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                  <text>Thursday, May 25,2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Pqe 88 • The Daily Sentinel

Extension organizes
4-H Ambassador
program,A6

Barbaro happy, stable, napping; Prado still trying to cope
'

KENNETI SQUARE, Pa.
(AP) - Barbaro 's jockey
Edgar Prado said he spent
days in tears over th¢
Kentucky Derby winner's
career-ending breakdown in
the Preakness Stakes.
"Of all the tears I have
cried, if tears could heal a
wound, Barbaro would be
healed by now," Prado said
on the New ·York Racing
Web site
Association 's
Wednesday. "I've been thinking about him and I've been
crying on and off. I can't do
anymore."
Prado won three races
Wednesday after the track
was closed the past two days .
On Sunday, the day after the
Preakness at Pimlico, Prado
won two races at Belmont.
. "Saturday was a nightmare," Prado said. "I was
. heartbroken Monday and
Tuesday. The busier I stay,
the better it will be for me."
. Barbaro, who was un beat!!n in six races and a serious
Triple Crown threat, shattered three bones in his right
hind leg at the start of the
Preakness.
"I have never ridden a
horse that broke down that
was as special as Barbaro,"
Prado said . "A lot of people
thought thi s was the year
there 'd be a Triple Crown.
All we can do now is pray for
him to have a speedy recovery and for him to enjoy the
rest of his life." ·
Meanwhile,
Barbaro
enjoyed a restful nap and a
few
crunchy
treats

surgery sunday, called his
famou s patient's · condition
excellent, though he has cautioned that Barbaro remains
vulnerable 10 infection and
other life-threatening complications.
·
"He is stable and happy,"
Richardson said Wednesday
afternoon.
.
Barbaro's pastern bone was
shattered in more than 20
:pieces . boctors inserted a
plate and 27 screws tp repair
the severe &lt;)am age.
Barbaro's owners Gretchen
and Roy Jackson. have
praised Prado for being able
to pull up Barbaro a few hundred yards after he was
injured at the start of the
race.
"In talking with Edgar, he
said he was fine after he
broke through the gate," Roy
· Jackson said, referring to
Barbaro getting through the
gate early before being led
around an re-loaded for the
start . "Edgar thinks it happened 50-75 yards after he
left the gate, coming down
the wrong way on that leg . It
was just one of those things."
Prado said "anybody could
'
.
~~
have
done the same job.
Lemon Drop Kid , left, with Jose Santos up, Stephen Got Even, second from left, with Shane Sellars up, Charismatic, second
"I reacted pretty quickly
from right, with Chris Antley up, and Silverbu lletday, with Jerry Bailey up, right, come around the fourth turn during the Belmont
and
I tried to hold him
Stakes at Belmont Park in Elmont, N.Y., in this, June 5, '1999 file photo. Charismatic. Ruffian. Go For Wand .And now Barbaro.
together,"
he added. "The
Each a talented horse that carried their human handlers' hopes and dreams of racing immortality; only to be dashed while strainhorse did his job by not fighting at fast speeds on thoroughbred racing's grandest stages . When they stumbled and fell , not only bones were broken.
ing with me : He's an intelliUniversity
of
Pennsylvania's
Sweeney
said
.
"It's
just
gent
horse. He knew · he was
Wednesday , another small received enough to feed the
New
Bolton
Cente(.
amazing
the
depth
of
the
conhurt
and he knew what he
whole
hospital ,"
sa id
step toward recovery.
Fans
have
delivered cern and t~e warmth ·that wanted - he wanted to sur-·
" Probabi'y he has as many Corinne R. Sweeney, execuvive. I think he'll . make it
ions
of
apples
and · comes out."
"express
carrots as the doctors allow ti ve hospital director at the
through.
He's ·a very special
and as many apples as the George D. Widener Hospital baskets and stuffed animals · Dr. Dean Richards011 , who
statues," performed the six-hour horse ."
religious
doctors allow because he's for Large Animals at the and

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.)o ('I':\ I'S • \ 'ol. :;:;. :\o, :.!oo

No SENTINEL
ON MONDAY
POMEROY - The Daily
Sentinel will not be published .
Monday so that its employees
can observe the Memorial .
Day holiday.
·
Regular publication and
business ·hours · resume
Tuesday.

SPORTS
• D-11 regional meet
underway. See Page 81

BY PAUL ELtAS

..~

ASSOCIATED PRESS

STOCKTON, Calif. - In a
low-stakes mule race in a
remote comer of the West,
nature versus nurture will be
put to the test a5 two of the
horse family's earliest clones
challenge naturally bred runners next month in Nevada.
It's not exactly the Kentucky
Derby, but two cloned mules
named Idaho Star and Idaho
Gem will compete in a professional
mule
race
in
Winnemucca. Nev. , where the
professional mule racing sea- .
son begins.
Idaho Star was the first animal from the horse family
cloned and his brother. Idaho
Gem, was the third. Both were
born three years ago. and carry
identical DNA taken from a
fetus produced by the same
parents that sired a champion
mule racer named Taz.
Because Gem and Star have
been separated for two years
and trained sepamtely, wato;:hing how they perform against
each other will offer insight
into the role played by environmental variables, such diet and
trainin~ · regimens, in developing racmg mules.
Though the jokes about the
two clones finishing in a dead
heat are legion , no one is
expecting a tie. And just
because they carry the DNA of
a past champion , there's no
guarantee the clones will he

•

AP photo

Idaho Gem, right, the first clone born from a horse family, stands on· the track with his brother
Idaho Star during a workout session Friday in Stockton , Calif. The two genetically identical
mules, cloned by a research team.at the University of Idaho, will race against each other In an
obscure professional mule race ne~t month in Nevada.
tlew nearby. · Star remained
pete and w'ant to win."
successful.
calm.
Gordon
Woods
,
the
lead
sci"We know they have the
"There is nothing abnormal
genetic capability to be great," entist who created the clones,
said Don Jacklin, who leases declined to h·andicap their about these cloned mules,"
Woods said .
.
Idaho Gem from the University chances.
The
mule
cloning
project
On Friday, the two cloned
of Idaho for about $1,000 a
year. Jacklin has hired a profes- mules whinnied and ran like also provides insight into
cancer
research.
sional mule trainer to prepare their natural)y bred rivals human
Eguines
have
significantly
Idaho Gem for its racing debut. . working out with them at a
"We don 't know if they are Stockton track . Idaho Gem lower · cancer rates than
going to have ... the attitu(ie to bolted and ran over his train- humans , a difference that can
want to run and want to· com- er's foot when a helicopter be illuminated by 'cloning and

0BOUARIFS
Page AS ··~
• Leota Smith, 87 ·
• Clemit WhHe, 85

INSIDE .
• The Holy Spirit in
the 1ne of Christ.
See Page A2
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Eams scholarship.
See Page A&amp;
• Summer Classes
· to be held at the Ariel. ·
See Page AS
: • Joins U.S. Marines.
:• See Page AS
•• Racine youth ·
receives recognition.
•
· See Page AS

WEATIIER

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Cancer Never Sleeps ...

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I

"

Details on Pace

AS

INDEX
2 SECJ'JONS - . 16

p AGFS

A6
Calendars
Bs-6
.Classifieds
Comics
B7
Dear Abby
A6
Editorials
A4
Faith • Values
A2-3
Movies
As
NASCAR
B3
Obituaries
As
B Section
Sports
AB
Weather
.

t@ :1006 Ohlo Volley Publl8hlng Co.

y.
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U\\\\ . 111\d . nh .. , · ulllh 1,u111

Conunissioners to again seek 911 approval
Bv BRIAN J. REED
BREED®MYDAILYSENTINELCOM

· The· surcharge was pro- their estimates, the surcharge In fact, the Vinton County sysposed last year, but was would generate approximately tem provides additional opera!defeated.
Commissioners " $32,000 per year.
. ing revenue for the county's
POMEROY Meigs said they plan a more aggresThe charge . would be . sheriff, who has been able to
County Commissioners will sive campaign for the propos- assessed to all residential hire at least one dispatcher
again · seek approval of a al this year. Meigs County is telephone customers. Under through the 911 charge.
monthly telephone charge to the'only county in Ohio with- commissioners' proposal, the
Sheriff Robert Beegle has
fund a 911 emergency system. out a 911 service.
911 di spatching ·service . expressed a willingness to
At Thursday's regular meetThe surcharge 'is preferable would be operated from the operate the service from his
ing, Commissioners Mick to an additional sales tax or an sheriff's department, using oft1ce.
Davenport and Jim Sheets operating levy, commission.- exisiing staff.
"Vinton County has a realsaid they plan to file a petition ers said, because it generates
A similar operating system in ly good system, and it operwith the Board of Elections less money, costs less per neighboring Vinton County ates ver)l cost effective ly,"
before the Aug. 24 deadline; household, and more equally operates on far less, and pro- Sheets satd.
to place the 50-cent surcharge distributes the burden of fund- vides an adequate service,
Sheets said the next step in
on the November ballot.
ing the ,service. According to Commissioner Jim Sheets said. the 911 process wi ll be 'the

appointment of a new committee to outline the needs of such
a system and to promote the
issue's passage. He said volunteers have already come forward to work on the proposal.
· An earlier · 911 committee,
also appointed by commissioners, proposed a much more
detailed 911 system - and a
more expensive one. That proposal involved using proceeds
from an additional sales tax to
operate a 911 system from a

Meigs graduates ·receive .recognition;
awarded scholarships for excellence

London Pool
•
reopemngon
Sunday with
free swimming,
rededication

POMEROY- Scholarships
totaling over $500,000 were
awarded to
Meigs High
School graduating seniors during the annual awards day
assembly program Thursday.
Students recognized and
presented scholarships were
as follows:
Miranda Beha - Marietta
College Scholarship, $59,000;
Ohio Academic Scholarship,
$9,000; American Red Cross
Scholarship, $500; Bachtel
Scholarship for Academic
Excellence, $2,500; Hugh
0' Brien
. Scholarship,
$12,000; Fine arts Sch!illlfship
$3,000,
and
'Gateway
Scholarship, $5,000.
Chris VanReeth - OSU
Ohio Land Grant and Trusiees
Scholarship, $86,000; Sons of
'the Uni,on Veterans, $1 00.
Jacob Venoy - University
of Charleston, $64,000; U. S.
Marine Corps Scholarship
Progr\lm. $2,600; Maude
Sellards Scholarship, $400;
Bachtel Schohirship for
Academic Excellence, $2;500.
Joshua
· Venoy
Univers ity of Charleston ,
$64,000; Mari 11" Corps
Scholarship Program , 2,600.
Travis
Butcher
University of Charleston
Scholarship, $64,000.
Whitney
Thoene
University of Rio Grande Ohio
First· Scholarship, $30,()()(). .
Brandon Kimes - Ohio
Army
National
Guard; .

•

Please see 911, AS

.
BY· BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
SYRACUSE- Yester~y.
something miraculou s happened at the London Pool water ran in and didn't seep
out through the cracks caused
by flood damage, in fact,
there are no more cracks, no
more uneven concrete decking, no more problems with
the pur;nps or filters, and n&lt;1
problem waiting for the pool
to reopen this Sunday.
. After two years of sitting
sllem the London Pool will
finally ry:open at I p.m. this
Sunday With free ·swimming,
free food · via a community
·
.
Charlene Hooftlch/photo
cookout and a rededication
These Meigs High School graduating seniors were presented over $500,000 in scholarships at ceremony commemorating
Thursday's awards assembly. They are from· the left, front, Chelsea Fahey, Joey Haning, Ashley the miracle of the pool's new
Savage, Samantha Cole, Meghan Leslie, Nathan Argabright, Whitney Thoene, and Autumn lease .on life.
Mclaughlin; second row, Derek Brickles, Josh Kennedy, Miranda Beha, Chris VanReeth, Carita · Oh course a lot of people
Gardner, Taryn Lentes, Brittney Jacks; third row, Brooke O'Bryant, Channing Burge, Kayla will tell you some miracles
McCarthy, Nathan Jeffers, Jake Kennedy, Scott Tobin, and Nathan Becker; fourth row, Travis require hard work and for
Butcher, Jake Venoy, Eric VanMeter, Ray Sargent, Kylen King, Chris Fields, Josh Veney.
the London Pool's miracle,
well, that required a whole
,Hocking College, $6,400.
Milestone
Benefits University
Gateway
Please see Pool, AS
Ashl~y Savage Brandi Scholarship, $500.
Scholarship, $750 . .
Scott Tobin - $10,000
Jacob Kennedy- Milestone
Thomas Scholarship of
$1 ,000; Milestone Benefits Sam Walton Community Benelits· Scholarship, $500;
•
Scholarship, $500.
Scholarship; Ohio University Parker Long Scholarship, $500.
Kylen King Brandi Gateway Scholarship, $4,000.
Nathan. Jeffers - Friday
Thomas Scholarship of$1 ,000
Derek Brickles - Hocking Businessmen's Scholarship of
Kayla McCarthy - $500 College
· Principal' s $500; Meigs Local Teachers'
McComas/Moore Scholarship; Scholarship, $300.
Association Scholarship, $300;
$1,000 Century Aluminum
Joshua Kennedy _ Oliio Ohio University Victor L. Cody
Scholarship;
Milestone University Victor L Cody Scholarship, $1.000; Milestone
1 h'1p, $500 .
scho1ars h.1p, $1,000 .
Benefits Scholarship. $500;
BenefiIL•·~ Schoars
Taryn Lentes · Ohio
Please see Meigs, AS
Brooke 0' Bryant

·Burlingham.
plans 116th
Decoration.
Day program
BY CHARLENE HOEFLiCH
HOEFUCH®MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

.· Whethe,r it be a family member,
friend, co-worker, or neighbor, we ·
have all been touched in some way .
by cancer. A cancer patient endures
months and so met i·~es years of ·
treatment and life changing issues.
Holzer Medical Center and the '
American. Cancer Society would '
like to invite the community to
support the struggles of cancer
patients and their families.

I Rill\\'
\I\\
·•b
·•oo(&gt;
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BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Cloned mules go head-to-head in nattlre v. nurture showdown
possibly lead to research clues. with paying customers are
But of more immediate expected to be born this year.
import to the mules' handlers is · Most of the horses perform in
what'the animals could do for a "cutting" competitions, which
minor sport that needs publici- test the animals' ability to herd.
ty to boost it out from the shadNow, Jacklin hopes paying
ow of thoroughbred horse rae- fans· will 1\lrn out in greater
mg.
numbers than usual to watch
There are only abOut 70 the clones compete against
mules competing on the each other and naturally bred .
California fair circuit, the most rivals . (Mules are usually propopular venue for the sport, duced by breeding a female
because it offers only about horse with a male donkey and
$5 ,000 a race and a total of are usually infertile.)
$500,000 in purse money
"I see it as be in!\ a major
throughout the summer. The · draw card, peo~le w1ll come to
Winnem'ucca races will be run see the clones,' Jacklin said.
in two heats and a final on June
Jacklin is a principal investor
2 and June 3.
. in a company that is offering to
Playing the part of mule rae- commercially cloned horses ,
ing's P.T. Barnum is Jacklin , an and he hopes to have his first
Idaho resident who leads the customer next year.
American
Mule
Racing . But The Jockey Club, thor- .
Association and is the financial oughbred racing's governing .
muscle behind the cloning pro- body in North America, keeps
ject. He made a fortune selling an extremely tight rein on
grass seeds to golf courses, and breeding practices. Only natur-.
he ponied up $400,000 of the. al breeding methods are
$1_ mllhon m other grants It allowed. :and cJub rules exphc. ulumately took to clone the 1tly prohibit not only clonmg,
two mules in 2002.
but also artificial insemination .
The team that created Idaho · What's more, for the mules
Gem won a global scientific to remain a popular attraction,
race to be the first to clone an they will have to win.
equine by two days , beating an
"The clones will bring some
Italian team. Since then, sever- additional hype," said Larry
al more hOrse have been Swartzlander, director of
cloned, including the first two California's horse racing at the
horses sold commercially. county fairs. "This is a first in
which were made by the the industry, but for them to
Austin-based biotech Viagen remain popular for more than a
few races they' ll have to perInc.
Several more cloned horses form ."

· Collins ·attends DC
leadership program, AS

Yesterday was
the last day of
BURLINGHAM - The school for many
I 16th annual Decoration Day
young people in
program will be held at the
the county,
Burlingham .Church and
including these
cemetery Monday.
.
Meigs
First held in 1891, serElemerrtary
vices commemorati ng a day
students
set aside to pay tribute to
making their
veterans have been held at
way to the
the little country church
school bus to
every year but one since that
go home and
time.
start their
Erected in 1843 on what
summer
was then the Adkins propervacation,
some
ty, it was a log building
of
them
more
which faced in the opposite
direction as the road which is · · enthusiastically
than others. Of
there now.
course, none
The log church burned in
were more
1887 and the present cliurch
enthusiastic
was built in 1888 with lumthan the
ber sawed on a water-powteachers!
ered mi II .on Shade Creek.
The original congregation Beth Sor&amp;ont/photo
was Baptist but over the
years different denominations have been holding services there. ·
,
The service will begin at I
'Please see Program, AS

Last day of schoolt

How do
Pomeroy
residents want
distress grant
funds used?
By· BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Now that
the proverbial ball has begun
to roll again when it comes to
Pomeroy's application for a
$300.000 distress grant, village officials are revisiting
what last year's surveys told
them regarding where the
people want the money spent.
Of course, all this hinges on
if Poineroy receives the competitive award also know as a
Community Development
Blo~k Grant (CDBG). . .
Last year around 900 surveys
were completed and turned into
the village which is around·half
of the village's population.
. The project that came in at
number one for the funding,
at least according to the residents, was street repairs. Of
course, these surveys were
turned in before Pomeroy
underwent a massive paving
job last year where several
residential streets were paved
with Issue Two funds .
Thi s cou ld mean street
repairs· may' ve fallen down
the list of importance for
some, but will it be for a ,
. majority of residents?
For this reason more public
meetings will be held to discuss where the money will be
hesl spent at this time. Public
input is crucial)n regards to
Please see Grant. AS

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FAITH. VALUES

·The Daily Sentinel

Rev.
Jonathan
Noble
PASTOR,
TRINITY CHURCH

after which He led Christ out
into 'the wilderness to be tried
and tempted by the Oevil. (Cf
Mark 1.1 0-12)
After spending fony days in
that wasteland we are told,
"Jesus returned to Galilee in tlie
power of the Spirit..." (Luke
4.14) And Christ was anointed
to preach by the Holy Spirit.
(Cf. Luke 4.1820: Acts I0.38)
And, of course, He was
certainly present· with our
Lord Jesus at His crucifixion.
In fact we are told, "Christ ...
through the eternal Spirit
offered Himself without
blemish to God." (Hebrews
9.14) And God the Father, by
the power of the Holy Spirit.
raised Jesus from 'the dead on
the third day. (Cf. Roman s
1.4 and 8.11 ; I Peter 3.18)
Yes, the Holy Spirit was
pivotal in the life and ministry, death and resurrection
of Christ our Lord - so
much so, in fact, that Jesus
Himself hinged our very salvation upon the work of the
l.

·Friday, May 26, 2006

Friday, May 26, 2006

Fellowship
Apostolic

AM, the God of your fathers
(Part Two: adapted from
- the God of Abraham, the
Exodus 3:11 -22)
God of Isaac and the ·God of
Moses raised his head and
Jacob - has sent me to you.'
peered at the blazing bush
This is My name forever, the
before him . With the impact
Pastor
name by which I am to be
of what he had just heard detThorn
onating all kinds of feelings
remembered from generation
to
generation."
·
of disbelief, terror, and good
Molloh{ln
old-fashioned amazement, he
Even as God spoke to him,
· Moses was struck by how difsimply couldn't manage to
ferent the Lord was from what
find his own voice. The .
peoples around the world
Voice of the Lord, however,
had just pronounced an unex- to this very spot ... the place thought and believed . about
pected destiny for him and that God had ftrst spoken to the divine. The Lord was so
·now there simply were no him.But as much as Moses' perfect, with such incredible
words to adequately capture heart Jeaft within him to the glory, amazing power, and
the jumble of conflicting sound o God's voice, little unimaginable compassion!
thoughts leeches of doub~ clu~g to him And such REALNESS! God
feelings · and
. and sapped hts Willpower. wasn't simply different from
exploding within him.
. "Ah .•. urn," he · finally "But," he pondered aloud, what other peoples in the
managed to murmur. "You "suppose I go to the Israelites · world worshiped, He was
mean, uh ... me? I, uh, well, and say to them, 'The God of more than even Moses and his
urn, You know that I ran your fathers has sent me to people had ever imagined or
away ... don't You? And also, you,' and they, ask me, 'What hoped. The Lord wasn ~t just a
You know that I killed a man ts His name? Then what shall god for only the part of world
over tbere ... right? I mean, I I tell them? I just can't go to from which Abraham had
just figured that You of all them and tell them that come; He was alive and well
people would have known 'What's His Name' sent me, in Egypt, hearing His people
about that ... And besides, can I? I know that there's cry out. He wasn't just a god
Who am I, that I should go to nothing to the statues, stories of Moses' ancestors or merely
Pharaoh and bring the and kings .that the Egyptians 'the god of a nation of people,
Israelites out of Egypt? They worship, but they have names He was here in Midian too
probably wouldn't even for all the idols to which they and had met Moses, declaring
remember that I'm a Hebrew. bow. And as far as we go, .out His lordship over even his
They wouldn't just welcome own eyes have been looking broken life.
me back, I'm sure: Between inward so long because of our
"Moses," God said. "The
them and Pharaoh, who prob- own troubles, that we've real- king of Egypt will not let yol\
ably still has a bounty Oll my · ly gotten qut of touch with go unless a mighty hand comhead, I could get killed!"
· You. We don't even remember pels him. So I will stretch oul
· There was a stirring sound what You're like."
My hand and I will do amaz~
and the names within the
Although the tlames were . ing things. Then he will lei
branches of the bush flickered continuing
to
glimmer you go. And after all these
brighter, swirling out towards patient)y in the deep shade of years of their working as
him as if reachin~ to him. The night while Moses was speak- slaves for the Egyptians, I will Voice spoke agam. "I will be in~, they seemed to burn a bit even work in ·such a way !hat
with you. And this will be the bnghter and more glorious. ~hose who .have oppressed My
sign to you that it is I Who God spoke again, but this time people will look favorably
have·sent you: when you have with a majesty at which had : upon them and give them sil~
brought the r.eople out of never even been hinted before . ver and gold. Even though
members away from tradition- . Egypt, you wtll worship Me in Moses' wildest imagina- they have been slaves, when
al churches. Megachurches on this mountain. When you tions. "I AM Who I AM," said they leave Egypt, they will not
with a weekly attendance of at have done all that I have in the Vo.ice. ''This is what you go empty-handed." .
least 2,000 have doubled in store for you to do, you will are to say .to the Israelites: 'I
Hope was now thoroughly
five years to I ,210, according return here, along with your AM has sent me to you.,,. A awakened in Moses. "I can't
to a study from Leadership brothers and sisters, and you sense of overwhelming awe believe it," he thought. "My .
Network, a church-growth will all worship Me here." · came crashing over Moses people are finally going to
consulting fum in Dallas.
The. implicallon of what the and he hid his face again. find release. They're about to
'St. Paui's, which is in subur- Voice .was saying was not lost Infinite and immeasurable, the wake up and see that the Lord
ban Toledo, holds one of its on the man who cowered perfect and holy glory of God hils remembered them ahd
contemporary services In a before II. God had remem- Almighty flickered through ·has a special destiny for
movie theater about two bered His people. Arid He was those few words. Utterly ,them!" But then, a nasty
blocks from the church, get- now intervemng in His cre- beyond earthly reckoning, spark of doubt flared up m
ting edgier with skits, tlashing ation's mad race towards self- they described the essence of. his mind again. "But why
lights and rock 'n' roll. St. destruction once again and the One Who was and is me?" he wondered. "Why do
Paul's calls it "church for peo- ·was, at the same time, reach- absolutely sufficient within I have be the . one? l don't
ple who don't go to church." ing into Moses' life. In 'this · Himself. Ageless, ' timeless, think I can do it." But even as
There's not a suit and tie incredible encounter, God was and limitless in power, knowl- he thought these things, he
among the crowd. About 150 ' announcing promises that edge and love, this amazing sensed that the contents of his
people attend each week would fulfill not only the opes and living .God was ·now heart were already known to ·
more than the number at the 8 uttered before for the people s~aking with him in the back the One.speaking to him.
a.m. Sunday traditional ser- of Israel, but were personal hills of Midian. God Himself
To be cpntinued ... .
·
(Thorn
MolloluJn
and
his
vice. Financially, it's almost and specific to Moses' life as was reaching forth His fingers
~ached a break-even point,
well. It was as if the Lord was to continue a work that had ·family have ministered in
balancing out against the cost squelching any suspicion that been begun hundreds of years southern Ohio the past 10of renting the theate.r and · could possibly have arisen in · before when His same Voice . 112 years. He is the pastor of
paying for utilities.
Moses mind that God could called to a man named Abram Pathway
. Community
People who might be ever forget His promises or to set out from the land of Church, which meets on
uncomfortable going into a forsake those who belong to Haran to "go to a land that He Sunday mornings aJ the Ariel
church have no problem Him. Not only was God send- would show htm" (see Theatre. He IMY be reached
going to a theater, satd mem- ing him, He was also guaran- .Genesis 12:1). ' ·
for comments or questions by
"Moses," the Lord contin- e-IMil aJ pastorthom@pizthber Patti Rish. A few always teeing that Moses would surwander·in late.
vive, succeed .and then return ued, "tell the Israelites, 'I waygallipofis.com).

Church or Jrsus Chrhl Apot:tolk
VanZiindt and . Ward Rd., Pa5tor: James
Miller, Sunday School • 10:30 a.m.,
Evening -7:30p.m.
RivuVaUey

River Valle y Apos101ic Worship Cemer,
873 S. 3rd
Ave., Middleport, Rev.
Michael Bradford, Pw;tor, Sunday, 10:30
a.m. Tues. 6:30 prayer. Wed. 7 pm Bible
Study
Emmanud Apostolk 'llbernadt Int.
Loop Rd orr New Lim11 Rd. Rutlan:d,
Se.rvices: Sun 10:00 a.m. &amp; 7:30 p.m..
Thurs. 7:00p.m., ·Pastor MartyR . H~tton

Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly or God
P.O. Box 467, Dudding Lane, Mason,
W.Va., Pastor: N~il Tennant, Sunday
Scrvice1- 10:00 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Baptist
Carpenter Baptist Churth
Sunday School - 9:30am, Preaching
Service' . l0:30am, Evening Service
7:00pm, '• Wednesday Bible Study 7:00 pm,
lnl cri~ Preacher - A oyd Ros!i

Cheshire Baplilll Chun:h
Pastor: Steve Little, Sunday School: 9:30
am,' Morning WorShip: 1.0:30 am.
Wednesday Bible Study 6:30pm; choir
pmctice 7;30; youth and Bible Buddies
6:30 p.m:·Thurs. I pm book study
Hope Baptist Churth (Southem)
570 Grant St., Middleport, Sunday school
:·9:30a. m., Worship- II a.m. and 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m. Pastor: Gary
Ellis
-

Rutland Flrsl Baptist Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.. w'o~hip 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy Finl Baptist
Pastor Jon Drockert, East Main St.,
Sunday Sch. 9:30am. Worship 10:30 am

New.style of worship ·b rings
new spirit to mainline church
Bv JOHN SEEWER
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

mAUMEE - The pews
have been replaced by upholstered chairs at St. Paul 's
Lutheran Church. The altar is
now al) expansive stage that
accommodates drummers,
guitarists and keyboard players. The most popular seats in
the building are the two
leather couches that make the
church's entryway feel like a
hip coffee shop. ·
St. Paul's rocks - with
dancing, clapping and happy
music that is making its contemporary services evermore papular, eclipsing the
traditional Sunday morning
services it still offers.
"We needed to offer something different because people were leaving to find
churches where they couJ.d·
express more joy or celebration;" said the Rev. Roger
Miller, St. Paul's pastor. "The
church is just looking for a
way to speak to the culture."
· Mimy mainline Protestant
denommations with leveling or

-(

i'

declining attendance are experimenting with similar ideas,
following the .lead of non- .
denominational megachurches
that appeal ·to young people
and families.
"Mainline churches are
way behind in the ballgame
because they were so steeped
in their worship traditions,"
said Ronald Shifley, pastor at
Spencerville Uniied Church
.
of Christ, which
started a contemporary ser- ·
vice two years ago."Down
the road, churches will have
to move to contemporary
worship in some form or
they'll cease to exist."
Contemporary services are
less formal.than the coat and
tie services. Praise bands take
the place of an organ or a
choir.
There's
dancing
instead of kneeling. Skits are
acted out. Hymn· -books are
missing. Scripture often still
plays a role but,ln Jess formalized readings.
This style of worship is a
big reason why Protestant
megachurches have grown so
much, with some drawing

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First Soulllem Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike, Pastor: E. Lamar
O'Bryant. Sunday S&lt;:hool - 9:30- a.m.,
Worship - 8: I j a.m.• 9:45 am &amp; 7:0Q. p.m .•
~ednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

'.

Flrsl Baptist Chul'l'h
Pastor: Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St.,
Middleport. Sunday School - 9:15a.m .•
Worship - 10 : 15 a.m ·. , 7:00 p.rri.,
Wednesday Service- 7:00 p.m..

Racine First Baptist
Pastor: Joseph Godwin. interim pastor •
Sunday School - ~9 : 30 a.m., .Worship 10:40 a.m ., 7:00 p.m., Wednesday
Sel"\·ices- 7:00p.m.
Silt"er Run BJifitlst
Pastor: John Swanson, Sunday School •
IOa.m.• Worship - lla .lf\ .. 7:00 p.m.
,Wedne~y

Sen-ice~ -

'

It seems only oalural

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

.

Coolville, Ohio
. Located less th~n 30 minutes from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg
1-740-667-3156
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financial

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nothing of this world is permanent and
that everything in our lives is subject to

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leave us or forsake us, and the Bible tells us in Proverbs 8: t 7~ that God loves those who
love Him, and rhalthose who seek Him diligently will find,Him. Also, we are
told !hat God will supply all of our needs according to His riches in glory hy ChriS!
Jesus (Philippians 4: 19). Whenever we feel like everylhing is going wrong and that
everyone has desened us, we should knoW that God is always there waiting for us to

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Pomeroy ChUrch of Christ
212 W. Main St. , Sunday School- 9:30
a.m .. Worship- 10 :30 a.m., 6 p.m.,
Wedneiday Services - 1 p.m.
Pomeroy Westside Church of Cbrt.st
33226 Children's Home Rd ., Sunday
School- II a.m., Worship - JOa.m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Services- 1 p.m .

'
Middleport Church of ChriS!
5th and Main , Pasior: AI Harhon,
Childrens Director; Sharon Sayre, Teen
Din;ctor: Dodger Vaughan, Sunday School
· 9:30 a.m., Worship- 8:15 , 10:30 a.m., 1
p.m .• Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Keoo Church ol Cbrblt
Wors hip - 9:30 a.m .. Sunday School 10:30 a.m., Pastor-Jeffrey Wallace, lsl and
3rd Sunday
llearwallow Rldp Church of Cbrlsl
Pastor: Bruce Terry. Sunday School -9:30
a.m .
Worship - 10·: 30 a.m., 6:30 p.m.
Wednesilay Services - 6:30p.m.

Zion C•uMh of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisonville Rd . {Rt.l43),
Pastor: Roaer Watson, Sunday School 9 :30 a.m., Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m., Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
'
Thppen Plain Church of Christ
Instrumental. Worship Service - 9 a.ni.,
Communion - 10 a.m., Sunday School 10: IS a.m., Youth- 5:30pm Sunday, Bible
Study Wednesday 1 pm
Bradbury Claurch of Christ
Mini ster: Tom Runyon, 3955R Bradhury
Road, Middlepon, Sund11y School · 9:30

Trhitty Chur.:h
Second &amp; Lynn, Pomeroy, Pastor: Rev.
Jonathan Noble, Wo~hip 10:25 a.m..
Sunday School 9:15a.m.

Episcopal

I 0:30 a.m.. 6:30 p.m., Wednesday
Services • 7 p.m. Rev. Mjke Clad:

Other Churches
A New Beginnln1
(Full Gospel Chun:h) Harrisonville,
Pastors: Bob and Kay Marshall.
Sunday Sen-ice, 2 p.m.

E11terprise.

326 E. Main St.. Pomeroy, Sunday School
and Holy Eucharisl tJ :00 a.m. Rev.
Edward Payne

Stu dy Wed. 7:30
'Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader, Sunday School . 10
a. m.. Worshi p - II a.m.

Holiness
Community Churth
Pastor: Steve Tomek, Main Street,
Rutland, Sunday Worship-10:.00 a.m..
Sundny Sen-iee- 7 p.m.

Healh (Middleport)
Pastor· Brian Dunham, Sunda y St.: hool 9:30 a.m., Worship - 11:00 a.m.

Mlnersvill11=
Pastor: Bob RobinsOn, Sunday School - 9
.' a.m., Worship - 10 a.m

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road, Pastur: Charle s
McKenzie, SulldaY School 9:30 a.m..
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:00 p.m., W~dne sday
Ser\lice - 7:00p.m.

1•earl Chapel
sUnday School · 9 a.m,, Worship - 10 a.m.
Pomti-oy

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

RDH of Sharon Holineu Chun:h
Leading Creek Rd., Rutland. Pastor: Rev.
Dewey King, Sunday '1Chool- 9:30 tt.m.,
Sunday worship -7. p.m., Wednesday
prayer meeting- 1 p,m.

Rock Sprl!Jp
Pil!ltor: Keith Rader, Sunday School - 9:15
a.m., Worship - 10 a .m ., Youth
Fellowship. Sunday - 6 p.m.

PIM Gron Bible Holiness Chun:h
lfl mile Orr Rt . 325, 'Pastor: Rev. O'Dell
Manley, Sunday School - 9:30· a.m..
Worship · - 10:30 a.m., 7:]0
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Rullaad

Paslnr: Ri ck Bourne, Sunday School 9:30a.m., Wurship - 10:30 a.m .. Thursday
Services- 7 p.m.
Salem Center
PIIStor: William K. Mlllshall, Sunday
School- 10: 15 a.m., Worship-9:15a.m.•
Bible Study: Mond11y 7:00pm
·

p.m.,

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Churc.h
75 Pearl St., Middleport Pastor: Rick
Bourne, Sunday School- 10 a.m. Worship
- 10:45 p.m., Sunday Eve. 7:00 p.m.,
Wednesday.Service - 7:30p.m.

· Snowville
Sunday School - 10 a.m .. WorShip - 9 a.m

Hy~~eU Run Community Chun:h
Pastor: Rev. ·tarry Lemley; Sundlly Schoo l
-9:30a.m., Worship - 10:45 ·a.m., 7 p.m.,
Thursday Bible Study·and Youth - 7 p.m.

Bl'thany ·
Pa!itor: John Gilmore, Sunday School - 10
a.m.. Worship
9 a.m .. Wednesday .
Services. - 10 a.m.

'
Laurel Cliff Frft Methodist Chun:h
Pastor: Glenn Rowe, Sund11y School 9:30 a.m ., Worship - 10:30 &lt;t ~ tn . uud 6
p.m .. Wednesday Service - 7:00p.m.

Cannel-Sutton
Carmel &amp; Bashan Rds. Racine, Ohi o,
Pa stor: John Gilmore. Sunday School 9:30 a.m., Worship · 10:45 a.m. , Bible
Study Wet!. 7:00p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Rudand Cbur.:h of Christ
Su~day Scb,ool - 9:30 a.111 .• Wo~ip and
Con::arnunion - 10:30 a.m .. Bob J.. Werry,
Minister

MurningS~r

The Chun:h or JesUs
Christ ol Latter-Day Saln.L'I
St. Rt. .160, '446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunday School 10 :20·11 a.m., RCiief
Sociely/PrieNthood I I :05- 12 :00 noon ,
Sacrament Serv,jce 9- 10 : 15 a .m.,
Homemaking meeting, 1st Thurs.- 7 p.m.

Bradford Chun:b. of Christ
St. Rt. 124 &amp;. Bradbury Rd. ,

Pastor: John Gil more, Sunday Sc hool - II
a.m., Worship - 10 a.m.
East Ll'tan
Pa~tor: Bill Marshall Sunday School 9u.m., Worship - io a.m ., 1st Sunday
every month evening service 7:00 p.m .:
Wednesday • 7 p.m.

Lutheran

Old Bethel fo' rtt Will Baptist Chul'l'h
28601. St. Rl. 7, Middleport, Sunday
Service - 10 a.m ., 6:00 p.m .. TUesday
Servk't's -6:00

Hickory Hills Cbur&lt;ll of c~rlit
Thppers Plains.. Pastor Mike Moore, Bible
class, 9 a.m. Sunday ; worship 10 a.m.
Sunday ; worship 6:30pm Sunday; Bible
cla58 7 pm Wed.

Our Saviour Lutheran Chun:h
· ,Walnul and. Henry Sts ., Ravenswood,
W.Va ., Pastor: David Ru ssell. Sunday
School - 10:00 a..m., Worship - II a.m.

Coolville United Methodist Parish
Helen Kline. Coolville Church,
Muin &amp; Fifth St., Sunday School - 10
a.m., Worship - 9 a.m.. Thcsday Servic,cs 7p.m.

Foral Run Bapll~t
Pnslor : Arius Hurt, Sunday Sehool - I 0
a.m., Worship - I I a.m.

~L Moriah 'B•ptist
Fourth &amp; Main 51., Middleport, Pastor:·
Rev. Gilbl:rt Craig, Jr., Sunday School 9:3oa.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.
Antlqully Baptist
SundaY School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10 :4~ a.m., Sunday Evening· 6:00 ·p.m.,
Pastor: Don Walkt'T

Radand Free WUI Baptist
Salem St., Pastor: Jamtc Fo'rtner, Sunday

Calvary Bible Church
Pomt roy Pike, Co. Rd., Pastor: J Rev.
Blackwood, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,
Worship 10 :30 a.m., 7:.l 0 p.m.,
Wednesday Service· 7:30p.m.

Ouls Cbrbdlln Fell&lt;&gt;lHblp
(Non-denominational fellowship)
Meeting in lhe old American Legion Hall
South Founh Avenue, Middleport
Pas1or: Ch~s Stcwllrt I0:00am Sunday
Other meetina:s in homes

Fo~l Run
·Pastor: Boh Robinson. Sunda y School - I 0
a.m. , Worship - 9 a.m.

Danvll,lt Holiaess Ch~rch
31057 State Route 325, Langs vlle, Pastor·
Victor Roush, Sunday school - 9:30 a.m:;
Sunday worship - 10:]0 a.m. &amp; 7 p.m.,
Wednesday pr~yer service - 7 p.m.

Sund4y School -9:30a.m.• Worship - 7:00
p..m., Wedl'lt.sday Bible Study-7 :00p.m.
F.Jtb Fellow111hlp Cru.SKde Cor Chrjst
Pastor: Rev. Franklin Dickens. Service:
Friday. 7 p

Amazing G~e Community Church
Pastor: Wafne Dunlap. State Rt. 681,
Tuppers Plains, Sun. Worship: 10 am &amp;
6:30pm., ,Wed. Bible Study 7:00p.m.

Paslor: Arland King, Sunday School 10::\11 a.m., Worship - 9:30 a.m .. Bible

Cracl' Episcopal Churth

Fairvlt:w Bible Chul'l'h

Utart, W.Va. Rt. I, Pastor: Brian Ma y,

, StinnvUit Community Apostolic
Cburch
Pastor: W~yne R. Jewell. Sunday worship
- 6:00p.m., Wednesday - 6:00p.m. Bible
Study ·

Community or Cbrht .
Ponland-Racine Rd .. Pastor: Jim Proffitt,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.,. Worship •
10:30 a.m., Wednesday Serv ices - 7:00
p.m.
Btthel Wonhlp Ccnttr
39782 S.R. 7, Reedsville, OH 45772, 1/2
mile nonh of Eastern Schools on SR 7. A
Full Gos pel Ch urch. Pastor. Rob Barber,
Auociate Pastor Karyn Davis, Youth
Pastor Suzie Francilo, Sunday services
10:00 am worship, 6:00 pm Faf!'lily Life
Classe s. Wed . Home Cell Groups 7:00
p.m.• ·Outer Limits Cell Group at the
chutch 6:30pm to 8:30pm

Rejoicing Lire Chun:h
500 N. 2nd Ave .. Middl epon . Pastor:
Mike Foreman, Paslor Emeritu.\ Lawrence
FOreman , Worship- I0:00 am
Wednesday Services - '7 p.m.
Clltton Tabernacle Chun:h

Clifton, W.Va., Sundny School - 10 a.m ..

Worship - 7 p.m.. Wednesday S~rvice - 7
p.m.
New LiCt: Vletory Center
3773 Georges Creek Road, Oa.llipolis, OH
Pastor: Bill Staten, Sunday Services - 10
_ a.m. &amp; 7 p.m. Wedne sday . 7 p.m. &amp;
Alb Stretl Cburch .
Youth 7 p.m.
398 Asb St., Middleport-Pastor Jeff Smith
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m ., Morning
Full Gospel Chun:h
Worship - I 0:30 a.m. &amp; 7:00 pm,
or the Living Savior
Wedneliday Service - 7:00 p.m., Youth
Rl.338, Antiquity, Pasior: Jesse Morris,
Sen-ice- 7:00p.m.
Services:
Saturd&amp;y 2:00p.m.
Appf Ure Center
"Fuli-Go11pel Churi;h", Pastor!! John &amp;
Patty Wade. 603 Second Ave. Mason, 7735017, Service time : Sunday 10:30 a.m .•
Wednesday 1 pm

RtedJviUe Churdl of Cbrllt
Pastor: Philip Swnn. Sunday School: 9:30
a.m., Worship Service: 10:30 &amp;JII., Bible
Study, Wednesday, 6:30p.m.

Abund11nt Grace R.F.I.
923 S. Third St .. Middleport. Pastor Teresa
Da vis, Sunday servic e, 10 a.m"
Wednesday service, 7 p.m..

Hobson Chri!ltian Fellowship Churth
Pastor: Herschel White , Sunda~· School10 am. Sunday Church service-6:30pm
· Wednesday 7 pm

Faith Full Gospel Chun:h
Long Bottom. Pastor: Sieve Reed, Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m. Worship · 9:30 a.m.
and 7 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m., Friday .felloWship service 1 p.m.

Restondon Christian Fellowship
9365 Hoope r Road, Athens, Pastor:
Lonnie Coats, Sunday Worship I 0:00 am,
Wednesday : 1 pm

Harrlso!lvllle Co1ununity Church
Pastor. Theron Durham , Sunday - 9:30
- a.m . and 1 p.m., Wednesday - 7 p.m.

Lanpvtlle Chri!t"tiaa Church
Full Gospel, Paston Robert MuSse r,
Sunday Schoo19:30 am, , Worship 10: 30
Bm - 7:00pm, Wed. Service 7:00pm

Outer Churtb of Chrbt
Sunday school 9:30a.m.. Sunday worship
- 10:30 a.m.
The Church ot Ch.rist of Pomeroy
Intersection 7 and 124 W, Evangelist:
Dennis Sargent, Sunday Bible Study 9:30a.m.. Worship: 10:30 a.m. and 6:30
p,m., Wednesday Bible Study • 1 p.m.

Christian Union ·
Hlll1fonl Cbun:h of Cbrl!lln
ChrUU.n Union
Hartford ; W.Va., Pastor:David Greer,
Sunday School - 9:30 a,m., Worship 10:30 ~. m ., 7:00 p.m .. Wednesday
Services-7:00p.m.

Church of God
ML Morlab Cllurch of God
Mile Hill Rd ., Racine . Paslor: James
Satterfield,. Sunday School - 9:45 a.m.,
Evening- 6 p.m .• Wedne!U.III)' Services • 1
p.m.

· Middleport Community Chbn::h
51S Pearl St., Middlepon , Pastor: Sam
Andeuon, Sunday SchC!OI I 0 a.m.,
Evening-7 :30p.m. , Wednesday Service7:30p.m.

Faith Valley Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road. Pastor: Rev. Emmett
Rawson , Sunda.y Evening 7 p.m ..
Thursday Service - 7 p.m.

Presbyterian
HaiT'isonvtUe Prelh)'terlan Church
Pait.Or. Ruben Crow, Worshi p- 9 a.m.

. Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman ·st .. Syracuse, Sunday
School • 10 a.m. E\·ening • 6 p.m.,
Wedne!lday Servi" • 7 p.m.

Middleport Prnbyterian
Pastor: James Snyder, Sunday Sehoul 10
a.m., worship .\ervice II am.

Seventh-Day Adventist

·noel Conuoualty Cb•rch

Off Rt. 124. Pastor: Edsel Hart, Sunday

'.Yorship ~ II a.m. Pa~tor : Richard Nease
Btc:htel UnltN Mdhodlit

Hocklnaaort Chun:h
Grand Street, Sunday School - 9:30 a.rn.,
Worship - 10:30 11.m .. Pastor Phillip Bell

Mont Chapel Churtb
Sunday school - 10 a,m., Worship - 11
a.m., Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

New Hnen, Richard Nease, Pastor,
Sunday worllhip 9:30 a .m. Thes. 6:]0
~n1yer and Bible Study.

Co.

Torth Church
63, Sunday School '- 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m.

Fallb Gospel Church
Long Botlom, Sllnday School - 9:30 a..m .•
Worship - 10:45 a.m., 7:30 p.m.,
Wednciday 7:30p.m.
MI. OUve Coau•unltytCIIun:h
Pas tor: Lawrence B~ sh, Sunday School 9 :JO ·a.m., Evening-6:30p.m., Wedneday
S~rvice - 7 p.m. .

United Methodist
GraloUl Unlkd Metbodlol

Mt. Oll"e United Methodist
OfT 124 behind Wilkesville, Pal&gt;lor. Rev.
Ralph Spires, Sunday Scttool - 9:30 a.r:n ..
Worship • 10:30 a.m ., 7 p.m .. n1ursday
Services · 7 p.m.

~d .

Nazarene

Melp Cooper~dvt P•rtsh
Nort heast Cluster, Alfred, Pastor: Jane
Beanie. Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., - ·
Worship - II a.m., 6:30p.m. •

Middleport C~ul'l'h oflbt Nazarene
Pa ~tor: Allen Midcap, Sunday School 9:30 a .m .. Wo1'8hip - 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.,
W~dne!itlay Services - 7 p.m., Pastor:
Allen Mi&lt;l:up
.

Rmbvllle Fellowship .
Church of the Nazarene. Pastor: . Sunday
School - 9:30 a.m., Worship - 10:45 a.m.,
7 p.m., Wednesday Services- 7 p.m. ·

Putor: J11ne Beattie, Worship • 9 a.m.,
Sunday School - 10 a.m. • Thursday
Services • 1 p:m.

SyracUR Church of the Nazarene
Pastor Mike Adkins. Sunda y School - 9:30

Joppo

a.m., Worship - 10 :30 a.m., b p.m ..
Wednesday Servicrs -. 7 p.m.

Paslor: Bob Randolph, Wors hip - 9:30

a.m .. 6 · p.m.. Wednesday Services - 1

a.m. Sunday School -

1~ ; 30

a.m.

Pumeroy Church or lhe N.:lartnt
Pastor: Jan L11vendcr. Sunday ·School -

Seventh-bay A.dnntiJt
Mulberry Hts. Rd ., Pomeroy. Pastor:
Bennett Luckies h, Saturday Servkes'
Sabbath School· 2 p.m.. Worship · 3 p.m .'

School - 9:30a.m., Wonhip - 10:30 a.m.,
7:30p.m.

Oycs~llle Comfttunlty Church
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship 10:30 R.m., 7 p.m.

a.m.

Rutland Cbu':'h of God
Pastor: Ron Heath, Sunday Worship • 10

~nlecoslal A~~tm bly

St. Rt. 124, ~aci ne, Tomado Rd. Sunday
School - 10 a.m., E\'ening - 7 p.m.•
Wednesday Sen-ices - 1 p.m.

Bethel Chur.:h
Township Rd., 468C, Sunday School - 9
a.m. Wouhip - 10 a.m., Wednesday
Services- 10 a.m.

Chester

Pentecostal

~astor:

SL Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second St., Pomeroy,
· Sunday School - 9:45 a.m .. Worship ~ II

United Brethren
ML Hennon United Brechren
tn Chrid ChuKh
Tcus Community 36411 .Wickham Rd .
Pastor: Peter Martindale. Sunday School 9:10 a.m., Wor§hip - 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.. Wednesday Services - 7:00 p.m.
Youth group meeting 2 ~d &amp; 4th Sundays
7p.m.
Edtn United Brethren in Christ
State Route 124, between Reedsvil le &amp;
Hockingport, Sunday School - 10 u.m.,
Sunday Worship - li :OO a.m. Wednesda)'
Services - 7:00 p.m .. Pastor- M . Adam
Will

Full Gusptl Ll&amp;hthouse
3]045 Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Pas!or: Roy

Hunter, Sunday School- 10 a. m., Evening
7 :30p.m.. Tuesday &amp; Thurs.- 7:30p.m.
South Bethel Communlt)' Churdl
Sih·er Ridge- Pastor Linda Damewood.
. Sunday School - 9 a.m.. Worship Service
10 u.m. 200 and 4th Sunday

.

C.rltfoft lnterdenomlnatioul Chufth
King sb ury Road, Pastor: Rober! Vance,
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m., Worship
Servke 10:30 a.m., Evening Service 6 ,

'

• men, that they may see your
good works and glorify
Father in heaven."
Matthew 5:

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

507 Mulbe~ry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~~
(740) 992-3279
~
Tot Free 1-877-583-2433

N. Second St.

Middlepi&gt;n,

•

·. ' '

499 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-594-6333 ' 1-800-451-9806

.

. I l l lilt

Davia-Quickel Agency Inc. Ifye abide in Me, and My Bragan- Warner
; INSURANCE
Full line 01
INSURANCE
,
Insurance words abide in you, ye shall
SERVICES
t :
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214 E. Main ~
(·
ENCIES Inc. Services
e one unto you.
992·5130 ~

OH

740-992-6128
Local source for trophies.
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Let your light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men, that they may see your
The care you desene, close to home' good work.•·and glorify your
36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Father in heaven. "
Pomeroy, OH 45769
Matthew 5:16

Meigs County's Oldest Florist
EastMain

We Fill Doctors'
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W

Pomeroy, Oh
'Lat ""'"d ,.,, thougho .nh •PG&lt;I•I ,.,,

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~

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d h
Go so 1ove 1 e

arace is sufficient
for thee: for mll

ld

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wOJ:

he gave his only
lbel!otren son...
Jolm 3:16

Pes:;::.~t: !~~~~~S.

~ ~9~11~1a~u~Ic~u~t--~~~~----~~~J-oh_n_/_s_.-~__:P:ome::r:oy~-------t9:9:2~·2:9:5:5__~P~o~m~·e~r:OY~~~--------~~i-~~~~l:I~C~o~r:.:l2~:-91
7

KEBLER

1tt

BUSINESS SERVICES
An 'Accounting &amp;
Fitwncial Services Firm

618 E. Main Street • Pomeroy

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Fifth Street
Coolville, Ohio
7 40-667-311 0

(740) 992-7270

"'

ROCKSPRINGS

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

.,

Blessed are the pure
in ..heart,·fior thevJ
174LayneSirtti'PO Boxl70
shall see God.
.A~•~'L";.~~,:rotDire&lt;~or
Matthew 5_
•

.

.
•

liJ

"So I strive always to keep
my conscience clea~ before
God and man."

Acts 24:

Office Service &amp; Supply

137·C N. 2nd Ave.

·u••••famifiJ'n.lp

prottct yourfamily •

Middleport,

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{72 N. 2nd~~~u~t~dteport,OH
353·0837 Fax:

....... . . .. ...........
~

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OH

-6
992 376

•

•

Salem Community Church
Back of West Columbia, W.Va.om Lie..,ing ·
Road , Pastor: ChRrl~ s Roush t304J fi752288, Sunday School 9:30 ani , Sunday
evening service 7:00 pm . Bibly Study
Wedf1('sday Rrvice 7:00 pm

a.m .

•• "Let your light.so shine before

•
•

Hemlock Grot"e Chrls~n Chun:h
Minisler: Larry Brown, Wor!ihip - 9:30
a.m. Sunday School - 10:30 a. m., Bible
Sludy - 7 p.m.

Congregational

Whlte'1 Chapel Wesleyan
Coolwille Road. Pastor: Rev. Phillip
Ridenour, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.,
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. Wedne sday Service
-7 p.m.

" Rolland Churdt ollhe NaZIIrrnt
Sunday School . 9 :30 a.m., Worship -

'
~

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

190

Sales • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

•

'
•

Wntstde Church of Christ
33226 Childn:n's Home Rd, Pomeroy, OH
Contact 740-441-1296 Sunday morning
10:00, Sun morning Bible study;
following worship, Sun . e ve 6:00 pm,
Wed bible study 7 pm

• 9:30a. m., Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.rn .,
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Thppen PlaiM St Paul
Pastor: Jane' Beanie, Sunday School - 9
a.m.. Worship - 10 a.m .. Tuesday Sen-ices
-7:30p.m.
Centnd Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse), Plllltor: Bob Rnbi n!'IOn,
Sunday School - 9:45 a.J;l., Worship - II
a.m., Wednesday Services - 7:30 p.m.

Won;hip- I I a.m.• Wednesday Servkes - 7
p.m .

Rol!er WillronJ, Sunday School - 9:30
a.m. Worship- 7 p.m.

Chaier Cburdt oftM NQartne
Pastor: Rev. Herbert Grate , Sunday School

ReedsvDit
Worship - 9 :3 ~ a.m., Sunday School 10:30 a.m .. First Sunday of Monlh - 7:00
p.m. serv i c~

Radn•
Pas lor: Kerry Wood, Sunday School - I0
a.m.. Worship - II a.m.

I

Sizes available Sx1 0 to 10 x.20

••
•••
••

•

Mi[[ie's !l{estaurant

Chqrch of Christ

'

Ffttdom Goopd Mlodon
Ba ld Knob , on Co. Rd. J I , Pas1or: Rt&gt; v.

•'

740-949-2217
.

P.O. Box 683

6am·Bpm

Atmosphere

Home People"

rcalizrition that the only thing that ctin he
secure in our lives is our relationship
with oUr Heavenly Father. God will ~ever

life is totally and completely worthless; however, with Him ' we are never

••'

"A Home Bank for

change, we are 1hen faced'\vilh lhe fuller .

•'

OH

•••

Hours

Wam Frientjly

lives; however, we must al(be aware of

•

Fax ;74oi 992· 7406

Hem CathoUc Churdl
161 Mulbel'1')' Ave., Pomeroy, 992-5898.
Pa$lor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz, Sat. Con.
4:45-!5: I.Sp .m.; Mass- 5:30 p.m., Sun.
Con. · 8:45-9:1.5 a.m ... Sun . Mass - 9:30
a.m.• Daily Mass-8:30 a.m.

10:30 a. m.

Wedne5day Services-6:30p.m.

St. Jolin Ludu:ran Clturth
Pine Grove. Worship · 9:00a.m., Sunday
School - 10:00 a.m. Pastor: James P.
Brady

Railroad St., Ma!iOn , Sunday School • 10 .
a.m.• Wor ship - I I a.m., 6 p.m,
Wednesday Sen-ices - 7 p.m.

·'

S~ered

p.m.

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m., Worship -

Minister: Doug Shamblin, Youth Minister:
Bill Amberger, Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship - 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 7:00
p.m.,Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.

Vktory Bopllstlndepeodent
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport, Pastor: Jame~
E. Keesee, Worship - IOa .m., 7 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 1 p.m.

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Or.
"A C:Clebration of Life"
333 Page Street
(740) 992-6472

Catholic

Ch•rcla or God ur ProphHJ
O.J. White Rd. off St. R1. 160, Pastor: P. J.
Chapman, Sunday sChool • 10 a.m.,

9 :30 a.m ., Worlhip - 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m .• Wednesday Ser\lices- 1 p.m.

J..ooa Bottom

Com~r ·of

Faith Baptist Churcb

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

Syracue First Cburdl of God
Apple and Second Sts., Pastor: Rev. Davit!
Russell. Sunday School and Worship- 10
a.m. Evening Services- 6:30 p.m.,

Belhlebem Baptist Cburch
Great Bend, Route 124, Racine, OH,
Paslor : Daniel Mecca, Sunday S.chool 9:30 a.m., Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m ..
W~docsday Bible Stody- 6:00p.m.

Hillside Baptist ChuR:h
St. Rl. 143 just off Rt . 7, Pastor: Rev.
James R. Acree. Sr.. Sunday Unified
Service, Worship - 10:30 a.m ., 6 p.m.,
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

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

School - 10 a.m., Evening - 1 p.m.,
Wednesda y Servtces- 7 p.m .
Setond &amp;.ptltt Church
Ravenswood. WV. Sunday School 10 am, Morning worship II am Evenina · 1 pm.
Wedne5day 7 p.m.

7:00p.m.

ML Union Baptist
Pastor: Dennis Weaver Sunday School9:45 . a.m., Evening - 6 :30 p.m.,
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

i

r

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

'

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A Hunger For More

Holy Spirit. Remember what
He told Nicodemus?
"Most assuredly, I say to
you, unless one is born of
water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of
God." (John 3.5; cf also Titus
3.5) Thus it naturally follows,
"The Spirit Himself bears
witness with our spirit that
we are the children of God."
(Romans 8.16)
And it is the Spirit who
leads us into an ever-deepening relatio'!ship with the Lord
and reproduces in us the life of
Ch.rist - that life marked by
"love, joy, peace, long-suffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and selfcontrol." (Galatians 5.22-23)
So what does this mean for
us today?
Pray, study the Word of
God, and seek to know more
deeply and intimately the
Person and work of the Holy
Spirit. Live in the Spirit. Walk
in the Spirit. (Cf. Galatians
5.25) And, as St. Basil said,
"Do not deprive Him of the
faith and praise He is due."
And surely God will grant
us, "according to the riches of
His glory, to be strengthened
inwardly with power through
the Holy Spirit..." apd will
"do far more abundantly
beyond a,ll that we ask or
think, according to that same
power at work within us." (Cf.
Ephesians 3.16, 20) Amen.

www.mydallysentlnel.com

WORSIHP GOD THIS WEEK

•

The Holy Spirit in·the life of Christ
The renowned 19th century
missionary pastor· and devotional writer, Andrew Murray,
rightly observed in his own
day and time, "The one thing
ne'eded for the Church in its
search for spiritual excellence
is to be filled with the Spirit
of God." Amen.
In an age when the Person
and work of the Holy Spirit is
often misunderstood or,
worse, largely ignored lo the
great detriment of the Church
Universal we would do well
to heed the warning of St.
Basil the .Great:
"His works are ineft'able in
majesty, and innumerable in
quantity... Do not deprive Him
of the faith and praise He is
due. He has been within you.
Have you expelled Him ... ?
Do not repay your benefactor\s love for man with ·ingratitude. That would be the
height of baseness. Do not
grieve the Holy Spirit of God." .
Indeed, the countless works
of the Holy Spirit are magnificent and awe-inspiring,
especially when we pause to
consider what crucial role He
played in the life of Christ
our Lord and, thus, in the
story of out redemption.
The Holy Spirit conceived
Jesus in the womb of the
Blessed Virgin Mary, (Cf.
Matthew 1.20; Luke 1.35) He
was present when Jesus was
baptized in the Jordan River,

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OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

.

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
-.mydelly~tlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher
·Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting 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 of grievances.
- The First Amendment to the U.S. ConatltuUon

TODAY IN HISTQ . RY
Today is Friday. May 26, the 14(ith day·of 2006. T!Jere are
219 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History :
On May 26, 1940, the evacuation of Allied troops from
Dunkirk, France, began during World Wat II.
On this date:
In 1521 , Martin Luther was banned b~ the Edict of Worms
because of his religious beliefs 'and wriungs.
·
In 1805, Napoleon Bonaparte was crowned king of Italy in
Milan.
In 1865, arrangements were made in New Orleans for the
surrender of Confederate forces west ofthe Mississippi.
In 1868, the impeachment trial of President Andrew
Johnson ended with his acquittal on all remainin~ charges.
In 1913, Actors' Equity Association was orgamzed.
In 1960, U.N. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge accused the
Soviets of hiding a microphone inside a wood carving of the
Great Seal of the United States that had been pre.sented to the
U.S. embassy in Moscow.
.
In 1978, the first legal casino in the eastern U.S. opened in
Atlantic City, N.J.
.
·
·
In 1981, 14 people were killed when a Marine jet crashed
onto the flight deck of the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz off
Florida.
In 1991, a Lauda Air Boeing 767 crashed in Thailand,
killing all 223 people aboard.
..
Ten years ago: A police sergeant searching the murky waters
where ValuJet Flight 592 crashed into the Florida Everglades,
killing all II 0 people aboard, found the crucial cockpit voice
recorder. Buddy Lazier won the Indianapolis 500.
Five years ago: Republicans and moderate Democrats drove .
a sweeping $1.35 trillion, 10-year tax cut through ~ongress,
handing President Bush a political triumph.
One year ago: President Bush received Palestinian leader
Mahmoud Abbas at the White House; Bush called Abbas a
courageous democratic reformer and bolstered his standing at
home with $50 million in assistance. Investigators confumed
five cases in which military personnel mishandled the Qurans
of Muslim prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, but said they had
found no "credible evidence" that a holy book was flushed in
a toilet Actor Eddie Albert died in Los Angeles at age 99.
Today's Birthdays: Actor James Ainess is 83. Actor Alec
McCowen is 81. Sportscaster Brent Musberger is '67. Rock
singer-musician Levon Helm (The Band) is 66. Country musician Gates Nichols (Confederate Railroad) is 62. Rock musician Garry Peterson (Guess Who) is 61. Singer Stevie Nicks
is 58. Actress Pam Grier is 57. Actor Philip Michael 'fllomas
is 57. Country singer Hank Williams Jr. is 57. Former astronaut Sally K. Ride is 55. Actress Margaret Colin is 49.
Co uri try singer-son~writer Dave Robbins (BlackHawk) is 47.
Actor Doug Hutch1son is 46. Actress Genie Francis is 44.
Comedian Bobcat Goldthwait is 44. Singer Lenny Kravitz is
42. Actress Helena Bonham Carter is 40. Rock musician
. Phillip Rhodes is 38. Actor Joseph Fiennes is 36. Rhythmand-blues singer Joey Kibble (Take 6) is 35. Actor-producerwriter Matt Stone is 35. Contemporary Christian musician
Nathan Cochran is 28.
Thought for Today: "Talent is what you possess; genius is
what possesses you." - Malcolm Cowley, American author
and critic (1898-1989).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Letters to the editor are welcome. They should be less than
300 words. All/etters are subject to editing, must be signed,
and include address and telephone number. No unsigned letters ·will be published. Letters should be in goQd taste,
addressing issues, not perso'!alities. Letters of thanks to organizations and individuals will nor be accepted for publication.

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services
Correction Polley ·

(USPs 213·960&gt;
Ohio·Valley Publlehlng Co.

Our main concern in all stories Is 10 be '· Publlahed every afternoon. Monday
through

Friday, 111

Court Street.

accurate. If you know ot an error In a
Pomeroy, Ohio. Second-clua pottage
story, &lt;all the newsroom at (740) 992· 'paid
at Pomeroy.
·
2156.
Member:·The Associated Presa and the
Ohio Newspaper Association.

Ou'r main number Ia
(740) 992-2156.

Department extenalona are:

News

Ednor: Charlene Hoeflich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: Beth Sergent, Ext. 13

Advertising
Outalde SeiN: Dave Harris, Ext. 15
Oublde S.IN: Brenda Davis, E&gt;et 16
ClauJCirc.: Judy Cl~r1&lt;. Ext. 1o

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Poatmaatar: Send 'addr~sa corrections

to The Dally 8entlntl, 111 Court Slrtt&gt;t,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

SubiiCrlptlon Rain
By carrier or motor route
One month •• ..•. •... .'1 0.27
One yur • ...... .....'123:24
Dally ...... .' ,' ... ; •. . ...50'
Senior Citizen rtit•
One month .... ........'9.24
One , _ ............'1 03.110
~ ...... ahould remit In

to lhe

advance-

Dolly-·No aubacrlptlon by

mall penniUod In areu where hOme

carr1er oervlce II avlllable,

Mall Sui!Grlptlcin
lnalde Melga County
13 Weeks . ......... . ..'32.26
26 Weeks ........ .. ...'64.20
52 Weeks .. ... ...... .'127.11
Oul81de Melga County
13 Weaks ......... . ...'53.55
26 Wuks . . . . ... . .. . .'107.10
52 Wea~s .. ........ . .'214:21
I•

Pagei\4..
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Friday, Mar 26, 2006

.

Obituaries

Poll gives Democrat slight lead ·in. governor's race
BY JUUE CARR SMYTH · just 3 percent, fueled by a
Af' STATEHOUSE CORRESPONDENT
heavy unfavorable sentiment
among
registered
COLUMBUS, Ohio Democrats. The rating meaDemocratic U.S. Rep. Ted sures the percentage differStrickland ~as a slight lead ence between voters with
over Republican Secretary positive and negative opinof State Kenneth Blackwell Ions of the candidate.
in the race for Ohio goverDe Wine was viewed most
nor, according to a statewide positively, receiving .a 15
poll released Thursday.
percent favorability rating,
About 50 percent of regis- compared to 7 percent for
tered voters said they woutd Brown.
select Strickland in the
Brown had the lowest
November election versus name recognition of all four
44 percent who would candidates, according to the
choose Blackwell, according poll, with just 77 percent of
to the first major poll since the 698 registered voters
the primary election, con- sampled knowing who he is.
ducted by the University of DeWine was recognized by
Cincinnati. The poll had a 95 percent of people surmargin of error of plus or veyed.
minus 3.7 percentage points. . ,The two gubernatorial
The Ohio Poll, conducted campaigns accentuated the
from May 9 through May . positive in the new numbers .
21, also showed Republican - and their opponent's
U.S. Sen. Mike DeWine weaknesses.
leading U.S. Rep. Sherrod
"It's showing that Ohioans
Brown, the Democrat chat- · are hungry for change," said
Ienger for the Seriate seat. Strickland
campaign
About 52 percent of voters spokesman Keith Dailey. "It
support DeWine versus 42 seems that the more voters
percent who favor Brown.
know Ted ·Strickland the
Ninety-two percent of more they like him. The
tliose
surveyed
knew more they know Ken
Blackwell's name, versus 79 Blackwell,
the less they trust
.
. ,,
percent who had heard of hlm ..
. Lara Mastin, who chairs
·
Strickland.
When asked whether they Blackwell's campaign, said
had a positive opinion of the in a statemenl'lhat her candicandidates, people of all par- date. is closing the gap .on
ties gave Strickland a 10 per- Strickland, based .on the
. cent favorability ralllig. results of two erevious polls .
.Blackwell's was lower at
"Ohioans w1ll continue to

Brown, compared to 38 percent for De Wine.
Both Senate campaigns
downplayed the significance
of a poll more than five
months before the Nov. 7
,.
election.
"There's a lot of campa1gn .
left," DeWine campai~n
spokesman Brian Se1!ch1k
said. "People w11l begm to
hear more about Senator
DeWine's record of accomplishment and Congressman
Brown's 14-year. record in
the House and we expect it
to be close."
"Everyone can- see this is a
hot I y contested race and
polls swing on a variety. of·
issues," Brown' campa1gn
spokeswoman
Joanna
Kuebler said.
Democrats elbowed Paul
Hackett, an Iraqi War veteran who was running a strong
grass-roots
campaign
against DeWine; out of the
primary in hopes that the
popular Brown could preva1l
in the wake of widespread
Republican scandal.
DeWine's campaign didn't
rejoice over the , apparent
advantage of their candidate
on
name
recognition .
"Congressman Brown will
certainly have the resources ·
to get · hi s message out,"
Seitchik said. Brown's campaign said it was confident
his ·name recognition would
improve .

rally around Ken Blackwell
once they become aware of
Ted Strickland's inexperience, out-of-touch voting
record and inability to get
things done," the statement
said.
Eric Rademacher, associate director of the Ohio Poll,
was not surpri sed to hear
campaigns were spi nning
the numbers to their best
advantage. He said he views
the poll as a starting point
for · JUdging the progress of
the four campaigns as they
progress.
"These are four candidates
that really are all in pretty
good 11hape," he said. "To
have 8 in l 0 registered voters, or higher. knowing who
you are this early on is a real
positive."
The poll also .revealed a
significant lack of information about the candidates
among registt;red voters,
something that Rademacher
said will give all four room
to move.
Forty ~ five percent of voters surveyed - and particularly independents - said
they know too little · about
Blackwell to judge 'him.
Fifty-one percent said they
still need more information
about Strickland, with only
those in his southeaste'rn
Ohio congressional district
claiming adequate knowtc
edge. Half of voters said
they know too little. to judge

INDEED,

MR. PRESIDENT,
.THE TAYlOR
HICKS LOOK

MI(9HT
lfl\PROVE
VOUR POLL
STANDINGS.

,,

Leota Smith
POMEROY - Leota "Sitter" Smith 87, Pomeroy, died
early Thursday Morning at Camden Clark Memorial Hospital
in Parkersburg, W.Va.
She was born Sept. 12, 1918 in Alfred, the daughter of the
late Emmett and Bernice Bentz Hawk. Leota served as the
Hemlock Grove postmaster from 1956 until her retirement in
1984. She graduated from Pomeroy High School Class of
1936, was a member of the Hemlock Grove Christian Church,
Hemlock Grove Grange, the Walk-In Garden Club and the
Hemlock Grove Quitters.
Besides her Parents she was p~eceded in death by her husband Ralph Smith in 1965 and a son Bob Smith.
. "
.
Cha- Hoellch/pllotoa
Surviving are her daughter, Sharon (Charlie) 'Johnston, The Danforth Foundation "I Dare You" awards went to juniors,
Madera, Calif.; a son, Ron (Mary) Smith, Versailes, Ky.; a Jennifer Smith; Keilah Jacks, Sarah Engles, Dru Reed, Dane
· daughter in law, Peggy Smith of Mandavi lie, La.; grandchil- Eichinger, and David Poole in recognition of their efforts to
dren, Erica (Kevin) Smith, Lindsey Smith, Kristen Smith., achieve their personal best, lead a balanced life, and make a
:ratum ·smith and Steven Smith; and great-grandchildren Zack positive difference In ,their community.
and Regan Smith; sisters: Pearl (Bob) Welker Cushner and
Sara Cullums; a brother, Robert (Romona) Hawk all of
University Of Rio Grande
~onieroy; and several nieces and nephews.
People s Bank Scholarship,
Graveside services will be II a.m. Friday J~ne 2, 2006 at
$900; Milestone Benefits
the Hemlock Growe Cemetery. .
Scholarship, $500.
from PageA1
Memorial contributions may be made to the Hemlock
Eric VanMeter, - Dennis
Grove Christian Church, c/o Marge Barr, 39186 Hemlock
Boggs Scholarship, $300;
Susan Park Scholarship, $450; Bachtel Scholarship for
Grove Road Pomeroy, Ohi&lt;!, 45769. ·
Louise Morhart Grant Music Athletic Excellence, $2,500.
Scholarship, $1,400.
Nathan Becker- Milestone
Autumn McLaughlin Benefits Scholarship, $500.
University of Rio Grande
Chris Fields- Milestone
Scholarship, $30,000; Meigs Benefits Scholarshil?, $500.
Local Teachers Association
Nathan Ar~abnght Scholarship, $300; Susan · Student Counctl Scholarship
· 300.
Park Scholarship, $450;
Chelsea
Fahey
Other recognition
&lt;:;I emit White, 85,' of New Haven , W.Va., died May 24, Columbia
College,
Numerous other awards
2006, at hi s residence.
Columbia, S. C., $5,000.
made during the assemwere
His wife. Betty Jane White, survives.
Joey Haning Ohio bly program. Samantha Cole
Funeral service will be 2 p.m : on Saturday, May 27, Valley University Athletic and Jacob Venoy received the
2006, at Anderson Funeral Home in New Haven, W.Va. , Scholarship, $7,000;. Bachtel Army
Reserve
with Arnold Marcum officiating · and buri al following in Sch.olarship for Athletic Scholar/Athlete Awards;
Eric
Graham Cemetery.
.
·
Excellence, $2;500.
Vanmeter, the U. S. Marine
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m. on Friday at the funeral
Carita Gardner- Shawnee Distinguished Athlete Award;
home.' Online registry is available at www.andersonfh.com.
State un·iversity Scholarship, Scott Tobin the U. S. Marine
$20,09(l.
'
John Philip Sousa Award; and
Meghan Leslie- David V. Miranda Beha . and Jacob
Stivison
Appalachian Venoy, the U.S. Marine
Scholarship, $1 ,000; Sam · Scholastic Excellence Awards.
Walton
· Community
Whitney Thoene was preScholarship;$1,000.
, sented a trophy in recognition
Brittney Jacks - Wendy's of maintaining perfect attenScholarship of $250; Ohio dance from kindergarten
University .
Gateway through high school. Others
Scholarship, $300; Bedford - awards went to David Poole,
Township
Scholarship, the Bausch &amp; Lomb Honorary
$1 ,000; Tri-County Vending Science Award; · Channing
Scholarship, $500.
Burge,
the .. Marketing
C.hanning
Burge
Education Student of the Year
Handleman Entertainment as well as the DECA Member
of the Year awards. ·
Co. scholar~hip, $1,000.
State Farm Scholar/Athlete
Ray Sargent - Washington
State Community College ·awards went to Samantha
Tech Prep Scholarship, $5,000 . Cole and Jacob Venoy, the
,Archie Griftin Sportsmanship
Samantha
Cole

Meigs

Deaths

demit White

..

Yes , It's true, water was running into the London Pool yesterday and it was not seeping out through the cracks because
there are no more cracks after being repaired. The pool will
. have its grand reopening this Sunday starting at 1 p.m. with
free swimming, free food via a community cookout, door prizes
and a 'rededication ceremony. Here , pool committee members
Judy Williams (left) and Joy Bentley prepare to get their toes
wet as the water begins to fill the pool.

from Page A1 .

Leave the Democrats alone

"

for a prompt bug-out. But ·
their pres,dential candidate,
Hillary Clinton, like her predecessor John Kerry (and,
for that matter, such 'rivals as
William · former Virginia Gov. Mark
Warner and John Edwards),
Rusher
knows very. well that this
would be smc1dal. So she ts
already strappmg on her ceremomal sword, plannmg to .
structive suggestions from swamp th~ ·stage With .ll:mtime' to time, which the forms agam, and pracucmg
· Repul&gt;licans could then that snappy Kerry. salute.
implement - .. and, of course, · Meanwh1le, she remmds
take credit for implementing. everyone. that she vote~ for
But when a party· has con- the mvas10n, and contmues
trolled the White House and to support the war. \Yhat
both houses of Congress for hope IS ~ere for a umfi~d
nearly eight years, it's pretty Democmtlc pohcy on Iraq .
hard cheese to demand that
Or what about I.ran? The
its rival come up with ideas Democrnts are pos1t1ve ,they
to bail it out of trouble.If the don't want the United States·
Democrats did have any use- to undertake military action
ful ideas, they would no ' against that large and dangerdoubt rather implement them ou s nation in the present
themselves.
.
state of play in the Middle
In the second place, the East. But ·do they, then, recharsh truth is that the ommend letting Iran build
Democrats don't have any nuclear weapons? Well• no
very hot ideas. Or, more pre- not exactly. What, then?
cisely, they are themselves Harry Reid and Nancy Pelosi
deeply divided, or at least in haven't told us.
grave doubt, about the soluOr what about illegal
tion to almost every major immigration?
The
prdblem afflicting the .coun- Democrats can re·aq the
polls, and they are therefore ·
' try.
Take Iraq . It's a safe bet all for beefing up the patrols
that, in a free vote, the dele- along the Mexican border.
gates to the 'next Demol::ratic ... But they are also convinced
national convention will that they wi II get the votes of
(like the delegates to the last the lion's share of those II or
one, in Boston) long to vote so m'illion illegal immigrants,

'

'

who paraded through our
major cities. on ' May I, i(
only they can contrive to tum
them into citizens. So you
can bet they arent going to
back any effort \O expel
them, or confine them to
"guest worker" status. Net
result: No Democratic policy
on illegal immigration worth
mentioning.
But 1 repeat: Why should
the Deml)cratic Party twist
itself into knots trying (o
come up with real solutions
to these problems? The
Republicans wanted the
country _ OK, so they got
it. Let them carry the can . .
The handwriting is already .
on the wall as far as this ·
. ,
,
'
.
fa 11s off-year elec(lons. are
concerned : The A~encan
peo~le have teml'&lt;?ranly had
It Wtth the R:epubhcan Party,
an~ unle~s 11 c~n core. up
WI a w 0 1e stnng o ~r~­
cle.s before November 11 IS
gomg to get a handsome .
drubbing. pen, wit~ thll
Democrats m possess1on of
one or both houses of
Congress, .th~~ c,an. accept
co-respons1b1!1!Y wah the :
GOP for devtsmg the pohcies that · 'will govern
America.
(William Rusher is .a
Distinguished Fellow of the
Claremont lnstztute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

911

Beth Sei'JI8fll/photo

···Pool

The Democrats have been
on the receiving end of a lot
of criticism lately, not only
from Republicans, but from
allegedly
objective
observers, for failing to come
up with their own proposed
solutions for various problems currently afflicting the
body politic. "You can't beat
something with nothing," the
complaint goes. It's all very
well to complain that the situation in Iraq is a mess, and
that President Bush doesn't
seem to have any idea what
to do about Iran (other than
say that its manufacture of
nuclear weapons would be
"unacceptable"), and thai the
GOP's disarray on the issue
of illegal immigration .leaves
us with no effective policy
there, but where and what are
the Democratic alternatives?
These are fair questions ;
but I cannot persuade myself
that the Democrats must be
. faulted for failing to come up
'with answers of their own.
On the contrary, I think it is
strategically wise for the
Democrats to leave their
response~ to them shrouded
in ambiguity:
In the first place, it's the
Republicans who are running
the country, anti it's frrst and
foremost their .obligation to'
.come up with policies that
solve the nation's problems.
It would be nice if the
Qemocrats would,make con-

Tf1e Daily Sentinel • Page As

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, May 26, 2006

community and then some.
Sunday's celebration will
be .the culmination of that
hard work by village officials
and volunteers, as well as
donations made by residents
for start up, and matching
Federal
Emergency
Manage.ment Agency funds .
After the P90l opens. at I ,
p.m., a rededication w1ll be
held at 2 p.m. acknowledging
the late Herman London who
was mayor when the pool
opened in the late 1970's.
Although London and his
wife have since passed away,
the London's children .and
grandchildren will be there
for the ceremony.
· Al so receiving special
recognition will be local
~onors, that gave a $100 (or
more) donation to the
London Pool Fund.
Door prizes will be given
away every 15 minutes. The
prizes, such as gift certificates, were donated by local
businesses for the .event.
WMPO will be at the pool
.for a live remote from l p.m.
.to 4 p.m. The pool will close
at 6 p.m.
.
During the summer the
pool's regular hours will be
noon-6 p.m., Monday. Saturday. and 1- 6 p.in . on
Sundays.
Pool Masters of Vienna,
' W.Va. have been diligently
working tq get the pool up
and running, sometime s
staying well into the morning, including some work
days that ended at 2 a.m . and
4:30 a.m. just to- "1eet the
.deadline of reopening the
pool by Memorial Day
Weekend.
Yesterday Jim Powell of
Pool Masters said all that
would be lefl for his crew to
do tomorrow was basically
"clean up."
The fact the pool is open at
all is a relief to London Pool

.. from Page A1

Orange Township, on the rec.ommendation. of Engineer
Eugene Triplett !\lld after a
pubiic viewing and hearing
on the request from Orange
Township Trustees.
• Opened a bid for bituminous materials for June from
Asphalt Materialil,, Marietta,
and referred it to Triplett.
• Approved release of a
mortgage from Adam and
Cara Bullington through the
Community
Housing
Improvement Program.
• Approved payment of bills
in the amount of $330,328.43.

new 911 emergency and training center to be built by the
county.
Commissioners have maintained that a less expensive serSteering Committee mem- vice operating from an existing
bers Joy Bentley and Judy location would be · more suitWilliams .
able for the county, Sheets s;Ud.
· "Without our whole com• · Other business
'
munity comi1ig together this
Commissioners also:
would have never happened,"
• Approved vacating a por·
Williams said. ·
tion of Ski Run Road .·in
Bentley agreed, saying it
took a positive outlook to
ments, improved sewer facil.believe the pool could be
ities,
child care center, combrought back to -life which
munity
center, street lighting,
appears to have now hapstreet parking, ·senior center.
from PageA1
penep.
Vill&lt;l!le officials must have
One member of the London
all
pertment material to Meigs
Pool Steering Committee how, and where, the funds
County
GrantS Administrator ·
w~om Bentley credited with
will be directed.
that positive outlook was the . Those funds cannot be Jean Trussell by .June 23 so
late Bob Wingett who passed spent in the downtown area that she can prepare the grant
away earlier this month. and are to be directed at which has an application deadBentley said Wingett will be neighborhood improvements line of July 14. The award date
is Sept. I. If Pomeroy is chowith the group in spirit this within the village.
sen
for the competitive grant it
Sunday when the. festivities
Eligible .activities for the should see funding in late fail,
get underway.
grant include public facilities ·
November, and
The pool will have both a improvements such as con- possibly
would then have two years to
manager and assistant man- struction,
reconstruction," spend the money.
ager. Seven lifeguards are rehabilitation of infrastructure . The surveys collected last
ready to take their seats
overlooking the water with in targeted areas of distress year are still valid for use in
more receiving their certifi- that do not fit within the crite- this year's grant application. ·
Announcements of • the
cation on Monday. Now, all ria of other Ohio Small Cities
CDBG
competitive
programs.
upcoming
public meetings
that's left are some swi mIn
descending
order
of
will
be
published
in The Daily
mers for those lifeg uards to
importance according to resi- Sentinel when the information
·watch over.
dents
via the surveys, street becomes available.
Although there are still volrepairs
were followed by
unteers and funds needed to
fix the roof to the pool and ·demolition of abandoned
shelter house, as well as a list structures, ·fire equipment '
.of other repairs. for all intents and facilities, sidewalk
and purposes the summer is repairs, parks and recreation,
ready to begin in the deep improved water facilities tied
with storm drainage improveend 10 Syracuse.

Grant

l"m very proud of
you ana I love you·

Marianne. Campbell; chairperson of the Board of Trustees of
The Foundation for Appalachian Ohio, center, presents
Bachtel· Scholarship awards of $2,500 each to four gradual·
ing seniors, from the left, Jacob Venoy and Miranda Beha, for
academic excellence, and Joey Haning and Eric VanMeter for
athletic excellence.
Awards to Ashley Savage and Scott Tobin, Christopher
VanReeth and Jacob Venoy.
Eric VanMeter.
The Danforth Foundation
A
representative
of
"I Dare You" awards went to Walmart recognized Melanie
juniors, Dru Reed , Sarah Myers as "Teacher of the
Engle, David Poole, Jennifer · Year" and presented her with
Smith, Dane Eichinger, an~ $500 for classroom use . .
'Keilah . Jacks. The award is Bryce Davis and Danny
given to recognize students Mullins were recognized for
who strive to achieve their excellence in marketing work
personal best, lead a balanced experience, and Kevin Jarvis
life, and make a positive dif- and Gene Buckley for work
ference in their community.
study community service.
Ohio
Department
of
Soon Tobin was recognized
Education Awards of Merit . as the leading scorer on the quiz
went to Tmvis Butcher, Carita · team composed of Kim Johson,
Gardner, Jacob Kennedy, Taryn Lentes, Ashton Bush,
Joshua Kennedy, Whitney Miranda Beha, Chris VanReeth,
Thoene, Chris VanReeth, and Whitney Thoene. An award
Miranda Beha, Samantha Cole, for outstanding analyst in
Taryn Lentes, Meghan Leslie. chemistry II went to Nathan
Scott Tobin, all college prepara- Becker, while Nathan Jeffers ·
tory students; and Chaning received the award for outBurge, a career technical stu- standing lab student.
dent. Criteria for receiving the
Receiving recognition for
awards involves ev~rything having the highest avera~e in
from attendance requirements senior Engish was Wh1tney
to curriculum, grade point aver- Thoene, while Miranda Beha
, age, and participation in and Nathan Beck~r shared
extracurricular school and com- top awards for actmg 10 the
munity activitity, '15 well as drama class.
demonstrating outstariding citiRecognized for "achieving
zenship and character. .
all /\s each grading period in
Receiving honors diplomas physics were Wes Ault,
from the State Depamnent of Meghan Leslie, Whitney
Education for rileetin~ eight out Thoene, Scott Tobin, Jake
of nine specified cnteria per- Venoy and Josh Venoy; m
taining to curriculum, grade advanced
!Uath,
Dan .
point average and ACf score, Bookman, BecKy rader, Carita
were Miranda Beha, Travis Gardner, Nathan Jeffers,
Butcher, Samantha Cole, Carita Whitney Thoene and Chris
Gardner, Jacob Kennedy, VanReeth; and calCulus, Wes
Joshua Kennedy, Taryn Lentes, Ault, Mirinda Beha, Samantha
Meghan Leslie, Autumn Cole, Meghan Leslie, .Jake
McLaughlin, Whitney Thoene, Venoy and Jo~h Venoy.

Program
from Page A1 ·
p.m. in the cemetery with a
gun salute to veterans by the
honor guard of FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion. Those attending will
then move to the church for
the program.
Guest speaker will be the
Rev. Bill O'Brien of Shade.
There will be s pecial music
by Junior White, Colleen
Brickles, Steve Dugan, and
the Alexander Church
choir, along with several
members of the newly organized Athens Harmonica
Club.
•

Preceding the service, an·.
old-fashion indoor picnic
will be held at the Modem.·
Woodmen's hall between
II: 15 a.m. and 12:30 p.m.
when the group will move to
the cemetery and church .'
Following the conclusion of.
the program there, about .
4:30 p.m.; the crowd will be
· invited back
to
the.
Woodmen 's hall for more
refreshments. Those attend· ing are asked to take a cov-_
ered dish. Chicken, meat·
loaf, and rolls along with'
plates, utensils and cups will
be furnished.

A!!t=!·

Auditions for Showboat 5/23
6J!m
HUMC ReUgious Mystery
Pial: 6/4
The Weatherfords 6/9
Emerson Drlv~ 6/14
Barbershop Concert 6/17
Summer Classes Begin Soon!
Register now for Acting,
Dance &amp; Slrilll!
The Ariel-Dater Hall

.42874n~F.-A
Sec. Av\ ~.;,l~iptl;~,?H
21 ,
'.

United We Stand
To hnor our own

This Memorial Day, the staff of
Fisher Funeral Homes celebrates
America's past, present and fu.ture by
honoring those men and women who ,
served in our U.S . A!]ned Forces.
· Because of their bravery and
courage, the American spirit
unites us from within.

verym~h!

Love,

Sarah

590 L M •P-r,·OII 457"
264 s. ................, 011 45760 .
,
748.992.5141

�•

PageA6

BY THE BEND

:rhe Daily Sentinel

Friday, May 26, 2006

.

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'

www.mydailysentinel.com

=
Man abused in prison-now sees his attacker at wo'rk Community Calendar
DEAR ABBY: When I was
younger, I got in trouble with
the law and spent a couple of
years in prison. Because of
my slight build and "good
:looks, I received unwanted
: attention from several of my
fellow inmates. It was very
tniumatic, and it took years of
therapy after I was released
to come to terms with ·What
happened to me. ·
· I now have a job that I love,
: but recently the company
hired one of the men who
raped me .in prison. This is
ppsetting because he recog. mzed me and gives me this
horrible smile every time our
paths at work cross. I don 't
know what to do because I
really need this job, and if I
were to quit, I wouldn't find
one in this area that would
· pay me half as much as I get
now. I can't just up and move
because I have to care for my
mother, whose health is failing. What can I do? - MANHANDLED IN MICHIGAN
DEAR MANHANDLED:
It's ,a pity your attacker was
released from prison, because
someone like him belongs
· behind bars permanently.

lac field of study.
·
My husband decided to
post
a
picture
of
Michelangelo's "David" on
his Web page. I just about
flipped when I saw it. I
Dear
askel) him why he chose that
'
one, and he had numerous
Abby
excuses, none of them to my
satisfaction .
My husband does not
teach anything remotely tied
Obviously, your employer is . to .
the
"David,"
one who believes ih giving Mtch.e langelo! art, Italy,
convicts a second chance. I Renaissance htstory, etc. The
think you should tell your closest he comes to it is he
boss exactly what you have teaches s'ummer school in
told me. If I were · your Europe and recruits students
employer 1 would want to for his classes over there. I
know so' that I could either told him he should be proget · rid of that employee, or moting his program, not this.
arrange that your paths never
I am not a prude. I've been
cross again.
to Florence and have seen the
DEAR ABBY: My husband statue. It's a fabulous art treais a college professor.' His sure, and I can see why it's
department wanted the facul- famous. I guess my biggest
ty to have Web pages with a concern is. that my husband
"personal " touch, so they ~1ghtbe btsexual, and thts ts
ordered each faculty member hts subconsciOus way of sayto have a photograph taken 'to ing so. He hasn't given me
post on them. If they chose any other reason to believe it,
not to display their own oic- but I can't imagine any other
tures. they could post a pic- reason why a normal heteroture of something they like or sexual man would have this
that represents their particu- picture "represent" himself.

Can you please give me your
thoughts on this? - WORRIED WIFE
DEAR WORRIED: You
didn't mention your busband's reasons for posting the
picture, so I can't evaluate
whether they make sense to
me. Because his school had
no objection to his selection
of artwork, I'd say you are
overreacting.
Beauty is in the eye of the
beholder - and so is evil.
Michelangelo's "David" rep. resents the ideal of perfeclion in the male physique.
Perhaps 'your husband chose
that image because he wishes
that' s the way he looked or not. Would you have been
equally suspicious if · a
female professor had used a·
picture of the "Venus de
Milo"? Sometimes a picture
is only a picture.

Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Buren, also
known as Jeanne · Phillips,
and was founded by her
mvther, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
Box 69440, Los Angeles,
CA 90069. ··

.

Public meetings
Thesday, May 30
Meigs
POMEROY County Veterans Service
Commission, 9 a.m., 117
Memorial Dr.
POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District
Board
of
Supervisors, special session,
II a.m at the district office.
3310 I
Hiland
Road,
Pomeroy.

Church events
Friday, May 26
CARTHAGE -A spring
revival will be held May 26
and 27 at· the Carthage
Community Church, 7 p.m.
both nights.'Jay Hubban!will
speak at the Friday service
with Erica Cremeans prqviding
music ,
and
Sam
Anderson
will
preach
Saturday night with open talent.
MIDDLEPORT
-Free

Members of
the newly
organized
Meigs County
4-H
Ambassadors
are from the
left, Amanda
Windon, Tina
Dra.ke, Corey
Jarvis,
Hannah Yost
and Sarah
Engle.

.

Eutrm Local Schooll956 Alumni classes are celebrating their
AnnMrse~Jt..The new facilities tQ Jtouse Chester and Tuppers fla'ns
(Olive-Orange) bad not yet been constnacted in 1956.

M

1

HCJWtMr we were eonsoBdaaed as Earn IAcal SchOlL ·

•

Clubs and
organizations
Sunday, May 28
RACINE - Southern High
School class of 1971 wil hold
its 35th reunion at 12:30 p.m.
at the home of Rita Salser
Matthews on Addie Decker
Road, Racine. Call 949-2437
or 992-3685 for more information.

,.
'

'

•'.1

'

l

at

Meigs County Fish .&amp; Game Club
Information - 992-0026 '

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

v..c!IIJ }t. )0!6

or.
QPR:A.trOR
ct·\l.R! .

. )1)99

Extension office in Meigs
County, 992-6696, can be
contacted by community
groups interested in having
the 4-H Ambassadors present
at a function or in learning
more about the program.

• Spons Injuries

• Most ln ~uronces

• Mcdkal'l'

• Same day app1.

'

Socit'ly

Member Of Aincricrut
Boord of Foronsk
1

Professionals
20 yrs cxpericru;e

Member of Anu: ri~ (U\

.Acndl'my of Medical

• A.cupuu•.:turc
_

• 304-273-5321 3C
316 Washington St

Acupwll: ture

.

.·&lt;'

Rog~r Epple

Tomla Dorst .

··Eleanor.Well

Birth·announced

Maxine.Wtiitehead

~

·~.

·, •

Jobil Riebel· · ..

636~MAINSili&amp;i

f'oMIIROY, OHIO 457ft
7A0-992-6121

£it'nvl:

ntiiU I'OR!
. . CHIN, TOU.CCO, DOMII'a,

,

,.

..

.~IIeP-a,

_

:riUCil AND BAKE PiZZA, COI'PD,
liANI:IWic:Ha,.BaR, WI Nil

--···
'.

10 WINGS $4.00, PiZZA .85 A IWCE

·

.

..

J&gt;

.

..

Roger Epple ·

..

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~ ·

' Agnhal StHtf Editors
-~

.

••

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J~ff · Starcher,

-

·

Gertrude WaUace ·

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)

•'

:'r~

'•

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I~.

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Has Graduated
.

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3054 Students, Many ·.
· ·Gone On To College, Returned To The
Disli:lctT9 Teach, We Are Very Proud
·
Of Out School!

"I'm encouraging
my family to
partic:ipate!"

w
.
.
) "t T'

· Seniors CbeedewJers
.lime Rideno~
Deceased
Louise Riebel
Keith Buckley
Rowena SQilders
Douglas Garlalnd

Tuppers Plains High
''

Belpre Resident

Limited paper' copies available
at Brookmar, Inc. in Vienna.
Call 304/865-4205 for details.

Fully qualified participants receive
$400 plus blood test results. You'll
be glad you participated, too!

cJ

.

,

Tbe students, Staft', administration and board of education of Eastern
,. Local Sch®ls wish to congratulate the CI&amp;Sll of 1956.
·
Fifty years ago you Start.ed·a tradi~n that continues today-·
·

· PRIDE AND. EXCELLENCE!
.
John Rice

·

Shelia Taylor

.l og on to: Www.c8healthpro)act.org

Howard Caldwell
Charles Weber
Greg Bailey

CS HEALTH .
I,I~C.)JI:CT

BRQOKMAR, INC. '

''

Independent Hea~ Project Coordinators, assigned the~ of collecting health lnformalian and ~ 1estillQ.

f

*DIEU* IIAU..v- 'AWEA8 II&amp;8T BEER AND WINI-..:cnoN•IliiYa VJI:W PATIO Dlfl•ta
1
PAIITY TltAY•* rYY Htl&amp;...,.,.. W.:IITa
~f
•

,

..

·llrn
.
.

· Conducted by:

.,

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John Riebel- '·: '
Jim Wbitlatcb

~

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$1.00 DRAFT/$3.00 Mlic:&amp;:'•
i'ttARGARrrA '
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'BasJretbell SeniorS .· .
BOb POweUT
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· : · DaleKubn
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"PARTY ON THE PATIO" . ,.,!•
HAPPY HOUR ALJ.. DAY FRIDAY, SATUitDAY ~D MQNPAY
"HOT OFF THE GRILL" BURGEri AND HOT~ SPIECJAU

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~ott
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BUN'S PARTY BARN

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. . ~oger EPI»&gt;f ..i,
Wallace{\."Valton) ' Ronn" Clay . ~ . .

Robert
EddieMuru

Don't procrastinate - complete
your health questionnaire today ·
at www.c8healthproject.org.

.

.jJ' ,

417 Grand Park Drive; Vienna. WV 26105

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James Brannon
Clara Ami Chaney (Jones)
Ralph Chevalier
•
Victor Chevalier
Janet Chrmy (Ctmmtber·lin)
Joe Ann Combs (Padgett)
KeQneth Frecker
Sylvia Harris (Webb)
Lurea Knight (Cline)
Dale Kuhn
Lyle Life
Eddie Murphy
Robert PoweU
Paulette Rockhold (Shields)
Rowena Sanders (Walters)
1
Delorse Sinclair
Mary Jane Spencer (Osburn)
~tty Vencill (Milhone) '
Charles Vineyard
Mary Vineyard
James Whitlatch
RayYoung ·

"

·K:~rue:! bel ..

"Getting paid $400 dqllars to be
in the CB Health Project was
great, but when I received my
test results from my blood work,
I was really glad I participated!
My doctor said the vast amount
of information is invaluable to my
personal health profile. Now that the project is accepting
questionnaires again, I'm encouraging my family to participate!"

POMEROY - Tom and
:Robin Dorst of Pomeroy
•announce the birth of their
daughter, Tomia Mildred
Marie, born April 18, at the
Holzer Medical Center. ,
The infant weighed 4
.pounds; 13 ounces. She was
:!Welcomed home by a brother,
Tiamo, and a cousin, Jessica:
Maternal grandparents are
Robert, Jr. and the late Mildred
Marie "Betty" McDaniel.
.Paternal grandparents are the
)ate Edgar and Sybil Dorst.

:.. , ..

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~~ar:!:~ns ~:.

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. Tuppers Plains Teqcbers
tBc:mnie Brown,··
Evelvn Koehler
W.A.Rice
·Nora Rice
J.C.Quick
O.C.Bibbee

. · ·' ·
Reinard ~~e

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Caldwell

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Principal .

1955-1956 Championship in FootbaD
. gl'.!~~=f~ty Tournament ChampiQns Basketball .

. ~~!:!~Yose (Keller)
'

... Marvene
..
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Maxine Reed (Duper) · , ,..
uhe Ridenour (E(Jp[e)

John Riebel
.
Louise Riebel (Morton)

Tuppers Plains

i

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Linda Fitch (Oiler)
: 1 Mildred Gilkey (Nash)
". .
·J.~ Helen Haggy (Norris)
K'Dallas Marks , · · , ·· .
Janet Osborne (Doherty) · ·
Lois PnlliM (Mu ser)

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Tuppers Plains!l

J.S. Davis

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·Earns scholarship
Garrett Karr of Pomeroy has received the Emmett Karrar
Memorial Award, a $1,000 scholarship presented earlier this
month at The Ohio State ·University faculty Club.
Karr, the son of Ray and Bobbie Karr, is enrolled in the
Civil and Environmental Engineering and Geodetic Science
department at OSU.

Su;retaries
·-·.

'

·.~&gt; Ferra .Lou Chevalier (Barringer) ~U .D odrill
· Ronald Clay .
.
Henry Beaver
. .Larry Cleland .
. Fay Sauer

·Marilyn Scott (Mason)

Ravenswood, WV

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V.P. WV Chimp racti c

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Chiropractor of the year

Auto Accidents
Worker's Compensation

''1;
r'"' Chester .
' . .·
·~ Darlene JJailey (Buckley)

. Saturday, June 1Oth
8 am- 2 pm

Walter Brown Francis Andrews
·AgneS Hill DelmaiT Baum
.
Carl Barnhart

.•

:· PrinciPal

FREE FISHING DERBY

Eastern I focal
Roant Of Education

County Swt of Schools
. · . 0.0. Patton . · ·

Meigs County Fish &amp; Game Association
Annual Kids

Extension organizes 4-H Ambassador program.
POMEROY Eastern,
Meigs, home schooled and
Southern 4-H members are
coming together as one to be
4-H Ambassadors, a group
designed to provide meaningful opportunities for teens
toward expanding the program and image.
To become a member of
the 4-H Ambassadors girls
and boy must be at least 14
years old and have a deep
appreciation 'for the 4-H program, said Sarah Engle, a ·
member of the group. She
said that as an Ambassador,
the 4-H member's ,responsibilities are to assist as needed
in planning, implemenling,
and evaluating countywide
4-H programs and to represent Meigs County 4-H opportuntttes and experi- H image.
· members on program and ences to enhance . their
This years Ambassadors
_pevelopment committees.
knowledge, skills, attitudes include Engle and Corey
· Ambassadors will .also and aspirations in leadership, Jarvis from the Salem Center
: work
with
other 4-H ·citizenship, ~ommunications, Go-Getters
4-H
Club,
Ambassadors to plan, impleAudrionmi
Pullins
and
public
relations,
scholarship
ment and evaluate . . an
Ambassador
project
to and ·related areas of interest. · Hannah Yost from the Meigs .
strengthen, promote and pub- Other purposes are to enable County Dairy Club, Zach
licize the Ohio 4-H youth teens who become ambas- Carson from God's Country
: ttevelopment
program, sadors to serve as 4-H Kidz 4-H Club, Amanda
spokespersons and to involve Windon from the Kountry
•!lccording to Engle.
·· The Ambassador program teens in expanding 4-H mar- Kidz 4-H Club and Tina Drake
:provides Ohio 4-H teens who keting arid promotion efforts from the Pioneers 4-H Club.
:J,ecome ambassadors .with and in managing the Ohio 4Cassie Turner at the OSU

EASTERN 50 YEARS
'.C ELEBRATION

community dinner. 4:30 to
6:30p.m. Middleport Church
of Chri st Family Life Center.
Creamed baked chicken and
noodles will be served to the
public.
Sunday, !\Jay 28
PORTLAND
~
Stive rsville
Community
Church wi II observe homecoming · with · services to
begin at I p.m. with Bill and
Sherry Vill ers preaching and.
special mu sic by Mary
Dailey and Delivered. A dinner will follow the service.

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COMMUNI1'Y

The Daily sentinel

Friday, May 26,

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2006

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Inside

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

ScorebOard ..... , ... : .. B4

Summer Classes to be held at the Ariel Joins U.S. Marines
'

Submitted photo

Kristin Rck, Christopher Bissell and Baylee Collins. all sixth
graders at Eastern Elementary School, participated in the Junior
National Young Leaders Conference In Washington, D.C. recently.
.

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(OI.IJNS ATIENDS ·DC
LFADERSHIP ·PROGRAM
LONG
BOTTOM
Baylee Collins, a student at
Eastern Elementary School,
was one of over 200 from
across the United States to
·take part in a leadership conference in Washington , D.C.
She is the daughter of
Brian and Jayne Ann Collins
of Long Bottom. ,
Themed the Legacy of
American Leadership , the
Junior
National
Young
Leaders Conference introduces young people · to the
tradition
of
leadership
throughout .American history,
while helping them ·develop
their own leadership skills.
"The , aim of the Junior
National
Young
Leaders
Conference is to inspire students to recognize their o~n
leadership skills, measure !heir
skills against those of current
and fanner leaders and retum
home wilh new found confidence in !heir ability to exercise
positive influence within their
communities," said Mike
LaSday, executive director of
the Congressional Youth
Leadership Council,lhe organization !hat sponsors JrNYLC.
. ''Young people are not only
welcome in Washington ,
. D.C., they actu;!lly keep this
city and our country running."
During the six-day program, participants take pan in
educational activities and pre-

sentations , as well as meet
with elected officials and kii,Y
Congressional staff members
. on Capitol HilL Panicipants
also visit historical sites , such
as Colonial Williamsburg,
· Harpers Ferry, tQe National
Museum of American History
and Washington, D.C.'s manuments and memorials.
In ad(lition to examining
notable ·U.S. leaders and historic figures. students study the
impact of leadership throughout critical periods of
American history including the
Civil War and Reconsbuction;
World War · II, the Great
Depression and the 'Civil
Rights Movement. Upon completion of JrNYLC,- students
gain a greater sense of understanding of the role of individ- ·
uals in American democracy,
as well as the responsibilities
of being a leader.
· CYLC is a nonprofit, nonpanisan educational organization. Since 1985, the
Council has inspired more
than 200 ,000 young people to
. achieve their full leadership
potential. Nearly 425 members or the U.S. Congress
join our commitment by serv· ing on the CYLC Honorary
Congressional Bo'ard of
Advisors : In addition, more
than 40 embassies partiCipate
in the Council's Honorary ·
Board ,of Embassies.

GALLIPOLIS -'- "A full line-up of
summer performing arts classes are
planned for The Ariel - Ann Carson
Dater Performing Ans Centre. Included
in the class schedules are acting, dance,
string, and ballroom dancing.
A progressive design for the youth acting classes will be implt~mented in the
Ariel Young Actors Studiq. taught by
Joseph Wright and Kim Vanco . Students
entering grades 3 through 12 can learn
·performing ans skills such as improvisatiOI\, monologue . performance, stage
makeup, audition techniques, character
development, theater games, and more.
Students will receive makeup kit and
monologue boOklet during the weekly 90
minute classes. Classes will run for 8
weeks, and are $80 per· student, including supplies.
Joseph Wright and Kim Vanco, both
have extensive theater, and acting insbUction background. Wright, executive director of !he Ariel - Dater Hall says, "Our
new Ariel Young Actors Studio is

a

designed tO help our local youth actors
POMEROY
fine tune their performance skills by · Joshua
Buzzard
focusing on a variety exercises and !heater recently joined the
processes." He continues, "the classes are U.S. Marine Corps
enjoyable, engaging, and challenging."
through the delayed
Sarah Roush will present a summer entry program. A
session of jazz, modern, and ballet senior at Meigs Hi~h
dance classes for ages 3 through, adult. School,
he will
Numerous students have worked with attend Mari~e Cows
Sarah in her years of dance instruction recrmt trammg m
experience. Roush has danced semi- May at Marine Corps
professionally with the Mid-Illinois Recruit Depot in Josh Buzzard
Ballet Company, and has just completed Parrislsland, S.C.
He will undergo 13 weeks of training "
her second year of dance instruction
including first aid instruction , generar
with the Ariel.
. Classes will also be taught in string by military subjects , physical · fitness ,
. Deb Wood: Ballroom Dancing with Dr. Marine Corps history, and weapons
Joe Li is being planned for mid-summer, familiarization.
as'well.
Upon successful completion · of
Most class fees are $8 per session. recruit training, he will return home for
Classes will begin the week of June II. leave before attending one of 300 forRegistrations for classes are currently . mal military occupational schools that
·
being accepted at the Ariel - 'Dater Hall he chooses.
He is. the son ·of Kermit and Kelly
box office. For more information call our
Buzzard
of Middleport.
offices at 740-446-ARTS (446-2787).

Friday, May 26, 2006

LocAL ScHEDULE
GAL.qPOLIS - A schedule ol upcoming colege ·
and high sc:tlool varsity sporting events Involving
I98JT1s from Gallia, Meigs and Mason counties.

Friday's Qlmt
Track and Field

'OHSAA

Tugday. May 30
American Legion Baseball
~eigs Juniors at McArthur, 6 p.m.

OHSAA

Bryan Walterslphatao

Saturday. Juna 3

Track and Field
OHSM State Championships
. American Legion Blleeball
Chillicothe 757 at Feeney Bennett (OH), 1
~.m.

SPORTS BRIEFS

Meigs junior golf

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- POMEROY - The Meigs
Junior Golf League will have
sign-ups, and their ·first
match
on
8:30
aim/
Wednesday, May 31 at, the
Pine Hills Golf Course.
· . For more information contate Marty Cline at 992-6604
. or Carol McCullough at 9923322.

EHS basketball
camp set for May
&lt;

, TUPPERS PLAINS - The
eighth annual Eastern Eagle
Pasketball Camp will be held
for all kids in grades 4-6 boys or girls - on Tuesday,
May 30 through Friday, June 2
at Eastern High School. ·
The four-day event will run
from 9 a.m. to noon and will
focus on fundamental drills
essential to producing winning
basketball at all levels.
Registration forms can be
~lc\Ced up at Eastern High
~)::hool and, all campers in
b.ttendance will receive a Tand basketball.
•: Completed
registration
(Qrms can be returned to either
t'last~rn High School, . c/o
f{ow1e caldwell, 38900 State
Route 7, Reedsville. Ohio
~~772, or Coach Howie
Caldwell, 40878 Old Seven
. Road, Reedsville, Ohio 45772.

Ton Rag. Cab 4WD

HOME FOR
We're dona~llli $100 to the NatiOnal VfW Home lor Clildm~ tor ·
evtry new &amp;ld&lt; or Pontiac whlcll sold and dellwrvd durinv
Memor1al Day weekend.

fhirt

Cincinnati Reds
legends camp

cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms in the
evening .. .Then partly ·cloudy
after midnight. Lows around
60. Northwest winds 5 to 10
mph. Chance of rain 40 percent.
Saturday•.•Partly cloudy.
Highs in the lower 80s. North
winds 5 to 10 mph.

ems1
Call .
Cory•••

I
I.

1·1~'·1~1·

Take 1-n to Ripley ,
Call 422·07 56
FAtRPLAIN Interchange
loll Free 1-800·822·0417 (exhon132)RouteTum Nor1h
Dealership is
Vl•lt us online at
3 miles on left
W!fWW.Iompeden.com
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Taxes, tags. IItie leextra. Rtbalt induded In salt prkt If MW velridl.,_ wllen applkilllle. On approved atdi1.
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detols. •• With conquest trade rebate. Not rtlfiOIIIIble for tyr.ogrophiml er!'OB~Prices good May 2Sth lbrough May 281h.
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of every ased

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1••

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!'

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"'ad Sherman, Sports Editor
f;&gt;40) 446·2342, ext. 33 ·
bshermanOmydailytrlbune.com

·

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Bryan Walters, Sports Writer

.Jizp

.

(!40) 446·2342, ext. 23
.
ftwaltersO mydallytrlbune.com

•

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•
'

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~arry Crum, Sports Writer
f1'40) 446·2342, ext. 33
~i-umOmydallyreglster.com

.• ;:.. ,'' ·&gt;··' •. ·'' .::.. : ·· .· .··-:· ::~: ~;·;~::'.·. ':&gt;.•'

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Mighty Ducks stay alive against Edmonton

fax -1·740·446·3008

4/:J South Church Str•eet, Rtpley • Monday - Satm•!lay 9 am · 8 pm • Sunflav 1 pm - 7 pm • Closet! Memm•ml Day

vehkle over $6,000. Dealer contributipn may ailed final price.

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·•soo shopping cord with FICO credit sme up lo 630, and purthose of o used

BYESVILLE
The
Gallia Academy girls have a
dozen competitions awaiting
them Saturday in the' 2006
Division II Regional track
and field finals to be held at
· Meadowbrook High School. ·
The Blue Angels, who .are
this season's defending D-11
regional champion, qualified
iri five individual events and
also advanced in two relay
events during Thu.rsday's
qualifying lleafs.
Senior Felicia Close led
the way by quaiifying in the
lOOm hurdles and 300m hurdles. Close also joined teammates Kayla Perry, Alexis
Geiger and Tonia Logan on
the top-qualifying 4x I OOm
relay team. Close was also
the top qualifier in the lOOm
hurdles and will also ·compete in the lorig jump
Saturday.
Perry, another senior, sits
as the top qualifier in the
400m dash . Perry was also
the runner-up qualifier in the
.200m dash and was part of
the second-fastest 4x200m
relay team. Logan, Ivy Hurt
and Crystal Wade joined
Perry ·in that relay event.
Geiger, a fre shman, qualified individually in the .1OOm

and 200m dashes as well as
the 4x I OOn1 relay. Geiger
will also compete in the long
jump on Saturday.
One other
freshman ,·
Lauren Adkins , will compete
in both the l600m and
3200m runs held this weekend . Junior Carol Fahmy
will also compete in the
1600m run:
The Meigs boys also had
some success at qualifying
Thursday, landing one relay
team and one individual in
the .finals.
The Marauders - behind
the quartet of Jared .Casey,
Corey Wilson, Cornelius
English and Brandau Fisher
- · qualified fifth in the
4x I OOm dash for Saturday.
English, currently a sophomore, also qualified in the
200m dash.
Devan Soulsby will also
comp~;te for MHS Saturday
in the girls 800m run.
The River Valley · boys '
duo of Chris Lester and
Jonathan Casto y;ill compete
Saturday in the 800m run·..
Ashley Fitch will also compete Saturday in the 800m
finals .
The field events of
Saturday's finals will start at
II :30 a.m. Track finals start
at 12:30 p.m.

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

'

*Get a

BY BRYAN WALTERS
BWALTERS@MYOAILYTRIBUNE.COM .

~ . OVP ScoreLine (&amp; p.m.-1 a.in.)

~1 ,'

1lll~Uw111Mt1UOO

MARIEITA
· The
Cincinnati Reds will be holdIng its annual Legends Youth
Baseball Clinic June 14-16 at
VFW Baseball Field in
Marietta.
:: The three day dinic is for
ages 5-19 and will focus on
P!lchin~. hitting and fi~lding
mstructlon. The camp wrll ·run .
daily from I0 a.m. to 3 p.m.
and will star former Reds
players Don Gullett, Gary
Nolan, Todd Benzinger, Kal
Dllniels, Leo Cardenas and Joe
Charboneau.
: Early registration can be
t;Ione any time and any
eampers who register by May
25 will receive an autographed
~eds Legends commemora:
nve baseball card and mm1
helmet. The registration dead·
line is June 12.
For more information about
~e camp, please call 740-3733476.
.

o-uraui
etu

CoNTACT US

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.DONWOOD'Nc.
-AUTOMOTIVE

•

State Champio'nships

Amorlcon Legion Baseball
.Gallipolis at Lancaster, 6 p.m.

Local Weather

•

Tburtday. June~ 1
Legion Baaabell

Fddav. Juna a
Track and Field

NELSONVILLE
Students were honored
Scholastic achievemeill and Tuesday evening at a banquet
leadership abilities help to hosted by ·Hocking College
determine who is named to .President John Light and
the 2006 President's List at attended by members of the
Hocking College.
Hocking College Board of
Shauna . Elliott of · Racine Trustees.
·was one· of 23 students choThe Trustees' Award recipsen for the college 's most . iel]t is selected from among
prestigious recognition. w,ith President's List students and
less than one half of one per- will be announced at the
cent of the student populatioA · recogmtton banquet the
receiving this special honor.
evening before graduation.

'

at

.OHSAA
Meadowbrooke, 5 p.m.

Lancaster at Gallipolis (at Rio Grande), 6
p.m.

CHILDREN DRIVE

~~~~~~ !. mn~.~ llll,l

Saturday's game
Track and Field
Division II Regional

Lancaster. 5 p.m..

,

THE VFW NATIONAL

.

at

Ill

A~erlcan

Racine youth receives r~o~q'!n

Friday...Mostly
cloudy.
Showers and thunderstorms
likely in the moming ...Then a
chance of showers and thunderstonns in the afternoon.
Highs in the upper 70s.
Southwest winds !Oto IS mph.
Chance of rain 70 percent. .
Friday
nlght .. .Mostly

.

Regional

Division

· Meigs' Devan Soulsby, left,
runs a leg of the 4x400- .
.meter relay during day one of
the Division II Regional track
and field meet at
Meadowbrook High School in
Byesville. 'Pictured below, '
Meigs· Brandan Fisher competes in the 100meter dash.
The Division II meet wraps
up on Saturday with the top ·
four placers in each event
advancing to next week's
State Track and Field meet
at Jesse Owens Stadium in
Columbus.

AP. photo

Anaheim Mighty Ducks goaltender Jean -Sebastil~n Gig~ere celebrates after defeating the Edmonton Oilers, 6-3, dur,ing playoff hockey action In game four the NHL Western Conference
Finals in Edmonton. Canada Thursday.
··

,,

--------·----

EDMONTON,
Alberta s~althe win for the Du~ks.
(AP) - Dustin Penner and
Dwayne Roloson ·allowed
Jaffrey Lupul scored twice five goals on 40 shots and lost
for the Anaheim Mighty for the first time since Game
Ducks, ivho stayed alive in 2 · of , Edmonton's secondthe -Western Conference tinals round series ,against San Jose.
with a 6-3 victory over the He is 1'1-5 in these playoffs.
Oilers
on
The Oilers won the final
Edmonton
Thursday night.
four of that matchup to elimi:
· Jean-Sebastie n
Giguere nate the Sharks and then took
returned to the AnaHeim goal the first three from Anaheim,
for his first start since April which had lo~t 13 straight at
29- a span of nine games· Edmonton. The Ducks hadn't
and made 20 saves as the won there since Feb, 24,
Mighty Ducks extended the' · 1999.
series and snapped the Oilers '
Giguere hadn't started since
seven-game' winning streak.
he was replaced by rookie
They will return home for llya Bryzgalov in Game 5 of
Game 5 on Saturday nigh,t. the first-round series agai nst
Ar&lt;Jheim still trails 3-1 in the . Calgary. He showed some
best-of-seven· series. Only rust inallowing three goals on
two NHL teams have rallied the first nine shots he faced ,
from such a deficit .to win.
but was good enough to
The Mighty Ducks ·took a improve to 3-2 in . thi s post3-0 lead in the' · first period season .
'
wh.en Penner , scored twi ce. · "It was pretty hard. It' s
and rellow rookie Ryan been a month since I played,"
Get~laf added a goal.
Giguere said. ''I' m just happy
Marc- Andre Bergeron got that I was able to go .th~~ugh
Edmonton on the board early . and that we got :he wu: . .
in the second period. but
G1guere was~ t surpn sed to
Anaheim defenseman Ruslan get the eall . wrth the Ducks
Salei made it 4-1 less than 2 facmg ellmmatlon.
minutes later.
'
"1 was sort of expecting it,''
Edmonton got wilhin one lie s~ id. "When you are down
goa l when ·Ryan Smyth and three-nothmg you have to
Georges Laraque scored in make some c~.anges and see
the second period, but Lupul what happens.
made it 5-3 with only 1:.38 . The Duck:~ came_at Rolo,son
left in the frame and lhen 111 waves 111 the f1rst penod,
added a1i empty-netter in the .
Please see Ducks, a•
final seconds of the game 1o
•

Reds deal
Williams
to Mets
NEW YORK (AP) -The
New York Mets made
another trade 'to help their
injury-depleted
pitching
staff Thursday, acquiring
Dave Williams from the
Cincinnati Reds for a minor
leaguer.
The Reds got right-hander
Rubert Manuel in the deal
and assigned him to Class-A
Dayton . They also · sent
about $500,000 to the Mets
to cover half of Williams '
remaining salary this season. Williams )s making
$1.4 million this year.
The 27-year-old lefty was
designated for assignment ,
by Cincinnati on Saturday.
He was2-3 with a 7.20 ERA
in eight starts.
"We've added to our
stockpile of pitching," Mets
general manager Omar .
Minaya said. "It enables us
to fill some holes caused by
the injuries to some of the
players we had. It gives us
numbers."
In his last start, Williams
gave up six .runs in three
innings of Cincinnati's 9-8
victory over Pittsburgh -on
Thursday. He went I 0-11
with a -;1.25 ·ERA for the
Pirates last season and is
19-29 with a 4.56 ERA in
74 major league games,
including 66 stans.
Cincinnati acquired him
from Pittsburgh last offseason for first baseman Sean
Casey and cash.
.
"We see Williams as a
starting pitcher and we're
going to send him to TripleA with that. in mind,"
Minaya said.
The 6-foot-3, 190-pound
Manuel is 22 years old. He ·
went 8-1 with a 2.06 ERA in
12 · games of .rookie ball
with the Gulf Coast Mets
last season.
Trying to upgrade , the
back of their rotation, the
Mets acquired veteran right-.
hander Orlando Hernandez
from Arizona on Wednesday
for reliever Jorge Julio.
Victor Zambrano is out
for the . season following
elbow surgery and rookie
Br.ian Bannister is still sidelined with a hamstring
injury. John Maine, who
filled in for one start, is also
on the disabled list because
of inflammation in his right
middle finger.
·
After trading starters Kris
Benson and Jae Seo in the
offseason, New York has
been scrambling to fill the
void. using Jose Lima and
Jeremi Gonzalez behind tile .
steady , trio of Pedro
Martinez, Tom Glavine and
Steve Trachsel.
Gonzalez was designated
for assignment Thursday
· after New York's loss to
· Philadelphia. He allowed
three runs and ·seven hits in
six innings of a no-decision,
leaving him with a 7. 71
ERA in three starts. The
Mets have I 0 days to trade'.
release or se nd him outright
to the minors.
If . Gonzalez
clears
waivers, New York manager
Willie Randolph said the
team would like to send him
back to Triple-A Norfolk.
The right-hander 'ol(as cut
to make room on the roster
for Hernandez. expected to
join the team Friday in
Florida and make his Mets
debut with a start on
Sunday.
. .
Another reason Gonzalez
became expendabJe was the
promising major league
debut of Cuban defector
Alay Soler on Wednesday
night against the Phillies,
"We're going ~-- go with
Soler in the rotation for
now, '' Minaya said. "This
gives us some ~omfort zone
· and we'll have to see -how·it
works out." .
Lima was designated for
assignment on Saturday.

�www.mydallyyntlnel.com

PtgeB2

El rday. 26. 200§.

-

Friday, May 26, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

..

.........
. At limes '4 .• "

:· t::t.~.

Jilo If JOU ll8ve equeMion or • -lh•-t, write: NASCAR This
•

Week, o;o The Gaston Gazette,

BUS&lt;&gt;t+ 5-t::HIES

•

1 R -: Coe&amp;Ccla 600 ·
• WileN: Lowe's Motor SpeedWfli, Concord, N.C. (1.5 miles),
400 laps/600 miles.
• Wlleoi: Sundl!y
• Laet _.. wii!Mr: Jimmie
Johnson
·
• QooeiiJinC : Elliott
Sadler, Ford, 193.216 mph. Oct.
13,2005.
Bobby Labonte,
Pontiac, 151.952 mph , May 28.

Chili Peppers, Johnson manaeed
• bee: Carquest Auto
to win what fled been billed as
Parts 300
stock-car raoing's trrand and glor'
• .- . .: Lowe's MotOt"
ous alt-.Jter eVent but, In th&amp; est&gt;
Speedway, Concord, N.C.
matico of Tony Stewart, was 'the
(1.5 miles). 200
Nextel All-Star Crashfest." ~ was·
lapS/300 miles.
n't an ofliclal race. Not by a long
• Wilen: Saturday
shot. ~ was more farcical than
· • LMt year•• winner:·
anything else. Johnson, the acK)ie Busch
knowledged moster of Lowe's Mo- a Qua~ record: Jimtor Speedway and driver of the
mie Joh nson , Chevrolet ,
No. 48 Chevrolet that shares the
187.735 mpl1 , Oct. 14,
'
1995. .
,track's sponsor. ran _ , and be2005.
• Laet ....,., The notion of Jimcame the benefactor of a race
• " - -: Mark
mie Johnson winQing the Nextel
distinguished far more by deslluc- Martin, Ford , 155.799
All-Star ChellefCe was more com- tlon than excellence. Johnson
mph , May 25, 1996.
plicated than the simple matter of won the Chellenge for the second
• Lilli race: Chevrolet
Johnson's No. 48 bainll the
time, thoU&amp;h the race was known
driver Denny Hamlin won
fastest car. Significantly, It was
as The Winston when he won ~ ·
the Diemond Hill Plyone of relati'lely feW left running
for the first time In 2003. Johnwood
200 at Darl ington
and uncrumpled 111 ihe end. In
son haa also won five of the past
Ra&lt;:eway.
Sjlite of rain, wrecks and Red Hot
sl• 'official' races II LMS.
.

.

IN THE SPO'FI:.-.IGHT

or Olherwlee, to . .

·:.,.ll'
Ji llliiClal ~oo
~r· ., .
·
i
&amp;Uiltlleck?
'!IIS,Ifld.lt
-ril•
....
• ·II' It le q(llte the coincidence,'
'

'

'

.

'

I

' UAW.GM Ohio
A -:

250
• -: Mansfield
(Ohio) Motorsports Park
(.5 miles), 250 iapS/125
mlle.s.
1 When: Saturday-

·-=

•Bobby
Lilli Hamilton
liNfl

Qulllbt• NOOn!: Ron
Hornadar Jr.. C~evrolet.
UD.585 mph , May 14,
2005.
'

1

• R - . -: BobllY
Hami~on,

Dodge, 65.907

mph, Mil)' 14, 2005.

• Laot ....,., Kyle Busch.
In a Ch8VJOiet Silvera(lo,
won the Quaker Steak &amp;
Lube 200 at Lowe's Motor Speedolay for the second year in a row.

.

.

• FEUD OF THE· WEEK ·

I

v

'

·• ."unfair edvllntaeo· Does hia
'

' CRAFTSMAN TRUCK

'

• liMe-=

.•'

The Daily Sentnel • Page B3

JEFF BURTON'

NEXTEL. CUP SERIES

No. 31 CINGULAR WIRELEss

CHEVROLET

E

.

R

thoo4h. Jolmson hii·WO!Itht.

1

.. Pll't three coca-COla .60011. fMi

· • of the past six official races and
,." two olthe p&amp;lll four ali's!ar
•· ra(:es. His victory In the Nextel
All-Star Challenge demOnstrates
· ' , that he still has an edee- .

Tony
Stew•t

Memorial Day.is,a time to honor and show our appreciation for our country's fallen
wartime heroes. From the American Revolution to the War in Iraq and all eras in
between,
hund_reds of thousands ofAmerican
men and women in unifoim have selflessly
.
.
given their lives protecting our freedom. This Memorial Day, take a few moments to
reflect on the courage
patriotism of these proud Americans, and voice your'
appreciation for their efforts and the continued efforts of today's dedicated troops.

and

Ingels
Electronics
·
THE SHOE
PLACE/
BROGAN WARNE·R
•
and Jewelry .·
LOCKER219
INSURANCE
992-6687 • Pomeroy, OH

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR Thi~ Week

CONCORD, N.C.- At least among the ranks of drivers,
Jeff Burton may be the most thoughtful observer of the
sport
·
Trouble is, the driver of Richard Childress Racing's No.
31 Ctngular Wireless Chevrolet hasn't won a Nextel Cup
race since Oct. 28, 2001 at Phoenix. The good news, however, is that Burton ill closing in on a victory that would be the
18th of his career. He's ioth in the points standings, meaning that the 38-year-old native of South Boston, Va., is on
track to make the Chase for the Nextel Cup.
Burton bas finished in the top 10 six times in the first 11
races. He's also a two· time winner of the Coca-Cola 600,
scheduled for this Sunday at Lowe's Motor Speedway. .
Why the long dry spell?
- ·
"There are a lot of good cars, and it's highly competi'
·
·
.
live," said Burton.
Som!l drivers have.called for shortening the races, which
is a pertinent issue since the Coke 600 Is the sport's longest
event.
· "We have a place for a 600·mile race," Burton opined.
"It's a tradition that ill rich in heritage and rich in history.
It carries with it a great deal of prestige to win it I think
it's important for a sport to have a longest race of the y.ear,
and I think it's a great thing. I think it's a bad tbing to have
a competition of bow many race tracks can have long
races. I think that's abad thing, but if you occasionally
have a race that's too long, lfs a very unique situation. I
think that add$ to the schedule.
·
"I think that winning the Coca-Cola 600, being the longest
race of the year, adds something that otherwise you wouldn't have."
· Burton hQs also been highly successful in the Busch Series over the-years, and he addressed the topic of Cup driv·
ers IJ\Onopolizing the competition. Cup regular.s have won
every Busch Series race in the season to date.
"I think it's tougher for Busch car owners," he said. "It's
kind of bard to separate them, but I don't have a lot of sym-·
pathy for the Busch drivers, because if you look through
the Cup field, the Cup field is litter;;;{ with Busch drivers
. who have.bad the chance to run in the Cup Series because
of the opportunity given to .them for racing the Cup guys in
tbe Busch races. For the Busch drivers, it's a great thing.
"For tbe Buscb car owners, I think there has to be some
sort of concession given to them so they can be more competitive. Currently the Cup-oriented teams are dominat·
, mg that·series. I really think that NASCAR can look at

II' Mark Martin now has his own
rap anthem. There's no punch
line. It's titled 'St!lrt Your Engjnes• and is p"erformed by Budda Early. Thank goodness Mark
lsn1 rapp;ng himself ... yet .

~ ,.,. II caused qohe a stir last week
. , , In the L.-'s Motor Spee&lt;tNey
· • . media center when the results
:: of tile ~nal practice session
•I ·• · ware dlatnbuted. The stat sheet
. , showed Matt Kenseth at the top
• • of the speed charts ..• at
87~.344 mph. That's falter
than b&lt;&gt;th the speed of sound
; • and the existing land speed
record. ~sey ~hne was a
· ' mere 692.485 mph slower. He
o,id he'd try to catch up by mak;; inC aueek-bar adjustment.

••

'' . '1-

.'
1'

WHO ' S HOT

" · ANO WHO 'S NOT ·

"

: : ' ...Who'a hot -'- This Is. a no" braiMr. Jlmr.&gt;le Jol1nton·
: : leadS the I)Ointa. Juat won the

•
::

·

:: ·
•·
: ;,
· ·';

CROW&amp;CROW
Baumlumber

~"

Nextel Ail-Star Challence and
haa won·three Coca-Cola
~In a row.... Just for
IOOd meuure, thotJ&amp;h, let's
lfye 1 cell (with apolotlet to
MRf\!'1 Barney,Hell) to Sc:ott
Rlaa, wl)o Wlil! the N~el .
Qp,n and "nlohed 10tK In
the Challe,.,.e.

ATIORNEYSATLAW

985-3301 • Chester, OH

QUALITY PRINT
SHOP
•

•

• Middlepo

992-6059 ·• Pomeroy, OH

.

The Va.ughon
Agency

The Daily
Sentinel
992-2155 • Pomeroy, OH

992-5444 • Pomeroy, OH
992-5141 • Midd

Downing-Childs
Mullen-Musser
INSURANCE

•

OH

By Monte DuttOn
NASCAR This Week ·

FARMERS BANK
·"Your Bank For Life"·
992-2136 •
985-3385 •
•446 ... 2265.
304-773-6400•

OH
OH .

··VALLEY
LUMBER

'•

992-2955 • Pomeroy,·OH

he was widely blamed for the crash, ·
reJ)Iays clearly showed Stewart's
Chevrolet hugging the bottom of the
track as he attempted to pass
llenseth in turn one . llenseth apparently didn~ realize Stewart was under him end moved down to block."

FAN TIPS

·

, . . ... ....,~oeto
welllhln on walk.of

F•••
t.....,

ThrlltJlh July 15, fans may
part In online ,v otlnl fo"r this year's
Tolledega. Texaco Walk of Fame honorees. On Oct. 7, two new names will ,
ba added to Walk of Feme In downtown Talladega, Ala . Each year one
acti•e dri..,r and one legendary figure
form the past ere enshrined. 'lotio&amp;
io being conducted at www.tallade- .
gawalk.com. Fans fll8ll \'Ole once

each day.

VOUR TURN

·

LETIERS FROM OUR READERS•

I wl8hl-ld ellenoe

Mm...,._.., Wltlbll)
~ welllnin -

John Clork/NASCAR This won a race Iince 2001, he\

Jelf Burtlln hasn'
oommtly 10th In the points standings and lias a shot at lite Chaae for ·
the Nelctel Champlonsllip.

some· procedural thing to make it so that the Busch car
owners have a way to be more competitive. One of the
ideas I have is to give them an extra set of tires, and if
you're a Cup driver who's in the top 30 in points, bill us
for it Just take it out of our purse and give that set of
tires to the Busch regulars and let them have anotber set
of tires to.practice on."
Contact Monte Dutton at
· hmduttonSO@aol.com

W

ith all the fancy aadgets avail·
able for "TV these days ... I
wish there was a·button (ill&gt;
sides the •mute') I could push that
would silence jusi the voice of Larry
(I leU you what) McR!!ynolds . His
blather goes (on and on) abQut differ·
ent strBiagies posaible for each
. ieom from the first areen ftae to the
checker.
Just once, it would be nice .to hear
the announcer and skip the nonsense
of the 'Chip &amp; Dale' iWin gigglers.
Put Larry end D.W, back in the pits,
'cause they're both cartooos.
J.D. 8arton
Sharpsville , Ind.

IM!I!rlp Ond MCR&amp;)/110/&lt;IS have quite
feelS the
..y you do wa appreciate your
t11ougn15, tnoug/1.

992-6611 • Middleport, OH

.

Truex's team takes first in ·Pit Crew Challenge

992-9784 •

HOME NATIONAL SWISHER &amp; LOHSE/
-!N·BANK
~
'PHARMACY
f~t
~
949-221 0 · • Racine, OH
992-6333 • Syracuse, OH

NAIICM Thlo WNk'a ._,_
o.tton ..... hie tllllo: 'The ev•
denee backs Stewart up. Although

a foiiOWfnl, so not OWII}'One

'

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

These two hove a history, ehd
Stewart clasl1ed with llenseth's crew
chief, Robbie Reiser, after a crash in
tile Nextel All-Star Challenge. Referrio&amp; to Kensath, Stewart said: 'II he
thinks it was my faun , he's messed
up in the heed .'

Veteran driver sitting in 10th
place, hoping for another 600 win

..

This page proudly sponsored by these many fine businesses.

'

ve. Mlltt Kenulll:

:. II' Stewart announ&lt;:ea he:S Join. log the media. Well •. not com:; J)letely; Stewart's colng to host
•· a weekly show on Sirius Satellhe Redic beginning in 2007 .
. . Stewart said. -~· knew
how much he likes to talk. Aci!Jr
, . ally, mal))' In the print media
" hadn't noticed.

""
:.
"
::
.•
·;

Matt

KeriMtli

·Toftyltew.t

• .,. No Petly EnJerl!ttSH car !*! .
.: qualified for tile rece now known
as tile Nextei 'AII-Star Challenge
:: (~ was The Winston prior to
•. 2004) Since 2000. This year,
both flnishad in lhe top 10. Of
.. liourse, part of the reason was
that there were only 10 cars
running 11 the end of what Tony
· Stewatt referred to as 'the Nextel All-Star Crash fest. •

REMEMBERING OUR FALLEN VETERANS

s
u
s

TIIUCII

••••. s.a.

.,.. a.
•'.... ,

Todd Bodine
Tail Mus&amp;nM
David Reutimenn
Mark Martin

•'
.~ I

Terry Cook

- 209

••

John~

- 229
-'234

•..

Benton
DaYid Starr
'
Dennis Setzer
Jack S~retue
• :lD. Matt Crefton
•

'. ••
1.

.. ••
' ••
••

1,017

- 17
· 121
- 173

- 241
- 252
- 257

had more fun tonight than I've
bad since Homestead (the final
race of the 2005 season)."
The Bass Pro Shops team,
Seven individual winners
representing driver Martin also were named for their reTruex Jr., pulled off a surpri&amp;· spective positions. Each winlng victory in the Ne.xtel Pit · ner was awarded a Craftsmal)
Crew Challenge, held.on May toolbox filled with tools, along
17in front of a crowd of about with a $10,000 cash prize, a
4,000 at Charlotte Bobcats Are- special leather jacket and a
na.
·
championship ring.
.
.Twenty-four teams part!ci·. The Pit Crew Challenge bepated for the title, racing gao in 2005 as an enhancement
. against the clock in team and to Nextel All-Star Challeng-e
individual competions. Truex's activities. There were seven
crew, representing Dale Earn· . head·tOnhead ski.lls competi·
hardt Inc., was the only one left tions: individual and team con·
standins at . the end of the tests for tire chansers, tire carnight
·
riers, gas men, jack men and
In the finals, the crew repre- catch-can men, with competisenting Truex and DEl defeat· ·tors earning more than
ed the Dodse Dealers/UAW $250,000incashandprizes. ·
team representing Kasey
Kahne and Evernham Motor- ·
•
sports. The winning time was
25.44 seconds.
. Hard times - Bobby Hamil·
"This team is number one ton - the 2004 champion of
tonight," said winning crew the Craftsman Truck Sefies,
chief Kevin Ma!lion. "We came for many years a Cup regular
in as . the underdog and are and owner of a multi-truck
leaving as a winner. The Nextel tl!am - wasn't at Lowe's Mo. Pit Crew Challenge Is a really 1or Speedway for the series'
.neat deal for these guys. I've race on May 19, and his ab-

sence was·glaring.
Hamilton is suffering from
head-and-neck cancer, and
treatment has been far more
taxing than he anticipated . .
''l'in not going to lie and say
the last few weeks been easy,"
he said from his home in Mt.
Juliet,.Tenn . "It has been the
hardest battle I have ever had
to fight, I went to the race at
Gateway International Raceway (April 29) and causht a
virus, which spiked a fever
and knocked me down · for
three or four days. The chemo
and'1'adiation regimen I'm on
knocks my ·immune system
down , causing me to be more
susceptible to infection. Even
the slightest cold can turn into
a major illness for me .... Being in large crowds of people
right now is a huge risk for
me."
·
The illness forced Hamilton ,
who turns 49 on May 29, to
abandon his career as a driver.
Bobby Hamilton Jr., like his fa·
ther a former Cup regular, has
taken·over as one of tbe driv-

ers in the Dodge three-truck
team.

•
Been a while - Petty Enterprises ended a long dry spell
when Bobby Labonte and Kyle
Petty ~ompeted in the All-Star
Challenge.
No Petty entry had made the
all-star field swince John An·
dretti competed in 2000.
Why was Labonte eligible 1
Automatic spots in the field are
granted to active champions
from the past 10 years. Labonte
won what was then known as
the Winston Cup championship
in 2000 while driving Joe
Gibbs' No. 18 Pontiac.
Petty was in because of a fan
vote announced before the
race's start.
"I think a lot or fans want
to see this car in the all-star
race," said Labonte. "There
are probably a lot of people
who feel It deserves to be in
this race. I just know it's
good to bring It back. This Is
an all-star event full of champions."

•

Barden tapped - Robert
Yates Racing and crew chief
Richard "Slugger" Labonte lost
their appeal of a four-race s~s­
pension last week, so the car
chief, Jason Burdett, took over
as Dale Jarrett's interim crew
chief while Labbe is away from
the tracks;
NASCAR officials are seldom overturned by the socalled National Stock car Com·
mission.
~we're disappointed but respect the decision of the appeals committee and accept the
results," Labbe said in a prepared statement released by
RYR : Jason Burdett is a long· .
time employee of·RYR and deserves this opportunity. ... He's
the best person to do this for
our team because the communication has.aiready been started with the driver and crew
members."
• Jimmie Johnson won the
Daytona soo·and one more race
earlier this year while Chad
Knaus was serving a similar .
suspension.

•

(

-

I
• '" '

--------·- ·---··- --·-------'-

l·

I

- - - ---·-

····-·-~-- - --

"

�•

Page 84 • The Thi1y Sentinel

'

TIIU.-.,'o llajor ~ L J - . AIII!RICAN LIAOUI
o.troH
200 OM- tltSO
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Maroth, Colon (1 ), Grilli (6), Seay (7),
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waeohlor Harvtlle (6) Orvolla (B) and
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NA'IlONAL LEAGUE
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SMyers Rhodes (8) Gordon (8) and
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and La Dues W-BM~ers 3·2 l Fellclano 1·1 Sv~o rdo n (14) HAsPhiladelphia BAbreu (6) Howard (15)
Now York Reyes (5)
American League
Eeet Dlvlelon
WLPctGB
Boston
'a7 18 600
26 19 578 1
New York
Toronto
25 21
543 2 &lt;
Baltimore
22 26 458 6 4
Tampa Bay
21 27 438 7 1,
Central Dlvlelon
W
L
PctGB
Dolroll
33 14 702
Chicago
3 1 t5
674 n
Cleveland
23 23 500 9 1~
Minnesota
20 26 435 12'"
Kansas City
10 35 222 22
Weat Dlvlalon
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Texas
24 23 511
Oakland
22 25 468 2
22 27 449 3
Seattle
Los Angele s
19 28
404 5
Wedneeday'e Glm11
Cleveland 11 , M1nnesota 0
l A Angels 8 Texas 5
N Y. Yankees 8, Boston 6
Tampa Bay 10 Toron to 8
Chicago While Sox 3 Oakland 2
Oetro1t Kansas City 3
Seattle 7 Balt1more 4
Thursdays Games
Detroit 13j Kansas C1ty 8
Baltimore 2 Seattle 0
Boston 4 Tampa Bay 1
Texas 8 Oakland 7
Frldey'l Gema
Tampa Bay (Kazm1r 7 2) at Boston
(Wells 0-t), 7 05 p m
Cleveland (Westbrook 4·2) at Detra1t
(Robenson 4 2) 7 05 p m
Kansas C1ty (Eiarton 0..5) at NY
Yankees (Musslna 6·1) 7 05 p m
Chicago White Sok (Garc1a 1 1) at
Toronto (Lilly 4-4) 7 07 p m
Oakland (Blanton 4·5) at Texas
(Koronka 4 2) 8 05 p m
Seattle (Hernandez 3-5) at M1nnesota
(Ur1ano 2-Q) 8 30 p m
Balt1moro (Chon 0 5) at LA Angels
(Gregg 2-2) t 0 05 p m
Saturday's Gamea
Kansas C1ty at N Y Yankees 4 05 p m
Chicago White Sox at Toronto 4 07 p m
Tampa Bav at Boston 7 05 p m
Cleveland at Detroi t 7 05 p m
Seattle at Minnesota, 7 10 p m
Oakla nd at Texas 8 05 p m
Battlmore at L A Angels 10 05 p m
Sundey'a QamM
Cleveland at Detra1t , 05 p m
Kansas City at N Y Yankees 1 05 p m
Ch1cago White Sox at Toronto 1 07 p m
Tampa Bav at Boston 2 05 p m
SeaHle at Minnesota 2 10 p m
Baltimore at l A Angels 3 35 p m
Oakland at Texas 8 05 p m

e.

I

National

League
At A Glance
By The Alaoclated Preaa
'All Tlmoo EDT
Eeet Dlvlalon
W
L
F'ct
GB
New York
28 t8
609
Ph1ladelph1a
24 22
522 4
24 23
511 4 '/a
Atlanta
Wash ington
t9 29
396 to,
Florida
t4 31
311 13~
Central Dlvleton
WLPctGB
St LOUIS
3t
16
860
Cincinnati
27 20
574. 4
Houston
25 23
521 8~
Milwaukee
24 23
511 7
18 28
Chicago
391 12h
P1ttsburgh
t4 33
298 t7
Welt DIYIIIon
WLPctGB
Arizona
27 19 587
LOS Angeles
27 20
574 ~
Colorado
25 22
532 2~
San 01ego
24 23
511 3~
San Franci sco 24 23
511 3~

'Wedneeday 1 Gamea
Florida 9 Ch1cago Cubs 3
St l ouis 10 San Francisco 4
Arizona 8 Pittsburgh 7
Wash ington 5, Houston 1
N Y Meta 5 PhiiBdBiphla 4
Milwaukee B Clnclnnatl2
Atlanla 10, San Diogo 6
L A Dodgers 7, Colorado 1
Thurodoy'o Gomoo
Washington 8, Houston 5
~hlladalphl a 6, N Y Met• 3
Frlday'a Gamea
Atlanta (Hudson 4-3) at Chicago Cuba
(Zambrano 3-2), 2 20 p m
Houoton (Buchholz 3-3) at Ptnoburgh
(Snell 3-3), 7 05 p m
Mllwaukae
(Capuano
5-3)
at
Philadelphia (Lidle ~-4) , 7 05 p m
LA
Dodgora
(Tomko
5· 1)
at
Wuhlngton (Hornandaz 2-5), 7 05 p m
Arizona (Webb 7 -0) at Cincinnati (Milton
2-1), 710pm
N Y Meto (Manlnez 5-0) 11 Florida
(Johnoon 3-2), 7 35 p m
St Loulo (Suppa~ 5·3) at Son Diogo
(Honlley 2-3) 10 OS p m

Friday, May 26, 2006

.
'

Color- (Franclo 3-3) at Son Francloco
(Schmidt :J-2), 10 15 p m
........,.. GlmM

Connoc:IICut

2

Indiana
Chlcogo

LA Oodgor1 ot Wuhtngton 1:20 p m
St t.oulo II Son Diogo, 4 05 p m
Arizona ot Cincinnati, 8 10 p m
Houlton at Pmlburgh 7 05 p m
Mllwaukoo at Phlladalp/ll., 7 05 p m
COlOradO II SOli Frandaoo, 9 05 p m
lundey'aN ~ Met10t Flortda 1 05 p m
LA Oodgoro at Wuhlngton 1 05 p m
Arizona at Cincinnati, 1 15 p m
HOUltOn at Pittaburgh 1 35 p m
Milwaukee at Phlladatphla 1 35 p m
Atlanta at Chlceoo Cubo, 2 20 p m
St LOUII II San Otego 4 05 p m
COlorado at Son Francteco 4 05 p m

Detroit
WUhington

2
1
1

TODAY'IIIA.IOR LEAGUE LEADERS
AMERICAN LEAGUE
BATTING-R~. Toronto, 357 Blake,
Cleveland, 35ot, Jeter, New York 348,
Hillenbrand, Toronto , 340
Mauer,
Mlnnetota, 336 Pierzynskl Chicago,
338 Tejada Baltimore, 333
II~N8-Hafner, Cleveland 43, Thome,
Chicago, 41 Swiaher Oakland, 40,
ARodrlguez New Vorl&lt; 40, Te)ada,
Bolt1moro, 39 Iguchi, Chicago, 37,
Sizemore Cleveland 37, Glaus, Toronto,
37
RBI-Thoma, Chicago, 44 Hafner,
Cleveland , 42, oon1z Booton , 42,
VGuerrero, loa Angetes, 40 Gomes,
Tampa Bay 39, Jolopez, Beanie, 38,
Glaus, Toronto 38 Konerka Chicago,

Charlotte

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1 000
1 000

1
1

500
500

1

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2

333

t~

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2

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. Houoton
Loa Angello
1 Sacramento
1 Soanle
San Antonio
Minnesota
Phoenl'

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2
2
2
1

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REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
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Wedneaday'a Gam••

I

Detrott 78, Minnesota 69

I'

ThuiWd.y'a Game•
Chark&gt;tte 73 Washtngton 63
Los Angeles 80 San Antomo 71
Seattle 94 Phoen 1x 81,
Houatan 81. Sacramenta 66
Frlday'a Gamea
Indiana at Chicago, 8 30 p m
Saturday'• Gamea
1
Detroit at Connecticut, 4 p m
1 Minnesota at Washington 5 p m

I

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Pro Hockey
Notional Hockey Laague
Pley-oH Glance
CONFERENCE FINALS
(Boot-ol-7)
,
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Ctrollna ye BuffalO
Saturday May 20 Buffalo 3 Carolina 2
Mondav. May 22 Carolina 4 Buffalo 3
Wadnosday May 24 I!Yffalo 4 Carolina
1 3 Buffalo leads series 2·1
1 Friday May 28 Carolina at Buffalo 7 30
Pm
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•POLICIES•

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Women'o National l o o -

Aoooclotlon

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LB Jeremy Loyd
HOCKEY
Notional Hockey Laaguo
CHICAGO BLACKHAWKS---Signed C
RW Dave Bolland to a three-year contract
PITTSBURGH
PENGUINS-Named
Aay Shere general manager and signed
him to 1 live-year contract
COLLEGE
NCAA-Penalized Oklahoma lor making
lmpermllllble pl'lone celts to man.:s basketball recrutto
BUFFALQ-Signod
Reggie
Wltherapoon, men a baeketball coach to
a three-year contract extenatan
CENTRAL FLORIDA-E&lt;tended tho
contract ot George O'Leary, football
coach, through 2015

'

Ohio Valley
Publlahlng resantea
the rlghtlo edit.
~aclorcancelany
ed at
time
Eorora Mull 8
eportad on lhe II
ay ol publication an
he Trlbune·Sentlnat
eglater
will
b
eaponalble lor n
ore titan the coli
he apaca occupla

anv

AP photo

Detroit Pistons guard Richard Hamilton looks to pass during the first quarter of Game 2 of the
Eastern Conference basketball f1nals at the Palace 1n Auburn Hills, Mich. Thursday.

Pistons withstand Heal
AUBURN HILLS, Mich
(AP) - The start, story hne
and result were different
Tayshaun Pnnce scored 24
pomts , R1chard Hamilton
had 22 and the Detroit
P1 stons bounced back - as
usual - and held on to beat
the Miam1 Heat 92-88
Thursday mght m Game 2,
evemng
the
Eastern
Conference finals
Detrm( got off to a great
start after an awful one m the
opener ShaqUille O'Neal
and Dwyane Wade 's supporting cast was lackluster
followmg Its outstandmg
performance.
The Heat made It close
with a frantic rally, but the
conference finals rematch ts
now a best-of-five series,
w1th M1ami headed home lb
host Game 3 on Saturday
mght
Wade had 32 pomts and
seven ass1sts, while O' Neal
was dommant wtth 2 I pomts
and 12 rebounds. But they
d1dn' t get much help
Detroit, wh1ch led by as
much as 14 pomts m the ftrst
half, went ahead 57-39 early
m the second half on
layup
after
Ham1lton 's
Chauncey Btllups scored hts
firs( pomts on a 3-pmnter
and a layup
A I0-2 run pulled Miami
wlthm s1x pomts m1dway
through the fourth quarter
Rasheed Wallace's 3-pointer
gave the P1stons an 81-71
lead w1th 2.4 I 'left
Wh1le thousa,nds of fans
headed home , Mmm1 wasn't
ready to concede
Wade's 3-pomter w1th 9 8
seconds left made it 90-88,
then B11lups made two free
throws on the ensumg posseSSion and Lmdsey Hll)lter
made a steal to seal 1he VICtory
The Heat had won four
strrught road games and ftve

m a row overall
Billups had 18 pomts and
etght
ass1sts,
Rasheed
Wallace scored 16 and Ben
Wallace added nine pomts
and 12 rebounds
M1am1 beat Detroit 91-86
m Game I and snatched
home-court advantage away
from the top-seeded team rn
the NBA playoffs
The Heat's new-look surroundrng cast came through
Tuesday night - whtle tts
superst,ars were m foul trouble - wtth Antome Walker,
Gary Payton and Jason
Williams combmmg for 41
points
In Game 2, that tno contnbuted JUS! 25 pomts.
M1am1 led 11 -0 m (he
senes opener m 1ts fust
game m a week, v.h1le
Detroit mtssed Its f1rst SIX
shots playrng two days after
be10g pushed to seven games
by the Cleveland Cavaliers
Game 2 provtded a stark
contrast, wrth the Ptslons
seemrng to have much more
energy
Detrott got off to such a
good start that otfens1vely
challenged Ben Wallace was
outsconng the Heat 7·6 midway through the fust quarter
Pnnce's 3-pomter capped a
13-0 run to put Detroit up
18-6.
The P1stons led 25- 12 after
mak10g 56 percent of the1r
shots and holdmg M1am1 to
25 percent It was the Heat's
lowest sconng quarter of the
playoffs, and the fewest
pomts a team has scored
agamst the P1sto ns m the
fust quarter th1s postseason
Detrou had success m the
fust quarter keep1n g Wade
out of the lane, forcmg h1m
to settle for three m1ssed
JUmpers, anif he had tWO
points on free throws He
had 13 of h1 s 25 pomts m the
f1rst quarter of Game I after

makmg all SIX of h1s shots
Wade got closer to the basket 10 the second quarter and
also connected from the outSide, sconng 14 pmnts on 6- ,
of-9 shoottng
After the Heat cut their
deficit to four late m the first
half, Detroit scored the last
seven pomts to lead 48-37 at
halfttme
Wade and O ' Neal combmed for 26 po10ts on 11-of20 shootmg m the fust half,.
wh1ie the rest of the Heat had
JUst 11 pmnts after mtssmg .
14 of 18 shots.
Even though Billups d1dn 't
score in the f1rst half, he had ,
frve ass1sts and d1rected 0\ •
free -flowmg offense that
helped Hamilton score 20,
Pnnce 12 and Ben Wallace
mne on 4-of-4 shootmg.
Notes: O ' Neal appeared to
hurt h1s neck wtth 5 03 Je(t
10 the game when h1s head
colltded With Walker's knee
after trymg to block a shot
and tumbling over teammate
James Posey,
O' Neal has
not lost a senes after hts
team won Game I , whtch
has happened 25 ttmes prevt·
ously .. Wade added to hts
Heat record by sconng at
least 20 pomts this postseason for the 13th time
Detrot( and M1ami are meetlOg for the thud time m the
postseason, and the second
stratght year. The Heat lost
on the1r home court lasi year
10 Game 7 of the conference
f10als, and swept the P1stons
10 the 2000 first round. ..
Riley ts one of three coaches
to lead three franchises to
the conference f10als , and
former Prstons coach Larry
Brown IS the only coach to
pull off the feat w1th four
teams
In h1s prev1ous four
games, Walker averaged 19
points on 53 percent shootmg

Ducks

Edmonton ever allowed m a
playoff penod, toppmg the
20 recorded by Vancouver m
1992
Bergeron , Laraque and
Sll)yth. all scored m the second penod for the 01lers,
who lost at home for the sec·
ond ume m this postseason
Bergeron fired a one-umer
over Giguere's ' glove from
the c1rcle on a 5-on-3 power
play about three minutes 10
Smyth scored on a hp-m 4
mmutes later
Laraque scored h1s flfSt
playoff , goal m more than
three years at the mtdway
pomt when he corralled Chns
Prenger 's pomt shot m the
slot, moved around a sprawlmg G1guere to score He then
raced to the corner and
launched h1mself headlong
10to the glass as the 16,839
fans roared m deh ght
Anaheim managed to stay
ahead tl'l the second on
Sale• 's goal from the pmnt
and a late score by Lupul,
who Jumped on a lace oil

scramble to the left of
Roloson to fire the puck over
the goahe's shoulder
The Otters, w1th as many a&amp; "
10 players battling the flu,
are the first e1ghth-place seed
to advance to the conference
finals. They are trymg to get
back to the Stanley Cup
finals for the first ume m 16
years
The Ducks lost the first two
games of the senes by 1denh·
cal 3- 1 scores before the
teams combtned for mne
goals m Game 3
• •
Notes: Bryzgalov allowed
ftve goals on 22 shots m
Game 3
The Oilers had
two fami har faces return to
the hneup Shifty wmger
Radek Dvorak came back
after betng out smce the first
game of the San Jose series
w1th a spramed knee.
Forwa rd
R!iffi
Torres
returned after m1ssmg tWo
games because of the flu . .
The most shots against the
Oilers m any period was 29
by Detroit m 1979

fromPageBl
skat10g 10 and finng at w1ll at
the 01lers' defense that went
from solrd 10 the first three
contests to loose 10 Game 4.
Anaheim took Its first lead
of the senes at 7·28, when
Teemu Selanne swooped m
front of the net and passed
the puck through the crease.
It ncocheted off the skate of
Oilers defenseman Jaroslav
Spacek and mto the net
Penner was credited wah the
goaL
He scored aga10 at 15 II ,
takmg a pass 10 the comer
from Selanne and firing the
puck through traffic under
Roleson's pads
The thud came on a 5-on-3,
one of four two-man advantages the Ducks had Andy
McDonald ztpped the puck
through the slot for a onetrmer by Getzlaf
The 25 shots were the most

I

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ftret lnaertlon W
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scrubs boys clothes household Items ' NOT AESPON
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()

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l ots of yard sale 1tems to be Strawberues
desk oak
picked up 740 992 1093
table, book case several

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sma ll tables seeder couch
and chair basket rack
·itoo-llliiiiiiiiii--rl rechner air conditiOner 26~
bicycle Sa turday 9 dark
Found Dalmatian call to ID 19 ~ 4 State Route 141
(740)992 2084
Gallipolis

FOUND

Reward. Mlssmg
m ale
Shlhtzu-Poodle miX Copper
color with white on chest
Last seen an Bula111lle P1ke
around
Groom
Shop
Responds to Caddie and ts
vel)! shy arou)1d people Call
(740)367-()813 or (740)446
4t63
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811_
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Rd_K_a_
na_u_ga~-­

Yard Sale 5/28 &amp; 29 8 00
5 oo Parking lot Sassy
Scissors Adultiklds clothes
counter top w1th sink toys
mise

Yo\RDSALE

We will not knowing
accept any adver
Jatmenl In vlolallo
the law

rA-mum~~
Bedd1ng &amp; Vegetable
Plants, Hanging Baskets
Combo
Pots
Sues
Greenhouse
Moringstar
Rd Racine Ohio 740-949·

3151

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YARD SAI.Ji~..

GAIJJPOUS

YARDSALEPoMEROYIM.JDOLE

Alligator Jacks-May 26 10
5 Mav 21 &amp; 28 9 s St At
7, Po met $S setu

Fndav/Saturday 8am-6pm

YARD SAU:-

4959 SA 7S Assorted tools

Pr. PLF...ASANT

glassware cloth ing mise
Items Something far every
one

3 Family Yard Sale May 26 &amp;
27 women mens clOthes
household goods some
Fndav/Salurday/Monday 9 5 crahs- mise 1 m ~ e out 62
miles out St At 14 1 south watch for S1gns 9 7
Clothes household 1tems
books, homeschoohng sup· 3 Familv Ya rd Sale Saturday
pltes elliptical trainer
May 27th 8·? 1209 Ma1n
Huge yard sate 1nclu dmg
k1ds clothes both g.rls and
boys (all s1zes) adu lt cloth·
1ng
household
goods
antiQUe&amp; tools and TOYS
TOYS and more TOYSIII
Fnday Mondav 4077 Stllte
Route 588 Gallipolis Just
follow the signs

CLASSIFIED INDEX
4x4'a For Sale
• 725
Announcement • •
• 030
Anttquea
----------530
Apartmenta for Rent
440
Auction end Flee Market
....... 080
Auto Parts &amp; Acceaaorlea .
760
Auto Repair
....... 770
Autoe for Sale.. . .
. . 71 o
Boata &amp; Motora for Sale .. •
• 750
Building Suppllea. •
• • 550
Buelneaa and Buildings ..
• 340
Buelneal Opportunity
210
aualneaa Training.
.. . ..... 140
Campera A Motor Homea
• 790
Camping Equipment .
.. ......... 780
Carda of Thanks
..
01 o
Child/Elderly Cora
, - --- ... -- 190
Electrlcei!Rerrlgeretlon
840
Equtpmenllor Renl...
- - - .480
Excavating
• •• 830
Farm Equipment-- -- ---,
• -. 610
Farma for Rent
• 430
Farms for Sale
330
For Leaee.
• ..... . 490
For Sale. ·-·----- • , ·---585
For Sale or Trade
...... 590
Fruita 6 Vegetables •• ---- 580
Furnlehed Rooms .. • .............
.. .450
General Hauling ........ B50
Giveaway
• ................... ...... ..... • ~ .. 040
Happy Ado. •
.050
Hay • Grain -- ----- -- •• ------- --- • ----- ,
840
Help Wanted •• 110
Home lmprovemanta. ............. .......
• 810
Homea for Sale ... ......
• •• 310
Household Qooda ...... ....
.. ••• 510
Houaea tor Rant
.... 410
In Memoriam.................... • .... •
020
lneurance
..... 130
Lawn A Gardin Equipment
680
Llvaatock
630
Loet and Found ....... ..
060
Loll • Acroag• ---- ------- -- ----------------·-- , • • 350
Ml•cellaneoua..... •
... .... • •
170
Mlacellaneoua MerchandiH.............
.. .. 540
Moblla Homo Repair
B80
Mobile Homoolor Rant.............. ...
420
Mobile Homea for Sale
320
Money to L9on .................... -·-------·-220
Motorcycle&amp; • • Wheelere
740
Mualcallnatrumenta .. • • • •
'ol
• 670
Pereona'•
• .. .. • .... . ..........
006
Peta for Sale .................. • • • • •
• • 560
Plumbing &amp; Healing •• -------------- ------- ,
, 820
Profeaelonal Services • • • ... • •
230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair.......................
. 160
Reat Eototo Wonted ----- ----- -- •
360
Schoola lnatructlon ..................... ....... 150
load , Plant 6 Fertilizer
1150
Situation• Wanted
• 120
Space for Renl
480
&amp;porting Good• -- • ... , ....... • •
520
SUV'e tor Sale
720
Trucka for Sale .......................
716
Upholatery
••
870
Vana For Sale.
.730
Wanted to Buy
t
•
090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllaa
620
Wanted To Do
180
Wonled to Rani
•
.470
Yard Sale- Gallipolis
......... 072
Yard Bolo-Pomeroy/Middte
•• 074
Yard Sate-Pt Pleasant •
076

5 -U.

--------Yard sale May 27 28 29
Clothes, kn1ck·knacks eel

::;::;:::~ ....iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijil

Thla
newapape
ceple only hoi
anled Ida mHtln
OE standards

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and JaCkson areas

osh Call (740}446 6696

Bathtub &amp; shower s tall for
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KIT &amp; CARLYLE

2 adult bikes for parts Table
leaf approJC 24x47 oak ftn
3 tree kittens
2380

(

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

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

1

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Sentinel

or Fax To (740) 446-3008

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WEBTIRN CONFERENCE
pa1111 ye PbMnl•
Wodnoaday, May 24 Phoenix t21
Dallaa 118 Phoenix ieado oerleo 1-Q
Friday, May 26 P~lx at Dallu s 30
Pm
Sunday, May 28 Dallao at Phoenix, 6 30
pm
Tuelday, May 30 Dallal at Phoenix, 9
pm
Thuraday, June 1 Phoenix at Dallal
8 30 p m , If ntcltllry
Saturday Juno 3 Dlllu at Pttoonlx,
8 30 p m, II n......ry
Monday, June 5. Phoenix at Dal1aa, 8 30
p m , If nect111ry

UJ:rtbune

To Place

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Melp C001nlr OH

WESTERN CONFERENCE

1

HITS-MYoung , Te&lt;ao, 66,
Soattto, 65 Tejada Baltimore 83, Jeter,
New York, 63 Sizemore Cleveland 59,
VWells Toronto, 59 Jolopez Seattle,
58
DOUBLES-Lowell,
Boston,
21'
Matthews Texas, 18, Aloe Toronto, 17,
MYoung Texas 17, CGulllen, Oetrau, 15
VMartmez. Cleveland 14 Youkllla,
Boston 13 Teixeira, Texa1, 13
TRIPLEs-Jolopez, Seante s, Reed,
Sunday May 28 BuHalo at Carolina
Seattle 4 , Sizemore Cleveland, 4, 1 7 30 P m
Matthews Texas, 4, Shelton, Detroit, 3,
Tuesday May 30 carolina at Buffalo
7 30 P m • If noceaeary
ISuzukl Seenle 3 Podsednlk Chlcego
3 Ibanez, Seattle. 3
'
'
Thuredav. June 1 Buffalo at Carolina
HOllE RUNB-Thomt Chlcego 18
7 30 p m, If necessary
WESTERN CONFERENCE
Swlahsr Oakland, 14 Qomae Tampft
Bav 14, DOrtlz Boaton , 14 Hafner,
Anebtlm v• Edmonton
Cleveland 13, Glaus, Toronto, 13, 1 Friday, Mev 19 Edmonton 3 Anahe•m 1
Tetjada, Baltimore, 13
1 Sunday May 21 Edmonton 3 Anaheim
STOLEN lASES-crawford, Tampa 1
Bay, 19, Podaednlk, Chicago 18,
Tuesday, May23 Edmonton5 Anahe1 m
Figgins Loa Angeleo, 18, ISuzukl, 4
Seanle 1!5, CPatteraon, Baltimore, 15,
Thursday May 25 Anaheim 6
Damon New York, 11 Gathr1ght Tempe Edmonton 3, Edmonton leads sene&amp; 3 1
Bay 10
Saturday, May 27
Edmonton at
PITCHINQ (I Ooclalona)-8ect&lt;en, Anaheim, 9 p m
Boston, 7·1,
875 3 80, FGarcla,
Monday May 29 Anahe1m at Edmonton
Chicago, 7-1,875 3921Ka.zmtr Tampa Spm II necessary
Bay 7 2 778, 2 39; SchNIIng Booton, 7
Wednotday, May 31 Edmonton at
2 778, 3 60, Rogor1, O.tro~. 7-2, 778, Anaheim, 9 p m , II neceoaary
3 32 BueMe Chlcogo 6-2, 750 2 62,
Verlander Detroit, 6-3 667, 2 70
ITRtKEOUTS-JoSantana, Minnesota,
75 Kazmlr Tampa Bay, 67 Muaslna,
Now York, 59, Schilling, Booton, 58,
Major Laegue Boccor
Sonderman Detroit 53, FHemandez,
E11tem Conference
Soanlo 51 Lackay, Los Angello, 51
WLT
PtsGFGA
SAVE8-Papelbon Boaton, 18, T Jones,
DC
United
4
1
3
15 15 8
O.trolt, 15, Janka Chlugo, 13, Ray,
4 3 t
13 11 9
Baltimore 12 FrROdriguez, Loa Angeles, KanouC~
3 3 2
11 7 9
11 BRyan Toronto, 11 .MRIYera, New Columbus
Now England 3 3 1
10 9 8
York, 10
Chicago
2 1 4
10 9 8
NA'IlONAL LEAGUE
Now Vorl&lt;
1 2 5 6
11 14
BATTINQ-VIdro Washington, 347
Woatom Conlo,....
HaRamlrtz, Flortda 335, MICabrera,
W L T
Pta GFGA
Florida 335, Hawpa, Colorado, 329,
8 1 3 21 21 13
ShClroon,
Arizona,
329,
Utley, FC Dalla&amp;
Houaton
4 3 1
13 14 12
Philadelphia, 328, Byrnao, Arizona, 326
3 3 1
10 10 11
RUNS-Pu)olo,
St
Loull,
48, Colorado
to 13
HaRamlrez
Florida,
42,
Utley Real Sa~ Lll&lt;e 2 5 1 7
LosAngetoa
2 6 1 7
6 15
Philadelphia, 37 Furcal, Loa Angeles
CD Chlvao USA 1 4 1 4
9 12
37 BAbreu, Philadelphia 37, Weeks
Milwaukee, 38, Reyes, Now York, 36,
NOTE Three points tor victory, one point
Flopez Cincinnati, 36
lor tie
RBt-Pujolo St Louts, 57, 1\Jonoa
Atlanta, 45, Berkman. Houston, 43
Wtdneldaiy'a Gam..
Calae Milwaukee, 4t, UICabrera,
Florida 39, Howard Pttlladatphla, 38,
FC CaMeo 2 Now York 1
Holliday Colorado 37
Boturdoy'o Qameo
HIT8-Holllday Colmada, 59 Eckstein,· Colorado at Real Salt Lake, 4 p m
St Louis 59, Vldro Washington, 59,
Houston at New England 7 30 p m
Utley,
Philadelphia, 58,
FLopez,
DC Unltad at Kanaas C~ 8 30 p m
Clnclnn.atl 58 ASorlano Washington, Chicago at CD Chlva&amp; USA 11 p m
57 Uggla Florida, 56 Wright, New York, Wadnaaday, May 31
56, F1oldar Milwaukee, 56, MICabrara, Columbuo at D C Unltad 7 30 p m
Florida, 56
las Angeles at Colorado, 9 30 p m
DOUBLE8-Bigglo
Houeton,
t9,
Saturday, June 3
MICabrera,
Florida
18, Koskie , Now England at D C United, 7 30 p m
Milwaukee 17, Tracy Arizona, 16,
COlumbus at FC Callas, 8 30 p m
OMIUer, Milwaukee 15 LGonzalez,
Loa Angalaa at Houston 8;30 p m
Anzona 15
New York at Kansas City 8 30 p m
TRtPLE8-SFinley, san Francisco, 8,
Chicago at Real Slit Lake 9 p m
Sullivan, Colorado 8, Aeyea New York
COlorado at CO Chlvas USA 10 p m
6 DRoberts San Diego, 6, Lofton, Los
Angeles , 5
1
HOllE RUN8-Pu)ole Sl LOUIS 23 '
Dunn Cincinnati 16 Ensberg, Houston
16 Galee, Milwaukee 16, ASoriano
Thursday's Sporta Tl'llnaactlona
Washington 16, Howard Philadelphia 1
BASEBALL
15, COelgado New York t5
1
llojor Looguo Baaabatl
STOLEN BAIE9-Reyes, New York,
MLB-Suspended San Franc1sco Giants
18 HaRamlrez , Florida 16, Flopez I minor league OF Abraham Nunez tor 50
Cincmnatl 16, Pierre, Chicago, 14
games tor a violation of the minor league
DRoberts, San Diego
14
Freel
drug prevention and treatment program
Cinclnnati,11,ASOr•ano Washmgton, 11
American League
PITCHING (I Dtolelono)-TGiavlno 1 KANSAS CITY ROYALS-Optioned
New York, 7-2 778, 2 48, WRodnguez
RHP Leo Nunez to Omaha of the PCL
Houston, 6 2
750, 3 88 Arroyo
Purchased the contract of AHP Bobby
Cincinnati. 6 2, 750 2 29 Capuano
Keppel from Omaha
Milwaukee, 5-3 825 2 78, Harang I TEXAS RANGERS- Activated INF ian
625 3 82, Oswalt
Kinsler from the 15 day DL Designated
Cincinnati 5-3
Houston )5 3, 625 3 36 Wright San OF Adrian Brown for assignment Sent
RHP Robinson Tejeda to Oklahoma ot
Franclaco, 5-3 625 3 84 Suppan St
Louto 5;_3. 625 4 50
tho PCL
STRIKBOUTB-CZambrano Chicago
TORONTO BLUE JAYS- A
d 10
71 , PMartlnez New York 70 Harang I
gree
Cincinnati a7 Peavy San Diego 66 1 term• w1th INF Edgardo Alforu:o to a
Capuano, Mi lwaukee
eo, Smonz
minor league contract
Atlanta 57, Bush, Milwaukee 55
National Lugue
SAVE8-IIrlnghauoen St Louis 15 ' CINCINNATI REDS- Aes1gned RHP
Valverde
Arizona
14
Tur~bow Robert Manuel to Dayton of the M1dwest
Milwaukee, 14, Gordon Phtiadelphia, 14
league
Udge Houston 12 Fuentes Colorado 1 COLORADO ROCKIES- Traded OF
1 Tony Miller to the Toronto Blue Jays for
10 BWagner New York 10
1 OF Jorge Sandes Traded INF Juan Melo
to the San Francisco Giants for future
considerations AS!flgned INF Tammy
Whiteman to Cotorado Sprmgs of the
National Baokalbatl Aoaocrouon
1 PCL
1
Playoll Glance
1 MILWAUKEE
BREWERS-Optioned
CONFERENCE FINALS
RHP Chris Demana to Naohv11io of the
ASTER(IoNCatO-oNI•FTE)RENCE
PCL Assigned RHP Juotln Lehr outright
E
to Nashville Purchaeed the contract of
...~11 : · ~lem!D
AHP Joe Wtnkelsas from Huntsville of
Tuead ay, mly 2
lam 91 , etroit 86
the SL
Thuraday Moy 25 Dolroll92, Miami 66
NEW YORK MET5-Traded RHP
aeries tied 1·1
"'I Robert Manuet to the Clnclnnali Reds far
Saturday May 27 Detroit ~t Miami, 8 LH~ Dave Wlllla.ms and cash
Pm
BASKETBALL
Monday, May 29 Dstrolt at Miami, 6
National Baakotball Aoooclotlon
pm
M
It
CLEVELAND CAVALIEAS- Exercleod
lam1at Detro • 8 / their option on the con tract or Mike
Wednesday May 31
Pm
Brown coach
FOOTBALL
Friday, Juno 2 Detroit at Miami, 8 P m 1
If ~eeeallry
Nattonal Football League
lls~:·~;~no 4 Miami It Detroit 8 P m
NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS- Releaesd

Pro Basketball

bune - Sentinel - ll.\.e ster

""

1

I
I
I
!Suzuki,

~

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

·c LASSIFIED

IAITERN CONFERENCE
W L
Pet
GB

N ~ loleta ot Florida, 1 20 p m
Attanto at Chlugo Cuba, 1 20 p m

----~-----

www.mydallysentlnel.com

..

OVPScoreboard
Pro Baseball

Friday, May 26, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Street
---,------,.-Yard
Sale
Frl Sat Sun
across from Beale School
on AI 2 8 ? Tools Baby
~
cl!!
ot~h-••.&amp;~MIsc
_ _ _ _.,
AucnON AND

FLFA MARKET

~-oioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil;...l

~

www.comlcs com

116

1_

HEl.PWANIID

Applications
are be ing Daycare Center hmng per·
accepted
lor
HHA son t 8 years, h igh school
diploma background Check
Applicants should have a
h1gh school diploma or required 740-992-3142 to
schedule Interview
G E D reliable transpo,ta
tlon and a telephone In the
Direct
Sales
Fantastic
home Experience In provld·
SOK
no
lng d1rect care or working Opportunity
Problem
Must
be
Motivated
w1th older adults a P'us
STNA s are encouraged to and Self Starter Call Kan
(740)992-7440
applv
Benefit package
(lncludmg Health Dental Experienced loader for loadVISIOn &amp; 401K) No weak mg timber Call after 6pm
end or evenmg work and (740)882 731 8 or (740)988paid mileage &amp; drive time 694t
Appllcat1ons are available at
th e Meigs Multipurpose Familv Senior Care Inc now
Sen1or Center Mulberry hirin g PCA's, STNAs and
He1ghts Pomeroy OH An CHHA s for the Me1ga
EOE Employer
County area Willing to train
the right people Please call
Anent1 on Mechanics Now (7.0)992-ll990
tak1ng app11cat 1ons 1or expe
r ences Truck Mechanic For a limited t1me make 50%
Mall resume to
R&amp;J sel~ng Avon Call (740)4463358
Truck;1ng 14530 St At
7 Manetta OH 45750
GKN Elac:trlcaf Engl,_r

--.

AVON! All Areas! To Buy or
Cross Creek Auctton
Sell
Shirley Spears 304~ We are a manufacturing
laclllty with currant sales of
The Place to Be this 675 1429
approxlmatety $30 m111ion a
Memorial Day Weekend
year, targeted to double our
Send
resume
to
Bartender
Dealer Ron PriCe
Used
Consignments
Craitman PO Bo&lt; 303 Gelllpotls OH sales over the next five
years and are located In
Toolbox Routor &amp; many 45631
south eastern Oh10 We are
other Tool s
&amp;
Items
currently looking for a top
(304)937 21 18 or (304)550
notch Individual to p tn our
1616
team as an electncal engl·
WANTFJ)
noor

t

Lot
Attendant•
and
Drlvera will rece1ve a great
work experience deta1i ng
C 2008 by NEA, Inc
and transponlng cars with
an industry leader! 30 hours
a week 1ncludmg weekends
Startmg hourly rate at
1
7 OOihourt Yo u must be at
least 21 vears ol age wrth a
clean dnvlng record Must
QKN "1alntenanco
apply 1n person at the
Technlc ..n
GallipoliS Rental Branch
GKN Sinter Metals the located at 371 State Rt 7 N
Oh1o 4563 1
worlds leading manufacturer GaiHpolls
of powder metal campo eOEIMFOV
nents seeks a motivated
Ma l ntenanc~t, Now h1nng full lime Walt
skilled
Technician fo r equipment Staff FMndly personality
process and laclllties at our professiOnal attitude a must
Bring your sm1le and apply
Plant 1n Gallipolis Ohio
in person Hol1day Inn
GallipOlis No phone calls
Qualifications
please '
•Skilled at both corrective
and preventive maintenance Nurses Akles
• A working knowledge of
tT'S YOUR TURN TO
lnduatr~al Electricity
BLOSSOM
• Experience with Allen
And we hava jusl the oppar
Bradlev PLC and servo sv s
tunlties you need to bloom m
terns
a l 1eld where your talent and
•Basic Weldtng and sheet
sk•lls are truly nee ded
metal, tabriCatlon skills
Heartland of Jackson has
•Ability to read aM under
exciting opportun1t1es avail·
stand hydraulic system
able tor
prints

116
.
IIELPWANrm

STNAo
Full
&amp;
Part-tlma.
All ahltta
candidate fo pass a basic
skills fest prior to employ·
Apply 1n person or forward
ment
resume 1o Heartland ol
Jackson 8668 State AI 93,
Send resume or lener of
Jackson OH 45640 Fax
experience to
galltoalls hrOgknsintermet· 740-286o{)295 Apply online
alliJ;om or tax (740)44t- at www her manorcare com
EEOIDrug Free Employer
3249 Rotor to Job Opening
People Suength
Mainte nance Technician
Commitment

This pos/flon will rwqul"' tho

roBuv

Absolu te Top Dollar U S
S1!ver and Gold Cams
Proofsets Gold R1ngs Pre
US
Currency
1935
Sol1talre Diamonds· M TS
Com Shop 151 Second
Avenue Gallipolis 740 446-2842
I w1ll buy Jwlh Qm Call
(7 40)388 9303

Quatifications
• NO EXPER IENCE NECESSARY
' FULL

TIMECL"-SSES

CDL TRAINING
' FINANCING AVAII.AillE
'JOB PLACEMENT

ENROLLING NaN

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

BS
In
Electrical
Engineering solid knowl
edge of Auto/CAD electrical
Allen Bradley oontrols and
programming NEC persOn
al computer programs lean
manufacturing
principals
and the ability to read and
comprehend ektctficBI pnnts
and programm1ng 1og1c The
candldal8 must also have
excellent oral and written
communication skills to
effectively
communicate
with all levels of employees
as well as the ability to
organtze multiple project&amp;
and establish priOI'Itles

1-800·334·1203
Wanted Old 1800 s Log
Cabin logs must be In good
ca nd1t1on w1l hng to tear Childcare worker n&amp;eded for
down if standing (740)407· Res1dent1a l
Treatment
6680
Fac1l1ty Pay based on expe·
nence, pa1d insurance Call
Would like to buy or.1e Gall Ia
to apply Mon-Frl 8am·3pm
Academy H S "G alllan •
(740)37 ~ 9083
yearbook from 1974 1975
Primary )ob responsibilities
1976 t977 and 1978
CLERICAL
will Include the des1gn
GAHS grad 937 765-D040
development and malnte·
I \ 11'111\ \II \1
R+l CARRIERS one ol tl'le nance ol PLC programs to
nations
largest lam11y support manufacturing acttv·
'I I{ \ II I ..,
owned LTL motor freight ear- lUes and engineering lunc
ners ' has lmmedl(\t&amp; open tlons determination at com
lng
lor
Part Time panents tor use In electrical
.1
HllJ' WANilD
Cfertcai/Oala Entry/Billing systems Install program
pos1t10n
2nd shill (M - and troubleshoot servo
tOO WORKERS NEEDED
Ft4pm-1 Opm)
Moat type drive motion control sys·
Assemble crafts
m1n 30 wpm with accuracy terns and robot~ systems
wood Items
and poSses excellent data
To $480/wk
entry/general offlca akjlle send resume to
Materials prov1ded
we offer a slanlng wage of qelllpglia DrQgknalntermetFree Information pkg 24Hr
SB 50fhr and a comprehen- flll com or fsx (740)441
BOt 428 4649
s ve benefit pacKage that 3255 Refer to Job Opening
Includes a 401 K ret1rement Electrical Engineering
554
plan and lree vacation todg·
/
An Excellent way to earn ing a1 our employee resorts
tn Ft Myers Beach FL and
money The New Avon
Pigeon Forl,jla TN Come to r
Call Marilyn 304 882 2645
a persona1 1nlerview at 6 136
Certified Home Health Huntington Ad Gallipolis Equsl Opportunity EmplOyer
Aide Clnae&amp;· Homecare Ferrv WV 25515 Ph 800·
lra~nlng Center wll) be offer 669 1809 or IM lo 304 675· Insurance Agency looking
lng CI-!HA c..lasses to any 4662
MIF/ ON
EOE for a responalble, licensed
bod';' mte1es1Gd In work1ng www ~orlc com or www rlr· or willing to becom e
licensed Customer Service
as aiJ a1do 111 the hOme ltc com
Rep Salary and benellls
health !laid The ClASSWltl be
held June 5 2006 June 16 Come and join our team l dependant on experience
2006 We help with job The Holiday Inn of Gail•polis Interested applicants please
placement Call (740)441 seeks to hire a tutl time dish submit resume to The Dally
PO Box 729 e
t37-7 or (740)992 0990 to• washer Please apply In per Senti nel
Pomen&gt;y Oh10 45769
son No phone calls pleafie
Information

'

110

• &gt;·-"""

Equal Opponunlly Employer
- -- - - - - - Growmg Home
Health
Agency has Full·Time pas!tlan for an RN or LPN
Competitive wages bOnuses, &amp; benefits
Contact
Home Health Care of SEO
Toll Free at1-866-388 tlOO
HOME HEALTH AIDES
SIGN ON BONUS Home
Health Care of SE Oh10 1s
currently hlnng home health
aldea·competlllve wages
Call740-662-1222
Housekeeping Supervisor
Healthcare Services Group
Inc: Ia looking IO'r a career
oriented aggressive hands
on manager In the GaiUpoUa
area AI the teading provider
of housekeeping and laundry services to the tong term
care industry we are seek
lng Individuals who w1U
effectlvelv represent our
company and manage our
on site Oi)iiratlonl We pro
v1de a competit ive ealary
pald training and benetits
package Please tax reftume
to t -614-577-0 t25

We have opemngs for enthu
S1ast1c dedicated proles
s onals who enjoy working
with people In a last paced
env~ronment who exh1b1
ls
leadership and des1re to
build management SKillS II
th1s describes you and
you re ready lo grow we
offer you the opportumty
We offer the oppor!umty and
the tollow1ng benefits Blue
Bl ue
Shiel d
Cross
Insurance
Dental
Prescnplion card 401K
paid vacations ftve day work
week and umforms

If 1nterested apply at Burger
K1ng 65 Upper R1ver Road
m Gallipolis UH or mall
resume to 3210Weshlngton
Blvd
Hunlmgton
WV
25705 EOE

ScHOOLS
!Nsn!UCI10N

r
lnst1!U11on
ff1ce of Consume
ffalrs BEFORE you refi
ance your home o
ta1n a loan BEWAR
t requests tor any lerg
dvance payments o
ees or Insurance Cal
he Office ol Consum
flairs toll free at 1·8
ortgage
broker o
ender
1S
properl
ICensed (ThiS IS a pubh
ervlce announce men
rom the Oh1o Valle

PROFElo...,IONAI
S.RVKIS
Barn Removal ServiCf:l
304 378 00 11
Refe rences available
We work In WV and Ohio
areas,.
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W n'
t 868 582 3345
t~l\11

Concealed P1slol Class
Oh10 WV June 10 2006
$75 00
9 OOam VFW
Mason wv Ph {740)843
5555
Gallipolis Career College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today I 740 446 4387
t-800 214 0452

... 1\11

~!""'-""!"_ _ _ _.,

ItO

HOMF:~

IOK SALE

·--iolliiiiiiiii;;,lllil,.l
1 Bedroom bnck CA CH 96
Olive Street near GOC
35 900 CALL 446 3952 o•
1 865-679-8311

112 Pleasant Street Pomt
Pleasant
WV \304(675
,t.ccred111d Member ACCIIdnlllg
Council lor lndeper'ldant Col!eges 4034 0 ' (304)675 04t8 3
lind Schoo~~ 12749
bedroom 1 1f2bath fam11y
room d1mng roo m new win
dows , new AC new water
tank lanced yard
'ltW'N gaWipolaacaraeroollege com

2112 acres at 4499 6 Baum
Addll on Beh1na skahng
r nk Last House on nghl 4
or 5 bedrooms 3 balh split
level basement attached
Couch $250 00 3 M1ss1on garage
and
sepa rate
style
ta bles
$30 00 garage
$199 000
740
Entertamment
Cenler 985 3586
$50 00 Oak Kitchen table
Pt
with leaf and four chairs 2912 Ann1ston Dr
38A 2BA LR
$200 00 Arm cha1r $15 00 Pleasanl
FA Garage NICe nBighbor
Cal1 740 578 1074
hood (304)675 3637 dsys
(304)675 2355 even1ngs
WANIEil

Above ground pool 38 tong
oval 4 deep $300 Chrysler
Sundance $350 Truck for
parts $75 740 742 2025

To Do
AffOrdable Computer Repa1r
Expert Serv1ce (740)992
2395

:180 2Ba l1rep1ace 40x60
barn B flat acres Pleasant
Valley 1'1d
R10 Grande
$120000 (74017091166

3br 1ba half tiM;hed full
Complete yard work garden tJasement f101 shed nmc b1g
Overbrook Reh ab ilita tion tilling and small home repa~r tenced m backyarel 1n town
20 years exp Call (7 40)446 13041674 5380
Center 1s currently accepting
3682
apphcat1ons lor the position · ----~---­
of dletarv cook and dietary Exp Driver looking for work
aide
Part ttme positions Alt enders (740)367 7899
available Anyone Interested (740)645 6795
please piCk up an appilca
tlon at 333 Page Street Roofing Decks Pole Barns
Middleport OH E 0 E
Garages New Construction
Top
Notch
Bu1ldmg
Part time poslhon to Manage Contractors
WVH036667
country Homes rental cam (304)675 3042 or (304)593· 4 year old Colomal on 3 ,
acres approx 1 900 sq tt 3
mun1ty '" Shade Area 1115
bd
2 bal hS 2 c&lt;~ r ga1age
Includes a house to hve 1n
Summer
Employment masler bdr IS 28x2 4 WJlh a
Send res ume Ia Country
Wanted
Compuler and IBCUZZI
tu!J
S125 000
Homes, PO Box 1033
OffiCe sKII S 0UICkBookS (740)446 7029
Logan Ohio 43138
word processmg graph cs
4BA
Fo re closure
only
Parts Salesperson wanted and Web deveiopmem
$20 900 For IISIIOQS CBil
(740)
992
56
1
3
Computer experience and
800 391 5228 ext F254
knowledgo of farm eqwp Will do housecleanmg
ment
prelerred
Sa lary References avaliable Call 5 rms
ba! h upsta rs
negotiable depending on (740)256-1053
Fu rnished 1 BA apt Clown·
experience
'Health
stMS Furniture Store 1n rear
Insurance Qrovided Send
1/2 ac lot commorc al at
resume to d.A Box 5W: c/o
130
Bulavllle
P1ke
Gallipolis Tribune PO Box
Gall1pols OH (740)446
469 Gallipolis OH 45631
Bonn1e s Private Childcare 4782
now
has
open •ngs
Attent ion!
POSTAL JOBS
Convenietly located by new
$15 67 $21 98/hr now hlr highway on Sl Rl 7 Call Local c om pan~ ollenng "NO
p10
DOWN PAYMEN T
lng For appi1CBt1on and lree 740 985 4326
ms
tor
you
lo
buy
your
gro
gavernoment job 1nta call
11'\\'\,1\1
horne tnstead of ro 11ttng
American Assoc of Labor 1
• 1OQ 01" f1nanc ng
913-599 8042 24/hrs emp
8 USINEl&gt;.'&gt;
' LP.'i S than pPrtecl credll
oorv
OlroRWNm
acc.dpted
• Payment co uld be the
Super 8 Motel IS accepting
same as rent
applications tor housekeep
•NOHCEo
locators
lng Evening weekends and
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
holiday shifts are req ulred
NG CO recommends tha
Please apply In person No
you do bualness with pea
Phone Calla
pie you know and NOT 1
end money through th
Truck Driver needed Full or
Part time Henderson WV mail un111vou have 1nvest1
ated the offerlna.
baaed COL hcense &amp; 2

---

Local Bualneu seeking full
time secretary Job will
Included Billing scheduling
pay roll basic office dulles
etc Please send re~ume to
CLA Bo&lt; W c/o Clolllpollo
Dati)' Tribune PO Bo&lt; •as
Gallipolis OH 45631
years experience
MVR
- - - - - - - - - requ 1red Call (304)875 P.arfy Supplv Store tor sale
n Pomeroy (3 04)6 75 5332
Magic Yea rs Day Care 7434
c enter seeking applicants
for
part
time
s u bs tit u 1ell I o ate r
E~eperlence In lntanHoddler
roo m helpful Send Resume
to 20t High St Polnl
Pleasant WV 25550

FIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS
I

�f

•

Friday, May 26, 2006
ALLEYOOP

www.mydailysentinel.com

•

The

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE
MOTIVATED Sellerl, Send
Hill Rd. nice, stick-built mod·
ular home. meets N.C. hurrtcane specs, 3BA, 2 ful l
baths, oak kitchen' cabinets,
1.21 acres, outbu ilding. 304675-2319

;Central air, full basement,
ohardwood lloonl, de1actled
:Jfarage, covered patio,
~enced back yard, newly
~·remodeled , 3 or 4 bed·

Need to sell your home? New 28R apls. Wa1Son Ad,
Late on payments, divorce, Rodnqy Plke/850 ' area,
fob transfer or a death? 1 Reference/
Deposit
can buy your home. AI cesh required, no pets. (740)446·
and quick clo&amp;lng. 74()..416- 1271 , (740)709-1657.

riO

~

1BA house- 11 Garfield Ave,
Gallipolis. $350 month. Call
for details (740)441-0194 or
740)_
11_·84
_
1__
..
_,_._
_ · _ _ __

$450.00 Month plus utilities
ar;tQ Qeposil. No Pets. 740-

log Cabin , togs must be in 667·3487.

good condition, withng to
~ Attention!
tear down if standing. Local company offering "NO
(740)407-6680.
DOWN PAVMENr pro·
Fair Housing Act of 1968
~j=-"M~--grams for you to buy your
whleh mtkn It Illegal to
.
~S~ 1 home instead of renting. .
sdvertlae "any
.
___
• • 100% financing ·
prllferenct, llmlwtlon or
• Less than pertec1 credit
dl.crlmlnatlon b..ed on
race, cotor, religion, HI
14x55·'97 Fleetwood MH· accepted
famila.l Ntu1 or national
2BR, 1 bath , elec. heatiAC· • Payment could D e the
origin, or an~ Intention to
good condition $10,500. cau . same ag rent.
melee M1Y IUCh
(740)446·3644 for appt
Mortgage
Locat9rs.
pr.t.fance, limitation or
(740)367-0000
dl.c:rlmlnatlon."
1.981 14X70. Victorian, 2
bedroom, Mobile · Home For Rent. Clean , pretty, 3
Th .. newspaper will not
$4,500 OBO (304)67S·6:i23 bedroom, · 1 1/2 bath.
kr:owlngly accepl
Downtown Gallipolis. $775.
2000 Fortune 16xS.O, all No utilities. 446-4639.
.ldvenlsements for r.. t
'
ntllte Which Is In
Appliances, 3br, 2ba, central
vlolltlon of the law. Our
air-gas heat, vinyl siding, Rent 'or Sale 4br ln
reader• are hereby
shingle roof, porch 12x16 Syracuse, $600/month &amp;
Informed that all
DepoSit. •
Watei'/Sewer
(304) 773-5003 after 4pm
dwellings adv8rtlaed in
included. No ~ts (304)675'2000 Oakwood 16x80, vinyl 5332 or(740)59l-0265
this mMspaper are
available on an equal
siding, shingle rool, 4BA, 2
opportunity bales.
bath, central air $19,000. Small
2br
House
Daytime · (740)388-0000 $300/montp, plus deposit &amp;
; For Sale ... Pretty, clean , 3 evening (740)388·8017.
'utilities (304)675-3100
• bedroom, 1 1/2 bath.
SA 7S· 4BR, 1 bath home•·Downtown Gallipolis. 446· 6 good condition used
garage, basement. ri')l'er
mobile
homes,
1997-2000
~4639.
models, 14 &amp; 16 wide, 2·3·4 access. Propane ·heat. winbedrooms, all with r.Emtral dow A/C. $650/month rentair. Special 1997 14x70, S650 sec. dep., ,you pay util2BR , 2 balh, $16,500. ities. Available 1st week In
Day1ime
(740)388·0000, April . Call(740)446·3644 for
an application.
evening (740)388-8017.

...-_-_...,

Handy Man Special
'"Newer 3 bdrm Ranch, w/2
bathrooms. Never lived in, in
drywall stage. Sits on 2
beautiful acres. city water at
road, about 20 mins south of
Athens, $74,500 Owner
financing . (740)489·9146.
1-louse for Sale in Syracuse;
two-bedroom with bath ,
8ttached garage and base·
ment .
An estate sale.
$70,000. Phone 992·3690.
Log Home with addition.
Large li&lt;Jing room and eat in
kitchen. Utilily, 1 112 bath, 2
bedrooms and loft. All alectriC, heat pump/AC, L.P: fire.Place, large deck and full
front porch. Separate 1 car
garage/workshop, on 2.2
acres. 10 miles north of
Pomeroy, Route #7. 1-740985-4281 .
New 3 bedroom. 2 bath,
brick home for sale in Rio
Grande. Call (740)379-26t5

John Deere Mini Excavalorl Lw-.i
Tractor Loader Backhoe/
Skid Steers. carmichael 2000 Dodge Caravan with
, Equlpmen1(740)446-2412
Sport Package. 105,000
miles, $3,900 OBO, Call
Now John Deere Compac)s ~7;;4::0e;266~-6~1::;6:9·:;,·...,._ _.,
and 5000 Series U11111y lriiC'
MoroRcvCt.E&lt;;/
lors Cl 0% Fixed for 38
4 Wurn FRS

3 bedroom house lor rent lrt
Tuppers Plains. Central Air.

Wanted to buy: Old 1800's

Parking Lots • Ball Courts • Private

Hardwood • Vinyl

Roads • Driveways • Streets ~

Carpet Restretch
Laminates
74().517-3704
74().992-(}650

r

ll'10

HOIJSEHOI.D

CHICKEN

BBa'

Sunday, May 28th
Serving at

11

am

Lw--oiGooo;liililiilii.-_.1

Chester Volunteer Fire
'
Department
Annual Memorial Day
Chicken and Rib BBQ
Homemade Ice Cream
Serving Begins at

11 :30 am

Location

Memorial Day Services
to Honor Veterans

Tony

BEAUTIFUL
APART·
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Weslwood
Drive from $344 to $442.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740'446·2568.
Equal
Houslhg Opportunity. .

May29, 2006
Racine American Legion '

602 · '

Monument Post
Featuring

a Veteran Speaker
. The Band

&amp; the

Enduring Freedom Group

ATLANTIC .CITY
30, 2006 to
July 2, 2006

Friday, June

$200/person
Price includes airfare and
two nights at
Harrah's Casino

&amp;

Resort

Private jet from
Charleston, WV
Contact PVH Community
Relations (304)

675-4340,

Ext 1326 to

make

resel')lations
LIMITED SEATS!
Gladly accept credit cards ,
personal checks and cash

1

•

EIP.

FREE
ESTIMATES

(740) 949-1405

IiBERT
BISSEll

r~o~~
BASEMENT
WATERPROOANG
UncOnditional lifetime guar.
antee. Local references furnished. Established 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446·
0870, Roge'rs , Basement
Waterproofing.

CGISTIIIcntl
• New Homes

140-992·1611
Stop &amp; Compare

r~~

r'b

.

I

MANLEY'S
SElf STORAGE
97 Beech Street
Middleport,

OH

10x10x10x20

740-992-5776

992-3194
or 992-6635

Open Mon-Sm i 0-5
' Closed

"Middleport's only
SeD-Storage•

Syracuse, OH

4&lt;1•

THE BORN LOSER
IT

.

""!

TJ.\"-t-IK::&gt; "- \.0\-YOU CA\1€.
/f'€, '&lt;OUR. C.Olt&gt; !

I""Of\, Yt.AA?

I COULD~'\ f.\1\IJ('

G.I\IE.N 'tOU

~'{ (.OL\) ...

Electrlcll 6 Pluri1btng
Rooting &amp; Outlel'l
Vln~l Siding &amp; Painting
P..lo and Porch O.Cke
WV038725

f&gt;
)'

Rome Auto 5ales
6725 51. At 7 s . Gallipolis
• (740)441·9544
1998 Neon $2,100; 1998
Cavalier $2,995; 1996
Blazer
$3,500 ;
1998.
Wlndstar $3,500; 2000 Alero
$3,995; 1997 Cavalier 224
$3,895; 1994 FISO ext cab
4&gt;4 $2,995; 2002 Grand Am
$6,900; 1995 Dakola 4&gt;4
$1 ,800; 2001 Rom 1600 "''

IMPORTS

Ill

&gt;

{r 11~

lWI&lt;JV

I"

11

(l/11

Athena

t

~PI tlf'tll t

'

... THE
HAS
SOMETHING
FOR YOU!!

Hill's Se lf
Storage
29670 Bashan Road
· Racine, Ohio
45n1
740-9411-2217

~2u~f.~£.
Chuck Wolfe
Owner

• New Homes • Additions
• Remodeling
Licensed

1962 Thunderbird; Blue
Exterior.
Ivory
leather
Interior, White vlnyt top.
Nice driver, 390ci engine,
auto transmission, power
steering, power brake,
power window, power seat.
Price $13,500.00.
Hill's
Automotive Classic Car
Restoration &amp; Parts, Inc.,
29670
Bashan
Aoad,
Racine, Ohio 45771; Phone:
740·949·2217; Fa.: . 740·
949·1957; Pictured on
www thutH!edllrds;tntot com , PUBLIC NOTICE
The
VIllage • · ol
1995 Ponliac Bonneville Middleport will be
3800 V6, 20 mpg, 93,000 accepting
property
ll)lles, all power, AC, $2,600 purchase offers lor
OBO. (7 40)245·5934.
one housing
eHo
- - - - - '·' ----located In the VIllage
1997 Buick Park Avenue. at 705 Hobart Street
Lealhor, loaded, all maln1e- (50' X 100'1· Plat rniP
nance records, well main- number
· 008.
tained, 1t6k, asking $4,600. Aaaeaaor'a
Parcel
(740)245·5934.
· '
number
15-00905,
Thla 11 now a vacant
1998 Buick Skylark 96,000 lot. The minimum offer
miles, excellent condition. the Village will accept
$2,800. Call(740)388·9645 Ia $6,500.00. Offera
will be acc:epted at the
2003 PT Cruiser, 4 cyl.,
runs &amp; looks great, good gas Mayor'a Office , at
mileage,
$7,200.
Call Vlllege Hall, 237 Race
Street,
Middleport,
(740)386.0140,
---'-~~-- Ohio 45760 until 4:00
98 Plymouth Neon,· auto· pm on Friday, June 2,
matte, air, $1600 080. 2006
(51 18, 23, 26
(740)256·1652,
------~--

YOUNG
99? 621 s

Home

GAME

Builder

ON ACCOUNT
OF PARKNE55!
WIIERE'P E1}EI1.V80DI'
60? I CAN'T

(740) 992-0496
V#

SEE A THING!

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH
be aubmiHed Ia June
16,2006.
(51 24, 25, 26

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Ia hert!iby
given
that
on
Saturday, 18ay 27,
2006 at 10:00 a.m., a
public aale will be
held at2tt W, Second
St., Pomeroy, Ohio,
The Farmers Bank
and
Savings
Company · Ia selling
lor cash In hand or .
certified check the following collateral:
11194
Ford
F250
2FTHF26H9RCA82729
2001 Dodge Ram 1500
3B7HF13Z31G785595
The Farmera Bank
and
Savings
Public Notice
· Company, Pomeroy,
Request
For
Ohio, reaervea the
Propoaala
· right to bid at this
The Meigs County
sale, and to withdraw
Office of Economic
the above collateral
and ,'
Workforce
prior to sale. Further,
Development Ia r.eek·
The Farmers Bank
lng propoaels from
and
Savlnga
organizations Inter·
Company
ruerves
esled In admlnlater·
the right to relect any
lng a county tourlam
or all bids submitted.
program lor the peri·
The above deacrtbed
od of July 3, 2006
collateral will be aold
through June
30, · "as Is-where Ia", with
2007. The complete
no
expreaaed
or
request for proposal
Implied : warranty
It available lor pickup
given.
at 238 West M'ln
For further Informs·
Street In Pomeroy, by
tlon, or lor an appointcalling 992-3034, or
ment to Inspect collatthrough e-mail at
eral, prior to sale date
brouah Omelgacouncontact Cyndle, Stacy,
tyohlo.com. the dead·
or Randy at 992·2136.
line lor propoula to
(5) 24, 25, 26

CALLED

.,

..

.

--c -c:==-

•.

SUNSHINE CLUB
I kkVl.CI\J'T MI/JD

~ Cornerstone
I!§·~; (1:!
Construction

AUlTL£ INVASICN
CF !=RIV.Ilt:Y IJCJV
IWDlHW

Residential • Commerdal • General Contncling
Painting • Dours • Windowll • Decks
• Siding • Roofing • Room Additions • Rcmcx.t cling
WV 038992
• Plumbing • Electri cal 740-367.0&amp;W
OH 38244
• A-.: co ustic CL'il ln g · .7 40·339·\$412

Beef
Beef $8.75
Corn $7.25/Bag
II·Crack,ed Corn $8.25/Bag
!·Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
I·Shade River Hog Feed $8.85
Why Drive Anywhere Else?

s/u.

. GARFIELD

Shade River AG Service, Inc
35537 St Rt 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

FOR RENT- MEIGS COUNTY
1-4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD

Also Commercial Space
740~416-5547
Now

GRIZZWELLS

All pass

J

curve

21 Hurts
23 Bum Bllghtly

26 Doctrine

28 Goal
29 Nozzle
30 Swlmauh
5
material
6
34 BIUHalrf81 7
In Memphis
38 Leather
8
punch
38 Magna9
laude
39 Speak
12
41 Metro area 13
42 Sharp tugs 18
44 Sound at
tho movies

BAl i!VI LUMBER
Scorpion .Tractors

S•turday. May 27, 2008
By Bernice Bede Otoi ·
Yo4 could be extremely fortunate ·during
the year ahead in projects or Involvements
that are of a mental nature because you'll
be more disciplined than usual in slaying
the course. You wilt carefully consider
every move before executing them .
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - Make your
every hour count instead of merely being
busy lor busy's sake. Success comes
when you have definite objectiVes and
aren't afraid to do what it takes to achieve
them.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) - It's best not
to tell others in advance what your intentions are or how you plan to go about
achieving them. Do wh&amp;t needs doing, and
let your achievement! speak loudly for
themselves.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) - Being encourag·
ing to frl!indS and associates has a twOfold
effect: 1); it will inspire them to climb to
new heights and. 2) , it will get you to take
some of your own advice as well.
VIRGO ('Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - You're
presently in a hopeful cycle where good
thln.gs can be created by your own initiative and effort. Establish and strive for wor·
thy targets that are meaningful to you.
LIBRA (Sept . 23.Qct. 23) - You may
Involve yourself with a number of unrelated
situ ations. Howevttr, if others are involved,
it is best you mastermind each ope(alion
so you don't get your wires crossed.
SCORPIO (OCt. 24-Nov. 22) - Do not
hesitate to revise plans or procedures it
business conditions have not been running
as smoothly as you'd like. Even If it's diffi·
cult to accomplish, ,new ways and means
could turn the tide.
SAGIITARIU S (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Rewards will be commensurate to the
efforts that are expended. So if yOu
engage in a joint endeavor with another,.
be sure slhe Is willing lo give what is necessary to acttieve success.
CAPRICORN ·(Dec , 22.Jan . t9) - Give
matters relating to work all your attention ,
whether they concern a personal project or ·
one being done for another.. Don't allow
outside, frivolous activities to distract you .
AQUARIU S (Jan . 2Q-Feb. 19)- Be exceptionally ceretut not t6 play favorites when
out with your cronie·s. II you treat one
hlend lavishly wh~e giving little lime and
attention to the others; it cOuld cost you
lriendships.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Today is
one of those times when you can tie down
all the loose ends you've ten hanging on
several projects., Worthwhile accomplishments are possible - if you hava the
gumption to do so.
ARI ES _{March 21-Aprl t 1 9) - You have an
enormous capacity tor handling tasks or
assignments that are of a deep mental
nature . Give your muscles a rest . and put
y6u r brilliant mind to the test at this time .
TAURU S (April 20-May 20) - Some days
are better for making money than others.
Today is likely to be one of them. Subdue
your other interests, and expend y-our
efforts on doing things that can generate

42 Lout

quarters
23 Bus alter·
native
.
24 Step on It
25 Japanese
pearl diver
covers
27 Coup d'Witty retort 29 Welghtlllllng
Part oi.PGA
maneuver
Condor:a
31 201,
abode
to Claudius
Eurasian
32 Muddy
range
track
Superman, 33 Alcott girl
Incognito
35 City on the
F&lt;u«&gt;orcar
Thames
Powsrtul
37 oater
Lingua
40 Test, as ore
(Dublin
41 · Ernesto
carrlsrl
Guevora

43 Opera45 Put lit
. whammy on
46 Laze
around

48 Baseball
family

name

49 Art-clan
model

50 Bad air
54 Way back
-

CELEBRITY CIPHER
.

by Luis campos

Celel:rfty Cipher avpiO!Jams are createci frtm qoo'*"' by tamous people. pa$1111'1:1 J»esent.
Eldllel18r ;;, the ciphef N'Q; kll anottler.

Tod:ty's CiuecBequeOF
"KOS

FO

SOKK . WTL

IRU
-

TYOHZTFO

•

VPIS

M N . M S ' N G 0 M R D I G K.0

PIAAOMRONN

S T Z T R B' H T R S

AHTGKOFN,"

STF · ZHL .MNO

PREVIOUS SOLUTION -'He was a rare talenland a beaui~ul men... his
voice. was unlike any other." - Burt Bac:haractl , remembering Gene Pitney

C.ir:l 1)

~h..

,( .. ,1) "'C

~ c:_ I

WOlD
lA II

\:)~ ' ~Qt.! ~).- ~ ~ &lt;.f';;)

l~lto4 loy CU. T I , 'OLl.lN - - - - - -

the
b,.
low lo form leur simDit word1.
Rtartan;e

"obur'Bfrthdlly:

22 Monk's

Cleveland
eager
2 Rolaids·
target
3 Moore ot
"GJ. Jane"
4 Pillow

of

-ardJ

.ENTBRA

EVRJ R
!

I I I' I
URBEY

I

"Have ~ou ever noqccd.'' a
politician asked a v01cr "that
'
'
those wbo are neuua! arouse
•

S0 V I N I
susoicion from · - · - ~,
-;1-lr-""'"',-T,·.;_;.,.,I....,,~ Q C::l"'P•'• the ,!'IU::kle uored
Qi
.

-

-1'-..J...-.L..J..-.l....J,

e
€)

b" lillinQ •n

l t"le

m•umg words

you oev!l i:J;:) irom ~t tl Nc : J oaiow.

..

PRINi NUMBERED
I
tfi! EP.S IN SOUAR!S
UNSCRAMBLE tETT EP. S

fOR ANSWER

I i

SCRAMLErl ANswaRI PliZIIDII

Marrow - Giver - Cover - Entice - WEAR I T
Aller repairing his garden bench, my neighbor
pur a sign oo it that read: "Wet Paine Watch It or WEAR
IT'"

ARLO &amp; JANIS

ffiA~

YOU.'

funds.

1/o Yoli1\.I\~K

Available At

connector
60 Kind ollrtp
•
DOWN

Astro-.
Graph 0 four s:tombiedlett1r1

•

New O•r•SJSI•

59 Berlin

16 Where to
hear Farsi
17 Sparkler
19 Gold-coated
20 Mountain

'UULII

R•modallng

V .C

55 Mortgage

56 Long pall
57 Popular pet
58 Part o1 UCLA

11 Whllper
loudly
13 Juot
14 Energy
15 Cothadral

TllllDAILY

SERVICE

,

East

Doug Larson said, 'What some people
mistake for the high cost olliving is really
lhe cosl of h1gh living.'
Allhe bridgelable, some inattentive players qcca.sionally have difficulty ·deciding
whether a card is high or low. Instead of
looking at every card played, saying 1he
cards to themselves, and working out
what is high and what is low, th9y assume
anything below a six is low and aboye a
·sl&gt; is high. The si&gt; i!Salf lhey hope never
to see played at a critical juncture.
North open&amp; one club, being too strong
for one no-trump, but a tad weak for two
no-trump. East might overcall two nOIrump, lha Unusual-No-Trump showing al
leas1 5·5 in lhe 1wo lowes! unbid suits, Bul
with -the unfavo rable vulnerability, he
decided lo enler lhe bidding al a lower
klvel, AHer South responded one spade,
Nonh jumped 10 four spades, which his
poinl-counl diclaled, allhough his awful
4-3·3·3 distribulion suggeslod thallhreo
spades was sufficient (which South
would raise to game).
Weslled lhe heart jack: lhreo, king, four.
East cashed the heart ace : seven, two,
' live. And Easl conlinued wilh Ihe heart,
eight queen, spada live, hear1 si&gt;. What
should Wesllead now?
'
WO!ll, baing a fully paid -up member of lhe
•above a six is high• school, shifted to a
diamond. Declarer wOn on the board,
drew trumps, and claimed.
An .observant West would have known
that East's heart eight was his lowest
remaining card in the suit. Then West
would have shifted Ia a club, giving· Easl
the ruff that ruffles the contract.

Roam Addition• &amp;

I

In Pomeroy Area. 3. Bd.·2
Bath mobile hOme. Also, 2
80.-IBath. Bo1h Very Good
Condition. Call J.A. 740- Yamaha guitar electric &amp; U
::cab;r4,;;'4;.$;;;9~,300~.--__,
243-5811 for more detail.
acouslie FGX-413 SC, 3 yrs, . rl5
'fRUCJ(S
old
.
(
like
new)
wNender
amp
I,,
_
_
_
FORiiiiiiSiiALEiiiil-·
Mod6rn one bedroom. can
(740)446·3738.
I \In I "- I 1'1' 1 II ..,
1982 GMC pickup 4x4, 350,
New 2 Bedroom Apartment.s
,\ I I\ I ' 1(11 t,
4 speed, $1 ,600 . Call
washer/dryer
hookup,
(740)441-7390.
srove/ref rlgerator included.
FARM
starting al $4001mo. Call for
2000 GMC Sierra 2500, 314
dela lls (740)441-0194 or a.-ooiiEQu::m::riiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiio_,.. ton, ext-cab. 56,000/mlles,
(740)441.0194.
'
vortec 6000, V-8, gas
John Deere I 0 ft. No Til Drill
TWo Bedroom Apt. for for
engln8,
excellent condition.
rent.
Carmichael
renVulllllles paid, No Pels,
Priced 10 sell al $14,500
Equlpmenl(740)446·2412,
(304)576-2722
740-992·5858 ,

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

rass

CARPENTER

Gazelle,
Baskets
(304)675·2157 leave mes· $509! Police Impounds!
Cars from $500. For listings
sage.
BO!J.391·5227 axt 31!01
JET
1952 Chevrolet Deluxe, 4
AERATION MOTORS
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuilt In door, 6 cyt. 3 spe89, runs
Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1· good, interior needs work,
.53,000
miles. $2,000.
BO!J.537 ·9528.
(740)«1·7390.

L.,i_..:;;;;:.---irl

SPRING SPECIAL ,

Nortb

Is that card
high or low?

YOUNG'S

·-------,J.

Little

'Flats $7.50
' Hanging Baskets
'Pols and Tubs
L1rgc 10" Ferns $6.95
Shrnbs and Perennials

• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

Handy Man. Home Services
and Repairs, Call (740)645·
7524,

•

West

Opening lead: •

2AS9 St. Rt 160 • GaiUpolls

Spring Season!

Q 10 9 8 6

1 ..

740.446.9200

-.. 11&lt;\ II I '

Q7 4

Dealer: North
Vulnerable : East-West

,.,_,Cim-eeltoablnetry.eo•

6 mo. old beige Lab with
papers , very friendly paid
$200,
sell
for 5Hio.
(740)446-7127, '
--------Clean Efficiency, Rei, . D!lp., American aulldog puppies.
Vet checked, 1stshots,NKC
No Pels (304)675·5162
Reg. $600 neg . (740)256·
CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· 6057.
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments, Beagle Type Puppies. Cute
and/or' small houses FOR and Heal1hy. Call George
RENT. Call' (740)441·1111 Miller 740·742-1024.
for application &amp; Information.
Belgium Malindis Pups and
GraciOUs living. 1 and 2 bed; At&lt;C German Shepherd
room apartments at Village adults. (:J0.0)937·3059
Manor
and
"Rivers ide~ www.TRISTATEK-9.COM
Apartments In Middleport.
From $295·$444. Call 740- Great Dane puppies. Full
992·5064. Equal Housing blooded, ready Friday, May
261H, Call(740)379-2282.
Opportunities.

10:00 am

1' '

l

Hardwood cabinetry And Furnnure

Warehouse

t

Chester Fire House
Monday, May 29th

1

JONES'

Appliance

1br, Garage Apt, Utilities
NEW AND USED STEEL
paid.
$425fmonlh,
Steel Beams, Pipe Rebar
$275/deposit
No
Pets
For" Concrete,
Angle,
(304)675·2319
Channel, Flat Bar, S.teel
For .
Drains,
3 Bedroom. doublewide. 3 Grating
miles from Pomeroy on 143. Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
$375.00 a month
plus Scrap Metals Open Monday,
deposit, call after 5:00 P.M. Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Sam=4:30pm. Closed
740·992·7401
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
4 roams &amp; bath, stove/ref. Sunday. (740)446-7300
Utilities paid. $450/mo.
Upstairs, 46 Olive St. No Xerox Copier reduces &amp;
pels. (740)446"3945. ·
enlarges $300 (304)675 2975
Accepting applications for 1
or 2 bedro·om apartment,
$400-$500 month, kitchen
appliances &amp; WID furnished,
water &amp; garbage included, Block, brick, sewer pipes,
no pets, 1st month, security windows, lintels, etc, Claude
deposit &amp; IQase required. Winters, Rio Grande, OH
(740)448·9585.

Homemade Ice Cream

I /

tared males. Ready to
breed. Championship bloodlines. Call(740)245·0485,

~~-~-----, longaberger

t and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, furnished and unfur·
nished, security . deposit
required, no pets, 740-992·
2218.

zom

304-675-2457
( 'I Hl l

=;;;;;:;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 6 full blood, 1 year old regis-

SHOP
CLASSIFIED$

Racine Fire Department

•

Boar G011t1for aale

\ 11 W II \ "''" I

··.I.

Playgrounds

rl~er

" 52 Trabek o1
7 Pullfn's kin
• Jeopardy!"
"lira."

part

• 6 3 2
.AK1098
tQ l 0986

Soutb

j

FUR RENT

• nrw.

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East

+? 5 4 3 2
.754 32
South
• A Q J 10 9

Twin Rivers Tower is accept·
ing applications for waiting
list for Hud-subsized, 1· br,
apartment, can 675-6679
Equal Housing Opportunity

r

APAKIMENIS

-Free Eslimales

5

• J 2

Carpet
Ceramic Tile

Bucket Truck

j'

~

•

Top • Remov41 • Trim
• Stump Grinding

r:

i

West
• SEAL COATING
•PATCHING

Installer

Tree Service

·rtb

Sunday,

·-------,J

•

Ray Martin

throUgh John
De\lre Credit. Carmichael
1999 BlacK Harley Davidson
Equipment (740)446·2412
Fatboy. Lo1s of chrome and
Single Bedtoom $300 mc;mlh
extras 9,400 miles. Call
+ $300 deposH. .2 QJ Apt
or (740)339$350 a month $300 deposit.
Tracy's Apt (304)675·2288
mcintha

in Henderson, WV. Preowned Appliances starting
'86 Cr~strige 14x70 2BRI 2 Stop renting Buy 7 bedroom
at $75 &amp; up all under Quality horse and livestock
foreclosure
$18.000.
For
listbalh , $6,995 . Call(740)385·
ings 800·391·5228 6&gt;1. Warra~ty. also have recon- trailers now available at
9948.
Carmichael Equipment. New
1709.
ditioned Big; Screen TV's dealer for Valley and
'86 Skyline front kitchen .
Horse
and
Cash price $8.995. Will ~~~--~--., by Ron's TV (304)675- KleferbuiH
7999
MOBFORn.EnJ!~
Livestock Trailers. Many
deliver. Call (740)385-9948. ·
"""" 1
- - - - - - - - -· options available· steel, alu9/10th of an acre for sale on
Free estimates Mollohan minlim, dressing rOOm$, llv.
mobile
homes
,
_
143 2
740
Carpet, Be:rber $5.95/yard. ing quarters. (740)446-24 12.
2, 2 bedroom Trailers for VInyl $4.95/yard. (740)446·
992 _5858 .
- - - - - - - - - Rent on Plymale Lane 7444, 76 Vine St.
HAY &amp;
Brand
new 16' wide (304)67s.4044
vlnyl(shingle Sl 81/mo. Call - - ' - - - - - - - - New Kirby vacuum cleaner t,___,;;GiiRAINilii--_.1
(740)385-7671 ,
3 bedroorri , 2 bath, in coun- with shampooer, all accestry, B miles to Pomeroy, 12 sories. $9QO. (.740)388· Tobacco Plants for sale. Call
Nice i4x70 3 bedroom only mileS to Albany, $475 per 0442.
, (740)446·7843 or (740)645·
$10,995. Will help with deliv- month plus deposit &amp; utlllery. Call (740)386-9621 .
ties, (859)606-4354
Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Repalr-675-7388. For Sale,
Very ctean 14x64
2 bed· 3BOA , 2Ba , doublewlde re-conditioned automatic 1998 John Deere GX 345·
..;
room. Only '!17,995 . Calf · close to RVHS. $450 month, washers &amp; dryers, refrigera- with 18hp, v-twin Kawasaki
I 0138 ··069-=-8----, $450 dop., ref. required. No
"71!!1411""•5·
F.
tors, gas and electric mo1or 848 hrs. llquld cooled,
FARMS
pets. (740)367-7025. ,·
ranges, air conditioners , and hydrqstatic transmission, 54
S
wringer washefs. Will do in. hydraulic deck, tractor
L_
, _ _FU_R_ALE
_ __.I 3Br. Refridg. &amp; Stove,Washer
&amp; Dryer ·,neluded (304)576 repairs on maJ·or brand.s in llres with 48 in. hy'draullc
snow blade.
•
shop or at your home.
7'acres on A.tver. 3BR . bern. 2934
,np.;;;.:;;.:,;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;._.,
1996 John Deere GX 345·
$150,000. Crown City. ·call ~obile. home sites for up to
wilh 18hp, v·twin Kawasaki
(740)256·6 140.
16x80 in Country Homes.
ANnQUES
motOr 1101 hrS. liqu+d
cooled, hydrostatic trans(740)385·4019
~
mission, 54 in. hydraulic
Newer large 3 bedroom, 2 Buy or sell. · Riverine
deck, tractor tires with 48 ln.
bath on 1/4 acre lot, 5 mites Antiques, 1124 East Main hydnluhc snow blade Call
from
Gallipolis. · Green on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740M
(740)441·1150 ask lor
School, storage building. 992·2526. Russ Moore,
Rodney.
$475 monlh, $475 depo~1.
no utilities paid: (740)446Like new Carlton brand
9116 , 339·2541 leave mesStump Grinder. 46 hours.
sage.
Carmichael
Equi'pment
(740)446-2412.
Small . 2 bedroom mobile 6 month old Hewlett Packard
home in Middleport, $225 Computer
&amp;
Printer
I H \ "\"&gt; t'l l l ~ I \ I II l \
per month, $225 deposit, (740)367·7172
years lease. no· pets.
Aurc»i
(740)992·5039 no calls after Body by Jake Ab Scissors,
FUR SAUl
.
9pm

05·26-oti

+ AKJ

·-llliiFORiiiiiRENriiiliioo_.l

51 Cincinnati

serve

North
..J •K874
• 6 5 3

H~~

1 Two-timer
4 Tlfuana

10~53111.~

l

1, 1\.l\l '-.

Niqt 3 Bedroom House in
Pomeroy. $450.oo per
Month plus $450.00 deposit.
740·992.Q064

46 Animal fat
47 Cbaylttltrlca

ACROSS

Phillip
Alder

3130.

Reduced Price 2-Houses
·looms. close to schools, one
in
New Haven ,
· Point Pleasant, $69.500. Brick/Wood Home 4·bed.
1740)709-1382.
0
$ 50 ,000 asotn
I
rom.
Mason Manufactured Home
3-bedroom . 2·full-baths. No
land c. ont 1acts. $62 ,000
(304 )882·3200

All real ntlte adYtni.J ng
ht thl1 MWIIMP'I' Ia
autlfKI to the Fedel'tll

96 Dodge 1600 Quod cab.
4WD, k&gt;eded, $8,850 negotiable. (740)«6·1905 or
(00.0)412·4645.

Daily Sentinel • Page 87

SOUP TO NUTZ

~E'I.-L 'r.VE~

.m LA\tl

~oien~)

OFI='?

"Taking Tile Sting Out Of
Hard Work! "
Mid- Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubola Engine s

BAUM LUMBER
St. Rt. 124

Chester

985-330 I
I

•,,
--- - --··.' -·.

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______

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--.........,.--. -

-

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·

�I

www.myd~llysentlnel.com

The Dally sentinel Page B8

Friday, May 26, 2006

ALONG THE RivER
The last full measure:
Legion post honors two
Medal of Honor heroes,_Cl

.,

!l{emem6eri11fj'OuT

Hometown News for Gama &amp; Meigs counties
I )hio

\ ;dk' l'uhli,Jtin~ ( o.

NO PAPERS
ON MONDAY

You were a light in our life
That bums forever on our
hearts.
Miss and .l ove you always,
Tom, Janet and Tom

Jeffrey S. Davidson

Gene Underwood

Fritz Sayre

Son
July 29. 1963-May I, 2006

Father/Husband
2/17/34 -4/5/01

Husband
4/23/41 - 7/11103

Though out of sight, you ' ll
forever be in my heart
and mind.

You are in our thoughts and
prayers from morning to night
and from year to year.

Harry D. Barton

Norman W. Milliron

. Oct. 25th 1938 .
Feb. 16th 2006 .

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God hold you
in the palm of His hand.

We send this message with a
loving kiss for eternal rest
happiness.

Suzanne Sayre

Wife
Kids
&amp; Grandkids

Love &amp; Miss You
Ruth &amp; Virginia

Nancy Pettit

Father &amp; Grandpa
December 30, 1923
: January 14,2006
We send this message with a
loving kiss for eternal rest
happiness.
·
Connie &amp; Steve Miller
&amp; Kids-Alisha, Breanna·
&amp; Curtis

The Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, The Daily Sentinel
and the Point Pleasant
, . Register will ·not be published Monday so that its
employees can observe the
Memorial Day holiday.
Regular publication and
business hours resume
Thesday.

SPORTS
• Eastern sending five
to State. See Page 81

Audra M. Gloyd (Mother)
Sept. 12, 1926- Nov. 19, 1997
1 Forever missc~ . never Forgotten.
r May Go&lt;l hold you in the palm
His hand.
·
Mamie Oaun Harmop
(Sister)
, '
' July 31, 1956-March 16,2003
Your courage and bravery still
inspire us all, and the memory ?r
your smile tills us with joy ·
and laughter.

In Loving Memory Of
Joseph A. Bissell 1981
Joseph E. Bissell 1982
Violet M. Smith 1985
Leona M. Hen sley 1986
Michael Patrick Bissell 1990
Kenneth E. Bissell 1996
Ada E. Bissell 1996
Mae E. McPeek 1997
Gone but not forgotten
Orva Jean, Marilyn , Mike .
&amp; Families

Both Sadly Missed By Family

Harold E. Hager .

Jimmie G. King

Dallas V. Hill

Jack Lance

Loving Husband
6/16/1933 -9/15/2001
Ahappy home we once enjoyed,

Husband, Father
Oct. 3, 1920 - Feb. 23. 2004

Brother
4/9/39 -9/24/00

How sweet the memorY still. But

·We send this message with a
loving kiss for eternal rest
happiness.

The days may come and go;
but tbe times we shared will
always remain.

Family

Judy Elkins

death has lefra loneliness, The
can never fill. We mourned for him

silence, No eyes cas see us weep.
' many a silent tear rs shed, Whrle
others are asleep.

Husband &amp; Father
6127/35 - 2/19/06
May God's angels guide you
and protect you
throughout time.

John B. Ridenour

John B. Ridenour

Father
9/18/46 -5/26/02

Son
9/18/46- 5/26/02

Though out of sight. you'll
forever be in my heart
and mind. · · ·

May God cradle you in His
arms, now and forever.

Norman (Poppy)
Milliron

Iva S. Cremeans

OBITUARIES
•

f~P.~!.~

-'. .

~a Ma!'BHonti

~· Helen·1:.. Cheesebrew.

~· V. LouiSe Kirby
:. Ernest R. Reed
;• Mildred Roush Swisher
•

Father
12/3011923 - 1/1412006

INSIDE
Jason

and Jared

Pauline Ridenour

We hold you in our thoughts
and memories forever.
·

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God hold you
in the palm of His hand.

Love Always,
Sandy

Lawrence (Lonnie)
Darst
I 012 1/5 1· 12129105

Candie, Frank
&amp; Zach Davis

Tracey R.
Riggenbach

Harry D. Barton

Lewis K. Smith

Garry C~emeans
&amp; Mariann Hendricks

WEATIIER

. Father &amp; Gramps
12/30123 - 1/14/06

INDEX

-...

"ill

4 SECJ'IONS -

Forever missed, never·
forgotten. May God hold you
in t~e palm of His hand.
Ann Felty

You were a
that burns
in
our hearts.
We love and miss you Paw Paw
Michael, Brcanna
Hannah and Austin

·~

our thoughts ·
mernorites forever.

-

Ruth Smilh
and Family

love and miss you very mu•ch,l
JoAnn, Derrick, Mall, Jessica,
Danny, Aleta, Ryan Cheyenne,
Jamie, Healher, Morgan, Jilylen

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Cof!1ics ·
Editorials
Obituaries
Regional
Sports ·
Weather

28 PAGES .

A3

· c Section
D Section
insert

A4
A6

A2
BSection
AS

li;J 2006 Ohio Valley Publishlq Co.

{

I.

speaker Tina Merry said during her address.
"I feel very fortunate to
MERCERVILLE - A lot have attended a smaller high
has changed at South Gallia school, like South Gallia."
High Scheo) since the class she said. "The nice thing is
of 2006 started there.
that the . t~achers all know
The football team played in you. Unfortunately, they also
their first pl!lyoff game. The know your family and · it's
cheerleading squad won first harder to get by with stuff."
Merry is a l 987 graduate of
place
in the
Eastern
Southwestern
Hillh School,
Cheerleaders Association
, national championship. And which merged wtth Hannan
voters approved a bond issue Trace High School to form
.
that will lead .to construction South Gallia. .
Merry's
daughter,
Miranda,
of new school buildings.
The class gathered in the was among those who
gymnasium Saturday. for the received diplomas Saturday.
Graduating from the school
school's I Oth commenceis
important because of famiment ceremony since rely history, valedictorian
opening in 1996.
Amber
Gillenwater said.
Attending a small, rural
Please see SGHS, A5
school is a . blessing, guest
BY PAUL DARST
PDARST®MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

DetalllonPii&amp;8A8

were a light in our
that bums forever in
our hearts.

RIO
GRANDE
Memories of senior year
merged with the realization
of what the" post-graduation
world holds in the parting
thoughts of the Gallia ·
Academy High School Class
of 2006's top lO perc~~J~.t-st!h
dents.
"' . .
"It's been a long •journey
filled with so many memories," said · Alicia Calvert,
who joined classmates
Elizabeth Buck, Bridget
Merry and Kayla Perry in the
student ·addresses during
'
Friday's GAHS graduation at
Lyne ·Center on the campus
of the University of Rio
Grande/Rio
Grande
Community College. ·
·"We have worked so hard to
Kevin Kelly/photo
make it to this moment; and
Gallia
Academy
High
School
senior
Kaitl
Dovyak
performed
a
violin
solo
uncier
the
direction of
this momen~ and others are
what we will remember from Marilyn Kibble during graduation ceremonies Friday at Lyne Center. Diplomas were awarded to
163 GAHS seniors.
·
senior year," Calven added.
Utilizing a connecting nar- many things - assigned
importantly, passing a bond work and dedication have
rative in their addresses, the
speakers touched on the parking, single lockers, issue for a new high -school come down to this," said
Perry. "We will never forget
defining moments of their defeating Jackson in football - became a reality.
final year at GAHS, when for homecoming and most
"This is it. All of the hard
Please see GAHS. A:J
'

v

·'

Gold Wings
kick off.
festival season
in Pomeroy
BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
HOEFLICH@MYQAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The Gold
Wings and , Ribs Festival
Friday and Saturday, June 3
and 4, will kick off a variety of
summer programs on the par~­
ing lot and in the amphitheater
·of downtown Pomeroy. .
Paul Darnell , chairman of
the ·festival events, says several 'hundred motorcyclists
from around the country are
expected to begin rolling into
Pomeroy Friday as the event
gets underway.
·Food vendors of all kinds
- plenty of them selling
ribs - will open before
noop on Friday for the lunch
crowd at the family-oriented, alcohol free event.
' Continuous 'entertainment
in the amphitheater will get
underway, at 2 p.m. Friday
with
vocalists
Juli,e
Imboden , Miss Ohio . River
2004, and Katie Reed,
Middleport resident and student at Ohio University, providing afternoon entertainment, and the band and vocal
group "Insured Sound" combining some oldies . with
more modern music to entertain from 6 to 9 p.m.
Friday evening activities
will wrap up with the first of
two light parade s through
the Bend area. The second
light parade will take place
on Saturday. Both are scheduled to leave the parking lot
at 9: 15p.m.
Friday night's parade route
will take the motorcyclists
across the Pomeroy-Mason
bridge into West Virginia. and
move upriver through Mason.
Hartford - and New Haven,
before turning and heading
back to the parking lot. .
Saturday's parade route
will be upriver taking the
motorcyclists
·through
Paul Darst;pholo
Minersv ille. Syracuse and
Kat9 Dennison, left and Keva Bing await the beginning of the Racine, then back through
commencement ceremony with the rest of the South Gallia
Please see Festival, A&amp;
High School class of 2006.

SGHS graduates begin
·new chapter of their lives ..

Norman W. Milliron

October 25, 1936·
Fcbr'\181"/ t6th, 2006

Daughter

Forever missed, never
forgotten. May God hold you
in the palm of His hand.

• Local Briefs.
SeePageA3
'
• League helps library.
See Page AS -

8120170 - 10/18/05

Whtn
came and
) 'OU 5
months ago, Our whoJe world £ell
apart. \'ou did so many things for us,
Your heart was kind and true, And
when we ever netdt!d surname, We
always count on you. Our lives go
on without you, But nothing is the
same, We lry to hide our heartaches,
When so~n:one speaks your name. lhe
specla,l years
not return, When we
\4'Cre all tugelher, But with the Jove
within our hearts, You' ll walk'"tt·ith us
We lov~ and miss

,

. KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

,."

Though out of sight, you'll
forever he in my heart
and mind.
,
i'
Love Always,
Sandie
,..

POMEROY - After reflecting on
the lessons learned and the memories
made, the valedictorians and salutatorian of the Meigs High School Class of
2006 turned to the challenges and
responsibilities· of the future in speeches at Friday night's commencement.
Addressing the 130 graduating
· seniors and their families and friends
which filled the Larry R. Morrison gymnasium, were valedictorians, Miranda
• Beha, Whitney Thoene, and Jacob
Venoy, and salutatorian, Joshua Venoy.
Beha called on her classmates to
hold on to their memories but challenged them to use their skill s and
abilities to make a difference in the
world. She spoke of the.responsibility
to serve others and the satisfaction it
brings to the individual. "By shifting
the focus of attention off ourselves,
.
Charlene Hoetllch/photo we will 'become more aware of the
Graduation comes with mixed emotions for many parents. Here Lisa. Venoy world around us," said Beha,
shares a pro'ud moment with her twin sons, Jos'iah and Jacob, just minutes "Service not only benefits the person
before the procession begins.
you are helping, it rewards you." .

The importance of high expectations
was stressed by Thoene in . her comments. She. encouraged her .classmates
to have the countge to try new things
and to remember what golfer Tom
Jenkins once said "Shoot for the moon.
Even if you miss, you will land among .
ihe stars." If you believe in yourself, all
things are possible, said Thoene.
Jacob Venoy, after commenting on
the friends and memories made during high school, moved on to life in
college or the world of work. He said
"Life cim be overwhelming at some
points, so keep your eye on the prize.
Look past your problems and worries
of today, and into your dreams of
1omorrow." While describing the
future as unpredictable, he concluded
that "life without obstacles and adversity would be like a roller coaster with
no hills. It would be boring."
Salutatorian Joshua Venoy talked
about the journey through 13 years of
school and the role parents and teachers
, had in making those years .successful.
Please see Mel1s. A7

GIHS

Mary King

Father
· May 25. 1935 · Nov 27. 2001

IU.'I999

Bv CHARLENE HoEFLICH
. HOEFLICH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY KEVIN KEUY

Clair W. Might

~I. :ill,\ ol. -to. :-.;.,, 1H

Meigs awards diplomas to class of 130

and Stacey

._
Moiher
June II , 1942 -Jan

l'urm·r·o~ • \lidclkp&lt;wl • (,;rllipoli' • :\l;r) :.!H. :!ool&gt;

Sue, Kim

'

Patricia K. Mo·ssm1anl

tmt ..

un a

On !Memo

Far heriM other/Brother/Aunt

House ofthe Week:
Arches define look of
handsome home, 01

tf

'

Joseph E., Ada E.
and Kenneth E.
Bissell and.Mae E.
McPeek

LMNG

•

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