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•
I

'
www
.mydailysentinel.com

.Page B8 • The Daily Sentinel

. Thursday, April27, 2006

Favre facing tough decision: When to step aside?
BY

CHRIS JENKINS
ASSOCIATED PRfSS

MILWAUKEE Bre tt
Favre cenainly isn't the first
star quarterback to have a
difficult time deciding whe n
the time is right to step a'ide .
Johnn y Unitas and Joe
co nsid ered
Namath are
· prime example s of NFL lege nds who held on too long.
And Favre ' s fe llow GreC.1
Bay Packers icon. Bart Starr,
includes himself on th at lisL
" In hindsight . I should
have done it sooner:· Starr
said of his retirement from
the Packers in 1971. ·:But I
ha ve no regrets. "
Starr said he kept playing
through chroni c injuries out
of loyalty to new coac h Phil
Beng tson. who was put in
th e impossible position of
replac ing Vince Lombardi.
The sent imen t was nice,
but the re sult s weren't.
"My performance went
downh ill ,'' Starr sa id from
his office in Birmin gham.
Ala.
But Starr 'isn' t drawing a

compari son between the way
his career ended and Favre\
decision to return to the
Packers
next
season ,
announ ced by the team
Wednesday morning.
Favre is expected to partic ipate in the Packers ' first
minicamp beginning May 5,
gene ral
manager
Ted
Thompson said .
. Stmr does n' t think Favre,
who turn s ·31 Oct. I 0, is
makin g a mistake .
" He 's got as many good
ye ars left as · he wants to,"
said Starr, who wo.n five
NFL champion ships and two
Sup e r Bowl s wi th the
Pa c ker ~.

Favre threw a career-wo rst
29 intercepti ons last season ,
causing some to wonder if
hi s ski ll s were beginning to
e'rode . But Starr said 'fans
shou ldn ' t read too much into
the way Favre played last
season as th e Packers were
beset by injuries and fre eagent losses .
"Las t year, no disrespect to
an yo ne. he just didn't ha ve a
team around him ," Starr said.
That' s perhaps the most

confusing part of Favre's Wi sconsi n.
physically, mentally, and
dec ision to return. As he
But the so-called "Favre emotionally. How can you
waflled on his football future Watch" gre w to epic propor- , question that process?"
thi s offseason, he all but lions in 2006 as Favre took
Packers president and CEO
demanded that general man- nearly four months to make a Bob Harl an watched the
ager Ted Thompson improve final decision . Team officials Favre saga unfold on televithe team by making a splash were careful not to put p~b- sion With everybody else, but
in free agency.
lie pressure on Favre, but the as the proce ss dragged on ,
But beyond retaining their process wore on fans and the Harlan said he grew more
own key free agents, includ- medi a.
confident
Favre
wo~ld
return.
,
.
ing running back Ahman
'Tvc read in the medi a that
Green and defensive end people were fru strated with
"Every time I would see
A&amp;ron
Kampman,
ami the length of time it took him in hi s television interadd in g · a few role players, Brett to come 'to this deci- views, it just looked to me
. ihe Packe rs genera ll y had not sian," said former Pack,ers like he had that desire to
been ac tive in free agency.
coach Mike Sherman,· now play," Harla n-said.
That changed Wednesday an assistant witi) the Houston
" I think he's looking fornight, when the team agreed Texans. "Last I checked, he ward to it, and I ·think he's
to terms wi th defensive back hasn' t missed any preseason. going to be ready."
C harles Woodson. But one practices or games yet in the
Sherman said he spoke to
free agent sign ing isn't goi ng 2006 season."
Favre recently and came
to turn around a 4-12 tea m.
Sherman applauded Favre away convinced he still was
So why did Favre come' for hi s deliberate decision committed to playing footback?
making.
ball.
"This is a de cis io n that he
"I'm sure hi s intent was to
"He put his heart and soul
and hi s family have to validate to himself that by into th1s decision ," Sherman
make," Starr said . "Outsiders coming back he was doing said. "He wouldn't have
can' t understand everything the ri ght thing for himself, decided to come back if ·he
· hi s family, the Packers and wasn't totally confident in
that goes into it."
Favre began waffling on the fans," Sherman said in his commitment and his
hi s future to ward the end of comment s distributed by the future co ntribution to the
la st season, kickin g off Texans. " I'm sure lie wanted Packers."
retirement spec ul ati on that is · to make with total certainty a
It is not immediately clear
becoming a winter ritual in commitment to the team if Favre's commitment runs

beyond this season, ~ lthough
he said in a newspaper inter·
view last month he wouldn't
consider playing beyond
2006.
"If I do play this year, it
will be my last," Favre told
the Biloxi Sun Herald.
"There's · no doubt about·
that. "
Thompson said he and ,
Favre did not discuss his
plans beyond next seaso n.
"We just got past this hurdl e," Thompson said.
The message: Fans should
enjoy it while they can.
Starr expects them to do
just that.
"For someone who has displayed that kind of leadership, enthusiasm, guts and
grit, so to speak, I would
think that every single one of
them is ecstatic," Starr said.
''I'm sure they were high-fiving one another and toasting
each other in the bars.!'

toMeigs,Bt

•
Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
;,o l ' l· l\ IS • \ 'ol. ;;:; .No. tHo

.

• Menopausal Symptoms •

Cervical Disease •

Preventive Services

• Top NFL prospects
·still unsure where they'll
land. See Page 81

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIDDLEPORT
Demolition of three build. ings on the first block of
North Second Avenue will
proceed on Monday, Mayor
Sandy lannarelli said.
The condemned buildings,
owned by lannarelli, Rex and
Brenda Darst and Lenny
Tennant, were scheduled for
demolition in March, but the
project was delayed due to
the condemnation of a fourth

To schedule an appointment, please call:

Athens: (740) 589-3120
Gallipolis: (740) 446-5381
Jackson: (740) 395-8801
Direct Line (740) 446-5065

Council
reinstates
.
Miller to
police force

OBITUARIES

Craig Strafford, MD
Gynecology

I.J{J

HOLZER
~CLINIC

Page AS ·
• James Edward Gilkey, 22
• Mildred Wise Souders, 80 .

INSIDE
• We declare to you.
See Page A2
• A Hunger For More.
See Page AS
• Construction begif\S
on.Freedom. Tower
at ground zero.
See Page AS
• Local Briefs.
See Page AS
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• Republicans to decide
only contested local race.
See
A6
• Local.options on
Tuesday ballot.
.See Page A~
• Central Committees
on Tuesday ballot.
See Page A&amp;
• Meigs County polling
·locations. See Page A7
·.- Survivor 5ays some
·air .packs didn't work.
See Page AS .

Page

BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

MIQDLEPORT - Jeffrey
Miller was re-instated as a
member of Middleport's
police force Thursday, after a
two-week paid suspension.
Meeting in spec1al session
yesterday
afternoon,
Middleport Village Council
voted unapimousl to restore
Miller to his pos1tion on the
force. He was suspended after a
complaint was received from a
female employee of the department alleging sexual ham!Ssment,, Village Solicitor Jennifer
Sheets confmned ye~terday.
Council met in executive
session with Sheets before voting· on Miller's reinstatement.
Council also voted to appoint a
committee to review the village's employee handbook and
police department policies on
sexual harrassment, and will
institute a training program for
all village employees to pre-.
vent sexual harrassment.
Miller was suspended earlier this month; with pay, pending an investigation of the
charges. Sheets said yesterday
an outside law enforcementled investigation into the complaint uncovered no evidence
that Miller was guilty of the
char~e against him .
M1ller also serves as police
chief in Rutland. and is · a
two-time candidate for county sheriff.

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Dehllto on PI&amp;• A8

INDEX
~ SI!CTIONS -

Calendars
Classifieds
Comics
Dear Abby ·
Editorial&amp;
Faith • Values
Movies

NASCAR

16 PAGES

.

AS
B4-6
B7
AS

A4
A2-3

As
B3

Obituaries
As
B Section
'Sports
A6-7
Voters Guide
AS
Weather
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stih/usa.com

AreyoureadyforaSTIHL?

..

•

I

ment that Ervin would not
stand in the way of the demolition of the three buildings
next to hi s. His building,
.which he purchased earlier
this month from Jack Carsey,
is .in need of serious repair,
and could suffer structural
damage as a resu lt of the
demolition of its neighboring
buildings, since it shares a
common Wllll with the Darst
building, which was dam aged by fire last ~eptember.
· lannarelli said the excavating firm would not begin

work on the three buildings
until Ervin waived any liability for damage caused to his
building by the work.
Demolition was to have begun
· Thursday, but lannarelli said
Jeffers asked to _begin on
Monday so rubble would not
impede traffic or pose a safety
risk over the weekend.
Encouraging the demolition of the three . unsightl y
buildings and the redevelopment of their lots by the
respective landowners has
been a priority for the

Middleport
Deve lopment
Group, a committee appointed by vi llage council to oversee the downtown revitalization project. .
• The design re ~iew commi- .
tee, which council appointed
to design and enforce a uniform design scheme as part
of the revitalization project,
hopes Ervin's building can be
saved and re stored, but will
likely approve demolition
after the 30-day period if the
building is not brought up to
current building codes.

STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY
Joani
Powers with a photo deeicting the contest theme ' The
Waters of Meigs .Cou'nty"
was the first place winner in
the 2006 photo contest sponsored by the Meigs Soil and
Water Conservation District.
Powers' photo was titled
"Every Little Bit Counts ."
Second place went to Joyce
Manuel with "Lazy Day
Fishin " ' and third to S11rah
Lawrence with her entry
titled "Muddy River." Cash
prizes for the winners .were
provided by Fatmers Bank,
Home Nauonal Bank, and
Ohio Valley Bank.
The contest was open to all
Meigs Counuans of all ages
,with the only requitemefit
being that the photos be taken
in the . county and relate to
water. Twenty entries from
around the county were
entered in the competition.
· The photos were judged by
local photographer, Sharon
Dean, Brian Lintala and
Shawn Richendollar based on
clarity and originality using a
point systt;m,
Announcement of the winners was made at the recent
Leading Creek Watershed ·
Group duting the annual
Leading Creek stream sweep .
All of the photos are on display at the Meigs office, and
will also be on e~hibit at the
Leading Creek Watershed
Group ~ublic meeting at the
SWCD s annual banquet. The
top· three photos will also be
displf!yed at the Meigs
SWCD booth during the
Meigs County Fair.
Raina Fulk of the Meigs
SWCD staff, and coordinator
of the photo contest, noted that
plans are being made to
enhance the contest ne~t year
by adding a variety and specific categories for photo entries.

Raina Fulk of
the Meigs
SWCD staff
. presents a
certificate
and cash ·
prize to Joani
Powers, first
place winner
in the photo
contest.
Submitted photoo

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building on the block.
lannarelli said Allan Ervin,
the owner of the founh building, has signed a release of ·
liability, allowing Jeffers
Excavating to begin demolition of the other three structures. Ervin hopes to 'repair
·and restore the fourtl) building, and was granted a 30-day
extension on demolishing the
building b~ the village's
design revtew board 111 a
meeting on Monday.
The design group granted
the extension with the agree-

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SPORTS

Have yo14 spent yo.u~ life taking care
of others? '!''[ow zt zs zmportant to
take care of yourself ·
Dr. Craig Strafford is accepting new patients in Athens, Gallipolis, arid Jackson.
Dr. Strafford practices gynecology with a focus on:

FRIII.\Y, ;\1'1{11. :!H, :!Ooh
'

AP Sports Writer Larry
Lage in Detroit contributed
·
to this report.

EXPERIENCED .. COMPASSIONATf. .. QUAI..IFIED

Lady ~arauders
blanked by Point, Bt

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..

, {'

CHESHIRE
A
Cheshire-area man has died
of injuries suffered in a onevehicle aceident last Sunday
on. Cheshire Township Road
633 (Storys Run), the GalliaMeigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol reponed.
. James Edward "Jimmy"
Gilkey died at 10:25 a.m.
Monday in Cabell Huntington
Hospital.at Huntington, W.Va.,
where he had been transported
following the 4 a. m. crash that
occurred ei~ht-tenths of a mile
west of Oh1o 7.
Troopers said Gilkey,. 22,
of 1752 Storys Run Road,
was westbound · in a sports
utility vehicle when it . traveled off the left side of the
road a nd struck a tree. The
SUV was severely damaged,
· according to the report. '
Gilkey was taken to a staging area by emergency personm;l and airlifted to Cabell
Huntington by MedFlight,
troopers said.
The victim has been released
to Acree Funeral Home in
Middleport for IIITllngements.

this year, commissioners dis- holding racility for molllcontinued a similar contract mum-ri sk male inmates.
Beegle sa id Tuesday the
with the Southeastern Ohio
POMEROY Meigs . Regional Jail, because of a county will continue to use
County
Commissioners billing contlict.
the Washington Cou nty Jai l
approved a new contract with
With the Meigs ja il sched- to house long- term inmates.
Washington County Jail for uled for re-opening on inmates considered at high
jail space at Thursday's regu- Monday, commissioners and ri sk because of medical conJar meeting .
Sheriff Robert Beeg le will ditions or high escape ri sk,
The county has used space rely less on outside jails to · and women .
in the Washington County meet local jail housing needs.
Other business
Grants Administrator Jean ·
Jail since the closing of the However, the co unty jail will
Meigs jail in 2004. Earlier be open only as a 12-dax Trussell conducted a second
BY BRIAN J. R.EED
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

public hearing on the county's application for home
repai r funds through the U.S.
Department 'of Agriculture
Rt~ral Development 's Rural
Hou ~ in g Preservation program.
The county will seek
$56,000 in funding to supplement its home repair program
for very low income house-

Please see Jail, AS

.CS Health Project entering final weeks
.BY TtM MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYDAILYREGISTER .COM

'

.

POMEROY - The re is
only about a month left now
for the C8 trailer in Pomeroy,
and organizers are calling the
project one of the most successful health studies in
United States history.
An appreciation luncheon
was held Thursday at the
Wild Horse Cafe.
"We could not have had the
success we ' ve · had without

the help of the comm unity," people have had full -time months,'· Brooks said.
It's no sec ret that the $400
sa id Art Maher. who is JObs for the past se veral
payday
had everyt hing to do
di rec tin g the C8 Health months at the test ing offices
Project · along with Dr. . Paul' in Pomeroy and Point with people's willingness to
Pleasant, and have received a fill ou t the forms and give
Brooks.
iota!
of $8 15.000 in pay.
. blood .
In Pomeroy .U!ld · Mason
The salaries and payments
County co mbined , approxi" I think it was wise to give
mately 17.000 people have combined mean ihe C8 · that kind of stipeod to panicparticipated by givi ng a Health Project . has injected ipa.te," Brooks said . "We
blood sample and fi lling out a more than $75 'million in the wouldn ' t minimize the fact
health data questionnaire. At the Meigs and Mason county tha~ the pa'yments had a lot to
$400 a head, that means more economies, almost $ 1 million do with panicipation."
th an $6.7 million has been a month... ·
The story of the ,C8 health
''I'd say that's a pretty good
paid. out to Meigs and Mason
Please see C8, AS
co unty resident, . Also , 30 shot in the arm for a few

..

�•

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

A lung time ago there was a
man named Cerinthus. He
was a religious teacher, who
moved from his Egypt into
the region of Asia Minor, and
'h'e claimed to have spiritual
enlightenment. He also
claimed to know the "truth"
about Jesus of Nazareth and
His "real" gospel message.
Among
other things ,
Cerinthus taught Jesus was
not the only-begotten Son of
God but only the flesh-andblood son of Joseph and
Mary. The Spirit of the Lord
did descend upon Jesus at his
baptism, Cerinthus said, but
left him just before He was
crucified on the cross.
Salvation, he taught, comes
through knowledge and spiritual enlightenment rather
than the sufferings, death and
resurrection of Jesus - the
resurrection that, of course ,
never actually occurred.
Cerinthus was rather persuasive, too, and might have
made a good career but...
Living in that same region
in the city of Ephesus was an
old man who had personally
known Jesus ·or Nazareth. In
fact, he had lived with Jesus
for three years, had witnessed
His miracles, sufferings . and
death by cruCifixion. He had
also spent time with Jesus
after. His literal, physical resurrection from the dead.
This old man was the
Apostle St. John. When,
therefore, he caught wind of
Cerinthus and hi s novel
teachings he was norie too
pleased, as you can imagine.
If anyone knew t()e truth
about Jesus, he and the other
Apostles, along with a number of other followers of
Christ, 'Certainly did ... but
not Cerinthus!
And so an aged John inked
his quill and began an epistle
to Christians living in the
· region:
·
"The one who existed from
the beginning is the one we
have heard and seen. We saw
• him with our own eyes and

orthodoK believers and followers of Christ will find
themselves in the middle of
Rev.
this philosophical, religious
Jonathan tempest.
Are we equipped for the
Noble
challenge? Are we prep,ared
PASTOR,
TRINITY CHURCH
to " fig~t the good.fight of the
fmth?" Do we know why we
believe what we believe? Do.
we know why our faith is reasonable? Are we ready to
touched him' with our own give an answer to anyone
hands. He 'is Jesus Christ, the who asks us about the hope
Word of life:.. We,are telling we have in Christ Jesus our
you about what we ourselves Lord, as St. Peter instnucts in
have actually seen and his Epistle?
The collective testimony of
heard ... "
d II
John, the other Apostles the New Testament (an a
and many other followers of of Scripture, really ) is trustJesus knew their Lord and worthy and dependable. And
Savior. They knew the gen- perhaps the most compelling
uine, unadulterated Gospel of evidence of this .is the fact
Christ. This is what they that all of the New TestamenJ
pre&lt;tched, taught, and wrote. writers willingly suffered for
This was, in fact , their very what they taught· and. wrote
life ... And by this time, many and preached ... many of
of them had already died a · them dying a martyr 's death.
martyr's death.
So did John and the others
And so St. John was really declare what they had
reminding believers that he · seen, heard, touched and
and the other Apostles had experienced? Yes. Do we
given them an accurate and have a firm foundation upon
trustworthy · testi many about which to stand, good reason
Christ Jesus. And he was for believing? Absolutely.
warning tliem not to buy into · But we have to stand on this
any other gospel" except the foundation, in fact build our
one they had already received. very lives upon it.
Unfortunately, though, the
More ttran ·this, like the
teachings of Cerinthus out- Apostle St. John we have to
lived Cerinthus himself, and willing stand, lift our voices
grew into an extraordinary and say. "We declare to you
array of poems, legends, and what was from the beginning
mystical "knowledge" large- ... concerning the word of
ly centered on or around the life. We declare to you" what
character of Jesus.
we knQW to be true, that
It is from this body of poet- "God sent his only Son into
ry, fables and esoteric teach- . the world ·so that we might
ing that we have today the so- live through him."
called "gospels" of Thomas,
"We declare to you" that
JudaS , Mary , etc . And my , Oh , "there t's salvation m no one
my how times have changed else, for there is no other
and yet so much remains the name under heaven given
same! Once again, in our own among mortals by which we
day and time, we face the must be saved." We should
~arne sort of challenge to the certainly be able to say, "This
·
life was revealed" to us, "and
Christian Faith.
In ·the coming weeks and we have seen it" manifested
months ahead, the traditional in our own lives, "arid we tesBiblical understanding of tify to it, and declare to you
Jesus and the Christian Faith eternal life" through Jesus
will likely be challenged to . ~hrist our Lord. A~en. May
the core. And, as in ages past, 11 be so, Lord! May tt be so! .

the faith .
Troyer used a religi?us
freedom defense, saymg
church doctrine prevented
her [rom taking money from
those shunned by the Amish.
The commission ordered
Troyer to pay $1 00 to Garrett
for embarrassment caused by
the confronll!tion.
Troyer, who declined comment, can appeal the order to
a circuit court.
The case stemmed from an

www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Friday, April28, 2006

JERUSALEM (AP) Israeli Cabinet minister Tzachi
Hanegbi has written llineos I,
the deposed leader of the
Greek Orthodox Patriarchate,
confirming Israel's recognition of him as the continuing
head despile the church's
appointment of Theofilos 111
as his successor, the daily
Haaretz reported Monday.

Hanegbi heads the commit-'\
tee that deals with Orthodox
church issues .
Irineos was ousted after he
alle~edly signed a land deal
leasmg prime church properties
to Jews who seek to increase
their presence in prominently
Arab east Jerusalem. He has
refused to recognize his ouster.
lrineos loyalists had said

the. deposed leader would ·
attend Easter .ceremomes last
:-ve~kend, wh).ch would have
1gmted tensions: But he
stayed away at pollee re9uest.
Theofilos has petitioned
Israel's Supreme Court for
state recogmtlon. Church
rules reqUire approval from
all three ~overnments where
his flock hves.

Fellowship
Apostolfc .

School - 10 a.m .. Evening - 7 p.m.,

Apple and Second Stli., Pastor: Rev. David
Rus~ll , Sun day School~mcl Worship- !0
11. m. Evening Services- 6:30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 6:30 p.m.

Long Bottom
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worsh ip 10:30 a.m.

Catholic

Church of God of Prophecy
O.J. White Rd . o!T St. Rt. 160, Pastor: PJ

10:30 a. !!I·· 1-l r&lt;it Sunday of Month · 7.00
p.m. service

RJverValley
River Valley A~toli c ,Worship Ce nt,e r,
Ave., MKklleport, Re\·,
873 S. 3rd
Michael Bradford. Pastor. Sunday. 10:30
a.m. Tues. .6:30 prayer, Wed . 7 pm Bible
Study

Sacred lltart Catlaolic Church
16 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898,·
Pasto r: Rev. W11 lter E. H ~ int, Sa t. Co n.
4 :45-5:15p.m .; Mass - 5:30 p.m., Sun.

Chapman. Sunday School - 10 a. m..
Wors hip - 11 a.m., w't:dlll:sday Services- 7
p.m.

'lbppers PhaJns St. Paul
Pastor: l a ne Beattie, Sunday School - 9

Emmanuel Apostolic Tabernacle Inc.
Loop Rd off Ne·~ Li ma Rd . Rutland,
Services: SWl 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m.,
Thurs. 7 :00p .m., Pastor MartyR . Hutton

Church of Christ

Chu~h ol J~s Christ Apostulk
Vai1Zwld1 atld Ward Rd., Pa,"'-or: Jamu

RavenswoOO, WV, Sunday School 10 am-

Miller, Sunday School •
Evening - 7:3'0 p.m.

Wednesday 7 p.m.

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P11~ tor: Steve Little, Sunday School: 9 :30 ,

10:30

am,

6 :30p.m. Thurs. I pm book study

Hope Baptist Church (Southern)
370 Gmnt St., Middlepon, Sunday school
-9:30a.m ., Worship - II a.m . and 6 p.m..
Wednesday Service .. 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
Ellis
Rutland First Baptist Churth ·
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m .• Worship 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy nnt Baptist
Pastor Jo n Brockeit, Ea!lt Main St.
Sunday Sch. 9:30 am, Woo.;hip I 0:30am

•

Sunday School - 9 :30 a.m ., Worship 10:40 a.m., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Services - 7:00p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
, Pastor: John Swa nson , Surtday Sc h~ l IOa.m .. Worship - II a.m .. 7:00 p.m.
,Wednesday Services- 7:00p.m.
ML Union O.ptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School9 :45 a .m ., Evening - 6 :30 p .m ..

·r

Bdhlthtm Baptist Church
Great Bend, Route ' 124, Racine, OH .
Pulor : Daniel Mecea, Sunday Sc hool •
9:30a.m., Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m .,

Ser:ice - 10 a .m .• fi :OO p.m .• Tuesday
Services -6:00

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

In the Bible, our Lord speaks
frequently about children and
being childlike:
"Let the children
come to me, and

,omptetely in their parents or
guardian, and they depend on them
for all of their physical
and emotional needs.

t:J

o

do not slop them,
because the
kingdom of
heaven belongs to

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

0

such as these"
(Mark 10:14). We

They don'1 worry or
fret about what
lomorrow will bring;
they trust that someone
will always lake care
of them. We should
strive to develop a

are also totd thai, O
:'to all \VhO receive
Him, who believed
in His name, He 0
gave power to
become children
of God" (John
I:12). As adu lts

uardrail, Fence &amp; ·
sign erection

. loving and trusting
0 relationship with God,
and we should be
confidenl that He has

'

...---.~

we hilve a lendency lo over-

analyl!' everything and tive our
lives on the basis of logic. In
comparison, children tru st

control. We'shoutd not
be overly concerned
when lhings don't
work out like we think they
should; accepting God's wil l in
our lives is pan of being a child of
God.

P.O. Box683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

"Still small enough to care"
209 Third

Racine, OH

. 740·949.;2210
"A Home Bank fo'r
Home People"

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.

740·949-2217
Sizes available 5x1 0 to 10 x 20

The Hppllance man
740·985·3561
992-1550

I assure you that whoever does not receive the kingdom
of God like a cllild will nev11r enter it.
Good News

Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 min·utes from
Alhens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
] •740·667-3156

Racine, OH

our lives in His

0

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes

Bible Mark 10:"15

Ken and Adam Youn
MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, 00
\

..

•

507 M·ulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(740) 992·3279
Tol Free 1-877-583·2433

•

Pine Gro,·e Bible Holiness Church
If). mile .off Rt. 325, Pastor: Rev. O'Dell

p.m .

Pas tor: Roger W11tson , Sunday School 9:30 a.m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m ., Wednc~ y S(:n.•ices - 7 p.m.

Wesleyan Biblt: HolinESS Chun-h
75 Pearl St., Middleport. Pastor: Rick
Bnume. Sunday School - 10 a.m. Worship
- 10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday Servk:e - 7:30 p.m.

1\rpptn Plain Chur-ch or Christ
In strumental. Worship Service - 9 a.m ..
Communion - 10 a.m., Sunday Sc hool 10: 15 a .m., Youth- 5:30pm Sunday. Bible
Study Wednesday 7 pm
Bradbury Church ofChrhd
Minister: Tom Runyon , 39558 Bradbury
Road. Middleport , Sunday School - 9:30
a.m .
Worship - 10:30 a.m .
Rutland Church .of Christ
Sunday Sc hool - 9:J Q a.m., Wor§hip and
Communion - 10 :30 a.m.- . Bob J. Werry,
Minister
Bradford Church of Christ
Comer of S1. Rt. 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd .,
Minis1er: Doug Shamblin. Youth Minister:
Hill Amberger, Sunday School - 9 :3~ a.m,
~orship

- 8:00 a.m.. I 0:30 a .m.. 7:00
p.m.,Wedncsda y Services ·7:00p.m.

Rev. ·Larry Lcmky;, ~unday School
- ~: 3 0 a .m. , Worship - 10:4!5 a.m .. 7 p.m ..
Th ~rsday

Dible Study and Youth ~ 7 p .m.

9:3 0 a.m., Worshi p - ' 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednesday Serv ir.:e - 7:00p .m.

Latter-Day Saints

Lutheran

a.m., Sunday Evening - fi:OO p.m.,
Pastor: Don Walker

/lome Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specials
Rulland

Free WDI Baptkt

Salem St .. Pa~tor : Jamie Fonner. Sunday

School •· 10:00 .u. m. Pastor: Jame s P.
Brady

Corrier S)"Ca~tore &amp;: Sccu11d St., Pomeroy,
Sunday' School · 9 :4 ~ a.m.. Wor.lhip - II
:1.m.

MI. Olive Vnited Methodist
off 124 behind Wilkesville. Pastor: R~·v.
Rillph Spires. Su nday School - 9:30 a.m..

Hartford C hurch of Chrhtln
Christiaa Union
Hartford, W.Va .. Pas tor :J;&gt;avid Greer.

Wonhi p · 10:30 a. m.. 7 p.m ., Thursday
Servk-c s- 7 p.m.·

Sunday Sc hcXII - 9:30 11.m., Worship •
10:3 0 a .m .• 7:00 p .m., Wcdncsdu y
Services · 7:1.10 p.m-

Meip; Cooperative Parish
Nonh easl Cluster, 'Alfred. Pas tor : Jane

Church of God
Mile Hill Rd., !heine, PB~ In r: Jrimes
Satterfield, Su nday Sc hoo l - "}:45 a.m..
Evening - 6 p.m.. Wednesday Scr..-ices - 7
p.m .
Rutland Chun-h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath, Su nday Worship - 10
a .m .. 6

p.m .. Wed ne ~ ay Services - 7

Your #2 Bu.~i11 ess is OJ4r #I Busines.~
Phone or Fax 740·992-7 119
Owners: David &amp; Edilh Brickles
•

your light so shine before
lrn1en, that they. may see your
lg&lt;&gt;od ·works and glorify your
IF':itlter in heaven."
Matthew

•

MIDDLEPORT

•

TROPHIES &amp; TEES
St. . Middleport, OH

740-992..,6128
•
'•

Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-Shirts and more .

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~ undu y

School - 9 :30 a.m .,

Worship - I I a.m.. 6:30p.m.

Pastor : Jant: Beattit: , Wors hip - 9 a.m ..
Sunday School - IU a.m. . Thursday
Service s·- 7 p.m .

Joppa
Pa~ t or :

..
_
...............

499 Rlcliland Avenue, Athens
740-5'14-6333

1·800·451·9806

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

Mllllltu

t•

Patty Wade . 603 Second Ave. Mason, 7'735017, Service time: Sunday 10:30 a.m.,
Wcdne~ay 7 pm

Salem Community Churr:h
Back of We~t Columbia, W. Va.om Ueving
Road . Pastor: Charles Rous h (304) 675 -

Torch Church
Co . Rd. 63. Sunda y School - 9:30 a. m.,
Worship - 10:30 a .m.

22BB , S und ay Sc hool 9 :30 am, Sunday
evenin g service 7:00 pm. Bi"bly Study
Wednesday service 7: 00 PJil

Hnbson Christlaa FeUowship Church
Palilor: He rschel. White, Sunday School .10 am. Sunday Church service· 6:30pm
Wedn~:sday 7 pm

School - 9 :30 a .m. Worship - 9: 30 a.m.
a nd 7 p.m .. Wednesday - 7 p.m .. Frii:lay felloW ship sen.·ice 1 p.m.

Restor-ation Christhm Fellolriblp
9]65 Hoope r Road , Alhens. Pastor :
lonnie Coats. Sunday Worship t'O ;OO am,
Wednesday : 7 pm
Lanpville Christian Church.

Nazarene
MiddlePort Church of the Na1.arrne
Pastor: Alleu Midcap , Sun day School .
9:30 a.m.. Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m ..
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m ., Pasto1:
Allen M i d~·ap
Retdsvillt F~llo"'-shlp
Churrh of the Nuarene, Pastor: . Suuday

Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
Pa·stor Mike Adkins. Su nday School - 9:JO
a.m .. Wors hip - 10 :30 a.m.. 6 p.m .,
Wednesday Services ~ 7 p.m.

l'ttone Chapel C hurcb
Sunday school - \0 a.m.. Worship a.m .. Wednesday Sen.·icc • 7 p .m.

Faith Gosptl Church
Long Bottom .. Sunday School · 9:30a.m..
Wurship - 10 :45 a .m.. 7:30 p.m ..
Wedncsda)'. 7:30p.m.
Mt. Olive Communlt,r C hurch
Pastor: Lawrence Bush, Sunday School 9:3.0 a".m., Evening - 6 :30p .m., Wedntday
Scr\dcc - 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Pent«Mial Auembly
St. RL 124, Racine , Tornado Rd. Sunday
School - . JO a.m. . Evening ~ 7 p .m ..
Wednesday Scn.:ices • 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrisonville Presbyterian Churcb
PastOr: Kol)el1 Crow, Worsf"!ip - 9 a.m.

'

Mulberry Hts . Rd .. Po meroy. Pastor :
Benn ett Luckiesh. Saturday Services :
Sabbath School - 2 p.m .. Worship - 3 p.m .

United Brethren
Mt. HennOn United Brdhrtn
in Christ Church
Te~as

Community 3fi411 Wickham Rd.
Pas10r: Peter Martindale, Sundoy Sehoul - ·-

9: .\0 a .m .. Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:00
p. m .. Wednesday Services · 7:00 p.m .
Youth group meeti ns. 2nd &amp; 4th Sundays
7 pm
Eden United Brethren in Christ
St.ate Ro 111c 124 . hetween l,{eedsville &amp;
Hockingpon. Sunda y School - 10 a.m ., .
Sunday Wor!ihip - I J !00 a.m. Wednr:-..Wy ·:
Sc:f\·in:s - 7:00p .m.. P~ stor - M. Adam

Will

Sunday Schnol - Y:JO a.m .. Worship
Service 10:30 a.m., E\·eni ng Servic e 6

Maflhew 5:16

Meigs

Coun ly\

East"Main
Pomeroy, Oh
't.r

"oend ''"'

Oldest Florist
~

'W

'""thl•wlrt. '~*I"'"'

740-992-2644

,

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Seventh-Day Adventist

Ca rltlon Inte rdenominational Church
Kingsbury Road. Pas1or: Rollen yance ,

.740·992-6606

992-6677

Middleport Pmibylerian
Pw;tor: Jame s Snyder. Sunday School 10
a.m .. worship service I l am.

Soulh lkthcl Community Chun-h
Si lver Ridge· Pastor Linda Damewood ,
Sunday School - 9 a.m.: Worship Service
10 a.m. 200 and 4th Sunday

The care yt~u de,.·erve, close to home good works and g/or~fy your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven .~·

.

am 7:00pm. Wed. Service 7:00pm

F•ll Gospel Ughlhouse
3304~ Hil : nd Road, Pomeroy, Pa.stur: Roy
Hunter. Sunday School - 10 11.m.. EvCning
7:30 p.m.. Tues-da y &amp; Thurs .- 7:30 p.m.

ROCKSPRINGS
Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men. lhal they .m ay see )'Ol4r

Pomeroy, OH 45769

II

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Fu ll Gospel. Pastor: Kober! Mu sse r.
Su nday Schoul9 :30 am , , Worship 10:30

p.m .,

DyesviUe. Community C hurch
Sunduy School - 9 :30 a. m.. Worship 10:30 a .m .. 1 p.m .·

..,..

Saturday 2:{)(1 p.n,.

FP.ith Full Gospel Church
long Bottom. Pastor: Steve Reed. Sunday

Bethrl Church

All Accormting &amp;

•

Service~:

Hazel Communily C hun-h
Off Rt . 124, Pastor: Edsel Han, Sunday •.
School - 9 :30 o..m:. Wor.;hi p- 10:30 a.m ..
7:30p.m.

Township, Rd .. 468C, Sunday School _- 9
a .m. Worship - 10 . a.m., Wednesday
Service.s- IOa.m .

BUSINESS SERVICES

61RE. Main Street • Pomenry
(740) 992· 7270

Appe Lire Cen~er­
" Fuii-Gos pel Church'', Pastors John &amp;

Syr-acuse Mission
14 l J' Brid geman St ., Syracuse. Sunday
Schoo l - 10 a.m. Evening - 6 p.m ..
Wednt:sday Service- 7 p.m.

a.m., Worship- 9 a.m .• Tuesday Services·
7 p.m.

KEBLER
Fi11anciol Services Firm

Pastor; Bill Staten. Sunday Services- 10
a.m . &amp; 7 p.m. Wedne sday · 7 p.m . &amp;
Youth 7 p.m .
Full Gospel Church
of thr Lh·ing Savior
Rt.J38, Antiquity, Pastor: l esse Morris ,

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, an d My Bro. gan-Warner
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
G0 d f d h
/d
01
Full
line
INSURANCE
PHARMACY
.w,
ove
t
e
war
Insurance words abide i11 you, ye shall
~
1
1·
1
1e gave liS on ,Y
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
.
We 'Fill Doctors'
Financial
"
214 E. Main
)bt~g(lft~·n SOil...
_
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·
Services
beuoneuntoyou.
Prescriptions
John J: / 6
..
992 5130
AGENC.IES Inc.
John 15:7 '
Pomeroy
992·2955
Pomeroy
Bill

New Life Victory Centrr
3773 Georges C reek Road, Gall ipolis , OH

Wo rship - 10:30 a .m. &amp; 6 :30 pm ,
Wednesilil y Service - 6:30 p.m .. Youth
Service- 6:30p.m .

Raw son , Sunday Evenin g 7
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

CoOlville Un~led Methodist Parish
Pa!itOr: Uden It-lin e, Coolvi lle Chu rch,
Main &amp; Fifth St ., Sunday School - 10

Pomr-ro)' C hurch of lht Naurtne
Pastor: J an La vender, Su nday School -

.1111-er .1anrrll Jlomr

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

Clifton Ta~macle Chun:h
Clifwn. W.Va .. Sunday School - 10 11.m .. '
Worshi p - 7 p.m .• Wednesday Service - 7
p.m.

R8dnc

Bo b Randol ph. Worship - 9:30

a.m. Sunday School - IO:JU a.m

Rejoicing L!fe Cburtb
500 N. 2 nd Av e., Middlepon , Pastor :
Mik.~ Fo reman , Pa stor Emetilus Lawrence
Forcmon, Worship- JO:OU am
Wednescla y Service s- 7 p.m .

Faith VM IIty Tabernacle Chun:h
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev. Emmett

Pastor: Kerry Wood, Sundii y School - 10
·a.m.. Worship -. II a,m.

Sch uol - 9:30a.m .• Worship - \0:4 5 ll.m ..
7 p.m.. Wednesday Servi ec~ - 7 p.m

Chcsln '

Stiversville Community Apostolic
Churth
Pastor: Wa yne R. Jewell, Sunday worship ·
- 6:00p .m.. Wed ne~da y · 6 :00p.m. Bible .'
S1udy

Middleport Communll)' Church
575 Pearl St ., J.1iddleport , Pastor: Sam
Anders.o n, Sunda y School \0 a.m ..
Evening - 7: 30 p_m_, Wed nesda y Service7:30p .m.

United Methodist

prayer and Bible Study.

Clilll'Mry Bible Chun:b
Pomeroy Pike. Co. Rd., Pastor: Rev .
Bl ackwood, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ., .
Wors hip 10:3 0 a .m .. 7:30 p.m . ,
Wctlnesday Servi ce- 7.30 p.m

Harri!'IOnl"ille Community Church
Pa stur : Theron Durham, Sunday - 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.. Wednesday- 7 p.m.

St. Paul Lutheran Churth

9 :30 a.m .. Worship : 10:.,11 a.m. and 6:3 0

•
••

Pomeroy. OH

Racine, Ohio,
Pastor: John Gilm ore. Sunda~ School 9:30 a.m ., Worship • 10:45 a.m. , Bibl t:
·study Wed. 7:00p.m.

Grand Street, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship - \0:30a.m .. Pastor Phillip Bgll

10: 4~

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C~nne l &amp; Rasr&lt;~,n . Rds .

Graham United Metbodloit

A•tiquily Baptist
Sunday SchOOl - 9 :30 a.m ., Worship -

Portable Toilet Rentals

Cannd-Sutton

SL John Luthtran Church
Pine Grove. Worship - 9:00a .m .. Sunday

ML Moriah Church or God

A . Jack's Septic Tank &amp;
l l Portable
Toilet Service
(In Darwin)

Bethaay
Pastor: John Gilmore, Sunda y School . 10
a .m., Wors hip - 9 a .m., Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m.

Eaul Letart
Pastor: Bill Mar.'&gt; hall Sunday School 9n .m., Wor~ h ip - 10 a.m., 1st Sunday
e vvry rn onth evening s~ r v ice 7:00 p.m.;
Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Bea~tic ,

Sunday School -9:3 0a.m ., WoNhip - 7:00
p.m .. Wednesday Bible St udy-7 :00p.m .
Faitli Fellows hip Crusade for Chrisl
P11stor: Rev. Franklin Dickens, Service:
Fdduy, 7 p.m.

Abundant Gract R.F. I,
923 S. Third St., Middlepon. Pastor Teresa
Davi s, Su nd ay serv ice, 10 a.m ..
Wednesday service, 7 p.m.

SriowviUe
Sunday School - I 0 a .m., Worship 9 a.m.

Worship - 1.1 a.m. Pastor: Richnrd Nr:asc
Bedatt'l United MethodlSt
Ne w Haven . Richard Ne11sc, Pustor,
Sundu y wors hip 9:30 a.m. Tu es . 6: .W

6am - 8pm

740-992·7713

Sclx)O]- 10:15 a.m., Worship-9:15a.m ..
Bible Study: Monday 7:00pm

Dn.ttr Chun::h of (.:hrlst

9:30 a.m ., Wonhip - 10:45a.m.

Open 7 days a week

SaleDt Center
Pastor: William K. Marshall, Sundlly

Sunday school 9:30a. m.. Sunday worship
- !0:30a.m

ML Moriah Bapdst
Pourth &amp; Main St., Middleport. Pastor:
R(:V. Gilbert Craig. Jr.• Sunday School -

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

Rutbmd
Pastor: R ick Bourne, Sunday School 9:30a .m ., Worship'- 10:30 a.m., Thul"!lday 'services - 7 p.m.

525 N. 2nd St. Middleport. Pastor: James
E. Keesee, Wonhip - IOa.m ., 7 p.m .,
WedneOOay Services - 7 p.m .

Fonsl Run Bapcist
Pustor : Arius Hurt , Sunduy School - 10
a.m.. Worship - II a.m.

Hours'

Youth

Hoddngpol1 Chun-h

Christian Union

fairview Hlble Church
Letan. W.Va . Rt. 1, Pastor: Brian May.

Asb Street Church
398 Ash St., Middleport·Pa..tor Jeff Smith
Sunda y School - 9:30 a.m., Mo rning

Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School - 9i 15
a.m .. Worship - JO a .m.,
Fellowship, Sunday - 6 p.m.

Society/Priesthood II :05 -12:00 noon :
Sa~nunent ser':icc 9 - 10: I S a. m .,
Homemaking meeting. 1st Thurs.· 7 p.m.

Our Suiuur- Lutheran Church

p.m., Wednesday Bib!~ Stud~·- 7 p.m.

Other Churches

Bethel Worship Centu
39782 S.R. 7, Reedsville. OH 45772 , lf2
mile nonh of F.astem Schools on SR 7. A.
Full Gospel Church. Pastor Rob Barber.
Assoc iate Pa stor Karyn Dovi s. Youth
Pastur Suzie Franc is, Sunday services
10:00 am worship, 6:00 pm Family Life
C lasses, Wed. Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m., O uter Limit ~&gt; Cell Group a+ the
church ~:30.pm tO 8:]0 pm

RockSprings

Mornlns Star .
Pastor: J ohn GilmQrc , Sllnday School - II
a.m., Worship - 10 a.n!.

Walnut and Henr y St ~ .. Ravenswood,
W.Va., F:'a~tor : DaviU Russell, S unday
School - 10:00 o.m .. Worship · II a.m.

Thr Church of Cbri."t of Pomeroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W. Evangelist :
~ Denni s Sargent, Sunday Bible Study -

White•s Chape l Wesleyan
Coo lvill e Road, Pastnr · Re-v. Phillip
Ridenour, Su uday S(.·hoo l - 9:30 a.m.,
Worshi p - 10:30 a.m .. Wednesday Service
-7 p.m

Sunday School - 9 :30 u.m., Worship IO:ilO a. m .. Wednesday Services - 7:00
p.m.

Pomeroy
Pastor: Brian Dunham, Worship • 9:30
11 .m., Sunday School - 10:35 a.m.

lbe Church of Jesus
ChrlSI of Latter-Day Saints
St . Rt. 160. 446-6247 or' 446 -7486.
·· S unday School 10:20- l l a. m., Rel ie f

Hickory Hills Church or Christ

oi

Wednesday S~rvices- 7 p.m.
Rutland Cburcb of the Nazarue
Sunday School - 9 :30 a.p1., Worsh ip 10:30 un .. 6:30 p.m .. Wednesday
Services - 7 p.m. Rev. Mi ke Clark:

Comnaunity of Chr-Ist •
Ponland-Racine Rd .. Pasior: lim Proffitt ,

Pearl Chapel
Sunday S\:hool- 9 a.m., Worship - 10 a.m .

Laurel Clitr Frtt Methodist Chunh
Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Sunday School -

Tuppers Phtins, Pastor Mike MOOre, Bible
class. 9 a. m. Sunda y: wnr~h ip 10 a.m.
S unday ~ worship 6 :3 0 pm Suntlliy; Bible

Rt:tdsville-Cburth Chrisl
Pastor: Philip Sturm, Sundlly School : 9:30
a.m .. Worship Service: 10:30 a. m.. 8ihle
Study, Wl!dnesday, 6:30p.m.

Roger Willford, Sunday School - 9:30
un. Worship- ? p.m.

Oa~is Christian Fellowship
(Non -denominational (ellowship )
Meeting in the old Ameril:an Le gion Hull
South Fourth Avenue, Middleport
Pastor: Chris Str:wart 10:00 am Sunduy
Other meetings in homes

Hysell Run Community Church
~a stor :

Wednesday Services • 7 P · ~ ·

!Mi{fie's ~estaurant

190 N. Second

Dewey King , Sunday school- 9:30 a.m .,
Sunday_ worship -7 p.m.. Wednesday
prayer meeting- 7 p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harri sonville Rd. (Rt.t43) .

Chester Churth or the Nazarme
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Orale, Sunday School
- 9:30 a.m .. Worship • l l a. m., 6 p.m.,

6 :30pm,, Wet!. ~ible Study 7:00p.m.'

Minersville
P.Jstur: Bob Robinson. Sunday School - 9
• a.m., Worship - 10 a.m .

VIctory Baptist Independent

Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St. , Mason, Sunday Scllool - 1"0
a.m ,. Worship - II a.m ., 6 · p.m,

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
. Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of Ufe•
333 Page Street
(740) 992-&amp;~n
Middleport OH Fax (74Qi_992·7406

39825 Gold Ridge Road.

Keno Chun:h of Christ
Wo rship - 9:~0 a .m.. Sunday School -

class 7 p~ Wed.

r

Wam1 Frie11dl y
Atmosphere·

Row of Sharun Holiness Church
Leadi.ng Creek Rd .. Rutland. Pastor: Rev.

Wednesday Serv!ce§- 6:30p.m:

Old Bethel Fru: WiD Bapli&lt;~t Churth
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepurl, Sunday

i'

DiJ"ector: Dodger'Vougluln, Sunday SchOOl .
- 9 :30a.m.. Worship- 8: 15. 10:30 a.m .. 7
p.m., Wednesday Sel"vices - 7 p.m.

Wednesday Services- 6 :30 p.~l.

Hillside Baptillt Chur-ch
Si. Rt. 143 just o ff Rl. 7, Pastor: Rev.

·r

Road, Pastor: Charl es
Sunday School 9:30 a.m .,

O'Bryant, Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.,

Wednesday Bible Study · 6:00p.m. ·

•'.

CHI var-y Pilgrim Chupel

Wednesday Service • 7:30 p.m .

Racine Firsl BaptiSt
Pastor: Joseph Godwin, interim pastor ,

.~.

Wed nesday prayer ser\' ice - 7 p.m. ·

ll.lll .

Worship - 10 :15 a.m ., 7:00 p .m ..
Wednesday Service- 7!00 p.m.

....

Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Briun Dunham . Sunday School 9:30a.m .• Wo r~hi p · I I :00 a.m.

•
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pastor: E. Lamar

Flnl Baptist Chun-h
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St..
Middleport, Su nday School - 9:15a.m.,

for thi~ presentation.
For more information regarding
the presentation on bariatric surgery,
or to schedule a coooultation,
contact the Holzer Center for
Comprehensive Weight Loss at.

Danville Hollne.'l'i Churth

Worship - I I a. m.. 7:()0 p.m., Wed ne sday
Service-7 :00p.m.

10:3 0 a.m .. 6 :30

Ft'ftdom Gospel Millllion
Buld Knob . on Co. Rd. 3 1. Pastor: Rev.

Amazing Grace Community Church
Pustor: Wuyne Dunlap, State Rt. 68 1,
Tuppers Plain s. Sun. Worsh ip: 10 am &amp;

Forest Run ·

] 1057 Slate Route 325, Langs\'llt: , .Pa sto r~
Vi ctor Roush. Sllnday school - 9 :30a.m.,

Manle y, Sunday Schoo! - 9:30 a.m .,
Worship - 10:30 · a.m., 7:30 p.m ..

WorshiP - 8: IS a.m .. 9:4!i am &amp; 7:00p.m.,
Wed"nesday Services· 7:00p.m.

Attendees will also learn how the actual
surgery is conducted and the risk factors
involved. There is no need to pre-register

Pastor : Bo~ Robinson. Su nday School - 10
a.m., Worship- 9 a.m .

M ~: Kc nzie,

p.m.

A New Beginning
(Full Gospel Cburc'h) Harrisonville,
Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshall .

lo: nterpri!!t:
P11 st"or: Arland King . Sunday School I0:30 a .in .. Worship • 9:30 a. m.. Bible
Study Wed . 7:30

Cu mmunity C hurch
Pastor· Steve Tomek. Mllin Stra:t ,
Rutlan\1. Sunday Worship- 10:00 a.m ..
Sunday Service-7 p.m.

Hnrrisnn\'ille

-

Central Cluster
Asbury (Synu;use), Pastor: Bob Robin son.
Sunday School - 9 :45 a .m., Worship - II
a.m.·, Wednesday Services . 7:30 p.m.

Holiness

Middleport Chun-h of ('l1 rist
5th lin d M ai n, Pastur : /&gt; rbrtson,
Childrcns Director; Sharo11 Sayre. Teen

Wo rship

a.m., Wors hi p· 10 a.m ., Tut:sday Services
· 7 :30p.m .

S und~y worship - 10:30 a.m. &amp; 7 p.in ..

Pomeroy Westside Church ofCbrlst
3]226 Chi ld re n's Ho me Rd ., Sunday
School- II a .m.• Worship - IOa.m .. 6 p .m.
Wednesda y Services- 7 p.m.

10:30 a. m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallact, lsi 3nd
3rd SuiXIay

Reed.n lllt'
Worship - 9:30 a.m .. S unda }l School -

Flatwoods
Pastor: Ke ith Rader, ·sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - II a.m .

Bearwallow Rida:e Chun:b of ChriSt
Pastor: Bruc e Teny. Sunday School -9:30

Flrst Southern Baptist .

located at 577 State Route 7 North in
['P~lllipollis, Ohio. Those who wish to attend
1.inJfonmatioJilal presentation will learn about
.uu•.u preoperative and postoperative issues
lillOmg bariatric surgery and the necessacy
r¢quiremtenlts in order to be considered as a
qualified candidate for bariatric surgery.

]26 b. Main St ., Pomeroy, Sunday Sc'hool
Holy Euc harist I I :00 u.m . Rev
Edward Payne

ami

Pomeroy Church ofChri~t

9 :30 a.m., Worship - 10:3 0 a.m. and 6
p.m., Wednesday Serv ices- 7 p.m.

Sunday Servtce. 2 p.m.

Episcopal

212 W. Mail'l St .. Sunday School - 9 :30
a .m .. Worship- 10:30 a.m .. 6 . pcm.,
Wednes4ay Services - 7 p.m.

Che!iblre Baptist Church
Worship:

10:25 a.m..

, Grace Episcopal Church

Minister: Larry Br.9wn. Worship - 9 :30

Interim Pre~her - fl oyd Ross

M;oming

Trinit)· Church
Second &amp; Lyn n, Pomeroy. Pas tor: Rev.

Hemlock Grove Christian Church

Service
I0:30am,
Evening Service
7: 00pm, Wednesday Bible Study H)() pm,

am,

. Congregational
Jonathan Noble, Worsh ip
Sunday Schoot.9 : 15 a.m.

Westside Chu~ of Christ
33 226 Childre n's Home Rd, Pomeroy, OH
Contact 740-44 1- 1296 Sunday morn ing
10 :00, Sun morning Bible s tudy;
foll owing w orship, Sun. eve 6:00 pm,
Wed bible _study 7 pm

Carpenter Baplbt Chun-h
Sunday School - 9:30am , Preaching

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

Becoming Children of God

Con. -8:45-9: 15 a. m.,. S un. Mass- 9 :30 _
a .m., Daily Mass-8:30a. m.

Wednesday Bihle Sttidy 6:30pm ; choir
praclice 7 :30; youlh and Bible Buddies ·

Oct. 15, ,2003, confrontation . Garrett attempted to
purchase groceries. Troyer
refused to ring up the items
because she recognized
Garrett from one ·Of the
books Garrett wrote about
the Amish life she had left.
Troyer said she even offen;d
to give Garrett the groceries
for free.
Garrett said last week that
she expected to shop at
Troyer's store in the future.

r

i

a.m. Sunday School - 10:]0 a.m ., Bible
Study - 7 p.m .

Service. Worship - 10 :30 a.m., 6 p.m_. .
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

i'

' Mo rning worship· II am Evening • 7 pm,

10:30 un .,

James R . Acree, Sr., Sunday Unified

i'

Seronci Bapdsl Church

Baptist

''""'""Holzer Center for Comprehensive
Weight Loss willbe conducting
an inforiiJational presentation
for individuals in Gallia County
and surrounding areas who are
lJ"ested in learning about bariaQic surgery.
'
The presentation will take place on
May 4th at 6 p.m. at the Holiday Inn

Syral'use Jolnt Chun:h of God

Wednesday Servias - 7 p.m.

Liberty AJStmbly of God
P.O. Box 4'67, Dudding Lane. Mason.
W.Va., Pastor: Neil Te nn~~nt , Sunday
Service~&gt;· 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

you·need help
ingweight?

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK ~

Assembly of God

Commission rules for ex-Amish woman in discrimination case
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)
- Kentucky's Commission
on Human Rights has ruled in
favor of a former Amish
woman who claimed she was
discriminated against by an
Amish thrift store owner who ·
refused to serve her. Erma Troyer, who owns the
Rocky Top Salvage store in
an Amish enclave at Cub
Run, Ky., was ordered to
serve Ruth Irene Garrett, an
author on Amish life who left

April 28, 2006

Isr~el reported to recognize ousted Greek Orthodox leader

WE DECLARE TO YOU
Scripture: I John 1. 1-4

PageA2

740.992-62911

MY erace is sufficient
for thee: for m11
streni!th .IS

f

Per ect

ma de

.
k
tn wea ness.
II Cor. 12:9

�.'

,.

·OPINION

·The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallyaentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co ..
Jim Freeland

Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
. General Manager-News Editor .

Congress shall make no law respectit~g an
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; or the right of the..
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

.

'

TO-DAY IN HISTORY
Today is Friday, April 28, the I 18th day of 2006. There are
247 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On April 28, 1945, Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and
his mistress, Clara. Petacci, were executed ·by Italian partisans &lt;\S they attempted to flee the country.
On this date:
In 1758, the fifth president of the United States, James
Monroe. was born in Westmoreland County, Va.
In 1789, there was a mutiny on HMS Bounty as the crew
of the British ship set Capt. William Bligh and 18 'sailors
adrift in a launch in the South Pacific.
In 1947, a six-man expedition sailed from Peru aboard a
bal sa wood raft namc;d the Kon-Tiki on a 101-day journey to
Polynesia.
In 1952, war with Japan officially ended as a treaty that
had been signed by the United States and 47 other nation.s
took effect.
In 1958, Vice President Nixon and his wife, Pat, began a
goodwill tour of Latin America that was marred by. hostile ·
mobs in. Lima, Peru, and Caracas, Venezuela.
In 1967, heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali
refused to be inducted into the Army, the same day Gen.
William C. Westmoreland told Congress the U.S. "would
·prevail in Vietnam."
· In 1988, a flight attendant was killed and 61 persons
injured when part of the roof of an ·Aloha Airlines Boeing
737 peeled back.during a flight from Hila to Honolulu.
Ten years ago: President Clinton gaye 4 1/2 hours . of .
videotaped testimony as a defense witness in the criminal
1rial of his former Whitewater business partners. A man
armed with a semiautomatic rifle opened fire on tourists on .
-the Australian .island of Tasmania, killing 35 people ; he was
captured by police after a 12"hour standoff at a guest cottage.
Five years ago: A Russian rocket lifted off from Central
.Asia bearing the first space tourist, California businessman
.Dennis Tito, and two cosmonauts on a journey to the international space station.
.
·
· One year ago: A military jury at Fort Bragg, N.C., sentenced Sgt. Hasan Akbar to death for the 2003 murders of
two ·officers in Kuwait. More than I 00 volunteers joined
police in Duluth, Ga., in searching for Jennifer Wilbanks, a
bride-to-be who had vanished two days earlier. (Wilbanks
turned up in Albuquerque, N.M., having run· away on her
own.)
.
Today's Birthdays: Author Harper Lee is 80. Former
Secretary of State James A. Baker Ill is 76. The former president of Iraq, Saddam Hussein, is 69. Actress'singer AnnMargret is 65. Actress Marcia Strassman is 58. Actor Paul
Guilfoyle ("C-S,I") is 57. Actor Bruno Kirby is 57. "Tonight
Show" host Jay Lena is 56. Actress Mary McDonnell is 53.
Rock singer-musician Kim Gordon (Sonic Youth) is .53.
Rapper Too Shan is 40. Actress Simbi Khali is 35. Actress
· Bndget Moynahan is 35. Actor Chris Young is 35. Rapper
Big Gipp is 33. Actor Jorge Garcia is 33. Actress Elisabeth
:Rohm is 33. Actress Penelope Cruz is 32. Actor Nate Richert
is 28. Actress Jessica Alba is 25. Actress Aleisha Allen is I.S.
: Thought for Today: "If youth only had a chance or oltl age
@y brains." - Stephen Leacock, Canadian .humorist-educator ( 1869-1944).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
r
Letrers to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All letters are subject to editing. must be signed,
· ar1d include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leiters should be in good taste,
addressing issues. rwt personalities. Letters of thanks to organiza tions and individuals will not be acceptedfor publication.

·The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction .Policy
Our main concem il'! all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
slory, cali lhe newsroom al (740) 992·
2156.
Our main number

Ia

(740) 992-2156.

Depanment extensions are:

News
' Editor: Charlene Hoellich, Ext 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext 14
Reporter: Belh Sergenl, Ext. 13

Advertising
Outside Salea: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
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ClaosJCirc.: Judy Clarl&lt;, Ext 1o

General Manager
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E.....U:
newsCI mydailysentinel.com

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PageA4

.

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Published every afternoon. Monday
through Friday, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-class postage

paid at Pomeroy.

'

The Associated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. .
PolbnHter: Send address corrections
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Friday, A1&gt;I'il28, 2006 ·

'New product' could spell disaster
'

DEAR MARY: A year
ago, we took a seco nd mangage on our home. Now the
finance company is calling,
saying they have a " new
product" that would allow us
to consolidate our debts. The
salesman made sense, and he
seems to be acting in our best
interest by trying to save us
money. However; when I
spoke with him recently, 1
told him it may be to our
benefit to use the Rapid Debt
Repayment Plan I found
online at your Web site
(www.debtproofliving.com ),
which shows how we can be
debt-free ip about five years
without taking out new
loans. He said rather condescendingly, "Yeah, I have
heard about that: Where did
you find it? I'm not sure tbat
is the best idea."
· My husband and I have a .
net income of about $4,200
per month, but after all of
our expenses, we are still
living paycheck to pay check. We are ready io jump

Mary
Hunt

in wi.th both feet and get a
handle on things. Do you
suggest we . try the RDRP
first or refinance everything
into one monthly payment
with thi s finance company?
Our credit rating is too bad
to qualify for a regular bank
loan. - M. &amp; T. Reynolds,
Canada
DEAR M. &amp; T.: First, you
need to recognize that this
s~Jesman has only one person's best interest in mindhis own. Trust me on this. It
is his next paycheck he is
working on, and you are
simply a piece on his game
board. ·
Anytime a lender speaks

of a " product," you must
assume it has "more debt"
written all over it - a big
burden you'll be carrying
long after the salesman has
disappeared with his commission . His offer to refinance your debt into one
convenient monthly pay·
ment will plunge you deeper
into debt for a long time.
The
Rapid
Debt
· Repayment Plan is a way out
of debt. As you · discovered,.
it creates a written plan that
leads you out of debt. He
does not want you to consider thi s because it cuts him
out of the picture. He is not
looking after your best interests here . You must look out
for yourselves.
If you are still considering
his offer, ask him to write
down the entire plan he has
for you, including all figures
in clear and understandable
terms, the date you will be
debt-free and the total
amount you will pay to get
there with all fees and his

commission. Have' him sign
it and then fax it to me. I
want to see what he has in
, mind for you. I can guarantee it's not good, but I' d like
to take a look ..
You have a respectable
income, you have the tool
you need in the RDRP and
you have me to be your
cheerleader. You can and
you should do this yourself.
It's time to get out of debt,
not to dig the pit even deeper.
(Mary Hum is the founder
and publisher of Debt-Proof
Living newsletter and Debt·
Proof Living Web ·site
(www.debtproofliving.com).
To receive a sample of the
Debt-Proof Living newslet·
ter or to send a question or
tip, email cheapskate@unitedmedia.com or write to' .
Everyday Cheapskate, P. 0.
Box 2135 Paramount, CA .
90723. All correspondence
becomes the property of
Debt-Proof Living.)

.

'

Friday, April28, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Obituaries

The Daily Sentinel• Page As

A Hunger For More

James Edward Gilkey

My 5-~ear-old son ran up
and · a desire to do good
to me w1th an eager look on
instead of serve self.
CHESHIRE - James Edward "Jimmy" Gilkey, 22, of his face. "Dad, may I have a
"At dawn (Jesus) appeared
Cheshire, died April 23, 2006 at Cabeli-Huntington Hospital. penny ?" he asked. The little
again in the temple courts,
Born on Dec. 30, 19&amp;3 in Gallipolis, he ,was the son of the boy smiled up at me with his
where · all the people gathered
late Joseph R. Sr. and Wilma Lee Hunter Gilkey.
Pastor
big, blue eyes shining. ''Why
around Him, and He sat down
Jimmy graduated from River Valley High School and do you want a penny?" I
Thom
to teach them. The teachers of
Buckeye Hills Career Center in 2003. He had worked as an oil asked, although I had a feelMollohan the Law and the Pharisees
well swabber for Brasel ~nd Brasel. Jimmy was a member of · ing that I already kntw, based
brought in a woman caught in
. the Big Bend Farm Antique Club, and his hobbies included on similar requests in the
adultery. They made her stand
hunting, archery, motor cross racing and dirt track racing.
past. " I want a.piece of gum,"
before the group and said to
He is survived by a brother, 'Joseph R. "Huck" (Shelley.) he replied (I' keep a coinJesus, "Teacher, this woman
Gilkey, Jr. of Middleport; an uncle, Roger Hunter of Cheshire operated
bubble
guiTJ ... " He stopped in the· middle was caught in the act of adulwith whom Jimmy lived for many years; two nephews, Josh machine in our den that I use 'o f his sentence. "Is God . tery. In tl1e Law, Moses comGilkey and Jessie James Gilkey .of Middleport; and a niece, sometimes as an office).
manded us to stone such
going to tell YOU about it?''
Rylee Shaye Gilkey of Middlepon.
.. do you
With supper' f.1st approach·I remained silent and just women. N ow w.,at
Besides his parents, Jimmy was preceded in death by his ing, f. shook my head as I looked at him as gently as I say?' They were using this
grandparents.
· ·
·
looked down at him. ''No, not could. "Oh, all right," he question as a trap, in order to
Funeral services will be held at the Full Gospel Lighthouse right now. Maybe later." He grumbled. "I found the penny have a basis for accusing Him.
Church on Hiland Road in Pomeroy Saturday, April 29, ·at I sighed an\f walked away on mom's dresser."
But Jesus bent down and startp.m. with Pastor Roger Hunter officiating. Burial will follow glumly while I went on with
I reached down and hugged ed to write on the ground with
at Gravel Hill Cemetery. Friends may call al the Acree Fuheral my own projects . About 10 him. "Sweetheart, taking that His finger.. When they kept on
Home 'in Middeport on Friday, April 28, from I to 9 p.m.
minutes later, I walked by the penny,. even though it WAS questioning Him, He straightdoor of our den again, only to JUSt a penny. was still steal- ened up and said to them, 'If
have my son pop out of the ing," I explained. "Go and tell ' any one of you is without' siol,
room and run past me. "Son," )'Our mommy what you've let him be the first to throw a
I called and he stopped, look- done ... but just so you kl1ow, stone . at her.' . Again He
ing back at me wllh a pecu- · I'm proud of you for telling stooped down and wrote on
liar look in his eyes.
me the truth." He didn't the ground. At this, those wh9
. "Horiey, . what were you answer me but he did hug me heard beg~ .to go away one at
dolngr• ].asked him as some- . back and then ran off to talk a time, the · older ones first,
MIDDLEPORT - Mildred "Mood" Ann Wise Souders, thing . like guilt flashed in his to his mom. I let him tell her until only Jesus was left, with
formerly of Middleport died Wednesday, April 6, 2006 in expressio n. "Did you ~et a on his own and walked into the woman still standing there.
Pensacola, Fla.
piece of gum?" He hesitated the room .just as he was com- Jesus straightened up and
and
then nodded his head. pleting his confession. His asked her, ' Woman, where are
She is survived by her hlis.band, Jim.
Funeral services were held on April 21 with burial in "Yes, I did," he answered. mother Joyingly received him they? Has no one condemned
. Hmm. Since Thadn't actually and affirmed his telling the you'l' 'No one, sir,' she S!aid.
Pensacola.
said that he couldn ' t have truth, and forgave him openly. 'Then neither do I condemn
gum, I didn't feel that I could · We then explained that he you,' Jesus declared. 'Go now
confront him on that matter would now have to "pay and le!}ve your life of sin'."
· alon'e. "Where did you get the ·back" the penny he took by (John 8:2-11 NIV).
money for the gum?" 1 asked. doing a small chore. Even so,
Driven by, their jealousy,
then his misdeed would not be . these who should have been
He
paused
and
answered, "I found it on the dangled over his head: it was helping others to find God,
floor hy my bed." Something forgiven and forgotten . .
were not really interested in
didn
'
t
quite
ring
true
in
what
In
so
[llany
ways,
such
justice
... they were simply
CHESTER - A two-day yard sale for the benefit of the
Chester-Shade Historical Society will be held May 4 !llld 5, 8 he · said so I looked intently human demonstrations are trying to discredit Jesus in the
a.m to 4 p.m. at the Chester Courthouse. Good useable items, into his face, searching for only feeble portrayals of eyes of those gathered
except clothing, -are being collected for the sale. Call Kaye some evidence that would grace, and we are by no means around. Quagmired in their
perfect examples of it, but pride and envy, they '¥ere, in
Fick (985-4115 ), Mary Powell (992-2622), or Linda Blosser support his claim.
After a pause, I simply said, such small opponunities to fact, misrepresenting God,
. (985-42&amp; I) for more information.
"Did you take someone else's love our children as God loves indulging their own egos,and
money for the gum?" He us perhaps gives them pic- ·in real denial of their own
shook his head at me. "Son, tures of the kind of relation- sinfulness and need for grace.
God sees everything ... even ship that we can have with our
0h, how tragic that human
MIDDLEPORT- A four-evening acrylic landscape based the things that I don't see," I · heavenly FPther. And while no nature distorts the simple
on a design by Jerry Yarnell, PBS television instructor, will be said quietly. "He knows if one could ever possibly " pay story . of God's love! The
.
you found it on the floor of God back" to undo the dam- Gospel of Jesus is good news.
painted in a new class to begin Tuesday. .
Classes will be held at the Riverbend Arts Council, 290 your bedroom or not." My age that our sin has done, we And the good news of this
North Second Ave., Middleport with Rhojean McClure, son looked up at me, and are hopefully reminded . that Gospel is that God loves us in
started to ·shake his head His forgiveness · should result spite of the fact that we have
instructor. There will be no class on May 16.
again.
"I OlD find it on the in a penitent heart on our part aiJ sinned and fall shan of
Cost is $36 with 20 percent of the cost to go to support the
work of The Riverbend Arts Council. For details call McClure
at 992-3842 or e-mail rvm@voyager.net. Students are to furnish their own supplies. A 1ist will be provided at registration.
'

Deaths

Mildred Ann Wi$e Souders

Local Briefs

Benefit yard sale planned

Painting class to start

SADDA'M
HUSSEIN
DOESN'T

Construction begins on Freedom Tower at ground zero

APPEAR
AN'IWHERE
IN THIS
FflfY1 ..

Bv AMY WESTFELOT

For the Record

• ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

.

- Dissolutions
POMEROY - An action for dissolution of marriage was
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas Coun by Rebecca D.
Matson, Racine, and Norman S. Matson, Racine.
Dissolutions were granted to Rachel M . Reynolds and Jason
Todd Reynolds, Bobby L. Pierce and Shannon S. Pierce,
David Wayne Easter and Ava Marie Easter, and James Adam
Hicks and Heather Nicole Hicks.

.,

CB
from PageA1

America's rendezvous with Islam ·
theless formidable propor, cy and prosperity beyond
Before Sept. I-I , the course
tion
of the world's Muslims their dreams. That is what he .
of events in the 21st century
(if we guessed I percent, that has, offered the people. of
aJlpc;ared reasonably pl'ewould still constitute well Iraq, by ousting Saddam
dictahle. Western culture over 12 million people) were Hussein and encouraging
political, economic and
by no means ready to be democratic change. It is a
social - seemed well on its
William
rolled over by the West. On bold offer, and one Iraq (and
Wi/oY to conquering and transRusher
the contrary, by equipping after it, the world's Muslims)
forming the world. If Francis
themselves
with
such would do well to accept.
Fukuyama was a bit overBut the fanatics among
Western conveniences as
heated in hailing thi s as
them
have no such intention.
plane travel, cell phones and
heralding "the end of histobombs, they were prepared Democracy is unnecessary;
ry," it cenainly seemed to
Mohammed, and in the sev- to strike back at their sharia is the only Jaw a ·
indicate the direction of
enth and subsequent cen- Western tormentors, and ulti- Muslim needs. Who would
future developments. Insofar
turies had made a determined mately (or so they told them- reject it, in favor of the gross
as there were dangers ahead,
and nearly successful bid to selves) to conquer them.
immorality so prevalent in
they . inyolved
rivalries · overthrow the West and
Matters
were
not
made
any
the
West? Rather, it is the
among various contenders establish domination of the
easier by the fact that many West that must succumb to
for leadership of the globe world. But the effort ·was
notably China. But for the · beaten back, and in recent Western nations had grown shana.
That is "the struggle that
time being American domi- centuries Islam had become soft, failing ·even to repro. nance was indisputal:fJe. The a cultural backwater, domi- duce themselves in numbers · will dominate the 21st centuidea that the whole general nate,&lt;! by vilrious local tyr:ill- sufficient to maintain their ry, until one side or the -other
prevails. Fl&gt;r the United
direction of civilization nies that professed to rule in population.
President Bush decided to ·States, it may mean only
might come under serious obedience to "sharia," the
challenge was practically comprehensive and unchang- call this unexpected new (only!) a steady drumbeat of
unthinkable. (Let us pause ing laws laid down by the struggle "the war against ter- terrorist incidents, some
here to acknowledge Wle pre- Prophet. In such societies ~ ror." I! is most certainly a smaller and others 'quite posscience
of
Samuel · the concept of "democracy" war, and, at least for the sibly far larger than those of
Huntington.)
was simply irrelevant; "the moment, the favorite· tech- Sept. II - not to mention
On Sept. II , the world people" didn 't need to gov- nique of the enemy is terror the· casualties that our solmeaning small-scale diers must yet sustain in Iraq.
awoke to. the existence of a ern affairs, because all necesatrocities,
from · suicide . But do not suppose we cari
menace from a quite unex- . sary governance was already
bombs to beheadings. It is a avoid the battle by Jlulling
pected direction. It turned provided by sharia.
out that we had overlooked
Insofar as the . Western long way from overthrowing out of Iraq and turning ·the
·the threat from well over I .2 world thought about Islam at the nations of the Western White House over to Hillary
billion people, concentrated all, it assumed that the world, but it is devilishly dif- Clinton. Our enemies in the
Muslim world are going to
in the Middle East but with processes o'f acculturation by ficult to stop.
To
-stop
it,
Bush
has
offered
the
West
would
gradually
outliers as distant as
be a lot harder to appease
Indonesia, grouped under the overtake and transform it, as Muslims something he is than that.
general sobriquet of "Jsl;un" they had ovenaken all other confident they will perceive
(William Ruslrer is a
and calling themselves rival systems. It was. there- as better than their present Distinguished Fellow of.tlre
"Muslims." This vast seg- fore , a tremendous shock life: . political and economic Clarenumt frwitute for the
ment of humanity gives its when Sept. II revealed that a freedom on the Western Study of Slatesmamhip and
allegil!nce to the prophet relatively small , but never- model, resulting in democm- Political Plrilo.\'llfJII_\c)

..

His glory (see Romans 3:23).
And the good news gets even
better in that He loves us so
much that He willingly and
willfully sacrificed Himself
in the Person of Hi s Son,
Jesus, so that His holy Law
would be vinc'icated and yet'
not destroy us: P.e took ow
punishn.ent in . our place ' '
that through liis death ana
· re'surrect ed life we · might
have the prom is~ of e!e•·nal ·
life. Thrmu;h Chrii;l ,Jw ,
He gives u' heaven withuLI
. sli' arne and reproach
' ');
tne
our sin hanging on us withal!
its nasty tentacles. What I J ~
require s in return is simpl y
that we turn from what ·.ve
once were in the slime of our
siq and se lfishn ~%, and
embrace His death, resurrel'tion and lordship as our onl y
hope for eternity. We then
walk with Him as. obedie1t
· children, beloved of •heir
Father. Rather sirr:pl e, -isn 'i
it? So let us not iJe so bound
to our pride, a.r..bitwn. and
selfi shness th:lt we c;;n' t
co me to Him a ~ ~ child.
Neithe; 'Jet ~s ~e bu'iieci hy
fear or pres~ure s awl t:,ranni cal rlemands of the world that
we do not stop and li&gt;•:!r wi;b
open ears and hear~s to th~
voice of the Or:e Who J~sire ~•.
to give us life and hope thu &lt;
last beyond the grave.
"(Jesus) called a little child
and had him stand among
them. And He said, ' I tell you
the. truth, unless you change
and become like little children ,
you will never enter the kingdom of heaven"' (Matthew
18:2-3 NIV). Let us then pray
that we all will have soft anct
tender hearts as His Holy Spirit
moves in our river valley.
(Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministered in
southern Ohio the past 10112 years. .He is the pastor of
Pa~hway
Community
Church, which meets on ·
Sunday mornings aJ the Ariel
Theatre. He may be reached
for comments or questions by
e-mail aJ pastorthom@paJh· waygallipolis.com).
"

..

project 's success could well.
be told by a family with 13
members who an · came to a
testing facility on the same
day. They left with checks
totaling $5,200.
Another side benefit to the
project has been the detection
of serious illnesses in a handful of participants. While it is

Jail
from PageA1
holds. Funds through the
Community
Housing
Improvement Progra.m will
be used to match the grant
application, Trussell said. .
The funds would' be used to
complete electrical, heating
and other repairs to homes,
and will most likely be used
to assist those ?n a waiting

not great news for people to
find out they are sick, there.
was one young girl · in
Pomeroy whose cancer will be
treatable because of the early
detection, said Meigs County
Commissioner Jim Sheets. ·
"I think that was a neat
thing about the project,"
Maher said. "We· re just glad
to have been a pan of it and
to have been able to help
those people out."
Appointments are scheduled
at the C8 trailer in Pomeroy
through the end of May.

NEW YORK -·
After
. months of disputes over the
future of ground zero, state and
city officials finally brought in
the heavy equipment and
began construction Thufsday
on the 1,776-foot Freedom
Tower that will rise on the site
of the World Trade Center.
"(i is going to be a symbol of
our freedom and independence," Gov. George Pataki
said after three yellow ton_struction trucks - dtiven by
workers wearing hard hats
emblazoned with the American
flag and the words "Freedom
Tower, World Trade Center"
- rolled down . a ramp to
applause from politicians.
· The project has been held up
by bickering between city and
state agencies and the project's
chief developer, and by objections, mostly from Sept. I I
family members, to the design
of the trade center memorial.
But a . breakthrough came
this week · when the Pon

ignated agent fpr the Ohio
list through the CHIP.
Children's Trust Fund, in the
Commissioners also:
• Approved amendment to amount of $2.500 for child
the contract bet ween the abuse prevention through the
Department of Job and Creating Lasting Families
Family Services. as agent for Connection program . ·
• Referred
bituminous
Meigs County Family and
from
Children First Council, and ' materials ' quotes
Athens-Meigs Educational Asphalt Materials, ·· inc. ,
Service Center, for the Help , Marietta, for May, to
Me Grow progra111, adding Engineer Eugene Triplett.
$20,000 in funding, for a pro• Approved payment of
bills tn the amount of
gram total of $427,888.27.
• Approved a contract $21I,968.81.
Present were Commissioners
between DJFS and Health
Recovery Services .as the des- Mick Davenport · and Jim
Sheets and Clerk Gloria Kloes.

Authority of New York and •
New Jersey, which owns the
site, reached an agreement
developer
Larry ·
with
Silverstein, 'll(ho held the
lease on the twin towers.
The agency had been pressing Silverstein to give up
control over the $2.1 billion
Freedom Tower, for fear he
would not have the financial
means to complete the proJect. Silverstein agreed to surrender control of the. skyscraper and a secon!l· building, but will built! three other
office towers ·at ground zero.
The Freedom Tower is
scheduled to open in 20 II , and
officials said Wednesday's deal
,means all five towers could be
built by 2012. Construction has
also begun on the memorial.
The project will return millions of square feet of office
space, shops and people to
downtown's financial district.
"Everybody had a smile on
their face and everybody

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1,362 feet into the sky. But an
illuminated spire . will stretch
the building to the symbolic
1,776 feet envisioned in the
original Freedom Tower
design. That's taller than any
building
in
existence,
although even taller sky-scraPers · are planned in Chicago
and the United Arab Emimtes.
Thursday was the second
time officials tried to start construction ori the tower, which
has been designed three times.
Architect . Daniel Libeskinq
drew the first Freedom Towe'r,
a . twisting glass skyscraper
w1th at) off,center sp1re meant
to evoke the Statue of Libeny.

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Danny Harmon
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understands - if you're not
happy with the design, you
had your chance, if you're not
happy with the deal, you had
your chance," Mayor Michael
Bloomberg said. ' ."We've
finally all come together and
said what .we're going to do,
so now we're going to do it."
Business and civic leaders
have wondered whether there
is demand for that much
office space downtown , and
said that the Freedom Tower
has not attracted tenants yet
because of its height and its
·potential as a terrorist target.
8ut Pataki said: "We are not
going to just build low in the
face of a war against terror."
Like the World Trade
Center, the tower will reach

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VOTERS GUIDE
New slots language seeks to unite gambling plans
New ·voting sys(em in

PageA6

VOTERS GUIDE'

':fhe Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel .

Friday, April 28, 2.0 06
~

'

Republicans to decide only .contested local race
BY BRIAN J. REED
BREEDOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
'

.· POMEROY - Republicans will
determine the winner in a four-way
'race for county auditor in the only
ltically-contested race on Tuesday's
·
primary ballot.
· Democrats and Republicans will
choose nominees for statewide
office and nominees for ·a fall race
to replace U.S. Rep. Ted Strickland,
0-Lisbon, who is a candidate for
Ohio governor.
Democrats will decide a two-way
race for State Representative.
Candidates in the primary are:

Ohio stands as crossroads in fight for control of Congress.
BY

DAVID ESPO .

Central Committees
on Tuesday ballot .

Republican

Democratic

paign.
Emanuel arranged for
)Jemocratic households to
receive a recorded phone call
from Bill Clinton. "Charlie
has the most experience. best
ideas, and he is supported by
me .... and .all 12 Dempcratic
County Chairs," says the for· .
mer president.
Eager to keep Wilson off
the ballot, Republicans criticized him in television commercials that said millions of
gallons of raw sewage had
been secretly dumped into
the Ohio River when he was
chairman of the Eastern Ohio
Regional
Wastewater
Authority.
Democrats leapt to his
defense, sayin~ opponents
were agrunst WII&amp;on because
he "fought the big oil and gas
companies and won't 'yield'
to President Bush · and
Republicans who are taking
us the wrong way." .
The campaign is more
straightforward in the middle of the state, where Pryce
has long been secure and
drew 60 percent of the vote
in 2004. But Democratic
presidential candidate John
Kerry lost narrowly to Bush
in the dis.trict, which
includes . Ohio
· State
University, and Democratic
strategists have touted their·
chances for months.
Democratic · challenger
Mary Jo Kilroy, a county
commissioner, calls Pryc.e a

·ate

,.

~*******************
:
VOTERS OF
.!
MIDDLEPORT!
.! . ·

*.

YOUR .village·needs your support!

1!1'11·

:

*
1t
*
t .
*
* What would a 1 mill levy cost you? **
~
hous~
a~
i'
* *•
*
per
*§
*
1f
PLEASE
!*
Did you know that it costs $30,000 per
year to run our street lights? .

:

•

The .o wner of a
valued
$50,000.00 would only pay ·.
$17.50
year!

:

·

Vote yes for YOUR 1 mill levy! ·
.

.

.

on: May 2nd.

*

P~id for by the Village of Middleport:

MEIGS COUNft

pr!!~~!nce

35 years of
workmg
with public and teenagers.
• Ma. ster's degree in Mathematics, Bachelor's
degree in Psychology.
• Pro-life
~~ . • Member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church
(organist) and organist for St. Paul Lutheran
Church.
.
•NRA(CCWI
• Have always had open-door policy in the
classroom and will continue that policy as
auditor in the courthouse.
~~ No political agenda. Will maintain fair and
consiste11t management of the auditor's office.
• Outstanding work ethic.
• Good problem~solving skills.
Embrace change and enjoy finding more
efficient ways to get tasks accomplished.
• Enjoy workmg together to solve problems to
benefit everyone.
• Belief that to mcrease tax dollars for Meigs
it is necessary to buy whenever
in
County.

a

This is just one of the services brought to :
you by your village government.
Please show your support. .

~
:

!*

W
§~ •

for

•
a

******************** .

meet federal standards. The the ballot is completed, the
new equipment is required voter will feed it into a
under the Help America counter, which will keep , a
Vote Act. which requires, running tabulation of votes as
among other things, that bal- they are cast.
lots be counted · at the
The county board received
precinct level , ratt,ler than at $221 ,225 for the purchase of
· the central board office after the equ'ipment and $9,000
polls close. The federal gov'
for
training.
Elections
· ernment, through the state,
has also provided funding Systems and Softwa;e · and
through HAVA for the new board staff have demonstrated the new equipment in the
equipment.
·
The primary change for the past several weeks, includvoting pub ic is the use of a ing demonstrations at local
"bubble sheet" ballot as supermarkets. The system
opposed to a paper · punch- has also required extensive
style ballot and stylus. Once training for poll workers.

·w.Va. voter rolls dip before primary election

MEIGS 'COUNTY POLUNG LOCATIONS.
· POMEROY - Voters in
Salem , Center
Fire
Shade River Masonic
some Meigs County precincts
Building,
46416
Ohio
248
Department, 28854 Ohio. 124
should note changes in their
polling locations. Since . the
November general election,
the Meigs County Board of
Elections has . placed some
Pomeroy Gun Club, 42560
precincts in combined polling · Pomeroy Pike Rd.
·
location's .
Church of Christ Family
While the precincts them~
Center, 437 Main'S!.
Life
selves remain the same, some
wjll be voting in new places.
The changes in polling loca- · Columbia' Township Fire
tions were made to allow for Department, 29466 Ohio 143
the purchase of new elections
equipment, which witr be
used in Meigs County for the
Mulberry
Community
first time on Tuesday. .(See
Portland
Community Center, 260 Mulberry Ave.
related story.)
Center, Ohio 124
The North Olive and
Orange' precincts will vote
together in the Tuppers .
Bradbury
Elementary
Plains school building; ·
.
. .
Racine· Village and Racine . Letart T,ownship Bmldmg, School; 39105 Bradbury Rd ..
precinct will vote together at 49457 OhiO 338
the Christian
Outreach
Center of the First Baptist
Church, and the Laurel Cliff
and Rocksprings precincts . Long Bottom Community
will both vote at the Building, 36709 T.R. 275
. Rocksprings U.M. Church
Rocksprings
United
(bas~ment)
34500
Methodist Church.
Rocksprings Rd.
The
. precincts
in
Middleport and Pomeroy
were placed in one common
polling
location
in
Tuppers Plains School,
Scipio Tpv,:nship Fire
N~ec~~~iete list of polling' 50008 Ohio 681
Department,
35575
locations and addresses folFirehouse Rd.
lows:

West Chester

Middleport
2,3 &amp; 4

Columbia

Pomeroy
1, 2 &amp;3

Lebanon

Bradbury

Letart

Laurel Cliff
Rocksprings

South Olive
Nprth Olive
Orange

Bedford

AN EXPERIENCED PERSON IN THE
AUDITOR'S OFFICE WILL MAKE
. FOR A SMOOTH TRANSITION

Ohio Valley Christian
Assembly , Campgrounds,
39560 Rock~il)gs Rd.

East (;hester

ELECT

MARY I.
YOURIEIT
MEIGS COUNTY
AUIITIR

Rutland Village
East Rutland .
Wesf Rutland

Racine Village
Racine Precinct

Rutland Civic Center; 337.
Main St.
·

Church
First
Baptist
Christian Outreach Center,
Fifth Street.

Salem

races in the final weeks of
the campaign.
Local election officials also
·are holding meetings to educate voters on how to use the
new voting systems in nearly
all 88 counties. They also discuss changes in the law.
· "We think 'it (interest in
absentee voting) is going to
go up and might be slightly
higher than we anticipated,
maybe lO percent or 15 percent higher," Williams said.
0thers don't anticipate a
bus:t week.
.
"This has been kind of a
slower election for us so. far,"
said Stephanie Thompson,
elections director in southern
Ohio's Adams County. "I'm
not sure everybody knows
about the change."

issues, Williams said. About
3,000 liad been returned last
week, he said. ·
In · 2002, the last year for
COLUMBUS - Ohio voters for the frrst time won't state otfice races, Hamilton
need an excuse to vote by County Democrats returned
ballots,
mail in the May 2 election, 2, 750 absentee
but poll workers s'ay they Republicans sent in 3,13 7 halhaven't seen a significant lots and issues accounted for
· spike . in requests ·for the 822 ballots. Similar increases
are occurring in Cuyahoga
absentee ballots.
Last
October,
the County, which includes
Legislature passed and Gov.. Cleveland, and in Franklin
Bob Taft signed into law a County, which includes
bill allowing all Ohio voters Columbus.
to use absentee ballots.
Other counties are seeing
Lawmakers had included little activity.
the rrovision in a major over· "In our county we're not
hau of Ohio election law, but seeing an impact whatsoeyer.
passed it separately, in .Part, We're below our even-year
to head off a vote on the Issue (average) total," said Steve
in the November election.
Harsman, 'elections director
The new law aims to in Montgomery County,'
encourag_e voter participatio!J whi'ch includes Dayton.
· and help reduce long lines at· . About 3,200 ballots. had
been requested by county
the polls.
In previous elections, vot- voters, comp¥ed with 4,600 .
ers needed to be at least 62 in 2002. Harsman said. He
· years old, or be 0 ~ 1 of t~e predicted a total' of about
country, in the _hospital· or 10 4,500 would arrive by May l ,
jail · on ElectiOn Day when absentee voting for the
among other reasons - to primary ends. .
·
vote by absentee ballot. Now,
The state tracks abseQtee
all a voter has to do 1s ask the
county board of elections for ballots only for general elecone, beginning 35 days tions. said . James ' Lee,
before an election.
spokesman for Blackwell, the
. Some boards say business secretary of state. His office
is up, but not significantly. expects no problems in
while othe~s report no reporting tlie results because
the new law made no change
c)lange. ·
b
· "We're up a little bit, but 1 in the way a sentee votes are
would not call it a real large counted, Lee said.
.
increase,"
said , John
Most elections officials
Williams elections director expect an increase in
·in Hamiiton !=ounty, }Vhich requests this week, spurred
by interest in the primary
includes Cincinnati.
.Voters requested ·3,811 hal· between Kenneth Blackwell
lots for the Democmllc pn- and Aliorney General Jim
"mary, 4,619
for
the Petro for the GOP nominaRepublican primary and 727 tion for governor and advernonpartisan ballots to vote on ti sing inten~ifyin~ in many
BY

JOHN McCARTHY

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

• 13 years experience working in the Auditor's
Office
• Performing checks and balances on all
County office's budgets and allocations
• Protecting your tax dollars from Citations
and findings by the State Auditor

Paid for by the Candidate PO Box 860, Racine, Ohio 45771

• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ¥¥• .

..

W

r
,.

Marty grew up in Meigs County and has been a resident most of
'his life. He has bOOn JT,lllrried fourteen years to wife, Tammy, and·
has two children, Tyler age 12, and Paige age 10. He is theoon of

·

'Jeny and Phyllis Cline.
Education
t 987 Salutatorian Meigs High School
·Bachelor of Business Administration Ohio University .
Graduated Summa Cum Laude
Work Exoerlerice
Certffied Public Accountant, Auditor, Tax and
Financial Consultant, Business Owner and Manager, 15
Years Accounting and ,Business Experience
··1 hm~ worktd Mrd all m)•lift toac h it&gt;~'l! suru n ill bolh 1he omdernk fit ld tmd !Itt&gt;
world. Wi1h .w ur http, (will put m.' · n fxrirnu , han! M:ork, and dedit·ation to
"-'Orkfur M~ig.r County. f would appreciate your l'{Jtt' for rht Rt:jmb/imn nolllimttion
an May 2, 2~. Thu~k _1'tlu {M your .t ltf'IJiirt"" Alfm y L Clint'-

busin~sr

j·

'

•

' ,0

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

CHARLESTON, W.Va. Wesi Virginia has 38,686
fewer voters heading into the
May 9 primary than\ it .did
during its last regular election, with the long-dominant
Democrats suffering the bulk
of that loss.
.
Secretary of State Betiy
Ireland counted 1,130,008.
voters registered in time Jor
the primary, down from 1.16.
million in November 2004 when the voter rolls reached
a 52-year-high.
.
jts numbers trimmed by
32,358 during the time, the.
Democratic
Party
has
648;106 voters or 57.3 percent of the total. It lost its
long-held 2-to-1 advantage
2004
over
the
in
Republicans, whose numbers
also declined this year by
8,433 to 340,760.
"For close to 10 years, the
West Virginia Republican
Party has been making steady
registration gains on .the
Democratic Party," said
Charles Bolen, the state
GOP's research director.
The GOP's share of total
voters actually rose slightly,

Scipio

Despite new law, requests for
. absentee ballots a bit stagnate

'•

.

REED

MlchMIIf.

·Struble

ll•lcrlllcCI,.._
. 1211111111 llllllc.l
3D Yell'S PIMIC I'IIICI

EIF.niiCI

'"AVOTE FOR
THE FUTURE
'"A VOICE FOR
THE PEOPLE

ference call Tuesday that
they have no partners i'lf
their effort and plan to
underwrite the issue alone.
Talk of unity behind the new
proposal is premature, said
Andrew
Bowers,
a
spokesman for the Penn·
National-backed
group,
whose ballot language was
certified Friday by the attor- :·
ney general's office.
However, ·
Cuyahoga .
Coupty Commissioner Tim .
Hagan, who is consulting on.
Clevelanct:
the
Greater
Partnership proposal. said the
new Learii and Earn initiative
showed promise. ·
.
"I think it's a compromise
we can all live with," he said.

COLUMBUS (AP) - One issues often serve to confuse
of three groups seeking to put voters, who vote against
slot machines at racetracks them as a result.
The revi~ed plan would
has filed new state ballot language aimed at unifying sup- establish slots-like facilities
at .Ohio's seven horse tracks
porters of the idea.
Learn and Earn said in a and allow two 3,500-machine
in
downtown
written
statement
that locations
accompanied the filing Cleveland. It would not
Monday that it believes the include a site in Cincinnati,
compromise can gafner sup~ which was part of Learn· and
port from Penn National Earn's earlier proposal.
The new proposal also calls
Gaming Inc. and the Greater
Cleveland Partnership, the for charging a one-time $6
other groups pushing gam- million fee to gambling facil-·
. ities, with the money to be
bling measures.
Getting all three to support divided between Cuyahoga
a. single ballot issue could and Summit counties.
Executives
of
help some form of gambling
Wyomissing
,
Pa
.-based
pass
in
November.
Competing but similar ballot Penn National said in a con-

BY LAWRENCE MESSINA

Fl CARLA
. SIDLER~
Fl

t

:

rubber stam p for the administration and .hopes to tie
her to the president .as we'll
as
to
corruption
in
Washington.
After sev'en terms, Pryce
has told associates she recognizes she is in the tough· ·
est fight of her career. She is
raising · campaign · funds
aggressively, and her most
recent
federal
report
showed $1.5 million cash ·
on hand.
Kilroy reported $355,000,
a distinct di sadvantage as she
enters a general election cam"
paign against a longtime
incumbent. She hopes to
recoup with · the help of
Emily's List, aworganization·
that says it raised more than
$I 0 mill ion two years ago for
fewer than 24 candidates in
scattered races.
MoveOn is active, too, targeting Pryce as one of four
Republican incumbents in its
opening wave of attacks.
"The goal of the prograin is
to show that the .House is up
for grabs, and we believe we ,
can do that by working in the
districts that are not in the top
tier,"
said
Jennifer·
Lindenauer.
The initial effort ran· into
turbulence, though, when ·
some stations rejected the
. ads.
. It was yet another sign that
the campaign .lias come early
to Ohio.

•~tltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltltAAitltlt•

25
. percent turnout predicted

J.

POMEROY Meigs
County voters will find· a
new way to cast their votes
with the first use . of new
elections equipment
in
Tuesday' s primary, but this
new system may be reminiscent of the "old days," when
ballots were marked by liand
and counted at the local voting precinct. ,
The Meigs County Board
of Elections has purchased
19 new optical scanners and
other equipment needed to

I

headed to extinction," he ·
· said. "I think that as we look
at House seats we're going to
. COLUMBUS - Welcome hold our own. We won't take
to Ohio, springtime cross- it for granted ... but we're
The four-mill renewal levy · road s in the battle for control
STAFF REPORJ .
, certainly holding our own."
NEWS®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
for the Southern school dis- of the House, where the politSolely in terms of political
trict is a three-year levy for ical parties, outside groups, punch, Ohio arguably has
. POMEROY- A four-mill current expenses.
attack advertising, .surrogate more to lose from a
lo;vy renewal in the Sout~ern
Other issues on the ballot:
campaigning and more 11re in Democratic takeover of ·the
Local School District and
• Safisbury Township, half- full flower.
"
House than any other state. '
two local liquor options for mill, five years, for maintainThe two parties have spent
Two Ohioans, ,newly electthe Village of Racine will be ., ing and operating cemeteries. more than $600,000 com- . ed Majority Leader John
ainong the local issue s
• Rutlano Village, two- bined trying to influence the . Boehner and · Pryce, hold
appearing on Tuesday's pri- mill, five years, additional fate of Democratic write-in s,pots at the Republican leadhopeful Charlie Wilson in ership ·table. Two other
mary ballot.
.
tax for police protection.
· Michael J. Hin II of Hill's · • Columbia . Township, one district, a highly unusual members of ·the delegation,
Citgo, has applied for two half-niill, five years, addi- commitment that reflects the Reps,. Ralph Regula and·
local· liquor options, one tiona! tax for maintaining and importance that Republicans Dav.id Hobson, chair approand Democrats place on priations subcommittees.
allowing for a C-.1 liquor per- operating cemeteries.
mit authorizing'carryout.sales
• Village of Middleport, every · potentially competi- Regula oversees Congress'
largest annual non-defense
. Monday through Saturday, additional one-mill, five year tive seal.
MoveOn
.org,
a
liberal
spending . bill, covering
and one authorizing Sunday tax for current expenses
group,
has
pummeled
veterhealth and education procarryout sales.
(streetlights).
an Republican Rep. Deborah grams. Hobson has responsiPryce in her Columbus-area 'bilities for funding of t:;l)ergy
district, paying for television and water projects.
commercials so controversial
Among the . four, only
that some stations declined Pryce faces significant oppo:
to · run them .. Emily's List sition. But a Democratic
· waded
early
into
a takeover would strip the
Democratic. primary battle to chairmen of their gavels ,and
the north on behalf of Betty cost the GOP leaders their
. POMEROY - The folSutton,
part of its campaign ability to set the House's leglowing candidates have filed
to elect abortion rights advo- islative agenda in the last
for
County
Central
Bedford,
Marlene cates to Congress..
. two years of President
Committee:
Harrison, Karen K. York;
There's more:
Bush's term.
/
West Chester, Blair Windon;
First Lady Laura Bush is
Ohio also stands as a symColumbia, Marco Jeffers; penciled in for a fundraiser · bol of the national competiGarry . Smith; next week for Pryce, and Sen. tion between Republicans, a
Lebanon,
: Bedford. Jane Frymyer; Letart, Joyce White; North · John McCain of Arizona, the dozen years in the majority,
Columbia, Judy Carter; Olive, J,anice Young; Rutland potential 2008 presidential and Democrats, who need to
I.:ebanon, Lawrence Hayman; Village, Robert F. Snowden; 'candidate, swung through gain I 5 seats to take controL
Ultart, Raymond L. Rowe; East Rutland, · · Wilma J. th.is .· mont~ to ·campaign . in
Bush's statewide populariSouth Olive, Melody L. Davidson; West · Ruthind, . Cincmnau for Rep. Steve ty has declined since Ohio
Hauber;
Orange, . Dana Steven D. Morris.
,
Chabot.
·
,
voters sealed his re-election
Salem, R. Keith Oiler;
Kessinger; Rutland Village,
Across the state, scandal- victory in 2004. Partiaily as a
Samuel Bruce May; East Middleport 2, Ruth Powers; scarred Republican Rep. Bob result, Democrats claim a
R;utland, Karen S. Williams: Middleport 3, Faye Manley; Ney is expected to survive a chance to win seats that have
r.,iddleport
2,
Kenneth Pomeroy I, Judith R. Sisson; primary
challenge
on · been out of reach for years, .
Imboden; Pomeroy I, Philip Pomeroy 2, E .. Jane Walton; Tuesday, but some party the same argument they make
~ : Ohlinger; Pomeroy 2, Pomeroy 3, Bill Spaun; strategists privately say they on a national· scale.
· Rebecca
J.
Triplett; Bradbury, Roger D. Coates; hoiJe he will then .step aside
Republicans scour for
Rocksprings,
Carol
A. · Laurel Cliff, Marjorie Fetty; · and allow them to field a opportunities district by disOhlinger; Racine Village, Scipio, Randy Butcher; replacement candidate with a trict, rough going given
/\nna · Layne;
Syracuse Racine Village, Robert E. better chance of holding t!Je Bush's diminished support.
\tillage, ·Shannon Slavin; Beegle; Syracuse Village, seat in the. fall.
They ·nurse hopes of captur· 1\!linersville, John N. lhle; Kay Hill; Minersville, Jason .
Overall, "I'd rather be us ing a seat along Lilke Erie that
~acine · Precinct,
Joyce A. Baer; Racine Precinct; than them," says Rep. Rahm Rep. Sherrod Brown is giving
Quillen.
. Grover Salser Jr. .
Emanuel of Illinois, the up to run for Senate, but conchairman
of the Democratic cede their· chances hinge on
''&lt; .
Congressional · Campaign the outcome of a crowded
Committee.
Democratic primary.
·
it
clear
.
the
Judging by · the involve- ·
He
made
. Democrats' road to a majori- ment of the two political par:coLUMBUS (AP)
years and local races an'd bal- ty runs through Ohio. Asked ties, the pre~primary combat
Al)out 25 percent of Ohio's .lot issues. There is no whether the party must win is strongest in a district that
1:1 million registered voters statewide issue on Tuesday's seats in the. state to capture ' stretches wr 300 miles or
expected to vote in ballot.
.
the House, he said, "Yes, 'and more along the Ohio River as
'J¥esday 's primary election,
In the 2002 primary, the we're go.ing to, We bave to it forms the state's border
tle ·state's elections office last time voters selected can- and we will."
·
with Kentucky, West Virginia
si{d Thursday.
didates for governor and
·
Rep. Tom Reynolds of · and Penns:rlvania.
~'fhe . prediction was based other
statewide offices, New York, c hairman of the
Wilson, a state senator and
~ estimates the state's 88 turnout was · 19 percent. In
GOP campaign committee, the party favorite, failed to
cpimty boards of elections 1998, . turnout was 28 per- sized up -the situation differ- gather enough valid signagpile to Secretary of State cent.
tures to qualify for the ballot.
ently.
Kenneth · Blackwell. His
Polls are open Tuesday
"Everybody told me that The party establishment
office also analyzed turnout froin 6:30 a.m. until 7:30 Ohio was doom and gloom spumed other hopefuls and
and that Republicans were swung behind a .write-in camf!gures of similar election · p.m.

:

BY BRIAN

BREED@MYDAILYSENTIN EL.COM

Meigs County races

AP SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT

Friday, April28, 2006

place in Meigs County

Ohio House of Representatives,
Bradley, (1/2): Democratic, Ben Espy, Peter
Governor: Democratic, Bryan E. Republican, Jennelle
M. Sikora, Republican, Robert R 92nd District: Democratic, Debbie
Flannery/Frank M. Starns, Ted Sandra O'Brien.
Phillips, Michael T · Struble;
Strickland/Lee Fisher; Republican, ·
U.S . Senator: Democratic Sherrod Cupp.
Judge of Fourth District Court of _Republican, Jimmy Stewart .
J. Ke11neth Blackwelltrhomas A. Brown, Merrill Samuel Keiser Jr.;
Raga, Jim Petro/Joy Padgett.
Republican. Mike DeWine, William Appeals: Democratic, No candi- ·
Attorney General: Democratic, G. Pierce, David R. Smith.
date, Republican, William H.
·"'
Subodh Chandra, Marc Dann;
U.S.
Rep.
Sixth
District: Harsha.
Republican, Tim Grendel!, Belly Democratic, Bob Carr, John S.
.20th District State Central
Judge of the Court of C(J~mon
Montgomery.
Democratic, Pleas: Democratic, No candidate~
Luchansky,
Charles
Wilson Committeeman:
Auditor of State: Democ.ratic ; (WRITE-IN); Republican: Chuck Darrell Lear, William E. Moore, Republican, Fred W. Crow III. .
Barbara Sykes; Republican, Mary Blasdel, · Tim Ginter, Danny Anthony Vernell, Republican,
County Commissioner (l/1):
Patrick Hennessey.
·
Taylor.
Harmon, Richard D. Stobbs.
Democratic, Mick · Davenport,
Secretary of State: Democratic,
20th District State Central Republican, Ernest E. Spencer.
Justice of the Supreme Court
Jennifer Brunner; Republican, Greg · (Ill): Democratic, William Michael Committee, woman: Democratic,
County AlJ..ditor: Democratic, no ·
Hartmann, Jim Trakas.
O'Neill, A.J. Wagner; Republican, Lynd~ L. Bolin, Susan Gwinn, candidate; f&lt;epubl ican , Mary T.
Treasurer of State: Democratic, Terrence O'Donnell.
Republican,
Marilyn · Kaye Byer-Hill, Marty L. Cline, Fred
Richard Cordray, Hugh Quill;
Hoffman, Carla Shuler. ·
Justice of the Supreme Court Ashcraft.

Local options on
Thesday ballot

PageA7

to just over 30 percent. But Democrats ·
outnumber
the party sported slightly Republicans among 18- to
higher margins in the ,e arly · 25-year-olds, Bolen said the
1990s. The ranks of third- margin is much smaller when
party and unaffiliated vot- compared to voters aged 65
ers, meanwhile, grew to or older.
As a midterm election
141,142 or 12.5 percent of
.registered voters.
.
year, both registration and
Democrats now outnum- turnout are expected to be ·
ber Republicans· in all but lower than when' the presi- :
nine of 55 counties, down dency · is on the· ballot.
two from 2004. Berkeley County clerks have also been ·
and Preston counties are the purging from their rolls all ·
latest to join the GOP-major- . voters inactive for at least
ity column.
four election cycles. Though .
State Democratic Party . the 2004 primary also feaChairman Nick Casey con- tured high voter numbers, ·
ceded that Republicans are this year's figures for both
benefiting from the influx major parties are · actually
of new residents in the higher than they have been in
Eastern Panhandle, which at least the previous five prl- .
includes Berkeley County. mary elections.
Casey
believes
Casey .believes the · three ~
But
President Bush's fortunes way race in the 18-county
will affect voter rolls in 2nd Congressional Districl
West Virginia.
and both state ·House and
After the , state helped Senate races in Raleigh
Bush win the White House County
will
affect
in both . 2000 . and 2004, Democratic turnout in those
"now, he looks very, very areas. State GOP Chairman
bad to a whole lot of peo- Rob Capehart noted that' his
pie," Casey said.
party also has contested priBolen, meanwhile, cited maries in Raleigh County,
figures compiled by his party while the U.S. Senate race'
to argue that Republicans are with its six Republican candi- •
making inroads among the dates should raise interest ·
state's younger voters. While statewide.
'

.

. .Vote May 1nd .•

.

.Write In Char\ie Wl\son
.

-

tor ~ongress
oemocrat

National Repu\lticans have outsourced our jobs, tried to privatize Social St:eurily and done nothing to
stop skyrocketing prescriplion drug costs.
·.
,
'
.

Charlie Wilson Will Fight for Us.

·

.

. .

Charlie Wilson is fighting back. He's 1hc Democrat Ted Strickland trusts lo follow m hiS tootsleps and
tum America around.
..

Don't Let the Republican~ Meddle in Our Democratic Primary

.

.

.

That's.why George Bush and the Republican attack machine are targetmg Charhe Wilson.
Don't let them gel away with it.

OFFICIAL DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY IIAU .Ill'

••
••
••
••
••
:•
••

••
•

. lllllllUCIIM'ro1·-J:-~~
.....(f(
.......
z.f§••""""",.,..._,
hMi (

..

F"O' ............

-.......-r• .....
._,_OM!

(Vote lor Not More Than

) ....... ol . .

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... ... llfl"ll'ldllllllll ......... lll

SIIlllllllllll

....:IIMW~IWI"It.

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alkili ........

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MERRILl SNMJEL
~ . JR.

-~
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Fer """-Ill I 10

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

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tl . . llrOMFru irtl

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Write Jn Wilson.
To vote lor Charlie Wilson, you must write in his name on .the ballot. It's easy
to do!
·
·,
1) Simply darken in the. oval next to the [)ox that says "Write in" as shown in
the photo
·
2) Write in the name "Charlie Wilson"
,,
3) That's it!
·

�Page AS.

BY THE BEND

!he Daily Sentinel

Friday, April28, 2006 '

to be in working order."
Dirk Fillpot, an MSHA
spokesman, said the agency
BUCKHANNON, W.Va. and. the National Institute for
Trapped deep below Occupational Safety and
ground by poisonous gases, Health tested all the air packs
the Sago miners realized at recovered from the mine after
least four of their air packs the explosion. Initial tests
did not work, forcing them to found that the air packs that
share the devices as they des- had been activated would have ·
perately pounded away with functioned properly, he said.
a sledgehammer in hopes of
"MSHA is . looking at
getting rescuers'. attention, whether the miners received
the sole survivor says.
adequate training in the use of
Fin'!lly, resigned to their their SCSRs. MSHA is also
fate, the men recited a "sin- initiating an effort with State
ner's prayer," scrawled agencies to ensure that miners
farewell notes to their loved are properly trained in SCSR
ones, and succumbed, some use nationwide," Fillpot said
as if drifting off to sleep.
in a prepared statement.
"As my tmpped co-workers
The state Office of Miners'
lost consciousness one by one, Health Safety and Training
the room ~w still and I oon- has not received any reports
tinued to s1t and wait, unable to of problems ~ith air packs,
do much else," Randal spokeswoman
Caryn
McCloy Jr. wrote to his co- Gresham said.
workers' families in a letter
After. the blast, the miners
dated Wednesday and obtained returned to their shuttle car in
by The Associated Press.
hopes of escaping along the
Jane Peak; an attorney who track, but had to abandon
represents nine of the miners' their efforts because of bad
families, asked the media to air. They dien retreated, hung
respect their privacy as they a curtain to keep out the poideal with what are "obviously sonous gases, and tried to sigvery upsetting" revelations.
nal their location by beating
"This is a very difficult on the mine bolts and plates.
time for the families and they
"We found a §IedgehamMonday, l\fay 1
do not . wish to comment". mer, and for a long time, we
REEDSVILLE
Olive
before state ·hearings nex.t took turns pounding away," Township Trustees,- regular
week that are part of the McCloy wrote. "We had to
investigation into the tragedy, take off the rescuers in order meeting, 7:30 p.m., township
Peak said late Thursday.
to •hammer as hard as we garage.
SYRACUSE Sutton
McCloy's two-page typed could. This effort caused us to
Township Trustees' 7 p.m. at
Jetter offered the most breathe much harder. We Syracuse Village Hall.
detailed account yet of what never heard a responsive blast
LETART
Letart
happened in the mine after the or shot from the surface."
Jan. 2 explosion. The blast
Martin "Junior" Toler, 51, Township Trustees will meet .
killed one miner and spread and Tom Anderson, 39, made 6:30p.m. at the office building.
Tuesday, May 2
carbon monoxide that slowly another, last-ditch attempt to
RACINE- Southern Local
asphyxiated II other men 260 find a way out but were quickBoard
of Education, special
feet below ground as they ly turned back by heavy smoke
meeting,
7 p.m. at the high
waited in the farthest reaches and fumes, McCloy said.
school
for
interviewing superof the mine to be rescued.
"We were worried and
.The air packs - referred to afraid, but we began to accept intendent applicants, approve
in the letter as "rescuers" our fate," he wrote. "Junior state loan of $41,000, talk
are intended to give .each Toler led us all in the Sinners about a music ieacher, and
miner about an hour's worth Prayer," a prayer seeking sal- approve permanent budget.
ALFRED . -·
Orange
of oxygen while they escape vation of one's soul.
Trustee,
7:30
p.m.
Township
or find a pocket of clean air.
McCloy said the air behind
home
of
Clerk
Osie
Follrod.
at
But at leasrfour of the devices the curtain grew worse, and
did not function, McCloy said. he lay as low as possible and
·''There were not enough tried to take shallow breaths..
rescuers to go around," but became.lighthea~ed.
McCloy said. He said he
· "Some drifted off mto what
shared his air pack with appeared to be a deep sleep,
· ,
miner Jerry G\·oves, as co- . and one person sitting neaJ:.,me ,.... ~:..:.:.&amp;uewy,,,Apnl 29,,.,,
' Mrrlf)I]~P()Rf ~ Special
workers did with the three collapsed and fell off his buckother men whose devices et, not moving. It was clear that meetmg of Middleport Lodge
there was nothing I could do to 363, ~&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. for
were not functioning.
In a statement, mine owner help him," McCloy wrote. work m .Master Mason deg~e
International Coal Group Inc. ''The last person I remember at Middleport · Masomc
said that the miners' air speaking to was Jackie Temple. All Master Masons
·packs, also known as self- Weaver who reassured me that invited. Members to take food
contained
self-rescue if it w~s our time to go, then items for Grand Master's food
devices, or SCSRs, were test- God's will would be fulfilled." bank program. Refreshments.
. He said he has no idea ·
Monday, May 1
ed by federal investigators.
"ICG was informed that the much time went by before he . POMEROY - Meigs Band
·Boosters _will meet at 6:30p.m.
SCSRs found at the barricade passed out.
Groves' family members Monday m the band room.
were deployed and showed
RACINE- Racine Chapter
evidence of use," said ICG said .Thursday. they were
Vice· President Charles grateful to McCloy, bo\h for 134, Order of Eastern Stars, will
Snavely. "The federal investi- revealing details of Groves' meet at 7:30p.m. at the hall.
Tuesday May 2
gators did not note any defec- final · hours and for sharing
MIDDLEPORT
tive SCSRs and all appeared his air pack.
Middleport Lodge 363, ·
F&amp;AM, 7:30 p.m. , at
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Take non-perishable · fooa
item for Grand Master's food·
bank program.
Friday.•Partly cloudy in the · showers. Highs in the mid 60s.
moming ...Then clearing. Highs
night... Mostly
Sunday
cloudy
w'ith
a 50 percent
in the mid 60s. Northeast winds
around 5 mph.
.
chance of showers: Lows in
Friday,Aprll 28
Friday
night ... Mostly the upper 40s.
MIDDLEPORT - A free
dear. Lows in the upper 30s.
Monday... Mostly cloudy
ham
dinner will be served from
Noith winds.around 5 mph.
with a chance of showers and
4:30
to 6:15p.m. Friday at. the
. Saturday... Partly cloudy. thunderstorms. Highs in the
Highs in the lower 70s. East mid 60s. Chance of rain 50 Middleport Church of Christ
as a part of the church's free
winds '5 to 10 mph.
percent.
Saturday night... Partly
Monday nlght ... Mostly
cloudy. Lows in the lower cloudy with a chance of
40s.
showers and thunderstorms.
Sunday... Mostly cloudy Lo.ws in the mid 40s. Chance
with a 30 percent chance of of rain 40 percent.

BY VICKI SMITH

. ASSOCIATED. PRESS WRITER

1 should be able to, and then
my parents will be in agreement. - HAIRY AND SELFCONSCIOUS IN OHIO '
DEAR HAIRY: I am glad
to help. The time a girl should
Dear
begin to shave her legs is
when she becomes conscious
Abby
of the fact that she needs to.
It's not a matter of "age." It is
..
when she's old enou~h to do
it carefully and not inJure herAnonymous online" and find self. And. 12 is about average.
a variety of resources. Plenty I hope your stepmother sees
of help is available if you just this and relen(s.
DEAR ABBY: My 16-yearreach out for it! Good luck!
DEAR ABBY: I am a 12- old son agreed to download
year-old · girl in seventh music onto his cousin's iPod in
grade. My parents are his absence. Unfortunately, our
divorced, and my father has dog got hold of the iPod and
remarried . My parents have chewed the leather.case it was
shared custody and make in and damaged the screen. ·
joint decisions about me.
Who should be responsible
My mother has given rhe for the replacement of the
permission to shave my legs, iPod ($450 plus $40 for the
but my father says I am not old leather case)? I think the
enough because that is what responsibility lies with both
my stepmother tells him to say. · parties and the cost should be
My stepmother reads your split in half.
Please share your thoughts
col urnn, and if you agree that I
am old enough to shave my ASAP. Because this concerns
legs, she will tell my father that famil~, it could create real

2006 NFL Draft, B4
Blue Devils .win share of SEOAL title, B8

animosity if it is not handled
· properly.
MUSICAL
DILEMMA
DEAR MUS ICAL DILEMMA: I do not agree with .you.
The person who should pay to
replace the damaged iPod is
the person whose carelessness
resulted in the dog destroying
it. Look at it this way: Often
the most expensive lesson is
the most effective- and this
one is a doozy!
DEAR ABBY: I am being
married next year, and our
"best man" is female. Can
you tell us what we should
call her? - KARLA IN
AKRON, OHIO
DEAR
KARLA:
Congratulations on your
forthcoming wedding. Your
friend's official title will be
'.'groom's attendant."

Friday, April28, 20o6

Marauders soar past Eastern, 7-3
BY BRYAN WALTERS

··-"·Ciubs_and
organl'zatl'ons

community dinner program.
MIDDLEPORT - Kim
Collins will be guest speaker
at the old American Legion
hall, 7 _p.m.
Saturday, April 29
PORTER - Clark Chapel
Free Will Baptist Church will
have special services with
Rev. Bemam Ferrell and Rev.
Pete Justice df Columbus.
Service at 6 p.m.
RACINE - Gospel meeting at Red Brush Church of
Christ, 7 p.m. ori Saturday; .6
p.m. on Sunday, with Denver .
Hill as speaker.
·
Sunday, Aprll30
CARPENTER . TheHumphreys ill CQ~ · at Mt
Union Baptist QlurCh, 6:30p.m.
RUTLI,\ND -·
Revival
services will be held adt the
Rutland church· of the
Nazarene wi,th Rev. Robert
Dabydeen at .. Sunday morning service" ·and continue
njghtly--·~ Wednesday.
Services. Sunday at 6:30,
Monday; : Tuesday
and

GALLIPOliS- A. ach&amp;du~ of upcoming colege
and high sch~ varsity apor1ing aventa lnvoNing
teams from Galtia, Meigs -and Mason counties.

Fddav'a gamaa
Baaeball
Gallia Academy at Wellston , 5 p.m.
·Wahama at Buffalo, 5 p.m.
~int Pleasant at WaYne, 1 p.m.
River Valley at South Point, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Fedei-ai Hocking. 5 .p.m.
Southern~~ VInton County, 5 p.m.
Softball
Gatlla Academy at Warren, 5 p.m.
PQinl F'leasant at Logan, 5 p.m.
River Valley at South Point, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Federal Hocking, 5 p.m.
Southern at Vinton County, 5 p.m.

Dear Abby i~ wrinen by
Al1igail ,Van Buren, also
. known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was .founded by her nwther,
Pauline Phillips. ffiite Deru
Abby at www.DearAbby.com
or P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angeles, CA 90069.

Track end Field

Point Pleasant at Ripley, TBA
Eastern at Federal Hocking, 4:30 p.m.
Meigs ." at ·Federal Hocking Ogg
Invitational, 3:30p.m.
Tannle
St. Marys at Wahama, 4:30 p.m.

Wednesday, 7 p.m. Local
talen will provide music .
Monday, May 1
POMEROY - Bishop R.
Daniel Conlon, Diocese of
Steubenville, to celebraie
Mass for . Mexican migrant
workers, I p.m., Sacred Heart
Church. Luncheon to follow.
Public invited.

Stocks

Browning and Cory Shaffer.
Durst, who was the pitcher
of losili)i record, worked only
two-plus innings and allowed
four runs in hi s start.
Browning took over in the
third and · surrendered two
runs through the fifth inning.
Shaffer allowed no runs in hi s
one inning of work during the
sixth .
The Green and White cut a
4-0 lead in half during the top
of the fourth when Joel Lynch

Point shuts
out Meigs

Please see· Marauden; B:Z

BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUM&lt;!!&gt;MYDAILYREGISTER .COI-1

POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va. - There was no one
inning that stood out, but the
Point Pleasant softball team
and steady .
approach in
6-0 shutout
of
Meigs
Thursday
evening in
P o i n t
Pleasant.

Top NFL prospects still urisure where they'll land
BY DAVE GoLDBERG
. ASSOCIATED PRESS

Other events
Wednesday, May 3
RACINE - American Red

Mounl Vemon Nazarene a1 Rio Grande

Cross bl.ood drive, I0 a.m. - 2
p.m., Southern High School.

(DH), 1 p.m.

s.rumav'• e•me•

Birthdays

BaHball
Wlrt County at Eastern,, noon
Meigs at Athens (DH). noon
Alver Valley at Watren (DH), noon
Southern vs. Oak Hill (at Alexander), TBA
Softball
Hannan at Southern (DH),,4 p.m.
River Valley at Warren (DH). noon

Wednesday, May 3
POMEROY
Doris
Thomas who is a resident of
The Inn . at Lakeview in
Groveport will observe her
90th birthday on May· 3.
Cards may be sent to her at
The Inn at Lakeview, B-21,
4000 Lakeview Crossing,
Groveport, Ohio 43125.

Track and Field
Galtla Academy at MarieHa Invitational.

-10 a.m.
River Valley at Piketon Invitational, TBA
Collogo Booebell
Mount Vernon Nazarene at Alo Grande
(OH), 1 p.m.
'
College Softball
Rio Grande at O~io Valley, 1 p.m. •
Mondav'a gamaa

OUNTY

BIN ball
· Gallia Academy at Warren, 5 p.m. ~
Miller at Eastern, 5 p.m.
Poca at Point Pleasant, 7 p.m.
Wahama at South Gallia, 5 p.m.
Meigs at Wellston, 5 p.m.
Southern at Trimbte. 5 p.m.
Softball
Gailla Academy at Rock Hill. 5 p.m.
RlverVaUey at Marietta, 5 p.m.
• . Wahama at South Gallia, 5 p.m.

UDITOR

A lifelong resident of Meigs County,
a U.S. Army Veteran, over 25 years
experience In handling government
finances, funds and g.-ants.
Your Vote Needed andApJrJr~·~fal~ea.t

~ner

at Eutem, 5 p.m.

Meigs at Weltston, 5 p.m.
Southern at Trimble, 5 p.m.'
Tennla

Point Plea•ant girls at St. Joe, 4 p.m.

TVC Standings
BASEBALL
Ohio Division
Wellston*
Alexander
Belpre
Me•gs
Vinton Co
Nels-York

8-1
6-2
5-3
3-5
1-7
1-6

Hocking Division .
Fed Hock*
Trimble
Southern
Eastern
Miller
WaterfOrd

Church events

~ocal

. ROCK SPRINGS- Throw
'strikes, trust in your defense
and rely on your offense 'to
produce.
Meigs did exactly those
things Thursday during· a 7-3
victory over intra-county rival
East&lt;:;.rn in a Tri-Valley
Conference non-divisional
contest.
The Marauders (5-l 0)
received six solid innings
from starter Josh Kimes, who

Austin Dunfee worked
relief. in the seventh frame,
allowinjl two hits, no runs and
no walks in closing out the triumph. !\'either pitcher record. ed a strikeout against the
Eagles. who fell to ~-5 overall
this year.
Aaron Story's two-run
homer in the bottom of the
first inning prayed to be the
Kimes
Durst
game-winning run for the
Marauders, who blasted out
allowed three earned runs, five earned runs and nine hits
eijlht hits and no walks in the against the. EHS pitching trio
wmning decision.
of Terry Durst, Justin

a

VInton ~unty at Point Pleasant boys.
NEW YORK _
4 '30 p.m.
. · be'•Ore th NFL
,
College Baubell

Local Weather

.

BWAL'rERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

LocAL SCHEDULE

Coinmu.nity Calendar
Public meetings

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

.·

Inside
White Falcons fly by Rebels, B2

Survivor says some Online help offers ·lifeline to .man drowning in drink
air packs didn't work
DEAR ABBY: I am a fulltime firefighter, married with
two small children, living in a
small city. My problem is I
have a drinking problem that
I hide well from friends and
family. Lately, however, it
has been getting worse, and I
would likelo get help.
I know of several AA
groups that meet in my area,
but because this is a small
community. I'm afraid that
someone will notice rpe at one
.of the meetings, and my problem will be exposed - and I
could possibly lose my job.
, Is there any professional help
·I might be able to get online?NEEDS HELP IN VIRGINIA
DEAR NEEDS . HELP:
Where tbere's a will, there's a
way. You can participate in
AA meetings via the Internet
by going to www.aa-intergroup.org. It 's an Internet
chapter . of
Alcoholics
Anonymous where you can
join in on audio or e- mail
meetings. Another site is
www.aaonline.net. · You can
also Google "Alcoholics

.

8-0
6-3
4-5
4-4
3-4
0-9

•
Wahama
~
·COED
.
W!FFI.E
BAl./.
TOURNAMENT
~
thumps
• All proceeds benefit the Point
•
:
Girl \. · ,\'ojihr71! J.eague &amp; PI 'II Foundation
:
LadyRebs •••
•
•

ACI-93.05
AEP-33.39

Ltd.- 25.54
NSC- 54.41
A~-57.70
Oak Hill Financial Athland Inc. - 65.05
28.11 '
BU-14.46
OVB-25
, Bob Evans :.... 28.54
BBT-42.45
Bor&amp;Wamer - 61.70
Peoples - 30.29
CE...X-45.68
Pepsico - .58.08
Champion - 6.25
Premier - 16.25
Channing Shops - 13.54 Rockwell.- 73.40
Rocky BOots - 25.96.
City Holding - 36
Col- 57.64
·
. Sears - 146.05
DG -17.42
Wai-Mart - 45.64
Wendy's - 62.50
DuPont- 43.57
Worthington - 19.51
Federal Mogul - .34
Dally stock reports are
USB- 30.98
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
Gannett - 53.98
General Electric - 34.43 of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
• QKNLY - S. 70
Hartey Davidson- 51.51 Smith Financial Advisors
''of Hllllar!l Lyons In
JPM -43.95
Galllpoll$.
KrO,er - 19.58

I

7-1
• 7-2
5-3
3"5
2-5
0-8

BY BRYAN WALTERS

BWALTERS41MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

9-0
7-2
4-4
3-6
2-6
1-8

*- denotes ch~mpion
Ex&gt;mAcrUs

..

.
:: OVP Score Line

(5 p.m.·1 a.m.)

ext. 33
or 992-5287· (Meigs Co.)
1-740·446-2342

l'ex -

.1·740·446·3008

imell- sportsOmydeilysonllnel.com
Sporta Staff

Bracf. Sherman, Sports Editor
(740)446·2342, 0&gt;&lt;1. 33
bahArman 0 mydailytribune.com

Bryan Wattere, Sports Writer
(740) 446·2342, e&gt;rt. 23
owallers 0 mydaiiytribune.com

Larry Crum, Sports Writer.
(7401 446·2342,

ext. 33

Ierum 0 mydaltyreglster.com

P/ea.~·ant

•

Hocking Division

J

Knight ace
pitcher
'Kayla Shobe
dominated
II.
the mound ·
"There's
10
with
so much
s
trikeouts
uncertainty
and no walks
I
don't
while .giying
DRAFT 2006 even pay
up only two
attention to
hits
to the
what they ' re saying anyL a d y
more," Southern Cal quarterMarauders .
back Matt Leinart, the 2004
Her offenHeisman Trophy winner, said
sive
support
Thursday during an NFLcame
in the
sponsored media session for
Burton
form
of
SIX of the top prospective
Tessa Wyant who went 2-fordraftees. Those players have
3 with a double and an RBI,
spent the last few days in
Jeannette Oliver who had two
New York at similar events
hits, Megan Hatfield who
leading up to Saturday's lotsmashed two hits with an
tery at Radio City Music
RBI and Devin Cottrill,
Hall.
Tasha
Wyant and Shobe with
"I don't want to watch telea
hit
apiece.
vision . I don't want to look at
Joey Haning was credited
mock drafts. I just want it to
wilh the loss on ·the mound
happen."
for
Meigs, fanning one and
Of all the top picks - and
walking
one. Haning and
there's a general consensus
Amber
Burton
also provided
on the top 10 or 12, Leinart
the only offensive support for
seems to be the one sliding in
the Lady Marauders (ll-6)
the final days, although no
on
the evening.
one is sure why. In fact, there
Point
got on the board in, ·
are a few people who think
the second inning when
he could end up going' to
Cottrill
led off with a single
Minnesota at NO. 17, 16
and
scored
on an RBI from
spots below where he almost
Hatfield.
In
the third, Tasha
surely would have been
Wyant hit a single and scored
selected if he had come out a
on
an RBI from Tessa Wyant.
year ago, and I 0 spots or
The
Lady Knights got .
more below where he is likerolling
again
in the fourth
ly to end up. ·
when Hatfield smashed a sinThat is typical of this draft
AP photo gle and scored on a passed
season, where ev~rything is ·
murky, in part because of an Top NFL draft prospect Reggie Bush, who was a running back at the University of Southern ball. Shobe hit a double in the
unusually
long . period California, chats with students at the Jackie Robinson educational complex in New York, fifti1, followed by an RBI
Thursday. Bush was among a group of top college football athletes appearing at the school as
Please see Meigs, 12
Please see Draft. B8
part of the NFL's "G~t Active" campaign.

•··············································~······ ·················•

Ohio Division

Trimble*
Waterford
Fed Hock
Southern
Miller
:: Eastern

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

L a d y

•

SOFfBALL

Wellston
Vinton Co
Meigs
Alexander
Belpre
Nels-York

Two days
draf t, even
e
the players WhO Will be
picked at the top are tired of
listening to the chatter and
reading the
gossip.
•
In other
"
words, just
"' . . .....
jlC:t on with.

·

Please see Thumps, B:Z

••
••

•
•

HARTFORD, W.Va. •
Wahama softball surrendered •
. only one hit over three :
innmgs Thursday during .a •
15-0 mercy- •
rule victory :
over South •
Gallia.
•
The Lady ·:
Falcons (9•
5) allowed a •
leadoff sin- •
gle to Mary . :
Stapleton to •
start
the •
game, then :
Wolfe
the pitching •
duo of Kylie Riggs and •
Brooke Hankinson retired the ••
next nine batters to keep the •
Lady Rebels ( 1-5) without a •
baserutmer.
:
That, along with 10 wal~s. • .
·two hit batsmen and six hits, · •
enabled the hosts to post four :
runs in the first, six runs in •
the second and five more in •
the third to secure the 15-run :
rule triumph after three •
innings of action.
•
Wahama started things by :
sending. nine batters to the . •
plate in the bottom ofthe first •
'

•
•

••

•••

••

.

• Saturday~ May 27, 2006 ·
• Ordnance Fields • Equipment provided

• Begins at 9 a.m.

I

.,

i

I IJOUI/.E EliMINATION.
I SCHOO/. YARIJ RUlES

•
•
••
••

•••

••••

• $100 per team

• MaxirilUffi 12•pefS0fl fOster (6 men &amp; 6 W()llltn)

• Must be 18 years of age

I PRIZES TO ·TOP TWO TEAMS •••
••

For more infonnation please call

• Pick-up packets at PVH Wellness Center

Pam Muncy, (304) 67~-2415

•••
••
••
•

······················································~··············
Black

-~-----

••
•
'
·•••
••
••
••
••

+

I

I

�-.

Page B2 •. The D.illy Sentinel

www'.myd8.iiysentinel.com

•

BY GARY CLARK
SPORTS CORRESPONDENT _

MASON.
W.Va.
Kameron Sayre's fourth
inning grand slam home run
highlighted a l 0-run explosion by the Wahama White
Falcons and carried the Bend
Area diamond team past visiting South Gallia 15-5 score in
high school baseball action
Thursday evening on the
Mason County nine's home
turf.
Sayre clubbed his second
·round tripper of the spring
with the bases full in the
Falcons fouth inning to snap a
5-5 deadlock and send
Wahama on its way to its fifth
victory over its last six games.
Sayre's line drive blast over
the left field fen ce departed
the yard in a hurry and the
White Falcons went on to
score six more runs in the
Inning to bring the contest to
af! early exit due to the 10-run
rule.
·
The win improves the
Falcons 2001i spring record to
9-7 while visiting South
Gallia fell to 3-9 following
the loss. The Rebels were
hampered somewhat by the
absence of four senior starters

Bryan Walters/photo

Wahama's Sabrln11 Estep. left scores during the third inning of
Thursday's contest with South Gallia at Hartford , W.Va .

Thumps

SGHS could record an out.
Amber Tully stole home on
a bases loaded passed ball to
complete the mercy-rule vicfromPageBl
tory.
Wolfe paced WHS with
inning.
three
, while Sayre,
Ashley Wolfe, KeithAnn Kehler hits
and
Tully provided
Sayre and Mary Kebler all
singled to give WHS a 2-0 the other safeties.
Wolfe, Sayre, Tully and
advantage, then a wild pitch
Haley
each scored
. enabled Kebler_to score for a twice in Davis
the
win.
three-run edge.
Riggs started and l~s ted
Following a putout, SG HS
two
allowing one hit
starter Kri,s~en Halley issued and innings,
no
walks
in the winning
consecutive walks to Haley •
decision.
Riggs
also struck
Davis, Kaley Ferguson and
three. Hankinson came in
Amber Tully to load the out
for
relief
to start the third and
bases.
recorded
one
strikeout.
A wild pitch' allowed Davis
s~ven
Halley
surrendered
to score for a 4-0 lead, but
Riggs flew out. to center in earned runs and recorded no
the next at-bat to leave two strikeouts in the setback.
These two teams will play
runners stranded. The Lady Falcons sent a again on Monday in a
dozen hitters to the plate dur- rematch at Mercerville. The
ing the second frame, which f1rst p-itch is scheduled for 5
resulted in six runs ·on three p.m.
hits and'l(hree walks for a i 0- ·
WAHAIIA 15, SOUTH GAU.IA 0
0 advantage.
31nnlnga
SGallia
000
013
Wahama sent eight more
Wahama
465
15
60
hitters to the plate in the
Kristen Halley and Laura Gwinn. Kylie
third. which resulted in the Riggs, Brooke Hankinson (3) and Mary
first five scoring before Kabler. WP - Riggs. LP - Hal l~.

Brad Sherman/photo

Wahama 's Brandon Fowler slides safely into second base during Thursday's contest with South Gallia in Mason , W. Va.

Marauders
from PageBl
singled to start the rally.
Dl!rSt followed by launching
a two-run shot to make it 4-2.
Meigs. which never trailed
in the contest, responded
with a run in each of 1ts next
two at-bats to lead 6-2 after
five innings, then both
squads scored one apiece in
the sixth to conclude the
sconng.
Poole and Bryan DeLong
e~ch had two hits to pace the
Marauders, while Story,
Kimes. Eric VanMeter, Matt
Imboden and Steve Hudson
provided the other safeties.
Story and Poole each had
two RB!s. Imboden, DeLong
and Greg Musser also one

MEIGS 7, EASTERN 3

Eastern

000 201 0

-

3 10 3

111 x ·- 7 9 ·1
Terry Durst. Justin Browning (3) , Cory
Me1gs

202

-

IJo&gt; If you have a qLie•tlon or a comment, write: NASCAR
·

t

7

. .

J

'

11'~11 !~ BuSi;h ,~Nfl$1!1CkS
• 1be C9f1JklerW -Ollila Jon J.,NI.
' national Ch&amp;mplonahlp
• ¢hlllal\90f111. The latest ~
SIOfY: Nextel Cup drivers flnlsl&gt;ll'lflln )11!1 top eight positions at

ome

N ~XTE L

C U P SERIES

This Week, Gfo The Gaston Gazette, P.O. Box

BUSCH SERIES

• Race : Aaron's 499
win," said Harvick, who has won
• Where: Talladega (Ala.) Super· · · consecutive Busch Series races
- and a Nextei Cup race. Childress
speedway 12.666 miles) , 188
laps/501 .208 miles .
was in Africa, but Harvick's victo•When: Sunday, April30
ry came from noWhere. He
• lnt year's winner: Jeff Gordon tracked down two drivers, Tony
• Quallfytn,; record: Bill Elliott,
Stewart and Greg Biffle , in the fiFord, 212.809 mph , April 30,
nal io laps. Neither Biffle . who
1987.
· ,
ran out of gas near the end. nor
•Race record: Mark Martin, Ford , Stewart rolled over and played
188.354 mph , May 10,1997.
dead, but the racing at the end
• Lut week: Kevin Harvick's· vicwas Intense without being uncivil.
tory in the Subway Fresh 500
. · Stewart finished second, Matt
was out of Africa. That's because Kenseth third, Carl Edwards
owner Richard Childress was , uh, fourth and rookie Clint Bowyer
In Africa. Harvl ck swept the week- finh . Told by crew chief Doug
end rac,e s at Phoenix lnternatlon- Richert, "We had to gamble,~ afal Raceway while Childress was
ter the race, Biffle replied via raaway on -a hunting expedition.
dio by saylhg, " No, that 's the
Harvick may conspire not to let
problem. We gamble too much."
him bacl&lt;. "Alii know is ever
Biffle finished 16th, matching the
since he left , all we've done Is
number on his Ford.

·

C ftAFTSMAN TRUCK

• Race: Aaron's 312
• Race: Dodge Ram
•Where: Talladega (Ala.) Tough 200
Superspeadway (2 .666
• WIHire: Gateway Intermiles). 117
national Raceway,· Madilaps/311.922 miles.
son, Ill. (1.25 miles),
• When: Saturday. April
150 iaps/200 mi les.
29
• When: Saturday, April
•Last year's winner:
29
Martin Truex Jr.
• Laat year's winner: Ted
• QualllylnJ record: Joe
MusgraVe
Nemechek, Chevrolet,
• Qualllytnl record : Ted
193.517 mph, April 24,
Musgrave , Dodge ,
1997.
135.159 mph, April 30,
' 2005.
• Race record: Mark
Martin, Ford, 168.937
• Race fe(:ord: Jack
mph , April 26, 1997.
Sprague, Chevrolet,
113.726 mph, May 7,
• Last week: Kevin Harvick ,' In a Chevrolet, won
2000.
the. Bashes' Supermar• Last race : David Starr,
kets 200 at Phoenix Inin. a Toyota,.won the
ternational Raceway.
Kroger 250 at Martinsvi lle Speedway.

.

• .. FEUD QF THE WEEK

~ ~ P,h?\'111"' ·,_

.,
•' -"' '
~Fqr months, lt'e been consjd-,L
•red'll~x that J&lt;evtn Harvl!lk

KEVIN HARVICK

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

No.

29

v

GM GOODWRENCH CHEVROLET .

at tlttJ end of the year. WMi a

E
R

'
"" !lie!' anstc~ Busch~

s

' WOUld I~ Richard Childress , -

~.-5 !11CeJ, F.Jusil!'C/v.1tli' sue, .. -tlke!Y tq •.
" •~lll!t'Of course, that could
_
·' c~~. !POe· ' 1

~-'··

.

I, /"·.

Kyle
Busch

,

: li&gt; some have sutli8ilted Ch,ll-

·
dress should go hunting more"
· often ... but not for a new driver.

.. ~ Henseth Is the new points

Jrench City
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Je~r. A year ago after eight
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FOODFAIR

a

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-"llenseth and teammate Greg
Biffle have.almost switched
· roles In the Roush Racing sta-ble. j3jffle can't•buy a break.
Oori'i count him out, though.
' l-Ie's still got 18 races to get up
. to• lOll\ lor the Chase.

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·.. Carl E~rds got a much-need_, ed lilt from a fourth-place
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: 'l.lil\onte arid Jeff Burton.
":/
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•ill ftllh-pl!ll:~ Phoenix finish

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Shaffer (6} and Tony Roush, Terry Durst
Aaron Story. WP - Kimes. LP - Durst.
HR: M- Aaron Story, first inn1ng, one on.
E - Terry Durst fourth inning. one on.

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First the pole winner, Busch,
and Mears tangled on the track.
Then , with a r~d flag out for an accident at the same time on the op- ,
posite side' of the track , Busch retaliated by bumping Mears'
stoppe_
d car. NASCAR officials
quickly requested a post-race aud l·
ence with Busch and crew chief
Alan Gustafson .

'

Harvick regaining
his winning form
at just the right time
By Monte Dutton

, NASCAR _Thlt Week't Monte
Dutton 11voo his take: "There's
no excuse for bumplrlg a car while
the race is stopped. Busch Was
frustrated, and· It was the heat of
t he battle and all th,a t, but he's
got to be held responsible for his
actions."

NASCAR This Week
AVONDALE, Ariz. - Kevin Harvick's first Nextel Cup victory in 38
races couldn't have come at a better
time. Winning two straight in the
Busch Series didn't hurt, either.
· Harvick, 30, is in the final year of
his contract with Richard Childress
Racing, where he suceeeded the late
Dale Earnhardt in 2001. His hot streak
could well speed -the process in his negotiations with Childress for a new
contract.
It wasn't that long ago that many expected Harvick to leave Childress and
perhaps join a Toyota team next year.
The situation has been at a standstill
since Child[ess left for a hunting safari in Africa. His timing wasn't the
best Harvick has been winning ever
since the owner left. ·
Even before he won the Subway
Fresh 500 at Phoenix International
Raceway, Harvick was sounding like a
man who wanted to stay put
"I think we've made some good additions to our race team,'~ he said on .
April 21. "I think ourrace team is on
-the same page and has been together
for three years and that's what it
takes to win a championship: I think
the performance of the race cars has
helped make that a little bit easier to
see."
H;~rvick, from Bakersfield, Calif.,
has insisted all along that success was
more important than money.
"I like to win," he said. "I don't need
money, and I like to win. That's what I
want lO do. I want to win races; I want
to win a championship. That's my goal.
I may have been a little outspoken as
far as what it would take to get this organization there ... but that's what I
want to do, so whatever it takes to do

• LEGENDS ·AND t..QRE

Tallllde,. quickly ,.IHcl .
reputation for 1p1ad
The area where Talladega Superspeedway is located used to be •
known as Dry Valley. The mammoth
2.66&amp;mile track .opened in 1969
and Quickly earned a reputation as
the biggest, fastest, most compatltlve and most unpredictable track In
the world. The turns are banked 33
degrees, two mOre than Daytona's.
Fearing that the tires were not
equipped to handle the high
speeds, many top drivers boycotted
the first race, on Sept . 14, 1969.
The·winner of the first Talladega
500 was Richard Bric khouse of
Rocky Point, N.C.

John Clark/NASCAR This - k

Kevin Harvick, fresh off a win last weekend In Phoenix, Is Cllrrently eighth In the points race.
also In the last year of his contract with Richard Childress Racing.

that, that's the goal I want to achieve."
Harvick faced crushing setbacks
when he failed to make the Chase in
either 2004 or 2005, but at present, his
status seems reasonably .solid. In his
last four races, he's finished second,
seventh, fifth and first. During that
per:iod, Harvick has risen from 23rd
to eighth in the Nextel Cup points
stlmdings. ·
"I think you always feel you're bet-

He~

ter than what you did last year or
what you're doing a( the moment/'
said Harvick. "I think, going forward,
the goal is to prove we call win championships, and, when you count us out,
we-always come back."
Doesn't sound like a man who's on
the verge of leaving, does it?

• VQIL:.IR TURN
• i:EITERS FROM OUR READERS

Another fen who'l not too
excited about Toyota

I

am fur.ious about Toyota being let
Into NASCAR in the year 2007. I
know 1t has got to be money-relat·
ed, but this is wrong, wrong, Wrong!
... Look at the history of this sport
I'll bet there are a lot of NASCAR supporters who are as angry as I am
about this. I know of 28 .

Pew A. Honaley ~

Contact Monte button
at hmduttonSO@aotcom

Porterville, Calif . .. ·

Graves steps down as Ganassi team manager, is Toyota next?
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week
Team manager Andy Graves
abruptly resigned at Chip
Ganassi Racing with Felix
Sabates. He supposedly will be
reassigned to a different position within. the ·company, liut
there is considerable belief
within the sport ·that he will
wind up working with the impending Thyota effort
Time will tell whether or not
Graves was 'serious when a
team release quoted him as
saying, "l am now just looking
forward to the next chapter of
my car~er here at Chip Ganassi
Racing."
.
He was in his sixth season as
Ganassi's team manager.
In addition, Sieven Lane is
· taking over as crew chief of
· one of the Ganassi teams, the
No. 40 of rookie David
Stremme. Lane, a former crew
chief at Petty Enterprises, had
been car chief with the team of
another {janassi rookie, Reed
Sorenson. Jeff Vanderm6ss
will now take over those duties.

Hettr whar others arw utylttg
obout Otlcon '.syiKtb. ·

BILES Ill- \I&lt;I'C.
CE:'\ITLI{
GA LI.J.rOLIS.
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740-446-7619

------------, --------~----_:_. _______.___'4

vs.Casey Me••

About money? NASCAR? Surely, you ~­

ov

M.2ru1Ay ·

-

musr be joking.

BANK. ·

IUH!Iay- $1 00 off any DIIUliJr

·.·

KyleBueeh

· "'"" IIHite' successes have '00., ·cui1e(l-.,nile o~er Childress
,lilas &amp;'ftf!Y on a hunting saran in
Africa. Funny, \\'here were ali the
C~ad Knaus que.;tlons about
' , cell·phone cal!s and remote oc_cesa? ·-

,.,,.,,.
... .
. • 'f

u I , . J
Casey
s Mears

·

(3}. Josh Kimes, Austin Dunfee (7) and

The Meigs County Commissioners will hold the first of
two public hearings at the office of the Meigs County
Commissioners, Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio on Thursday,
April 20,2006 ~t 1 :30 P.M., lor the purpose of providing
the public information and receiving comments as .to the
Notice ot Acceptance of pre-applications for grant
funding from the USDA, Rural Development Housing
Preservation Grant Program for housing rehabilitation or
repair programs.
: The Ru.ral Development Housing Preservation Program
provides grant funding to .qualified public agencies,
private nonprofit opganizations, and other eligible entities
to assist very low -low income home owners repa ir or
rehabilitate their homes in rural areas. Ohio has been
allocates! a total of $362,171. Rural Development may not
approve more than 50 percent of the s tate alloca lion to a
single entity.
. Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on April
20, 2006 , to make suggestions and comments and to
provide public input on various activities which may be
undertaken in this program.
·
If a participant will need auxiliary aids ( interpreter,
brailled or _taped materials, assistive listening device,
other) due to a disability, please contact Gloria Kloes,
Clerk, prior to April 20, 2006, at 740-992-2895 in order to
ensure that your needs will be accommodated. Tfle Meigs
County Courthouse is handicapped accessible.
·. Written comments will be accept~d untill:O;O P.M., April
20, 2006 and may be mailed to the Meigs . County
Commissioners, Meigs County Cou rthou ~e, Pomeroy,
Ohio45769.
Mick Davenport, President
Meigs County Commissioners

.- .

'"·

The Daily Sentnel •. Page B3.

,., ~~~~110W ' 8PI&gt;tiar's

NOTICE OF FIRST PUBLIC HEARING

•

South Gallia with Jacob
Roach picking up his first
career mound triumph for
Wahama in a relief role.
John Well s alsn saw action,pn
the hill for the Rebels with
Casey Harri son, Brenton
Clark and Trevor Peters all
throwing for the White
Falcons.
South Gallia had three hits
on the day with Wells, Fulks
and Casey Sommer all
stroking a single each. Derek
Yeazy, Brandon Fowler, Cody
Herdman and Caleb Roach all
had two hits apiece for
Wahama with Sayre; Gabe
Roush, Brenton Clark and
Jacob Roach all having one
safety in the contest. Sayre's
home run and a double by
Herdman were the lone extra·
base hits on the evening for
WHS .
Wahama will return to
action tonight when the locals
travel to Buffalo for a 7:00
pm affair with the highlyrated Bi son.

www.mydailysentinel.com

dtff&amp;rence' a couple weeks
rrtal&lt;e. H~k hal won a Cup- •

!80 Stale Rt. -7 N. •Gallipolis, OH

apiece.
Durst and Shaffer each had
three hits for EHS, which
outhit the hosts 10-9 in the
setback.
Lynch,
Cody
_ Gerlach, Dustin Cowdery
and Mark Guess had the
other hits for the guests.
Durst had a game-high
three RBis. ·
Meigs returns to action
today when it travels to
Stewart for .a TVC non-conference
matchup
with
Federal Hocking. Game time
is slated for 5 p.m. Eastern
will liost W1rt County
· Saturday at noon.

'

Friday, April 28, 2006

who were on their senior class edge with another tally in the
trip.
second.
,
Wahama out hit South
A three-run third frame
Gallia 12-3 in the outing but gave the White Falcons its
the Rebels took advantage of first lead of the day but South
four WHS defensive nnscues Galli a battled back to even the
' to score five unearned run S. count with a single run in the
The Gallia County nine put fourth . The roof caved in on
the host team in a -hole in the the Rebels in the Bend Area
opening frame after plating teams half of the fourth as
three tallies in the top half of · Wahama sent 15 batters to the
WAHAIIA 15, SOUTH GALLIA 5
the first inning for a quick 3-0 plate and scored 10 times with
Slnnlnga
advantage . Wah am a Sayre's grand slam highlight-- SGallia 310 10 - 53 4
W&amp;hal"f'IB
113 (10)x 15 12 '4
answered with one run in its - ing the inning.
Harrison,
Clark
(2},
J.
Roach
(4),
PEtters (5)
half of the inning only to have
Bernie Fulks was tagged and S1afford. Fulks, Wells (4) and
Wells,
the Rebels regain its three run with the pitching loss for Green (4). W- J. Roach L - Fulks.

Meigs

plate on an error as Meigs
never once threatened the
Lady Knight lead.
Point Pleasant will now
from PageBl
gear up for a trip to Logan 5
p.m. today, while Meigs also
double from Tessa Wyant -hits
the road with a trip to
who was driven in on a fieldFederal Hocking 5 p.m.
ers choice from Cottrill.
The final run of the contest today.
came in the bottom of the,
POINT PLEASANT 8, MEIGS 0
sixth inning ·when Michaela Meigs 000 000 0 - 0 2 1
m1 121 x - 690
Williamson reached base Point
Kayle Shobe and Jeannette Olh;er. Joey
after being hit by a pitch, ~anlng and Amber Burton . WP - Shobe.
eventually crossing home LP- Haning.

Friday, April 28, 2006

.,..

'
~

•

··NUTS AND BOLTS •

New name - For now and
the foreseeable future , the
Nextel Cup race held each May
at Richmond -International
'Raceway will be known as the
Crown Ro.yal 400. This year's
night race is scheduled for Saturday, May 6.

••
The Kid Brother - Kprt and
Kyle Busch, winners of the
previous two races at Phoenix,
get along famously with each
other, even if they aren't overwhelmingly popular with fans
and other drivers at times.
~ut ...
·· The sibling . compatibility
wa·sn't always the case. Asked
about growing up Busch,
Kyle's answer was right out of
'"Leave It to Beaver."
"
"No, he (Kurt) wasn't always
nice to me," said Kyle. "We had
some battles. I'm the younger
brother who always wants to do
what the older brother does.
With him being (almost) seven
years _older than lam, it makes

'

it difficult for me to go do the
same things that he does. When
he gets the driver's license at
age 16 and I'm only 10, he doesn't want to hang out with his 10year-old brother. He wants to
go out and hang with his
friends. I've always .had that to
battle with that."

•
Out of the way - Asked if he
and Kurt were "sometimes
misunderstood" for their aggressive driving styles ·_ kind
of an odd question, it being a
bit odd for a driving style to be
"misunderstood"
Kyle
nonetheles s mustered an ansWer.
"We drive hard, man," he

said. "That's what we're out
there'tO do. We 're out there to
drive ' hard and win races.
That's what we enjoy doing.
We're npt here to lay back and
run between 15th and 30th.
We're out here to win races and
do the job that our sponsors
and car owners want us to do."

MORE TO COME: One of the
notable developments of the
Nextel Cup season to date is
the dramatic improvement of
the Dodge teams.
John Fernandez, director of
Dodge's . inotorsports operations, said there's plenty more
where that came from . He
doesn't think the improvement
process has rim its course.
"I think last year it was a
knife's edge," he said, referring to the margin for error in
he Cha_rger's handling characteristics. "This year it's a little ·
box. We've got to make it into a
big box, and it's just matter
of continuing to learn the car
and understanding the car
more and more."

a

•

Anytime minutes - Roy
McCauley, who became
Busch's crew chief this year,
was absent for the Subway
Fresh 500 as per his doctor's
orders.
,
McCauley experienced chest
pains on April 17, and after a
trip to the hospital, underwent

•
•
•
•

minor surgery on ·Thesday to ·
treat what was described in a •
Penske Racing South release as
"a small blockage."
Expected to return to the ·.
team at Talladega, McCauley :
joked that he might wear oul ~
several cell phones this week.

•
A likely story - During the ·
Busch Series race, race win- :
ner Kevin Harvick tried to
give arch-rival Kurt Busch a :
break . Harvick radioed his ·
spotter that someone needed to tell Busch his left-front ·
tire was going flat. Busch's ·
initial reaction was disbelief,
When the tire went flat on the
1571h lap, it cost Busch an un,
·scheduled pit stop and, proba- :
.bly, a reailstic chance at winning .
Told Busch hadn't trusted
him , Harvick said, "Can you
blame him? It was plain as
day. There's something differ- :
ent between having a beef •
with someone and taking a :
chance of getting someone · .
-,
hurt."

- - ---·-· ··'

�.

~

....

.

.

,.

...

-

· ~- --

.. ... ....
~

.,

Page

B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, April 28, 2006

www .mydailysentinel.com

.. Friday, April 28, 2006

www.mydailysentlnel.com

2006: Bush.No,l
. no matter what the 'experts' say

D

.

NEW YOR~ (AP) - A week
ago, there- · were ' rumors out of
HoustQ"n that had the Texans leaning away from taking Reggie Bush
with the No. 1 pick and toward
Mario Williams, the North
Carolina State defensive end who
is supposed to be a cross between
Juliu s Peppers and Lawrence
1,
Taylor.
Indeed, they even began talking
· with Williams. Disinformation,
. perhaps, but standard. .
More than any other, this draft
has been full of that kind of thing.
On the Web . On talk railio .
_Everywhere. The NFL draft, which
: will take place Saturday and
·. Sunday at Radio City Music Hall,
has become football's most overan;alyzed even!, evenby the people in
&lt;:barge. What prospective draftees
aid on the field last fall has been
:forgolten in the tempest from
. : January through April.
Consider
Vince
Young's
Wonderlic score. LenDale White's
. weight gain and hamstring injury.
Jimmy Williams '. supposedly lackadaisical attitude. And the endless
debate over whether 'lay Cutler, the
Vanderbilt quarterback, . belongs
with Matt Leinart and Young at the
. top of the quarterback pool.
.
Remember that the draft is really
a .crapshoot. First-rounders often
fail, sec&lt;1nd-rounders and lower
succeed, as did linebacker Lofa
Tatupu, whe as a second-round
rookie last season led a defense
. that helped Seattle to an NFC
championship.
· Remember also that everyone
ties. Or says nothing.
"You know this is a time when
nobody really ever really kind of
tells the truth about what they plan
to do," Miami coach Nick Saban
· said last week. "! cer1ainly would
never deceive you in anything that
I told you, so rather thim deceive
yeu l would just rather not tell you
certain things."
"Certain things" almpst surely
start with Bush, described by some
as the next Gale Sayers, Or the next
Barry Sanders . He's a unique talent
who can turn a game on one play.
So when Paul Tagliabue calls to
order his final NFL draft as cotnmissioner, HOUSTON will use it
on REGGIE BUSH, RB, Southern
Cal.
•
2. NEW ORLEANS. After signing Drew Brees, the Saints broughr
in Leinart for a workout. Is that
. :because Brees is coming off shoulder surgery? Or is it to suggest to
the Titans and Jets that they have to

'atribune - Sentinel _, l\.egister

.

C LAS S.- 1F I .E D

reasons still don't have a healthy best receiver is 36-y~ar-old Keenan
2005
No. 1 wide receiver. Roy is from McCardell, you need young speed.
Texas, as is MIKE HUFF, DB , SANTONIO HOLMES, WR, Ohio
Texas.
'
State.
·
10. ARIZONA. No matter how
20. KANSAS CITY. Fresh blood
good Larry Fitzgerald is (he's very for the annual defensive overhaul.
From the'lnt8met tonatlorlal
good), the Cardinals might have TYE HILL, CB, Clemson.
,
been better off with Ben
21. NEW ENGLAND. Bill
talf&lt;shOws, the questk&gt;n 8S to .
Roethlisberger.or l'hilip Rivers two Belichick was a young assistant in
•, ·who. WiH b$ the No. 1 pick has
years ago. Kun Warner was Eli the Meadowlands when Rob
· _hel~ m~e·~ NF.I:: draft.one
Manning' s caddie in New York, so Carpenter. was a Giants· running
·,-0{ fOotball's moSJ overanalyzed
he can do the sam'e for JAY CUT- back. Rob's son, BOBBY CARts B
h . h
LER, QB,, Vanderbilt.· Dennis PENTER, LB, Ohio State.
even · t.rt no r¥tter. w.,at 1 e
Green has actually said he'll take
22. SAN FRANCISCO. The
f!l~rts say, there:s' likely_to be
him here if he falls; see above for 49ers got this pick in a deal with
a ,new ~sh iii reJq:IS.( When
untruths . .
Denver and might try to package it
HOIJS!Orl $tart$•gff tt\&amp; draft
11. ST. LOUIS. The Rams to move up for Hawk or Williams.
' th'15 we9 k~ at a d'10
replaced coach Mike Martz with If not; MANNY LAWSON,
. •
· '· ~a
Scott Linehan, · another . offensive DE/LB, North . Carolina State, a
, City ~S!Q H~lt in
guy. But they need defense, espe- much-needed pass rusher. ·
.;; New York.
cially at tackle. HALOT! NGATA,
23. TAMPA BAY. Brian Kelly
DT, Oregon, even though the Rams and Ronde Barber are 31 and 30,
have used three first -round picks at respectively, but old enough to start
that position since 200 I.
breaking in ANTONIO CROMAR12. CLEVELAND. The Browns TIE, CB, Florida State, who can
were aggressive during the offseac take his time recovering from a
Reggie Bush,
.U S,C.#" ,son, signing LB Willie McGinest knee injury.
B k
,...
New Or.l eans
from New England to help Romeo
24. CINCINNATI. No one in
2 D' ric ashaw r-erguson, OT, UVA
,.
Crennel's young charges learn the Cincinnati remembers when the
Tennessee
3-4 defense. Willie can be especial- Bengals drafted this low. Defense
3 Matt Leinart, Oe; USC
4 Mario Williams, DE; NC. State
N.Y. Jets
. ly useful with KAMERION WIM- is still a need. DONTE WHITNE~.
..
• · ' L"'' ·
"'''"· • . ·
BLEY, DE/LB, Florida State, who S, Ohio State.
5 AiJ. Hawk, La, Ohio Sta,e
Gr~n Bay
Crennel hopes will stay healthier . 25. NEW YORK GIANTS.
6 Vernon Davis, i'E, Maryland
San FranCisco
than the last two No. Is, Kellen They were set to take a linebacker.
7 VjoiGI...: '(!
a·
· .,,
o·akla·i;w
Winslow 'and Bray Ion Edwards.
Now they have LaVar Arrington,
1':""" ·• ollng, B, Texas .
u
13. BALTIMORE. Would take making the need less pre~sing.
8 Brodrick Bunkley, DT. Florida State : Buffalo
Young: or Cutler. Instead, a j.look- ASHTON YOUBOUTY, CB, Ohio
..
g Mike 'Hi.ME.PB~Texas ·&lt;"~i;'-- ';!:F : qetroit
end . for Jonathan Ogden, WIN- State although they could trade
STON JUSTICE, OT, the third down for needed defensive tackle
10 Jay Cutler, QB, Vanderbilt
.Arizona
Southern Cal player chosen.
help or even a running back,
..:._ Dave Goldberg •AP
14.. PHILADELPHIA. The
26. CHICAGO. Plenty of
Eagles like aggressive defenders, a defense. Desperate for offense.
trade up to. get him? Linebacker player.
description that fits ERNIE SIMS. CHAD JACKSON, WR, Florida.
A.J. Hawk, but more likely:
6. SAN FRANCISCO. Another LB, Florida State. The reservation
27. CAROL'INA. The Panthers
D'BRICKASHAW FERGUSON , team ·that needs everything, all.d is five concussions in college.,
played the NFC title game with
OT, Virginia.
could move up using the newly
15. DENVER~ Tatum Bell is a third- and fourth-string running
3. TENNESSEE.' Norm Chow, ' acquired 22nd pick for Williams or part-timer and so is Ron Dayne. backs. LAURENCE MARONEY,
the offensive coordinator, had the Hawk. If not, VERNON DAVIS, The Broncos always seem to get RB, Minnesota.
same job at Southern Cal and TE, Maryland, seems 'to be a spe- productive running backs late, but
28. JACKSONVILLE. Firsttutored Leinart. The Titans might cial athlete at a position that's in why not the explosive DE ANGE- round centers are rare. But ...
like Vince Young, but MATT vogue.
LQ WILLIAMS, RB, Memphis.
. NICK MANGOLD, C, Ohio State,
LEINART, QB, Southern Cal, is
7. OAKLAND. The Raiders
16. MIAMI. Sam Madison was a the sixtl) guy from a team that didthe safer pick.
have Aaron Brooks, who filially ·salary cap casualty. JIMMY n't even win the Big Ten title.
4. NEW YORK JETS •. They wore out the Saints' patience. WlLLIAMS, DB , Virginia Tech,
29. NEW YORK JETS. This
have a sore shouldered Chad VINCE YOUNG, QB, Texas, is an has been falling for a variety ·of pick could be in New Orleans if the
Pennington and the newly obtained AI Davis type · pick who might be reasons. Not past this spot.
Jets make a deal. If not, MARCUS
Patrick Ramsey. Both are ifs, so something special.
17. MINNESOTA. One of a McNEILL, OT, Auburn.
they c&lt;luld move ·up to second for
8. BUFFALO. One mistake a bunch of teams that could use line30. INDIANAPOLIS. Maybe
Leinart - with the 29th and 35th year ago. W!IS ,letting Pat Williams backers in a draft with a lot of good JOSEPH ADDAI, RB, LSU, is
pic,_~s as bait. If not, MARIO go to the Vikings. Williams is list- ones. CHAD GREENWAY, LB, Edgerrin James.
WILLIAMS, DE; North· Carolina ed at 320 pounds. Maybe 420? Iowa.
31. SEATTLE. The Seahawks
State.
Whatever, BRODRICK BUNK18. DALLAS. Roy Williams 'is a had no dominant outside pass rush.
5. GR-EEN BAY. One reason LEY, DT, Florida. State is a svelte ferocious hitter who caused the er
last season.
MATHIAS
Brett Favre keeps pu!ting off his 306 - or so they say. He fits the NFL's changed rules to keep him KIWANUKA, DE, Boston College . .
decision on retirement is the sorry purpose.
from using the "horse-collar" tack32.
PITTSBURGH.
Troy
state of the Packers. A.J. HAWK, · 9. DETROIT. The Lions have !e. He can use a partner who can Polamalu is a stud safety from
LB, Ohio State, won't tum them taken Charles Rogers, Roy cover.
JASON ALLEN, S,• Southern Cal. How · about another
around for Favre's last season, but Williams -and Mike Williams the Tennessee.
one: DARNELL BING, S,
eventually should be an impact last three· years and for a variety of
11), SAN DIEGO. When your Southern Cal.
.

'.

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER '285,000-PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW N INE

Public Notice

Get AJump
on
SAYINGS

Public Notice

Call TOday... ·

.

Public Notice
'

Dally

HOW

\'\.\01 \(I \ II '\. I"'

.r

.

Public Notice
The
Athens-Meigs
Educational Service
Center Ia accepting
blps for renovations
to
the · Bradbury
Learning
Canter,
located at 39105
Bradbury
Road
Middleport,
Ohio
45760. .
Prcipoaed
work will Include

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

eral remodeling 'o f era as s~tfled at the
of
office apace and · Department
Labor's website. Total
extensive electrical
upgrades. This proJ- coal
of
proJect
ect Ia covered by the approximately
$50,000.00. All lnlerprovlalona ol the
Davla-llecon Act, and ealed parties are
aa a result contrac- encouraged to anend
tors will be required 1 bidder's conference
IC! pay prevailing IChlkluled for May 19,
2006 ·at 2;00 ,;:,;;.;_;;.:.:.
at
to their work·

the proJect slle sp8ctfled above. Bids will
be opened on Friday,
June 2, at 2;00 p.m. al
t~e ·
Bradbury
Learning Center. The
Board reserves the
right to reJect any
bid a.
(4) 28, (5) 5

For more lnfonnatlon. contact your
local Ohio Valley
Publlshln1 office.

~aUtpolis

_____

DAY!

Jlailp m:rtbune

(740) 446-2342

.....,

1-\f: ASI4&gt;D If WI&gt;' F4;:
5'MO~tl. SfiOfll-i&gt;r-l'T '~iii"
~~S'fioN MVE f&gt;~~N,

Parts
Clerk
wante.d .
Computer expenence and
knowledge of farm equipment. Send resurne to CLA
Box ill C10 Gallipolis
Tribune, PO Box 469 ,
- Gall 1polis, OH 45631.
·

I

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{;~

•

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tY.~~\.~U\.~:,1

!1'111"------..11"

,

•

Aucllon: Modular House
and Tools &amp; Equipment.
Buckeye · H1lls
Career
Center, Rio Grande, Ohio.
T&amp;E, farm tractors at
11 :OOam, House at 12 :00
Noon on
May 6, 2006.
(740)245 ' 5334.
'--'-------Cross Creek Auction
Buffalo Avction Saturday
N1ght 6pm
D&amp;N Wholesaler's
Garage Sale: 9:00·5 :00 - from Virginia. 1sl time in
Friday &amp; Saturday, Roush
building in over 4 months
Lane, Cheshire.
(304)937,2118 or

•

Per80M811 ••• ,,,,, ... ,, .................~•••••• .,.,,,.,,.,.,,,, DOS

·1'

.r

I

'

....

Sell.

.©®1!.

' NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY

'FUU·TIME CLASSES
COL TRAINING
• FINANCING AVAil.ABLE
'JOB PLACEMENT
o ENROlliNG NOW
o

ft'lll" _ _ _ _ _ _'l
0

Hn.PWANillD.

•

I
•

.e~~~~~·~P~Ioias~a~m~WV~.~~

Housekeeping Supervisor
Healthcare Services Group,
Inc. is looking for a career
oriented, aggressive hands·
on manager In the Mariena
area. As the leading provider
of housekeeping and laun·
dry services 10 the long ~term
care industry, we are seeking Individuals Who will
effecllvety represent our
company and manage. our
on-site operations. We provide a competitive sa lary,
paid training and benefits
. package. Please fax resume
to: 1-614-577·0125

Shirley Spears, 304- Ohio Valley W1reless , 166 Overbrook Rehabilitation
Mulberry Avenoe, Pomeroy,
Cer;~terlscurrentlyacceptlng
Ohio 45 769. 0 uesuons may applic(ltions tor · LPN 's.
be directed to 740-506- Available shlhs are 7A-7P
06 36
_~-·- - - - ---' and 7P-7A. All Interested ~
applicants should pitt~; up an
Nursing Assistant Classes
applicaHon at 333 Page
beginning May 9, 2006. II Street, Middleport, OH For
you enjoy elderly people and further lnforma 11on, please
want to become a member contact Hollie at (740)992of . our health care teanl , S472. EOE
please stop by Rocksprings ~~-----,---;-Rehabilitation · center at
Paid Training ' ,
36759 Rocksprings Road, Individuals willing to train for
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 end flU clerical or driving positions.
out an application tor the Must bi3 AGE 55 0~ OVER
classes.
EKtendicare and meet eligibility require·
Health · Services, Inc. is ments Additional training
equal opportunity emQ~yer positions available. Call the
·lhat encourages workplace Senior Employment Center
diversity. MJF DN
(866)734-2301 .
•

·Pels lor Sate ..... ,................................... ,...... ~60
May 1st, 2nd, 3rd. 4th, and 675· 1429.
5th, 8AM -2PM, at 611 s.
Plumbing &amp; Heattng , .................................. a2o
Care
Give r
wanted .
Profasatonal Sarvlces ................................. 230
~:~~~d
~~~~~.
Mf~ll~~~~:
Saturday.
Sunday,
Monday.
R.dlo, TV &amp; CB RaP'IIr ............................... 160
$60 shi ft .
Real Estate Wanted ..................................... 360 · Aniiques, Collector Items, Day , shift.
School• lnotructlon ....: ................................150
(30·4)675•4138
G
~,;un;;;•;;,
· _ _ _ _ __,
saec:t , Plant &amp; Ferttltzer .............................. 650 !I
:~~
Nurses and STNA'S
Sttuatlona Wanted .......................................120
t&lt;lmes
Nursing
'and
, ~ UJ.IU\I\.Col
Space for Ren\ ............................ ,................ 480
1
Rehabilitation
Center.
a
lam
Sporting Gooda .........................................:.520
u
y
owned 61 bed skilled
suv·s lor Sale ..............................................720
Auction
House
At
2
nursing facility in Athens. is
Trucks for Sate ..........................:................. 715
Glenwood WV, ne)(t AUCtiOn
looking for dependable, ceil ·
Uphololery ................................................... 870
May 7. 2 pm. Semi Load • ing and friendly nurses and
Van• For Sale.......,...........-............................730
new brand name tools, tool STNA's to join our grow•ng
wanted.lo Buy ............................................. 090
cabinets, hand tools, house- la(ruly, If you have these
Wenled to Buy· Farm Supplles .................. 620 . wares. gas grltls, tents
qualities, please stop by at
Wanted To Do .............................................. 180
canopies, bikes , mopeds, 75 Kimes Lane or call
Wanted to Renl ............................................470
hOrse drawn equipment &amp; (740)593·3391 to scheduiB
Yard Sale· Gatllpolla...................... :.........:...072
much
more (304) 762&gt;- 1117 an Interview Don't miss t~ls
Yard Sate-Pomaroy1Middle ......................... 074
or cell (304)638; 5981
Yard Sate-Pt. Pleasani ................................. 076
great opportunity! EOE

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

.

v

la.egister

.

' 0

I

n"!!!!

pald .vacations,f ivedaywork
week and uniforms.

IIi .,a,es person neelleu.

;;:;;;:::=====::::j

Fo~
ANew Home?
·TrY the
, Classifieds!!

ThomasDo-IICenter,
At. 2 Bypass,

serv.
'71~~~~5iiii~"\11

1 • 11 I

Cl2006"bY NEA, Inc.

:~c:!.Cf:n"!!!! ll1.lO-·Hn.P--W·A·NillD--...

.l'J...I'.J\

~ifltt

A

cars.

.

Experience preferred.
Apply In person

$15.67-$2i.98/hr., now hir·
ing. For applicalfon and free
governemenl job info, can
American Assoc . of Labor 1913·599·8042. ~4/hrs. emp.

"1- 2.'8'"

· - - - - - - -..

I

rrow Smart. Contac
he Oh1o Division o
inanc1al
lnslilutlan'
ffite ot Consume
ffairs BEFORE you refi
ance your home o
btaln a loan BEWAR
f requests for any larg
dvance payments a
ees or Insurance. Gal
he Office of C~msume
ffatrs loti free at 1-8
78-0003 to learn if th
oi-tgage
broker
ender
is
proper'!
icensed . (This is a publi
ervice announcemen
rom the Ohio Valle
ublishin Com n

We have openings tor enthus•ast1c, dedicated profes·.
sionals who enjoy working
with people in a fast paced
environment, who exhiQits
leadership and desire to
build management skills. If
JIRol.l!$0NAL
this describes you and
you're ready to grow, we ..__ _SliliVICES
offer you the opportunity.
. lUANED DOWN ON
We offer the opportunity and SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI1
No Fee Unless W&amp; Wm!
the following benefits: Blue
Cross · Blue
Shield
1·888·582·3345
InSurance .
Dental.
10 \1 l . ._ I \1 I
Prescription card. 40lK,

POSTAL JOBS

YARD SALE

www.comlcs.com

Tri·State area dealership in
need of qualified ATV &amp;
Motorcycle Mechanics. To
be considered : Please send
resume &amp; references to
4367 State Route 160,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631.

Part time position tO Manage
Country Homes rental com·
munity m Shade Area·
Includes a house to live In
Send resume to Country
Homes, PO Box 1033
logan, Ohio 4~138.

'' 1;&gt;0 '/oV '7N'v&gt;t::fi ?_

i

(304) 675·1333

•·

..

CLASSIFIED INDEX

(740) 992-2155
~oint ~leasant

Part time Dental Assistant &amp;
Part time Receptionist
Please send resume to CLA
Box ill. c/o Gallipolis
Tribune, PO Box 469,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 . .

ALLIANCE
4x4'a For Sale ..............................................725
TRA'CTOR-TRAiLEF\
Announcement ....................................o.o•o . . . 030
304 5 5 0 16 1 6
TRAINING CENTERS
Garage Saie: Multiple laml· ...,,....1:;;;:;;::1;;:;;,'.:,;;,~-'""1
Antl"qe.tea·............................................o .. oooo . . . . 530
WYTHEVILLE, VA
Apartment• tor Rent.. ........... :..................... 440
lies, 51!;/06·5/6106, 9am·
WANI'FJ)
Auction and Flea Markel.............................oao
LOOKING FOR
Spm . 1631 Cora Mill Ad.
10 BUY
•
1-aoo-S34·1203
Auto Pa.._ &amp; Accessories .......................... 780
A COMFORTABLE
Furniture, antiques, apptl- ~------_.1
· "'i:::m--1 ,
Auto Repalr ..................................................T70
CAREER?
ances. Home Interior, dish- ~
Absolute Top Dollar: U.S. l-.:l"""~'":l!"""'=-=":::;•l:::••~
Auloator Sate.............................................. 710
es, etc . .
Silver and Gold Coins, Chlldcare worker needed for The leading bedding retailer
Boata &amp; Motors lor Sate ............................. 750
in the tri-state Mallress
Huge sale Saturday. Lari at Proofsets, Gokt Rings, Pre- Re~i~ential
Treatment
Building Supptleo................................,....... 550
is seeking a
Warehouse
Drive (across form lair· 1935
US.
Currency. ~acllity. Pay based on exp~·
Buolneas and Buildings ........ :.................... 340
full·lime SALES ASSOCI·
grounds)
Twin
boy,
adult
&amp;
Solitaire
DiamondsM.T.S.'
nence,
paid
Insurance
Call
Business· Opportunlty..................... :...........210
girls clothing, 'bBI:w items, . Coin Shop, 151 S8cond to apply Mon·Frl, 9am-3pm ATE to work in our new
Buslnesa Training ........................................ 140
Gallipolis, OH location .
mvch
f1"10r&amp;.
Avenue, Gallipolis, 740-446- (740)3 79-9083
Campara &amp; Motor Hames ........................... 790 •
Previous retail and/or com2842.
Camping Equlpmant ... ,............................... 780
mission
e11penence a
P".\ ....~v~ ~ ~ ------~- Desk Clerk position open plus, but sales
Cards of Thanks ..........................................010
not required. Sales
I
·'
£\m'tr.AVI/1UWIJI.,.I!.
I
will
buy
J.u.nk.
Call
immediately.
Professional
ChlldiEI&lt;,1erly Care ....................................... 190
(740)388-9303.
anitude &amp;. friendly persQnall· Associates are respOnsible
Electrtcat/Retrtgeratlon ...............................840
,
ty a must. Please apply 1n for performing sales related
Equipment lor Rent .............. :......................480
Big Yard Sale! Fri. 28tt:J &amp; License plate frame from old person at Holiday Inn. duties while selling merExcavallng .................................................... 830
Sat 291h, HyseiiAun Road, Blaettnar auto car sales, Gallipolis. NO PHONE chandise and products to
Farm Equlpmenl ..........................................610
3rd Dri11&lt;1way Past Church ,(7. .:.;40::.19:.4.:.:9·.:.:il9oo:;.:.:.:_ _ _.:.;_ CALLS PLEASE .
individuals in a store show·
Fannstor Rant ............................................. 430 . on Left.
LOts of Kids room Medical, dental, and
Farmslclr Sale ........................ ;.................... 330
Clothes, Large Baby Items.
Randy Hart Logging
Direct
Sales
fantastic life insurances available
For ,Laa88 .................................................,... 490
Womens Clothes.
Certified Master Logger,
Opportunity,
50K
no after 90 days. Please email
Mefllber of OFA
For Sate ........................................................ 585
Problem. Must be Motivated resume to: iobsQsleeoonFor Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
~
~
Clothes,
Oa~ • Pedestal
and Self Starter. Call Ken thebest com or fax to: 304Fruita &amp; Vegetablea ..................................... seo
.
Table. lawn furniture, 30 Inch Wanllo buy mature standing
Furnlehed Rooma ........................................ 450
, 588-4442 A~: HA
·EOE
TV: 72 Pike St, Sayre Aes. j timber , for select cut. (740)992-7440
General Hauttng ........................................... 850
e man r u 10n, nc.
MJFIDN
Premium prices .for hard·
Hartford. April 29th Only. '
Glveawa'y ........ :............................................. 040
urchasing Agent, kliowl - - - - - - - woods~ (740)332·1207 or
·
~ h 1 1 OVert::lrook Center is currer;tl·
d ge
Happy·Ado .................................................... o5o · First Time Four Family Huge (740)332·6420
1n
,ec n ca
·
ly ac:oopting applications for
Iec Iron Ics, , A·•
Hay, &amp; araln .. .. .............................................. 640
Sale. May 1 and 2- s:oou.omo11ve,
I \ ll ' t(l\ \ 11 \I
RN's.
8 and 12 hour shifts
·
5:00-Beshan
Help Wanted ....... o . . . . . . . . . . . . . . o. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . .110
Road~Log
ydrauIlcs, wIexperl ence
..._! H\ I! I ....,
un::haslng
&amp;
buying
se
available
.
Competitive
Home lmprovemfllnl&amp; ................................... 810
Home
Above
Bashan .
esume· Fa)( to (304)882 wages and benefits package
Homes tor Sata ....:....................................... 310
Clean, Ou81ity Items! Old
1187
available.
All intere~ted
Household Goods ....................................... 510
life and Country magazines; 1110 llEtP·WAN'IlD
mail glp_mmarkerGfron apPlicants should pick · up
Houses for Rent .......................................... 410
cat collectlble6; baskets ;· •
,
an applicant at 333 Page
In Memorlam ................................................ 020
1ernet.net
\lOuth bed: roll away bed ;
~~~--"--.J Street, Middleport, 0H For
lnsurai1ce ..................................................... 130
women's and clilldren's 100 WORKERS NEEDED
Full time sale~ pos1tton additional
Information
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment ............ .., ......... 660
clothin'g, women's robes ;
Assemble crafts,
needed
Experience' 1n please contact Hollie at
Llveslock-............................................. :.......630
microwaves: portabl&amp; TVs;
wood items.
sales and computer use (740)992·6472. EOE
Loaland Found .................:......................... 060
kitchen table, small tables ,
Ta $480/wk
required. Suocesstul candi· ' - - ' - - - - -- - Lola &amp; Acraage ............................................ 350
shoes. purses; glassware;
Materials provided.
dates must be pro!iclent in Overbrook Rehabilitation
Mlacellaneous...........................................:.. t70
Sfall appliances; rag rugs; Free information pkg. 24Hr. customer service and per- · Cente; is currently accepting
Mlacellaneous Merchandt88 ....................... 540
mce TV Stand; kitchen cab1801 ,428-4649
sonal 1nter8clion skills . applications for a dlerary
Mobile Home Repatr.: ......................... ,.........aeo
net pictures and photo _ __;___ _ _ __
Responsibil ities
include coo~ Pa'rt time positions
Mobile Homea for Rant ............................... 420 .
frames; and much morel
An EKcellent way lo earn
11 bl
All 1 1
1d
sates, scheduling, inventory eva a e. ',
n eras e
Mobile Homes f.o r Sata ................................ 320
money.
The
Nfffl
Avon.
Ilea
1
h
ld
lck
Money to Loan ...................................:... :..... 220
May 1 &amp; 2 Follow stgns at
and quality assurance. app
n 5 s ou P up an
· ,.
1 333 p
MOtorcycles &amp; 4 Whaetera .......................... 740 . 5-Points. Furnlfure, clothes. Call Marilyn 304-662-2645 Salary based on experience. app 1ICB
IOn a
age
Muslcallnolrumanls ................................... 570
car, etc
AVON! All Areas! To.Buy or To apply send a resume to Street, Middleport, OH.

The Daily Sentinel '

•.

1

Child Swing Set (304)675·
3 family, 1/4 mites SA 218,
1916
Fri -Sat. Vera Bradley, appli·
Dingo mix dog. Not good ances, name brand clothes,
with chHdren, (great .watch
dog). Please- call (740)446· allsizes
59 1 Jay Drive, Saturday,
4177.
May 29th, 9am·? Little girl
'Free to goop home blact&lt; clothes, toys, decorations &amp;
rabbit. Call (740)446-4177, m1sc. items.
tor rnore inlormauon .
Couch w!malch chair, Zenith
Free to good home mixed Tv, glass top coffee table,
breed puppies, blacklwhhe, temps, misc. clothing, tools,
· medium size. Call (740)446· sewing machine w/table,
6233.
slates
(lor
painting)
Charcoal grill, various other
Spaniel
Type
Dog Interesting items. 102 First
WhitefTan, Female, Friendly. Avenue (rear), April 28th74()-698·9252:
29th, 8:30am-3:00pm

Card .Shower ·
for Doris Thomas'
90th Birthday on May 3rd
Send to:
The Inn at Lakeview
B-21
'
4000 Lakeview Crossing
· Groveport, OH 43125
"She'd love to hear from
Meigs County''

SOMfONE'S

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
GMAWAY

~--iiiiiioiiiiiiill!l...

Public Welcome

MAKE

•••••pal""l

Cement from porch, already •. ~~;:;:;:::~
. busted up. Would make D
good 1111 : You load. (740)379·
YARD SALE2235.
'
GAUJPOUS

(Price was incorrect in Thurs. paper)

'

GMAWAY

male kittens, (740)742-2380

Ham, Sweet Potatoes,
Scall_oped Potatoes, Lim.a
Beans, Salad, roll, Dessert
Cost $6.00

For more information on these services and benefits,
.. contact your Verizon representative at 1 -800-483-4000.

POLICIES: Ohio Y•llfY Publishing ''~' the right to edtt. "reJKt, Of Clnc.l any ad many time. Error• mut1 ~ reported on the flr~t day ot
Trlbune-Sentlnti·Reglater will be ruponl\lble tor no mora thin the coM of tht IP"I occupied by the error and onty thl flrlt lntertlon. We shall not be
any lou or ••PIInlfll,that results from the publicfltlon or omiMion olafl lldvwtl..,.nt. Conection ~~~~ be made In the flrtt available edition. • Boi
are always confidential. • Cur...,..t rille ~rd appll... • All real "hill advertl..,...nts . . aubJect to the Fedllfal Fair Houeing Act of 1968. • Thla
eccapta only help w1med ada m"llng EOE 8tandlrdt. We will ~knowingly accept any edvenlalng In vlol.tlon or the lew.

Lost Black Lab puppy with
• white on her neck, around
Garfie ld Ave. area. Call
2 male red Hoeler pups,' 6 (740)339-3400.
mos. &amp; 2 mos.; 2 orange ~~;;;;.;,;;;;;,_ _ _.,

·EAGLES 171
DINNER
May 6, 2006
6:00 - 8:00 pm

Also, additional monthly discounts and free te&gt;ll limitation
services are available to residential customers who are
enrolled in certain low-income assistance programs.

All Display: 12 Noon 2
a·uelne- Days Prior To
Publication
.
SUndaY Display: 1:00 p.m·.
Thursday for Sundays

(740)245·5984.

__

'Ra(pfi "'Barne\f" Shain

aren't only for
buyln1 or sellln1
Items. you can use
this.widely read.
section to wish
someone• ·
Happy Birthday,
provide • lhenk
You, end .plece en
ad ·1n Memory"
of a loved one;

'

. totnm

The family of

&lt;

1:00 p.m.

• All ads must be prepaid'

Fight the coat at gaal Car FOUND: Leon area Cattle. ·
pool from Pomeroy IQ Identify pay damages &amp;
Gallipolis (8am -5pm).
1 board by 512106 (614) 302drive, you ride, . split gas.l·8~7~3_ _ __:_ _~
Smokers we lcome.
Ca ll -:
Melissa (740)446-2342 ext. Lost: 4 month old black lri
14
or Australian male pUp on Kerr .
90 4 3@ h
Road, near Harrisburg &amp;
mvancoqney
car: Adamsville. $25 rewa(d. Call

and

.

ANNO!JNCEMENrS

rI
r

Now You con have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
(.~
1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
t!,.ii4
Graphics SO¢ for small
$1.00 for large
·

Display Ads

ln Next Day's Paper
In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

Trano gas furnace, to yrs.
old , good N\lorking order,
Concealed Pistol Class (740)742·2380
Ohio, WV, May 1.3. 2006,.
$75.00.
9:00am. VFW
LosT AND
Mason WV. Ph. (740)M3·
FOUND
5Ss5,

r

Jn~Column:

Oeacl/1ir~

' A Keyword • Include Complete
• Start Your Ac11 With
Description • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations
• Include Phone Number And Addre11 When Needed
• Adl Should Run 7 Days

WRITE AN Al2

Successful Ads
Should Include These Items
To Help ~et Response ...

and

Residential customers can receive sil1gle party, :voice
grade telephone service, including touchtone and access
to: 1) long distance; 2) operator services; 3) directory
assistance; and 4) 9-1-1 emergency service (where
available) for just $13.93 a month for flat rate service
($27.86 for single line businesses), or $8.36 a month for
usage sensitive se111ice (16.74 for single line business- .
es). These rates are based on Band ;3 rates and do not
·include the federal sub~?criber line charge or the Access
Recovery Charge. There are six rate bands. Individual
rates could
be higher or lower than the example,
'
.
· depending on individual rate band.

I2

Register

'

or Fax To (740) 992-2157

-

Mo~day-Frlday for Insertion

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

'wishes to express our thanks for.your
visits, cards,.
throughout the
death. Special

Verizon North Inc. is an Eligible Telecommunications
Carrier in Ohio and, under Federal Communications
Commission (FCC) and Public Utilities Commission, of
Ohio (PUCO) guidelines, it receives federal universal
service funding. This is to notify all customers within the
Verizon North - Ohio service area of the availability of
basic telephone service.

or Fax To (-,4o) 44&amp;-allos

Word Ads

Card of Thanlcs

Card ·of Thanks

Sentinel

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

, · Your Ad,

For. fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
Public Notice

\~tribune

To PIGce

-

Public No.t ice

'

~ ··

~·

i

iiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.,J

---'""'1

-,l"'"-.....

If interested apply at Burger
King, 65 Upper R1ver Road
in Gall1po11s, OH or mail
resume to: 3210 Washington
Growing $1 b1ll1on com.muni- Blvd.
Hunlingtor\,
WV
tv bank has a full·time 25705. EOE.
career opportunity In our ftlj-ifl!lii~....,;,Satoo'!""-·LS~Jackson
headquarters.
Responsible for planning,
~UCI'ION ·
acqu is i t i O n ,
construction/renovation and Gallipolis career College
(Careers Close To Home)
maintenance of all facilities
and banking related equ\p- Call Todsyl 740-44iH367,
1-800·214·0452 .
men.t.
· Supe"tv1ses,
www galkpollscareercollego.com
Maintenance, Purchasing
and Custodial supervisors Accr8ditad Memb~r Accrltditmg
Council lor Independent Colleges
and staff. E)(cellent cormnu- and Schools 12748
nications and organizat1onal
skills are reqUJred. Four·year
college degree plus minimum of f1ve years facilities,
construction and/or pur- Lennox Heat , PumpiAC.
chasmg
management $750.00. Call to see workrequired , 1n banking pre- Ing.
Ready for you 10
ferred. , ProfiCiency 1n HauVRe1nst811 M8v1st. 74QMicrosoft Word, Excel and 949·2445 9:AM·9:00PM
Power Point Excellent
salary and benefits. Includ- Mower for Sale. Troy BII.Ing healtMife ins~rance, and
8HP·26' ·3
speed·high
profit-sharing/&lt;401 (k) . Prewhe~s- · 19•, 3.5 Hf Mower,
employment · drug testing
Motor Lif14.5 Cyclinder w/10
reqwred. Send resume and ft. reach . 12 HP Wheel
saJary requ irements to : Oak Horse w/36" T11/er. '1:40..992Hil l Banks. Attn : Human 2201.
Resources, P.O. Box 647 ,
J8ckson, OH 456;40, Please Richmond Tickets for Sale.
reference Job Code #574E. 2 Busch and 2 Cup Tickets.
EOE, MIF/DN.
. Face Value-$250.00. Call
Senior Facllltlee &amp;
Pu~haalng Officer

..

~rio

HOMES

FOR SALE

112 Pleasant Street, Point
Pleasant, WV (304(6754034 or (304)675-0418: : 3
bedroom , 1 112bath. familY.
room, dmmg room, new wl.ndows, ·new AC, ne:w water
tank, fenced yard '

11900

Telephone
· interviewer,
e:.:ceiiEmt computer &amp; commulliCatlOn skills. !ull·tlme.
no bonefits, $10 per hour
after 4 weeks traii1ing, $8
per hour dur,·ng training, in
Pomeroy, star! immoo 1ately,
call Mark 800-556·3583
-------The City of Point Pleasant is
accepting applications lor
Hfeguards. Cu rrent lifegvard
and CPA certification IS
required . AppliCBIIons are
available at City Hall. 400
Viand Street. Point Pleasant
or for students of PPHS, at
Pomt Pleasant High School.
Applicat ,ons
r:'ust
be
rerurned to the C1ty no later
than 4:00 pm Wednesday
May 1-2.

sq.fl. 3bd 2ba home
with basement. stts on 3
acres. IUSI off of Rt 7,
Chester Township. Eastern
School Distnct. Also registered quarter horses lor
sale. Call (740)985·4321
aher 6pm

20 acre farm with 2500sq ft
custom 1999. 2 story home
located between Rio Grande
and Jackson, 3·4BR : den, 3
full bath w1th mast.er jacuzzi,
huge wrap-around porch;·
large kitchen with island; ~
car garage foundation ready
to frame, private setting with ·
great huntlng, $234,900
(740)384·5182

2br House 1n Alpley,w/carporl. New carpet , w1ndows,
roof &amp; paint . $59,000
(304)532·3447 or (304)372·
3447
~BO. 2Ba. flrepla6e. 40x60
b8rn. 6 flat ac res. Pleasant
Valley Ad ., Rio ' Grande.
$120.000 (740)709-1166.

740·992·6634.
r.:r~~~-----, 3BR 2 Car attached Garage

1110
WANTID
I
1 --·11iiioiiOiDo-.-rJ.·
t.,.

Care for your loved one in
my home. Opening for 1
lady
Expenenced . Call
(740)368.0118.
c;omplete yard work. garden
tilling and small home repai r.
20 y9ars exp Call -~740}446·
3682.

on

1 06

acres

(304 )675-6331

$60.000
·

3BA, 2ba ; LR ; F'R w/1wood
burner; gas fu rnace ; new
CA; anached :2-car garage
w/posslble ups tairs apartment, plus another attached
1-car
garage /workshop,
large outbu1ld1ng; aboveground pool; 3 acres mil .
As king $110.000. Near Al e
Grande (7 40)245.0372

--~--

Computer Troubleshoot &amp;
Repair. Call (740)992·2395
~-'!""'-~---,

l'. go

CHIJ..n'EUII:RLV
CARE

I•

t..--•sjiiiiiiii-_.1

Person81 Care for elderly
couple. All shifts in couple's
home. Call1 74Q-992-7180 4 year old Colonial on 3
acres, appro)(. 1.900 sq. ft. 3
The
Middlepor t
Pol 1ce Between 6·00P -B·OOP
bdr. 2 bath s. 2 car garage ,
Department Is accepting -~~-__:__ __
master bdr. is 281124 with a
A 1 1
1
p 11
pp 1catons
or
o ce Will babysit 1n my home jacuzzi { tub. $125 ,000
Officers and Dispatchers. Eastern ~chool DistriCt or (740)4 46·7029.
Applications can be picked will sit w1th and run_errand .:.,....:___ _ _ _ __
740·992 - 4BA
Fa,reclosure . only
up at the Middleport Pol1ce tor the elderly
Dept, 237 Race Street, 4174.
S 14,900. For list1ngs call
0
Middleport, hto.
800·391 ·~28 ext. F254.
II \ \\t I \I
Equal Opportunity Employer

Tired ol working all holidays? Tired of working 12
hour shifts? Come hOme
and join us at M~l Home
Health! Opening for a PAN
RN andlorlull time RN posl·
lion . EOE . Full time positions
Includes benefit package,
401 K, and sign on bonus
$2,000. Ca ll Judie Reese.
AN,
Clinical Manager. at
(7 40)441 -1779 &lt;f&gt;()r 1-800481-6334 .

c.

f'~==OPPoK;;;IlJN;r:rY::.

ii.,,_;;;;.'!""____, 4BR, 2ba.
0
~
1 a ...ailable .
eNOTICEo
PHIO VALLCY PUBLISH
NG CO. recommends tha
~u do busi ness with peo
le you know, and NOT t
jsend money through th .
tnaltuntll you have lnvasti
Ia ated tho offerlno. · •

~00% financ 1ng

even witn less

than pertect credit. No down
payment. {740)742·2376.
Brick hom~ 4BR . 3BA.
garage, basement . hreplacil,
mce lot with storage bldg.
carport. patio. pool and
fenced backyard. Excellent
location on Jaickson Pike.
(740)446·7903.
cell
(740)441 · 7098.

�..
Friday, April 28, 2006
ALLEY OOP

Friday, April 28, 2006

...
'
Wanted: Putur. &amp; Hay
Locol corrc&gt;ai'IY orr.rlng "NN ground to leaH or rent. Call
IJ9WN PAVMENr pro- (740)256-9250.
P,nl lor )'OU lo buy ,)'OUr al""'"~~~--,
llorM ..._ ol rontin9.
Rw. FsrAn:

j

• ~ tlnanclng

·

Locatofl.

(1.a0):!87~

WAN!Dl

job

Riverside very unusual colore · and (740)367-7057.

and

From

,

$295-~.

Call 740- 256-t498, call·5781058

t990

Chevy

OpportunHiea.

Coprico

shots &amp; 1 worming, AKC. $1650, (740)4t6-t472
Call (740)645-7009 ·
t994 Ford Aoroalar $1,500
$tOO (3()4)675-7652

t995 Pontiae Bonneville
3800 VB, 20 mpg, 93,000
Labrsdor Retrievers AKC miles, all power, AC, $3,000
reglslorad. Different color, "O.::B_::O_,(::.740..:::_12:.4~5-.::5.::9:.
34.::,__
ages &amp; ,ince. &lt; 740 1~56 -64 63 t997 Buick Pork Avonuo.
or &lt;740164 5-6527 ·
Leather, loaded, sll mainlo·

'

call (740)446-4467.

Gibson Epiphone acoustiC
guitars, solid mahogany
Single Bedroom $300 month bodies and necks, new In
+ $300 deposit. 2 br Apt box. Your choice $150 cash
$350 a month $300 deposit.
740 379-2601 .

Trac:y's Apt (3()4)675-2286
38R, 2 1!2 bath, unfurn.
$600 per mo. Dep. req. ref.
Good locatton. (740)44.63667.

Tara

TownhOuse

$3200,

9693 2PM-6PM or'742·2662
anytime.

Bath,

2001
B'lazer LT • 4x4,
91,000ml, .loaded, New
Goodyears, Onstar, Leather,
All Power, $7 ,500. (740)245-

Asparagus
Adult Pool &amp; Baby available at McKean Farm,
4br
In
Syracuse, Pool. Patio, Start $425/Mo. Centenary Road , (740)446Lease
Plus 9442
$600/month &amp; Deposit No ~· Pets,
WateriSewer Included, No Security Deposit Required,
FOR SAlE
Pets (304)675·5332 or (740)367-7066.

j

Brrakfast Speci;, l

1998 red Monte Carlo,
loaded, Pioneer CO stereo,
American racing wheels,
~8,000
miles,
$7,000.

Phono(740)446-3267

AJJ

Room, 2-baths, Kitchen , list for Hud-subsized, 1- br, Lesage•. wv naxt to Lesage
Dining Room. Mt Alto. No apartment, call 675·6679 Fire Dept. 1.77 acres 2f1120
Pets $650/month (3()4)674· EHO
sq. feet new log office. whole
55n
area is stoned ideal for car,

•Th•

MWIPII~r

will not

• knowingly occopt
:~torrul
• ..urte which lain
"'lolltton of the law. Our

4br. newly remolded near
Ritter Park. Great lor Grad.

Street,

ers uses.
Some owner
financing (304)762-1117 or

Mason .

~rlect locstlon. 4 bedroom

$69,000

Newly remodeled , · 3 or 4
bedrooms, central air, full
basement, hardwood ·floors,
detached garage, large covered patio, fenced back
yard, close to ·schools, Point
$69,500.
Pleasant.

(740)709-1382.

ROGER HYSELL'
GARAGE '
Auto &amp; Truck.
Repair
3 miles west of

1618.

Pomeroy,OH
on State Rt. 124

r

992-5682

'

1

~

'

]1

II' "

I lll, j:

I

It I

j [

i

TO G~T VP WITti

I

1 I )I I

\

Tti~ CtiiC~~NS,

t

/

(740)992·2804
(740)517-6883
J eff Sleth em - Owner

YOU'VE GOT TO
STOP ~TAYING UP
TILL. Tti~ COwS
COME tiOMt.

Aftl
Se~mless Gutter

Hardi'OICI Calllnetry And Ftnlllre

Downspout

www.tba-kQabiJ!."*'7.oo•

FREE
ESTIMATES

740.446.9200

(740) 949-1405

SAYS HERE THAT
TH' MA.JORITY OF
FOLKS IN THIS
COUNTRY ARE
OUTTA SHAPE,
MAW!!

2A59 St. Rt. 160 • GaiUpoUs

THAT COULD

rM~~~ lr M~~~

•. WHY WE'VE SEEN
GITTIN' FEWER

'DOOR- TO ·l)E)OR
SALESMAN!!

experience

. MilLEn
SELF STORAGE

Ed Dill/owner

742 20 4

$t,200
209t .

JET

•8!'

H.ome .. 3 ·arm, ~ b~th, -v.-ry-c-lo_a_n_t_4_x_64_2-bed-AERATION MOTORS
ver; me~ w1th underp1nmng. room . Only 57 ,995 . Call Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In
$8,800/flfm. Serious Calls .(740)385-o6 98
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1·

'

rAP~

26 Years Experience

David Lewis
740-992-6971
Free

"Carpet Guy"

Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle ,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
Scr8p Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, 8am-4:30p,m. Closed
Saturday
&amp;
paid, Po"or, OH (740)367- Thu rsday,
Nice 14x70 3 bedroom only
Sunday. (740)446-7300
7015.

du

I

j:'
Ims &amp;
AHentlon
LL--,.;AiOIEAiiiiiGEiiio-r .Worktra.

Conatructlon

Moon (304)675'5096

2 sleeping
rooms.--turnished w/cable

1 1/2 acre of land all level on and utilities-weekly and
Pieaaant Ridge Rod. $5,000 monthly rates. 740-992- . . , . . - - - - - - - - - .
(304)675-4693 or (304)593· tXl31 or 304-88 2 -3449 ·
BUD..DING
3707
BEAUTIFUL
APAFIT·

i

t/2 acre Lot on Redmond MENTS

AT

BUDGET

------_.1

· ~. .

Sum..I:Es

Ridge will consider Land PFIICES AT JACKSON Block, brick, sewer pipes,
, Contract (740)245·5087 or ESTATES, 52 Westwood Wif1dows; lintels, etc. Claude
(740)206-002B
Drive from $344 to $442. Winters, Rio Grande, OH
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call iiCzaJirl7:.;40-;;:;:2:;;4;;;5~-5:,::t2:;;t:;..- - . ,
;n acres, wonderful view, 7o40-446·2588.
Equal
ridgetop prope'rty, close to ,Housing Oppo'1Unity.
PETs

j

Free Measurements

Ray Martin

Syracu..,, OH

Carpet
Ceramic Tile
Carpet Restretch
Laminates
?40,517-3704
740·992-Q650

apartments,

puppy, 9 weeks old. Call

r·. .

I -·M·~-AMPERS-H·o·~-.,.11
1982 Allegro Motor Home.
Good Condition. Low miles. ~

~

El.ctrtctll 6 Plumbing
Roofing a Gutter.
VInyl Siding &amp; P1lnt1ng
Plltlo and Porch Dec:kt

WV036725 ,

V.C. YOUNG
qq~J (J,)

t'r

1983
Nomad
Century
camper by Skyline. 24',
, good condition, ~leaps 6, !IC
needs repair all else works

OBO. (740)645· good, (740)667·3655

\i

Ill • I

I

Ill

1 'J

',

))llr&gt;

•I. 'I''

'Re 'Rose
§reenfiouse
PEANUTS

(304)675·4062

t794 or (740)339-3526.

'

Registered Angus bulls. 3
year olds to yearling . Price 2004 TT,R225. Excellent Truck Camper. wlbath, AC,
S2,000-$t ,ooo.
Call condition, low hours, $2,400. TV Antenna on top $5,200.

(740)446·7166.

(740)245-5984.

r~

Boxrs &amp; MOIORS

·~

i .

I~ ·

FOKSAIE

(2) 26" Bikes, like now
(304)676-3353 ·
" I In H I "
1
•

1B'3• Stretos 150 hp. Just
rebuilt
$12,500.
Call

r10·.

" OME ·

lMPRovF..MENrs

(740)256-t962

2001 Partkraft 24ft. Pontoon
by Godfrey Marine. Canopy,
2 stroke 40HPYamaha, trailAuros
er, beautiful boat Garage
FOR SAUl
kept, approM. 42 hrs on boat
motor.
Ca ll daytime .
$5001 Police Impounds! {740)446-9416 or evenings
Cars lrom $500. For listings &amp; weekends (740)44 1-1724,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional tltetime guarantee. Local references furnlshed. Establ ished 1975.
Call
24 Hrs. {740) 4o460870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

600·30t-5227 ext 390t

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio
45771
740-949-2217

04 Pontiac Grand Prix, 4 df.,
GT, all power options,
$10,900; 02 Ford Taurus
SES, aU power with sun roof

only $7495;)lt Kls Sophis, 4

ADVERTISE
YOUR
tM~~~ BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSIFIEDS

dy. auto, $2995; 98 Dodge
Neon. auto. 4 dr.. $2995; 93
Buick Century V-6. 4 dr., (740)441 -\724.
$1,400, Rill8rview Mo1ors,
one block above McOonalds
in
Pomeroy,
phone

miles ,

BOFW,

auto,

all

$18,000. Excellent t;ondi-

r

..

HOLD ON
UNTIL HE

TO THE BALL

60ES AWA'f

Hours: 8-8 Daily

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

A
'

.
.

LIBRA (Sapt 23-0ct. 23) -

Cornerstone
Construction
• Accouslic Ceiling

7ol0-339-3412

I

'f(o.r

GARFIELD
SOMEONe HERE
ORPER SOMe
ZANY HhJINK5 '?

Sl'ANLEY TREE
TRIMMING&amp;

GENERAL

"Insured"

740·742-229]

ROBERT
BISSEll
CDimiCDII
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

.· .

740-992-1&amp;n
Stop &amp; Compare

pauport

•

.

by Luis Campos
Tc&gt;do!y'scluo: Oequa~ P

' " EXU

CYPWXEUIE

DRE,
XUY

'

ZPWXE

XSI

WDAU

L .U L P Z Z H D Y U M U Y T U Z U C Y S E U
ZDMPAW

IOPYPE."-

YDCPA

EYPCREU

ED · vsAS

YUU.MU
PREVIOUS SOLUTION - "Ho would always say: 'do avorythlng.• - John
Smgleton, on adv1ce ho raca1ved lrom lha multnalanted Gqrdon Parks
(c) 2006 by NEA, Inc. 4-28

S© tt~ 1J.- ;:Z ctN~· .:::~

_ _ _ _;.:_.: loooo by CLAY I. '0UAN - - - - - -

0 RtarrOI'IQI · i•rters

ol tke
four ~~rombitd wordf be·
low to form fp;ur simDit wQfds.

Hi RMT

I I' I

~~~

j~

THIB A

I I' I I i?

" It is a fact." the jOll)' woman told
her kids . 'vou can't dam112e vour

evesi2ht
:
. ..
;---:--------, ·· side:·

·I

G IT HEW

r--;--;---;-1-;5:-,--,1-:'-ll 0
--'--'--'--'--'-_J

if vou trY. to lookat 'the ••: ~

C om:::le~e

.

tha

:~u::llt

!IIJOite'

~ ·· fiJj,,~ II'. t~t m:~1n; w:&gt;fCJ
vc .. aeve1ce 1rorr "e ;: N;. ~ pel1;1w.

PP.N: Nu~~.eEF. f rt :. :7nr. s u.
: ~;s; ;::~u"r.~!

I'

,,

I

ur ;s:~~MS L: ~&lt;!Dv: LE~ : ~ ~ ~
~: · :; ~- .~o.N ::; w ~ r

SCRAMLETS ANSweRS 4:27106

' Merely· Draft· Raven· OUTLET
I knew the guy was 1 bad credit rlak when he uked, 'Whll
would my payments be Including the LATE FEE'
.~RLO

&amp; JANIS

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 2t) -

1!to4/1 mo. pd

Call Gary Stanley

If you'll put

·forth the necessary efftlrt, you can gel a lot
done, espeCially 'all those chores or little
annoying tasks yau've been putting otf. You
won:t mind doing these petty jobs at this
time.
SCORPIO {Oct . 24-Nov. 22)- Something
social and une1&lt;pected might pop up later
in 1 e day, wh~ you'll want to be part ot.
Keep your schOdule flexible)n order to ,1011')
In on the fun. shou ld an invitation arise.

Residential • Commercial • Geuerr.d Conlrutdng
~ Painting • Doors • Windows • Decks
• Siding • Roofing • Room l;.ddilions • RcmodeliHg
WV 038882
• Plumbing • Electricti.l 74G-387-0544

OH 38244 '

Watlderwr" :
alnger
•
Vlu·and

Evon

though it might not be as apparent to you
as to. everyone else, your Ideas are winning the universal admiration and respect
of your contemporaries.
GEMINI (May 2t -June 20) - II you are
lrylng to dewlap something that Is potentially profitable at this time. move swiftly on
It and the result could be a favorable
"upturn in your financial affairs.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)- A kindness
you did for another a While back may be
repaid. Howeller, the recipient of your past
gesture niight have to use an intermediary
In orde r to pull if off.
LEO (J uly 23-Aug. 22) - I! there is somathing tor which you have not been ade·
quately compensated , the chances for get·
tlng what you're owed look exceptionally
promising today.
and tomorrow, your greatest strides are
likely to · be made in situations where you
are Involved in some sort of partnership
arrangement. You'll ~member there is
strength In union .

SUNSHINE CLUB

7:00AM - 8:00 PM

CONTRAOING
• Prompt &amp; qualily
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates

'llrlhdltY:

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt 22) - Both today ,

Hours

• Leave a message

Two 1997 three seater
Caeto Contracting
S9doo's on a twin aluminum Cor'nmercial
Aesldentlal
trailer. One B5HP GTI &amp; one Remodeling "We do it all~
110HP GTX under as hrs on Phone (740)446-0306.
Doth PWC's. Garage kept
E~&lt;cellent as new condition.
Call daytime (740)446-9416
or evenings &amp; weekends

•

Tl415 NE)(T 6W 15 THEIR -BEST
i-!ITTER .. EVER't' TIME !olE'S UP,
l.lE 1-liTS A !-lOME RUN ...

'I

Hi ll' s Se lf
Storage

-

TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20) -

50447 Tornado Rd.
Racine, Ohio

RtmOdtUng
NewO.r•ue•

(740)256·6492

AtGienwood5-7/tOacrosof and/or smaU houses FOR (740133 9- 2745 or (740)339- power, $16,t00 , overage tlon, clean . (740)245-9109,
wooded land only $6,060, RENT. Call (740)44t·t111 2753 _
retail St8,600, (740)350- (740)44t -7632.
Call 703-971-&lt;)839.
for application &amp; lnlormallon.
9977 '

- -·-···- . .......... ... ._........ __.......... . .

SERVICE

::
.•

Celebrity Ciphef cryptograms are created !rom c,JOtabons by famous people , put 111:J ~IIWfll.
Each le!!er in the cipll&amp;r stands for el'dhel.

LPZZPSKI ,

saturd.y, April 21, 2008
By Bemlct Bade Otol
In tne year aMead, there Is a strong possibility ttult you will make a major change of
direction conc&amp;~nlng your personal affairs.
How8\ler, once you ElstabUsh your new
course. you'll find ample reasons to maintain it.

IMPORTS
Athen•

YOUNG 'S

Room Addhlone &amp;

not successful, "declarer

AstroGraph
'

Refreshments Served
$8.00 Flats $8.00 'Baskets
Variety of Miniature Roses

CARPENTER

waS

QIG NATE

Open Mon-Sat 10-5
Closed Sunda

Stripe
"The

;

CELEBRITY CIPHER

the

Israel had the last laugh, though, fin~hing
sscond to Britain's fifth - butthsreln 'lies
• an untellable tale,

Opening Day
Sunday May 7th
l2·1

Hardwood • Vinyl

main highway perfvct for 4- :__:;_;:.:___,__:__ _ L--oiFOKiliii.iiSiiALE--oJ (740)992-3490
wheeler trails, (740)707· CONVENII!NTLV LOCAT· -,
:._:.:::_:::_::._:.__ __
02 Wildcat 28h. ~th wheel,
ED.
AFFORDABLE!
t
mai~AKC
English
Bulldog
04 VW Bug GLS, 16,300 slide out, fiberglass sides,
t09
2
Townhouse

740-992-5776

Installer

made

imps to Great Britain.

1999 Starcraft SOft Skie
1999 Harley Fat Boy 9,400 13FT. Truck Camper. Selfmiles, lots Clf e1&lt;tras, new contained, Furnace, sleeps
tlras, $13,000. (740)44t - 4, Clean, Ex. C.onditlon.

St0.995. Will ho/p .with delivery._Call (740)385·96?1 , • 1 bedrOom apt .. Vine St., Pace- saver 3 wheel scoot·
......--........
Gallipolis", Ohio. (740)367· er, charger &amp; basket- $800.
Nice! 2002 Patriot, Special 7886, •
Tobacco Plants for sa le. Call
Pronto M-91 electric wheel
Edition. t6 X 60 all electric.
(740)446-7843 or (740)645·
chair, almost new, heavy
3 bedroom, 2 bath with 1 BR apt/cabin, ,all utilities
t660
duty, $2 ,000. (740)446screened Front Porch. Heat paid. Call (740)44 Hlt17.
I I{ \''1'4H~ I\ Ill!\

4063.
Pump. Also, large sized
2 Bedroom Apartments - - - - -- -- proPane heater Included .
starting at $400Jmo. Most Simplicity riding Mower
House-Type Gutters. Asking
Brand New. Call for details hydrostatic 4212, CeleStron
$29;500. 741M149-2543,
·Telescope, view Stars &amp;
(740)44t -0194.

Shrubs and Perennials

..;

making an ovo~r~ for plus 1, t90 and 18

. (740) 992-0496

' Flats $7.~0
•Hanging Baskets

v•lley

Route tor
Bon-Hur

Yesterday's deal came from the 1972
European
Junior
(Undar-27)
Championship in Delft, the Nalherlands,
which is famous for its blue pottery. Here
is another deal, from the ma1ch between
Israel and GreatBrHaln.

bled, which

· Open For
Spring Season!

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

949-2217 until 7 pm.

992-5858,

1 and 2 bedroom apart·
Brahd
new
16' wide ments. furnished and unfur..
vh'lyVshl'ngle $181/mo. Call nis.hed, security deposit
reQuired , no-pets, 740·992(7M)385·767t .
2218.
For sate or rent. 1996, --~----14ia2, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. 1 ··bedroom apt. Stove,
(740)245-0461
refridg, water, sewer, trash

Licensed Home Builder

*Pots and Tubs
SPRING SPECIAL
Large 10" Ferns $6.95

Price $t3,500, Call 740· (304)675-061t

143 . 2 mobile homes. 740- ~
___
................. NEW ANO USED STEEL

I"II\'I

"Middleport's only
SeH-Sto.roge" · ,

1986 Coachman Ford 460
1999 Harley Davidson Ultra Engine. 40,000/mlles. New
Classic. Loaded, Excellent generator, new paint &amp; strip- ·
(304)675-4356
or
'condition, 29,000 lotal miles. ing

600-537-9526.

00'(, IT~ 'nil\( fO~
'IOU TO !££K. TIJ£ ~~.
/1.,\:N I(E. 01'" "'(.OQ\)·

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling

97 Beech Street
Middleport, QH
10x10x10x20
992-3194
or992-6635

r

r~1

·opening lead: • 2

opening bid! (Details are at www.phtlli·
palderbridge.com .) Soulh doubled, and
West 1espooded four diamonds, which
asked his partner lo pass with diamqnds,
bul lo bid live clubs with that suit No~h
doubled: and East retreated to five clubs.
South bid five diamonds, ahd Wosl raisad
to six clubs. After two passes, SOuth dou-

Owner

l4br Emergency
St:nlce
Licensed &amp; Insured
Over 30 years

ft,

_ ___ _

All pass

:;

wtnamald"' ·

Britain.
That defensive error cost only four inter·
national match points, because in the
other room, East opened three hearts,
showing a four-bid in either minor. This

Chuck Wolfe

I

r404 ~=~

Pass
Dbl.

invented these pre-empt!) or

I

i

2• 3•

Pass

Degrade

rii;/.y-

With neither side vulnerable, whal would

BARNEY

All types of roofing:

East

North

Yma -

Ucortce .•
fiiii'Orlng ~

you O!)'ln with tho Easl hand, if anything?
In the first room, East passed, and Scuth
ended In four hearts, unwisaly doubled by
West after the given sequence, Declarer
lrumped the club lead and played a hea~
to dummy's tO, gelling the bed news. A
diamond to lhe ace was ruffed by West
He exited wllh a trump to dummy's eight
A second diamond was tuffod by Wosl,
bul _lnstead qi juslloading a club, he panlcl&lt;ad and tried a low spada - plus 590 to

and Sans

.....,

a.-.....,

Back to the. well'
an~ pottery works

If YOU'ItE GOING

u. Wrttesel
•
New or Repair

K 8 54

AJ163
AK101

lo CHsar
47 Dappled,
notice
11 a horse
7 Snooze
51 Fill'I friend
10 401(k) CCUIIn 52 Long-active
1 t ldentlflel
volcono
•13 Garr of "Mr. 53 Sundial
Mom"
numeral
14 "qnndlo.., 55 Skip a turn
-56 Jlfflea
15 Hunch
57 Go-ahead
16 Columbul' 58 King bealer
home
59 Blended
17 Waahed
whtokey
aahore
60 Naval off.
19 Algerian
22 Peace Prize 42
port
DOWN
city
43
20 Do batik
23 Good, for
21 Yogapaolllan 1 L•_., dance
monsieur 45
23 Ms. Mynon . 2
24 Riviera
46
26
3 Connac1lcu1
summer
28 Homer·
campua
2S Fein. saint 48
hmer Mel- 4 Hot
27 Be an omen,
29 Hubbub
5 Carrot-lop
of
49
30 Stretch
6 Pointad
29 Big-50
fabric
arch
elephant
34 Has OCCI·
1 Hindu
31 Truckere'
olaleomon
oton for
54
radios
36 Ginger and 8 Opere
32 Estuary
· Frad, once
highlights
33 Some
38 Aour holder '9 Subatomic 35 Low cards
39 Raring to go
particle
37 Pres1ure
41 "- -, ofil . 12 Unhappily
40 OP'no lhe
chap"
13 Fool,
mouth wide
42 Condo
· stanglly
41 Wyo.
luxury
18 Blurbs
neighbor

imaglnaliva affort is high~ racommended,
but modesly forbids my clivulglng who

(740)446-7636.,

Cub Cadet riders &amp; Zero
turn mowers.
workshop, deck.
pool, foreclosure $11,500. For list· Thompsons Appliance &amp; Special deals on in stock
$150,000. Century 21 H&amp;L ings 8o0-39t-5228 ext Repair-675-73BB. For sale, units
.98 Dodge 1500 Quad cab.
(304)634·2290.
1709,
re -conditioned aut.omatic
4WD, loaded, $6,850 nego·
washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- Disc Mowers &amp; Disc Bines
tiable . (740)446·1905 or
tors, gas and electric New Holland
304 412-4645.
ranges, air conditioners, and New Idea
wringer washers. Will do Massey Ferguson
4x4
t4x55-'97 Fleetwood MHrepairs on major brands in
FORSAIE
2BR, 1 bath, sloe, hoaVAC· 13 Bedroom, Bath &amp;1/2 shop or at your home.
Financing as low at 0%
good condition $t0,500. Call Trailer Country-Rural Aroa,
(740)446-36441or appt
HUD Welcome W/Deposit.
SPOKllNG
John Doer 650 tractor w/60" 1979 Ford F 150 Custom AU
740-843-5716, .
Gcx:ns
. belly moWer, 1 ,040 hrs, Original. $2,500.00 Firm.
740-742-Q519.
14X70 Schultz, 3 bedroom,
2 bath, 6'x20' expando. 2 Bedrooms and 2 Baths, " - - - - - - - · $5,500, call (740)949-2t69
Chevy
Silverado
building, porch $10,500 unfurnished ..washe.r/d ryer, Winchester model 12, 1948 Load TraiVLoad Mal&lt; Trailers- 1986
4x4.
94000
(304)675-59tt,
·
. porches. No Pets. $550.000 12126/mod, $400, (740)245- Goose necks/Dum psi. Shortbed
Original
Miles.
Garage
Kept.
Utiiities.
. Cermichaet
and utilities and deposit.
Nice. $4500. 710·446-9574
t996 ahd Up, t4 and t6 740-992-oo3t
ANnQUES
Equipment (740)446-2412.
740·339-23t 2
Wl.de Mobile Homes for Sale - - - ' - - - - Massey
Ferguson
135
in excellent Condition. oay: 2BR, all electric. w/ CJA. no
Tractor with Howes BUsh 1999 Jeep Grand CherOkee
740·388.()()()(1 or 740·388- pets, taking applications
Buy
"or
sell.
Riverine
Hog, Ford 2000. Ford 6610, Laredo, Burgundy, 4.0, 4
85t3. Evenings: 740-386- $360/monlh, (740)379·2923
Antiques, 1124 East Main John Deeire 1520. 740·286· wheel drive, 135.000 miles,
8017.
or (740)446-61!65.
good condition. $6,800.00
onSR 124 E. Pomeroy, 740· 6522.
2 Bdrm 14x70 Mobile Home 3BA, 2ba doubleWide, close 992r2526. Russ Moore,
Firm. 740-992-7599.
$4,500 Or. Best Offer to R.V. high school. No pots, owner.
LM:srocK
2003 Jeep Grand Cherokee
(304)675-6323 evenings 6-9 reference
required ,
LaradO, 59,000 miles, 4x4,
$500/month·. $550/deposlt. Pie Safe, Sellers Kitchen
$11,900 OBO. (740)256·
2002 14x50 Clayton Mobile (740)367-7025.
cupboard. Table and chairs, 2 1/2 year oil black Umosine
Home. 2 bedroom, 1 bath
1800's Oak Secretary, and herd bull for sale. (740)256· 6200 or (740)256·t6t6.
with AC. Can staY on rented For Sale or· Rent 2 bel. tra .
Bedroom Suite. , 740-286· 6740 after dark.
lot In Spring VaUey if accept- furn . $375/mo. , $150/dp.
6522.
ed by ·landlord.
Great Ret., No Pets , Non
Angus Bulls, two X-breds, 4
$17,500 call Smokers, 8-mi. from Pl.
Condition.
heifers. Excellent breeding.
(740)446-~096 or (740)645- Pleasant, R1 2-N (3()4)675·
Slate RUn Farm. See 1972 Yamaha XS650 origi0535
:....:_
315t
nal Paint $1,200.
www.slate runt arm .co m ,
2004 Hpnda Trail 70 Clone
'86 Crestrige 141&lt; 70 2BRI 2 Mobile home sites tor up to 3 diamond' pierced earrings. (740)266·5395.
90cc, as
new
$750.
bath, $6,995. Call {740)385 _ 16~80 in Country Homes. $30 each. Small satelhte
(740)245-0611.
Boer Goats for sale
9948,
(740)385,40t9,
with 2 receivers &amp; 2
remotes, $90. 2 VCR's with 6 full blood, t year old regis· 1985 Honda Shadow VT500
'86 Skyline front kit'chen . Two Bedroom Mobile Home. remotes. like new $30 each. tered males. Ready to
runs . &amp; looks great, neW
Cash price $&amp;, 995 . Will All Elec1ric. Absolutely. No (740)245·5601 lv. messsgo. breed. Championship bloodtires, garage kept. Asking
Pets. Near Rutland. 740lines. Call (740)245-o485.
deliver. Call (740)385-9948.
_ t

I

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Homes- Decks Equipment
Degreasing- Boats-

:.n ·

3 BR, garage. 40x60 dream Stop renting Buy 3 bedroom ~(J-40~)44-1~·-62_58~-p-m_ __

I

,.

"r10 H

Patriot- 3.87 park-like acres; _a_n_app:.;_lic_a_tlon'-.---- ( 7 4 0) 4 4 s·- 7 1 0 o- am '

911 Oth of an acre tor sale on

t•

Trimrhing - Aeration- Campers- Trucks - D«:k
Fenilization- planLingstaini ng or painting
• Mulching
Sp~~ial rates for
/-

•

•
t

West

4•

Trucking companies

Judy '](ay's ':Restaurant

-.
2003 Mazda Tribute 4x4.
Want a relaxing summer?
leather
interior, 26,000
Rent
Anontlonl
an
Ohio
River
1 \lnl..,l 1'1' 111 '
miles,
$10,900
OBO.
Local company offering "NO Campsite. Enjoy a beautiful,
,\ I 1\ I " If II h.
DOWN PAVMENr pro- sandy beach. cool shade for -11~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ (740)256-6200 or (740)256·
grams for you to buy yOur your campS/, and a conwnFARM
1618.
home Instead of'rentlng.
lent location. Call 740-992EQuiPMENT
2003 PT Cruiser Turbo.
• 100% financing
5782.
............._J automatic, cruise, air,
• Less than perfect credit
$4,600 OBO. Call (740)256·
~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ t995 Model t11 0 Ford Naw f652.
accepted·
,
Holland Tractor. 4 wheel
• Payment could be the
drive, 17 HP Diesel only 995 2003 PT Cruiser, 4 cyt.,
same as rent.
Hrs. Hydrostat transmis- runs &amp; looks great, good gas
Mortgage
Locators.
sian. 3 Pt. hi1ch, turf tiies, · mileage.
$7,200.
Call
(740)367·0000
Complete queen size poster very n~o cond. $3,950,00, (740)366-0140.
Behind Go-Mart, 2br House. bed $400; Armoire $200; 740-4t6-09t6,
$375/month Ty (3()4)675- new love seat $350; 3 enter2004 Mercury Marquis GS.
4030
tainment centers, 1 tor $100; 4 row Corn Planters! John Gold color, 4 door, VB, good
2 $50 each, rocking . chair geere 726o No Til vacuum - gas mileage, excellent conHouse for rent. (740)446miles.
6,000
$25; computer desk $25; John Deere 7200 No Til dition,
4234 or (740)206-786t ,
3-Bprri
ct1est $25; console TV $75. plateless- white 5100 No .Till (740)446-0626
air planter. (740)446-2412 evenings.
Middleport. 2 to 3 bedroom (740)44t·0966.
House.
Total Electric. - - - - - - - ' - - - Carmichael Equipment.
96 Olds Ctera, very clean.
$425.00. 740~5264.
· Free estimates · Mollohan
Bobcat Zero turn mowers, 01 Metro, less than 100k call
Carpet, Berber $5.95/yard.
SR 7S; 4BR, t bath -home- (740)446-7444; 76 VIne St. 19HP .thru 33HP in stock, (304)674-()()96 after 5pm
0"/,(24 months- 3.9%!36
garage, basement, river
For sala, 1950 Ford, V6, 4
access. Propane heat, win- Refrigerator, almon~. large months.
door Sedan. Black, 3 speed
dow A/C. $650/month rent- freezer at top, nice, $~so .
manual trans, 78,200 miles.
$650 sec. dep., you pay uti!- W~sher, heavy duty, $95, Finish mowers- 3PI. hitch,
Great
auto 1o complete
ities. Available 1st week in dryer,
$95.
Gene 48~ thru 90" in stock. New &amp;
restoration. $8,500. Call
Used
ApriL Call (740)446·3644 for Appliances, 76 Vine St.

orjtylll (304)675·42t8

Salads· Clrt?f· GriJl~d
Cl1icktn &amp; Chicken Tt?nditr

.AQJt074 !
South

Vulnerable: Neither

Driveways -

Mowing· Tree

-

• 5I 2

Dealer: East

liP.

POWER WASHING
LAWN CARE .

195 N, Second Ave. • Middleport, OH

$3,600 OBO. (740)256·
1233·
.
2003 Jeep Liberty, Umited,
22,000 miles, $10,200 OBO.

,•

AnD LAWn CARE

f4,99

sa~sa~

t

-

TRI-STATE mOBILE POWER WASH

Judy Kays Sptdo.f BUrger -Charlie Brown Burgtr
&amp; Carolina Burger

•10. .

walk in closet, 2 full bath, 2
lots w/prlvacy fence. Great

Neighborhood.
(304)n3·5288

~--tiiURiiiioRmriOii--_.1

D~y

1r 1 1

11

28YIS
South

All Bu'11'" made from ~sh il""'nd chuck featuring

truck mobile home lot !I oth· (740)256·6200 qr (740)256·

Students: (3()4)593-8890

: - - INhoNby
~ · Informed ttud all
"fwoollngo odve&lt;tlood In
• • lhla I'IWNtl~ are
: wall8ble on an equ.l
. opportunity bale.
Mt&amp;ple

,.,,__...,.SPACE
____,
i

c~

·

.. _

Playgrounds

304·675-2457

Daily Lunch Spt?cials

or bacon
homt?fries &amp; toast $4.99

2 r!ggS,

ftCI, color, retlgton, ••
9245, (740)367·0624.
.mill• ttllkf• ~r n.tloftlll
origin, or MW" intention to ' (740)59t.()265
,
L
.
.
.
J
Twin Rivers.Tow&amp;r is accept- 2003 Dodge Neon 4 cyl, 5
e :
melee II'IV auc:h
4br, Living room, Family ing applications for wailing For Sa:te or lease Rt 2 speed, air, 78,000 h1i les,
............ llmltollon"'
4 • dlect1mlnM:Ion."

Roads • Driveways • Streets •

PhiJJy Steak &amp; Clrt?est?
wJFrit?S
$5.99 Evr:ryday_
(made with Choice Fn~sh
Black Angus Slic~d Rlbeye)

160, Vinton, Ohio. Call388·

Apa"ments, Very Spa~ious,
2 Bedrooms, CJA, 1 1f2 Homegrown

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private
- Free Estimates

E•st .
• Q 10 7

't

.. K9 5 2

591-4641
416-1436
,..I:::::::::::::=========~

LX, Auto, Air,
M&amp;J Auto, St At

QJ9863

. Q 9H2

• PATCHING

40-99 _
7
2 7953

Dodge
Air,
$2800. Caravan,
t998 Auto,
Chrysler

K 10 8

•

A J 6 3

•

• SEAL COATING

HOMt CREEK ENTERPRISES

Gallipolis. $350 month. Call
t998 Dodge Dollots, Auto,
V6 , 2X4 , air, bed topper.
for details (740)44Hlt!l4 or
Newly .renovated 2 bedroom BuHerfly Kol, Red &amp; White 1994 Chevy Astra Conv.Van,
(740)44t-1184.
apt. DowntoWn Gallipolis, Fantails (304)675·5043
Auto. Air, $t500. 1999
Sebring

wp

Flat Roofs A Spedalty

Water Hyacinths

•

West

Ae :E'uu•clk il1'4tu
Nel/lr' ConstrucUon
d R ..vl.i.Jinn
an ern~.:.~'O

tainod, 116k, asking$4,600.
(740)245-5934.

r~~ · 1

'7. ~((c S:. 6ta.d

S~ed&lt;fl«lrt,

OHIHIO

9 2

.. 8.

W

nance records, well main-

$47s/mo., no utilities included. Deposit required . Inquire
in person at French City
Childcare, 300 Third Ave.·or

•

an·d lxca•atiDft

shots, wormed. Only 4 left.

1BA house.- 11 Garfield Ava,

No'!b_

leneral Canldnlcllan

Lab puppies AKc. papers, !3041578-3202

transfer or a death? I

canoov your hOrne. All cash
and quiet&lt; closing. 740-4t63t30.

All ,... MUd• adwt111tng
In thll .....,..,., .••
, aubfect to the Federal
blr Houalng Act of 1MI
lfhlch mllkH It 1n.o-1 to
•
actverttH "lnY
}w.....nc.. llmltaUon or
dlacrimlrwtton baed on

1 Nolay bird
4 Sellout

ClassiC, runs good, like new
Dachshund puppies $300. 1 Inside &amp; out. 85K, must see

992-sotW. Equal Housing

44 Fl~ about

46 Now,

Phillip
Alder

Apartmamo In Middleport dapples 350.00 and up 740- .:__:__ _ _ _ __

H~
FOKibNr

•
•

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Grlclouallvlng, t aod 2 bed· AKC, reg, mini dachshund t989 TOyota ' Te""'t Does
Manor

-

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7.

room apartmoniB at VIllage puppies 21ltters 1 ready now run. needs work $350. Call

'~
L- than po.-.:t croc11t · - .. - - - ·
• Poyment 'coilld be lhe NHd to sell your hOrne?
..,.... u root
Late on poymerrto, dM&gt;rco,

a.t;rfgage

www.mydailysentlnel.com
BRIDGE

........

.

.

'

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury~ Also HUD
, Also Commercial Space
74Q-416-5547
Now Available At

GRIZZWELLS

1.\10 .1-\1&gt;.0 io l.tAI/~, '6UI 1-\E.
lit.' D 3E 15ACk

·

BAlJ:\1 Ll li\IBEI{
Scorpion .Tractors

\l'l A JI~FY

CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jan . 19) - That
aecret world within you might encourage
an escape from your da"y concerns and
routine. If you sense this happening. plan
something that substantiates your faith In
humanity: ·
I

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. t9)- Yo~r self·

less InStincts could be very pronounced,
and chances are you'll demonstrate this by
putting the needs of others above your
own . Your good deeds will long be remembered.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Two of your
greatest assets are your tact and charm,
and you can use bo1h to your advantage, if
you choose. Let the real you emerge and
shine forth In all dealings with others.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) - Although It
might be a brief cycte, it can be .a very
rewarding one - If you i!Oiate your eHorts
to high·priorlty ,.Projects. Give thi ~ gs the

'·

very best you have to oHer.

~AID

. 'M\~~~ I) \1~
6~ l\lli MdtA'&lt;.'&lt;
To e\l'l ~
M~G\.\

Sl"o\U'5
cA'!l.?

"Taking 1'he Sting Out Of·
Hard Work!"

Someone whose motives are sincere
might offer you a small token of appreciation. Don't read anything sinister into it and
don't be reluctant to accept this gilt .
His/her feelings could be hurt.

SOUP TO NUTZ
L..aS-1' ~!Gl-4.,- :[ fui M',' '
ioo11-1 ut&lt;!Pefl M\' .PILIPW
BoT I WOKe UP IN 1\le
MIDDLe Of "11-le &gt;ltGHl:..

.AND 11\f!tt. was 1:&gt;\D
looltf&gt;\ HIS H~i'lp UNDER

M'&lt; PIL!PW... l""- ""'"'R

6et.n MOlle DtSat'lbiNru&gt;

~T SoRf Of' F SlealS fitS l&lt;oti3 ~
F81R4 MoNo.«. ?

\1

Mid-Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engin'es

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. I 24

CbcNtcr

985·3301

·,
'

'

. .....

-c-·------ . .,. .
''

- L

�•
•

Pqe 88 • The Daily Sentirel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, April28,

2006

..

ALONG THE

9-allia Academy clinches share of first SEOAL title in 21 years
BY BRAD SHERMAN
BSHERMANOMYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM

MARIETIA - The long
championship drought is over,
but Gallia Academy is not celebrating - not just yei.
The Blue Devils ended 21
years of frustration when they
clinched at least a share of the
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League baseball championship following a 7-2 victory
at Marietta on Thursday.
Brad Caudill had a big day
at the plate, and drove in the
~o-'ahead run in the sixth
mning before the Blue Devils
tacked on four insurance ·runs
in th~ ~eve nth. All the while,
pitcher Shaphen Robinson
gave a gutsy performance just
three days after suffering a
shoulder injury:
. And
. while
Gallia
Academy's first baseball title
since ·l985 is certainly sweet,
coach Rich Corvin isn't satisfied with just a tie.
"Tiiat's a little monkey off
our back," Corvin said. "But
we're not done, we're not sat,
isfied with that. "
.
His team can win it outright
by beating Warren on the road
Monday.
·
Still a Gallia Academy
baseball title, shared or not, is
a rarity. It's only the I Oth title

in school history.
"ft was probably the No. I
goal when I took over three
years ago," admitted Corvin,
who has turned the program
around in his three years at the
helm. ''Tonight was a very
emotional night, the kids were
excited and I was speechless
- which I'm not too often."
Warren (6-2 SEOAL) is the
only other team that can still
claim a share: In addition to
Monday 's showdown, the
Warriors also have a make-up
game remaining with Marietta
llext week.
Robinson, who struck out
seven and ·walked nine batters, threw a complete game
- remarkable considering he
was just three days removed
from a scary-looking shoulder
injury earlier in the week.
He had popped ~is shoulqer
out of socket agamst Logan,
but looked almost back to tOO
percent on Thursday.
"He didn 't throw very many
breaking balls t'or strikes, but
it was enough to keep those
guys off balance a little bit,"
Corvin explained. "He had a
lot of pop on the fastball and
he pretty much overpowered
them."
Marietta had six hits off
Robinson. David Painter went
2-for-3 with a run batted in

RivER

LMNG

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Local educators connect
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·and
Sam ·· the top of the sixth then stole 'swinging bunt was mishan- first, giving the Devils a leg
Tuten sin- second to move into scoring died by the pitcher allowing up 1-0. Then Caudill drove in
gled in the position. Caudill drove him in another to cross home plate· Thompson in the second to
only other with his second hit of the safely. Russell drew a bases- ·make n 2-0.
.
afternoon, which gave the loaded walk then . Mooney
The Tigers answered with
Tiger run.
The Blue Gallians a 3-2 edge.
beat out an mfield smgle that an unearned run in the bot"He had two b\g hits,! think scored the final· tally of the tom of the second and was
De vi Is .
able to even the score thanks
meanwhile, both of those come with two · contest.
amassed II outs as well," Corvin said of "The game was tied game to another unearned taUy in
hits . ·off C_audill, ~~o hit out. of. the gong into the sixth, a.~ything the fifth.
. .
. M a r 1et t a mne hole. !;le had a btg mght coul~ h ~~e hap~ned, . stated
The SEOAL began league
Corvm ... but our k1ds JUSt got play in baseball in 1941.
pnchmg; Caud1ll ha~ a p31r of at the plate.
RBI smgles whde - Luke · Galha Academy then used a 11 done.
Gallia Academ
is at
Haislop also went 2-for-3,, trio of hits, a-walk and error to
Three .of the .run s were off Wellston toda ~n nonmcludmg a double,_ and score four msurance talhes m Manetta s Chns Dent, who 1 .
f
fh
f
1
Shawn . Thompson s1_ngled the seventh.
came on in relief of starter and eagu.e ac IOn: .e sec I on~
tw1ce and scored three Urnes.
Saunders singled and loser Nathan Eschbaugh.
~ra~ln~ h w~lr' ge . he
Robinson, Austin King , Haislop hit a .double to put Early on, it was a pitcher's un ay_, 1 e ue evl 1s a~e
Greg Russett, Matt Mooney runners on the comers to start duel betwee!l Eschbl!ugh and a shoe-m for a ho"!e game 111
and Justin Saunders also hn the big inning. King was Robinson . Gallipoli s scored roun~ one, and w1ll also be
safely. Despite the copious inientionally walked to toad one run in each of the first two lookmg to land the top seed.
hits, the Blue Devils didn't the bases, ,then Robinson 's innings, but were held scorepull ahead for good until the · sacrifice fly plated the first less over the next three frames • GALL lA ACADEMY 7, MARIETTA 2
Gallipolis 110 .001 4 -7112
sixth inning or pull away' until run.
-allowing Marietta to come Marietta
010 010 0 - 2 6 2
the ~nat frame.
·
Thompson hit a perfect bunt back and tie it.
Shaphen Robinson and Luke Haislop.
Wnh the contest even at two single to load the bases agai,n
King hit a two-out single to Nathan Eschbaugh, Chris Dent (7) and
ap1ece, Thompson singled in for Chris Miller, . whose plate Haislop in the top of the Powell. W -Robinson. l .:.. Eschb8ugh.

Buenos Aires show offers
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• Redwomen sweep
Urbana. See Page 81

Draft
from 'Page 81
between the end of the college season and · the draft.
That gives teams all the
opportunity in the world to
overanalyze everyone, even
Reggie Bush, Leinart's
Trojans teammate, his successor as the Heisman winner
and the player almost everyone has conceded Houston
·will take with the top pick.
Even that seems a bit up in
the air. But just a bit.
The Te)lans announced
Wednesday they are negotiating with both ' Bush and
Mario Williams, the Nonh
Carolina State defensive end
who has been described as a
cross between Julius Peppers
and Lawrence Taylor, who
both played ill rival Nonh
Carolina. Williams' stock has
been soaring a.nd Houston
owner Bob McNair, who was .
at Thursday 's gathering.
insisted there is still discussion over the choice.
Mc~air said the negotiations are important so the
Texans can avoid a holdouf.
But he also said the indecision is legitimate - it usually is a ruse - because the
front office still hasn't decid. ed which of the two can provide the most help to his
team, which finished 2-14
last ~ason.
"We are very serious about
this, not nervous," McNair
said. ~·we will address where
we have the greatest needs
and where the player can help
us the most. It's not often we
have the opportunity to select
a player of this caliber. You
want to make a pick of a
player who will be with you
and make a contribution for a
long period of time."
Bush?
He seems to understand the
process having played, like
Leinart, for the most scrutinized team in a major media
market without an NFL team.
Playing in. Los Angeles for
two-time national champion
Southern Cal is just abol!l the
same as playing 'for, say, the
Giants . or Jets or Bears or
Patriots.
So he doesn' t seem fazed

home phone number could
not be found.
Oester spent his entire 13year career with the Reds,
playing from 1978 to 1990.
The second haseman helped
the Reds sweep the Oakland
Athletics in the 1990 World
Series :
He was the first base
coach for manager Tony
Perez in 1993 and later
served four years as a coach
for Ray Knight and then
Jack McKeon, who was
fired the day after .the 2000
season ended.
Oester soured on the Reds
after being passed 'over for
the manager 's job in 2000
but later returned as the
team's minor teague field
coordinator.

•

0

Page A5
Poul Dorst;photo
Workers with Geiger Brothers Mechanical Contractors Inc., of Jackson, work on space that will
• John A. Stewart
•
'become
the operating rooms of the new Holzer Clinic Ambulatory Surgery Unit.
• Paul Thomas Cozart
• Ellen Louise Johnson
Houck ·
• Jack E 'Mickey' Watson ·
• Mildred Souders
• Carol W. Cline
• Carol Patrese Pullen

Battlgield
preservation
plan going
bifore public

INSIDE

'.

HOW IT WAS ONCE DONE

BY BEnt 8ERGENT

13SERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

liT THE IREAT

RACINE - Civil War
enthusiasts are invited to the
unveiling ef the Buffington
Island Preservation Plan, which
will be presented at a, puqlic
meeting from 9 a.m. to It :30
a.m., Saturday, May 6 in the
cafeteria
at
Southern
Elementary School.
The plan was developed by
consultants Gray &amp; Pape Inc.
of Cincinnati~ with.the support
of local residents interested in
preserving the only Civil War
battletield in of Ohio at
Portland. ·
Gray &amp; Pape perform historical excavations, preservations and archival resear€h
among other services.
Gray &amp; Pape were hired by
the Ohio Historical Society
(OHS.) to provide both the
Portland com,munity and
Meigs County in general with ·
ideas on how to preserve the
battlefield.
·
Michael Matts; Buffington
Island project manager from
Gray &amp; Pape, srud the firm was
hired by OHS in part because
,
.
Joy Kocmoucljphoto
OHS received a grant from t])e
Students
from
second
grade
classes
at
Bidwell-Porter
Elementary
School
were
mesmeri?ed
by
Mark
Tra11
of
Heritage Review
American
Battlefield
Protection Program from the Children's Programming as he demon.strated blacksmithc techniques from the 1800s during Gallipolis' Federal Army
Homecoming this weekend in the City Park. Trail is shown here teaching the children how to make a lead bullet. The homePlease see Bufflnpon, Al coming continues until Sunday afternoon .

II
• Community calendars.
SeePageA3
• Man who shot officer at
airport had violent history.
SeePageA5
·
• Local news briefs.
SeePage AS
•ISissing the pig.
SeePage AS

WEATHER

•

1W suspense
·catholic bishop to visit Meigs Mexican migrants Gallia ~ prinwry holds
county auditor in 1998, is run·

expe~ted to begin a weekJon~ boycott , of American

J. REED
,
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
BY BIIIAN

'

Detallo on

Call 422·0756
Toll Free 1·800·822·0417
.
VIsit VI eallae at
.

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4exlt t 32) fun North

I !.'i'-!""1•

4 SECflONS- !14

Around Town
Celebrations ·
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

3m1M Oil left

•n•·••

·- . • ..

~

-

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·'in.,

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Pace AliX

INDEX

on Rout• 21.
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.•

•'

Holzer Clinic to give a shoi
in the arm to local contrac;
tors."
•
GALLIPOLIS
.Panich &amp; Noel architect~
Contractors last week started have designed ambulatory
construction work on the new surgery units and other medAmbulatory Surgery Unit at . ical facilities . around the
Holzer Clinic. ·
region, said David Panich.
Workers with Geiger They designed the Ohio
Brothers .
Mechanical Valley · Sports Medicine
Contractors Inc., of Jackson, building i~ Chillicothe, the
now are renovating about Holzer administration · build8,000 square feet of the exist- ing in ,the Dan Evans
ing clinic bui !ding ' and Industrial Park and other propreparing to build a two-story jects.
addition . with another 8,000
Geiger Brothers has consquare feet.
structed medical facilities for
"It's going to be u beautiful , 0 ' Bleness
Memorial
structure," said Scott Massie, Hospital in Athens, Marietta
president of Geiger Brothers. Memorial Hospital , Holzer
"It's going ·to be an eye- Clinic, Jackson and others,
catcher."
Massie said.
The addition was designed
The new unit will be locatby Panich &amp; Noel Architects . ed on the east side of the clinqf Athens. The sub-contrac- ic between tile main entrance
tors who wilt help build the and the parking deck. The
structure are from this area bridge that connected the
too, Geiger said.
parking deck with the clinic
"We're' pleased with their entrance has been removed to
decision to work with local make way for the addition, .
contractors," he said. 'This is
Please see Unit. A2 .
a great opportunity for
BY PAUL DARST'

PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

OBITUARIES

by the Texans' juggling act.
"This is like everybody is
playing high-stakes poker,"
he said. "Everyone has their
sunglasses on ... at the end of
the day you can't control it.
You have to trust the organization to make the decision
based on who they feel will
most help the team."
Blish, probably the highestrated running back since
Barry Sanders 17 years ago
- he's often compared to
Sanders and Gale Sayers is still likely to go No. I to
Houston.
Picks 2-7 are SUPPOSED
to be, in some order: Leinart;
Williams; quarterback Vince
Young of Texas; offensive
tackle
D'Brickashaw
Ferguson of Virginia; tight
end · Vernon Davis of
Maryland; and linebacker
A.J. Hawk of Ohio State, the
only one who wasn't present
Thursday. Teams 2-7 are
New Orleans, Tennessee, the
New York Jets, Green Bay,
San Francisco and Oakland.
That order and those players (add in Jay Cutler of
Vanderbilt, the third quarterba,ck in the top group) make
it seem unlikely Leinart will
fall anywhere close to 17. If
Tennessee takes Young with
the third pick - owner Bud .
Adams wants him, the
coaching staff may not Leinart still mighrnot get by
the Jets or Raiders and certainly not beyond Arizona at
I 0 or Baltimore at 13.
In fact, other teams might
try to get up for a quarterback or one of the other
players in that top group.
"My gut tells me once one
or two of these players starts
to s Iide . a I ittle !)it, teams
might come flying up .there
for them, especially a quar- '
terback,"
says
Scot
McCloughan, the director of
personnel for the 49ers, who
took Alex Smith with the
2005 ·No. I pick, a choice
they might well have used
on Leinart if he was available.
" I have not seen a top 10
this sporadic this late in the ·
process of.the draft. ... Some
of the things that I am hearing from the agents blows
my mind. It is just a very
unique year."

~ 1.:; o • \' o l. 40 , '\; 11. 1;;

Work begins on clinic's ambulatory surgery unit

SPORTS

0

NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) · Ron Oester, a former
Cincinnati Reds player and
coach , argued with police
outside a courthouse and
was arrested Thursday on a
charge of disorderly conduct, authorities said.
The altercation followed
the conviction of Oester ~ s
daughter on a traffic
offense, authorities said.
Oester became belligerent
and swore at the officers,
authorities said.
He posted a $1,009 bond
and was released from the
Campbell County Detention
Center in · this city across
the Ohio River from
Cincinnati.
Oester, 49, could not b.~
reached for comment. A

•

Hometown News for Ga11ia &amp; Meigs coun:ties

Former Red Oester arrested
on disorderly conduct charge
•

tn

•

PAGES

A3
C Section
D Section
insert

A4
As
A2
B Section
A6
'

© zou6 OhioNu..lley Publishing Cu.

•·'·

POMEROY - Bishop R.
Daniel Conlon of the Catholic
Diocese of Steubeiwille will
celebrate Mass and visit with
members of Meigs County's
Mexican migrant community
on Monday at Sacred Heart
Church.
The Mass and luncheon
will serve as an early celebration of Cinco de Mayo, a
Mexican celebration of freedom imd liberty commemorating the May 5, 1862, victory o.f 4,000 Mexican soldiers
·over armies made up of
French and rebel Mexicans.
For Roman Catholics, May
I is also the feast of St.Joseph
the Worker, which honors
Jesus' earthly father as the
personification of the dignity
of the manual laborer and the
guardian of the worker's fam-

Bllhop If. Dan,el Conlon
ily.
.· In addition to celebrating
Mass, Bishop Conlon will
also baptize several children
from the migrant community,
according to the Rev. Walter
Heinz, pastor at Sacred Heart .
The May Day celebration
has special significance this
year. It is also the day
migrants in several cities are
0

BY KEVIN KELLY.

ning for a third te(lm On the
Republi can ballot and is
busmesses to demonstrate
GALLIPOLIS
unopposed in the pfimary.
their imponance to the econo1- Uncontested races for riOmi- Political newcomer Mark R.
my and to protest legi slation nations 'in two .countywide Kirkhart, who operates a farm
designed to crack down on offices and three local option near Rio Grande, is the sole
illegal immigration -into the questions highlight the ballot Democrat seeking his party's
u.s.
in Gallia County's primary nomination to oppose Betz.
Rev. Heinz said the vote on Tuesday.
For · state representative in
Monda7 celebration is "by no
Polls in all voting precincts the 87th Hou se Distfict that
means' part of the boycott or open at (dO a.m. and close at includes Gallia. incumbent
any statement on the ongoing 7:30p.m., the Gallia Count y Clyde Evans of Rio Grande, a
debate about mi ~ra nt labor or Board of Ele~tions reported. · Repub lican first elected in
illegal immigration.
litcumbent
County 2002, is 1he only GOP candi·, Th~ local Catholic pari sh ·is Commissioner
H&lt;lrold
for nomination in the priabout to begin it s second year Montgomery, a Republican . date
mary.
On the Democratic tickof ministry to the migrant seeking a second consecutive et, Nick
D. Rupert of New
workers, who provide labor term thi s fall, is the sole GOP
on vegetable farms,along the candidate for the nomination. Plymouth is unopposed in his
bid to challenge Evans in the '
Ohio Riwer during the sumLocal
bu
si
nessman
,
Justin
November election.
mer months.
Fallon
is
the
only
Democratic
· State Sen. John A. Carey,
The
Our
Lady
of
seeking
his
party's
candidate
the
Weliston Republican
Guadalupe Mission w11s
nomination
to
oppose
who's
represented the, 17th
begun last summer 1n
Montgomery.
who
had·
previSenate District that includes
Portland , but this year, a
ously served. two terms as Gallia since 2003, is in the
commissioner in tlie 1990s. ·
Please SH Primary. A2
Please see Mlgrl!l'nts, A:Z
Larry M. Betz, clec.ted
•

KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.coM

0

,,'•

'

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