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Senior Quarterly
inside today's Se11tinel
Page 86 ·The Daily Sentinel
•

Actors Guild
Offers Youth
Theatre
Program

-------

www.mydailysentinel.com

.,...

set

'

Thursday, July 6, 2006

15-16

POMEROY - Many area
bikers will be heading
toward Grove City on July
I5 for the annual biker
weekend which kicks off
with a breakfast at 8 a.m.
folloWed b~ a ride to the
Hocking Hills and includes
services Saturday night and
Sunday morning.
Services will be held at the
Grove' Cit~ Church of the
Nazarene, 4770 Hoover
Road at 6 p.m. on Saturday
where the GCCN Praise
team cranks up the volume
for a great biker service followed by a cookout.
Special guest at that
Saturday night service will
be
Tribe
of
Judah
Motorcycle
Ministry
founder Ben Priest who has
an ·outstanding testimony of
how God saved him from
alcohol, drug abuse, gangs
and thoughts of suicide.
The ninth annual Biker
Sunday will include services
at 9 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. at
the church. Theme of the
meeting will be "Against all
Odds- Defeating the Giants
in OUI' Lives" with special
guest Michael W. Smith.
The ministries is again
teaming p with the Crew

~iddleport

. PARKERSBURG , W.Va.
- The youth theater company at the Actors Guild of
Parkersburg is beginning its
IOth season this month and
preregistration for participation is taking place now for
classes
to
begin
in
September.
. The
Guild
Builders
September classes will meet
on Saturday mornings from
9:00a.m . until 12:30 p.m. at
"the Actors Guild , located at
the comer. of Eighth and
Market streets in downtown
Parkersburg. Interested children entering grades four
through nine are invited to
take part in the free program .
Weekly
curriculum
includes instruction and participation in all facets of theater arts : acting and singing;
.
Submitted photo
movement and dance;• set,
For many area bikers on the weekend of July 15-16, the road leads to the Grove City Church of the Nazarene for the ninth
props, costume design and
annual Biker Weekend.
construction; lighting and
Stadium · for another ,Biker Crew Stadium for another reserved seating and · are Ticketmaster. As was last
sound; marketing design;
Sunday blowout event. The ~ervice at 2 p.m. with Smith. available at the Grove City year, Biker Sunday is ~
makeup , directing , and
motorcyclists will parade at Tickets are $ I 5 for general Church of the Nazarene or fundraiser
to
benefit
stage management.
noon
with
(10iice
escort
to
admission
and
$25
for
be
obtained
through
Ranch.
can
Buckeye
ln addition to the "basics",
specialty classes have · been
included, · acting With an
accent , jazz and tap basics.
movable set construction,
mask making, theater superstiPOMEROY - Chicago Rhythm
tions, magic, fencing, move- and Blues Kings will be the featured
ment for aged characters, attraction at Rhythm on the River
improvisation, puppetry, clog- this Friday at 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy
ging, unusual props construc- riverfront amphitheater. .
tion, Native American dance
Since March of 1993 the Chicago
and song, glues and textures , Rhythm and Blues Kings have been
acting for the camera, blasting out their own soul-steeped
researching your role. charac- brand of rhythm and blues on a nightter development, preparing for ly basis, and come July 7 they'll
an audition, dialects, safe stage bring their dynamic sound to
combat lmd falls , acting with Pomeroy's riverfront amphitheater.
emotion, script period history, This high energy brass-leavened
phys\cal performance: dance ensemble will play at 8 p.m. in a free
and movement for actors, and concert as the third performer of the
specialty theater makeup. season in the Rhythm and Blues
Each week guest artists con- summer series oft he Big Bend Blues
duct a class or workshop in and J~zz Society.
their particular area of experTenor saxman Terry Ogolini and
tise. Each season new classes trumpeter Don Tenuta still comprise
are added to keep the program one of the city's most dangerous horn
fresh for returning students.
sections; bassist Bob Halaj and gui~ ·
The technical students, in tarist David Mick. band members for
addition to learning the teCh- I3 and 12 years, respectively continnical support skills for the ue to cook up sizzling rhythms,
production (stage managers, anchored by drummer Willie Hayes.
backstage. props, light board, The soulful approach of the
sound, follow-sp'ot), also Chicago Rhythm and Blues· Kings,
form the playwriting and pro- to their music is a natural progresducing class and create an sion from the group's earlier days
original stage play, performed when they performed as the Mellow
as a companion piece.
•
The students create the Fellows.
Chicago Rhythm and Blues Kings
In those early days there was a pro•
characters, write the script. tracted
dry spell between records for demo tape sent to him by Ernie thing included on the Kings' latest first Blind Pig album , the Chicago
stage the scenes, design and the group
stemmed from an Peniston·, a singer from the Quad album on the Blind Pig label and Rhythm and Blues Ki11gs begin. a
assist in construction of their inability to which
remains a featured vocalist/saxophon- .new chapter. From here on, the
locate the right individual Cities area.
set and costumes, and per- ·
Sax legend Gene "Daddy G" Barge ist with the band on selected gigs.
band's future looks even brighter
to
front
the
band.
That
search
ended
form their play prior to each when the band's agent passed along a wrote or co-wrote nearly half of everyNow, with the emergence of their than its storied past.
of the four performances of
the selected stage production. The culmination of the
student's six-month effort is
the use of all the .skills they .
have learned in connection
1 p.m. - Dewayne Hill Magic Show, First Slreet stage
with the productions.
1 p.m. - Kids game show, Riverfront Park
· Thi s season's production
2 p.m. - Line throwing contest. River Museum
will be The Stories of 5 p.m. - Dark Birds of West Virginia show, Tu-Endie-Wei Stale
Park
·
·2 p.m. - Che~rnastics, Post Office
Scheherazade based on the
classic "Tales of the Arabian . 6-11 p.m_- Old Time Gospel Show, First Street stage
2:30 p.m. - Parade awards presentation, Riverfront Park
Nights".
6 p_m. - Regatta Queen pageant, State Theatre
2:30p.m.- Kids contest, Firs! Street stage
To request a registration
6-7:45 p.m. -Joey Wilcoxon, Riverfront stage
3 p.m. - Mother Goose stor'ytelling, Tu-Endie-Wei State Park
packet please call (740) 4236-10 p.m_- Dunking booth, Main Street
3 p.m. -Satin Dolls.performance, Post Office
5041 or (304) 863-8637 ore7 p.m. - Pretty Baby Contest, Post Office
3 p.m. - Dewayne Hill Magic Show, Post Office
mail
us
at
8
p.m.
Evening
river
cruise
departs,
Riverfront
Park
guildbuilders@yahoo.com.
3:30 p.m. ,-- Kids Game, First Street stage
Registration is on . a first- 8-9 p.m. - Paul poeffinger, .Riverfront ~tage
4 p.m. - Hula Hoop contesl, First Street stage
9:15p.m. -Two River Junction, Riverfront stage
come-first -served .basis.
4 p.m. - Kids karaoke with Rockin' Reggie, First Street stage
The program is sponsored
5
p.m. - Big Bend Cloggers, place to be announced ·
by Camden-Clark Memorial
5:30 p_m. - Pizza eating contest, Post Office
Hospital. supported in part by
6 p.m. - Hidden Label, First Street stage
the Ohio River Border . 9 a.m. - 5K run, Main Street
Initiative (a joint project of
6 p.m. - Heart Cry, Riverfront stage
11 a.m.- 16th Annual Sternwheel Regatta Parade, Main Street
the Ohio Arts Council and
7 p.m. - Denis Chapman and quartet, Riverfront stage
Noon - Ohio River Dance performance, Post Office
the
West
Virginia
8 p.m. - Nina Sharp, Riverfront stage
Noon - Kids games, First Street stage
Commission on the Arts),
8:30 p.m. - Fireworks river cruise departs, Riverfront Park
Noon-4 p.m. - Creation Station and kids crafts, Gunn Park
Artsbridge and in partnership
Noon-4 p.m, - Soccer Alley and kids games, Gunn Park
10 p.m. - Fireworks, Tu-Er:1die-Wei State Park ·
with Mountain · State Blue
Cross and Bfue Shield and
Noon-10 p.m.- Dunking booth, Main Street
•
After fireworks •.Karaoke with Rockin' Reggie, Riverfront stage
the Par~ersburg Arts Center.

Reds fall to Atlanta,
drop sixth straight.

Bv BETH SERGENT

o

• aSERGENT®MYDAILYSENTINELcoM

SYRACUSE - One of
Syracuse's assets is the
Ohio River and now that
view of the river may trans·1;\te into a selling pointfor a
new subdivision proposed
by local businesswoman
Judy Williams.
At last night's regular session of Syracuse Village
Council, Williams and engineer Bill Exline presented
preliminary
plans for
Baxter's View on the River
Subdivision which is pro-.
posed for the corner of

See Page 81

WOLF PEN - Wild
wolves are known. for their
independence, roaming on
STAFF REPORT
the
fringe and traveling in
NEWS®MY DAILYSENTINEL .COM
packs and now the community
of Wolf Pen is celebratTUPPERS ·PLAINS ing
all
of those trai ts as well
Scot Gheen of Pomeroy has
as
expressing
their own
been named principal at
identity in Meigs County
Eastern High School. .
.
Page AS
The Eastern Local Board of with a statue along the interEducation approved Gheen section of 'Ohio I43 and
o Mary K. ~rown, 87
for the position last week. He Wolf Pen Road.
o Frank L Hawley, 72
The statue of a wolf howl "
will replace Jon Lindner,
ing
at the sky was made of
o Prentice B. Hess, 73
whose resignation was
sand
rock found in the Wolf
approved. Lindner \\/ill return
o H~rold E. Ridenour, 63
Pen
area.
Inscribed on the
to teaching in Vinton County
o Lelia VanCooney, 82
this · faiL He has served as statue is "Wolf Pen - Est.
Eastem High School's princi- 1819." If you look a little
closer, the initials ''KJ" and
pal for two years.
"2006"
can be found etched
Gheen has formerly
worked as an administrator in the rock between the
. for the Meigs Local School wolf's front paws.
o Owner of World
The "KJ 2006" are subtle
District , and has most
just
how statue creator
Trade Center site to
·recently served as cunicuJum supervisor for the Kenny Johnson of Wolf Pen
take over Sept. 11
Athens-Meigs Educational wants it. Creating the statue
memorial construction.
was something personal for
Service Center.
Johnson
Who wanted to be
See Page A2
According to Eastern
sure to shove the spotlight
Loc~l Superintendent Rick
• DofA group hears
off
of himself and include
Edwards,
Gheen
will
nominations for officers.
his
neighbors
in the story of
assume his new position on
the
statue's
creation.
See Page A3
Aug. I. He was hired .on a
About a month ago neightwo-year
contract, at a
• Bob Evans Farm
bors
in the Wolf Pen area
salary of $56,000.
celebrates Red
star.ted di scussing a community project that resulted in
· Hat Society Day.
the idea for the statue that
See Page A3
would denote not only Wolf
• Law You Can Use.
Pen Road but more importantly the area, hi story and
See .Page AS
personality of Wolf Pen.
o Treasure the word of
Johnson said it took six
God. See Page AS
days to actually make the
STAFF REPORT
NEWS@MVDAILYTRIBUNE.COM
statue. He used air chisels,
• Taft signs bill fo
Dremel tools and grinders
increase usage of
GALLIPOLIS - When to carve out the piece which
corn-based fuel.
Monty Coles of Charleston, ended up weighing around
W.
Ya., a pilot for over 25 :3,000 pounds.
See Page AS
Johnson said the hardest
ye'ars, landed at the GalliaMeigs Regional Airport last part of making this or any
month, he did so with a snake statue was the face but it all
fell into place once he · finwrapped around one am1.
WEATHER
While · the inciuent has . ishcd the wolf's expression.
Wolf Pen neighbors helped
been widely di scussed on
transport
the statue this week
the Inernet and in other
from
Johnson's
residence
sources, Coles has provided
an account of the incident in and despite the rain the wolf
his own words, via a Jetter. was placed at his permanent
"I( is rare that I have a home on Wednesday and
now stands near)~ six feet
Please see Snake. AS
fall by four feet Wide.

~..--·-

-

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.

- --

enforcement trust fund.
After hearing a presenta:
tion from Debra Prim ·from
the Ohio EPA D. ' ·
f
Drinkincr and Gro~~~s~~~~
cou ncil bapproved a resolu:
tion making Syracuse Water
Bo· d M be B'JJ D ·
·h· ar· . emf rh 1s avis
ai rmdn;: t ep yrac~se
Pol urce C ater . rotec uon
ommntee
for
S an
yracuse · . ·and Pomeroy.
Pome~fY-'' mcluded because
Its ~e t~eld s are so close to
Syracuse s weH fiel.ds.
By developt~g a Source
Water Protection Plan
Please see Syracuse, ~5

S

·

•

.

OBITUARIES

.

INSIDE

Snake ends up
in Gallipolis after
airplane ride

Beth Sergentj photo

Neighbors in the Wolf Pen area rece ntly came together fo r a community project that result·
ed in a unique landmark denoting not only Wolf Pen Road but the Wolf Pen community.
Like any piece of art the wonder about it.
ty is unique. The proJect is a
statue now not only belongs · Johnson and his neighbors reminder to us all that Meigs
·tO the Wolf Pen area but to created something unique County is more than the
whoever stops to look and just as their sma.JJ communi- larger vilbges.
'·

Details on

Pa~a

Dixie Melody Boys ·co~ng to.Meigs CoD;nty

A8

BY CHARLENE HOEFliCH
HOEFUCH@M'f'DAILY SENTINELCOM

INDEX
2 SECfiONS -

t6

A3

Classifieds

B4-6

B7

Dear Abby
.'

.

Travelers can discover
-more about Ohio's outdoor
. dramas and other history/her- 'lb.
itage attra~tions with a visit
to www.DiscoverOhio.com
or ' by calling (800) BUCKEYE.

'

PAGES

Calendars .
·comics

(866)

a two mill·, two year po'lice
protection levy for the
Nov. 7 election.
·
·
Syracuse Chief of Police
Ryan Hi)J said he hoped to
go door to door with members ol council to take this
Issue to the reside nt s of
·
Syracuse to maintain police
protec tion as well as
·improve the department
. also reported he ·will
.
Hill
be atten d'mg a grant wntmg
..
workshop for small po lice
agencies on Sept. I l in
London to help find funding
for those . improvements.
Fees for this workshop wiH
be paid out of the law

BY BETH SERGENT

Celebrate Ohio's heritage with outdoor dramas
London Symphony Orchestra)
- and its narration sequences
recorded by Native American
actor Grahan1 Greene, continue to thrill audience members
of all ages; (740) 775-0700 or

www.mydailptt.•ntinl"l.(·nm

Marina Drive and Ohio 124. as well. Williams reported
·
. w1111a m s sa1 d th e subd lVI- t he oh·10 Env1ronmental
Sion would cover between Protection Agency has
I 2-16 acres where 26 lots already been wntacted
·Will be up tor sale. Although about the sewer and water
the~e lots ~re m. the flood plan~ . for the project.
plam no vanance IS reqmr.ed Council as well as Mayor
'and they would come With Enc Cu nnmgham received
· t.Ions on bu1·1 d·mg. the prelnmnary
· ·
.res tnc
plans as
such as no basements for we ll as proposed restri cexample. The homes would tions on the future homes
have to be bUI'It to a ce11am
·
·
1·or review.
·
o
·
n
and
Jlood
vent
·
Th
·
elevatl
.
.
s
e Issue
o1· po 1·ICC proInstalled to come llllo com- teet ion once aga in came
pha~c~ with r~stnctions.
before council ·when it
V.Ilhams said she would voted to receive a certifibe meetmg wuh the cate of estimated property
Syracuse W:ater and Sewer tax. revenue from the
Boards to di scuss the plans Meigs County Auditor fo r

BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

SATURDAY, JULY 8

audience a unique viewing
expenence.
This professionally produced outdoor drama is written by seven-time Pulitzer
Prize nominee and Em my
recipient Allan W. Eckert;
nationally known for his buckskin bestsellers, "The Winning
of America Series." Quality .
production elements, such as
the play's hauntingly beautiful
Native American nwsic score
(recorded exclusively by the

200 6

Gheen is
Wolf Pen ;neighbors create unique landmark
new Eastern
principal

FRIDAY,JULY7

ground where these legends acre outdoor stage. (937) 376once walked . W.L. Mundell's 4318 or (877) 465-BLUE
"Blue Jacket" tells the tnov• "Tecumseh!", Sugarloaf
ing story of the struggle Mountain
Amphitheatre,
between the Shawnee Indians Chillicothe, June 9-Sept. 2.
and the encroaching settlers
Witness the epic life story
for the Ohio territory through of the legendary Shawnee
one man's journey
leader as he struggles ·'to
This action-packed show defend his sacred homeland
features a herd of horses, .- in the Ohio country during
roaring cannons, flaming the late 1700s.
arrows and torches and a
Thi! huge outdoor stages
multi-racial cast of profes- of the Sugarloaf Mountain
s1onal actors, live on the 3- Amphitheatre afford the

Pomeroy, Ohio

Syracuse Council hears subdivision plans, considers police levy

SPORTS

2006 Point Pleasant Stemwheel Regatta·schedule

ritory between the Shawnee
Indians and the encroaching
se ttl~r
s...._ The dramas run
thro · 1September and tickets. are n sale now.
• "Blue Jacket," Caesar's
Ford Amphitheatre, Xenia,
June 16-A ug ._ 13; 25th
anni versary.
Reli ve the adventure · as
Shawnee Indians, frontier setters and fugi ti ve sl~ves forge
the definition of American
freedom here, on the sacred

o

FRIDAY , JULY
' 7,

''"" Nn • ·•·•H
''111 CENTS • Vnl • .&gt;.&gt;•
--

. Rhyhtm &amp; Blues Kings coming to Pomeroy

COLUMBUS - Herds of
horses. roaring cannons ,
flamingarrows, and battle
pyrotechnics are thrilling
audiences as Ohio's outdoor
dramas unfold. Families will
be ·so entertained they woh't
even realize they're learning
about Ohio's history and
heritage.
Step back in time to witness the founding of Ohio's
first settlement , or to relive
the struggle for the Ohio ter-

Nationwide/Farm
Bureau 's ponsors
camp delegates, A3

Editorials
Faith • Values

·A3
A4
A6-7

Movies

As

NASCAR

B3

Obituaries
Sports .

As

Weather

B Section
.A8

© :.~oob Ohio VaHey Publishing Co.

..

'

r-

POM EROY - One of gospel
music's most popular quartets, The
Dixie Melody Boys, will be in con· cert Thursday, July 20, at the
Pomeroy Amphitheater in Pomeroy.
The talented quartet will share
their unique four-part harmony with
those attending the concert which
· begins at 7 p.m. The group comes
here under spori sorship' of the First
Southern Baptist Church ot".
Pomeroy as a part of its annual summer gospel concert program.
Since organizing ·nearly four
decades ago, The Dixie Melody
Boys have enjoyed great success,
including a Grammy nomination
and numero us Fan Award nomination s fro m The Singing News
Magazine, Southern Gospel
Mu sie's lead ing fan and trade
publ'ication .

Hit releases have !lowed their·
way m bunches. including recent
releases such as 'T il Be Living That
Way." "I Won't Compromise,"
"Welcome
Home,"
"Ant ioch
Church Choir" and ''I' m One Of
Them." The thrill and excitement of
performing experienc ed by each
group member night after night is
evident at each·concert. Their goal
of delivering a first-class performance fil.led with excitement. energy and lots of great traditional,
Southern Gospel' Music. are traits
which have been instilled in each
member by group leader Ed
O'Neal, a 45-yea r gospel music vett;ran, who was inducted into the
Southern Gospel Music Association
Hull of Fame in 2004.
These characteristics. united with
their desire to never compromi se·
thei r responsibility to spread the
Please see Dixie, AS

Submitted photo

Popular Southern Gospel quartet The Dixie Melody Boys, Andrew King, Dan
Keeton. Dona ld Morris and Southern Gospel Music Association Hall of
Fame member. Ed O'Neal: will be featured in concert at ttte Pomeroy
Amphitheater in Pomeroy, 7 p.m. July-20.
•
'•

�The Daily Sentinel
•

· PageA2

-NATION • WORLD

Friday, JUly 7,

BY THE BEND

The Daily Sentinel

2006

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

SEOUL. South Korea North
Korea
angrily
mocked international criticism of its multiple missile
on
tests.
threatening
Thursday to fire off more
rockets.
In the face of nearly unanimous world condemnation
of the seven missile tests on
Wednesday, Pyongyang 's
foreign minister released a
blustery statement declaring
that it had the right to develop and test its weapons and · .vowing unspecified
retaliation against anyone
who tries to stop it.
"Our military will continue with missile launch drills
in the future as part of
efforts to strengthen selfJ
defense deterrent," said the
statement. carried 'in staterun media. "If anyone
intends to dispute or ·add
pressure about this, we will
have to take stronger physical actions in other forms. "
The , statement did not
specify what actions North
Korea would take.
The aggressive stance
from Pyongyang coincided
with intense diplomatic
activity in world capitals to
formulate a response to the·
tests . Washington and· its
allies -· particularly Japan
clamored for sanctions

AP Photo

Song II Ho, North Korean envoy in charge of normalization talks with Japan, answers ~ues­
tions from the Japanese ·media during a meeting in the North Korean capital of Pyongyang
today. North Korea on Friday demanded the immediate lifting of sanctions imposed by
Japan in response to the communist nation's missile tests, calling the measures outrageous, Kyodo News agency reported.
.
against the North, but struggled against resistance by
China and Russia.
North Korea set · off an
international ·· furor on
Wednesday when it tested
seven missiles. all of which
landed into the Sea of Japan
without causing any dam,
age . The blasts apparently

included a long-range
Taepodong-2 that broke up
less than a minute after
takeoff and splashed into
the sea.
On Friday. U.S. Assi"stant
Secretary
of
State
Christopher
Hill . and
Chinese Vice Foreign
Minister W~ Dawei- their

nations' senior negotiators
on North Korea - con·
terred on the missile tests.
Hill and Wu exchanged
pleasantries before their
meeting . After its conclusion, Hill was scheduled to
meet Chinese Foreign
Minister Li Zhaoxing.
before the U.S. envoy heads

for Seoul.
. A Japanese newspaper
reported Friday that North
Korea had targeted South
Pacific waters in the vicinity of Hawaii with the longrange missile. The conservative daily Sankei cited
unnamed U.S. and Japanese
and officials as saying
Japan 's Defense Agency
and the · U.S. military
reached that conclu sion
after an·aJyzing the missile's
path from data collected
from intelligence equipment. The report couldn't
be immediately indepen dently confirmed.
The statement threatening
more tests came as South
Korean officials said intelli gence reports showed continued activity at Northern
missile sites . suggesting
further firings could be in ·
the works.
It was unclear if or when
the missile s would fly.
Japanese officials said they
had no indications another
Taepodong test was being
prepared, and South Korean
officials said the launches
were not imminent.
' Still, the North pulled no
punches . in its statement,
hailing the launches on
Wednesday as a success and
making no mention of the
Taepodong-2 failure.
"The successful missile
launches were part of our

military's regular military
drills to strengthen self
defense," said the state ment. "As a sovereign country, this is our legal right
and we are not bound by
any international law or
bilateral or multtlateral
agreements.
. .
The ministry ;tlso denred
it had violated a missile
moratorium, saying it was
only in effect when
Pyongyang was in dialogue
with the U.S. The statement
.also blamed the Japanese
for making an international
issue out of North Korea's
un solved kidnappings of
Japanese citizens.
Meanwhile,
the
Australian Broadcasting
Corp. reported Friday that
Australia has decided to
curtail its diplomatic ties
with North Korea over the
tests.
The report said that
Michael L'Estrange, head of
the country's Department of ·
Foreign Affairs and Trade ,
said departmental dealings
with North Korean officials
will be canceled,
The report did .not elaborate and calls to the department seeking confirmation
were · no.t immediately
returned.
Australia is one of a handful of countries that maintain s limited diplomatic
relations with Pyongyang.
ll

,.

Owner of World Trade
Shuttle
docks
with
space
station;
Center si~e to take over Sept. .
· 11 -memorial construction NASA reports trouble-free flight so far
BY AMY WESTFELDT
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

NEW YORK- The government agency that owns
the World Trade Center site
is taking over construction
of the Sept. ll memorial,
following recommendations
that the move could trim
spiraling costs.
But. the chairman of the
Port Authority of New York
and New Jersey also said the
agency could back out of the
agreement if the price of the
project exceeds the latest
estimate of $51 0 million.
"We're going to try and
reconcile the numbers. No
one has agreed to build it for
a number greater" than
$510 million, Chairman
Anthony Coscia said.
The boards of the Port
Authority and the World ·
Trade Center Memorial
Foundation voted Thursday
to have the Pdri Authority
build the memorial instead
of the nonprofit memorial
·
foundation.
Officials have already
approved a new. less-expensive
version of ·the
"Reflecting
Absen.c e"
design after contractors estimated in May it would cost
close to $1 billion .
Preliminary
memorial
construction began in March
and stopped two months
. later when. the cost estimates
came out. The memorial
foundation suspended private fum! raismg and its
president quit, while Gov.
George Pataki and Mayor
Michael Bloomberg appointed a developer to cut costs.
The
latest
estimate
assumes sav ings becau se
having the site's owner take
over would cut down on
duplications of services and
would reduce the number of
people involved. The Port
Authority had previously ·
offered to take over the
memorial construction, but
had been turned down.
The new design for the
square pools with ~ascadin g
waterfalls set above the
twin towers' footprints cuts
.underground space around
the pool s, creates · one
entrance to three separate
memorial facilities and raises to street level the names
of ihe 2, 979 people killed in
the 200 I attacks and the
1993 trade center bombing,
The nonprofit memorial
foundation had been on

' PROUD TO BE A
PART OF YOUR (IFE. ·
The Daily Sentinel
Subscribe today •.992-2155
www.my4i:Jilysentinel.com

•

charge of building the
memorial. as well as fund
raising and, eventually,
operating it. Critics of the
foundation had said it
should focus on fund raising
instead of design and construction.
On Thursday, the foundation formally launched a
national fundraising cam' paign, reaching out for private donations months before
the fifth anniversary of t.he
attacks. The foundation has
raised $130 million privately
and, after initially announcing a $500 million goal, now
said it must raise $170 ·million~ for the memorial to be
built and open by 2009.
·
The campaign will feature
ads in new spapers and on
Web sites. television and
radio.
The Port Authority - a
government agency controlled by the governors of
New York and New J~rsey
- has slowly been taking
greater responsibility for all
projects on the 16-acre site.
In April it took control of
building two out of five
planned
skyscrap'ers,
mcluding the I ,776-foot
Freedom Tower. It is the
only builder to complete
construction of anything at
ground zero - a temporary
commuter-rai I hub that
opened in 2003.
-

Bv SETI:I BORENSTEIN
AP SCIENCE WRITER

HOUSTON - Life in
space returned Thursday to
as close to normal as it has
been since the Columbia
disaster three years ago.
After the space shuttle
Discovery docked with the
international space station,
the orbiting outpost was
fully statTed with three crew
members for the first time
since 2003. European Space
Agency astronaut Thomas
Reiter arrived on the shuttle
for a six-month stay,
for
And the news
Discovery was also reminiscent of more carefree days:
NASA found no major
problems with the shuttle's
heat shield.
Pictures taken by the space
station crew, as Discovery .
approached for the linkup,
uncovered no serious concerns with the thermal tiles,
said deputy shuttle program
manager John Shannon. He
called that "somewhat of a
surprise. but a very pleasant
surprise." As of Thursday
evening, experts on ihe
ground had analyzed many
of the 352 digital images.
The pictures revealed a
second protruding thermal
tile filler on the shuttle's
underside, and engineers
were assessing whether the

flaws posed any risk for reentry. A small piece of fabric was also . a little loose
behind the nose. ·
"Overall ; it was a great
look at the vehicle, and
we're struggling a little bit·
to find areas to go look at
with our focused inspection" on Friday, said
Shannon, chairman of the
mission management team ..
During the inspection, astronauts will use the shuttle's
robotic arm and extended
boom tp take close-up pictures of four areas that engineers need to examine.
During a meeting to discuss problems "we were
looking for things to talk
about," Shannon said. "The
vehicle is· doing so well."
The biggest piece of foam
insul&lt;1tion to come off the
external fuel tank .:was 12
inches· by 14 inches .and no
more than an inch thick,
Shannon said. It was well
within safety limits in size
and because it fell later in
the launch, he said.
After a lunchtime hatch
opening, both crews seven on the arriving shuttle
and two on the station exchanged hugs and handshakes and rei ished the
trouble-free flight. Then
they started to transfer more
than 5,000 pounds of s~p­
plies from the shuttle to the

space station.
"Everybody 's
having
fun ," American astronaut
Jeff Williams, who has been
on the station since March
31, radioed back to Earth. "I
don't see a sad person in the
crowd."
On the ground, NASA
officials happily noted the
lack of problems 220 miles
above the Earth. .
"It's boring to us that it's
quiet," said lead flight controller Tony Ceccacci said.
"But it's a good thing, It
means that everything is
going welL"
Even though the mission
was progressing smoothly,
the control center · had not
returned to a· sense of normalcy, Ceccacci said. "It's
more of a sense of, 'Hey, the
things we've done to make
the ... tank better are working,"' he said.
Before Discovery docked
with the station Thursday,
commander Steve Lindsey
flew the shuttle into a back
flip maneuver so the space
station crew could take photographs of the tiles on the
belly of Discovery.
Engineers were looking
. for signs that hard insulating foam from the shuttle's
ex.ternal tank hit the shuttle
,during launch. Damage
from falling foam led to
Columbia's destruction in

2003, when all seven astronauts died after fiery gases
entered a breach in a wing
-during re-entry.
The day before, astronauts
on Discovery used a boom
and the shuttle's robotic arm
to take 70 minutes of video
of the shuttle's nose ·cone
and wings . Engineers spent
much . of Wednesday and
Thursday ex~mining the
video for signs of damage.
As of Thursday afternoon,
they had found areas "of
interest" but not of concern,
Ceccacci said.
Mission managers told
Discovery' s crew .Thursday
~bout six probable impacts
that had been detected by
sensors on the leading edge
of the shuttle's wings, aqd
. officials were investigating .
Shannon said the sensors
were probably recording the
passage of shock waves and
described the risk as "beyond
minor." Ceccacci, who said
he did not know anything
about the dings, said he knew
of no serious problems.
Cameras al so found foam
strikes 19 seconds afU!r
launch and just under five
minutes after launch. But
neither impact was during
the critical 75-second period
a couple minutes after launch
when the foam would have
enough speed to cause damage, NASA ofticials said.

.

Hey Moms and Dads, .Grandmas and Grandpas and Aunts and Uncles ...
-, In t~e· Daily Sentinel.

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Friday, July 7,

2006 ·

Girlfriend's past indiscretion gnaws at man in here and now

NORTH KOREA THREA:I'ENS FURTHER MISSILE·TESTS
BY JOSEPH COLEMAN

PageA3

Submitted photo

Tina Drake and Audrionna Pullins, front, are de legates to
the State 4-H Leadership Camp from Meigs County. They
are sponsored by local representatives of Nationwide
Agencies , Melissa Collins, Jessica Dillon and Jeff Warner,
and from Farm Bureau , David King, left to right.

Nationwide/Fann Bureau
sponsors camp delegates
.,

POMEROY - Tma Drake
and Audrionna Pullins have
been selected to represent
· · Meigs County at State 4-H
Leadership Camp at 4-H
Camp Ohio July 9-14. The
Ohio Farm Bureau Federation
and Nationwide sponsor the
program and provide full
camp scholarships for up to
two 4-H members from each
of Ohio's 88 counties.
Tina is the daughter of
Tom and Debbie Drake of
the
Long
Bottom
Community. She is a member of the Pioneer 4-H club.
Tina serves on the Fashion
Board, is a 4-H Col!ntY
Ambassador. and participates as a Camp Counselor
for Canters Cave 4-H Camp.
Audrionna is the daughter
of Tom and Stacie Pullins of
Long Bottom Community.
She is a member of the Meigs
County Dairy 4-H club.
Audrionna serves on the
Fashion Board, was the 2006
Meigs County Representative
for the State Fashion Board
selection, is a 4-H County
Ambassador, and participates
as a Camp Counselor for
Canters Cave 4-H (::amp.
. State 4-H Leadership
Camp is a once-in-a-life-

time. exciting. fun, and challenging learn' by-doing leadership development experience. It has been described
as one of the best programs
of its kind in the nation.
The campers themselves
are responsible for planning,
conducting, and evaluating
almost everything that occurs
at the week:long camp.
through program planning
committees, leadership family groups, cabin groups, and
other work groups. In doing
so, they- develop real-life
leadership knowledge. skills.
attitudes and aspirations and
achieve the camp objectives
and purposes.
Other Leadership Camp
opportunities include in-depth
experiences focusing on daily
leadership themes, and
options for campers in such
areas as leadership skills, local
and county programs and
ideas, cultural heritage and citizenship, communications.
careers, and personal development. Campers will also take
advantage of Camp Ohio's
natuml environment. Evening
programs and inspirational
services provide campers
additional opportunities for
leadership development:

DofA group hears .
nominations for officers
CHESTER - Nomination noted. The charter wi II be
of officers was held at a recent draped at the Aiug. I meeting
meeting of the Past Councilors for Margaret Amberger and
Club of Chester Council 323, Doris Koening. Members
Daughters of America.
were asked to wear white.
Nominated were Laura Esther Smith gave the secreMae
Nice,
president; tary and treasurer's repons.
Thelma White, vice presiRefreshments were served
dent; Charlotte Grant, secre- by Nice for Opal Eichinger
tary; Mary Jo Barringer, and Delore.s Wolfe who
treasurer; Opal Hollon. sen- were absent. Games were
tinel; Erma Cleland, flower conducted by Opal Hollon
committee, and Mary K. for Erma Cleland and
Holter. news reporter.
Dorothy Myers who were
Jean Welsh, president, con- also n&lt;;&gt;t at the meeting .
ducted the meeting opening
Attending were Doris
Grueser,
Thelma White,
with a reading from Psalm
24. the Lord 's Prayer and Goldie Frederick . Opal
pledge to the Americim !lag Hollon, Mary K. Holter.
in uni son. The death of Jean Wel sh, Esther Smith.
Denver Curtis, brother to Mary Jo Barringer, and a
member, lnzy Newell, was guest, Sandy White . ·

Bob Evans Fann celebrates
· Red Hat Society Day
RIO GRANDE - The
Bob E1·ans Fanm welcomes
"red and pink hatters" to
Country Red Hat Society Day
on July 15. Hosted by the
French City Red Hat Flashes,
the event will be held from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. in and around
the Craft Bam at the Bob
Evans Fann in Rio Grande.
Though advance regi stration is not required, chapters
or groups' are asked to call
the farm at (740) 245-5305
before July I. with an estimate of the number who will
be attending. There is a registration fee of $5 per person, .which covers lunch and.
entertainment for the ev.cnt.
Regi stration and a "get
acquainted" time wi II be held
from 10 a.m. to noon. Red
and pink hattei·s may tour the
Homestead Mu seum , take
wagon rides throughout the
farm and visit the Craft Barn
for hand · knitting, cross
stitching. crocheting and
"snow people" sculpting
demonstrations. as well as a
booi&lt;. signing by area author
Justine Rutherford.
A lunch of sandwi ches,
fruit and cheese plate,
banana nul bread and red
velvet cake will be served
from noon to I p.m. Local
humorist Steve Pyles will

DEAR ABBY: I am a 20something male who is
madly in love with my girlfriend. That being said. I do
have one concern. She dated
a friend of mine for a short
Dear
while prior to dating me.
Abby
Their relationship was
physically intimate. something I have reserved for
only our relationship.
In short , I am having troLr-~
· ble facing my friend . .
look at it this way:
Can you advise me how to YOU ' VE got the gi rL
get over my discomfort at
DEAR ABBY: I was
the physical" nature of their 'hocked and hurt recently
relationship'? She was never when my grandmother
promiscuous. Her one wrote me a letter about the
·· indiscretion·· happens to be · level of "d isres pect"" I sup. my good friend. - TRYposedly "heaped on her"
lNG TO GET OVER IT
duriug a recent visit. I am
DEAR TRYING : You can 37 years old. and while visovercome · your ui scom fort iting her after the funeral of
by recognizing that today a relative, I showed her
many people come with a some photographs of me
sexual past , and by not and my fiance . . ·.
allowin~ yourself to dwell
My fiance is a tull. handunit. (It you do. it" II be like some.
African-American
pumping air into a. balloon man I met and tell in love
until ii explodes.)
with two years ago. The "disYour problem isn't unusu- respect'" she was alluding tn
aL Most people like to fan- in the letter was "because her
tasize that the partner they granddaughter was invol ved
have chosen has no sexual with a black man."
history. If you're worried
Abby. I was rai sed to
about · "comparisons" accept people for who they

Public
meetings

Phebe Lovett s· children
encouraged to attend.
Business meeting. planning
f6r lOth reunion, Take items
for auction.
Wednesday, July 12
Theiss
POMEROY Meigs . RACINE
County Board of Health, reg- reunion , Star Mill Park .
ular meeting. 5 p.rn., Meigs Racine. Covered dish dinCounty Health Department.
ner. I p.m. pig in poke ~a le .

Club and
organizations
Saturday, July 8
SALEM CENTER -· Star
Grange #778 and Star Junior
Grange #878, potluck at 6:30
p.m. , followed by meeting at
7:30. Date changed due to tl1e
Rutland Fireman's Ox Roast.
HARRISONVILLE Scottish Rite annual dinner.
5;30 p.m. at tl'le Hanisonville
Lodge hall , S.R. 143. For
reservations call Charlie
Wilson, 992-394R.
TUPPERS PLAINS Spaghetti dinner for members and husbands of VFW
Post 9053 Auxiliary. 6 p.m .
Sunday, July 9
POMEROY - Modern
Woodmen of America
Camp 7230 potluck picnic,
12:30 p.m., northbound
roadside park on U.S. 33.
Camp to . provide chicken.
bread and butter, soft drinks
and plates . Members to
bring dish to share. Drawing
for family door prize.
Monday, July 10
POMEROY Meigs
Band Boosters. 6 p.m . Meigs
High School band room.
Thesday, .July II
TUPPERS PLAINS Eastern Music Boosters
monthly meeting changed
to 7 p.m. on July II . due to
Independence Day holiday.
High school bandroom:

Lane will be speaking 7
p.m. Friday and Saturday.
10:30 a.m. Sunday.
Monday, July 10
HARTFORD - Hartford
Church of Christ in Christian
Union will have a Bible
school 6 to 8 p.m.. July I014. Theme: Don't Monkcv
Arou11d with Sal vation, Get
Serious.'" Activities, crafts,
fun: refreshments nightly. For
more information, call Pastor
David Greer. 882- 1119.
REEDSVILLE
Reedsvi lle
Community
Vacation Bible School. 'The
Incredible Race." 6:30 to 9
p.m. through July 14 at
Reedsville United Methodist
Church.
Kick-off ·free

spaghetti
dinner
at
Reedsville Church of Christ. ·
12:30 p.m. Donations toward
VBS will be accepted.
MIDDLEPORT - Bible
school July I0-14.6to8p.m.
at the Wesleyan Bible
Holiness Church. 75 Pearl St.,
Middleport. Theme "Sailing
the 7 C's of History with
Jesus." Special activities. picnic, July 15: VBS program,
10 a.m. .July 16. For more
information call 992-200 I.
POMEROY - Vacation
Bible School will be held at
the Hy sell Run Community
Church on Hysell Run ·
Road, 6 to 8 p.m. July I014. For more information
call 742-3171 or 992-7036.

ignorance

of the

social

Unless you want to
chip in for a group gift, I
succest vou also decline
th&lt;tt', ·inv ii ~ti on.··
· Dear Abby is .writteu by
Abigl1il Van Bureu, also
kuown as Jeanne Phillips,
and was founded by her
mother, Pauline Phillips.
Write Dear Abby at
www.DearAbby.com · or
P.O. Box 69440, Los
Angele!·, CA 90069.
gral~~s.

Church events
Friday, July 7
LONG BOTTOM
Hymn Sing, 7 p.m .• Mt. Olive
Church with Dayspring.
POMEROY
Mt.
Hermon United Brethren
Church revival through
Sunday. Evangeli st Rocky

YOUR- AD INSIDE ACOMIC STRIP·

Reunions

4-H club meets

'

with us. Over the past year,
we have all become friendly.
Shirley has a daughter I' II
ca ll ''Toni." Toni is pregnant. and Shirley is throwing her a shower. We are all
invited, even though I am
the on ly .one who has met
Toni. and only once, briefly.
Shirley approache.d us to
ask if any of us are attending the shower. and when
we declined the invitation.
she proceeded to ask if we
would all chip in S \0 for a
gift from us.
' Does thi s take nerve or
what'' Any suggestions? MORTIFIED IN LANSFORD. PA.
DEAR MORTIFIED: It .
takes either '"nerve" or total

Community ·Calendar

·saturday, July 8
present "A man's view of the · RACINE - Reunion of
'Red Hat Society'" at I p.m. the Charles and Fannie
A hand l an presentat ion by Beaver family, at Star Mill
Jackie Coonen and a style Park. in Racine. Take covshow will follow. In addi- ered dish. Lunch at noon.
tion, there will be a Country
MIDDLEPORT
Red Hat Contest with prizes Lore.nzo and Annie Stucky
awarded for first, second and Davi s reunion. noon to 4
third place tini shers.
p.rn., Gen eral Hartinger
The Red Hat Society Park . Bring covered dish
''began as a result of a tew casserole and table servi ce.
wome~r.eciding tu greet mid- Contact Joyce Davis. 992 dle ag •ith verve. humor ~md 7SIS or Cindy Dlrvi s
elan," ' cording to the soci- Doanchie. (330) 757-J797.
ety's ofticial Web site. Noting
POMEROY - Reunion of
that those in the society share descendants of Miles Lewis
a "bond forged by commt'ln Bl ake
and
Martha
life experiences and an enthu- Whittington 's children wi ll
siasm fur whenever lite takes be held' 12 :30 p.m. at the
us next." the site says that "red Zion Church of Christ. Route
hatters·· have reached the age 143. Potluck meal. business
of 50, while those under 50 meeting. fellowsh ip. Take
may be "pink hullers."
items for display tahle.
"We're excited for this
" Sunday, July 9
first-time event at the farm ," · POMEROY Eighth
said Bob Evans Faron annual Lovett reunion. I
Assistant
Manager of p.m. at the Zion Church of
Events Gale Leslie . "We Christ. Route 143. Pomeroy.
know it will be an afternoon Descendant s of Daniel and
of country fun fur this livel y '
and enthusiastic group."
For more infonuation about
Cmmtrr Red Hat Sm ·ietv Dav
RACINE - Thf! Wooly
or otlier events at the Bob
Evans Fann. those inrerested Bullys and Mor~ 4-H Club
should call the famr at (740) . met recently were members
245-5305 or (800) 994 -3276 discu ssed their project for
m: visit the Web site at tile Mei gs County Fair and
worked on project b()C1ks.
lVII"!" bob~ \'CI/IS.C0/11.

..

are. loving ly and with
rc&gt;pect. regardle" of color
or ethnicity. I do not wamtu
be disrespectfuL uf my
gra ndmother or hurt her. but
rny fiance and I were married un Apri I 15 and we arc
very happy. My question is,
can old grandmothers be
taught new tricks 0 OFFENDED It\ CARTERVILLE. GA .
PEAR
OFFENDED:
Some COJn. wherr they see ·.
their grandc hild is happy ir~
a stable marriage: others are
' too firmly en trenc hed in
their biases to chan.ge their
'thinkin g. Remember. you
and she are from different
generations: and although
mixed marriages are not
uncommon these days. they
were when your grandmother was growrng up.
In your case . .J wouldn't
count on teaching Granny
any new tricks. becau,e her
mind appears to be locked .
tighter than Guantanamo
Bay. But hold a good
_,
thought.
DEAR ABBY: I work in a
· small oftice with four "girls.·•
A lifth girl , whom I' ll call
'"Shirley:· takes her break

.

this is gonna
be fun!

Gizmos ~ Ga ~ets is Comin~:
To place an ad please contact:
Dave or Brenda
at 992-2155

The Daily Sentinel
'

�'

PageA4 ·

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel ·

Friday, July 7, 2006

Don't get burned by the high cost of kids' baking mixes

DEAR MARY: I hope
you can help me. I recently
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio
found a treasure for my
(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com
grandniece at a garage sale
-an Easy-Bake, Oven. Too
cool' At least I thought so
Ohio Valley Publishing C6.
Mary
until I saw the price of the
Hunt
mixes in the store ($4.25
Jim Freeland
each). Ouch. I know you
Publisher
like w tinker in the kitc:hen.
Can you give me any just- .
Charlene Hoeflich
add-water mix ide;;s for this
Chocolate Cake
General Manager-News Editor
yard-sale gem'' - Marsha
N., Nevada
• 6 teaspoons !lour
DEAR
MARSHA:
4 teaspoons sugar
Possibly
the
easiest
1/4 teaspoon baking powCongress shall make tro law respecting an
"recipe" fa( your little der
baker is to mix 3 table- · I teaspoon unsweetened
establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
of a regular 18.25- cocoa
free exercise thereof; or abridging tlu freedom of spoons
ounce cake mix (much
3/4 teaspoon 'honcning
speec.h, or of the press; or the right of the
I pim:h sa lt
cheaper than $4.25 ~o ften
on sale for about $1) with 4
people peaceably to assemble, and. to petition
teaspnon s water.
Mix
Combine illl ingredients
the Government for a redress of grievances.
together in a small bowl or in a baggie and seal. To use:
cup. and pour into a In a small bowl. blend the
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution greased and !loured toy contents of the baggie -and 6
cake pan. Bake 12 to 13 tea&gt;poo ns milk. Pour into a
minutes or as directed in toy cake pan. Bake 12 to 13
your Easy-Bake Ovens minutes or as directed in
instructions. Cool in pan on your Easy- Bake Oven's
instructions. Cool in pan on
ra&lt;.:k fur 5 ·minutes.
rack for 5 minutes.
Here\ another recipe .

READERS'

VIEWS

Heroes

Foundation seeking award nominees
Dear Editor:
Do your readers know of "unsung heroes" in their midst.
people who work hard every day to make their commuriities a better place to live?
If so, the Jenco Foundation of Athens would like to hear
about these worthy indi victuals. The Jenco Foundation was created in 200 I to recognize and reward people who are working
for the dignity and sense of worth of the people of Appalachia.
The primary focus of Jenco activities is the 29 counties of
Appalachian Ohio as well as all of the state of West Virginia.
With generous community support; over the past four
years our foundation has given over $31 ,000 in ·grants to
nineteen exceptional people whose direct, caring action has
contributed to the quality of life of individuals living in our
region, an activist for the homeless, the founder of a rural
community center. and others who are making a difference.
. Now we are seeking nominations for the 2006 Jenco Award.
The Jenco Foundation does not fund project grants or
organizational grants at this time. The award is intended to
recognize individual work that has already been done or is
ongoing. Preference is given to those remarkable people
whose accomplishments are made on a volunteer basis or
. transcend their customary job description. .
To nominate someone for the 2006 Jenco Award, readers
should send a detailed letter to the Board of Directors,
Jenco Foundation, P.O. Box 783, Athens, Ohio 45701.
Letters must be postmarked by August I, 2006. Complete
information with a nomination form is available from the
Jenco website: www.jencofoundation.org
As secretary of the Jenco board of directors, I encourage·
your readers to help shine the spotlight on some of our
regions most talented and deserving people.
·
Carolyn Fisk
·
]enco Foundation secretary
New Marshfield

Note: For a vanilla (yel·
low ) cake, ami t the cocoa
and add a drop of vanilla
with the milk.
You can find dozens more
simp le recipes for kids'
•
at
ovens
www. budget I0 l.com!kids.h
tm.. I bet you are way ahead
of me with plans to make up
dozens of prepacked dry
mixes for Christmas.
DEAR MARY: I'm looking for the laundry pretreatment Soilove that you men·
tion from time to time in
this column. I can't find it
anywhere. I do not use a
computer. so I need a phone
number. Also, do you have
any inexpensive and quick
blind
cleaners?
Catherine B.. Pennsylvania
DEAR · CATHERINE:
Unless you live in Southern
California or Arizona: you
are not likely to lind Soilove
in your local supermarket.
But don 't worry: You can
order Soilove by phone from
Soaps
Gone
Buy
(www.soapsgonebuy.com)

at (888) 858-7627.
The best way to clean
blinds is to soak them in a
bathtub full of mild, soapy,
hot water. Line the rub with
a towel before adding the
blinds ro avoid scratching
the tub's finish. Make sure
the blinds are open so the
slats don't stick together.
After 30 minutes, rinse
them and hang the blinds
outdoors to dry. Rehang .
One final trick: Wipe your
newly clean blinds with a
sheet of fabric softener · to
prevent dust from adhering
to that nasty buildup ..
(Fo r more money-saving
Tips, look for Mary Hu11t 's
book
"Everyday
Cheapskate's
Greatest
Tips" (Running Press.
2005 ). You can e-mail tips
or questions to cheapskate@unitedmedia.com or
mail
to
Everyday
Cheapskate. P.O. Box 2/35
Paramount, CA 90723. All
correspondence becomes
the property of Debt-Proof
Living.)

HONEY THE COOLER's
LEAKING A~AIN, .. I THINK THERE'S
AHOLE IN THE FOAM
I

.

MY PARENTS

ARE NASA
·ENGINEERS.

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Obituaries

•

Frank L Hawley
COLUMBUS - Frank L
"Pappaw" Hawley, 72. went
home to be with the Lord,
Wednesday. July 5, 2006 at
Riverside Method1st Hospital.
He .was retired from
Kinnear Rolling Doors as a
Steelworker. Frank was an
avid' craftSillan enjoyed
being an OU\doorsman, especially hunting and tishing.
He attended the North
Church of Christ in
Christian Union and was an
U.S . Army veteran.
Frank L. Hawley
He is survived by loving
w1fe of 117 years. Mary: children, Gregory Ha,vley, Brenda (Todd) Rossi, Christy (Scott
Cave) Hawlcy-Messer and Mark (Arnie) Hawley; II
grandchildren ; brother, John (Bertha) Hawley: sister.
Bonoie Ebers bach: sister-in-law, Wanda "June" (Jim ) Tolle,
along with numerous nieces; nephews· and friends.
· He was preceded in .death by his pare.nts, James and
.Sparkle Hawley: sisters. Audrey Hawley. Katlilene Manley,
Helen Farley and Georgia Pullins; brothers, James,
Norman ~ Earnest, Delmar and Richard Hawley; and grand·
children. Kenny, Mariah and Angel. .
The family will receive friends Friday from 5 to 8 p.m. at
Schoedinger North Chapel, 5554 Karl Road . A funeral service will be held at 10 a.m. Saturday, July 8, 2006 at Nonh
Church of Christ in Christian Union, 5600 Karl Road. where
family will receive friends one hour .prior to the se rvice.
The family will also receive friends Saturday from 2 to 4
p.m. at the Cheshire Baptist Church in Cheshire. with a
graveside service to he held at 4 p.m. at · Gravel Hill
Cemetery in Cheshire. .
· ·

The Daily Sentinel • Page As

LAW YOU CAN
USE
.
Know when subprime mortgages-equal predatory lending
Q.: What is a "subprime
"mortgage?
A.: A subprime mongage
is a mortgage offered to a
borrower with a "subprime"
credit score below 620.
Most con&gt;umers' credit
scores range from 600 to
700.
Q.: If my credit score is
suhprime, how will this
affect my mor.tgage?
A.: Generally speaking,
lower credit scores mean
higher risk to lenders.
Lenders will therefore
charge higher interest rates
on such loans to cover the
losses they may incur from
loans that are not repaid.
Unfortunately, these h1gher
interest rates, combined
with other common features
of subprime mortgages, can
result in a loan that IS
"predatory" in that the loan
is made for ihe lender's own
benefit rather than the borrower's.

Q.: What is predatory
lending?
A.: Predatory lending
describes practices ·of
lenders that are designed to
take advantage of consumers. · Borrowers with
subprime credit can be the
target of predatory lenders
because it is difficult to get
favorable loan terms when a
borrower has. subprime
credit.

gages they offer: they may
use a less negative term
such as "non-l;'rime." Pay
attention to the mterest rates
on such loans, which can be
extremely high. However,
to attract a borrower with .
subprime credit, a lender
may offer a low interest
rate, but at a price that may
include prepayment penalties, balloon payments, high
closing costs, or excess fees
to compensate for offering a
"good' interest rate to a
borrower with a poor credit
history.

a favorable' loan and avoid
pr~tdatory lenders?
A.: First, · obtain your
credit score and determine
what you can afford and
what interest rates you will
likely be offered. Second,
be wary of telephone and
mail solicitations. Contact
lenders yourself. Third,
shop arouqd; the lending
industry is competitive, and
lenders will want your business even if your credit history is poor. Founh, before
signing on the "dotted line,"
.read the fine print. ask questions, and reconsider what
Q.: What are prepay- · you can afford. Just because
ment penalties and bal· you are approved for a speloon paywents? ·
cific amount doesn't mean
A.: ffecause lenders · you should borrow the
make money fmm i merest entire amount. A good rule
payments, they benefit of thumb for an affordwhen borrowers use the able/reasonable monthly
entire loan term to pay off a house payment is 15. to 35
loan. If a borrower pays off percent
of
spendable
a loan early in its term, the man thl y income.
lender will lose out on
income from interest and
Q.: What can I do if,
related · sources. So, to after I've signed loan doc·
make up for this lost inter· uments, I chan~e my mind
est income, the lender may or I see somethmg in them
charge a prepayment penal· I don't like?
ty. A lender also may offer
A.: Under the Truth-Ina' lower interest rate in Lending Act, borrowers
exchange for a large pay- have three days in which to
ment at the end of the loan cancel ·a mortgage loan, no
term (the "balloon pay - questions asked. Contact a
ment"). Since balloon pay· consumer assistance organi·
ments are usually too large .zation or someone you trust
for consumers to cover to help you review the loan.
with
their disposable Also, call the lender and ask
monthly income,
questions. If you believe
many borrowers will have x_ou should cancel the loan,
no choke but to refinance d'o so in writing so that the
or risk foreclosure in order cancellation IS effective
to make the balloon pay- under the statute.
ment. Refinancing will
Q.: Can any government
often mean additional closing costs and other fees.
or private agencies help
me get a mortgage if I
Q.: What can I do to get have subprime credit?

POMEROY ~ Prentice B. Hess·, 73 , of Pomeroy, was
called home to the Lord on July 5, 2006, after a threeyear illness.
He whs born on June I, 1933, son of Orner and Dorothy
Randolph Hess.
Q.: My credit score Is
Prentice belonged t&lt;i the Church of Christ and served in
below
620. What predatothe U.S. Army from 1953 to 1955. He retired from General
ry
lending
tactics should I
Motors after 30 years.
Prentice was devoted to his family and enjoyed living on his watch out for when shopfamily farm on Cherry Ridge, where he was born and raised. ping for a mortgage?
A.: Be aware that lenders
Surviving are his wife, Carol Hart Hess, whom he marmay
not use the term "subried on Aug. II, 1953; three daughters: Rhonda Tackett of
· Pomeroy, Sondra (Dean) Sexton of Tuppers Plains, and prime" to describe thy mort·
Lori Hess of Columbus; four grandchildren: Jennifer
(Scot\) Richardson of Pomeroy, Matthew (Nikki) Tackett of
Perrysville, Erin (Tony) Klancar of Cincinnati, Sarah
(Dallas) Lockart of Parkersburg, W.Va.; three brothers:
Drexel (Lucille) Hess of Nashville, Ohio, Eldred (Marie)
from PageA1
Hess of Wooster and [)orrence (Donna) Hess of Akron; a
sister, Bertine (Frank) Bain of Des Moines. Iowa; his mother-in-law, Geraldine Hart of Perrysville: two brothers-in- Saturday off from work
law, Denzil (Nancy) Han of Bellville and Jack Risley of and good tlying weather,
Burbank; two sisters-in-law, Naomi Scott of Perrysville so I headed to the airport
and Lura (M,erl) Hall of Dansville; five great grandchildren and got my trusty old
Cherokee. With less . than
. and many nieces and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by ·an sixteen hours on the
infant brother, Myron Hess; his sister. June Risley; son-in- engine, I paid even closer
attention to the preflight
law, Steve Tackett; and father-in-law, Gail Hart.
Services will be held at I p.m. on Saturday, July 8, 2006, in'spection.
"Everything looked fine
at Acree Funeral Home in Middleport with burial following
and I departed Mallory
in Cherry Ridge Cemete'ry.
··
Friends and family may visit at the funeral home from 2 Airport (and headed north)
about ten minutes (to) take
to 4 and 6 to 9 p.m. on Friday.
some pictures, and then
headed west to get fuel ~t
Gallipolis, Ohio. As I
approached the Henderson
Mary K. Brown, 87, 'of LeGrange, Ky., formerly of VOR a head appeared
Middleport, died Thursday JuJy .6. 2006 at Baptist Hospital through a 3/4 inch hole in
Submitted photo
N.E. in LeGrange.
Pilot
Monty
Coles
holds
the
black
snake
that
hitched a ride
the top of the instrument
She was borrt April 14, 1919 in Middleport, the daughter paneL After it came out on his airplane in May. The stow-away snake made news
of the late Jasper H. and Lenora Belcher Grate.
about 4 inches I realized I when Coles landed at the Gallia·Meigs Regional Airport.
Before retiring she worked as a secretary ~t Imperial had a snake staring · me in
Electric in Middlepon. and assisted her brother Gene Grate as ·the face at 3.000 feet.
The snake's tail found the
snake fell on my boots.
Clerk of the Village of. Middlepon. She was a 1937 graduate
tlap lever on the floor and
"As
I
was
reaching
for
"I looked around for
of Middleport high school and a member of the Middleport something to grab it with, the door handle, it shot up began (to pull).
First Presbyterian Church and the Order of the Eastern Star.
"By now I was six miles
then smacked it on the nose the door, covering the han·
In addition to her parents, she was pre&lt;:eded in death by with my Sporty's handheld dies. I grabbed it behind its from Gallipolis and there
her husband Leland Brown in 2002, brothers Gene Grate radio. Double A batteries head.
It
immediately were several planes in the
and William Grate, and sisters Frances McCormick and went flying everywhere, wrapped around my arm pattern doing touch and
.
Ruth Tewksbury.
and the unknown brand of and began (to squeeze). go's. I announced my locaSlie is survived by her son and daughter-in-law Leland
and Brenda Brown of Le Grange, two grandchildren
Gospel Music. The group's featured on such popular
Matthew and Kristelr-and several nieces and nephews.
energy and excitement, television programs as the
Services will be I p.m. on Saturday. July 8, 2006, at the
coupled with their excep- Ralph Emery Show and
Middleport Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home. Bunal w11l
from
PageA1
tional vocal blend is appeal- Primetime Country. They
follow in Riverview Cemeterv. Fnends may call from II
a.m. till the time of the service on Saturday.
ing to audiences of all ages, had appeared at Carowinds
Gospel through Southern and sure to create .an excit- Theme Park, Six Flags Over
Gospel Music have allowed ing evening of musical Georgia, and Dollywood .
Southern Gospel radio staThe Dixie Melody Boys to pleasure.
Over the years, The Dixie tions nationwide consistentfirmly establish a place at
the airwaves with the
the ·forefront of Southern Melody Boys have been ly fill
.

The Democratic solution(s)
There's little ,. doubt that
"What to do about Iraq?" is
the central
issue
in
American politics today. 1t
isn't the only is s ue ~ witness illegal immigration but it towers above all the
others. It is costing $250
million a day, and several
American lives a week, and
polls make it c_lear that .the
American people are thoroughly (and, I might add,
understandably) upset about
the ·way it's going.
How we got here isn't in
doubt. President Bush (like
Presideut Clinton, ~1d all of
the leadin g ~pokesmen of
both .parties. and for that
matter all of the major
nations of the Westem
World, and the United
Nations) was convinced in
2003, on th~ basis of the
best intelligence available.
that Saddam Hussei n had
chemical and biological
weapons of mass destruction, and was moving to
construct nuclear weapons
as well . In those ci rcumstances, and given the spectacular failure of diplomatic
efforts
to
discipline
Saddam, Bll-'h would have
been irresponsible if he· hadn' t ordered a military attack
to overthrow and replace
Saddam's regime.
When ·it tumed out, however, . thai ·no &gt;uc h weapons

William
Rusher

could be found, Bush point-·
ed out that Saddam was' a
murderous tyrant who thoroughly ·deserved ouster anyway. And far more impor· ·
tant, if a democratic successor regime could be brought
to birth in lray;· the beneficent effect · on the whole
Middle East would be enormous. The example of a free
Arab · society would resonate throughout the region,
force democratic reforms in
all the neighboring states,
and stabilize this important
corner . of tile wurld for
decades to come.
Since then, the United
States ha., been trying grimly to'bring about this hopedfor result. But the fanatical
hlamist insurgency. traceable to Osama hin Laden
and led in !rag. until recently. by Abu Mu ~ab alZargawi. has made the
going far rougher than Bush
,and Secretary of Defense
Donald Rumsfeld can , ever
possibly have anticipated.

SuiCide bombers and gratu· rest suspect that it isn't, but
itous beheadings have made are deeply divided over what
the process of winning mad- to recommend. Sen. John
deningly slow. But have Kerry, D.Mass., wants to
they made it impossible? start pulling out American
That is the question that forces by the end of ·this
understandably preoccupies year. Others demand that we
American politicians.
. "redeploy" our troops beginFor the Republicans, the ning on some later speciflc
answer simply has to be date (e.g. June 30, 2007).
"No" - Bush has commit- Sen. Hillary Clinton, D-N.Y
.ted ·the nation to war, and -if I understand her- also
the only. acceptable out- favors "redeployment," but
come 1s v1ctory.
without a specific timetable.
For the Democrats, howAnd all of this leaves
ever, there .are other. possi- unclear exactly what "redebliltles. Wtthout gomg so ployment" means. Would
far as to w_ish ·defeat upon our troops be redeployed to
Amenca's forces, they may . their bases in the United
conclude that victory is not, States, or simply across the
1n fact, poss1blc - not, at Iraqi border into Kuwait, to
any rate, at any pnce the await orders for further milnation is prepared to pay. In itary action? The Democrats
that case .. prudence would don't say, and take refuge in
dtptate Withdrawal, and 1f the comforting ambiguity of .
that resulted in aill)ost the term.
unimaginabl_e ~isast~r for
But it's hard to imagine a
Amencan tore1gn pol1cy bumper sticker sunlmarizand America's image in the ing that mishmash of conworld - well, the responsi- \fadictory ideas. "Bug out
bility would be assi~ned to - . but slowly"? ''Bring ·the
Bush and the Republicans .
boys halfway home by
So the Democrats today Christmas"? The Democrats
are searching desperately for must have the courage of
a pohcy. and the , surpnsmg the1r convictions but first
news is that they are split six they have to de~ ide what
ways from · Sunday. A few, those convictions are.
like the indomitable Sen. Joe
(William RLisher is a
Lieberman, ~-Conn., insist Disti11guished Fellow of the
that the war 1s .wmnable, and . Claremont l11stitute for the
support Bush s determma- · Study of Statesman&lt;hip and
tton to press on. Most of the Political Phi/o,,ophy.)
.

- ---- -·-'-""+-

POINT PLEASANT - Harold E. Ridenour, 63, of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., died Wednesday morning. July 5. 2006. at
Cabell Huntington Hospital, Huntington, W.Va . He was the
husband of Beverly A. (Beller) Ridenour. ·
Funeral services will be at 2 p.ln., Sunday, July 9, 2006,
at the Point Pleasant Middle School Gymn~sium . Burial ·
will follow in Suncrcst Cemetery, Point Pleasant.
Visitation will be held at the Crow-Hussell Funeral Home,
Saturday, July 8, 2006 , from 2 to 9 p.m. and one hour prior
to the service at the Middle School.
·
In lieu of tlowers, the family requests memorial dona-·
tions be made io .the Mason County Anunal Shelter,
Heights United Methodi st Church Educational trust Fund,
and the Point Pleasant Fire Pepar\ment.

Lelia Bobo VanCooney
MESA. ARIZ.~ Le.lia Bobo .VanCooney, formerly of
Langsville, died June 25 in Mesa, Ariz. She is survived
by her husband Clyde. Funeral scrv1ces were held 111
Tempe , Ariz. June 28.

Local
Briefs
•
Special meeting set
POMEROY ~

The Meigs County Agricultural Society
will hold a special meeting at 7:30 p.m .July 17 in the Coon
Hunters building to discuss the fair and other matters.

Q.: Where can I go for
more information and for
assistance with subprime
mortga~es and predatory
lenders.
A.: A number of governmental and private organit.at ion; are involved in combating predatory . lending,
including, for example, the
American
Bankers
Association , the National
Home Equity Mortgage
Association and the Federal
Trade Commission . For
consumer information aboUt
subp(ime mortgages and
predatory · lending, visit
www hud.gov,
www.u s doj.gov,
www.fdic.jzov
or
www.ftc.gov.
Law You Can Use is a
weekly conmmer legal
information column pro·
vided by the Ohio State Bar
Associatio11 (OSBA). This
article was prepared by
attorneys
Russell
D.
Kornblut and Nathan G.
Haskell of the Clevela11d
office of Buckley King,
LPA. For more iuforma·
lion on a variety of legal ·
topics, visit the OSBA 's
Web site at www. ohio/Jar.
org. Articles appearing in
this column are intended to
provide broad, general
infoT'matioll about the law.
Before applying this infor·
mation lfl a .~pecific legal
problem, readersare urged
to seek advice from ar1
attorney.

Snake

Dixie

inusic of The Dixie Melody
Boys. Throughout the past
four decades, hit songs have
!lowed their way in bunches. In fact, they have
· enjoyed more that 20 Top •
40 hits. including eight Top
I0 releases.
To obtain additienal information call 740-992-6779.

Deaths

Harold E. Ridenour

A.: Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac are government-s ponsored entiti es that
offer mortgages to borrowers with subprime credit.

tion, that I had a problem.
and would appreciaie a priority for a straight in on .
Runway Five.
"Immediately
several
pil;Jts replied that they
would be out of the way.
"When one asl&lt;ed what
the problem was, I responded that l 'had one hand full
of plane and the other full of
snake.'
"After an extremely
smooth touch down, I taxied to the pumps. Several of
my friends from my local
airport walked up to the
plane and very slowly
opened the door.
"I tossed one my camera
to take (a few) pictures of
me and my uninvited guest.
"One (person} commented, with a landing like that
I should carry a snake
more often.
"I (have added) to my
pre-flight check list a longhandled inspection mirror
to look under the instrument paneL"
Coles released the snake
after · having pictures taken
with it. It now resides in
Ohio, as he has ruefully
noted to friends.

Mary K. Brown

My thoughts

.LE.TTERS TO THE EDITOR

www .mydailyseptinel.com

2006

Prentice B. Hess

Lieberman
Dear Editor:
I know very little about Mr. Lieberman, but he has often
seemed to be so conservative as to be a Republican. Why
doesn't he change party and run as a Republican? That
would be more hqnorable.
Bob Smiddie
Pomeroy

Friday, July 7,

'

Syracuse
from ·Page A1
Syracuse may be eligible
for grant money and additional
points
for
Community Development
Block Grant application s.
London Pool Manager
Heather Wolfe reponed that
as of July I the daily admission total was $1 ,384.30;
concessions totals were
54,729.02; total swimmers,
3,575 with an average of 715
a week; eight individual/family passes had been sold.
London Pool Steering
Committee Member John
Bentley reported the roofs
on the shelter and pool
houses had·been repaired by
volJ.mteers who donated
their time and equipment.
The · shelter roof cost
approximately $300. and
the pool house roof cost
around $1 ,900 and were
paid for with donations to
the London Pool Fund.
Bent ley thanked the many

volunteers by name.
Council changed the pay
requirements for the London
Pool Manager to work 84
hours per pay period for
$300 and the assistant manager to work 60 hours ,for
$200 per pay penod retroactive to the beginning of the
pool season, this excludes
days when the pool is closed
because qf. weather. .

Council passed the water
leak insurance ordinance in
emergency
measure.
Residents can now purchase
leak insurance from the village should a major water
leak occur on their side of
the meter.
All members of council
were present for the meeting as was Clerk-Treasurer
Sharon CottrilL

SPRING VALLEY
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FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

URE 'I'HE:
WORD OF GOD
" Your word I have treasured in my heart . that I
might not sin against You.
Rev.
Blessed are You. 0 Lord;
Jonathan
teach me Your statutes.
With my lips I ha ve told of
Noble
PASTO.R.
all the ordi nances of Your
TRINITY CHURCH
mouth. I have rejoiced m
the way of Your testimonies . as much as in all
riches. I wi ll meditate on
Your precept's and regard able, reliable .
Your ways. I shall delight in
And the Word of God is
Your · statutes: I shall not enduring. "The grass withforget Your word ." (Psalm ers. the !lower fades. but the
11 9. 11 - 16. NASB)
Word of God stands forev We take much time and er.'' (Isaiah 40.8, NKJV) As
even make some effott · to the Psalmist cries out to
hsten to fa mil y and fri ends. God. "The sum of Your
to popular musicians and, word is truth , and every one
political pundits . ta lk show of Your righteous ordihosts. debutante' and a host nances is everlasting ."
of other voices .. even min - (Psalm 119 . 160, NASB)
isters and other re ligious And our Lord Jesus said,
leaders. Yet from our ex pe- "Heaven and earth will pass
ri ence. · someti mes quite away, but my words will
·painful. we know all too never pass away." (Matthew
well th at good ad vi~e is not 24.35, NIV) So much in our
always good. what i' fash - v,.orld wears out , decays and
ionable is not always bene- fad es away, bm not the
fici al, and even those who Word of God.
love us and mean well
And the Word of God is
sometimes dishearten and time ly
and
effective.
·
fall woefully sh01t .
Different people living in
Not so the Word of God. different cultures in every
which ts "hving and itct1ve. age have found in Scrip)Ure
sharper than an y two-edged supreme comfort , guidance
sword. piercing to the divi- and direction at just the
sion of soul and of spirit, of right moment. to exactly the
joints and of marrow. and right degree, in precis'ely the
discerning the thoughts'and right manner. They could
intentions of the heart." ge nuinely say, "Thy word is
(Hebrews 4.12, ESV) The a lamp unto my feet. and a
Word of God , holy light unto my path." (Psalm
Scripture , is '·breathed out 119 .105 , NAY) Indeed , the
by God and profitable fo r Word of God is "useful for
teaching , fur reproof. for teaching the truth, rebuking
correction . and for triu ning error, correcting faults , and
in righteousness ... " ( II giving instruction for right
Timothy 3.16, ESV) Then living." ( II Timothy 3.16,
should we not take the time · GNT)
and even make much effort
As St. Cyprian said long
in "listening" to God speak'! ago, " More strength will be
The Word of God is reli - given you, and the knowlable. "Every word of God edge of the heart increased
proves true. He is a shield more · and more , as you
to those who take refuge in ex'amine more fully the
Him ." (PI'overbs 30 .5 , Scriptures," the · inspired
NRS V) When Jesus prayed Word of God . And this is
for His disciples , He asked . no less true today, of
the Father to "sanctify co urse . No wonder the
them tn truth ," and went on Psalmist treasured the
immediately to declare , Word of God in his heart.
" Your word is truth.'' (John We should do the same,
17 .17 . NASB) What does rejoiCing in the testimonies
this mean for you and me? of God more than .any
Very simply. we can wholly material wealth , meditating
depend upon the Word of on Hi s precepts, and
God . We may not always delighting in Hi s statutes.
completely · or
rightly And we ought to be able to
understand Scripwre ... but say as well, "I shall not forthe Word of God is depend- get Your word." Amen.

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PageA6

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Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

assault . "Oka-a-y !"
I
thought. "That was interesting . But maybe it didn 't
mean to hurt me. I must
have surprised it. Besides.
surely the people · here
wouldn't have an animal sitting here in the middle 'of
their gift store if it was
aggressive ." Famous last
words. In my own defense. ]
was younger then and a bit
more na'ive than I am now. I
moved slowly towards it
again, thi s time a wee bit.
more cautious. "It's okay.
fella ," I said soothin g ly.
" l'm .not going to hurt you.''
As I watched for any sign of
sudden
movement,
I
reached out again . I thought
that if it knew I didn ' t mean
it any harm, it would let me
touch it. My hand got as far
.. as it had before and I held it
there : waiting to see if the
animal would react. It sat
quietly and just looked at
me as if it didn't mind in the
least that I was entering its
space. Feeling encouraged.
my hand started to reach
through the bars and was
almost touching its leg.
As quick as a snake, it
lunged forward imd reached
both its paws through the
bars, slamming them together hard around my forearm.
Higher up my arm and' with
better aim than before. its
paws grasped at me even as I
pulled back away from it, its
claws raking long lines of
skin from my forearm . Well.
enough is enough , even for
me. I quickly joined my wife
and young son and said ~im­
ply that we needed to stay
away from the bear on the
other side of the room. I
me11tioned my little misadventure to the ownerlmanager before we left (noting that
the animal could be very
dangemus especially to chil-

Fellowship
Apostolic

from it- pov,.er.
Not onlv so . but it works
to tame ihe "W ild beast''
with in each of. u; though
our selfi shness sometimes
shows it s fangs and clicks
its claws when it ge ts an
opportunity. ,Let us be careful then to not "wander"
into the r~ach of our lessth an-hea,e nly impu!ses. Let
u' &lt;tcer clear .of ac tions.
words. and attitudes within
ourselves that will rend and
tear our sp1 ntual growth and
hamper our joy and peace as
God's
du ldren.
And
al though such thin gs cannot
shake us loose from God 's
grace t\nd are truly caged by
God 's au thoritY. let us take
care tha t we avo id lhe
snares and pitfalls that can
mjure our fru itfulness as
messengers of the hope ot
the Gospel.
"Put to death . therefore ,
whatever belongs to your
earth ly nature: sexual
1mmorality. impurity. lust.
ev il desires and greed. which
is idolatry .... Rid yourselves
ot all such . thin~s as these:
anger, rage. ma lice, s l ~mder 1
and fi lthy language from
your lips. Do not Iie to each
other. since you have taken
of1' your old self with its
practi ces and have put on the
new se lf. which is being
renewed 111 knowl edge in the
image of Its Creator. ... As
Gmi\ cho,en people. holy
and dearl y lo ved. clothe
yourselves w1th compassion ,
kindness . humility. gentleness and patience. Bear with
each other and forgive whatever gri evances you may
have against one another.
Forgive as the Lord forgave
vo u. And o'er all these
virt ues put on love, which
binds them all together in
perfect unit y'' (Colossia ns
3:5. ~ - 14 NIV ).
(Thom Mollohan and his
family have ministereii in
~·oulhern Ohio the past
eleven years. He is tile pas·
lor of Pathway Community
Church which meets on
Sunday morning.i at the
Ariel Theatre. He may be
reached far comments or
questions by email at pastortlwm @pathwaygallipo·
lis.com) .

dren who might wander into
its reach) and we then left .
with me on a quest fur the
antiseptic in the first aid kit
th at we keep in our vchtcle.
As
· foolhardy
as
approaching the bear may
have been. Cl1 ristinns fre quentl y do the same thing
on a spiritual level. We fl irt
wi th thin gs that we know
are spiritually dangerous
and potenti all y corrupting.
We reach out thinking foo lishly that such thin·gs ar~
not really so dange rou s
(whether they' re thin gs we
watch. things we indul~ e in .
or kmus of:lttitudes we pet'
mit ourse lves to l1a vc ).
Unfonuntltel)·, we find out
sooner or later that some
things rc&lt;il.ly are beset with
pain and sorrow. and are
best left alone .
Still , th ~ good news is th at
God has tmly caged our
sp1ntua\ &lt;' ll l' lll Y and limited
its abi lir" r,, daunt and control li .... L i-.. caged and we
arc lrec . .. .. Thc:re is now
no cunucmnation for those
who are in Christ Jesus.
because thruu~:h Chnst
Jesus the la1v of the Spiri t of
life set me free from the law
of sm and death. For wha t
the law was powerless to 'do
in that it was weakened by
the sinful nalllre. God did
by se nding IllS own So n in
the likeness of sinful man to
be~ sin offen ng. Ami so He
condemned s1n in ·sinfu l
man, in order that the nghteous re quire m ent ~ of the
law might be full y met in
us, who do not Iive according to the sinful nature but
according to the Spirit"
(Romans 8: 1-4 NIV).
One of the great tn1ths of
God is that His love and
power are relevant to every
day life . It is H1s l01·e that
moved His God-si zed heprt
to bear the Cross in our
place. It is His power that
binds the umversal ' law of
sin (which is that sin in all
men and women will be
ju.dged) to its being satisfied
by the laying down of
Jesus' sinless life for our
sakes, sc~; un ng fo r us a
beautiful certa inty that
through fa1th tn Christ , we
are forgiven and set free

MEMPHIS. Tennessee
(AP) - A 72-foot replica of
the Statue of Liberty,
unveiled by a Memphis
church for Independence
Day, has the right arm
extended upward in familiar
pose but holds a cross

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instead of a torch .
Replacing the famou s
inscription - "Give me
your tired, your poor ..." are Roman numerals symbolizing
the
Ten
Commandments. And a tear
runs down th~ statute's face,

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reflecting c o n~;ern
for
America.
Thi s
·'Stat ue
of
Liberation" was erected at
a cost of $260 .000 by
Overcomers
World
Outreac h
Mimstries
Church.

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" People don 't talk about
Christ any more and our
morals are gone," said
Apostle Alton R. Williams.
'·People cannot drive by our
statue without thinkmg
about their relationship with
God."

i'

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PEP TALK

Whi le in high school and col lege, tt Js 4u ite common to attend a sports pep
r..lily prior i~J b tg game or event ltl order to show support and build up
confidence for our favori te team . Also. many !nhletes today often confidently
proclaim that they wt\ 1 wm :-.ome -'QJCCta l event. or at the nsk of sounding
egotistical. :-.ttl! others may evt!n -dC'olar~ that they are the greatest at what they
do. These ath letes are g1v in g t h ~msdvcs a pep tu lk :md are actually buildin g up
self~confidence m thetr own a btl1t y. Uod w ants us all
to be the best 111 whatever we do, and hav ing con fidl!~ce and believing in
ourselves is an important fa~..·1 or
m be1ng content ami happy
in our ltves. Giving ourse lves a p !! p
ta lk on a re gular ba~is and
remem bermg that we can l\() ,til
thmgs through God who

a

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

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1ry 10
do their br.:st unJ v. lwt is ngh t.
seem

10

be beltl'f able (() hand I.:

ltfe·~

datly l:hallenge:o..

~

1-740·667·3156
"Still small e twu~h to mre"

333 Page Street
Middlecon OH

,
740-949-2210

uardrail , Fence &amp;
sign erectton

(740 i 992 -64l l

Hulland Free Will B11ptlst

VanZandt and WarJ Rd . Pa'itor hmt~

Salem St , Pa .. tor J amu~ Fnnner. Sunda)l

Mtller. Sunday School - 10 30 am.
Evening - 7:30pm

School - 10 am . Eventng - 1 p m
Wednesqa} Services 1 p m.
S«ond Baptlsl ('burch
Ra1~n,WO{ld . WV, Sundu) !khool 10 am -

~n

RiH~r \alley
Apli'IOhc \k.hrshtp Ctllh'l
3nl
-\~e . , Mtdlllepor1. R~1

V.:~ llc )

R.H"r

S

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohio 45769-0683

6am- Hpm

:Mi[[ie's 'l(estauran.t
/Jail_~

$pcclals

Open 7 days ,1 wed
740·992-77 13

I

740-949-2217
Sizes available 5x10

AIIIIJJ,Iflllt' ll'

If ye abide i11 Me, a11d My
words abide in yo11 , ye shall
ask what ye will, a11d it shall
,be do11e unto you.
]oltlll5:7

Study
E:mmanul'l Apo!itolk lilbt:rnade m: ,
Lnop Rd off N('w Lima Rd Ruthmd.
Ser.·ices S1m 10.00 am &amp; 7.30 p m..
Thurs . 7 00 p m , Pll~ l;,r Many I{ Huttm1

Assembly of God
Liberty A.sstmbly or t;od
P.O. Box 467 . Duddmg LanC'. M:~mn.
W.Va.. Pas tor· Ne1l Tennant Sufldny
St"n'll.:s,- 10 00 :un and 7 p.m

Baptist
Pageville Freewill H11ptlst Chur('h
Pa~tor Mtlc H.mnon, SL1 nUuy School
Y ~U to IU ] 0 ,tm, Wors h 1p !oer~ ' ce IOJO
l&lt;l 11 UO am Wed preadunp: 6 pm
CHrJ.Wnh: r 811plist Chun:h
Su nd,•y School · Y JOam. Pn:achmg
Scn•1ce 10 1n.1m benmg Se-rvile
1 OCipm. Wrdneo,day Btble Slndy 7.00 pm.
lntenm Preucher - Floyd Ross
Chtshlrl' Ropll!il Churrh
Little. Su nday School 9 30
,un. Momin!l ~or,hip 10 JO :un
Wedne~Uu} Bible S111J y 6·30 pm . choir
pr.lt'llCt' 7J0. ymnh mul B1h le Au tld 1e~
6. 30 p. m Th ur~ I pm hook stu dy
Pa~1 m · Sle\'e

Hope B11ptlst Church /Southern)
570 Grant S1.. Mtddlepnn. Sund:ty Sl. hool
-9JO:~ m .Wo rshlp II am and6pm
Wedni!'~UaY Servile - 1 p m Pastor Gary

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

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES
190 N Second St

Middleport, OH

740·992·6128
Local source for trophies,
Ia ues !·shirts and more

E.n~ nm~

'0

Ruthwd First Baptist Church
Sunday ~il.:hvul - Y ,\(l' a.m. Wor~hip l04."ia m
Pomeroy l' irsl 8apllst
Pasto r Jon Brocken, East Mam St ..
Sunday Sch Y 30 am. 'Worshtp 10.30 am
t"irst Southern Baptist
4 1872 Pomero_y Ptke. Pastor· E Lllmar
0 Rr yan1. Su nday Schoo l - 9 30 am ,
Wor~h1p - R·l ~am , l) 4S nm &amp; HlO p m ,
'Yednesday Serv1ces - HJO·p m
First Baptist Chun:h
Pastor. Billy Zuspan 6th and Palmer St,
Middlepon . Sunday School - 9: 15 a m..
Wor ship - iO:IS am .. 7:00 p.m..
Wednesday Servke- 7 00 p. m.
Racine First Baptist
Pastor. Josep h Godwm, inte nm pastor ,
Sunday School - 9.3fl am., Worship 10:40 am .. 7·00 p m. Wednesday
Servtces - 7.00 p m
Sliver Run Bapllst
Pastor· Joh n Swa nson, Sunday School ·
lOa m , Worsh1p · II a.m .. 7:00 p m.
,Wednesday Services- 7 00 ~ .m .

PaSior: Dennis Weaver Sunday School9:45 a.m .. Evening - 6.30 p.m.,
Wednesday Se rviles · 6.30p.m.
Bdhkhem Bapllsl Church
Great Bend, Route 124. Ra, me. OH,
Pas101 : Ed Curte r, Sunday School - 9·10
am : Sunday Wouh1 p · 10 \0 am,
Wed ne~ day B•ble Study· 7 00 p m
Old 'Bethel •·rt'e Will Baptist Church
2l:I W 1 St Rt 7. Middleport , Sunday
Serv1ce . 10 a m , 6·00 p m , Tue ~day
ServiCe&gt; -trOO

VIctory Bapli&lt;lt Independent
525 N. 2nd St. Middleport. Pastor. hmes
E Keesee Worship · \Oa .m , 1 p.m .
Wednesday Services · I p.m
Faith Baptist Church
Ralll'l.lad St. Musun. Suuday Sc hool - 10
a.m .. Worship - II a.m. 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m
Fo~!)t

Run Baptlsl
Pustur, Arius HUit , Sunday School - 10
a.m, Wonhtp- II 11.111.
MI. Moriah Uaplisl
Founh &amp; Mam St . Middleport Pastor
Rev. Gi lbert Cra ig, Jr. Sunday School 9 30 u.m , Worship - 10·45 am
Antiquity Baptist
Sunday St honl - 9·30 am . Wors_htp

Matthew S: 16

A. JACKSON 'BAILES , OD

507 Mulberf) Heights
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
(740) 992·3279
To! Free 1-877-5H3·2433

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
,J n A ccormting &amp;
Fi11anria/ Service~· Firm

h IS 1:. Mam Street • Pomeroy
(7-10) 992-7270

p.m .. Wedn·e~da} S~r\u.:e., - 7

~ 111

Con -8 45-9:15 om ... Sun . Moss am . Dllily Mass - R·JO a.m

pm

Sun

•uo

Congregational
Trinity Churth
S«ond &amp; Lynn. Pomeroy. Pn'itor Re\.
Jonath.m Noblt. Wor.~ hip 10: ~5 :~ m..
S~nday School9 l~ am.

Church of Christ
Wrstskle Churrb or Christ
.lJ226 Ch1\dren's !lome Kd . Pomem;. 0!1
Contact 740-441 1296 Sunduy nwrnmg
10 00 Sun morning Bthk s1Ud)
fullow mg wor5h1p , Sun evt 6.00 pm.
WOO. bible ~tud y I pm
Hemluck Grove Christian Churrh
M1n1ster La rry H ro~n . Wur shtp - 9 30
am Sunday S~huul · 10 .30 a.m., B1ble
Stud~· - 7 p.m
Pomeroy Church of Chrisl
212 W Mam St .. Sunda) Sc hool · ~ JO
u m . Worsh1p- lU ~0 am .. 6 p m.
Wednesday Serv1ces -'7 p m
Pomeroy Wl'stsldl' Chul'l'h of Christ
3U26 Children's ll (lmt: Rd . Sunday
Sc hool · 11 tl m Wt)I'Sh!p - lOam, f1 p 111
Wednesday Semce~ - 1 p n 1
!\1lddltport Churl'h of Chrlsl
3th and M~ m. Pu st nr i\ 1 Hamon.
Ch tl drens Dtrec tor: Sharon Sn~re. Teen
Dtrector Oodger Vaugh:m , Sunday Sc hool
- 9.30 ~ m.. Worshtp·_B 15. 10:30 ~. m , 1
p.m , Wedne sday Serv1ces - 7 p.m.
Keno Churrh of Christ
- Q 30 am . Sunday Schuul ·
10 30 a 111 . P~)lur-J dfrey Wallace. ht and
Jrd Sunday

Wor~htp

Dearwallow Ridge Churth of Christ
Pastor Bruce lerry. Su nday School -9·30

'm
Wor ship - i O·JO tt m , 6 JO p m
Wednesday Services · 6 30 p m

Episcopal
Gra« Episcopal Church
32 6 E . Mam Sl. Pome roy. Sunday S.:'huvl
and
Holy Euch11n~l 1 1 · !~1 ,, m i{e\'

Edward Payne

'-

Holiness
Communi!} Chun:h
Tomek. Ma1n Stret'l.
ROlland. Sullday Wurship--10.111) am.
Sunduy Scr-o~re-7 p m
P~~tor

S1..-~e

l&gt;an,·ille Holin ess Chun: h
J 1057 State Rout~ 325 . Lang~' lle. Pa~ lor
Vtcwr Roush . Sund:J} ~ch111..1l - 9 JIJ a.m.
Sunda) wo r'h1p - 10 J{i am &amp; 7 p m ,
Wctlnl·~ll~y pr~)I:T ~f\JlC - 7 p 111 .
l:al\·ary l'ilgnm t:hapel
HamsonvJ IIe Rood . P~ •lor Charles
McKent 1e. Sundav Scht--.ol 9 Jll ,, 111
Worshtp - 11 :1111 7 lJ(J r m. Wednc"lfl}
Ser. Ke - 7:00 p m

' or Sharon Holiness C hu~h
Rose
Leadmg (red. Rd. Rut l,md Pa~ tOI~ R e~
Dewry Kmg. Sunday st· hool- 9 W .1111 ..
Sunday wor&lt;;h1p 1 p m . Wcdne~d~y
prayer meetin g- 7 p.m.
Pine Grm•e Bible Hollnl'S5 Church
IJ2 mtle off Rt. 325. P,Lstu r Rev. O'Dell
Manley. Sunday Sc hool
9 ,'() a.m ,
Wmsht p - 10 30 ~ m , 7 .\0 p.m ,
WedneM.la} St:rvH.:c - 1 30 p m.
Wf!l:feyan Dible Holintoss Church
)&gt;astor K1 ck
Bournt, Sunday School - 10 ;1 m Wor;h1p
-\0 45 p.m. Sunday Eve 700 p m .'
Wednesday Serv1ce- 1 :\0 p m

7'5 Pearl St , MJddieport

Zion Church or Christ
Pomeroy, Harnson\dle Rd (RL14h
Pastor Roger Watson, Sunday School .
9:30 a. m.. Wor sh ip - 10.30 a.m.. 7.00
p.m.. Wednesday Services ~,7 p.m.
Tuppt.n PlaiD Church or Chrbit
Instrumental. Worship ServiCe - 9 am .
Commumon · 10 a.m., Sunday School ·
lO IS am . Youth- 5 30 pm Sunday, Btble
Study Wednesday I pm
Bradbury Cburth or Chrtst
Mlmster: Tom Runyon, 39558 Bradbury
Road. Middleport. Sunday Schoo l - 9.30

a.m.
Worship- 10 30 a.m.
Rutland Chun!b or Christ
Su nday School · 9 30 a.m , Worship an d
Comm umon · 10 30 a.m, Bob J WerT)',
Mmtster
Bradford Chul'l'h or Christ
Comer of St Rt 124 &amp; Bradbury Rd ,
· Mmister Doug Shambhn. Youth Minister:
R11l Amberger, Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wor~ hip - 8·00 am .. 10:30 a.m.. 7.00
p m ,Wednesday Services - 7:00p.m.
Hickory Hllls Chun:h or Chrl!it
Tuppers Platns. Pastor Mike Moo..C. B1ble
class. 9 am. Su nliay. worsh ip 10 ~ m
Sunday, wor~! up 6.30 pm Sunday, B1ble
class 7 pm Wed
Reedsvill~

l:hurth of Christ
P~stor. Phrhp Stu rn• . Sunday Schoo l 9·30
a m.. Worsh1p Servrce 10.30 a:m. Bihle
Study. Wednesday.6·30 p.m
Delltn Church or Chrisl
Sunday ~c boo l 9·30 a.m . Sunday wo rship
-1030 a m.
Tht Churrh of Christ or Pomeroy
lntcrsecuon 7 and 124 W, Evangehsl
De nm ~ Sargent. Sunda y Bible Study 9 30 a m , Wnrsht p· 10 :30 a m and 6:3n
p m , Wednesd ay Bible Stud) - 7 p m.

Christian Union
Hartrord Chun:h or Chris I in
Christhm Union
Hanford . WVa .. Pastor. Dav1d lireer
Sundll}' S• houl - 9 J[j' a 111 • Worsh1p lO .J(l u m.. 7.0() p m_., Wednesday
Sen· i ce~..,- 7 00 p.m.

Church of God
Mt. Moriah Chuuh of God
Milt H1ll Rd , Rac1ne, P~ stor Jame s
Satterfield. Sunday School - 9.45 a.m .
.6

Hysell Run Community Church
Pastor· Rev Larry Lemley. Sunday ~hool
-9:30 a.m, Wor&gt;ht p - 10:45 a.m .. 7 p m..
Thursday Bible S1udy and Youth 1 p.m.

Laurel Cliff Frt't Method.M Church
Pa_li tor. Gle nn Rowe, Sunday School ·
9.30 a.m., Wot'sh1p - 10.30 a.m and 6
p m .Wednesday Serv1ce - 7·00 p m.

Latter-Day Saints
The Churth or Jesus
Chrisl or LaUer- Dar Saints
St . Rt. 160, 446-6247 or 446-7486,
Sunda y Sehoul 10.20-1 1 a. m.. Relief
Sor;;Jet y/Prtesthuud II 05- 12.00 noon.
Sacra mtn! Sen11ce 9-10 15 am.
Homemakmg meeting. 1st Thurs.- 7 p m

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Pme Grove. Worship · 9 00 am .. Sunday
School - 10 00 a m Pastor · James P
Brad)

'our Saliour Luthtran Church
Waln ut and Hen ry Sts . Rll\'el!swood.
W.Va , Pastor Dav1d Ru ssell. Sunduy
School . 10.00 am .. Worship- II a.m
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamure &amp; Selu nd St , Pumero),
Sun Sehoul - 9.45 a.m .. Worshtp - 11 am

United Methodist
Graham Unlled Methodist
Worsh1p - 11 om Pastor· Rt l'hlrrd Nc11sc
B«hlel Un1ted Ml'thodisl
Ne-w Ha,•en. R1 chnrd Nea'ic. Pll~ t o r .
Sunday worsh1 p 9·30 a 111 . TueS 6 30
pr.1)er und R1hl e Sturly
\1t. Olive l)nl1"4 Methodist

Off 1 ~4 heh1nd \\'llkeo;\'1\le Pos10r. Re\ .
Ralph Sptres. Sunday School · 9·30 a.m,
Worship \0 30 a.m . 7 p m . Thur~day
Servtces - 7 p.m.
MeiK!&gt; Coopera tive Parish
Nonhe~t C lu st~r . Alfred, Pa~ tur Jane
Be~tt1e. Suntlay s~ huol - 1J JO a m
Worshtp-1 1 a m .630pm

Chtstrr
Pastor Ja ne Dcathe .Wor•h1p · 9 lim
Su nday School · 10 am
fhur~da}
Serv1 ce~ - 1 p m

jfi~ber funeral jl:)ome
2M llltllllei1IIIIVI. • W'S II I rl.ll'
15111

1...992-5141
4'19 Richland Avenue, Athens
740-5'14·6333
I -800-45 I -98116

lllalll*r-IIIICIII
Htlllllllilltrlll• ' - "·H 45188

748-1112-5444

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and My Brogan-Warner
Full li ne of
INSURANCE
In surance words abide in you, ye shall
Products+ ask what ye will, and it shall
SERVICES · ~
•
· Ftnancial
214
E.
Main
be done unto you.
ENC IES Inc Services
992·5130
John 15:7

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

Pomeroy
'

lilfil
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

174 Laya~ Stmt • PO Bux 170
Nrw Haven. WV 15265
Jtntei H. Anderson, Lictnsed ~·untral Dimtor
Heidi
1
Planning

Pa-~or :

l'omero~

811b RJndolph . Wur'h 1p - ':1 )(}

Chun:b of the Nuarent

Pa•tt•r J.1n Lo11em.ler. Sund~; S~htk.ll

:1.m Sunda\ Slhool - IU 30 i.l m.

'I ](J n ru , Wor-h1p - IU ..lO am ilfld 6

&lt;

Kmgsbur) Road. P:~~tor Robert Vance.
Sunda} School · 9 \Q am , Worshtp
Ser' llt' \0 .)0
pm

p.m . Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p 111

Church or God or Prophecy

"Let your light so shine
that they may see your
works and glorify your
heaven."

10

OJ. Wh1te Rdflff St Rt 160. Putor: I' J
Chapman. Sunday Sc-hool - 10 am .
Worsh1p- II am Wednc!\day Str.·tcr, - 7

Sacred Heart Cath oli~ Chun-h
16 1 Mu lberr} Aile. Pom~roy . 9lJ2 -.51M!,
Pa&gt;tor · Re\' Wat'ter E Hetru , Sut Cnn
4 ·4&lt;i+5 ' 1~p m : t&gt;h m - 5

JopJm

Syrarust Flnl Ch urch or God
Apple and Second Sts .. Pastor: Re~ . Davtd
Rus~ll. Sunday School und Wor~htp 1(1
a.m. Evemng Sen1u~ - 6 JU p.IJI ..
Wedne~da)' Services · 6 jo p m.

Catholic

Bill Quickel

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC

Rutland Churt"h or (;od
R,)n Heath. Sundu~ Wm~htp

a.m. 6
p.m

7 pm .

E l\1 ~

""'"' r1er in

to 10 x 20

, Mumin~ \\ UP.hlp II am
'Wedne~d&lt;~y 1 p.m

~hthael U1,1Llfon.l , P~~tor. Sun )5
- ID \0
am Tu&lt;t~ 6 30 prayer Wed 7 p · Bthk

Hours

mil\

1/umt• Coo~f• J Meuh· &amp;

Hills Self Storage
29670 Bashan Rd.
Racine, OH

r~t

(740 ) 992·6472
Fax i740l 992·7406

Homemade Desserts Made Daily

"A Home Bank for
Home People"

opti ml:o.tJC ;.lb\ml our '.Lilly hvc~.

thetr own \-\-ay. people who

Located less tht~n JO minut e~ 1'1om
Athens, Pomeroy-orParJ...ero.. bulg

209 Third
Racine, OH

bend tcm\. Bemg f:Klsiti\ c ,u.JJ

thdt no o ne al\\ay~ ha~ t!\l!ry11ung

Director
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center
"A Celebration of Ute "

Coolville, Ohio

1\;J/ m f

strengthen:- us. can he \cry

and ht~vmg :m · I can ha ndlt· it"
attttude 1~ alw,ty~ helle r l hau
rellt:ctlll); n~:galm~m . And
although w~ ~hou!J k..:cp ttl minJ

ARCADIA NURSING
. CENTER

Michelle Kennedy,
&lt;\dmissions and Marketing

pm
Pa~tor·

Hlll!ilde Baptist Churth
St Rt !43 Jll~l off Rt. 7. Pas10r: Re,v
}a rne~ R Acree. Sr Sunday Unif1ed
Se rvice . Worship · 10.30 a.m.. 6 p.tn ,
~cdneWay Serv1ces -7 p.m

·i'

10 ~5 am , Sunda) Ev~mn~ • 6 UO p.m ,

Paslor Don Wallo.er

Churth of JE"Su~ Christ Apostolic

Mt. Union Bapllst

July 4 in Memphis: Church unveils Christianized Statue of Liberty

The Dally Sentinel • Page A7

WORSIHP GOD THIS WEEK

A Hunger For Mor~
Several years ago my
family and I were driving in
southern West Virginia near
the college campus on
which I worked . As we
turned with the road in one
of its many curves, my wife
suddenly ~rabbed my arm
and exclauned , "Did you
see that buffalo?"
"No," I replied. "I didn't
see any buffalo. Are you sure
you saw a buffalo~ There
aren't any buffalo around
here." And while I waxed eloquently on and on about buffalo not living in the area, sbe
sat quietly and looked ahead,
smiling . The road curved
back again and by the road we
came upon a huge wooden
gate and above it a big sign
that read, "Grandfather's Hill.
Horseback riding and petting
zoo. Come and see our friendly bears and buffalo."
*Grandfather's Hill was not
its real name .
They should have mentioned crow, too, since that
was what I was eating.
Anyway, I pulled our car
into their parking lot and we
got out. After we had
w!llked around a bit, looking at the various animal
exhibits, we finally went
into the main building
which housed a gift shop.
While my wife and son
looked around, I was irresistibly drawn to a large
cage that stood in an open
area towards the back. ·
Inside the cage was a small
black bear, probably in its
adolescence. It sat on its
rear ha~nches looking forlorn and I found myself
feeling sorry for it. "Oh, it's
lonely," I thought as I
approached it. ''How ya
dmn' , buddy?" I gently said
to it as I neared it. " Are you
feeling forgotten? Are you
lonely?" I began to reach
out to pat its leg which was
just inside the bar of the
cage. When my hand was
inches from the bars , the
bear shot its two front paws
out like lightning between
the bars and smacked my
hands hard between them!
I was extremely startled
and jerked my hand backward out of its reach , smarting from its unexpected

www.mydallysentinel.com
-

Friciay, July 7, 2006

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

GIVE YOURSELF

Friday, July 7, 2006

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see G,od.
Matt!rew 5:8

Loot~

•

Bottom

Sunday School • ~ 30 a m

Chester Churc:h of rhe Nazart'IK'
Pa'i\or Re'' ~erben Grote. Sund.1y SL hool
- 9.30 a rn , Worship - II &lt;1 m . 6 p m .
Wednesda~ Ser\ 1ces - 1 p m
Rutland Chun::h ollhf Nazarent
Sunday School - 9 30 ~ . m , Worship JUJU am . t. 30 p.m., Wedf'lesday
St:rv1c.:s - 1 p m Rt\' Mikt: Clllrk

Retdstl\ll'
~ m., Suqtloy School JO 10 a m , F~r~t Su nday of Month - 7:00
pIll 'il.'rv1ce

Wnr~h 1 p ~

9 30

n1ppers Phdns St. Poul
Pastor . Jane Beatlle. Sunday School - 9
a.m . Worship 10 a.m.. Tuesday Scrvtces
- 7.30pm
Cf nlnl Clusler
A~bury { S)r.llu~e), PaMur. Bob Robmsun,
Sumla y So;;hool · 9AS am ., Worship • II
~ m , Wedllt'sday Sef\'Jces - 7:30 p m

· Other Churches
i\ New Bqlnning
(Full Gospel Chun:h) Hamsonvtl\e
P:tsiors Bob and Kay Mar~hall.
Sund&lt;~y Sef\'ice, 2 p m
Am11zing G11K't Community Church
Pastor Wayne Dunlap, State Rt. 68 1,
Tuppers Plams, Sun. Wor:s h1p 10 am &amp;
6.30 pm.. Wed B1b le Study 7 OU p.m

EntupriR
rH~Ior Arl!tnd Km~. Su nday School 10 30 am .. Worship - 9·?,(1 u m 81ble
Study Wed. 7.30
Flalwood~

Pastor Ketth Rader Su nday

S~houl

Oasis Christian Felll)wshlp
(Non-denominational fellov.shtp)
Medmg m the old Amencan Leg1c n Hall
South 1-ounh Avenue, /l.hddlcp.m
Pastor Chm Stewan 10·00 am Sllnduy
Other ml!eungs m hom~s

- 10

u m, Worshtp I I a.m
t'uresl Run
l'it~ tt'r Bllh Robm~on. Sumla; Sdl\ll•l . 10
.1m .. Wo r~h1p 9 am

Community of Chrlsl
Penland R.~~:tne Rd . P-Jstur: Jim Proffitt ,
Sumla) S.. hnol 9 10 am .. Wonhip 10 .~0 am , Wt:dnesda)' S('n IC('' - 7.00
p m.
lkthel Worship Ce ntrr
N 7 R~ S R 7. Ree dsv 11lc. OH :+H7~ 1 1 ~
nnle north of Easlem Schools on SR 7. A
ful l Gu~pel Church. Pastor Rob Barber.
A~~"'-l,ltl' P.tstor Karyn O:n 1s. You th
Pnswr Snlte Fran cis, Su nday ~C r\' l ces
10 00 l!ln wor&gt;hlp tl 00 pm Fam1ly L1fe
(l,t~~e~ Wed Hom e Ct:l l Grou ps 7.00
p 111 Outer l1mLts Cell Grou p at the
~- hun· h fi.JO pm tog JO p111

Heath (\liddl eporl)
i'&lt;htor ~nan Dunham. SunJJ\ Sdw,,l
lJ 'Oa m. W(lrsh1p - l llNl a m
\tinN-svillr
Pa&lt;;tm Rnh Rt~hm~on . SunJa) Sl·hnnl ~ ')
am Wtlr~htp - ltlnm
J-..arl Chapel
Sunday School 'I am .. vi'Nship. 10 ~ m
Pomero~·

Bnan D1mham . Worshtp •
Sunday Sdt~.~tll · IU ~5 u m

Pa~ l ur

~ - 11 1

l)

30

K01:k Springs
P.1stor Keuh Kader Sunda) Scht"IQl - ~- I~
.1 m , Worsh1p - 10 a.m . y,,uth
Fello~~--~hip. Sunda) - b p m

Rutland
P.htor R1d Bourne. Su nduy S~hoo l 9 \() ~ m Wnr\h!p · 10 10 am . ThursdliY
Servtce~ - 7 p m
S11lem Cl' nter
Pasto r. W1lh am K M:~rsh all. Sunday
School · 10 !5 ,, 111. Wors htp - 9 15 ~ . m ,
Btble Study· Monday hlO pm
Snowlllle
Su nd&lt;~y S~huul - 10 ~ .m . , Wurship- 9 a.m
Belh11ny
Pastor John G1lmort:. Sund~y School- 10
a m , Wonhtp - 9 am . Wtdne&gt;day
Serv1ces- 10 am

Ash Stre11t Churrh
.'98 A\h St . M1 dd le pon- P~ )tur JeiT Smi th
Su u Ja~ Sehoul - 9 30 a m Mm nmg
W\•r)lnp - IO .JO am &amp; 7 00 pm .
Wcdne,Uay Se rv1ce - 1 00 p nl . Youth
So:r\'ICl'- 1 (Jt) p m
Agape Lifl' Center
"Fuii·Gospel Church ' Pastors John &amp;
Patty Wade 60~ Second Ave Mason. 773~011, Se-r''''-'c t1me · Sllndfly 10 ·JO am
Wednc~da} 1 pm
Abundant Grace R.F.I.
S. Tiurd St.. Middleport. Pastor Teresa
Da~is, Su nda)
se rvtce, 10 a.m ..
Wednesday service. 7 p m.

9~3

Faith Full Gospel Churth
Long Bonom, Pastor. Steve Reed, Sunday
Sc hool · 9 30 a m. Wors hip · 9 30 ,am
and I p m . Wednesday - 1 p m . fnday fe llowship serv1(,'e I p m

Carmfi-Suuon
Carmel &amp;. Bashan Rds Raci ne, OhiO,
Pastor: Joh n Gtlmore . Sunday School 9:30 a.m , Worship - 10 :4~ a.m. , Bible
Study Wed 7 00 p m

Harrisonville Community Churth
Pastor: Theron Durham . Sunday - 9 30
a.m and 7 p m , Wedne~day- 7 p m.

MomlngSiar
Pastor · Jo hn Gtl ~ore . Sunday Schoo l · II
am , Worship · lOam

Middleport Communlly Church
Pearl St . Middleport , Pastor· Sam
4.ndersort Sund ay Sc hool 110 am ,
E\emng -7·30 p m , Wednesday Sef\-tce7 30 pm
~75

East Letart
Pastor. Bill Ma~hall Sunday Sc hool
9a m , Worship . 10 am .. 1st Sunda}
eve ry month evemng se rvice 7.00 p.m
Wednesday 7 p.m

Faith \'alit)' Tabernacle Church
Run Road. Pastor· Rev. Emmen
Raw~on. Sunday Eve ning ? p.m ..
Thursday Sernce . 1 p m
B~iley

Raclnr
Pao tor Kerry Wood Sunda) S.:hlllll · 19
a.m., Worsh1p - II a.m.

SyracUSf Mission
14 11 Bndg&lt;! man St .. Syracu~e. Su nday
School · 10 am bentng - 6 p m.
Wedn e~day Sen ice- 7 p m.

Coo\"ille United Methodist i'ttmh
Pastor Jlden Kl me. Cooh1lk Chu rch
Mam &amp; Ftfth St Sun School - 10 :1111
Wor ~h •p - 'Jam . Tiles Ser\'ICI''-- 7 p m

lla:zcl Community Churrh
1 ~4 P ~stur Ed"-!;' I Hart Sund.1~
s,·hool . rJ JO n m. WN~h1p- lrl 10 .1 m .
Off lh
7

&lt;o r m

Bethel Church
To\\-nshtp Rd . 468C. Sunday S\·houl ')
.a.m. Worshtp
10 am. Wedru!'MI&lt;I}
Ser.•t..:es - 10 a.m.

D) t'!i ' 'ille Communil) Chun.:h
Sund:w School q .\0 am . Wonhtp
1030am .. I p.m

Hockln"purt Chun:h'
Grand Street. Sunduy s~·hool • 9 JO .un .
Wursh 1p - IO.JO u m., Pa.,lor Pl1 1lhp B~ll

Mur..e Chwpel Ch!lrch
Sundu1 \~hoo l - 10 a 111 . W!11 ~h1 p - I I
a m . Wrdm:sday Sen•tce - 7 p m

Torch Chu!'(:h
Co RU 63 Su ndaY Schonl · 9 '0 a 111
Worship - 10 30 am
•

Faith Gospel Church
Long Uottom. Sunday Sehoul · 4 ~0 n m .
Wur~h1p - 10 .:~ ll 111 • 7 lO p m ,
Wcdu Nia~ 7 ~0 p m
Mt. Olhe Community Churt'h
Pn~lor Lwwre nle Rush Sundn) Schn,,l 11· 10 n m Ev~nmg - 6 .\0 p m. Wcdneday
Ser.1~e 7pm

Nazarene
MirldleJHlrl Church ortht NHl.arenc
Pas lor Alkn M1d.:11p Sundll\' S~hm1 l ·
9·30 om Wor..h1p 10 30 u m 6 J\1 p.rn
W~dncsda) Se r\·ke s
1 p.m . Pa~tor .
Alkn MidCiip

f'ull GosPfl LiJ,lhthous~
Hiland R11:1d Pumeru}. P~~\ur. Ruy
Hunter. Su nJJ , S~huol · 10 ~ m, E1en1nt!
7. JO p m Tu~~Jay &amp; Thur~ - 7 )(] p.m

.nO-t~

Reedsvillt&gt; Fellu~·s bip
Church of the Nalaft"nc, P. 1~tm . Sund:~1
Schoo l · 9.30 a.m . Wl1r~h1p - lOA~~ 111 ,
7 p m, Wcdnt~day Ser. 1~c-~ . 1 p m
Syracuse Church of Ihe Nazarene
P&lt;!S IOr M1ke Adkms. Sunda~ Sthool - •J 10
a m . Wor~ht p - 10 JU .1 m . fl p n_1
Wednesda;• Ser\' lee~ · 7 p·m

•

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

PHARMACY
We Fill' Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy
"So l strive always to keep
my conscience clear before
God and man.''

Acts 24:16

E~emng

ServKe 6

tiosl)('l Misliion

Knob Cln Cu Rd Jl Pll51or· Re"'

Roger Wtllford . Sunda) School - 9 · 30
mm \\or;h1p- 7 p m

Whit e's Chapel Wtsleyan
Coohtll~

Road. Pastor· Rev. Ph illip

Ridenour Sunday Schoo l 9 30 a m .
Worshtp 10:~ a.m , Wed nt ~y Service
-7 p.m.

hirvirw Bible Churth
l1t1u1 W\'a Ht I . Pastor. Qnan May,
Sunday School - 9 30 am Worsht p - 7·00

P. m . Wednesday B1ble Study - 1 00 p m
Faith Fdlow1hlp Crnsadl' ror ChriJt
Pastor: Rev. Frnnkl1n Did:ens. Scrv1ct
Frilby. J p.m

t al,vary Biblr Church
1'\lllll.'ro) Pike .·Co . Rd , Pastor: Rev.

Blad.. wl'•od . Sunday S.:houl · 9.30 am ..
Worshtp HI 30 a .m . 7.30 p .m,
Wcdnc~duy

Service . 7 1() p m

Sth ers\' ille f ommunily o\postollc
Chul'('h
P.~ S !C\r Wa~lll.' fl. Jev.e\l Sumla~ wors hip
o.m p m . Wt&gt;dne:.Oa~ - 6 fKl p m B1hle
Swtl~
Rejoidn~; Life Chu,rch
500 N 2nd A1·~ !l.hddlepun Pa~tor :
M 1 ~e Forenll!n. Pa~t••r Eml!ntU ~ Lawrence
Foreman Worship· 10 00 am
Wednesday Sel'\ Kes · 7 p m

Clifton Tabtrmtdr Chun:h
Clifton. W Va. Sund&lt;~y School - IU am ,
WoNh1p - 7 p m , Wedn e~dny Scr\lee . 7
p.nl
Nl'w Llfr Vil'tory Center
171~ George&lt;; Creek Road .. GtdhJXllis OH
Pa~tor. Bill Slaten. Sunda} Services- 1&amp;'
a.m &amp; 1 p.m Wedne~daJ 7 p.m &amp; _
Youth 7 p.m.

"

Full Gospel Church
or·the lifing sa~iur
Rt .'U8. An!H.~Uit}. Pa~tur . Jesse Morn s,
Sef\'l~ c s . SJturdav ~ . O&lt;l p.m

Salem Community Churtb
of Wcs! Columbia W Va om Lt('vmg
Road. Pastor Charles Koush (304) 67522~8. Sund a}' Schoo l 9 30 am. Sunday
eve ning scr\ tre 7 00 pm, Bihl } Study
Wednt:sd11y semt•e HXl pm
Ba~·k

Hobson Christian Fellowship Church
Pastor· HerS\'hel White . Sunday School10 am. Sunda~ Church serv1ce- 6:30pm
Wednesda y 7 pm
Keslonllon Chrh;tlan t'eUow1hip
9305 Hooper Ro ad, A.thens , Pastor
Lon 01e Coats. Sunda y Worship 10·00 am ,

Wednesday 1 pm

LanpviUt Chrlethm Church
Full Gospel, Pastor. Robert Musser.
Sunda y School \1 30 am, , Worship \0.30
am- 7 00 pm, Wed Serv1ce 1.00 pm

Pentecostal
Ptntl'costal Assembly
Si Rr !2·1-. Racme. Tornado Rd Sunday
School - 10 a m • Eve mng - I p m ,
Wedne~ dny Strv1ces - i p.m

Presbyterian
Harriso nville Pr-Mbytenau Church
Pastor Roben Crow, Wors hip- 9 am

•

\l1ddleport Prtsbytnian
Pol&gt;lur· J,une~ Snyder. Sunday Schon\ 10
a m . wor~ h•p scn·1ce 11 am

Seventh-Day Adventist
Scfcnth·Day Ad\entlst
Mult-.~rr~ Ht s Rd . P0meroy. Paswr
Bennet! Lud1es h. S:nurday Sen tees
Suhb~1h S~ h ool- 2 p m , Worship · 3 p m

United Brethren
MI . Hermon United Brethren
1n Chrlsl ( 'hurch
Te xa" Cnmmumty J(&gt;-111 Wtckh am Rd .
Pa~tor Pet ~ r Man 1ndale. Sunday School ·
l} 10 u m . Worshr p - \0 \0 am , 7·00
p m . WeJne~d.Ly Serv1ces - 7 (H) p m
You1h group·mecttn g ~ nd &amp; ~rh Sll nda~§
7 pm.
)£d('n l 1nhed Brethren In Christ ·
St:ttt! RL)Ulc 124. between Reed~' Llle &amp;
HO!.·kmgport. Sunduy School - JO a.m,
Sundn~ 'Wors hip 11 00 :1m. Wednesday
Sen•1ce' - 7.00 p m , Pa ~wr- M Adam
Will

r::xfttend enawA

Carlelonlnterdenominalionall'hureh

Tile care you deien-e , close 10 home ROOd II'Orks and glorif\· \'Our

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

m.

South Btthel Community Church
S1her Rtd ~;e - Pa~tor Linda Dame"'ood,
Sunday S'hool - 9 am , Worship Servn:e
10 am . ~ nd ttml4th Sunda)'

ROCKSPRINGS
Let you' light so shine before
REHABILITATION CENTER men. that they may see your

740·992·6606

Fr~om

B~ld

111 JU 11m.

~

Father ittheal'ell."
Matthew 5: 16

Met g:-.

Couniy's Oldest Florist

. John 3:16

our family fll{p
protut yciur Jamilr('
S uppres~io n • E:mngu1'ohers

• Sp nnkh:r~

• Security

l72 N.2ndAve M1ddlepon .OH
· FaX.:

W

alA! ut Ulld yOUt lhougflh wltfltpeelll eert•

740-992-2644

God so loved the world
he gave his only
lbexol'ten smr. ..

6_

EastMa1n
Pomeroy, Oh

740-992-6298

MY erace is sufficient
for thee: for mY
strenith is made
Perfect in weakness.
1'1 Cor. 12:9

Office Service &amp;Supply
137·C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992~376

�•

LOCAL • STATE

The Daily Sentinel

Beth Sareent/photo

Yesterday drivers found a "bargain" at the Pomeroy Exxon where regular UQleaded was $2.98 a gallon, nearly 10 cents
cheaper than a nearby competitor. Fear that gas prices are once again ready to jum~ kept the lines forming and the
pumps turning.

Taft signs bill to increase usage of com-based fuel
other law enforcement vehicles are exempt from that
requirement , said Ben
Pi scitelli, spokesman for the
Ohio
Department
of
Administrative Services.
Last year, the agency
bought
I,779 vehicle~,
including 521 that could convert to ethanol. The state has ·.
2,309 flex-fuel vehicles in its
fleet of II ,662, Piscitelli said..
The law also requires
increasing of the-state fleet's
use of E85 from 30,000 gallons to 60,000 gallons by
Jan. I, provided the fuel is
"reasonably available at a
reasonable price."
Only one plant in Ohio produces ethanol, and that is
made
from unsold beer, soda
.

ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

BLACKLICK The
state will increase its use of
corn-based ethanol in its
vehicles and buy fleets that
can be converted from gasoline power to ethanol under
a bill Gov. Bob Taft signed .
·
Thursday.
The bill, sponsored by
Republican Rep. Steve
Reinhard
of Bucyrus,
requires the state to purchase
only "flex-fuel" vehicles that
can use either gasoline or
E85, a mixture of 15 percent
gasoline and 85 percent
ethanol, beginning next year.
Heavy equipment, State
Highway Patrol cruisers and

'

Friday, July 7,

and other liquids. The Ohio
Environmental Protection
Agency has issued permits to
tour com-to-ethanol sites that
are planned in Hicksville,
Lima, Cadiz and Coshocton
and has applications from
two other sites, EPA sp6keswoman Linda Fee Oros said.
Taft hopes to increase the
number of pumps that dispense ethanol from six to 18
statewide by next February.
"This is the beginning.
We've got a long way to go,"
Taft said after signing the
bill at a Kroger supermarket
in suburban. Columbus that
expects to begin selling
ethanol soon. "We expect
that Ohio will be producing
a large amount of ethanol

within two or three years."
One problem is demand,
which in Ohio far exceeds
the supply. But Ohio's com
production is bountiful
enough to keep up with the
supply required of the new
plants,
said
Dwayne
Siekman, executive director
of the Ohio Com Growers
Association. Ohio produces
about 500 niillion bushels
of .corn each year. ·
"Right now the Ohio com
crop, we ship out about 50
percent of that to the hog and
poultry industries. We' re
going to start seeing
changes," Siekman said. "We
have the corn available to
handle the 33 plants in construction across the country."

COLUMBUS (A P) level of service. But the cost
Few assisted-living centers of room and board still must
in Ohio itre participating so be paid for by the resident.
far in a new program in The state has capped that
which the state pays for the cost at $553 per month.
The cap is makin~ some
care of senior citizens who
don 't want to live in nursi ng residential care centers shy
homes but need too much awa y from participating,
help to stay in their homes. said Jean Thompson, execu-.
Ohio began pfferirig tive director of the Ohio
Medicaid coverage July I at Assisted Living Association.
assisted-living centers for • "The problem is $553 a
up to I ,800 people , the 43rd month is not adequate paystate to pay lor some ser- ment for room and board in
vices at the facilities that some parts of the state, parcan help residents with ticularly in urban areas,"
bathing, dressing and eat- Thompson said .
ing. State lawmakers have
There is also some relucset aside $18 million for the lance because current priprogram.
vate-pay re sidents will not
As of Thursday, 4 7 qualify for the state proOhioans had applied for gram should they run out of
assisted-living coverage and money, she said.
only nine facilities had
Ohio's program is availreceived state approval to able only 10 Medicaid recipaceept the Medieai&lt;j recipi- ients already living in nursents.
ing homes or receiving inMany facilities still are. · home care .
trying to make sure they
Anna Katona, 90, of
meet state requirements , Columbus, has been getting
through
such · as ensuring that in-home ,. car~
Medicaid residents are · Medicaid's PASSPORT pro~
offered private rooms and gram, but her family wants
private baths, said Roland her to move into an assistedHornbostel , deputy director living apartment. Katona's
of the Ohio Department of eyesight has deteriorated.
Aging. The state expects
"We want her to still
. more providers and appli- maintain some indepencants to come forward by dence," said Tina Lovejoy,
the end of the year, he said. Katona's
granddaughter.
About 18,000 Ohioans are "My experience with · anyin 400 assisted-living cen- one who has been in a nursters statewide, according to ing facility is they don'tlast
Ohio long. With assisted living,
the ·' nonprofit
of
Area she is in her own apartment
Association
Agencies on Aging. The with her own bathroom.
average age of a resident is Nursing homes feel like hos83, and costs range from pitals. We don' t want that."
$2,000 to $4,000 per month
Nursing home care costs
- most of .it paid for by Medicaid about $58,000 per
families or in some cases by resident each year, cominsurance policies.
pared with $22,000 for
Ohio's new. assisted-living assisted living, according to
program will pick up .the cost the Ohio Department of Job
of a resident's cane- $50 to and Family Services, which
$70 a day, depending on the distributes Medicaid dollars.

'· ,.

Forecast lor Friday, July 7

~

Mansfield •
n • 1s2•

DayiOn•

80' 154'

~

v

Cltyilleglon
High I Low temps

Youngstown •
79o I 50o

{·
I

V

*Columbus
80' ISS'

PA.

'

~

V

Cincinnati

....

• 83' 155"

..,..,_ · Portsmouth •

v'

6
·

Partly
Ooo&lt;ly

~

81.15-4'

.,

'

ClOudy

~ ~~~- ~

Flunies

~ .S'tloW$rs
'"' ~ ~ ~
~
Aa!n _ • • *

W.VA.
~
"···
Snow

!ce

~
•• ,. • ~

Weather Underground • AP

,

Friday.•• Patchy fog in the
morning. Mostly sunny.
Highs in the lower 80s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Friday
night .••Ciear.
Lows in the 'upper 50s.
Northeast winds around 5
mph.
Saturday.•. Mostly sunny.
Highs in the mid 80s. West
winds around 5 mph.

Saturday night . and
Sunday,.Mostly
clear. .
Lows in the upper 50s.
Highs in the mid 80s.
Sunday
night. •• Partly
cloudy. Lows in the mid 60s. .
Monday and Monday
night ... Partly cloudy with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the mid
80s. Lows in the upper 60s.
Chance of rain 30 percent.

Local Stocks
ACI-42.60
AEP-34.37
Akzo- 53.15
Ashland Inc. - 66.18
BLI-16.81
Bob Evans - 29.04
BorgWamer - 64,51
CENX- 37.35
Champion - 8.35
Cllermlng Shops - U.04
City Holding - 36.29
Col- 55.83
OG -14.47
DuPont - 41.05
Federal Mogul - .38
USB -31.12
Gannett - 56.57
General Electric -33.5
GKNLY- 4.90
Harley Davidson - 54.48
JPM - 42.46

Kroger - 21.~
Ud. - 25.34
NSC -52.21
Oak Hill Financial - 25.46
OVB-25.15
BBT-41,29
Peoples - 29.64
Pepsico - 60.33
Premier - 14.44
Rockwell- 73.90
Rocky Boots - 21,40
Sears -154.66
Wal-Mart'- 46.70
Wendy's - 59.28
Worthington' - 21.41
Dally stock reports lire the
4 p.m. closing quotes of
the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
Financial Advisors of
Hilliard ·Lyons In Gallipolis.

The Daily Sentinel

Tour de France, Page 82

Local Weather
Today's Forecast

Inside

2006

Ohio looking for
more assisted-living
homes for seniors

OLINE G

BY JOHN McCARTHY

Page AS

12 Buckeyes headed to HOF, Page 82
Yankees clobber Cleveland, Page B4
Reds acquire LHP Guardado, Page 84

Friday, July 7, 2006
l.ocAL SCHEDULE
POMEROY - A schedule oi upoommg cullege
and high 5ehool ~arsity sponlng events involving
teams lrom Gall1a, Meig5 and Moson counties /

Redwomen volleyball adds SSU transfer Feeney

se n
ssu th e setti ng duties for the think she is a great lillie
over Ri o Redw omen in 2006, which seller, I think she makes
,
Ja,t
ycm will se nior-to- be Jessica' great deci sions and that' s
RIO
GRANDE
The
and
played
Salurday'a gamaa
Veach into another spot, going to be a key."
American legion Baseball
University of Rio Grande
against her most likely as an· outside
"Going to the right pe r. Pickerington 283 at Feeney Bennett
women's volleyball team
· 1 e r , hitter.
SIS
(DH), I p.m.
son at the right tiille,''
will have a va stly different
Jessica. in
The three sisters all hail Fi eld s added. "S he \ a
.s..uMiy's gamea
look in 2006 than it had in
the
two from Willi amsport and hu stler and, with her sisAmerican Legion Baseball
2005. Head Coach Pat sy
match es played for Westfa ll High ters, she's brin gi ng that
Wave rly 142 at Feeney Bennef1 (DH), 1
STAFF REPORT
p.m
Fields has put the fini shthe school s School, who has estab- desire 10 win, they know
SPORTS@MYDAJ LYSE NTI NEL.COM
Meigs Ju n1~rs at Athens (DH) , 1 p.m.
ing touches on an impresplayed last li shed itse lf as one of the how to win , they just know
sive recruiting class. The
Rodgers
year. Each premiere volleyball pro- how to get the job done for
Thursday July 13
MCARTHUR - After an
American Legion Baseball
fi
nal
piece
was
the
addiwon
one
match
with
overall
1-3 finish at the
grams in · the Buckeye you ."
Feeney Bennett at Athens Junior: 6 p.m.
tion of Randi. Rodgers, a Shawnee
winning
at State.
4th
of July Legion
Athens
Pickerington at Gallipolis, 6 p.m..
It's the first time in Rio
ll
Tournament
this
Baseba
, tran sfer from Shawnee Portsmouth in three . clo se
Field s beJieve s that volleyball history that
past
weekend,
Feeney
State.
.
. games and Rio coming Randi 's prese nce is just three sisters will suit up at
.· What . make s thts addr: · back to win in five games what her team has been th.e same time, but it' s not Bennett Post 128 got back to
its winning
!ton untque rs the Randt at the Newt Oliver Arena . mi ss ing. " We like Randi. the first time that Fields
w a y s
wiH JOtn her sis ters,
Randi. competed in 16 she is so meone who is has gone through thi s parThursday
Jess tea, a so phomore-to-be games for the Lady Bears, going to come in and help ti cular situation. " No. it's
with a 16- ~
TUPPERS PLAINS -- and Kari: one of the compiling, 51 as sists (3.2 us step to the level that we never happened, well , yes.
victory ovet
On July ID , Eastern foot - tncomrng treshmen.
apg.), four serve aces and have not beeri able to step
McArthur
ball players need to have a·
Please see Rio, Bl
Randr had tnttntlly cho- 13 digs . She will handl e up to," Fi eld s said. " I
i&gt;ost 303 in
parent attend a meeting at
8th District
·
6:30 p.m.
action.
on the footFeeney
b a I I
Benne!! ;
bleacher s.
VanMeter
w h i c. h .·
At
this
scored
a
BY CHARLES ODUM
meeting,
total of 20 runs in four games
ASSOC IATED PRE SS
plan s for
over the holiday, exploded
.
the upcorl!:
for nine earned runs and 15
ATLANTA - Atlanta's
mg season will be dishits en route to improving to
cu ssed and required 'forms relievers had their biggest
11 - 14 overall this season. The
that need to be completed blowup of the season
triumph also moved Post 128 .
will be handed out.
Thursday
night
but
to a 6-3 league mark.
:
This meeting will follow Cincinnati 's displaced closFeeney Bennett establishe&lt;t
the regular boo ster dub er wound up taking the· loss
an early 10-3 lead after the
in a matchup of struggling
meeting at 6 p.m.
top of the fourth, but
McArthur (6-1 3, 2-7) battled
Upcoming
important bull pens.
Jetf
Francoeur's
two-out
back
to within three runs after
Eastern football date s:
single
in
the
lOth
inning
six
full
frames.
·;
• Today through July 9
drove
in
Chipper
Jones
with
Leading ll -8 at that pointi
• July 10, II and 13, liftthe
winning
run
as
the
Post
. 128 exploded tor five
' ing and conditioning at 9
runs rn the top of the ninth IQ
Braves recovered from a
a.m.
secure the road victory.
ninth-inning collapse to
• July 17 , 18, 20, 24,25 beat the Reds 8-7.
Eric VanMeter led the wa)i ·
and 27, Eastern High·
for
Ppst 128 with live RBis
Francoeur's hit came off
School football camp at 6 Todd Coffey (3-4 ), whose
and four singles, while Matt
p.m. All players need to stint as Reds closer apparMooney, Jeremy Blackston:·
Luke Haislop, Terry Durst
attend. This will be a time ently ended with the Reds'
and Mike Davis all had two
of teaching and learning trade with Seallle for veterhits in the win. Haislop also
the new offense, defense an closer Eddie Guardado
had a two-run homer tn the
and special teams .
on Thursday. Guardado is
third that led to four scores in
• July , 18 following ex~cted to join the team
the inning. ·
·
carrip, Zides will be taking Fnday.
Cory Shaffer had the other
Coffey followed David
football shoe orders. See
Feeney
Bennett safety with a .
Coach Walla&lt;;e about Weathers in the closer's
.llouble.
.
role. The Reds relievers
available shoe packages.
Zach
Haislop
Starter
• July 20 following have a 5.28 ERA, 10 losses
worked 3. I innings, allowing
camp, helmets and shoul- and 13 blown saves.
seven eamed runs and seven
"Anytime you struggle,
der pads will be fitted.
hits· in picking up the win.
Haislop also walked tour and
• August 3, the first day it's fru strating," Coffey
·Said. "It 's even more so
su·uck out two.
of practice .
when our hitters got us back
Butch Mart1hout came in
Questions can be direct - in the game and I go out and
during
the fourth and went
ed 10 Vic Wallace, Eastern give it right back to them."
the
duration,
allowirJg just
head football coach, at
Despite rallying with five
one run and five hits over 5.2
740-596-0076.
runs in the ninth, the Reds
innings. Marnhout also struck
lost their sixth straight.
out !line ami walked five:
Post 303 starter Andrew
Jones hit a one-out douWasch
allowed I0 nms and ·
ble,
his
third
hit
of
the
SPORTS BRIEFS
II
hits
in
his tour innings of
game, in the IOth. Coffey
work.
Wasch
also walked
struck out Andruw Jones·
Rio basketball to before
three and fanned two in takintentionally walking
ing
the loss.
host golf scramble Brian McCann to face
Tyrus
Covan threw live
Francoeur, who laced a sininnings
of
relief for the hosts,
RIO GRANDE - Both gle Lo left. Jones just beat
surrendering
six runs, four
University of Rio Grande Adam Dunn's throw to the
hits
and
two
walks
over that
men 's and women's basket- plate , giving the Braves
span. Coyan also eight and .
ball pro- their fifth win in seven
allowed just one earned run.
_
grams are games.
Coyan. Wasch and Chris
"I remember from last
s ponsor Corner all had three hits to
ing a Golf year, he has a great sinker,"
pace McArthur. which had 12
Scramble Francoeur said of Coffey. "I
hits in the setback.
to be held was able to hang in there
Feeney Bennett returns to
AP photo action today when it travels
Augu s t and ge t it on the upswing ....
12 at the Ifigured it was just a matter Atlant&lt;J Braves' Jeff Francoeur and Adam LaRoche, rear, celebrate after Francoeur drove in to Logan for· another 8th
the winning run with a base hit in the bottom of the 10th inning of a baseball game against District contest. First pitch is
"'
Cliffside
Please
see
Reds.
Bl
the
Cincinnati Reds on Thur'sday in Atlanta . Atlanta won 8-7.
Golf Club in Gallipolis. The
slated for 6 p.m.
shotgun start is at 8:30a.m.
The evein is a four-r,erson
scramble. Flight ','A' will
consist of a total team handicap of 75 or below· while
flight "B" will consist of a
total team handicap of more
than 75. •
BY RtcK GANO
role model and my best
Tickets for the annual 300
ASSOCIATED PRESS
·friend," Jamie Walker Said,
club raffle will also be
his voice breaking. ''I' II love
available for purchase.
EVANSTON,
Ill.
you and miss.you."•
For reservations or more
Hundred of mourners,
information co ntact Rio Jamie Walker grew up as the
Men 's so n of a coach whose pas- including fellow coaches,
Grande
Head
Basketball Coach Ken sion tor football was second current and former players,
French at (740) 245-7294.
only to the love he showed family and frie11ds came to a
his family.
Presbyterian church not far
" He always supported me from the campus 10 honor
and
my sister," Jamie Walker, who grew up in
ComAcrUs
Walker said ,Thursday dur- Troy, Ohio , and coached
OVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.·t a.m.) ing an emotional 90-rninute Miami of Ohio before goi ng
memorial service for hi s to Northwestern.
1-740-446-2342 ext. 33
,dad, Northwestern · football' Wearing matching dark
or 992-5287 (Meig~ Co.)
coach Randy Walker, who athletic shirts with the
died last week of an appar- Northwestern emblem, the ·
Fax- 1·740-446·3008
ent
heart attack at age 52.
football team filed in shortly
E-mail - spor1s@ mydailysentlnel.com
Whether it meant drawing before the family and took
the
curtains tight so his kids up nearly the entire right
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor could
splash each other in side of the lower sanctuary.
(740) 446-2342. ext. 33
the bathtub, telling bedtime
One of Walker's former
bsherman @mydai lytri bll ne .com
stories he made up him self players, running back Jason
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer or monitoring ·his kids' par- ' Wr'ight, now with the
(740) 446-2342 ..... 23
ticipalion in baseball and Cleveland Browns .. sang a
bwalters@,mydaitytribune.com
figure
skating.
Randy solo, " It Is Well."
AP photo
Larrf'Crum, Sports Writer
Walker took fatherhood seriAmid flowers spread on Former University of Wisconsin football coach Barry Alvarez leaves First Presbyterian Churct1
(740) 446·2342, ext 33
in Evanston. Ill., after attending memorial services for Northwestern football coach Randy
au~~
I
lk
lc rum @ mydallyregiste r.com
" You were a great father,
Pease see Wa er, Bl
Walker on Thursday. Walker, 52, died suddenly last week of, an apparent heart attack.
:
. J'
Today'• game

American Legion Baseball
Feeney Bennett at Logan. 6 p.m.

Bennett

BY MARK WILLIAMS
SPECIAL TO THE SENTIN EL

doubles up
McArthur·

Eastern football
parents meeting

Re~s fall

to Atlanta, drop sixth straight

Walker remembered
as mentor, friend

Beginning in July,
Holzer Clinic Meigs
New Urgent Care Ho:ur.s

7 Days/Week
11am-9pm Daily

740.992.0060

HOLZER
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"'

�..

•

Friday, July 7, 2oo6

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 7, 2006

'

.

www.mydailysentinel .com

The Dai Iy Sentnel • Page B3

Without Lance, Tour de France faces new pressures
.

'

BY JOHN lEICESTER
ASSOCIATED PRESS

CAEN, France - After so many
years of riding in Lance
Armstrong's wake, how will his
heir - whoever that may be cope with the pressure of wearing
the race leader's yellow jersey as
1he tinish in Pari s nears1
It's a question some favorite's
-already are asking themselves.
"I've imagined it enough. I think
it'll be normal. I' ll be all right."
American Floyd Landis said after
safely completing Thursday 's
stage five, which· was won by
three-time former world champion
Oscar Freire in a sprint tinish. ·
Race leader Tom Boonen, who
placed second, is learning all about
the added weight that comes with
trying to hang onto the prized jer- .
sey that seven-time champion
Armstrong made his own from
1999-2005.
"It's been causing a lot of
strain," said the world champion,
whose lead over Australian
Michael Rogers &amp;rew Thursday to
13 seconds. Fretre vaulted from
20th to third overall, bumping
AP photo
George Hincapie of the United Oscar Freire of Spain, left, reacts as he crosses the finish line ahead of overall leader Tom Boonen of Belgium,
States down to fourth. They are center. and lnaki lsasi of Spain, right, to win the 5th stage of the 93rd Tour de France cycling race between
both 17 seoonds behind Boonen.
Beauvais and Caen, northwestern France, on Thursday.
'
Although Boonen has won
· smaller stage races and. the treach- . for very hard because I'm noi the leads. He soaked up, even thrived
Instead, the racing so far has had
erous Paris-Roubaix classic, he is kind .of rider to wear yellow in the on, the pressure of being in yellow a mellower, less regulated, more
still seen- and sees himself - as. Tour," Boon en added. "I'm very, and the center of attraction. He sur- fluid feel. Boonen said the searing
a sprint contender, not as a favorite very proud of it."
rounded himself with strong team- temperatures of the first few days
for tlle overall Tour title that will
Landis is the kind of rider that mates such as_ Landis who con- ~. which eased Thursday with a
be decided in long time trials and could be wearing yellow when the trolled the race, allowing rivals little rain and overcast skies mountain dimbs in the Pyrenees Tour heads out of the Alps back few if any openings to make up also affected the pace ..
How teams and top riders will
and Alps in weeks two and three. toward the finish in Paris on July lost time.
"It's mote heavy for me because 23. The Pennsylvanian is a solid
But this year, in a field depleted cope with the pressure if they are
I'm not supposed to wear it," th~ time-trialer and mountain climber by Armstrong's retirement and a in position to win going into and
Belgian said of the yellow shirt and learned from the best. He and doping scandal that forced out the coming out of the Alps is one of
that he first took Tuesday and will Armstrong were teammates before favorites to succeed him, no single the many questions hanging over a
wear for a third straight day on Landis switched to the Swiss outfit team yet has displayed tbe domi- Tour filled with uncertainties and
Friday's sta~e six, which marks the Phonak.
nance that was the hallmark of his ripe for surprises.
end of the f1rst week.
Armstrong was a master in U.S. Postal and Discovery ChanneL "Coming out of the . Alps?"
"It's something I have to work building and holding onto Tour squads.
IDltsed ·Landis, who placed 34th

Trachsel, New York shackle Pirates, 7-5
NEW YORK (AP) Steve Trachsel dtdn't want to
put runners. on base. He just
wanted to p1tch from the
stret~h.
.
Cltff Floyd and Dav1d
Wnght each drove. m two runs
to back Trachsel t.n the New
York ~ets' 7-5 v1ctory over
the Ptttsb?rgh P1rates on
Thursday nrght.
Trachs.el (8-4) gave up
seven h1ts and three runs,
walked four. and struck out
tour m 6 1-3 mmngs.
.
"I felt · ~ lot better in the
stretch: I think some of your
most 1mportant pitches are
made from the stretch and I do
about h!llf my bullpen m the
stretch," Trachsel said. "I
need to he more consistent
from ~e wind up bu\ I'm still
throwrng well. There sa small
adJustment I need to make.
l'm close, a little bit better

each time. All the pitches I
threw (118), I still felt good
and that says a lot for this time
of year. ·
.
"I've always heen l think
shru;per, from the ~!retch. I
wouldn t say they re better
(pttches) but maybe more
cnsJ? and sharp."
B11ly Wagner allowed an
unearned run the ninth forhis
17th save m 21 upportumt1es.
"lt was good enough to get
it' done tonight," he said. "I
was able to spot my fastball...
overall it was all right."
Floyd doubled in two runs
off Pirates rook1e starter Tom
Gorzelanny (0-1) in the secand mnmg. Wnght h1t h1s
19th homer, a two-run shot, in
the fifth.
_Gorielan~x allowed a run
Without a h1t m the third. Jose
Reyes walked, stole second,
took third on a wild pitch and

scored on Carlos Delgado's
infield out.
.
Gorzelanny hit Floyd with a
pitch to lead off the fourth and
th~n issued a one-out walk to
Elt Marrero: Both runners
advanced on Trachsel's sacrifice before Reyes smgled to
center to score both and make
it S-0.
"With a _guy you haven't
seen, you JUSt try )o go ur,
there and he aggressive, '
Mets
manager
Willie
RandOIJ?h said. "I tell my ~uys
not to g1ve them (young p1tchers) to.o much credit. Just try
to be aggress1ve and attack.
It's all about keeping it simpie."
Both teams scored two runs
in the tifth. with the Pwdtes
getting an RBI single from
Jason Bay and an RBI double
from Joe Randa. Wright
homered in the bottom of the

Reds

David Ross and a three-run
homer to pinch-hitter iavier
Valentin.
"I was just trying to be
aggressive," Valentin said.
''It was a fastball, low. I got
good wood on it."
Braves fans booed .after
Sosa gave up a fly ball
caught by Andruw Jones in
front of the wall in center to
end the inning.
Hudson gave up eight hits
and four runs in eight
mnmgs.
"We won the game, man,
that's all I wanted," Hudson
said. "The way I've been
throwing the ball the last
few weeks, I was just happy
with going out th,ere, giving
us a chance to win, not
putting us in a hole early."
Andruw Jones . drove in
four runs, including three
with his 19th homer that
capped a four-run first
inning.
Hudson stranded runners
on second and third in the

sixth inning, thanks to third
baseman Chipper Jones .
Jones dived to his left to
snag a sharp grounder by
Keams and then threw him
out at first.
• Joe Mays, making his
sixth appearance and third
start with Cincinnati, gave
up hits to the Braves' first
four batters. Marcus Giles,
Edgar Renteria and Chipper
Jones opened with singles,
with Giles scoring the first
run on Jones' hit to left
before Andruw Jones'
homer to left.
Hatteberg's eighth homer
· in the second cut the lead to
4-1, The Braves got the run
back in the. fourth when
Francoeur led off with a single and scored on a double
by Adam LaRoche.
Hatteberg led off the sixth
with a double to right and,
after. movinl/ to third on
Encarnacion s
single,
scored on a double play
grounder by Ross.

fromPageBl
of time before he came in
there with that."
Francoeur has 60 RBls,
33 with two outs.
"Maybe I get locked in
more," Francoeur said. "I
like to be in that situation."
l&lt;j!n Ray ( 1-0) earned the
win, pitching around two
·walks in the top of the lOth.
Jorge Sosa suffered the
staff's 17th blown save in
35 chances as the Braves
couldn't hold a 7-2 lead in
the ninth.
Starter Tim Hudson gave
up singles to Dunn and
Austin Kearns before
· reliever Macay McBride
gave up a single , to Scott
Hatteberg to load the base.s.
Susa struck out Edwin
.Encarnacion before giving
up a two-run double to

Walker.

games. He said the school
plans to endow a scholar•
ship in Walker's honor.
fromPageBl
. "He was a father fig11re, a
friend, a mentor and a spiri•
·the altar were three photos tual leader of our team,"
of Walker: one showing him· kicker Joel Howells said,
coaching on the sideline, adding that Walker someanother · picturing him with times used a combination of
his players and •the third love and discipline with .his
. showing him relaxing on a players.
Walker stood up for
.beach at a table . .One of the
Howells,
who had a rough
, ·hymns sung was "Morning
day
converting
' kicks in
Has Broken," which was
also played at Walker's Sun Bowl loss to UCLA,
and had phoned the 'kicker
wedding.
shortly
before his death last
"It's painful for Rani:ly to
be taken from us ... with so wee~ .
"He just wanted to see
much to look forward to,"
how
I was doing," Howells
Northwestern
president
Harry Bienen said of the said.
only coach to take the
Pat Fitzgerald. a defensive
Wildcat s to three bowl standout at Northwestern in

a

Thursday and is eighth overall. "I
can 't plan on anything like that,
I've go !Ia take it cmc day at a
time."
For now. contenders for the
overall title bave been concentrating not on placings but on avoiding
crashes that often mar the relatively flat and fast first week and
which took out a top rider. ·
Alejandro Valverde of Spain, who
fractured a collarbone. requiring
surgery.
'
"You stay safe. stay out of trouble, try to conserve as much energy as possible. It is not rocket science," said American Levi
Leipheimer. 49th on Thursday and .
25th overall.
Boorien'S goal is not wearing
yellow in Paris but green - the
color of the jersey awarded to the
Tour 's best sprinter.
He is one point behind
Australian
sprinter
Robbie
McEwen, who won the green jersey in 2002 and 2004. in that category. But Boonen has yet to di splay the explosiveness he showed
on the past two Tours, when he
won four stages. He blamed his
second place Thursday on a mistake in the final sprit)t.
"I think I'm a li.ttle bit too nervous.'' he said.
Freire, .of the Rabobank squad,
made no mistakes, accelerating
sharply in the last 300 yards and
sprinting up the right side of the
fmishing straight to take .the stage
victory, his second in three Tours.
lnaki lsasi of the Basque team
Euskaltel placed third. McEwen,
winner of two sprint stages this
Tour and I 0 overall, was fifth.
"It wasn 't the wav that I'm used
to sprinting. 1 usualiy stay in other
riders' wheels and wait until the
last second," said Freire. But this
time "what I needed to do was to
take the initiative ... That is what I
did."

RB 9-e~rge amorigs~ 12

headed to Buckeyes HOF

inning off reliever Jonah
Bayliss after Delgado walked.
rookie of the
COLUMBUS (AP)
"I gave up two runs and
year
in
Dave Wright hits a big two- Heisman Trophy winner ·
Eddie
George
is
one
of
12
1996.
run home run to get it back,"
Six other
Trachsel said. "That's the way Ohio State alumni to be
men and five
it goes sometimes and I was selected ·for the school's
happy to see it."
w o m e n
Athletics Hall of Fame, the
Wri~ht is hoping the home scho'ol said Thursday.
selected by the Ohio State
run is 'a good sign."
.
George, a running back Varsity "0" Association
. "I've heen struggling a little from 1992 to 1995 and the will also be inducted. In
btt lately," the All-Star starter Big Ten's most valuable all, 293 athletes have
said. "Going the other way player in 1995, will be entered· the university's
with power, that's my game inducted Sept. 15 and han- hall of fame since 1977.
and I hope it continues."
The other 2006 inductees
.Pittsburgh added a run in ored the following day at
the seventh when Randa halftime of the Cincinnati- and their sports are: Kevin
greeted reliever
Aaron Ohio State game at Ohio Atkins, track and field:
Alex Eckelman, baseball;
Heilman with an RBI single Stadium.
George
set
Ohio
State's
Kate Hedman, swimming;.·
and another in the eighth on
single-game
rushing
record
Annette
Kraml, rille ;
Freddie Sanchez's RBI douwith 314 yards vs. Illinois Donica Merriman, track;
ble.
·
Gorzelanny allowed five in 1995 and ended his col- Ron Nischwitz, baseball;
nms and four hits in four hits, legiate career as the Ted Provost , football; Kip
walking four without a strike- B11ckeyes' second leading Simons,
gymnastics;
out.
all-time rusher. He was a . Patricia Szelle , fencing ;
first-round draft choice by and Lindsey Vagades,
the Houston Oilers and gymnastics.
The Braves pushed the
lead to 6-2 and knocked
Mays out of the game in the
want to do what's right to
sixth. Giles' double drove in
help the team."
Ryan Langerhans, who led
· Thi s season, in addition
off with a single. Andruw
from PageBl
to the three Rodgers sisJones drove in a run in the
ters, Rio will also have
eighth with a sacrifice fly.
set of ;iblings as
another
Mays gave up nine hits it has, at Kyger Creek," newcomer
Jennilynn
and six runs in 5 1-3 she s~id. "I had three of Martin, of Jackson, will
innings. He had four strike- the Hall sisters there , so JOIU her older sister
that has happened."
outs and walked three.
"There was no problem (Jessica Veach) on the
Notes: Reds OF Dewayne
Wise, whose contract was .there. and I think these . 2006 Redwomen squad .
Randi, .who will have
purchased from TripJecA three all are on the right
Louisville on Thursday, track, they want to win ,'' three years of eligibility,
grounded out in t~hth Fields added. "If you've along with her sister Kari ,
inning as a pinch hll'fer~ He all got the same, I don ' t join Martin, Megan Wil) s
from
Lancaster
and
· made his first major league really see a problem .
appearance since Sept. 29, . Westfall · High School Summer Rinehart from
2004 with Atlanta: ... The Lori Merriman , ·who Adena .as the new blood
Braves stranded a season- coached all thr.ee sisters, that makes up the 2006
high 14 runners .... The summed what the sisters recruiting class.
Rio &lt;Urande is coming
Reds had two previous five- will bring to the Rio progame losing streaks this gram. "They have it great off a 7-27 overall record
season. ..•.-., Giles reached passion for the. game," in' 2005, including .a 1-15
base in his first four plate Merriman said. "They mark in the American .
appearances with a single, love the game, they haye Mideast Conference South
two walks and a double .
· great work ethic; they Division.

the mid-1990s who is now .Ohio. After the eulogists
the Wildcats' ·linebackers were finished, a five-minute
coach and recruiting coordi- video tribute to walker's life
nator, talked about how well was shown on the wall of
Walker worked with .the . the church.
team.
Outside the . servtce,
"He taught us to love each Illinois football coach Ron
other aild how to respec( our Zook, a teammate of
players and build tru~t," . Walker's at Miami of Ohio,
Fitzgerald said, adding that said he left "a great'legacy."
being asked to speak at the
"Randy never · changed
memorial service was the from the first da&gt;: we met
him in 1972 'Ill today,"
greatest honor of his life.
Fitzgerald said if Walker Zook said.
could speak again to his
Brett Basanez, who biosgrief-ravaged . team · he somed into a quality quarwould tell them, "I. taught terback and helped the
you what to do, and that's Wildcats make the Sun
respond."
Bowl, said Walker develAlso
speaking
was oped a sense of family
Indiana
coach
Terry while .
he
made
Hoeppn·er, who was on Northwestern respectable
Walker 's staff at Miar:ni of on the f~eld.

Rio

~ H you 'have

~ All,.,_ eas~M~

a question ur a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, C/O Th.e Gaston Gazette,

'li! NeldiiiCUr!
.
' ___,;, ·

.......
...

, US!j~400, .

3 p,m.. Sunday

.

~
, ..
; USG Diltock 300, ,

j'fpJI\., $alul'day
1

~ ,.,.

.

• R-: USG Sheetrock 400

Stewart executed a remarkable
comeback after the final caution
Joliet, lit. t1.5 miles), 267 .
flag. He drove from 10th to sectaps/400.5 miles.
ond in a span of two laps, then,
• When : Sunday, July9
alter another caution flag, pof
• Lut - ' • ""-: Date Earn· ished off Boris Said, the driv-er
hardt Jr.
whom he had started alongside
• Qllllifyii\IIJKord: Jimmie John- · at the start. But. on the final lap,
son, Chevrolet, 188.14 7 mph,
the champ was in a bit of a
July 8, 2005.
predicament. A pair of brothers,.
• R- racord: Kevin Ha"lck,
Kyle and Kurt Busch. were posiCh011rolet, -136.832 mph, J"ly 14, tioned behind h1m. That's when
2002.
the debris was discovered m turn
• Lut -'&lt;: Tony Stewan's per- three. When the yellow wWed.
formance at Daytona lnternatiOil the field was frozen, giving Stew·
at Speedway was positi~ly Roart his second consecutive vlcto·
man. He came. He saw. He·conry in this race. The road-course
quered. Debrts in turn three
specialist Said, meanwhile.
turned what might have been a
wound up fourth, h1s highest ca·
itlorious finish into an anticlimax. reer finish on an oval tr~ck.

• wttore; Chicagoland Speedway,

• ~

Chase is exeitlilll'?
"'' wen, if tt doesn't bother you

' 11&gt; Think the

that &amp; guy l'hd'i CIOminant all

year king can have his adYart~e erased with 10 races to

• R...: Buil t Ford .Tough
225
1 Where: Kentucky
Speedway, Sparta, Ky.
(1.5 miles). 150
-.ps/ 225-miles.

• Reu: USG Durock
300
• Whore: Chicagotand
Speedway (1.5 miles),
. 200 taps/300 miles.
1 When: Saturday, July 8
• Lilli yeat'e winner:

• When: Saturday,.Ju~ 8
• Loot ywr'l wlnnor:

KeJJin Harvick
• Quollfyll\ll record:
Ryan Newman ; Dodge,
186.438 mph, July 9.
2005.
• Race record; Kevin Har·
vick, Chevrolet , 130.340
mpiUu~ 9, 2005.
• Lilt -k: Dale Earn- .
hardt Jr.. in a Chevrolet,
dominated the Winn-Oix10 250 at Daytona.

Dennis Setzer

• Quotlfylnc ""'onl: Bill
Lester, Toyola, 178.141
mph, July 9, 2005.
• R- NConl: Mike
Bliss, ChOIIrolet.
143.515 mph, July 13,
200:i.
• Loot week: Terry Cook,
in a Ford, won the O'Rell·
~A"to Parts 250 at
Kansas Speedway.

go, then you're P&lt;obably going to
low what Brteh france has In
mind foi next year. Nothing's of.
ficial yet, but the tilte 1800 is go.
· tng to become own more wld&amp;-

v

open. lilt's "tricked up' now, it's

goinC to become even more so.
II&gt; Dodge ~nnoonced that its new
Challenger will go into produc~on In 2008. If GM follows su~
with Its new Cemero concept,
n·s possible that Challengers,
Cameros and Mustangs wilt
eventually become the models
of choice in the Busch Series.

Torry Stewart's late charge in
the Pepsi 400 was reminiscent
of one of the late Date Earnhardt's famous rallies in restric«&gt;r.plate races. Stewart has
something else in common with
~mhardt. Even though he's become a master at 'plate reclng," he still insists that he rea~
ly doesn't like racing with the
engines sapped of horsepower.

TONY STEWART

NEXTEL CUP SERIES

.No. 20

HOME DEPOT CHEVROLET

E

R

s

I

u
Johnson

11&gt;

., Jimmie 'Johnson, when he
heard that Brian France planned
to tweak the Chase. said he
hgped the field would be limited
only to those wrthin 400 points
of first place. not the top 10. AI?
tually, what France -has in mind
·is almost the oppoSite of what
Johnson propased. The field is
likely to get bigger, not smatter.
1&gt; Another likely change is a sep-

arate points system for the drivers who make the Chase . In oth·
er words. paints would be
awarcled on the basis of h&lt;lw
the drivers fare In relatiOn 10
each other. If a driVer IS fifth
among the Chase ·drillers in one
of the final 10 races- btit actually finishes, scy, 21st- he
would get fi(th-place parnts in
the Chase st~ndings.

II&gt; Dele Earnhardt Jr. dominated
lla)tona's Busch Series race,
. ending COI1$ecutlve races in
which the 18ces went to drivers
who do not atso compete in
Cup, Those are the only two vic·
tories this season by "Busch

SP8(:1atists."

Ji Who'e hot-

Kurt Busch
has finished in the top 10 In
lour straight races .... Boris
Said, fourth at Daytona, had
his best-ever finish In a nonroad-coors~ 0\lent

.. Who't.tiOI
- Jimmie
JOhnSon had
his worst finIsh of the
$1lason.and

his points
tee~ di'QIIPed

' 11om 101to .
. eight..., 'Jeff
·' ~on

fell
beCk out of the top 10 in

pol/It$.

s

Labonte

Jimmie John11011
VL Bobby Labonte ·
Neat the end of the I'&lt;! psi 400 ,
Johnson lost con trol and slid into
Labonte. w1th his Car pinn1ng
Labonte's against the wall. The mcident cost Johnson most of ~is
points. lead and left him in 32nd
Dtace. his worst f1nish of the year.
The crash was as costly for Labonte,
who is trying to tmng his new team.

Resurgent Stewart
wins a pair of
races in Daytona

Petty Enterpnses, up to speed. "The
car was fast and good a:nd every·
thirg.Msaid Labonte . ~we were sit·
ting a\ the right plqCe and, theh. all
that happened at the end, and it wa s
Very unfortunate.·

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. - A v.ictory in the Pepsi 400 capl!ed off a memorable weekend for reigning Nextel
Cup champion Tony Stewart.
·
On the night ofJuly 29, Stewart won
his second straighi International Race
of Champions event, dominating a
field of stars from a variety of racing
·backgrounds on the Daytona Interna· .
tiona! Speedway road course.
The Pepsi 400 was also Stewart's
second straight in Daytona's summer~
time night tace. Those are the only restrictor-plate victories of his career,
but in races at Daytona and ThUadega,
Stewart has 13 top-five finishes in 31
career starts.
.
Though the race ended under caution, all but the very end was breathtaking. Stewart, 35, charged to the
front after a pit stop left him in toth
place with 10 laps remaining. slewart
regained the lead by passing Boris
$pec1al to NASCAR This Week
Said with three laps remaining and
then held off Kyle and Kurt Busch, Tony S~'s win In the Pepsi 400 was his 26th career victory, leaving him lied
with Said finishing fourth.
wttlt Fred Lorenzen for 21st place all-lima.
With seven laps remaining, Stewart
passed six cars in less than a quarter
of a lap.
You could've driven a semi between
Stewart, from Columbus, lnd,, actu·
"I did get a big run," he said, "and I me and him . He never tried to block ally celebrated with the fans . After
think, if I remember right, that it was or anything. I had such abig run that I climbing the Daytona flagstand, a
a restart that kind of led us up to ihat. just blew by all those guys and the Stewart signature after victories, he
I was behind anyway, and I.got sepa- next thing I knew, I was in second."
dove into a sea of fans before return·
rated from that pack a little bit. I think
Stewart's 26th career victory left him ing to his car.
I just got a good push that gave me the tied with another star from the Mid''I don't know why I do half the stu·
run when 1 got there. Those guys real- west, Fred Lorenlen, for 2l't place all- pid stuff I do," he said. "I felt good af·
ly weren't paying attention to me;·they time. Lorenzen, who is from Elmhurst, ter the end of the race until! got stuwere paying attention to the 'two-wide' . lll., won his fmal race in 1967.
pid and went up the flag stand again.
that they were involved in.
The Daytona victory could hardly
"I'll be honest. There was no way I
"I got underneath Denny (Hamlin) have come at a better time. It ended a was going to let those race fans dowri
and got by him, and then Casey Mears string of five races in which Stewart toiright because it (the celebration)
was stuck in the middle and working · had fallen from second to seventh in the started here, and this was the year afon somebody on the outside, and I points standings. Winning at Daytona ter it all started, and I was either go·
don't even think he even saw me com· moved Stewart hack up to fifth, 299 ing to get all the way up, or I was go·
ing because he never even flinched . points behind leader Jimmie Johnson.
ing to fall off and fall on my butt."

NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton
hit take: -Johnson had
won the first two restrictor-plate
races of the season, putting behind
a reputation, among some of his
peers. for recklessness m 'plate
races.' It doesn't take much of a
mistake for a crash to occur m the
close. narrow quarters of Daytona.~

ctves

Toyota h8a as mucll ~ to

race In NASCAR MlfiYOIIe

I

ha~~e

been a NASCAR fan for about
15 years. and I would like to justify
Toyota competing in Ne:tel Cup in
2007 . Some fans feel that Toyota
does not belong because they are a
foreign manufacturer.
Toyota produces ... vetlicles .:-. in
the USA, which I believe is a rule that

1s in the N~SCAR rule book, The Tundra is built in Indiana and wil l be built
rn Texas starting in 2007, and the
Camry is built in Kentucky. These ve·
hicles are American-made. Toyota em·
ploys about 25,000 team members
in North Amer1ca and is still growing,
I have read that some fans and
teams are worned that Toyota w!ll
come m and spend hu.odreds of milhans of dollars and buy a championship. I do not think tt11s is P&lt;Jssible
m NASCAR with the rules that are in
place. Nobody is compla1mng wnen
Chevy wms the Championship almost
every year, or when Dodge wms a lot
of pales.
·
I am proud to be a team member
at Toyota and am looking forward to
seeing Toyota compete in Nextet Cup
and watching them giJJe the Big Three
a run lor the champ1onsh1pl
,
D. Goellel
Evansville. lnd.
Thanl&lt;s for letting us.know how you
feel. We've gotten dozens of letters on
rhis issue and are rJappy to air an opposing vJ€w. ·

"We all loved him very Bowl. Northwestern also
much,'" Basanez said. ''He went to the 2003 Motor City
was a father away from Bo~l.
home; you spent more time
Walker was . the first
with him than your parents Wildcats coach to guide the
in your college years.
team to four sea·sons with at
"He .always joked, 'When least six wins since C.M.
I'm done coaching, I' II be Hollister in 1899-1902.
on some beach somewhere.'
Two
months
ago,
It just happens to be on a Northwestern gi\ve Walker
different- beach in a differ- a four-year extension
ent place."
through the 20 II season. He
Walker ·died June 29 after arrived at Northwestern· in
feeling chest pains late that 1999 after nine years at
night at his suburban Miami of Ohio, where he
Chicago home.
compiled a 59-35-5 record
Northwestern was 37-46 in nine seasons at his alma
under Walker. The Wildcats mater.
were 7-5 last season atier a
Walker is survived by his
50-38 loss to UCLA in the wife, Tamara, and two chilSun Bowl. The Wildcats dren, Abbey, 28,' and Jainie,
shared the Big Ten title in · 25. who is the sc~ool's foot2000 and went to the 'Alamo ball recruiting assistant.

•

f

- ·---- '----·---~~------·-----------------~------~--------­
'

�r

Friday, July 7,

www .mydailysentinel.com

Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 7, 2006

2006

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Yankees clobber Cleveland, 10-4 Reds acquireLHP Guardado
BY TOM WITHERS
· ASSOCIATED PRESS

CLEVELAND - Jason
Giambi and Derek Jeter both
drove in three runs and
Randy Johnson, ejected in
the seventh inning the last
time he faced Cleveland,
stuck around until the eighth
Thursday night, leading the
New York Yankees to a 10-4
victory over the Indians.
Johnson (I 0-7), who dominated early, 'allowed three
run s and seven hits in 7 2-3
innings. The five-tiine Cy
Youn~ Award winner picked
up hts 273rd career win,
moving him into a tie for
30th place with Red
Ruffing.
.
In his first start at Jacobs
Field since 1998, Johnson
walked none and struck out
five . He took a 10-1 lead
into the eighth before tirin~,
but improved to 13-4 in hts
· career against the Indians.
On June 14 at Yankee .
Stadium, Johnson was
thrown out in the seventh
inning of a 6-1 win for
throwing
at
former
AP photo
Cleveland first baseman
Eduardo Perez. The next New York Yankees' Randy Johnson pitches to Cleveland
· day, Major League Baseball Indians' batter Jhonny Peralta in the first inning in baseball
slapped him with a five- action Thursday in Cleveland.
game suspension.
This time, Johnson dealt Arizona, looked like he helped New York score three
the punishment.
. might flirt with another.
unearned run s in the fifth
The Yankees split the four- · With the setting sun cast- and open a 5-0 lead.
game series , winning the ing a shadow across the-back
The Yankees added two
final two after dropping the of the mound, the 42-year- runs in the sixth on RBI sinopener, then losing 19-1 on old lefty easily retired gles by Miguel Cairo and
Tuesday night, matching the Cleveland's first 12 hitters. Jeter. They scored three
second-most lopsided defeat He struck out four, got two more to make it 10-1 in the
in New York's storied his to- outs on come backers and eighth on Melky Cabrera's
ry.
didn't allow the Indians to . run-scoring hit and Jeter's
Giambi hit a two-run get good wood on anything. sat fly.
homer in the first off Cliff
Johnson, who has had an
Notes:
Yankees
OF
Lee (8-6) and Jeter had two erratic season, struck out Johnny Damon sat out with
RHI singles and a sacrifice Travis Hafner his first time an abdominal pull that could
fly.
up, but leading .off the fifth, keep sidelined for a few
Lee lost for the first time Cleveland's designated hit- more days. Manager Joe
in seven starts since May 29, ter dropped a 2-2 pitch into . Torre said the club will be
allowing four earned runs left field for the Indians' first ·cautious with Damon,. who
and I0 hits in six innings, hit.
is hoping .to be able to swing
He was hurt by Cleveland's · Johnson got a double play · pain-free Friday.... John son
defense, which had two to get out of the inning, then _ (4,449) is closing in on
errors· and has allowed 10 retired five straight before Roger Clemens (4,509) for
unearned runs in the past Michaels connected on a 3-2 second place on the' career
three games.
pitch for his sixth homer strikeout list behind Nolan
Jason Michaels homered with one out in the seventh. Ryan (5 ,7 14).... Hafner finfor the Indians, who went 3In the fourth; Jeter dou- ished third in fan online vol4 against New York and bled and Giambi , who ing for the final roster spot
haven't won a season series grounded into a double play on the AL All-Star team.
against the Yankees since his first time up, followed Chicago C A.J. Pierzynski
1992.
with his 26th homer, his won with 3.6 million votes
to edge Minnesota pitcher
For the first four innings, third in the series. .
Two errors by the Indians, Francisco Liriano. ·
Johnson, who pitched a perfeet game May 18, 2004, for who had three Wednesday,

CINCINNATI (A P)
"Earlier
Trying to bolster their strugin the year,
gling bullpen, the Cincinnati
yeah, Eddie
Reds will turn to former Alldid struggle,
Star closer Eddie Guardado.
and (maoThe
Reds
obtained
ager) Mike
(Hargrove)
Guardado and cash from the
Seattle Mariners for minor
made the
league pitcher Travis Chick
decision to
on Thursday, hours after the
move him
out of the
latest in this season 's series of
Guardado · closer role,"
bullpen meltdowns - blown
leads in the .lOth and 13th
Mariners
innings of a 6-5 loss at general manager Bill Bavasi
said. "But lately, ·he's been
Milwaukee.
"He lives for the ninth doing a lot of what he does.
innin~ : he loves the pressure He is back to the Eddie of
of bemg in that situation, and old."
we're going to give him that
Bavasi said Putz has. per- ·
opportunity," satd Reds gen- formed well with the
era! manager Wayne Krivsky, Mariners in the AL West race,
a former assistant general and the Mariners are pleased
manager at Minnesota wpere for Guardado that he'll get a
Guardado was an All-Star for chance to close for the Reds.
two years.
Guardado had a 3. 77 ERA in
Guardado led the American 19 . games since losing his
League with 45 saves in 2002 cloSer role.
and was second with 41 in
"This guy battled. Harq;''
2003.
said Bavasi, noting that
· Quardado lost his closer's Guardado pitched through
role at Seattle, but Krivsky knee and shoulder troubfes
said he'll get the chance to during his Seattle tenure.
claim Cincmnati's.
Tl\e Reds have been shufThe 35-year-old lefty had !lin~ their bullpen, last week
36 saves with a 2.72 ERA in destgnating veteran Chris
58 games for the Mariners Hammond for assignment
recalling
Brian
last season. The Mariners and
exercised their 2006 option Shackelford from Triple-A
tor Guardado for $625 mil- Louisville.
lion. It wasn't immediately
After Wednesda~ night's
known how much cash the game
in
Mtlwaukee,
Mariners are giving the Reds Shackelford was arrested on
in the deal. .
·
suspicion of third-degree sexThis year, the normal.ly reli- ual a.ssault. The Reds
able reliever known as optioned him to Louisville
"Everyday Eddie" struggled and recalled pitcher Michael
and was demoted in May Gosling on Thursday.
The Reds have tned veterafter blowing three save
chances. Guardado 1-fas 1-3 an David Weathers and then
with five saves and a 5.48 Todd Coffey as closers.
ERA. and was serving as a Coffey blew a ninth-inning
· lead Monday in Milwaukee
setup man for JJ. Putz.

m:rtbune - Sentinel - i\egister
CLASSIFIED

for an 8-7 loss and gave up a
game-tying home run in the
bottom
of the
IOth
Wednesday before Jason
Standridge, who joined the
team last month from
Louisville, allowed two runs
in the 13th. for the loss.
"I wanted to do something
that made sense, and this deal
makes sense to us," Krivsky
said. He expects Guardado to
bring "veteran influence that
will settle down" t)Je bullpen,
"and we can start closing out
these games."
The Reds bullpen has
blown 13 of 32 save opportunities, and has National
League highs of a 5.28 ERA,
43 home runs ~iven up, and .
~~nents' balling average of

In One Week With Us
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Guardado is expected to
join the Reds in Atlanta on
Friday. Cincinnati be~an the
day two games behmd· St.
Louis in the NL Central, after
·
losing five straight games.
The 22-year-old Chick was
4-5 with ,a 4.61 ERA for
Double- A Chattanooga. The
Reds acquired the righty from
the San Diego orgaruzation
last. July ·in a deal for third
baseman Joe Randa. Chick
will report to Double-A San
Antonio and will start there,
Bavasi said.
In other moves Thursday,
the Reds activated third baseman Edwin Encarnacion and
obtained outfielder Dewayne
Wise from Louisville. To
make room, the Reds designated outfielder Quinton
McCracken for assignment
and shipped pitcher Elizardo
Ramirez to Class-A Dayton
so he can start on his regular
tum Monday during the AllStar break.

" Ohio Valley

Putlllshlna reserves

the rlghtto edll,
reject or cancel any
ld at any time.
Errors

ay of publication a
ht Tribune-Sentinel
eglster
will
b
esponalble for n
ore than the cost o
he space occuple
y the arror and onl
he first Insertion. W
hall not be liable to
ny loss or e~pena
hat reaulta from th
ubllcatlon or omla
lon of an advertla
nt. Corrections wll
made In the firs
vallable edition.

involved a woman Monday. prison and a $25,000 fine,
" It's an ongoing criminal said Assistant Attorney
General Roy Korte.
investigation," she said.
Assistant Di.strict Attorney
Shackelford was being
held Thursday at the . Kenneth Berg was assigned
Milwaukee. County Jail, the the case and did not immediately return calls from The
sheriff's department said.
The Reds optioned the Associated Press. '·
pitcher to the minors and . The Reds sent Shackelford
said they will not discuss t.he to Triple-A Louisville and
case because of pending brought up another lefthanded
pitcher, · Mike
legal proceedings.
Third-degree
· sexual Gosling. Team spokesman
assault is a felony in . Rob Butcher declined tQ say
Wisconsin, carrying a maxi- if the move was related to
mum penalty of I 0 years in the Milwaukee case.

)-Box number ada ar
lways confidential.
Current

ppllee.

Puhllc Notices in

Nt'w''P''P''rs.r;i

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE: Is hereby
given that on Saturday,
July 8, 2006 at 10:00
a.m, a public sale will
be held at 211 W.
Second St., Pomeroy,
Ohio.

The

Farmers "as Is-where is", with
no
expressed
or

Bank and Savings
Company is selling tor
cash In hand or certl11ed check the followIng collateral:
1994 Chevrolet Z-11
1GCEK19K3RE289918
1999 Peterbilt .TK
Model
379
1XP5069X5XN466211
The

T1054, T1 055, T1056,
T1057 within lhe
Community ol Tuppers
Plains and 915 L. F. of
portions of Orange
Townshlp Roads T295
and T1036 &gt;fithln the
Courlhouse, Second Community of Tuppers
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio Plains. The engineer's
45769 until 1:15 p.m. estimate for this projLocal Time, July 20, eel Is $579,668.00.
2006, and then opened Domestic Steel use
requirements as spec Iand read aloud.
The project provides fled In Section 153.011
tor paving 15,840 L.F. of tho Revised Code
of · Meigs CR 17 apply to this project.
CoHerill Road, .13,675 Copies of Section
L.F. of Meigs CR 29 153.011 of the Revised

the Meigs County
Paving ProJect- Round
Company reserves the 20 will be received by
right lo reJect any or all the Meigs County
bids submiHed.
Commissioners
at
The above described their office at The
collateral will be sold Meigs
County
Further, The Farmers
Bank and
Savings

Implied

given.

warranty

For further Informa-

tion, or tor an appointmont to Inspect collateral, prior to sale date

contact Cyndle, Stacy
or Randy at992-2136.
(7) 5, 6, 7

Farmers Bank and

Savings Company,
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
Public Notice
reaerves the right to ----~--­
bid at this sale, and to NOTICE TO CONTRACwlthdraw the above TORS
collateral prior to sale. Sealed proposals tor

Bowmans

Run,

The Meigs County
Engineer,
34110
Fairgrounds Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769,
P.hone Number 740992-2911 for a 510.00
non-refundable tee.
Each bid must be
accompanied by either
a

bid

lerotcredlt upon a solbank . in

portions

of

Olive Services.

aforesaid Meigs

the

Township Roads T73, Bid documents may be County Commlasloner.
T296, T1038, T1053, aecured at the office of Bid bonds shall be
accompanied by Proof
of Authority of the offi-

Pt. Pleasant, WV
SUNDAY SPECfAL
July 9
$5 Packs
$1 000 Coverall
(Guaranteed)
Doors Open 2 pm Early Birds 3

Regular Ses.sion 4 pm

agent signing

the bond.
Bldi shall be · sealed
and marked ao Bid tor:
Meigs County Paving
ProJect· Round 20 and
mailed or delivered to:

Meigs

Door open at 4:00
Bingo starts at 6:30

124 Highland Ave ..

the

33,211 L.F: of Meigs CR from any of tho offices amount of not leas
32 Eagle Ridge Road of the Department ol than 10% of lhe bid
and paving 5665 L. F. ot Ad mIn Is t rat Iv o amount In the favor of

Middleport American
Legion

(WV Jobs Foundation Bingo Hall)

the

cashiers check, or let-

and Code can be· obtained vent

BINGO

BINGO

in

ebmol.dUaflmt oo'un1t0%woitththae
surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs
County Commissioner
or by certified check,

cial or

Mason County
Little League

bond

County

Colnmlssionera

The Meigs County
Courthouse, Second
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(7) 7, 10, 17

Starting July 1st
1st pack is $10.00
2nd Pack Free
All other packs is
$5.00 each "-"
Going back the way we
used to play

which Ia located on the

Are you f)6
or older:?.
on your home delivered
subscription! ·
Here's all you
need to do .. ~
,
Fill out the coupon
below and drop off ot:
mail it with a
copy of your photo ID.
cfJalltpoU• J9ail!' Q[;rtiJun:e

,tloint tll~aitant -· Begittter
The Daily Sentinel
6unba!' lltime• -6entinel
p•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Subscriber's Name
Address

A public hearing will
be held Thursday, July
20th, 2006, on the tiscal 2007 budget. Tho
hearing Is set tor 1:00
p.m. . In
the

Saturday, July 8
D.J. Karaoke Food &amp; Fun
No Cover

City/State/Zip

•

Phone__~--------------------~----

Commissioners '
Office.

(7) 7

'Now playing every
Wednesday &amp; Saturday

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS
•

Malt or drop .off 'thls coupon along
with a copy of your Jihoto ID to
Ohio Valley Publishing P.O. Box 469, Gallipolis, 01'1 45831

------------------------------I

..

--

I

'

110

1.

...------....-...;..,....__

Lost: . Bla ck
Ronweiler
approx 1201bs. Last seen on

2 Beau1ilul adult cats. fiied Smith Ridge Road in Long
(Po rtland area)

&amp; declawed. Needs Good Bottom
home. After 6pm (740)992· FAMILY
1090.

-----3 kittens, titter trained, 10· t 1
wks,
to
good
home.
(740)992-0841

--'----Free female kitten to good
home. Silver tiger stripped.

Barn

4/15106. (740)508-

r

PET!

REWARD

. , &amp;.. ~ •• ,. ........

$200.00! 740-843-5437

r

YARD SALE

::'9p_m_ _ , - - - - , - - Puppies!
Chocolate
Lab/Dalmatian Mix, 2 like
Lab. 3like Dalmatian. Lots of

litiiRI!II
0' ............ .

~

Manage-

YAKDSALEGALLII'OLIS

3 Family. Friday/Saturday,
9am·?, across from Gallia
Auto Sales, Jackson Pike.
Baby &amp; Misc. Items.

spots! (304)593-8581 days, 4 10 Hedgewood Dr., 7n(304)576·2881 evenings.
719. Solottex , plus size cloth·
Six 11 week old kil1ens . ing. children's books, old
(740)446·1735.
books, collectibles . Multi·
i:li"..;.~.;;..---, fam i~. 9·5.
f11'rt'ANO
------5167 St. At. 850, Men s,
.,_ _ _ _ _ __... womens , little boys clothing,

r

Hu.P WA.\TED

finance and Insurance

0819, (740)992·5599 before

FOUND

.......................................................
Apartments tor Rent.. ................................. 440
Auction and Flea Market.. ................ ,......... oao
Auto Parts Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair ..................................................no
Autos tor Sale ..............................................710
Boats Motors tor Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplles ...:............... .....................550
Business and Bulldlngs ............................. 340
Business Opportunity................................. 210
Business Trelnlng .................................. ..... 140
Campers Motor Homes ........................... 790
Camping Equipment ................................... 780
Carda ot Thanks .......................................... 010
Child/Elderly Care ................................... :... 190
ElectrlcaVRetrlgeratlon ...............................840
Equipment tor Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpment.. ........................................610
Farms tor Rent. ............................................430
Farms tor Sale ............................................. 330
For Laasa ......:.............................................. 490
For Sale........................................................585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms........................................ 450
Goneral Haullng ........................................... B50
Glveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Grain ..................................................640
Help Wantad ...............;................................. 110
Home lmprovaments...................................ato
Homes tor Sale............................................310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses tor Rent.. ........................................ 410
· In Memorlam ................................................ 020
lnauranca .........................:........................... 130
Lawn &amp;·Garden Equlpment ........................ 660
Livestock: ......................... ............................630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acraaga ............................................ 350
Mlscollaneoua.............................................. 170
· Mlocallaneoua Merchandise .......................540
Mobile Home Repalr .................................... B60
Mobile Homes tor Ront ............................... 420
Mobile Homes tor Sale................................320
Money to Loan ............................................. 220
Motorcyclaa &amp;4 Wheolers ..........................740
Muslcallnstruments ................................... 570
Personals ..................................................... 005
· Pots tor Sole ........ ........................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Haatlng .................................... 820
Protasslonel Servlcea ............;.................... 230
Radio, TV &amp; ca Rapalr ............................... 160
Real Estate Wanled ..................................... 360
Schoola lnatrucllon..................................... 150
Seed, Plant &amp; Fertlllzer.:............................ 65D
Situations Wanted ........................ ............... 12D
Space tor Rent ............................................. 460
Sporting Goods .. ,........................................ 520
SUV'slor Sale ........,...................... ............... 720
Trucka tor Sale ............................................ 715
. Upholatery ................................................... 870
Vena For Sale ............................................... 730 .
Wanted to Buy ..................... :....................... 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Suppllaa ................. 520
Wanted To Do .......................................:...... 1BO
Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470
Yard Sole- Golllpolls ...................:.................072
Ylld Saii-Pomaroy/Middle ........ ....:............ 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Plaailant ................................ D76

Senior Discount*

POLICIES: Ohio Valley Publllhtng ......-vu the riQhllo edit, ~tct, or CWIC• any ad at any tlma. Errora mutt bl raponltd on th11 flrat dl'f ol publication and
Trlbun.a.mlnei-Fiagl•r will be rMponalble tor no mCiftllhln thl 0011.of thlaptot oocupt.a by ttMI tr'ror and only the llratlntertlon. We 11'1aU not be 11
any ion or axpenM tNt rnuhe hom the pubiiCJtlon or omlnlon of en elfwrtiHmtnt. Cor~tlon will ba m•d•ln the flrat •v•ll•bla ed ition, • BoM """''" adl•l
lfl 11.-v• conftdantlet. • Cllrr.nt rate card 1ppiiN. • All rMI allltl ldvlrtlllmente ilre aubfac1 to the Fadtfll F1lr Hou• lng Act of 1968. • Thil newapaper
acctpte onty hllp Wll'lt.cl HI mHtlnQ EOE 111ndlrd1. W1 wlll not ~nowlngly •ccept •ny •dlo'eftlllng In vi&lt;Matlon of thellw.

kltncorlylo41comcaot.nel

CLASSIFIED INDEX

second floor of the

MIZWAY
8 Year Anniversary Party

foUND

4x4's For Sale ....;..............................,..........725

If so, you qualify for a

Court House.

ca

1'

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
.1m
Borders $3.00/per ad
l!i
Graphics 50¢ for small
$1.00 for large

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

LasrAND

to the Fodera

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Meigs Cou~ty's 2007
tlscsl budget Is available tor Inspection by
the public until July 15,
at the Auditor's Office,

rate

All Dlaplayz 12 Naon 2
•ualn••• Daya Prior To
Publlc•tlon
sund•y Dl•pl•y: l:OO
Thur•d•y tor Sund•y•

• All ade muet be prepaid•

mi sc. items. Saturday 9·2 .
Found camera in Gallipolis
Cily Park 304·675· 7158
Cleaning oul garage sate.
All Real
Estal
TaOie &amp; 6 chairs, nice cloth·
dvertlaemenlt ar
Found in Thurman, Black ing, linens. lots ol good
ub!ect
Lab-Mix puppy. AOoul 5 glass dished &amp; others. Come
air ttoualng Act o
months old, ma te, black cot- see· 471 Jerry Sl. Fri &amp;Sal.
968.
tar.
(740)245·9740,
(740)441 -2896
Community yard sale. July
)oThll
newspape
- ' - - ' - - - - - - - 8th, 8-? Ingalls Ad, 2.7 miles
FOUND ·
Male Dog on ff R 1 218
· hi K'"
ccepts . only hel
o
ou e
on rig · ...,s
Ashton Upland Rd . Black &amp; d 11 1 thl
h
h id
anted ads meetl
a u co ng. ouse o
w/Gold like stripes, wea ring bu'l d"
1 · 1
OE standards.
• tng ma ena s. ·
Pink collar (304)576·2273
Friday
&amp; Saturday. Little
We will not knowllly
LOST: Black male Cat, bOys clothes, girls clothes.
accept any adver
Camp Conley area, Fairview plus size clothes, uniforms,
laement In vlolatlo
Road .
Call anytime. cheap, no lool s, 588 behind
f the law.
(304)675-4080
Bodimers.
-----..,.--Gatp.ge Sale: 273 LeGrande
Blvd., Saturday July 81 7·3.
Clothing, furniture, home
Announcement ........ ~................................... 030
· _'_
m_•_ll_•_i&gt;_pl-i·
Antlq~as
53Q . d•c..c_o_r
a~es,. _'o_o_''_
and more.
Huge mutti·iamily. First time
sale,
908 Roush
Ln .
&amp;
Cheshire. Fri-Sat S·? Little
Tykes toys. little girls name
brand clothe s 52 0·5, lots of
&amp;
baby furniture, mens, miss·
es &amp; plus sz . clothes, furn ilure, home inter ior items, too
much Ia mention.
-------&amp;
July 7 &amp; 8 small appliances,
clothes, grill cover, full size
car cover and othe r items
38_35_S_t._At_.3_2_5_s._ _ _
-

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

Your Right to Know, Delivered Right to Your IJoor.l\ll

Mutt , B

eported on the firs

r
I

r'-------,;.J·
GtvFAWAY

In Next Day•a Paper
Sunday In-Column: 1:00 p.m.
•rl&lt;lay P'or Suhd•v• P•per

• Start Your Adt With • Keyword • Include Complete
Detcrlptton • Include A Price • A\told Abbte"latlone
• Include Phone Numbtlr And Addreu When Needed
• Adl ~hould Run 7 Days

Items
\\\01 '\t I \II '\I ...

Display Ads

Dally ln~Column: 1:00 p.m.
Monday-Friday for lnaertlon

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

*POLICIES*

Oearllfir~

Word Ads

,-

Reds P Brian Shackelford arrested
MlLWAUKEE (AP) Cincinnati Reds pitcher
Brian Shackelford was
arrested early Thursday on
suspicion of third-degree
sexual assault.
The 29-year-old player .
was arrested shortly ·after
midnight at Miller Park,
where the Reds played the
Milwaukee Brewers on
Wedne sday night, police
spokeswoman Anne E.
Schwartz said. She declined
to provide details on the
arrest other than to say it

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

1-'1

Ill&gt; 20011

www.comlcs.com

pl14

YARD SALE-

I'oMEROY/1\&lt;IIDoLE

~.,r__.~.ANTFJ).Buv--,.1

:::--::--:-c----c-c--l
L.I.IO.·•HEIP--W.-ANI'EIJ--_.1
Two Family Garage Sale. .,
Friday and Saturday. July 7
and 8. 8:00·5:00. Route
14:3, Harrisonville, Signs
Posted. 200+ Cookie Jars·
Old-New-Collectables.
t740·742·4002. .
Yard sale- 4 family. 828 E
Main St. Pomeroy, Fri 7th,
Sat. 8th, 9·? . Furniture. guitar, dishes, bedding, clothing
aU sizes. motor home.
bOoks, fiddl e, apartment
size electric stove.

100WORKERSNEEOED
Assemble craHs.
wood items.
To $480/wk
Milterlals provided.
Free information pkg. 24Hr.
801-428·4649

r

Fair;;lrounds.
Furn iture , including 1 weekend . "Part
Childrens clothes. toys, etc. Time LPN's·7A·7P or 7P-7A
required to worll; 4 sched·
- - - - - - - : : - : - : - uled days/month and 1
vard·Sale Lucas Lane, Fri &amp;
weekend . 'FTIPT STNA's·
Sat. 8· 7 · Bicycle, Tools . We provide the following
Route 160 at Kerr on 54 Queen
Manress
set, fleltible shifts, 3A-3P, 3P-3A,
Ambleside
Baby a'dult longaberger,
Grass 7A·7P, 7P·7A, Applicants
Laliders.. .musI .b e depen dSUI
ua • •earn
Clothes , air conditioner, •Catcher, Wooden
. "
,,
misc. Sat. 8-?
Star . of Davtd Glassware. players with positive attl·
tudos to join us In provkting
Hospttal Bed. Etc.
Tara Estates- Sal . July 8th,
a:oo-? Clothing children to
AUCilON AND
outstanding. quality care to
adult, baby 1tems. lurnilure,
FuA MARKET 1 our residents. w_e Otter:
Fle~tlble scheduling with set
Cub Cadet riding mower.
rotations"FT/PT/Per diem
Cross Cr6ek Auction Buffalo
queen bed, much more.

r

716106·719106, moving sate this Saturday

a

Multi family yard sale, 91
Spires Rd . (SA 160N, 4
mites past Korner Store to
Mo&lt;gan Center Ad. Go 1
mile to Spires Rd ." 1 mite to
yard sale) Clothing, 1ntant
adtJII. large vartety ol items
including gl assWare. dishes,
collectibje, books. 9·5.

HF.LP WANTED

Night 7pm Gravely, DR
Trimmer, Bolen riding Lawn
Mower, Troy Bill Tiller, 6ft
Grader Blade. Carry All ,
Yard Cart, Craftsman Air
Compressor, Disk Band
Saw. Stihl 021 Cllain Saw,
Tool Chest, &amp; Much Much
More.
Dealer
from

~~;~~~:~~~:~~:~~:~~~

a.

u.s.

Sl

SHOP
CLASSIfl EOS
'

.

This position requires
prior automotive technician experience in light
repair. Good communication skills and a
positi11e attitude is a
must 1n this career.
Basic compu1er skills
are a plus.

This position requires
previous Automotive or
BBnking experience.
Advanced education in
business or accounting
is a plus but not
required. Training will be
offered and is on going
Compensation and
Benefits will be discussed during the appli·
cation process.

Compensation and
Bentits package will be
discussed during the
applicalion process.

All applications will be
held in the strictest of
confidence, current
employers will not be
notified.

If you are looking to start

At John Sang Ford
Uncoln Mercury we ha11e
established a 35 year
reputation of honesty,
integrity and outstanding
customer service before
and after the sale. Wit~
the hottest produe1s on
the market and as the
fastest growing dealership In our re~ion, we
are adding staff to better
service our customers.
This poslti.on requires
an individual with self
drive. Automotive and
sales experience is a
plus but not necessary.
Training will be providGd
and Is on going.
Sales Consultant
Compensation and
Benefits Package wilt be
discussed during
appl ication process.

a new career or maybe
do not feel you are paid
or treated as well as you
should be and you 're
tired ol working for
someone·who is not
working tor you ..
apply today.

All applications wit! be
tletd In the strt~est or
confidence; current
employers will not be

notified.

Prep cook needed. Apply in
person JimaneHi 's Pizza ,
A1o Grande. Oh.

LPN

'

...

•.f:~
~

(p

('_..\I)ITOL Ml:l)U.'_\L.'~·

Capitol Medlclll

Attention CNAs

Available .TODAY!
Hurricane Area
Great Pay Ratest

If you ar"e looking to start
a new career or maybe
do not feel you are paid
or treated as well as you
should be and you're
tired·of worklnQ for
someone who Is not
working for you·.....
appt1today.

Please contact
Brad Sang at
(740)446·9800
or at 195 Upper RiVer
Ad. Gallipolis, OH 45631

Tomato Pickers
740-247·
Healthcare Services Group 3901 . Letart Fa lls. Ohio
the nation's largest provider - - - - - - - ol laundry and housekeep- VACANCY:
InformatiOn
Please contact
ing services lor long lerm Technology lns1ructor of
Brad Sang at
care IS currently seeking Interactive
Media.
(740)446·9800
laundry and housekeeping Cert ifiable as an InformatiOn
or at 195 Upper Rive r
managers in the Gallipolis
Technology
or
Rd. Gallipolis, OH 45631
area. If you want 10 grow
Comprehensi11e Bustness
with an established publicly Instructor.
CONTACT:
AVON! All Areas! To Buy or held Company tall resume Gal lia-Jackson·Vinton
Sell. Shirley Spears, 304· -"' 6_1_4·,.-57_7-,.0_1-,25_._ _ _ JVSO. (740 ) 245 _5334 . 9111
675·1429.
20 1 EEO.
Nuralng Assistants

Fu ll Time 3-11P Positions

entlai•Paid vacations. holi·
days&amp;slck days• bonus days
lor attendance"Frtendlylpro·
lessional staff and work
enviroment"Deaicated
Please coiltae1
Management Staff. Stop By
Brad Sang at
and Fill Out an application or
(740)446·9800
contact Hollie Bumgarner,
or at 195 Upper River
LPN , Slaf1 Development
Ad . Gallipolis. OH 45631
Parkersburg (304)937·2118 Coordinator 0 740·992·
Thursday, Friday, Sat. 8-? or (30 4l 550 · 1616
6472 and come see for your·
4409 B 1 11 p·c
A b Ste hen Reed Llct 1639
u avt e 1118
u Y
self the Difference you can
red dishes &amp; Pilcher,
\VMTED
make at Overbrookll!
. - - - - - -- -- - ,
Longaoerger,
Precious
Moments loots. tots ot misc. •
An E•cellent way to earn
©~11.
_m_or_e_lto_m_s_e_o_ch_d_ a.:._1__ Absolute Top DGIIar:
money. The New Avon.
Yard sale Saturday. JtJiy
Stiver and Gold , Coins, Call Marilyn 304·882-2645
Ba·2p. 221 Dabble Dr. Proofsots, Gold Rings. Pro·
'iJ':ru~mfflO~@I
Gallipolis Baby items, toys. 1935
u .s :
currency, Appalachian nre is accept·
Solitaire DiamOnds· M.T.S. tng applications for Sales
4
YARJ&gt;SALE·
Cotn Shop, 151 Second Assoc tate
&amp;
General
'No.E:~~~~~~~:;ARY
PoMERO''II'IMIOOLE A"Venue . Gall t"""ls, 740·446· Service. Pick up applications
·cOL TAAINII-!0
9
~·
4"6
VI and
• •e
2842.
Ill'
c;
. =
r 1.
'FIH.I.NCINO AI/AIU.....,
Pleasanl. No Phone calls
·JOe PLACE~ENT
4 !amity yard sale, At 7 ----::----c---:- please
• ENAOlliHONDW
Nor1h oiTlJpp&amp;rs Platns. Fri.· I buy Junk Cars (304)773- -----~-Sat.. July 7-8
· 5004
Desk clerk needed . Person
ALLIANCE ·
with good communiCation
TRACTOR· TRAILER
I wtll buy Junk Cars &amp; Tru~ skill, good attitude &amp; self·
TRAJNINO CENTERS
motivated. Should ·apply at
WYTHEVILLE , v~
(304)773·5343
Budget Inn, Jackson Pike,
Gatlipolls. No phone calls,
1·800·334·1203
I will buy Jlmi&lt; em. Call
please.
L-:l-=.l!,..!!!""=:!!!'"'!!!
"'!!!l'll
' 11 '!i;'~
~...J
1 - - - - - - - . J (740)388-9303

·--oimiiiiBiiU\ii'--' - - - - - - - -

At John Sang Ford ·
Lincqln Mercury we have
establislled a 35 year
reputation of honesty,
integrity and outstanding
customer service before
and after the sale. With
the hottest products on
the market and as the
lastest growing dealer·
ship in our region, we
are adding staff to better
seNice our customers.

Training will be proVided
and is on going.

clothes(Tommy. Polo, A&amp;F. DA.EAMEA7701NBOX.CO
American Eagle), Boys M or ptiona (740)256-6514.
Clothe~, bedding, Middleton
I \ 11'1 ! 1\ \ II "\ I
Doll, Lots of household and
"I ll \ I( 1 ....
misc. Huge Sale··No Junk.
740·949·2603

Moving sa le· Friday 7n ·&amp;
Saturday 7/8 , 850 Kraus
Beck, 9-4, Furn1ture, house·
hold items, Longabergor,
dott1ing,,collee1ibles.

Thurs-Sun.

1

Garage Sale, Friday, July 7..
9:QO-? Rain or Shine. AI Wanted your unwanted dish
Martie Rose's, 112 mile from receiver with card will pay
cash for eome. Also want
Racine
on
C.A.
28.
Antiques, toys(like new), outside dish, large or small.
to
toddler
beds, Eman

A
Ce lebration
of
life ... Overbrook
Center, ·
Located at 333 Page Street,
Middleport, Ohio is pleased
to announce we are accept·
i;;r,;~:-:;.~~-...., ing applications for the lol·
July 7·
9am-Oark, 9585
YARD SALElowing positions to join our
St. At. 554, Bidwell, _Oh . L.-,;,~,;,·;oi'LF.AsAiiiiiliiiiiNTii.,.J friendly and dedicated staff.
Womens plus sizes. mater- .,
•3• 11 AN Manager or FT
nity ctotlles. baby &amp; kids Big Carport S"'ale, July 7th 7P· 7A A"N Supervisor. "Per
clothing, car seat. Rain dam and 8th. Bam to 2pm. 303 Diem AN's·required to work
14 &amp; 15·
stair House Rd ., near 4 scheduled days/month

a.

110

~

by NEA, Inc.

At John Sang Ford
Lincoln Mercury we have
established a 35 year
reputation of honesty,
Integrity and outstanding
customer service before
and aHer the sale. With
the hottest products on
the market and as the
lastest gtowing dealer·
ship in our region, we
are adding stan to beHer
service our customers .

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Private Duty is accepting
applications lor nursing
·assistants and LPN's lor
home care cases in Athens.
MeiQs. Ga111a and Mason
Counties. Fte-.:iblo sohea ul·
lng and excellent pay Fo r
more 1nlormati on :::ontac!
Trtna at 304·675-7400 or
1·600}46-0076 AAIEOE

150

SOIC.)I-'i
I~&gt;TRU "fl"'

Gallipolis Caree1 College
1Cmeers Close To ~ome)
Cal! Todav' 740·-l 46·4367.
1·800-2 I ·1-0452
.vww gal'•poi•SGdrf:erco~lege ·com
AccraOI Iad M~ mbttr Acc r!ldtlmg
Couoc11 W• lndepenoent Colleges

Ohio Valley Home Health.
Inc. hiring Fu ll Time RN anti School9 127&lt;46
Case ~anager. Must have
11\1\1

Ill

I

OH &amp; wv AN licenses. ml("""~~---..,
Competitl~e Waoes and
Blbll\~
Benefits including health
&lt;llroRltJNIT\'
·

insurance.
Apply Gallipolis,
at 1480
Jackson Pike,
Ohio or 2415 Jackson
Avenue, Point PleaSant, WV.
--:-cc:800-:-c.5c:76c:.6c-34cc--8cc--- Phone toll lrf)e t866-44 1·
1393·
CNC AND MANUAL
MACHINISTS
Ohio Valley Home Health,
Immediate Day and Evening Inc . hiring for Occupational
shift position lor CNC and Therap 1st, and Speech
Manual Machinists.
Pay Therap 1st
Compe!i ti&gt;Je
based on experience and wages and M1teage Apply
qualifications. Mus! have at 1480 Jackson P1ke
own hand tools. We offe r Gallipolis, or 2415 Jackson
Insurance, Vacation , Paid Avenue, Point Pleasant, WV
Holidays, and Retirement 01 phone toll free 1-866·441·
Pllone 1-304·743·1705
1393.
Call Heather

E•perienced
Bartender. Overbrook Rehab Center
send resume to PO Box will be holding STNA ciassa03, Galllpoltjj, OH 45 53 1.
es starting on Tuesday July
18, 2006. Appllcat1ons ,or
Experienced Fence Builders tM class will be accepted
needed for small farm , Call until Friday July 14 , 2006.
(740)245·5595
Please stop by our front
- - - - - - - - office and 1111 out an applies·
FEDERAL
tion to be considered tor the
POSTAL JOBS
classes. No phone cans
please. EO.E.
$15.67·$26 ,19/hr., now hli·
lng. For app lication and tree Parts Salesperson wanted
governement job info. call · Computer e11perience and
American Assoc. of Labor 1· knowledge oi farm equip·
913-599·8042 , 24/hrs. emp. men! prelerred. Salary
serv.
• negotiable depending on
- - - - - - - - e~perience .
Health
Looking for someone to Insurance provided . Send
work with framing, insulation resume to: CLA Box~ c/o
and wtnoows. E~tpertence a Gallipolis Tribune. PO Box
must. 992·1628
469 , Gallipolis, ...OH 456.31 .

--------

Wanted Someone in Leon
area to mow Yard tn" Leon.
Phone (304)674·0132

rtb

f'"===~~~=~·
•NOTICE•
OH IO VALLEY PUBLISHlNG CO. re comme nds
!hat you do btJsiness with
people you !&lt;.now. and
NOT to senri money
through the fll8 1i un111 you
have lllvest .gal~:od the
otfenng ·

r

Mo~l:Y

TO LoA.~

**'\'OTIC E.. *
Borrow Smart. Contact
the Oh10 Div1sion ol
Financ1a1
tnst1tution's
Office
of
Consumer
~flairs BEFORE you reli·
nance your home or
obtain a toan . BEWARE
of reQuests lor any large
advance ' payments of
fees or 1nsurance Call the
Ofltce
ol
Consumer
Aflatrs toll free at 1-866·
278-0003 IQ learn 11 the
mortgage
broKer
or
lender
15
property
licensed . (Th1s is a public
service announcement
!rom the Ohto valley
Publishing Company)

�Friday, July 7, 2006
ALLEY OOP
New. B1'il 4 Bedroom. Walk·
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI? In Closets, Flroplace, Pantry,
Biacktop Drive, Private 2+
No Fee Unless We Win!
acres. 3 minutes trom
t-888·582-3345
.HOlzer, town , or 35 Must
HI \ t I "o I \I t
Sell, Trade or Best Offer
(740)388-8228

Need to sell your home?
Lata on payments, divorce,·
Job transfer or a death? I
can buy your home. All caah
and quid!; closing. 740-4163t30.

2 bedroom Apartment, No
Pets, $350 month. $200
deposil.
2101 Jefferson
Ave. Pt. Pleasant (304)892·
3963

NO DOWN PAYMENT even

1996, Appro:c. 1800 SqFt w/2
1/2 acres, 3brm 2 full batns.
LAm. FRm. Formal DAm ,
Eat-in kit chen. Central
Air/heal. Covered Frcint
Porch, Deck. 3 car dei&lt;K:h
garage w/one stall as a finished 1'1eated room, lmmed
Poss "Loan Assumption
Avail 5.5% or $97,500 740245-0125 or 740·645·2249
3 SR. 1 b'ath, I 112 story, dry
basemen!, 12 1( 24 family
ordaining room . Heat pump
&amp; propane furnace , vinyl Sid·

1

10

room 1 bath home In
Middleport. Corner lot, vinyl
siding, fireplace in living
room , good carpal , tile tloor
in kitchen , French doors
open to master bedroom,
jacuzzi tuo, off streat park·
ing. Paymerlt around 5550
per month. 740-367-7129.

·--oiFORiiiiliRmriiiiiio-.,1

2 Bd./1 Bath Pomeroy. Nice
condition . $.so.oo. 740·
843·5264.

2BA house in City. Central
heat- air, carpOrt, Available
2nd week Aug . $485 mooth
+ ·~c. dep. Call 1740 1446·
Priced 4to sell! Very nice 4555 after 5pm.
3BA, 1Jatl'1 , \JPStairs, furnished tBR apt downstairs, 2BR house- Gartielti Ave
furn iture store in rear, car lot $460 rent &amp; sec. ctep. 3BR
011 s1de All on 112 ac. lot at house- L.aGrande Blvd.

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

r

ing, new windo,ws. lg. front 130 Bul avilte Pike. Gallipolis, $600 rent &amp; sec. dep. You Route 160. Can for details Repalr-675·?388 . For sale,
porch, bad&lt; deck. carport , OH. Call to see (740)44g.. pay utilities. Lease &amp; refer· .(7,.0)441.0194 or (740)441· re-conditioned automatic
all on 1acre. 1 mil e south ol
Rio Granae. 2656 Garners
Ford Rd. Call for appoml·
"ment {740)245·5811.

ct~tB4:.:__.

c4-'76::2::_.- - - - - - ences required . (740)446-----Property tor Sate. LocatiOn:
- - CONVENIENTLY LOCAT·
2 mites outback of New 3_4 BA home, Gao. Creek ED 1 AFFORDABLE!
Haven Co. Ad 312, Move in Ad .- Non Smoking rental· Townhouse
apartments,
$700/mo. sec. dep. Call and/or sma II houses FOR
'a,
on
SA
279.
tOO$
Co_
ndition,
2·stry
Bnck
with
2
RENT
4BR' 2"
11 17401 41
financing availablE even with acres, 2-ti replaces, LR whh(,7::_4~0:__14_46~·~
36:_4::_4:__.- - - . a
4 · 111 t
less than perfect credit. Oak floors 14.. 30, Cedar
-3BA, 1.5 bath, recenlty for application &amp; Information.
.
F II R 14 3 0
(740)742·2376 .
am Y m x 0, ak tnm,
Etflclenl"\/ apartment tor
1 car garage 2ox 4o root remodeled, country setting.
$ -,
5 br. 2 ba. 2 story. bi·level 169 .00
Appt.
Only $550/mo, d9posit. {740)367· rent, 250 per month plus
0834.
utilities,
in
Middleport,
dack, above ground pool call (304)682-3772 (304)593- -::::.::.__ _ _ _ _ _ 17401992-6849
-4 bedroom house in Tuppers - - - - ' - - - - - - 304-675·7808 after 5pm.
887 1
·
11 B d
t 740 Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp;
PI
5 Roam House with Bath, 3 Recenlty remodeled two 992·3034.
Bins. a ran a a
· bath, upstat'rs, clean , no
pets. Ref/deposit required.
lots, in Leon. Sell or Trade. story home in Mercerville.
Phone (304)674{)132
Walking distance of schools. 46 A house lor rent. 650 (740)446 _1519,
hunl1~~ nearby mo. plus dep. Call {740 )446 .
Public
$68 ,900. Adjacent income
1 · 1
Gractous nvinn. 1and 2 bed.
d 3644 or 1n o.
•
property ava1 1able, pnce
room apartments at Village
Anenttonl
Manor
and
Aiver.aide
separately. Immediate occupancy. (740)256·1965 or LocaI company offering ~No Apartments in Middleport.
1(661)33t -6672.
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- From $295·$444. Call 740·
grams Ior you to blAY your 992·5064. Equal Housing
SyracUse--Two bEdroom, home instead of renting.
. Opportunities.
one bath. Corner lot, move , 100% financing
5 year old Colonial on 3 in condition . Appt only. No • Less than perfect credit Honeysuckle
Hills
acres, apprO)(. 1,900 sq. ft . 3 calls after 9:00 P.M. 140· .accepted
Apartments, Gallipolis, now
bdr, 2 baths, 2 car garage. 992·5326.
• Payment could be tl'1e accepting ap~lcatlons lor 2
MOHILE HOMJo:::S
same as rant.
Bedroom Apartments. No
master bdr. is 2Bx24 wilh a
jacuzzi tub.
$125.000.
S
Mortgage
Locators. Rental Assistance available
(740)446-7029
..__ _;.IU;;,RiiiiiiAiiLE;;,;-~ (740)367-0000
at this time. Rent starts at
AAA MODULAR ran ch
$315/mo. Equal Housing
models
,
. Midwest 141155·'9! Fleetwood MH· Hartford area, cl(tan, 2 bed- Opportunity. {740)446·3344
555 838
Homes (740)828-2750
2BR. condition
1 bath, elec.
heaVAC·
room, 1 bath. $325Deposit
month, Immaculate 2 bedroom
good
$10,500
Call References,
(740)446-3644 tor appt.
reqUired.
No
Pets. apartment in the country.
Attantion!
(304 )576 •4037
New carpet &amp; cabinets,
Local company offering "NO 14M65 Mobile Home in Great
frest11y painted &amp; decorated,
DOWN PAYMENT" pro- Shape ,
Only
$7500. House for rent on lincoln. WID hookup. Beautiful ooungrams for you lo bUy your (740)256· 1427alterdark.
Will be available July 15th. try sening. Must .see to
home instead of renting.
Newly renovated, nice quiet appreciate.
$400/mo.
• 100010 financing
•
2000 t6K80 Clayton. Vinyl neighborhood. Can show on (614)595·7773 or 1·888·
' Less lhan perfect credit S[dlng, Shingle Roof, Heat notice. The Tan Shak call 212·1208.
Pump, New Carpel, 6 other
-.,--------accepted
(740)446-7425 for an appt
.
Modern 1 bedroom apt.
• Payment could be the Homes on Lot. Call for
Pricing.
(740)388·0000· Lovely nome in cOuntry. Pt1one: (740)446-0390.
same as rent.
Locators days,
(740)388-8017- 2BA, LA, K, 1 bath. $450 per
Mortgage
evenings, (740 )794 •0460 • mo./deposit.
No
pets. Nice 1br, all electric, stove &amp;
(740)367·0000
cell, (740)645·6150- cell.
(740)446·2801.
relridg furnished located
near
High
School
'86 Crestrige 14x70 2BR/ 2 New 2 badroom house in $325/month ,. plus daposit
bath, $6,995. Call (740)365· Gallipolis. Clean 'and com· (304)675·3100
lortable Central air, laundry
9948.
2
Nice Clean
br
'86 Skyline front kitchen . room . S550/mo. (740)441· located
'nt Apartment
Pte
t
·n Pot
1
0194 or (740)441-1184.
asan ·
Cash
prieS
$8.995.
Will
Rafridge!Kitchen
Range
lurAll real estate advertlelng
deliver. Call (740)385-9948.
MOIIFOILERD~o~
nished, also Wasner &amp; Dyer.
In this new1paper Ia
Breezewood t x
IU'..l"'l
Forced Air Gas Heat &amp; AC.
subleet to the Federal
91
4 70 3
$3001
Fak Housing Act ot 1968
mont h, $200/deposit
bedroom, 1 bath, total eiec·.
wt11ch m1kn It illagat to
tric. Cai1(740) 6·6S8 .
2br Trailer for Rent ·Rt
(304)675·7628
87
25
7
advertiu "any
AAA MODULAR ranch $250 month plus deposit Nice,
clean
Efficiency
pr...rtnca, llmlllllfon or
models $55,838. Midwest _13_0_1
4 8_9_5-_35_6_t _ _ _ _ Apartment Ref. &amp; Dep.req.
d!.crlminatlon baud on
(740)8
No Pel's 304-675-5 t 62
H
race, color, reUglon, sex
28 -2750
ames
2BR, large livingroom, wash
tanrillal1tatua or ni.tional
Brand
new
·with awning, North 3rd Ave., Middleport,
16. wide room, porch
origin, or any Intention to
'ld.
"C
2
bedroom,
furnished,
vinyllsh 1ngle $181/mo. Call s1orage bUl 1ng, rv , very
make any such
nice. no pets. In Gallipolis. deposit &amp; previous rental
(740 )385 .767 1.
ptelerenc., llmltatton or
(740)446·2003, (740)446- reetterences re_quired , No
discrimination."
p s, (740)992 0165
LANO &amp; HOME PACK· 1409
AGES· 1st time buyers &amp; _::_________
This newapeper will not
FHA.
Midwest
Homes 3 Bd and 2 Bd. Mobile Single Bedroom.S300 month
knowingly I[H::cept
(7401828 _2750
Homes , both 1 112 bath, + $300 deposit 2 br Apt.
adv.niMment. for real
Pomeroy Area. Call 740- S350amonthS300deposil.
..tat. which Ia In
Mobile Home lor sale 14 X2_4.:_3:.:-5:.:8_,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Tracy's Apt (304)675-2288
vloletlan of tha law. Our
70, good condit1on. Will sell ruder• are hereby
on land contract. 740-992· For rent: Nice 2 bedroom Tara
Townhouse
lnfarmed 1hat all

,3644.:___fo~r.:_a:::p::.pl-'ic~at-'io~n-'.

c

s

o

c

s

r

dwellings advertised In
thla newspaper are
avaU.ble on an equal
opportunity baaea.

5858

Gallipolis Ferry, Approx. 100
yr old 2 Sty, 3 bedroom, 1
1/4 bath. Farmhouse Style
Home, w/central heat and
AJC, on approx. 1 level acre,
near Beale Etem. School
$69,900 Tri·County Realty,
304)773-9000 (304)633·
1
1622 Paul Hemann
AN
H DYMAN PECIAL
Foreclosed. new 3 Bdrm
ranch w/2'bathrooms. In drywall stage. sits on 2 beautiful
acres, city water at road .
Aboul 1hr Northeast from
Gallipolis, $74',500 ownerlinanclng. (74)489-9146.
House For Sate.
In

s

I

'

r

APARTMENTS
n&gt;R RENT

Nice 14x70 3 bedroom only __
10 ,995 . Will nelp with deliv·
ery. Call (740)385·962t .
t and 2 bedroom apart·
ments, lurnish&amp;d and unfurREPO'S •• "USED 1rom nishad, security deposil
$1,900 down . Midwest required, no pets, 74 992 .
Homes (740)828·2750
2218 .

s

o-

Vary clean 14)(64 2 bed- t bedroo
· m,
0
$
upstairs unfur·
room .
nly 7,995. Call nlshed apartment , with
(740)385-0698.
range, refr.. disposal and
LO'lS &amp;
garage. 136 First Ave., rear.

-r

r

..""'-=-.,J

t.,.---~-"
_

Auto &amp; Truck

ti.! . I·

.

R .
epatr

992 5682

air, nice, $5495: Riverview

1999 Chevy Silverado 4WO
PtU, 85,000 miles, 5.3 V8,
all options, short bed with
topper. Excellent Condi tion,
$t t ,000 (740)645·0626.

"------~--,1

'-:-::-'----c-----c----

1:1:~--~~---.

304-675· speed 3,900
(740)2566251, {740)645- 1393.

r

Bo,\'rs&amp; MoroRS
tUN. SALE

I!ZI'--~---""'1 .:.:.:..:..:_:::.;_;,:::.,;__::::___ .~---iiiiiiiiiiiii-.,J

2000 Dodge Neon, 85,000
miles. Cold Air, Runs Great.
Reali
od
$2400
Y go
on gas.
OBO. {740)256·1233 or
9 Miniature Dachshunds first (740)256·9031 .
shots &amp; wormed reedy to go
07-22-06 304·593·3820
2002 Olds Alero teat green
-----~--- "Awesome car"
Under
AKP black Lab, Qood hunt- 21 ,000 miles V6· 3.4L
ennine. Runs nreatl Askt'ng
mg
clog.
$200.
Cali
•
,
{740 )441 _0405 .
$7,000. Cali after 6pm
.- - - - - - - - (740)992·1090
·Beautiful
AKC
Golden "'::~.::;_.:.::.:.:.,_ __
Retriever pups 6 weEks old 2004 Chevy Cavalier LS,
fully loaded, 44,000 miles.
~parents on· .premises· 1 gold In color, traction control
malef 2 females 740.256· and security system, NADA
1084
$10,500 wilt sell lor $9 ,1 00
- - - - - - - - FIRM. (740)992-2456 or
CKC ..,iniature Pinscher, (740)992 _4063
·
Ready to Go. Black/Tan.
I:'
.'U...II:o

-A~ed/T_a_n_&amp;_c_r•_a_m_rn_an
___c_aJI ~15
(740) "8 8788
0

~r~---:4~x"!""4

C·

:oo.

a..-.,;iiiiiiiiiii--

For
Sale: Vine
Ripe
Tomatoes
at
Yoder's
Greenhouse. 1Omi. West of
GIll " I
SA

2 horse tra1Jer lor sale, good
condition
Roy
Phillips
(740)256-t 355
Have some hauling to do?
Carmichael
Equipmentyour source . for quality
gOosenecks, dumps and uiil·
ilies. Your dealer lot Prostar
and Load Tra!l trailers .
(740)446-2412.
John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill
for
rent
Carmichael
Equipment (740)446·2412.

\

:·.

The Daily Sentinel'

992-2155
:·

• References

S'v10' '

•
•

Available

.,..., "

• Free Estimates

.'to 10'X30'

"--------.,1

John Deere Mini EKcavatot/
TractOr Loader Backlloe/
Skid Staers. Carmichael
Equipment (740)446·2412
New John Deere Compacts
and 5000 Series UtiNty tractors 00% Fixed for 36
month• through
John
Deere Credit. Carmict1ael
Equipment (740)446-2412
Quality John Deere Hay
Equipment lor less-round
balars. squar.e balers &amp;
mower conditioners 04 .7%
Fix:ed lor 48 months through
Deere
Credit
John
·Carmichael
Equ1pment
(740)446~2412.

Q4

•

Dealer•West
Vulnerable :

&amp; MEDICAt EQUIP~tENT
• CPA!'

• Hehos

• Hospital Beds

• Hnrnefill

• Wheelchairs i

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• 1\'ebulizers

wtto 1&gt;0 YOU .Tttlf"IC
/ YOU'((E ~ll&gt;PING?
itt~ CIJI SCOUTS
l&gt;ON'T tMV~ A
"SnCIALoPS~

Oelivering Daily *One Stop Shop*
740·446·0007 Toll Free 177-&amp;&amp;9·0007
TO Pine Street • Gallipolis
I..Jtcalf · ow11ed. Wt care about ou!

~,._.. ,

.... - .

EYEBLACK ?II FER

www:tlmbo...,..eokcobblotJoy.com

••

~;;;;;;~~~!:~=:~:~
1.1· \\

7-7

BARNEY

Hamntl Cabinetry And rurnliure
~

A POICER

GAME

.

?It
"

JT CUTS

AN' YOU'VE SEEN
TH' GLARES I GIT
WHEN I'M
DEALIN' !!

DOWN ON
TH' GLARE,
LUKE'( !!

h

II·

I 0\1 Rl

'1'0\;. I Rl I 110\

Concrete Removal
and Replacement
;,._··_'
. . .~.•-._,.·_· •. I..."
_._._ ..
•".,,,
- ~v
_ .:_ . i.,',..·
.(Q

•, Garages
• Complete

· ,, C

d I
ing

~lr:·"-

v• ,

\" ~.... hr -1&lt;1Hi

.one;~..., .YIO.-. ).

'

26 Years

Remo e

Experience

David Le,wis

140·992·1611

740-992-6971

Stop &amp; Compare

lmured

47
:rr~fr~~~~~~~~~~F~rc
~e~E:s~ti~m~at~
es
1
.1

IMPORTS
Athens

CAMPF.H." &amp;

93 Columbus Rd.

·--iiiiliiiitiiill-.,1

• I

I

'

P'!:~::&amp;r

Advertise in
this space for
$27 per
month

...

All types ot rooting:
New or Repair
Seamless Gutte'r
Downspout

0

NOWRIIIIDU
A~J MIDI Storage
992·6396
992·2212

''

FREE
ESTIMATES
'(740) 949·1405~

l!!tl:'IS!:!WU:a!:'l!LLII.!:L!L~IJ£

PEANUTS
I'M NOT SU~E I WANT
TO 60 TO CAMP.

6ET14ERE IN
SIX MINUTES ..

0

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR S54 PER

MONTH

WA~:~~:~~~ING

SUNSHINE CLUB

~

Cornerstone
Construction

!I '; ~

Residenti~l: Comml'rl'lnl o Generol Contracting
Pa111tmg o Doors • Win dow~ • Decks

•

Sidin~

o

Ruo ting • Ruo111 Additions • Rcmudeli ng·

WV 038992
OH 38244

o

Pltunhmg
o

Elc..:tno.:al 7.t0-367.05U
AC(.'Ou~tiC Ceiling
740·339~12
o

-Economy Beef $8.25
·Shade R1ver Beef $8.75 ·· ·
·Whole/Shell Corn $7.25/Bag
·Cracked Corn $8.25/Bag
·Soybean Meal $13.25/Bag
·Shade River Hog Feed $9.50

I

GARFIELD

Why Drive Anyw~ere Else?

Shade River AG Service, Inc
355~7

St

Rt

•••

7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985-3831

FOR RENT· MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.
1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also CommerciCII Space
740·416-5547
YOUNG'S

I

I

of opera

Middleport,

OH

.I Ox 1Ox I Ox20
992-l194
or992-6635
"Middleport's only

Self-Storage"

Pass

A

Some deals offer real insight Into what
ihis game can be about. This IS an exam·
pie, taken from a pair event.
3outh is in lwo spades, after East
opened in third pos1tion with a weak two·
bid in hearts. West cashes his two top
clubs, Easl playing high-low to show his
· doubleton. How should the play proceed
if West continues with a third club, East
rutting. with the spade 1O; or if West
sh ifts to the heart eight?
When ' West shows up with six clubs
headed by the ace-king , East becomes
marketi with the diamond ace. Why?
Because West, with thai card as . well,
would have opened one club.
. If West plays a 1hird club and East tries
to uppercut declarer, with th~ spade 1o,
South should calmly discard the heart
live - a classic loser-on -loser play.
South Will win the ne)(t tnck. probably
with the heart ace, draw trumps, and
play a low diamond to dummy's 10, ending with an overtrick .
When West shifts to a heart at tr ick
three, declarer plays similarly, again win·
ning nine tricks.
At one table , though , after winning the
third trick with tile heart ace and remov·
ing trumps, South incorrectly led the dia:
mond jack, covered with the queen , king
and ace. Now East defended cleverly,
cash ing the heart king and returhing the
diamond six. South pul up his eight~ so
East· now had to score a trick with his
diamond seven. Declarer ended with
only eight tricll.s for zero match points.
South erred . If East had the 9·6 or dia·
monds left, he would have led the heart
queen (not the diamond silt), torcing
South to ruff and lo play diamonds him·
self.

AstroGraph
'blr 'lllrlhdo,y :

Saturday, July 8, 2006
By Bernice Bede Osol
A great deal more energy and attention
might be focused on your commercial
Interests In the year ahead - which can
do much for your security. If you handle
matters wisely, substantial gains are li~e­
ly.
CANCER (June 2t-July 22) - You may
be far more ingen1ous and adept at mak·
ing eKcuses lor wt1y something shouldn't
be done. ratt1er than accepting the fact
that it ' st1ould be taken care ot.
LEO (July 23-Aug. ·22) - Guard aga1nst
your early inclinations to treat serious
matters with indifference . 11 might be a lot
easier, but, if you do, there's·a chance
the last liiugh will be on you .
VIRGO (Aug . 23-S~pt. 22) - There is a
strong probability tt1at domestic pr9s sun=ts could turn out to be a bit heavier
tharl usual, owing to external influen ces.
Try to shut oul the worldly woes knocking
at your door.
.
LIBRA (Sept 23.0c1. 23) - Be the first
to step up and acknow ledge your own
mistakes. If you're In error about some·
th ing and you know it, don't point the finger of blame at enother. It'll make you
looK bad.
SCORPIO (Oct 24 -Nov. 22) - Unless
you are careful about sticking to your
game plan involving a financial goal ,
somathinQ that could have been yours
miQht .sHp through your fingers. Taka
notning for granted.
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov. 23-~c. 2 t ) Instead of slicking to your guns and the
course ol .action you've set for yourself,
you rriay let someone who is far less
effective talk you into his/her inadequale
way of doing things.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) Lingering problems COLJ id result, espe·
cially if you break down and do thing s'
that are based on motives not up to your
usual high standards. Keep your lofty
principles Intact.
AQUARIUS (Ja n. 20-Feb. 19) - An
extravagant lriend may entice you to be
much looser wl1h your resources than
you normally would be. 'Waste not, want
not" Is a good motto to keep In mind and
stick by.
PISCES (Feb. 20·Merch 20) - '
Sometimes you can relax and ignore
things, but this Is not likely to be one of
those days when It Is OK to ease up on
your established objectives. It would
Impede your progress.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) - Be careful
you don't make any caualle comments
just because you're temporarily annoyed
with someone you like. It might not be
that easy to klse and make up.
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - If ycu're
not alert or on your toea al all times,
especially when It comea to your com marclaltransactlona, there 1111 a poaslblll·
ty you might do aomethlng t11a1 does not
serve your bestlnterasts.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) -Your ener.'
gy and/or dedication tc a project might
~~ be In harmony with your ambition•. If
you 're Mt wlllln.g to pay the price, a goal

34

~:esheher

Electric floh
Archlpelogo
dot
52 Uh-huh
53 Battery size
54 First name
in jezz
55 Mrs. CNrtee
56 Graylshbrown
57 Jet noise

DOWN

2t TeloviHt ·
24 Phanneclst
1 Arlth. tonn
- Lilly
2 Oopsl
25 Cleopatra's
(hyph.)
wooer
3 Billionth,
26 HI or bye
In combos
27 Party
4 Larger
centerpiece
5 Aquamarine 28 Flxas
mineral
a squoak
6 Goodall
29 Mope
subject
3t Took .the
7
2
33
( wds.)

~~:.~)le

~

35
36
37
39

Jab
8 Turn pale
Deep purple 9 Fnxn rnornory 35
Prairie walt 10 1939 Lugool
Ho~zon,
rola
36
maybe
1 t Web addnoos ·
40 GP group
ending
38
41 Morae click 19 Golly!

Remodeling
New Garage1 .
Electrical &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Gutt•r•
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Parct1 Decks
wv 036725

Protest
aong .
42 Fridge lllck
43 Sheil! of
the movlee
45 Europeen
41

capital

48 EaU•h,...
pot
47 Novelist

-Rand
49

r.'::m

Thurman
51 Flair lor
Stately
music
display
More
concise
Harley
compatHor

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Cell!btity .Ciprel r:rypt:x;jrams are aMI&amp;d trom quotatiOns b'f t~~MUS peoplll, pest arr1 j:tt!lenl
Eech letl$r 111 the ~ stards ror anothef ,
.

TortaysciUa: Hequals c
"JNSCMR
SGD ...

HCD

CAA

PNWBDCRX
BR. " -

JX

LX
C

RNGSL

LCT

RN

THXDX

MCIWNDP

BT

ZBRLNGR

PN

RN

RN

XDRXM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION ' Did you aver sea a place that looks like
just fo e~oy1 ... Maine looks that way.' - Wtll Rogers

Tll.\t OAilT

mma

Lit&lt;e 1b

ee a

ON THe WBLL

R&gt;R T~ C&lt;ltN~'llON ~

it was

~©itJ.\1-A-~t~~·. ::::

0

Qtarran;-o ltt!trl cf rhe
fcut acromble.d words
!ow to form four limplt words.

ea.

ACOLET

TV MUS

I I' I" I
D UB N 0

During an interview lbc man saw
h,,-,.... -rl--:;l-1~ !bat he had f!lfgotten to take the 1111
~ off his new suil "Well," he mused
. - - - - - - - - , t o his potential bo$$, "ifl don't get
D 1wC E K
llhejob I can take lbc-- -."

.,. ,,.:.
11

:

(-..,.,;;,.7..,.,;_1;:.8,:;.,,;.::...,,-1

L-J...-L.--1.-.l.-.l.....J.

0

Co,.olete lh.. chuckle quoted .,

yo~o~

by filling in 1ht tniu1ng wards
dtYeiop ftom ~~~ No, 3 beJow:.

SCRAML!TS AHSWI!RS TltiOI

Sbak}'- Hooded -LOOKS LIKE
"That woman is not very small," llold a colleague. "She
told me she lent a tiiend mcney for a lice lift, now she
d~n't know w~ she LOOKS LIKE." , .
Alkali -Flock-

--

ARLO &amp; JANIS ~
IF YOUR I.IFE lo!l'f AU.. YOU
E.XI'tCf, YOU'~E.1HE.OULY
OIJE. WHO CAf.l CHAI.lOC IT.'

I

llon'-r 1\.\inl&lt; I'o

wanna

B~

a

FLY.,

ONe ~lnG , llieiR

DieTaRY cHOic~s Lea-e
a LoT&lt;&gt; Be DEsiJ&lt;ep.•.

992-5215

'J

\

••

bui~

- - - - - - . . : loll"~~. CU.Y •. 'O(Wt _.;...._ _...,.._

PornNoy Otuo
25 Y~.us I OCcll l'xpe•lt'I\Cl'

l

C

HLCDPAXM

V.C. YOUNG Ill

11

39 Trltlll wont

SOUP TO NUTZ

&amp;

Street

Eul

t4 Company
emblem
15 0Y8f wllh
t6 Michael
Stipe's
group
t7 Quark's
place
18 Hero
sandwich
20 More
ieve1headed
22 0111. bill
23 Photo
24 Phll~ln or
Se/ak
27 Dr ve-In
employee
30 Secret bose
31 Is on the go
32 Promissory

48
SO

that can be achieved Won't be.

CARPENTER
MANLEY'S
SElf STORAGE RaomSERVICE
Addition•
97 Beech

2.

North
Pass
P~s

A card-reading
cornucopia

G

BIG NATE

MOtOR HOl\U:S

Both

Opening lead: •

I

• Po~able Oxygen

21 ft. Glasport boat &amp; •
Tandem tra1ler. 305 Chevy
1n b o a r d 1 o u t b o a r d
Mercruiser, 150 hours. Call
(740)384-2646. $6,000

antee. Local rolerences fur·
nished. Established 1975.
c 11 24 H
74
44
a
· rs. ( 0)
60870, Rogers Basement
Waterproofing,

A 5

• J 64 3

Wtsl

• New Homes

2

• !0 7
.KQJ 762
t A76
&gt;2 • 8 3

Pass
Pass

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSJRUCJIIN

s

East

•

90hp, and Trailer. Lots of
E~&lt;tra 's (304)882-1148 after
3:00pm Asking $6,500
··

02 Wildcat 27f1 _ 511'1 wheel,
slide out. Look and make
of1er. Call (740)245·91b9,
(7 40 )44 I -7632

K 10

84
Q9
A K 10 7

"Insured''
Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293

Hours
7:00AM • 8:00 PM

10 9 3

t

South
ifoA"KQ95

1993 16ft Capehorn fishing
boat. 2000 model motor.

FOTKRUSA!.El."KS

lent condition, likE new
FOR SAlE
5700
150
•
· Chest freezer $
good condition. (740)245·
1990 7.3 diesel 5 speed.
9439 after 4
i:ir~~:;;:;;.....,..-...., 4x4, 150,000 mifes. $4,900 .
FR~ &amp;
{740)388 . 8358 .
VEGJITABI..ES

FARM

$i7.00 PER~0Nnt(

Sl•"'"'

P'2lf

F.QUIPMF.Nf

.

740·949·2217

•

West
J 6 3

•
•

• Affordable Rates

PETs

FORS.u
"----iiiiiiiiiilo-,J

I \ll\ 1 "I 1'1 '1 I I 'o
,\ I I \ I " I I I( h

ON THIS
FOR
. PAGE
.
AS LOW AS

work

.

07-07-o&amp;

842

• J 96

r

-Se-1-iln_g_o_u_t:_A_e_tn-.g~ar_a_to-r-17

,

45771

•

foR SALE J
~~---tiliiillliilliooi~

[30

"--lliiNrnliilloiiii!WMliiliiiiitiilo.,J

,,

29670 Bashan Road
Racine, Ohio

North

4X4

Motors 1 block above ~~--~----,
Antiques; Repaired and McDonalds, Pomeroy, Oh,
VA~S
A
740·992·3490
FOR SA""
efinished.
Also,far
BuySale.
and - - - - - - - - SelL
Lumber
1982 Thunderbird Bl
Gibbs
Wood
and Exterior.
:leathe
uer 2000
Ivory
Dodge
Caravan
Flestoration Shop, 49985 Interior , White vinyl top $4,000 OBO. (740)256- 161 B
Tornado Road, Racine. Call Nice driver, 390cl engme, or (740)256-6200. '
949-2246.
auto transmission, power Luxury
Van.
Chevy,
steering, power brake,
Buy or sell. · Riverine
E11cellent
condition,
Antiques, t 124 East Main power window, power seat mechanic owned. travel in
Price $9,500.00.
Hil l's tyl
1 $
·
on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
s e, must see. 5,900 or
992-2526. Russ Moore, AutomOtive Classic Car best offer. 446·9961
Restoration &amp; Parts. Inc., "?.:!!'"'~--..;...--.,
owner.
F 40 M.oruR~·c· ·~'
~~~~----- 29670 Bashan Road,
~.., .LI!.Y
MlscFIJ.ANEOUS
Ffacine, Ohio 45771: Phone· ••4•~-iiiili
:LiiEii:ruiiis--,J
MEROIAND~
740·949·2217; Fa)(: 740·
~~--Oiiiiiiiiiiililliiil_. 949-1957; Pictured on , 1992-Harley Davidson 883
12oocc,
JET
wwwthynderbjrdcenterconi Low
A ider,
AERATION MOTORS
1993 Honda Accord, Runs Hypercharger with Screamin
Repaired, New &amp; Rebuillln eKcellent, $ 1200. (740 )245 _ Eagle E)(haust &amp; High perStock. Call Ron Evans, t - 5672
lormance Carb. Porkster gas
800-537·9528.
- - - - -- - - - tank . Garage kept, never
1996 Ford Windstar LX. ridden in Rain (304 )675 .
0
NEW AND
USED . STEEL Runs/looks
· gOOd
' c $1,500
ld I'V
"C •-..,'t564
·
loaded. Must
sell
- - - - -- - Steel Beams, Pipe Reber OBO. ,
(740)645·3727 1996 Honda CBA 600 F3.
For
Concrete,
Angle, (740)388 •0528 .
Runs excellent, very last.
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Must sell S2,000 OBO.
Grating
For
Drains, 1998
Cadillac
Devill e, (7 40)64.5·3727 (740)3El8·
Driveways&amp;Walkways. L&amp;L 77,200 miles. 2 owner car, 0528.
Scrap Metals Open Monday, eKceii9nt condition . $7,500. '-':.:.:__ _ _ _ _ _ __
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp; (740}446-3389.
1999 Black Harley Davidson
Friday, 8am-4:30pm. Closed '---'---'--'-'-'-'------ Fatboy. Lots of chrome and
t999 But·~ LeSabre V6
1
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
"'"
·
' ex ras 9.400 miles. Call
Sunday. (740)44&amp;- 7300
4dr, power everything, AM- (740)446-9954 or (740)339·
FM cassette, new ti res, 78K, 3528 .
clean . $4,900. (740)379· .:_:::.:.:__ _ __:___
Tires and rims 4 sale, 2748
2002 Yamaha vstar 1100
AmeriCan Racing wheels. - - : - : - - - : - - - - - - - Classic. 5,500 miles. black.
Call me at (304)576-2225 1999 Pontiac Grand Am , new condition, leather bags,
$250.
red, AC, automatic, beautilul 50mpg, $5,000. (7401245·
- - - - - - - - car. 4,200 ..
5934
want to buy Charles 1996 Camaro red. Hops, 5
Dickens books
6499

8 - ·a-brae

wotcltdog

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRAC11NG
. • Prompt &amp; quall'ty

::=======
:=~~==":":":m:':·:'"~-=~~L:e:a:ve::a:m~e~ss:a:g:e;:
Ij
•

I

Deposit and Reference. cu.lt frost free was $1?5,
(740)446-256 1.
now $t45; refrigerator frost
$
•
1 BR apt/cabin, all utilities nee now 75; , 0 ,000 and
paid. Call (740)44 t . 0117 .
12,000 BTU eir conditioners
$95/each: dryer now $85,
2BA. For sale: 2.87 acres land 1BA apt. in Spring Valley. ,washer now $85. 76 Vine
Middleport, 4BA.
Priced below appraisal. Walnut Twp. Ideal for mobile WI D hookups. HUD/PRC Street,
9:00am-t:OOpm
www.orvtl.com #6276. Call home. Call · for
pr1ce accepted . Call (740)446· 1740)446-7t DO
or
by
·(740)992-596t .
(740)256·6958.
0834 or (740)339-0362
appointment (740)36~·7886

Hill's Self
Storage

3 miles west of
Pomeroy, OH
on S,tate Rto 124

!~r.1ll'o.;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

I

Gl.........,

An•- to P,..louo Pumo

42 Energy

44 Cvbors(llee

t
bfggle
5 Coil~ 47 Gtuck
t2 Grill otaai&lt;l
t3 Acid rain

1997-Aerolite 25·FDB travel
Trailer.
Self-contained
vg •
wlk1tchen . couch, 1able,
Full blooded Rat Terrier
1994 Chev . Dully pickup neat/air and bathroom,
pups, 3 ma tes, 1 female $75
diesel. Must see to appreci· Separate bedroom wldouble
each. Coli (740)245-9061.
alec[7401256·6574.
bed and bunk. Plenty of
storage.
Asking $5,600
Registered AKC Lob pup·
SUVS
(304)675-695.7
or (304)593·
pies. Choc &amp; black, m.ale
FOR SALE
2176 °
and female. Wormed 2x. " - - - - - - - Ready to go. Call (740)388- 1998 GMC 4x4, SUV. V6, 1999-25 loot Sandpiper 5th
apartment, call 675·6679 9932 anytime.
auto, 7400 miles. A1. condi· wheel travel trailer w1th 12
Equal Hoosing Opportunity
tlon, $7,500. (740)367-7123, loot slide-out. Very good
condition . $9500. 740·949·
•Tea-Cup Yorkie, female, 4583 NSR 7.
1
2615,
2 weeks.
rto
Hou;mow
•Tee-Cup Poodle, female, 2003 Jeep Liberty 4x4
"o lIn HIs
t2weeks · Aeg lste re d · t'my . $9,800. (740 )256 -1618 or
GooD;
..__ _ _ _ _ _ _,J baby doll face. (740)446· (740)256-6200.
IP.!r"';..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
10
9428
HOME
Used Furniture Store, 1 3 1
0
'='-....,~---....,
r
2003 Mazda Tribute (Sma ll
IMPROVEME.vrs
Bllleville Pike. Stop by
MUSICAL
SUV) $10,200 080. Call L-..Oiiiaillililliiiii;,:;::..,J
{740)446-4782 , Gallipolis,
(740)256-1618 or (740)256·
OH. Hrs. 11·3 (M·F)
6200.
.
Kimball Studio Piano, excel__, Unconditional llletlme guar-

Syrecuse: two-bedfoom with
ACREAGE
bath, anached garage and --..
,
b asement. An estate sale. 49.5 acres by Tycoon J.ake.
S?O.OOO. Pt1one 9~2-3690. Call (740)709-1166

'

Phillip
Alder

~esslng

washers &amp; dryers, refrloeraAuras
tors, gas and electric ·--·FO-RiiSiiAiiLEii'io••
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Wilt do aou~toF,o.rd,·r, l&lt;loaaudruesd., 4$7d4r9.,5·V, oo·6,
repairs on major brands In
shop or at your home.
Ford Escort ZX2, 2dr, auto,
air. sharp, $4495: 01
PIymol/1 h .,
.tvrvuliX'
1,.eon, 4dr, auto,

mobile home in Country Apartments, Very Sp9:i::ious,
Homes. $325 + deposit 2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 1/2
NEW 3 br doublewides from ·(740)385-4019.
Beth, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
$269 mo. Mklwest Homes
Poo l, Patio, Start $425/Mo.
(740)628·2750.
Mobile home sites for up to No Pets, Lease· Plus
16x80 in Country HomeS. S
NEW
SINGLEWIDE·
ecurity Deposit Flequired,
(740)385-4019.
I 4
$22,572 Midwest Homes
7 0)367-7086.
(740)828-~750.
Mobile Home sites for up to Twin Riv8rs Tower Is accept·
:::..:___;_~:,-,.-.,---- 16x80 in Country Homes.
NEW
StNGLEWIOE- (740)385 _4019 .
ing applications lor waiting
$22,572 Midwest Homes ~~;;..;...;..._ _ _..., list for Hud-subslzeGI, 1- br,
,1_7 4_0:.._
)8_2_
8·_
2_75_0_.- - - -

ACROSS

JO.i.

Warranty, also have recon- CarmWtl Equipment. New
BEAUTIFUL
APART· dltioned Big Screen TV's dealer lor valley end
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
Kieferbuill
Horse
and
PRICES AT JACKSON by Ron'• TV (30')175- Llvaatoct&lt; Trailers. Many
ESTATES, S2 Westwood 7188
options: available- steel. alu Drl\le from $344 to $442. - - - - - - - - - mlnum,
rooms, liv·
'Walk to shop &amp;'mO'Itee. Calf New Sofa &amp; Loveseat, $400; lng quarters. (740)446-24t2.
740·«6·2568.
Equal Sofa
&amp; Chair, $350;
HoUsrng Opportunny.
Recffner, $200. Open 9am·
Brand new 2 Bedroom apm Sat, M~fohan's, 202 ~
,
Clart&lt; Chapel Fload, f:Jorter,
Apartments Washer/dryer Ohio.
{740)388·0173: Hay for Sale. 1000 Round
hookup, s1ove/refrigerator (749)448·7444.
Bales, mixed hay. 740 .949 _
included.
- - - - - - - - 2059
Also available units State Thompsons Appliance &amp;

NEA Cronword Puzzle

BRIDGE

2 Reg. Persian mares
$1,200 each. Call (740)38St9747

5 full blooded Boer billyWlrahouae goats, vaccinated &amp; wormed
3 mon. olct $125.00
675-5906
In Henderson, WV. Pre· ~------­
owned Appliances stanlng Ouallty horae and livestock
at $75 &amp; up all under trailers now available at

2 Btdroom Apartments
Downtown acr0681rom park,
newly renovated, central
HfA include&amp; water, sewer,
garbage (740)709-1890

with tess than perfect creditr
~,..--"'u"""'~----..., _
is available on this 3 bed·
J.IVUX.o')

The Daily Sentil)el • Page 87

-

~-=-------

HOME'&gt;

FOR SALE

Applllnce

www.mydailysentinel.com

\

�Page 88 • lhe Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 7, 2006

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wie, Sorenstam win Match Play openers
GLADSTONE. N.J. (AP)
- Michelle Wie overcame a
shaky start to win -her first'
match in the HSBC Women's
World
Match
Play
Championship, and Annika
Sorenstam followed her U.S.
Women's Open victory with
another solid round.
Wie rail ied to beat 63rd"
seeded Candy Hannemann 5
and 3 on Thursday. and the
top-seeded
Sorenstam
opened with a 3-and-2 victory over No. 64 Virada
Nirapathpongporn on the
waterlogged Hamilton Farm
course.
With about 200 people following Wie on the hazy,
humid day, the 16-year-old
star lost the first two holes .
She hit her opening drive
under a tree in the right rough
en route to a bogey. then lost
the par-5 second when
Hannemann made a 3-footer
for birdie.

''I just got off to a rocky
After a 'halve on No. 10,
start,' Wie said. "Obviously, JN.ie birdied the par-S II th to
the first hole was not as a l . take a 5-up lead. Hannemann
planned, but after that it was won the par-3 12th with a
really nice ."
birdie, and they halved the
After halving the par-4 next two holes with pars
third. the second-seeded Wie before Wie ended the match
won the next six holes.
with a !Jirdie - her sixth of
"In match play, if you don't the day - on the par-4 15th.
play. good one day, then
Wie advanced' to_ a secondyou're out of it," said Wie , round match agamst 34thcoming off a third-place tie in seeded Christina Kim, the
the
Women 's
Open. talkative Solheim Cup star
"Nothing is guaranteed here. who beat Joo Mi Kim 2 and
I think it makes it a lot more I.
challen&amp;ing and a lot more
"I've played with her a
lot ," Wie said. "She's really
intense.'
Wie two-putted for pars on fun to talk to. She calls me
tpc par-4 fourth and fifth sometimes. She's really a
holes to square the match and nice girl. ... Obviously,
took the lead on the par-4 Christina gets very excited as
sixth, hitting a sand wed~e you could see in the Solheim
shot that spun back withm Cup. It's very fun and interinches of the hole. She hit a estmg to watch."
7-iron to 3 feet on the 178Christina Kim was lookirig
yard seventh to set up a birdie forward to facing Wie in
and also birdied Nos. 8 and 9 front of a big crowd.
to make the turn 4-up.
"I'm guessing that they

won't all be rooting for me ;"
she said. "But I think I can
work my charm and convert
a few.''

Sorenstam
edged
Nirapathpongpom three days
after beating Pat Hurst 70.-74
in an 18-hole playoff for her
third U.S. Women's Open
title.
"I thought I hit some good
shots today, drove it really
well and rolled in some putts,
so I'm very pleased,"
Sorenstam said.
The Swede won Nos. 2-4
to take a 3-up lead, but
Nirapathpongpom took the
lOth and 12th to pull within
one. Sorenstam won the 13th,
Nirapathpongpom took the
14th and Sorenstam won the
next two holes to end the
match.
Sorenstam advanced to
face Heather Young, a 19hole winner over Sung-Ah
Yim.

AP photo

Justine Henin-Hardenne of Belgium celebrates her 6-4, 7-6
win over Kim Clijsters of Belgium after their.Women's Singles'
semifinal match on Wimpledon's Centre Court Thursday.

Henin-Hardenne to
face Mauresmo in
Wimbledon fmal
WIMBLEDON, England er today (on grass) than I
(AP) - Justine Henin- was a few years ago."Hardenne is one vi~tory
Nadal will face Marcos
from .a career Grand Slam. Baghdatis, who upset 2002
She
'defeated
Kim champion Lleyton Hewitt
Clijsters 6-4, 7-6 (4) 6-1, 5-7. 7-6 (5), 6-2 on
Thwsday · to reach the Wednesday .
Wimbledon final and close
The other men's semifiin on the one major title nal will pit Bjorkman
missing from her collec- against three-time defendlion .
ing
champion
Roger
The third-seeded Henin- Federer, who defeated
Hardenne will face No. I Mario Ancic 6-4. 6-4, 6-4
Amelie Mauresmo or 2004 to extend his grass-court
champion
Maria winning streak to 46
Sharapova in Saturday's matches and• reach his
championship.
· ninth consecutive Grand
French Open champion Slam semi.
Rafael Nadal advanced to
The 20-year-old Nadal is
the men's semifinals by the seventh youngest
beating Finland's Jarkko Wimbledon semifinalist
Nieminen 6-3, 6-4, 6-4. and first Spaniard to get
Their quarterfinal was this far since Manuel
postponed
Wedne sday Orante s in 1972. He's
after Jonas Bjorkman 's challenging to become the
five-set
victory
over first player to win the
Radek Stepanek took 6 1/2 Ftench
Open
and
hours, including two rafn Wimbledon in _the same
delays totaling 2 112 hours . year since Bjorn Borg in
Henin-Hardenne reached 1980.
the Wimbledo·n final in
Many people didn't
200 I, losing to Venus think Nadal, winner of a
Williams. Since then, she record 60 . straight clayhas won three French court matches , could make
Opens and one U.S. Open a title run on grass. But
and Australian Open . By he's wol) 12 sets in a row
taking Wimbledon, she and hasn't been broken
would become only the since the second round.
lOth woman to win all four
"His game is more dan Grand Slams.
gerous on clay, but he's
"I don ' t have anything to playing really well on
prove to anyone anymore," grass, too," Nieminen said.
Henin-Hardenne said. ''I "It's really surprising."
-think I proved enough on
Henin -Hardenne beat
the tennis court the fighter Clijsters for the fourth
I am , how much I can com- straight time at a Grand
pete. There's always a lot' Slam tournament in a
of determination . 'It's just match that swung tn
about myself, and I hope I momentum during both
can win this title ."
sets. She raised 'ner game
Thursday's match . was when needed and played a
the 20th career tour-level more varied, all-court
meeting between Hen in- game than Clijsters, taking
Hardenne and Clijsters and 17 of 21 points at the. net.
seventh at a Grand · Sam,
After being broken to go
but . · their
first
at down 4-3 in the first set ,
Wimbledon .
Henin-Hardenne ran off 12
The two Belgians, whose of the next 16 points and
relationship has often been three straight games to
frosty, shook hands at the take the set. She continued
net. But they did not a stretc h , of II straight
embrace or kiss on the points and 14 of 15 to go
cheeks as is common in up 1-0 and 15-40 on
women's tenni s.
Clijsters'
serve,
but
Henin-Hardenne eve ned Clijsters bore down and
the series at 10-10, win- won three consecutive
ning for the third time in a games for a 3-1 lead .
After another exchange
month after victories in the
French Open quarters and of breaks. Clijsters served
. the Eastbourne grass-court for the set at 6-5 but couldevent.
n 't
conve rt.
Henin ':For the last few match- Hanlenne had three wines that I played, this has ners and Clijsters blew a
been the best. one I played short forehand on break
. against her," Clijsters said. point.
"I'm happy with ,that."
Henin- Hardennc took
Henin- Hardenne
has the lead· at 3-2 in the
won 17 straight matches. tiebreaker and went on to
including 13 consecutive close the 90-minute match
Grand Slam matches with- with a crosscourt passing
out dropping a set. She can shot off her one-handed
become t)le firs t player in backhand.
"[ love this kind of situathe Open era to win the
French
Open
and tion,"
Henin-Hardenne
Wimbledon )lack-to-back said . referring to the
without losing a set. ·
tiebreaker. " I have the
•''Today .I played my best (!:eling tha t is why I am
tennis on important points playing tennis. There is a
when I had to," she said. lot of pressure m the se
'' I'm for sure a better play - moments ."
I

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