

ET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

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

nine-month span. nine
Cincinnati players were
arrested for charges ranging
from drunken driving and
resisting arrest and spousal
battery. Last week. receiver
Chris Henry spent two days
in jail after pleading guilty
to allowing minors to drink
in a hotel room he rented.
"The last thing I tell
every team when I visit is
that the only thing that can
mess up the collective bargaining agreement is the
players
themselves."
NFLPA executive director
Gene Upshaw said. "We ' re
very concerned about that."

Is Peyton performing magic or blowing smoke?

Lawsuit filed over death of
Vikings' Stringer can proceed

if you're playing defense
against him.
"You can't get caught up
in all of that," Bears defensive end Adewale Ogunleye
said. "We're not going to
worry about the audibles,
we're not going to worry
about what he's doing at the
line of scrimmage. At. the
end of the day, he's going to
have to call a play and snap
the ball ."
But before the ball is
snapped, Manning has chosen what he beiieves is the
proper play for the defensive
alignment he sees. He has all
kinds of options, both for
passes and runs.
Sometimes, the call he has
gotten from the sideline is
perfect, and all Manning
does is, well, nothing. He's
like a third-base coach sending false signals to the batter.
In other instances, he is
changing the play, the blocking assigrunent, the formation - everything but his
uniform, it seems.

Judge dismisses as~ult charge against CB Jones

•

J

are trying to get money from
him.
"I'm just happy it's over
with and the truth always
comes to the end," he sa1d.
"Everybody wants som~­
thing out of my situation."
Jones was also charged
with public intoxication and
disorderly conduct last
August when he got into an
argument with a woman at a
night club in Murfreesboro.
Th&lt;;&gt;se charges will be dismissed if he stays out of
trouble for six ·months.

•

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How you can have borders and graphics
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'em ou1."

The mercurial Me Mahon
has distanced himself from
football, saying this week he
hasn't watched a game in 10
years, But some members of
the '85 Bears are frequent
visitors to the team's complex, serving as a reminder
that there's a legacy to live
up to.
·
The current Bears say they
don't mind.
"This team has nothin~
but respect for those guys,'
Brown said. "They're our
idols. Why not be in the
shadow of your idols?
They' re kind of like your big
brothers. We look up to
them, just like everybody
else does."

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POLICIES; Ohkl Valt.y Publilhklg,...,..... U. rtghllo ldtl. ~ Of e~~nc:.l anv M •t 1ny u.,.. Errors muat be ~ed on the
Trlbun.&amp;.nllnM-~ wiM biiJUfllln•lblelor no mor•lMn the cal Df tn. apaa. occ:up'-d by IM •rrar Mid only tM llrs1 inHrtlon .
•ny tou ar ,..,_.. thM ruun• from 11'11 publkatiOn or OI'IUUkN'I Olan ~nt Correc:tK!n will tMIINde In tnattm avallllble .cllllon.
.,. always conlklentlal. • eurr.nt rate e~~rd appiiM. · All f'NIMtllt ..,... ..........,are IUbltCt to the hd•al Fair ttouslng Act ot I HI.
acnptt ontw Mlp wtnttd adl
W. wm
In vlo•Uon ol tht lb.

r'
~---'

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

\\.\ il l \ l l \II \ I "

r~

Ohio VoU.y
Publlslllng .......
lhl right to odll,
rojoot "'OIIICOI any
ad 11 any lime.

kltncarlyle@!comcast.net

t·M':i\

Lost- 1 chocolate &amp; 1 yellow
male Lao dogs. Hobson
area, Middleport, (740)9923882 or740-416-1 9BB

Mutt

Aaoclltecl on lhl

r

r

"1111""'-----.,

ll:

Gln::,\\\'A\'

~..._

_ _ _ _ _ _•

YNI

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0

W.wniD
mBu\'

~

•

Proolsets. Gold R1ngs. Pre1935
U.S
Currency.
Sol1tane Diamonds· M T. S.
Co1n Shop, t 51 Second

~~

I \11'1 \ 1\ \II\\
-.1 1{\ h I "

rio

lhJJ'W,"''IUl

Free to a good home. 4
black puppies, 2 male and 2 tOO WORKERS NEEDEO
tema1e . Call 740--256·1360. Assemble cr afts. woo d
1tems To $480/wk Matanals
provided. Free 1nforma110n
Gweaway- 2 year old brown pkg 24H r
t -428-4649
male p1lbutl.
Excollen1
watcl'ldog To good home Accept1ng app llca bons for
w1thout kids (7-40)416·61 54 cash1er s Must be available
to work all shifts No Phone
Calls. Apply at Par Mar 1142,
15054 Slate Roule 160,
Vinton
4x4'o For Sole ...... ..................... ....... ........ .... 725

ao

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Announcemen\ ............................. ..... .......... 030
Antlqun ............... ................. ............. .... .. .... 530
Aportmento tor Rent ............ ...... .. ....... .. .. .... 440
Auotlon ond Ftea Mart&lt;et .... ................... .. .... oao
Auto Porto a 1\cc.ooorlea .. ........... .... ......... 760
Auto A9palr ..................... .................. ........... no
Auto. lor Sole ............... ............................... 71 D
Boola a Motors lor Sole ............................. 750
Building Supplleo ......... ............................... 550
Buol.... ond Buildings ............................. 340
Bual.... Opportun11y ....... .......................... 21 0
Bualneoo Trolnlng ....... ....... .................... ..... 140
Campara a Motor Homeo ................. ..... ..... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Corda oflhonka ...... .......... .. ................... .... .010
Child/Elderly care ....................................... 190
Eloctrlcal/llolrlgerallon .... ............... ...... ......840
Equlp.,...ttor Rant .... ................ ................. 480
Excavating ......................... .. .................. ...... 830
Form Equlpment ......... ...... .................... ....... 6t0
Forma lor flont ............................................. 430
Forma lor Sole .............. ............................... 330
For L -................. .......... .. ........................ 480
For Sole .... ...... ............ ................... ... .... ........ 585
For Sole or T.-......................................... 590
FruHs l v.getablta .... ..... ...... .......... ............ seo
Furnl- Aoomo ........................................o\50
a......t Houllng ......... .... ............ ..... .............650
Ol-woy ......................................................040
Happy Ado............................. .. ....... ..... ...... ... 050
Hoy Oraln ........................... ..... .... .............. 840
Holp Wantocl ......................... ........................ ItO
Homelmprovemento ...... ...... .......... ............. B10
Homeotor Sole ...... ............ ..... .... .... ............. 310
Ho"""""ld Ooodo ....... :.... .... ............. .......... 510
- l o r Rtnt.. ........................................ 410
tn-lam ................................................ 020
ln.urMce ... .................................................. 130
Lawn a Qardon Equlpment.. .................... .. 680

a

~:::'.:r;;ou;;d·::::::: .· ': : :.·::.:::.::::. ::::::::. ::::g
a

Loto Acreage .......... .................................. :150
Mlocoll-..... ..... ................ .. ............ ...... 170
Mloeollaneouo -chandln ........ ............ ... 540
Mobile Home Repair ................................. .. .680
Mobile Homeolor Ront. ........................... ... 420
Mobile llo~MSior Sole .. .......................... .. .. 320
Money IO Loan .................. ... ........................ 220
Motorcyc... a. 4 Wheelert ..........................740
Mualc.tlnatruments ................................... 570
....oonalo .................. ................................. .. oos
'-to lor Solo .................................. .............. 560
Plumbing a Heating ...... ...... ........ ................ 820
ProfMalonal Services................................. 230
- , TV a CB Repalr ............................... 160
llool Exlelo Wontocl ............ .......... .... ........... J60
Sc'-!olnotructlon..................................... 1SO
- , Plant a Fertl- .............................. 150
SHua11ono Wanllod ....................................... 120

=i

=~:: ::: :::::.: :::.: : : : : : : ::·:::::::::~

llucllo lor Solo ............................... ............. 715
UphOiotllrY ................................. ............... ... 870
vono For Sole................................ ............... 730
WonWei to Buy .............. ............................... D90
WanWcl to Buy- Farm Supplies .................. &amp;20
WanWcllo'Oo .............................................. 180
Wonead to Rent............................................ 470
Yarcl Sele- Glollfpolls............................... ... .. 072
YtlrCI Soi•Pomaroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yont Safe-Pt. - n t ............. ................... 07&amp;

Accepnng Applications for
011 and Gas Dri lling.
PosrtionsOpen· Tool Pusher
and Ollllers. eKpenence
requuod Floor han cls na
eKperience necessary Pick
up application @ J D. Drilling
in Racme. Ohi o. Apply in
Person no phone calls
please.
:________
Accepting Resumes to r an
OhiO Licensed Massage
Therap1st to wor k 1n 2 tt1r1v·
mg ChirOpractic offi ces 1n
Gallia &amp; Jackson counties
E ~&lt;ce llent
Wages
&amp;
Opportunity for nght person
Con tact The
Gallipolis
Chiropractic Center at 990
2nd Avenue. Gallipolis.
_o_nio_;_
(7_
40_:1_••_•_
-o_2oo___
An Excellent way to earn
money. The New Avon.
Call ManIyn 304 •882 •2845
Area Manufacturer has
lndustrial Maintenance
posit ion available. Must
have mechanical and
electrical
expenence.
Ab!e to work on welders.
cold saws, an d other
m1sc mach1n ery, read
schematiCS. and bl ue·
prints. Apply 1n person at·
SFS Truck Sales, 2t 50
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis.
Arthur Treachers/Twin Oaks
accepting applications tor
expttrienced cooks/ attendants. Apply @ J.O. Drilling
1n ~acine . Ot110. Apply m
person no phone calls
plea se
AVON 1 All Areas 1 To Buy or
SelL Shirley Spears, 304675- 1-129

Bartender wanted to star t
1mmed1ately. Apply 1n person
at Halfhill's Tavern. 234 Jrd
Avenue. GallipoliS, OH
Bob Evans of GallipoliS,
Hmng night &amp; Oa:y stufl Grill
Cooks
Excellen t Pay &amp;
Benel1ts ava1lal:l1e Stop •n
Full·llme te mp needed lor
busy office
Job may
become pe rmanool Pus•l•oo
15 m1J.ed St3crelaflal and
mediCal Resumes rnay be
dropped oft at the office of
John A. Wade, MO. 2520
VaHey D1iva Swte 112,
Pmnl Pleasant. Feb. I st. 2nd
and 5th NO Phone Calls

lt'ri"ol""'-----.,
~F.Lr W.~IITFD
..

~ a rly!H e ad Star t Program
accepting appltcat•ons for
postlions: Teact1er. Teac her
A1de.
Famil y
Advocate/Orl'.'er. Bus Dr1ver.
Food Serv1ce. Custodial and
SubsliiUtes
1n
Cabell.
Wayne, Lincoln. Mason M1n
Eliuc &amp; valid dflvers license
req. lor each pos it•on:
Submit resun1e. cover ltr., 3
ret llr s to SCAC. 540 Filth
A'J9 . Htg'., WV 25701 by 216-07 EOE

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$16.53-$27 58/hr., now hir·
111g. For application and lree
governement job Ink&gt;, call
Amei JCan Assoc. of Labor 1913·599-8042. 24fhrs. amp.
serv.
GREENHOUSE GROWER
Grin 's M1dway Greenhouse
IS seeking to hll 1 or 2 greenhouse grower positiOns
Must have 3 years of plant
prodlJ clion eMperience Must
be able to wo rk rotating
weekend &amp; hol iday schedula We provide a compeliti-..e salary &amp; benefit pack·
age. Fax
resu me to
(_304
__:_15_8:6-2_54_8_.,------,Hair Stylist- Michael &amp;
Friends is seeking a ta lented
creat1ve stylist with man.agers license for Booth
Rental. $1 25 per week. Call
Patty for intQfview (740)3799145 , cell (740)645 _5895

Holze r Sen1or Care
Cente r has an open1ng
lor the loUOW111Q posi·
tions:
• Full lime STNA
• Part llfTle STNA
• Part time Oietary Aide
• Part lime
Housek~per

It you are 1ntersted 1n

a

;&gt;osition wit h great benefits and would like to
be part ot a res1dent
care or1entad nurs1ng
facility please call Bill
lambert. Payroll Clerk
or
Barb Peterson.
Human
Resources
Director for Long Term
Care at 740·446·500 1
or stop 1n ana see us at.
380 ColOnial On'Ji:!
Sidwell. OH 45614
EqtJal Opportumty
Employer
HOME HEALTH AIDEsSIGN ()ftj BONUS home
health care ot SE Oh10 IS
currently h1nng tlQme health
a1de6 · competitiVe wages.
Call 740-662-1222
- - - - -- - Tow TruCk operalor. MVA
and drug screen reQun&amp;d
740·368·8547

5 Plus Acres, 2 Br.. Kit.
Din., Front Am .. Full base.,
story and 112, AC. s1ngle
garage.'20 X 20 shop
Racine. Route 124. 740or you may submJt resu me Witt oo general hOuse clean- 9-49-2253.
to: indrecruiling@mpwser- ing. reasonable rates. have - - - - - - - vices.com
references. 740- 441 -5122
A.Henllon!
Aqua- Tach Environmental
l ocal company offenng "NO

,_,

~ --www.comica.com

home.740-379-9 t1 2

------

WorM 1nvo111es JrldliStnal
cleaning;' h1gh pressure
waterblastmg, wet/dry ...acu uming. Hard hat. drug-tree
and Union env1ronment
Needs HS diploma or GEO
and drtvers license.
Actvlinctmtn1
No Need!
Low M01sI ure carpet
1'\oo,....., .... ,nlttes
,.,...,.
,__ . d
h 1
Fo• more ;•to•mao;on
call:
CIU&lt;:Imng nes tn an our
"
Calvin l epoi1'Clearly Clean
800-827-8790
ext 5686 or ext 5736
l3041675+0022

0

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Silver and Gold Coi11s.

3bd 2ba HUD $27,0001
Only S1i01mol 4% Oown.
30 years @ B'7o. For listu)gs
800·559-4 109 K254

Jor. 2 112 ba House 011 At
62 1n Har tfo rd,
House
beside available lor sale,
Small Home Repair Also. rent one or have extended
Brush cu11ing, painllng, land- tam1ly option. Senous c~ lls
scaplng Ret available, Over at
(304)675-2484
cell
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(304)593· 1481
U-Save. Heatmg. Cool1ng.
Hot Water Heaters &amp; Odd 5 Plus Acres. 2 Br.. K1t .
D1n . Front Am Full base ,
Jobs, Call [740)388·9039.
story and 112. AC, s1ng1e
(740)794-1532.
garage/20 X 20 shop
Rac1ne . Route 124 740Waiting till Spnrlg to
949-2253
clean your Carpet?

Tempo rary Positions
Available
lnduatrlll
Ser"tce
Technlclana In Galllpolla,

G1u&gt;UND~ foot&gt; . ·

Irs

Drywall and patnttng servtc es. 740-985·3779.
- -- - - - - God's Re;oictng Carpenter
building, remodeling_ plumbIng, prayer. Jotm Moore 9922839.

OH

7 Mon. old Beagle/Basseu
Hooncl. Housebroken. good
Wltr'l children. needs a good

Ftee Bull dog MiK Pups.
Ha&gt;~e shots &amp; b-een wormed.
Evenmgs (740)38B-0551

PI- Sr;: ~ I'IA ~

W

WA.vrm
To Do

HELP W,WIID 1
. -

Secretarial position tn local
office, expenence a plus but
not required. send resume
to P.O Sox 351 , Ga lli ~IIS.
Ohio 45631

51\ll' s P.l\) 'fl-It&lt;
"'"" 51.:&gt;~ HAP NC&gt;lHtfl\6t

-i'~r-.1~.

--.
Avenue. Galhpol1s. 740 -446·
2 yr. old male Aonweiler, 2842.
good natured. needs room
to run.wl dog house shots
up to date 304-675-5305

Union to ask for help outlining conduct rules
H

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

@

caregi&gt;~els

In-Home
Needed. Mason Counly
Act 1on Group. lllC. In-Home
Serv.ces 1s currently accept·
mg app1tcat1ons tor care·
gJVers to pro&gt;~ide 1n-home
serviCes to the elderly and
disabled. EKperience pre!erred but no! reqwred .
Please
contact
Lisa
Templeton, AN or Jennifer
Thomas. AN @ 675 _3300 or
apply in person @ 22 t Main
Slreet Monda~ through
Friday 8 am to 4 pm EOE.
M/F, PJA

LABORER EARN AS YOU
LEARN. Start OUilding for
your future now by joi ning
our ProfeSSional Team and
learn the ski lls to become a
H1gh Pressure Cleaning
Maintenance Techni Cian. All
posillon s require weekly
TRAVEL outs1de of Ohio,
Company provides lodging,
transportat ion,
and
'"
~rDiem A.VEA"'-=~E startfng wage with cost of benefits included js $205 00 ~r
field ctay worked. with a
chance to advance up to
$263 00 per lield day
worked. We prO'.'Ide pa1d
training and EXCELLENT
BENEFITS.
PreEmpl oyment DRUG TEST
and a valid Oriver's license
is required. Class A COL. IS
a plus. but not requ1red.
Send woO; his!(!()' and day
time phor16 number to
TECHN ICIAN TRAINEE ,
PO. BOX 565, MARIETTA,
OHIO 45750. EOE

~

2007 by NEA, Inc.

h;,;n~

Ohio Valley Home Health.
Inc.
RN 's. CNA.
STNA.
CHHA.
PCA.
Compet1t1ve Wages and
Benefits including health
illSurance and M1teage.
Apply at 1430Jackson Pike.
or 24 t 5 Jackson
Avenue, Point Pl&amp;aSanl, WV
or phone toll free 1·866·44 1·
1393
- - -- - - - Overbrook Center Located
0 333 Page St.. Middleport
Ohio
Is Pleased To
Announce We W!ll Be
Holding An STNA Class.
Scheduled For Feb. 20March 7, Hours Will Be Bam·
4:30pm.
If
Vou
Are
Interested In Joining Our
Friendly And Dedicated
Staff, Please Stop By Our
Front Office Mon-Fri., 9am!Sp m And Fill Out An
Application.
Space
Is
UmHed, Applications Will Be
• - opted Until Feb 9 Full
""""
· ·
T1me Alld Part Time Part
Time Pos111ons Ava1lable To
Those Qualified lndi\~duals
Completing The Class.
Applicants
Must
Be
Dependable (Attendance Is
A Must) Team Players With
Positive Attitudes To Join Us
In Providing Outstanding,
Quality Care To Our
Residents.
If You Have Any Questions

Gal~pohs

rw

___s_••_,;_ce_• _ _ _

c
a ~i tlo; open~ngh ~ ~~~~~-;~x~;- 1 ;~0~~:~~~
'

has
;:ache•

~~na~::gs C~u~ty·

9034 _

Certification/Licensure 10
Phy 51ca,I Educa110n. Hea\th,.
1
1
5
or n erven 10n pec1a 1s
preferred . This position IS a
9-month contract w1th Board
appr0\16d benefits. Salary
will be based on expeflence
and cert!flcai!On according
to salary. Submit lener of
1nterest to John 0. Costanzo,
Superintendent.
AthensMe1gs EducatiOnal Service
Center. 320 112 East Mam
S1reet Pomeroy. OH 45769
Application
Deadline
February 9, 2007. 4.00 p.m.
The AMESC is an Equal
0 p p o r t u n 1t y
Employer/Provi der.

Employment DRUG TEST
and a &gt;~ahd Dn\l&amp;r's license
IS required. Class A COL IS
a pii.IS. but not required .
Send worK hiStory ami day
t1me phon e number to
TECHNICIAN
TRAINEE,
PO BOX 565, MARIETTA,
OHIO 45750 EOE

baSj c first a1d at bus1ness 1n
Chesh.re.
OH.
tnterestirog/LOW Stress Work
Env1ronment.
Great
Opportunity to Earn Extra
Cash! Call 888--269-6344 or
Fax resu me to 740-2666671
-------AN's. O.alysrs TechructanS.
anO Unrt CkHk ~ tor
Pleasant Valley DialySis, an

Nanny
$700
week
Immediately
in
Pomt
owned
Pleasan!,
Must Love
bent dialySIS facility In
Children (67B)318-3650
Pt.Pieasant.W\1. Expel'ience
pre ferred. P1ease send
No-11 H1ru1g 8kperienced resumes to Candy Bartram.
Sawmifl help. Appl)' 1n per- lOUISS-Fort Gay R ~onal
son.
Twin
AIYer Oiai)'SIS. 21 45 Highway
Haut cc~ 26 t 2 US RI 35. 2565, Lou1sa, KV ot1230 Of
18)1. to 606-638-3404.
SouthSide

,. _noonuv

ouooa-

8'-"""-'~

OwoRn.INrn'

o1

University ot RIO Grande IS
looking lor expaflenceo
~ PI
1 1 the
· aase app Y a

~~,taleterla.

- -- - - - - WantedPartTimeBart9fldel
(must be 21 years old! Send
Resume to AmEif 1Can Leg1041
Post 140 PO 6o11 267 New
Haven, WV 25265 ~nn
L1nda Wyatt or stoP 111 and
p1ck up appliCiiotiOns after

•N011Ch
OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SH·
lNG CO. recom mends
that you do bu s1ness w1ttl
pevPie you know, and
NOT to send money
th rough the mail until you
have investigated the
ofterlng

r

MOI&gt;ri
lU LoA,,

Bon ow Smart Contact
the Oh10 Division of
Financ1al
Institution 's
Oltice
of
Consumer
Af1a1rs BEFORE you railnance your home or
obtain a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
ad'»'ance payments of
toos or insurance. Call the
Office of
Consumer
Aft"a1rs toll free at 1·866·
278-000 3 to learn 1f the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
is
properly
licensed. (ThiS IS a public
service announcement
lrom the

r

Oh •o Vall ey

Pub11shi~ Company)

:;::;~;~==~
PR~=~"
....,..~ ... vu.
S~VK.:t.;S

1,~--oiiiiiiiliiiii...r
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL sECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win'
1_888 _582 . 3345

All rMI nlllt actvtr1lllng
In thll newapeper 11
IUb)tct to tht FIKitrll
Fair Hou11ng Act or 1"68
which makn tl Hlagallo
tdvertl" "any
preference, limitation or
dlscrtmtnatlon baHCI on
riCe, COlor, religiOn, Mx
femillll atatu1 or nei!Of\11
ortgln, or tny lntenuon to
make any suc:h
pteftrtnce, llmltltlon or
dlt&amp;Crimlnalion."
Thlt newspa~r will not
knowingly Kcept
ld'o'ertltemtntt 101' reel
Mtate which lain
"loletlon ot !he law. Our
readers 1re hereby
Informed ttm ell
dwellings edvertlaed In
lhla Mwapaper are
e'llellebt. on en -tual
opportunity baNI.

s

For
1 Ranch Sl yt:J
1
ae·
Home . 4 Bedrooms. 3 Bath.
B acres. (740)3B8-8639
House tor sale 3 1'2 m11es
oot Sandhtll. 3 bedrooms. 1
bath, lots ot storage space.
call (304)675 -2507
HUD HOMEI l bd $II2J-.
......
3Dd 2be $15 5/mo. More
homes ava1lable1 4%dn

r

ao"'

30yrs @
For llsllngs
800-559-4109 xF144
MOBILE HO\IES

•OR SAU:

I

t2X60 2 Br all slec 1n M100
on rented lot $4500 740tirrio~;;;;;;:;u::;;;;~;;.~;;·..;._, 416· 1354
"'-A'-u~
~\L.-------1~
...- ~ L
1984 t 4J.17 3 Bed. Mobile
Home .
Remodeled .
0 Down even w1th less ltlan $12 000 Free lot rent tor 6
perfect credit 1s avallable on monltls. Pome roy 740 )416 th 1s 3 bedroom 1 Oath 6 "54
home Corner lot fireplace
3.' 2 Dou01ew1de
modern li.ilchen. 1acuzz, 1ub 2007
Pa,.ment around S-550 per $37 .970 M1CWest '740 )828·
2-:'50
mon th . 740-367-7129.

~'paml""'-:o:-----.,

r§O

=

~

f

exper ience .

2007 , 4:00 p m
The
AMESC
1s an
Equal
0 p p o 1 t u n 1I v
Employer!Prov,der

accepted
· Paym ent could be the
same as rent.
Mortga ge
Locators.
(740)367-0000
r---~---.,

"::~~~::=~

Occupational Therap•sl 1n
Mei~ County. Applicants
should have expenence in
providing OT in a schOol set·
ling
for
students
in
Preschool through Grade
12 _ ContraCt and salary will
be
basect
on
certilication/llcensure and

- -- ------- __·::c_
•·-- - ----

Avg. Pay $20/hr or
S57K annual!):
lnciuding Federal Benefits
and OT. Paid Trainmg,
Vacations-FT/PT
1-800-5&amp;4- 1775 Ext. f 8923
USWA
-- -----AN . immediate opening for
DON, eKper;ence prelerred.
Call lor additional inlorma.tion or Interview Contact:
Marjorie
Huston
0
(740)384-3485 or (740 )3842676. Huston
NurSII1Q
Home. Inc. 38500 St. Rt
160. Hamden. OhiO 45634.
AN's needed to perform

~rii0;;;;.;~~.;;~·...
;...~..;.
· ..;....,

The
Athe ns-Meig s
Educational Ser'.'ice Center
has an antic1pated posi tion
opening lor a school based

years

DOWN

• g1ams lor

1uu:.

-

Appllcants must provi de
their own tra nsportation.
Submit letter Df interest.
Contact Holhe Bumgarner, resum e. references and a
LP"'"'· SlaH o-'elopment
...
copy
o1
current
~ 740 99 2
·
Coo'd'·nalo• .._
•
• certificateiiJcense(s) to JOhn
0.
Costanzo.
6472.
Overbrook Cente r IS An
E.O.E. And A PartiCipant Of Superintendent. Athens
~~
Meigs Educational ~r&gt;~•ce
The Orug Free Worlq)lace Cent81', 320 112 East Ma!n
Pr&lt;'VV'Am.
Street, Pom eroy. Oh10
LABORER EARN AS VOU
POST OFFICE NOW
45769.
Application
LEARN . Start building to'
HIRING
Deadline
Febr uary 16 ,

your luture now by joining
ou r Professional Team and
learn the skins to become a
H1gl1 Pressure Cleaning
Mamtenan ce Technician. All
pOSitions requlf&amp; weekly
TRAVEL outside of OhiO,
Company prCNideS fodQi ng,
transpor tatiOn,
and
Per Oien-'1. AVERAG E Slalt·
1ng wage with cost of benefits ii'ICiuded Is $205.00 per
field day worke d, with a
chance to advance up to
$263.00 per field day
worked VWe provida p81d
trai mng and EXCELLENT
BENEFITS
Pre-

I

CHil.lVEL.DERLC
.'""
y

PAYME NT" proyou to buy your
home in stead ot renllng.
The
Athens-Meigs
• , 00% t1nanc1ng
. 1 •- ·
Wtll care tor elderly 1n their
Educa 1ona
.::n~~rv 1ce en1er
• Less than pe rfect credit

-

SoKxlLS

(,X\"fRU{"I'I(I'\

"--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;.,,,
Gottlpolio ew- co1~ogo

~·; ) y!t f'l

••

~~ r.:-.. _.,..._ ,~-~~

.

Mo"e tn toda~ 1 New 2007 3
oeoroom 2 bath
Only
S I 99 86 per month Se1 up
m1nutes from Athens and
ready for •1'1med1ate OCC\.r pancy Call 740-385-4367

3 Bedroom . 1 li4 Baths NEW 2007 4 'oed D/Wide 1
K1td'len , LA. FR. Central Ar r $49, 179. Midwest {140 )826·
MAny eKtras 2 13 ac res 2750
located on Chns Lane. close
-.gatllpoi~Searaer~ cor"
-.:credt!ed Membtir .t.ccr&amp;OIIIfl\j to new GAHS. Reduced lo
Lm~ &amp;
Count~~ 1or 11 llapa 10e111 Col leges St29.900 . 1740)245-5909
Ar RfAGE
1110~1274S
iir~~~--.., 3 Beoroom. 2 Bath. fireplace
on Pteasan1 Valley Rei 1 2 4 acre lot for sale t304 )743..
• ll111e !rom R1o Grande 6323
A&gt;~aJ!abl e Wlltl 1 5. or 8 - - - - - , - 47 acres .. · L1ev1ng Roaa, '
Wanted: Aespoo81ble party acres (740)709-tt66
to take oo small monthly - - - - - - - - Country water septic. pono
payments oo High Ouf1nibon 4 rerital hOIJses "FOI' Sale" &amp; barn . electl'lc. many hOme
S125.000 hrm
Big Screen TV 1·800·398· In Gathpo~s. Call Wa vne Sites
13041882-3131
3970.
( 404 1 456 -~02
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Toda)-1740-446·4-367
1-800-214-0452

r7U ~1N.uL\i'\llJl.iS

r:

I

- ,_

�Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 2,:1007 .

www.mydailyseiitinel.com

www.mydallyeentinel.com

Bears try to emerge from 1985 team's shadow
MIAMI (AP) - Now a
300-pound guard for the
Chicago Bears, Ruben
Brown was big even as a I) year-old Pee Wee League
lineman in I985 .
The Bears were big then,
too. They had Walter
Payton, Jim McMahon and
William ''The Refrigerator"
Perry. a 375-pound defensive tackle who occasionally
doubled as a ball carrier and
became a folk hero.
That's why Brown's Pee
Wee teammates wanted him
to switch positions.
" It was kind of funny.
because ~ople started
AP photo
thinking, Hey, let's put
Ruben at running back," ' Visitors pose for photos with the bronze lions standing outBrown said. "I was one of side the Art Institute of Chicago on Thursda~. The lions were
the biggest kids, and they fitted with oversized helmets to support the Chicago Bears
wanted me to be the and Super Bowl Festlyltles. The Bears will pia~ the
Refrigerator."
Indianapolis Colts in Super .Bowl XLI this Sunday.
Brown declined. He was
"It was probably the first
huge, but Fridge and the '85 game ended.
Bears were larger than life • ''The characters they had time the Super Bowl was
- a team remembered for ... " current Chic&amp;go line- more like a rock concert,"
AP Pli!Mo
its colorful characters, Hall backer Lance Briggs said. said Ron Rivera, a lineIndianapolis Colts quarterback Peyton Manning .signals at of Fame running back and a "When I run into them in a backer for those '85 Bears
the line of scrimmage during the AFC divisional playoff foot- defense that ranks with the bar, they tell stories about and now their defensive
ball game against the Baltimore Ravens in Baltimore in this best ever.
what they did. They were a coordinator. "We didn't have
Jan. 13 file photo.
a curfew until Friday night.
That team also is remem- wild group."
bered for winning the Super
At least two Colts have We had a quarterback who
Bowl, an achievement this ties to the legacy. Indy was fun-lovtng 1111d enjoyed
season's Bears will tty to receiver Aaron Moorehead's himself, and a lot of guys
match Sunday by beating the dad, Emery, was a tight end followed him."
Most teams seem dull in
Indianapolis Colts.
for the '85 Bears. Leslie
"We love the '85 Bears, Frazier, who coaches the comparison, and that's the
but we're trying to make Colts' defensive backs, start- case this week. Instead of
some footprints of our own," ed at cornerback for Chicago stories about bar-hopping
Chicago receiver Bernard in the Super Bowl 21 years Bears, there are profiles of
NEW YORK !AP) - School of Business.
Chicago's Lovie Smith and
Berrian said. "We're going ago.
"People would see hjm as to · be in their shadow until
Indianapolis Colts quarter"The bravado of that team lndy.'s Tony Dungy as laidback Peyton Manning is the white knight riding to the we win this game."
- guys who had so much back coaches who win withalready the NFL's most pro- rescue," Smith said. And that
The '85 Bears are the fran- confidence in their ability," out yelling or cllfSing.
litlc pitchman, but market- would help Manning tran- chise's lone championship Frazier said. "Some were
Their teams ·reflect that
ing expens say a Super Bowl scend the traditional spons team in the past 43 years, bigger than the sport. personality.
win could catapult him to a audience, which is unusual and that's only pan of their McMahon was huge. The
"This Bears team is similevel few gridiron stars have for team-sports players.
legacy. With the Fridge. Fridge was huge in his own lar to us- they're just play"Team-spol1s stars have a nonconformist McMahon way. Just big personalities." ing, doing what they're supever achieved.
In case he wasn't feeling harder time reaching big and fiery coach Mike Ditka,
They were at their best posed to be doing." the
enough pressure about audiences, especially foot- the Bears may have set a during Super Bowl week in Colts' Moorehead said.
Sunday 's game in Miami, ball players who are covered league record for charisma. New Orleans, where the "That Bears team had so
the two-time NFL most valu- in armor," Smith said. "But a
They even came with a national media turned every much personality. Those
able player should consider win will put him on late- soundtrack. The Bears quirky quote and escapade guys are legends. The Bears
this: Expe11s say a win could night talk shows and maga- recorded "The Super Bowl into a headline. Even a could win championships
allow htm to not only triple zines, and gi ve him a chance Shuffle" way before they got closed team practice made for a long time coming, but
his income from endorse- to demonstrate to more peo- to Bourbon Street, and were news when McMahon that team will always be
ment deals but also com- ple that he's witty and still dancing when the big mooned a TV helicopter.
something very special."
mand protit-sharing or own - engaging."
ership stakes from the comManning is already wildly
panies he endorses.
popular. His Q Score is 33,
"With a victory Sunday. he second among active players
will be at the top of his mar- behind Green Bay Packers
keting game," said Henry quarterback and Super Bowl
MIAMI (AP) - A shootand how down with the up-and-comSchafer, executive vice pres- winner Brett Favre's 35. ing death in Denver, a slew
best
to ing superstars. We need to
ident
of
Marketing Woods scores a 40 . of arrests in Cincinnati.
m e e t hear from them and see
Evaluations Inc ., which Mannings' recognition rate
them.
what's making them tick."
This was a black-eye seagtves ratitrgs called "Q among the general public in son for the NFL - someI · m Under the current NFL
Scores" to celebrities based September was near 60 per- thing not lost on its players'
c o n - conduct policy, the penalon their commercial appeal. cent, QScores said.
cerned , ties for first convictions are
union. The New Year's Day
"He will have the platform
Pan of Manning's appeal , murder of Broncos comerconcerned determined by the commisto transcend the spon of say the companies that have back Darrent Williams and
about all sioner, while a second confootball to an even greater worked with him. is the the lengthy rap sheet comthe issues viction bring automatic
Notebook
extent than he does now."
depth of his public persona. piled by the Bengals brought
we saw off suspensions of varying
"He's a rare combination player conduct to the fore in
Manning pocketed $11.5
the field," lengths.
million in endorsements in of an ordinary guy that hap- recent months.
union
president
Troy
Chicago defensive tackle
2005, highest among foot - pens to have an extraordiSoon, leaders at the NFL Vincent said Thursday at the Tank Johnson will play in
hal! players. according to nary talent," said Chris Players Association will NFLPA's annual news con- the Super Bowl on Sunday
Sports lllustntted. New Jogts, vice president of U.S. invite a few stars to its ference. "We can't go home after
receiving
court
England Patriots quarterback brand
marketin~e
at offices to get their opinions with the players, but I hold approval to leave Illinois
Tom Brady, a three-time MasterCard Inc. , whtch uses on the challenges today ' s every player responsible for while awaiting trial on gun
Super Bowl champion who Manning as a "fan of the players face off the field, their actions. We need to sit possession charges . Over a
earned $9 million in fan," cheering on workers at
endorsemenh. was the No. 2 a grocery store and coffee
NFL player on the list. Tiger shop.
Woods led all U.S. athletes
"People love Peyton
with $87 million in endorse- Manning because he is that
mem earnings.
guy next door," said Todd
MIAMI (AP)
He That's part of playing in the play. "He sees things that I
It is unlikely Manning will Krinsky. vice president of points, he ptvots, he barks NFL, and the reason you would not see. because of
approach Woods' marketing sports and entertainment out more orders than a cof- have confidence is because mr. position.
money, said Gary Philpott. marketing at Reebok, the fee shop waiter at lunchtime. of how hard you worked and
'When I am down in my
CEO of E-Poll Market Adidas AG unit which has a
When Peyton Manning is how hard you prepared. I've stance, he can see things so
Research. "Tiger is an icon, long-term
deal
with running the show for the used this quote before, but much better. He does a good
so those numbers are Manning. "His appeal is not Indianapolis Colts, it's diffi- my dad ~ave it to me when I job throughout the week of
untouchable for now."' he being that Hollywood guy, cult to decipher if he is per- was a ktd. It was by Chuck pulling guys aside and saysaid. "Manning will more so people young and old can forming magic or 'just blow- Noll, which said, 'Pressure mg. ' Hey, I see this, or I am
than likely top $30 million." relate to him."
is something that you feel goinll to get to this, do you
in* smoke.
'That would be impossi- only when you don't know like It?' He makes sure that
A dramatic tinish to the
Manning had deals with at
game would help Manning least six companies in 2006, ble to answer without giving what you are doing.' "
as you prepare for the week,
the most, said Dan Smith, a including Gatorade, made by away secrets," Manning said
Do his teammates and you feel comfonable on
marketing professor at PepsiCo Inc., DirecTV with a smile.
coaches know exactly what Sunday of knowing what
Indiana Uni versity 's Kelley Group Inc. and Sony Corp.
When Manning brings his Manning is doing when he checks we are going to go
offense to the line against gestures toward the defense? to."
the Chicago Bears in Or when Manning backs
No other quanerback perSunday's Super Bowl, at away from center Jeff forms all those machmatimes he will resemble a Saturday as if he can't tions. Few - Brett Favre,
maestro conducting a finely remember what he's sup- Tom Brady on occasion tuned orchestra. Other times, posed to do?
call or change plays at the
he'
II
look
like
a
disoriented
"We
work
together
so
line as much ·as Manning. In
COLUMBUS (AP) missed one of the lawsuit's
The widow of Minnesota claims. in which . Kelci traveler seeking directions. often, when you come to the offensive coordinator Tom
"To me, our offense, 'like line of scrimmage, I have a Moore's system, which
Viking s lineman Korey Stringer argued that the NFL
any
offense, is about execu- pretty good feel for what he Manning has played under
Stringer can proceed with didn 't set guidelines for
said the NFL's leading likes, what he sees and if he since he was the No. I overtion."
her negligence lawsuit practicing in the heat or propasser.
"We do call certain is going to check (oft) or all draft choice in 1998,
against the NFL and equip- vide information to coaches
mem 1'Piaker Riddell Inc . and trainers on how to rec- plays at the line of scrim- not," said Saturday, who most of the decision-making
over his heatstroke death ognize , treat and prevent mage, that's no secret there. obviously must be in tune is left in fhe quarterback's
"I think you have to be with whatever concerto hands.
during training camp in .!)eat-related illness.
confident
in your offense. Manning is leading on each
But don't watch the hands
200 I, a federal judge ruled
However, the judge
on Thursday.
allowed the claim that the
Kelci Strin~er sued the league and its subsidiary,
league and Riddell follow- NFL Properties, apr,roved
ing her husband 's death, equipment that dido t proclaiming the NFL hadn't tect players from injury,
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) inconsistent testimony about October. "Por the most part.
done enough to ensure that including heat-related ill- - An assault charge against when she noticed there was she asked me for $50,000. I
equipment used by _players nesses. The claim argues Titans cornerback Adam spit in her hair and wiped it wasn't aoins to give
protected them from mjuries Riddell's helmets and shoul- "Pacman"
Jones
was off, and about when she $50.000."
or deaths caused by heat- der pads are not fit for their dropped Thursday because a knew Jones' identity.
Jones, a former standout at
related illnesses.
intended use.
judge ruled there were too
The judge told Webb that West Virginia,
wasn't
Korey Stringer, a 27-year"We 're gratified that many inconsistencies in the she could still pursue the allowed to play in one game
old, 335-pound lineman Judge Holschuh has held testimony of a woman who case in a civil lawsuit. Webb Nov. S as punishment for the
who played college football that Kelci Stringer deserves claimed Jones spit on her at and her lawyer declined to incident, and the NFL fmed
at Ohio State, died from to take her case before a jury a Nashville night club.
speak to reporters after the him $100.000. But Jones
·
heatstroke after he practiced and show that the NFL, NFL
Jones was accused of spit- ruling.
said he hopes to get that
in the S":eltering heat and Properties and Riddell ting in a woman's face after
"She'll have a real hard money- back now that the
humidity. which pushed hi s should have done more to an argument at Club Mystic time winnin~ the civil suit if charge has been dismissed.
she didn't wm this case right
After the ruling, Jones
body temperature to I08.8 prevent his death," Stringer on Oct. 26.
Judge John Aaron Holt here," said Jones, who had- said he needs to pro!ect
family attorney Paul De
degrees.
said Krystal Webb gave n't spoken to reponers sin9e himself from people who
Judge John Ho bchuh dis- Marw said.

Super Bowl win could
catapult Manning into
endorsement stratosphere

Payton ~ave the '85 Bears
an offenstve weapon difficult to match. One thing
Chicago's only two Super
Bowl teams do have in common ts a dominating
defense.
Perry, Mike Singletary,
Wilber Marshall, Dan
Hampton and Richard Dent
made the Bears the Monsters
of the Midway in 1985.
They shut out back-to-hack
pl ayoff opponents before
overwhelming New England
46- 10 in the Super Bowl.
With Pro Bowl starters
Briggs, Brian Urlacher and
injured Tommie Harns,
defense was again Chicago's
strength. But while the current unit thrives on speed to
force turnovers, the ' 85
Bears were a more bruising
bunch.
"My dad always said the
biggest thing their team tried
to do was take out the starting quarterback every s in~;le
game," Moorehead satd .
"And if they took him out,
they were trying to take out
the backup.
"They were a rock ' em,
sock 'em, kill 'em type of
team. That's not the type of
defense this Bears team
plays. They're good, but it's ,
not knock 'em down, take

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\e
CLASSIFIED

E-mail
classified@mydailytribune.com

(304) 675-1333
675-5234

ET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

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

nine-month span. nine
Cincinnati players were
arrested for charges ranging
from drunken driving and
resisting arrest and spousal
battery. Last week. receiver
Chris Henry spent two days
in jail after pleading guilty
to allowing minors to drink
in a hotel room he rented.
"The last thing I tell
every team when I visit is
that the only thing that can
mess up the collective bargaining agreement is the
players
themselves."
NFLPA executive director
Gene Upshaw said. "We ' re
very concerned about that."

Is Peyton performing magic or blowing smoke?

Lawsuit filed over death of
Vikings' Stringer can proceed

if you're playing defense
against him.
"You can't get caught up
in all of that," Bears defensive end Adewale Ogunleye
said. "We're not going to
worry about the audibles,
we're not going to worry
about what he's doing at the
line of scrimmage. At. the
end of the day, he's going to
have to call a play and snap
the ball ."
But before the ball is
snapped, Manning has chosen what he beiieves is the
proper play for the defensive
alignment he sees. He has all
kinds of options, both for
passes and runs.
Sometimes, the call he has
gotten from the sideline is
perfect, and all Manning
does is, well, nothing. He's
like a third-base coach sending false signals to the batter.
In other instances, he is
changing the play, the blocking assigrunent, the formation - everything but his
uniform, it seems.

Judge dismisses as~ult charge against CB Jones

•

J

are trying to get money from
him.
"I'm just happy it's over
with and the truth always
comes to the end," he sa1d.
"Everybody wants som~­
thing out of my situation."
Jones was also charged
with public intoxication and
disorderly conduct last
August when he got into an
argument with a woman at a
night club in Murfreesboro.
Th&lt;;&gt;se charges will be dismissed if he stays out of
trouble for six ·months.

•

Wprd Adt

Qltplay Ads

Dally In-Column : 1:00 p.m.

All Dlaplay : 12 Noon :il

Monday- Friday for Inaartlon
In Next Day "• Paper
Sunday In- Column: 1:00 p.m.

llualne. . Daya Prior To
Publlc:.tlon
su-.day Dlaplay: 1:00

frio~••

Thu.-.clay for Sundaya

For Sund•v• P•per

How you can have borders and graphics
..._,.
added to your classified ads
_;,~
Jm
Borders$3.00/perad
f!
Graphics SOC for small
S1.00 for Iaroe

• All ada must be prepaid'

'

• Sto~rt Your Ada With A. KeyMJrd • Include Complet•
Desc;rlptlon • lnd\lde A Price • A.vold AbbnlvlaUons
• Include Phone Number And Addr..a When Nuct.d
1 Ads Should Run 7 D,.ys

'em ou1."

The mercurial Me Mahon
has distanced himself from
football, saying this week he
hasn't watched a game in 10
years, But some members of
the '85 Bears are frequent
visitors to the team's complex, serving as a reminder
that there's a legacy to live
up to.
·
The current Bears say they
don't mind.
"This team has nothin~
but respect for those guys,'
Brown said. "They're our
idols. Why not be in the
shadow of your idols?
They' re kind of like your big
brothers. We look up to
them, just like everybody
else does."

Websites
www.mydailytribune.com
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www.mydailyregisler.cQm

l\egi~ter

POLICIES; Ohkl Valt.y Publilhklg,...,..... U. rtghllo ldtl. ~ Of e~~nc:.l anv M •t 1ny u.,.. Errors muat be ~ed on the
Trlbun.&amp;.nllnM-~ wiM biiJUfllln•lblelor no mor•lMn the cal Df tn. apaa. occ:up'-d by IM •rrar Mid only tM llrs1 inHrtlon .
•ny tou ar ,..,_.. thM ruun• from 11'11 publkatiOn or OI'IUUkN'I Olan ~nt Correc:tK!n will tMIINde In tnattm avallllble .cllllon.
.,. always conlklentlal. • eurr.nt rate e~~rd appiiM. · All f'NIMtllt ..,... ..........,are IUbltCt to the hd•al Fair ttouslng Act ot I HI.
acnptt ontw Mlp wtnttd adl
W. wm
In vlo•Uon ol tht lb.

r'
~---'

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

\\.\ il l \ l l \II \ I "

r~

Ohio VoU.y
Publlslllng .......
lhl right to odll,
rojoot "'OIIICOI any
ad 11 any lime.

kltncarlyle@!comcast.net

t·M':i\

Lost- 1 chocolate &amp; 1 yellow
male Lao dogs. Hobson
area, Middleport, (740)9923882 or740-416-1 9BB

Mutt

Aaoclltecl on lhl

r

r

"1111""'-----.,

ll:

Gln::,\\\'A\'

~..._

_ _ _ _ _ _•

YNI

\'AKD S,u..:

0

W.wniD
mBu\'

~

•

Proolsets. Gold R1ngs. Pre1935
U.S
Currency.
Sol1tane Diamonds· M T. S.
Co1n Shop, t 51 Second

~~

I \11'1 \ 1\ \II\\
-.1 1{\ h I "

rio

lhJJ'W,"''IUl

Free to a good home. 4
black puppies, 2 male and 2 tOO WORKERS NEEDEO
tema1e . Call 740--256·1360. Assemble cr afts. woo d
1tems To $480/wk Matanals
provided. Free 1nforma110n
Gweaway- 2 year old brown pkg 24H r
t -428-4649
male p1lbutl.
Excollen1
watcl'ldog To good home Accept1ng app llca bons for
w1thout kids (7-40)416·61 54 cash1er s Must be available
to work all shifts No Phone
Calls. Apply at Par Mar 1142,
15054 Slate Roule 160,
Vinton
4x4'o For Sole ...... ..................... ....... ........ .... 725

ao

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Announcemen\ ............................. ..... .......... 030
Antlqun ............... ................. ............. .... .. .... 530
Aportmento tor Rent ............ ...... .. ....... .. .. .... 440
Auotlon ond Ftea Mart&lt;et .... ................... .. .... oao
Auto Porto a 1\cc.ooorlea .. ........... .... ......... 760
Auto A9palr ..................... .................. ........... no
Auto. lor Sole ............... ............................... 71 D
Boola a Motors lor Sole ............................. 750
Building Supplleo ......... ............................... 550
Buol.... ond Buildings ............................. 340
Bual.... Opportun11y ....... .......................... 21 0
Bualneoo Trolnlng ....... ....... .................... ..... 140
Campara a Motor Homeo ................. ..... ..... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Corda oflhonka ...... .......... .. ................... .... .010
Child/Elderly care ....................................... 190
Eloctrlcal/llolrlgerallon .... ............... ...... ......840
Equlp.,...ttor Rant .... ................ ................. 480
Excavating ......................... .. .................. ...... 830
Form Equlpment ......... ...... .................... ....... 6t0
Forma lor flont ............................................. 430
Forma lor Sole .............. ............................... 330
For L -................. .......... .. ........................ 480
For Sole .... ...... ............ ................... ... .... ........ 585
For Sole or T.-......................................... 590
FruHs l v.getablta .... ..... ...... .......... ............ seo
Furnl- Aoomo ........................................o\50
a......t Houllng ......... .... ............ ..... .............650
Ol-woy ......................................................040
Happy Ado............................. .. ....... ..... ...... ... 050
Hoy Oraln ........................... ..... .... .............. 840
Holp Wantocl ......................... ........................ ItO
Homelmprovemento ...... ...... .......... ............. B10
Homeotor Sole ...... ............ ..... .... .... ............. 310
Ho"""""ld Ooodo ....... :.... .... ............. .......... 510
- l o r Rtnt.. ........................................ 410
tn-lam ................................................ 020
ln.urMce ... .................................................. 130
Lawn a Qardon Equlpment.. .................... .. 680

a

~:::'.:r;;ou;;d·::::::: .· ': : :.·::.:::.::::. ::::::::. ::::g
a

Loto Acreage .......... .................................. :150
Mlocoll-..... ..... ................ .. ............ ...... 170
Mloeollaneouo -chandln ........ ............ ... 540
Mobile Home Repair ................................. .. .680
Mobile Homeolor Ront. ........................... ... 420
Mobile llo~MSior Sole .. .......................... .. .. 320
Money IO Loan .................. ... ........................ 220
Motorcyc... a. 4 Wheelert ..........................740
Mualc.tlnatruments ................................... 570
....oonalo .................. ................................. .. oos
'-to lor Solo .................................. .............. 560
Plumbing a Heating ...... ...... ........ ................ 820
ProfMalonal Services................................. 230
- , TV a CB Repalr ............................... 160
llool Exlelo Wontocl ............ .......... .... ........... J60
Sc'-!olnotructlon..................................... 1SO
- , Plant a Fertl- .............................. 150
SHua11ono Wanllod ....................................... 120

=i

=~:: ::: :::::.: :::.: : : : : : : ::·:::::::::~

llucllo lor Solo ............................... ............. 715
UphOiotllrY ................................. ............... ... 870
vono For Sole................................ ............... 730
WonWei to Buy .............. ............................... D90
WanWcl to Buy- Farm Supplies .................. &amp;20
WanWcllo'Oo .............................................. 180
Wonead to Rent............................................ 470
Yarcl Sele- Glollfpolls............................... ... .. 072
YtlrCI Soi•Pomaroy/Middle ......................... 074
Yont Safe-Pt. - n t ............. ................... 07&amp;

Accepnng Applications for
011 and Gas Dri lling.
PosrtionsOpen· Tool Pusher
and Ollllers. eKpenence
requuod Floor han cls na
eKperience necessary Pick
up application @ J D. Drilling
in Racme. Ohi o. Apply in
Person no phone calls
please.
:________
Accepting Resumes to r an
OhiO Licensed Massage
Therap1st to wor k 1n 2 tt1r1v·
mg ChirOpractic offi ces 1n
Gallia &amp; Jackson counties
E ~&lt;ce llent
Wages
&amp;
Opportunity for nght person
Con tact The
Gallipolis
Chiropractic Center at 990
2nd Avenue. Gallipolis.
_o_nio_;_
(7_
40_:1_••_•_
-o_2oo___
An Excellent way to earn
money. The New Avon.
Call ManIyn 304 •882 •2845
Area Manufacturer has
lndustrial Maintenance
posit ion available. Must
have mechanical and
electrical
expenence.
Ab!e to work on welders.
cold saws, an d other
m1sc mach1n ery, read
schematiCS. and bl ue·
prints. Apply 1n person at·
SFS Truck Sales, 2t 50
Eastern Ave., Gallipolis.
Arthur Treachers/Twin Oaks
accepting applications tor
expttrienced cooks/ attendants. Apply @ J.O. Drilling
1n ~acine . Ot110. Apply m
person no phone calls
plea se
AVON 1 All Areas 1 To Buy or
SelL Shirley Spears, 304675- 1-129

Bartender wanted to star t
1mmed1ately. Apply 1n person
at Halfhill's Tavern. 234 Jrd
Avenue. GallipoliS, OH
Bob Evans of GallipoliS,
Hmng night &amp; Oa:y stufl Grill
Cooks
Excellen t Pay &amp;
Benel1ts ava1lal:l1e Stop •n
Full·llme te mp needed lor
busy office
Job may
become pe rmanool Pus•l•oo
15 m1J.ed St3crelaflal and
mediCal Resumes rnay be
dropped oft at the office of
John A. Wade, MO. 2520
VaHey D1iva Swte 112,
Pmnl Pleasant. Feb. I st. 2nd
and 5th NO Phone Calls

lt'ri"ol""'-----.,
~F.Lr W.~IITFD
..

~ a rly!H e ad Star t Program
accepting appltcat•ons for
postlions: Teact1er. Teac her
A1de.
Famil y
Advocate/Orl'.'er. Bus Dr1ver.
Food Serv1ce. Custodial and
SubsliiUtes
1n
Cabell.
Wayne, Lincoln. Mason M1n
Eliuc &amp; valid dflvers license
req. lor each pos it•on:
Submit resun1e. cover ltr., 3
ret llr s to SCAC. 540 Filth
A'J9 . Htg'., WV 25701 by 216-07 EOE

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$16.53-$27 58/hr., now hir·
111g. For application and lree
governement job Ink&gt;, call
Amei JCan Assoc. of Labor 1913·599-8042. 24fhrs. amp.
serv.
GREENHOUSE GROWER
Grin 's M1dway Greenhouse
IS seeking to hll 1 or 2 greenhouse grower positiOns
Must have 3 years of plant
prodlJ clion eMperience Must
be able to wo rk rotating
weekend &amp; hol iday schedula We provide a compeliti-..e salary &amp; benefit pack·
age. Fax
resu me to
(_304
__:_15_8:6-2_54_8_.,------,Hair Stylist- Michael &amp;
Friends is seeking a ta lented
creat1ve stylist with man.agers license for Booth
Rental. $1 25 per week. Call
Patty for intQfview (740)3799145 , cell (740)645 _5895

Holze r Sen1or Care
Cente r has an open1ng
lor the loUOW111Q posi·
tions:
• Full lime STNA
• Part llfTle STNA
• Part time Oietary Aide
• Part lime
Housek~per

It you are 1ntersted 1n

a

;&gt;osition wit h great benefits and would like to
be part ot a res1dent
care or1entad nurs1ng
facility please call Bill
lambert. Payroll Clerk
or
Barb Peterson.
Human
Resources
Director for Long Term
Care at 740·446·500 1
or stop 1n ana see us at.
380 ColOnial On'Ji:!
Sidwell. OH 45614
EqtJal Opportumty
Employer
HOME HEALTH AIDEsSIGN ()ftj BONUS home
health care ot SE Oh10 IS
currently h1nng tlQme health
a1de6 · competitiVe wages.
Call 740-662-1222
- - - - -- - Tow TruCk operalor. MVA
and drug screen reQun&amp;d
740·368·8547

5 Plus Acres, 2 Br.. Kit.
Din., Front Am .. Full base.,
story and 112, AC. s1ngle
garage.'20 X 20 shop
Racine. Route 124. 740or you may submJt resu me Witt oo general hOuse clean- 9-49-2253.
to: indrecruiling@mpwser- ing. reasonable rates. have - - - - - - - vices.com
references. 740- 441 -5122
A.Henllon!
Aqua- Tach Environmental
l ocal company offenng "NO

,_,

~ --www.comica.com

home.740-379-9 t1 2

------

WorM 1nvo111es JrldliStnal
cleaning;' h1gh pressure
waterblastmg, wet/dry ...acu uming. Hard hat. drug-tree
and Union env1ronment
Needs HS diploma or GEO
and drtvers license.
Actvlinctmtn1
No Need!
Low M01sI ure carpet
1'\oo,....., .... ,nlttes
,.,...,.
,__ . d
h 1
Fo• more ;•to•mao;on
call:
CIU&lt;:Imng nes tn an our
"
Calvin l epoi1'Clearly Clean
800-827-8790
ext 5686 or ext 5736
l3041675+0022

0

Ab solute Top Dollar U S
Silver and Gold Coi11s.

3bd 2ba HUD $27,0001
Only S1i01mol 4% Oown.
30 years @ B'7o. For listu)gs
800·559-4 109 K254

Jor. 2 112 ba House 011 At
62 1n Har tfo rd,
House
beside available lor sale,
Small Home Repair Also. rent one or have extended
Brush cu11ing, painllng, land- tam1ly option. Senous c~ lls
scaplng Ret available, Over at
(304)675-2484
cell
t5 yrs. eKp (740)446-3682
(304)593· 1481
U-Save. Heatmg. Cool1ng.
Hot Water Heaters &amp; Odd 5 Plus Acres. 2 Br.. K1t .
D1n . Front Am Full base ,
Jobs, Call [740)388·9039.
story and 112. AC, s1ng1e
(740)794-1532.
garage/20 X 20 shop
Rac1ne . Route 124 740Waiting till Spnrlg to
949-2253
clean your Carpet?

Tempo rary Positions
Available
lnduatrlll
Ser"tce
Technlclana In Galllpolla,

G1u&gt;UND~ foot&gt; . ·

Irs

Drywall and patnttng servtc es. 740-985·3779.
- -- - - - - God's Re;oictng Carpenter
building, remodeling_ plumbIng, prayer. Jotm Moore 9922839.

OH

7 Mon. old Beagle/Basseu
Hooncl. Housebroken. good
Wltr'l children. needs a good

Ftee Bull dog MiK Pups.
Ha&gt;~e shots &amp; b-een wormed.
Evenmgs (740)38B-0551

PI- Sr;: ~ I'IA ~

W

WA.vrm
To Do

HELP W,WIID 1
. -

Secretarial position tn local
office, expenence a plus but
not required. send resume
to P.O Sox 351 , Ga lli ~IIS.
Ohio 45631

51\ll' s P.l\) 'fl-It&lt;
"'"" 51.:&gt;~ HAP NC&gt;lHtfl\6t

-i'~r-.1~.

--.
Avenue. Galhpol1s. 740 -446·
2 yr. old male Aonweiler, 2842.
good natured. needs room
to run.wl dog house shots
up to date 304-675-5305

Union to ask for help outlining conduct rules
H

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE

@

caregi&gt;~els

In-Home
Needed. Mason Counly
Act 1on Group. lllC. In-Home
Serv.ces 1s currently accept·
mg app1tcat1ons tor care·
gJVers to pro&gt;~ide 1n-home
serviCes to the elderly and
disabled. EKperience pre!erred but no! reqwred .
Please
contact
Lisa
Templeton, AN or Jennifer
Thomas. AN @ 675 _3300 or
apply in person @ 22 t Main
Slreet Monda~ through
Friday 8 am to 4 pm EOE.
M/F, PJA

LABORER EARN AS YOU
LEARN. Start OUilding for
your future now by joi ning
our ProfeSSional Team and
learn the ski lls to become a
H1gh Pressure Cleaning
Maintenance Techni Cian. All
posillon s require weekly
TRAVEL outs1de of Ohio,
Company provides lodging,
transportat ion,
and
'"
~rDiem A.VEA"'-=~E startfng wage with cost of benefits included js $205 00 ~r
field ctay worked. with a
chance to advance up to
$263 00 per lield day
worked. We prO'.'Ide pa1d
training and EXCELLENT
BENEFITS.
PreEmpl oyment DRUG TEST
and a valid Oriver's license
is required. Class A COL. IS
a plus. but not requ1red.
Send woO; his!(!()' and day
time phor16 number to
TECHN ICIAN TRAINEE ,
PO. BOX 565, MARIETTA,
OHIO 45750. EOE

~

2007 by NEA, Inc.

h;,;n~

Ohio Valley Home Health.
Inc.
RN 's. CNA.
STNA.
CHHA.
PCA.
Compet1t1ve Wages and
Benefits including health
illSurance and M1teage.
Apply at 1430Jackson Pike.
or 24 t 5 Jackson
Avenue, Point Pl&amp;aSanl, WV
or phone toll free 1·866·44 1·
1393
- - -- - - - Overbrook Center Located
0 333 Page St.. Middleport
Ohio
Is Pleased To
Announce We W!ll Be
Holding An STNA Class.
Scheduled For Feb. 20March 7, Hours Will Be Bam·
4:30pm.
If
Vou
Are
Interested In Joining Our
Friendly And Dedicated
Staff, Please Stop By Our
Front Office Mon-Fri., 9am!Sp m And Fill Out An
Application.
Space
Is
UmHed, Applications Will Be
• - opted Until Feb 9 Full
""""
· ·
T1me Alld Part Time Part
Time Pos111ons Ava1lable To
Those Qualified lndi\~duals
Completing The Class.
Applicants
Must
Be
Dependable (Attendance Is
A Must) Team Players With
Positive Attitudes To Join Us
In Providing Outstanding,
Quality Care To Our
Residents.
If You Have Any Questions

Gal~pohs

rw

___s_••_,;_ce_• _ _ _

c
a ~i tlo; open~ngh ~ ~~~~~-;~x~;- 1 ;~0~~:~~~
'

has
;:ache•

~~na~::gs C~u~ty·

9034 _

Certification/Licensure 10
Phy 51ca,I Educa110n. Hea\th,.
1
1
5
or n erven 10n pec1a 1s
preferred . This position IS a
9-month contract w1th Board
appr0\16d benefits. Salary
will be based on expeflence
and cert!flcai!On according
to salary. Submit lener of
1nterest to John 0. Costanzo,
Superintendent.
AthensMe1gs EducatiOnal Service
Center. 320 112 East Mam
S1reet Pomeroy. OH 45769
Application
Deadline
February 9, 2007. 4.00 p.m.
The AMESC is an Equal
0 p p o r t u n 1t y
Employer/Provi der.

Employment DRUG TEST
and a &gt;~ahd Dn\l&amp;r's license
IS required. Class A COL IS
a pii.IS. but not required .
Send worK hiStory ami day
t1me phon e number to
TECHNICIAN
TRAINEE,
PO BOX 565, MARIETTA,
OHIO 45750 EOE

baSj c first a1d at bus1ness 1n
Chesh.re.
OH.
tnterestirog/LOW Stress Work
Env1ronment.
Great
Opportunity to Earn Extra
Cash! Call 888--269-6344 or
Fax resu me to 740-2666671
-------AN's. O.alysrs TechructanS.
anO Unrt CkHk ~ tor
Pleasant Valley DialySis, an

Nanny
$700
week
Immediately
in
Pomt
owned
Pleasan!,
Must Love
bent dialySIS facility In
Children (67B)318-3650
Pt.Pieasant.W\1. Expel'ience
pre ferred. P1ease send
No-11 H1ru1g 8kperienced resumes to Candy Bartram.
Sawmifl help. Appl)' 1n per- lOUISS-Fort Gay R ~onal
son.
Twin
AIYer Oiai)'SIS. 21 45 Highway
Haut cc~ 26 t 2 US RI 35. 2565, Lou1sa, KV ot1230 Of
18)1. to 606-638-3404.
SouthSide

,. _noonuv

ouooa-

8'-"""-'~

OwoRn.INrn'

o1

University ot RIO Grande IS
looking lor expaflenceo
~ PI
1 1 the
· aase app Y a

~~,taleterla.

- -- - - - - WantedPartTimeBart9fldel
(must be 21 years old! Send
Resume to AmEif 1Can Leg1041
Post 140 PO 6o11 267 New
Haven, WV 25265 ~nn
L1nda Wyatt or stoP 111 and
p1ck up appliCiiotiOns after

•N011Ch
OHIO VALLEY PUBLI SH·
lNG CO. recom mends
that you do bu s1ness w1ttl
pevPie you know, and
NOT to send money
th rough the mail until you
have investigated the
ofterlng

r

MOI&gt;ri
lU LoA,,

Bon ow Smart Contact
the Oh10 Division of
Financ1al
Institution 's
Oltice
of
Consumer
Af1a1rs BEFORE you railnance your home or
obtain a loan BEWARE
of requests for any large
ad'»'ance payments of
toos or insurance. Call the
Office of
Consumer
Aft"a1rs toll free at 1·866·
278-000 3 to learn 1f the
mortgage
broker
or
lender
is
properly
licensed. (ThiS IS a public
service announcement
lrom the

r

Oh •o Vall ey

Pub11shi~ Company)

:;::;~;~==~
PR~=~"
....,..~ ... vu.
S~VK.:t.;S

1,~--oiiiiiiiliiiii...r
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL sECURITY ISSI?
No Fee Unless We Win'
1_888 _582 . 3345

All rMI nlllt actvtr1lllng
In thll newapeper 11
IUb)tct to tht FIKitrll
Fair Hou11ng Act or 1"68
which makn tl Hlagallo
tdvertl" "any
preference, limitation or
dlscrtmtnatlon baHCI on
riCe, COlor, religiOn, Mx
femillll atatu1 or nei!Of\11
ortgln, or tny lntenuon to
make any suc:h
pteftrtnce, llmltltlon or
dlt&amp;Crimlnalion."
Thlt newspa~r will not
knowingly Kcept
ld'o'ertltemtntt 101' reel
Mtate which lain
"loletlon ot !he law. Our
readers 1re hereby
Informed ttm ell
dwellings edvertlaed In
lhla Mwapaper are
e'llellebt. on en -tual
opportunity baNI.

s

For
1 Ranch Sl yt:J
1
ae·
Home . 4 Bedrooms. 3 Bath.
B acres. (740)3B8-8639
House tor sale 3 1'2 m11es
oot Sandhtll. 3 bedrooms. 1
bath, lots ot storage space.
call (304)675 -2507
HUD HOMEI l bd $II2J-.
......
3Dd 2be $15 5/mo. More
homes ava1lable1 4%dn

r

ao"'

30yrs @
For llsllngs
800-559-4109 xF144
MOBILE HO\IES

•OR SAU:

I

t2X60 2 Br all slec 1n M100
on rented lot $4500 740tirrio~;;;;;;:;u::;;;;~;;.~;;·..;._, 416· 1354
"'-A'-u~
~\L.-------1~
...- ~ L
1984 t 4J.17 3 Bed. Mobile
Home .
Remodeled .
0 Down even w1th less ltlan $12 000 Free lot rent tor 6
perfect credit 1s avallable on monltls. Pome roy 740 )416 th 1s 3 bedroom 1 Oath 6 "54
home Corner lot fireplace
3.' 2 Dou01ew1de
modern li.ilchen. 1acuzz, 1ub 2007
Pa,.ment around S-550 per $37 .970 M1CWest '740 )828·
2-:'50
mon th . 740-367-7129.

~'paml""'-:o:-----.,

r§O

=

~

f

exper ience .

2007 , 4:00 p m
The
AMESC
1s an
Equal
0 p p o 1 t u n 1I v
Employer!Prov,der

accepted
· Paym ent could be the
same as rent.
Mortga ge
Locators.
(740)367-0000
r---~---.,

"::~~~::=~

Occupational Therap•sl 1n
Mei~ County. Applicants
should have expenence in
providing OT in a schOol set·
ling
for
students
in
Preschool through Grade
12 _ ContraCt and salary will
be
basect
on
certilication/llcensure and

- -- ------- __·::c_
•·-- - ----

Avg. Pay $20/hr or
S57K annual!):
lnciuding Federal Benefits
and OT. Paid Trainmg,
Vacations-FT/PT
1-800-5&amp;4- 1775 Ext. f 8923
USWA
-- -----AN . immediate opening for
DON, eKper;ence prelerred.
Call lor additional inlorma.tion or Interview Contact:
Marjorie
Huston
0
(740)384-3485 or (740 )3842676. Huston
NurSII1Q
Home. Inc. 38500 St. Rt
160. Hamden. OhiO 45634.
AN's needed to perform

~rii0;;;;.;~~.;;~·...
;...~..;.
· ..;....,

The
Athe ns-Meig s
Educational Ser'.'ice Center
has an antic1pated posi tion
opening lor a school based

years

DOWN

• g1ams lor

1uu:.

-

Appllcants must provi de
their own tra nsportation.
Submit letter Df interest.
Contact Holhe Bumgarner, resum e. references and a
LP"'"'· SlaH o-'elopment
...
copy
o1
current
~ 740 99 2
·
Coo'd'·nalo• .._
•
• certificateiiJcense(s) to JOhn
0.
Costanzo.
6472.
Overbrook Cente r IS An
E.O.E. And A PartiCipant Of Superintendent. Athens
~~
Meigs Educational ~r&gt;~•ce
The Orug Free Worlq)lace Cent81', 320 112 East Ma!n
Pr&lt;'VV'Am.
Street, Pom eroy. Oh10
LABORER EARN AS VOU
POST OFFICE NOW
45769.
Application
LEARN . Start building to'
HIRING
Deadline
Febr uary 16 ,

your luture now by joining
ou r Professional Team and
learn the skins to become a
H1gl1 Pressure Cleaning
Mamtenan ce Technician. All
pOSitions requlf&amp; weekly
TRAVEL outside of OhiO,
Company prCNideS fodQi ng,
transpor tatiOn,
and
Per Oien-'1. AVERAG E Slalt·
1ng wage with cost of benefits ii'ICiuded Is $205.00 per
field day worke d, with a
chance to advance up to
$263.00 per field day
worked VWe provida p81d
trai mng and EXCELLENT
BENEFITS
Pre-

I

CHil.lVEL.DERLC
.'""
y

PAYME NT" proyou to buy your
home in stead ot renllng.
The
Athens-Meigs
• , 00% t1nanc1ng
. 1 •- ·
Wtll care tor elderly 1n their
Educa 1ona
.::n~~rv 1ce en1er
• Less than pe rfect credit

-

SoKxlLS

(,X\"fRU{"I'I(I'\

"--liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;.,,,
Gottlpolio ew- co1~ogo

~·; ) y!t f'l

••

~~ r.:-.. _.,..._ ,~-~~

.

Mo"e tn toda~ 1 New 2007 3
oeoroom 2 bath
Only
S I 99 86 per month Se1 up
m1nutes from Athens and
ready for •1'1med1ate OCC\.r pancy Call 740-385-4367

3 Bedroom . 1 li4 Baths NEW 2007 4 'oed D/Wide 1
K1td'len , LA. FR. Central Ar r $49, 179. Midwest {140 )826·
MAny eKtras 2 13 ac res 2750
located on Chns Lane. close
-.gatllpoi~Searaer~ cor"
-.:credt!ed Membtir .t.ccr&amp;OIIIfl\j to new GAHS. Reduced lo
Lm~ &amp;
Count~~ 1or 11 llapa 10e111 Col leges St29.900 . 1740)245-5909
Ar RfAGE
1110~1274S
iir~~~--.., 3 Beoroom. 2 Bath. fireplace
on Pteasan1 Valley Rei 1 2 4 acre lot for sale t304 )743..
• ll111e !rom R1o Grande 6323
A&gt;~aJ!abl e Wlltl 1 5. or 8 - - - - - , - 47 acres .. · L1ev1ng Roaa, '
Wanted: Aespoo81ble party acres (740)709-tt66
to take oo small monthly - - - - - - - - Country water septic. pono
payments oo High Ouf1nibon 4 rerital hOIJses "FOI' Sale" &amp; barn . electl'lc. many hOme
S125.000 hrm
Big Screen TV 1·800·398· In Gathpo~s. Call Wa vne Sites
13041882-3131
3970.
( 404 1 456 -~02
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Toda)-1740-446·4-367
1-800-214-0452

r7U ~1N.uL\i'\llJl.iS

r:

I

- ,_

�Friday, February 2, 2007

'

www.mydallyaentinel.com .

The Daily Sentinel • Page

ALLEY OOP

NEA Cr o11word Puzzle

BRIDGE
Mobile Home Lot tor rent Mobile Home Lot 1n Johnson
near Vinton . Call {740)44 1- Mobile Home Park in
1 1 11
Gallipolis. OH
Phone
(740}446·2003 or (740}4461409. '

N•ce 14x70 3 Bedroom, 2
Neod to sell your home?
Late on payments. diVorce,
)Ob transter or a dea th? I
can buy your home. All cash
and quick clos1ng. 740-4 16·
3130.
I~ I ' I \I "'

Bath
home.
located
between
Athens
and
Pomeroy. $36 5.00
per
month. Call (740)3B5-9948.

NICe. Clean, 2BR. 4 mi from
$ 3751
Ho1zers.
mo ... sec.
deposit &amp; Ref. No Pats.
(740)446-6 865, (740)3792923.

0,1::N;;;:;s·.:_.,JI '"r•--"'
•10_..,:~";:
-~-ll1111___
ENIS....,
to"t)R Jb.,._ .
lbNr

L

1

FOR

SSII8/mo! B uy Jbd HUD
HOME! 4°·odn. 30yrs @ 8%.
For listings 800-559·4109
X1 709

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
tor Rent, MeiQS County, tn
town. No Pets. Deposit
Requ1rad. (7401992-5 174 or
(740)44 1-0 11 0.

Financing as low as 0%· 36
lmmaculale 1 Bedroom Apt.
Newly Carpeted, Freshly :J~~=:l:::.~~.., Mos. on John Deer e 7
Series 4x4, 4x5 &amp; 5Jt.4
Painted &amp; Decorated, New
Round Bllert/500 Senes
appliances, WID Hookup,
MoC oi/Sq1111re
Baiera.
Privacy Fence, Private
Also available S.K , on
Parking , 12 min. from Rio
Grande, ~ see to appre- 4 Bristol Tlcl&lt;ets. March 23&lt;d Uaed Hay Equipment. All
rates thru John Deere
ciate . $325/mo. (614)S95- &amp; 24th. (740)256-1 417
Carmichael
Credit
n73, 800-7~ .
.a.tt purpose western sadcle,
Equipment j740)446·241 2.
In Gallipolis, Clean, upstairs, excellent COI'ldllon. match·
2 bedrooms. 2 bath. dish· lng brtdle (head stall , - - - - - - -Keiter Buill- Valley- B4sonwasher, W/0 hookup, SSOO. retgnS), hillier, bridle. $3SO.
Horse
and
LlveatocM
deposit,
references. (740)446-7644
lfalleraLoadmax(740)446•9209 _
JET
:.___:__ -,-_ _ __
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
AEAATION UOTORS
Utility· AJuma Aluminum
Midclaport ' Beech Street. 2
Repaired, New &amp; Rebu ln In Trau.n- B&amp;W Goosenectl
bedroom furnished apart- Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- Hitches.
Carmichael
men1. deposit &amp; pre-rental
800·537-9528
Equipment j740)446-2412
references, no pets, utilities
paid, (740)992·0165
- - - - - - - - NEW AND USED STEEL
New 1 Bedroom Apt., living
Steel Beama, Pipe Rebar ~-------,1
room. full bath &amp; large clos· For
Concrete,
Angle,
e1. Limited KitcheneHe . Channel , Flat Bar, Steel Keifer Built- Valley- BisonCould 00 used as a two bed- Grating
and
livestock
Fo1
Drains, Horse
room studio. Furnished ,
loadmaxDriveways &amp; Wallcways. l &amp;L TrailersS450Jmo and unfu rnished,
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Gooscnect, Dumps, &amp;
S300Jmo. (740)416-6 154
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Ut11ity- A.luma Aluminum
~allera · B&amp;W Goosenecll
New
2BR
apartments Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed Hitches.
Carmichael
Saturday
&amp;
w asher/dryer
hookup, Thursday,
E ui ment 740 446-24 12
stove/refrigerator inctuded.
Sunday. l740)446-7300

L.,-liilliiiiiiiii:li-,..J

r

r

4x4
FORSAU:

03 Ford E•P· XLS. 4•4. All
Pwr . CO/Tape, /JC , Aear Ail,
3rd ~. New Tires, Running
Boards, While wl gray int..
$11 ,500 OBO, 'i&lt;0-709-

112 mile west oo SR
124 1o Rutland, Oh

1\_
_
74v- 992 5682

1.1.:..!

Pe, Pl. AT 87,000 miles. 4
Door. $4200. 96 Ford F I SO
XLT. •wo. Ext cab, PS. PW.
PB, Pl. "T, leather, 63,000
miles. Bed hnar. $5200.
17401446 3580
.

(740)446-3870.

MlfllEfS
SElf STOOGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

(740)446-7425

A HIDDEN TREASURE!
Commons
2 or 3 Br. house, no pets, l aurel
Apartments . Largest in !he
740·992-5858.
area! Beautifully renovated
2·3 Bedroom Duplex, throughout including brand
$420.'mo plus deposit &amp; utili- new kitchen and bath.
ti es 1n Downtown GallipoliS: Sta rl i n~ at S405. ·call today!

No Pots (740)446-0332 (304)273-3344
8am-5pm Mon-Sat

Apartment for rent. 1-2
2bl, House in Pt. Pt $465
Bdrm., remodeled, new carHomestead Really Broker
pet. stove &amp; b ig .. water,
(304)675-4024 1304)675sewer, !rash pd. Mtddleporl.
0799 ask tor Nancy.
$425.00. No pets. Ref.
3BR. 1 bath, LeGrande required. 74Q-843-5264.
Blvd. no pet s, $6.25 mo. +

Twin Rivers TOW8l is accepting applications tor waiting AKC Golden Aetrii\lef puplist for Hud-subsil:ed, 1- br. pies, vet ck. ok, DOB
12/16/06, $350, (740)696·
apanmant, call 675·6679
Equal Ho~ ng Opportunity 1085

Two bedroom upstairs apartment in Miedeport all alec·
!ric we pay water and trash
you pay electric, $300
deposit, $450 per month
with a year lease. No Pets,
Reference
required,
Construction worker wei·
com e! Call (740}416-2506

1995 Buick Century, 4 dr.,
137,000K. runs great. good
body &amp; tires, $1 ,800 060.
740..992-3453.

Registered small
miniature schnauzers. l
Choc.male 1 Choc mate w/
white on chest and frt.paws
1 salt&amp;pepper f wl unique
markings. 1st shots and
PlJPP'I cut. 740441_1657

--------

2000 PlyiTIOllth N6011. Auto.
AC, AMIFM CO.Runs great
740-949-2394.

· Garages

• Complete

YOUNG'S

Remodeling

CARPENTER
SERVICE

J40-9&amp;2-1m

a

Stop &amp; Compare

Remodeling

Mute swans fDI' sale , yearling male &amp; female, call lor
or
BEAUTIFUL
APART· Valley """rlments in Mason, prices 304·576-2999
304-593- 5591.
UENTS
AT BUDGET Wtl is .._
~ accepting appli·
PRICES AT JACKSON cations. Apply in person at RP""_!"!'_ _ __,

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
501 Shawnee Trail, Point
Drive from $349 lo $448
Pleasant. 'WV on Tuesdays

r

Mta::AL

IJI6ntm.P~S

- - - ----2002
Pontiac
Suntir e

$4200 00 OBO 2000 .............,_

I

·-.~ 00 OBO """"
N
74"
eon ~· ..,.

256-6169

97 Sebring. 2 door. V6,
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call or Thursdays
HUD --105,000 miles. PWR, win·
740-446 -2568.
Equal
Assisted. Equal Opportunity Wurlitzer piano exc ellent dows, door loc«s, key less
Housing Opportunity_
Housing
cond , medium wood finish, entry, 53250 080. Phone

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
ED l AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
and/or small hOuses FOR

i

~(.'E

FOR Rmr

I

RENT Call (740)44 1· 11 11 Commercial building ·For

ln.memory of

i

Few SAI..E

During your
illness you
always said that
Bonruwile, v-6 auto, 4 cloor,
$2495. Nice 1997 Cavalier.
I'll be a winner
red, auto. $2500. NiCe 1998
Ford Escort ~ cyl. aut o
either way.
$2500. Nice 1995 Ford mustang GT v-8 302 auto $4900
You area
(74014411-8172
wmner.
5 'fROCKS
We love You &amp;
fUR SALE
t.,._.,;liiiiilii-rl
Miss You

Rent" 1600 square feet, off
street pa~ing. Great toea· Com mercial building "f or
Downtown Point Pleasant tion! 749 Thi rd Awnue in Sale~ 1600 sq fl, on street
modern one bedroom Apt. Gallipolis_ Rent $47Simo. parking. Great location. Call
Second floor, stove and Call Waynal 404)456-3802 WWfn&lt;J (404)456-3802.
refrigerator, included, all
electric/depOsit requ ired No OHice 101" Rent 2611 Stroller wlcarseat and base,
Pets
call
afler
Spm Jackson Ave. , beside Holzer pack&amp;plav, lots of baby
While Ave 2BR house (,-3::.04::.16:_7.:5.:·3::.788::__ __
Clinic 3 rooms {304)675- clothes(girls and boys) .
$450/mo + 1tmo. oep water 2507
Everything is In good snape. 1991 Chevy S- 10, 180K, 5
paid, ranier pays gas &amp; elec·
call
740.388-0031
\I I 1{1 II\ \Ill"'\
speed. E11tended Bed,
tric. 1 sman pet ate. 740-794·
$1,000 000 1740)441 ·0422
l \I\\ I .., I 1'1 1 II "'
1760.
\ t t \ I " 'I I( I,
• 2&amp;3 bedroom aPartments
• Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup
Mollohan carpet. 1s vine
2 Bd. Mobile home in Midd. •All electric· averaging
Street, Gallipolis . Berber, ..,
all alec. $425 plus dep. 740- $50-$60/month
$5.95/yd, Call lor free quote. 0% Financing- 36 M as
• Owner pays water. se wer. 1740) 4411-7444
416-1354
avaitabte flOW on John
trash
Oe&amp;re Z Trak Zw 1\lma &amp;
2 Bedroom !railer in country,
(304)882-3017 Thompsons Appliance &amp; 5.11'% Fixed Aate on Jonn
ready Feb.3. $350 Deposit.
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
Deere Gato~ Carmichael
$350 rent Call 245-0095
re-condilioned automaUc Equipment (740)446·241 2.
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera2 Bedroom. Bu laville Pil&lt;e,
tors, gas and electric 511. hydraulic brush hog, lor
Trastv'Waler Pd. No Pets,
ranges, air conditioners, and skid steer. Used 30 hours
Deposit &amp;
References.
wri nger washers. Will do $2800. New 6ft hydraulic
(740:1388-1100
Gracious livin!;J. 1 and 2 b6d· repairs on major brands In brush hog, $3800. Call 7403 Bedroom Mobile Home room apartments at Village shop or at you r home.
388-1579
Union Aven ue . Pornerov. Manor
and
Riverside
Completely
Renovated. Apartments in Middleport Used furniture store, 130
$450/mo. (740)4 16-6154
From $295-$444_ Call 740- Bulaville Pike. Electric gas New John Deere Compacts
992-5064. Equal Housing ranges, chests. couches. and 5000 Series Utility tracMobile Home $375/month
ma1tresses, bunk beds, tors 0 0% Fixed for 36
Opportunities.
•
$375/deposit Aeteren cas
dinenes. recliners. (740)446· months through John Deere
required No Pe ts (304)675-- Modern 1BA apt. (740)446" 4782. Gallipolis, QH _Hrs 11 - Credit.
Carmichael
5578
0390.
3 (M·F), Sat. Call First.
Equipment (740)44 6·241 2
tor application &amp; Information

r

EllmView
Apartments

ro ":w I.;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;

Lr.'~--EQu•F~iiiiiiENI'il.i;.,..J

ti

H1ll 's Se lf
Stora qe
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Oh io

March 22, 2007 to
March 24, 2007
$175/peraon baled on

Jim Forshey

Until we meer tAgaiiJ .

Your family

Hours

7:00AM · 8:00PM
11t4/t mo. pd

AUCTION
Middleport Dept.
Store .
Sue's Seledubles
March 2nd
5:00pm to ~ : 00 pm
Mar&lt;b 3rd 10:00 am

Auctioneer
Hilly R. Goble Jr.

740-416-1164
www .aucl ionZII) .m m

;Are you 65
" ·or older?

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

with a tribute to Elvis

•allipoH• llailp Utrtbunt

second morning
Single rooms can be purehnad

Saturday, Feb. 3rd
8:00pm

$275/person
Must be 21 years of age

No Cover Charge

Joint Jlta,ant 1\egt•ttr
The Daily Sentinel

double occupancy
Package Includes dinner on the
first night and breakfast on the

for

(No refunds)
Gladly accept cash, money
order, check &amp; credit cards
Please call PVH Community
Relation~

to make reservations,

(304167!&gt;-4340, Ext.

~~~

1~

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, February 4th
Outlaw/22 LR

12 Noon
Meeting before Match

B &lt;l,,.-.,..,..,..,.,.

Racine American Legion Post 602
, will have a public
Ham &amp; Turkey Dinner w/ Noodles
Sun , Feb. 4th. 11 :00 am 1i!l??
$6.00 includes Iced Tea or Coffee
and Dessert, while available.
Welcome!

BINGo·
American Legion
Middleport
February 3

6:30pm
All Paper Packs you can
play for $25.00
Guaranteed $80.00 a game
co~erall depends on crowd
Early bird starts at 5:30 pm
First 60 people eligible for
special door prize.

Also playing Bingo on
Tuesday night at 6:30 pm

I NT

Pass

6unba~ Qtimt• ·6tnhntl
P•••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

O'Bryant

urholstery
cleaning solution
for over 20 years

MY DADBU~N ~ELATIVES
STAY FE~ DAYS , BUT
THEY NEVE~ LIFT
A FINGE~ !!

'c EPT WHEN 1 ASK NWHO
WANTS SECONDS '1'1!"

1aetor
41 Smldgtna

AUpaaa

46 Rldor'a
lltoul
47 8011

51 DriYI u t ml
52 Fuuylrun
53 Cllocollt•
calorld doa
,....oc~y
55 Momboro ol
1B Dick Trocy'a
the flock

56 Big • -

wltl

17 Gridiron

8 Elocta
33 OYerhtld
8 Dloctmlng
ttolns
18 Atrvo
12 Dllopklotld 3li Social
olll-k
13 Toke long
- ·
20 Mo. Rond
center
l1epl
37 Golf cour11
21 Moltl, atilt 60 Pollen
18 Smull Into 40 Major
Icicle
tpreldtr
22 Abaorbod
JapantM
23 Economlll
23 Chuck
11011
- SmHII
DOWN
Yoager, e.g. 41 Hlbtma1e
ae Wood
24 Orond
42 Softeno up
nymph
1 Mr. Voight
Coulee
43 Cldl
21 Commuter
2 Popullr
25 Fly ball'a
43 " AIIIII" tollr
,.htclt
ldYica giver
poth
46 Cry or
:1$ Chimp
· 3 Eully-tp!H 27 Fwdoot••
dollgttl
lboclt
mineral
pill
48 Ganllt IIOpl
30 Nobel Prba 4 Ollttortng
28 Alhllll'l
48 SmaothCitegory
5 Epcot
lither
talking
34 ~ahow
neighbor
31 Turldah
50 floof tdgl
1toat
6 In 1 d olftctat
54 "So long!"
31 OYer end
7 Collle'a
32 Urban
tltrlhant
57 Woll climber
58 Slllorn run
58 Hurricane

lllin

chargo

over

11'11nlpol1

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

"u~.o~
C~nnete Work
26 Years Ex pe rience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimates

What will happen ~ yoo lea&lt;! bad&lt; a
· club? Oedarer will win with h~ club
queen and run lor home, here taking 10
~icks: three spades, ,;, diamonds and

Baer Builders
&amp;Developers

(740) 992-5232

Owner
Rhonda Peters
Mana~ e r

Janet Jeffers

CELEBRITY CIPHER

one cl ub.
You must shift to a heart.

• Custom Baths
• Complete
Renovations
• Honey Do Lists
• Plumbing/Wiring
• Free Estimates

THE BORN LOSER
f'QUE.')i!Ot'l '&amp;OUT
\1\E. ro\UI\J

honor in a surt (and lead llgh wrttmut an
honor). Th is is almosl always righ1 - but
note that "almose If you swi1ch to a low
heart here, South will probatiy play low
from his hand and will have a heart stop·
per.
Since you have dummv 's hear1 10 surrounded by your jadt and nine, and you
have a_higher nontouching honor in lhe

v::;:::=:::--,

(740) 416-1568

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

BIG NATE
E . I'M

8EC.61NG ~

SOT fEt111E .

\o/OllLD•I'T
TO l.IK E TH"T.
"FEMriE OAt&gt;. SHE 'O
f.O.T... LIT'I': THIN!&lt;. You

WHEN IT
CDI'IE~

Loc:al Contraclor

740..367-0544
Free Ettlmatea

I 'LL
&amp;E~!

740..367.0536

'

We Deliver To You!
• Horne Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hornefill System
• Helios System

PEANUTS

~ ••~."&gt;:"J!Itli"ij..,4":.,...

I1VS

DECIDED TO

TIE A

PINK RI660N AROUND

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

ALL MV LOVE LETTER5.

5EE? I ALREADV
"AVE THE RIBBON .

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

SUNSHINE CLUB

l11cu• Construcllan ud

If m. FISH IS (aJ·
CHE-ST£R, a! lf1}1E
MEAT HAS AU.. THDS£ Ami BIOIKl

J

~

11Vill~Alro.

l•ull C•bacUag.

IN"JHtM

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

/

Additions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4141 Office
740-416·1834

GARFIELD
1 NEVeR G&gt;IS1 A CAl.l.
ON M"' Cl&lt;l.l. P~E

I••

..... . .n•RM•Itii•HI•
. . _ _12:11_

I

NYIIIITW . .II . .
I nC.•D I ·eu't
1!11 2 . . . . . . . . . . . .

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ __

WE~E

A

WUSS'I'.

\

-----·················· ·· ·······
'

Tc!Qay's clw: Tequals C

• p XSEU

EXU

•

TRIXPAW

OUEUY

" ZDMU

LDYV

CYPAWI

NDA

IXUZZ. " - ZNAA

' XSEU."'

DAE

DH

NDRY

YUVWYSJIU

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' My recipe lor IWa is ool being atraid o1 myself,
alraid ot whalllhink or ol my optnions.' - Eartha Kill

G

':::' s~~lllA-&amp;£~s· 1=
or:.r:..t:r...::. ~

AstroGraph
-'lllrthdrlf:

Saturday, Feb. 3, aG07
By S.rnlell
O.ol
Vou may find you rself tlavlng strong
desires to be 1nduded in aomettllng larger than lite, and you are apl to partiCipate
in group activities where ttlis is feasible.
Wo rki ng harmoniously wilh others
makes i1 possible
AQUARI US (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Although an it would require i8 a tittle
seed money in order 10 prime the pump
lor something large r. you're apt to be
afraid to spend the e nerg~ or funds nec essary to do so.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - It you're
hoping to aChieve something of considerable nole, you nved llln &amp;l ly who can
and will operate on the same scale as
you. Don't team up with so me&lt;Jne who
thinks in petty terms .
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - lady Luck
might do her part lo put you lnt&lt;J a good
position lor gain, but unless you roll up
your.sieeves and take &lt;~~ d vantage of her
groundwork, it isn't likelv you'll accom·
pl ish much.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You might
get the oppor1unity to meet someone
who is .a nice pefSOfl and wo uld be a
good friend, yet if you look at tlim or her
with envy, yo u could nix the hand ot
friendship.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - Vou might
be a be tle r doer than vou think. And
Instead of sw1ng1 ng into action on things
you do we 11, you could allow negative
thinking to ca use you to waste this valuable day
CANCER (June 21-July 2.2} - A relationship in which you 're presentl y
involved lOoKs pretty Interesting, but it
you lump people you don't like very
much .nto catego ries, no one is going to
appeal to you
LE O (July 23-Aug. 22) - Size matt&amp;!'$
when it comes to you r financial involve·
ments. If you spend quality time on amall
exchanges, you' ll only get small returnlil .
Use your energy on large opponunitin.
VI RGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Vou can
win friends and 1nlluunoo people as a
leader i1 you accept the bl am ~ tor the
mistakes made by :,oour team a!:i yours
and not merely the irs. You'l f lose others it
you don't.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Soinething
buneficiat co uld develop b '{OU, not nee·
euarily through what vou know bUt from
whom '{Qu know. Recognize the truth so
you don't break your arm frying to pa,t
yourself on the back.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Testy 91tuationa will be manageable, and you can
fulfill your objectivea It you try. HoWever,
it you let ama ll obltaclu dilute your
enthu•iaam, nothing will be accom plllin.d
SAGITTA.AIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) There Ill everv lndlcltlon ~u oan be
luoi(ier than uaual when It oomM to your
ambltlona and lntere•ta. How.ver,
bece.UM you're harboring a negative attl·
t\.10., you'M(live Lacty L.UOk the bOOt.
CA ~R ICORN {0.0. 22·Jan. tW] Othere find you an V!Joyable lncllvlduai
when you oe,n live and tel uw . Don't R.'tpiOk over ..,.ry little thing th4ly CSO or M)l
tn•t Jen't pel'lllc:t tnOugn fo r you, lnclud-

a..

SOUPTONUTZ

Phone,__________ _

E..:tllltltriltll~.-.t(:rnbf.

king, shift to the heart jack, the card
above dummy's best. Nowyour side can
take the first fi\18 tfOs.

lni hlr looka.

~

•

by Lull Campol

Celltdy Cifi* CtY'*'IJIITIIIII "'*'from QI.OIIIklnl trt !wnous ptOpif, J1M1 Wid ,...m.

There is another "rule" - lead fourth·
highest when you have at leaSI one

-t:ORNIR STONI
Now Renti11g
High and Dry CONSTRUCTION

Storage
331111 1111011 ..
Ptlllrtl.ll

able game bonus

always think fi rst. (Against a su~ contract, this rule is right much less Clften.)

2AS9 St. Rt. KiO • (&gt;llllpotis

I I \\ I -..
l 1 I'd hI I I
l l I\.-., I 1 ~ \ l I It I \

club jack, king
How woukl yoo
defe nd?
North is right to blast into th ree no·
trump. It might have no play, it might be
laydown,' it might depend upon the
defense. But if it makes, 11pays a vulner-

There is a "rule" - r8tum partner's lead.
That is typically trua in no-trump. l &lt;J1

GRIZZWELLS

Ohio Valley Publl•hlng P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

I

........
4 ~~~ .

A native American gave the following
piece ol advice lo Hubert Humphrey: "Be
careful in revising those immigration
laws of ~ours. We got careless with
ours:
At the bridge table, ba careful in lolklw-·
ing the •rules" - such carelessness may
result iA your contract being overrun. or
vour failing to defeat a contract .
In this deal, take the East cards. Against

740.446.9200

•

Mall or drop oil this coupon along
with a copy of your photo tO to

Eue
Pa"'

It can be so easy
to get careless

1-888-992-7090
1-740-992-7090
Your carret and

'W'I!VW.timbbl aeekcab.ln*'t·eo•

Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ __
Address __________

North
I t
3 NT

Opening lead: • J

Harnood cabinewy ADd FurnHure

when you pay
. for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered.subscription!

3 Day-2 Night Getaway

CARPET
TREATMENT
by

4577 1

Senior Discount*

The Eagles Club
presents

West

BARNEY

If so, you qualify for a

Belterra Casino
Resort &amp; Spa

South

c

Jack L.
,-·~~-"
Frederick ~:.
fi~ -.~~ +~~

I

l arge 3 Bd. house in
Pom eroy. 1 112 balh, ai r
col'\d_ . basement, &amp; 2 car
garage, very clean ancl pt en·
ty of room. $700 pe1 M. 740949·2303 or 740-591-3920.

[o,tltqc"ll

741)-114f-221 7

2120149
1131106

38 lmmlgrotlon

three no-trump, your part ner leads the

l~;;~;;CJ

included $600.00 ( 740 ~ 1 - 9564
304-895-3769
------Nice
1994
Pontiac

bench

THE RED

f ', llllt 'l• 1 li'i11

II

i 8 6 5
KJ 9 3
5 •
A 72

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Nortb-SouUt

~':12l121~

In Memory

1 Toaat

. 10 T otllre
t 1 WO&lt;Ir unltl
13 Fq •
14 Brobw'a
netwofk
15 Sun bum

South
• KJ I
' Q 8.
t 6 3I
• Q 6 43

70 Pine S 1ree t • Gallipo li s

Marty

•
'
•
•

to • a 5

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

• New Homes

SeH-Stor•1•"

.-. 1

Ea»l

tO7 J
A. 1 6
9 7

• J

r]amihJ (•ti'@#:l
ROBERT
BISSELl
CIISTIICTIIII

"Middleport's only

great $1 .500 (3041882-3652

AKC

•
•
•

V.C YOUNG Ill

1991 Chevy S-10, V6 , 5
speed, high miles, runs

-------

• K
West

7411-446-0007 T o ll Free 1177-669 -0007

1Ox 1Ox 1Ox20
992-]194
or 992-66]5

• Room Additions

Nonh
02-a-(11
• A Q 4
' 10 5 2
t AKQJ 10 8

•RENTALS•SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN .VISITS

· New Garages
· E* tne.l I Ptumblng
· Roofing I Guttera
·VI nyl Siding I h inting
• PatkJ and Porch Decks
WV038725

2 Nice RemOOeled Homes in
town. No Pats, Renovatod.
All new
carpet c'all

(740)367·0000

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

::;;;;;;;;~

98 Blaza&gt;. 4WO. PS. PW.

......

31 Liquid

~ ...1w
42 Tie • turuy
7 Pllnl cropl 44 ....... -

88 Toyota 4WD, V6, Auto,
New Tires, Call after 6:00.
1
1740)446-4536
,.....~.~..~~~.....

L.,--•GiiiiiiWNiiiii--,.1

AttentkM'II
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAVMENr programs_fo r you to OOy your
home Instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• l ess than pertect credit
accepted
• Paymen1 could be th e
same as rent
Localors.
Morlgage

Phillip
Alder

9 am - 6 pm

1276

1 poSSibly 2 Br House 1n
New Hailen. $275tmonth, 1 and 2 bedroom apar t$275/deposlt
No Pets. ments. tw nished and unfur(304)882-3652
nished. secunty deposit
required , no pets. 740-992100 liberty Straet SSOO plus
22:_1.:.
8· _ _ _ _ _ _
U1il1 lie s 2 bedroom Out of .:.
Town $650 plus ublilies 3 1BR upstairs garage apt. A.lso, units 011 SA 160. Pets
IIAv &amp;
Oak firewood lor sale.
bedroom Contact ERA Town beside Washington school. · Welcome! (740)44H)194.
Delivered
or
pick
up.
BASEMENT
&amp; Country Real Estate. 675· $525/mo • 1/mo. Clep, all uti!
1740)441-0941, 1740)645WATERPROOFING
5548
pd. 1 small pe l allowed.
5946. CAA HEAP accepted. 60 dry bales, $25 a bale, Unconditional lifetime guar(740)794-1760
740·949-2293 or 74D-41&amp; antee. Local ruferences furnished. Establislled 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
$325 per mon. + 1 mon.
Waterproofing
deposit Water paid. AU ele&lt;o,
no gas Dill. (740)794- t760 or

sac dep. l740)446-3644.

ACROSS

1994 Chevrolel Sll\18rado.
loaded, longbed, low
miles, aulomatic, bedl lnet'.
Excellent condition, no rust.
Books tor $6500. Sell for
$5,000 740-367-7129.

ve.

BS

llrhl ~ C\Al L I'OIW1

'

I I I* I I I

low to 101111 .... • " - ·

EDDLAY

I

GRI 0 I

I I' T-l
HN0 T G "I

The guy in tile 1111' behiDd 118
"I was driviaa m:kleuly. My
I~ 1
siabod. "Can Clll
" busbitnd
brina out allertain beul in
poople -· - !"
KROEVE
0

111

I

' I I I, I I

1.-y

Compltoo lht chudllt quotod
8you d""olop
bv fllllog I• tho •luiog worda
from J1t9 No. 3 below.

SCUM.Lm ANSWIIIS 2 - 1 - o1
Uuolcl - MIUve - Grief - Rudoly - FALL l&gt;r US

"Tho law o.f IUpply IIICl demand," mused my
ftioocl, "is wbu wo don' l ftiU for the pricos, ~
tbo prices must FALL for US." ·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�Friday, February 2, 2007

'

www.mydallyaentinel.com .

The Daily Sentinel • Page

ALLEY OOP

NEA Cr o11word Puzzle

BRIDGE
Mobile Home Lot tor rent Mobile Home Lot 1n Johnson
near Vinton . Call {740)44 1- Mobile Home Park in
1 1 11
Gallipolis. OH
Phone
(740}446·2003 or (740}4461409. '

N•ce 14x70 3 Bedroom, 2
Neod to sell your home?
Late on payments. diVorce,
)Ob transter or a dea th? I
can buy your home. All cash
and quick clos1ng. 740-4 16·
3130.
I~ I ' I \I "'

Bath
home.
located
between
Athens
and
Pomeroy. $36 5.00
per
month. Call (740)3B5-9948.

NICe. Clean, 2BR. 4 mi from
$ 3751
Ho1zers.
mo ... sec.
deposit &amp; Ref. No Pats.
(740)446-6 865, (740)3792923.

0,1::N;;;:;s·.:_.,JI '"r•--"'
•10_..,:~";:
-~-ll1111___
ENIS....,
to"t)R Jb.,._ .
lbNr

L

1

FOR

SSII8/mo! B uy Jbd HUD
HOME! 4°·odn. 30yrs @ 8%.
For listings 800-559·4109
X1 709

1 &amp; 2 Bedroom Apartments
tor Rent, MeiQS County, tn
town. No Pets. Deposit
Requ1rad. (7401992-5 174 or
(740)44 1-0 11 0.

Financing as low as 0%· 36
lmmaculale 1 Bedroom Apt.
Newly Carpeted, Freshly :J~~=:l:::.~~.., Mos. on John Deer e 7
Series 4x4, 4x5 &amp; 5Jt.4
Painted &amp; Decorated, New
Round Bllert/500 Senes
appliances, WID Hookup,
MoC oi/Sq1111re
Baiera.
Privacy Fence, Private
Also available S.K , on
Parking , 12 min. from Rio
Grande, ~ see to appre- 4 Bristol Tlcl&lt;ets. March 23&lt;d Uaed Hay Equipment. All
rates thru John Deere
ciate . $325/mo. (614)S95- &amp; 24th. (740)256-1 417
Carmichael
Credit
n73, 800-7~ .
.a.tt purpose western sadcle,
Equipment j740)446·241 2.
In Gallipolis, Clean, upstairs, excellent COI'ldllon. match·
2 bedrooms. 2 bath. dish· lng brtdle (head stall , - - - - - - -Keiter Buill- Valley- B4sonwasher, W/0 hookup, SSOO. retgnS), hillier, bridle. $3SO.
Horse
and
LlveatocM
deposit,
references. (740)446-7644
lfalleraLoadmax(740)446•9209 _
JET
:.___:__ -,-_ _ __
Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
AEAATION UOTORS
Utility· AJuma Aluminum
Midclaport ' Beech Street. 2
Repaired, New &amp; Rebu ln In Trau.n- B&amp;W Goosenectl
bedroom furnished apart- Stock. Call Ron Evans. 1- Hitches.
Carmichael
men1. deposit &amp; pre-rental
800·537-9528
Equipment j740)446-2412
references, no pets, utilities
paid, (740)992·0165
- - - - - - - - NEW AND USED STEEL
New 1 Bedroom Apt., living
Steel Beama, Pipe Rebar ~-------,1
room. full bath &amp; large clos· For
Concrete,
Angle,
e1. Limited KitcheneHe . Channel , Flat Bar, Steel Keifer Built- Valley- BisonCould 00 used as a two bed- Grating
and
livestock
Fo1
Drains, Horse
room studio. Furnished ,
loadmaxDriveways &amp; Wallcways. l &amp;L TrailersS450Jmo and unfu rnished,
Scrap Metals Open Monday, Gooscnect, Dumps, &amp;
S300Jmo. (740)416-6 154
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; Ut11ity- A.luma Aluminum
~allera · B&amp;W Goosenecll
New
2BR
apartments Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed Hitches.
Carmichael
Saturday
&amp;
w asher/dryer
hookup, Thursday,
E ui ment 740 446-24 12
stove/refrigerator inctuded.
Sunday. l740)446-7300

L.,-liilliiiiiiiii:li-,..J

r

r

4x4
FORSAU:

03 Ford E•P· XLS. 4•4. All
Pwr . CO/Tape, /JC , Aear Ail,
3rd ~. New Tires, Running
Boards, While wl gray int..
$11 ,500 OBO, 'i&lt;0-709-

112 mile west oo SR
124 1o Rutland, Oh

1\_
_
74v- 992 5682

1.1.:..!

Pe, Pl. AT 87,000 miles. 4
Door. $4200. 96 Ford F I SO
XLT. •wo. Ext cab, PS. PW.
PB, Pl. "T, leather, 63,000
miles. Bed hnar. $5200.
17401446 3580
.

(740)446-3870.

MlfllEfS
SElf STOOGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

(740)446-7425

A HIDDEN TREASURE!
Commons
2 or 3 Br. house, no pets, l aurel
Apartments . Largest in !he
740·992-5858.
area! Beautifully renovated
2·3 Bedroom Duplex, throughout including brand
$420.'mo plus deposit &amp; utili- new kitchen and bath.
ti es 1n Downtown GallipoliS: Sta rl i n~ at S405. ·call today!

No Pots (740)446-0332 (304)273-3344
8am-5pm Mon-Sat

Apartment for rent. 1-2
2bl, House in Pt. Pt $465
Bdrm., remodeled, new carHomestead Really Broker
pet. stove &amp; b ig .. water,
(304)675-4024 1304)675sewer, !rash pd. Mtddleporl.
0799 ask tor Nancy.
$425.00. No pets. Ref.
3BR. 1 bath, LeGrande required. 74Q-843-5264.
Blvd. no pet s, $6.25 mo. +

Twin Rivers TOW8l is accepting applications tor waiting AKC Golden Aetrii\lef puplist for Hud-subsil:ed, 1- br. pies, vet ck. ok, DOB
12/16/06, $350, (740)696·
apanmant, call 675·6679
Equal Ho~ ng Opportunity 1085

Two bedroom upstairs apartment in Miedeport all alec·
!ric we pay water and trash
you pay electric, $300
deposit, $450 per month
with a year lease. No Pets,
Reference
required,
Construction worker wei·
com e! Call (740}416-2506

1995 Buick Century, 4 dr.,
137,000K. runs great. good
body &amp; tires, $1 ,800 060.
740..992-3453.

Registered small
miniature schnauzers. l
Choc.male 1 Choc mate w/
white on chest and frt.paws
1 salt&amp;pepper f wl unique
markings. 1st shots and
PlJPP'I cut. 740441_1657

--------

2000 PlyiTIOllth N6011. Auto.
AC, AMIFM CO.Runs great
740-949-2394.

· Garages

• Complete

YOUNG'S

Remodeling

CARPENTER
SERVICE

J40-9&amp;2-1m

a

Stop &amp; Compare

Remodeling

Mute swans fDI' sale , yearling male &amp; female, call lor
or
BEAUTIFUL
APART· Valley """rlments in Mason, prices 304·576-2999
304-593- 5591.
UENTS
AT BUDGET Wtl is .._
~ accepting appli·
PRICES AT JACKSON cations. Apply in person at RP""_!"!'_ _ __,

ESTATES, 52 Westwood
501 Shawnee Trail, Point
Drive from $349 lo $448
Pleasant. 'WV on Tuesdays

r

Mta::AL

IJI6ntm.P~S

- - - ----2002
Pontiac
Suntir e

$4200 00 OBO 2000 .............,_

I

·-.~ 00 OBO """"
N
74"
eon ~· ..,.

256-6169

97 Sebring. 2 door. V6,
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call or Thursdays
HUD --105,000 miles. PWR, win·
740-446 -2568.
Equal
Assisted. Equal Opportunity Wurlitzer piano exc ellent dows, door loc«s, key less
Housing Opportunity_
Housing
cond , medium wood finish, entry, 53250 080. Phone

CONVENIENTLY LOCAl·
ED l AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments.
and/or small hOuses FOR

i

~(.'E

FOR Rmr

I

RENT Call (740)44 1· 11 11 Commercial building ·For

ln.memory of

i

Few SAI..E

During your
illness you
always said that
Bonruwile, v-6 auto, 4 cloor,
$2495. Nice 1997 Cavalier.
I'll be a winner
red, auto. $2500. NiCe 1998
Ford Escort ~ cyl. aut o
either way.
$2500. Nice 1995 Ford mustang GT v-8 302 auto $4900
You area
(74014411-8172
wmner.
5 'fROCKS
We love You &amp;
fUR SALE
t.,._.,;liiiiilii-rl
Miss You

Rent" 1600 square feet, off
street pa~ing. Great toea· Com mercial building "f or
Downtown Point Pleasant tion! 749 Thi rd Awnue in Sale~ 1600 sq fl, on street
modern one bedroom Apt. Gallipolis_ Rent $47Simo. parking. Great location. Call
Second floor, stove and Call Waynal 404)456-3802 WWfn&lt;J (404)456-3802.
refrigerator, included, all
electric/depOsit requ ired No OHice 101" Rent 2611 Stroller wlcarseat and base,
Pets
call
afler
Spm Jackson Ave. , beside Holzer pack&amp;plav, lots of baby
While Ave 2BR house (,-3::.04::.16:_7.:5.:·3::.788::__ __
Clinic 3 rooms {304)675- clothes(girls and boys) .
$450/mo + 1tmo. oep water 2507
Everything is In good snape. 1991 Chevy S- 10, 180K, 5
paid, ranier pays gas &amp; elec·
call
740.388-0031
\I I 1{1 II\ \Ill"'\
speed. E11tended Bed,
tric. 1 sman pet ate. 740-794·
$1,000 000 1740)441 ·0422
l \I\\ I .., I 1'1 1 II "'
1760.
\ t t \ I " 'I I( I,
• 2&amp;3 bedroom aPartments
• Central heat &amp; AJC
•Washer/dryer hookup
Mollohan carpet. 1s vine
2 Bd. Mobile home in Midd. •All electric· averaging
Street, Gallipolis . Berber, ..,
all alec. $425 plus dep. 740- $50-$60/month
$5.95/yd, Call lor free quote. 0% Financing- 36 M as
• Owner pays water. se wer. 1740) 4411-7444
416-1354
avaitabte flOW on John
trash
Oe&amp;re Z Trak Zw 1\lma &amp;
2 Bedroom !railer in country,
(304)882-3017 Thompsons Appliance &amp; 5.11'% Fixed Aate on Jonn
ready Feb.3. $350 Deposit.
Repair-675-7388. For sale,
Deere Gato~ Carmichael
$350 rent Call 245-0095
re-condilioned automaUc Equipment (740)446·241 2.
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera2 Bedroom. Bu laville Pil&lt;e,
tors, gas and electric 511. hydraulic brush hog, lor
Trastv'Waler Pd. No Pets,
ranges, air conditioners, and skid steer. Used 30 hours
Deposit &amp;
References.
wri nger washers. Will do $2800. New 6ft hydraulic
(740:1388-1100
Gracious livin!;J. 1 and 2 b6d· repairs on major brands In brush hog, $3800. Call 7403 Bedroom Mobile Home room apartments at Village shop or at you r home.
388-1579
Union Aven ue . Pornerov. Manor
and
Riverside
Completely
Renovated. Apartments in Middleport Used furniture store, 130
$450/mo. (740)4 16-6154
From $295-$444_ Call 740- Bulaville Pike. Electric gas New John Deere Compacts
992-5064. Equal Housing ranges, chests. couches. and 5000 Series Utility tracMobile Home $375/month
ma1tresses, bunk beds, tors 0 0% Fixed for 36
Opportunities.
•
$375/deposit Aeteren cas
dinenes. recliners. (740)446· months through John Deere
required No Pe ts (304)675-- Modern 1BA apt. (740)446" 4782. Gallipolis, QH _Hrs 11 - Credit.
Carmichael
5578
0390.
3 (M·F), Sat. Call First.
Equipment (740)44 6·241 2
tor application &amp; Information

r

EllmView
Apartments

ro ":w I.;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;

Lr.'~--EQu•F~iiiiiiENI'il.i;.,..J

ti

H1ll 's Se lf
Stora qe
29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Oh io

March 22, 2007 to
March 24, 2007
$175/peraon baled on

Jim Forshey

Until we meer tAgaiiJ .

Your family

Hours

7:00AM · 8:00PM
11t4/t mo. pd

AUCTION
Middleport Dept.
Store .
Sue's Seledubles
March 2nd
5:00pm to ~ : 00 pm
Mar&lt;b 3rd 10:00 am

Auctioneer
Hilly R. Goble Jr.

740-416-1164
www .aucl ionZII) .m m

;Are you 65
" ·or older?

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out the coupon below
and drop off or mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.

with a tribute to Elvis

•allipoH• llailp Utrtbunt

second morning
Single rooms can be purehnad

Saturday, Feb. 3rd
8:00pm

$275/person
Must be 21 years of age

No Cover Charge

Joint Jlta,ant 1\egt•ttr
The Daily Sentinel

double occupancy
Package Includes dinner on the
first night and breakfast on the

for

(No refunds)
Gladly accept cash, money
order, check &amp; credit cards
Please call PVH Community
Relation~

to make reservations,

(304167!&gt;-4340, Ext.

~~~

1~

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, February 4th
Outlaw/22 LR

12 Noon
Meeting before Match

B &lt;l,,.-.,..,..,..,.,.

Racine American Legion Post 602
, will have a public
Ham &amp; Turkey Dinner w/ Noodles
Sun , Feb. 4th. 11 :00 am 1i!l??
$6.00 includes Iced Tea or Coffee
and Dessert, while available.
Welcome!

BINGo·
American Legion
Middleport
February 3

6:30pm
All Paper Packs you can
play for $25.00
Guaranteed $80.00 a game
co~erall depends on crowd
Early bird starts at 5:30 pm
First 60 people eligible for
special door prize.

Also playing Bingo on
Tuesday night at 6:30 pm

I NT

Pass

6unba~ Qtimt• ·6tnhntl
P•••••••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

O'Bryant

urholstery
cleaning solution
for over 20 years

MY DADBU~N ~ELATIVES
STAY FE~ DAYS , BUT
THEY NEVE~ LIFT
A FINGE~ !!

'c EPT WHEN 1 ASK NWHO
WANTS SECONDS '1'1!"

1aetor
41 Smldgtna

AUpaaa

46 Rldor'a
lltoul
47 8011

51 DriYI u t ml
52 Fuuylrun
53 Cllocollt•
calorld doa
,....oc~y
55 Momboro ol
1B Dick Trocy'a
the flock

56 Big • -

wltl

17 Gridiron

8 Elocta
33 OYerhtld
8 Dloctmlng
ttolns
18 Atrvo
12 Dllopklotld 3li Social
olll-k
13 Toke long
- ·
20 Mo. Rond
center
l1epl
37 Golf cour11
21 Moltl, atilt 60 Pollen
18 Smull Into 40 Major
Icicle
tpreldtr
22 Abaorbod
JapantM
23 Economlll
23 Chuck
11011
- SmHII
DOWN
Yoager, e.g. 41 Hlbtma1e
ae Wood
24 Orond
42 Softeno up
nymph
1 Mr. Voight
Coulee
43 Cldl
21 Commuter
2 Popullr
25 Fly ball'a
43 " AIIIII" tollr
,.htclt
ldYica giver
poth
46 Cry or
:1$ Chimp
· 3 Eully-tp!H 27 Fwdoot••
dollgttl
lboclt
mineral
pill
48 Ganllt IIOpl
30 Nobel Prba 4 Ollttortng
28 Alhllll'l
48 SmaothCitegory
5 Epcot
lither
talking
34 ~ahow
neighbor
31 Turldah
50 floof tdgl
1toat
6 In 1 d olftctat
54 "So long!"
31 OYer end
7 Collle'a
32 Urban
tltrlhant
57 Woll climber
58 Slllorn run
58 Hurricane

lllin

chargo

over

11'11nlpol1

Concrete Removal
and Replacement

"u~.o~
C~nnete Work
26 Years Ex pe rience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Insured
Free Estimates

What will happen ~ yoo lea&lt;! bad&lt; a
· club? Oedarer will win with h~ club
queen and run lor home, here taking 10
~icks: three spades, ,;, diamonds and

Baer Builders
&amp;Developers

(740) 992-5232

Owner
Rhonda Peters
Mana~ e r

Janet Jeffers

CELEBRITY CIPHER

one cl ub.
You must shift to a heart.

• Custom Baths
• Complete
Renovations
• Honey Do Lists
• Plumbing/Wiring
• Free Estimates

THE BORN LOSER
f'QUE.')i!Ot'l '&amp;OUT
\1\E. ro\UI\J

honor in a surt (and lead llgh wrttmut an
honor). Th is is almosl always righ1 - but
note that "almose If you swi1ch to a low
heart here, South will probatiy play low
from his hand and will have a heart stop·
per.
Since you have dummv 's hear1 10 surrounded by your jadt and nine, and you
have a_higher nontouching honor in lhe

v::;:::=:::--,

(740) 416-1568

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

BIG NATE
E . I'M

8EC.61NG ~

SOT fEt111E .

\o/OllLD•I'T
TO l.IK E TH"T.
"FEMriE OAt&gt;. SHE 'O
f.O.T... LIT'I': THIN!&lt;. You

WHEN IT
CDI'IE~

Loc:al Contraclor

740..367-0544
Free Ettlmatea

I 'LL
&amp;E~!

740..367.0536

'

We Deliver To You!
• Horne Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Hornefill System
• Helios System

PEANUTS

~ ••~."&gt;:"J!Itli"ij..,4":.,...

I1VS

DECIDED TO

TIE A

PINK RI660N AROUND

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

ALL MV LOVE LETTER5.

5EE? I ALREADV
"AVE THE RIBBON .

70 Pine Street • Gallipolis
446-0007

SUNSHINE CLUB

l11cu• Construcllan ud

If m. FISH IS (aJ·
CHE-ST£R, a! lf1}1E
MEAT HAS AU.. THDS£ Ami BIOIKl

J

~

11Vill~Alro.

l•ull C•bacUag.

IN"JHtM

St. Rt. 248 Chester, Ohio
Mike W. Marcum, Owner

/

Additions
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commercial
740-985-4141 Office
740-416·1834

GARFIELD
1 NEVeR G&gt;IS1 A CAl.l.
ON M"' Cl&lt;l.l. P~E

I••

..... . .n•RM•Itii•HI•
. . _ _12:11_

I

NYIIIITW . .II . .
I nC.•D I ·eu't
1!11 2 . . . . . . . . . . . .

City/State/Zip _ _ _ _ _ __

WE~E

A

WUSS'I'.

\

-----·················· ·· ·······
'

Tc!Qay's clw: Tequals C

• p XSEU

EXU

•

TRIXPAW

OUEUY

" ZDMU

LDYV

CYPAWI

NDA

IXUZZ. " - ZNAA

' XSEU."'

DAE

DH

NDRY

YUVWYSJIU

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' My recipe lor IWa is ool being atraid o1 myself,
alraid ot whalllhink or ol my optnions.' - Eartha Kill

G

':::' s~~lllA-&amp;£~s· 1=
or:.r:..t:r...::. ~

AstroGraph
-'lllrthdrlf:

Saturday, Feb. 3, aG07
By S.rnlell
O.ol
Vou may find you rself tlavlng strong
desires to be 1nduded in aomettllng larger than lite, and you are apl to partiCipate
in group activities where ttlis is feasible.
Wo rki ng harmoniously wilh others
makes i1 possible
AQUARI US (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) Although an it would require i8 a tittle
seed money in order 10 prime the pump
lor something large r. you're apt to be
afraid to spend the e nerg~ or funds nec essary to do so.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - It you're
hoping to aChieve something of considerable nole, you nved llln &amp;l ly who can
and will operate on the same scale as
you. Don't team up with so me&lt;Jne who
thinks in petty terms .
ARIES (March 21·April 19) - lady Luck
might do her part lo put you lnt&lt;J a good
position lor gain, but unless you roll up
your.sieeves and take &lt;~~ d vantage of her
groundwork, it isn't likelv you'll accom·
pl ish much.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - You might
get the oppor1unity to meet someone
who is .a nice pefSOfl and wo uld be a
good friend, yet if you look at tlim or her
with envy, yo u could nix the hand ot
friendship.
GEMINI (May 21 -June 20) - Vou might
be a be tle r doer than vou think. And
Instead of sw1ng1 ng into action on things
you do we 11, you could allow negative
thinking to ca use you to waste this valuable day
CANCER (June 21-July 2.2} - A relationship in which you 're presentl y
involved lOoKs pretty Interesting, but it
you lump people you don't like very
much .nto catego ries, no one is going to
appeal to you
LE O (July 23-Aug. 22) - Size matt&amp;!'$
when it comes to you r financial involve·
ments. If you spend quality time on amall
exchanges, you' ll only get small returnlil .
Use your energy on large opponunitin.
VI RGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) - Vou can
win friends and 1nlluunoo people as a
leader i1 you accept the bl am ~ tor the
mistakes made by :,oour team a!:i yours
and not merely the irs. You'l f lose others it
you don't.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) - Soinething
buneficiat co uld develop b '{OU, not nee·
euarily through what vou know bUt from
whom '{Qu know. Recognize the truth so
you don't break your arm frying to pa,t
yourself on the back.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22) - Testy 91tuationa will be manageable, and you can
fulfill your objectivea It you try. HoWever,
it you let ama ll obltaclu dilute your
enthu•iaam, nothing will be accom plllin.d
SAGITTA.AIUS (Nov. 23-0ec. 21) There Ill everv lndlcltlon ~u oan be
luoi(ier than uaual when It oomM to your
ambltlona and lntere•ta. How.ver,
bece.UM you're harboring a negative attl·
t\.10., you'M(live Lacty L.UOk the bOOt.
CA ~R ICORN {0.0. 22·Jan. tW] Othere find you an V!Joyable lncllvlduai
when you oe,n live and tel uw . Don't R.'tpiOk over ..,.ry little thing th4ly CSO or M)l
tn•t Jen't pel'lllc:t tnOugn fo r you, lnclud-

a..

SOUPTONUTZ

Phone,__________ _

E..:tllltltriltll~.-.t(:rnbf.

king, shift to the heart jack, the card
above dummy's best. Nowyour side can
take the first fi\18 tfOs.

lni hlr looka.

~

•

by Lull Campol

Celltdy Cifi* CtY'*'IJIITIIIII "'*'from QI.OIIIklnl trt !wnous ptOpif, J1M1 Wid ,...m.

There is another "rule" - lead fourth·
highest when you have at leaSI one

-t:ORNIR STONI
Now Renti11g
High and Dry CONSTRUCTION

Storage
331111 1111011 ..
Ptlllrtl.ll

able game bonus

always think fi rst. (Against a su~ contract, this rule is right much less Clften.)

2AS9 St. Rt. KiO • (&gt;llllpotis

I I \\ I -..
l 1 I'd hI I I
l l I\.-., I 1 ~ \ l I It I \

club jack, king
How woukl yoo
defe nd?
North is right to blast into th ree no·
trump. It might have no play, it might be
laydown,' it might depend upon the
defense. But if it makes, 11pays a vulner-

There is a "rule" - r8tum partner's lead.
That is typically trua in no-trump. l &lt;J1

GRIZZWELLS

Ohio Valley Publl•hlng P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, OH 45631

I

........
4 ~~~ .

A native American gave the following
piece ol advice lo Hubert Humphrey: "Be
careful in revising those immigration
laws of ~ours. We got careless with
ours:
At the bridge table, ba careful in lolklw-·
ing the •rules" - such carelessness may
result iA your contract being overrun. or
vour failing to defeat a contract .
In this deal, take the East cards. Against

740.446.9200

•

Mall or drop oil this coupon along
with a copy of your photo tO to

Eue
Pa"'

It can be so easy
to get careless

1-888-992-7090
1-740-992-7090
Your carret and

'W'I!VW.timbbl aeekcab.ln*'t·eo•

Subscriber's Name _ _ _ _ __
Address __________

North
I t
3 NT

Opening lead: • J

Harnood cabinewy ADd FurnHure

when you pay
. for a 6 or 12
month subscription on your
home delivered.subscription!

3 Day-2 Night Getaway

CARPET
TREATMENT
by

4577 1

Senior Discount*

The Eagles Club
presents

West

BARNEY

If so, you qualify for a

Belterra Casino
Resort &amp; Spa

South

c

Jack L.
,-·~~-"
Frederick ~:.
fi~ -.~~ +~~

I

l arge 3 Bd. house in
Pom eroy. 1 112 balh, ai r
col'\d_ . basement, &amp; 2 car
garage, very clean ancl pt en·
ty of room. $700 pe1 M. 740949·2303 or 740-591-3920.

[o,tltqc"ll

741)-114f-221 7

2120149
1131106

38 lmmlgrotlon

three no-trump, your part ner leads the

l~;;~;;CJ

included $600.00 ( 740 ~ 1 - 9564
304-895-3769
------Nice
1994
Pontiac

bench

THE RED

f ', llllt 'l• 1 li'i11

II

i 8 6 5
KJ 9 3
5 •
A 72

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: Nortb-SouUt

~':12l121~

In Memory

1 Toaat

. 10 T otllre
t 1 WO&lt;Ir unltl
13 Fq •
14 Brobw'a
netwofk
15 Sun bum

South
• KJ I
' Q 8.
t 6 3I
• Q 6 43

70 Pine S 1ree t • Gallipo li s

Marty

•
'
•
•

to • a 5

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

• New Homes

SeH-Stor•1•"

.-. 1

Ea»l

tO7 J
A. 1 6
9 7

• J

r]amihJ (•ti'@#:l
ROBERT
BISSELl
CIISTIICTIIII

"Middleport's only

great $1 .500 (3041882-3652

AKC

•
•
•

V.C YOUNG Ill

1991 Chevy S-10, V6 , 5
speed, high miles, runs

-------

• K
West

7411-446-0007 T o ll Free 1177-669 -0007

1Ox 1Ox 1Ox20
992-]194
or 992-66]5

• Room Additions

Nonh
02-a-(11
• A Q 4
' 10 5 2
t AKQJ 10 8

•RENTALS•SALES
•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN .VISITS

· New Garages
· E* tne.l I Ptumblng
· Roofing I Guttera
·VI nyl Siding I h inting
• PatkJ and Porch Decks
WV038725

2 Nice RemOOeled Homes in
town. No Pats, Renovatod.
All new
carpet c'all

(740)367·0000

ROGER HYSELL'S
GARAGE

::;;;;;;;;~

98 Blaza&gt;. 4WO. PS. PW.

......

31 Liquid

~ ...1w
42 Tie • turuy
7 Pllnl cropl 44 ....... -

88 Toyota 4WD, V6, Auto,
New Tires, Call after 6:00.
1
1740)446-4536
,.....~.~..~~~.....

L.,--•GiiiiiiWNiiiii--,.1

AttentkM'II
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAVMENr programs_fo r you to OOy your
home Instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• l ess than pertect credit
accepted
• Paymen1 could be th e
same as rent
Localors.
Morlgage

Phillip
Alder

9 am - 6 pm

1276

1 poSSibly 2 Br House 1n
New Hailen. $275tmonth, 1 and 2 bedroom apar t$275/deposlt
No Pets. ments. tw nished and unfur(304)882-3652
nished. secunty deposit
required , no pets. 740-992100 liberty Straet SSOO plus
22:_1.:.
8· _ _ _ _ _ _
U1il1 lie s 2 bedroom Out of .:.
Town $650 plus ublilies 3 1BR upstairs garage apt. A.lso, units 011 SA 160. Pets
IIAv &amp;
Oak firewood lor sale.
bedroom Contact ERA Town beside Washington school. · Welcome! (740)44H)194.
Delivered
or
pick
up.
BASEMENT
&amp; Country Real Estate. 675· $525/mo • 1/mo. Clep, all uti!
1740)441-0941, 1740)645WATERPROOFING
5548
pd. 1 small pe l allowed.
5946. CAA HEAP accepted. 60 dry bales, $25 a bale, Unconditional lifetime guar(740)794-1760
740·949-2293 or 74D-41&amp; antee. Local ruferences furnished. Establislled 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
$325 per mon. + 1 mon.
Waterproofing
deposit Water paid. AU ele&lt;o,
no gas Dill. (740)794- t760 or

sac dep. l740)446-3644.

ACROSS

1994 Chevrolel Sll\18rado.
loaded, longbed, low
miles, aulomatic, bedl lnet'.
Excellent condition, no rust.
Books tor $6500. Sell for
$5,000 740-367-7129.

ve.

BS

llrhl ~ C\Al L I'OIW1

'

I I I* I I I

low to 101111 .... • " - ·

EDDLAY

I

GRI 0 I

I I' T-l
HN0 T G "I

The guy in tile 1111' behiDd 118
"I was driviaa m:kleuly. My
I~ 1
siabod. "Can Clll
" busbitnd
brina out allertain beul in
poople -· - !"
KROEVE
0

111

I

' I I I, I I

1.-y

Compltoo lht chudllt quotod
8you d""olop
bv fllllog I• tho •luiog worda
from J1t9 No. 3 below.

SCUM.Lm ANSWIIIS 2 - 1 - o1
Uuolcl - MIUve - Grief - Rudoly - FALL l&gt;r US

"Tho law o.f IUpply IIICl demand," mused my
ftioocl, "is wbu wo don' l ftiU for the pricos, ~
tbo prices must FALL for US." ·

ARLO &amp; JANIS

�\

Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

www .mydailysentinel.com

F'riday, February 2, aoo?

Trio of Suns picked for All-Star game
NEW YORK (APl- One
bad night may have overshadowed all the good
Carmelo Anthony has done
this season.
The NBA's leading scorer
was not among the seven
reserves
announced
Thursday night for the
Western Conference team
that will play in the NBA
All-Star game.
Denver teammate Allen
Iverson was chosen, extending his streak of consecutive
All -Star appearances to
eight. He started the last
seven games whi le playing
for Philadelphia. Anthony.
who is averaging 3 1.3
points but missed 15 games
while suspended for his role
in the brawl at Madison
Square Garden, was the
most obvious omiss ion.
Earlier Thursday, Anthony
said he hoped his suspensian wouldn' t prevent him
from earning his first AllStar spot.
"I hope no one holds that
over my head over anything," he said. "Thin gs
happen. One incident like
that is held over one person's head. life ain 't fair.
"I did my punishment. I
could've easily kepi my
name out there by appealing
it and doin g oth er stuff
about it, but I just did my 15,

fully pullhat behind us ."
Steve
Nash ,
Amare
Stoudemire and Sh&lt;lwn
Marion were all chosen
from the Phoenix Suns, but
Dirk Nowitzki was the only
player picked from the
Dallas Mavericks , who have
the leag ue's best recmd. The
Mavericks had been hoping
Josh Howard would be
selected as well.
Detroit and New Jersey
had
muiliple
reserve s
pkked for the Feb. 18 game.
Chauncey
Billups and
Richard Hamilton, who both
made their first appearances
last season, are goin£ back,
and Jason Kidd and Vince
Carter will represent the
Nets in the game at UNLV's
Thomus &amp; Mack Center.
Indiana's
Jermlline
0' Neal and first -timers
Dwight Howard of Orlando
and Caron Butler of
Washington round out the
East reserves.
The seven reserves were
voted on by the head coa,hes in their respective confere nces. Coaches cou ldn 't
vole for their own players,
and had to se lect two forwards, two guards, a center
and two players regardless
of their position.
The remainder of the West
reserves were San Antonio
guard Tony Parker and Utah

The
starters
were
announced las1 Thijrsday.
LeBron James , Shaquille
O ' Neal ,
Chris
Bosh ,
Dwyane Wade and Gilbert
Arenas were picked in the
East. Tim Duncan , Kevin
Garnett, -Yao Ming, Tracy
M~:Grady and Kobe Bryant
were voted in by fans 10
start for the West.
Anthony still has a chance
to play in Las Vegas. NBA
commissinner David Stern
will choose a replacement
for Yao, who is sti ll recovering from a broken bone
under his knee, and Boozer
also could be un available
because of a hairline !"raelure in his left leg.
He's expected to miss a
few wee h. but said
Thursday he hopes to return
in time for All-Star weekend. He doesn't know when
he would need to resume
running for that to happen .
''Hopefully if everything
works out, it wi ll be right on
time, " he said. '"I' II put it
like that."
Anthony
and
Josh
Howard are the most likely
replacement &lt;: hoi.:es, but
could face competition for
those spots from Seutt le's
Ray Allen, Portland's Zach
Rand olph. the Clippers'
Ehun Brand und another
Denver player, Marcus

Stern said he expected 10
make his decision in the
next few days, and thai
when doing so he wouldn 'I
consider the suspension he
gave Amhony for the punch
the Denver star hit the
Knicks' Mardy Collins with
on Dec. 16.
Phoenix coac h Mike
D' Antoni will lead the West
squad, sine~ Dall.1s ' Avery
Johnson is ineligible afler
coaching last season. The
same three Suns were chosen as reserves to the 2005
game .
"Obviously the reason I'm
there is because of Ihese
three guys and other guys on
the
Phoenix
Suns,"
D' Antoni said in a statement . "For them to ~el this,
that's really spec ial.'
Washington's
Eddie
Jordan is close to clinching
the East coaching spol,
large ly because of the play
of Buller. The forward is
averaging 20.6 points and
8.0 rebounds, both career
highs.
"Coach Jordan gave me
more and more freedom and
I re~lly thought I had a
chance," Butler said . " I dedicated my lime last summer
and look what came out of
il. I couldn' t be happier with
this, but I know there is st ill
work 10 be done."

Merry Family Winery:
Gallia County's best-kept secret, Cl

DUBAI, United Arab
Emirates (A P) - The clicking cameras didn't help, nor
did the poor puning . All of
whi&lt;:h lefl Tiger Woods as
frustrated as any weekend
hacker.
For someone who has
been playing nothing but
sterling golf of late, Woods
tossed hi s club after a
botched putt Thursday during the opening round of the
Dubai Desert Classic.
"Last week I puned ·great
and today I didn ' t putt so
~ood," Woods, the defendmg champion, said after his
4-under-par 68.
He was three strokes
behind leaders Ross Fisher
and Graeme McDowell.
Ernie Els was another stroke
back at 66 in a tie for third
with Jose Manuel Lara and
Jyoti Randhaw a at th e
Emirates Golf Club.
Woods' problems started
on the second hole, where he
drove into a row ·of trees
before settling for a bogey.
He reclaimed the lost stroke
on the par-5 third hole, but
he soon encountered another
problem on the eighth.
While he was swinging, a
group of photographers were
snapping pictures, causing
Woods to send the ball into
the long grass on the edge of
the fairway.
"Nice
going
guys,
thanks," he said sarcastically.
On the 12th, Woods
missed a short putt and took
another bogey. He responded by tossing his club to the
ground.
"I left a lot of opportuni-

Cavs
from PageBl
nic al foul and, after
Zydrunas, llga uskas made
the free throw. James could
have tied it with his two.
But he missed the lirst
and, eve n though James hit
a 3-pointer with 3.6 seconds
left to get Cleveland within
90-89, the Heat would
eventually hold on - giving James his seventh loss
in as many trips to South
Aotida.
Cleve land led 4 1-38 at
halftime, doing so despite a
quiet opening half from
James, who missed two of
the Cavaliers' pre vious
three games because of the
toe injury.
James was 1-for-6 from
the field in the lirst half. his
only basket being an alleyoop dunk oil Larry Hughes·
assist. But James hit a 3pointer only 21 seconds
after jntermission, sparking
a 7-0 run that pushed
Cleveland's lead to 48-38.
Miami wen t into the
fourth down 66-58. then
missed three shots on its
fi rst possession of the tina!
quarter. After that fu tile trip,
li&gt;amon Jones hit a 3-pointer

AP pholo

Tiger Woods of the US plays his approach shot to the 12th
hole during the first round of the Dubai Desert Classic iil
Dubai, United Arab Em1rates on Thursday. Tiger Woods finished the first round at 4 under par.
ties out there," Woods said. around the world after cruis'"I didn 't putt well. I didn' t ing to win th e Buick
put the ball on line with my ln\"itational on Sunday for
pulls. It was fru strating his seventh straight victory
because the gree ns are really on the PGA Tour. The Dubai
nice out there. I just have to tournament won't affect the
streak because it's a PGA
get some work in here."
Still, Woods started the European tour eve nt.
ba&lt;:k nine with a pair of
Woods, who denied havbirdies to keep himself in ing jet lag, knows what he
contention.
needs to do in the next three
Woods tlew halfway rounds.
to push Cleveland's lead to play.
II , but the Cavaliers unravNotes:
0 ' Neal and
eled from there.
Wade got th eir All -Star
Earlier Thursday, the jerseys bet'ore the ga.me .
Heat brought guard Eddie Both were voted as
Jones back to Miami , Eas tern
Confe re nce
s1gnin g him to a contract starters .... The Cavs' loss
for the remainder of the ensured Washington coac h
season. Jones, who spe nt Eddie Jordan ol' coaching
five seaso ns in Miami the Eastern Conference in
before being traded after the All -Star game. Plenty
the 2004-05 season, was of celebrities were in the
in uniform but did not crowd, including tenni s

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"Work. Bust my butt.
That's how you do it," he
said. "I just need to do a littl e work here around th e
greens and get my stroke
organized."
Els, lirst playing on the
back nine. also started parbogey on his tirst two holes.
But the South African followed with an eagle and
three straight birdies 10
climb near the top of the
lcaderboard.
"It was a nice start," said
Els, a three-time Dubai
champion. "To be 6 under
after the lirst round, you
always take that."
Woods· playing partner,
Miguel Angel Jimenez,
stayed ahead of the world's
top-ranked golfer for the
entire round. Jimenez fin ished with a 67, including a
40-foot birdie putt on the
16th.
''I did good," Jimenez
said, nodding at Woods.
"He's tough to beat."
Fisher, however, was the
surprise leader in a field thai
also
includes
Henrik
Stenson {68), Paul Casey
(70) aod Sergio Garcia (73).
"Obviously it's a tre mendous thrill," the Englishman
said. "('along with Ernie Els
am trying to get to where he
(Woods) is, but it's proving
very, very difticult."
Woods' presence Iured
throngs of fans. Among
them were five Muslim girls
in black headscarves who
waved at him and called in
umsoo,
.
"G o, T"tger '"
. Woo ds
responded with a wave of
his own.

Panoramic porch, Dl

'

tme

•

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
()ltio \alh·~ t•uhli ... hing( o .

SPORTS
• • Super Bowl previews.
See Page 81

phota
Ohio State's Jessica Davenport, left, ~oes up for a shot
aga inst Northwestern's Kaitlin Mcinerney during the first
half of a basketball game Thursday in Evanston, Ill.
AP

11

EVANsToN. 111 . &lt;AP)
When Ohio State
stepped on the gas, it left
Northwestern in the dust.
The
fifth-ranked
Buckeves set the tone with
an 18-4 run in the first half
and Star A lien scored 13 of
her 19 points in the sec·ond
half to lift Ohio State to its
13th straight win with a
66-42 victory over the
Wildcat s on Th11rsday
night.
''We wanted to push it,"
Ohio State coach Jim
Foster said. "We wanted to
get up the tloor. By upping
th e tempo. we could gel
some se paration ."
Ohio State (20-1 , 9-0) i'
off lo the best start in progra m history and has 26
consc&lt;:utivc wins aga inst
confere nce
op ponents.
Foster now has five
straight 20-w in seasons .
The
Buckeyes
held
Northwestern (6- 17, 0-10)
lo 30.2 percent shootin g in
sending th e Wildcats l!l
lhe1r 15th conse&lt;:ullve loss.
Allen. a sophomore forward, was 8-nf- 11 from the
field and gra bbed 15
rebounds. Brandie Hosk ins
and Jessic a Da~ e nport
each added 12 points for
Ohio State.

star Andy Roddick , San
Diego
running
back
LaDainian
Tom lin so n,
Dalla s
wide recei ver
Terrell Owens , Chicago
defensive end Adewale
Ogunleye (taking a break
from his Super Bowl
preparations), and former
tenni s
pro
Anna
Kournikova, accompanied
as alway s by singer
Enrique Iglesias.

\lidtlh·lwr·t · (,.allipuli..,

•ll·hntar~ -'" ·:l ou-

St .50 • \'ol. .,tl, No.:.!

Equipment to connect new bridge due in April
District I0, said the equip- origi nal design failed when
ment ~:a iled a form traveler constructing a bridge in
will allow workers to tinally Puerto Rico last year.
The form traveler is ~:ur­
begin "'&lt;:rossi ng the channel."
A form traveler is a rently being assembled off
portat&gt;le framework used to site with the entire assembly
support newly-poured con - process taking around six
crete during constructi on months. The bridge 's generbetween the two towers , al contractor, CJ Mahan
though it is not a permanent Constn1ction, has reduced
its work crew until th e
tixture of the bridge.
The new form traveler, newly designed form travelwhich will be used by work er arrives in April, though
crews during construction , ODOT savs work remains
was .redesigned when the ongoing ai the site.

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT®MYDAILVSENTINEL.COM

"'There is work heine
done on the site."' Fil\llll
said . ""There have been a
number of obstadc' and
challenges on thi' project ,
but we wntinue to meet
them and move forward .'"
Filson said that ongomg
work includes post-tensioning on the West Virginia
side, which is a method of
reinforcing concrete and
other structurul elements for
the purpose of counteracting
anti&lt;:ipated external load s

snow!

0BITUARIFS
Pages AS, A&amp;
• Raymond C. Baity
• Clarice Mae Huffman
• Gerrald Lee Johnson
• Matylu Stewart Lloyd
• Bernice L. McMahon
• Maty E Miller
• Dr. Donald E O'Rourke
• Willard Dean Smith
• Patricia VanMeter
• Juanita Wamsley

J. RMd/ photoo

~---- -

.•

•

.

...

ADDISON - When 10year-old Jacob Winters
Details on Page A6
went to the store to purchase ducks early last year.
he ended up taking home
more
than he bargained for.
INDEX
" I went after ducks, but I
4 SECTIONS- 24 PAuo:.s
don't know what happened.
, There were no ducks, .. said
Around Town
A3 i Winters. ·:so I started out
C4 with six baby chicks ."
·Celebrations
Over the next three to four
Classitleds
D3-5 months, Jacob took care of
·
his chi&lt;:kens as thevJ grew
to
msen
Comics
maturity. By summertime.
Editorials
A4 the chic·kens had started to
c2 lay eggs, and Jacob founded
Movies
Higher Ground Eggs .
As, A6
In 2006. Jacob made
Obituaries
A 2 enough money to cover all
Regional
of his expenses with a little
B Section bit \eft over. He got so busy
Sports
A6 over the summer he had to
Weather
employ
his 8-yea r-old
brother.
Joshu
a. to help
© au.n Ohio \'alit:} Publi.... hlng Co.

J.

REED
TINEL.COM .

Joy Kocft1041d/ plloto

Jacob Winters. 10, shows off some of his flock of egg-lay·
ing chickens. Winters founded Highe r Ground Eggs last year
and has learned a lot from running his own business .
maintain the tlock.
"' I rt'allv wanted somethmg that i could pet. bulm~
dad thought c·hickens were a

good idea bcc·ausc the eggs
cuuld pay l\1r the feed. &lt;Uld
the)· haw ... ,aid Jacob.
Jacob has started hat~:hing

dow111o11 n Middleport and
,hared their enmmcnts oc
th~ \ ' illa~c.:· 's "l i"L'~o.'t!'-cape plaO

~~:,;· ~~i:.~~kdi,p''" ul !ht· pla(l

baby chickens in incubators
and currcntlv has about ~0
healthy ba&amp;y .;hiL"ks .Thc
young entrepreneur e1·en
keeps his own record' on a
wmpuler database. He is an
honor stude nt al Ky ger
Creek Middle School and a
member of the For Hi,
Giory 4-H Club.

The
\1 iddleport
Dewlopmelll Gmup. overseeing 1he pnll.'cs- ,,r applymg li1r ·' t"!'' erant funding
for !ht· '" ' ita l it:~l ion projecL
unwikd a ,.,,,"·cptualizcd
'treer-capc pl ,m created by
the clcsi~n linn DLZ al ·'dis1 play al l11'111e'l\lll n '\tulet.
, The di'P"'' in,·luLkd posI sibk imprmcnwnh to three

" He lcarnl'd a gooJ k~:-o\lll

Jo\\ntnwn hltiiJin~-. .... am -

in etonomics:· said Tra!..·v

pk'"llf p~t' ~ nwnt trf'atment~

PIHse see Business. Al

Please see Display, Al

Wimers. Jacob'~ mom . wh{) and . . tre ~o·t turnP.. hln~"'· and
is also 4-H Educator with the ~:olor palcuc· appmved
Ohio Slate University's for usc· by lh~ ' illage·,
Extension's Gallia Coun11 dc,i~n rc\ '~ " hoard .
office. " He learned th~'
St:1ll ing the· d"pla 0. volvalue of a dollar and how tel umcers from the· J,·,e loplak.e t..'are of animab. Hl· m~nt ~rour e\plainl..'d ...ome
learned that there are hard- elf the· prc&gt;p&lt;'-Cd nnpr&lt;llcships as well."
l tnent:-. . an~v.t•n.·J qut~,ttons
Lately. the chickt•n, haw and logged c:ommcllts frum
been locked in their wop the pll~lic about the lnitaJbec·ause of a rt·d·tailed ll ati&lt;lll pmpo,al.
hawk prnblem.
Th'"'' comment- will be
"' II \ been ha rd !&lt;Hell u"·d in th e impkmcmation

,.
•

BRIAN

S~E ED@ M'r'DAILYSEr..

the -..urn.1undin).! L' lllllm u n~
tie\ looked P\~r an anist'S
t...:t'lll'I...'Ptinll of ,t re' ital11ed

JKOCMOUO@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

BLOWOUT PRKIS ON MACARONI WAD Sl. 19 LB., BUNS WORlD FMWS PUUID PORK S2.69 LB.
BAKW BlANSSI.99 LB.

RIO GRANDE - This
week 's near-zero temperatures will have two certain
consequences: Utility delivery systems will be taxed to
keep up with demand, and
electric bills for February
will balloon.
Forec~sters r.redict a period of bone-ch tlling cold for
. three to four days. Buckeye
Rural Electric Cooperative
(BRECl is bracing for possible
record-breaking
de manu across iIs southeast
Ohio servi.:e wrritorv.
The warning to· co-op
members is to prepare their
h ~&gt; m es ai1Ll their budgets.
according
lo
BREC
Co nsum er
Services
Manager Russ Elliott.
'"Our primary concern is
se lling a new winter _peak of
record .'" he said. " If the
forecast model s hold true.
this area lace' some of the
lowest ni ght time temperatures seen in several years."
If the system peaks, all
BR EC members wi ll pay
more for who!e,ale ['Ower
in the futu re. This is the reason thai th e co-op iss ues
peak akrt warnings on local
mdio \tat ion\.
Peak situations are likely
to occur ln the mornings

MIDDL EPORT
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Please see Bridle• Al

,

Local youth learns from egg business

~or lit $21.99

~) ~t:g!ll~llt~

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R I SE A N D S H I N E

arJ~

uf

Public views
first display of
streetscape plan

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L" rete and w iII ri'e approx imatdv 249 feet abo1e the

Pleue see Eledric, Al

WEATHER

BUN'S PARTYBARN

A, for the wwe" . Fil" &gt;n
said hoth arc ba,i~:ally even
and ready tn be ··topped
nut ."" 11 i1h th e final pour.
dependent
•&gt;n
warmer
weather. Each tower con-

STAFF REPORT

INSIDE
• For the Record.
SeePageA2
• Abusive dad shouldn't
avoid responsibility.
SeePageA3
• Meigs County calendar.
SeePageA3
• Gallia County calendar.
SeePageA3
• Local Briefs.
SeePage AS
• Local Stocks.
.See Page A&amp;

wrc \ life 1..'\L'k"&gt; .~ PO\I -IC ll­
~iontllg \\ork on the Ohto
... ide ha-. hee n u11npleted.

NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

With the arrival of February,
snowfall has become a part of
our daily lives, and a part of the
landscape, too. Friday's snow
was heavy and wet, just perfect
for building a snowman, riding a
s led , or other wintertime fun.
Dressed in their warmest winter
coats, hats and gloves, Layne
and Landon Acree, sons of
James and Kristin Acree, were
throwing snowballs. shoveling
snow and playing with their
puppy on Friday afternoon on
the lawn between the Acree
Funeral Home and the Downing
House in downtown Middleport.
Friday was another "snow day"
for s tudents it] Meigs County
sc hools. The snow was ex pected to continue th roughout the
weekend .
B~on

encoutJkreJ durin!!. a "' tru~ ­

Cold spell
means peak
electric use

More

11

Kri sten • cartwright
scored 12 points and
Kaitlin Mcinerney had 10
points for Northwestern.
Marscilla
Hoski ns,
Packer and Shavelle Little
got the Buckeyes' first-half
run started on the de fensive end, s tarting fast
breaks with steals and genc rally
disrupting
the
Wil dcats.
During the burst, which
lasted more than 9 minutes,
Ohio
State
held
Northwestern to 2-of-9
s hooting.
Ohio State limited the
Wildcats to 9-of-33 shooting from the . field in the
first half, went ahead by as
many as 21 and led 36-20
at halftime .
,
'" h was a matter of turnin ~ up the inten si ty," Allen
sa td. '" We had to get our
energy together."
The Wild &lt;:ats were 1-of-9
from the foul line.
'" We have to make a
play," Northwestern coach
Beth Combs said . " We shot ·
the ball 14 more time s than
them . When you have that
many
seco nd- chanc e
opportunities. when you
gel opportunities against a
team like that, you have to
make a riay.''

Ponn'l"o~ •

POMEROY - Meetin g
in th e middle may now be a
possibility when a cruc ial
piece of equipment arrives
in April to wnne&lt;:t the
Ohio and Wes t Virginia
' spans of the new Pomeroy Mason Bridge.
Stephanie Filson, Ohio
Department
of
Transportation
(ODOT)
information ofticer for

_ga_m_e_s_s_us-·p-en_s_•o_n_a_nd~ho_p_c_-_~_o_rw_,_~rn__c _ar_Io_s_B_o_o_ze_r._____c_a_•n_b_y._________________________·_______ «=}~llJ (! ~~S ~ {1~ '~11~

Tiger has ·frustrati•ng day I·n Dubai· desert

LIVING
House of the Week:

ALONG THE RIVER

•

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