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88 • The Daily 5entinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Thursday, April 26, 2007

·Pride 2007: llie

.Cardinals·fepd off Cincinnati, 5-2 .Marsh~II signs Ky.
· recruit lV[att Walls.

ST. LOUIS (AP) Braden Looper went back
to being a set-tip man for
the Cardinals. ·
The reliever turned starter
pitched his best game of
the season, setting the table
for Alb!:rt Pujols' two-run,
tie-breaking double in the
eighth· inning. and St. Louis
beat the Cincinnati Reds 52 on Wednesday night.
It was only the second
win in nine home games
for 'lhe Cardinals, the first
World Series winners to
start the following season
1-7 at home.
Looper, who is 3-1 with a
1.91 ERA, and three relievers combined on a five ~hit­
ter.
"It was probably some of
the best control for the
majority of the game that
I've had," he said. "I just
made one really bad pitch
to the wrong guy._. Luckily
AP photo
it didn' t hurt us too bad."
St. Louis Cardinals' Albert Pujols heads for first after hitting a 2·RBI double in the eighth
Looper allowed one run inning against the Cincinnati Re.d s in their baseball game Wednesday at Busch Stadium in
on three hits in seven St. Louis. The Cardinals beat the Reds 5·2.
innings in his fifth career
start, all of them lasting at . appointing when you don't shortstop Alex Gonzalez' Edmonds ' RBI single.
least six innings, since the win the ball game."
wild throw to fir st on
Looper didn't allow a hit,
Cardinals plugged the forDavid Eckstein was hit- Preston Wil son's one-out permitting only two walks,
mer closer and setup man less in three at -bats and grotmder
and
Yadier until Gonzalez singled with
into the rotation.
hadn't gotten the ball out Molina's sacrifice fly off one out in the fifth. He had
"That's another outstand- of the .infield before leading Victor Santos gave the retired II of 12 batters
ing outing for him," man- off the eighth with a bloop Cardinals a 5-1 lead.
before Hamilton hit his first
ager Tony La .Russa , said. single against Kirk Saarloos
Jim Edmonds had an RBI pitch of the sixth over the
"He's given us a terrific (0-2). Chris J?liJ.li!'an walked single in the fourth for the center field W&lt;!IL
lift."
on a full count and Pujols' Cardinals, who had been
Saarloos allowed two hits
Josh Hamilton hit his · liner to the gap in right- outscored 44-20 during and two walks to start the
sixth home run and drove center scored both runners their first eight home eighth. In his last two outin .his 12th run, both tops and made it 3-1.
games with I 0 of their runs ings, he has allowed six
among NL rookies, for the
"A lot of hitters try to be corning in the lone victory. runs in one-third of an
Reds. Hamilton homered a hero and try to create They scuffled for offense in inning.
five times in his first 29 at~ something big," Pujols said. this game, too, mustering
"(I) stunk pretty . much,"
bats and waited 17 more at- "I try to make it simple, go seven hits.
·
Saarloos said. "J · couldn' t
bats for his sixth long ball. back to my basics and just
Randy Flores ( 1-0), St. get . anyone out. A bad
The Reds wasted another get the ball deep."
Louis' third pitcher, struck effort for me."
strong start by Bronson
Pujols has struggled in out Hamilton and Brandon
Notes: Gonzalez is 6-forArroyo, who gave up one the early . going, batting Phillips to end the eighth, 9 the last two games,
run on five hits in seven .234, but has 14 RBls.
then allowed an RBI single emerging from a, 3-for-22
"Obviously it doesn't io Scott Hatteberg in the slump. ... Duncan singled
innings. Arroyo has worked
seven or more innings in matter how I'm swinging ninth. Jason lsringhausen twice, walked and lined
four of his last five starts, or what my batting average came on to get the last out out, and is batting .448 (13but the Reds are 0-5 with looks like, when it comes for his fifth save in six for-29) at 'home. ... Skip
him on the mound while to that situation I'm a dif- chances.
Schumaker is 2·for-14 as a
scoring II runs.
ferent person," Pujols said.
hitter
for
the
The Cardinals scored first- pinch
"It's just the way it is, I "I know sooner or later I'm for only the fifth time in 20 Cardinals after . grounding
guess," Arroyo said. "I felt going to get a big opportu- games, taking · the lead in out to end the · seventh. ...
·
1 threw the ball well. It's nity."
the fourth on Scott Rolen's . The Reds' bullpen has five
always frustrating · and dis- · A, fourth run scored on leadoff
double
and of the team's II losses.

HUNTINGTON , W.Va.
(AP) - Guard· Matt Walls
ha s signed a national letter-of-intent to play at
Marshall. coach Donnie
Jon es said Wedne sday.
The 6-foot-3 Wall s averaged 20 points per game
thi s season in leadin g
Scott County, Ky. , to the
Kentucky state championship.
" Matt is a basketball
gym rat," Jones said. " He
is a combo guard with a

great basketbaiiiQ. He has
the ability to make others
around him better, and
after being the MVP of the
Sweet 16 Tournament in
Kentucky, we know that he
is a winner. "
When Scott County beat.
powerhouse Huntington
H,igh 72-68 on Feb. 2,
Walls hit four free throws
in the final 13 seconds to
seal the win and finished
with 22 points and five
steals.

Marshall .basketball hires
Darren Tillis as assistant
HUNTINGTON, W.Va.
(AP) - Darren Tillis has
been hired as an assistant
basketball
coach
at
Marshall, new coach Donnie
·
announced
Jones
Wednesday.
· Tillis spent the pas.t four
seasons as an assistant at
Tennessee State. Before that
he was an assistant at SMU,
Wyoming and Clemson.
Tillis also was a head coach
in the Swedish League.
"''ve known coach Jones

for a while, and he has a
good vi sion of what he
wants to do here," Tillis ·
said. "He's very passionate
and energetic about that
vision, and I see the future
being very bright here at
Marshall."
Tillis was a four-year
starter at Cleveland State
from 1978 to 1982, He ranks
first in school history in
career blocked shots, second
in rebounds and fourth 111
scoring.

Festival

Along the River
inside today's Sentinel

sponsor,A6

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;, o t'F\:TS • \'ol. ;;h. r\o. IS-

Commissioners open, award fof:lllul~ grant bids

SPORTS
• Southern clinches
share of Hocking .
crown. See Page 81

, c

·.$

'"'"'·"'~.tail~"'"lio w l ,..,,,

11{11).\\', \I&gt;RII , :.!';'. :.!00 7

BY BRIAN

J. REED

BREEOOMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

POMEROY .-·
Meigs
County
Commissioners
opened bids for projects to
be funded through the
Community Development
Biock Grant formula program at Thursday's regular
meeting.
Commissioners
also
awarded a bid for a project
to be funded through the
program.
· ·Sealed bids were received
and opened from Shelly

Co., Thornville, and Black
Top Contracting, Inc.,
Nelsonville, for paving of
various streets in the Village
of Pomeroy. Shelly Co. was
the apparent low bidder,
with a bid of $43,955. Black
Top bid $47,000. The engineer's estimate for the pro~
ject was $44,900, according
to Grants Administrator
Jean Trussell.
Valley
Lumber , and
Supply Co., Middleport,
was the apparent low bidder
for fencing materials for the
· Scipio Towpship ball field,

with a bid of $4,692.83 . Enterprises of Pomeroy for
Alco-Nowell of Vienna, development of a basketball
W.Va. submitted a bid of court at the Mulberry
$7,460. J'he specifications Conununity Center, also to
called for vinyl and chain- be financed through the
link fencing for the ball CDBG formula program.
field which is being devel- The bid was opened and
oped . · at
the
old tabled at last week's meeting.
Harrisonville Elementary
Commissioners also:
School by the Scipio
• Approved the purchase
Township Trustees.
of a new air conditioning
Bids on both the paving unit and exhaust fan for the
project and the fencing were Department of Job and
tabled until next week so Family Services, at a cost of
bids can be reviewed.
$17,6,00.
Commissioners awarded a
• Authorized a ' proclama$19,500 bid to Homecreek . tion declaring Soil and

Huggins signs first recruit
MORGANTOWN, W.Va.
(AP) - William Thomas
has· signed a national letterof-intent to play basketball
at ·West Virginia, marking
the· first recruit for new
Mountaineers coach Bob
Huggins.
"Will has a chance to be
special because he has the
best floor vision that I've
seen in quite some · time,"
Huggins said. "It's a gift
we hope to capitalize on."
Before breaking his leg
on Jap. ·2, the 6-foot-5
guard averaged nearly 25
points, · 15 re,bounds, six
assists, three steals and two

blocked shots per game
this season at Shaw High
in East Cleveland, Ohio.
"I'm very happy to be
coming to West Virginia
play
for
coach
to
Huggins," Thomas said.
"I know he will push me
to the limit to make it on
the next level;"

Flower Festival
queen candidates

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• George H~rris, Sr., 83
• William 'Bill'lubtls, 16
Beth Sergent/photo;

INSIDE

Carolyn Koin of Shade received her new heart on Jan. 1, 1995, a date etched into her new
specialty license plates from the BMV featuring organ donor awareness.

• AHunger For More.

j.

,·~

.'

Water
Gonservatioh
Stewardship Week.
• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of
$334,003.68 . .
• Approved a bid for bituminous materials for May
from Asphalt Materials,
Inc., Marietta.
· · • Approved a personnel
action as requested by DJFS
L.
Director · Michael
Swisher.
l'resent
were
Commissioners
Mick
Davenport and Jim SJleets
and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

. See Page A2
• The Kings to perfoim.
See Page A2
· • Local Briefs. ·
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• Foundation offering
grant ~pportiJnities.
See Page AS
• Byer presents
.: program to retired
teachers. See Page AS
• ABLE program
serves Meigs County.See Page A7

Organ·donor recipient
first to receive plates
BY BETH SERGENT ·
BSERGENT&lt;IIMYOAILYSENTINELCOM

.POMEROY - Carolyn
Kom, an organ donor recipient, is the first in Meigs
County to receive the Bureau
of Motor Vehicle's (BMV)
new specialty plate recognizing the Ohio Donor Registty.
"It's such a good cause

and it makes people aware,"
Kom said about purchasing
the. plate which promotes
organ donation, a subject
near and dear to her heart,
literally. "
Kom was on the verge of
losing her battle with heart
disease, more specifically
"transr,osition of the great
vessel ' when she received a·

' heart from an organ donor
on Jan. I, 1995. Twelve
years later that date is
stamped on her new special. ty
plate
which
reads CK1195 which translates into "Carolyn Kom.
Jan. I, 1995," the beginning
of the rest of her life.

' Please see Plates, AS

Beth Sercent/plloto

One of five girls from Southern High School will be crowned
Flower Festival Queen at 11:45 a.m. tomorrow at Star Mill
Park. Those candidates are, sitting (from left) Bethany
Vance, daughter of Annette and Dave Vance of Portland;
Adelle Rice, daughter of Steve and Julie Rifle of Racine;
standing, (from left), Rachel Wood, daughter of Kerry and
Deborah Wood of Racine;, Mallory Hill, daughter of Perry
and Bobbi Hill of Letart, Emily Babbitt, daughter of Red
'Babbitt of Gallipolis and Debbie and Mick Howell of Racine.

WEATIIER

Prom candidates
.

~

,

f

. i \l . ,
•.

'

INDEX

.
.

'

:l SB!JilONS- 16 PA«;JES

\~

Annie's Mailbox
'

'

•
'

.
'

A6

Calendars

A6

Classifieds
Comics
Editorials·

Bs-6

B7

Faith • Values

Movies
~ASCAR

Obituaries
~)ports

A4
A2-3

As
BB
As
. B Section

Weather

.

A7

i!!J 0007 Ohio
,,, V.Uey Publlsbin&amp; Co.
.
lj.,

.

I ·

!:~arlene

HoetUehjphoto

These Meigs High School s\~~ents, left to I right, front, Amy Barr, Talisha Beha, Ashley
DeMoss, Becca Hanstine and Bladley Jones, anC\ back, Kaylee Kennedy, Kirk Legar, Shane
Milhoan, Steven Stewart, and Ashley Zielinski, were inducted into the National Honor
Society Thursday.

Students inducted into National Honor Socit~ty
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@&gt;MYOAILYSENTINELcOM

POMEROY- A ceremony of induction into the
National Honor Society was
conducted for I 0 Meigs
High School students in an
assembly Thursday.
Inducted were Amy Barr,
Talisha
Belia,
Ashley
DeMoss, Becca Hanstine,
Bradley Jones, Kaylee
K:.ennedy, Kirk Legar, Shane
Milhoan, Steven Stewart

"

. and Ashley Zielinski.
by senior NHS members,
Following a welcome they were presented certififrom Principal Dennis cates of membership and
·
Eichinger, Kayla Grover, yellow roses. ·
In the ceremony the offipresident, introduced the
officers, Valerie Carpenter, cers conunented on the four
vice president; Drew Reed; desired qualities of candi:
treasurer; and Krista Nic"'e dates for acceptance into the
Stitt, secretary. They lighted · National Honor Society -.
Bllon J. RMd/photo
candles representing . the scholarship, service, leadereternal light of knowledge ship and character. The oath ·candidates for Eastern High School Prqm Queen and King
as they reviewed the four of honor was given to the are, 1-r, Jenna Aupp, Shannan Loscar, Jillian Brannon, Erin
qualities of the Society.
candidates by Stephanie Ash. Weber, Danielle Phillips, Alex McGrath and Justin Riebel.
As candidates
were
A reception followed the King candidate Cory Shaffer was absent. The prom will be
tapped and escorted forward induction ceremony.
held Saturday at the high schooL
l

...

"

�. ·I

PageA2

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentin,el

Friday; April 27,

Friday, April 27, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP
GOD·THIS WEEK
.

2007. ·

.

- - -A Hunger For More ~-"When Jesus said this, He .
. called out, 'He who has ears
to hear. let him hear.' His
disciples asked Him what
this parable meant He said,
Pastor
'The knowledge of the
Thom
secrets of the kingdom of
God has been given to you,
Mollohan
but to others I speak in parables, so that, "'though seeing,. they may not see;
though hearing, they may
to ·experience the power of
not
understand'
Therefore consider careful- His promises, we must be
ly how you listen. Whoever willing to say "yes" to God
has will be given more; to whatever leading He subwhoever does not have, mits to us. If we do not and
even what he thinks he has instead deliberate in our
will be taken from him'" hearts to attain His bless(Luke 8:8a-10, 18 NIV).
ingsonOURtenns, thenthe
The parables through truths of the kingdom are
which Jesus disclosed the incomprehensible to us.
secrets of the Kingdom of Pride, lusts of the flesh,
God ,were not mystic codes greed and envy will all
to be translated and decoded bequeath a blindness to our
by the few who have excep- spiritual eyes and a deafness
tiona! intellectual under- to our spiritual ears.
standing of the hidden
So when Jesus makes the
knowledge of God. Nor statement, "though seeing,
were they supernatural mes- they may not see; though
sages so sophistically ethe- hearing, they may not
real that only an ascended understand," He's simply
master could absorb and/or declaring a blessing upon
appreciate them. Instead, those whose hearts are hunthey were straightforward gry for God. If you are hun.Submitted plloto
characterizations of the gry for God and are really
The Kings of Lancaster will perform In concert at 7 p.m. on Kingdom that even a child ready to reach out to Him
May 3 at Mt. Hermon United Brethren in Christ Church, could grasp and engage on His terms: then do not
Wickham Road. Peter Martindale is pastor.
·
·
them.The problem then for be afraid! He will not turn
people in receiving them you away.
(by which I mean underThe things that will hinstanding and incorporating der your coming to Him are
.them in daily living) is in basic yet often so effectual.
the receptivity of their . For example, we can FEAR
hearts towards their funda- to "hear" the message and
GRAND MOUND, Iowa abuse by those we trusted." mental need for God and respond to it. We fear to risk
(AP) - A monument honIt will be placed in the His preeminent right to responding to ·the invitation
oring the victims of sexual yard outside the parish, the exercise lordship in their of God because we fear that
abuse by Roman Catholic . last stop in the . 40-year . livt;s. Let's face tt. For you He'll reject us (in spite of
priests has been placed near career of James Janssen, a and me to enjoy the bless- His claims to the contrary
a small eastern Iowa parish former priest •who worked ings of God, we must come - S'&lt;e Jeremiah 29: 14). ·.Or
where a predator once in the church from 1980 to to Him on His tenns, For us we fear that God will not or
served.
1990. Janssen was accused
Parishioners of the SS. of sexually assaulting about
Philip &amp; James Catholic a qozen boys in six parishes
Church in Grand Mound over three decades. The
unveiled the granite monu- church placed him on in!lefNASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) ing to the 2006 profile of the
ment last Sunday. They and inite leave in August 1990
The number of baptisms Southern Baptist Convention.
members of a group called and defrocked him in 2004. ·
Catholics for Spiritual
Deacon
David in Southern Baptist churches
Thorn Rainer, president of
Christian
Healing raised the $4,000 Montgomery, spokesmap has fallen for the second con- ·LifeWay
the Diocese of secutive year despite a push Resourcl)s, a Southern
needed for the creation and for
placement of the 3 l/2-foot- Davenport, Iowa, which by tOp )eaders to evangelize. Baptist agency that conducts
high ·monument. ·
includes Grand Mound; said , At the same time, national the annual ·survey, said the
The torch and flame Bishop Martin Amos ·was membership inc(eased by findings show that denomidesign depicts an angel and invited.to the ceremony but less than I percent, but more nation has not been effective
a small boy carrying a had previous commitments churches were built, accord- in "stepping up to the task of
Bible.
and couldn't attend.
The verse is from Luke
"He's very pleased that
12: "There is nothing con- they're
doing . this,"
cealed that will not be dis- Montgomery said.
Diocesan leaders have
closed, or hidden that will
LONDON
(AP)
known as the niqab, should
not be · made known. What asked every parish to have a
Muslim
women
should
be
be
made on a case-by-case
you have said in the dark statute or item "signifying
allowed
to
wear
a
veil
in
basis,
the Judicial Studies
will be heard in the day- the importance of protecting
British
courts,
as
long
it
Board's
Equal Treatment
light, and what you have God's children and reminddoes
not
interfere
with
court
Advisory Committee,said.
whispered in the ear in the ing everyone of the scars of
proceedings, s.enior judges
The · guidance was issued
inner rooms will be pro- abuse."
claimed from the roofs.'
The
Diocese
of said in guidelines published after an immigration judge
is · Davenport has filed for Tuesday.
adjourned. a case in StokeThe
monument
Decisions on · whether to on-Trent,
inscribed, "dedicated to our Chapter I 1 bankru~tcy m
in
central
children who survived the face of abuse clrums.
allow the full facial covering, England, last November

Monument dedicated to victims
of clergy abuse in Catholic diocese .

Ftllowship

Apostolfc

Churth «ii.Jesw Christ Aposlollc
VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: James
Miller, Sunday School . 10:)0 a.m.,
Eve ni ng"~" 7:30 p.m.

ence, with the King of kings,
overwhelming out mortal
faculties so that we cannot
discern our hunger and see .
the hand of God offering us
His Bread of Life.
If you want to have ears to
heijr, you must begin to consciously choose to trust
God, let go, and spend time
with Him. Tame your fears
by rehearsing the goodness
and greatness of . God.
Release your life's potential
by learning to let go of
things that hurt and hinder a
saving knowledge of Jesus
Christ. Set time and make a
habit of both private and
corporate wor.ship and
devotion characterized by
reading and meditating on
His Word,. the Bible, and
seeking Him in prayer.
"Here I am! I stand at .the
door and knock.If. ·!uJypne
hears My voice and·opens
the door, I will come· in and
eat with him, and he. with
Me. To him . who .' overcomes, I will give the right
to sit with Me on My
throne, just as I overcame
and sat down with my
Father on His throne. He
who has an ear, let him hear
what the Spirit says to the
churches."
(Revelation
3:20-22 NIV).

cannot keep His promises to
us (and that He really isn't
"faithful and true" after all
-see Revelations 3: 14).
Another mill stone often
tied about our necks is our
UNWILLINGNESS to ~ear
the message (to repent of
our own ways and follow
God). In all honesty, turning
to Jesus means that a radical
change is going to take
place - an inward change
that· will also manifest itself
outwardly. In other words, a
person might tum a deaf ear
to the message of God'.s
offer of life simply because
he or she is unwilling to let
go of pride, bitterness, or
selfish desires. A lot of peopie
mijlht
become
Christians tf it means that
they can continue on in
whatever life style they
want. But it doesn 't work
that way. To lay hold of
Jesus, we must first be willing to let go of anything and
everything which resists His
claim upon our lives.
"Anyone who does not
carry his cross and follow
Me cannot be My disciple"
(Luke 14:27 NIV).
And finally another reason
we cannot at times "hear"
the message of the Gospel is
that our• world generates a
tremendous amount of static. Hectic sch&amp;dules (one
busy thing after another) and
1 no time to reflect, meditate,
and ·pray between them
leave us no opportunity to
learn the distinct and lovely
sound of the Savior's voice.
Although we applaud (he
one who can multitask, we
fail to recognize the f!ICt that
the incessant "multHasking" crowds out our audi-

River V•lley.
River Volley Apo stolic Worship Cemer.
873 S. 3rd Ave., Middlcpon , Rev
Michael Bmr.Jford. Pas10r. Sunday. 10:30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 prayer, Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study
Emmanuel Apostollt TabtrniK'Ie Ill('.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutla lftt-.
Services: Sun 10:00 a .m. &amp; 7:30 p.m..
Thurs. 7:00p .m., Pastor Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God
Uberty Assembly of Cod
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane, Mason.
W.Va .. Paslor : Nei l Ttnn:ml. Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Page,·llle Frttwiii ·Baptlst Church
Pastor;. Mike Uamm~ . Sunday School
9:30 to 10:30 am , Worship !C rv i~.:e !0:30
to 11 .00 oun . Wed. preoching 6 pm
Carpe111er Baptist Churcll
Sunda}' School - 9:30am. !'reaching
Se rvice 10:3Uam. E\·en mg Se rvice
7:00pm. Wednesda}' Uihlc Slud)' 7:0CJ ll1ll.
Interim !-'reacher - R&lt;Jyd Ross
Cheshire Bapllst Church
Pastor: Steve Litt le. S unday School: 9:30
am . Morning. Wors hip : 10:30 - am .
Wednesday Bible St ud y 6:30pm; choir
practice 7;30: youth and Bible B~ dr.Jics
6:30p.m. Thurs. I pm book study

Hopt Baptlsl Chun:h (Southern)
570 Grant St. . Middlepon . Sunday sc hool
- 9;30 a.m.. Worship· II a.m. and 6 p.rn ..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m. PastOr: Gary
Ellis
Rutland t' irst Baptist Church
Sll nday Sehoul · 9:30 a.m.. Worship •
1 0:4~ a.m.
Pomeroy Flrsl Ba.pUst
Pastor Jon -Hroc kell . East Muin St..
Sllnda)' Sch. 9:30am , Worship 10:30 am

(Thom Mo,llnha{l and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past 12
years. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church, which meets at the
corner of Third Avenue
and Locust Street iii downtown Gallipolis. He may be
reached for comments or
questions by e-mail at pastorthom @pathwaygallipolis.com).

t"lnt Soothern Baptisl
4 1872 Pomeroy Pike , Pas1or: E. Lamar
O' B"ryant , Su nday Sc ho;, l - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 8: 15a.m .. 9:45am &amp; 7:00p .m ..
Wednesday Services' - 7:00p.m .
First BaptiSI Church
Pa~t or : Bill y Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport . Sunthiy Sl:hool - 9:15 ll.lll.,
Worship - 10: 1.5 a .m., 7:00 p.m:,
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Southern Baptist baptisms drop for 2nd straight year
sharing the Gospel with a
lost and dying world."
· Baptisms dropped from
371,850 to 364,826, or 1.89
percent, last year, the lowest
· annual total since 1993,
according to Baptist Press.
In 2005, baptisms decreased
by 4.15 percent.
Natiqnal
membership

reached 16,306,246, up by
nearly 36,000 in 2005. The
number of churches across
the country increased by
524, or 1.2 percent, to a
tetal of 44,223.
The . Southern Baptis t
Convention is the nation's
largest Protestant denomination.

Racine Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Ryan Eaton . pastor . Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship · 111:40 a.m.,
· 7:00 p.m., Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.
Silver Run Baplbt
P~s tor: John Swanson, Sunday School \Oa .m.. Worship : l la.m, 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesduy Services- 7:00p.m.
Mt. Uol&lt;ln Baptisl
Pastor: Deunis WeavCr S u n d ~y Schoo\9:45 a .m., Even in g - 6:30 p.m ..
Wedne sday Services - 6:30p.m.

Senior judges say Muslim veils allowed in British courts

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because he could not hear a "significant impact on that
Muslim lawyer who refused woman's sense of di gnity"
to remove her veil. The case and could exclude and marresumed after her firm sent ginalize her, the panel said.
another lawyer to represent
The issue of face-coverher client in court.
ing veils has stoked debate
Forcing a woman to over religious tolerance and
choose · between participat- cultural assimilation in
ing in a court case or remov- Britain, which is home to
ing her veil could have a · 1.6 million Muslims.

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,Bethlehem Bapdst Church
Greut Bend , Route 124. Raci ne. OH.
Pastor: Ed C arttr. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.• Sunday Wo rship • 111:30 a. m ..
Wednesday Bible Swdy- 7?J p.m
Old Btlhel Frte WUI Baptl§l Church
2860 1 Sl. Rt . 7, Miildleport, Sunday
Service - 10 a .m .. 6:00 p.m.. Tucsda)'
Services -6:00

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

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Bit:ssed are the pure
in Mart; for they
shall see God.
·
Matthew 5:8

Yourself

Love

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Michelle Kennedy

'

Director of Marketing and Admissions

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HiUMdt Baplist Chun:h
St. Rt. 143 jusr off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R . Acree , Sr., Sund•y Unified
Service, Worship ~ 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.,
~.ednesday Services -7 p.m.
VIctory Blpllstlndependelt
52.5 N. 2nd St. Middlepon. Pastor: James
E. Keesee . Worship · iOa.m.. 7 p.m ..
· Wed nestlay Sen; i ~e s - 7 p.m
F1lth B1ptkl Churtb
Railroad St.. Mason. Sunday Sc hool · 10
a.m., Worship ~ II a .nl ., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

FOreSt Run Baptist- Pometo)'
Rev. Jose ph Woods. Sunday School · 10
H.m., Wur.;hip - II :30 a.m..

In the .Gospel of Matthew, we are told to love
our neighbors as•we love ourselves. (Matthew .

22:39) In thinking about this commandment,
which Jesus ranks second only to the command
to love God with all our heart, soul and mind,
we usually focus on the obligation to love our
neighbor. But perhaps we ought to focus on the
issumption being made here: that we love
01melves. This iS not always true, and if we
attend in our thoughts, we may actually find that
we are downright hateful with·oursctves. In fact,
it isn't unusual for people to be incredibly harsh
1111d overly critic81 with themselves; and indeed,.
we are often much harsher with ourselves than
we are with odlen. How often do we find
Olmelves feeling that we are stupid or that we
are ajcik over some minor lapse for which we
could readily forgive a friend or family
member? Listen to what we say to oursel ves.
and if. we are overly clitical, or downright
vicious, we need to work on being bettir to
ourselves. We should also try IO forgive
oursclves. There is no point in holding onto past
mislllkes. We should learn from them and move
on. And remember ajways thai God loves us and
approves of us even though we art imperfect. God it loW!, rur;/ .,.., obiiUJ iJI/ort
Finally. consider that the injunction to love our obilhJ iJI God, IJIId God rJbilhJ iJI
neighbor as our self goes both ways; thai is, we
m..
should love ourselves as we love our lll'ighbors.
• R.S.V. I Job 4:16

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

We Sell Homes at

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Karl Kehler IU .
Certlllod Public AC&lt;OWIIInt
email: kbbler@cUt1&lt;r.ntl
618 E. Mlln Stroot
Pomeroy, OH 45'769
746-!19Z-727t

·KEHLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

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Mt. Moriah Baplht
Fourth &amp; Main St .. Middlepon . P11stor:
Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr., Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.

:Millie's j(estaurant

"A Home Bank for

29670 Blshan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-992-3325

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TEAFORD REAL ESTATE

Wann Friencll)'.

AIIUqulty lllptbt

H.,.,t Cooktd Mtllb &amp; Daily Speciols

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Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m .. Worship 1 0: 4~ a.m .. Sunday E\•ening - 6:00 p.m..

Pastor: Don Walker
Rutl•nd Fr« Wii.IBaptlst
Salem S1., Pastor: Jamie Fortner. Sunday
S~.: h uul

· 10 a .m., Evening - 7 p.n'l .,

Wetha:sday Servil;e) · 7 p.m.
Serond _Buptbt Church
Ra,·enswood. WV, Sunday School 10 am . Morning worship II &lt;1m E\ening -'7 pm.
Wednesday 1 p.m.
first Baptlsl Church or Mason, WV
\Indepe ndent Haplistl

SR M! and Anderson St. Pa!itor: Robert
Grady. Sunday ~ hnnl Ill am. Mnrmng
chu rch II am. Sunday evL&lt;ning 6 prn . Wed
Bible Study 7 pm

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
1&amp;1 Mu lberry Ave .. Pomemy. 992 -SR9N.
Pastor: Rev. Waller E. Hei nl, Sm. Con.
4:45_-5: 15p.m .; Mass- 5:30 p.m.. Su n.
Con. -H:45-9: 15 a .m... Su n. Mass · 9:30
a.m.. Daily M~1 ~s - 8:30 u.rn .

Church of Christ
W~tslde Church of Christ
33226 Chi ldren's Home RO . Pomeroy. OH
Cunt;u.:l 740-441 - 1296 Su nday tll mn irl ~
10:00. Sun morning Dible study;
followi ng worship, Sun e\'e 6:00 pm,
Wed bible o;rudy 7 pm

Hemlock \.rove Chrlsllan Church
Mini ster: Larry Brown. Wt lr~ hip - 9:30
a.m . Su ntl:ly School - ]():3{1 a.m .. Bible
Study- 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Chun:h of Chrlsl
212 W. Mai n St .. Sunday School- 9:.\0
tun .. Wor~ h i p - 10 :30 u.m., b p.m..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

190 N. Second St.

Episcopal
Grace Ephcopal Church
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy. Sunday School
and Holy Ellc harist II :00 a.m. Rev.
bdward Payne

Holiness
Community Cltturch
Pastor· Steve Tomek. Main Street. ·
.Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m..
Sundqy Servrce--7 p.m.
Danville Holint!i!l Chun:h
J 1057 Sl4llc Route 325, Langsv lle. Pustor:
Benjami n CrawfOrd . Sunday school - 9:30
a.m .. Sund•y worship · JO:JO a.m. &amp; 7
p.m.. Wed nesday prayer service- 7 p.m.
Cahar)' Pilgrim Chapel
Ruad, Pa ~tdr: Charles .
McKenzie , Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · \ I a.m.. 7:00 p.m., Wedne5day
Serv ice- 7:00 p.m.
H ~ rT isun v i\ l c

Hose or Sharnn Holine.ti Churth
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutland , Pa_~tor : Rev.
Drwey King. St1nday ~chool · 9:30 a.m.,
Sunduy worl'hip -7 p.m .. Wedn e~day
pnyer meeting- 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mi le off Rt. 325 . Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Man ley. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m..
Wed n e~day Service · 7:30 p.m.

Btarwallow Ridge Church of Chri st
Pa slor:8rUt:c Terry. Sund11y Sr.hool -9:30
a.rn
Worship - 10:30 a .m .. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30 p.m.

Wesle)'an Bible Hullnts!i Church
7.5 Pearl St.'. Middleport . Pastor: Rick
Bourne. Sunday School - 10 a .m. Worship
· 10:45 p.m.. Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday SerVice· 7:.W p.m.

Zion C hurth or Christ
Pomeroy. Harr ison ville Rd . (Rt.l43 ).
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday School 9:30 tu n .. Worship • 10:30 l\.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Serv ices· 7 p.m.

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor: Re\'. Larry Lemley ; ~ und ~y Schoo l
- 9:JO a.m .. Worship · 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study and Youlh - 7 p.m .

Tuppers Plain Church of Chrkt
instrumental. Worship Strvice - 9 a.m..
Communion - 10 a .m., Sunday Schoo l 10:15o .m.. Yuuth- 5:30pm Sunday. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Laurel Cliff Fm Melhodlst Church
Pastor: Glenp Rowe, Su nduy Schoo l 9:30 a. m., Wo r~ hi p ·- 10:30 a.m. un~ 6
p.m.,Wcd ncsday Service· 7:00p .m.

Bradbury Chun:h of Christ
Mini slcr: Tlrnt Runyuu. JY55H lh'udbury
Road, Midtllepurl . Sundil)' Slhtwl - 9:30

Latter-Day Saints ·
ur

The Chun:h Jesus
Chrbt of Latter-Day S11ints
Sr. Rt. 160. 446-0247 . or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20· 11 a.m .. Relief
Society/Priesthood ! 1:05- 12:00 noon,
Sa ( rament Se rvi ce 9· 10 :15 a.m..
Homemaking m~ling . lsi Thurs .· 7 p.m.

a.m.
WorShip - 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Chun:h of Chilst
Sunday Sc hOOl • 11:311 a.m .. Wor~ hip and
Commt1nion • lf):JO a.m .. Bob J. Werry.
Minisler

Lutheran

Bradrord Churth ofChrl~l
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradhury Rd ..
Mi nisler: Doug Shamblin. Youth ~ini ster:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School · Q:JO a.m.
Won hip - 8:00 a.m.. 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Scnices - 7:00 p.m.
Hk:kory lfllb Chun:h ur Christ
TupJX!ni Plains, P-4s1or Mite Moore. Bible
class. 9 ' a.m. Sunday: worship \0 .u.m.
Sunday: worship 6 ) 0 pm Sunday: Bihle
class 7 pm Wed.
R.eeds\'llle Churth of Christ
Pastor: Philip Srunn. Sunday School: 9:JO
a.m.. Won;hi p Sen•i(e: HUO a.m.. Bible
Study. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.
Dexltr Chu.rdl or Christ
Sunday schoo l 9:30a.m.. Sunda) vmrship
- 10:30 a.m .
The Ch'un:h·ofChrlsl of Pomtro)'
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelisl:
Denni s Sarge nt , Sunday Bibl e Study •
9:30a.m .. Worsh i~ : 10:30 a .m. and 6:30
p.m.. Wedtltsduy Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Christian Union
, H~rtford Cburth of CllrlSlln

Chrisdan UHan,fmd . W.Va .. Pa stor: David Gretr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship •
10:30 a.m., 7:00. p .m . Wtdnesday
Services ~ 1:00 p.m.

1-800-451-9806

St. ~ uhn

Lutheran Churth
Pme Grove, WorShip - 9:00 a.m.. S u~d sy
School · 10:00 a.m. Pastor:
Our Saviour Lulhtrln Churth
Walnu t and He nry .Sts .. Ra\·cnswood,
W.Vu .. Pa stor: David Russell , Sunday
Sehoul - HI :OO ll.lll ., Worship · 11 u:.m .

"'

. St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,,
Sun . School · 9:45a .m .. Worship - i I o.m.

United Methodist
Graham UnUM Mtlhodl§l
.Worship . II 11.m Pmtor: Ri chard Nease
B«hltl United ~tethodlst
New Ha ven. R ic h~ rd Nease. Pao;to r.
Sunday worshi p 9:30 a.m. Tue s. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Middleport, OH

MI. OMve Unlltd Mtthodlsl
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spirts, Sunday School - 9:30a .m ..
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.. Thursday
Services · 7 p.m.
Mel~e~ Coopen.tJve Parish
Nonheast Cluster. Alfn:d, Pl.'i;tor': Jim
Corbin •. Saftd&amp;y School - 9:30 a .m ..
Worship · II a.m.. 6:30 p.m. •

Cbtsttr
Pauor: Jim Cottli tt. Worship • 9 a.m ..
Sunday School' • I 0 a.m . . Thursdly

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jfisber .:funrral-omr
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Ill.

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Mta-IMI

...a.-. ...
M1112Ma

Pomeroy

Bill

Joppa
r-dstor: l:knzil Nllll. Wnrshtp - Y:30 li.m .
Sunday Schoo l · 10:30 a_m

'10 11 .m . 2nd and 4th Sunduy
CKrldon lntenlrnumimallomll Cbun:~
Kiu g~b ury Ro&lt;~d . Pllstor: Ruben Vi!nCc,
Su nday School · Y:30 a.m., Worship
Service 10:30 a .m .. Eve ning SerVIce 6

l'omeruy ~burch of the Naza!"fne
Pa ~tu r : Jan Lavender. Sunday S~hool 9:3() a.m.. Worship - 10:30 u.m. ;md 6
p.m.. Wednc~day Sen-ices · 7 fUll .

Long B.ottom

Sunday School • 9:JO a .m .. Worship 10:30 a.m
RtedsviHe
Worship . 9:30 a.m .. Su nday School ·
10:30 a .m., Fi rst Sunday of Month . 7:00
p.m. service

p.m.

Frffilom Gospel Miss~on
Bald Knoh. on Co. Rd . 31. Pastor: Rev.
Ru~er Willford . Sunday Sc hool - 9:30
;un. Wor~htt&gt;· 7 p.m.

Chester Chun:h or the ~1zarent
Pa~10r : Rev. Herben Grate . Sunday Sc hool
- (}:3 0 u.rn .. Wnr ship- II a.m .. 6 p.m.,
Wedne!&gt;day Sel""icc~ · 7 p.m
Kut111nd Church or the Naz.~tre nt
Pa&gt;lttr _haac Shupe. Su nday Sdtovl - 9:30
a.m .. Wor ~ hip · lO:JU a.m.. ldO p.m..
Wedne~d ay S~rv i cc~ · 1 p.m

Tuppers flain~ St. Paul
PusllJr: J im Corbitt , Sunday S.:hno l · (}
a.m .. Wo r~hip · HI a.m.. Tuc!;(:illy Sen·icc-.
- 7:30 p.m.
Central Clu.~ ter
Asbury (Syracuse). Pastor. Bob Rnbimon ,
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m., Wur, lli jl · II
a.m., W~:dm:sday Service~- 7:3() p.m.

Wh!tr '~ Chaprl W~drya n
Coolville Road. Pastor: Rev_ Charlt s
Manindalt'. Sunday Sc~oo l ~- 9:30 a.m..
Wo rship - lO:JO a.rn .. Wcdne ~da y Service
. 7 p.m.

Other Churches

•·airvie"' Bible Church
Letart. W.V"J Rr . l . Pastor : Brian May,
Sunday Sdk.IOI · !J:30 a.m.. Wor&gt;hip - 7:00
p.m.. WeJnesd~y l:l ib le Study - 7:00 p.m.
Fnith •'dlowshlp Crusade for Christ
Pa&gt;tor : Rev. Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday. 7 p.m.

Syncu!ie Community Church
241«1 Second Sl .. SyracuM:. OH
Su n. Sl'h1111l !II ~llt. Sundy ni ~ ht fdO pm
Undt!tthc direclion of Dan &amp; Fatl h
!h yman
A Nl'w llfo.ginnlng
(Full t:ospt'l Church) Harrisonville.
Pa.,t11rs: Bob atr d Kay Marshall.
Still day Sen'ite, 2 p.m.

1-: nt l'rpri.~

Pastor : Arlanr.J King. Sunday Sehoul 10:30 u. m.. Wnrship · IJ :3U a.m.. Bible
~tudy Wed . 7:30
t'lllWIJOdS
Pastor: Keith Rader. Su nduy ~il'hool · 111
a.m Worship - 11 a.m.

Calvary Bible Church
Pomcrlly Pik.t, C11 . Rd.. Pastor: Re v
Blackwood, Sun d~ )' Sc hoo l · 9:30 a .m ..
Wu rsl1ip \0 :30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
WcUuesday Serv1ce - 7:30 p.m.

Amaling Grace Con1munlly Ch urch
Pn ~ wr: Wayne Dunlap . State Rr . 6111,
Tupper~ Pl ain~. Sun. Wnrship: 10 am &amp;
6:30 pill .. Wed. 8ihle Study 7:00p.m.

lo'orest Nun
Bob Robt n•i.iri , Sunday Sdukll - 10
a.m . Worship - 9 a.m.

Stlversvllle Communlly Church
Pastor: v/aync R. Jewell , Sunday worship
· 6:00 p.tll .. Wedn esday · 6:00p.m. Bible
Study

P~1stor :

Hea th IMiddltportJ
Pastor: Brian Dunh"Jm . Sunday
9:30a .m.. Worsh ip · II :011 a.m.

Ott.'~ ls Christian Fellowship
INnn ·dcnomi nutional felluw.1hipJ
Meeting in the Meigs Middle School.
Ctt fett"ria Pa,tor: Chri5 S r ~wart
IU :OIJ am · Ntltl/J .Sumlay : lnfonmll
Worship . Childre n·s m1ntstry

S~ hool

Miners,·llle
Pas1or: Boh Robinson, Su nday School - II
a.m.. Worship · 10 a.m .

Communil}' or Christ
PnnlamJ.Raci nc Rd .. Pa~to r : Jim Pmffitl.
Sunday Sc hnol · tHO :un .. Worship .
10:30 a.rn.. Wednesday Serv ice&lt;; - 7:00 _
p.m.
Bethel ~orship Centtr
39781 S.R. 7. Reeds,·illt' , OH 45772, 112
mile north or En~t e rn Schools 011 SK 7. A
fllll Gospel Chur~ h . Paslt)r Rob Barber.
Assoc inlc · !'astor Karyn Dllvis, Youth
Pas1U r Sude Fram:is. Su nd ay~ services
10:00 am wm ship . 6:00 pm Family Life
ClaHes . Wed . Hcmw Ce ll Group ~ 7:00
p.m.. Olller Limits Cell Group at the
durch 6:30pm to fUll pm

Prurl C h~tptl
Sunday S~hoo l- 9 a.m .. Wur~hi p - 10 a.1n.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Brian Dunhum. Worship · 9:311
~un .. Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.
Kor k Springs
Pastor: Keith Radt'r. Sunday School - 9 : 15
a nL, Worshi p - 10 a .m .. Youth
Fellowship . Sunday . 6 p m.

Snowville
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.. Worship · 9 a.m.
Htlhany
Pa,stor: John Gilmon:: . Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m.. Wnnhip · Y a.m .. Wedne sday
Services . 10 a.m

Full GO!ipel Chun:h
of the Living Savior
Rt.3 38. Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse Monis,
Services: Saturday 2:00 p.m
Salem Communi!)' l;: hurch
Back nf West Cnlumhia. W.Va .om Lieving
Road . Paslor: Charles Roush (304) 6752288. Su nday School IJ:30 am, Sunday
eve ning §e rvice 7:00 pm . Bibly Study
1
Wednesday sef"\Jice 7:00 pm
Hobson Christian Felluwship Church
Pastor: H er~c he l White . Sunday School10 am,Sunday Chui'ch service· 6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm

Abundanl Grate R.F. I.
CJ23 S. Third St .. Middlep11n . .Pas10rTeresa
Dav is . Su nd ay servin=. lU a .m ..
Wednesday sel""il'e. 7 p.m.

Cannei-Sutlon
Carmel &amp; ·Bashan Rds. R"Jcinc. Ohio,
Pastor: John Gi lm ore, Sunday S( hool ·
9:45a.m., Worship - 11 :00 a.nt. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:.\1) p.m.

Rnluration ,Chrlsdan Fellcnuhip
9365 Huope r Rulld, Athen s, Paslor :
Lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 am,
Wednesday: 7 pm ,

t'alth t' ull Gosptl Church
Lnng Rollnm. Pmtor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School · 9:30 a.m. Worsh ip - Q:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednc&gt;&lt;lny - 7 p.m .. Friduy fe llow ~ h i , service 7 p.m

Morning Star
Pastor: John Gil mol"(. SundJy School · 11
a.m., Woi-.&gt;hip · Ill a.m.
'

House of Healtna Mlnlstrttt
51. Rt, 124 Langs,·llle, OH .
Full Gospel. Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Roberta
Musser. Sunday Schoo l 9:JU am . .
Won hip 10:30 am . 7:00 pm. Wed .
Service 7:[M) pm
Team Jesm Mlnlslries
Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Center Gymnasium . Pastor Eddie Baer.
Service every Tuesday 6:30 pm

Harrhon\·llle Communll)' Church
Pastor: Theron Du rham . Sunday · 11:30
a.m. ar1d 7 p.m., Wedne ~d ny - 7 p.m.

Ea~t Ldart
Pastor : Bill Marsh ~ll Sun tlity School 9a .m.. Wor ship - 10 a.nt.. 1st Sundu y
every month evening se r vic~ 7:(1() p.m.:
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

R"aclnl'
Pastor: Kerry Wood. S und ~y Sl·houl - Ill
·a.m.. Worship . . I I "J .mWedncsd:•y
Serv ices 6 pm : Thur Riblc Study,7 pm
Coolville United Mtthodist Parish
Pustor: Helen Kl ine, Coolvil le Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St. , Sun . Sch(ll)l · 10 u.m..
Worship · IJ tun .. Tue~. Stnirc ~ · 7 p.m.
lkthel C hal ~ h
TttY.nship Rd .. 46RC. Sunduy S\: houl - 9
M.m. Worship - 10 a.m .. Wednesda)
Senkes · 10 a.m.
llocklngport Churth
Grand Street. Su nday School • 9:.10 a.m..
Wtmhip · 111:30 a.nL Pastor Ph1lltp Bell

9 :~ 0

Clifton Talwrnaclt Churth
Clifton, W.Va ., Sunday School - 10 a.m.1
Wors.hip - 7 p.m. ." Wednesday Serv i ~e - 7
p.m.
New Life VldOry Center
3773 Georges Creek Rbad .Gall lpolis, 0H
Pastor: Bill S111ten. Sunday Se rvices· 10
~ .m . &amp; 1 p.m. WedneM1ay · 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Ash Street Church
398 Ash St.; M i ddlt•pon . P a~t pr Jeff Smith
Sunday School - IJ:30 a:n1 .,, Morning
Wnrship · 10 : ~0 a.m . &amp; 7:00 pm',
Wednesday Service ·. 7;0() p.m., Youth
Service - 7:00 P..m.
Agapt Life Cenlcr
"Fuii -Guspel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Pany Wade , 60J ScctJnd Ave . Mason. 773 501 7, Senicc rime: Sunday 10:30 a.m..
Wl'llncsd ny 7 pm

Rutland
Pastor: Rick ~uu rn e, Sunduy Sehoul ·
9:3[1a.m.. Worship - 111:.10 a.m.. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.
Salem Ctnter
P..utor: Willi~m K. Murshall. Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m., Worship · IJ:IS a.m..
Bible Study: Munday 7:00pm

Torth .C hurt'h
Co . Rd . 63. Su nday SdliJ(II •
W()rship . 10:30 a.m.

Kejolclng Llft ChUJ'th
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport , Pastor:
Mike Foreman. Pastor Emeritm La ~rence
Foreman. Worship- 10:00 am
W~dnes day Servi ~-es. 7 p.m.

a.n1..

Nazarene
Mlddltporl Churr:h of the Nuaftne
Pastor: Allen Midcap . Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..Worship - 10:30 a.m.. tdO p.m..
Wedne ~day Services ~ 7 p.m .. Pastor:
Allen Midcap

Rmlsvlllt Ftllowshlp
Chun:h of the Na1.a~t:nc. Pa stor: Russell
Carson . Sttnday School · 9:30 a.tl ..
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Services · 7 p.m

Middleport Community Chun:h
575 Pearl St.. Middleport , Pa .~tor : Sam
AndcrM•Il. Su nday School 10 . a.m ..
E1c n i n ~: · 7:.'11 p.m .. Wedne sday Servio.:c ): JOp .lll .

Pentecostal
Pcnteroslal Assembly
Pastor : Gary &amp; Sharon Hughes, Sr. Rr.
124. Racine . Tornado Rd. Sunday &amp;:hool 10 u.m., Evening - 7 p.1n , Wednesday
ServiL-e~· 7 p.m.

Faith Yallfy Tabernacle Church
Hailey Rtln Road , Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Ruw sun. Su ndA y E1·enmg 7 p.m ..
Th ur.Wny Scro•icc . 7 p.m.
S~ucuse

Presbyterian

Mi!o'&gt;ion

Harrison, !lie Prtsbyterian C h~rch
Pastor : Kohen Crow. Wors ~ip · 9a.m.

141 1 Bridgeman St.. Syra,· u ~c. Sunday
Sc hool · 10 a.m. Eve nin g - 6 p.m . .
Wednesd~y Service· 7 p.m.

l\-liddltporl Preshyll'fian
Pastor : J u nH.~' Snyder. Sunday SChool 10
a.nl.. wofship servil·~ 11 am.

Hazel Com munlly Cburth
Off RL 1:!4, Pustnr: Edse l Han. Sunday
S~hoo l - 9 : ~0 a.m.. Worship - lO :JO a.m..
7:311p .m.

Seventh-Day Adventist '
Sennlh-Da)· Advenllst
Mulherry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy. Sa!urday
s~r l'k~s: Sabb urh s,·hool
2 p.m ..
Wnn;hip · J p.m.

Oytsville Communily Cburth
Sunday Sdmul · 9:JO a.m.. Wor.; hip ·
IO:JOa.m.. 7 p.m.
Morse Ch1pel Chun:h
Su nd~ y school · 10 a'.m .. Worsttip · 11
a.m.. WCilnesday Scl'\•it:e · 7 p.m.

United l;lrethren

t'alth G~l Ch11rth
Long Houom . Sunday School - 9:.1() a.m..
Worship - 10:45 am .. 7:} 0 p .m ..
· ~nesday 7:JOp.m.
, Mt . Oii\'1' Communlly Churt'h
Pastor: L:111.renl't Bush. Sunday Sehoul ·
9:]0 a.m , E1·t ning . 6JO p.m.. Wedntday
Service - 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hi land Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
lluntcr. Suor.lay Sd iDol · 10 a.m .. E1·ening
7:30p.m.. Tuesday &amp; Thurs .· 7:)() p.m.

Ml.llmnoo Unitt4 Brtlhnn
in Christ Church
Texa" Community 3041 1 Wickh• m Rd .
PaMm: Peter Manindak. Sunday School 11 :.~0 ~ .m :. Wor.;hip - 10:30 a .m ... 7:00
p.m .. ~'e dnt sday Sen ·ices • 7:00 p.m.
Youth ~roup mce;ung 2nd &amp; 4th Sund1ys
7 p.rn
t:dtn Unllfd Brtthrtn in Cbrtst
S t n t ~ Rnute ·124. het y,·een Reedsville&amp;:
H i'C l in~ l" ln . Sunday School · 10 1.m ..
Sunday Wor!&gt;hip · II :UO a.m. Wednesday
Sen·kes . 7:00 p.m.. Pastor- M . Adam
Will

South Bellad Communll)' Chun:h

Syntu.w Chui'th of I he Naz.artM

ROCKSPRINGS
Let )iour light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER met!, tllar they may see your
Tht can you dtstM, tlosttd llillllt good works and glorify your

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Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

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Father in hfaven ..,
Matthew 5:16

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l1e gave his only
1bi~JlCitlen SOil ...

Joh11 3:16

"So I strive always to keep ~
my conscience clear before ~ ·[,,.,..familyMp

ARCADIA NURSING
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Coolville, Ohio
Located less !hart 30 minutes from
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Perfect in weakness.
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Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jonat han Noble . Worship 10:25 il.tll .,
Su nday SdlQol Y:l5 ~ . m .

Keno Church of Chdst
Worshi p - 9:30 a. m.. Sunday School .
10:30 a.m.. Pustor·Jc ffrey Wallace. 1st and
3rd Sunday

~

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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Iii::.
(740) 992-3279
~
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Congregational

Middleport Churth of Christ
5th uml Mum. Pastor: AI Hartso n.
Ch ild re n ~ D1rector: Sharon Sayre, Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan . Sunday School
• 9:JO tun .. Wor sh ip- ~ : IS. 10:30 a.m . 7
p.m . Wednesday Services- 7 p.m..

your light so shine bel&lt;&gt;reJ
:1 nten, that 'they may see
works aqd glorify
!ll'atl~er in heaven."
499 Ridlland Avenue, Athens
Manhew 5:

•.

Church of God of Prophecy
OJ . White Rd. off
Rt. 100, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman . Sunday School
10 a.m .,
Worship - I I a.m., Wednesday Services- 7
p.m .

Pomeroy Wrstslde Chun:h of Christ
33226 C hi l drt n '~ Hnrne Rd .. Sund~y
S~houl · II a.m .. Worship · IUll .m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

740-594-6333

DLEPORT.
TROPHIES &amp; TEEs

Syra('tl§t rtnil Churr:li of God
Apple and Second Sts., P'dstor: 'Rev_David
RuHe ll. Sunday School alld Wonhip- 10
a.m . Even ing Se rvices- 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Se r,li(es . 6:30 p.m.

st

Catholic

If ye abide in Me, and My

w~rds abide in you, ye shall
aslc what ye will, and il shall
be done unto you.
. John 15:7

Mt, Moriah Church or God
Mile Hi ll Rd., Racine , Pastor: James
Satterfiel d. Sunday School · IJ:4S a.m.,
Evenif!g - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services- 7
p.m .
Rutland Church or Cod
Pastor: Ron Heath , Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services · 7
p.m.

a.m.. Wor:.tup - 10:30 am .. b p.m..
Wcdne:oday Servicei • 7 p.m.

Blessed are the pure
. h
fi h
In eart; or t ey
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

.-'
•

�. ·I

PageA2

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentin,el

Friday; April 27,

Friday, April 27, 2007

www.mydallysentlnel.com

I

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP
GOD·THIS WEEK
.

2007. ·

.

- - -A Hunger For More ~-"When Jesus said this, He .
. called out, 'He who has ears
to hear. let him hear.' His
disciples asked Him what
this parable meant He said,
Pastor
'The knowledge of the
Thom
secrets of the kingdom of
God has been given to you,
Mollohan
but to others I speak in parables, so that, "'though seeing,. they may not see;
though hearing, they may
to ·experience the power of
not
understand'
Therefore consider careful- His promises, we must be
ly how you listen. Whoever willing to say "yes" to God
has will be given more; to whatever leading He subwhoever does not have, mits to us. If we do not and
even what he thinks he has instead deliberate in our
will be taken from him'" hearts to attain His bless(Luke 8:8a-10, 18 NIV).
ingsonOURtenns, thenthe
The parables through truths of the kingdom are
which Jesus disclosed the incomprehensible to us.
secrets of the Kingdom of Pride, lusts of the flesh,
God ,were not mystic codes greed and envy will all
to be translated and decoded bequeath a blindness to our
by the few who have excep- spiritual eyes and a deafness
tiona! intellectual under- to our spiritual ears.
standing of the hidden
So when Jesus makes the
knowledge of God. Nor statement, "though seeing,
were they supernatural mes- they may not see; though
sages so sophistically ethe- hearing, they may not
real that only an ascended understand," He's simply
master could absorb and/or declaring a blessing upon
appreciate them. Instead, those whose hearts are hunthey were straightforward gry for God. If you are hun.Submitted plloto
characterizations of the gry for God and are really
The Kings of Lancaster will perform In concert at 7 p.m. on Kingdom that even a child ready to reach out to Him
May 3 at Mt. Hermon United Brethren in Christ Church, could grasp and engage on His terms: then do not
Wickham Road. Peter Martindale is pastor.
·
·
them.The problem then for be afraid! He will not turn
people in receiving them you away.
(by which I mean underThe things that will hinstanding and incorporating der your coming to Him are
.them in daily living) is in basic yet often so effectual.
the receptivity of their . For example, we can FEAR
hearts towards their funda- to "hear" the message and
GRAND MOUND, Iowa abuse by those we trusted." mental need for God and respond to it. We fear to risk
(AP) - A monument honIt will be placed in the His preeminent right to responding to ·the invitation
oring the victims of sexual yard outside the parish, the exercise lordship in their of God because we fear that
abuse by Roman Catholic . last stop in the . 40-year . livt;s. Let's face tt. For you He'll reject us (in spite of
priests has been placed near career of James Janssen, a and me to enjoy the bless- His claims to the contrary
a small eastern Iowa parish former priest •who worked ings of God, we must come - S'&lt;e Jeremiah 29: 14). ·.Or
where a predator once in the church from 1980 to to Him on His tenns, For us we fear that God will not or
served.
1990. Janssen was accused
Parishioners of the SS. of sexually assaulting about
Philip &amp; James Catholic a qozen boys in six parishes
Church in Grand Mound over three decades. The
unveiled the granite monu- church placed him on in!lefNASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) ing to the 2006 profile of the
ment last Sunday. They and inite leave in August 1990
The number of baptisms Southern Baptist Convention.
members of a group called and defrocked him in 2004. ·
Catholics for Spiritual
Deacon
David in Southern Baptist churches
Thorn Rainer, president of
Christian
Healing raised the $4,000 Montgomery, spokesmap has fallen for the second con- ·LifeWay
the Diocese of secutive year despite a push Resourcl)s, a Southern
needed for the creation and for
placement of the 3 l/2-foot- Davenport, Iowa, which by tOp )eaders to evangelize. Baptist agency that conducts
high ·monument. ·
includes Grand Mound; said , At the same time, national the annual ·survey, said the
The torch and flame Bishop Martin Amos ·was membership inc(eased by findings show that denomidesign depicts an angel and invited.to the ceremony but less than I percent, but more nation has not been effective
a small boy carrying a had previous commitments churches were built, accord- in "stepping up to the task of
Bible.
and couldn't attend.
The verse is from Luke
"He's very pleased that
12: "There is nothing con- they're
doing . this,"
cealed that will not be dis- Montgomery said.
Diocesan leaders have
closed, or hidden that will
LONDON
(AP)
known as the niqab, should
not be · made known. What asked every parish to have a
Muslim
women
should
be
be
made on a case-by-case
you have said in the dark statute or item "signifying
allowed
to
wear
a
veil
in
basis,
the Judicial Studies
will be heard in the day- the importance of protecting
British
courts,
as
long
it
Board's
Equal Treatment
light, and what you have God's children and reminddoes
not
interfere
with
court
Advisory Committee,said.
whispered in the ear in the ing everyone of the scars of
proceedings, s.enior judges
The · guidance was issued
inner rooms will be pro- abuse."
claimed from the roofs.'
The
Diocese
of said in guidelines published after an immigration judge
is · Davenport has filed for Tuesday.
adjourned. a case in StokeThe
monument
Decisions on · whether to on-Trent,
inscribed, "dedicated to our Chapter I 1 bankru~tcy m
in
central
children who survived the face of abuse clrums.
allow the full facial covering, England, last November

Monument dedicated to victims
of clergy abuse in Catholic diocese .

Ftllowship

Apostolfc

Churth «ii.Jesw Christ Aposlollc
VanZandt and Ward Rd., Pastor: James
Miller, Sunday School . 10:)0 a.m.,
Eve ni ng"~" 7:30 p.m.

ence, with the King of kings,
overwhelming out mortal
faculties so that we cannot
discern our hunger and see .
the hand of God offering us
His Bread of Life.
If you want to have ears to
heijr, you must begin to consciously choose to trust
God, let go, and spend time
with Him. Tame your fears
by rehearsing the goodness
and greatness of . God.
Release your life's potential
by learning to let go of
things that hurt and hinder a
saving knowledge of Jesus
Christ. Set time and make a
habit of both private and
corporate wor.ship and
devotion characterized by
reading and meditating on
His Word,. the Bible, and
seeking Him in prayer.
"Here I am! I stand at .the
door and knock.If. ·!uJypne
hears My voice and·opens
the door, I will come· in and
eat with him, and he. with
Me. To him . who .' overcomes, I will give the right
to sit with Me on My
throne, just as I overcame
and sat down with my
Father on His throne. He
who has an ear, let him hear
what the Spirit says to the
churches."
(Revelation
3:20-22 NIV).

cannot keep His promises to
us (and that He really isn't
"faithful and true" after all
-see Revelations 3: 14).
Another mill stone often
tied about our necks is our
UNWILLINGNESS to ~ear
the message (to repent of
our own ways and follow
God). In all honesty, turning
to Jesus means that a radical
change is going to take
place - an inward change
that· will also manifest itself
outwardly. In other words, a
person might tum a deaf ear
to the message of God'.s
offer of life simply because
he or she is unwilling to let
go of pride, bitterness, or
selfish desires. A lot of peopie
mijlht
become
Christians tf it means that
they can continue on in
whatever life style they
want. But it doesn 't work
that way. To lay hold of
Jesus, we must first be willing to let go of anything and
everything which resists His
claim upon our lives.
"Anyone who does not
carry his cross and follow
Me cannot be My disciple"
(Luke 14:27 NIV).
And finally another reason
we cannot at times "hear"
the message of the Gospel is
that our• world generates a
tremendous amount of static. Hectic sch&amp;dules (one
busy thing after another) and
1 no time to reflect, meditate,
and ·pray between them
leave us no opportunity to
learn the distinct and lovely
sound of the Savior's voice.
Although we applaud (he
one who can multitask, we
fail to recognize the f!ICt that
the incessant "multHasking" crowds out our audi-

River V•lley.
River Volley Apo stolic Worship Cemer.
873 S. 3rd Ave., Middlcpon , Rev
Michael Bmr.Jford. Pas10r. Sunday. 10:30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 prayer, Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study
Emmanuel Apostollt TabtrniK'Ie Ill('.
Loop Rd off New Lima Rd. Rutla lftt-.
Services: Sun 10:00 a .m. &amp; 7:30 p.m..
Thurs. 7:00p .m., Pastor Many R. Hutton

Assembly of God
Uberty Assembly of Cod
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane, Mason.
W.Va .. Paslor : Nei l Ttnn:ml. Sunday
Services- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Page,·llle Frttwiii ·Baptlst Church
Pastor;. Mike Uamm~ . Sunday School
9:30 to 10:30 am , Worship !C rv i~.:e !0:30
to 11 .00 oun . Wed. preoching 6 pm
Carpe111er Baptist Churcll
Sunda}' School - 9:30am. !'reaching
Se rvice 10:3Uam. E\·en mg Se rvice
7:00pm. Wednesda}' Uihlc Slud)' 7:0CJ ll1ll.
Interim !-'reacher - R&lt;Jyd Ross
Cheshire Bapllst Church
Pastor: Steve Litt le. S unday School: 9:30
am . Morning. Wors hip : 10:30 - am .
Wednesday Bible St ud y 6:30pm; choir
practice 7;30: youth and Bible B~ dr.Jics
6:30p.m. Thurs. I pm book study

Hopt Baptlsl Chun:h (Southern)
570 Grant St. . Middlepon . Sunday sc hool
- 9;30 a.m.. Worship· II a.m. and 6 p.rn ..
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m. PastOr: Gary
Ellis
Rutland t' irst Baptist Church
Sll nday Sehoul · 9:30 a.m.. Worship •
1 0:4~ a.m.
Pomeroy Flrsl Ba.pUst
Pastor Jon -Hroc kell . East Muin St..
Sllnda)' Sch. 9:30am , Worship 10:30 am

(Thom Mo,llnha{l and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past 12
years. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church, which meets at the
corner of Third Avenue
and Locust Street iii downtown Gallipolis. He may be
reached for comments or
questions by e-mail at pastorthom @pathwaygallipolis.com).

t"lnt Soothern Baptisl
4 1872 Pomeroy Pike , Pas1or: E. Lamar
O' B"ryant , Su nday Sc ho;, l - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - 8: 15a.m .. 9:45am &amp; 7:00p .m ..
Wednesday Services' - 7:00p.m .
First BaptiSI Church
Pa~t or : Bill y Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport . Sunthiy Sl:hool - 9:15 ll.lll.,
Worship - 10: 1.5 a .m., 7:00 p.m:,
Wednesday Service- 7:00p.m.

Southern Baptist baptisms drop for 2nd straight year
sharing the Gospel with a
lost and dying world."
· Baptisms dropped from
371,850 to 364,826, or 1.89
percent, last year, the lowest
· annual total since 1993,
according to Baptist Press.
In 2005, baptisms decreased
by 4.15 percent.
Natiqnal
membership

reached 16,306,246, up by
nearly 36,000 in 2005. The
number of churches across
the country increased by
524, or 1.2 percent, to a
tetal of 44,223.
The . Southern Baptis t
Convention is the nation's
largest Protestant denomination.

Racine Flnt Baptist
Pastor: Ryan Eaton . pastor . Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship · 111:40 a.m.,
· 7:00 p.m., Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.
Silver Run Baplbt
P~s tor: John Swanson, Sunday School \Oa .m.. Worship : l la.m, 7:00 p.m.
.Wednesduy Services- 7:00p.m.
Mt. Uol&lt;ln Baptisl
Pastor: Deunis WeavCr S u n d ~y Schoo\9:45 a .m., Even in g - 6:30 p.m ..
Wedne sday Services - 6:30p.m.

Senior judges say Muslim veils allowed in British courts

II

rIll

(

f

f

II

(

(

r

f

f

f

because he could not hear a "significant impact on that
Muslim lawyer who refused woman's sense of di gnity"
to remove her veil. The case and could exclude and marresumed after her firm sent ginalize her, the panel said.
another lawyer to represent
The issue of face-coverher client in court.
ing veils has stoked debate
Forcing a woman to over religious tolerance and
choose · between participat- cultural assimilation in
ing in a court case or remov- Britain, which is home to
ing her veil could have a · 1.6 million Muslims.

r

r

If

r

(

,Bethlehem Bapdst Church
Greut Bend , Route 124. Raci ne. OH.
Pastor: Ed C arttr. Sunday School - 9:30
a.m.• Sunday Wo rship • 111:30 a. m ..
Wednesday Bible Swdy- 7?J p.m
Old Btlhel Frte WUI Baptl§l Church
2860 1 Sl. Rt . 7, Miildleport, Sunday
Service - 10 a .m .. 6:00 p.m.. Tucsda)'
Services -6:00

.-

(f

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

'·

/.

,.'

Bit:ssed are the pure
in Mart; for they
shall see God.
·
Matthew 5:8

Yourself

Love

'
..

Michelle Kennedy

'

Director of Marketing and Admissions

"
0

HiUMdt Baplist Chun:h
St. Rt. 143 jusr off Rt. 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R . Acree , Sr., Sund•y Unified
Service, Worship ~ 10:30 a.m.. 6 p.m.,
~.ednesday Services -7 p.m.
VIctory Blpllstlndependelt
52.5 N. 2nd St. Middlepon. Pastor: James
E. Keesee . Worship · iOa.m.. 7 p.m ..
· Wed nestlay Sen; i ~e s - 7 p.m
F1lth B1ptkl Churtb
Railroad St.. Mason. Sunday Sc hool · 10
a.m., Worship ~ II a .nl ., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

FOreSt Run Baptist- Pometo)'
Rev. Jose ph Woods. Sunday School · 10
H.m., Wur.;hip - II :30 a.m..

In the .Gospel of Matthew, we are told to love
our neighbors as•we love ourselves. (Matthew .

22:39) In thinking about this commandment,
which Jesus ranks second only to the command
to love God with all our heart, soul and mind,
we usually focus on the obligation to love our
neighbor. But perhaps we ought to focus on the
issumption being made here: that we love
01melves. This iS not always true, and if we
attend in our thoughts, we may actually find that
we are downright hateful with·oursctves. In fact,
it isn't unusual for people to be incredibly harsh
1111d overly critic81 with themselves; and indeed,.
we are often much harsher with ourselves than
we are with odlen. How often do we find
Olmelves feeling that we are stupid or that we
are ajcik over some minor lapse for which we
could readily forgive a friend or family
member? Listen to what we say to oursel ves.
and if. we are overly clitical, or downright
vicious, we need to work on being bettir to
ourselves. We should also try IO forgive
oursclves. There is no point in holding onto past
mislllkes. We should learn from them and move
on. And remember ajways thai God loves us and
approves of us even though we art imperfect. God it loW!, rur;/ .,.., obiiUJ iJI/ort
Finally. consider that the injunction to love our obilhJ iJI God, IJIId God rJbilhJ iJI
neighbor as our self goes both ways; thai is, we
m..
should love ourselves as we love our lll'ighbors.
• R.S.V. I Job 4:16

209Thlrd
Racine, OH

We Sell Homes at

.

Karl Kehler IU .
Certlllod Public AC&lt;OWIIInt
email: kbbler@cUt1&lt;r.ntl
618 E. Mlln Stroot
Pomeroy, OH 45'769
746-!19Z-727t

·KEHLER BUSINESS
SERVICES

ServicesiM Securities offered through H.D. Vem
lnvestnient Strvict..-. Member SIPC Adv i~
services offertd through H.D. Vest Ad vi 50£}
Sctviets.., Non-bank subsidiaries of Wellli

FU!o&amp; Company. 63Jl North Slate HWY 161
41h Floor. lr&lt;i"J TX. 1lOJ8 (912) 81().()00()

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Sizes.available 5x10 to 10 x 20

WNW.Ieafordrealestate.net

IRA 's'. Ro/lovtrs'. Srocts' Bond.r'. M•rwal
f~. ANWitit.r-. LOng Term Ca~
Karl Kebler. lll, CPA. Regi ~red
Representative or H.D. Vest lnvutment

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Open 7 days aweek
74().992-n13

740-949-2217

The ftppUance man
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740-985-3561
992-1550
Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

Mt. Moriah Baplht
Fourth &amp; Main St .. Middlepon . P11stor:
Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr., Sunday School ·
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:4.5 a.m.

:Millie's j(estaurant

"A Home Bank for

29670 Blshan Rd.
Racine, OH

740-992-3325

A1mosphe~

6am - 8pm

Homemade Desserts Made Dally

Hills Self Storage

Meinbers of tl1e MLS and REAlTOR"
Pick up a color Brochure!
216 East Second St. • Pomeroy

Ho u ~

740-949-2210
Home l"eoJ*"

TEAFORD REAL ESTATE

Wann Friencll)'.

AIIUqulty lllptbt

H.,.,t Cooktd Mtllb &amp; Daily Speciols

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Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m .. Worship 1 0: 4~ a.m .. Sunday E\•ening - 6:00 p.m..

Pastor: Don Walker
Rutl•nd Fr« Wii.IBaptlst
Salem S1., Pastor: Jamie Fortner. Sunday
S~.: h uul

· 10 a .m., Evening - 7 p.n'l .,

Wetha:sday Servil;e) · 7 p.m.
Serond _Buptbt Church
Ra,·enswood. WV, Sunday School 10 am . Morning worship II &lt;1m E\ening -'7 pm.
Wednesday 1 p.m.
first Baptlsl Church or Mason, WV
\Indepe ndent Haplistl

SR M! and Anderson St. Pa!itor: Robert
Grady. Sunday ~ hnnl Ill am. Mnrmng
chu rch II am. Sunday evL&lt;ning 6 prn . Wed
Bible Study 7 pm

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
1&amp;1 Mu lberry Ave .. Pomemy. 992 -SR9N.
Pastor: Rev. Waller E. Hei nl, Sm. Con.
4:45_-5: 15p.m .; Mass- 5:30 p.m.. Su n.
Con. -H:45-9: 15 a .m... Su n. Mass · 9:30
a.m.. Daily M~1 ~s - 8:30 u.rn .

Church of Christ
W~tslde Church of Christ
33226 Chi ldren's Home RO . Pomeroy. OH
Cunt;u.:l 740-441 - 1296 Su nday tll mn irl ~
10:00. Sun morning Dible study;
followi ng worship, Sun e\'e 6:00 pm,
Wed bible o;rudy 7 pm

Hemlock \.rove Chrlsllan Church
Mini ster: Larry Brown. Wt lr~ hip - 9:30
a.m . Su ntl:ly School - ]():3{1 a.m .. Bible
Study- 7 p.m.
Pomeroy Chun:h of Chrlsl
212 W. Mai n St .. Sunday School- 9:.\0
tun .. Wor~ h i p - 10 :30 u.m., b p.m..
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

190 N. Second St.

Episcopal
Grace Ephcopal Church
326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy. Sunday School
and Holy Ellc harist II :00 a.m. Rev.
bdward Payne

Holiness
Community Cltturch
Pastor· Steve Tomek. Main Street. ·
.Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:00 a.m..
Sundqy Servrce--7 p.m.
Danville Holint!i!l Chun:h
J 1057 Sl4llc Route 325, Langsv lle. Pustor:
Benjami n CrawfOrd . Sunday school - 9:30
a.m .. Sund•y worship · JO:JO a.m. &amp; 7
p.m.. Wed nesday prayer service- 7 p.m.
Cahar)' Pilgrim Chapel
Ruad, Pa ~tdr: Charles .
McKenzie , Sunday School 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · \ I a.m.. 7:00 p.m., Wedne5day
Serv ice- 7:00 p.m.
H ~ rT isun v i\ l c

Hose or Sharnn Holine.ti Churth
Leading Creek Rd .. Rutland , Pa_~tor : Rev.
Drwey King. St1nday ~chool · 9:30 a.m.,
Sunduy worl'hip -7 p.m .. Wedn e~day
pnyer meeting- 7 p.m.
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mi le off Rt. 325 . Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Man ley. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30 p.m..
Wed n e~day Service · 7:30 p.m.

Btarwallow Ridge Church of Chri st
Pa slor:8rUt:c Terry. Sund11y Sr.hool -9:30
a.rn
Worship - 10:30 a .m .. 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 6:30 p.m.

Wesle)'an Bible Hullnts!i Church
7.5 Pearl St.'. Middleport . Pastor: Rick
Bourne. Sunday School - 10 a .m. Worship
· 10:45 p.m.. Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday SerVice· 7:.W p.m.

Zion C hurth or Christ
Pomeroy. Harr ison ville Rd . (Rt.l43 ).
Pastor: Roger Watson. Sunday School 9:30 tu n .. Worship • 10:30 l\.m .. 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Serv ices· 7 p.m.

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor: Re\'. Larry Lemley ; ~ und ~y Schoo l
- 9:JO a.m .. Worship · 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study and Youlh - 7 p.m .

Tuppers Plain Church of Chrkt
instrumental. Worship Strvice - 9 a.m..
Communion - 10 a .m., Sunday Schoo l 10:15o .m.. Yuuth- 5:30pm Sunday. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm

Laurel Cliff Fm Melhodlst Church
Pastor: Glenp Rowe, Su nduy Schoo l 9:30 a. m., Wo r~ hi p ·- 10:30 a.m. un~ 6
p.m.,Wcd ncsday Service· 7:00p .m.

Bradbury Chun:h of Christ
Mini slcr: Tlrnt Runyuu. JY55H lh'udbury
Road, Midtllepurl . Sundil)' Slhtwl - 9:30

Latter-Day Saints ·
ur

The Chun:h Jesus
Chrbt of Latter-Day S11ints
Sr. Rt. 160. 446-0247 . or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10:20· 11 a.m .. Relief
Society/Priesthood ! 1:05- 12:00 noon,
Sa ( rament Se rvi ce 9· 10 :15 a.m..
Homemaking m~ling . lsi Thurs .· 7 p.m.

a.m.
WorShip - 10:30 a.m.
Rutland Chun:h of Chilst
Sunday Sc hOOl • 11:311 a.m .. Wor~ hip and
Commt1nion • lf):JO a.m .. Bob J. Werry.
Minisler

Lutheran

Bradrord Churth ofChrl~l
Comer of St. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradhury Rd ..
Mi nisler: Doug Shamblin. Youth ~ini ster:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School · Q:JO a.m.
Won hip - 8:00 a.m.. 10:30 a.m .. 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Scnices - 7:00 p.m.
Hk:kory lfllb Chun:h ur Christ
TupJX!ni Plains, P-4s1or Mite Moore. Bible
class. 9 ' a.m. Sunday: worship \0 .u.m.
Sunday: worship 6 ) 0 pm Sunday: Bihle
class 7 pm Wed.
R.eeds\'llle Churth of Christ
Pastor: Philip Srunn. Sunday School: 9:JO
a.m.. Won;hi p Sen•i(e: HUO a.m.. Bible
Study. Wednesday. 6:30p.m.
Dexltr Chu.rdl or Christ
Sunday schoo l 9:30a.m.. Sunda) vmrship
- 10:30 a.m .
The Ch'un:h·ofChrlsl of Pomtro)'
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelisl:
Denni s Sarge nt , Sunday Bibl e Study •
9:30a.m .. Worsh i~ : 10:30 a .m. and 6:30
p.m.. Wedtltsduy Bible Study - 7 p.m.

Christian Union
, H~rtford Cburth of CllrlSlln

Chrisdan UHan,fmd . W.Va .. Pa stor: David Gretr.
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m .. Worship •
10:30 a.m., 7:00. p .m . Wtdnesday
Services ~ 1:00 p.m.

1-800-451-9806

St. ~ uhn

Lutheran Churth
Pme Grove, WorShip - 9:00 a.m.. S u~d sy
School · 10:00 a.m. Pastor:
Our Saviour Lulhtrln Churth
Walnu t and He nry .Sts .. Ra\·cnswood,
W.Vu .. Pa stor: David Russell , Sunday
Sehoul - HI :OO ll.lll ., Worship · 11 u:.m .

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. St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,,
Sun . School · 9:45a .m .. Worship - i I o.m.

United Methodist
Graham UnUM Mtlhodl§l
.Worship . II 11.m Pmtor: Ri chard Nease
B«hltl United ~tethodlst
New Ha ven. R ic h~ rd Nease. Pao;to r.
Sunday worshi p 9:30 a.m. Tue s. 6:30
prayer and Bible Study.

Middleport, OH

MI. OMve Unlltd Mtthodlsl
Off 124 behind Wilkesville, Pastor: Rev.
Ralph Spirts, Sunday School - 9:30a .m ..
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.. Thursday
Services · 7 p.m.
Mel~e~ Coopen.tJve Parish
Nonheast Cluster. Alfn:d, Pl.'i;tor': Jim
Corbin •. Saftd&amp;y School - 9:30 a .m ..
Worship · II a.m.. 6:30 p.m. •

Cbtsttr
Pauor: Jim Cottli tt. Worship • 9 a.m ..
Sunday School' • I 0 a.m . . Thursdly

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jfisber .:funrral-omr
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M1112Ma

Pomeroy

Bill

Joppa
r-dstor: l:knzil Nllll. Wnrshtp - Y:30 li.m .
Sunday Schoo l · 10:30 a_m

'10 11 .m . 2nd and 4th Sunduy
CKrldon lntenlrnumimallomll Cbun:~
Kiu g~b ury Ro&lt;~d . Pllstor: Ruben Vi!nCc,
Su nday School · Y:30 a.m., Worship
Service 10:30 a .m .. Eve ning SerVIce 6

l'omeruy ~burch of the Naza!"fne
Pa ~tu r : Jan Lavender. Sunday S~hool 9:3() a.m.. Worship - 10:30 u.m. ;md 6
p.m.. Wednc~day Sen-ices · 7 fUll .

Long B.ottom

Sunday School • 9:JO a .m .. Worship 10:30 a.m
RtedsviHe
Worship . 9:30 a.m .. Su nday School ·
10:30 a .m., Fi rst Sunday of Month . 7:00
p.m. service

p.m.

Frffilom Gospel Miss~on
Bald Knoh. on Co. Rd . 31. Pastor: Rev.
Ru~er Willford . Sunday Sc hool - 9:30
;un. Wor~htt&gt;· 7 p.m.

Chester Chun:h or the ~1zarent
Pa~10r : Rev. Herben Grate . Sunday Sc hool
- (}:3 0 u.rn .. Wnr ship- II a.m .. 6 p.m.,
Wedne!&gt;day Sel""icc~ · 7 p.m
Kut111nd Church or the Naz.~tre nt
Pa&gt;lttr _haac Shupe. Su nday Sdtovl - 9:30
a.m .. Wor ~ hip · lO:JU a.m.. ldO p.m..
Wedne~d ay S~rv i cc~ · 1 p.m

Tuppers flain~ St. Paul
PusllJr: J im Corbitt , Sunday S.:hno l · (}
a.m .. Wo r~hip · HI a.m.. Tuc!;(:illy Sen·icc-.
- 7:30 p.m.
Central Clu.~ ter
Asbury (Syracuse). Pastor. Bob Rnbimon ,
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m., Wur, lli jl · II
a.m., W~:dm:sday Service~- 7:3() p.m.

Wh!tr '~ Chaprl W~drya n
Coolville Road. Pastor: Rev_ Charlt s
Manindalt'. Sunday Sc~oo l ~- 9:30 a.m..
Wo rship - lO:JO a.rn .. Wcdne ~da y Service
. 7 p.m.

Other Churches

•·airvie"' Bible Church
Letart. W.V"J Rr . l . Pastor : Brian May,
Sunday Sdk.IOI · !J:30 a.m.. Wor&gt;hip - 7:00
p.m.. WeJnesd~y l:l ib le Study - 7:00 p.m.
Fnith •'dlowshlp Crusade for Christ
Pa&gt;tor : Rev. Franklin Dickens, Service:
Friday. 7 p.m.

Syncu!ie Community Church
241«1 Second Sl .. SyracuM:. OH
Su n. Sl'h1111l !II ~llt. Sundy ni ~ ht fdO pm
Undt!tthc direclion of Dan &amp; Fatl h
!h yman
A Nl'w llfo.ginnlng
(Full t:ospt'l Church) Harrisonville.
Pa.,t11rs: Bob atr d Kay Marshall.
Still day Sen'ite, 2 p.m.

1-: nt l'rpri.~

Pastor : Arlanr.J King. Sunday Sehoul 10:30 u. m.. Wnrship · IJ :3U a.m.. Bible
~tudy Wed . 7:30
t'lllWIJOdS
Pastor: Keith Rader. Su nduy ~il'hool · 111
a.m Worship - 11 a.m.

Calvary Bible Church
Pomcrlly Pik.t, C11 . Rd.. Pastor: Re v
Blackwood, Sun d~ )' Sc hoo l · 9:30 a .m ..
Wu rsl1ip \0 :30 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
WcUuesday Serv1ce - 7:30 p.m.

Amaling Grace Con1munlly Ch urch
Pn ~ wr: Wayne Dunlap . State Rr . 6111,
Tupper~ Pl ain~. Sun. Wnrship: 10 am &amp;
6:30 pill .. Wed. 8ihle Study 7:00p.m.

lo'orest Nun
Bob Robt n•i.iri , Sunday Sdukll - 10
a.m . Worship - 9 a.m.

Stlversvllle Communlly Church
Pastor: v/aync R. Jewell , Sunday worship
· 6:00 p.tll .. Wedn esday · 6:00p.m. Bible
Study

P~1stor :

Hea th IMiddltportJ
Pastor: Brian Dunh"Jm . Sunday
9:30a .m.. Worsh ip · II :011 a.m.

Ott.'~ ls Christian Fellowship
INnn ·dcnomi nutional felluw.1hipJ
Meeting in the Meigs Middle School.
Ctt fett"ria Pa,tor: Chri5 S r ~wart
IU :OIJ am · Ntltl/J .Sumlay : lnfonmll
Worship . Childre n·s m1ntstry

S~ hool

Miners,·llle
Pas1or: Boh Robinson, Su nday School - II
a.m.. Worship · 10 a.m .

Communil}' or Christ
PnnlamJ.Raci nc Rd .. Pa~to r : Jim Pmffitl.
Sunday Sc hnol · tHO :un .. Worship .
10:30 a.rn.. Wednesday Serv ice&lt;; - 7:00 _
p.m.
Bethel ~orship Centtr
39781 S.R. 7. Reeds,·illt' , OH 45772, 112
mile north or En~t e rn Schools 011 SK 7. A
fllll Gospel Chur~ h . Paslt)r Rob Barber.
Assoc inlc · !'astor Karyn Dllvis, Youth
Pas1U r Sude Fram:is. Su nd ay~ services
10:00 am wm ship . 6:00 pm Family Life
ClaHes . Wed . Hcmw Ce ll Group ~ 7:00
p.m.. Olller Limits Cell Group at the
durch 6:30pm to fUll pm

Prurl C h~tptl
Sunday S~hoo l- 9 a.m .. Wur~hi p - 10 a.1n.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Brian Dunhum. Worship · 9:311
~un .. Sunday School- 10:35 a.m.
Kor k Springs
Pastor: Keith Radt'r. Sunday School - 9 : 15
a nL, Worshi p - 10 a .m .. Youth
Fellowship . Sunday . 6 p m.

Snowville
Sunday Sc hool - 10 a.m.. Worship · 9 a.m.
Htlhany
Pa,stor: John Gilmon:: . Sunday Sc hool - 10
a.m.. Wnnhip · Y a.m .. Wedne sday
Services . 10 a.m

Full GO!ipel Chun:h
of the Living Savior
Rt.3 38. Antiquity. Pastor: Jesse Monis,
Services: Saturday 2:00 p.m
Salem Communi!)' l;: hurch
Back nf West Cnlumhia. W.Va .om Lieving
Road . Paslor: Charles Roush (304) 6752288. Su nday School IJ:30 am, Sunday
eve ning §e rvice 7:00 pm . Bibly Study
1
Wednesday sef"\Jice 7:00 pm
Hobson Christian Felluwship Church
Pastor: H er~c he l White . Sunday School10 am,Sunday Chui'ch service· 6:30pm
Wednesday 7 pm

Abundanl Grate R.F. I.
CJ23 S. Third St .. Middlep11n . .Pas10rTeresa
Dav is . Su nd ay servin=. lU a .m ..
Wednesday sel""il'e. 7 p.m.

Cannei-Sutlon
Carmel &amp; ·Bashan Rds. R"Jcinc. Ohio,
Pastor: John Gi lm ore, Sunday S( hool ·
9:45a.m., Worship - 11 :00 a.nt. , Bible
Study Wed. 7:.\1) p.m.

Rnluration ,Chrlsdan Fellcnuhip
9365 Huope r Rulld, Athen s, Paslor :
Lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship 10:00 am,
Wednesday: 7 pm ,

t'alth t' ull Gosptl Church
Lnng Rollnm. Pmtor: Steve Reed. Sunday
School · 9:30 a.m. Worsh ip - Q:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednc&gt;&lt;lny - 7 p.m .. Friduy fe llow ~ h i , service 7 p.m

Morning Star
Pastor: John Gil mol"(. SundJy School · 11
a.m., Woi-.&gt;hip · Ill a.m.
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House of Healtna Mlnlstrttt
51. Rt, 124 Langs,·llle, OH .
Full Gospel. Cl Pastors Robert &amp; Roberta
Musser. Sunday Schoo l 9:JU am . .
Won hip 10:30 am . 7:00 pm. Wed .
Service 7:[M) pm
Team Jesm Mlnlslries
Meeting in the Mulberry Community
Center Gymnasium . Pastor Eddie Baer.
Service every Tuesday 6:30 pm

Harrhon\·llle Communll)' Church
Pastor: Theron Du rham . Sunday · 11:30
a.m. ar1d 7 p.m., Wedne ~d ny - 7 p.m.

Ea~t Ldart
Pastor : Bill Marsh ~ll Sun tlity School 9a .m.. Wor ship - 10 a.nt.. 1st Sundu y
every month evening se r vic~ 7:(1() p.m.:
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

R"aclnl'
Pastor: Kerry Wood. S und ~y Sl·houl - Ill
·a.m.. Worship . . I I "J .mWedncsd:•y
Serv ices 6 pm : Thur Riblc Study,7 pm
Coolville United Mtthodist Parish
Pustor: Helen Kl ine, Coolvil le Church,
Main &amp; Fifth St. , Sun . Sch(ll)l · 10 u.m..
Worship · IJ tun .. Tue~. Stnirc ~ · 7 p.m.
lkthel C hal ~ h
TttY.nship Rd .. 46RC. Sunduy S\: houl - 9
M.m. Worship - 10 a.m .. Wednesda)
Senkes · 10 a.m.
llocklngport Churth
Grand Street. Su nday School • 9:.10 a.m..
Wtmhip · 111:30 a.nL Pastor Ph1lltp Bell

9 :~ 0

Clifton Talwrnaclt Churth
Clifton, W.Va ., Sunday School - 10 a.m.1
Wors.hip - 7 p.m. ." Wednesday Serv i ~e - 7
p.m.
New Life VldOry Center
3773 Georges Creek Rbad .Gall lpolis, 0H
Pastor: Bill S111ten. Sunday Se rvices· 10
~ .m . &amp; 1 p.m. WedneM1ay · 7 p.m. &amp;
Youth 7 p.m.

Ash Street Church
398 Ash St.; M i ddlt•pon . P a~t pr Jeff Smith
Sunday School - IJ:30 a:n1 .,, Morning
Wnrship · 10 : ~0 a.m . &amp; 7:00 pm',
Wednesday Service ·. 7;0() p.m., Youth
Service - 7:00 P..m.
Agapt Life Cenlcr
"Fuii -Guspel Church", Pastors John &amp;
Pany Wade , 60J ScctJnd Ave . Mason. 773 501 7, Senicc rime: Sunday 10:30 a.m..
Wl'llncsd ny 7 pm

Rutland
Pastor: Rick ~uu rn e, Sunduy Sehoul ·
9:3[1a.m.. Worship - 111:.10 a.m.. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.
Salem Ctnter
P..utor: Willi~m K. Murshall. Sunday
School - 10:15 a.m., Worship · IJ:IS a.m..
Bible Study: Munday 7:00pm

Torth .C hurt'h
Co . Rd . 63. Su nday SdliJ(II •
W()rship . 10:30 a.m.

Kejolclng Llft ChUJ'th
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport , Pastor:
Mike Foreman. Pastor Emeritm La ~rence
Foreman. Worship- 10:00 am
W~dnes day Servi ~-es. 7 p.m.

a.n1..

Nazarene
Mlddltporl Churr:h of the Nuaftne
Pastor: Allen Midcap . Sunday School 9:30 a.m ..Worship - 10:30 a.m.. tdO p.m..
Wedne ~day Services ~ 7 p.m .. Pastor:
Allen Midcap

Rmlsvlllt Ftllowshlp
Chun:h of the Na1.a~t:nc. Pa stor: Russell
Carson . Sttnday School · 9:30 a.tl ..
Worship - 10:45 a.m.. 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Services · 7 p.m

Middleport Community Chun:h
575 Pearl St.. Middleport , Pa .~tor : Sam
AndcrM•Il. Su nday School 10 . a.m ..
E1c n i n ~: · 7:.'11 p.m .. Wedne sday Servio.:c ): JOp .lll .

Pentecostal
Pcnteroslal Assembly
Pastor : Gary &amp; Sharon Hughes, Sr. Rr.
124. Racine . Tornado Rd. Sunday &amp;:hool 10 u.m., Evening - 7 p.1n , Wednesday
ServiL-e~· 7 p.m.

Faith Yallfy Tabernacle Church
Hailey Rtln Road , Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Ruw sun. Su ndA y E1·enmg 7 p.m ..
Th ur.Wny Scro•icc . 7 p.m.
S~ucuse

Presbyterian

Mi!o'&gt;ion

Harrison, !lie Prtsbyterian C h~rch
Pastor : Kohen Crow. Wors ~ip · 9a.m.

141 1 Bridgeman St.. Syra,· u ~c. Sunday
Sc hool · 10 a.m. Eve nin g - 6 p.m . .
Wednesd~y Service· 7 p.m.

l\-liddltporl Preshyll'fian
Pastor : J u nH.~' Snyder. Sunday SChool 10
a.nl.. wofship servil·~ 11 am.

Hazel Com munlly Cburth
Off RL 1:!4, Pustnr: Edse l Han. Sunday
S~hoo l - 9 : ~0 a.m.. Worship - lO :JO a.m..
7:311p .m.

Seventh-Day Adventist '
Sennlh-Da)· Advenllst
Mulherry Hts. Rd .. Pomeroy. Sa!urday
s~r l'k~s: Sabb urh s,·hool
2 p.m ..
Wnn;hip · J p.m.

Oytsville Communily Cburth
Sunday Sdmul · 9:JO a.m.. Wor.; hip ·
IO:JOa.m.. 7 p.m.
Morse Ch1pel Chun:h
Su nd~ y school · 10 a'.m .. Worsttip · 11
a.m.. WCilnesday Scl'\•it:e · 7 p.m.

United l;lrethren

t'alth G~l Ch11rth
Long Houom . Sunday School - 9:.1() a.m..
Worship - 10:45 am .. 7:} 0 p .m ..
· ~nesday 7:JOp.m.
, Mt . Oii\'1' Communlly Churt'h
Pastor: L:111.renl't Bush. Sunday Sehoul ·
9:]0 a.m , E1·t ning . 6JO p.m.. Wedntday
Service - 7 p.m.
Full Gospel Lighthouse
33045 Hi land Road. Pomeroy. Pastor: Roy
lluntcr. Suor.lay Sd iDol · 10 a.m .. E1·ening
7:30p.m.. Tuesday &amp; Thurs .· 7:)() p.m.

Ml.llmnoo Unitt4 Brtlhnn
in Christ Church
Texa" Community 3041 1 Wickh• m Rd .
PaMm: Peter Manindak. Sunday School 11 :.~0 ~ .m :. Wor.;hip - 10:30 a .m ... 7:00
p.m .. ~'e dnt sday Sen ·ices • 7:00 p.m.
Youth ~roup mce;ung 2nd &amp; 4th Sund1ys
7 p.rn
t:dtn Unllfd Brtthrtn in Cbrtst
S t n t ~ Rnute ·124. het y,·een Reedsville&amp;:
H i'C l in~ l" ln . Sunday School · 10 1.m ..
Sunday Wor!&gt;hip · II :UO a.m. Wednesday
Sen·kes . 7:00 p.m.. Pastor- M . Adam
Will

South Bellad Communll)' Chun:h

Syntu.w Chui'th of I he Naz.artM

ROCKSPRINGS
Let )iour light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER met!, tllar they may see your
Tht can you dtstM, tlosttd llillllt good works and glorify your

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

SWISHER &amp; LOHS~
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescri~tions

Pomeroy

992·2955

Father in hfaven ..,
Matthew 5:16

God
. so loved !he
. wor·/d
l1e gave his only
1bi~JlCitlen SOil ...

Joh11 3:16

"So I strive always to keep ~
my conscience clear before ~ ·[,,.,..familyMp

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolville, Ohio
Located less !hart 30 minutes from
Athen s. Pomeroy or Paikersbutg

1-740-667·3156
·"Still small
to cart"

·M111!race is
for thee: for m11
strenath is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
197-C N. 2nd Ave.
prottct Y"" family •
God and man."
I su,ppre,;siion • Extinguishc" . Sprinkle"
Middleport, OH
Acts 24:16
' Securily
•
112 N. 2nd Ave . Middleport .OH
99.2-6376
::J.......~~~~~~~L.....................~~~35~3~~~8~37~F~ax~: ~~~~~. . . . . ..;;;~~~. . . . . .J.

White
Home
I!!W
A.N'DERSOf'li
Since 1858
fl' NERAL HOME
9 Fifth Street
t74 ...,... -·PO 114lx210
N&lt;wlll•a.wv zsw
Coolville, Ohio
J~~-~~;::,:;::.:;:F;::!.~7..
740-667-3110
~

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

Services - 7 p.m.

'

. ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
words abide in you, ye shall INSURANCE
ask what ye' will, and il shall
SERVICES~
..
214.E. Main
be done unto you.
992-5130
.. John 15:7

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues t-shirts and more

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

Trinity Church
Second &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jonat han Noble . Worship 10:25 il.tll .,
Su nday SdlQol Y:l5 ~ . m .

Keno Church of Chdst
Worshi p - 9:30 a. m.. Sunday School .
10:30 a.m.. Pustor·Jc ffrey Wallace. 1st and
3rd Sunday

~

507 Mulberry' Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 Iii::.
(740) 992-3279
~
Tol Free 1-877·583-2433

Congregational

Middleport Churth of Christ
5th uml Mum. Pastor: AI Hartso n.
Ch ild re n ~ D1rector: Sharon Sayre, Teen
Director: Dodger Vaughan . Sunday School
• 9:JO tun .. Wor sh ip- ~ : IS. 10:30 a.m . 7
p.m . Wednesday Services- 7 p.m..

your light so shine bel&lt;&gt;reJ
:1 nten, that 'they may see
works aqd glorify
!ll'atl~er in heaven."
499 Ridlland Avenue, Athens
Manhew 5:

•.

Church of God of Prophecy
OJ . White Rd. off
Rt. 100, Pastor: PJ .
Chapman . Sunday School
10 a.m .,
Worship - I I a.m., Wednesday Services- 7
p.m .

Pomeroy Wrstslde Chun:h of Christ
33226 C hi l drt n '~ Hnrne Rd .. Sund~y
S~houl · II a.m .. Worship · IUll .m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

740-594-6333

DLEPORT.
TROPHIES &amp; TEEs

Syra('tl§t rtnil Churr:li of God
Apple and Second Sts., P'dstor: 'Rev_David
RuHe ll. Sunday School alld Wonhip- 10
a.m . Even ing Se rvices- 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Se r,li(es . 6:30 p.m.

st

Catholic

If ye abide in Me, and My

w~rds abide in you, ye shall
aslc what ye will, and il shall
be done unto you.
. John 15:7

Mt, Moriah Church or God
Mile Hi ll Rd., Racine , Pastor: James
Satterfiel d. Sunday School · IJ:4S a.m.,
Evenif!g - 6 p.m., Wednesday Services- 7
p.m .
Rutland Church or Cod
Pastor: Ron Heath , Sunday Worship - 10
a.m., 6 p.m., Wednesday Services · 7
p.m.

a.m.. Wor:.tup - 10:30 am .. b p.m..
Wcdne:oday Servicei • 7 p.m.

Blessed are the pure
. h
fi h
In eart; or t ey
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

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Tbe Daily Sentinel

OPINION

•

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740J 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnal.com
·

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

Congress ~hall make no law respecti~g an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or o/the press; or the r.ight 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, April 27, the II 7th day of 2007. There
are 248 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: OnApril 27, 1805, during the First Barbary War, an American-led force of
Marines and mercenaries captured the city of Derna, on
the shores of Tripoli.
.
On this date: In 1509, Pope Julius II excommunicated the
republic of Venice. (The pope lifted the ban in February 151 0.)
· In 1521, Portuguese exr.Jorer Ferdinand Magellan was
killed by natives in the Phtlippines.
: In 1570, Pope Pius V.excommunicated Queen Elizabeth I.
In 1822, the 18th president of the United States, Ulysses
S. Grant, was born in Point Pleasant, Ohio.
·
In 1865, the steamer Sultana exploded on the Mississippi
River near Memphis, Tenn., killing more thari 1,400 people, mostly Union prisoners of war.
In 1932, American poet Hart Crane, 32, drowned after
· jumping from a steamer into the Gulf of Mexico while en
route to New York.
In 1947, it was "Babe Ruth Day" at Yankee Stadium as
baseball fans, not just in New York, but across the country
as, well, honored the ailing star.
.
In 1967, Expo '67 was officially opened in Montreal by
Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson.
In 1973, during the Watergate scandal, Acting FBI
Director L. Patrick Gray resigned.
.
In 1978, convicted Watergate defendant John D. Ehrlichman
was released from an Arizona prison after serving 18 months.
Ten years ago: President Chnton, along with former presidents Georse Bush and Jimmy Carter, helped polish gritty
city streets m Philadelphia as they launched the three-day
· Summit for America's Future, a gathering on community
· service also attended by former President Gerald Ford and
former first lady Nancy Reagan. .
Five years ago: South African entrepreneur Mark
Shuttleworth arrived at the international space station for an
eight-day, seven-night cruise that had cost him $20 million. A
biker brawl at Harrah's Casino in Laughlin, Nev., left three bikers dead and 12 others wounded. Derek Lowe of-the Boston
Red Sox pitched a no-hiller against the Tampa Bax Devil Rays,
10-Q, Mallei toy company co-fowider Ruth Handler, who created the Barbie doll, died in Los Angeles at age 85.
One year ago: Construction began on the 1,776-foot
Freedom Tower that will stand on the site of the World
Trade Center in New York City. The publisher of the teen
novel "How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild and Got a
Life" pulled the book off the market after its author,
Hllf\'ard student Kaavya Viswanathan acknowledged that
numerous passages had been lifted from another writer.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Jack Klugman · is 85. Actress
Anouk Aimee is 75. Announcer Casey Kaseril is 75. Rhythmand-blues singer Cuba Gooding is 63. Rock singer Kate
Pierson (The B-52's) is 59. Actor Douglas Sheehan is 58.
Rock musician Ace Frebley is 56. Pop singer Sheena Easton is
48. Rock singer-musician Patrick Stump (Fall Out Boy) is 23.
. , Thought for Today: "The trouble w1th our age is all signposts and no destination." - Louis Kronenberger,
American author ( 1904-1980).

You're waiting for ttie
other shoe to drop.
You know the shoe I'm
talking about - the religion
shoe. When the . Virginia
Tech University story
broke, .you began clicking
from Web site to Web site,
channel to channel, seeking
information and, then,
something more.
You've seen photos of
mourners in pews, offering
comfort and seeking solace.
You know believers will
pray and journalists will
keep aiming cameras at
them, because, that's what
Bible Belt· people. do.
People in the southwest
Virginia put scriptures on
big road signs and build
huge crosses next to
Interstate highways. They
pray. Jt'.s a good photo, but
it's just prayer. Right?
No, you're waiting for a
real religion angle to surface, a crazy one linked to
violence and power. After
all, religion surfaces in so
many bloody stories these
days.
Plus, you know there are
politicos in Washington
who are silting, TV remotes
in hand, waiting to grade the
candidates. Will Barack
Obama get the tone right,
with the right mixture of
scripture and concern? Will
Hillary Clinton look chilly?
WiJI anyone in the GOP
herd look both presidential
and pastoral? You know the ..
pope will say something

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services'
correction Polley ·

(usPS 2t3-180)
Ohio Valley Publllhlng co.
Our main concom In all . - 1o to · _., -..,.,, Mcnelly
o.-.. I
through Friday, 111 Court Strtet,
be accurate . •• yw N.,w
o an error Pomeroy, ONe. Secon!ldlu poa11ge
in a stclfY, call !he newsroom at (740) pold 11 Pomeroy.

-ted -

---The
lnd
1111 O l l l o - - -lion.

(740) 182·2158.
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News
Editor. Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
lhpoltw: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
RepooW. Beth Sergent, Ext. 13 .

Advertising

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Streot, Pomeroy, Ohio 457811. .

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-

Terry
Mattingly

and that - no matter what
he says about the mysteries
of life and death, good and
evil - it will appear in
news reports as a naive cry
fpr peace and for an end to
violence.
Then · again, journalists
know that the Jerry
Falwell 's Liberty University
is a few interstate exits
away from Blacksburg, Va.,
and the Virginia Tech campus.
So maybe he 'll go to
Virginia Tech and talk about
jealousy, broken hearts and
the sexual revolution. Or
maybe Pat Robertson will ·
say - something, anything.
Then, on the other side, perhaps the atheist version of
Robertson could call a press
conference and say this
tragedy is more evidence
that life is random and without purpose.
You're waiting to find out
what video game the shooter played all hours of the
day and night. Did he go to
see the movie "300" one too
~mmy times? Was he driven
by Satan or too many "Left
Behind" novels? People on

both sides of the sacred vs.
secular divide need to know.
You're waiting to see if
he killed more women than
men. You want to know if
the big massacre started in
the classroom of an evangeiical professor who once
witnessed to the ' shooter
and made him mad. You
heard reporters say the
shooter was Asian and you
immediately
thought:
Asia? What part of Asia?
What religion was he?
You're waiting for something that points toward the
source of this evil.
· Am I right?
, And if you remember the
Columbine (Colo.) High
School massacre, · you may
be thinking of that column
that journalist Peggy
Noonan - a traditional
Catholic - wrote about the
"culture of death" hours
after that hellish day.
She wrote: "Your child is
an intelligent little fish . He
swims in deep water. Waves
of sound and sight, of
thought and fact, come
invisibly through that water,
like radar; they go thro1,1gh
hi!]1 again .and again, from
this direction and that. The
sound from the television is
a wave, and·the sound from
the radio .... The waves contain words like this, which
I'll limit to only one source,
the news: " ... took the .stand
to say the killer was smiling
the day the show aired ...
said the procedure is, in

fact, legal infanticide ... is
thought to be connected to
earlier sexual activity
among teens ... court battle
over who owns the frozen
sperm ... contains songs !hat
call for dominating and
·even imprisoning women ...
died of lethal injection ...
had threatened to kill her
children. ... had asked
Kevorkian for help in
killing himself ... protested
the game, which they said
has gone beyond violence to
sadism
showed no
remorse .•. which is about a
wager over whether he
could sleep with another
student ... which is about
her attempts to balance
three lovers and a watchful ·
fiance ...
"This is the ocean in
which our children swim.
This is the sound of our cuilure. It comes from all parts
of our culture and reaches
all parts of our culture, .and
all the people in it, which is
everybody."
You're waiting for the
other shoe to drop. You
want to know the eternal
"why" in "who, what, when,
· where, why and how." I
know I do.
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads ·
the
GetReligion.org project to ·
st~dy religion and the
news.)

TALKS ABOUT

RUSSIAN

DEMO~RACY

AN'f!YlORE.

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"\ ~ =--

:::-

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I

:Obituaries

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.

MIDDLEPORT - George L: Harris, Sr., 83, Middleport,
passed away on Monday, April23, 2007, at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis,. after a courageous battle against the
effects of diabetes.
. ~wa~ born in Minersville, on Dec. 25, 1923, son of the
late U:w1s E. and Mary A. (Bartels) Harris. He served in the
'·!J. S. ,ynt~ as a combat infantryman in World War II, see- .
~~~~a~ !ton m Germany with the 271 st Regiment of the 69th
DIVISIOn. He was a retired automobile salesman who
· worked for various local dealerships. He was also a former
_' salesman for the Pomeroy Feod Company.
,
: · He served on the Me1gs County Board of Elections and
· was a Republican Committeeman. He was a member of the
: Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, for over 50 years and was
· a 32nd Degree Mason. He was also a member of the Drew
· Webster. American Legion Post 39 ·for over 50 years and
·· was a former Post commander. He was a member and
·attended the Trinity Church of Pomeroy.
·
· In add1t1on to h1s parents, he was preceded in death in
2000 by his wife of 54 years. Lois (Hayman) Harris; brothers-in-law, William Lewis and Denver Rice.
· .
. George is survived by his two sons, George L. (Cinda)
Hams, Jr. and Thomas R. (Sheila) Harris, all of
· Middleport; his sister,: Nora E. Rice of Middleport; his
brother, Kenneth E. (Peggy) Harris of Pomeroy; sisters-in. law and brothers-in-law, Lillian and William Hayman, Jr.,
of Racine; Janice and John Simpson of Pasadena, Texas;
Mary Ellen Lewis of Houston, Texas; his tive grandchil•dren: The Rev. Phillip J. Harris of Circleville, Carrie A.
· (Michael) Kennedy of Middleport, Resa R. (Randall)
Hooks of Columbus, Jay W. Hams and Abby J. Harris, both
· of Middleport; and several nephews and a.niece. Very special to him were his great-grandchildren.
· Graveside services will be held at . II a.m. on Monday,
April30, 2007, at Letart Falls .Cemetery. Officiating will be
Rev. Jonathan Noble. Arrangements were handled by
Fisher Funeral Home.
In lieu of !lowers, contributions may be made to Drew
Webster Post 39, P.O. Box 40 I, Pomeroy, OH. 45769 or
Central Ohio Diabetes Association, II 00 Dennison
. Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43201.
· On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com

POMEROY - Vendors who sell cigarel!es must renew
cigarette licenses for 2007-2008, according to Auditor
Mary Byer-Hill.
Pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Section 5734.15, persons
engaging in the wholesale or retail business of Cigarette
sales must have a license to do so. Licenses may be purchased by mail with the application that was mailed to current vendors or at the auditor's office.
.
Licenses must be purchased before May 29. Revenues are
distributed .locally to townships, villages and the county.
Licenses may be purchased from 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.,
Monday through Friday. Additional information is available. at 992-2698.

William -'Bilr 'IUbbs

POMEROY - The following were sentenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court:
• Amanda F. Neece, one year each on charges of com-.
plicity to breaking and entering and one count of complicity to receiving stolen property. Four years were suspended, with Community Control order.
• Margilee V. Lemley, to one year, suspended, on a
char~e of possession of crack cocaine. Health Recovery
Serv1ces/TASC evaluation, 500 hours of community service, operator's .license suspended for six months.
• Terri L. Brewer, one year for possession of Percocet,
$190 restitution to Pomeroy Police Department.
• Bobbi J. Roush, two years, suspended, on charges of
receiving stolen property and forgery. Community' Control,
500 hours of community ·service.

·

Breakfast and auction planned
ALFRED - ' The Alfred Unilect Methodist Church will
hold a breakfast and auction on Saturday, May 5. It is open
to the r.ublic. Serving will begin at 6:30 a.m. and the auction w1ll take place at 10 a.m.

Class reunion planned
POMEROY - A luncheon at the Wildhorsehas been
planned for the Pomeroy High School Class of 1939 at
II :30 a.m. on May 26, the day. of the annual banquet and
reunion at Meigs High School. Class members are encouraged to attend the luncheon as well as the evening banquet.

For the Record
Dissolution
POMEROY - An action for dissoiution of marriage was
filed in Meigs County Co~mon Pleas Court by Michelle L.
Hutton, Rutland, and Chnstopher M. Hutton, Rutland.

Sentenced

Foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure was granted in Meigs
CoUifty Common Pleas Court to J.P. Morgan ChaseBaitk,
N.A., against Susan Lyn Jones, and o!}ters.

Highway Patrol
POMEROY- Cornelio Morales, 23, 33290 Ohio 124,
Racine, was cited for unsafe vehicle by the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol following a one-car accident Wednesday on Ohio 7 near Pomeroy.
Troopers said Morales was southbound at 4 p.m. when the
right rear tire on the car he drove.blew out. The car went off
the left side of the road and struck two highway traffic signs.
The car had functional damage, according to the report.

from PageA1

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living in a severely structured s!)ciety like (say)
19th-century Japan, where
everyone knew his place
and unconventional behavior was severely condemned. But the sort Of
"anything goes" mood dominant in America today carries with it, inevitably, the
risk that occasionally unstable individuals will choose
to go much too far.
So the unpalatable truth -is
that, · as a practical matter,
there is little we can do to
prevent tragedies like
Virginia Tech. ay all means
improve the observation, .
reporting and treatment. of
individuals who display
dangerous · psychological
symptoms. And condemn
and prevent (to the extent
that the courts will permit
it) the use of television and
other means ofcommunication to celebrate violence.
But as long as we, as a
nation, place the rights of
the individual in the forefront of our concern, · arid
relegate to a lesser status the ·
protection of society, we
will have to pay, from time
to time, the price for our
preference.
. (William Rusher is · a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont lnstitljte for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.) ·

grantoppo~ties

'

Licenses due

Plates·

been to treat such "me'ntal
problems" with scrupulous
consideration for those
who have them, but with
little or no thought for others · who may be endanWilliam
gered. In Virginia, where
Rusher
this massacre occurred, it .
is actually against the law
to notify even a student's
parents about his or he.r
noses, and the key question . psychological condition
is whether this ought to without. th~ . st~dent's
have been perceived in ex. press permiSSIOn. . .
advance and steps taken 10
But, unfortunately, not
head him off.
even the most draconian
Silent and stealthy though treatment of mentally dishe was, it appears that vari- turbed individuals could
ous symptoms of his trou- prevent all tragedies of this
ble had been noticed in son. Even today, ·a person
recent years, and a few who is clinically diagnosed
efforts had been made to as a danger to himself or
deal with them. He had others can legally be
stalked a couple of girls, restrained. But for ev~ry
who reporied their fears, , s~ch per,-son whose behav1or
and had written various ~ g1ves .h1m away, tl)ere are
exercises as schoolwork and will always be scores of
whose hostility so all!rmed others who are never di.shis teachers that they covered, and who w1ll
referred him for psychiatric remam at large unttl. every
attention. But he managed now and then, it is too late.
to elude serious study and
Tl)e problem is ma~e far
effective care, and carry out worse by the general atmoshis grisly plans.
.
phere of American society,
The basic reason he was which in recent decades, in
able to do so is that symp- deference ·to the First
toms of the son he dis- Amendment, has counteplayed exist in huge num- · nanced more .and more
bers in this nation of 300 depictions of violent behav- '
million people. What 's ior - most notabl)l on telemore, the trend in our soci - vision. Americans today
ety in recent decades has would certainly not enjoy

Foundation offering

CieoiJe L Harris·

:==·

The slaughter of 32 students and faculty members
at Virginia Tech, by a
deranged student who then
killed himself, forces us to
confront and reconsider certain disagreeable facts abou~
American society today.
, Luckily, a poll since the
massacre indrcates that 79
percent of those questioned
dismiss the idea that all that
was needed to prevent this
tragedy was some stricter
laws against guns. In a
nation with an estimated
210 million guns in private
hands, that notion surely
deserves a prize for sheer
stupidity.
But there are all sorts of
more· sensible considerations. The self-televised
rants of the gunman, which
he mailed off to NBC and
which were broadcast
extensively in the days following the . event, clearly
demonstrate that he was a
seething mass of hatred for
just about everything and
everyone in his environment. Whether he was a
psychotic, a psychopath,
something else with a
fancy technical name, or
was simply a profoundly
evil human being can be
argued ;u any length that ,
satisfies us. But the glaring
fact is that he developed
into a killer right under our

The 'Daily Sentinel. • Page As

Local Briefs

ALBANY - William "Bill" Tubbs, 76, of Albany, passed
away unexpectedly Thursday, April 26, 2007, at his residence.
He was born Sept. 18, 1931, in Athens County, to the late
Henry Orville and Mildred Ester Martin Tubbs.
He was an e~gineer in the aircraft industry for many
years, a member of the Elks in Arizona, .a member of the
American Legion, Drew Webster Post No. 39 of Pomeroy,
and a member of the United Methodist Church iii Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife, Sue Tubbs of Syracuse; children,
Mary (Dean) Keller of Peoria, Ariz., William (Michel!e)
Tubbs of Black Canyon, Ariz., daughter-in-law, Tammy
Tubbs of Phoenix, Ariz .. Jackie (Mike) Shriver of St.
Mary's, Ohio, and Dan (Pam) Cramer of Marysville; a
brother, John (Margie) Tubbs of Washington Court House;
grandchildren, Charlotte and Eddie Caffereta, Will, Cara,
Jaron Tubbs, Michael Peiz, Holly (Charles) Cubberly,
Samantha Tubbs, Scott, Molly and Megan Shriver, and
Caleb and Emily Craml)r; three great-grandchildren; and ·
several nieces, nephews and cousins.
He was preceded in death by: his parents, and a son,
Bruce Tubbs.
Services will be I p.m:· Monday, April 30, 2007, at the
Fisher Funeral Home in .Pomeroy, with the Rev. Brian
Dunham officiating. Burial will follow at the Oak Grove
Cemetery in Logan, Ohio. Visitation will be held from 2 to 4
and 6to 8 p.m. Sunday, April 29, 2007, at the funeral home.
Military rites will be conducted by the Drew Webster
Post No. 39 in Pomeroy.
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

NogoDY

-

www.mydailysentinel.crom

to be an m:gan donor really
means and these plates are
meant to raise awareness
about those fears and discover
the · facts. Anoth~r trend
Maison:notices is more young
people agree to be organ
donors than older r.ersons. ·
Currently a qu1lt of hope
from Lifeline of Ohio is on
display at the BMV; featuring organ donors from Ohio
and. their gifts,, including
Matthew All, the only person on the ,quilt from Meigs
County. Maison said the
quilt honors the gifts given
while Korn represents the
gifts received through organ
donation.
Korn. is living proof that
organ donations do make a
difference. Another difference
in Kom 's life is that she says
she doesn't get upset over
things that don't matter,
because life is too short.

The new plates cost $15
annually ..in addition to the
usual registration fees. A
portion of the plate fees, $5,
will go to benefit the Ohio .
Department of Health's
Second Chance Trust Fund
which educates Ohioans
about the difference one
individual can make by
signing up as an organ and
tissue donor in the Ohio
Donor Registry.
Meigs County BMV
Deputy Registrar Sue Maison
and her staff can register
Ohioans into the re~istry
when they renew their licenses. Maison said her office
receives "more no's than
yes"' when it comes to registering to be an organ donor.
For more information
Maison said there are still
many misconceptions out about the plates go to
there about what registering www.bmv.ohio.gov. ·

The massacre at Virginia Tech

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published, Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leuers of
thonks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication.

Our .11111ln number ..

· Friday, April27, 2ocn

Friday, April27, 2007

Lookingfor the 'why'

LETTERS TO THE
EDiTOR

992·2156.

Pagei\4.

POMEROY
The
. Foundation for Meigs
County Futute (FMCF) has
two grant opportunities, up
to $1,000 each, to assist
Meigs County non-profit
or§anizations.
'The FMCF in ~ranting
monies, hopes to 1mprove
the lives of its local citizens,
promote the growth of charitable giving in Meigs
County and to provide
resources and information
to assist others in the development of philanthropic
resources to provide grants,
scholarships, and endowments for future generations," according to Hal
Kneen, an officer.
It was noted that one grant
for up to $1,000 was given
as a bequest of · Abbie
Warner Stratton to assist in
the musical educa~ion of
youth in Meigs County. A
second grant for up to
$1 ,000 is available to non
profit organizations which
assist residents in their

acttvlltes to improve the
lives of fellow Meigs
Countians.
The short grant application
is available by writing c/o
FMCF P.O. Box 97, Pomeroy,
OH 45769 or by emailing
meigsfuture@yahoo.com.
Applications are due by May
15, and grants will be awarded June 15.
FMCF started as a result ·
of a joint venture called
Appalachian Ohio Giving,
between the Foundation of
Appalachian Ohio, The
Ohto State University
Extension, and Meigs
County individuals. The
objective was to create
regional partnerships that
promote the growth of
in
charitable
giving
Appalachian Ohio. Few
charitable funds are locaied in the Appalachian
region so this pilot program was initiated to educate a small number of residents about foundations
andcharitable giving. ·

Byer presents program
to retired teachers
POMEROY - Robert
Byer, Director of Meigs
County
Emergency
Management Agency was
the .g\lest speaker at the
recent meeting of the Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association.
The association met at
Trinity Church for a Iuncheon meeting. President
Gay Perrin led devotions in
memory of the late Carol
Ohlinger, ""What is Life?"
She had prayer before the
lunch, serve(! to 15 members and three guests.
Byer discussed the county's plan for emergency preparedness. He said the Four
W's of emergency management are Who we are, What
we do, What we are doing
and What you can do. He
addressed each of these areas.
Since Sept. II, 200 I, we
have two new terms in our
vocabulary, terrorism and
homelal)d security. Byer
told of being aware, havmg
a plannint~ process, training
and exerctse, and a recovery
plan. He also told of the
seven signs of terrorism:
Surveillance, elicitation,
tests of security, acquiring
supplies, suspicious people
who don't belong, dry runs
and deploying. assets and
gettmg mto pos1t1on.
Members signed cards for

Ida Diehl, Vinas Lee, Helen
Maag and Russ Moore. The
treasurer, Bill Downie, gave
his report. A donation to the
MCRTA scholarship fund
will be made in honor of
Ohlinger.
The president showed the
group the quilt square that
Rosalie Story made for the
quilt that is going to be displayed as part of the
ORTA's 60th anniversary
celebration.
·
Connie Enslen and
. Debbie Roush will be going
to Columbus to attend
Legislative Day on April 24.
The group was thanked
for items donated to
Serenity House.
Flowers donated by
Debbie Roush were given to
Rachel
Downie,
Bill
Downie, Dorothy Chaney,
Connie Enslen, · Nadine
Goebel, Gay Perrin and
Janice We~r as door prizes.
The next meetmgw11Ibe
May 17 at the R1vers1de
Golf Course Clubhouse.

&amp;mEL
JC~ABLISHED
1895

4728
The Ohio Valley
· Symphony
Guitar Classics ·
Spm
Sill
The Sinatra Show
featuring the
Joey Thomas Big Band
Dinner ti&lt;kets available
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec:. Ave. Galli~li~_?H
740-446-ARTS t27871

Of
·Tilents ·

Beth SercentJphoto

· Jhis quilt of hope is currently on display at the BMV featur. jng organ donors (rom Ohio and their gifts, including .
Matthew Alt. the ony person on the quilt from Meigs County.

Aprii29. ~ 'May 3rd
3:00p.m. Circie the Meigs CountY~
'

,J.,

'

y ~ ..~··'1

.

"'"'

4-Sp.~: .

Preschool Screening
For the 2007-2008 school
year will be held May 7, 2007
at Bradbury Learning Center.
-2
. 3
4
. 5

For an appointment contact:
Betsy Nicodemus

. (740) 992.-1740
o pq r s

_ _ _ _ _ __:_~::-.--+--,...-------- -·-· -·-----~-·-·--·

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Tbe Daily Sentinel

OPINION

•

The Daily Sentinel
· 111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740J 992·2157
www.mydallysentlnal.com
·

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

Congress ~hall make no law respecti~g an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or o/the press; or the r.ight 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, April 27, the II 7th day of 2007. There
are 248 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History: OnApril 27, 1805, during the First Barbary War, an American-led force of
Marines and mercenaries captured the city of Derna, on
the shores of Tripoli.
.
On this date: In 1509, Pope Julius II excommunicated the
republic of Venice. (The pope lifted the ban in February 151 0.)
· In 1521, Portuguese exr.Jorer Ferdinand Magellan was
killed by natives in the Phtlippines.
: In 1570, Pope Pius V.excommunicated Queen Elizabeth I.
In 1822, the 18th president of the United States, Ulysses
S. Grant, was born in Point Pleasant, Ohio.
·
In 1865, the steamer Sultana exploded on the Mississippi
River near Memphis, Tenn., killing more thari 1,400 people, mostly Union prisoners of war.
In 1932, American poet Hart Crane, 32, drowned after
· jumping from a steamer into the Gulf of Mexico while en
route to New York.
In 1947, it was "Babe Ruth Day" at Yankee Stadium as
baseball fans, not just in New York, but across the country
as, well, honored the ailing star.
.
In 1967, Expo '67 was officially opened in Montreal by
Canadian Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson.
In 1973, during the Watergate scandal, Acting FBI
Director L. Patrick Gray resigned.
.
In 1978, convicted Watergate defendant John D. Ehrlichman
was released from an Arizona prison after serving 18 months.
Ten years ago: President Chnton, along with former presidents Georse Bush and Jimmy Carter, helped polish gritty
city streets m Philadelphia as they launched the three-day
· Summit for America's Future, a gathering on community
· service also attended by former President Gerald Ford and
former first lady Nancy Reagan. .
Five years ago: South African entrepreneur Mark
Shuttleworth arrived at the international space station for an
eight-day, seven-night cruise that had cost him $20 million. A
biker brawl at Harrah's Casino in Laughlin, Nev., left three bikers dead and 12 others wounded. Derek Lowe of-the Boston
Red Sox pitched a no-hiller against the Tampa Bax Devil Rays,
10-Q, Mallei toy company co-fowider Ruth Handler, who created the Barbie doll, died in Los Angeles at age 85.
One year ago: Construction began on the 1,776-foot
Freedom Tower that will stand on the site of the World
Trade Center in New York City. The publisher of the teen
novel "How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild and Got a
Life" pulled the book off the market after its author,
Hllf\'ard student Kaavya Viswanathan acknowledged that
numerous passages had been lifted from another writer.
Today's Birthdays: Actor Jack Klugman · is 85. Actress
Anouk Aimee is 75. Announcer Casey Kaseril is 75. Rhythmand-blues singer Cuba Gooding is 63. Rock singer Kate
Pierson (The B-52's) is 59. Actor Douglas Sheehan is 58.
Rock musician Ace Frebley is 56. Pop singer Sheena Easton is
48. Rock singer-musician Patrick Stump (Fall Out Boy) is 23.
. , Thought for Today: "The trouble w1th our age is all signposts and no destination." - Louis Kronenberger,
American author ( 1904-1980).

You're waiting for ttie
other shoe to drop.
You know the shoe I'm
talking about - the religion
shoe. When the . Virginia
Tech University story
broke, .you began clicking
from Web site to Web site,
channel to channel, seeking
information and, then,
something more.
You've seen photos of
mourners in pews, offering
comfort and seeking solace.
You know believers will
pray and journalists will
keep aiming cameras at
them, because, that's what
Bible Belt· people. do.
People in the southwest
Virginia put scriptures on
big road signs and build
huge crosses next to
Interstate highways. They
pray. Jt'.s a good photo, but
it's just prayer. Right?
No, you're waiting for a
real religion angle to surface, a crazy one linked to
violence and power. After
all, religion surfaces in so
many bloody stories these
days.
Plus, you know there are
politicos in Washington
who are silting, TV remotes
in hand, waiting to grade the
candidates. Will Barack
Obama get the tone right,
with the right mixture of
scripture and concern? Will
Hillary Clinton look chilly?
WiJI anyone in the GOP
herd look both presidential
and pastoral? You know the ..
pope will say something

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services'
correction Polley ·

(usPS 2t3-180)
Ohio Valley Publllhlng co.
Our main concom In all . - 1o to · _., -..,.,, Mcnelly
o.-.. I
through Friday, 111 Court Strtet,
be accurate . •• yw N.,w
o an error Pomeroy, ONe. Secon!ldlu poa11ge
in a stclfY, call !he newsroom at (740) pold 11 Pomeroy.

-ted -

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lnd
1111 O l l l o - - -lion.

(740) 182·2158.
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Editor. Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
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RepooW. Beth Sergent, Ext. 13 .

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-

Terry
Mattingly

and that - no matter what
he says about the mysteries
of life and death, good and
evil - it will appear in
news reports as a naive cry
fpr peace and for an end to
violence.
Then · again, journalists
know that the Jerry
Falwell 's Liberty University
is a few interstate exits
away from Blacksburg, Va.,
and the Virginia Tech campus.
So maybe he 'll go to
Virginia Tech and talk about
jealousy, broken hearts and
the sexual revolution. Or
maybe Pat Robertson will ·
say - something, anything.
Then, on the other side, perhaps the atheist version of
Robertson could call a press
conference and say this
tragedy is more evidence
that life is random and without purpose.
You're waiting to find out
what video game the shooter played all hours of the
day and night. Did he go to
see the movie "300" one too
~mmy times? Was he driven
by Satan or too many "Left
Behind" novels? People on

both sides of the sacred vs.
secular divide need to know.
You're waiting to see if
he killed more women than
men. You want to know if
the big massacre started in
the classroom of an evangeiical professor who once
witnessed to the ' shooter
and made him mad. You
heard reporters say the
shooter was Asian and you
immediately
thought:
Asia? What part of Asia?
What religion was he?
You're waiting for something that points toward the
source of this evil.
· Am I right?
, And if you remember the
Columbine (Colo.) High
School massacre, · you may
be thinking of that column
that journalist Peggy
Noonan - a traditional
Catholic - wrote about the
"culture of death" hours
after that hellish day.
She wrote: "Your child is
an intelligent little fish . He
swims in deep water. Waves
of sound and sight, of
thought and fact, come
invisibly through that water,
like radar; they go thro1,1gh
hi!]1 again .and again, from
this direction and that. The
sound from the television is
a wave, and·the sound from
the radio .... The waves contain words like this, which
I'll limit to only one source,
the news: " ... took the .stand
to say the killer was smiling
the day the show aired ...
said the procedure is, in

fact, legal infanticide ... is
thought to be connected to
earlier sexual activity
among teens ... court battle
over who owns the frozen
sperm ... contains songs !hat
call for dominating and
·even imprisoning women ...
died of lethal injection ...
had threatened to kill her
children. ... had asked
Kevorkian for help in
killing himself ... protested
the game, which they said
has gone beyond violence to
sadism
showed no
remorse .•. which is about a
wager over whether he
could sleep with another
student ... which is about
her attempts to balance
three lovers and a watchful ·
fiance ...
"This is the ocean in
which our children swim.
This is the sound of our cuilure. It comes from all parts
of our culture and reaches
all parts of our culture, .and
all the people in it, which is
everybody."
You're waiting for the
other shoe to drop. You
want to know the eternal
"why" in "who, what, when,
· where, why and how." I
know I do.
(Terry Mattingly is director of the Washington
Journalism Center at the
Council for Christian
Colleges and Universities
and
leads ·
the
GetReligion.org project to ·
st~dy religion and the
news.)

TALKS ABOUT

RUSSIAN

DEMO~RACY

AN'f!YlORE.

-

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"\ ~ =--

:::-

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I

:Obituaries

-

.

MIDDLEPORT - George L: Harris, Sr., 83, Middleport,
passed away on Monday, April23, 2007, at Holzer Medical
Center in Gallipolis,. after a courageous battle against the
effects of diabetes.
. ~wa~ born in Minersville, on Dec. 25, 1923, son of the
late U:w1s E. and Mary A. (Bartels) Harris. He served in the
'·!J. S. ,ynt~ as a combat infantryman in World War II, see- .
~~~~a~ !ton m Germany with the 271 st Regiment of the 69th
DIVISIOn. He was a retired automobile salesman who
· worked for various local dealerships. He was also a former
_' salesman for the Pomeroy Feod Company.
,
: · He served on the Me1gs County Board of Elections and
· was a Republican Committeeman. He was a member of the
: Middleport Masonic Lodge 363, for over 50 years and was
· a 32nd Degree Mason. He was also a member of the Drew
· Webster. American Legion Post 39 ·for over 50 years and
·· was a former Post commander. He was a member and
·attended the Trinity Church of Pomeroy.
·
· In add1t1on to h1s parents, he was preceded in death in
2000 by his wife of 54 years. Lois (Hayman) Harris; brothers-in-law, William Lewis and Denver Rice.
· .
. George is survived by his two sons, George L. (Cinda)
Hams, Jr. and Thomas R. (Sheila) Harris, all of
· Middleport; his sister,: Nora E. Rice of Middleport; his
brother, Kenneth E. (Peggy) Harris of Pomeroy; sisters-in. law and brothers-in-law, Lillian and William Hayman, Jr.,
of Racine; Janice and John Simpson of Pasadena, Texas;
Mary Ellen Lewis of Houston, Texas; his tive grandchil•dren: The Rev. Phillip J. Harris of Circleville, Carrie A.
· (Michael) Kennedy of Middleport, Resa R. (Randall)
Hooks of Columbus, Jay W. Hams and Abby J. Harris, both
· of Middleport; and several nephews and a.niece. Very special to him were his great-grandchildren.
· Graveside services will be held at . II a.m. on Monday,
April30, 2007, at Letart Falls .Cemetery. Officiating will be
Rev. Jonathan Noble. Arrangements were handled by
Fisher Funeral Home.
In lieu of !lowers, contributions may be made to Drew
Webster Post 39, P.O. Box 40 I, Pomeroy, OH. 45769 or
Central Ohio Diabetes Association, II 00 Dennison
. Avenue, Columbus, Ohio 43201.
· On-line condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com

POMEROY - Vendors who sell cigarel!es must renew
cigarette licenses for 2007-2008, according to Auditor
Mary Byer-Hill.
Pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Section 5734.15, persons
engaging in the wholesale or retail business of Cigarette
sales must have a license to do so. Licenses may be purchased by mail with the application that was mailed to current vendors or at the auditor's office.
.
Licenses must be purchased before May 29. Revenues are
distributed .locally to townships, villages and the county.
Licenses may be purchased from 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.,
Monday through Friday. Additional information is available. at 992-2698.

William -'Bilr 'IUbbs

POMEROY - The following were sentenced in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court:
• Amanda F. Neece, one year each on charges of com-.
plicity to breaking and entering and one count of complicity to receiving stolen property. Four years were suspended, with Community Control order.
• Margilee V. Lemley, to one year, suspended, on a
char~e of possession of crack cocaine. Health Recovery
Serv1ces/TASC evaluation, 500 hours of community service, operator's .license suspended for six months.
• Terri L. Brewer, one year for possession of Percocet,
$190 restitution to Pomeroy Police Department.
• Bobbi J. Roush, two years, suspended, on charges of
receiving stolen property and forgery. Community' Control,
500 hours of community ·service.

·

Breakfast and auction planned
ALFRED - ' The Alfred Unilect Methodist Church will
hold a breakfast and auction on Saturday, May 5. It is open
to the r.ublic. Serving will begin at 6:30 a.m. and the auction w1ll take place at 10 a.m.

Class reunion planned
POMEROY - A luncheon at the Wildhorsehas been
planned for the Pomeroy High School Class of 1939 at
II :30 a.m. on May 26, the day. of the annual banquet and
reunion at Meigs High School. Class members are encouraged to attend the luncheon as well as the evening banquet.

For the Record
Dissolution
POMEROY - An action for dissoiution of marriage was
filed in Meigs County Co~mon Pleas Court by Michelle L.
Hutton, Rutland, and Chnstopher M. Hutton, Rutland.

Sentenced

Foreclosure
POMEROY - A foreclosure was granted in Meigs
CoUifty Common Pleas Court to J.P. Morgan ChaseBaitk,
N.A., against Susan Lyn Jones, and o!}ters.

Highway Patrol
POMEROY- Cornelio Morales, 23, 33290 Ohio 124,
Racine, was cited for unsafe vehicle by the Gallia-Meigs
Post of the State Highway Patrol following a one-car accident Wednesday on Ohio 7 near Pomeroy.
Troopers said Morales was southbound at 4 p.m. when the
right rear tire on the car he drove.blew out. The car went off
the left side of the road and struck two highway traffic signs.
The car had functional damage, according to the report.

from PageA1

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living in a severely structured s!)ciety like (say)
19th-century Japan, where
everyone knew his place
and unconventional behavior was severely condemned. But the sort Of
"anything goes" mood dominant in America today carries with it, inevitably, the
risk that occasionally unstable individuals will choose
to go much too far.
So the unpalatable truth -is
that, · as a practical matter,
there is little we can do to
prevent tragedies like
Virginia Tech. ay all means
improve the observation, .
reporting and treatment. of
individuals who display
dangerous · psychological
symptoms. And condemn
and prevent (to the extent
that the courts will permit
it) the use of television and
other means ofcommunication to celebrate violence.
But as long as we, as a
nation, place the rights of
the individual in the forefront of our concern, · arid
relegate to a lesser status the ·
protection of society, we
will have to pay, from time
to time, the price for our
preference.
. (William Rusher is · a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont lnstitljte for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.) ·

grantoppo~ties

'

Licenses due

Plates·

been to treat such "me'ntal
problems" with scrupulous
consideration for those
who have them, but with
little or no thought for others · who may be endanWilliam
gered. In Virginia, where
Rusher
this massacre occurred, it .
is actually against the law
to notify even a student's
parents about his or he.r
noses, and the key question . psychological condition
is whether this ought to without. th~ . st~dent's
have been perceived in ex. press permiSSIOn. . .
advance and steps taken 10
But, unfortunately, not
head him off.
even the most draconian
Silent and stealthy though treatment of mentally dishe was, it appears that vari- turbed individuals could
ous symptoms of his trou- prevent all tragedies of this
ble had been noticed in son. Even today, ·a person
recent years, and a few who is clinically diagnosed
efforts had been made to as a danger to himself or
deal with them. He had others can legally be
stalked a couple of girls, restrained. But for ev~ry
who reporied their fears, , s~ch per,-son whose behav1or
and had written various ~ g1ves .h1m away, tl)ere are
exercises as schoolwork and will always be scores of
whose hostility so all!rmed others who are never di.shis teachers that they covered, and who w1ll
referred him for psychiatric remam at large unttl. every
attention. But he managed now and then, it is too late.
to elude serious study and
Tl)e problem is ma~e far
effective care, and carry out worse by the general atmoshis grisly plans.
.
phere of American society,
The basic reason he was which in recent decades, in
able to do so is that symp- deference ·to the First
toms of the son he dis- Amendment, has counteplayed exist in huge num- · nanced more .and more
bers in this nation of 300 depictions of violent behav- '
million people. What 's ior - most notabl)l on telemore, the trend in our soci - vision. Americans today
ety in recent decades has would certainly not enjoy

Foundation offering

CieoiJe L Harris·

:==·

The slaughter of 32 students and faculty members
at Virginia Tech, by a
deranged student who then
killed himself, forces us to
confront and reconsider certain disagreeable facts abou~
American society today.
, Luckily, a poll since the
massacre indrcates that 79
percent of those questioned
dismiss the idea that all that
was needed to prevent this
tragedy was some stricter
laws against guns. In a
nation with an estimated
210 million guns in private
hands, that notion surely
deserves a prize for sheer
stupidity.
But there are all sorts of
more· sensible considerations. The self-televised
rants of the gunman, which
he mailed off to NBC and
which were broadcast
extensively in the days following the . event, clearly
demonstrate that he was a
seething mass of hatred for
just about everything and
everyone in his environment. Whether he was a
psychotic, a psychopath,
something else with a
fancy technical name, or
was simply a profoundly
evil human being can be
argued ;u any length that ,
satisfies us. But the glaring
fact is that he developed
into a killer right under our

The 'Daily Sentinel. • Page As

Local Briefs

ALBANY - William "Bill" Tubbs, 76, of Albany, passed
away unexpectedly Thursday, April 26, 2007, at his residence.
He was born Sept. 18, 1931, in Athens County, to the late
Henry Orville and Mildred Ester Martin Tubbs.
He was an e~gineer in the aircraft industry for many
years, a member of the Elks in Arizona, .a member of the
American Legion, Drew Webster Post No. 39 of Pomeroy,
and a member of the United Methodist Church iii Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife, Sue Tubbs of Syracuse; children,
Mary (Dean) Keller of Peoria, Ariz., William (Michel!e)
Tubbs of Black Canyon, Ariz., daughter-in-law, Tammy
Tubbs of Phoenix, Ariz .. Jackie (Mike) Shriver of St.
Mary's, Ohio, and Dan (Pam) Cramer of Marysville; a
brother, John (Margie) Tubbs of Washington Court House;
grandchildren, Charlotte and Eddie Caffereta, Will, Cara,
Jaron Tubbs, Michael Peiz, Holly (Charles) Cubberly,
Samantha Tubbs, Scott, Molly and Megan Shriver, and
Caleb and Emily Craml)r; three great-grandchildren; and ·
several nieces, nephews and cousins.
He was preceded in death by: his parents, and a son,
Bruce Tubbs.
Services will be I p.m:· Monday, April 30, 2007, at the
Fisher Funeral Home in .Pomeroy, with the Rev. Brian
Dunham officiating. Burial will follow at the Oak Grove
Cemetery in Logan, Ohio. Visitation will be held from 2 to 4
and 6to 8 p.m. Sunday, April 29, 2007, at the funeral home.
Military rites will be conducted by the Drew Webster
Post No. 39 in Pomeroy.
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

NogoDY

-

www.mydailysentinel.crom

to be an m:gan donor really
means and these plates are
meant to raise awareness
about those fears and discover
the · facts. Anoth~r trend
Maison:notices is more young
people agree to be organ
donors than older r.ersons. ·
Currently a qu1lt of hope
from Lifeline of Ohio is on
display at the BMV; featuring organ donors from Ohio
and. their gifts,, including
Matthew All, the only person on the ,quilt from Meigs
County. Maison said the
quilt honors the gifts given
while Korn represents the
gifts received through organ
donation.
Korn. is living proof that
organ donations do make a
difference. Another difference
in Kom 's life is that she says
she doesn't get upset over
things that don't matter,
because life is too short.

The new plates cost $15
annually ..in addition to the
usual registration fees. A
portion of the plate fees, $5,
will go to benefit the Ohio .
Department of Health's
Second Chance Trust Fund
which educates Ohioans
about the difference one
individual can make by
signing up as an organ and
tissue donor in the Ohio
Donor Registry.
Meigs County BMV
Deputy Registrar Sue Maison
and her staff can register
Ohioans into the re~istry
when they renew their licenses. Maison said her office
receives "more no's than
yes"' when it comes to registering to be an organ donor.
For more information
Maison said there are still
many misconceptions out about the plates go to
there about what registering www.bmv.ohio.gov. ·

The massacre at Virginia Tech

Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less
than 300 words. All letters are subject to editing, must be
signed, and include address and telephone number. No
unsigned letters will be published, Letters should be in
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities. Leuers of
thonks to organizations and individuals will not be accept·
ed for publication.

Our .11111ln number ..

· Friday, April27, 2ocn

Friday, April27, 2007

Lookingfor the 'why'

LETTERS TO THE
EDiTOR

992·2156.

Pagei\4.

POMEROY
The
. Foundation for Meigs
County Futute (FMCF) has
two grant opportunities, up
to $1,000 each, to assist
Meigs County non-profit
or§anizations.
'The FMCF in ~ranting
monies, hopes to 1mprove
the lives of its local citizens,
promote the growth of charitable giving in Meigs
County and to provide
resources and information
to assist others in the development of philanthropic
resources to provide grants,
scholarships, and endowments for future generations," according to Hal
Kneen, an officer.
It was noted that one grant
for up to $1,000 was given
as a bequest of · Abbie
Warner Stratton to assist in
the musical educa~ion of
youth in Meigs County. A
second grant for up to
$1 ,000 is available to non
profit organizations which
assist residents in their

acttvlltes to improve the
lives of fellow Meigs
Countians.
The short grant application
is available by writing c/o
FMCF P.O. Box 97, Pomeroy,
OH 45769 or by emailing
meigsfuture@yahoo.com.
Applications are due by May
15, and grants will be awarded June 15.
FMCF started as a result ·
of a joint venture called
Appalachian Ohio Giving,
between the Foundation of
Appalachian Ohio, The
Ohto State University
Extension, and Meigs
County individuals. The
objective was to create
regional partnerships that
promote the growth of
in
charitable
giving
Appalachian Ohio. Few
charitable funds are locaied in the Appalachian
region so this pilot program was initiated to educate a small number of residents about foundations
andcharitable giving. ·

Byer presents program
to retired teachers
POMEROY - Robert
Byer, Director of Meigs
County
Emergency
Management Agency was
the .g\lest speaker at the
recent meeting of the Meigs
County Retired Teachers
Association.
The association met at
Trinity Church for a Iuncheon meeting. President
Gay Perrin led devotions in
memory of the late Carol
Ohlinger, ""What is Life?"
She had prayer before the
lunch, serve(! to 15 members and three guests.
Byer discussed the county's plan for emergency preparedness. He said the Four
W's of emergency management are Who we are, What
we do, What we are doing
and What you can do. He
addressed each of these areas.
Since Sept. II, 200 I, we
have two new terms in our
vocabulary, terrorism and
homelal)d security. Byer
told of being aware, havmg
a plannint~ process, training
and exerctse, and a recovery
plan. He also told of the
seven signs of terrorism:
Surveillance, elicitation,
tests of security, acquiring
supplies, suspicious people
who don't belong, dry runs
and deploying. assets and
gettmg mto pos1t1on.
Members signed cards for

Ida Diehl, Vinas Lee, Helen
Maag and Russ Moore. The
treasurer, Bill Downie, gave
his report. A donation to the
MCRTA scholarship fund
will be made in honor of
Ohlinger.
The president showed the
group the quilt square that
Rosalie Story made for the
quilt that is going to be displayed as part of the
ORTA's 60th anniversary
celebration.
·
Connie Enslen and
. Debbie Roush will be going
to Columbus to attend
Legislative Day on April 24.
The group was thanked
for items donated to
Serenity House.
Flowers donated by
Debbie Roush were given to
Rachel
Downie,
Bill
Downie, Dorothy Chaney,
Connie Enslen, · Nadine
Goebel, Gay Perrin and
Janice We~r as door prizes.
The next meetmgw11Ibe
May 17 at the R1vers1de
Golf Course Clubhouse.

&amp;mEL
JC~ABLISHED
1895

4728
The Ohio Valley
· Symphony
Guitar Classics ·
Spm
Sill
The Sinatra Show
featuring the
Joey Thomas Big Band
Dinner ti&lt;kets available
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec:. Ave. Galli~li~_?H
740-446-ARTS t27871

Of
·Tilents ·

Beth SercentJphoto

· Jhis quilt of hope is currently on display at the BMV featur. jng organ donors (rom Ohio and their gifts, including .
Matthew Alt. the ony person on the quilt from Meigs County.

Aprii29. ~ 'May 3rd
3:00p.m. Circie the Meigs CountY~
'

,J.,

'

y ~ ..~··'1

.

"'"'

4-Sp.~: .

Preschool Screening
For the 2007-2008 school
year will be held May 7, 2007
at Bradbury Learning Center.
-2
. 3
4
. 5

For an appointment contact:
Betsy Nicodemus

. (740) 992.-1740
o pq r s

_ _ _ _ _ __:_~::-.--+--,...-------- -·-· -·-----~-·-·--·

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

·- - - - · .
~

'

' .

~

..

~

.

~·

.. ..

...

�,
PageA6

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Bv KATHY MITCHEll

needed help, Kevin would parent that my child was
be there. This may be true, running for the position?but I feel invaded by Kevin Bewildered Parent
Dear Bewildered: The
Dear Annie: We live next and do not enjoy living in
coach should not have
door to · my husband's my home.
My husband knows Kevin eliminated the elections,
brother, ''Kevin." Kevin
feels free to borrow any- is out of line, but he' won' t regardless of who was runthing of ours. and nothing is confront him. This is caus- ning. Although nothing
off limits. He never asks ing huge fights between us. underhanded may have
perm1ssion and rarely Please help. - In Need of occurred, you still should
register a complaint with
brings things back unless Pest Control in Illinois
Dear
Pest
Control:
the
princip;ll so it doesn't
we demand it. He comes
Because
your
husband
happen
again.
into our home and. takes
won
't
set
boundaries
on
Dear
Annie: "Unwilling
tlour and sugar, frequently
emptying whole canisters. Kevin 's behavior, he has Inmate" resented the time
allowed his brother to his wife spent with her
He never refills them.
I looked out the window- come between you. Insist mother at the nursing home.
one morning to see Kevin that your -husband put your Feeding her mother meals
walking to his house with feelings first, and if he every day is not only "fine ,"
the gas tank from my grill , · refuses, it's time to talk to it may be necessary.
After my own mother
and wmched him hook it up a counselor or your clerto hi s ow n and use it until it gyperson, to help ·him see lived in a beautiful nursing
was empty. I had to retrieve that Kevin is undermining home for a few weeks, I
it to refill it. When we are your marriage .
hired private sitters to stay
ou t of the house, Kevin will
Dear Annie: In the past, with her. Why? She was
get my teenage son to open my child's high · school being neglected. If a family
the door so he can rifle te am voted for captains member or 'someone other
through all our cupboards, and co-captains of their than staff is not present, too
-cabinets and drl!wers. He sports teams. My child and often meals go uneaten.
will come to our house hi s fri ends were excited
Elegant
surroundings
without his cigarettes and about voting. One parent and · multiple activities do
's moke half a pack of my phoned and asked if my not translate into hands-on
jmsband's.
child was goi ng to vote for . care. Too often, · there
· Kevin is not destitute. He his child. I mentioned that aren't enough aides to
_iives in a very expensive my child was also going to accomplish what needs to
·home .and has more income run for the pQsition. Two be done. Their work is hard
;th an anyone in the family. weeks later, thi s kid and and their pay is . low.
:And as if this isn't enough, one other .were appointed Administration and· absent
;Kevin will show up at our to the positions: No elec- family members often have
:house at all hours, frequent- tions were held .
'
no idea what goes on. The
ly after midnight, because
I am shocked that a coach only way I can be sure my
:!Je can't sleep.
would deny the team the . ·mother receives adequate
; My husband ·refuses to opportunity to vote for the care is by employing pri;say anythjng to Kevin and people they respected to be vate sitters ~tnd participat~w1ll ~ot allow me to speak captains. When questioned, ing actively in meeting her
. .up, e1ther. I have dropped the coach said, "I didn 't needs. - · Somewhere in
~ery heavy hints, but Kevin think anyone else was the South
}lc(s like·he doesn 't hear me. interested."
Dear
Somewhere:
.My husband says if he ever · Should I not have told this Unfortunately, this is a sad,
AND MARCY SUGAR

Friday, April27, 2007

..

Festival sponsor

Freeloader knows no boundaries
but often true, occurrence in
too many faci lities. Family
members who visit are more
likely to ensure that their
loved ones receive appropriate care.
..Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime
editors of the Ann
Landers column. Please
e-mail your questions to
anniesmailbox @co mcast.net, or write to:
· Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit
the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.cre ators.com.

Charlene Hoeftlch/photo

Pleasant Valley Hospital is a corporate sponsor for the
2007 Gold Wings and Ribs Festiva l to be held June 1 and 2
in Pomeroy. Here Amber Ohlinger, marketing associate for
PVH , presents a check for $750 to Paul Darnell of the
Festival committee .

Good Times
Presents

.Triple Threat
Saturdav, April 28th
********************
.AM II
Saturdav, Mav 5th
Check out our weekly lineup!

Public meetings
Monday, April 30
: POMEROY - Veterans
~ervice Commission, 9
tl.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
•
Thesday, May I
-· ALFRED
- Orange
:Township Trustees regular
:meeting, 7:30 p.m. , at the
:home of the clerk, Osie
J'ollrod.
~ PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township Trustees, 6 :30
. ,p.m. at the Pageville town
·hall.
Wednesday, May 2
. REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Trustees meet in
regular session, 7:30 p.m.,
Olive Township Garage.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, April 30
POMEROY - Oh-KAN
:coin Club, dinner at 6 p.m.,
·meeting at 7 ·p.m. at the.
Pomeroy Library.
Thesday, May I
. CHESTER
- 73rd
Anniversary of Che.ster
Council #323, Daughters of
America celebrated with
supper at 6:30 p.m., at
Masonic Hall. Lodge meet:ing at 7:30. Members who
:have not registered for sup:per should call Esther Smith
•at 985-4424.
·. MIDDLEPORT
:Middleport Lodge #363,
;F&amp;AM, monthly business
:meeting, . 7:30 p.m. All
-members to attend. All
:Master Masons invited.
:Refreshments.
:. POMEROY · Drew
~ebster Post 39. American

•

......

· Thuradgy-Ladies Night w/DJ
. $1 .00 cover 9pm- 2am
Tuesday·, Karaoke w/Ron Campbell
50&lt;; off all drinks· 1Opm- 2am
$1.00 Cover 9pm- tam
fl:llln
· OJ 9pm · 2am
Wednesday- Mens Night -Pool tournament
Saturday
-live Bands
$5.00 enlry Spm · 50&lt;; off all drinks 1Opm-2am
Sunday· $1.00 Bee r· $1.25 Coronas
Monday- 50&lt;; Drah

pommunity Calendar
Legion, dinner 7 p.m. fol- off." Dan and Tami Daly in
lowed by meeting when concert during evening.
new officers will b~ elected.
POINT
ROCK
Revival will begin Sunday
and continue through
Wednesday at the Point
Rock
Church of the
Friday, April 27
Nazarene.
Services will be
RACINE
- Southern
held
at
7 p.m. with
Local School District, acadEvangelist
Herman
Stewart ·
emic banquet, 6:30 p.m.,
speaking.
The
church
is
Southern High School.
located on State Route 689.
Monday, April 30
POMEROY- R((vival at .
the Mt. Hermon United
Saturday, April 28
Brethren in Christ Church,
RIO
GRANDE
April 30 to May 6, 7 p.m.
Community
. Christian Evangelist,
Wayne
Fellowship youth rally to McLaughlin of Chillicothe.
feaiure "Mantle" i!l concert, Specia.l sing'ing nightly.
6 p.,m. Located at ·Trails "The Kings" of Lancaster
End, Rio Grande. For more on Thursday. Church locatinformation call 742-1900 ed on Wickham Road, off
or 245-5946. Games, Fear Texas Road in the Texas
Factor, prizes, free pizza Community.
Peter
and drinks.
Martindale, pastor. Call
Sunday, April 29
985-9837 for information.
MIDDLEPORT
"Bound for Heaven" of
Parkersburg, W.Va. to sing ·
at II a.m., Hope Baptist ·
Friday, April 27
Church.
·
MIDDLEPORT
- Free
POMEROY
community
dinner,
4:30 to
Missionary
Gastom
6:15
p.m.,
Middleport
Nt!lmbo from Congo to
worship at II a.m. at Forest Church of Christ Family
Run United Methodist Life Center. Baked steak,
Church, and hold a work- mashed potatoes, mixed
shop at 4 p.m. at St. Paul vegetables, rolls, dessert.
United Methodist Church in
Tuppers Plains.
SYRACUSE Gary ·
Griffith to preach at
Thesday, May I
Syracuse
Community
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Church, 6:30p.m. ·
Help Me Grow sponsors a
CARPENTER
free Fun Fair for preschoolCommunity fellowship 6 to aged children, 10 a.m. to 2
8 p.m. Sunday at the p.m., Middleport Church of
Carpenter Baptist Church, Christ Family Life Center.
30711 S.R. 143, Albany, Door prizes, food, bounce
Theme
"The
Great. house, live entertainment,
Carpenter Cookie Bake- clowns, craft.
·

.,

Chef to conduct
heart healthy event
A'fHENS - Women are or stroke.
invited to a heart-healthy
O'Bleness received a
dinner buffet at the Healthy $5,000 educational grant
Cooking - Healthy Heart from . the Office on
event,
sponsored · by Women's Health of the U.S.
O'Bleness
Memorial Department of Health and
Hospital, on Tuesday, June Human Services, whi~h will
5, from 5 to 7 p.m., at The help sponsor the event. The
Plains United Methodist grant is intended to promote
Church.
1he National Heart, Lung
Chef Yancr Roush, owner and Blood Institute's Heart
of . Yan~y s Five-Star · Truth Campaign. focusing
Catenng In Belpre and a on better health for 40- to
former . chef of the 60-year-old women particGreenbner
and
the ul 1
h: h · k
Blennerhassett hotels will
ar Y w~men . at 1g. ns
tlemollstrate h - t0 '
k for c:rrdtovascular dtsease
ow
coo and diabetes
healt~y meals. Healthy
Seating f~r the women's
. . .
. Cooking - Healthy Heart h 1 h
will feature lifest' 1 d' _ · ea I event IS. ltmtted to
h
h
Y e . IS 150. To regtster, call
1
Pays,·
eart- ea!thy recipes O'Bleness' community relaand pnzes.
. · d
Becky Huston, DO, will liOns epartment at (740)
speak about cardiovascular 592-9300 by May_ 24. The
disease and how it is differ- cost of the event ts $5 per
llnt for women and for men. person. - .
Heart disease kill s more
women
as well
as men.
th11n
any. •other
disea~e.
· The incidence of cardiovascular disease in Ohio is

e~~iiJ~~::r~~~~~1a~J~~

cases in southeastern Ohio
have been reported to be
almost twice as high as state
and national averages. Heart
disease and diabetes are
often linked - two out of
three people with diabetes
will die from a hear.! attack

Church events .

•NO CREDIT CHECKS
•NO HASSLES

Other events

&amp;EASY

Youth events

ABLE program serves Meigs County
ll""t!'~

The Meigs County ABLE
program operates under
the umbre lla of the
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center with sites In
Tuppers Plains,
Middleport and
Bradbury. The staff
assists students with
GED preparation. Staff
members are, left to
right, seated, Alexandra
Brandt, Susan King,
and Lisa King, and
standing, Lois Knadler
· ~nd Richard Nease.
Submitted photo

co·ve· RALL

.---------~---------------------------------------•

p· LAY..
.

·

w· _IN

·

BIN
- GO
·

·
·

UP _TO $1-,000 '··'· '·

Employees, Independent Contractors, Vendors-and their immediate famiily not eligible.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Birth
·announced

(740) 446·1711
Two locllfiom:

1/4 mile north ot Pomeroy, Mason

·

Mason , wv
773-5721

GUYSVILLE - Julie.
and Bill Jenne of Guysville
announce the birth of a
daughter, Jasmine Ann, born
on April 24 at the O'~leness
Memorial Hospital.

. Frtday... Partly
sunny
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Cooler with highs
in the mid 60s. Southwest
winds 10 to.l5 mph.
. Friday · night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
:Chance of showers. Lows in
.lhe mid 40s. West winds 5
to 10 mph. ·
· Saturday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 60s.
We'st winds 5 to I0 mph.
: Saturday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s. West winds 5 to 10
mph .
Sunday and Sunday
night... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 70s. Lows in
the upper 40s.
Monday
through
Thesday , night ... Partly
cloudy. Highs in the upper
70s. Lows in the lower 50s.
Wednesday
through
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
.and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 70s. Lows in the
lower 50s. Chance of rain
30 percent.

Local Stocks
AEl' (NYSE)- 50.25
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 79.96
Alllland Inc. (NYSE)- 60.85
1111 Lots (NYSE)- 32.90
Bob E•..,. (NASDAQ)- 37.09
BoltiWamer (NYSE) - 50.32
Century (NASDAQ) -

49.311

C"-plon (NASDAQ) - 8.01
ChlormlnC Shope (NASDAQ) -

12.82
City H-., (NASDAQ) - 38.71

111 t:elellralloll Ill Pile
·lreei Ill Pile rou1 1:111111

Cotllna (NYSE) -

Pleasant
Valley
Hospital
675-4340 ·

Quad Cab 4x4, 21,000
miles, Factory ~arranty

~~u-n;unD
Gallla Auto Sales
2147 Jackson Pike

Galllpolla, OH

(740) 446-0724

Lim- -

Ollk Hit F1nanclal (NASDAQ) -

23.91

Olllo

.

-y Blnc COop. (NASDAQ)

-25.07

B8T (NYSE) -41.811

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
~16 Upper River Rd.
. (740) 446-2404

.......... (NASDAQ)- 28.64

JACKSON, OH ..
294 East Main
. (740) 28~699

.......... (NYSE)- 86.41
........, (NASDAQ) -U.U
Rea-l (NYSE)- 59.12
Rocky Boots' (NASDAQ)- U.48

RoJIIl Dutch -

SeMs

POMEROY, OHIO
204 W. 2nd Street
(740) 992..()461

PROCTORVILLE, OH
97 State Street
(740) 886-9397

Ucense CC7000n-OOO-G10
Ucense Ct 7501MI-DOO--llt0

- 70.05

~(NASDAQ)­

'1 8t.20
llart (NYSE) - 4&amp;.70
_ , . . (NYSE)- 37.19
.~JCtllll (NYSE)- 23.11
Gaily- ~ ... llle 4 p.m.
:ET clolllll_. ol ba · 1&lt;tloo•
for Apo112$', 2007, .....- ..,

- . . ..-111•&lt;111 .........
'tuae Mils III01111f •Ill (740)
441-9441- ~--to

. \1

STOP IN AND S~~ OUR NtW
2007 SPRIIIC AlP IAATTPt~
GH GR~AT INTRODUCTORY
SAlt PPICm
"}rom Our J{onu 'To Yours•

H 11 1.., ill \i;t\

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435'11 Second Annue

( '!\ll!z

GALLIPOLIS

Coroin &amp; Snytftr 1urnitun

(Aci'O$Il from

Post Office)

Open Mon.- Thurs. 8:30-5pm

llllt&lt;Oii ...... ' Gl1l!tll. 011
!JIIIlM;...~~M·II!MtlH.•IIIMII
•

(740) 446-7619

Another satisfied
Customer!
"Call us today and you ·
could be smiling tool"

24kRoseor
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Orchid Brooch
• Hair Care &amp;. Makeup
• Nail Care • Helix Cu IS
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Spa Pac~es ·Chemical ~s
• Mlcroch!rm Abrasions

~
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(740)441-1171 (800)434-4114

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326 Second Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631 .

(740) 446-2933

David Mink· Owner

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All Your
Respiratory Needs

• Oxygen
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• C-PAP
• Portable OxYgen
• Pulse Oximetry

87.40

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JP Mo1eon (NYSE)- 52.94
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FREE Re1nova1
. FREE Set•Up
FREE Delivery

Sider's
Signature

Dollar- (NYSE)- 21.42

.

..

Friday, April 27, 2007

local Weather

School events

Mei1s Coun~. H~, Me Grow

..

PageA7

COMMUNfl'Y

The Daily Sentinel •

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�,
PageA6

BYTHEBEND

The Daily Sentinel

ANNIE'S MAILBOX
Bv KATHY MITCHEll

needed help, Kevin would parent that my child was
be there. This may be true, running for the position?but I feel invaded by Kevin Bewildered Parent
Dear Bewildered: The
Dear Annie: We live next and do not enjoy living in
coach should not have
door to · my husband's my home.
My husband knows Kevin eliminated the elections,
brother, ''Kevin." Kevin
feels free to borrow any- is out of line, but he' won' t regardless of who was runthing of ours. and nothing is confront him. This is caus- ning. Although nothing
off limits. He never asks ing huge fights between us. underhanded may have
perm1ssion and rarely Please help. - In Need of occurred, you still should
register a complaint with
brings things back unless Pest Control in Illinois
Dear
Pest
Control:
the
princip;ll so it doesn't
we demand it. He comes
Because
your
husband
happen
again.
into our home and. takes
won
't
set
boundaries
on
Dear
Annie: "Unwilling
tlour and sugar, frequently
emptying whole canisters. Kevin 's behavior, he has Inmate" resented the time
allowed his brother to his wife spent with her
He never refills them.
I looked out the window- come between you. Insist mother at the nursing home.
one morning to see Kevin that your -husband put your Feeding her mother meals
walking to his house with feelings first, and if he every day is not only "fine ,"
the gas tank from my grill , · refuses, it's time to talk to it may be necessary.
After my own mother
and wmched him hook it up a counselor or your clerto hi s ow n and use it until it gyperson, to help ·him see lived in a beautiful nursing
was empty. I had to retrieve that Kevin is undermining home for a few weeks, I
it to refill it. When we are your marriage .
hired private sitters to stay
ou t of the house, Kevin will
Dear Annie: In the past, with her. Why? She was
get my teenage son to open my child's high · school being neglected. If a family
the door so he can rifle te am voted for captains member or 'someone other
through all our cupboards, and co-captains of their than staff is not present, too
-cabinets and drl!wers. He sports teams. My child and often meals go uneaten.
will come to our house hi s fri ends were excited
Elegant
surroundings
without his cigarettes and about voting. One parent and · multiple activities do
's moke half a pack of my phoned and asked if my not translate into hands-on
jmsband's.
child was goi ng to vote for . care. Too often, · there
· Kevin is not destitute. He his child. I mentioned that aren't enough aides to
_iives in a very expensive my child was also going to accomplish what needs to
·home .and has more income run for the pQsition. Two be done. Their work is hard
;th an anyone in the family. weeks later, thi s kid and and their pay is . low.
:And as if this isn't enough, one other .were appointed Administration and· absent
;Kevin will show up at our to the positions: No elec- family members often have
:house at all hours, frequent- tions were held .
'
no idea what goes on. The
ly after midnight, because
I am shocked that a coach only way I can be sure my
:!Je can't sleep.
would deny the team the . ·mother receives adequate
; My husband ·refuses to opportunity to vote for the care is by employing pri;say anythjng to Kevin and people they respected to be vate sitters ~tnd participat~w1ll ~ot allow me to speak captains. When questioned, ing actively in meeting her
. .up, e1ther. I have dropped the coach said, "I didn 't needs. - · Somewhere in
~ery heavy hints, but Kevin think anyone else was the South
}lc(s like·he doesn 't hear me. interested."
Dear
Somewhere:
.My husband says if he ever · Should I not have told this Unfortunately, this is a sad,
AND MARCY SUGAR

Friday, April27, 2007

..

Festival sponsor

Freeloader knows no boundaries
but often true, occurrence in
too many faci lities. Family
members who visit are more
likely to ensure that their
loved ones receive appropriate care.
..Annie's Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and
Marcy Sugar, longtime
editors of the Ann
Landers column. Please
e-mail your questions to
anniesmailbox @co mcast.net, or write to:
· Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
Box 118190, Chicago, JL
60611. To find out more
about Annie's Mailbox,
and read features by other
Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit
the Creators Syndicate
Web page at www.cre ators.com.

Charlene Hoeftlch/photo

Pleasant Valley Hospital is a corporate sponsor for the
2007 Gold Wings and Ribs Festiva l to be held June 1 and 2
in Pomeroy. Here Amber Ohlinger, marketing associate for
PVH , presents a check for $750 to Paul Darnell of the
Festival committee .

Good Times
Presents

.Triple Threat
Saturdav, April 28th
********************
.AM II
Saturdav, Mav 5th
Check out our weekly lineup!

Public meetings
Monday, April 30
: POMEROY - Veterans
~ervice Commission, 9
tl.m., 117 Memorial Dr.
•
Thesday, May I
-· ALFRED
- Orange
:Township Trustees regular
:meeting, 7:30 p.m. , at the
:home of the clerk, Osie
J'ollrod.
~ PAGEVILLE Scipio
Township Trustees, 6 :30
. ,p.m. at the Pageville town
·hall.
Wednesday, May 2
. REEDSVILLE -Olive
Township Trustees meet in
regular session, 7:30 p.m.,
Olive Township Garage.

Clubs and
organizations
Monday, April 30
POMEROY - Oh-KAN
:coin Club, dinner at 6 p.m.,
·meeting at 7 ·p.m. at the.
Pomeroy Library.
Thesday, May I
. CHESTER
- 73rd
Anniversary of Che.ster
Council #323, Daughters of
America celebrated with
supper at 6:30 p.m., at
Masonic Hall. Lodge meet:ing at 7:30. Members who
:have not registered for sup:per should call Esther Smith
•at 985-4424.
·. MIDDLEPORT
:Middleport Lodge #363,
;F&amp;AM, monthly business
:meeting, . 7:30 p.m. All
-members to attend. All
:Master Masons invited.
:Refreshments.
:. POMEROY · Drew
~ebster Post 39. American

•

......

· Thuradgy-Ladies Night w/DJ
. $1 .00 cover 9pm- 2am
Tuesday·, Karaoke w/Ron Campbell
50&lt;; off all drinks· 1Opm- 2am
$1.00 Cover 9pm- tam
fl:llln
· OJ 9pm · 2am
Wednesday- Mens Night -Pool tournament
Saturday
-live Bands
$5.00 enlry Spm · 50&lt;; off all drinks 1Opm-2am
Sunday· $1.00 Bee r· $1.25 Coronas
Monday- 50&lt;; Drah

pommunity Calendar
Legion, dinner 7 p.m. fol- off." Dan and Tami Daly in
lowed by meeting when concert during evening.
new officers will b~ elected.
POINT
ROCK
Revival will begin Sunday
and continue through
Wednesday at the Point
Rock
Church of the
Friday, April 27
Nazarene.
Services will be
RACINE
- Southern
held
at
7 p.m. with
Local School District, acadEvangelist
Herman
Stewart ·
emic banquet, 6:30 p.m.,
speaking.
The
church
is
Southern High School.
located on State Route 689.
Monday, April 30
POMEROY- R((vival at .
the Mt. Hermon United
Saturday, April 28
Brethren in Christ Church,
RIO
GRANDE
April 30 to May 6, 7 p.m.
Community
. Christian Evangelist,
Wayne
Fellowship youth rally to McLaughlin of Chillicothe.
feaiure "Mantle" i!l concert, Specia.l sing'ing nightly.
6 p.,m. Located at ·Trails "The Kings" of Lancaster
End, Rio Grande. For more on Thursday. Church locatinformation call 742-1900 ed on Wickham Road, off
or 245-5946. Games, Fear Texas Road in the Texas
Factor, prizes, free pizza Community.
Peter
and drinks.
Martindale, pastor. Call
Sunday, April 29
985-9837 for information.
MIDDLEPORT
"Bound for Heaven" of
Parkersburg, W.Va. to sing ·
at II a.m., Hope Baptist ·
Friday, April 27
Church.
·
MIDDLEPORT
- Free
POMEROY
community
dinner,
4:30 to
Missionary
Gastom
6:15
p.m.,
Middleport
Nt!lmbo from Congo to
worship at II a.m. at Forest Church of Christ Family
Run United Methodist Life Center. Baked steak,
Church, and hold a work- mashed potatoes, mixed
shop at 4 p.m. at St. Paul vegetables, rolls, dessert.
United Methodist Church in
Tuppers Plains.
SYRACUSE Gary ·
Griffith to preach at
Thesday, May I
Syracuse
Community
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Church, 6:30p.m. ·
Help Me Grow sponsors a
CARPENTER
free Fun Fair for preschoolCommunity fellowship 6 to aged children, 10 a.m. to 2
8 p.m. Sunday at the p.m., Middleport Church of
Carpenter Baptist Church, Christ Family Life Center.
30711 S.R. 143, Albany, Door prizes, food, bounce
Theme
"The
Great. house, live entertainment,
Carpenter Cookie Bake- clowns, craft.
·

.,

Chef to conduct
heart healthy event
A'fHENS - Women are or stroke.
invited to a heart-healthy
O'Bleness received a
dinner buffet at the Healthy $5,000 educational grant
Cooking - Healthy Heart from . the Office on
event,
sponsored · by Women's Health of the U.S.
O'Bleness
Memorial Department of Health and
Hospital, on Tuesday, June Human Services, whi~h will
5, from 5 to 7 p.m., at The help sponsor the event. The
Plains United Methodist grant is intended to promote
Church.
1he National Heart, Lung
Chef Yancr Roush, owner and Blood Institute's Heart
of . Yan~y s Five-Star · Truth Campaign. focusing
Catenng In Belpre and a on better health for 40- to
former . chef of the 60-year-old women particGreenbner
and
the ul 1
h: h · k
Blennerhassett hotels will
ar Y w~men . at 1g. ns
tlemollstrate h - t0 '
k for c:rrdtovascular dtsease
ow
coo and diabetes
healt~y meals. Healthy
Seating f~r the women's
. . .
. Cooking - Healthy Heart h 1 h
will feature lifest' 1 d' _ · ea I event IS. ltmtted to
h
h
Y e . IS 150. To regtster, call
1
Pays,·
eart- ea!thy recipes O'Bleness' community relaand pnzes.
. · d
Becky Huston, DO, will liOns epartment at (740)
speak about cardiovascular 592-9300 by May_ 24. The
disease and how it is differ- cost of the event ts $5 per
llnt for women and for men. person. - .
Heart disease kill s more
women
as well
as men.
th11n
any. •other
disea~e.
· The incidence of cardiovascular disease in Ohio is

e~~iiJ~~::r~~~~~1a~J~~

cases in southeastern Ohio
have been reported to be
almost twice as high as state
and national averages. Heart
disease and diabetes are
often linked - two out of
three people with diabetes
will die from a hear.! attack

Church events .

•NO CREDIT CHECKS
•NO HASSLES

Other events

&amp;EASY

Youth events

ABLE program serves Meigs County
ll""t!'~

The Meigs County ABLE
program operates under
the umbre lla of the
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center with sites In
Tuppers Plains,
Middleport and
Bradbury. The staff
assists students with
GED preparation. Staff
members are, left to
right, seated, Alexandra
Brandt, Susan King,
and Lisa King, and
standing, Lois Knadler
· ~nd Richard Nease.
Submitted photo

co·ve· RALL

.---------~---------------------------------------•

p· LAY..
.

·

w· _IN

·

BIN
- GO
·

·
·

UP _TO $1-,000 '··'· '·

Employees, Independent Contractors, Vendors-and their immediate famiily not eligible.

Gallipolis, Ohio

Birth
·announced

(740) 446·1711
Two locllfiom:

1/4 mile north ot Pomeroy, Mason

·

Mason , wv
773-5721

GUYSVILLE - Julie.
and Bill Jenne of Guysville
announce the birth of a
daughter, Jasmine Ann, born
on April 24 at the O'~leness
Memorial Hospital.

. Frtday... Partly
sunny
with a 20 percent chance of
showers. Cooler with highs
in the mid 60s. Southwest
winds 10 to.l5 mph.
. Friday · night ... Mostly
cloudy with a 20 percent
:Chance of showers. Lows in
.lhe mid 40s. West winds 5
to 10 mph. ·
· Saturday... Mostly sunny.
Highs in the upper 60s.
We'st winds 5 to I0 mph.
: Saturday night ... Partly
cloudy. Lows in the lower
40s. West winds 5 to 10
mph .
Sunday and Sunday
night... Partly cloudy. Highs
in the lower 70s. Lows in
the upper 40s.
Monday
through
Thesday , night ... Partly
cloudy. Highs in the upper
70s. Lows in the lower 50s.
Wednesday
through
Thursday... Mostly cloudy
with a chance of showers
.and thunderstorms. Highs in
the upper 70s. Lows in the
lower 50s. Chance of rain
30 percent.

Local Stocks
AEl' (NYSE)- 50.25
Akzo (NASDAQ)- 79.96
Alllland Inc. (NYSE)- 60.85
1111 Lots (NYSE)- 32.90
Bob E•..,. (NASDAQ)- 37.09
BoltiWamer (NYSE) - 50.32
Century (NASDAQ) -

49.311

C"-plon (NASDAQ) - 8.01
ChlormlnC Shope (NASDAQ) -

12.82
City H-., (NASDAQ) - 38.71

111 t:elellralloll Ill Pile
·lreei Ill Pile rou1 1:111111

Cotllna (NYSE) -

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Valley
Hospital
675-4340 ·

Quad Cab 4x4, 21,000
miles, Factory ~arranty

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2147 Jackson Pike

Galllpolla, OH

(740) 446-0724

Lim- -

Ollk Hit F1nanclal (NASDAQ) -

23.91

Olllo

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
~16 Upper River Rd.
. (740) 446-2404

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294 East Main
. (740) 28~699

.......... (NYSE)- 86.41
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Rocky Boots' (NASDAQ)- U.48

RoJIIl Dutch -

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POMEROY, OHIO
204 W. 2nd Street
(740) 992..()461

PROCTORVILLE, OH
97 State Street
(740) 886-9397

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'1 8t.20
llart (NYSE) - 4&amp;.70
_ , . . (NYSE)- 37.19
.~JCtllll (NYSE)- 23.11
Gaily- ~ ... llle 4 p.m.
:ET clolllll_. ol ba · 1&lt;tloo•
for Apo112$', 2007, .....- ..,

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'tuae Mils III01111f •Ill (740)
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GALLIPOLIS

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(Aci'O$Il from

Post Office)

Open Mon.- Thurs. 8:30-5pm

llllt&lt;Oii ...... ' Gl1l!tll. 011
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•

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• Hair Care &amp;. Makeup
• Nail Care • Helix Cu IS
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87.40

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JP Mo1eon (NYSE)- 52.94
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Dollar- (NYSE)- 21.42

.

..

Friday, April 27, 2007

local Weather

School events

Mei1s Coun~. H~, Me Grow

..

PageA7

COMMUNfl'Y

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740-446-0007

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.~slip past Reds, Page 82
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'

.
Friday, April27, 2007
·"

l.ocAL SCHEDULE
: POMEAO\' - A -le ol ~ I)Ogh
IChool V&amp;l'Sity Sj)Orti)g 8l.9nts inYoiYing teams
Meigs County.

Jodoy'epamtt

PnpSoftbel
Fastern at Sooth Gattis, 5 p.m.
Pnp-1
Eastern at South Gallla, 5 p.m.
Tlack lnd Fllld
Meigs. SoUthern at Federal Hocking
Invite, 5 p.m.

.PA'K •

lldurdly. April 21
PnpSoftbeH
Athens at Meigs (DH), t1 a.m.
Southern at Seaver Eastern, noon ·

PnpBIIoboll
Athens at Meigs (DH), noon

ENTERTAINMENT
10:00
Parade
10:30 am
Southern HighSchool Band
11:00 am &amp; 2:00pm

- ~~
Free Admission &amp;
parking
Bring Lawn Chair
To Reserve a craft
space or info
949~2656 '

• . Moodly.AQdl30

Opening .Day
Racine Youth
League
·Games
all day

PnpSoftbett
Meigs at Nels-York, 5 p.m.
W&amp;tefford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Miller at.Sou!hern. 5 p.m.

. Pnpllloeboll

Meigs at Net&amp;York, 5 p.m.
Waierford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 5 p.m.
l'nl&lt;:k ond field
Eastern, Southern at Alexander, 4:30

p.m.

D'"drt Mlyl
PnpSoftbett

Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.

Pnpllloeboll
Vinton County sf Meigs, 5 p.m.

·BASEQAU ·

Independence Road
11:45 am
.Crowning of Queen
· 12:00 &amp; 3:00pm
Jerry &amp; ·Lisa Queen
1:00
&amp; 4:00 pm
'
Duo·Gfide

I

Late rally lifts Eastern
past Lady 'Does, 3-2
j!JY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS .:_ A
bases-clearing d.ouble by
Kathryn Bland during the
bottom of the sixth inning
lifted host Eastern onward
to a dramatic 3-2 softball
victory over Southern
Thursday in Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division action. ·
The Lady Eagles (8-12,
4-4 TVC Hocking) trailed
2-0 after the fourth inning
and were hitless through
fiv e complete, but the
Green and White sent eight
batters to the plate during
that action-packed sixth
frame.
With one out, Alyssa
Baker gave Eastern its first
safety of the night with a
single 'to right-center field .
SHS starter Sarah Eddy

._._.;.&amp;..,.
Blsaell

Eddy

then issued back-to-back
walks to Kelsey Holter and
Brittany Bissell, loading
the bases with one out for
Bland.
Bland drove a 2-1 pitch
to the right field gap, plating Baker, . Holter and
Bis sell for the Lady
Eagles' first ·lead of the
night at 3-2. It also proved
Bryan wanera/plloto
to be the final score of the Eastern's Kathryn Bland belts out a hit off of Southern starting pitcher Sarah Eddy during
Thursday's TVC Hocking contest at Don Jackson Reid in Tuppers Plains. Bland's three-RBI
PluM see blly, 113
double in the bottom of the sixth gave the Lady Eagles a come-from-behind 3-2 victory.

Ohio Division .
7-2
6-2
6-2

1¥'' ~~,,~pre

&lt;;,o.."
. . .,23:-~.,., ..X'
. i~g.;

'· Hoeldng J&gt;lvlSion
SoUthern*
FedHock'
Eastern
Waterford .
Miller· ·
·'Trimble •

'

·8-1
7-2
5-3

· 2-6

2-7

'2-7
. ,,

Buffalo
blanks
Wahama

(Dale Kulchar &amp; Chad Dotson)

,.,.

· -;...r:r .. ,. -·.-, • ·

BY LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYDAILYREPISTER.COM

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TNT
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Meigs-VC diamond
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~

•

ROCK SPRINGS
· Thursday's
Tri-Valley
· Conference Ohio Division
baseball and softball
matchups
scheduled
between Vinton · County
and Meigs were postponed
due to concerns about
inclement weather by the
guests.
These home games for ·
the Marauders and Lady
Marauders have been
cescheduled for Tuesday.
: Another note of interest
for Meigs baseball after
'Thursday was the fact that
Alexander was defeated by
Wellston, 9-3. •
AHS now has a halfgame lead in the TVC
Ohio,
but . Meigs,
Alexander and Wellston all
.have two losses each.

.

Bryan Wllltera/photo

The So~thern bench congratulates Wes Riffle (10) after Riffle scored in the sixth inning of Thursday's TVC Hocking baseball game against Eastern at Tuppers Plains. The Tornadbes captured a share of. the Hocking Division crown with a 9-6
road victory. Eastern catcher Jake Lynch is pictured at the left..

Southern wins share of TVC Hocking title
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS - It
took three runs in the top of
the seventh and 143 pitches
from starter Patrick Johnson,
but Southern ended a decade
of title frustrations in baseball Thursday by clinching a
share of the Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Johnson
Buck
Division crown by defeating ·
host Eastern by a 9-6 marRya~ Chapman delivered
·
gm.
L,
a two-RBI single two batters
The Tornadoes (16-5, 8-1 later, giving the guests an g.
TVC Hocking) never trailed
h 1
·m the contest and JUmpe
·
d ·6scored
advantage.
Mam
out givater
on a passed ball,
out to a 4-0 advantage after ing Southern a three-run
two complete innings, but cushion headed into the final
those resilient. Eagles (9-8, half of the sc;venth.
5-3) answered the bell with Johnson, who allowed just
CoNTAcrUs
three runs in the bottom of four hits and three earned
the third.
runs over seven innings of
:. fNP Sc:oreUne (5 p.m.-1 Lm.)
The Purple and Gold work, retired the first two
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33 .
extended their lead to 6-3 in batters in the final frame,
the top half of the sixth; but then issued his fourth ·walk
hx-1·7~
EHS
again countered with of the game to Justin
:E.-- spons0!1lj&lt;laliysentinei.C0111 . three runs
in its ~alf of the Browning to put the tying
)!pam S!l1l
frame to tie the game at six run in the on-deck circle.
BJIId Shennlln, Sports Editor .after six full.
Johnson regathered his
J7401 -2342. ext. 33
Then
in
the
pivotal
final
composure
one batter later
·-.,omydlllytribuno.oom
inning, . SHS started things however, striking out Kyle
when Kreig Kleski led off Gordon to earn a complete:larry Crum, Sports Writer
fT40) -2342. ext 23
by reaching safely on an game decision, as well as the
. )crumOrnydolyrllgister.oom
error, then Jordan Pierce and first baseball league banner
.,... w.ner., Sports Writer . Butch Mamhout were issued since 1997.
back-to-hack walks to load Afterwards SHS coach
.:t740) -2342. 8111. 33
.
-Omydlllytribuno.com
the bases with nobody out. Ryan Lemley was obviously

t

overwhelmed with emotion going into the draw. We are
for both his players and their hoping for the number one
notable accomplishment. seed, and a win like this
Lemley also thought that against a great program like
although his ' Does have Coach Bowen has here at
won a major piece of the Eastern will definitely give
proverbial pie, he firmly us some credit."
believes that they want the
Johnson also struck out six
whole thing.
in the triumph.
"It's an awesome feeling,
Southern struck early and
but we have no intentions of often in each of the first two
sharing
this
Hocking frames, plating two . runs
Division title," he comment- apiece in each inning to
ed. ''Our focus now turns to establish that early four.run
Miller on Monday because advantage:
·
· th ·
· 1 b Jak H
we want to wm thts mg ,A smge y . e Ul)ter,
outright."
followed by a walk to
Besides his offense com- Chapman, gave the guests
d
ing through when
it
was
runners
·at
first
and
secon
Le
needed most, m1ey was with one away in the openalso most ·praiseful of hls ing atcbat. Johnson .helped
senior hurler - particularly his own cause with an· RBI
against such a formidable single, plating Hunter for a
foe like the Green and 1-0 lead.
.
White. And with the
J.R. Hupp followed with
Division IV toumament an RBI single of his own,
drawing slated for this plating Chapman for a twoSuriday, an outcome like this score edge through a half
only makes things more inning of play.
~tentially rewarding for the
Then in the top of the secDoes.
ond, Jordan Pierce singled to
"Overall, Patrick threw lead things off, then a onethe ball really well tonight. out error .allowed Hunter to
We, at times, lacked a little reach safely - giving SMS
bit .behind him defensively, · runners at the comers.
but he sucked it up and went Chapin.an delivered a single
. out and did what h&lt;: had to that scored Pierce for a 3-0
do," Lemley said. "We real- PittaM see Southem.
82
ly wanted to get this one

BUFFALO, W.Va. Anyone who follows high
school sports knows that the
postseason is all that really
matters.
However, the regular season is a
good sign
of things to
come.
De s pite
having one
of the best
seasons in
Wah a rna
(16~6) softball history,
the Lady
Falcons 4-0
loss to Buffalo (23-2) on
Thursday puts them 0-2
against thetr sectional foe
meaning a lot of work has to
be done if the Bend Area
girls want to make it to the
next round come next week.
The Lady Bison used
three errors in the fifth
inning to take a 1-0 game
and extend that lead to 4-0
and from there the Buffalo
. defense shut down everything Wahama threw at
them.
Five different Buffalo
players - Herdman, Blake,
Tucker, Williams and Tony
- managed a hit in the contest, but it was errors that ·
allowed those hits to tum
into runs.
On the other hand, the ·
usually hard hitting Lady
Falcons squad was held to
just four hils in the .contest,
with Mary Kebler leading
her team going 2-for-3 at
the plate. Ashley Wolfe and
Amber Tully added the
other hits.
Kylie Riggs ,was credited
with the pitching loss,
throwing seven strikeouts
and walking four batters.
Winter got the pitching
win, throwing seven strikeouts and walking three.
Wahama will next retw;n
to action when South Gallia
visits Hartford on Tuesday
before starting sectional
play on Wednesday.
BISON 4, FALCONS 0
Wahama 000 000 0 - 0 4 3
Buffalo
001 030 0 - 4 5 0
Kylie Riggs and Mary Kebler. Winter and
Wiliams. WP - Winter. LP - Riggs.

r,

•

�' .

.Inside

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

.~slip past Reds, Page 82
~

. Character counts in NFL draft, Page 84
'

.
Friday, April27, 2007
·"

l.ocAL SCHEDULE
: POMEAO\' - A -le ol ~ I)Ogh
IChool V&amp;l'Sity Sj)Orti)g 8l.9nts inYoiYing teams
Meigs County.

Jodoy'epamtt

PnpSoftbel
Fastern at Sooth Gattis, 5 p.m.
Pnp-1
Eastern at South Gallla, 5 p.m.
Tlack lnd Fllld
Meigs. SoUthern at Federal Hocking
Invite, 5 p.m.

.PA'K •

lldurdly. April 21
PnpSoftbeH
Athens at Meigs (DH), t1 a.m.
Southern at Seaver Eastern, noon ·

PnpBIIoboll
Athens at Meigs (DH), noon

ENTERTAINMENT
10:00
Parade
10:30 am
Southern HighSchool Band
11:00 am &amp; 2:00pm

- ~~
Free Admission &amp;
parking
Bring Lawn Chair
To Reserve a craft
space or info
949~2656 '

• . Moodly.AQdl30

Opening .Day
Racine Youth
League
·Games
all day

PnpSoftbett
Meigs at Nels-York, 5 p.m.
W&amp;tefford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Miller at.Sou!hern. 5 p.m.

. Pnpllloeboll

Meigs at Net&amp;York, 5 p.m.
Waierford at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Miller at Southern, 5 p.m.
l'nl&lt;:k ond field
Eastern, Southern at Alexander, 4:30

p.m.

D'"drt Mlyl
PnpSoftbett

Vinton County at Meigs, 5 p.m.

Pnpllloeboll
Vinton County sf Meigs, 5 p.m.

·BASEQAU ·

Independence Road
11:45 am
.Crowning of Queen
· 12:00 &amp; 3:00pm
Jerry &amp; ·Lisa Queen
1:00
&amp; 4:00 pm
'
Duo·Gfide

I

Late rally lifts Eastern
past Lady 'Does, 3-2
j!JY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS .:_ A
bases-clearing d.ouble by
Kathryn Bland during the
bottom of the sixth inning
lifted host Eastern onward
to a dramatic 3-2 softball
victory over Southern
Thursday in Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Division action. ·
The Lady Eagles (8-12,
4-4 TVC Hocking) trailed
2-0 after the fourth inning
and were hitless through
fiv e complete, but the
Green and White sent eight
batters to the plate during
that action-packed sixth
frame.
With one out, Alyssa
Baker gave Eastern its first
safety of the night with a
single 'to right-center field .
SHS starter Sarah Eddy

._._.;.&amp;..,.
Blsaell

Eddy

then issued back-to-back
walks to Kelsey Holter and
Brittany Bissell, loading
the bases with one out for
Bland.
Bland drove a 2-1 pitch
to the right field gap, plating Baker, . Holter and
Bis sell for the Lady
Eagles' first ·lead of the
night at 3-2. It also proved
Bryan wanera/plloto
to be the final score of the Eastern's Kathryn Bland belts out a hit off of Southern starting pitcher Sarah Eddy during
Thursday's TVC Hocking contest at Don Jackson Reid in Tuppers Plains. Bland's three-RBI
PluM see blly, 113
double in the bottom of the sixth gave the Lady Eagles a come-from-behind 3-2 victory.

Ohio Division .
7-2
6-2
6-2

1¥'' ~~,,~pre

&lt;;,o.."
. . .,23:-~.,., ..X'
. i~g.;

'· Hoeldng J&gt;lvlSion
SoUthern*
FedHock'
Eastern
Waterford .
Miller· ·
·'Trimble •

'

·8-1
7-2
5-3

· 2-6

2-7

'2-7
. ,,

Buffalo
blanks
Wahama

(Dale Kulchar &amp; Chad Dotson)

,.,.

· -;...r:r .. ,. -·.-, • ·

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LCRUM@MYDAILYREPISTER.COM

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•

ROCK SPRINGS
· Thursday's
Tri-Valley
· Conference Ohio Division
baseball and softball
matchups
scheduled
between Vinton · County
and Meigs were postponed
due to concerns about
inclement weather by the
guests.
These home games for ·
the Marauders and Lady
Marauders have been
cescheduled for Tuesday.
: Another note of interest
for Meigs baseball after
'Thursday was the fact that
Alexander was defeated by
Wellston, 9-3. •
AHS now has a halfgame lead in the TVC
Ohio,
but . Meigs,
Alexander and Wellston all
.have two losses each.

.

Bryan Wllltera/photo

The So~thern bench congratulates Wes Riffle (10) after Riffle scored in the sixth inning of Thursday's TVC Hocking baseball game against Eastern at Tuppers Plains. The Tornadbes captured a share of. the Hocking Division crown with a 9-6
road victory. Eastern catcher Jake Lynch is pictured at the left..

Southern wins share of TVC Hocking title
BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

TUPPERS PLAINS - It
took three runs in the top of
the seventh and 143 pitches
from starter Patrick Johnson,
but Southern ended a decade
of title frustrations in baseball Thursday by clinching a
share of the Tri-Valley
Conference
Hocking
Johnson
Buck
Division crown by defeating ·
host Eastern by a 9-6 marRya~ Chapman delivered
·
gm.
L,
a two-RBI single two batters
The Tornadoes (16-5, 8-1 later, giving the guests an g.
TVC Hocking) never trailed
h 1
·m the contest and JUmpe
·
d ·6scored
advantage.
Mam
out givater
on a passed ball,
out to a 4-0 advantage after ing Southern a three-run
two complete innings, but cushion headed into the final
those resilient. Eagles (9-8, half of the sc;venth.
5-3) answered the bell with Johnson, who allowed just
CoNTAcrUs
three runs in the bottom of four hits and three earned
the third.
runs over seven innings of
:. fNP Sc:oreUne (5 p.m.-1 Lm.)
The Purple and Gold work, retired the first two
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33 .
extended their lead to 6-3 in batters in the final frame,
the top half of the sixth; but then issued his fourth ·walk
hx-1·7~
EHS
again countered with of the game to Justin
:E.-- spons0!1lj&lt;laliysentinei.C0111 . three runs
in its ~alf of the Browning to put the tying
)!pam S!l1l
frame to tie the game at six run in the on-deck circle.
BJIId Shennlln, Sports Editor .after six full.
Johnson regathered his
J7401 -2342. ext. 33
Then
in
the
pivotal
final
composure
one batter later
·-.,omydlllytribuno.oom
inning, . SHS started things however, striking out Kyle
when Kreig Kleski led off Gordon to earn a complete:larry Crum, Sports Writer
fT40) -2342. ext 23
by reaching safely on an game decision, as well as the
. )crumOrnydolyrllgister.oom
error, then Jordan Pierce and first baseball league banner
.,... w.ner., Sports Writer . Butch Mamhout were issued since 1997.
back-to-hack walks to load Afterwards SHS coach
.:t740) -2342. 8111. 33
.
-Omydlllytribuno.com
the bases with nobody out. Ryan Lemley was obviously

t

overwhelmed with emotion going into the draw. We are
for both his players and their hoping for the number one
notable accomplishment. seed, and a win like this
Lemley also thought that against a great program like
although his ' Does have Coach Bowen has here at
won a major piece of the Eastern will definitely give
proverbial pie, he firmly us some credit."
believes that they want the
Johnson also struck out six
whole thing.
in the triumph.
"It's an awesome feeling,
Southern struck early and
but we have no intentions of often in each of the first two
sharing
this
Hocking frames, plating two . runs
Division title," he comment- apiece in each inning to
ed. ''Our focus now turns to establish that early four.run
Miller on Monday because advantage:
·
· th ·
· 1 b Jak H
we want to wm thts mg ,A smge y . e Ul)ter,
outright."
followed by a walk to
Besides his offense com- Chapman, gave the guests
d
ing through when
it
was
runners
·at
first
and
secon
Le
needed most, m1ey was with one away in the openalso most ·praiseful of hls ing atcbat. Johnson .helped
senior hurler - particularly his own cause with an· RBI
against such a formidable single, plating Hunter for a
foe like the Green and 1-0 lead.
.
White. And with the
J.R. Hupp followed with
Division IV toumament an RBI single of his own,
drawing slated for this plating Chapman for a twoSuriday, an outcome like this score edge through a half
only makes things more inning of play.
~tentially rewarding for the
Then in the top of the secDoes.
ond, Jordan Pierce singled to
"Overall, Patrick threw lead things off, then a onethe ball really well tonight. out error .allowed Hunter to
We, at times, lacked a little reach safely - giving SMS
bit .behind him defensively, · runners at the comers.
but he sucked it up and went Chapin.an delivered a single
. out and did what h&lt;: had to that scored Pierce for a 3-0
do," Lemley said. "We real- PittaM see Southem.
82
ly wanted to get this one

BUFFALO, W.Va. Anyone who follows high
school sports knows that the
postseason is all that really
matters.
However, the regular season is a
good sign
of things to
come.
De s pite
having one
of the best
seasons in
Wah a rna
(16~6) softball history,
the Lady
Falcons 4-0
loss to Buffalo (23-2) on
Thursday puts them 0-2
against thetr sectional foe
meaning a lot of work has to
be done if the Bend Area
girls want to make it to the
next round come next week.
The Lady Bison used
three errors in the fifth
inning to take a 1-0 game
and extend that lead to 4-0
and from there the Buffalo
. defense shut down everything Wahama threw at
them.
Five different Buffalo
players - Herdman, Blake,
Tucker, Williams and Tony
- managed a hit in the contest, but it was errors that ·
allowed those hits to tum
into runs.
On the other hand, the ·
usually hard hitting Lady
Falcons squad was held to
just four hils in the .contest,
with Mary Kebler leading
her team going 2-for-3 at
the plate. Ashley Wolfe and
Amber Tully added the
other hits.
Kylie Riggs ,was credited
with the pitching loss,
throwing seven strikeouts
and walking four batters.
Winter got the pitching
win, throwing seven strikeouts and walking three.
Wahama will next retw;n
to action when South Gallia
visits Hartford on Tuesday
before starting sectional
play on Wednesday.
BISON 4, FALCONS 0
Wahama 000 000 0 - 0 4 3
Buffalo
001 030 0 - 4 5 0
Kylie Riggs and Mary Kebler. Winter and
Wiliams. WP - Winter. LP - Riggs.

r,

•

�.

'

. .· -

Page '82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Cardinals slip past Reds, 7-5
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Skip
Schumaker benefited from a
late lineup switch with a
career-best three hiK' and
two RBis, helping the St:
Louis Cardinals rally from
an early four-run deficit to
beat the Cincinnati Reds 7-5
Thursday.
. Adam J&lt;ennedy' s second
double of the game snapped
a sixth-inning tie for the
Cardinals, who won consecutive home games for the
fll'St time this season: . St.
Louis is 3-7 overall at
Busch Stadium, where it
wrapped up its first World
Series title in 24 years last
fall.
The Cardinals trailed 4-0
in the third before getting to
Kyle Lohse (1-1) for one in
the third, ending his streak
of . 20 consecutive innings
without allowing an earned
run. They added three more
in the fifth and one in the
sixth against Lohse, who
~a~e up II hits in six
mrungs.
Brandon Phillips homered, doubled and ha4 three
RBls for the Reds, who are
3-7 in their last 10. Alex
Gonzalez tripled and singled, going 8-for-13 with
two homers and five RBis
in the three-game series,
and David Ross homered.
Schumaker was 4-for-27

This mothers day, a·heartfelt

81ud~

could be the best gift you could ·
ever give your mother.
Don't miss this opportunity to say it. :

fromPageBl

To be published ·

6-4.

.

Griffin grounded into a
fielder's choice that scored
Gordon, making it a onerun ball game with two outs
in the inning. Que batter
later, Shaffer made it a six- ·
all game when he reached
safely on an error that
allowed Young to score, setting up the dramatic conclusion.
Morris, who came in for
relief of stanter Joel Lynch
at the start of the third

Sunday, May 13th

The Dail

1X3 Greeting $12.00 1X5 Greeting· $15.00 :

Happy
Happy
Mother's Day Mother·s·oay

(Your
Mother's
Name)
Love, Brenda,
joe, Tom, Ken
&amp;.. Elaine

·E-Mail us at:

fromPageBl

..
."f;:ounty
rivalry contest.

sports@ mydailysentinel.com
-. .

,,,.]he

~· Bissell, who took over

in the circle during the top
:,of the sixth, threw just
'.four pitches to the Lady
;tornadoes (6-12, 4-5) in
.\ he seventh - retiring the
.·side in' order to complete
·the emotional come· from·
-behind triumph.
~-. Bi ssell was the winning
:Pitcher of record, working
:l wo flawless innings of
:relief for starter Sasha
.&lt;ollins. Collins threw five
;mnings, allowing both
' runs, six hits and a walk in
~~he no-dedsion. Collins
· &gt;also fanned one, while
;Bissell did not record a
, strikeout.
: Despite allowing only
two hits over si~ innings,
Eddy ended up being the
losing pitcher. Eddy surrendered three earned
ruJJs, five walks and hit
,one batter in the setback.
·Eddy also struck out a
half-dozen.
· Both Eddy and Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle paced the
Purple and Gold offense
with two hits apiece.
Stephanie . Cundiff and
Rashell Boso also added
·one safety apiece.
The Lady Tornadoes (6·
12, 4-5) avoided early
·trouble in the second when
Bissell led off the inning
by being hit by a pitch,
then Bland and Kate
Wilfong were issued backl o-back walks to load the
J&gt;ases'with nobody out.
• Hannah Cozart drove a
shot to shortstop, but
Kasey Turley snagged the
line drive and picked
Bissell' off at third for a
double-play.
Eddy
·;induced Hannah Pratt to
.fly ·out in the next at-bat
·and got out of the inning
.11nscathed.
SHS struck first blood in
,the top of the fourth with
;tlfree hits and a walk led to

Cltm ~. --·~

Bryan Wa~8fS/photo

.

Eastern second baseman Kelsey Holter, middle. makes a
force play on Southern baserunner RasheU Boso (14) dur.ing Thursday's TVC Hocking softbill! game at Don Jackson
Field in Tuppers Plains. The Lady Eagles won 3-2.
Centerfielder Amber White is also pictured to the left.
a 2-0 advanta.ge.
Mill Park in Racine back
Eddy led off the inning on April9.
with a single, then Turley
Eastern returns to action
grounded into a fielder's today when it travels to
choice that got Eddy Mercerville for a non-conthrown out at second . ference game with South
Wolfe-Riffle delivered a Gallia. Game time is
single .that moved Turley sc heduled for 5 p.m.
over to third, and a field·
Southern next play s
ing ·e rror on the · play Saturday during a noon
allowed Turley to score doubleheader at beaver
for a 1-0 edge.
against Pike Eastern.
Virginia
Brickles
walked to give the guests
EASTERN 3, SOUTHERN 2
runners at first and sec- Southern 000 200 0 - 2 6 1
ond, then Cundiff deliv - East8rn 000 003 x - 3 2 2
ered an RBI single to the SHS (6·12.' 4·5 TVC Hocking): Sarah
and Whitney Wotfe·Aiffle
. gap in left to score Wolfe . Eddy
EHS (8·12, 4-4 TVC Hocking): Sasha
Riffle for a two-run lead.
eollins, Brinany Bissell (6) and Kathryn
Southern won the previ- Bland
ous contest 8c5 at Star WP - Bissell; LP ·- Eddy

·We love you
mommy!
love,
Oerra, Skylar
&amp;. Pratt

Bryan W.llllrslphoto

Eastern senior Derek Young, right, is congratulated by teammate Derek Griffin (1) and others after scoring the tying run
in the sixth inning of Th~rsday' s TVC Hocking baseball contest against Southern at Tuppers Plains.
·
inning, breezed through·
most of the third, fourth and
fifth frames before running
into trouble in the sixth. But
in the seventh, Morris
llllowed both Kleski imd
Pierce to reach base, and
Titus Pierce became the
third pitcher used by the
hosts.
Pierce · intentionally
walked Marnhout to load
the bases with nobody
out, setting ·up the force
play at any base. Pierce
induced Hunter into an
infield
pop-out,
but
Chapman struck one batter later with the eventualgame winning RBI.
. Buck
paced
the
Tornadoes with three hits',
followed by Chapman and
Jbhnson with two apiece.
Marnhout, Hunter, Riffle
and Pierce provided the
other safeties during the
winning cause. Young,
Pierce, Jake Lynch and
Justin Browning provided a
hit each in the setback.
Joel Lynch worked two
innings in his start for EHS,
allowing four runs, three
earned runs, six hits and
three walks during his outing. Lynch also struck out .
three in the no-decision.
Morris was credited with
the' loss, going four-plus
innings and surrendering
four runs, three earned
runs, four hits and 'three
walks. Morris also hit two
batters and fanned six.
Pierce worked one inning
and allowed one earned
run, one hit and two walks.
Pierce also struck out one.
The Eagles left nine runners on base, wliile the
'Does stranded a .doze n
baserunners.
The Tornadoes also won

~

- - - - -- - --

(;reefing Example.\·...

Tne Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Rally .

:-.

(.148) in a bench role, with
The game·was delayed for
14 of the at-bats as a pinch 49 ' minutes with one out in
hitter, before replacing· the ninth because of rain.
Chris Duncan in left field in When
it
resumed,
a ll)OVe announced just lsringhausen got Josh
before the start of the game. Hamilton to ground out and
He doubled in the third to struck out Juan Castro to
produce the Cardinals' first end it.
run, had an RBI single in the
The Reds took the lead in
fifth and singled in the sev- the first on Gonzalez's oneenth.
·
out triple and Phillips' RBI
Duncan, who hit a pinch- double. Ross hit his ftrst
hit double in the bottom of homer in tile second and
the eighth, went to a doctor Phillips' two-run shot in the
.Thursday mornin~ for third, his ftfth of the season,
stitches after bumpmg his provided a 4-0 cushion.
head at his hotel. He dido 't
Schumaker's two-Out RBI
make it to the ballpark in double in the bottom of the
time so La Russa scratched third ended Lohse's streak,
him.
and the Cardinals tied it
Keisler, making his third with three runs in the fifth,
start filling ill for injured starting the inning with five
Chris Carpenter, lasted only straight hits.
3 1-3 innings and gave up
Kennedy doubled, Gary
four runs and six hits. Five Bennett singled, pinch-hitAPphoto
of the Reds,' hits against the ter So Taguchi hit an RBI
left-hander went for extra single, Aaron Miles singled Cincinnati Reds' Alex Gonzalez (2) is able to get bi!Ck to first as St. Louis Cardinals' Randy
and Schumaker hit an. RBI Keisler (54) misplays a ball after Gonzalez singled and realized he couldn't make it to sec·
bases.
Brad Thompson, ·Russ single before Albert Pujols' ond during the third inning of a baseball game Thursday in St. Louis.
Springer (1 -0) and Ryan 'bases-loaded double-play
Franklin combined for 4 2-3 ball, which scored the third
hitless innings, retiring 12 run, ended the string.
in a row at one point before
Notes: The Cardinals
the Reds cut the deficit to have been outscored 16-3 in ·
one in the eighth when Ryan the first inning and 23·6 the
Freel walked with one out, first two innings. They've
stole second, advanced on a scored the first run in only
groundout and scored on five of theif first 21 games.
Franklin's wild pitch. Jason ... Reds OF Ken Griffey Jr.
Isringhausen fimshed for his , was a late lineup scratch due .
sixth save in seven chances. to soreness in his chest. .

www.mydailysentinel.com

.
:~

Southern
cushion, then Nick B•ck
followed with an RBI single
that plated Hunter. for a
four-run lead. .
It was the kind of start
that EHS coach Brian
Bowen wanted to .avoid if at
all possible, and he thought
that the beginning of the
game played a large pari in
the final outcome. He was
also quick to note that his
kids never gave up.
''That was really important for them to get out to
big lead early like they did.
That was exactly what we
didn't want to have happen," commented Bowen. ·
"Our kids responded well
once we got in that situation
and showed some real character in battling back, but it
just wasn't meant to be."
Eastern finally got on the
scoreboard in the bottom of
the third, plating three runs
on one hit and three errors.
Derek Griffin started the
frame by reaching safely on
an error, then advanced to
third on another error and
passed ball. Cory Shaffer
also reached on an error one
batter later, plating Griffin
for a 4-1 deficit.
Joel Lynch hit into a fielder's choice, then the third
error of the inning allowed
· Matt Morris to reach safely
- giving the Eagles a pair
of baserunners-' Jake Lynch
singled in both his brother
· J6el and Morris with two
outs, cutting the lead down
to one at 4-3.
The score remained that
way through five .complete,
but the sixth proved to be an
explosive frame for both
clubs.
Southern scored twice
during its half of the inning
when back-to-back two-out
hits came to fruition when
Nick Buck doubled, then
Wes Riffle followed with an
RBI triple to make it a 5-3
contest. Riffle scored shortly afterwards on a passed
ball to make it a 6-3 margin.
The hosts put together
one last courageous rally in
their half of the sixth, scoring three runs on a hit, a
walk and three Southern
errors.
Jake Lynch led things off
by reaching safely on an ·
error, then Gordon walked
'jVith one away to give EHS
baserunners at first and second. A passed ball. allowed
both to move up 90-feet,
then Derek Young delivered
an RBI single that scored
Lynch - cutting the lead to

Friday, April27, ~007

Friday, April27, 2007

·--· -

the first contest at Paints'
Stadium in Chillicothe back
on April9 by a 4-3 count.
Southern next · plays
Monday when it goes for
the outright TVC Hocking
crown at Corning against
Miller. Eastern also plays in
division Monday when it
hosts Waterford. Both
games will start at 5 p.m.

1
I

Circle One:

1X3 Greeting $12.00 1XS Greeting • $15.00

1Mother's N a m e ' - - - - - - - " - - - - ' - - - - - - - -- - - - -

Your Name (s): _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~---------~YourAddress._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ~---,---------- I

SOUTHERN 9, EASTERN G
Southern 220 002 3 - 9 11 7 .
Eastern
003 003 0 - 6 4 2
SHS (16·5, 8·1 TVC Hocking): Patrick

City, State,Zip,_ _ _ __ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _~----Poone# _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I
I

GREAl-Afi'ROME ·,

Johnson and Butch Marnhout

EHS (9·8, 5·3 TVC Hocking) ~ Joel
Lynch , Man Morris (3), Titus Pierce (7)
ana Jake Lynch
WP - Johnson; LP - Morris

~-------------~2!!:1'!.'!e...P!!I!i!

- .J

__ .:_ ____ .., _____ _

.

•

Sie your local
dteler fer e lull line

.,•

of snHI. blowers.

MS 170 Chain Saw

. ,,.' 7·
·

·

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BG 55 Handheld Blower

'9··gs 'L
14' bor

Lightweight, includes
STIHL Ouickstop'•
· inertia chain brake

•1• 3· :g· gij·L

Optional vacuum
and gutter ~It
attachments available

irmror:tion

AIWifS

~

~

i
e

'

i•
u

Chester

Gallipois

Pomeroy

Baum Lumber Inc.
46384 State Route 248
.740-985-3301
www.baumlumber.com

Twin Rivers Marina
412 State Rt7 North
740-446·6700
Next to River Front Honda

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
740-992~5500

Open 7 Days a~eek

'

stihlusa.com. ---~---------~----- Are you readyforaSTIHL.?
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. .· -

Page '82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Cardinals slip past Reds, 7-5
ST. LOUIS (AP) - Skip
Schumaker benefited from a
late lineup switch with a
career-best three hiK' and
two RBis, helping the St:
Louis Cardinals rally from
an early four-run deficit to
beat the Cincinnati Reds 7-5
Thursday.
. Adam J&lt;ennedy' s second
double of the game snapped
a sixth-inning tie for the
Cardinals, who won consecutive home games for the
fll'St time this season: . St.
Louis is 3-7 overall at
Busch Stadium, where it
wrapped up its first World
Series title in 24 years last
fall.
The Cardinals trailed 4-0
in the third before getting to
Kyle Lohse (1-1) for one in
the third, ending his streak
of . 20 consecutive innings
without allowing an earned
run. They added three more
in the fifth and one in the
sixth against Lohse, who
~a~e up II hits in six
mrungs.
Brandon Phillips homered, doubled and ha4 three
RBls for the Reds, who are
3-7 in their last 10. Alex
Gonzalez tripled and singled, going 8-for-13 with
two homers and five RBis
in the three-game series,
and David Ross homered.
Schumaker was 4-for-27

This mothers day, a·heartfelt

81ud~

could be the best gift you could ·
ever give your mother.
Don't miss this opportunity to say it. :

fromPageBl

To be published ·

6-4.

.

Griffin grounded into a
fielder's choice that scored
Gordon, making it a onerun ball game with two outs
in the inning. Que batter
later, Shaffer made it a six- ·
all game when he reached
safely on an error that
allowed Young to score, setting up the dramatic conclusion.
Morris, who came in for
relief of stanter Joel Lynch
at the start of the third

Sunday, May 13th

The Dail

1X3 Greeting $12.00 1X5 Greeting· $15.00 :

Happy
Happy
Mother's Day Mother·s·oay

(Your
Mother's
Name)
Love, Brenda,
joe, Tom, Ken
&amp;.. Elaine

·E-Mail us at:

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..
."f;:ounty
rivalry contest.

sports@ mydailysentinel.com
-. .

,,,.]he

~· Bissell, who took over

in the circle during the top
:,of the sixth, threw just
'.four pitches to the Lady
;tornadoes (6-12, 4-5) in
.\ he seventh - retiring the
.·side in' order to complete
·the emotional come· from·
-behind triumph.
~-. Bi ssell was the winning
:Pitcher of record, working
:l wo flawless innings of
:relief for starter Sasha
.&lt;ollins. Collins threw five
;mnings, allowing both
' runs, six hits and a walk in
~~he no-dedsion. Collins
· &gt;also fanned one, while
;Bissell did not record a
, strikeout.
: Despite allowing only
two hits over si~ innings,
Eddy ended up being the
losing pitcher. Eddy surrendered three earned
ruJJs, five walks and hit
,one batter in the setback.
·Eddy also struck out a
half-dozen.
· Both Eddy and Whitney
Wolfe-Riffle paced the
Purple and Gold offense
with two hits apiece.
Stephanie . Cundiff and
Rashell Boso also added
·one safety apiece.
The Lady Tornadoes (6·
12, 4-5) avoided early
·trouble in the second when
Bissell led off the inning
by being hit by a pitch,
then Bland and Kate
Wilfong were issued backl o-back walks to load the
J&gt;ases'with nobody out.
• Hannah Cozart drove a
shot to shortstop, but
Kasey Turley snagged the
line drive and picked
Bissell' off at third for a
double-play.
Eddy
·;induced Hannah Pratt to
.fly ·out in the next at-bat
·and got out of the inning
.11nscathed.
SHS struck first blood in
,the top of the fourth with
;tlfree hits and a walk led to

Cltm ~. --·~

Bryan Wa~8fS/photo

.

Eastern second baseman Kelsey Holter, middle. makes a
force play on Southern baserunner RasheU Boso (14) dur.ing Thursday's TVC Hocking softbill! game at Don Jackson
Field in Tuppers Plains. The Lady Eagles won 3-2.
Centerfielder Amber White is also pictured to the left.
a 2-0 advanta.ge.
Mill Park in Racine back
Eddy led off the inning on April9.
with a single, then Turley
Eastern returns to action
grounded into a fielder's today when it travels to
choice that got Eddy Mercerville for a non-conthrown out at second . ference game with South
Wolfe-Riffle delivered a Gallia. Game time is
single .that moved Turley sc heduled for 5 p.m.
over to third, and a field·
Southern next play s
ing ·e rror on the · play Saturday during a noon
allowed Turley to score doubleheader at beaver
for a 1-0 edge.
against Pike Eastern.
Virginia
Brickles
walked to give the guests
EASTERN 3, SOUTHERN 2
runners at first and sec- Southern 000 200 0 - 2 6 1
ond, then Cundiff deliv - East8rn 000 003 x - 3 2 2
ered an RBI single to the SHS (6·12.' 4·5 TVC Hocking): Sarah
and Whitney Wotfe·Aiffle
. gap in left to score Wolfe . Eddy
EHS (8·12, 4-4 TVC Hocking): Sasha
Riffle for a two-run lead.
eollins, Brinany Bissell (6) and Kathryn
Southern won the previ- Bland
ous contest 8c5 at Star WP - Bissell; LP ·- Eddy

·We love you
mommy!
love,
Oerra, Skylar
&amp;. Pratt

Bryan W.llllrslphoto

Eastern senior Derek Young, right, is congratulated by teammate Derek Griffin (1) and others after scoring the tying run
in the sixth inning of Th~rsday' s TVC Hocking baseball contest against Southern at Tuppers Plains.
·
inning, breezed through·
most of the third, fourth and
fifth frames before running
into trouble in the sixth. But
in the seventh, Morris
llllowed both Kleski imd
Pierce to reach base, and
Titus Pierce became the
third pitcher used by the
hosts.
Pierce · intentionally
walked Marnhout to load
the bases with nobody
out, setting ·up the force
play at any base. Pierce
induced Hunter into an
infield
pop-out,
but
Chapman struck one batter later with the eventualgame winning RBI.
. Buck
paced
the
Tornadoes with three hits',
followed by Chapman and
Jbhnson with two apiece.
Marnhout, Hunter, Riffle
and Pierce provided the
other safeties during the
winning cause. Young,
Pierce, Jake Lynch and
Justin Browning provided a
hit each in the setback.
Joel Lynch worked two
innings in his start for EHS,
allowing four runs, three
earned runs, six hits and
three walks during his outing. Lynch also struck out .
three in the no-decision.
Morris was credited with
the' loss, going four-plus
innings and surrendering
four runs, three earned
runs, four hits and 'three
walks. Morris also hit two
batters and fanned six.
Pierce worked one inning
and allowed one earned
run, one hit and two walks.
Pierce also struck out one.
The Eagles left nine runners on base, wliile the
'Does stranded a .doze n
baserunners.
The Tornadoes also won

~

- - - - -- - --

(;reefing Example.\·...

Tne Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Rally .

:-.

(.148) in a bench role, with
The game·was delayed for
14 of the at-bats as a pinch 49 ' minutes with one out in
hitter, before replacing· the ninth because of rain.
Chris Duncan in left field in When
it
resumed,
a ll)OVe announced just lsringhausen got Josh
before the start of the game. Hamilton to ground out and
He doubled in the third to struck out Juan Castro to
produce the Cardinals' first end it.
run, had an RBI single in the
The Reds took the lead in
fifth and singled in the sev- the first on Gonzalez's oneenth.
·
out triple and Phillips' RBI
Duncan, who hit a pinch- double. Ross hit his ftrst
hit double in the bottom of homer in tile second and
the eighth, went to a doctor Phillips' two-run shot in the
.Thursday mornin~ for third, his ftfth of the season,
stitches after bumpmg his provided a 4-0 cushion.
head at his hotel. He dido 't
Schumaker's two-Out RBI
make it to the ballpark in double in the bottom of the
time so La Russa scratched third ended Lohse's streak,
him.
and the Cardinals tied it
Keisler, making his third with three runs in the fifth,
start filling ill for injured starting the inning with five
Chris Carpenter, lasted only straight hits.
3 1-3 innings and gave up
Kennedy doubled, Gary
four runs and six hits. Five Bennett singled, pinch-hitAPphoto
of the Reds,' hits against the ter So Taguchi hit an RBI
left-hander went for extra single, Aaron Miles singled Cincinnati Reds' Alex Gonzalez (2) is able to get bi!Ck to first as St. Louis Cardinals' Randy
and Schumaker hit an. RBI Keisler (54) misplays a ball after Gonzalez singled and realized he couldn't make it to sec·
bases.
Brad Thompson, ·Russ single before Albert Pujols' ond during the third inning of a baseball game Thursday in St. Louis.
Springer (1 -0) and Ryan 'bases-loaded double-play
Franklin combined for 4 2-3 ball, which scored the third
hitless innings, retiring 12 run, ended the string.
in a row at one point before
Notes: The Cardinals
the Reds cut the deficit to have been outscored 16-3 in ·
one in the eighth when Ryan the first inning and 23·6 the
Freel walked with one out, first two innings. They've
stole second, advanced on a scored the first run in only
groundout and scored on five of theif first 21 games.
Franklin's wild pitch. Jason ... Reds OF Ken Griffey Jr.
Isringhausen fimshed for his , was a late lineup scratch due .
sixth save in seven chances. to soreness in his chest. .

www.mydailysentinel.com

.
:~

Southern
cushion, then Nick B•ck
followed with an RBI single
that plated Hunter. for a
four-run lead. .
It was the kind of start
that EHS coach Brian
Bowen wanted to .avoid if at
all possible, and he thought
that the beginning of the
game played a large pari in
the final outcome. He was
also quick to note that his
kids never gave up.
''That was really important for them to get out to
big lead early like they did.
That was exactly what we
didn't want to have happen," commented Bowen. ·
"Our kids responded well
once we got in that situation
and showed some real character in battling back, but it
just wasn't meant to be."
Eastern finally got on the
scoreboard in the bottom of
the third, plating three runs
on one hit and three errors.
Derek Griffin started the
frame by reaching safely on
an error, then advanced to
third on another error and
passed ball. Cory Shaffer
also reached on an error one
batter later, plating Griffin
for a 4-1 deficit.
Joel Lynch hit into a fielder's choice, then the third
error of the inning allowed
· Matt Morris to reach safely
- giving the Eagles a pair
of baserunners-' Jake Lynch
singled in both his brother
· J6el and Morris with two
outs, cutting the lead down
to one at 4-3.
The score remained that
way through five .complete,
but the sixth proved to be an
explosive frame for both
clubs.
Southern scored twice
during its half of the inning
when back-to-back two-out
hits came to fruition when
Nick Buck doubled, then
Wes Riffle followed with an
RBI triple to make it a 5-3
contest. Riffle scored shortly afterwards on a passed
ball to make it a 6-3 margin.
The hosts put together
one last courageous rally in
their half of the sixth, scoring three runs on a hit, a
walk and three Southern
errors.
Jake Lynch led things off
by reaching safely on an ·
error, then Gordon walked
'jVith one away to give EHS
baserunners at first and second. A passed ball. allowed
both to move up 90-feet,
then Derek Young delivered
an RBI single that scored
Lynch - cutting the lead to

Friday, April27, ~007

Friday, April27, 2007

·--· -

the first contest at Paints'
Stadium in Chillicothe back
on April9 by a 4-3 count.
Southern next · plays
Monday when it goes for
the outright TVC Hocking
crown at Corning against
Miller. Eastern also plays in
division Monday when it
hosts Waterford. Both
games will start at 5 p.m.

1
I

Circle One:

1X3 Greeting $12.00 1XS Greeting • $15.00

1Mother's N a m e ' - - - - - - - " - - - - ' - - - - - - - -- - - - -

Your Name (s): _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~---------~YourAddress._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ ~---,---------- I

SOUTHERN 9, EASTERN G
Southern 220 002 3 - 9 11 7 .
Eastern
003 003 0 - 6 4 2
SHS (16·5, 8·1 TVC Hocking): Patrick

City, State,Zip,_ _ _ __ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ _~----Poone# _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

I
I
I

GREAl-Afi'ROME ·,

Johnson and Butch Marnhout

EHS (9·8, 5·3 TVC Hocking) ~ Joel
Lynch , Man Morris (3), Titus Pierce (7)
ana Jake Lynch
WP - Johnson; LP - Morris

~-------------~2!!:1'!.'!e...P!!I!i!

- .J

__ .:_ ____ .., _____ _

.

•

Sie your local
dteler fer e lull line

.,•

of snHI. blowers.

MS 170 Chain Saw

. ,,.' 7·
·

·

FULLY ASSEMBLED AND SERVICED.

BG 55 Handheld Blower

'9··gs 'L
14' bor

Lightweight, includes
STIHL Ouickstop'•
· inertia chain brake

•1• 3· :g· gij·L

Optional vacuum
and gutter ~It
attachments available

irmror:tion

AIWifS

~

~

i
e

'

i•
u

Chester

Gallipois

Pomeroy

Baum Lumber Inc.
46384 State Route 248
.740-985-3301
www.baumlumber.com

Twin Rivers Marina
412 State Rt7 North
740-446·6700
Next to River Front Honda

Dettwiller Lumber
634 East Main Street
740-992~5500

Open 7 Days a~eek

'

stihlusa.com. ---~---------~----- Are you readyforaSTIHL.?
', I
•

,,

--- - - --

--

�· Page B4 • The_Daily ~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Apri127, 2007

Friday, April 27, 2007

•

, www.mydailysentinel.com

Players' stock rises, falls as draft draws near
BY RusTY MtUER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
COLUMBUS - Antonio.
Pittman wavered at first:
Return to Ohio State for his
senior year or julJip to the·
pros .and support his family?
"My mind was going
through a lot of things:
Stay. Go. Stay. Go," the
tailback said. "And then coming at you full speed, I
once I finally made it I 00 knew it would help my
percent sure that I was stock," the Akron native
going to leave, I had to ded- said.
Now he's expected to be
icate myself to the weight
room, studying film and the taken in the second or third
long hours that it took to ' round and collect millions
of dollars. Most scouting
·
prepare for this."
"This" is the NFL draft, services have him listed
which gets under way on among the top handful of
tailbacks available.
Saturday in New York.
At least a couple of his
Pittman, frequently overformer
Ohio State teamlooked during his three
mates
should
be celebrating
years as a Buckeye, made a
already
by
the
time Pittman
lot of scouts. jaws drop
gets
the
call.
Wide
receiverwhen he had 40-yard dash
time of 4.4 seconds at the kick returner Ted Ginn Jr.
scouting
combine . in figures to go in the middle
Indianapolis. NFL person- of the first round. A third
nel guys knew he had num- Buckeye to give up his final
bers - more · than 2,500 year of eligibility, wide
Anthony
rushing yards the past two receiver
seasons for teams that went Gonzalez,.is expected to be
22-3 - but they weren't taken · late in the first or
aware of how physically early in the second round.
gifted he is.
The Cincinnati Bengals
"I knew once I got a would love to see Ginn's
chance to get out of the uni- name still on the board
form and just work out and when they pick 18th in the
show a team how well! can opening round.
move and do the things that
"What Ted Ginn accomthat are not involved when plished as a collegiate has
you've got II other guys JUSt been outstanding,"

Charac(er counts in NFL
draft but only so much
On the eve of the . NFL
draft, commissioner Roger
Goodell promised to whack
any team leaking confidential information about potential pick-s. That's not a bad
idea for a league beset by
enough legal trouble from
current players that the face
it presents to the public all
too often is a mug shot.
Goodell, to his credit, has
1 wasted
little time since tak. n office trying to polish the
's 1·mage.· He re~nded
to the problem he i erited
- some four dozen players
being arrested in a calendar
year- by toughenin~ up the
personal-conduct pohcy and
threatening to hold the teams
responsible for players'
transgressions.
Now he's telling teams not
just to keep reports of
draftees • bad behavior to
themselves but to use that
information to keep the troublemakers from finding
employment in the first
place.
Good luck.
"The definition of questionable character is always
going to be different for NFL
. executives than it is for the
average Joe," said Memphisbased agent Brian Parker,
whose firm specializes in
solid characters.
"They've got every bit of
background information on
these.gufrs that's possible to
gather, rom the classroom
to the weight r.oom. And
they've gotten better. at how
they apply that information ..
But every · team has their
own method of placing value
on a prospect."
.
d'
Tli .
.at IS a tp1omallc way
of saying that while teams
spend upward of $1 million
each to have kinesiologists,
psychologists, sociologists
and. even psychics measure,
Poke and probe the available
talent, they always t;lke the
player they think will help
them the most, no matter
how many red tabs peek out
from a prospect's folder.
Or, as San Diego general
manager A.J. Smith put it a
while back, "Ultimately,
every club has to decide how
short of the ideal they're
willine to accept to fill a
need:~'
.
We've heard countless
times that clrafting players is
an inexact science, but that's
an insult to science. What
the NFL's annual auction
· reminds us is that · it's not
about how much information
you gather, but what you do
with it that counts.
1\vo years ago, for exampie, Louisville running back
Eric Shelton interviewed
with a few clubs and couldn't figure out why each one
kept harping on character. It
wasn't until a visit to
Carolina that he learned
nearly 20 teams had received

~

Jim'

Li"'l"e
1.1.\!
bacbround checks on him
· 'l ·
f
·
contauung reports o a crunlnal past. The real story? The
h' d
company U'e to prepare
the checks confused him
with another Eric Shelton.
· Then there was the intelligence test devised by the
New York Giants to supplemi:nt the standard Wonderlic
exam given to every potential draftee. Their version
totaled 380 questions in all
_about eight times as many
as the Wonderlic _with the
intention of wearing down
players to the point where
the club got real answers
instead of the ones players
were programmed by agents
and media consultants to
give.
Whll! impressed the players was not the test's difficillty, but its preoccupation
with suicide.
''They asked that a lot of
times 10 a lot of different
forms," Panthers receiver
Steve Smith recalled. "You
know, like, 'Hav!l you ever
thought the world would be
better off without rou?'"
Now, Goodell s asking
whether the NFL would be
better off without certain
players. In that regard, there
'II be 1 ty f te
WI
Pen
st cases.
According to PrQ Football
Weekly, nine amonfc its top
1001 1
h
t
t ·
P
ayers
ave
a
eas
one
of those red tabs in their
folders.

°

Then throw in the rumor-

~oopednge~~gsh~~irc~~o~~~

his latest "don't-tell" edict.
"We certainly welcome
that," agent Ralph Cindrich
'd "S1
·

fi~d· o~l::"J;r~~·fe~~

off rumors about guys that
absolutely aren't true, and
better still, · we usually end
up tracing them back to the
clubs that are the most interested in drafting them."
For all the emphasis on
character this year, don't
expect thin~s to change.
Players fall mto the draft's
damaged-goods bin every
season for sins real and
ima2ined, then tumble down
the board at great personal
expense.
.
But as long as t&amp; many
OMs and coaches continue
to think they're running a
grown-up version of "Boys
Town"- that once they get
the kid into camp, they can
reform him - even the
worst characters won't have
much trouble landing a first
job.
·

Bengals coach Marvin fastest-rising, hidden gem
Lewis said on Tuesday. "In of the draft.
Ted Ginn's place, you have
If Young 's star is on the
a spot for him. But I don't rise, that has not been the
know that he ' ll be there case for Ohio State's
when we pick."
Heisman Trophy-winning
It should be a banner quarterback, Troy Smith.
weekend for ' players from Poor performances in · the
Ohio. Brady Quinn. the ex- Buckeyes' blowout loss to
Notre Dame quarterback Flofida in the national
from the Columbus suburb championship game, and in
of · Dublin, likely will be . a senior all-star game startone of the top seve n selec- ed tlie dow'nward slide.
lions - possibly even to Scouts weren't impressed
the home state Cleveland during private workouts .
Browns at No.3.
Now many predict he'll be
Plenty of other favorite waiting by the phone until
sons' are awaiting their fate , the third, fourth or even
either in the three .rounds fifth rounds.
held Saturday or the four
Although Smith may end
rounds a day later.
up disappointed by his draft
Kent State cornerback position, many others are
Usama Young wasn't even just happy to be selected at
invited to the sco uting com- all. Then there are some
bine but he has become one who are content to sign a
of the hot commodities in free-agent contract. ·
the draft after doing
Ryne Robinson (WR,
extremely well in private Miami of Ohio), Rudy
workouts.
Sylvan (TE, Ohio U.).
"When !learned that they Andy
Alleman
(OG,
had already picked every- Akron), Doug Datish (C.
one who was going to be Ohio State), Quinn Pitcock
invited, I was disappoint- (DT, Ohio State), Roy Hall
ed," the cornerback said. (WR, Ohio State), and Ohio
"But I knew I had to get native Prescott Burgess
over it because I had to per- (OLB. Michigan) hope to
form . It just fueled my hear their cell phones ring.
workouts. I took it as it's
" If I get drafted, it'll be a
my time to prove to them privilege and a 'blessing and
that I should have been if I don't it'll ju st be anoththere."
er time for me to go out
Now Young is projected there and show what I can
to go as high as the second do and prove people wrong
round. 1\vo scouting Web again," Hall said. " I just
sites designated him as .the want an opportunity."

Atale of two quarterbacks at the top
a:s~t~~T~~~:::G

•

NEW YORK - Casual
\.
\,)
fa·ns
didn't
discover
JaMarcus Russell until the
Sugar Bowl last January.
Neither, apparently, did
.,
some NFL scouts _ not to
the extent that they ' re on to
him now as the likely No.
pick in Saturday's draft.
In those three-plus hours.
· Russell's 332 yards and two
hd
· d
touc own passes came
LSU to a 41-14 win over
N
D
h
•
otre arne. T at per.orh1 d
1h ·
mance e pe prope •m to
the top of the 2007 NFL
draft class over the presumptive heir to that spot,
' Notre
Dame's
Brady
Quinn. Never mind that
LSU was simply the better
team, Quinn's 15-of-35 for
148. yards with two interceptions put a huge queslion mark after his name.
So the top of the NFL
draft is about the two quarterbacks, notwithstanding
the fact Georgia Tech's
Calvin Johnson is conceded
to be the one "can't miss"
player - perhaps the best
at any position in the last
five years or so.
,
But in the endless analysis that starts in early
January and carries on for
AP ph~to
four months, Quinn's "can Quarterbacks 'JaMarcus Russell, left, of Louisiana State, and Brady Quinn, right, of Notre
he or can't he" status has Dame pose for photos at Radio City Music Hall to promote the upcoming NFL Draft
been the focus, despite the Thursday in New York.
fact he hada far more con- variety of other players include Russell; Quinn; dash under 4.4 seconds al)d ·
sistent college career than were in trouble for a variety Johnson ; Adams, Okoye; can outleap almost anyone
Russell. Suddenly
he of other reasons. Earlier Oklahoma running back he's been called
became a "can't win the big this month, commissioner Adrian Peterson; offensive "Spiderman." Comparison?
one" QB, a label that also Roger Goodell suspended tackles Joe Thomas of Randy Moss without Moss'
was applied in college (and Adam "Pacman" Jones of Wisconsin ani! Levi Brown excess baggage and lackfor a whiie in the NFL) to .,..ennessee •or a year atld of Pe n St· te a'ety L R
1 t
k th'
p
M ·
''
''
n
a ; s ,,
a on us er wor e tc.
eyton anmng.
Cincinnati's Chris Henry Landry of LSU ; and cornerAssuming the Raiders
So if the Raiders don ' t for eight games for their back
Leon
Hall
of take Russell , Johnson pregrab Johnson or' trade down misbehavior. More suspen- Michigan
sent an · t
t'
d'l m
·
s
m eres mg 1 e to someone who wants him, st'ons c·ould be upcom•'ng.
But · the focus ·ts on rna to Detrott,
· wh'1ch pte
· ks
6
they are likely to take the - · But at least one player Quinn, who has been ana- second, putting considerfoo.t- 5• 260 pound-Russell. with a checkered past, cor- lyzed and overanalyzed. He able pressure on team presAI Davis has always covet- nerback Eric Wright, is could go to Detroit at No. 2, ident Matt Millen, under
ed quarterbacks like him likely to be drafted in the Cleveland at No. 3; or per- whom the Lions are 24-72. ·
who can throw the ball 40- first round. Wright was haps fall as low ·as ninth to
From 2003-2005, Millen
50-60 yards in the air, as he charged w1'th rape wht'le at MI'am•· ··
h
·
c ose WI'de receivers
WI'th
can. .
Southern California, but the
"I think that everything high fir st-round picks. Only ·
Quinn might go second, charges were dropped, he about him points to him one of them, Roy Williams,
third ... . or lOth, as Malt transferred to UNLV and being a successful quarter- has worked out, and taking
Leinart, who spent almost seems to ha,ve passed most back in the NFL," says his another, even one seemingtwo years at Southern Cal teams' character tests.
coach, Charlie Weis, who .[y as sure · a thing as
fighting the burden of being
In an odd twist, after a as an assistant with New Johii'Son,
would
be
a potential No. 1 did a year report leaked out that three England · helped turn Tom acknowledging how badly
ago. Such a drop could cost of the top players - Brady i~to a _star. "The way, .he has drafted.
Quinn a lot of money.
Johnson, Louisville defen- he cames himself on ·and
But Millen has said the
"I don't care about sive tackle Amobi Okoye, off the field, his ~thletic NFL now is "a throwing,
money, I care about foot- and Clemson defensive end abth_ty, h1s ~?~te , h1s lead- wide-open game."
ball," Quinn said Thursday Gaines Adams - acknowl- ership. That ll that certam
"That all points to catchat a media session in New edged at the scouting com- pe,?Pie have, well he has !ng Jhe football,"' he added
York for potential top bine that they had used It.
m defense of those three
picks. "Look at it this way: marijuana, the reaction to
A more neutral opinion? ~icks.
the lower I go, the better those revelations seemed to
"I think if it wasn't for
So does he take Johnson?
chan~e I have a chance. of . be positive. What college Brady and his production, Or Quinn for the throwing
playmg for a wmmng kid, many NFL types asked, Notre Dame never would ~art; the Lions' incumbent
team."
didn't try the drug at some liave been there playing QB is veteran journeyman
The other subplot to this point? And weren't these LSU," says Gil Brandt, the Jon Kitna. Or Thomas to
draft is behavior.
three more honest than oth- NFL's draft analyst and block? Or trade down and
The.re is supposed to be ers who didn't acknowl- Dallas' personnel director take Adams, the pass-rushincreased scrutiny on play- edge they u~ed it?
for the first 30 years of the er he needs.
ers who misbehaved in colThere is a consensus on Cowboys' existence.
That's makes this an
lege- whether on the field the top I 0 players, although . The best prospect?
unusual dr&amp;ft, especially in
or off - following a season not all will go in the top I 0
Without question it's the top five, which norm~lin which nine Cincinnati · simply because' drafts never . Johnson, who is 6-foot-4:' ly is pnllty well set this
Bengals were arrested and a · quite work that way. They 237 pounds, runs a 40-yard late.
\

1

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

m:rtbune- Sentinel -l\e
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llr•

KIT &amp; CA.,RLYLE

r ~~mrs I
\\\01 \ C I \ II \ I"

Ohio Valley
kltncarlyleGcomcalt.net
Publishing reserves
card o:::miSS&lt;J
lho rlghl to edH,
dog. Mixed
breed
rejeel or cancel any ALL KCHS ALUMNI SEC· Dachshund, short black hair
ad at any time.
OND ANNUAL REUNION, w/ a split in one of his ears.
Errors I MUsl B MOOSE LODGE. MAY 26, Has microctlip, can be idenoported on lhe firs . 2007, 8·100 ENTERTAIN· ·lilied by avet.740·245-()(){)4
MENT. (304)675·4831 OR
of publication an
e Trlbune-Senllnel (740)446-3488
'
. ·
YMUJSALE
eglater will
&amp; Carry
Training. ~- ==~~:;==~
esponalble lor n Conceal
NRA Certifi
ed Instructor,
ore than the cost o
Sam sharp, May 5th.
YMID SALEMercerville Fire Dept, email
GAlLIPOLIS
sta r,key@ in box .c.om . "'~-..iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiO...,I
D t&gt; -.l&gt;
(740)256·6514
·, ~ 0 ~"' 1
'
Addison Townhouse.Corner
. t ""~ St V~~
I Karen Honacher, would. like of Johnsons Ridge and
0
\' .
10 announce the divorce of Addison Pike. All proceeds
her .&amp; her husband Fred go towards March.of Dimes.
()
Honacher
Jr.
of Lots of stuff! Come See! Sat.
Tupp,ersplains, Ohio, the APril 28thOnly!
divorce hearing iS set lor _____ _ _
May 7. 20°7 at 11 am in Estate Leltover Sale Prices
Jackson Co. West Virginia Reduced. Cr\Jstal, .jeWeln•,
'
.,
HousehClld
goods,
Holiday
GIVEAWAl'
decorations. Etc. One price
Bolt number ads ar
lwoya conlldenllal.
takes all!! Tocallset(740)4AI·
up an·
appornlmenl
-1--L-r
•
2 male 1yr old cats 1 long- 5826
~
1
Current rate car
tabby striped. 1 solid
·
~
blhair
.· ppllos.
~ • VUfY sweeI &amp; IOVI'ng r~ v•~
.... S~
.. vaur.
www.comic•.com
IC:I 2007 b NEA I
304-675·8901
l'oMERoviMmDLE '----------------=.;..;.;.Y~...;..·..;n.;.c._,
All Real Estal
dvertlsements ar Free puppies, ·hall Border" .
Collie. 740·256·16526r740· Apnl 29, 30, May 1, 9am·ll10 .
111.0 u ....... W.••~ lll"hd u---W.·~
to lhe Federa
256_
1233
5pm.(740·985-3929)
nexlto
1fw&gt; WANIDI
nur ~"~
nr.tr ~"~
• ubjeel
air Housing Act o
Eastern
High
School,
solid
...
______
.,l
.
•
• 968.
Moving must lind homes for "oak table &amp; chairs. electric
'
yellow kittens &amp; cat some lift chair, electric hospital S Earn Extra MoneyS Drivers Needed: COL BuCkeye Hills Career Center
This
newapape have bobtails 304-675-6720 bed, washer, swivel recliner, Independent Contractors Drivers willing to drive fof 18 now accepting appUca·
ccep1s only 11el
loo'
DJ/stereo
equipment,
(must be atleast 1B)
local ready-mix COfTl)any. Ilona fcf slbstitute teachers
anted ada meetln
F~
skates, beautyshopwetsta· neededtodeliverthe
Experience is preferred bot (in all l;lcademlc and C-T
tion, bowl and fatigue mats, Ohio Valley Phone Book not necessary. Drivers must areas). Contact the
OE "'andards.
b~ycle, clothes, baby 1tems, in Gallipolis, Jackson, ba wiNing lo do pre malnte- .Superlnlendents Office at
Full-blHoooded
&amp; surrounding
nance on trucks &amp; equip· 740-245-5334. EEO
We will nol knowing Lost:
N · n Elk
nd 1AawlelghtoolProducts,
· mat- W~llslonareas
·
orweglaA Ad u • rasses, S, misc.
·
ment, vard
mis· --,.--:-::=::-:-,.-accepl any edver
storys
1
•••
·~asoo
' work &amp;other
un
area· - - - - - - cellaneous
chores. POSTOFFIcE NOW
,. • laement In vlolatlo
Gallia/Meigs, Answers to Rain or shine, Sat. 4/28,
Experleilce operating equip·
HIAING
·:!~f~lhe~la~w~.~~~~Pe~p=p=er~.(~74~0;)3~67~-7~20~4--, Bam-?, no before aam sales, 100 WORKERS NEEDED ment &amp; extra skills such 88
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
~
Syracuse 2nd St., across Assemble crafls, wood welding 8 plus. Call
$57K annually
~from Fire Station. sofa &amp; items. To $480/wk Materials (304)937_3410
Including Federal Benefits
•
CLASSIFIED INDEX
chair, bike, Pfaitz, mise
provided. Free information
and OT,Paid Trailing,
.. 4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
pkg. 24Hr. 801·428-4649 Farmers Market Manager
Vacatlbns;FTIPT
Announcei1'Mtnt ............................................ 030
PTYMUJ.
n. "'~~~
- - - - - - - Athens Farm"ers Market 1·80D-584·1 ns Ext. 18923
Antlques ....................................................... 530 __
r~• ·
.
Seeks Part-Time Manager
USWA
Apartments for Rent .............~ ..................... 440
Responsibilities: Manage ---------::Auction and Flea Market,.. ........................... 080 3 family Garage Sale 2016
'Market, Plan &amp; lmplenient R&amp;J Trucking Leading The
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760 Marquette Saturday 8·?,
Market progams, work with Wfri A&amp;J Truct&lt;.tng now
Auto Rapalr .................................................. no Something for everyone
300 Briarwood Drive
governmental &amp; Communtly Hiring at our New Havenj
Autoafor Sale............................................... 710 come and see our bargains
Gallipolis, Ohio
groups. Knowledge of farm- WV Terminal. ~or Regk&gt;na
Boatel Motors for Sale ............................. 750
740·441·9633
lng and marketing, strong Hauls-Dump 0rv. 1 year
Building 5uppltea ........................................ 550 Garage Sale .Saturday 4/28
communications end com- OTR verifiable e"f). Call I·
Bulh'1881 and BUildings ............................. 340 9·5 At 2N watch for signs on Holzer Assisted Living puter skills essential. 800-462•9365 ask for Kent
Buelneaa Opportunlty.................................210 the lett
Gallipolis has Employment Resume ahd tetter of appli·
Receptfonllt
Buelneaa·Tralnlng ..........:.......:.................... 140
Opportunities for
cation to: Athens Farmers John sang Ford LJnccitn
Campers &amp; Motor Homea ........................... 790
Inside Sate tots of nice PART-TIME and as needed Market, PO Box 5727, ~ercury 11 experiencing
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
things
tools everything ml!st
Resident Assistants. Athens, Oh 45701
continued growth ttlat
Carda of Thanks .......................................... 010 go, All Box 66·1 Broad Run Preler eKpenencad STNA,
requiros us to find a
Chllci/Elderly Care ....................................... t90 Ad, Letart g.? Sat &amp; Sun
but not required.
FEDERAL
energetic Reoeptlon~t.
Etectrlca11Refrlgeratlon
............................... 480
840 304·882·2196
Please
in parwn
POSTAL JOBS
Qualffica1ions
that woold
Equlpmenllor Rent .....................................
saridapply
Resume
to: or
be """""fit ~-1he ""'
8
ExcavaII ng................................................... 830·
hir- Is, ou1V"""'
~=
Diane Camden AN, DON $16.53·$27.58/hr.,
ing. For application now
and free
~ng personality,
61
FFarm E1qulpRmetnt .......................................... 43g
.
governement job info, call good phone skills and
F:;:: 1~; s:~;.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.' 330
-:--~-:--:-----:1 American Assoc. of Labor 1- cashiering ll"fl8rience.
For Leaae ..................................................... 490
AUCTION: Modular House A Celebration
° 913·599-8042, 24/hrs. emp. Contact
Dee Sweeney in
For Sale ..........~ ............................................. 585
and tools &amp; Equipment. life .... Overbrook Center, serv.
person at John sang
For Sa le or Trade......................................... 590 Buckeye Hills Career located at 333 Page Street, - - - - - - - - Ford un·coln Mercury.
Fruits &amp; Vanetables .....................................580 Center, R10· Grande , Oh'~· T Mid&lt;l~ort
. .., . Ohio is pleased Help wanted at Darst AduH 195 Upper Aiwr Road
-a
450
&amp; E I 11·00 a m House at to announce we are accept- Group Home, some ifting,
Gallipolls. Ohio
Furnished
Rooms
..:......................................'..BSO 12:00a noon. on. May
.. 5,2007. ing applications
General
Haullng
........................................
. tor the fol· 7-5 shift, 740·.992·5023. ..
Glveaway ...... :...............................................040 740·245·5334
towing positions to join our Help Wanted evenings 5· ~
Happy Ads ....................................................OSO
friendly and dedicated staff: 8pm &amp; Saturdays1o-4pm. at ~
Hoyg•· Gra In .................................................. 640 Carolr'n'a Flea Markel now 7A·7P,FuiiTimeSTNA's3A·
Part Ti"me LPN's 7P· 7A. &amp; .,'. A Communl'oatr'ons 740- - rcwHII'IrO."lt-"~·4&lt;fJKlJ~r-W"'"" .......;
Help Wanted ..................;.......................... .... 110 Open Fri. Sat. Sun 9·5 304- 3p &amp; 7A·?P, Part Time r44_1_·9':"71_1'[[l"Affr"""':l
Homelmprovements...................................810 675·5516
STNA's 3P-3A &amp; 7P-7A ·
EOE
Homes for Sale............................................ 31 0
Houaahold Goods ....................................... 510 Cross Creek Auction Buffalo Applicant's must be depend·
TO DRIVE
Houaaa for Rent .......................................... 410 Salurda" Nigh/ Dealer from abk&gt;, team ,players with pos·
ALLIANCE
' Virigina,
· trailer of itive attitudes to join us in
In Memorlam ................................................ O20
Northern
TRACTOR·TRAiLER
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Insurance ..................................................... 130 mercl1andise coming to WV providing outstanding: quali·
Center provides residents
· Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ S60 t II Bu'lcfng ·sal a s full ty care to our residents.
TRAINING CENTERS
with outstanding nursing
·Liveatock ..............:............................... ~.......630 ~:~ng s~u~ m:ily ~iia a~ Stop by and till out an appli·
·~~~~~so
ana and rehabiNtation serv·
Lost and Found ........................................... 060 Master Csrd ·
cation or contact Hollie
. fltwe~MO AVAILW..E"
ices helping them retum to a
Lots &amp;Acraage ............................................ 350 (304 ) 550 _1616 Ste hen Bu~garner. LPN. Staff
•JOBPI.ACf:MOO'"''
!He of independence at
Mlscellaneous.............................................. 170 Aed 1639
P
De v e I o p m e n I ~..,.............. home. We currently have
118
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
e Y
Coordinatqr@740·992·6472
' Vi~inia
opponunlties for LPN'S at
MoblleHomeRepalr....................................860
WANIID
and come see for yolXSBtl
~-~~QIITI
ourfacilitylnPomeroy,Ohio.
Mobl~ Homes for Rent ............... :............... 420
. , m BUY
.the difference you can make
We otter COMPETIVITE
8
Mobile Homes tor Sale................................ 320 Lw....- - - - · · at Overbrook!l!l EOE &amp; A L kl · f 1 .~..~...
oo ng
or n-,,wma
SALARY
SCALE,
an excel·
Money to Loan ...........-.................................. 22 0 ~Absoluie Top Dollar: U.S. Participant of The Drug·Free Childcara
provider
hour
lent
benefit
package
and a
12
Motorcy-cles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Workplace Progmm.
da A f' . ed S ·
Mualcallnatrumen1s ................................... 570 Silver and Gold Coins,
ys. et · requ1r . , enous supportive work environ·
p
1
· DOS
Proofsets Gold Rings ·Pre- ------d.,.---f0 Inquires only Catl304-675· ment. Interested candidates
should
apply
to:
P:;-:;;" :~ia·:;:;:::;;;;;:;;:;;:;:;;::;;:;::::::;::::;::::.':.' sso 1935 u.s. . Cur;ency, :~~~f~~t,~!~~,'~~~, ~ 3161
Plumbing &amp; Heattng ...............:................. _... 820 Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
.
.
. . 'Rockspings Rehabll!alion,
week. Apply
Amencan for
Now acc~tlng applicatiOnS 36759 Aockapflnga Road
Profenlonol Services ........ :........................ 230 co·n
' Shop· 151 · Second Legion
Post at27,theMcCormicl&lt;
GntVFry Cook Apply In
'
R8dto, TV &amp; CB Repalr ...................:........... 160 Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-446· Ad, 3pm-tipm, Apnl 24th·
2nd
A
Pomeroy,
Ohio
~5769.
308
110
Real Eatato Wonted ..................................... 360 2842.
301h.
~:i:t
' . ~~'~ca~e
~ Hea~~
SCfloOialnatruCIIOn.................................... 150
·
~~. nc. ~ an equa
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertlll-.............................. 650
Bu~ng Junk Cars, Trucks &amp; AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Now accepting applcattons opportunity omployer 1hal
Sltuetlono Wanted ..................................:.... 120 Wrecks. Pay Cash J D Sell. Shiney Spears, 304- for Servers. Apply in person encouragas worlcplace
3 773 5343 675·1429.
Space forGoodo
Rent .............................................
460
Salvage
a1308 2nd Ave, Clalll&gt;&lt;&gt;fls. clwrslty. MIF ON
Sporting
.........................................:.s:w
(304)674-1374t ~1 .
SUV'IIor Sete..:...................,....................... 720
- - - - - - - - NCNi HIRING, Pcim pleas• Roolors: Molal roofing, sldTrucks for.Sala ............................................ 715
Bennigans, hiring .Servers ant and Rio Grande ing and EPDM:Top poy and
· Upholllery ................................................... 870
Host, and Cooks. Apply at McDonatds. Apply wllhln. benefits. 72~-221H1020
vane For Sale..............................................730 r,;;,:;;;;----..., the P&lt;&gt;nt Pleasant locallon 245·5156 and 304-675·
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090 1"0 .._ -w.··~ on~
3908
.
s- 8 Motella _accepting
Wanledto.Buy-FarmSupplles ...........:...... 620
our ~"~
applica1lons for Fronl Deak
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Domino's Pizza Now Hiring Wanted part-time apartment Clark. Must be 11tH to 'NOftc
Wanted to Rant ........................:................... 470
Sale Oriwrs &amp; Management malntenar&lt;:e pelliOil, send floxlbla h&lt;lurs. and have
Vatd Seie- Galllpollo ...............................:... 072 An EKcellen1 way 10 earn P&lt;&gt;nl Pleasant, Galllpois &amp; work ll"fl8riences fo: DallY etrQng customor service
Yard Sole-Pomeroy1Niddle ......................... 074
money. The New Avon.
Pomeroy locations Apply In Samlnol, P.O.Box 729·4, skflo.•AwiY In ~- NO
Yard Sele-Pt PINHni·................................ 076 Call Marilyn 304-882-2645 Perwn
Pomeroy Oh 45769.
PHONE CALLS.

rC::!'"""----....,
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--====-:-==·VVV"VVV"

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Midwest Homes
mymldweathome,com
Toro/Nheel Horse Classic 3BR. 1.5. BA. CA. gas furn.
·312·8 Kohler Magnum 12, fu11 basement, frame house
42 inch deep. Runs. $400. on 5 lots on SA 554 Bidwell
992·7789,callaHe&lt; 4:00PM $50,000. 740·993·4551
ii WANIDI
AttenUonl
"'--•11ioii1iDo--'• DOWN
~ocal company offering "NO
PAVMENr pro·
Child Care in my Home 304· grams for you to buy your
Jratil'&amp;ril&amp;nt, tlaatth c8re, I" 675-6537
home instead of renting.
insurance and disability
· % financing
insurance.To apply, con· Will cleanup old buildings, . 100
less than pertect creel~
I tac1 Jiim Thomas. Service basements, and out build· accepted
Manager. 740-446-9800 ings. Call for free estimates, • Payment could be the
(7:40)367..0079 ask tor Andy same as rent.
Mortgage
Locator.s
Will mow lawns. 740·245· ( ) .00oo
740
367
04117. Aek for Tom
Brand new log home sitting
on approx. 1.44 acres,
EOE
!.almost ready to move into.
rtu
BU&gt;INI$
OPPoR111NriY
Custom Amish Kitchen with
~::::;;;:~ solid surface counters, 3BA,
2BA. $142,000. Call
•NOTICh
1740)256·9247
The Village of Rio Grande is
taking applications for the OHIOVALLEY PUBLISH· Building Downtown w~h 3
position of part time pollee lNG CO. recommends apartments&amp;offstreetpark·
oftlcer. Two years experl· that you do business wrth ing. Rent to own, $750/mo
ence
is
required. people you know. and with option to buy, Must
Applications can be piCked NOT to send money qualify. (740)710-()()()7
up at the Rio Grande through the mail untM you
Municipal Building Monday- ~ave investigated lhe
Friday, 8:30AM until :o;ri~er:lng:.:;;;:=~
4:30PM. Applications are
due back to the Municipal
MoNEY
·1
Building by noon on Monday
loAN
10
May 2007.
L~------·
re•lestlte ldvertlslng
~
c _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . -....~~~-.,
In thl1 new.paper is
Wanted: Direct Supervision
subjec:ttotiMFederal
emplovees to oversee male ••NOTI(;E••
F1lr Housing Act ot1968
youth In a staff secure resi·
which makn it Illegal to
dential environment Must Borrow Smart. Contact
adveniH ~any
pass physical lraining the Ohio Division · of preter•nee, llmllltion or
requirement. Pay base&lt;;! on Financial Institution's dlocrlmlnotlon boHd on
experience. Call (740)379- ~:!fr~ B~;OR~o~~u~~~
.~:~~.~:':t:~l::t,::l
9083
Mon·Frl
origin, or any intention to
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obtain a loan. BEWARE preference, llmilltion or
Lw-ili
of requests for any large
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,
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(careers Close To Home} Office of Consumer Thisknowingly
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CallTod8yi74Q-446-43ti7, Affairs tolllree at 1·866·
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Accredited. Mtmber AccradHino lender is properly
readers •re ttereby
informed th1t •II
:m~ ~~~ CollegM licensed. (This is a public
dwellings edvertlsed li1
servh;:e . anno4ncement
thla newsPaper ere
Nursing Assistant classes from ·.the Ohio Valley
available on an equsl
begnnlng May 7th, 2007. If Publishing Company)
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you enjoy elderly peopleand
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H
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~
Mature pme trees 2barns ·
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FOR SAlE
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call 740·286-7212 or 937·
Overbrook
•-9/mol
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Sl Mkldllocated
ri ..
.
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. .
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accepled until May 1. Full . 1oca llattnga call ea.sst- 160. 3BR, tBA. Peaches,
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_ Overbrool&lt; Center Is area . D, 304·675·3637 E. oost. 740·992·5635 or 992·
8472
an E.O.E. and a pertldpenl 304·882-2:134
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!OIIND A JIOIB wi1h a t2x18 addi1ional bed- Com"lDD!'ial property.
• •
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CLASSIF.lEOS AC, $1~9.500 (30~)874· now won't last long,
592t or (304)593-887t
(740)992-2429

IUf

""'

14,

i

All

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I
I

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"

-

~--------~---------------------------------~&lt;----------~------~----------~--~----------------------------~--:·~~~~-----·~~------~-------~----------·-------~··-----------~--------------------~·-·------~------~----------------~--~-----~----- ...._ .

�· Page B4 • The_Daily ~

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, Apri127, 2007

Friday, April 27, 2007

•

, www.mydailysentinel.com

Players' stock rises, falls as draft draws near
BY RusTY MtUER
ASSOCIATED PRESS
COLUMBUS - Antonio.
Pittman wavered at first:
Return to Ohio State for his
senior year or julJip to the·
pros .and support his family?
"My mind was going
through a lot of things:
Stay. Go. Stay. Go," the
tailback said. "And then coming at you full speed, I
once I finally made it I 00 knew it would help my
percent sure that I was stock," the Akron native
going to leave, I had to ded- said.
Now he's expected to be
icate myself to the weight
room, studying film and the taken in the second or third
long hours that it took to ' round and collect millions
of dollars. Most scouting
·
prepare for this."
"This" is the NFL draft, services have him listed
which gets under way on among the top handful of
tailbacks available.
Saturday in New York.
At least a couple of his
Pittman, frequently overformer
Ohio State teamlooked during his three
mates
should
be celebrating
years as a Buckeye, made a
already
by
the
time Pittman
lot of scouts. jaws drop
gets
the
call.
Wide
receiverwhen he had 40-yard dash
time of 4.4 seconds at the kick returner Ted Ginn Jr.
scouting
combine . in figures to go in the middle
Indianapolis. NFL person- of the first round. A third
nel guys knew he had num- Buckeye to give up his final
bers - more · than 2,500 year of eligibility, wide
Anthony
rushing yards the past two receiver
seasons for teams that went Gonzalez,.is expected to be
22-3 - but they weren't taken · late in the first or
aware of how physically early in the second round.
gifted he is.
The Cincinnati Bengals
"I knew once I got a would love to see Ginn's
chance to get out of the uni- name still on the board
form and just work out and when they pick 18th in the
show a team how well! can opening round.
move and do the things that
"What Ted Ginn accomthat are not involved when plished as a collegiate has
you've got II other guys JUSt been outstanding,"

Charac(er counts in NFL
draft but only so much
On the eve of the . NFL
draft, commissioner Roger
Goodell promised to whack
any team leaking confidential information about potential pick-s. That's not a bad
idea for a league beset by
enough legal trouble from
current players that the face
it presents to the public all
too often is a mug shot.
Goodell, to his credit, has
1 wasted
little time since tak. n office trying to polish the
's 1·mage.· He re~nded
to the problem he i erited
- some four dozen players
being arrested in a calendar
year- by toughenin~ up the
personal-conduct pohcy and
threatening to hold the teams
responsible for players'
transgressions.
Now he's telling teams not
just to keep reports of
draftees • bad behavior to
themselves but to use that
information to keep the troublemakers from finding
employment in the first
place.
Good luck.
"The definition of questionable character is always
going to be different for NFL
. executives than it is for the
average Joe," said Memphisbased agent Brian Parker,
whose firm specializes in
solid characters.
"They've got every bit of
background information on
these.gufrs that's possible to
gather, rom the classroom
to the weight r.oom. And
they've gotten better. at how
they apply that information ..
But every · team has their
own method of placing value
on a prospect."
.
d'
Tli .
.at IS a tp1omallc way
of saying that while teams
spend upward of $1 million
each to have kinesiologists,
psychologists, sociologists
and. even psychics measure,
Poke and probe the available
talent, they always t;lke the
player they think will help
them the most, no matter
how many red tabs peek out
from a prospect's folder.
Or, as San Diego general
manager A.J. Smith put it a
while back, "Ultimately,
every club has to decide how
short of the ideal they're
willine to accept to fill a
need:~'
.
We've heard countless
times that clrafting players is
an inexact science, but that's
an insult to science. What
the NFL's annual auction
· reminds us is that · it's not
about how much information
you gather, but what you do
with it that counts.
1\vo years ago, for exampie, Louisville running back
Eric Shelton interviewed
with a few clubs and couldn't figure out why each one
kept harping on character. It
wasn't until a visit to
Carolina that he learned
nearly 20 teams had received

~

Jim'

Li"'l"e
1.1.\!
bacbround checks on him
· 'l ·
f
·
contauung reports o a crunlnal past. The real story? The
h' d
company U'e to prepare
the checks confused him
with another Eric Shelton.
· Then there was the intelligence test devised by the
New York Giants to supplemi:nt the standard Wonderlic
exam given to every potential draftee. Their version
totaled 380 questions in all
_about eight times as many
as the Wonderlic _with the
intention of wearing down
players to the point where
the club got real answers
instead of the ones players
were programmed by agents
and media consultants to
give.
Whll! impressed the players was not the test's difficillty, but its preoccupation
with suicide.
''They asked that a lot of
times 10 a lot of different
forms," Panthers receiver
Steve Smith recalled. "You
know, like, 'Hav!l you ever
thought the world would be
better off without rou?'"
Now, Goodell s asking
whether the NFL would be
better off without certain
players. In that regard, there
'II be 1 ty f te
WI
Pen
st cases.
According to PrQ Football
Weekly, nine amonfc its top
1001 1
h
t
t ·
P
ayers
ave
a
eas
one
of those red tabs in their
folders.

°

Then throw in the rumor-

~oopednge~~gsh~~irc~~o~~~

his latest "don't-tell" edict.
"We certainly welcome
that," agent Ralph Cindrich
'd "S1
·

fi~d· o~l::"J;r~~·fe~~

off rumors about guys that
absolutely aren't true, and
better still, · we usually end
up tracing them back to the
clubs that are the most interested in drafting them."
For all the emphasis on
character this year, don't
expect thin~s to change.
Players fall mto the draft's
damaged-goods bin every
season for sins real and
ima2ined, then tumble down
the board at great personal
expense.
.
But as long as t&amp; many
OMs and coaches continue
to think they're running a
grown-up version of "Boys
Town"- that once they get
the kid into camp, they can
reform him - even the
worst characters won't have
much trouble landing a first
job.
·

Bengals coach Marvin fastest-rising, hidden gem
Lewis said on Tuesday. "In of the draft.
Ted Ginn's place, you have
If Young 's star is on the
a spot for him. But I don't rise, that has not been the
know that he ' ll be there case for Ohio State's
when we pick."
Heisman Trophy-winning
It should be a banner quarterback, Troy Smith.
weekend for ' players from Poor performances in · the
Ohio. Brady Quinn. the ex- Buckeyes' blowout loss to
Notre Dame quarterback Flofida in the national
from the Columbus suburb championship game, and in
of · Dublin, likely will be . a senior all-star game startone of the top seve n selec- ed tlie dow'nward slide.
lions - possibly even to Scouts weren't impressed
the home state Cleveland during private workouts .
Browns at No.3.
Now many predict he'll be
Plenty of other favorite waiting by the phone until
sons' are awaiting their fate , the third, fourth or even
either in the three .rounds fifth rounds.
held Saturday or the four
Although Smith may end
rounds a day later.
up disappointed by his draft
Kent State cornerback position, many others are
Usama Young wasn't even just happy to be selected at
invited to the sco uting com- all. Then there are some
bine but he has become one who are content to sign a
of the hot commodities in free-agent contract. ·
the draft after doing
Ryne Robinson (WR,
extremely well in private Miami of Ohio), Rudy
workouts.
Sylvan (TE, Ohio U.).
"When !learned that they Andy
Alleman
(OG,
had already picked every- Akron), Doug Datish (C.
one who was going to be Ohio State), Quinn Pitcock
invited, I was disappoint- (DT, Ohio State), Roy Hall
ed," the cornerback said. (WR, Ohio State), and Ohio
"But I knew I had to get native Prescott Burgess
over it because I had to per- (OLB. Michigan) hope to
form . It just fueled my hear their cell phones ring.
workouts. I took it as it's
" If I get drafted, it'll be a
my time to prove to them privilege and a 'blessing and
that I should have been if I don't it'll ju st be anoththere."
er time for me to go out
Now Young is projected there and show what I can
to go as high as the second do and prove people wrong
round. 1\vo scouting Web again," Hall said. " I just
sites designated him as .the want an opportunity."

Atale of two quarterbacks at the top
a:s~t~~T~~~:::G

•

NEW YORK - Casual
\.
\,)
fa·ns
didn't
discover
JaMarcus Russell until the
Sugar Bowl last January.
Neither, apparently, did
.,
some NFL scouts _ not to
the extent that they ' re on to
him now as the likely No.
pick in Saturday's draft.
In those three-plus hours.
· Russell's 332 yards and two
hd
· d
touc own passes came
LSU to a 41-14 win over
N
D
h
•
otre arne. T at per.orh1 d
1h ·
mance e pe prope •m to
the top of the 2007 NFL
draft class over the presumptive heir to that spot,
' Notre
Dame's
Brady
Quinn. Never mind that
LSU was simply the better
team, Quinn's 15-of-35 for
148. yards with two interceptions put a huge queslion mark after his name.
So the top of the NFL
draft is about the two quarterbacks, notwithstanding
the fact Georgia Tech's
Calvin Johnson is conceded
to be the one "can't miss"
player - perhaps the best
at any position in the last
five years or so.
,
But in the endless analysis that starts in early
January and carries on for
AP ph~to
four months, Quinn's "can Quarterbacks 'JaMarcus Russell, left, of Louisiana State, and Brady Quinn, right, of Notre
he or can't he" status has Dame pose for photos at Radio City Music Hall to promote the upcoming NFL Draft
been the focus, despite the Thursday in New York.
fact he hada far more con- variety of other players include Russell; Quinn; dash under 4.4 seconds al)d ·
sistent college career than were in trouble for a variety Johnson ; Adams, Okoye; can outleap almost anyone
Russell. Suddenly
he of other reasons. Earlier Oklahoma running back he's been called
became a "can't win the big this month, commissioner Adrian Peterson; offensive "Spiderman." Comparison?
one" QB, a label that also Roger Goodell suspended tackles Joe Thomas of Randy Moss without Moss'
was applied in college (and Adam "Pacman" Jones of Wisconsin ani! Levi Brown excess baggage and lackfor a whiie in the NFL) to .,..ennessee •or a year atld of Pe n St· te a'ety L R
1 t
k th'
p
M ·
''
''
n
a ; s ,,
a on us er wor e tc.
eyton anmng.
Cincinnati's Chris Henry Landry of LSU ; and cornerAssuming the Raiders
So if the Raiders don ' t for eight games for their back
Leon
Hall
of take Russell , Johnson pregrab Johnson or' trade down misbehavior. More suspen- Michigan
sent an · t
t'
d'l m
·
s
m eres mg 1 e to someone who wants him, st'ons c·ould be upcom•'ng.
But · the focus ·ts on rna to Detrott,
· wh'1ch pte
· ks
6
they are likely to take the - · But at least one player Quinn, who has been ana- second, putting considerfoo.t- 5• 260 pound-Russell. with a checkered past, cor- lyzed and overanalyzed. He able pressure on team presAI Davis has always covet- nerback Eric Wright, is could go to Detroit at No. 2, ident Matt Millen, under
ed quarterbacks like him likely to be drafted in the Cleveland at No. 3; or per- whom the Lions are 24-72. ·
who can throw the ball 40- first round. Wright was haps fall as low ·as ninth to
From 2003-2005, Millen
50-60 yards in the air, as he charged w1'th rape wht'le at MI'am•· ··
h
·
c ose WI'de receivers
WI'th
can. .
Southern California, but the
"I think that everything high fir st-round picks. Only ·
Quinn might go second, charges were dropped, he about him points to him one of them, Roy Williams,
third ... . or lOth, as Malt transferred to UNLV and being a successful quarter- has worked out, and taking
Leinart, who spent almost seems to ha,ve passed most back in the NFL," says his another, even one seemingtwo years at Southern Cal teams' character tests.
coach, Charlie Weis, who .[y as sure · a thing as
fighting the burden of being
In an odd twist, after a as an assistant with New Johii'Son,
would
be
a potential No. 1 did a year report leaked out that three England · helped turn Tom acknowledging how badly
ago. Such a drop could cost of the top players - Brady i~to a _star. "The way, .he has drafted.
Quinn a lot of money.
Johnson, Louisville defen- he cames himself on ·and
But Millen has said the
"I don't care about sive tackle Amobi Okoye, off the field, his ~thletic NFL now is "a throwing,
money, I care about foot- and Clemson defensive end abth_ty, h1s ~?~te , h1s lead- wide-open game."
ball," Quinn said Thursday Gaines Adams - acknowl- ership. That ll that certam
"That all points to catchat a media session in New edged at the scouting com- pe,?Pie have, well he has !ng Jhe football,"' he added
York for potential top bine that they had used It.
m defense of those three
picks. "Look at it this way: marijuana, the reaction to
A more neutral opinion? ~icks.
the lower I go, the better those revelations seemed to
"I think if it wasn't for
So does he take Johnson?
chan~e I have a chance. of . be positive. What college Brady and his production, Or Quinn for the throwing
playmg for a wmmng kid, many NFL types asked, Notre Dame never would ~art; the Lions' incumbent
team."
didn't try the drug at some liave been there playing QB is veteran journeyman
The other subplot to this point? And weren't these LSU," says Gil Brandt, the Jon Kitna. Or Thomas to
draft is behavior.
three more honest than oth- NFL's draft analyst and block? Or trade down and
The.re is supposed to be ers who didn't acknowl- Dallas' personnel director take Adams, the pass-rushincreased scrutiny on play- edge they u~ed it?
for the first 30 years of the er he needs.
ers who misbehaved in colThere is a consensus on Cowboys' existence.
That's makes this an
lege- whether on the field the top I 0 players, although . The best prospect?
unusual dr&amp;ft, especially in
or off - following a season not all will go in the top I 0
Without question it's the top five, which norm~lin which nine Cincinnati · simply because' drafts never . Johnson, who is 6-foot-4:' ly is pnllty well set this
Bengals were arrested and a · quite work that way. They 237 pounds, runs a 40-yard late.
\

1

. The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

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e Trlbune-Senllnel (740)446-3488
'
. ·
YMUJSALE
eglater will
&amp; Carry
Training. ~- ==~~:;==~
esponalble lor n Conceal
NRA Certifi
ed Instructor,
ore than the cost o
Sam sharp, May 5th.
YMID SALEMercerville Fire Dept, email
GAlLIPOLIS
sta r,key@ in box .c.om . "'~-..iiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiO...,I
D t&gt; -.l&gt;
(740)256·6514
·, ~ 0 ~"' 1
'
Addison Townhouse.Corner
. t ""~ St V~~
I Karen Honacher, would. like of Johnsons Ridge and
0
\' .
10 announce the divorce of Addison Pike. All proceeds
her .&amp; her husband Fred go towards March.of Dimes.
()
Honacher
Jr.
of Lots of stuff! Come See! Sat.
Tupp,ersplains, Ohio, the APril 28thOnly!
divorce hearing iS set lor _____ _ _
May 7. 20°7 at 11 am in Estate Leltover Sale Prices
Jackson Co. West Virginia Reduced. Cr\Jstal, .jeWeln•,
'
.,
HousehClld
goods,
Holiday
GIVEAWAl'
decorations. Etc. One price
Bolt number ads ar
lwoya conlldenllal.
takes all!! Tocallset(740)4AI·
up an·
appornlmenl
-1--L-r
•
2 male 1yr old cats 1 long- 5826
~
1
Current rate car
tabby striped. 1 solid
·
~
blhair
.· ppllos.
~ • VUfY sweeI &amp; IOVI'ng r~ v•~
.... S~
.. vaur.
www.comic•.com
IC:I 2007 b NEA I
304-675·8901
l'oMERoviMmDLE '----------------=.;..;.;.Y~...;..·..;n.;.c._,
All Real Estal
dvertlsements ar Free puppies, ·hall Border" .
Collie. 740·256·16526r740· Apnl 29, 30, May 1, 9am·ll10 .
111.0 u ....... W.••~ lll"hd u---W.·~
to lhe Federa
256_
1233
5pm.(740·985-3929)
nexlto
1fw&gt; WANIDI
nur ~"~
nr.tr ~"~
• ubjeel
air Housing Act o
Eastern
High
School,
solid
...
______
.,l
.
•
• 968.
Moving must lind homes for "oak table &amp; chairs. electric
'
yellow kittens &amp; cat some lift chair, electric hospital S Earn Extra MoneyS Drivers Needed: COL BuCkeye Hills Career Center
This
newapape have bobtails 304-675-6720 bed, washer, swivel recliner, Independent Contractors Drivers willing to drive fof 18 now accepting appUca·
ccep1s only 11el
loo'
DJ/stereo
equipment,
(must be atleast 1B)
local ready-mix COfTl)any. Ilona fcf slbstitute teachers
anted ada meetln
F~
skates, beautyshopwetsta· neededtodeliverthe
Experience is preferred bot (in all l;lcademlc and C-T
tion, bowl and fatigue mats, Ohio Valley Phone Book not necessary. Drivers must areas). Contact the
OE "'andards.
b~ycle, clothes, baby 1tems, in Gallipolis, Jackson, ba wiNing lo do pre malnte- .Superlnlendents Office at
Full-blHoooded
&amp; surrounding
nance on trucks &amp; equip· 740-245-5334. EEO
We will nol knowing Lost:
N · n Elk
nd 1AawlelghtoolProducts,
· mat- W~llslonareas
·
orweglaA Ad u • rasses, S, misc.
·
ment, vard
mis· --,.--:-::=::-:-,.-accepl any edver
storys
1
•••
·~asoo
' work &amp;other
un
area· - - - - - - cellaneous
chores. POSTOFFIcE NOW
,. • laement In vlolatlo
Gallia/Meigs, Answers to Rain or shine, Sat. 4/28,
Experleilce operating equip·
HIAING
·:!~f~lhe~la~w~.~~~~Pe~p=p=er~.(~74~0;)3~67~-7~20~4--, Bam-?, no before aam sales, 100 WORKERS NEEDED ment &amp; extra skills such 88
Avg. Pay $20/hr or
~
Syracuse 2nd St., across Assemble crafls, wood welding 8 plus. Call
$57K annually
~from Fire Station. sofa &amp; items. To $480/wk Materials (304)937_3410
Including Federal Benefits
•
CLASSIFIED INDEX
chair, bike, Pfaitz, mise
provided. Free information
and OT,Paid Trailing,
.. 4x4's For Sale .............................................. 725
pkg. 24Hr. 801·428-4649 Farmers Market Manager
Vacatlbns;FTIPT
Announcei1'Mtnt ............................................ 030
PTYMUJ.
n. "'~~~
- - - - - - - Athens Farm"ers Market 1·80D-584·1 ns Ext. 18923
Antlques ....................................................... 530 __
r~• ·
.
Seeks Part-Time Manager
USWA
Apartments for Rent .............~ ..................... 440
Responsibilities: Manage ---------::Auction and Flea Market,.. ........................... 080 3 family Garage Sale 2016
'Market, Plan &amp; lmplenient R&amp;J Trucking Leading The
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760 Marquette Saturday 8·?,
Market progams, work with Wfri A&amp;J Truct&lt;.tng now
Auto Rapalr .................................................. no Something for everyone
300 Briarwood Drive
governmental &amp; Communtly Hiring at our New Havenj
Autoafor Sale............................................... 710 come and see our bargains
Gallipolis, Ohio
groups. Knowledge of farm- WV Terminal. ~or Regk&gt;na
Boatel Motors for Sale ............................. 750
740·441·9633
lng and marketing, strong Hauls-Dump 0rv. 1 year
Building 5uppltea ........................................ 550 Garage Sale .Saturday 4/28
communications end com- OTR verifiable e"f). Call I·
Bulh'1881 and BUildings ............................. 340 9·5 At 2N watch for signs on Holzer Assisted Living puter skills essential. 800-462•9365 ask for Kent
Buelneaa Opportunlty.................................210 the lett
Gallipolis has Employment Resume ahd tetter of appli·
Receptfonllt
Buelneaa·Tralnlng ..........:.......:.................... 140
Opportunities for
cation to: Athens Farmers John sang Ford LJnccitn
Campers &amp; Motor Homea ........................... 790
Inside Sate tots of nice PART-TIME and as needed Market, PO Box 5727, ~ercury 11 experiencing
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
things
tools everything ml!st
Resident Assistants. Athens, Oh 45701
continued growth ttlat
Carda of Thanks .......................................... 010 go, All Box 66·1 Broad Run Preler eKpenencad STNA,
requiros us to find a
Chllci/Elderly Care ....................................... t90 Ad, Letart g.? Sat &amp; Sun
but not required.
FEDERAL
energetic Reoeptlon~t.
Etectrlca11Refrlgeratlon
............................... 480
840 304·882·2196
Please
in parwn
POSTAL JOBS
Qualffica1ions
that woold
Equlpmenllor Rent .....................................
saridapply
Resume
to: or
be """""fit ~-1he ""'
8
ExcavaII ng................................................... 830·
hir- Is, ou1V"""'
~=
Diane Camden AN, DON $16.53·$27.58/hr.,
ing. For application now
and free
~ng personality,
61
FFarm E1qulpRmetnt .......................................... 43g
.
governement job info, call good phone skills and
F:;:: 1~; s:~;.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.' 330
-:--~-:--:-----:1 American Assoc. of Labor 1- cashiering ll"fl8rience.
For Leaae ..................................................... 490
AUCTION: Modular House A Celebration
° 913·599-8042, 24/hrs. emp. Contact
Dee Sweeney in
For Sale ..........~ ............................................. 585
and tools &amp; Equipment. life .... Overbrook Center, serv.
person at John sang
For Sa le or Trade......................................... 590 Buckeye Hills Career located at 333 Page Street, - - - - - - - - Ford un·coln Mercury.
Fruits &amp; Vanetables .....................................580 Center, R10· Grande , Oh'~· T Mid&lt;l~ort
. .., . Ohio is pleased Help wanted at Darst AduH 195 Upper Aiwr Road
-a
450
&amp; E I 11·00 a m House at to announce we are accept- Group Home, some ifting,
Gallipolls. Ohio
Furnished
Rooms
..:......................................'..BSO 12:00a noon. on. May
.. 5,2007. ing applications
General
Haullng
........................................
. tor the fol· 7-5 shift, 740·.992·5023. ..
Glveaway ...... :...............................................040 740·245·5334
towing positions to join our Help Wanted evenings 5· ~
Happy Ads ....................................................OSO
friendly and dedicated staff: 8pm &amp; Saturdays1o-4pm. at ~
Hoyg•· Gra In .................................................. 640 Carolr'n'a Flea Markel now 7A·7P,FuiiTimeSTNA's3A·
Part Ti"me LPN's 7P· 7A. &amp; .,'. A Communl'oatr'ons 740- - rcwHII'IrO."lt-"~·4&lt;fJKlJ~r-W"'"" .......;
Help Wanted ..................;.......................... .... 110 Open Fri. Sat. Sun 9·5 304- 3p &amp; 7A·?P, Part Time r44_1_·9':"71_1'[[l"Affr"""':l
Homelmprovements...................................810 675·5516
STNA's 3P-3A &amp; 7P-7A ·
EOE
Homes for Sale............................................ 31 0
Houaahold Goods ....................................... 510 Cross Creek Auction Buffalo Applicant's must be depend·
TO DRIVE
Houaaa for Rent .......................................... 410 Salurda" Nigh/ Dealer from abk&gt;, team ,players with pos·
ALLIANCE
' Virigina,
· trailer of itive attitudes to join us in
In Memorlam ................................................ O20
Northern
TRACTOR·TRAiLER
Rocksprings Rehabilitation
Insurance ..................................................... 130 mercl1andise coming to WV providing outstanding: quali·
Center provides residents
· Lawn &amp; Garden Equlpment ........................ S60 t II Bu'lcfng ·sal a s full ty care to our residents.
TRAINING CENTERS
with outstanding nursing
·Liveatock ..............:............................... ~.......630 ~:~ng s~u~ m:ily ~iia a~ Stop by and till out an appli·
·~~~~~so
ana and rehabiNtation serv·
Lost and Found ........................................... 060 Master Csrd ·
cation or contact Hollie
. fltwe~MO AVAILW..E"
ices helping them retum to a
Lots &amp;Acraage ............................................ 350 (304 ) 550 _1616 Ste hen Bu~garner. LPN. Staff
•JOBPI.ACf:MOO'"''
!He of independence at
Mlscellaneous.............................................. 170 Aed 1639
P
De v e I o p m e n I ~..,.............. home. We currently have
118
Miscellaneous Merchandlse ....................... 540
e Y
Coordinatqr@740·992·6472
' Vi~inia
opponunlties for LPN'S at
MoblleHomeRepalr....................................860
WANIID
and come see for yolXSBtl
~-~~QIITI
ourfacilitylnPomeroy,Ohio.
Mobl~ Homes for Rent ............... :............... 420
. , m BUY
.the difference you can make
We otter COMPETIVITE
8
Mobile Homes tor Sale................................ 320 Lw....- - - - · · at Overbrook!l!l EOE &amp; A L kl · f 1 .~..~...
oo ng
or n-,,wma
SALARY
SCALE,
an excel·
Money to Loan ...........-.................................. 22 0 ~Absoluie Top Dollar: U.S. Participant of The Drug·Free Childcara
provider
hour
lent
benefit
package
and a
12
Motorcy-cles &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Workplace Progmm.
da A f' . ed S ·
Mualcallnatrumen1s ................................... 570 Silver and Gold Coins,
ys. et · requ1r . , enous supportive work environ·
p
1
· DOS
Proofsets Gold Rings ·Pre- ------d.,.---f0 Inquires only Catl304-675· ment. Interested candidates
should
apply
to:
P:;-:;;" :~ia·:;:;:::;;;;;:;;:;;:;:;;::;;:;::::::;::::;::::.':.' sso 1935 u.s. . Cur;ency, :~~~f~~t,~!~~,'~~~, ~ 3161
Plumbing &amp; Heattng ...............:................. _... 820 Solitaire Diamonds- M.T.S.
.
.
. . 'Rockspings Rehabll!alion,
week. Apply
Amencan for
Now acc~tlng applicatiOnS 36759 Aockapflnga Road
Profenlonol Services ........ :........................ 230 co·n
' Shop· 151 · Second Legion
Post at27,theMcCormicl&lt;
GntVFry Cook Apply In
'
R8dto, TV &amp; CB Repalr ...................:........... 160 Avenue. Gallipolis, 740-446· Ad, 3pm-tipm, Apnl 24th·
2nd
A
Pomeroy,
Ohio
~5769.
308
110
Real Eatato Wonted ..................................... 360 2842.
301h.
~:i:t
' . ~~'~ca~e
~ Hea~~
SCfloOialnatruCIIOn.................................... 150
·
~~. nc. ~ an equa
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertlll-.............................. 650
Bu~ng Junk Cars, Trucks &amp; AVONI All Areasl To Buy or Now accepting applcattons opportunity omployer 1hal
Sltuetlono Wanted ..................................:.... 120 Wrecks. Pay Cash J D Sell. Shiney Spears, 304- for Servers. Apply in person encouragas worlcplace
3 773 5343 675·1429.
Space forGoodo
Rent .............................................
460
Salvage
a1308 2nd Ave, Clalll&gt;&lt;&gt;fls. clwrslty. MIF ON
Sporting
.........................................:.s:w
(304)674-1374t ~1 .
SUV'IIor Sete..:...................,....................... 720
- - - - - - - - NCNi HIRING, Pcim pleas• Roolors: Molal roofing, sldTrucks for.Sala ............................................ 715
Bennigans, hiring .Servers ant and Rio Grande ing and EPDM:Top poy and
· Upholllery ................................................... 870
Host, and Cooks. Apply at McDonatds. Apply wllhln. benefits. 72~-221H1020
vane For Sale..............................................730 r,;;,:;;;;----..., the P&lt;&gt;nt Pleasant locallon 245·5156 and 304-675·
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090 1"0 .._ -w.··~ on~
3908
.
s- 8 Motella _accepting
Wanledto.Buy-FarmSupplles ...........:...... 620
our ~"~
applica1lons for Fronl Deak
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
Domino's Pizza Now Hiring Wanted part-time apartment Clark. Must be 11tH to 'NOftc
Wanted to Rant ........................:................... 470
Sale Oriwrs &amp; Management malntenar&lt;:e pelliOil, send floxlbla h&lt;lurs. and have
Vatd Seie- Galllpollo ...............................:... 072 An EKcellen1 way 10 earn P&lt;&gt;nl Pleasant, Galllpois &amp; work ll"fl8riences fo: DallY etrQng customor service
Yard Sole-Pomeroy1Niddle ......................... 074
money. The New Avon.
Pomeroy locations Apply In Samlnol, P.O.Box 729·4, skflo.•AwiY In ~- NO
Yard Sele-Pt PINHni·................................ 076 Call Marilyn 304-882-2645 Perwn
Pomeroy Oh 45769.
PHONE CALLS.

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Midwest Homes
mymldweathome,com
Toro/Nheel Horse Classic 3BR. 1.5. BA. CA. gas furn.
·312·8 Kohler Magnum 12, fu11 basement, frame house
42 inch deep. Runs. $400. on 5 lots on SA 554 Bidwell
992·7789,callaHe&lt; 4:00PM $50,000. 740·993·4551
ii WANIDI
AttenUonl
"'--•11ioii1iDo--'• DOWN
~ocal company offering "NO
PAVMENr pro·
Child Care in my Home 304· grams for you to buy your
Jratil'&amp;ril&amp;nt, tlaatth c8re, I" 675-6537
home instead of renting.
insurance and disability
· % financing
insurance.To apply, con· Will cleanup old buildings, . 100
less than pertect creel~
I tac1 Jiim Thomas. Service basements, and out build· accepted
Manager. 740-446-9800 ings. Call for free estimates, • Payment could be the
(7:40)367..0079 ask tor Andy same as rent.
Mortgage
Locator.s
Will mow lawns. 740·245· ( ) .00oo
740
367
04117. Aek for Tom
Brand new log home sitting
on approx. 1.44 acres,
EOE
!.almost ready to move into.
rtu
BU&gt;INI$
OPPoR111NriY
Custom Amish Kitchen with
~::::;;;:~ solid surface counters, 3BA,
2BA. $142,000. Call
•NOTICh
1740)256·9247
The Village of Rio Grande is
taking applications for the OHIOVALLEY PUBLISH· Building Downtown w~h 3
position of part time pollee lNG CO. recommends apartments&amp;offstreetpark·
oftlcer. Two years experl· that you do business wrth ing. Rent to own, $750/mo
ence
is
required. people you know. and with option to buy, Must
Applications can be piCked NOT to send money qualify. (740)710-()()()7
up at the Rio Grande through the mail untM you
Municipal Building Monday- ~ave investigated lhe
Friday, 8:30AM until :o;ri~er:lng:.:;;;:=~
4:30PM. Applications are
due back to the Municipal
MoNEY
·1
Building by noon on Monday
loAN
10
May 2007.
L~------·
re•lestlte ldvertlslng
~
c _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ . -....~~~-.,
In thl1 new.paper is
Wanted: Direct Supervision
subjec:ttotiMFederal
emplovees to oversee male ••NOTI(;E••
F1lr Housing Act ot1968
youth In a staff secure resi·
which makn it Illegal to
dential environment Must Borrow Smart. Contact
adveniH ~any
pass physical lraining the Ohio Division · of preter•nee, llmllltion or
requirement. Pay base&lt;;! on Financial Institution's dlocrlmlnotlon boHd on
experience. Call (740)379- ~:!fr~ B~;OR~o~~u~~~
.~:~~.~:':t:~l::t,::l
9083
Mon·Frl
origin, or any intention to
nance your home or
make any such
obtain a loan. BEWARE preference, llmilltion or
Lw-ili
of requests for any large
~lacrimlne.tion."
,
advance payments of
Gllllpolla career College fees or insurance.Call the
ne~upaper will not
(careers Close To Home} Office of Consumer Thisknowingly
accept
CallTod8yi74Q-446-43ti7, Affairs tolllree at 1·866·
edvertlnments tor re•t
t-800-214:o.t52
278·0003 lo laarn il the
e1tate which I• in
ww.gallipdiscaretfC.OIItge.oom
niortgage broker or violation of the law. Our
Accredited. Mtmber AccradHino lender is properly
readers •re ttereby
informed th1t •II
:m~ ~~~ CollegM licensed. (This is a public
dwellings edvertlsed li1
servh;:e . anno4ncement
thla newsPaper ere
Nursing Assistant classes from ·.the Ohio Valley
available on an equsl
begnnlng May 7th, 2007. If Publishing Company)
opportunity blaea.
you enjoy elderly peopleand
want to become a member
COUrfl'
RY SETTING
ctrur=lU'I\L
of
ourstop
health
care team, L,~--riiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-P·
SERviCES
3br, 2ba, w~h 24 )( 24 h
please
by Aooksprings
garage, 911 o of an acre
Rehabilitation Center at TURNED DOWN ON apprm:. a miles from Pt
36759 Rocksprings Road, SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? Pleasant. on AI 2 call lor
Pomeroy, Ohio45769 and fill No Fee Unless We Win! Appointment 304-675-5995
out an application tor the
1-888·582•3345
classes.
Extendlcare
Home in country. 9.73 acres
· 1nc. ·IS an
3 BA , 1 t/2 Bath . Fullbase·
Health serv~ces,
equal opportunity employer r·u
ment, 2 1/2 car garage
H
that encourages workplace
~
Mature pme trees 2barns ·
diversity. MIF DN
FOR SAlE
old school house $130.000
call 740·286-7212 or 937·
Overbrook
•-9/mol
.Buy GALLIPO- _51_5_·8_67_0.....,----,---0333Pa Center.
Sl Mkldllocated
ri ..
.
Ohl . 1ge ecit
epo ' LIS Forecloaure! 1-4 bed House on Land Contract
o1Sp eas oannounce homea from 199/mo 5% Pom
740 992 5858
we Will be holding an STNA down, •u
~ , ·yean a · .."'·_
eroy.
·
1 8For HUD HOMESI· 4-bedroom
Class, scheduled for May 8· More homeo available.
2_1. Hours wrll be_ BAM· •--- llo"n•• call 800.559- only $199/mo. 3 bedroom.
4·30PM
. . .·. If you ar~ 1nteresl - 4109 xF254
$203/mo. More 1·4bed
ed m JOimng our lnencijy and
homes available. 5% dn, 20
dedicated staff, please stop $269/mol Buy GALLI PO· yrs @ 8Yo. For listings 800·
by our front office Mon.·Fri., US Forecloaurel 1-4 bed 559-4109-ext. F144.
9AM·5PM and fill out an homes from 199/mo. 5% . .
. .
application. ~ce is lim"- down~ 20 years at B%. M1mature farm. Un1bu1lt
EKI, applications will be Morehomeaavallabte.For home on 4 acres, on SA
accepled until May 1. Full . 1oca llattnga call ea.sst- 160. 3BR, tBA. Peaches,
Time and Part Time posl· 4100xF254
berries, grape~. Swimming
lions available to those qual·
pool. New appl1ances. Wood
lfled individuals completing 0 Down even with less than burner, $95,000. 740·388th9 ciass. Applications must perfect credit is available on 0815
be dependabte(attendance this 3 . bedroom, 1 bath -------~
is a must) team players wtth home. Corner lot. fireplace, New Home for s_
ate. Save
po6ltlveattltudestojolnusln modernkitchen,jacuzzltlil, $20,000. lrn_medtate occu·
p~ng outslanding, quail- Paymem around $S50 per panoy, appilancas Inc. 2
ly
·-••·-t " month 740. 367.7129 _
s1ory wtwrap around porch.
cart to our r_., s. u
•
3-Br.,2&amp;1 /2 bath,l arge
you haw 11'11 questions conlaot Hollie .lumgerner, LPN, 104 Tatum Dr. New garage w/Bonus room owr·
Staff
Development Halgven.WV. ~- Aand'i hMead-SeFu11 B~seme~t . &amp;
COO!dinator 0 7~0 . 992. .sunroom, car gar. grea ore. 11er W1 pay cr&gt;&amp;ng
_ Overbrool&lt; Center Is area . D, 304·675·3637 E. oost. 740·992·5635 or 992·
8472
an E.O.E. and a pertldpenl 304·882-2:134
_24_7_8.______
of the drug ~.. wort&lt;plrtce 1969 ClaytonMobila Home, One acra along AI 7 below
prognm.
·t4160, 2 Bedroom, 1 Balf1 Holiday Inn inKanauga, OH.
!OIIND A JIOIB wi1h a t2x18 addi1ional bed- Com"lDD!'ial property.
• •
·-·
room, f2x6 mu&lt;*lroorn on (740).wi-t782
OR A NEW 112 acre lot wi1h chain link
fence &amp; 10x10 building, Syracuse- beaut/lui 4
CAREER
Aeklng $40,000. (740)379- bdrom, 2 bath Muse.
. · secluded, yet close to
2668
IN THE
schools &amp; town, large above
4br, 2 1/2 bath, 2FP, 2acres ground pool w/dacl&lt;, call
CLASSIF.lEOS AC, $1~9.500 (30~)874· now won't last long,
592t or (304)593-887t
(740)992-2429

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~--------~---------------------------------~&lt;----------~------~----------~--~----------------------------~--:·~~~~-----·~~------~-------~----------·-------~··-----------~--------------------~·-·------~------~----------------~--~-----~----- ...._ .

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Friday, Aprll27, 2007

V(NW.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, April 27, 2007
.ALLEY 001:'

ld '\ l\1 ...

Help Wanted

HooiFs
IDRREI\T

.www.orvb.com
5 BA 3.5 Bath, 5 acres
Witn access to the bOat
1
docks, 1 mi. outside ·
Gallipolis. View photos/info
online, Code 41 07 or cali
(740)441-1605.

Help Wanted

2 bedroom house on
Graham School Act $400
per month, plus deposit,
Water irictude 304·675·
2178

storage, no Yard , no Pets.

1967 ·• 14X56·· 2 Br.. 1 bath.
au electric. Must move. 740. 5332
698·1615. $6000.00
95 Horton 14&gt;70. 2 BR. 2
BA. VinyVshingle Cent . Heat
and Air. Part Furn. Like new.

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

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

or email bcasey@muskingum-valley.nel
CoJile and join a dynamic team of
healthcare professionals who are
making a difference one resident at a
lime. Excellent benefits, competitive
salary and Oexible schedule.
New grads welcome!

12,900. 304-633-6536

• Top • Removal

• Trim • Stump
Grinding • Bucket

-.JU.m.mtl

Free Estimates

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16~t80 with vtnyVshingle.
Mus1 sell, Only $25,995 with...
delivery. Call (740)385·4367

All hew, Bedroom. 2 full
~ New Kl'•Chen, L'IV1ng
ba111,
Room, Large Family Room,
Dining Room, 3 1/2 mii9S
•
from •.own, N0 pe.s.
References
Required,
$650/mo.. (740)446-3292

r

Lars&amp;
ACREAGE

3

Mobile Home Park. 4462003

3

Small Br. M.Home outside
ol r~mer~.
$250 a mon•h,
v
-~
•
$250 dep., year lease, no
pets, no calls after 9 P.M.
740-992·5039.
'l'J:~~,;,;;,;;____,

i

APAR'Il\oUNI'S
FOR R.J.Nr

Attention!

106 acres 011 Leon Baden
Local company offering "NO
Rd. stream, pasture &amp;
I and 2 bedroom apart·

• f · hed d 1
men.s, urms
an un ur·h d
d h
·
ms e ' an
ouses In
p
.omeroy an d M'ddl
1 epor 1•
... , d
't
· ed
secun.7 epos1 requ1r , no
1
740
992
22'8
pe s, · • 1 •
'--'------1 BR Apt. WID hookups.
2 MatHie Home Lot for rent
First Mon. rent $250 plus
.1 near Vinton, and 1 on
dep. 740-441·9668 or 74o·Georges Creek . Ad . Call
339·0362
;(740)441 ·1111 .
1 BA, Newly Remodeled,
'
Walk
•o
.•
1 Wal-"a",
.For Sale Soon 163 acres
M
••
u• .,l,·t,·es
' with Timber, minus Mineral _7;_946..:_______ Pd. Dep. Aeq , (740)245,RinhJS,
. in Gallia C o u n l y , 5·:.:55:.:5:..,(;_74:.:0::_)44:.:..:_1·_:5.:,
10::5..:__
11
House for rent. 2 1 3 Ohio near Bidwell. "Legal Bedroom in cit)', CIA, . 1 yr 2 BR Apt. on Watson Ad. "New 2BR apartments
description recorded in leaSe.
$500/mo.
Also Rodney area. Ref. Stove, Washer/dryer
hookup,
Deed volume 165 at page upstairs Apt. $350/mo. at W&amp;D included. Water &amp; stove/refrigerator indu~ct.
42, owner would like three 821 112 2nd Ave. 740-446· Sewer pd. Dep and "Ref Also, units on SA 160. Pets
_
separate offers before 1 0603 rt{fs,
eve. required. No pets. 709- 1657 Welcome! (740)441·0Hi4.
446 2158
.A.me as follows: (1) offer on
or 44&amp; 1271
Timber only, (2)' on land HUO HOMES! 4 bedroom
New Haven, 1 Br., furniShed,
only, (3) offer on land with only $199/mo. 3 bedroom, 2BR . Apt . Washer/Dryer no pets, dep.&amp;references,
standing Timber
only. $203/mo. More 1_4bed Hookup, appliances fur- 740-992-0165.
Interested persons should homes available. 5% dn, 20 . nished, (740)286·5789 or - - - - - - - Nice clean new decorated,
inspect 1he e prl"lr\Qrtu
and yrs v~ ro For listings BOO- 44
t ·3702
~,.. .... '1
. .:_.::.:_:::__ _. . , . - _ _ 2br no pels, ref!dep 304·
send their serious offers to ;
9
F
559-410 ext._ 144.
Osceola DeDaviess PO Box .:..:::.:..:...:.:...:..:.
_:__ _ 3 and 4 room furnished apts. 675-5162
HUO HOMES! 4 bedroom, 2 clean W/D hookup. No pets.
391 , Flichmond Hill, GA bath, $199/mo. 3 bedroom, Ae1.·
• and deposn· requrre
· d. Tara
Townhouse
31324 er fax their serious
740-446-'5'9
Apa~menls, Very Spacious,
offers to 912-236-8782
S198/mo.More homes avail·
• • ·
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs @ 8%. - - - - - - - - 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Balh. AduH Pool &amp; Baby
Horse property, 6 aaes with For Jis11ngs 800-559-4109
40~t80 insulated/ heated ext. F144.
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pets. Lease Plus
horse ba&gt;n, 10 slalb, Brick
wash stan wrth 4 Be&lt;troom large 4 bedroom house. 86
Security Deposit Required,
Garfield Ave. $575 mo. plus
II (740)367·7086.
living quarters. 37 additional
lfl
acres can be purchased deposit and utilities. 446.
Twin Rivers -r..ower IS
accept·
also. (740)446-3844
2515
.
-------ing applications for wailing
Undeveloped land, "6.66 ac Middleport,3bdrm,basement A HIDDEN TREASURE! list for Hud·subsized, 1· "br,
m11 avail, pmd, open/ wood· (full),fenced yard.neighbor- Laurel
Commons apartment,foi• the
ed. Long term (5·15 yr) hood good,$550 plus ut. &amp; Apartments. Largest in the elderly/disabled call 675·
lease tor mobile borne or dep.,ref.req.,740·643.·5264. areal Beautifully renova1ed 6679
Equal
Housing
other approved us.es. Loc
throughout including brand Opportunity
Brumfield Rd, Harrison T""l). Pomeroy, 2 . or 3 SR., . new kitchen and bath. ~:If;;;;;...;:.':':'"____,
ph 1513)295 _6309 leave Naylers Run/Condor, No Slarting al $405. Calllodayl
SPACE
pels, yards. sir; WID hook- (3041273·3344
L--·IDiiiiRioRENriiiliiio-.,J
msg
lor
relurn
call'
;p;;;;,;~~;:;;;.--.. up. Aeferences. a11 992 - ·• ·
t
n~ .. r~ ..:rn
npartmen 1or rent, 1·2
6886 _ ,
JUALJ:.:nA
.
Bdrm., remodeled, new car· Commercial building "For
WANnD
,
MOBD.E HOMF1i
Pet, stove &amp; frig ., water, Rent" 1600 square feet, oft
t:Y"\n n-... .
·sewer, trash pd. Middleport. street parking. Great loca·
Need to sell 0 r home?
rvn l\l'l ''H
$4 OO
tion! 74~ Third A\18nue In
25· · N0 pets. Ref. G
Yu
.
. . A
$40"I
late On payments, divorce,
required. 740-843-5264.
a11 tpo1IS. en1
u mo.
job trans1er or a death? 1 1 br Trailer In letart,
Call Wayne (404)456·3802
canbuyyourhome. All cash Complete furnished, utilities Butuillul ~ptl.atJeckeon
and quick dosing. 740-4 16- paid $350 m~nth (304)882- E1tataa. 52 Westwood .Commerical Space for rent
2858
Drive, from $365 to $560. Main St. Pt. Pl. $400/mo call
3'30.
'
740·446·2568.
Equal Julie 703-528·0617
2 Bdrm, 1 Ba mobile home
In country. Big Yard. No pets. Housing Opportunity. This Mobile Home space for rent
institution is an Equal
Call740·256·6~02
Oeppplortunily Provider and ;,~io Grande, !740)446 '
·woods, electric avail. call
Randall Bradford for dirac·
lions
304-206·6326.
$125,000
Century
21
Runyan Asscx:aites Tim
Runyan Broker

DOWN ·PAYMENr programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than per1ect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
:(7~4_0:_)36_7_·_0000~
· ---House for Renl in Mason,
WV
, on Ihe A.rver 304· 488 •

·--orriiiriiiiiiii--"

a• .

r,·

ii

r

I
i

r

c

I

2 Bedroom trailer. ideal for 1 m oyer.
or 2 people. No pets. f&lt;ilust Mid&lt;leport 1 or 2 Br. apls., Prime commercial SP.ace lor
have references. 740·441- no pets, dep. &amp; ref., 992- rent at Springvalley Plaza.
0181. Call 9am·6pm
O165
Call 645-2192.

r w.~~~ I

u ....CHAN•u•E

n.II!A

u...,

. available

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Melals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Fnday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Th d
S t d
&amp;
ur~ ay,
a ur ay
Sunday. (740)446-7300

Syracuse, Ohio

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $7.50
1O"Hanging Bas~ets $5.50-$6.50 .
4".Pots $1.25·$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95-$6.95
Open M-Saturday 10-5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

Stop in at
participating
Pomeroy
Merchimts
for our
Mother's
Day Gift
Basket
Giveaway

CONSTIUCnON
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

----~--A
Reg.
ngus
$IOOO.
400 • •

740·992·1611

cow/call

Stop &amp; Compare
Annus
•
Bulls &amp; Hef. $1 .05 per ~~~~~~~~~
pound. ?40·256-1758

soo•

J h

, T

-- -

Top•Trm•HIUIIng•litump

•

Gtlrtdlnu•aueutnucll

•

"""'~'"

•

·--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiloo_.J

lntul'ed•Fr.~Esli"" 1 "

i

.2004 Cadillac· Escalade.
low Mileage.
loaded.

r

Work

'Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!

E&gt;cellenl
$37,000. 446·7249Condition.

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

.

2000
Chevy
S·180,000
0 ext. cab
5 speed,
4 cyt.
miles lns1a·trike kit , converts
nice $5500. 95 Buick Park Harley Sporisier inlo a lrike.
ave. n o,ooo miles $2800. (7401386-0401

·cook Motors

I

MmoR Hoi\IFli

·•"-="

:126-llll_.86.

2000 Chevy Silverado eKI
cab, 4x4LS, .blue. 114,000
miles. Call 740-339·0008
94 Dodge Flam. 2WD, 5
Speed. $1300 060 Call
740·578-1040

FINO

BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

3 NT

freely
14 ..... turtay
15 Dairybuy
16 Idyllic opo1
17 19 ~:u••u•

56 All, In combot
'
fiT VCR miller
56 Ouoker
pronoun
59 Pauport
60 ~;,..

20 Earn
21 Mektsdl11y
23 Aplllcl

queriel

13 :JI.n.... 55=· .

1 Computer
datum

2 Pubilc
dlaorder
3 Draws a ·

_,

All pass

25 Newo

belld on
4Singlehlncled

340rango
East

18 Cryol
dlolalle
22 Hyckol rival
23 Keep en 10 the
ground
24 01111111
nickname

DOWN

26Jusa
28 SonoiVal
llld Aleta
29 Volcanic
dutt
30 Ut...y

Win or not to win,
that is the contract
Aroond 800 'B.C.,

53 llorly

36=·

5Expandl

;'!',W.,

......

39~

41 Guot
42 Mlkl

42

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

"'"
43 ~ull ol gunlo
45 E.uie'l
lolly neet

46 Forgot lo
Include
Ml1ntra
chenier
"Pretty
Wonwo"

9 Look offer
12 Unwanted
IOUnd
oornctlona
44 Auto
t3 Neglectful

1111111 '

32
33 GooH-

50 Groul
54Ve9aa

COIJI'H

leacl-ln

35 Elegant
37 Blkfng
40 Sun Valley

Hesiod wrole,

-observe due measure, for right timing
Is In allltings lhe mosllmponam faclor.'
He should have invenled bridge! Timing
can be so importanl in oor game. For
~. you can win a Irick or duck rt.
Which you do may maan the daference
belween eemract made and eonlract
defeated - as in ltis·cteal.
Againsl lhree no-lrump, Was! leads his
fourth-hlghesl spade. Whal happens
after !hal?
The auction was straighltorward. Soolh
opened one no-lrump, showing 15-17
poiols in the modem slyle. (A 15-17 nJilrump occurs 25 percent more often
!han 16-18, because you wil pldc up 15
points 25 percent more frequently !han
you wil gel 18.) Norlh, wilh a balanced
hand and no _major-surt lenglh, raised lo
three no-trump.
Suppose Easl lakes dummy's spade
queen wilh his ace and relums lhe nine
(the higher of two remaining cards) lo
dummy's king. Decla1er, wilh only eight
!ricks, will probably run lhe clUb 10. We.st
can win with his queen, but cannot get
more than another two tricks: the spa~
jack and dub ace.
,
Let's reiUrri to Irick one and change
Easl'a play. Instead of winning wilh his
spade ace, he plays his nine, encouraging West lo eenlinue spades when nexl
he wins a trick. Nolice lhe difference.
Wesl wins trick two wilh his cllb queen
and plays a spade lo the king end ace.
Now East leads his spade two lhroo~
Soolh's 10-7 inlo lhe jaws of Wesl's J-8.
The defendeJS lake ll'ree spadoa and
two dubs for down one.
Wrth only one winner in your hand, lime
its use liiou~duHy.

Astro..
Graph
a.bur'llrlhdlt':

CELEBRITY CIPHER .
by Luis Campos
Ce6ebrty ~ ~ u-ecrealedtrom ~s by rarnOOs ~past 1n:1 p-wrt.
Ead'll«lfr ifllte ~ stns !Of WIOihlf

Today's

"SXLVHT VXL
WHADXZVRZ.
GRKLTT
-

"*":Yequals X

LYZXLHLKII
MDG

JVR'Z SD WZ

IIDG WHVBWRL WZ."

BLDXBL KGJVT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'There's no need lo bel~ve whal an artist says.
Believe what he does; lflal's whal couniS.' - David Hackney

'::~::' S@~(llA-~~~s·
by CLAY l, 'OILAN
lollt•4

OIOIJr
horrcnoa lolltro of
IC1'0mblt4 . words

t:•)tf'tJ3••

lht

below 10 .form four limple words.

TWJNTJ

Don't he:Jilale to explore all brainstorms
you have regarding elth~H a new procedure or product.•There's a strong po68lblllly one couk:l fit a real need in the market·
P'ace and be the success you desire.
TAURUS (~rlt 20-May 20) - A rare
opportunity might develop for you invo1v··
· lng some good.colleagues. but it could b8
of a' fteeting nature. So if you wan! to get
·onboard, you might have to make an
lnstatit d&amp;cision.
The cutie and her boyfriend
GEMINI (May 21 ~Juna 20) - Although
you .are likely to be highly motivated, the
were arguing. He aa:used ber or
otijective you're after could be a bit eltr
, being unreasonable. "It's 001
siva. This may be due In part to 1he
sneilanigans of a competitor, so keep
L-...1-....L....I.....L-l •
unreasonable," sbe infonMd
your wits about you .
CANCER (June .21-July 22)- There's a
hi!n, whenalllwanlismy-·
good possibility you could easily be
manipulated by an adroit puppeteer who
complete 1he chuckle quoltd
knows all the right Strings to pull to make
.
• .
by f41ino 1n the m1»1nv WOlds
vou perform as he or she wishes. Don't
I.......J..-1-.L...J....J._,.,J yau dt•~lop from ~•P No. 3 below.
be had.
·
·LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Be extremety 1
PRINI NUMBEIED !filERS IN
artful and on your toes when doing busi·
IHESE SQUARfS
ness with a friend, especia11yJf there are
substantial amooots of money Involved.
The possibilities for misunderstandings
are strong.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept 22) - 'lbu might
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS •• - &lt;s - o 1
discover that someone with whom you've
been cooferring lnvotving a mutual inlerHypbcn ~ Fluid- Truck- Island - CHILDREN
asl has not been as forthright as you
SeVCTIII women were watching tbeir youngsters at
thought. Straighten out this sltua'tion
immediately.
play.
One mother sighed. "Of all of nature's gills,
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Even ·though
none
is dearer to us than our CHILDREN ."
you may start out to be quite industrious
where worK Is concerned, you might not
have the staying power necessary to
complete the jobs. Don't start IQO many
projects·.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - If there is
a situation that requires bolder measures
1han you believe you can handle, try to
hide your fears and Inner doubts about
your abilities. Be brave, and don't let others see you sweat.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211- Make
certain you and your mate consult one
another concerning any lmporta.nt
dOmestic mattar that arises. If you are
both In tune, you'll succe:&amp;d; If you are not,
you'll fail.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Should a matter of great significance to
you tum out to be of little interest-to your
cohorts, be prepared to do some selling.
It may take some coercion to gel them
onbocud.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Material
I AAO AIA~K \1/fflt t.UDWIQ,
lQU(.Yt'fDif ~.
trends might appear to be rather good
AIJD f'vt DtefDW 'In~
WW.,
I
CARE.Aeouf'IOU,
and trending In your favor, bUt don1take
A~Ui&lt;.UP!
YOU ~l'f'll.E. VJSlMIIJT.'
anything for granted. If vou rely purely on
tuck and little homework, you ooutd still
be a loser.
1
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Be your
own person because you are likely to
reap far great~:~r rewards from wnat yw
personally Initiate than from following lhe
collCepts or Ideas of others.
ARIES (March 21-April 191 - If you've .

I
~...,~.......,~-.,..~=-.-1.....;..1.,. 6~ if'
OWl E Y l

MA'&lt;BE T~E'f THINK
OF BARKING AS

I WONDER WllAT IT
WOULD SE LIKE TO 8E
A D06 AND NOT HAVE
DO AN'r'THING ..

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

BEING WOI&lt;:K ..

·e

_8. .;t: !.l.fw~cAN: :.:.'~ w~ef~-~n_'e_Rs_0'...Jii..-.l.l--~.l_l

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical &amp;"Plumbing
Roofing &amp; GuHers
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch DtH:ka ·
wv 035725

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

SUNSHINE CLUB

Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

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

GARFIELD
OKAY, SKINNY,
LEi'S SEE YOUR
FINGIERS

513 IHI Sl• llddliPOrt. 8145180
740-81
2·3184
. . . lllllllltfi'IIIIIIHOIIII-5• •11
llllnl... ll:ll
_ . .1z• ••

I"

,.

~

••

'
PIYIIIQTOPPIIICIS
fOI
•~

•IIIIIIICIIS •111.111 . . . . .
CIIJIIU~ Cllnrtn •

1:11..

IHIII.. IItllllrtl
ICIII'- em. PrleeSI

-

-~~[t::::_:~:l~,----

l &lt;tnd

exlr!nd the

offer of an Oil

.1rnl Go~o.,

11';1',1'

h:

IIJ:l',C'

!i!nrlownrro.;•rnrm·ral OWIU"' I ', willilll MPI(I',
:ond c.; :rll •:• (,,lllll r.•&gt;.. ( J vro r .)() ;11\IJ . 1
•. on tho .,,.

·got something commercial On which you
are working, It could be very lmpor1ant
that you know how to keep it to yourself.

____

._

SOUPTONUTZ

qUI-\1\\E'ft.,

SNvrces . lnr: :1 leadf'"r rrr 0 11 tro d
{;ao., PXplnr,""I\IOfl .1nrl d£&gt;velopnH'I11 l' •n uld ltk&lt; • II
W P ~Iern

"tl~ito,i~
ir:::::=:=:~~::::::~:-:::::::J
'L

I

Taka care oot to tip your hand to the
wrong set of eara.

GRIZZWELLS

NOTICE :
LANDOWNERS IN M E IGS
AND GALLIA C O UNTIE S

III

ARLO&amp;JANIS

Roofing, Siding,
Soffil, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Ef
.
ectnc, Plumb;ng,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local

. ..

WOll

"

PEANUTS

•
70 p·me S446-0007
treet • Ga II'1pohs

YOUNG'S

51!"

networ11
27 AI J10011 H 48
29 Hoi-oven
49
31 "Gal" ol

6 Consider
7 Shope Clay
8 Tile the

olayotom
38 Tur1doh

lite
41 "h'o

L 0 Yl 0

Manier.'.
I Recycl ng

·
2004 Stralus, 2001 Grande Camping Sile lor reril oo
Pri&gt; i&gt;T 2D Sunroof, 2000 river, lull hook·up. 992·
Salurn u oo 4D Sunrool All · 5956.
Power, 2005 Sunfire Sport
20 Sunroof, 1999 Jeep Cll::---=::----,
Wrangler, 2000 S-10 Aulo 4
Ho~u:
Cyl, 2 Mini Vans.
IMPROVFMENTS
Cars staring al $2500.
3 monlhs, 3,000 mile war·
ranly. 328 Jackson Pike
. WA~::::~~ING
446·0103
Unconditional lifetime guar·
ante~ . Local references fur·
TRucks
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446FOR SALE
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
Ford 250 XLT
Extended Cab truck auto. r-~:::::-::::----,
5.8, $3500.00. Mason. 614·

Pass

1t lb1pge,

I I II I I

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

&amp; · MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

2004 Honda Shadow VLX
600, gels 60mpg. 7400
miles, $3250. 446·1 006
-------2005 Honda 400ex, HMF
pip, Hot cam , Wisco ·pislon.$3600 Call 740·339·
0808 '
94 Honda Aulo. $600 OBO - - - - - - - call740-256-1652
2006 Black Harley D~vidson
1 owner lots ol extras $8,900 ·
8o's Classic Cars
304-593-3542

CAMPERS&amp;

s32

&lt;16 ()port or

aymphooow
1 Blldnl hill 47 SnHa
4 Say men
InduCer
7 lnllfMttld 51 Soft • . _
10 Llllntrlo
52 Some loeb

5alurday, April 28, 2007
By Bemlc• a.d• Oeot

FOR SALE

2006 Hyundai Elantra, 6·
7,000 miles, $13,000; 2007
Lincoln Navigator. 5,000
miles,
$55,000; 2007
ThOioughbred by Palomino
camper, $25,000. j740)441·
8204

I""

BIG NATE

Call Gary Slanley @

°

or 740-245-

7

West North

O

and Qualily

* Prompl

ome xygen
Portable Oxygen
Homefill System

~

"IO

-740·992-2155
304-675·1333
www.mydai~reg~tft'.c001 ww~.mydai~sentinelc0111

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

•Helios System

AlckJClhn•on-Dwner

2001 Mercury Cougar, V6, 2000 Chrysler Town &amp;
auto. sunroof. SOK. $7900. Country, Power Windows &amp;
740·339·2494
Door Locks, AMIFMICO,
AIC, Cruise, Interior/Exterior
2004 Stratus. $6000 080, Good Shape, Runs GOOd, 1
200 Ford Mustang, 55000 owner, regular maintenance.
OBO . .2000 Chevy Cavalier,
_
7401446 0500
$2800 OBO, 2002 Dodge jii~:::;::=--~Siralus, 2 door, 55600 OBO. ~ MrnORCY&lt;lllii
(740)256-6169.
4 WHW.ERS

~~~~208-0028

THE BORN LOSER

We Deliver
To You!
H
O

ree

G~'.:~~!!~~131

AUIO'

Pontiac Sunfire.
102000 miles, 38.5 MPG,
2500 740 446 4620
5
·
• •
2000 Chevy Impala 43,500
miles Must See $7,000 304593·3707 or 304-675·4893

BUT TMAT'S

JEST GoUGIN' !!

Hubbard's Oreenhouse

steps, shell ' bed cover. goOO cond. :::"'::"""~':',.~':"':"":'=~·
96,000 miles$1 ,2000BOor
trade 304·773·5070or304·
SUVs
593.0958
~
IDR SALE

'

Join! J!euan! !tgi~er The DaHy Sentinel

WE REALIZE TH' HIGH
PRICE OF OIL IS DRIVIN' UP
TH' COST OF

SILAS .. .

ROBERT
BISSEll

Goats for Sale. Boer Goats,
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb,
2007. Call (740)256-9247

r-..;_-s=H':'o=p:--..,
CLASSIFIEos· 1998

REACH ()VER
17,000 H()lJSEH()LDS!

..... ...

www.tlmben:reellcabinetry.colll

740·992-5776

filter and motor, diving
1967 Mazda B2200 e&gt;J. cab
board, vacuum hose, winter automatic overdrive, hard
cover,
medal
(740)992 3242
•

Hardwood Cabinev, And Furnltm

45771
74().949-2217

FOR SAIL

Used pool equipment, sand

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Reg~ter or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri·Couney Marke~lace!

.,

Wf~f
SfPA~ATfl&gt;

YOU

AT . Bf~Tt~!

Racine, Ohio

rLMsrocK

r16

Gun. 740·992-2476.

REACH 3 COUNTIES

·www.mydailytrilu.com

:--.---...... /

,.

Bashan Road

Tattle Tale Alarm S y s t e m , O nSOD S
new in box, $400 or trade for
Service

...

740-446-2342

.I LOST MY PA~~OT SOMfWttf~E IN Ttt~ ~A~BO~.

740-416-1834

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670

•

Opening lead: • 4

David Lewis

now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero Turns &amp;
2 tOO# LP Tanks phone 304· 5.99% Fixed Rate on John
675·1732
Deere Gators Carmichael
----~--- Equipment (740)446-2412.
36x24 Oval Pool with decking. Pool srts down Inside Kiefer Built· Valley-Bisondeck, $2995. (740)446-7425
Horse
and
Livestock
Trailers·
l oadmax·
Craltmatic Adjustable bedGooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
2004 mOdel. Rumba power
wheel chair niVV1I cond'tion Utility- Aluma Aluminum
•
l:f"""'
1
•
B ds'de
ode ' ·1 I l'ft Trailers- B&amp;W. Gooseneck
e 1 comm
•Ot e I
seat. 740-992-6968.
Hitches· Trailer Parts.
Carmichael
Trailers.
Hol11ub, 'op
,, Qual'lly, 5 per• (740)446-241 2
son N-·e Used a •·
• .,... r
· w rran.r.
Lounger,
Will
deliver.
(606)326-0777
JET
AERATION MOTORS
USED Rotary tillers. 4', 5',
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 6', 3 point hitch. BIG
Stock. Cal! Ron Evans, 1·
SELECTION. Jim's ·Farm
800·537-9528.
EQuipment 740·446·9777

__

F,=-::::ii:~~~ ,

w~ ~allipolis Jailp ~ri~unt

I NT

I

...::~lJ}J~~!f!:

'

South

740 992 6971

r

• A92
• 9632
• 85

J 83 4
J 7 4'
97 6 3
AQ

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

Garages
Vinyl Siding
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commerdal
740-985-4141 Office

Jack Rat pups, tails docked.
ready lo go. Per1ect hunters
\
II
IH
II
\
\
1
,1..,
1
Gracious Living 1 alld 2
or e~ttra family member.
Bedroom Apts. al Village "r"'IO.--H-~-~--n--, $100 eacl1 741}379·2371
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
V\.\X.nva..u
Goons
Middleport, from $3~ to
Spilz lo good home. Good
$592. 740·992·5064. qual
clog, needs room to run . '--,-::--,---::..,....--'
Housing Opportunily. This Appl1'ance Warehouse Also Copper nose Beagle.
inStitution is an Equal
good hunling dog.388·8649
Opportunity Provider and In Hen derson, WV. p re•~
1
EmplOyer.
owned '"'W~ances, a I under
Warranty, also have recondi26 Years Experience
Gracious living. 1 Bnd 2 bed- tioned Big Screen TV's
~
room apartments at Village (304)675-7999
Manor
and
Riverside -- - - - - - - - MEsA/Boogie Dual Rectifier
•
Apartments in Middleport. Mollohan Furn. 202 Clark Amplifier Head end match·
Insured
From $0-$592. Call 740· Chapel Rd. New turn, If you ing MESA 4x2 cabinet, 100
992-5064 . Equal Housing like to save money, check us wa«s great condition , will ':==~F~re~e~E~s~ll~m~a~l8~s
Opportunities.
Equal out. Drive a little. Save alot! sacrifice· $1 ,400 .call 304· 1
773-5958
Wise Concrete
Opportunity Employer"
~38.:.8.:.-0.:.1.:.7.:.3~--,-I \ H I I ' 1 1'1 '1 11'
All types of cencrele
Middleport Beech Street, 2 Used Furn~ure stoi'e. 130 '
,\ l l\ 1, 111(1-.
Br., furnished apt., utilities Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis.
Owner- Rick \Vi se
paid, no pets, dep. &amp; ref., Lorge seleclion ol every- ar~101:""--:f.~ARM----,
740-992-5929
992-Q165.
· thing. Home-Business for
740-416-1698
--- sale. 741}446-4782
Lw-.,.iEQlJII'Mmriiiiiiliiiiiiiio_.l
Mode
• BR
Aplc11446
"
15
yrs.
Exp. free Estimales
rn '
. a
'
"'"~ . -·~- ~
JYIJ..'!o\..UL'\J'Oir.ut..O
O% Financing- 36 Mos.
3736

·

East

•
•
•
•

• 10 7 6 3
9 K Q5
t AK2

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

Nice 2 BA mobile home.

AJC. Located at Johnson

tO 9 B 6

West

South

Marcum Construction aad
Geaeral Contracting

30 Yrs. Exp. Ins.
Owner Ronnie Jones

mymldweflhome.com

t Q J 10 I
•

• KJ4

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

$49,989

9 A 10 8

70 Pine S1ree1 • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Senior Citizen
Discount

111-27-&lt;7

• KQ

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Truck
Full 1nsur ect

NEW 2007 4 Bed

North

r]amibj.I•G'NM•

.l o lll'' lt t.'l' SlT\ in·

BEST BUY

3Br/2Ba.,Midd.,ten.yard ,sec
dep$250 ./$54 0M .basement,new rool&amp;furnace.304675-a626 or 740-416-5620

NJ;A Crossword Pu.zzle

BRIDGE

Please stop in
25675 Main St.,
Cooleville, OH 45723
or ll"fax 201-661-2846

"Celebration Sunday"
. '
Cheshire Baptist Church
April29
Sunday 10:30 am
Pastor Steve Little invites
you to come &amp; share our
churches blessings

1982 MoOMe t:lome 4 bed- $300tdeposil $300/month
room 2 add on 14:.70, semi _
304_·88_2_·36_5_2_ _ _ _
furnished
0.50
ac1es 3 BedrOOI'Tl House in
$28.000 304·882-2196
Syracuse. $500/month +
deposit No Pets. (304)675-

Sale. New Total
drywall homes !rom $299.63
per monlh, Call (740)385·
2434

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 .

Artadia Nursing Center has an
immediate PT opening to join our
in-house therapy department.

2br House. large Living
Room &amp; Kitchen. Garage for

C~arance

\vww.mydallysentlnel.com

~1\/&gt;.i'?

AMooT

fblt\l' "

;1rc.·a., 11ave ;1lready Uct:lr iL'&lt;t '&gt; l' t l :11111 .Ill '
pr£'pannq to be dc&gt;veloped If ~·ou h.tVC' n·1 " '•"n
t he chanc.e to he involvod 111 th1s vront 1 r1,.
please contact the local of h ce &lt;11 74D · -140 htHIO

Don ·! miss lhts oppor1U'llly to p.l•tiCip;"ttP 111 tiH
development of \"Ollt 11ntural rr~;nLHcc " fl" w r·ll
as the potenttal lot tncrcastrH.) you1
pC'r!&gt;Oil&lt;tl lnCOmC'

~

.

I

-·
- - ---.........

�'*

I

..

f

Friday, Aprll27, 2007

V(NW.mydallysentlnel.com

Friday, April 27, 2007
.ALLEY 001:'

ld '\ l\1 ...

Help Wanted

HooiFs
IDRREI\T

.www.orvb.com
5 BA 3.5 Bath, 5 acres
Witn access to the bOat
1
docks, 1 mi. outside ·
Gallipolis. View photos/info
online, Code 41 07 or cali
(740)441-1605.

Help Wanted

2 bedroom house on
Graham School Act $400
per month, plus deposit,
Water irictude 304·675·
2178

storage, no Yard , no Pets.

1967 ·• 14X56·· 2 Br.. 1 bath.
au electric. Must move. 740. 5332
698·1615. $6000.00
95 Horton 14&gt;70. 2 BR. 2
BA. VinyVshingle Cent . Heat
and Air. Part Furn. Like new.

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

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

or email bcasey@muskingum-valley.nel
CoJile and join a dynamic team of
healthcare professionals who are
making a difference one resident at a
lime. Excellent benefits, competitive
salary and Oexible schedule.
New grads welcome!

12,900. 304-633-6536

• Top • Removal

• Trim • Stump
Grinding • Bucket

-.JU.m.mtl

Free Estimates

Great used 2005 3 bedroom
16~t80 with vtnyVshingle.
Mus1 sell, Only $25,995 with...
delivery. Call (740)385·4367

All hew, Bedroom. 2 full
~ New Kl'•Chen, L'IV1ng
ba111,
Room, Large Family Room,
Dining Room, 3 1/2 mii9S
•
from •.own, N0 pe.s.
References
Required,
$650/mo.. (740)446-3292

r

Lars&amp;
ACREAGE

3

Mobile Home Park. 4462003

3

Small Br. M.Home outside
ol r~mer~.
$250 a mon•h,
v
-~
•
$250 dep., year lease, no
pets, no calls after 9 P.M.
740-992·5039.
'l'J:~~,;,;;,;;____,

i

APAR'Il\oUNI'S
FOR R.J.Nr

Attention!

106 acres 011 Leon Baden
Local company offering "NO
Rd. stream, pasture &amp;
I and 2 bedroom apart·

• f · hed d 1
men.s, urms
an un ur·h d
d h
·
ms e ' an
ouses In
p
.omeroy an d M'ddl
1 epor 1•
... , d
't
· ed
secun.7 epos1 requ1r , no
1
740
992
22'8
pe s, · • 1 •
'--'------1 BR Apt. WID hookups.
2 MatHie Home Lot for rent
First Mon. rent $250 plus
.1 near Vinton, and 1 on
dep. 740-441·9668 or 74o·Georges Creek . Ad . Call
339·0362
;(740)441 ·1111 .
1 BA, Newly Remodeled,
'
Walk
•o
.•
1 Wal-"a",
.For Sale Soon 163 acres
M
••
u• .,l,·t,·es
' with Timber, minus Mineral _7;_946..:_______ Pd. Dep. Aeq , (740)245,RinhJS,
. in Gallia C o u n l y , 5·:.:55:.:5:..,(;_74:.:0::_)44:.:..:_1·_:5.:,
10::5..:__
11
House for rent. 2 1 3 Ohio near Bidwell. "Legal Bedroom in cit)', CIA, . 1 yr 2 BR Apt. on Watson Ad. "New 2BR apartments
description recorded in leaSe.
$500/mo.
Also Rodney area. Ref. Stove, Washer/dryer
hookup,
Deed volume 165 at page upstairs Apt. $350/mo. at W&amp;D included. Water &amp; stove/refrigerator indu~ct.
42, owner would like three 821 112 2nd Ave. 740-446· Sewer pd. Dep and "Ref Also, units on SA 160. Pets
_
separate offers before 1 0603 rt{fs,
eve. required. No pets. 709- 1657 Welcome! (740)441·0Hi4.
446 2158
.A.me as follows: (1) offer on
or 44&amp; 1271
Timber only, (2)' on land HUO HOMES! 4 bedroom
New Haven, 1 Br., furniShed,
only, (3) offer on land with only $199/mo. 3 bedroom, 2BR . Apt . Washer/Dryer no pets, dep.&amp;references,
standing Timber
only. $203/mo. More 1_4bed Hookup, appliances fur- 740-992-0165.
Interested persons should homes available. 5% dn, 20 . nished, (740)286·5789 or - - - - - - - Nice clean new decorated,
inspect 1he e prl"lr\Qrtu
and yrs v~ ro For listings BOO- 44
t ·3702
~,.. .... '1
. .:_.::.:_:::__ _. . , . - _ _ 2br no pels, ref!dep 304·
send their serious offers to ;
9
F
559-410 ext._ 144.
Osceola DeDaviess PO Box .:..:::.:..:...:.:...:..:.
_:__ _ 3 and 4 room furnished apts. 675-5162
HUO HOMES! 4 bedroom, 2 clean W/D hookup. No pets.
391 , Flichmond Hill, GA bath, $199/mo. 3 bedroom, Ae1.·
• and deposn· requrre
· d. Tara
Townhouse
31324 er fax their serious
740-446-'5'9
Apa~menls, Very Spacious,
offers to 912-236-8782
S198/mo.More homes avail·
• • ·
able. 5% dn, 20 yrs @ 8%. - - - - - - - - 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
Balh. AduH Pool &amp; Baby
Horse property, 6 aaes with For Jis11ngs 800-559-4109
40~t80 insulated/ heated ext. F144.
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
No Pets. Lease Plus
horse ba&gt;n, 10 slalb, Brick
wash stan wrth 4 Be&lt;troom large 4 bedroom house. 86
Security Deposit Required,
Garfield Ave. $575 mo. plus
II (740)367·7086.
living quarters. 37 additional
lfl
acres can be purchased deposit and utilities. 446.
Twin Rivers -r..ower IS
accept·
also. (740)446-3844
2515
.
-------ing applications for wailing
Undeveloped land, "6.66 ac Middleport,3bdrm,basement A HIDDEN TREASURE! list for Hud·subsized, 1· "br,
m11 avail, pmd, open/ wood· (full),fenced yard.neighbor- Laurel
Commons apartment,foi• the
ed. Long term (5·15 yr) hood good,$550 plus ut. &amp; Apartments. Largest in the elderly/disabled call 675·
lease tor mobile borne or dep.,ref.req.,740·643.·5264. areal Beautifully renova1ed 6679
Equal
Housing
other approved us.es. Loc
throughout including brand Opportunity
Brumfield Rd, Harrison T""l). Pomeroy, 2 . or 3 SR., . new kitchen and bath. ~:If;;;;;...;:.':':'"____,
ph 1513)295 _6309 leave Naylers Run/Condor, No Slarting al $405. Calllodayl
SPACE
pels, yards. sir; WID hook- (3041273·3344
L--·IDiiiiRioRENriiiliiio-.,J
msg
lor
relurn
call'
;p;;;;,;~~;:;;;.--.. up. Aeferences. a11 992 - ·• ·
t
n~ .. r~ ..:rn
npartmen 1or rent, 1·2
6886 _ ,
JUALJ:.:nA
.
Bdrm., remodeled, new car· Commercial building "For
WANnD
,
MOBD.E HOMF1i
Pet, stove &amp; frig ., water, Rent" 1600 square feet, oft
t:Y"\n n-... .
·sewer, trash pd. Middleport. street parking. Great loca·
Need to sell 0 r home?
rvn l\l'l ''H
$4 OO
tion! 74~ Third A\18nue In
25· · N0 pets. Ref. G
Yu
.
. . A
$40"I
late On payments, divorce,
required. 740-843-5264.
a11 tpo1IS. en1
u mo.
job trans1er or a death? 1 1 br Trailer In letart,
Call Wayne (404)456·3802
canbuyyourhome. All cash Complete furnished, utilities Butuillul ~ptl.atJeckeon
and quick dosing. 740-4 16- paid $350 m~nth (304)882- E1tataa. 52 Westwood .Commerical Space for rent
2858
Drive, from $365 to $560. Main St. Pt. Pl. $400/mo call
3'30.
'
740·446·2568.
Equal Julie 703-528·0617
2 Bdrm, 1 Ba mobile home
In country. Big Yard. No pets. Housing Opportunity. This Mobile Home space for rent
institution is an Equal
Call740·256·6~02
Oeppplortunily Provider and ;,~io Grande, !740)446 '
·woods, electric avail. call
Randall Bradford for dirac·
lions
304-206·6326.
$125,000
Century
21
Runyan Asscx:aites Tim
Runyan Broker

DOWN ·PAYMENr programs for you to buy your
home instead of renting.
• 100% financing
• Less than per1ect credit
accepted
• Payment could be the
same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
:(7~4_0:_)36_7_·_0000~
· ---House for Renl in Mason,
WV
, on Ihe A.rver 304· 488 •

·--orriiiriiiiiiii--"

a• .

r,·

ii

r

I
i

r

c

I

2 Bedroom trailer. ideal for 1 m oyer.
or 2 people. No pets. f&lt;ilust Mid&lt;leport 1 or 2 Br. apls., Prime commercial SP.ace lor
have references. 740·441- no pets, dep. &amp; ref., 992- rent at Springvalley Plaza.
0181. Call 9am·6pm
O165
Call 645-2192.

r w.~~~ I

u ....CHAN•u•E

n.II!A

u...,

. available

NEW AND USED STEEL
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains.
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scrap Melals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Fnday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Th d
S t d
&amp;
ur~ ay,
a ur ay
Sunday. (740)446-7300

Syracuse, Ohio

OPEN FOR SEASON!
Flats $7.50
1O"Hanging Bas~ets $5.50-$6.50 .
4".Pots $1.25·$1.49
Shrubs-$2.95-$6.95
Open M-Saturday 10-5
Closed Sunday "That's Gods Day"

Stop in at
participating
Pomeroy
Merchimts
for our
Mother's
Day Gift
Basket
Giveaway

CONSTIUCnON
• New Homes

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

----~--A
Reg.
ngus
$IOOO.
400 • •

740·992·1611

cow/call

Stop &amp; Compare
Annus
•
Bulls &amp; Hef. $1 .05 per ~~~~~~~~~
pound. ?40·256-1758

soo•

J h

, T

-- -

Top•Trm•HIUIIng•litump

•

Gtlrtdlnu•aueutnucll

•

"""'~'"

•

·--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiloo_.J

lntul'ed•Fr.~Esli"" 1 "

i

.2004 Cadillac· Escalade.
low Mileage.
loaded.

r

Work

'Reasonable Rates
*Insured
*Experienced
References Available!

E&gt;cellenl
$37,000. 446·7249Condition.

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

.

2000
Chevy
S·180,000
0 ext. cab
5 speed,
4 cyt.
miles lns1a·trike kit , converts
nice $5500. 95 Buick Park Harley Sporisier inlo a lrike.
ave. n o,ooo miles $2800. (7401386-0401

·cook Motors

I

MmoR Hoi\IFli

·•"-="

:126-llll_.86.

2000 Chevy Silverado eKI
cab, 4x4LS, .blue. 114,000
miles. Call 740-339·0008
94 Dodge Flam. 2WD, 5
Speed. $1300 060 Call
740·578-1040

FINO

BARGAINS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

3 NT

freely
14 ..... turtay
15 Dairybuy
16 Idyllic opo1
17 19 ~:u••u•

56 All, In combot
'
fiT VCR miller
56 Ouoker
pronoun
59 Pauport
60 ~;,..

20 Earn
21 Mektsdl11y
23 Aplllcl

queriel

13 :JI.n.... 55=· .

1 Computer
datum

2 Pubilc
dlaorder
3 Draws a ·

_,

All pass

25 Newo

belld on
4Singlehlncled

340rango
East

18 Cryol
dlolalle
22 Hyckol rival
23 Keep en 10 the
ground
24 01111111
nickname

DOWN

26Jusa
28 SonoiVal
llld Aleta
29 Volcanic
dutt
30 Ut...y

Win or not to win,
that is the contract
Aroond 800 'B.C.,

53 llorly

36=·

5Expandl

;'!',W.,

......

39~

41 Guot
42 Mlkl

42

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

"'"
43 ~ull ol gunlo
45 E.uie'l
lolly neet

46 Forgot lo
Include
Ml1ntra
chenier
"Pretty
Wonwo"

9 Look offer
12 Unwanted
IOUnd
oornctlona
44 Auto
t3 Neglectful

1111111 '

32
33 GooH-

50 Groul
54Ve9aa

COIJI'H

leacl-ln

35 Elegant
37 Blkfng
40 Sun Valley

Hesiod wrole,

-observe due measure, for right timing
Is In allltings lhe mosllmponam faclor.'
He should have invenled bridge! Timing
can be so importanl in oor game. For
~. you can win a Irick or duck rt.
Which you do may maan the daference
belween eemract made and eonlract
defeated - as in ltis·cteal.
Againsl lhree no-lrump, Was! leads his
fourth-hlghesl spade. Whal happens
after !hal?
The auction was straighltorward. Soolh
opened one no-lrump, showing 15-17
poiols in the modem slyle. (A 15-17 nJilrump occurs 25 percent more often
!han 16-18, because you wil pldc up 15
points 25 percent more frequently !han
you wil gel 18.) Norlh, wilh a balanced
hand and no _major-surt lenglh, raised lo
three no-trump.
Suppose Easl lakes dummy's spade
queen wilh his ace and relums lhe nine
(the higher of two remaining cards) lo
dummy's king. Decla1er, wilh only eight
!ricks, will probably run lhe clUb 10. We.st
can win with his queen, but cannot get
more than another two tricks: the spa~
jack and dub ace.
,
Let's reiUrri to Irick one and change
Easl'a play. Instead of winning wilh his
spade ace, he plays his nine, encouraging West lo eenlinue spades when nexl
he wins a trick. Nolice lhe difference.
Wesl wins trick two wilh his cllb queen
and plays a spade lo the king end ace.
Now East leads his spade two lhroo~
Soolh's 10-7 inlo lhe jaws of Wesl's J-8.
The defendeJS lake ll'ree spadoa and
two dubs for down one.
Wrth only one winner in your hand, lime
its use liiou~duHy.

Astro..
Graph
a.bur'llrlhdlt':

CELEBRITY CIPHER .
by Luis Campos
Ce6ebrty ~ ~ u-ecrealedtrom ~s by rarnOOs ~past 1n:1 p-wrt.
Ead'll«lfr ifllte ~ stns !Of WIOihlf

Today's

"SXLVHT VXL
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GRKLTT
-

"*":Yequals X

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MDG

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IIDG WHVBWRL WZ."

BLDXBL KGJVT

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'There's no need lo bel~ve whal an artist says.
Believe what he does; lflal's whal couniS.' - David Hackney

'::~::' S@~(llA-~~~s·
by CLAY l, 'OILAN
lollt•4

OIOIJr
horrcnoa lolltro of
IC1'0mblt4 . words

t:•)tf'tJ3••

lht

below 10 .form four limple words.

TWJNTJ

Don't he:Jilale to explore all brainstorms
you have regarding elth~H a new procedure or product.•There's a strong po68lblllly one couk:l fit a real need in the market·
P'ace and be the success you desire.
TAURUS (~rlt 20-May 20) - A rare
opportunity might develop for you invo1v··
· lng some good.colleagues. but it could b8
of a' fteeting nature. So if you wan! to get
·onboard, you might have to make an
lnstatit d&amp;cision.
The cutie and her boyfriend
GEMINI (May 21 ~Juna 20) - Although
you .are likely to be highly motivated, the
were arguing. He aa:used ber or
otijective you're after could be a bit eltr
, being unreasonable. "It's 001
siva. This may be due In part to 1he
sneilanigans of a competitor, so keep
L-...1-....L....I.....L-l •
unreasonable," sbe infonMd
your wits about you .
CANCER (June .21-July 22)- There's a
hi!n, whenalllwanlismy-·
good possibility you could easily be
manipulated by an adroit puppeteer who
complete 1he chuckle quoltd
knows all the right Strings to pull to make
.
• .
by f41ino 1n the m1»1nv WOlds
vou perform as he or she wishes. Don't
I.......J..-1-.L...J....J._,.,J yau dt•~lop from ~•P No. 3 below.
be had.
·
·LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Be extremety 1
PRINI NUMBEIED !filERS IN
artful and on your toes when doing busi·
IHESE SQUARfS
ness with a friend, especia11yJf there are
substantial amooots of money Involved.
The possibilities for misunderstandings
are strong.
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept 22) - 'lbu might
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS •• - &lt;s - o 1
discover that someone with whom you've
been cooferring lnvotving a mutual inlerHypbcn ~ Fluid- Truck- Island - CHILDREN
asl has not been as forthright as you
SeVCTIII women were watching tbeir youngsters at
thought. Straighten out this sltua'tion
immediately.
play.
One mother sighed. "Of all of nature's gills,
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) - Even ·though
none
is dearer to us than our CHILDREN ."
you may start out to be quite industrious
where worK Is concerned, you might not
have the staying power necessary to
complete the jobs. Don't start IQO many
projects·.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) - If there is
a situation that requires bolder measures
1han you believe you can handle, try to
hide your fears and Inner doubts about
your abilities. Be brave, and don't let others see you sweat.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 211- Make
certain you and your mate consult one
another concerning any lmporta.nt
dOmestic mattar that arises. If you are
both In tune, you'll succe:&amp;d; If you are not,
you'll fail.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-Jan. 19) Should a matter of great significance to
you tum out to be of little interest-to your
cohorts, be prepared to do some selling.
It may take some coercion to gel them
onbocud.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - Material
I AAO AIA~K \1/fflt t.UDWIQ,
lQU(.Yt'fDif ~.
trends might appear to be rather good
AIJD f'vt DtefDW 'In~
WW.,
I
CARE.Aeouf'IOU,
and trending In your favor, bUt don1take
A~Ui&lt;.UP!
YOU ~l'f'll.E. VJSlMIIJT.'
anything for granted. If vou rely purely on
tuck and little homework, you ooutd still
be a loser.
1
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Be your
own person because you are likely to
reap far great~:~r rewards from wnat yw
personally Initiate than from following lhe
collCepts or Ideas of others.
ARIES (March 21-April 191 - If you've .

I
~...,~.......,~-.,..~=-.-1.....;..1.,. 6~ if'
OWl E Y l

MA'&lt;BE T~E'f THINK
OF BARKING AS

I WONDER WllAT IT
WOULD SE LIKE TO 8E
A D06 AND NOT HAVE
DO AN'r'THING ..

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

BEING WOI&lt;:K ..

·e

_8. .;t: !.l.fw~cAN: :.:.'~ w~ef~-~n_'e_Rs_0'...Jii..-.l.l--~.l_l

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
New Garages
Electrical &amp;"Plumbing
Roofing &amp; GuHers
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch DtH:ka ·
wv 035725

CORNER STONE
CONSTRUCTION

SUNSHINE CLUB

Contractor

740-367-0544
Free Estimates

740-367-0536

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

GARFIELD
OKAY, SKINNY,
LEi'S SEE YOUR
FINGIERS

513 IHI Sl• llddliPOrt. 8145180
740-81
2·3184
. . . lllllllltfi'IIIIIIHOIIII-5• •11
llllnl... ll:ll
_ . .1z• ••

I"

,.

~

••

'
PIYIIIQTOPPIIICIS
fOI
•~

•IIIIIIICIIS •111.111 . . . . .
CIIJIIU~ Cllnrtn •

1:11..

IHIII.. IItllllrtl
ICIII'- em. PrleeSI

-

-~~[t::::_:~:l~,----

l &lt;tnd

exlr!nd the

offer of an Oil

.1rnl Go~o.,

11';1',1'

h:

IIJ:l',C'

!i!nrlownrro.;•rnrm·ral OWIU"' I ', willilll MPI(I',
:ond c.; :rll •:• (,,lllll r.•&gt;.. ( J vro r .)() ;11\IJ . 1
•. on tho .,,.

·got something commercial On which you
are working, It could be very lmpor1ant
that you know how to keep it to yourself.

____

._

SOUPTONUTZ

qUI-\1\\E'ft.,

SNvrces . lnr: :1 leadf'"r rrr 0 11 tro d
{;ao., PXplnr,""I\IOfl .1nrl d£&gt;velopnH'I11 l' •n uld ltk&lt; • II
W P ~Iern

"tl~ito,i~
ir:::::=:=:~~::::::~:-:::::::J
'L

I

Taka care oot to tip your hand to the
wrong set of eara.

GRIZZWELLS

NOTICE :
LANDOWNERS IN M E IGS
AND GALLIA C O UNTIE S

III

ARLO&amp;JANIS

Roofing, Siding,
Soffil, Decks,
Doors, Windows,
Ef
.
ectnc, Plumb;ng,
Drywall,
Remodeling, Room
Additions
Local

. ..

WOll

"

PEANUTS

•
70 p·me S446-0007
treet • Ga II'1pohs

YOUNG'S

51!"

networ11
27 AI J10011 H 48
29 Hoi-oven
49
31 "Gal" ol

6 Consider
7 Shope Clay
8 Tile the

olayotom
38 Tur1doh

lite
41 "h'o

L 0 Yl 0

Manier.'.
I Recycl ng

·
2004 Stralus, 2001 Grande Camping Sile lor reril oo
Pri&gt; i&gt;T 2D Sunroof, 2000 river, lull hook·up. 992·
Salurn u oo 4D Sunrool All · 5956.
Power, 2005 Sunfire Sport
20 Sunroof, 1999 Jeep Cll::---=::----,
Wrangler, 2000 S-10 Aulo 4
Ho~u:
Cyl, 2 Mini Vans.
IMPROVFMENTS
Cars staring al $2500.
3 monlhs, 3,000 mile war·
ranly. 328 Jackson Pike
. WA~::::~~ING
446·0103
Unconditional lifetime guar·
ante~ . Local references fur·
TRucks
nished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446FOR SALE
0870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.
Ford 250 XLT
Extended Cab truck auto. r-~:::::-::::----,
5.8, $3500.00. Mason. 614·

Pass

1t lb1pge,

I I II I I

740-742-2293
Please leave messa e

&amp; · MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

2004 Honda Shadow VLX
600, gels 60mpg. 7400
miles, $3250. 446·1 006
-------2005 Honda 400ex, HMF
pip, Hot cam , Wisco ·pislon.$3600 Call 740·339·
0808 '
94 Honda Aulo. $600 OBO - - - - - - - call740-256-1652
2006 Black Harley D~vidson
1 owner lots ol extras $8,900 ·
8o's Classic Cars
304-593-3542

CAMPERS&amp;

s32

&lt;16 ()port or

aymphooow
1 Blldnl hill 47 SnHa
4 Say men
InduCer
7 lnllfMttld 51 Soft • . _
10 Llllntrlo
52 Some loeb

5alurday, April 28, 2007
By Bemlc• a.d• Oeot

FOR SALE

2006 Hyundai Elantra, 6·
7,000 miles, $13,000; 2007
Lincoln Navigator. 5,000
miles,
$55,000; 2007
ThOioughbred by Palomino
camper, $25,000. j740)441·
8204

I""

BIG NATE

Call Gary Slanley @

°

or 740-245-

7

West North

O

and Qualily

* Prompl

ome xygen
Portable Oxygen
Homefill System

~

"IO

-740·992-2155
304-675·1333
www.mydai~reg~tft'.c001 ww~.mydai~sentinelc0111

Stanley Tree·
Trimming
&amp; Removal

•Helios System

AlckJClhn•on-Dwner

2001 Mercury Cougar, V6, 2000 Chrysler Town &amp;
auto. sunroof. SOK. $7900. Country, Power Windows &amp;
740·339·2494
Door Locks, AMIFMICO,
AIC, Cruise, Interior/Exterior
2004 Stratus. $6000 080, Good Shape, Runs GOOd, 1
200 Ford Mustang, 55000 owner, regular maintenance.
OBO . .2000 Chevy Cavalier,
_
7401446 0500
$2800 OBO, 2002 Dodge jii~:::;::=--~Siralus, 2 door, 55600 OBO. ~ MrnORCY&lt;lllii
(740)256-6169.
4 WHW.ERS

~~~~208-0028

THE BORN LOSER

We Deliver
To You!
H
O

ree

G~'.:~~!!~~131

AUIO'

Pontiac Sunfire.
102000 miles, 38.5 MPG,
2500 740 446 4620
5
·
• •
2000 Chevy Impala 43,500
miles Must See $7,000 304593·3707 or 304-675·4893

BUT TMAT'S

JEST GoUGIN' !!

Hubbard's Oreenhouse

steps, shell ' bed cover. goOO cond. :::"'::"""~':',.~':"':"":'=~·
96,000 miles$1 ,2000BOor
trade 304·773·5070or304·
SUVs
593.0958
~
IDR SALE

'

Join! J!euan! !tgi~er The DaHy Sentinel

WE REALIZE TH' HIGH
PRICE OF OIL IS DRIVIN' UP
TH' COST OF

SILAS .. .

ROBERT
BISSEll

Goats for Sale. Boer Goats,
Club kids, Born Jan &amp; Feb,
2007. Call (740)256-9247

r-..;_-s=H':'o=p:--..,
CLASSIFIEos· 1998

REACH ()VER
17,000 H()lJSEH()LDS!

..... ...

www.tlmben:reellcabinetry.colll

740·992-5776

filter and motor, diving
1967 Mazda B2200 e&gt;J. cab
board, vacuum hose, winter automatic overdrive, hard
cover,
medal
(740)992 3242
•

Hardwood Cabinev, And Furnltm

45771
74().949-2217

FOR SAIL

Used pool equipment, sand

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Reg~ter or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri·Couney Marke~lace!

.,

Wf~f
SfPA~ATfl&gt;

YOU

AT . Bf~Tt~!

Racine, Ohio

rLMsrocK

r16

Gun. 740·992-2476.

REACH 3 COUNTIES

·www.mydailytrilu.com

:--.---...... /

,.

Bashan Road

Tattle Tale Alarm S y s t e m , O nSOD S
new in box, $400 or trade for
Service

...

740-446-2342

.I LOST MY PA~~OT SOMfWttf~E IN Ttt~ ~A~BO~.

740-416-1834

Hill 's Self
Storage
29670

•

Opening lead: • 4

David Lewis

now on John
Deere Z Trak Zero Turns &amp;
2 tOO# LP Tanks phone 304· 5.99% Fixed Rate on John
675·1732
Deere Gators Carmichael
----~--- Equipment (740)446-2412.
36x24 Oval Pool with decking. Pool srts down Inside Kiefer Built· Valley-Bisondeck, $2995. (740)446-7425
Horse
and
Livestock
Trailers·
l oadmax·
Craltmatic Adjustable bedGooseneck, Dumps, &amp;
2004 mOdel. Rumba power
wheel chair niVV1I cond'tion Utility- Aluma Aluminum
•
l:f"""'
1
•
B ds'de
ode ' ·1 I l'ft Trailers- B&amp;W. Gooseneck
e 1 comm
•Ot e I
seat. 740-992-6968.
Hitches· Trailer Parts.
Carmichael
Trailers.
Hol11ub, 'op
,, Qual'lly, 5 per• (740)446-241 2
son N-·e Used a •·
• .,... r
· w rran.r.
Lounger,
Will
deliver.
(606)326-0777
JET
AERATION MOTORS
USED Rotary tillers. 4', 5',
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In 6', 3 point hitch. BIG
Stock. Cal! Ron Evans, 1·
SELECTION. Jim's ·Farm
800·537-9528.
EQuipment 740·446·9777

__

F,=-::::ii:~~~ ,

w~ ~allipolis Jailp ~ri~unt

I NT

I

...::~lJ}J~~!f!:

'

South

740 992 6971

r

• A92
• 9632
• 85

J 83 4
J 7 4'
97 6 3
AQ

Dealer: South
Vulnerable: Both

Garages
Vinyl Siding
New Construction Interior Remodeling
Residential &amp; Commerdal
740-985-4141 Office

Jack Rat pups, tails docked.
ready lo go. Per1ect hunters
\
II
IH
II
\
\
1
,1..,
1
Gracious Living 1 alld 2
or e~ttra family member.
Bedroom Apts. al Village "r"'IO.--H-~-~--n--, $100 eacl1 741}379·2371
Manor and Riverside Apts. in
V\.\X.nva..u
Goons
Middleport, from $3~ to
Spilz lo good home. Good
$592. 740·992·5064. qual
clog, needs room to run . '--,-::--,---::..,....--'
Housing Opportunily. This Appl1'ance Warehouse Also Copper nose Beagle.
inStitution is an Equal
good hunling dog.388·8649
Opportunity Provider and In Hen derson, WV. p re•~
1
EmplOyer.
owned '"'W~ances, a I under
Warranty, also have recondi26 Years Experience
Gracious living. 1 Bnd 2 bed- tioned Big Screen TV's
~
room apartments at Village (304)675-7999
Manor
and
Riverside -- - - - - - - - MEsA/Boogie Dual Rectifier
•
Apartments in Middleport. Mollohan Furn. 202 Clark Amplifier Head end match·
Insured
From $0-$592. Call 740· Chapel Rd. New turn, If you ing MESA 4x2 cabinet, 100
992-5064 . Equal Housing like to save money, check us wa«s great condition , will ':==~F~re~e~E~s~ll~m~a~l8~s
Opportunities.
Equal out. Drive a little. Save alot! sacrifice· $1 ,400 .call 304· 1
773-5958
Wise Concrete
Opportunity Employer"
~38.:.8.:.-0.:.1.:.7.:.3~--,-I \ H I I ' 1 1'1 '1 11'
All types of cencrele
Middleport Beech Street, 2 Used Furn~ure stoi'e. 130 '
,\ l l\ 1, 111(1-.
Br., furnished apt., utilities Bulaville Pike, Gallipolis.
Owner- Rick \Vi se
paid, no pets, dep. &amp; ref., Lorge seleclion ol every- ar~101:""--:f.~ARM----,
740-992-5929
992-Q165.
· thing. Home-Business for
740-416-1698
--- sale. 741}446-4782
Lw-.,.iEQlJII'Mmriiiiiiliiiiiiiio_.l
Mode
• BR
Aplc11446
"
15
yrs.
Exp. free Estimales
rn '
. a
'
"'"~ . -·~- ~
JYIJ..'!o\..UL'\J'Oir.ut..O
O% Financing- 36 Mos.
3736

·

East

•
•
•
•

• 10 7 6 3
9 K Q5
t AK2

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

Nice 2 BA mobile home.

AJC. Located at Johnson

tO 9 B 6

West

South

Marcum Construction aad
Geaeral Contracting

30 Yrs. Exp. Ins.
Owner Ronnie Jones

mymldweflhome.com

t Q J 10 I
•

• KJ4

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

$49,989

9 A 10 8

70 Pine S1ree1 • Gallipolis
740-446-0007 Toll Free 877-669-0007

Senior Citizen
Discount

111-27-&lt;7

• KQ

&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

Truck
Full 1nsur ect

NEW 2007 4 Bed

North

r]amibj.I•G'NM•

.l o lll'' lt t.'l' SlT\ in·

BEST BUY

3Br/2Ba.,Midd.,ten.yard ,sec
dep$250 ./$54 0M .basement,new rool&amp;furnace.304675-a626 or 740-416-5620

NJ;A Crossword Pu.zzle

BRIDGE

Please stop in
25675 Main St.,
Cooleville, OH 45723
or ll"fax 201-661-2846

"Celebration Sunday"
. '
Cheshire Baptist Church
April29
Sunday 10:30 am
Pastor Steve Little invites
you to come &amp; share our
churches blessings

1982 MoOMe t:lome 4 bed- $300tdeposil $300/month
room 2 add on 14:.70, semi _
304_·88_2_·36_5_2_ _ _ _
furnished
0.50
ac1es 3 BedrOOI'Tl House in
$28.000 304·882-2196
Syracuse. $500/month +
deposit No Pets. (304)675-

Sale. New Total
drywall homes !rom $299.63
per monlh, Call (740)385·
2434

The Daily Sentinel • Page 87 .

Artadia Nursing Center has an
immediate PT opening to join our
in-house therapy department.

2br House. large Living
Room &amp; Kitchen. Garage for

C~arance

\vww.mydallysentlnel.com

~1\/&gt;.i'?

AMooT

fblt\l' "

;1rc.·a., 11ave ;1lready Uct:lr iL'&lt;t '&gt; l' t l :11111 .Ill '
pr£'pannq to be dc&gt;veloped If ~·ou h.tVC' n·1 " '•"n
t he chanc.e to he involvod 111 th1s vront 1 r1,.
please contact the local of h ce &lt;11 74D · -140 htHIO

Don ·! miss lhts oppor1U'llly to p.l•tiCip;"ttP 111 tiH
development of \"Ollt 11ntural rr~;nLHcc " fl" w r·ll
as the potenttal lot tncrcastrH.) you1
pC'r!&gt;Oil&lt;tl lnCOmC'

~

.

I

-·
- - ---.........

�'

''

'

11&gt;-

,

'"'

•'
~

• Two rule&amp; to.remember.where
TQily Stewart IS col\cemed: Happiness Is never laither f1NWY
than the next victory lane, and
there's always 1!1 least one por·
iion of e\'l!fY sea5on where he
appears to be nuts.

• Almost the entire difference

· -between Stewart and Jeff Gor·
iiOll can be accounted for in a

Friday, April 27,2007

www .mydaity·sentinel .com

Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

If you'·have a question or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c,to Th e Gaston Gazett e, 1'0. Box 1538, Gastonia , NC 28053.

ripe for Gordon's picking. By winning t~e Subway Fresh Fit 500,
Gordon hiked his season points
lead and tied Dale Earnhardt for
siKth place on NASCAR's all-time
list of race winners. He could
make the most significant pass
of his career next week at Talladega Superspeedway. long an
Earnhardt fam ily stronghold , by
claiming career victory No. 77.
Of Earnhardt. Gordon said. ·ra
even come close to anything he
ever did is quite an honor for
me." On lap 300, Gordon assumed control . leaving Tony
win during the season's fi rst sev- Stewart to finish second. Lateen races, trimmed Phoenix Inter- ra llying Denny Hamlin, Stewarts
national Raceway from the list of teammate, plucked third place
away from Matt Kenseth, who
tracks where he's never won.
Now only Texas Motor Speedway eventually fell to fifth . Jimmie
Johnson was fourth.
and Homestead-Miami remain,

• Race: Aaron's 499
• Where: Talladega (Ala.) Super·
speedway (2.666 miles ), 188
laps/ 501.208 miles.
• When: Sunday, April 29
•Last year's winner: Jimmie
Johnson
• Quallfylri&amp; record: Bill Elliott.
Ford, 212.809 mph, April 30,
1987.
• Race record : Mark Martin,
Ford , 188.354 mph . May 10,
1997.
• Last week : Eventually, Jeff
Go~ o n wins everywhere. Gardon, after doing everything but

• Roce: O' Rei l ~ Auto
Parts 250
Superspeedway (2.666
• Whete: Konsas Speed·
miles). 1171aps/ 311.922 way, Kansas City, Kan.
m1les.
(1.5 miles), 167
o When: Saturday, Apri l 28 laps/250.5 miles.
olaot year'• winner: Mar. • When: Sawrday, April 28
tin Truex Jr.
• L8lt , . ..,winner: Ter• QIIIIHfJinC rec:cmf: Joe
ry Cook
Nemechek, Chevrolet,
o QualilyiOC reeord: Bill
193.517 m p ~ . April 24.
l ester, Toyota, 173.833
1997.
mph. Ju~ 1, 2005.
• Race record: Mark Mar· • Race record: Ricky Hentin, Ford , 168.937 m p ~ . · drick, Chevrolet , 125.094
mph, July 7, 2001.
April26, 1997.
•Last week: Clint
• Last race: Toyota driver
Bowyer. In a Chevrolet.
Mike Skinner woo his
outdueled Ford's Matt
third consecutive race,
Kenseth at Phoenix Inter- dominating the Kroger
.national Raceway.
250 at Martinsville
Speedway.
o Race: Aaron·s 312
• Whefe: Talladega (Ala~

•

J

(

No. 24

NEXTEL CuP SERIES

JEFF GORDON

*?

C FiDLJ ~ F ·f Hi ~y e

v

DuPONT CHEVROLET ·

E
R

.tlflelllncie In dl!meanor, both on

and off the track.

·

s

• The Toyota train wreck contin-

ues, with only three of seven
Camrys making the Phoenix
field and Michael Waltrip failing
toinilke the field for the sev-

u
Gordon

entn race In a row.
• Matt ~seth has been the
highest-finishing Ford driver in
five of the season's eight races
to date.
• Kasey Kahne, Nextel Cup's
biggest winner in ,2006, is languishing, 33rd in the points
standings.
• Mark Martin competed for the
first time in the Car of TomorrCJW, and ~ showed.

• The ownership controversy at

DEl may not be affecting Dale
Earnhardt Jr.'s performance, but
that's the way it looks.

• At least until there is a road
race, it's Clint Bowyer, not Juan
Pablo Montoya, who offers the
greatest potential for a first-time

winner.
.,. Unlike the Phoenix, Kevin Harvick was unable to rise fro m the
ash.j'S .
• At Phoenix~ Jimmie Johnson
finished fourth, which, for him
these days, qualifies as an off
night.

• we all understand that there
are legions of Dale Earnhardt
tans (he actually gained popular·
lty after his death, it seems)
whO resent the fact that Jeff
Gordon has as many wins as
'The lnijmi~ator.' The fact is,
GordOn is as good a driver as
the sport has ever seen .

• Who'a hot - Jeff Gordon's
finished fourth or better six
times ,In eight races .... Jimmie Johnson's been fourth or
betler five times.

.. Wht'anot
• ~ Kasey
Kahne hasn't
finished In
the top 10 ..

' sinoe DaytO!\&lt;! . ...
hlgl&gt;est-

The

trisd··

KAHN£

' DJldfle driver, Kurt

Busch. Is 13th in the season
slllndlngs.

~. d:·
. ~ .,. ,,,
'
· t ] £JO,_; A::) l1t9\.!J
t.....
'
, fta1aCIJI' .

' .'

~J_rJkq_ i ::{)

1. Jell Gordon

;, a,

)!of! BurtO.n .

.j. Malt 'Kanseth
&lt;I;. : ·JI~e Jolln$00

~ Ji·. DennY Aamlln
: • • . !(wli;BI!III;fl

·'J.. ~l!­

..e, qart E&lt;i'Mifds

1,326 .
' 74

-160.
- 211
· 242
. 32'\
· 932
- 359

- 363

' Clint Bowyer
:""'10.
)lark ¥&amp;ilin
~-.'&lt;$·
1 ;,lbc:H Slll1ll

. · 405

Carl Edwards
a. Oll'le Blaney

1.525
· 424
. 449

·.'

' i.

·. s,

t&lt;evin Hatvlck

4. · ,M$1 .~seth

· 477

1. DIMd Rewmann

· 491
. 555

I. Kyle IIIIlCh
Mike V!'lltiace

r.

I , Marcos Ambrose '

~ t.

Bobby 11arnilton Jr.

111. DOnny Hamlin·

· 600
· 604
· 605
· 608

CIW'TiMAN TRUCK SERtEB

· :L Mif&lt;e Skinner

2.

Todd Bodine '
•
;t. ·Rick Crawford
~~ Ron Hornaday Jr.

\-.. Too l\lusgrave
I.
·. 7,
••
9.
10.

Jack Sprague
Mike Crafton
Johnny
Travis Kvapll
Allron Flke '

• rookie

BensOn

745 ·
· 94
· 143
. 144
. 145
· 181
· 196
202
· 216
• 248

.

s

Stewart

Jeff Gordon

n. Tony Stew..t
Losing to Gordon at Phoenix ollvl·
ously got under Stewart's skin. He
left the track wrt~out speaking to radio and TV or attending the supposedly mandatory post-race press con. .
ference. Stewart could use a victory
to reli eve the self·ap.plied pressure.

Gordon ties the
great Earnhardt on
all-time wins list

NASCAR Thlo Week'1 Monte

Dutton CJveo hll taka: ·stewart a&gt;

By Monte

ways complains about having a microphone stuck in his face after he
climbs out of his car, but ~e could
have taken t ime to cool down before
conducting the runner-up's press
conference. Instead, Tony opted to,
in his own words, 'beat. t~e traffic.' •

D~on

NASCAR This Week

AVONDALE, Ariz.- At this point,
it almost goes without saying, but

there's very little that four-time champion Jeff Gordon hasn't done.
For instance, Gordon's.latest victory, his 76th, tied him for sixth place on
NASCAE's list of all-time Cup winners
with none other than the great Dale
Earnhardt. Now Gordon gets to go for
No. 77 at the track where Earnhardt,
seven times a champion, was at his
very best.
There are now only two existing
tracks where Gordon has never won. ·
Having crossed off Phoenix International Raceway from the list, Gordon
lacks poly victories at Texas Motor
Speedway and Homestead-Miami
Speedway.
·
Perhaps Gordon's greatest attribute
is his knack for never repeating the
same mistake twice. His boundless
talent is matched only by his controlled demeanor, on and off the
track.
Though he's won the championship
four times - 1995 , 1997, 1998 and
2001 - Gordon has never won since
the Chase format was devised. This
could be the year. Already this season,
in eight races, Gordon has finished
first, second three times, third and
fourth. His worst finish of the season
to date was a 12th at Atlanta.
Perhaps the biggest reason Gordon,
35, has left the past four races with the
Nextel Cup point lead is the ever-improving ra!Jport between him and crew
chief Steve Letarte. As evidenced by
performance, it now compares favorably against the chemistry bet~een
Hendrick Motorsports teammate Jim·
mie Johnson and Chad Knaus.
"If I wa s Jimmie Johnson's crew
chief, we wouldn't win nearly as many

le T•ll.....,. cui'Hd71118t'e
whitt the okMimen NY
Some claim that Talladega Super·
speedway is cursed. Legend holds
that a Creek medicine man pla c~d a
curse on the land as his tribe was
.marched away in 1813. As proof,
some cite the boycott that clouded
.the first Talladega race, in 1969.
Others note the death of Tiny Lund in
1975 , or the 1973 incident in which
Bobby Isaac pulled off the track
·while leading, claiming a mysterious
voice told him to do so. T~e racing at ,
the mammoth track has always been
compelling, though. In 1984, 13 dri~·
ers swapped t~ e lead 75 times, an
all-t ime record.

John Clark/ NASCAR Th is Week

There ·are now only two eXIsting tracks where Jeff Gordon has never won. Having
crossed off Plloenlx lnternaUonal Raceway from the list, Gordon lacks only victories at
Texas Motor Speedway and Homestead-Miami S[ieedway.

races as they have won," said Letarte,
"and I think, if Chad was Jeff's crew
chief, I don't think they would have
won as many races as Chad has won
with Jimmie."
"The way we approach each ra~e is
to·win," said Gordon. "So, you know, in
the back of our minds, yeah, this was
an important win because it was the
first one this season.
"I can't believe that we've won 76

races, and, you know, it felt good to
get back irito victory lane and just to
be able to hold that flag."
Whatever the reason - and Gordon's talent is a considerable onethe greatest driver of his generation
seems back on his game. That's bad
news for everyone else.

There muet be • better
Wrf to rec:eet Tellllllep
I am not a fan of plate racing at ·
the superspeedways. How about, at
Daytona and Talladega, the Cup cars
race Busch-car motors, built to run
500 miles, and the Busch cars rua
with a two-barrel carburetor. 'Just a
t~oug~t for NASCAR .
David
El Centro, Calif.

uuirw

From NASCAR 's point of view, the

solution you cite, at least in Nextel

Contact Monte Dutton
at hmduttonSO@aol.com

~·· " .

.!?,

I

Cup, wouldn't slow-down the cars
enough. We agree that there ought to
be a better way, but that's' not
NASCAR's view.

Sadler touched by the massacre at Virginia Tech
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

AVONDALE, Ariz. - No
NASCAR driver has be'en more
touched by th.e Virginia Tech
tragedy than Elliott Sadler, the
Emporia, Va., native who has
famil y and personal conn ection s with the
· Blacksburg
school.
"I was on the
West Coast h.ere ·
trying· to
catch as much
as I coul d from
the news. I was with my.mom
anp dad on the phone checking
in as we found out people we
knew were OK," Sadler said.
"If you've ever been to
Blacksburg, you just don't see
this happening at that place.
Monday was a very, very tough
day for ever ybody that was
part of the Hokie Nation."
Another Virginian, Ward
Burton, made plans to visit Vir·
ginia Tech on Monday after re·
turning home from Phoenix.

c 1 ]!JE:;. ..&lt;'.! Jy

£.:0!:1:::; )

•

Hmm, that's odd - On April
17, Michael Waltrip an· ·
nounced he had promoted
Buddy Sisco to crew chief of
hi s No. 55 NAPA Auto Parts
Toyota. The move didn't get
much notice, particularly after Waltrip failed to make the
field for the Subway Fresh Fit
500, his seventh consecutive
failure.
Then, however, Waltrip was
asked about the rumor that he
was going to replace himself as
driver with Bill Elliott. Ab·
·solutely not , he replied. Presumably, one of,the appeals of
hiring Elliott would be the fact
that . the 1988 Win ston Cup
champion is eligible for ex·
champion's provi sional s. One
of the two other drivers at
Michael Waltrip Racing is Dale
Jarrett, who has run through
five of the allotted six slots in
that category.
Among Waltrip's comments:
"I know my focu s is sharp on
race day ... " ·

• c

How could he possibly know RicJ&lt;y Rudd , who has easily
competed in more Cup races
that?
than any other active driver,
said he has never faced a more .
imposing transllton than
Quite the test - Phoenix of· switching back and forth be·
fered a new challenge for the tween the Car of Thmorrow and
COT: speed.
the "original" design.
The previous races were
"It's two different worlds reheld on short tracks of roughly ally," he said. "There's just so
a half-mile. Aerodynamics much of a difference in the
makes little difference on such cars and in the ways Y,OI! set
tracks. Though Phoenix Inter- them up. You for get a.liout
national Raceway is relatively where you've been with the
flat , it's a mile long and has an standard cars in the past, with
unusual shape'. The back their set ups and you look back
straigh.t is curved., almost as if on our Richmond test and our
there were three turns on one weekend in Martin sville,
side of the track.
where we ran a pretty good
"The biggest thing is actually race.
racing at a track where aerody·
"Honestly, there are a lot of
namics matter," said Kyle Pet· similarities between our most
ty. "It's as important, or more recent runs at those two tracks
important, than mechanical. and then Phoenix, but you have
grip is at Phoeni x. ... We don't another factor (here), and that
have a test or any thing like is speed. The speed is much
that.
faster in Phoenix, and the aero"It's time to actually see dynamics are a big factor."
what we have."
Phoenix marked career start
No. 883 for Rudd. Next on the
•
list of active drivers is Kyle
·Petty, for whom Phoenix was
Whole new ball game
No. 793.

•

•

In the stars - With one ex·
ception, the winner of the sea·
son's eighth race had won the
ch.ampionship in each previous
NASCAR season ending in "7."
The 1957 champion, Buck
Baker, won the eighth race of
th.at season at AshevilleWeaverville Speedway. In 1977,
it was Cale Yarborough at Bristol. Dale Earnhardt won at
Martinsville in 1987, and .J eff
Gordon won al the same track
in 2007.

The only exception was
David Pearson, who won tlie
eighth race of 1967 ·at
Greenville-Pickens . (S. O.)
Speedway but failed to win tlie
title.
.
·
Pearson finished seventh in
the points, but he couldn't veiy
well have won the champi·
onsbip that year since he com·
peted tn only 22 of 49 rac~s.
Pearson won the cl!ampionshlp
the year before (1966) and tile
two years (1968-69) after. · ,.

Contact Monte Dutton
at hmduttor!SQ@aol. ~oin

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