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                  <text>U.N. Security
Council calls for 'early

Hit skip
accident, A3

resolution,' A2.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'

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TPRSD

SPORTS

board resigns,
administrator
appointed

• Fed Hock sweeps
Eastem. See Page 81

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEOOM 't' DAIL1'SENTINELCOM

......
Both SerJIIIIt/photo

OBITUARIES
Page AS
.
• William Kennedy, 74
• Joseph 'Eddie' Lish, 54
• NaQrnl Ruth Reed, 85
• Page 16

www.mydailysentinel.eom

Spring Sports 2007

INSIDE
• 4-H winner presents
genealogy project.
See Page A3
• M-G-M Scouting
district slates annual
banquet. See Page AS
• For the Reoord.
SeePage AS
• Student newspaper
invites author of
bypassed book.
See Page AS
• Growing or dying.
See Page A6
• AHunger For More.
See Page A6
• Holy Week services.
See Page A6

Yesterday workers began drilling holes for 74 shafts which will hold the decorative retaining wall in place along the
approach for the new Pomeroy Mason Bridge.

Making way for the wall
IY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENTOMYQellYSENTINEl.COM

POMEROY - The wall is on its way.
No, this has nothin~ to do with a
reissue of the classtc Pink Floyd
record but the retaining wall for the
new Pomeroy Mason Bridge.
This week motorists have no doubt
noticed new equipment moving into
the area in the shadow of the cliff side
now shaven away. Surveyor stakes
now mark where the 730-foot long
wall will rest while workers prepare
to erect it.
"The equipment you see there now
is the equipment necessary to drill
shafts that serve as the basis for the
retaining wall." said Stephanie Filson,
public information officer for the
Ohio Department of Transportation

District 10. "There will be 74 shafts
qrilled in all."
_
The drilling began yesterday with
rebar cages arriving on Tuesday which
is the next piece of the puzzle in constructing the wall.
The wall will range in height with
the tallest point rising to 37 feet in the
direction of Pomeroy. The wall will
then taper downwards towards
Middleport with its shortest point
being five feet tall.
The decorate wall will have sce nes
of life on the river etched into the concrete. These scenes include the Meigs
County Counhouse, children at play
as well as a stern wheeler.
The next major piece of equipment
to arrive on the construction site is
the form traveler which should arrive
next month. It is a portable frame-

work used to SUJ&gt;port newly poured
concrete
4uqng
construction
betv•een the twQ towers though it is
not a permanent fixture of the bridge .
The new form traveler, which will be
used by work crews during construction, was redesigned when the original design failed when constructing a
bridge in Puerto Rico last year. The
new design has been six months in
the makin~ .
The arnval of the form traveler
means workers can finally begin
crossing the channel and bridgi ng the
two towers which received their final
concrete pours this month.
Although there is no word on when
work on the retaining wall will be
completed, the completion date on the
new bridge remains mid,2008 as does
the cost at $60 million.

TUPPERS PLAINS ~ A
temporal") administrator has
been appointed to run the
Tuppers Plain' Regional
Sewer District until a new
board can be appointed.
In an entry filed late last
week. Comn1on Pleas Court
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill
appointed Kay Hayman . as
temporary administrator for
the district. She will handle
billing.
payroll
and
accounts payable while the
district operates without a
governing board.
Loretta Murphy, who
served as clerk , treasurer
and president of the board,
resigned earlier this month,
citing health issues and
alleged threats against her
by residents in the community and an employee of a
Tuppers Plains business.
The other two remaining
board members, Charles
Calaway and Ina VanMeter
have also resigned their
positions.
.
Crow, who has authority
to appoint board members
under the Ohio Revised
Code, would not comment
on the status of the district's
board or the process of
seeking applicants for board
positions. A legal notice
seeking appl icants for board
positions
was
placed.
County Commissioner Jim
Sheets said applications for
board members and a permanent paid clerk will be
accepted until 4 p.m. on
Friday. and that a board
could be in place by early
next week .
Sheets said at least two
applications have been
received from people interested in serving on the
board.
Please see TPliSD, A5

AMP-Ohio open house
Kent Carson of
,~merican

Municipal PowerOhio and Bill
Nease of Home
National Bank
review plans for
AMP,Ohio 's proposed $1 billion
IGCC power
plant, to be built
1n Letart
Township. AMP·
Ohio sponsored
an open house
for the community on Thursday
at its Pomeroy
office.

WEATHER

Brian J. Reed/photo
Both Ser&amp;onl/photo

INDEX
a SECnoNs- 16 P.wu

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
2520 Valley Drive Point Pleasant, WV 25550 (304) ~75-4340

Annie's Mailbox
A3
Calendars
A3
Classifieds
Bs-6
Comics
87
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A6-7
Movies
As
NAWAR
83
Obituaries
As
Sports
B Section
Weather
A2

.

© 3007 Obio Valley PUNisblnc Co•

Padgett recognized

Motorists looking for a bargain flocked to Riverside
Marathon yesterday to take advantage of lower than average gasoline prices.

Bargain hunting for gasoline
BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY ~ Have you
noticed business picking up
at the Riverside Marathon
on West Main Street? The
mystery is solved when
looking at what the station
was charging yesterday for
regular unleaded gasoline.
At $2.49 per gallon, the
station had one of the most
if not the cheapest prices in
the entire county yesterday.
The price had been lowered
since ·Sunday and motorists
have taken note.
There was no official

•

conunent on why Riverside
lowered its prices though
most consumers didn't
seem to care . Yesterday,
several stations were polled
across the county to compare gasoline prices for regular unleaded and here's
what was found.
In Pomeroy. in addition to
Riverside. two other stations had regular unleaded
at $2.57 and $2 .59 per gallon. Regular unleaded was
$2.59 per gallon at a station
in Olive Township. $2.57
per gallon at a station in

P" · 'M . . . G•sol-. A5

Ohio Senator Joy
Padgett. RCoshocton, was
recognized as the
e-Tech Ohio
Legislator of the
Year for her work
as Chair of the
Senate Education
Committee. E,Tech
works to advance
education and
accelerate the
learning of Ohioans
through technology.
Sen. Padgett is pic·
tured with Kevin
Potter. Government
Relations Director
for e-Tech Ohio.
Su-plloto

+---~--------------~

�The Daily Sentinel

PageA2

NATION • WORLD

Friday, March so, aoo7
'

U.N. SECURI'IY (OUNCR CALLS FOR 'FARLY RESOLUTION'
TO FACEOFF OVER IRAN'S

OF BRITONS

BY EDITH M. LEDERER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

UNITED NATIONS - The
U.N. Security Council expressed
"grave concern" Thursday over
Iran's seizure of 15 British sailors
and marines and called for an
early resolution of the escalating
dispute, but Iran's chief international negotiator suggested the
capti ves might be put on trial.
The council's statement wasn't
as tough as Britain had hoped,
though, and the divide seemed to
deepen.
As the standoff drove world oi I
prices to new six-month highs,
Turkey, NATO's only Muslim
member, reportedly sought to
calm tensions by urging Iran to let
a Turkish diplomat meet with the
detainees and to free the lone
woman among the Britons.
Tensions had seemed to be cool·
ing a day earlier. but after Iran
offended leaders by airing a video
of the prisoners and Britain
touched a nerve in Tehran by
seeking U.N . help, positions hardened even more Thursday.
Iran retreated from a pledge by
Iranian Foreign Minister Mottaki
that the female sailor, Faye
Turney, would be released soon.
Mottaki then repeated that the
matter could be resolved if Britain
admitted its sailors mistakenly
entered Iranian territorial waters
last Friday.
Britain's Foreign Office insisted
again that the sa1lors and marines
were seized in an Iraqi-controlled
area while searching merchant
ships under a U.N. mandate and
said no admission of error would
be made.
With Britain taking its case to
the United Nations, Ali Larijani, .
the top Iranian negotiator in all his
country 's foreign dealings. went
on Iranian state radio to issue a
warning.
He said that if Britain continued
its current approach, "this case
may face a legal path" - a clear
reference to Iran prosecuting the
sailors and mannes in court.
"British leaders have miscalculated this issue." he said.
Gen. Ali Reza Afshar, Iran's
military chief, blamed the backtracking on releasing the British
woman on "wrong behavior" by
her government. "The release of a
female British soldier has been
suspended," the semiofficial
Iranian news agency Mehr said.
The Security Council's statement was a watered-down version
of a stronger draft sought by
Britain to "deplore" Iranian
actions and urge the immediate

a;tj~~"(\\~)' ~\
I

~EKECU\tDAP photo

Chanting slogans, Iranian protestors hold banners demanding a trial and conviction for the British sailors ~nd
marines captured and being held during a protest in front of the Iran's Foreign Ministry in Tehran. Iran. ·
Thursday. Iran's foreign minister said Wednesday that Britain must admit that its 15 sailors and marines
entered Iranian waters in order to resolve a standoff over their capture by the Mideast nation. Since the crew 's
detention, Britain has insisted they were in Iraqi waters . A Foreign Office official in London said no adm1ss1on
would be forthcoming because "the detention is completely wrong, illegal and unacceptable and we've set out
the reasons why. ·
release of the prisoners, primarily tion of this problem including the
because Russia and South Africa release of the 15 U.K. personnel."
South African Ambassador
opposed putting blame on the
Dumisani Kumalo said negotiaTehran regime, diplomats said.
Russia also objected to the tions were needed to ensure the
council adopting Britain's posi- statement focused on the agreed
tion that its sailors were operating facts. "There is no political twistin Iraqi waters when they were ing of anything that happened," he
captured, the diplomats said, smd.
speaking on condition or
British Ambassador Emyr Jones
anonymity.
Parry expressed satisfaction with
With agreement required from the statement and said he hoped it
all 15 members for a statement's would send "the right message" to
wording, the parties spent more the Iranian government that it
than four hours in private talks should provide immediate access
before emerging with wording to the prisoners and bring their
softer than had been sought by prompt release.
Britain, which is also known as
Late Thursday night, Britain's
Foreign Office told the AP of con·
the United Kingdom.
"Members of the Security tacts with Iran over the detained
Council el\pressed grave concern Britons.
at
the capture
by
the
"The Iranian government has
Revolutionary Guard and the con- sent a formal note to the British
tinuing detention by the govern- Embassy," a spokeswoman said.
ment of Iran of 15 United "Such exchanges are always conKingdom naval persomiel and fidential but we are giving the
appealed to the government of message serious consideration and
Iran to allow consular access in will soon respond formally to the
terms of the relevant international Iranian government."
laws," the statement said.
The spokeswoman, who spoke
"Members of the Security on condition of anonxmity in
Council support calls including by keeping with Foreign Olfice polithe secretary-general in his March cy, refused to provide any other
29 meeting with the Iranian for- details.
eign minister for an early resoluEarlier. Iranian state television

reported what was believed to be
Ahmadinejad's fust comment on
the standoff, saying he accused
Britain of using propaganda rather
than trying to solve the matter quietly through diplomatic channels. '
Iran's state TV also said Turki sh
Prime Minister Rcccp Tayyip had
contacted Ahmadinejad seeking
permission for a Turkish diplomat
to meet with the seized Britons
and urging the release of Turney.
the female sailor.
Erdogan 's move was seen as a
possible opening to mediation in
the faceoff because Turkey is one
of the few countries that has good
relations with both Iran and the
West.
The report said Ahmadinejad
promised that Erdogan 's appeal
would be studied, but also told the
Turkish leader that the detention
case had entered a legal investiga·
tion phase.
State television also broadcast a
video it said showed show the
operation that seized the British
sailors and marines, In the clip, a
helicopter hovers above inflatable
boats in choppy seas, then the
Royal Navy crews are seen seated
in an Iranian vessel.
The video came a day after Iran
broadcast a longer video showing

the Britons in captiv ity. That
video induded a segment showi ng
Tu rney saying her team had "trespassed" 111 !raman walers.
Br itish Fore1gn Secretary
M&lt;~~gare t Bec-ken .condemned
Iran\ use ol Turney tor what she
c:alled "propaganda purposes:·
c:allin" it "outrageous and cruel."
Tht Iranians released a letter
Wednesday purportedly written
bv Turney to her family saying the
Briti,h sailors were in Iranian
watef' . And the video aired
Thuf'dav showed another letter
supposed!y by Turney to Britain 's
Parliament calhng for Bnush
troops to k ave Iraq.
··t ask the representatives of the
House of Commons, after the
government promised that this
kind of incident wouldn't happen
again. wh y did they let this occur,
and why has the government not
been 4ucstioned over this," the
letter read. ··.Jsn't it time to stan
withdrawing our force s from Iraq
and let them determine their own
future"'"'
Some expens raised questions
about that letter, saying its wording hinted it was first composed in
Farsi and then translated into
English.
" It's obviously been dictated tu
her," said Nadim Shehadi, an
expert on Iran at the Chatham
Hou se think tank in London.
"There's no way she would phrase
it like that."'
Beckett said there were "grave
concerns about the circumstances
in which it was prepared and
issued."
'"This blatant attempt to use
Leading Seaman Turney for propaganda purposes is outrageous
and nuel." Beckett said.
A spoke sman for Prime
Minister Tony Blair said Britain
wanted to resolve the crisis ~uick­
ly and without having a 'confrontation over thi s."
"We are noi seeking to put Iran
in a corner. We are simply saying,
' Please release the personnel who
should not have been seized in the
first place,'" said the s~kesman,
speakin~
on condttion of
anonymity in line with govern·
ment policy.
But in a briefing to reponers.
the spokesman said British officials had been angered by
Tehran's decision to show video
of the captives.
"Nobody should be put in that
position. It is an impossible ~si·
tion to be put in," he said. 'It is
wrong. It is wrong in terms of the
usual conventions that cover this . .
It is wrong in terms of basic
humanity."

Suicide bombers kill at least 122 in Shiite markets in one of Iraq~ deadliest .days
BY STEVEN R. HURST
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BAGHDAD - Five suicide bombers struck Shiite
marketplaces in nonheast
Baghdad and a town north of
the capital at nightfall
Thursday, lcilling at least 122
people and wounding more
than 150 in one of Iraq's
deadliest days in years.
The savage attacks carne ll,\
a new American ambassador
began his ftrst day on the job.
and Senate Democrats
ignored a veto threat and
approved a bill to require
President Bush to start withdrawing troops.
At least 178 people were
killed or found dead
Thursday. which marked the
end of the seventh week of
the latest U.S.-Iraqi military

drive to curtail violence in
Ba~hdad and surrounding
reg10ns.
The suicide bombers hit
markets in the Shiite town of
Khalis and the Shaab nei~h­
borhood in Baghdad during
the busiest time of the day,
timing that has become a
trademark of what are
believed to be Sunni insurgent
or al-Qdida suicide attackers.
Three suicide vehicle
bombs, including an explosives-packed ambulance, detonated in a market in Khalis,
50 miles north of the capital,
which was especially crowded because government !lour
rations had just arrived for the
fiN time in si' months, local
television stations reported.
At least 43 people were
killed and 86 wounded, polil-e
said.

Local weather
Friday ... Sunny in the
morning ... Then becoming
partly sunny. Highs in the
lower 70s. Northeast winds
around 5 mph ... Becoming
southwest in the afternoon .
Friday oigbt ... Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the mid
40s. Northwest winds
around 5 mph in the
evening ... Becoming light
and variable .
S~turday .. .Cloudy with
a 40 percent chance of
s.howers. Highs in the
upper 60s. Southeast
winds around 5 mph.
S a t u r d a y
night...Cloudy with a 20
percent chance of showers.
Not as cool with lows in
lbe mid 50s . . East winds
around 5 mph.
Sunday ... Mostly cloudy.
A chance of showers in the

•

afternoon . Highs in the
lower 70s. Chance of rain
50 percent.
Sunday night... Mostly
cloudy. Showers likely in
the
evenin g ...Then
a
chance of showers after
midnight. Low s in the
lower 50s. Chance of rain
70 percent.
~onday
through
'fuesday .. . Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 70s.
Lows in the upper 40s.
1\lesday night and
Wednesday ... Mostly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorm s. Lows around 50.
Hi ghs in the mid 60s.
Chance of raio 40 percent.
Wednesday night and
'fbursday .. . Mo s lly
cloudy. Lows in the upper
30s. Highs in the mid 50s.

In the north Baghdad
bombings, two suicide attackers wearing explosives vests
blew themselves up in the
Shalal market in the predominantly Shiite Shaab neighborhood. At least 79 people were
killed and 81 wounded as
they jammed the market . to
buy provisions on the eve of
the Muslim day of rest and
prayer.
The carnage in Iraq cast a
shadow over Ryan Crocker's
lirst day as ambassadOr. He
takes over in the midst of the
U.S.-lmqi security sweep, for
which Bush committed nearly
30,000 additional troops to
dampen what had become

uncontrollable violence in the Hussein's torrner Republican
capital.
P.dlace which is now in the
The Senate 's rare rebuke to hean of the heavily guarded
a wartime conunauder in Green Zone.
chief came in a 51-4 7 vote to
Violence has increasingly
provide $123 billion for the erupted in towns and cities
wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. outside the capital in recent
Senators also ordered Bush to weeks, as insurgent lighters
begin withdrawing troops take their tight to regions
within 120 days of the bill's where U.S. and lntqi forces
passage, and set a nonbinding are thinly deployed. The U.S.
goal of ending combat opera- military and its diplomats
tioQS by March 31, 2008.
have voiced cautious opti·
"President Bush's policy is mism about the sweep ll(i4
the right one. There has been emphasized that the full
progress; there is also much American surge force would
more to be done," the 57- not be in place until · June.
year-old Crocker said at his Crocker brought the same
swearing in at the American message.
. Embassy
in
Saddarn
"All of this will be very

DON'Ti~Ml~#,

OUT .ON

Church events

Erma Martin. A love offering will be taken. Pas tor
Whitt Akers, 59 1-1236.
Friday, April 6
TUPPERS PLAINS
The United Singers wi ll be
at the 7 p.m. Good Friday
services of Amazing Grace
Church in Tuppers Plains.
The church is located at
42019 Main Street, Tuppers
Plains.

Thesday, April 3
Saturday, March 31
MIDDLEPORT
CARPENTER - Eve lyn
Middleport Lodge 363, Roush will be hosting an
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. at the annual gospel sing at the
hall . All Master Masons Carpenter Baptist Church
Friday, March 30
invited. Refreshments.
30711 S.R. 143, Albany, at
POMEROY
The
POMEROY - Post 39, 7 p.m. Featured groups will Meigs County Board of
American Legion, will be "The Voices of Faith" Elections will be closed so
meet for a 7 p.m. dinner Sandra
Wise,
Evelyn employees can attend an
and short meeting at the Roush, and Chester and out-of- town meeting.

Public meetings

Hit skip accident

s-··

Dear Annie: My younger
sister. "Tam," has basically cut
oft· all ties with our family,
because she has ·somehow
w nvinced herself that my
brother and I committed
unforgivable acts toward ber
when she was ·a child.
I never did the things I wa.~
acc used of. but I can't speak
for my brother. He's always
had a problem with the truth,
even when there are no consequenc~' to speak of. Due to
previous incidents with
women and his lack. of social
grdCes, I can easily believe that
he did something to my sister.
Tara would never agree to
get counseling. I'm sure she
would rather just go her own
way and forget about us. and if
it weren 't for her daughter.
most of us would be tempted
to lei ~r. But I love my niece
and would like to restore some
kind of frunily harmony.
I am more than willing to
help Tard in any way I can, but
I'm really tired of being
blamed for someone else's
miS!ked,. So, how do we get
to the truth?- Not Guilty
Dear Not Guilty: You may
never find it. For your sister.
the truth is less important than
her perception of it. A reputable therapist could help her
come to terms with this, but
since she won't consider therapy, you may not be able to
reach her. Write Tara a letter
and express your sympathy for
her suffering, a.'k what you
can do to help, and tell her you
love her. If she doesn't

*"'..•

ouR E~~T/lA

M
Y$AVINCf ··
COUPON$ ·WORTH·\
. Sl42.00 ·'
·"'

respond, the best you can hope
for is that time will make her
reconsider.
Dear Annie: I've been married 10 "D-dve" for three years.
He is a ltind, couneous person
and a hard worker, but I can't
get him to do anything with
me.
I am an outgoing person and
have joined many organizations and met many people. I
enjoy lishing, hunting, boating, hiking and traveling. It's
like pulling teeth to get Dave
Ill spend time with me, so I end
up doing these things · by
myself. But it gets very lonely.
Dave likes to work on cars,
and I even suggested we get an
old beater and fiX it up together, but he said no.
When we · are intimate, I
don't feel close to him. I do it
just to get it over with. Dave
tells me he w&lt;iuld do more
with me if we had sex more
often. I tell Dave that if he'd
do more with me, we'd have
more sex.
We saw a marriage counselor a y~ ago. Dave was
more cooperative, and I tried
anti-depressants, but his suppon only lasted a few months.
I love him. but is this the way
married couples ~ supposed
to be? Lonely and

wo~. Go back to your counselor, or lind a new one with or without Dave - and
tigure out what you are willing
to do.
Dear Annie: Your answer to
"Holding My Nose" was
absolutely correct. When I
was 12. I went to the hairdresser, and she politely asked
me if I lrnew how to use
deodomnt. I was very embarrdSsed because I did not realize
I had body odor. My mother
had died two years earlier, and
my father believed bathing
once a week was enough.
Going · through puberty
brought about a lot of changes.
but I wa' unaware of them.
To this day, I remember the
woman's courage in speaking
up. It brought embarra.~sment
at the time, but now I think of
how insightful and compassionate she was. It literally
changed my life. - Grateful

for a Stranger's Compassion

Dear Grateful: Tbese subjects can be difficult to discuss.
but a willingness to do so can
be immeasurably helpful.
We're glad you were receptive.
Annie's Mailbox is wrilten
by Kolhy MilelteU and Marry
Sugar, longtime editors of the
Ann Lmulen column. Pleose

Neglected

e-mail your questions to

Dear Lonely: No. You
sound like two people circling
each other. Dave does not have
to share all your interests. It's
OK for you to do many of
these things without him and
vice ver.;a. Tbe problem is,
you resent it and be doesn't
care. Without an attitude
adjustment. things will get

anniesmailbOJc@comcasLrret,
or write to: Annie's Mailbox,

P.O. Box 118190., Clticago, 1L
60611.'/0jindout~about

Annie's Mailbox, and nod

feuJures by ollter Crmton
SyndicuU! wrilen and cartoonists, visit the Creillon
Syndicate Web page at
www.crfGiors.conr.

4-H winner presents genealogy project

POMEROY - Meredith
cloparlment/pholo
Meigs County Sheriff Robert Beegle said his department is investigating a hit-skip accident Gaul, daughter of David and
on Portland Road Thursday morning. Gary Smith reported that someone had gone off the Beth Gaul of Chester, ·preroadway and struck this outbuilding before pulling out and leaving the scene. The matter sented her grand prize 4-H
project of tracing her family
remains under investigation.
tree at a recent meeting of
the
Meigs
County
Genealogical Society.
Members of the society
were amused by the trunk of
information she brought as
Rockw• (NYSE)- 80.07
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GeMrll Electric (NYSE) Rocky lloo18 (NASDAQ} every genealogist faces the
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records. After showing her
16.31
t i ~- (NAIDlQ)SNia HokiiiiC (NASDAQ)well-organized collection of
JP MoiCan (NYSE) - 48.10
38.94
181.20
facts
, photos, documents.
Krocer (NYSE) - 28
801~ (NYIE} - 71.41
Wd-Mart (NYSE}- 48.72
and
other items, she disc.ntury· Alulnlrlum (NASDAQ)
Limited lilrands ( NYSE) Wendy'a ( NYSE) - 31.13
cussed various family
28.30
-48.39
Wotthincton (NYSE) - 20.83 ancestral surnames of Meigs
Norfolk
Southern
(NYSE}
Ctwn•!TR (NliDAQ) - 8.18
Dally atock report• are the 4 County including Castle ,
49.93
C"'-~itc Sllope (NASDAQ) p.m. ET closing quotea of
o.k Hill Financial (NASDAQ)
Ours, Trussell, Smith,
12.13
t.-ectlons
for March 29,
- 24.415
City Holdlll&amp; (NASDAQ) Kimes, Osborn, and others.
Olllo Yalley Bane COlli- (NAS- 2007, provided by Edward
40.43
Society president Keith
JoMI ftnancial advi10n1 Isaac
DAQ}- 25.25
Colllne (NYSE) - 88.89
Ashley noted her descenMills In Gallipolis at ( 740)
BIT (NYSE}- 41.~8
Dollar GeMrll (NYSEI dancy
from the Meigs
441-9441 and Lalley Marrero
f'eoplll (NASDAQ)- 28.20
U-13
County
families
of
In Point Pleelant at (304)
.....leo (NYSE) - 83.159
DuPont (NYIE)- 49.38
Robinson
and
Curtis
as
well
8744174. Member SIPC.
PNIIIIer (NASDAQ}- 18,30
US Bank (NYIE) - 35.01

Local stocks

Joel Castle. Revolutionary For further information, call
War soldier buried in Old 992-7874.
The society noted the
Bedford Cemetery. The
society presented Meredith recent donation of several
with a $SO savings bond for recent years of yearbooks of
her efforts . She said she Southern
Local
High
plans to expand her work in School. Newsletters of
the coming year.
genealogical societies of
A worksho{' to assist those surrounding counties are
wishing to jom lineage soci- being punched and placed
eties such as First Families into notebooks for use at the
of Ohio, First Families of Meigs County Museum.
Meigs County, Ladies of the
Membership in the society
Grand Army of the is available at $7 .per person.
Repul&gt;lic, Sons of Union Members recetve "The
Veterans of the Civil War•• Megaphone," the society's
the D.A.R., and the Sons of newsletter-quarterly. June.
the Revolution is set for I to Emma, and Keith Ashley are
4 p.m., Saturday, April 28, planning to attend the First
at the genealogy room of the Family of Ohio's induction
Meigs County Library in ceremony and banquet in
Pomeroy. No reservations to April in Columbus.
attend are needed and there
The upcoming ceremony
is no cost to participate. on May 19 to honor Cpl.
Interested individuals may Henry Dixon as Meigs
bring information on their County's last living Union
families as far as is known. veteran was also noted.

All proceeds go to

il

4:.

..

RELAY
FOR LIFE•
entire family!

.

~

Monday, April 2
POMEROY
The
Meigs County Cancer
Initiative, regular meeting,
noon, Meigs County Senior
Center, new members welcome.

post home in the old
Sali sbury
Ele mentary
School .
CHESTER - Chester
Council 323, Daughters of
America ,
7:30
p.m.,
Masonic Hall. Gary Holter,
Virginia Lee , Mary Kay
Holter as hosts.

Friday, March so, 2007

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Sisters suspicions may require counseling

hard. But if I thought it
impossible I would not be
standing here today. I pledge
my full suppon to this mis·
sion and to the people of Iraq.
and l ..know .YOU will do the
same. he srud.
.
When he finished speaking
a military band sttuck up.
"It's a Grand Old Aag."
Crocker. an Arabic speaker.
is among the most experi·
enced U.S. diplomats in the
Middle East. He had been
ambassador to Pakistan since
2004 and served as ambaSsador to Lebanon, Syria an9
Kuwait, with other assignments in Iran, Qatar and
Egypt.

'Jfil

'

Community Calendar
Clubs and
organizations

PageA3

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Sponsored by Holzer Clinic 's Relay for
Lite Team, ··uenny 's Buddies"

Location: 106,9 Jackson:Pike, Gallipolis, QH
Ori\iimg; IOi~Qns; Bwilding:is located adjacent to Foodlaod &amp;a~oss ftQm Spring Vails.y Plaza
a{l)Pf'O". 1/4 mil(t,past Holz.er Clini~ .. Walth for sigAIU!!'

Baby Items

I!

.,

THI$WEEK
IN$1DE · ~;, · ,

$UNDAY'$
~unbap

\!Cimes ~entinel
~

Saturday, March 31st
8 . 00 am - 2:00 p
Toys!
.

.

�The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Dan Goodrich
Publisher
Cha.-lene Hoeflich

General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
frre exerdse thereof; '" abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, March 30, the 89th day of 2007 . There
are 276 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 30, 1981 , President Reagan was shot and seriously injured outside a Washington hote l by John W.
Hinckley Jr. Also wounded were White House press secretary James Brady, a Secret Service rrgent and a District of
Columbia police officer.
On this date :
In 1822, Florida became a U.S. territory.
In 1842, Dr. Crawford W. Long of Jefferson, Ga., tirst
used ether as an anesthetic during a minor operation.
In 1867, U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward
reached agreement with Russia to purchase the territory of
Alaska for $7,2 million, a deal widely ridiculed as
"Seward's Folly."
In 1870, the 15th amendment to the Constitution. gi1•ing
all citizens t~e right to vote regardless of race, wa&gt; declared
in effect by Secretary of State Hamilton Fish.
In 1870, Texas was readmined to the Union.
In 1945, the Soviet Union invaded Austria during World
War IL
·
In 1964, John Glenn withdrew from the Ohio race for
U.S. Senate because of injuries suffered in a fall.
In 1970, the mu~ical "Applause." based on the movie
"All About Eve," opened on Broadway.
In 1979, Airey Neave, a leading member of the British
Parliament, was killed by a bomb planted by the Irish
National Liberation Anny.
In 1986, actor James Cagney died at his farm in
Stanfordville, N.Y., at age 86.
Ten years ago: The reigning champion Lady Vols of
Tennessee won their lifth NCAA women's basketball title
by defeating Old Dominion, 68-59.
Five years ago: The Queen Mother. Elizabeth, died in her
sleep at Royal Lodge, Windsor. outside London; she was
101 years old. The U.S. joined other U.N. Security Council
members in adopting a resolution calling on Israel to withdraw its troops from Palestinian cities, including Ramallah,
where Vasser Arafat's headquarters was under siege.
One year ago: American reponer Jill Carroll, a free lancer
for The Christian Science Monitor, was released after 82
days as a hostage in Iraq. A cruise boat capsized off the
coast of Bahrain, leaving 58 dead. Major League Baseball
began its investigation into alleged steroid use by Barry
Bonds and others.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Richard Dysart is 78. ·Actor
John Astin is 77. Game show host Peter Marshall is 77.
Actor-director Warren Beatty is 70. Rock musician Graeme
Edge (The Moody Blues) is 66. Rock musician Eric
Clapton is 62. Actor Robbie Coltrane is 57. Actor Paul
Reiser is 50. Rap artist MC Hammer is 44. Singer Tracy
Chapman is 43. Actor lan Ziering is 43. Singer Celine Dion
is 39. Actor Mark Consuelos is 36. Singer Norah Jones is
28.
Thought for Today : "If men could foresee the future, they
would still behave as they do now."- Russian proverb.

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

OPINION

-=

-

Friday, March 30,

2007

Passover is serious business for (rnatzoh maven' if Manischewitz
BvJANET
FRANKSTON LORIN
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

JERSEY CITY, N.J Exl·ept for a poster of grains
from around the world, the
oflice of Yaakov Horowitz
at Manischewitz looks like
a typi.:al rabbi 's study.
Heavy
books
with
Hebrew script are stacked
on the shelves, portraits of
other rabbis adorn the walls,
and Horowitz displays a
shofar, or ram's horn, that
he blows on his company's
production floor before the
kwish High Holy Day&gt;.
As ~hief rahbi at the
kosher food company
Manischewitz. the world
leader in matzoh production, Horowitz is the matzoh
maven. Grain used to produce matzoh is a big part of
his life.
'" It 's not just the most
important kosher food,"
says
the
5 1-year-old
Horowitz. "It is also the
most important Jewish food
and the last link to Jewish
heritage. I feel the responsibility very profoundly.'"
He oversees the company's annual production of
75.6 million sheets of matzoh, the unleavened bread
~aten by Jew s around the
world during the eight-day
Passover holiday and the
centerpiece of the seder.
The first seder, or
Passover dinner, begins
Monday night as Jews commemorate the biblical
account of their ancestors'
liberation from slavery in
ancient Egypt. They eat
matzoh on Passover to
rememller the hasty departure, which didn 't leave
enough time for bread to
nse.
The
fourth -generation
Hasidic rabbi has traveled
around the world to consult

about matwh production at
factories
in
Mexico,
Mm.cow, Kiev, England,
and hrael and is now
embarking on a new task :
designing the first new matzoh ovens for Manischewitt
in nearly 70 year's.
The company is moving
operations to Newark. leaving behind its historic ovens
in Jersey City, where massprodw.:ed mattoh was revolutionized.
ManischewitL\ parent
company, R.A .B. Food
Group of Secaucus, N.J .,
recently acquired other
kosher food companie' and
is consolidating production
of both wet food such a'
soup and gefilte fish and dry
goods such as cake mixes,
crackers and matzoh.
The new $10 million oven
will improve the company\
matzoh production because
daily cleaning during the
Passover season can be
done in less than a quarter
of the time, Horowitt said.
And when the mmpany
makes its once-a-year conversion to Passover goods,
it'll take le" than a week
instead of a month, said
Jeremy Fingerman, president and chief executive
officer of the privately held
R.A.B ., which acquired the
Manischew itz brand in
1998.
Matzoh is still the most
important
product
Manischewitz produces.
said Horowitz. who dons a
yarmulke. hair net and
another net to protect his
bushy salt-and-pepper beard
when he's on a factory floor.
Rabbi
Dov
Behr
Mariischewitz founded his
company in Cincinnati in
1888 to produce matzoh. By
1914, the company registered more than 50 patents
for matzoh !laking and, six
years later, it had created a

AMERICA'~ SPOKEN...

m&lt;ll"hine that could produce
maiLOh on a massive scale
- 1.25 million sheets per
day.
In I \IJlJ. the company
movt:d its matzoh operations to Jersey City. which
closed its plant 1his month.
The introduction of a
machine is still debatabh:
among some Orthodox
Jews, said Horowitz, whose
e-mail user name is "matwhmail.'"
Matzohs were historil'ally
made by hand and sold by
sy nagogues as a source of
income from the 1700s until
the latter part of the 19th
century.
'"Si nce the 1850s, people
involved in machine matzoh
have been forever trying to
improve on the design. to be
able to break it down better
to clean it more efficiently
and qukker." Horowitz
said.
According to the Jewish
laws of kashrut, matzoh
must be baked in 18 minutes or less. with ovens at
intense heat, between 650
degrees and 800 degrees.
Matzoh canno t mix with
leavened products. The
Newark factory will have its
own air ventilation system
lor the Passover production
area.
"Matzoh production is a
little bit like maritime law,"
Horowitz said. "It's an independent specialty. It's a different part of the ko&gt;her law
book."
During the season for
Passover products, between
seven and II mashgiachim,
or kosher supervisors, work
for the rabbi to inspect the
matzoh products.
One is stationed in
Pennsylvania for six months
to oversee the Passover production of the !lour as It is
grown, milled and trm:ked
to New Jersey in 40.000-

WHO'll

pound tankers. Between
f 1ve and eight tanker&gt; will
deliver the flour for 20
straight weeks. The company also manufactures matzoh under the HorowtlzMargareten (no relation)
and Goodman's labels.
'"Matzoh
is
always
watched, from the time of
grinding," said Horowitz,
who
speaks
English,
Hebrew
and Ytdd1sh .
'"Again this i&gt; ancient law."
Interpreting these ancient
laws is part of Horowitz\
job. But Fingerman said he
does a lot more for the
entire company, which consists of other kosher food
brands including Rokeach,
Mother's. Mrs. Adler's and
Mishpacha.
'"The rabbi has a pretty
good eye from a manufacturing perspective," he said.
Horowitz
previously
worked with other accounts.
companies such as the J.M .
Smucker Co and Nestle
USA, to supervise and coordinate their kosher food
programs for the Orthodox
Union as he now does full
time for Manischewitz. The
nonprofit
organization
inspects 6,000 plants in 80
countries around the globe
and certifies their products
as kosher.
But overseeing production at Manischewllz is a
special job because its matzoh is eaten by so many
people,
said
Rabbi
Menachem Genack. rabbinic administrator and
CEO of the Orthodox
Union's world kosher division.
"Passover itself in terms
of Jewish ritual is the holiday most ob&gt;erved," he
said. "Even people who
don' t eat kosher necessarily
all year or are somewhat
unaffiliated, they come back
at Passover."

BE SAFE ANOTHER WEEK?

~ ~

I

Friday, March 30, 2007

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries

M-G-M Scouting district slates annual banquet

Naomi Ruth Reed
MIDDLEPORT - Naon1i Ruth Reed, R5 , Gallipoli,,
passed away on Mar~h 27, 2007, at HolLer Medical Center
m Gallipolis.
She was born on August 15, 1921 , in Ironton, daughter of
the late Charles Presley and Sarah Thompson Presley. She
wa; a member ol Order nl Eastern Star-Harrisonville
Chapter. the Hemlock Grove Grange and the Order of
White Shrine. She was a foster grandparent at the Guiding
Hand School. She attended the Hemlock Grove Church.
In addition to her parents, she was preceded by her husband, Lennard Caperton Reed whom she married on Nov.
8. 1941, in Greenup, Ky.; children. Leonard Lee Reed,
David Franklin Reed: grandson, Jeremy Roger Ball; brothers, George, Warren and Norman Presley; half-sisters, Irene
Reed and Emma Myer~ .
She is survived lly a daughter, Connie (Michael) Fields.
Gallipolis; grandchildren, Lindsay Ball. Gallipolis; Jerrod
Ball, Ft. Collins, Colo.; Sandra Baker and Lisa (Mathew)
Musgrave, all of Point Plew.ant. W.Va.; Stephanie (Chad)
Bowman, Westerville, John Reid. The Colony, Texas; great
grandchi ldren, Jim Grimes, Point Plea,ant. W.Va.; April
Wtldermuth. Blacksburg, Va.: lan and Leigh Ann
Musgrave, Point Pleasant, W.Va. ; Jeremy Conner Walter.
Gallipolis; Logan and Keenan Reid. The Colony, Texas:
great-great-grandchild. Kennedy Wildermuth. Blacksburg,
Va. and several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Saturday. March 3 1,
2007, at the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home.
Officiating will be Rev. Jay 'fatum, chaplain at Holzer
Medical Center. Burial will be in Meigs Memory Gardens.
Friends may call on Saturday. March 31, from II a.m. until
time of serv ice at the funeral home.
On-line condolences mav be sent to www.lisherfuneral homes.com.
·

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYOAIL'tSENTINEl.COM

GALLIPOLIS - William
E. "Bill" Davis, executive
vice president and chief
operating officer of Chicagobased Magellan Associates
LLC, will be the guest speaker at the annual MeigsGallia-Mason Friends of
Scouting banquet set for
Tuesday, April 3 at 6:30p.m.
at the Gallipolis Elks Lodge.
Davis, who recently
moved to Gallipolis, has
more than 30 years of infor-

mation technology and
business experien,·e. including multiple tenures as a
chief information officer
and other executive positions. He has worked in the
air/ground transportation,
state government. banking.
technology and manufacturing industries.
With this background, he
co-founded
Magellan
A"ociates LLC and co-created Tile
Performance
Management Trilog1·(c). He
has provided services.
coached executives and their

team&gt; to organization performance excellence. including
Fortune 50 to 1,000 companie~. both profit and nonprofit in the USA and abroad.
Davis is the author of The
Foundmio'n
Guide
Manageme111 Tool.s for the
Serious Executi•·e. used by
over 300 companies in the
U.S., Europe and South
America.
A longtime supporter of
the Bnv Scouts of America.
Davis [s an Eagle Scout and
member of the National
Eagle Scout Association.

He was awarded the ··silver
Wreath"
Award
for
Distinguished Servi..:e to the
35.000-member Longhorn
Council of Fort Worth.
Texas , where he served as
chairman of the council's
NESA Chapter and as a
member of the cou ncil's
board of direuors.
Davis credits his personal
and professional success to
hi s experiences and learning
as a Boy Scout.
For more information on
the bwll.f~et. wlllact Dcn·e
Walka at (740) 367-5058.

one from the age of 15 and
up are invited to auend the
rehearsal. For more information call 304-675-5525
or 740-742-2832. All music
is provided.

the church gym at 525 N.
Second St., Middleport .
Included will be a variety of
baked good, beverages and
hot dogs to be eaten in or
carried out. For more information call 992-6550 or
992-9052.

truck which arrived in
January and will be on display for the public to view.
This is the department's
first new truck since 1980.

Local Briefs
PERl changes
meeting date
POMEROY- The Meigs
County local P.E.R.l. chapter has been rescheduled for
I p.m. on April 13 at the
Senior Citizens Center with
Bernard Fultz as speaker.

Choir enters
rehearsals

MASON, W.Va. - ;('he
Mason County Area Choir
will have its first rehearsal
.for the 2007 season, 7 p.m.
April 23, at the United
Methodist Church of the
Good Shepherd at Flatrock.
lt was noted that the choir
POMEROY - William E. "Bill" Kennedy 74, of
is
composed of singers repPomeroy. passed away Thursday. March 29. 2007 at The
resenting
all faiths and anyOverbrook Rehabilitation Center after an extended illness.
Funeral services will held at II a.m. Monday, April 2, 2007
at the Fisher Funeral Home in Pomeroy. Visitation will be
held from 4-7 p.m. on Sunday. April I, at the funeral home.
A full obituary will be in the Sunday Times-Sentinel.

Deaths

William E. ·ailr Kennedy

Cemetery
cleanup noted
POMEROY
The
Greenwood ' Cemetery
cleanup will begin on April
6. Any decorations families
wish to preserve must be
removed by then.

Bake sale
MIDDLEPORT - The
Ladies
Missionary
Fellowship of the Victory
Baptist Church will have
bake sale I0 a.m. April 6 in

Fish fry set
WILKESVILLE - A fish
fry dinner will be held
Saturday. April 7 from II a.m.
to 3 p.m. at the Wilkesville
Community Center. Proceeds
will suppon the Wilkesville
Township
volunteer
Firemen's Association. Fish
dinner along with a variety of
sandwiches, desserts and bev- ·
erages will be served.
At the dinner donations
will also be accepted for the
lire department's new lire

Car wash
planned
REESDVILLE - The
sophomore dass of Eastern
High School is raising
money for the senior trip.
On May 5, beginning at 10
a. m. the class will have a car
wash. cornhole tournament
and bake &gt;ale at Alligator
Jack&gt; on Laurel Cliff Road
in Pomeroy. Donations will
be needed for the bake sale.
To donate for the class trip
or the May 5 event, contact
Eastern High School. \1853329, Carman Mitchell.

For the Record

Joseph Lish

Highway Patrol

HARTFORD. W.Va. - Jn,eph Edward "Eddie" Lish, 54,
of Hartford, W.Va., died on March 21!, 2007, at his residen.:e.
His wife, Vicki Lish of Hartford, survives .
A memorial serv ice will be held at I p.m. on Monday,
April 2, 2007, at Anderson Funeral Heme in New Haven,
W.Va.·. with Pastor Mike Finnicum officiating. The family
will receive friends an hour prior to the service.
A registry is avai lable online at www.andersonfh.com.

REEDSVILLE
A
Reedsville man was injured in
a
one-car
accident
Wednesday on Ohio 681 . the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reported.
Brian L. Lamb, 31, 38655
Second St, was taken to
Camden-Clark Memorial
with the motors on the sys- Hospital in Parkersburg,
tem's two lift stations. W.Va., by private vehicle
Murphy said in January a following the 5:24 a.m. acciwinJ-driven aerator installed dent. according to the patrol.
from PageA1
Troopers said Lamll was
at one of the district's two
in
Olive
lagoons is inoperable. Both westbound
The district recently lagoons are operational, Township when the car he
received
$50,000
m Murphy said, but one is oper- drove crossed the center line,
Community DevelopiT\cnt ating at less than capacity.
went off the left side of the
Block Grant funding to
struck two trees and
road,
Customers in the district
upgrade the system and was pay $50 per month for went over an embankment
pla1,1ning to seek additional 'ewer 'ervice, unless they
The car was severely
funds for other 'improve- paid up-front their share of damaged . and Lamb was
ments.
the district's debt retireIn January. Murphy said ment. in which case they
the I0 year-old system was pay $27.25. Murphy said
.Inadequate for the commu- the district now has a cash
nity 's needs when it began reserve of $ 192,000.
AKRON (APJ - The
operating . She said there
The district was first
:were no plan s for un formed in 1992 to address a University of Akron student
building ban that was newspaper. upset about the
expansion.
. The district has experi- imposed in the unincorporat- school's decision not to
ed community in the 1970's. include a book by an ex~nced repeated problems
convict
on
freshman
required reading lists,
arranged for the author to
were compared within a make a campus speaking
time frame of 20 minutes.
engagement instead.
Yesterday. regular unleadJimmy Santiago Baca, 54,
ed was selling at an average of Albuquerque. N.M., said
from PageA1
of $2.69 per gallon just he
accepted
The
of
Point
Pleasant.
south
Buchtelite 's invitation to
Sutton Township, $2.62 at a
station
in
Lebanon W.Va . along State Route speak on campus and hold a
Township and $2..'i9 at a Two all the way into writing workshop April IOHuntington, W.Va.
Il because of the paper·'
Station: at Five Points .
Locally, there is no expla- support for him.
Yesterday. 15 miles south
" l think limiting young
of Pomeroy in Point nation for the difference in
prices
though
the
larger
picminds
by censoring books
Pleasant. W.Va. regular
ture
shows
crude
oil
on
the
disrupts
the adventure of
unleaded was selling for
rise
again
this
week,
selling
youth to explore their
$2.71 per ~allon at three gas
world and their role in it."
stations wtthin the city lim- at $66 a barrel.
Well.
that
was
a
summary
Baca
told The Associated
its. Compare this to
of
yesterday
's
gasoline
in
an
e- mail
Press
Riverside's regular unlead-.
ed at $2.49 per gallon and pri~e s. It's anybody's gue" Thursday. "Why extinguish
it's a difference of 22 cents where today 's prices might awe in their hearts at such a
young age?"
per gallon. The se prices . end up, or clown.

TPRSD

cited for failure to control.

•••

POMEROY - David 0 .
Andrews,
41,
New
Marshfield, was cited for
assured clear distance by
the patrol following a twovehicle accident Wednesday
on U.S. 33.
Troopers said Andrews
was eastbound at I :37 p.m.
when he was unable to slow
in lime and struck an eastbound truck driven by
Herman A. Roberts, 60,
· 39422 Union Ave., Pomeroy.
The truck, owned by
Salisbury Township, was
pulling a piece of equipment
at the time of the crash,
according to the report.
The minivan driv~n by
Andrews had disabling damage, and functional d;unage
wa'i reported to the truck.

Marriage
licenses

against
Jeffery
C.
Wickersham. Pomeroy.

Dissolutions

POMEROY - Marriage
licenses were issued in
POMEROY
Meigs County Probate Dissolutions were granted
Court to Michael James in Meigs County Common
Conlin, 46, Middleport, and Pleas Court to Timothy
Camilla Sue Morris, 41, Whitlatch and Sheila A.
Middleport. and to Robin Whitlatch, Amanda J. Faulk
Christy,
20, and Clinton T. Faulk, and
Samuri
Langsville, and Paula June Phillip E. Hawk and Donna
Abel, 53. Langsville.
R. Hawk.

Civil actions

Divorce

POMEROY
Civil
actions were filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas
Court by Heather D. Long,
Pomeroy, against Benjamin
R. Wolfe, Reedsville, and
by First Merit Bank, Akron.

POMEROY -· An action
for divorce was· filed m
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Donald
Eugene Coates, Jr. , Pomeroy,
against Sandie Coates,
Mission Viego. Calif.

Student newspaper invites author of bypassed book

The .Democrats' big gamble

In passing a resolution
demanding that America's
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less colllbat forces in Iraq be
than 300 words. All/etters are subject to-editing, must be withdrawn by September
signed, and include address mrd telephone number. No 2008, the House Democrats
unsigned leller~ will be published. Letters should be in have placed a heavy bet on
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Letters of the outcome of developthanks to organizations and individuals will not be accept- ments there, and a lot of
political consequences will
ed for publication.
depend· on the success of
that bet.
Never mind that the resolution passed by only the
narrowest of margins (218Reader Services
&lt;usPs 213-960)
to-2 12). with a signilicant
Corrwc:tlon Polley
Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
minority of Democrats votOur main concern in all stories is 10 Published every afternoon, Monday
ing
against it. Never mind
be accurate. If you know of an error through Friday, 111 Court Street,
that
is it virtually certain to
.
Pomerov. Ohio. Second-class postage
1n a story, call the newsroom al (740) paid at Pomeroy.
be defeated in the Senate,
992-2156.
The Associated Press and
where the rules will enable
the Ohio Newspaper Association.
the Republicans to filibuster
Our lll,lln number Is
Poatma•: Send address correcit to death. if necessary.
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court
(7~) 9t2-2156.
Never mind that, even if it
Slroet, Pomeroy, onio 45769.
Depwlmitr\1 extenSions are:
somehow passed both housSubacrlpllon Ral8a
es, it would promptly be
By or motor roulo
News
vetoed by President Bush.
One
month
..........
.' 10.27
E -: Charlene Hoeffich, Ext 12
and that there is no hope of
One y - .... - .·.... . .'115.84
Aopoltol: Brian Fleed, Ext 14
Dill)\ - , ,. - ,. ,. ,. ......50'
two-thirds of either house
Aoponor: Beth Sergent, Ext 13
SeniOr Clllan , ....
voting to override his veto.
One month ........... '10.27
Speaker
Pelosi and her colOne y - - ...........'103.90
Advertising
leagues knew all these
~ 5l'&lt;luiO """" in advance
Ollie* Seloe: Dave Harris, Ext 15 dnctDI'Ieoat;' Sentinel. No subscrip·
things, and passed the resoOolllldes.IM: Bronda Davis, Exl16 tion by mail permitted in areas where
lution anyway. so they were
home camar S8fVice IS avaifable.
CIMa./Circ.: Judy Claril, Ext 10
voting to make a point.
Their point is that they
M1ti1 Subllcrlpllon
General Manager
, lnalde IIWgs County .
believe the wat in Iraq is
13 WeekS . . . . . . . . .
. .'32.26
Charl- Hoeffich, Ext. 12
irretrievably
lost and that
26 Weeks . . . . . . . .
. .. '64.20
continuing
the
battle into.the
52 WeekS . . . .
'127.11
E-indetinitc future will merely
newsOmydailysentinel.com
OUtside Meigs County
waste ~ti II more blood and
13 WeJI&lt;s . . . . . . .
. ... '53.55
26 weet.s .
. . . . . .. •101 10 treasure. Moreover, they
have seen the polls indicat52 WeekS . . . . . . . . . . .'214.21
www.mydailysenlinel.com
ing that a maJority of

The Daily Sentinel

PageA4

William

Rusher

Americans agree that the
effon in Iraq has failed. and
the Democrats are therefore
convinced that the voters
will forgive them. in any
case, for demanding a pullout. There is no political
party more resolutely virtuou&gt; than one that believes a·
majority of the voters is
tirmly on its side.
The Republicans warn
that the Democratic resolution is simply a prescription
for
losing
the
war.
Moreover. they do not agree
that it is necessari ly aitd
inevi tably lost. President
Bush has changed Defense
secretaries. endorsed a new
proposal for a surge in the
number of combat troops in
Iraq, and sent there to command the effort Gen. David
Petraeus.
who
firmly
believes that such a surge
will work. What's more. the
Republicans are aware that
Americans resene the right
to change' their mmd,.
According t(&gt; the polls. a
majority l'avored tQC attack

on Saddam Hussein's Iraq.
Those same polls now
report that a majority have
lost heart. But if the surge
succeeds. you can be sure
that a majority will favor
lirm steps to .,., rap up the
victory, and will be glad to
scrap the Pelosi deadline.
The Democrats are aware
of this possibility, but are
simply betting that it won't
happen. And even if it does,
they calculate that the resulting' situation won't be so
encouraging that determined
pessimists will be fatally
embarrassed. There will still
be problems with the Iraqi
government, and enough
fatalities among American
troops to keep the media
busy. The Republicans may
rightly claim ''victory." but
the Democrats will continue
to mourn the cost.
Meanwhile, of course. the
very passage of this resolution by the House. regardless of its further prospects.
will encourage America's
enemies in the Middle East
to believe that they are winning, and redouble their
efforts. And indeed. in a
sense they are winning.
smce the members of one of
America·, two major parties
have called. in the House of
Representative,. for our
troops to abandon the battletield. Wouldn't you like to
'ee Osama bin Laden· s

expression when he sees that
on AI Jazeera?
Still, a realist would have
to concede that the chances
are thai the Democrats will
win their bet, or at least
escape major damage if they
lose it. American forces
have spent four years trying
to devise a way of suppressing the terrorist insurgenis
that have killed so many
scores of thousands of thei,r
fellow Iraqis, thus far with
notable lack of success. It
seems unlikely that a military "surge," however weU
conducted, can reverse that
record. And even if it does,
the Democrats are entitled(!&gt;
hope that the American ~
pie will choose to turn over
the
maqagement , of
America's future in the
Middle East to a party not
compromised by the failures
of the Bush administration._
A vigorous Republican
presidential candidate in
2008 might convince the
voters otherwise. But who is
he? Am I the only one who
thinks the newest face in the
Republican race, former
Sen. Fred Thompson of
Tennessee, might just fill the
bill'
(William Ru~her is a
Distinguished Fe/low of the
Clartmwlll Institute· for the
Srudy of Statesmmrship and
Pvlitinrl Phi/o~oph}~)

Gasoline

His book, '"A Place to
Stand," was considered by a
faculty committee as the
summer .reading sekction
for this fall's 4,000 incoming freshmen.
The university decided to
skip Baca 's book amid a
campus uproar over four exconvicts, including two in
their mid 40s, who were living in student dormitories.
The
university
later
imposed a requirement that
dormitory applicants disclose any crimmal record.
The university doesn't
object to Baca's appearance
and the stuJent-sponsored
require
event
doesn't
administration approval ,
campus spokesman Ken
Torisky said. He said the
book hadn' t been banned
and said the decision had
focused on the timing of
when it might be used.
Baca's book recounts his

rough childhood, desertion
lly his parents, living on
the street&gt; and in an
orphanage, and five years
in prison in his 20s for
drug abuse. While 111

prison, he learned to read
and write and developed a
taste for poetry.

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�PageA6

FAITH • VALUES
Growing or dying - - -A Hunger For More- - -

The Daily Sentinel

The righteous flourish like
the palm tree and gruw like
the .:edar of Lebanon. They
are planted in the house of
the Lord: they flourish in the
couns of our God They shall
b&lt;:ar fruit in old age: they are
everfull of sap and green ...
( Psalm9~ . 12 - l~ . ESVl
And h~ tnld this parable:
·A man had a lig tree plallled
in his vinev&lt;trd. and he c&lt;tme
seeki ng fruit Llll it and found
m'nc .. (Luke U .6. ESV)
When we pl&lt;mt seeds. we
tKttur&lt;tlly e~pect growth.
When we inwst money, we
hope l(lf a gt~x! l-etunl on our
investment. When a baby is
bom we &lt;mti.: ipate and pmy
lor good, healthy gmwth and
development. Should it not be
the same in our spiritual lives·&gt;
A question. inspired by
sLnnething Ronald Reagan
. said in his campaign for
reelc.:tion back in 198~.
occurred to me recently. You
may remember he asked people to ask themselves. ·'Are
you better off today than you
were lour years ago?"
With just a bit of a twist, I
frankly ask myself. "'Am I
better off spiritually today
than I was four years ago?
Than !'was this time last vear''
And if not, why not"'"' "And,
no, this is not about being perteet. It is simply about
growth, continuing growth.
It is good. once in awhile.
10 t&lt;tke a step back and really look at oneself good and
hard, 10 ask the tough questions, to take stock. So what
about you"? Are you further
along spiritually than you
were last year'' Are you
growing and bearing more
fruit in vour life·&gt;
It ne"arly goes without
saying we are growing or
dying spiritually - m&lt;tturing or degenerating in the
soul - one or the other but
never both. As Oscar Wilde
put it in The Picture of
Dorian Gray. "No life is
spoiled but one whose

Friday, Marc:h 30, 2007

Friday, March 30,2007

There is a weight to sin
that the eye cannot see and
the mind cannot imagine. It
Rev.
is so burdensome that it
Jonathan c.:annot be upheld by even
Pastor
the strength of mountains. It
Noble
Thom
brings with it a veil of
PASTOR,
Mollohan
TRINITY CHURCH
murky darkness that chokes
the soul, murders joy. and
smothers hope.
Like spiritual cement
shoes, this weight, encumgrow th is arrested." Indeed, bering all of human life on terrible priL:e ... and not least
we mi~ht ask with Roben planet eanh, drags its vic- because of the personal
Brown mg. "Why stay we on tims into grave waters of betrayal of one whom the
eternal separation from the Savior had loved as a friend .
the earth unless to grow'!"
·• ... Being in anguish, He
Are you growing tmd bear- presence of Holy God.
And
although
sin
was
not
prayed
... earnestly, and His
ing fntit? This is the chalnative to Him but was sweat was I ike drops of
len~e . to be willing to stand
in trmll of the mirror of God instead laid upon His blood falling to the ground"
to assess oneself in the light almighty shoulders so that (Luke 22:44 NIV).
It is almost unthinkable
of truth, then should we find our own frail forms might
our soul undernourished. not be destroyed. it was this that an "innocent" would
starving and really rather sort of burden with which endure the punishment of
barren to determine to recti- the Son ot God contended the guilty. And as much as it
on a lonely. dark night in a moves us to applaud a noble
fy this sad estate.
sacrifice, we mustn't forget
We have to be like the ser- grove of olive trees.
"Then Jesus went with His that Jesus was and is the
vant in the parable of the
unfruitfullig tree. When the disciples to a place called only real innocent that has
master determined to cut Gethsemane, and He said to ever lived - He is the only
down the tree because it had them. 'Sit here while I go One Who could ever truthborne no fruit ·for three over there and pray.' He took fully make such a claim.
years the servant said, Peter and the two sons of Nor can we forget the near"Leave it alone, sir, just one Zebedee along with Him, ly bonomless depth of the
more year. I will dig around and He began to be sorrow. guilt of mankind: how he
it and put in some fertiliz- ful and troubled. Then He tur1.1ed his back on his
said to them, 'My soul is Creator at the dawn of time
er." (Luke 13-8, GNT)
It may very well be time overw he Imed with sorrow to and unleashed hordes of
. for some serious spiritual the point of death. Stay here evils that have beset the
"digging 7' and "fertilizing." and keep watch with Me."' Cosmos since. Are we
deserving of abandonment?
Others may help you in (Matthew 26:36 NIV).
Looking around at those Yes. Are we deserving of
making such a determination. but ultimately only you who knew Him best, living judgment? Yes. It could
can answer the question for and working by His side for hardly have been expected
the last few years, His ten- that if God were like man,
yoLtrself.
der
heart reached out for that at the point of our rebelAre you better off spiritually now than you were four their love, knowing all the lion (and even more so for
years ago? Than you were while that, in the end, He our persistence in it). He
last year'' Remember the would walk this path alone. would have done anything
almost simplistic old saying ··Pray," He encouraged other than shrug His shoulis absolutely true. "When these friends and followers. ders, wash His hands of us,
growth stops. decay begins." "Pray that you will not fall and walk away. Yet, this
. Praise to God, though we into temptation" (Luke Innocent walked directly
into the face of hate, betrayhave every opportunity in 22:40b NIV).
His heart and mind were al, and death knowing the
and through Christ our Lord
to "llourish in the courts of bursting with anguish, not awful price that only His
our God" and "bear fntit only because of the physical blood could pay.
(even) in old age ... ever full travail that He was about to
But our astomshment must
of sap and green!" The face, but also from the fact still increase even more. His
question is, are we?
of the horror of sin and its heart reached up to His

Father. staggering under the
utter atrocity of our guilt and
shame, and doubtlessly
recoiled from the approach
of the most terrible of all
consequences - that of separation from the Father.
"Father, if you are willing,
take this t·up from Me; yet
not My will but Yours be
done" (Luke 22:~2 NIV).
And later, as the wrath of
divine judgment poised
over the spectade of His
gasping body, nailed cruelly
to a tree that He had c.:reatcd.
the sun itself was darkened
as if the face of the Father
Himself was forced to turn
away.
" It was now about the
sixth hour, and darkness
came over the whole land
until th~; ninth hour. for the
sun stopped shining ... Jesus
cried out in a loull voic.:c ...
'My God, My God. why
have You forsaken Me?'"
(Luke 23:44, Matthew
27:46 NIV). "God was reconciling the 'world to
Himself through Christ, not
counting men's sins against
them ... (bec.:ause) God
made Him Who had no sin
to be sin for us, so that in
Him we might bec.:ome the
righteousness of God" (2
Corinthians 5: 19a, 21 ).
The holy indignation of
the Father, having judged
once and for all the rebellion of the works of His
hands.
was
satisfied.
Holiness can't ignore sinfulness, but with Jesus' laying down of His own life,
holiness could be vindicated
and the eternal consequence
of sinfulness destroyed.
Mercy could enter the wide
gap separating mankind and
his Maker. bridging the
nearly immeasurable distance with the outstretched
arms of the Lamb of God.
Earlier it was said that we
cannot forget the nearly bottomless depth of the guilt of
mankind. This is definite Iy

tru.:. But I only said that it is
"nearly'· bottomless. There
is an end to it, after all. But
of the grace of God there is
no end. As measureless as
the east is from the west,
infinitely farther than the
nonh is from the south, and
truly deeper than the lowest
trench of the deepest ocean
i' the love and goodness of
God for those who will turn
from their own sin and
recei\'e the gift of life He
desires to give them.
"For the wages of sin IS
death. but the gift of God is
etemallite in Christ Jesus our
Lord" (Romans 6:23 NIV).
The crucifixion is ugly ...
but it is also beautiful. For
against the backdrop of
inc.:redible horrors and atrocious hate is the portrait of
grace in motion. Nails dido 't
hold our Savior on the cross;
the graL:e of God did. And it
is this grace that extends to
us today the only hope that
our woefully broken planet
has. And just as that grace
poured into the ugliness of
human sin a glimpse of intinile beauty as people reviled
Him, despised Him, abused
Him. and killed Him, that
same grace lives today still
as it reaches out through
hearts won over by His
faithful mercy.
As the winds of mercy
blow by you this approaching Holy Week , breathe
deeply the daily kindnesses
of your Father in heaven,
and breathe out praises and
loving kindnesses towards
all you meet.
( Thom Mollohan atul his
family have ministered in
souther~~ Ohio the past II
years. He is the [Histor of
Pathway
Community
Church, which meets on
Su11day mornings at the
Ariel Theatre. He may be
reached for comme11ts or
questions by e-mail al pastorthom @pathwaygallipo·
lis.com).

www.mydltllyuntlnel.com

C\oodoel J_, ClortotA......
Vlobodt IDd WW Rd . """". '"""
Miller. Sundlty Scbool - 10:30 a.m ..
EYfti.Da 7:30 p.m.

Rinrv.lry
Kiva Valley Apo.wlK: Worship Cmtcr,
873 S. }rd

Ave .. Middkport , Rev.

Mkhocl Bradford. Paslor, Sunda!. IO'JO
a.m. Tues. 6:30 prayer, Wed. 7 pm Blb}e
Stud)

· tmmaa~ .o\poskllk Taltll:r..rk at.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutlilad.
Ser,· i~o"t"!l : Sun 10:00. a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m..
Thup, 700 p.m.. Pas101 Many ll. HllttOO

Assembly of God
Libert!~ uiGod
1&gt;0 . Bo1 467. Dudding Lane. Masoo,
W V~ . P.ast01: Neil Ttnnanl. Sunday
Sen· • ec:~- !O:OOam. &amp;Ad 7 p.m

Baptist
l'olt•lle tnew• llapliol Clwr&lt;~
P&lt;L'itor: Mike Hannon . SundaJ ScOOol
~:.\1:1 t&lt;) IU:JO am. Wonl'lip §en&lt;it."e 10:30
to II :00 am. Wed. pnachWg 6 pm
CIU'ptottr lbplisl ('hurdll
Sunday

School •

9:.'0am,

Preaching

ScrvM.~

!0:30am. Evening St!mcc
7:00pm. Wedneiday Bibk Study 7:00pm,
laterim Prtacber - Floyd Ros.'i
ClitUirellap&amp;~o nort~

Plt'iiOr: Ste\'e Little. Sunday ~hool: 9 :30
..m. Morning Wonhip: 10:.'0 am.
Wednesda.y Bible Stud) 6 :30pm: dKlir

pr....:(t(e 7JO: youth and Bibk Buddu;s
p.m ThlliS. I pm book study

6:.\0

Hopt llap&amp;isl C-~ ISouthnnl
570 Gr&lt;llll St.. MiJdkpnn . Sunda~ s..:hl••l
- 4:30a.m .. Worship - II a.m. and 0 p.m..
Wedlle!tila)' Servi~l! · 7 p.m. Pa.\tor: Gary
Elli ~

litutbwd l'lnt 8aptkt Cllurtll
Sundu) School - 9:JO a.m . Wunohip !0:45a.m.
l'oiiiCn&gt;l l"lnlllaptbl
Pastor Joo Brod.en, WI Main St ..

Suodly Xh. 9;30am. Worship 10:30 am

llnl s.. ..... llapliot
-'1K.72 Purntroy P Llt. Pa~tor : E. L1mar
O'Brya.nl. Sunday S•hool - 9:.l0 a.m..
Worship - 3:15a.m.. 9:4.5 am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wcd~~tsda~

include a Maundy Thursday ser- communion and worship service
vice
and
the
Middleport lead by P.dStor Robert Gibson. Good
Ministerial Association's commu- Friday services will be at the church,
nity service on Good Friday, both 7 p.m. April 6. Linea Warmke of
at 7 p.m .. and an Easter sunrise Athens will be the guest speaker.
service followed by a breakfast.
Middleport Com111unity Service
Zion Chu~h
MIDDLEPORT- The commuPOMEROY -The Zion Church nity Good Friday service will be
of Christ, S.R. 143 w.ill .presept a held at 7 p.m. April 6 at the
cantata 'Then Came the Moming" Middleport First Baptist Church.
at the 7 a.m. sunrise service. A Jeff Smith, pastor of the Ash
breakfa~t will follow. Sunday school
Street Church, will be the speaker
will be held at 9:30 a.m.; worship and there will be special music by ·
service at 10:30 a.m. with special Adam "Shank. Those attending are
music. Roger Watson is pastor.
invited to take canned food items
St. Paul Lutheran
to be added to the food pantry at
POMEROY
Maundy the Rejoicing Life Church.
Thursday services, 7 p.m. April 5, at Sacred Heart Catholic Chu~h
St. Paul Lutherdll Church with holy
POMEROY - Palm Sunday

Vigil Mass at 5:30 p.m. Saturday,
Palm Sunday at 9:30 a.m. , with
blessing of palms.
Holy Thursday Mass of the
Lord's Supper, 7:30p.m.
Good
Friday
Community
Lenten service with Stations of the
Cross, 12 noon, followed by
Contessions at I p.m.
Solemn Commemoration of the
Passion and Death of Our Lord, followed by Confessions, 7:30p.m.
Solemn Easter Vigil Mass. 8:30
p.m. Saturday.
Easter Sunday Mass. 9:30a.m.
The United in Christ
POMEROY
A Maundy
Thursday silent communion service commemorating The Last

SerYices - 7 :00p . m .~

Flnl ...... CW&lt;h
Ptitol: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmu St..
M~pon . Sunda.)' S~hocll- 9 :15 a.m.•
Wonbip - 10:1.5 a.m., 7:00 p.m .•
Wodaesdly Sel'\'i«· 7:00p.m.

~, 30

a.m .• Wonllip · 10,40 a.m.,
7:00 p.m.. WedncMiay ~e,dcc• • 7:00
p.m.

SUver l.~om ..,U.1
Pastor: John Swanson, Sunday School •
lOa .m., W1.1nhip - lla.m. . 7:00p.m .
.Wednesday ~n- ice~· 1:00 p.m.
~11 .

Uaioa llat&gt;llll

Pa~wr :

Dennis Weaver Sunday School9:45 a.m ., E'·ening - b:JO p.m ..
Wed~~) Senwes · 6:30p.m
khlehem llapllal ChW&lt;h
Great Bend. Route 124. Racine . OH.
Pa~tor : Ed Carter. Sunday School · 9:30
a. m.. Sunday Wonhip . 10 :30 a.m..
Wcdftesday Bible Study - 7:00 p.m.

Old lkllod Fm Wllllapllsl Chwxh
28601 St . Rt. 7. Middleport. Sunday
Stn' LCt - 10 a.m .. 6:00 p.m .. TUtsda)'
Sen·Lee~ -6 :00

ll1lldd&lt; llapol.l Chunh
S1. R~.:' \4] jus1 off Rt. 7. Pa~tor : Rev.

hamu R. Acree. Sr.. Sunday Unified
Sen·ice. Worsh1p - IO:]U a.m.. 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Sel'\'ices -7 p.m

in our community

Vktury llapiAI lndeprndool
52~

•

that we arc always waiting

a break from our daily routine. And.

for some spec ial future c"·ent in our

God wants us 10 be a joyful people,

lives. Perhaps we are looking
forward to a long·
deserved val"ation.

wcrc so

but we should keep in mind 1ha1
God 's IO\'C is the
only thing in this
world
thai
is
constant. The Bible
tells us thai Gut!\
love is everlasting.
and with loving
kindness He
has
drawn us (Jeremiah
31.3 ). So many of
lhe
things lhat
seem w important
10 us" today will
probably
appear
relalively
insignificant ami

im ul ved wilh Ihem .

mean Ii Ltlc to us

or

maybe

an

upcoming sporting
event, or 'orne other
-;pcciar' occa~ion that

1s impoatant to us.
However, the joy
and plea,ure 1ha1 are
recci ved from most
uf these events are
all ~u short~li\' Cd.

that

we
might
afterwards
find
uur~ cl\'cs wondering
"h}

\\'I!

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

Surely. there is nothing wrung wilh later; twwever, our returning God's_
look 1ng
forward
to
special love will assure us of a fri~ndship
oc'-.:a)\ion~. since it is important to 1111 with Him thai wil) last forever.
have event.' in our lives that
us

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

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

740..949-2217

N 2nd St . Middleport. Pa.~10r : hmc ~

E. Keesee. Worship · l01:1.m .. 7 p.m ..
Wednesday Services · 7 p .m.

MicheUe Kennedy
Di rC\'l~'r

of Mm"kt.·ting and Admission~

faltb llapllsl OW"Cb
R:.t.ilr041d St., Ma!&gt;utJ. Sulll.lay School - 10
a .m ., Wo r ~ hip - II a.m.. 6 p .m.
Wednesday Service~· 7 p.m.

Forest RGD BapUoil· Pomero)
Rev. hx-;cph Woods. Sunday School · 10
a.m.. Worship · I UO a.m
~\'l1rm

•

•

Hours

f ·riendly

6 am - 8 pm

t\tmosplrt' l"f!

Mi[{ie's 2{estaurant

Mt. Moriah. Baptl&lt;~t
Fourth &amp; Main St.. Middleport. f'nstor·
Rev. GJ iben Craig. Jr .. Sunday Schoof9:30a.m .. Wors.hip - 10:45 a.m.

Homemackl Desserts Mack! Daily
Hom• Cwl&lt;ed Meols &amp; Daily SpttU.I.&lt;

Open 7 days a week

740.992-7713

-"'llqulty llaptlol
- 'i:.'\0 a.m .. Worship ·
10:45 a.m .. Sunday Evening - 6:00p.m ..

Sund~:~y S~.:hool

Cerliliod Publk: 1\«&lt;~UJ~tanl
o-n: Uobler@charler.nel
618 E. Main Simi
Pom.roy, 01145769
7*"!192-7270

KEBLER BUSJNESS
SERVICES

~ro•u~' "'. Non-hank 'ub!!.tdl.lrtC\ uf Well s

f' Jrgo &amp; Company, fl.\.~ .\ Nunh St&lt;tiC HWY 161
4th Aour. lrvmg TX, 7503~ tii72J S7tH)(JIJ\l

The Hppllfte Ulan
740-985-3561
992-1550
Sates • Sentlce • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam You

Catholic
101 Mulberry Aile .. PomerO)', 992-5898.
Ptitor: R(v Walter E. Heiru . Sill. Coo.
4:45-S: Up.m.; Mus- 5:30 p.m .. Sam.
Con. -8:45-9: 15 a.m... Sun. Mus - 9:30
a.m., Daily Mw - 8:30a.m .

Church of Christ
3)2260.ildRn's Home Rd. Pomeroy, 0H
Contact 740-441 -1296 Slmday mornin&amp;:
10:00. Sun morning Bible study;
following wotship. Sun. eve b:OO pm.
Wed bible: study 7 pm

1-kmkM:k lin.Wt ('luis&amp;ia,Q Cblll"t..
MmLster: larcy Brown . Worship - 9:30
a .m . Sunday School - 10:30 a.m .• iiLble
Stud}'- 7 p.m.

Po&amp;M:roy Clum:.. ul Christ
212 W. Main St.. Sunday Sl:huul - q :JO
a.m .. Wors hip- 10:30 a .m .. b p.m .

Wednrsd.ay ~n· kes - 7 p.m.

\\'nWdt c..~h ull'hrist
H22b Childr.-n\ Hom~! RJ .. Sunda)'
~nool • II a.m.. WOfShip - IOa.m.. b p.m.
Wednesd-ay ~rvk'ts - 7 p.m.
hmttv)'

~llddkport Cb""'h ul Chriot
and MaiD . Pastor: AI H.11.rt~on .
Childrens Director: Sharon Sayr.-. Teen
Uuector: Dodger Vaughan. Sunday School
- 9:30a.m.. Wor.;hip· 8:1 5. lO:JO a.m.. 7
p.m .. WedncMlay Sm·ices - 7 p.m.
~th

K...,CloudleiCiuiot
Worship · 9:30 a.m .. Sunday School 10:30 a.m.. Paso-Jeffrey Wall81:e. 1st and
.\rd Sunday

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N. Socood St.

Agency Inc.

Middleport, OH

740-992-6128
Local source tor trophies,
Ia u s t-shirts a

·

AGENCIES ln&lt;

Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~.
(740) 992-3279
''-!!Y
.Tol Free 1-877-5113-2433

tNOJ992-6-151
F

sqJ

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45 769-0683

11o.m .. 6

Sen.ce~

p.m., Wedntsda)'

· 1

liiDity u .....

Episcopal

...~

326 E. Main St., P\&gt;mtro)', Sunday School
illd Holy Euclwist 11:00 a.m. Rev.
Edw!U\J Pay Ill!'

Holiness

...

....

~

Creek Rd., Rutland. Pastor: Re,·.
Dtwey King. Sunday ~hoo l- Q:JO 1:1 .m..

SWlday

c~uu&lt;~o

Bible Sludy llld YOIIlb • 7 p.nt.

Putor: GleM Rowe. Sundl)' Scltool ·
9:30 a.m.. Wonhip - 10:30 a.m. tnd 6
p.m.,Wed.nesGiy Sef\·ice- 7:00p.m.

ne Chwl:h "J....

Cbrlol o1 Lallti'Doy So1o1A
St . Rt. 160. 446 -6247 or 446-1486,

Sunday School 10:20-11 a.m., Relief
Svciety/Priesthood II :05· 12 :00 noon.
Sacrament Sen.-ice 9-10:15 a.m ..
Homemaking meeting. l st Ttturs. • 7 p.m.

Ro,_C...,~ofCflrlll

Sunday School · ~:30 a.m .• Worship and
Communion- 10:30 a.m., Bob l Werry,
Mini~ter

.,.;.-_

~

St. Jolm L....... CkURh
Pine Grove, Woohip · 9:00a.m.. Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m. hstor

Bill Amberger, Sund.ll.y School ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 1'-00 a.m., 10: ~ a.m.. 7:00
p.m ..Wedne.sda&gt;· Sen-lees · 7:00p.m.

OorSa\'lour Lollle&lt;anChortll
Walnut and Henry Sts .. Raven swood,
W.Va ., Pastor : David Ruuell. Sunday
School- 10:00 a.m., W1.1Mip ·II a.m .

Hickory 11J11o Oor&lt;h ul Cllrlll
T\lppen Plains, Pas101 Mike Moore, Bible
class. 9 a.m. Sunday ; worship 10 a.m.
Sunday: won;hip 6:30 pm Suuday: Bible
da.•• 7 pm Wed.

Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St. Pomeroy.
Sun. Scbool - 9:45a.m., Worship - II a.m.

G"olwn UoltedWorship - II a.m. 1-"'-asiOr:· Richard Nease
Be&lt;hltl UoltedNew Haven, Richard Nease, Pastor.

Utl&amp;er Clwrtll ol Cluist
Sunday school 9:30a.m .. SundLl)' worship
- IO:JOa.m.
The Chun-11 ot Chrkit fJf Pomeroy
Intersection 1 and 124 W. Evangeli5t:
Dennis Sargent Sunda)' Bible" Study ·
Y:3U a.m .. WQrs1up: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p.m.. Wednesdv.y Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Sunda~

worship 9:)0 a.m. Tue£. 6:30
pra~er and Bible StuUy.
Ml. OUve Ullittd Mttbodkl
Oti 124 behind Wilkesville, Putor : Rev .

Rolph Spi!os, Sunda! S&lt;hool · 9JO a.m .,
WoriiUp - IO::JO a.m .. 7 p.m., Thursday
Service!- 7 p.m.

Christian Union

Mt'ip C llttMh• ~
Northeast Cluster. Alfred: Paste-r· Jim
Corbill. Sunday SA:Itool - 9:30 a.m ..
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Hartford Clwn:b ol Christ Ia
Chclollaa Unloo
Hartford . W.Va .. Putor :Oa vid Greer.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. Worship ·
10:30 a.m .. 7:00 p.m .. Wednesday
Services - 7:00p.m.

c-

Pa.!u:or: Jim Corbitt. Worship · 9 a.m.,
\

Sunday Sckool · 10 a.m. . Thursday

........
-L---

----·f
............

and My Brogan-Warner

INSURANCE

SERVICES~
214 E. Main

992·5130
Pomeroy

Blessed are tlae pure
r
i1t ~eart; for llaey
n• Ll)·a r Strttt • PO &amp;121t
shall see God.
New lbvc,a, W\' 25265
J...,H.........,Lktaled r.,.,;Din&lt;IM
Matthew5:8
ADolt~! I""""""Pl Fuaenl l'lal1aiaa ,
"

Ill

~' Uc.i\S~' ·'

.,~,.~t~u.

Cliftoo Tabcraaclr Cb&amp;an:..
Clifton. W.Va.. Sunda)' Scttool 10 a.m .,
Worship - 7 p.m.. Wedne5da~ Strvice - 7
p.m
Ntw Ult Vidor")' Ctalla"
3TJ3 Georges Creek Road. Gallipolis. OH
Pastor: BiU Slaten. Sunday Semce) - 10
a .m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wednes-day - 7 p.m. 4:
'l'owh 7 p.m.
r.u~n""~
oll.llc Livia&amp; Savior

Rt.338. Allliquit}'. Pastoc: Je£.SC Mocris.
Smices: Sarutday 2:00 p.m.

SalooaC-y c .....
Back ofWcs.t Columbia. W.Va.om Lic..-ioa
Road. Pu10&lt;' Clwl&lt;s Roosb 1304) 675-

"-LIItC-

2288, S•Dclay S&lt;hool 9,30 .... Slllldoy
eveaiq service 7:00 pro , Bibl}' Swd)'
WcdD::sdly servke 1:00pm

-c-.r........,c-.
""""' Henchel Whill, SIIDday S&lt;bool·
10 un, Sunday Church servkt- 6:XI pm

A--a.r.J.
923 S.lblrd So.. Middlcpoft, Pulot ~

Sorvic:tl· 10 a.m.

Davis,

Su~day

~7pm

servite, 10 a.m .,

w~ -""· 1 p.m.

Cu el&amp;eh

..... ~""'*

c....., " auh&amp;D Ida. RaciDo. Ohio.
"'""" JoluJ Qllmolo, S1104Q Scllool •
H.l a.m., Wonhip • II 00 a.m. , Biblo
Study Wed. 7,30 p.m.

l.ooi
.-.9,30
_
......
_---""""'
, - 9,30 a.m.
~-li:e7p.m.

Monlltllillr
-

MIJa•IMc••C•

Jolaou-., ~ Scllool· II

m

-

PullJr. KtrrY Wood. Sunday SchDol • 10
a.m., Wonhip - II a.m.Weclne6dly
Servi&lt;:CS 6 pm; Thur Bible SNd,y 7 pm

Cooftlll.t u- 'loll •

---

""""Eddie-·

CeiiiOr OyntiiSium.
Sarvic-e every T\leaday 6:30pm

.......

£ ....... 7::10p.m .. W-.doyScnice ·
7':10p.m.

Pentecostal
,

-~-rhC­

Putor: Gary 4: SharoD HuJbts. St. lt.t.
124. Racine. Tornado Rd. Sunday School ·
10 a.m., Eveaing · 7 p.m., Wec1aeiday
Servtces • 1 p.m.

BUley RGD told, Putor: Rev. Emmett
Rawson . SuD.day Bveniaa 7 p .m ..
lbunda! Scnice- 7 pm.

Mail" fiftlo Sl.. s... Scbool - 10 ......

Presbyterian

t4u • ........., so.. Sy,...,., Sunday
School • 10 a.m. Evcaina • 6 p.m..
_ , S..Vioe. 7 p.m.

- 7p.m.

-Ciiorclt

a.m. Worship · 10 a.m., WcdDcsday
Services - 10 a.m.

Pulor: Robert Crow. Wonbip- 9a.m.

_polt_,_

l'ulor. liiDCs Soydor. Sunday S.hool 10

..... C''PT''IJ CUift
Oft' Rt. 124, Put:or: Bdsel Hut. Sunday

a.m., wonb.ip sen-ice I I am .

School· 9:30a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m.,

Seventh-Day Adven&amp;t

1:30 p.m.

DJ•vlllt

Grand SUMt. Sunday School - 9:30a.m..
Worship- 10:30 a.m .. Pastcw Phillip Bell

Sneatll- o.y Advftlilt
Mulbetr)l Hts. Rd .• Pomeroy. Saturday
Service s: Sabba1b School • 2 p.m ..
Worship · :\ p.m.

c_.., Cllurdl

Sunllay S&lt;:bool - 9:3Q a.m ., Wor$hip IO;lO un., 7 p.m.

TordoC-~

-Ciupo!C......U

Co. Rd. 63, Sunday ScbooJ ~ 9:30a.m. ,
Worship -_I0:30 a.m.

Sunday school · I0 a.m .• Worship · II
a.m., Wcdnc&amp;day Service· 7 p.m .

Nazarene

United Brethren
Mt. Hermoa Uahed Bmllna
IDCiuiotC~un:h

faiiii~CHIO

-portCIIoJdouiiM-

lQDI Bo«om, SW!day S.bool · ~,JO o.m ..

Pastor: Allen Midcap. Sunday ~hooJ •
9:30 a.m.,Worship - 10:30 Lm., 6:30p.m.,
Wednesda)' Services • 7 p.m .• Pulor:
Allen Midnp
·

Worship - 10:4$ a.m .. 1:30 p.m.,
Wcdoeodo) 7,30 pm.
M&amp;. Oln Ce··na",- CUidlo
Pastor: LawrcDCc: Bush, Suadly Sc:bool ~: 30 a.m., Evenina - 6:30p.m .. Wedneday
Servtoc ~ 1 p.m.

lle&lt;d6•111ofollo...W,

Nl Golf&gt;ollltlol"'-

Chun:ll of the Nazarene. Putor: Ruuell
Cuso~ . Sunday StOOol • 9:30 a.m .•
Wonhip · 10:4-S a.m., 7 P·ll\·· Wedncs41y
Services . 1 p.m.
'

}3()45 Hilmd Road, Pomeroy, Puror: Roy

Hunter, Sunday School- lO a.m.. Evenmg
7:30p.m.. l'Ksday 4: Thurs.- 1:30 p.m.
SouiJolloiWc-.ltyQOKk

Sr-C....~ol ... l'lsoo&lt; Mike Adkins. Sundly Sdlool· ~J(I

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prtscriptionl
99fM955
Pomeroy

1

Coolville, Ohio

.. ~~

Located less lhan 30 minutes from

A1hens. Pomeroy or Parkersburg

l-74i-667-3156
"Still small
to ClUe"

God so loved the world
he gave his only
1Qe·go1rten son ...
John 3:16

"So I strive always to keep ~
my e&lt;&gt;nscience clear belfoo&gt;l ~"L"""'~fwlp
God and man ."

ACtS 24 ; 1

\;)1/tleMJ C'AatcA

CENTER

740-9126606

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Te-'as Communit)' J6411 Wickham Rd.
Pastor: Ptter Martindale. Sunday Scbool ·
9:30 a.m .. Worsttip · 10:30 a.m.• 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.
Youlh group \)lCCting 2rld 4 4th Stindayi
7p.m.
·
Edoo Ualted 8nllorH Ia ChriLII
State Route 124. lx:tw~n Reedsville 4
Hockingport. Sunday Scbool - 10 a.m ..
Sunday Worsttip · II :00 a.m. \\iedncsdly
Sel'\'ices · 7:00 p.m .. PISIOr- M . Adam
Will

ARCADIA NURSING

ROCKSPRINGS.
IAE.IABIIL.ITAlrtON CENTER
Tlu..,. "'" ._.,..,, clou to l'u&gt;•

~

--rn.,. . c_

s,__

1 .._.

-.tiDe. Coolville C'bwtb.

~ - 91J11.. 111co.Sorviooo

Meotio&amp; io lhc Mulbony COIIIIDUDiiy

M' • ' ; wt C,Grrsna'&amp;J CIMudt.
Poul So., Mlddkpod • Pu10&lt;' Sam

Aadenon. Sull_day School 10 a .m.,

~-1p.m.

Pastor: Heleo

stcra-dt

PaaiOr: Tboloo Douloom. """"' - 9::10
........ 7 pJD.. ~- 1 p.111.

.... w.t
l'osiOr: Bill Manhall Slllldoy Schnol ·
!lo.m., Wonlllp - 10 a.m., I so Sundly
•U~Y _ . tveai.Di llef\'lce 7:00 p.m.;

• 9 dq• CMIIdu , . . . .
936' Hooper R.oad. Atbeaa. Pu10r.
Lootok Colla, SIIDIIalWvnlUp 10;00 aa,
we 1)':7pm

............... t loa
Sl.ltl. ut h i ,.., 011
l'loll Oolpol. Cl l'lllon R- A R-..
MIISW, S•aU, School 9,30 am, ,
"'&gt;nbip 10,30 ... - 7,()1) pm, Woif.
Service 7j)O pm

... 7p.m .. -.,·7p.m .. ~·

Hoc~ Chon:~

United Methodist

Pas10r: Philip Stunn. Sunday School : 9:30
a.m .. Wonhip Service: 10:30 1:1 .m.. Bible
Study. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.

2nd A\'e .. MiddlePQn . Pastor:
Mile ~man. Pastor Ementus Lawrence
Foreman . WOIShi~ 10:00 am
Wedouda) Sen· ~ee~. 1 p.m.

"fllli-Go&amp;pel c•urch"' Puton Jolw &amp;
!'ally Wade, ~3 A•c. Mason. 773~11. Service lime: SuOay 10:)() a.m ..
Wcdoeodoy7pm

lbw.,hip Rd., we, Soo4o.l' Schnol- 9

St. Paul L~raa C..uw:lt.

Re&lt;d6•111e n""'~ ul Clorlsl

lltjoi&lt;io&amp; ur. n ....~
500 N

,, Service· 7:00p.m.

Posooc Joho Gilmoro. Sundly School"· 10
a.m ., Wonbip - 9 a.m .• Wedaeldly

'

Lutheran

lkdord C~lll'&lt;h ol CbriLII
Comer of St. RL 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ..
Miniiter: Doua Shamblin. Yvum Minister:

·-

1' -ffi -.

StivusvWe COIIUDUlly Cllu.n:•

AIII-C-

a.m., Wonhip • 10 a.m.

Latter-Day Saints

a.m.
Wonhip- IO:JO a.m.

Wo rship IO .JO a.m . 7.30
Wednesday Sel\ICe - no p.m.

398 Aslo St. Middlcpoft·l'lsoo&lt; Jeff Smilh
Sunday Scbool - 9 : JO a.m .. ·Momin&amp;
Wonb.ip - 10:30 a .m. A 7:00 pm,
Wedoesda)' Service - 7:00 p.m .. 'Youth

Bourne . Sunda)' School ·

-..,

Lunl CUll J'no Mo.- Cliorclt

Road. Middlopon. SWI&lt;Iay Scbool • 9,30

John 15:7

Rod.Spriop
Putor: Keith Rader. Sunday School - 9:13
a.m ., W1.1rs hip - 10 a.m .. Youth
Fcllowslup, Sunday · 6 p.m.

""'"'' William K. Mmhall, Sonday
School· 10:15 a.m.. Wonhip. 9: 1.5 a.m.•
Bible Sludy : Monday 1:00pm
Silo.....
Sunday Scbool - 10 a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.

- 9:30 •:~D·• Wonhip. 10:~ a.m.. 7 p.m ..

Minister: Tom Runyoo . 39l!-8 Braclbur)'

If ye abide in Me,

~
Paslor: Brian Dwham. Wolltup - 9:30
a.m., SunQay Scttool- 10:3.5 a.m.

)9782 S.R. 7, Reedsvltie , OH 4.5772, 112
mile north of Ea.wrn Schools oo SR 1 . A
Full Gosfel Cbw:ch. Pastor Rob Barber.
"ssociatc Pastor KIU')'n Da11is. 'l'ou.th
Pastor Sw:ic Frucis, Suday services
10:00 am worship. 6:00 pm Family Life
Claues, Wed Home Cell Groups ' 7:00
p.m., Outer Limits Cell Group at the
chwch 6: 30 pm to 8:30 pm

Putor: Rev. Larry Lemley ; Sunday School

......,c~.,....,~

499 ltidtla"d Avo11.ue, .-\llleus
740-594-6333
·-~1-9806

10:30 a.m., WeOnesday Servkes - 7:00
p.m.

~c-

wes~e,anllhle llollaessC~~~~&lt;h

10' IS a.m.• Youlh·l,JO pm ~. Biblo
Swdy Wednoodajl 7 pm

OuloCiorloliufollo....

Pastor: Wayne R. Jewell. Sundil}' W9(stup
- 6:00 p.m.. Wednesday - 6:00p.m. B1bk
Study

...... Ciupol
Sunday School - 9 a.m .. Wonllip - 10 a.m

9:30a.m .. WOIShip · lO:lO am., 1bursdly
Scrvlces · 1 p.m.

75 Pearl St .. Middlepon. Pastor: Rick
Boume. Sunday School - 10 a.m . Wormip
-10:45 p.m .• Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m ..
W~ Scf'\IICC - 7:30 p.m.

111~

81ack'llo'ood, Sunday School · 9 :30a.m ..

Coer·w'ty rl Cllrid
PortlaDd-RIIciDC Rd.. Pastor: Jim Proffin.
S~anday S&lt;:bool - 9:30 a.m .• W01ship -

Putot: Rick

PiDe G,..,., 8illat HoliDesl Clt.urc..
112 mile off Rl ..\2~. Pastor: Rev . O'Dell
Manley . Sunday Sdtool
9:.\0 a.m..
Worship • 10:.\0 a.m .. 7: .\0 p.m..
WC\l~sda)' Sen·ice · 7:30 p.m.

n._.IPialaCIIitftAuiCiuiot
laatnamenlll. Wonhip Servi~:e • 9 a.m.,
Commwtioo • 10 1.m.. Su~ khool •

c.a"..-' Bibk Cllwrlil
Pomeroy Ptll.e . Co. Rd., Pastor: Rev

.U...CGgccC
ltk,yCIMlrclt.
Pastor: Wayne Du.nlap. Stale Rt. 681 .
Tuppers Plains , S~o~n. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm .. Wed. Bible Swdy 7:00p.m.

Pastor: Bob Robinson. Suadly School • 9
a.m.. Waship - 10 a.m

wocship · 7 p.m., Wednesda)'

prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

lboola.. r--111

fairvitw Bible c~..
Lewt. W \'a Rt. I . Pastor: 8nan May.
Sundlt) School - 9:30 a.m .. WoWup - 7:00
p.m.. Wl!dnc:.~d.il)' Bible Study - 7:00p.m
faiUI t'tlowlllip c.-.... for Chr-iM
Pastor: Re v. Fnmkhn D1cll.eo s. Sen·ice
Fndiy. ? p.m.

lkiWWonlllt&gt;C-

HarrisorLYllle Ro;.d, PasiOr: Ctwles
McKeR2ie, Sulli.Wy School 9:30 a.m.,
WOJship - II .11..111., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Ser..-K:t: · 7:00p.m.
~-..-c

WW.te '1 Cltapcl Wttltyu
CoolvLlle Road . Pastor. Re v Cbules
Martmdale . Sunday Scl'lool - 9:30a.m ..
Won:h1p - 10 JO a.m . Wedntsday Scl'\l&amp;ee
. 7 pm

Cafeteria Pti1or: Chris Stewut
IO:OOam - Nooa S\lDCiay ~ lnfonna.l
Wonbip. Ctti.kftn's mini.sU'y

-.

Cab., l'll&amp;rilll Oajld

....

Rllllaad CW&lt;~ol ... NuoftM
Pasoo"
sunda, Scbool · 9,30
a.m.• Wonlllp • 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m ..

(Noo-deootni.nltiooal fellowship)
Mcelina io lhc Moip Middk Scbool

'I

Dutllk H..U.C.. CIIW&lt;~
31057 State Route J25.langsvlle , PaslOI:
Benjamin Cro1whd . Suodax school · 9 :)()
a.m.. Su nda)' WOI"\hip · 10:]0 a.m . &amp; 1
p.m .. Wnlll&lt;'sda)' pra)·r:r Soen'iCr: - 7 p.m.

~•g

Bald K nob. on ('Q. Rd. )I. P~U tor . Rev
Ruger Willford. Sullda) School - 9 .30
i..m . Wontup- 1 p.m

Clotoft~

1ka1.i1 (M't polt)
Pastor: Brian Dunham . Sunday Sc:bool 9:30a.m., Worship - I1:00 a.m.

Pastor Ste~·e Torn~:k . Main S~t.
RutlLtnd . Sunday Wurship-10:00 a.m.,
Slindu.y Servicc-7 p.m

I Clillftla

C - Clotoft~ ul 1M N Pu&amp;uc: Rev. Ha-ben Gmt, SU!Iday School
· 9.30 a.m.. WorshLp - II 11 .01 , 6 p.m .
W~y Sen-ices - 1 p.m.

Pastor: Bob ROOlnsoo, Stmday School- 10
a.m.. Wonhip • 9 a.m

COialaU!ty CMIR..

at

pm

24M&gt; Sccood Sa.. Syracu.w:. OH
SWl . Scbool10 am, Su.ndy ni&amp;ht 6.30 pm
Under the ciim;tioo of Dan&amp;. Failh
Hay IUD
ANe-w . . . •a
IN Gori&gt;o1 Clwr&lt;lol tlarrison&gt;'itk .
Puzon.: Bob Uld Kay M&amp;rsball .
Sunday Service. 2 p.m.

~
Pas-tor: A.rland Kina. Sunday School IO' JO a.m.. Wonh•p . 9,](1 a.m.. Bibk
Study Wed . 1:30
flolw. . .
Pu1or: Keith Rader. Sundt.)· Scbool - 10
a.m.. Woohip - II a.m.

Socood &amp; Lynn. Pomt:roy. Pastor: R C\'.
JoAatnan Noble. Worship 10:25 a.m.,
Sunda) School 9,15 a.m

'

Suncta} School - 9:30 a.m , Wonb.&amp;p
SnvLce 10 30 am .. E\"tlliDII Sel'\'ite 6

Other Churches
s,_ c - ,

Coalnl C'""""
A~ (Syracuse). Pastor: Bob Robin.wl .
Sunday School - 9:45 a.m., Wonbip - II
a.m.. Wednesday Servw;es - 7:JO p.m.

la&amp;t• t

Km&amp;sbw) ROid. Pastor RobeR Vance .

Wedoc:sday Semca - 7 p.m

-7J0 p.m

Congregational

c..-.

"""Shupe.

1\oppon - S t . r..l
Pastor: JinL CQftun. SWKI.Iy School - lJ
a.m ., Worship - 10 a.m .. T\IHdiy Servlces

Chapnwl. Sunday S\:bool - 10 &lt;t.m .•
Wonlup - II a .m .. Wednc~y Sel\U.:h - 7
p.m.

Z1oo Cloud~ o1 Cllrlol
Pomeroy. Hanison..-ille Rd . {RI.l43 ).
Putor: Rotor WIUOil . SuorJay School .
~, 30 a.m., Wonhlp · 10:30 a.m., 7'00
p.m., Wedncldly Service• • 1 p.m.

L , ., K. H

p.m. sen· ~~.:e

OJ White Rd . off S1 RL IW. Past.:r PJ

Worship - 10 :30 a .m, 6: }0 p .m.
Wodnesday Servieei- 6:30p.m.

~

-·lilt

Wonhip - 9:30 a.m.. Suday Scbool 10:30 a.m.. Finl Sunday of Mootb - 7:00

OudtoiGvolul~

a..,.-

Full line of
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask what ye will, and it .1hall
Financial
be do11e ullto you.
SeNices

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9·Fifth Street
Cool~ille, Ohio
740·667·3110

Sunday Sl:bool · 9:30 a.m., Worship I0:30a.m

S}'riNSt tlna C ..Yrdt. ol C9d
Apple and Second Sts., Pastoc: Rev. Dv.vld
Rli..,~ll . Sunda}· School &lt;Uld Worship- 10
a.m. E~· enmg Sen Leu- tdO p.m ..
Wedocsday Sci'\'IICCS • (dO p.m.

G"'" Eph&lt;opal n

......

~

10 a.m 2nd and 4Ch SWlday

-.yclloJdootiMPutor: J111 Lavender , Suaday School 9 J0 a.m., Wonh1p - 10 30 11m md 6
p.m .. Wednaday ScrvK.-es - 1 p.m .

Dentil Nlill . 'W'~p - 9 :30 a.m .

Sua::lay Sd!ool - 10:.10 a.m.

p.m

llldp Cllw&lt;h ul Chri&gt;l
Pastor: Bruce Tetl)'. Sunday ScOOol -9.30

Bill Quickel
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00

~
Pb101.

hstw : Roo Hnth. Sunday WoohLF · 10

.1i.Jbrr .1 unrral -omr
. ... .. 111 , . .
••
Matthew 5:

KortK~rlli

wv

l'lnlllapllol Cliootlo u1 ~-.
(lndcpcndtnt Bapli...n
SR 6j2 ud Atldcrsoo St. P.o~stor : Hubert
Grad}'. Suodlly scbool 10 am . Morning
church II &lt;llll. Sunday o!\Ctung 6 pm. Wed .
81bk Stud) 1 pm

lfye abide in Me, and My
word~ abide in you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it shall
be done unto you.
Joh11 15:7

Sizes available 5x10 to 10 x 20

.IRIH'. Rullovers•. Stodi.r' IJunJs'. Mutuul
Fw11Js•. t\ruruilie.{", W11~ Ttnn Care
Kacl Keblcr, Ill, CPA, Rcgrst.:n:d
kcpcc~ntauve of H.D. \le~l In11c~tment
Scr~ u.:co;"" Se..:urilic ~ offered through H. D. vC"s.L
ln \· c~lmcnt Ser\l il"CS"', Member SJPt' Ad\'IWI;o
~mcc' offcrcLllhrnugh II .D. VN AdyL'•tll'y

..

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

_....,..Ckur&lt;~

Raveaswood, WV. S.IAI!diY Sehoul 10 ilfTI. Mantilla woniUp 11 am EH~nmlll - 7 pm,
Wt:docsday 7 p.m.

a.m., Wonhip • IO.JO a.m.. 6 p .m .
Wednesday SuYices · 7 p .m .

Sen-ices - 1 p.m.

MI. Clloft~ ul Gill
Mile Hill ltd . Racane, Putor Jal!M' s
S~~ottc:rf}tW. SuiMh)' Sehoul - 9 45 a.m .
Evenia&amp; • 6 p.m .. \\'~)' SuviCet · 7
p.m.

a.m.

S.hnol·

Supper and a time of meditation to
piano music will be held at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ, West
Main Street, for the combined
con~regations of the Church of
Chnst and the Enterprise United
Methodist Church.
On Saturday, April 7, from noon
to 2 p.m. an Easter egg hunt will
be held at Star Mill Park in Racine
sponsored by the United in Christ
con~regation, .and on Sunday,
Apnl 8, Easter sunrise service will
be at 6:30a.m. The choir will present a cantata, "Because He
Lives ." Breakfast will follow, as
will Sunday school at 9:30 a.m.
and a worship service at 10:30
a.m. Arland Kmg is pastor.

~- Fm Wlllllap&amp;isl
S&amp;Wm Sl., Paitor. Jamie Fonner. SWiday
Scbool - 10 a.m.. Evening - 7 p.m .•
Wcdoetday Sen-ices . 7 p.m

W-Uiudlol~

-llniJotdol

Uoiled Methodist
POMEROY - The Rev. Bob
Robinson has announced Holy
Week. servi~:es tor the United
Methodist Churches he pastors.
Holy Thursday will be observed at
7:30 p.m. at the Forest Run
Church. Good Friday services at
7:30 at the Minersville Church, and
Easter sunrise services 6:30 a.m. at
the Asbury Church in Syracuse.
First Baptist
MIDDLEPORT - Following
the 10: 15 morning worship service at the Middleport First
Baptist Church, an Easter egg
hunt will be held for the children
along with a fellowship dinner.
Other services of the season will

Dally Sentinel • Page A7

WORSlllP GOD THIS WEEK

Pastor: R)'ID eaton, putor , Sundl)'

HOLY WEEK SERVICES

The

,..,.. !f"IU" ~-

1Su1tpre1Sioo • EluiD&amp;1Jisbcn • SprinAicB

•Securit)'

172 N. 2DII Ave. Middleport, OH

MY arace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
strenatb is matte
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

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

992-6376

�Page A8 •

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, Mareh 30, 2007

www.mydailysentinel.eom

Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

MLB prnlew, Pace B4

II&lt;&gt; l-JZ l~ I{ WE Salate Yoa. ••
(: l.J l\: I(~ Doetor'1 Day 2007

Friday,
. March 30, 2007

of Doctor's Day, we would like to
acknowledge and salute our dedicated staff of
physicians. At Holzer Clinic, our physicians are
Close to You ... There is a Holzer Clinic

In

POMEAG'V - A !Chedule -.4 l4)COfl"orrg colage
and h9' died va~Yy 5pOI1ing events irwoMng
iewns 11om G.aia rd ...... Q!MlM.

frklly'l Willi

...... Sollboll

.....,_,

MeiOs at River VaJiey, 4:Xl p.m
Trii'Ttlole at Southern, 5 p.m.
Trii'OO!e at Southern, 5 p.m.

Everywhere You Are.

Slturdly'a M1DM
"-P •·•bill

Meigs at Adena (OH), noon
Eastern at Logan (OH), 1, p.m.
Southam a1 Sootll Point (DH). noon

9Locatioas

~,a

Ote.r 1110 PJJ.ysidaas
Om- 3D Medical

WeUstoo at Meig&amp;, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 5 p.m.

Southtrn at Waterlord, 5 p.m.
Prep PU'blll
Weltston at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 5 p.m.
Sot.rthern at Waterford, 5 p.m.

-·

D"'*~"3

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

Lady Marauders impressive in opener Alexander
BY BIIYAH WALTERS
BWAlTERSOMYOAILVlRIBUNE.C OM

ALBANY - You never
get a second chance to make
a fmt impression.
The Dave Fife era started
on a pretty impressive note
Thursday as the visiting
Lady Marauders posted a
13-1 softball triumph in five
innings over Alexander in
both the season and TriValley Conference Ohio

Meigs at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Trock 11l1d Flolcl
Eastern. Southern, Meigs at River
Valley Invite, 4:30 p.m.

rt·y. April •
...... So-l

Wwdt

Southern a! Meigs, 5 p.m.
Prep Baseball

Southern at Metgs, 5 p.m.

.....,_,

Thygdly April 5

Medical Excellence.
Local Caring:

Belpre at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Miller at Eastern. 5 p.m.
Federal Hocking a! Southern, 5 p.m.

"-P ••••••,

Belpre at Meigs, 5 p.m.
Miller at Eas-. 5 p.m.
Southam at Fedefal Hocking. 5 p.m.

.....,_,

fddiii.Apdll

Eastern a1 Symmes vane~ Tournament,
TBA

,... ..,..,,n

Ravenswood at Southern, 5 p.m

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

Wahama
gets big
wmover
St. Joseph

comfortable 9 - 1 advantage.
More importantly, Meigs ( 10, 1-0 TVC Ohio) scored six
of those eight runs came
with two outs.
Junior Amy Barr. who
allowed just five hits and a
walk as the winning pitcher
of record, also belted a tworun shot over the centerfield
fence during that fourth
inning explosion.
MHS tacked on four more
runs in the fifth for a 13· I

edge . where the score
remained until the mercy
rule set in three outs later
Lian Hoffman paced
Meigs with two hits and was
also hit by a pitch. Amber
Burton and Cassi Whan each
provided a double, while .
Chafsie Manley. Kelsey
Fife, Cassie Patterson and
Meri VanMeter each added a
safety. Fife and Barr each

downs
Marauders
•
In opener
STAFF REPORT
SPORTS@M YOA.ILVSENTINEL.COM

ALBANY
Meig s
began it&gt; 2007 baseball seaPlease seel•pnss. 81
son on a down note. falling
13-9 to host Alexander in
the Tri-Valley Conference
Ohio Di "ision opener
Thursday.
The Marauders (()..I, 0-1
TVC Ohio) fell behind 1-0
after one complete , then rallied back to take a 2-1 lead
after their half of the third
inning.
The Spartans {1-0, 1-0)
responded with three runs
of their own for starter Matt
Demoskv. who lasted 4.2
innings i·n picking up the tri·
umphant decision .
AHS tacked on four more
scores in the fourth, increasing the lead to 8-2. but the
vi sitors did manage to
outscore the Red. Whne and
Black by a 7-5 margin the
rest of the way .
However. the offensive
rally came up short.
Junior Austin Dunfee
started for the Maroon aad
Gold, lasting three-plus
frames in the losing ~ci­
sion. Senior Dave Poole
took over relief duties in the
fourth and completed the
coAtest on the mound.
No other stati&gt;tical information was available at
press time.
Btyan W-e/photo
Eastern senior shortstop Brittany Bissell. left, applies a tag to a Federal Hocking base runPl"se see Ope11er. IU
ner during a steal attempt Thursday at Don Jackson F1eld in Tuppers Plains .

Eastern comes up short against Lady Lancers,

Meigs at Eastern, 5 p.m.

Southern at Roane County, 5 p.m.

Division
openers for
2007 .
Tk cl
at
one through
full
three
innings. the
Maroon and
Gold pounded out five
hits
and
Bart
eight runs in
the top half
of tbe founh to establish a

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERSIPMYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

TUPPERS PLAINS -A
late rally made things
interesting for Eastern, but
visiting Federal Hocking
came away from its Tri·
Valley
Conference
Hocking Division softball
opener a winner Thursday
following a 1().8 decision
at Don Jackson Field.
The Lady Lancers (2-0,
1-0 TVC Hocking) jumped
out to a 6-1 advantage
after three full innings and
led 10·1 headed into the
bottom of the sixth.
The Lady Eagles ( 1-2, 01) sent a dozen batters to
the plate and rallied for
seven runs in their half of
that frame to cut the lead
to 10-8. but the Green and
White never came closer.
Both teams produced
seven hits in the contest, as
well as combining for I0

"tese ... h.I..._,IU

BY LARRY CRUll
l~YOAI ..REGISTER.COM

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. Don't think Wahama is for

Tllllllllfi.Mf An Qt•• IIIR $1lH11011111 TNE AH4

hJ HUJ Gf/t IIMhta: BIIIMII/or .U «CtUUml,
IB~•. G,..IIIUHu,-.., Suwtrs, Wtlltltlln.,, IJoiJM.I• """ •'"• •Mtl&amp; ~'

Try our "Bun dowa tile Bara" Hot; Wiap
Tlae koatest wi"ft' in &amp;ow a
Also try our lkaey, Hld.ory BBQ lllld Hot; Wlap
(~n 7 days a week "we han~ Sunda~· bt-cr sales''

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Remember to check qut our weekly lh:li Specjals
(juali(y Mra(S and Cheeses, Mtide Fresh Deli Sandwiches and Bakrtl Go~·',.

""

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B111U1da Sleom

Large Assortment of Brand Name Gowns

• Alfed A1~lo • Forever Yours • Mary's &amp; More!
Bridesmaid. Flower Girl, Mother of the Bride
and Tuxedo's
•Complete Line of Bridal Accessories
*Layaway Available
•Great Sele~:tion of Wedding &amp; Shower lnvitalllorls
Molll·t'rl le-6. Sa&amp;. ll•!. Sun. 1·5

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304-675-2786

'·.

...d

'

•'

April 2nd
Savinp Up To .SO% Off
D••• o•s, Watdles, GoW,
feehioee Jewelry A Pusea

Cndl: u EGG to M4 Q you uviop
plu Tu Fne oaall Pvdluea
Bolin: Moll-.Fri. 9:30-J:JO Sat. 9:30-4

real?
. Well, maybe you had better stan believing.
Riding a four game winning streak to open the sea:son, the very young La4y
falcons softball team went to
:tlunlington to fa~.-e a very
tough St.
Joe team
and came
away with a
5-3 victory
10
in
innings
Thursday
evening the schools
first
win
over St. Joe
Devil
in years.
With the
score knotted 2-2 after seven
innings. the two squads went
into the fmal fnunes using
the international tiebreaker
rule, which places a runner
on second base to begin each
at bat.
Both squad.~ immediately
got on lhe board in the fust
inning of ovenime, but nei·
ther would budge as the two
teams again found themselves tied 3-3 as the battle
ensued.
BtyanW~
St. Joe had its best oppor- Eastern freshman starter Titus Pierce delivers a pitch durtunity to put the game away . ing the second inning of Thursday's TVC Hocking opener .
in the bottom of the ninth against Federal Hocking in Tuppers Plains.
inning with runners in scor·
ing position and entering inlo
the heart of their lineup.
But a solid double play
from Ashley Wolfe to
held EHS scoreless the rest
BY BRYAN WALTEAI.
Kayanna Sayre to Airael
BWALTERS@MYDPtiL'fTRIBUNE.COM
of the way.
Deriiield, who made a nice
Burke, who allowed seven
grab and tag a1 third, got
TUPPERS PLAINS hits and four earned runs in
\Vahama out of the inrung Both teams struck early. but his complete game win,
Federal Hocking scored allowed just two hits and, a
en ... ...
u·ma- more often Thursday during walk after the third frame.
a 10-4 victory over Eastern Burke also struck out five.
in the Tri· Valley Conference walked three and h.it one
HOcking Division baseball batter in the decision,
CoNTACT US
FHHS also produced nine
opener. ·
The Lancers ( 1-1, l-0 hits and received nine walks
OVP Sc_..lnets p.m.·I o.m.t
TVC
Hocking)
began in the outcome, helping
defense of their 2006 TVC coach Rocky Brunty earn
1·740-446-2342 ext. 33
.Hocking title by plating four his 200th career win .
Fu-H-Jooe
The Green and White got
runs on three walks, two
E-111111- sponsilmydailysentinel.oorn
errors and a h.it - all in the five innings out of freshman
S9orta Stan
staning pitcher Titus Pierce,
first inning.
ar.d Sl.lenneri, Sporta Editol:
The Eagles (2-1 , 0- I) woo allowed six runs, four
1740144&amp;-23ol;l. 0111. 33
responded with two hits, earned runs and five hits in
~~~~o.com
two walks and a hit bats· the lo&amp;in(l effort. Pierce also
man, pulling' to within 4-3 walked s1x and fanned four.
Sporta Writllr
Joel Lynch worked the
(740) 446-23!111, Old. 23
after one complete inning.
final
two frames of relief for
Ierum 0 mydeitwegi&amp;ter.com
Both clubs tr.lded scores
'
the Eagles. allowing four
8ryM w.u.r., Spods Wri111r again in the third for a 5-4
contest, but Maroon and
(7401446-2342, alii. 33
.. , , ... ,jr,IU
bwaltersOmydailytribune.com
Gold starter Zack Budl.e

Eagles fall to Fed Hock

.

.. ....

Larry.-..,

•

·- - - - - -- - - - - - - - ··-- - - - - - --------·1.----------------4'·--

���•
Friday, March 30, 2007
ALLEYOOP

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87

NIA Cro11word Puule

BRIDGE
l\8Wt'i deoora!Od. WID

Model 11 ·87-sps 12 ga.
Spuer-Mag. auto. 2 314-3-3
1/3 1nch chamber, Mossy
oP. Break-up in boll $600;
Mossberg 9200 12 ga .. auto
Modern 1 BR Apt Call 446- turkey, auto, Woodlands
3736
Camo. 24 InCh, V-R-b b L-11n bOx, $400; 45 caJ Kr'lqlt.
New 2BR apartments.
O.LS.C.
w/Simmons
Washer/dryer
hookup,
2•1 0:..44 Scope, $300,
stovelrelngEHatOt •nc ~
&lt;\01!192·3992
AJso, uruts on SA 160: Pets
Welcome! (740}441 -0 194.

Midcleport, N. 4th Ave.. 2
ranoe &amp; fridge fur· room effiency. Oep.&amp; reterf'MShed new cond : no pets encas. No pets. Utilities paid.
Rei &amp; Dep (304)675-5182 740-992·0165.

2bdl.

~up:

3 ana 4 1oom turn.Shed apts
clean WID hoOkup. No pets.
Ref. and deposit IEIQUifed.
74~46 - 1519.

-------3 bl. apt , $400 a month plus
utilit~es &amp; deposit. 3td St..
Rac1ne . a11a1lable 1st of
month (740)247-4292

r

~~.'.~

__

l"~

Kieler Built- Valley -BisonHorse
and
Livestock
Trel..raLoadmax.Gooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
Ut1hty -

Alum1num

Tr.llerl· B&amp;W Gooseneck
H1tc:hes- Trailer
Parts .
Carmichael
Trailers.

r
I·

(740)446·241 2

1

LlvmucK
.

whe&amp;l
Exc ellent
Con01ion. $8200. 740-4489543 or 740-794-0691

·------,.1
!9jr--......":',4x":".,"':4.~••..- . ,
I' \.Ill .:Jo"lU.

446-9856

$2700 (740)379-2615

ro

between 1128 &amp;
::-59_·_30_:
4 3_1-::---::--- '

r

Albany (740)696·6231

Fivv

100%

baby

,__,..

698-26 13

goats

..~N .

BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. Local references fur-

mshed. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (7401 446·
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

~r!J
411F.~---"":".,

1

Boers. Male. Father. reg with
Mmutev~
papers. call 740..256-6931 4 Wm'F1 FMS
tor more rnfo.
1987 Hartey Davidson FTC
Meat Goats, born wk ot 80cubic inch, leather bags,
1/14/07. $75.Q0-$100.00.
runs strong, $7 150. 7'40·

-pl

441 -9668 or 740-339·0362.
Beautiful 1 brf 1ba, ava~able
rig ht away, must see to
apprec1ate. cable hookup,
firs t. last, plus clepoSII, rete(ences. (740)992-3543

740-643·2497
44 1-8953.
Rent" 1600 square teet. off
-------Quality 4-H show p.no:. Now
street parking. Great loca - Little Tyke outOOor Play Set
-.Private Treaty at farm. 52 t 2004 Kawasak• , Vulcan ,
tion! 749 Third Avenue in $100 needS to be spray
washed 304 _675 _3639
Ewington Road, Vinton, 500cc, 1509 m11es $4,000
Gallipolis. Rent $400/mo
(304)675-7243
CaMWayne 1404 )456-3802 - - - - - - -- Ohio 740.388-0183 Of &amp;45·
1644
NEW AND USED STEEL _ _ __ _ _ __
2005 Kawasaki KLR 650
Commer~l Space lor rent Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar Quality ·show Pigs• from
5,700 miles new Illes &amp; bat·
Main St. Pt. Pl. S400'mo~call For
Concrete, AOQie, Tti~e p Fa rm- From tery. waterproof nylOn saoJulie 703- 528-061 7
Channel, Flat Ba1, Steel National Winning Breedng

740-446-2 568

Equal

Housing Opportunity.

·------,.1
Goou;

94 Suzuki OR400, dirVstreet
Dak firewood for sale. 74Q-2-4 5·9157
bike.
Nice!.$1400. Honda
Delivered · or
picKup.
White laying chickens soe a 650 Nighthawk. S1400. 740-

application &amp;

•nlolmation

Ellm View
Apartments
• 2&amp;3 bedroom apartments
• Central heat &amp; AJC
• Washerfdryer hookup

• All electric- averag1ng
$50-$60/month

•Owner pays water. sewar.
trash

(304)882-3017

~

379-9242

.
.
.
_
r

For

r~.o--~-RAll.v.~..._.~1 t BG\~~I

I

sale: 2004 Kia Opti ma.
.-. 1&gt;
Hand made Am•sh Oak
FOR
Carriages, horse pack,misc ..__ _

SAl...E
iiiiiiiio-pl

roto tiller.

c

Bidwell. 740-446-2720

Eng.Mastiff puppies. 12 wks
old. AI&lt;C Reg. Ellcellent
Moving sale. ALL must go! Bloodlines. 74G-245-5823 Of
11 9

Raven

Cres t Drive

Apto i.Gallipolis. Ohio. oH

740.645. 1912

HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOIJ!!

17, SOhp, Nissan motor with
repa.r. Make offer. 740. 256- tilt 7 trim, 9.9 Mercury with

antiques.Jazzy
powered CKC Toy Poodl e puppies,
wheel Chair. furniture and females. ShOts and wormed. John Deere 425, $4400.
appliances. Can be seen
1eam in cotor. $300 each. John Deere G1 10. $3000.
Sat 10-4 and Sun 12-4 740-256-3168
o.R. Walk Behind. $3000.
7435 State Route 160.
740·446-7731
11{ \ \ .... 1'1 11 .: 1 \il ! l\

r10

A~

IURSAIJ:

lank &amp; tiler, depth finder,
new tires, COllet. Excellent
condition 304-675-3313 can

All Types Of
Concrete Work

26 Ye• rs Experience

David Lewis

St ., Ret. Required.
. .
G•acious hvlng. 1 and 2.bedroom apa rtments at V1llage
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments m Mr ddleport.
From $327 -S592 · Call 740992-5064. Equal Housing

Opport

..

uflllles.
l arge 1 BD. 900sq.ft apt
Washe r/Dryer,
frktge,314
bath, partially furni shed
InCludes bed.Fi rst mo. renr +

deposit . MlJSI fill out application. No pets 740-44 1·
073 1
_
- - - - -- Lg . Apa rtmen t in Pt.
Pleasant. mostly furnished,
Central AC $300 plus utili·
ties Dep Req. 304-675- 7783

339-0681 _

Tiny Toy Poodes. (F) Fleg. Jeep

lnsuAid
Free Estlmat

r

MUSICAL

riO

EQuB&amp;Nr

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

Equipment(740)448·241 2.

1953 Gok:ten Jubilee Tractor,
WANTED: Full-time and part-time
pos itions available 10 assist individuals

with

ment al

retardation

in

Meigs County:

I I ~0 hrs : as scheduled:
2 I 40 hrs: Fri 4 pm thru 8 am Sun:
.11 28 hrs: 3-9 pm Mffu!W:
Must have high school diploma or GED.
valid driver's license. three years good
dn ving
expenence
and
adequate
automobile i n ~u rann:. Excellent bene til
package . ~7.25 hr. Send resume to:
Buckeye Community Senices
P.O. Box 604, Jackson, OH 45640
or ~-mai l to beyecserv @yahoo.com.
Deadline for applicants 4/9/07 .
Pre-employ me nt drug testing .
Equal Opportunity Employer

Exc. Cond.: 4' JO Brush hog,
5' Grader Blade, 7' Box
Bl ade, All in Good Cond.

zx

:_=.::..c...:.:.:.__ __

88 Tovota Camry Good cond!tion. Great

gas mileage.

$700. 740·446·701 7
Cookllotoro

2002 Ca11alier Z-24 37,000
(740)208-8376
miles, ~ke new $4900. 2005
Farma.lf A witl'l cultilolll:ors &amp; Sunfire Sport 2D Sunroof
side dresser, JD 3 bOttom 24,000 mites $6900. 2002
16" plows, JO 8"disc, JO 609 Ca11al ier 40, 5 Speed
Aottery Cutter. JO sprayer 59,000 miles $4500. 1999 ·
with 100 gal tank 6 ton Jeep Wrangler $6900. 1999

wagon gear 304-593-4750

Htlp Wanted
Rl&gt;erside Golf Club
. Mason. WV
Hiring Cook &amp; Server
Positions
Open Interviews:
Sal , Man.:h 3 l '&gt;L · I pm· 3 pw
Thuo... April 51h · S pm • 7 pt:n

Mwibu $3100. 2000 S-10
LS Auto $4700. 1999
Taurus $2500. 1993 Honda
Del S&lt;; 20 $2800. Others in
stock 3 months/3,000 mUe

warranty.
740-446-0 103. 328 Jackson

Pike

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

BINGO
American Legion
Middleport
Gingerbread House Daycare
is now enrolling ages 6 weeks
Ia 5 years of age. Limitl!d
spaces available.
7 40-992·3 142 far more info
i
will have a public
Sirloin lip Steak &amp; Noodle Dinner
S unday, April 1st 11 am - ?
$6.00 Includes Iced Tea or Coffee
and Dessert. while available

WelcomeI

Broad Run Gun Club
Sunday, April1 st
.680/22 Long Rifle
Starts 12 noon Meeting
before Match

Saturday, March 31st
6pm
Early Bird 5 pm
$300 or more on coverall
$25 up to 4 packs
$30 up to 4 packs
and one computer
$20 each additional

computer

Mason, WV
Hiring Cook &amp; Server Positions
Open Interviews:
I Satu rd;~y. March 31st· 1 pm- 3
Thursday, April 5111 • 5 pm . 7 pm

• AQi79

740.446.9200
Hill's Sel f
Sto ra. \l e
Racine. Ohio

FRANK &amp; EARNEST
~ON'T

TAICf IT Pftc~ONALLY, ..
-?-~
A#,.L GAffS OF
' rt&gt;.
PAtcANOIA
viANT A
Sf CONI&gt;
OPINION.

f'SYCHIAT~IC

CoNVENTION

/

TH' HATFIELDS
AN' TH' McCO'&lt;S
ARE STILL GOIN'
AT IT, EH, LUKEY

ALTHOUGH THEY

YA READY FER A
WMUI'PIN',
McCOY ?!
ARE

HA'IIE RATCHETED
THINGS DOWN A BIT

~-. r-..:-~~

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

M1-H2-1m

P"~it.~ '(QU ~ITOit.INGo '(OJ;'_!

P"011.

YE.~, OOCTOR.!

I!&gt;ITM£ Of ~WE.e:.TSr ~ l
Rt.c.ol'\lo\E.Nt&gt;Et&gt; 7

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

accepl·

Syr-.

Sy•-

42~

What with four
over a double?

t8
22
23
24
25

Spack
Qulat limo
Have dinner
Flro ruklue
Sign before
VIrgo
27 Friendly
21 Rogltor
Samjna
3t -!he

42 Cooll"l .....
43 Rock
45 Dry whllo
wine
46 Sound
ola
hooftlrll
41 Talto

a-

111m

,.....,,101...

bllrltndtr

50 Gorman ln-

32 "SI,.....,...

dum

33 Altla'o oon
dul1rlal
35 Goicl-lu8lt
region
111rtar
54 llartllc,.
371rb./1oc 'e
....

OIII'*Y

40 Hlb
4t W11M1 buy
(2 wda.)

Thil · WI 11M bean lludylng raitlng parlntr'a mojor·ault -"'111 wtlh
blr-card
play.. hu pallid. Bul how-~ -lilt
respondar'l ac:tiona W hiS riQIII·hlnd
O!lf)OUOnl- I l8ic8oul &lt;loullle?

-'-the-

Nowa~tromonoto­

becomes prHrl1ptivt. H lhowl blr
!rumps, bul at moot nino - ' POi"rll
and (at -~ nine 1ooar1. The bid II
modo to try to ...... lile .. -~ u
~ lor the doublor'a partner - ..
in !his deal.
Alter West's
wNorth had
bid only two spades, Eut would haW
boon I1IIPPI' to compate with
cal. llul whon North jumped to lhree

a-'*'

spades, Eas1

waa no1 strong ...,...;. to

rt

'MlUid prolll1l&gt;ly leil bv lrid&lt;s (minus 500), bul can go down four
(minus BOO).To gollhe l1181dmum. Soull
l1lJ8I ~ his singleton ci!vnond, golln
wtlh 11\e club ace. and lwice pul North oo

v-1,,..., M TI-\RE£ C.I-I.OCOL.I\TE.'"I
~ /&gt;.lo\1&gt; ,._JELL'( DOUC.w-tUI,
F1\R TOt&gt;"''( !

I :)()

t "' ' ' - - '

i

a••

1111111 Coalrlctlat

-.um -

38 --

Pus
Pus

CELEBRITY CIPHER

sive 1riCI&lt;.

llarall CDDIIIIctlla lid

ed will be $500.00. The
Water Boatel andlor
Council r_,..e lhe
right to reject any
an4IDr all - Bids muat be sealad
•od rnarll8d "TRUCK·
1110'".
Bids may be mailed 1o
P.O.
Box
323,
Ohio 45179
or may be liMn 1o lhe
Clerk's 0111ca a1 2511t
Tltlrd Strati,
Ohio but must be
racel- by Noon on
111111y 7, 2007. 8idll will
be opt&lt; lad ll the 111111y
2007 Water 11oM!
IIMting,
(3)00, (4)6, 13

5

lead " spades 10 ci!¥nond rulfs.
The heart ace would be 11\e a1xt1 dolon-

Stop &amp; Compare

PUBLIC NOTICE
Galling Ohio, Lie., 430
Public Notice
Harper Park Drive,
Btcldty, Virginia, The Meigs County
25801 has IUbminecl ~~ ol Job l
., Uncllrground Coal Faml~ S.rvlcll is
Mining
and IHklng JMOil c nil 1o
Reclamation .,.,mit provide a 1ummer
r\ppllc_, numbered youth program to allg&gt;t0312 lo lite Ohio bit youth age 14-t8
~ ol Nalural consi11tn1 whh Ieder·
~ DiVIeian ol al, alate ond local
Ml...,al
IIHourc:as guidelines lor lhe
~ The pro- Ten~pCnry •··i·h tee
poMd cc.l mining ond lor tt.edy Famlllea
rer:IMiatlon
oper• (Tr\NF) progiHI. Youth
will be In lola Who rllicle in Meigs
11811, 1189, 119t l County ond whou
t1912, L.wt Township. family tnco-M does
Townehip ,z Ringen, noi-2CIII%otlhe
l In SIC'Ion a, Lola federal pooerty Index
1211, 1212, t213, ond - eligible lor partie&gt;12t4, L.wt Townehlp, • pation. ......am _..
Townehip 2 ll8ngll 12 IIIUSt nol txceecl
ond In Lola 271, m , S240,ooo,oo tor the
271, 279, 834, 83&amp;, poriad begir.."llng Mer
t 208, uoe, 1210, 1215. 1, 2007. N Is oxpecttod
t21&amp;, t 219 and the lhel lhe progl'am will
Commons ond In enroll 70 youlh onc1
Ser:lioi • 10, 11. 12. t7 provide employment a1
18,
Sulton $e.15 per hour. The
Townelrip, Townehip 2, program will also proRange 12, Meigs vide t.n.guard Training

Pau

bid atlhe four-level. Nola ltlat 11118 clubs

$11 ,500/neg 304-

Publie Notice

• •

Pau

YOU

• New Homes

45771
740-949-22t7

------Public Notice
-----The Syracuse 11oM! o1
Public Affairs (Water
Boanl) and Syracuse
Vllloge Council era
oll8t;lng lor sale a t987
Ford F350 lour wheel
drive ton lruck whh
nwchanll:o bed. Truck
is IUiomalio: ond WU
tul ued as a w11er
IO&lt;Yica vehicle. MIIM
-ing
on
lite
odomallr iltt2.270.
Truck 1o · be sold
"ASIS" "'WIIEREIS."

llbL

4•

N - l!u&amp;

Opening lead: • K

29670 Bashan Road

lor no more than 35 til·
glble youth. Acluol
enrol-l 11 expected
1o begin no Ieier than
May ·
t4,
2007.
r\dmlnlalrallva co1t
may not txceed t5% of
lhe tolal contract
award. r\ copy of the
RequUt lor Propoul,
may be plckad up from
J - Banko at the
Malga
Counly
Department of Job l
Family Services, t75
Race
Streel,
Mlclclleport, OH 457&amp;0.
Propoaall shall be
oubml1tad 10 Jane
Bankl, lleip County
Departmenl of Job l
Family Servictl, P.O.
Box t9t , 175 Rac:e
Street, Middleport, OH
45760 no Iaior lhan
April tO, 2007 at 10:00
a.m. The Department
, . _ , . lhe righl to
reject any or all propoaela. In accordllnce
wllh 29 CFR part 31 , 32
Meigs
County
Departmenl o1 Job &amp;
Family Senlicas II prohibl1ecl from clilcrlminalion on lhe beals of
race, color, national
origin, au, age, raiiglan, polhlcal belief or
diutlilily.
(3) 23, 30 (4) 6

Weal

by Lull Campol

Agalnst four spades, WOil led !he lliart

Carver 26ft Cabin Cruiser,
Marine AC, fully galley, separate sleeping cabin , good

County, Ohio. The area
II locll«&lt; on lhe New
Haven, Ravens-.!,
and Cheater 7 t/2
minute
U.S.G.S.
Quadrangle mapa. The
parmh being located
approximately
t .9
mllea North, 0.9 mile
Eoal and 3.5 mllel
Soulhout ol tha cor·
poratlon llmlll of
Racine, Ohio. Tha proposed permit will
encompau 75.3 acres
and the propoead area
10 be undermined
encompau.. 1894.9
acraa. This coal mining
application wilt remove
coal USing lhe under·
ground mining matllodo, opec:lllcally lhe
room
and
pillar
melhcld. Thla applicolion II on flle at the
llllge
County
Co u rt ho uaa ,
Recorder's Olllce, tOO
weot 2nd
Street,
Pornecoy. Ohio 457Q
lor pullllc inlpecllon.
Written
commento,
objections or requMta
lor en lnlormal confer.,_ may be aent to
the Ohio Diopartrnen1
ol Nalural - . . ,
Divlolon of Mineral
R • s o u r c • ,a
Management,
2045
Mont Road, Building
K-3, Columbuo. Ohio
4:1229-6693, whhln (30)
thirty clays of the tut
dale of publicalion o1
this nollce.
(3) 9, 16, 23, 30

Sou"
,.

error

28 Appllcltion 4 Whtra
21 Frallet1tr
Madrula
wn30 r\ndaa rumi6 Necknant
34 ..... call 7 Gnnl8d
6 "Phantom
3&amp; Pari of FYI
...... -·
31 Out IIIMkMII I ....
4t Phllnloh'l
T"*-\of
.... oornlca
12 ....,.
ta Repair
amodon
a boot
44Lirp-

Dealer: Soulh
Vulnenble: North-Soulh

BISSELl

ave. POint Pleasant

PUBLIC NOTICE
r\ request hal bMn
mode 10 the Ohio
of
Department
Transportation Dislrict
10, 10 grant Melga
Poinl Dock LLC parmlulon lo conducl
aurfllca mining opereIlona whhln tOO._. of
the oulolde rlghl·ofway line but no clour
lhan 20 IMI otthe travelad portion of State
Route 124 and lo conolrucl a corw~ over
SR 124 u delcrlbed
below:
localecl In loll 275,
276 l 2n, IOWIIIhlp 2,
Range t2, Sunon
townahlp,
llelga
County, Ohio.
lleglnnlng at a polnl In
SR t24 llfiPIOxlmately
2200- aouthout of
tile lnterMctlon ol SR
t24 and Yellowbush
Road. Thence from
ukl plac:e of beginnlng and following SR
t241n a - l t r l y
dincllon lor a . . . _
ol t540 teet to the
polnl ol11rmlnus.
A '-lng will be held
on IIIia requeol al lite
Ohio Dtparlment of
Tranaportotlon, 11t1ga
County Garage, 34448
Stale
Route
7,
""'-oy, Ohio 457&amp;11
on April t6, 2007 at
tO:OO a.m.
(3) 30

zeC'

• J
• AI S1

RDBUT

~

NOTICES

-

'I A» 4

24!&gt;9 St. Rt. 160 • GaWpoUs

Christian Fellows hip
GoH league
at
Pine Hills GoHCourse
April 3rd 5:30
All churches welcome
info call740.378·6144

10

•J t754

takeout-.

rangier. 4cly, auto,

I

t KQ

A7 6 S

South

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

w

and Applehead Chihuahua 4x4, 89,000 miles, $7.000
Thom psons Appli ance &amp; pups. Sprrng lap babies. 0 80; 1998 PQntlac Firebird,
Aepa•r-675 _7388 _ For sale, 740 _645.6987
V-6. auto, H ops, 113,000
re -conditioned automa tic
miles.
$4.000
OBO,
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera(740)742-235.7
tors
gas and electric
L~UMtNIS
'
. ~"~I·
· nd
1980 Ford p.ckup. 4x4, 302
range 5, 81r ........, "-" IOf'rers, a
.
_
ltoppe $600 1990
wrin~er wash~rs. Will ~ Wurlitzer P~ano, excellent ~ ~s~- hatch; back,
repa~rs on mapr brands 10 cordtion. 740-44l· 7098
2 _3 eng ., $SOO (7401742 _
shop or at your home.
3902
- ------Used furniture store. 130
2002
Saturn
50,000K
Bulavi lle
Pike, Electric
FARl\1
$5995.00--2000 Plymouth
Ranges. Cl'lests. Couches,
Breeze
S39 95.Q0- -2000
Manresses, bu nk beds,
Ford Escourt
2 $3795 _()()dinettes. recliners. Nice
·99
Mercury
Tracer
2002 Bass Tracker fish1ng 0% Financing- 36 Mos $3395.00 and many more to
boat.
(740)446-47 82 aOJai lable now on John ch oose from Al~..-vlew
Gallipolis, OH, Hrs 11 -3 (M· Deere Z Ti'ak Zero Tl.irna &amp; Motor. 2 blocks aboOJe
F)
$.91% Fixed Rate on John McDonalds Pome r~. OH
Deere G•tors carmichael (740)992·3490.

."lO Yrs. Exp. Ins.
Owner Ronnie Jones
Free Estimates

740-992-6971

Bullevill e Pike. tum on to Golden Retrie11er pups,
967·2986 Huntington
Garage Apt, LA, BR, K, B, Lin wood and go to the dead AKC, 1st shots, wormed, vet · 1979 Bayliner, 17', 75hp out·
~~ ~~~~- Petsp~~~ end Everything only about checked. $150. 740 -682 · board motOf' w/miracte lift
1 year old. Most things are 6562
trailer. s1eoo 0 80: 1998
[740)446-1214. 35 112 Vine selling at haH prk:e. 74{}-

740-367"02661
1-800-950-3359

be seen at 2320 Washington

1 condi1ion

•

• K Q 10

740-367·0536

All need Bass Tracker Tournament TX

6401

Full insured
Senior Citizen
Discmmt

55 LMft OUI
-~ ......
57 - kwon do
movie
5I Canvnon
(lwda.)
.....
t6 Big porty
~ Slrong 1011P
nlghla
10 Phyoli:a unh
t 7 Dengaroul
of worlc
bean
tl The ledy'a
OOWN
20Numlkult
at ....
t ~deVardugo
p
23 Fooct
2 COrnpoMr
- Slllle
3 Spelling

• I 2

Grinding • Bucket
TrU~:k

r:r

u

• 86'

51=...

13 Mal
t4DIII
tS Flrll 00

Eul

• K Q J 10

• Top • Removal
• Trim • Stump

Concrela Removal
and Replacement

Freehtlmatea

2 usad ridng lawn mowers

and ·"sed

~\ l\ tl,lll

l l l \ ... 11\ l l l l l l \ ,

7 40-367-11544

headache rack , -4" straps &amp;
tioned Big Screen TV's
portable we nches. heavy
(304)675-7999
chains,
heavy
screw (150) Round Bales Hay dly 2002 195Jr20 SeaOoo Jel
&amp; covered $ 15 each boat with trailer &amp; many
binders.
lock
over
binders,
Bedroom w ile $100, blutt
~
8CWSSQries. $23,000. 740.
lift chair $150, Call 740-446- 24x24 tarps, bungee cords
8
45-0324
of
var.
sizes.
304-675-2051
1909

We1&amp;

I I \ I I'

•Insured
*Experience'-.!
RetCrcnces A\'ailablc!
Call Gary Stanley @
740-742-2293
Please leave messa •c

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

Apnl Jrd. Ferguson Farm.

and/or smi:lll hooses FOR owned Appliances , all uMer
Retired Truck driver selling
RENT. Call (740)441-1111 Warranty, also hall&amp; recondifQ(

STYlE. ..

- - - -- - - - mile. $5500. (740)446-6970
Show pigs tor sale , starting

_C_ONV
_ E
::_N_:IE"-N-T LY_:_L_O_C_AT-ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Appliance Warehouse (740)441-0941 , (740)645- piece 74Q-985-3956.
Townhouse
apa rtments. 1n Henderson, WV. Pre- 5946. CAA HEAP ac&lt;:epted.

* Reasonable R ate~

32119 Welchlown Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

die bags 304-675-7071

Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. l&amp;L
Scrap MetalS Open Monday,
Tu esday. Wednesday &amp;
0 rive from $365 to $560.
Friday, Sam-4:30pm. Closed
1!'11!"'"~-----. Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call riO
IIOUSDIOU&gt;
Sunday. (740 )446- 7300

. 54

70 Pi ne S tre e t • Ga ll ipolis
1 40-446-0007 l o ll F...,e 877-6611-0007

also selling ATV Parts

Stock. Avai~e for viewi ng,
by appointment. on March 2006 Honda 400 A.TV, 4x4,
26. Barrows ~tartiOQ @ Of 2x4. Auto or Manuel Shift.
$150, Gihs 0 $200, 304- 4yr warranty, winch, bagS,
675- 1798
FlaQ(s, Ramps &amp; Ace .. 200

BEAUTIFUl
APART- Prime commercial space tor
UENTS
AT
BUDGET rent at Springvalley PWa.
PRICES AT JACKSON Call 645-2192.
. ESTATES. 52 Westwood

••

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

*Prompt and Qua l ity
Work

z

41 Jagpd rack
47 CrOOhll

7 F.._d
U""k*el
to OM h go
nelgltbor
1t Ptcture
53 WOOd
""""""
holder

........

• II 5

rJamihJ l•trttn:•

Jlm"a Smell Engine
Repair
740·992·2432
Gel ready lor spring

Apts. Available· Gallipol is Commercial building •For 800-537·9528.

• 75

•SERVICE •FREE DELIVERY
•MONTHLY OXYGEN VISITS
Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

lo;-

• K J 10 I

•RENTALS •SALES

2000
lnnsbruc&gt; Gulf
Stream. 28ft, fully furnished

•

Fair Meat Goats. Ready to 2002 Dodge Caravan,
go. Born early January. 86000 miles, runs great.
$JS.OO
each .
Steve S3200, OBO 740-2 55- 1233
Slapl81
74D-256 161 9 01 or 256-903t .
on.
·
________
740-446-4 172
2003 E250 Ford Cargo Van ,
Fair Pip
bins, ladder rack . ac, towing
Oaughty 'S Club P.g
n..,..&lt;11U&gt;
cell nh.u.A 740..

elderlytdisabled call 675 chairs. call after 6pm. 446Ap anme nt for rent. 1·2 6679
Equal
Housing
4052
Bdrm., remoOeled , new car- Opportunrty
pet, stove &amp; !rig., water, ~r;,;;;.~~--...,
JET
sewer. tra sh pd . Middleport.
SPAl l:
AERATION MOTORS
$425.00 No pets. Ret. 1.--·lliilR-Jbiii:ii
\'1;,'
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuih In
required. 74Q-843-5264
'
stock_ Call Ron Evans. 1-

·

Norto .

6982

10
Vi\115
lfo\u:
211 740- "---FUitiii
. iiiSlli:
iiiii._r 1.,-oiiMI'IIOiiioiiiiVIll\
iii
ltMS
iiiiiorl

4-H Pigs tor sale born

'""

www .spnng·va 11 ey"
propertLes.com or can 740-

Phillip
Alder

18 mo. Reg. Angus Bull. 12
$6.500 coll740-794-()()16
mo. Reg. Angus-· 740- 1990 4x4 Tovota pickup,
"I 1, \ II I . _,

- ·~

area.

ACROSS

1987 Prairie Schooner. 36'.

5th

1998
24h .
Dutchman
Campef, ACJfurnace. SSC:W.,
trldge. treezet, microwave,
61 Both run, both have hard walk around bed. exce&amp;lent
tops. $2200.00. Ph. 379-- concilion. $7000. 740-446-

2706

•

New Hallen , 1 Br., furnished,
no pets, dep.&amp;re terences.
1984-Toyota mini Motor
740-992-0 165
Home 84,000 miles $2,000,
Tara
Townhouse olde1 GoU-cart, gas_ good
Apartments, Very Spac•ous. condition $800 304· 773·
2 Bedrooms. CIA, 1 1/2 5132
I Iii'
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
PooL Patto, Start $4251Mo. 2 Studded Snow tires 14' ott
lease Plu s S- 10 set of Snow chains
·A HIDDEN T REASURE ! No Pets,
Laurel
Commons Security Deposit Required, 304·812·2359
- - - -- -- Apartments. Largest m the (740)367-7086.
3 steel shipping crates 2211 )(
area! Beautifully renovated
Twin Ri\ler s Tower IS accept· 12ft. 11 -h high 304-6 75 throughout •ncludlng brand
ing applications for waiting 205 1
new k1lchen and bath.
list tor Hud-subsized. 1· br,
Br-~·n OUidOOr set: oct~
Starting at $405. Call today!
-~ ·
(304)2 73-3344
apartment,tor
table, coffee table. and

i

A.luma

02 F1 50, ~ . lXXI miles. 740379-24 to
-------1995 Ford Range1 4x4
$3,500 304-675-3164 aher
5pm
- -- -. , . - - - - 2 W~ty's Jeep&amp; tor sale. 59 &amp;

king. (Qid he haW a bellor cholco?)
Soolh woo wilt! his heart ace and conceded a clamond trldc The de-rs
look !heir two heart Irides belore shltllng
to a !rump, bul ft was to no avail. Soolh
won oo 11\e board, rullod a clamond in
his hand. C&amp;Bhed 11\e club .... and
crossrullod homo.
The delense can lrlumph HW8811aad8 a
trump at !rid&lt; one. Oedarar WOUld prnbat:Jy will on the board and call lor a ciamond. bul Eut Ol Will his queen
and plays a aeoondlj)llde.

G

BIG NATE

Additioa'
Garages
Roofing
Vinyl Siding
New Construction Interior Remodelln
Residenlial &amp; Commen-ial
740-IJliS-4141 Otlke

in"'

Celrltdy ~ ~ • • CIIO:I Itonl cpJDIIIions by !WfCIUS J*l'Pit.pal nj ~
EliCh ...
ciPIII' ~~We b' arolhtr

Toooy's eM!: Z IQilllis W

" ZBSX E AP llBEXLI ZEGBPIIG OXR
SYHKOXOGEPX , JIIG UIIIG ZEGB
IHPXGOXSEGR .. . E WOX JS IIIFS
GBOG E OV

.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "The
in; and lite bel~! in a lhing makes k

, ...,.

AstroGraph

Ohltrortoo

.... a roe:

By--Oool

I

ARIES ( - 21·Aprll 19) - Should

~ :;m:D
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT.

~-!ERE'S TilE FIERCE JUN6LE

ANIMAL St.IEAKIN6 UP
ON IllS PRE'r' ...

VSIN6 ALL I-llS NATIVE
CVNNIN6, llE CREEPS UP

IS TillS TI-lE FRONT
OR TilE 8ACK ?

BE\o41Nt:' HIS VICTIM ...

'-------------..1
. ...

GEMINI (May 21-..lune 20) - Even tt
your financial affair. appear to be ehow·
lng lnctiCationa ot lmprowemant, donl
take this u a eign that you can now b.as extravagant u you want It'&amp; willr to
iiCCUmulate a tlttte flr.t.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - Promllel
made to you, even ~ ck&gt;ee fl'lei'Q Of
family, snould be taken with a grain of
salt They ~ not haw any Intention of

up your schedule br the Mid tew dalya it
you clon't ananct to mane,. thl~ 1\Hd
attention right now. Oh, you'll gat around
10 dOing them later. but not at a moment
you'll like.

.

SUNSHINE CLUB

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt 22! -

II mlghl

prove wise tor you to pretend the flllln-

YOUNG 'S

clal surpluaes you've aocumula'-d rutty
don'1 u.lst, becaute you could be In an
extravagant frame
mind now and be

CARPENTER
SERVICE

or

LIBRA

97

-~
E~ie~;trica! I Plumbing

-ltng&amp;Gu-.
Vinyl Siding I hinting
Pt.tio and P01ch Declr:s

10x10X10Xl0

WV036nS

991-3194

V C YOUN G Ill

or991·6635

J-1~'"~'1,

"Middl1poot's only

'
'

(Sopl.

~

1 MU&amp;t HAllE

PIAUlPA
WRONit NLWIIER

I I I' I. I

II'OUble," lbe philosop~~er tokl
hb class, "own a fro&amp; will -- -.'

Ie

Corn!&gt;~·· lht (huckle qUOitd '
by lillln; In lilt IIIIS1InO *Otds
vo• dovolop 1- ~•P No. 3 below.

ICRAM,LETS ANSWERS

3- H- o 1

Weakly - ~ - U.ury - Doling - OWN EARS
0..-y llways told me that a fool could not see his own
tblly any moro tbla he could see his OWN BARS.

ARLO&amp;JANIS

a.

tnat you could tuftlr aom. kind of

1ooa due to """' I~ a. - -ment of your furQ.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J&amp;n. 19) - lt'l
very unlike you but tor reuone known
only to you, you could be *Oefully llack
In .......,.. ll1al

_ , . _..,._ It jOU

e.

alklw
to prw.WI , you'll 10M OUI on
oomolhing big.

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

If'S r\ ~~fllf' A6fiAUI..f

OU C!Ull~fW.IGWU.r

I

AQUARIUS (Jor1. 20-Fob. 18) - 'rbu
might make your pre~e~• lilt, but not

II
Hl•a.•
-~··=,=·=--···
7

c

.,I "Wheu m o!et*ot iJ io

more on your 10aa than uauaf when It
comes to money I'Y\Iitte.-. n.e.-·s a pot-

GARFIELD

7

KRACEN

I

.,0 '

23-0ol. 231 - Poor iudg-

SABtnARtus (No¥. 23-Doc. 21 1 -

s.Jf-SIIIr. . .

IEJJ

I

'

0

ment or impulaivaneaa on your part
oould be your WOiat enemy. Take&gt; pttnty
of time to think thi'CIIJQh Jmpottant rT'IO'IM&amp;
thai muet be n\w;le. Oon't alk:Jw yourHif
to be rushed.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - lt'a
always good to be oplimlltic about your
aflairs, but not to lha point of being 101111'1 unraaliatic about your ldVanlaQM. It'S
I"'''C:n import8nt to ~ on your &amp;bllltles
than on iudl:.

Beech Street
Middleport. OH

-lng

T

I' 1 I I
5

...

,...ry wasteful.

Room Additions I

•

C WH I H

brHklng their word , but circumatancea
can cause it.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - 'rbu could loul

~
- - -~
~
·-· · · -

.

I' I I I

a.

70 Pine Slreel • Gallipolis
446-0007

.

T A I NG

TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - It's g.-..t
to be a team ~. but w•tdl out kJr
someone laking advantage ol your oooperatlw aptrtt In wave that oould be quite
dialgreeable.
euy gotng, but not a

puppet.

HIKONO

'I Pill

you 1n1 yo&lt;rrMif a bM on 111e laZy 01&lt;10.
you might have to guard aga!Mt mag.-tyOig .....,.. IMkl 1n10 1&gt;0"11 aomolt1ing
dltlcuH. Don't let your iml.glnatlon delelt
you.

PEANUTS

lellara of ll!o

four rcrallblad - • btlow .. loan ftol . . . -dL

liN that come ITom 11.

• Home Oxygen
• Portable Oxygen
• Homefill System·
• Helios System

hapgons !hal you rOIJiy believe
.• - Fr&amp;nit L Wrighl

PIUUI

Thlre 18 a 1trong poultlllty that you
could make aome kind of beneflcll.l
change in an Important arN of your life.
Once you make up your mind to do so,
you'Hbe to copltab• on opporlurli·

We Deliver To You!

t!'i=

DSKKEXE

w. r1Qu ...... 31, 2007

740-416-1834

FELBG . " • OSASFEWP

,.,_ .. ...,._,_hing_
nacutt•lty In a Wlft you would like. If
you take 11 upon )'OUL'M" ta make

11101'~2- 0 - - 20! - Pui1Jng
PISCES (Fob.
on dllctatiOfll Of' Pl"'ttl ~ to be eom.lh"'! you-.. ,.. wUI ~ you In " ' - - H
~ calla you on H. "''bu'll mMI a

jOUr -

m

Mi•l I
ilmiDnl

GRIZZWELLS
t"IJE t7£CWEP "b ~El" A.

beo.r 1 , . . , - Ill' bolng yo&lt;rr going.-MH.

t?l~

-

SOUP TO NUTZ

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

~

-..of- AI&gt;M--...,., ~ ill -l~

GooOR&gt;cl&gt;-l?

·

'

- ..

�•
\

Friday. March 30,2007

www.mydailysentinel .com

Page 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Bono
OSPI·T AL

PLEAS

oa,

• Suresb K. Agrawal, MD
··~.
• Muhammad Atif, MD
(h••,.,

s.,.,., -•••,••,.,

• Robert M. Holley,
F•lftlly Me~lcl•e

tU/07

• lsmael 0. Jamora,

.

C•rtllolt~D cll•t•r••l Metllcl••

• Craig Ausmus, MD
E.e,.,e•ey Metllel••

• Harold E. Ayers, J
I••r•fll Me~lcbte cl

• Lee J. Dt4ca•~••
F•.uly Me•lkll

• Nikola

IWI-., ·. · ·
'

..

• James R.

J. Casto, DO
.,~

BIMrJe•cy Ml4llit

• Daaiel R,

MD
• Step••• Dillard, ·oo
E.,.,.,..qMetllcbtll

MD

• Carrie Loeldaart DIUard, M1) •
F•.U, Me~khle cl reMIItlkt

cl He11111toldJ1

• s•abbir A. Doctor, DMD

A. Wade, Jr., MD

,_tlwy

Alll"'1• AltA• cl BNT

• Jamea P. Waaaer, MD

• David Felder, MD

F•-'ly M•tllcl••

Ordl.tlb

·

• JMJ D. Wlleosea, DC
Ctlro1rutlc

• R•er Bald laa, MD·••k. . . . . ,.,. .·t·~

• Bedy J. Wlad1or, MD

~ABe...,

Dllt•t1ln 41 Gx••c•lol1

. • RaadaU F. Bawlda1, MD .
llllerul Me~kl••

• Step • K. Reryc•, MD
Ge•erfll &amp;~~~pry

•J••• F. WUtz, MD

J

retlllllrk•

PLEASANT VALLEY JJOSPITAL
1520 Valley Drive 'e Poinl P/em;ant, WY •
. . . . . ..n st••Nfr• h,. t'

•---

..

.

.

WpMfl I

304~ 675-4340
'

;4twel ... 1'7• ....,. . . .'cp'JI6PNeflll, (JI4) 61J-IJ41• n.JitHII _,.,.., ,..,....,•.,.

··--· ---------

..-

·-.. -

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

---

-·-

-

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