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                  <text>Browns lose Bentley
for season, Bt

Reds double ·up
Astros, Bt

.

.

Neighborhood meeting addresses Middleport drug traffic

SPORTS -

J.

attended a community
meeting Thursday night at
the Middleport Church of
MIDDLEPORT- In the. Christ Family Life Center,
past month, law enforce- to discuss what measures
ment officials in and around the community _can take to
Middleport have seized 184 address the drug problem in
grams . of
powdered Middleport.
cocaine, 284 grams of crack
The
meeting
was
cocai ne , 1.25 pounds of arranged by local residents,
marijuana, and I0 grams of with participation from vilmethamphetamine.
lage officials · and law
Seven vehicles, 40 guns enforcement
officers.
and $10,000 in cash were Residents
of
one
seized in those I0 · drug Middleport neighborhood,
searches, according to th at of North Second
Deputy Sheriff Rick Smith. Avenue, Coal and Walnut
They are not statistics a Streets, took their concerns
small community can be to village council a month
proud of Residents of several Middleport neighbor- ago, seeking village interhoods are fed up with drug vention into the problem .
dealers and· drug users in - That discussion resulted in
their
neighborhoods. last night's meeting.
BY BRIAN

• Team says Landis
tested positive during
Tour. See Page 81

REED

BREED®MYOAILYSENTINEL.COM

Approximately

7.1 people

Pluse sH Meeting, AS

Brian J. Reed/photo

Deputy Sheriff Rick Smith and Middleport Pollee Chief Bruce Swift discuss law enforcement
efforts to control drug trafficking in Middleport at a community meeting last night.

-New health
•
msurance
plan promises
county savings

Getting a ·'head start'

BY BRIAN

OBITUARIES

2006-Baby Sentinel

Page 12 •

Thursday, July 27, 2006

All parents want their kids' dreams to come true.
At PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL, every
doctor, nurse and team member is dedicated to
helping your children grow~up to fulfill their dreams.

INSIDE

..
WEATHER
I

Please see Insurance, AS

Beth Sorgonl/photo

Bring on the blues!

God's NET
.

•
•

INDEX
2 SECTIONS- 12 PAGES

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Cr-ea tiblf~~ E!r-{;f{,tltj Ur/t
...

Annie's Mailbox

A6

Calendars

As

Classifieds

B2-4

Comics

Bs

Editorials
Faith • Values.

A4

Movies
NASCAR

As
B6

Obituaries
I

Sports
Weather

A2-3

As
B Section
A6

© 2006 Ohio Volley Publishing Co .

&lt;.:ongcstion.

This work will include the
removal of old rails near
•
Wendy's and Po\vell's Food
Fair on East Main Street to
level
the surface.
BY BETH SERGENT
Pavinu \Vill cuvcr un· area
BSERGE'.NT@IMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
of around 2.4 miles beginning .2 mib nort h of the
POMEROY - Gone are
Pomeroy-MtNlll Bridge and
the days when all you needed
ending
south of the intersecto 'retum to school were pention
of
Route H)3 and Ohio
cils and some paper which is
12-+ nea r Ponwrm Water
why God's NET will be.
Works
Park .
• '
holding its annual school
The
Ohio
Department
uf
supplies giveaway from 6
Tratl&gt;po rta ti&lt;ln
iODOT)
p.m. to 8 p.m. (or until sup- ·
sold the repa ving job to
plies run out) on Tuesday,
Shellv Materials. lnl'. of
Aug. 22 at the Mulberry
Thorn ville whiCh hid uf
Community Center.
$437.313.46
fnr · \he
However. you can't have
job.
falling
beluw
Pomeroy
a giveaway without any
the engineer\ project c,ti;
supplies which is what
mate of roughly $550.000. :
God's Net is in need of as it
Shelley Materials. Inc·.
'served 250 children at last
was al so ret:emlv awarded a
year's event.
paving job in Syntcusc hy
Dee Rader of God's NET
the
Meig'
County
said all items for back to
school are needed but esp.eCommis&gt;inncr' and "111 he
cially loose leaf paper,
paid "ith C\lmmunity
·loose leaf binders, colored
Develupment Bl&lt;ll'~ Grant
Beth Sere:ent;photo
pencils, index cads, protrac-· We 've all heard of the Redneck Yacht Club but how about the Gallipolis Boat Club? funds . Shelley bid a price of
tors, dry erasers, white
$40,707 for P'" ing riv&gt;
large erasers and especially Members of the GBC (pictured here)' arrived early to get a prime spot alo ng the Pomeroy S\~ racu:--c \lrech \\hich
river front for this we.ekend's Blues and Jazz Festival. One GBC member even trave ls every
Please see supplies, AS year from ·Cortez, Ra. to take in the sights, sounds and of course the blues!
Please see Paving. AS

gtveaway

Details on Page A&amp;

Ohio 833
paving to
begin Aug. 21

Several young people got a head start for Heart of the Valley Head Start this week by receivmg their required physicals
for fall enrollment. It was one stop shopping for the kids and their parents who arrived at the Meigs County Health
BY BETH SERGENT
Department for blood pressure checks, a TB test, immunizations and a visit with a Holzer Clinic physician. Here , Saetym
BSERGENT@MYDI\ILYSENTINELCOM
Davis , 4, gets her blood pressure taken by MCHD Director of Nursing Sherry Wi lcox, one of the man_y health depa_ rtment staff members who coordinated the event. Davis will be attending Heart .of the Valley Head Start m Tuppers Plams , POMEROY
The
this fall.
repaving of Ohio R33
through Pomeroy is tentatively scheduled to begin on
Aug. 21 with the majority of
wurk repurted to be done at
nighl to min imi7e traffic

School supplies
needed for

'

REED

POMEROY Meigs
County Commissioners hope
a new health insu ranee program will provide health care
savings to employees and a
cost savings to the county.
The new hl•alth plilfl will
go into effect on Aug. I. It
uses health re imbursement
accounts, or HRA's, to provide the first measure of
health care reimbursement ·
for employee s. The county
has establi shed a $2,000
HRA for each county
employee covered under a
~ingle insurance plan, and
$4,000 for each fami ly plan .
Those HRA\ will pay for
the first $2.000 or $4,000 in
health care costs incurred
by employees each year.
After those funds are spent.

Page AS
• Rev. John Elswick, 68 _
• Marabel Frecker, 86
• Vicki Lynn Johnson, 56
• Ralph D: Well, 80

• Living victoriously:
Why so downcast.
See Page A2
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Mosque of Paris
sues satirical weekly
over prophet cartoons.
See Page A2
• For the Record.
See Page AS
• McKelvey and
Newland qualify
for Ohio State
Fair Horse Show.
See Page A6

J.

BREE,D@MYDAILYSENTINEl..COM

-·-

'

�'

PageA2

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 28, 2006

Living victoriously: - - -A Hunger For More -~Why so downcast
"Why are you cast down,
0 my soul? And why are you
disquieted within me? For I
shall yet pra1se H1m, the help
of my countenance and my
God." (Psalm 42.11 , NKJV)
The life of faith is not about
being capncwus or nonchalant about everything It does
not mean lumin~ a blind eye
and deaf ear to crrcumstances
in the world around us, nor
does it mean being cold and
apathetic. It is not about
attaining temporal power and
prestige and material wealth,
nor is it even passing through
days carefree and untroubled.'
The life of faith is peace
dunng the tempest, quiet in
the melee, assurance when
surrounded by uncertainty,
confidence encircled by terror. It is genume concern, not
' . worry. It is being aware and
willing to help, not engrossed
and overcome and petrified. It
is being nch in love and full
of purpose when so much
around seems vain and empty.
Open the newspaper or
tum on the television. Both at
horne and abroad we can find
there plenty wtth which to
paralyze ourselves with anxiety ... if that is our aim. The
life of the sinner saved by
grace through faith in Christ,
however, is lived in an entirely different sphere wuh an
altogether different design.
Ftlled with the Spmt of
God, in the face of tnals &lt;llld
tnbulat1on the believer
quenes, "Why are you cast
down, my soul? Has God
been dethroned? Is the Lord
not still our risen Savior"
Why are you disquieted
wuhm me? Has there arisen
now some power greater
than the Almtghty, an opponent more fierce than the
Lion of Judah?"
Lmes from an early 18th
century hymn, written by the
great Isaac Watts, seem qUite
potgnant and appropriate:
"Hast thou not heard

Rev.
Jonathan
Noble
PASTOR
TRI NITY CHURCH

That firm remains on high
The everlasting throne of
hm1
Who formed the earth and
sky?
"Art thou afraid his power
shall fail
When comes thy evil day?
And can an all-creating arm
Grow weary or decay?
"Supreme in wisdom as in
power
The Rock of Ages
stan ds.. ...
(From the hymn, "Hast
Thou Not Known,")
And so we praise Him
who alone is worthy of all
praise and adoration as we
contmue our work m the
world, for His honor and
glory and the advancement
of His heavenly kmgdom.
And as the Psalmist implies,
our very real and deeply felt
confidence in God will
shine forth in our countenance -that is, our appearance or expression.
Angry brows and worry
ltnes 1eally have no pla~e on
the face of the Christian any
more than avarice or arrogance belongs in his heart
Vacuity does not sutt the eyes
of the believer, nor shadow
his soul. "We are more than
conquerors through Him
who loved us," (Romans
8.37, NKJV) and so we are
called, and privileged, to live
life m His victory.
"Why so downcast, then,
why all these sighs? Hope
in God! I will praise htm
still, my Savior, my God."
(Psalm 42.11, NJB)

Mosque of Paris sues satirical
weekly over prophet cartoons
PARIS (AP)
The satirical magazine, and
Mosque of Paris has filed against the Rotatives pubsuit against a satincal week- lishing house.
ly for publishing three carThe Mosque of Paris said
toons of Islam's prophet. it considers publishing the
Two of the cartoons were cartoons "a deliberate act
among those published by a of ag~ression aimed at
Danish newspaper that trig- offendmg people of the
gered violent protests five Muslim religion." The
months ago, judicial offi- mosque is the largest in
cials said.
France, where about 5 milThe suit was filed against lion Musltms live. A prePhilippe Val, executive edi- liminary hearing is set for
tor of Charlie-Hebdo, a late September.

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Whtle l can't say that the
children 's books of Maurice
Sendak are exactly a wellspring of deep spiritual
mstght, I would say that his
picture book, Where the
Wild Things Are (pi1blished
by Harper &amp;
Row,
Publishers) is a masterpiece
in depicting our general atti·
tude towards God, what we
thmk about ourselves, and
maybe a little bit of our sptr·
itual predicament. Its pages
have long reminded me of
the story that Jesus· told
about another son (see Luke
11 .15-35) also with a willful
spirit, a rebellious wandering out into the wide world,
and an eventual repentance
and return to grace.
Sendak's little tale begins
with, "The night Max wore
his wolf su1t and made mischief of one kmd . and
another .. . his mother called
him 'WILD THING'' and
Max said, 'I'LL EAT YOU
UP! ' so he was sent to bed
without eating anything."
Although we lliathe to
admit it, there is withm each
of us an overwhelming
impulse that passionately
seeks to have its own way
and, when yielded to, 'wreaks
mischief of one kind ... and
another ... and another. From
the dawning of time when
humanity tirst rebelled in the
Garden (see Genesis 3), we
~ave habitually exalted our
own plans and ambitions
above the loving direcllves
given us by God. And so we
don the wolf suit of selfishness, heedless of the implications of our defiance.
But there are great prices
to pay when we choose to
defy the loving plan of God.
The tirst great tragedy of our
asserting our will above
God's is, of course, disconcordance in our relationship
with Him and the breaking
of our fellowship wtth our
Creator. Our disregard for
the Lord's will and our
wolfish pursuit to please
ourselves disrupt His plan to
enrich our lives, encourage
our hearts and envelop us
with His peace and joy. Even
subtle sms and passive rebellion to God's claim to our

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

lives as Lord contaminate
our lives and make us untit
to "enter Hisdresence."
The secon great tragedy
results from the first. Having
lost the immediacy of His
divine presence, and bent on
going our own way in the
world, we are fated to find
ourselves surrounded by terrors and monsters unleashed
by such self-will. Fears
enslave us, hatreds besiege
us, pam and loss bind us as
though they were great
shackles forged in the heat of
our pride and passions. Such
woes and afflictions "roar
their terrible roars, and gnash
their terrible teeth and roll
their terrible eyes and show
their terrible claws." We may
have succeeded in "sassing"
God, but our only rewards
are fearsome and awful
friends with troubles and
woe. But perhbps it dawns on
us that somewhere there is
something better waiting for
us, and just like Max in
Sendak's book, we long "to
be where someone loves us
best of all."
When the willful, son of
Luke 15 approaches his
father and begs an early
withdraw on his inheritance,
we can perhaps feel a little
bit of the sorrow that
wrenched the older man's
heart. Was that all he was to
this beloved son? An easy
way to a good time? The
mischief wasn't merely in
the asking for the money of
course. It was also partly in
the son's desire to leave the
fellowship of his father's
house and to be lord and
master of his own destiny.
With a pocket full of cash,
he could call the shots and
be the big man for a change.
1\nd so he, like Max,
boards the "private boat" of
his independence and sets

filled with compassiOn for
h1m ; he ran to his son, threw
his arms around him and
kissed him. The son said to
him, ' Father, I have sinned
against heaven and against
you. r am no longer worthy
to be called your son.' But
the father said to his servants, 'Quick! Bring the
best robe and put it on him.
Put a ring on hts t1ngcr and
sandals on his feet. Bring
the fattened calf and kill it
Let's have a f('ast and celebrate . For this son of mine
was dead and is alive again:
he was lost and is found.' So
they began to celebrate."
(Luke l5 .20b-24 NIV).
What
an
incredible
reumon! Instead of glowering at him from under
bristling eyebrows, mstead
of slamming the door 111 his
face, instead of lecturing him
on how he squandered his
father's money and brought
shame upon his house, the
father embraced him and
said, "Welcome home, son .
Let's go inside and get to
know each other all over
again over a nice hot meal."
Little Max, when he also
"came to his senses,"
remembered where he
belonged. He too turned
towards horrte and "sailed
back over a year and in and
out of 'Weeks and through a
day and mto the night of his
very own room where he
found hts supper waiting for
hun .. . and 1t was still hot."
If your heart hasn't yet
"turned towards home," let
today be the day you also
come to your sens.es and
remember that there is a place
"where someone loves you
best of all," too. That "place"
is a personal relationship with
Jesus Christ. Let today be the
day your heart goes home.
(Thorn Mollohan and his
family have· ministered ill
southern Ohio the past 11
years. He is the pastor of
Pathway
Community
Church, which meets on
Sunday mornings at the
Ariel Theatre. He may be
reached for comments or
questions by e-mail at pastorthom@pathwaygallipolis.com).

sail through "night and day
and in and out of weeks and
almost over a year to where
the wild thing&amp; are." And
there thts wayward son
reigns for awhile, having a
"wild rumpus" of his own .. .
at least until he nms out of
money. And lo and behold,
he suddenly has nothing and
is nothing to even those he
had once called friends. He
is reduced to squalor and
terrible jobs that no one else
will endure.
"When he came to hts
senses, he said, 'How many
of my father's hired men
have food to spare, and here
I am starving to death! I wtll
set out and go back to my
father and say to him: Father,
I have sinned against heaven
and against you I am no
longer worthy to be called
your son; make me like one
of your hired men.' So he got
up and went to his father"
(Luke 15.17-20a NIV).
We don't necessanly have
to completely hit bottom for
us to come to our senses.
How much eas1er and better
would it have been if this
young man had had a
change of heart before he
had even left his father's
house? There's no denying
that it would have been an
easier road for all involved.
Still, it is clear that God is
perfectly wtlling to go to
unimaginable lengths to
soften our hearts to Hts
overtures of loving accep-.
tance. You matter that much
to God. And when your
heart turns towards home,
He is ready and waitmg to
receive you!
And don't think that getting up and going home was
an easy thing to do for this
prodigal son, no matter how ·
broken he was. It wasn't.
Wild feelings of guilt,
shame, fear and worry most
certainly "roared their terrible roars and gnashed their
terrible teeth and rolled thetr
terrible eyes and showed
their terrible claws," yet it
was the right thing to do ... it
was the only thing to do.
"But while (the son) was
still a long way off, his
father saw him and was

Appeals court orders review of Colombian Monnons asylum case
SALT LAKE CITY (AP)
- A federal appeals court
has reversed a decision that
would have sent a Mormon
couple back home to
Colombia, where they say
they where threatened
because of their religious
and political acuvity.
The lOth U.S. Circuit Court

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of Appeals ordered the Board
of Inunigration Appeals to
reconsider the q15e of Herbert
Douglas Moscoso-Morales
and his wife, Nancy, citing a
written death threat delivered
in 2002 to the couple's home.
"We know of all your
political and informant
activil!es for your Mormon

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cult," the letter stated, and
told them to be gone within
24 hours or be "eliminated."
The couple fled to Salt
Lake City and began their
battle to gain political asylum.
In its July 14 ruling, the
Denver-based appeals court
said the letter wa~ evidence
that the couple had "a well-

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founded fear of future persecution" should they return home.
Accordmg to court records,
Moscoso-Morales was raised
in The·Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints and was
active in church work, and
for the past few years had
worked as a teacher at a high
school in lbague.

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

FAMIL~)\rALUES
,_,.
People ollen talk Jho ut the unportanc c nl lam• I) ~'al ue~, somrttllll'' even
suggeslmg that the tanul y • ~ detcnordll ng IL ts pe rh ap~ true th m tht: ''tradlllonal"
. .. lanuly. compnsed ol nne man .md one wom,m JOt ned tn marn age and havmg
ch ildren. 1s not nece~;lo anly tht' notm nowadays In fact s tati s ti c ~ md1ca1e a
!ilgOJfi ca nt incrca"c 10 lh t.:' numl'lcr ol ~ mg le-parent taml ll e..,, ble nded tamil•e s,
and ot her permutatio n ~ of the tr.!dlt lonallanul) 10 o ur SOC iety tnday But 1s
th1 s neces~an l y a "dctc nOiallon" ol the tmmly. or 1s the tamJiy
struct ure merely dun gtng Ill re llect the demands ot modern
life'' It we lnnk tn the R1ble for cnlightcnmcm here.
we are t~ nhkd y til lind any unambiguous help.
Fustl y, the B1bk Itsel f ill ustrates an evolution 10
com:cpt of the fanul y. In th e Old Tcslamcnt,
we M! t:' man y C)(Uillplcs ol pulygarny, nnd
km:-.h1p rclatltm :-. .,,.ere LCrt.u nly not what
we 111111~ ulthcrn tnd,J)' Who could marrv

Coolville, Ohio
Located less than 30 mmules from
Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

1-740-667·3156
"Still small enough to care"

Michelle Kennedy,
Admissions and Marketing
Director
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Center
"A Celebration of Life"

C

333 Page Street
(740) 992·6472
M1ddleoort OH Fax i740i 992-7406
Warm FrrerUJI}

209Third

Racine, OH

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

Almu~ph t!re

Fellowship
Apostolfc
Chun:h of Jrsu~ Chnst.\po~tollc
VanZanUt and Ward Rd
Mdler. Sunda} Scllool
Evenmg · 7 JO p m

, each other .111d hnw pcopk 'got tn\UTIC&lt;f;

29670 Bashan Rd.

has changed &lt;..011\ldt rabl y over the cehtunes
ln the Btrk Jc-. u ~ t el l ~ us that "whoever
doc ... the:" II lot my f .Hher m heaven
1 ~ my hruthcr. and sl..,tcr. and mother "
lMallht·w 12 ~0~ While 11 may he tempung
tn 'Icc tht\ a~ s1gnahng J c~ w.;'s d1sd ar n for
the nud:ar famlly, perhaps the more scns1blc
' ~~ that Jesus 1s trymg to .:xtend
1ntcrprctatwn
thl' ct~nu;pt of th\:' fa mily ~u thai H mcludes
&lt;~I I ol (JUT tcl lov. hmn.m hcmgs, and th,il GoJ
rnu ~1 come hd ore !amdy So, th e next lime
v.c .1rc 1e m prcd to JUdge 'omcone who comes

Racine, OH
PO. Box 683
P.omero , Ohio 45769-0683

740-949-2217
S1zes ava1lable Sx10

Hours
6 am - 8 pm

Mif[ie's 2(estaurant
Homemade Desserts Made Daily
Home Cooked Meals &amp; Daily Specials

Open 7 days a week
740-992-7713

740-985-3561
992-1550

from a nonlradi\Jonal family, we should
that they are Indeed our brother and sister.

•

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

to 10 x 20

The Hppllance man
Salas • Service • Parts
All Makes
Ken and Adam Youn

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 l'ii:'.
(740) 992-3279
'-.!!V
Tol Free 1-877-583-2433

•

•

•

101,0

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Sntdy
Emmanurl ApostoliC TabernHclc lnl·.
loop Rd otT Nel'o Lrma IM Jhulund
StrvKes Sun 10()() a Ill &amp; 7 30 p m
Thun. 7 00 p m , Pa ~tor Mmn R Huwm

Catholic
Sucred Ut'Hrt Cutlu•hl' ( 'bunh
161 ~ l nlhur.., A\e l'1•nwn•' &lt;N~ &lt;;~•JX
Pa,lur Rev \\',liter '- IlL 111/ S.ll ( Pll
J -l '&gt; -5 l~p m
~ ' ·'" ~ Ill p m ~1m
II

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Tennam

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Servrces- IU 00 n m ,md I p m

\\ ~t s id c t: hurch of ( ' hr! ~ l
l22fi C!uldrc n ~ f lom1,; R.d P,1nwn•1 n it
( on l.l&lt;t 7-ltl -I-ll 11 •)h ~nml I \ llH11 111o1''

liJlllt '11J~
fnllow tn ~ \l or-.h lp Sun ,.H 1100 pm
Wt'd l•t l'o k '&lt;1Ui.h 7 p 11

Baptist
Pagevllle rrt&gt;ew\11 1\apttst Churrh
Pastor Mtke H!lrmon , S und A~ School
9 30 !0 10 30 am Wor~ h1p ~er\ a·e I0 10
to II 00 am Wed preachmg 6 pm

Che5hlf'f' Bap!lst Church
Pastor Steve L1!1le, Sunday School lJ 10
am Mommg Wor~h1p 10 30 urn
Wedneij(jay Bible Stud) 6 30pm l hOIT
practice 7 30. youth nnd Bthlc Andd 1 e ~
6 30 p m. Thurs I prn book ~tud ~

Hope Baplbit Chun:h (Soulhernl
570 Grant Sl , M1ddlepon . Sun day schoo l
-930 am, Worsh1 p- l l u m and 6 p m,
Wednesday Servile - 7 p m Pastor Gun
Elhs
Rutland First Baptist Lhurth
Sunday School - 9 30 a m , Worsh1p 10·45 am
Pomeroy Flrsl Baplbt
Purot Jnn Brockert, Ea~t Mam St ,
Sunday Sch 9 30 am , Worshtp 10 30 am

First BapU'I Churth
Pastor B11ly Zu span 6th and P~tme r St ,
Mtddleport , Sunday School - 9 !5 a m .
Worship - 10 15 am 7 OU p m ,
Wednesday Se!"1 1~ e - 7 00 p m

llcmlo&lt;k GmH· U~r~sr m n C hurrh
\ linl'l~ r

L,,fl'&gt;' Hrt~&gt;•n Wo r ~lnp

a JJI Sunduy Sd11'•1l

Slher Ru~ Baptist
Pastor John Swun ~ un, Sunduv S ~houl
lOam , Wo r ~htp - II am , ? 00 p m
,Wcdnesda} Scr\ Jces- 7 00 p m
Mt. Union Baptist o~
Pastor Otnnn We ave r Sunday School9 45 11 m . E ve n1 n ~ - 6 30 p m .
Wednesday Serv 1ces- b lOp m

Btthlehl'm Baptist Churth
Great Bend Route 124 , Rac mc OH
Pastor Ed Carter Su nday School 9 10
am Sunday Wor ~ htp
10 J [~ n m .
'Wednesday B1ble Study - ? 00 p m

Old Bethel Frte Will Baptist Church
2860 I St Rt 7. Mtddle p11n Sunda~
Ser\'lce - 10 am , 6.00 p m , Tuesd11y
Sel"\' K:e~ -6 00

VIctory Baptlstlndependtnl
525 N l nd St Middleport Pthto r J uues
E Keesee Wmsh1p - lOam 7 p rn
Wednesday Serv1ces - 7 p m

Faith Baptist Clmrth
Rail road St Ma ~on . Sunda) s~ hool
am

Wors h1p -

I J n 111

1(1
6 pm
-

W~dne~d ay Servtces - 7 p m

7r m

l'mmr01y ' h111l'h nf ( bn ~l
212\V MamSt , ;&gt;i u• .1\ ~. r 1 .,.,1 IJ\i)
a m Wor~h 1 p - 1r1 111 , 1'1 '' p n
Wed nl·~d.11 S~l\l•C' -

I p n,

Forest Run Baptist- Pomcro~
Re~ Jo seph Woods SunJay S~ h •wl
am Worshtp 11 m am

10

Mt. \tnrlah B11ptisl
Founh &amp; Matn St Midd leport. Pa~hlf
Rev GJlben Cratg, Jr Sunthn Sd wu l
930am , Worsh1p - 10 4.Sa m

.

Pomem} Wts t~ldc llmrrh of(' hri ~ l
Jl2:!(1 Children, Ht1lllt: ~ ~~ Slllllh.n
St.:hllOI - II .1m WM,hl p IIJ.I 111 f• p,n1
W"'dne-dn\ ').:rv1cc• 7 p m

Middleport ( huro:h uf C hrl~ t
'i th ond M ~l ll , P. 1 ~ 1 or AI Hrnt •o11
Cht iJre ns D1redur Sh.mm S.tyrc T~en
Dtrecror DodJ,:cr Vaughan Sunda) Sthon l
9 ~0 am, Wor~ h 1 p ~ l:l, 1030 am 7
p m Wed n ~~d:i}' ScJ\' ICe&gt; 7 Jl m
Keno Chunli of Christ
Wor• htp - 9 JO ,1 Ill . Sundu\ Sdnw l
10·30 am Pa•lor-Jellre~ Wlllloio.;e I &gt;f 111d
l rd SunJav

KearwRIIo" Ridge lhurch of t:hri ~l
Bruce Tt'l r\ Sunday S.hon ! .q 10

'm
Wo r ~ hlp

am

I 0 10

Wc d ne~ d uy

6 )lJ

rm

S\!Ti llC., - 6 10 ll m

Zion Churd1 or C hrist
Pumerov Ha rmon1.1llc Rd IRt J-1 &lt;1
Pa ~ ror lh •yer Wn •un. Sund.a~ SdlL'II! ') 30 ;JIll. wlll~lllfl 10 ]{1 a Ill ., {1(1
p 111 Wedne~da) St"r\ IC C~ • 7 p Ill
ThppcN Plain Churth of Chm t
Wor•lll p ~cr11~&lt;' IJ an,
Communl(ln • 10 am SunJJ} Schun!
10 l'i .1111 'lllllh- 'i lfr p111 .., uilil~~ 1l1bl.:
Stud~ \\ td n e sda~ 7 pm

or

Bradbur~ Church
lhrl~t
Vltnl ster 1om Rtm y\l ll , li)S~l! l'li&lt;~Jbu r~
Rvad. MtdU k port Su nUa y Sch110l 9 JO

""
Wu1sh1 p - 10 30 am
Rutland Church or Chri~l
S unda~

SdJu(ll - •} JO 1 111 • Wor~h1p .md

Cummu nu'n - 10 3U ~ m Bob J \\~:If\

\1m1sler
llntdlord L'hunh ot ( hml
Corner or St Rt I ?4 t\: ll r 1dbun Rd
fvlimstcr Doug Shnmhl m Yll\lth ~1 111 ,rcr
Bill Am bcr~,·r ~1 1n cl1y SdiLto'l - tJ 1{) s 111
W(lf\ hl p - H l)( J ~I Ill 10 11 1 .I 111 7 Uti

pm

Wc d n(\d,t ~

/I"X~p m

St'f\l l"l'

llkknr~

Ihils ( hurch of l hrist
P:t'-tlll M1 kt' \ h1nre H1 blt!
cl.h., 9 ii 111 Su 111l.n, v. nr..htp t(r ,, m
Sunda'. "''''ht p fo &lt;() pm Sund,J&gt; B1hlc
eta\~ 7 JlH I \\ ed
Tup p~r., Pl.1t n ~

Chun.:h nft h r i ~ l
Pa.,tur f-'luli p Sllum Sund&lt;~y Sd11~1l '' ~()
.1 111 \\ ,, r,lup s.r•l~C 10 _111 &lt;1111
Hihlr:
StuJ\ Wl'dn"J,I• 6 ltJ p m
Rr't'd ~\ illl'

o. ~ll'r l hurd1 uf ( hrlsl
"iund.n "d1onl 'I ~n " m Su od,11 1\m~hip
111 ~ n 1m
Thr ( hnr~ h 11ff'hrht of Pnnurm
hll l!r ~ edlo n 7 111d 1 ~-1 W h untt ll\l
D(ntl l\ S .t lg~ nl S undll) Hit'lle Stu.J1
1/

\0 ,t ill

r fll

\\ ,lt~lllj'l

\I I 1tl

w ,•tllw..U,I\ Blhll

•I

'It li d~

Ill ,11!,\

/1 \( I

7 pIll

Uurtford Churd1 of Chri-.1 m
&lt;'hll\ llall lmun
!1;utrt,.J \\ \',, l',, , tn• J)J, ,d 1..11'·'·
Suml.1\ Sd1t1ul 'I \0 .1m \l.. ur•lup
!{I ll)

I

S~:HllC'

Ill

., I Ill

pIll

\\ ~ lill~• J,t \

7 (1(1 pIll

9 JU a m .

\1orlllh l'1111r1 h tJI ( oHcl
i\ 111, IIlii Rd lLt -. 1 1 • ~· l'o Ins J.t l t'
\~ nr ~ h 1p

Middleport. OH

Fulll1ne of

Insurance

An Acc01111lillg &amp;

Financial Services Firm
•
61 8 E. Main SirccJ • Pomeroy

1740) 992-7270

Bill Quickel

Products+
F1nanc1al
Serv1ces

499 Ril'hl.tiid c\vcnut• , -\thl'nS
740-S94-63.1.1
l·H00-4S 1-48llli

words abide in you, ye sir a//
ask w/uJ~,ye will, ami it ,/ra/1
be d01w u11to you.
}olrn 15:7

992·6677

ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME

Pa~ r or

am

p 111

Still' R.,utt' J:!'i Lang,v lk P-J~1or
\'1L1nr Rou,h Sund!l} .,~hool - '-J lU d 111
Sunda1 wo r~h1p - 10 ~0 11 111 &amp; 7 pIll
\\ednc,day pr~) tr ~er\ 1ce 7 p m

Rock

{1 ~ - 1:! 00

II

Su.ram~ ~ t

~CfiJ&lt;t'

IIDmt'nl.lkln):

ml.'etmg 1~ ~ ThUJ'

noon ,

.1m

fJI(J\~

? pm

Lutheran
St . .fohn Lulht'run fhun:h
Pm ~ Ci JOit', Wm'hlp 'I 00 u m , .Sunda)
Sll11•&lt;&gt;l 10 OIJ u 111 Pu '&gt; tm JJ m e~ P
li1nl1
Our 'ia1iour Luthtren Church
11!1l and H&lt;nr) S1~ R il•&lt;' n ~ y, o o.J ,
\\ v,, P &lt;~~tor D.n 1d Runcll Sunda y
S,h.,ol lfiOO ,I m Wor• hlp-11 am
\\

t1

..,t, Puul Lutheran l'h11rcb
( &lt;lntt'l S~t amor&lt;" &amp; s~·,nml S1 Pnmemy
'i ll II ;-., hovl- ') -l 'i .± rn \\ ur,hqJ II a m

United Methodist
f;raham lJniled 1\h&gt;thfHiist
\\\1r,h1p II .1 m l\1~ tor R1 ~hard Ne:~\e
n~ \h ld l 'nill'd \ll'lhudi ~ l
~,.,, ! ! 11_. 11 R.i,lt.Jrd Nt'.t'~
P.11!0 r
'\111,d I ' \\Ill , jllf' 4 ~l) ,1 Il l l \J~ I (\ )(]
J' l 1\L'f .tnd ll 1hk S)itdy
\It Oli H' \ 111 ti~EI \lt t hudl~l
[Ill 12-1 hd11nd \\ ,lh,OJIIC l' l,flll R.,\
I{ •.! ph

Sp•rc' ' ~uHJdl "~ht•t' l - 'l «J a 111

Ill 11J 1 111
~ p II

Wolnlll[l
'i, 1\ Itt"\

7 p m l1111t1d,J\

\le i ~ ~

Nort h .:~'!

l:k,IUit'
l,l,,,l,lllp

( uoprruti\r
Clu-.r~r c\ llrt'd

l" 1ifl ~ h
P.t\!OT

)111\d,l~,_ S,hlllll

L) ~0

June
.1111

J' JIll () "10 Jllll
l'ht' ~ ttr

f'.l'-il'l IJ IIL' B,·.u u, \\ ,, t ~hl p I) ,Jill
S'ln,\,,1 'i d 111•'l
I(I 1m
I hur1d,tJ

590 fAit Mlln Street •Ptlltlli. DN 45119

140-992·5444

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main

992-5130
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God. ·
Matt/lew 5.

Sprln&amp;~

Pastor Keah Rader Sunday School· 9 15

am , Worsh1p - 10 am , Youth
fe\lu .... ~h tp . Sunday 6 p m
Rutbmd
R1 ol&lt; Bourne , Sunday. School 9 30 a m , 'Worsh1p - 10 30 a m, Thu rsdt~y
Scrv1ces - r p m
Salrm Centrr
Pa ,111: W1lham K Marshall Sunday
School !0 15 am , Wor~h 1 p - Q 15 a m,
Btble Stud) Monday 7 00 pm
Sno"M \Ilk
Su ndav s~hlXll 10 u m . Vtorsh1p- 9 a m
Pa ~ t o r

Run fnmmunlty Churctr
Pastor Rev Lun I .emit) S un da~ School
9\0a m Wm~ltip IIJ -15am,7p m .
TlmrM.Ia} B tbl~ Study OJnd Youth ? p m

rhe Church of J~u~
l hr1st of l11ttcr-Da} Sithlls
St Rt i()fl 44{J-Ii:!.l 7 or -146·7 4!1 6,
Sund.1v 1\thtKil ! tl ~0-1 1 11m Relief

-

Pomeroy
Bnan Dunham Worshtp - 9 30
a m Sunday School· 10 35 a m

Wesleyan E11hle Hullnt10s lhurch
75 Pearl St Middleport IJastor R1\k
Boume Sund &amp;} s~hool 10.1 m 'W orsh1 p
!04 ~ p m
Su udll) Eve 700 p 111
Wed n e~duy Srrv,~c - 7 10 p m

Latter-Day Saints

S~hool

Bethan,·
Pa;tor John Gilmore , Sunda)' School 10
.1 rn
Wurs hUJ - 9 a m Wednesday
Se r\1~~·~·10 Gm

I (1 \ U a m
6 10 p m.. Wednt'~di·l
Sc n1 .. c~- 7 p m Rl.'\ Mtk.- Clarl

\\'hir e's Chupd \\ csll'~ an
Con II illl- Ruad l'~;lnr Re1 Phillip
R1J~nt&gt;ur, Sund.l\ S!.hnnl
i.) ~() u m
\J.us~h1 p - li l l[}dnl V.~dn ~•illl\ Scn1lt'
7 pm

Other Churches

I llir\ le"' Htblt ( hun:h
I et art W \ ,, Kt I ('~,l ·•r llno~n Ma )
SuuJa) Schu;.•l 4 1!• ~ m \\or,htp- ., I.XI
p m \\edne ~J"1 Hth l~ ~1ud~ 7 Ul p m
hith •·ellol' ~hlp Crusadr for Cbmt
P:~~mr Re1 fr,mklin D1 .. ltt1~ St'r\h&lt;"
h1da). 7 p m

,\New B~tnnln g

t•"ull G05pel Church I H umsonvtll~
P:1stors Bob and Ka~ Mar-;hall
Sunday Str\l ~e. 2-p m
A.mazmg Grace Commumty l 'hunh
\'a~ t or Wd1ne Dunlap Stat~ Rt M! I
Tu ppe r~ Plam~. Su n Wor,hlp Ill illll &amp;
6 10 pm Wed B1 b t ~ Study 7 Oil p !11

( 'Khan Bihll' Church
P 1l..~ Cu Rd
P~o~ ~tm R~~
Blad.:"L'''d Sll nJ d) S,_hLJ••I l;l 10 am
\h1r,h 1p 10 .'10 u m , 7 lll p m
\\lcdn t•sda\ 'il"TIIL\ I 10 p 111

l'oniCil')

Oa'ii~ Chnstlan tello~~osh1p
("Jon denonuuatwrml ft" llo"' oh1p 1
Meeting m rhe old Amencan I cgl•&gt;n Hall
South Founh A\ enue Muldtepo. •rt
Pa~ r or Chns Stewan 10 00 am Sundav
01 her meeungs m horne&gt;

Slh ~ rs \llh·

R~ c t n e, Ohto
Pastor John Gil m ore, Sunday School •
9 JU a 111 Worship - 10 45 a m , 81bl e
Study Wed 7 00 p m

&amp; B11shan Rd5

:\iornlng .Star
Pustor John Gtlmore , Sunday School 11
am , \\of!; hlp lO am

Stud~

pm

M1ke! tlrelllJn P a~ t or E mernu~
Fmrman \\ or~htp 10 00 oUll
Wedne-.du; Sen lte~- J p 111

Bethel Worship Center
19782 S R 7 Reeds11 l1 e OH 4'5?12, 1 / ~
m1le mmh of Elmern Se houl ~ \ln SR 7 A
Full Gospe l Chu r~ h . P a~ fo r R(l b Barber
~ ssouat e Pa ~ tnr Kar ~ n DllVts Youth
Pasmr Suw:' Franc1s Sunday se r.• tce~
10 00 am worsh1p 6 00 pm Fam ily L1fe
Cla sses, Wed Home Cell Groups ? 00
p m Outer L1mtt s Cell Gr oup at th ~
church 6 JU pm to 8 30 pm

Ash Slnet Church
398 Ash St M1ddleport-Pastur Jeff Smtth
Sunday School - 9 30 a m , M o nu ng
Worshtp - 10 30 a m &amp; 7 00 pm
Wednesday Servtee - 7 00 p m . Youth
Sel"\'tee· 7 00 p m
AJape Life Center
"FuJI-G os pel Church", Pastor ~ Jo hn &amp;
Pany Wade, 603 Second Ave Mao;cyn 77~­
S017 Ser\tce flme Sunda) JO ~0 n m
Wednesday ? pm

~00

H.ejoicin.: Lire Church
:!nd AH::, M ,dJkpurl Pa,tur

r...

Lo~wr~nc e

lltfton lilbernaclt Churrh
Cl1f1on WVu Sunil a~ Sc hool to a n1
Wmsh1p- 7 p m Wedn esda\ Se n t ~e - 7
pm
~e"' Llle VIctory Center
377~ George~ C r~ek. Roud. Gal hpuhs, O H
Pastor Bill Stuten Sund a} S erv t~; t' s IU
am &amp; 7 p m W~ne sd a } - 7 p m &amp;
Yout h/1 p m

Full Go~pel Churth
of the Lhlng Savior
Rt 338. Antrquny. Pastor J e ~sc Morr 1s
Servtces Sa1urday 2 00 p m

Abuudant Gnce R.F.I.
923 S Thtrd S1 , Mtddl~ po n, Pastor Teresa
Dav1s, Sund~ y sc r\"e . 10 a m,
Wednesday s ~nM , 7 pm
Faith Full Gospel Church
Long Bottom Pa stor Steve Reed Sunda)
School - q ID t1. m, WorShip • 9 30 am
and ? p rn . We dne~a y · 7 p m Pnday fell owship servtcc 7 p m
Harrisonville Community Church
PQ stor Theron Durham Sund ay - 9 30
am and7pm,Wedneoday - 7p m
Middleport Communil) Church
Pearl St , Middleport , Pastor Sam
Anders on Su n da~ Sc hool I 0 a m ,
Ev~ n1ng - 7 10 p m Wtdneo.day Sc mce 7 10 p m
~75

Salem Community Chunh
Sad ol West Columbia, 'W V11 {Jill Ltevmg
Rn:ld Pastor Charles Rlll!Sh () 04) 67522 88 Sunda ) School 9 30 am Su nJn)
eve mn g sen tee 7 OU pm, l:l1 bly Stu i.l}
Wednesdlly Ser\ ICt' 7 01) pm
Hoh!inh Christian •·e\loY.shlp C hurch
Pustor Her;chel Wh11e Sundll)' S, honl
10am.Sund ayChureh ser\1C•' 6 \Opm
Wedncsdn} 7 pm
Restoutiun Chrlsttan F~lloY.shlp
9365 Houpe r Ro ad, At h~n~ Pastor
Lonm e C o~t ~ Sunda\ W01~ l np 10 00 am
Wednesday 7 prn
Lanpvlllt Chrbtlan Church
Full GtHpe l Pns tor Ro bert MuB cr.
Sunda; S ch ool ~ 1(1 asn Wor ~ h1p JO l f)
•um -70flpm Wed Se l"ll('e700 pm

Pentecostal
PeniMostul A~mbly
St Rt I ~4 . Racme. rmnado Rd Sunda ~

Pastur Bill MmhaU Sunday School
10 a m , 1st Su nday
e&lt; er) month e~ e n mg sen 1ce 7 00 p m ,
Wedn_~da y - ? p m

9u m , Worship

Racine
Pasror Kerry Wood , Sundav Sc hoot . 10
a m Wor&gt;htp - 11 a m

Bethel C"hurl'h
To...,n shlp Rd -168C Sunday Sehoul \l
~ 111, Worship - I 0 a m , \l. ed nc~ d ay
S..: r\ J\ e~ IO !tm

Syracuse MIS!ilon
St, Syracu &lt;;e,
- lfl J m, E\cmng -

Bm.tg ~ m u n

H ll

S~;hool

7 p m,

Hurl Community Church
011 Rt I ::!4 f&gt;11o;tor Ed ~ e! Hart Su ndav
SdJrlOl • 9 10 a m. Wor)h1p - 10 JO il lll .
7 \0 p 111
Dyr~ ille Communi!~ Church
Sunday School - 9 J (l " m Wor\hlp •

II

t ~1th ( .o~pclllmrl !1

Wur' h1p Wedw.:~ da ~

l lJ -l ~

:.~n , ,

1 \() p 111

7 &gt;Op m

• \fl Uh\~ CommunLII Churd1
P,I\\Clf Ll \\ l'l nu: Bu' h Su11Jo1\ Slht 1•l ·
t

m

Se~enth·Day Adventist
~l' l llt:rlJ I

Mnt herr&gt; HI &gt; Rd
~ e n nc lt

P tl ~ l or

Lu d.1~~h. ~ at un.l uj

Se n -. c,
s,,bhu1h Sch,,ul - 2 p m \\\ •rsh1p -·J pm

United Brethren
In (

I 011;1. l:h•llvtn \ tnld••Y SI. IIU LI •l \\1 1111

&lt;) 11)

:\hddl~port Presb)terilm
Pastor J,une• Snydet Sundu ~ s,· hp, I 10
11m wor ~ lup ~~ n llt' II 1m

:\11. Htrmon Ullllrd Brethren

Torch Church
Co Rd 61 Sundao, S,ho,,l- 9 11) a 111
w.lrshl[l !0 mam

Pa•tor Allen M1dcap SunJa ~ Sc hnul 930o m Worshtp - IOJOam 610 p m
\\ ed nesday Sen tee~ - 7 p m Pa,wr
All\'n M1dcap

Harr1sonllllr Preshytef18n Chnrch
Pa•ror, Rohen Cr1.1v. \l. or&lt;;h•p q ,1 m

"~ pm

1030 a m

tO am Ea·n mg - 7 p m
Ser.·Jces- 7 p m

Presbyterian

pm ,

Morse Chapel Churl'h
S um\.1~ ~ ~h unl
10 .11!1 Wor\IHp
MIll Wed ne~d ~l Sl!fiiCC 7 r m

Church of the Nazarene

W~ dne~ dny

S und~ y

(I

Hockmgport Church
U rJnJ Street Sunday Sd nll! l - 9 JO .1 111
Worsh1p • 10 JO a m Pa.,ror Ph1ll1 p Bell

Nazarene

Schuol

Faith \'alley Tahernacle Church
Bailey Ru n Road Pastor Re \ Emmeu
Ra\lo son. S u nda~ E1er11 ng J p m
• Th ur~d a \ Ser.1ce- 7 p m

Wedne~ilily S c rv1~e

Chnlvllle United Mtthodisl Parish
PB ~ tor Hdcn Klmc Cool~ lilt C hurch,
Mam &amp; F1fth Sl . Sun School - 10 a m
Worship 9 a m lUes Serv1ces 7 p 111

R~dnllle

A(KI~ to!it

Communll~ of Christ
Ponland- Raune Rd Pastor J1m Pruffltl
Sunda) Sehoul 9 :10 a m . WOhhlp I0 30 a m We dnt"~ da y Sen JCI'~ 7 00

EB51 Lrtart

\1iddl~tJOrl

Ctlhlsmuuh

(hurrh
Pa~m r 'Wa~ne R Jcy,cl! Su nda.,. "'enh1p
tl (1(1 p m , \\l'dne~da\ o 00 p m Utble

Carmel-Sutton
Ca tm ~ l

treffiom (josJ)\'1 \h ~~mn
Knnb on lt• I&lt;U 31 P,l,ttor R~'
Rllg(r Wil lford Sunda1 'lth&lt;~&lt;ll
'I \II
Jm \\'ot~ h l p -"'p m

SdlOOI · 10

Pa~t or

Pine G role 81hle Holiness Church
1/2 mile olf Rt 125. Pustor Re1 0 Dell
Manle) Sundnv St hool - 9 30 u m
\\ o r ~ l11p
Ill 10 ~ m 7.30 p m.
'W edm:'id~~ Slln ~ ~t' ? 30 p m

l.tlurei.Ch!T I n•e i\lethudlsl Church
Pu ~lur Gle nn Rowe, Sund.1y Sc hool \l '10 am , \\'ur •hlJI - I!J 10 ~ m and 6
p /11 Wed nN J.t} ~CI ' ' l c;~· 7 ()(1 p 111

S unda~

Ptarl Chapel
Su nday S~hoo1 9 a m Wursh1p - 10 a m

Kose of Sharon llollnus Church
LeaJmg lreek Rd , Rut lhnd . P a~tor Re1
[)~wev Kmg Su nd,Jy school 9 JO ~ m
Sunda) 1\or,hip -? p m , We dn ~s d uy
praJe" mce1 1ng- J p rn

Stk letyi Pnc-l homl

Chester Church of the Sa1arenr
Herbert Grate. Sunda) s~h rllll
-~)Oam,'\\our~ lu p
II am Opm
W~d ne sday Sc 1 \ 1 ~e"-? p 111
Kulland lhurch uri be N11zurene
Su ndaj School - '! 10 am. Wol\htp -

m

Mlnem•lllt
Pa~ ru r Bob Robmson Sunday &amp;:hool - 9
am , \\or..h1p lOam

( nh nr~ IJjlgrlm Chapel
H. un~• • av1llc
Kua.l. Pt ~h1r Charles
~1 ~ K cnliO:
Sumla) S~ h mt l 9 _
;o "m
\\om~ h 1p - 11 " 111 , ? 00 p 111 , Wed n ~~d ay
Ser1 1le - 7 IJO p m

~~~ ~ell

Bob Robinson

Wor~h 1p -~:1

pm

Pd~IO T R e\

Run

Heath tMiddleporl )
Pa,tor Br1an Dunham Sunilll)'
930a m Worshtp \lOO~ m

Dan\llle Uollntss Chun:h

140-992-5141

Davls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, and . Jy

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

KEBLER
BUSINESS SERVICES

Sc r\ 1 (~-7

Billet ~ Rshlr·lliiKtll

Matth ew ~ .i 6

t· o~sl

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

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Pa,tor J\ rla nd Kmg Su nd.t} Schuol
10 ~() u m Wor~ h 1 p •J \0 am B1ble
Study Wed ? \0
Flalwoods
f-'a~ t ur Kt"tt h Ruder Su n d ~ ) .SchOill 10
am Worshtp ·l l am

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( unununh} Cbunh
P.t~wr
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j1SIJt'l' junrrall!)otne
264 Sa uti! Se£fl1ll All.· Mtale..l\ II
45160

ll'aih•or in heaven ."

190 N Second St

EJY,.I td PUIIIL'

St'l\lc~ ,-l p111

your light so shme before
that they may sec your
work s and gionfy your

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

(;rurr t.pls&amp;:op:il f'huri'h
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9 lO Mm . Wor~h1p - 10 1U 11 m aod 6
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rup[)Cl"i P1alns Sl. Paul
Paswr Jane Bc~llle Su nday Schvol . g
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7 10p m
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L!,,bul) (S)rao..u~el, P,l,tm Bob Rilb1n\on
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Sui'UJ~ s~hool
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10 \II a Ill
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10 \U om hrst S und~y lll Mon1 h ? 00

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Pastor Joseph God...,tn mt erml pa&gt;tor
Sunday School - 9 30 u m Wor&lt;; hip 10.40 am
7·00 p m Wedne sdn;
Scrv1ccs - 7 00 p m

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t1rstl hunh uf' Gud
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41872 Pomeroy Ptke. Pastor E Llimar
O'Brylnt , Sunday S~hool
9 JO am .
Wonh1p- 815am . 94S am &amp; ? OO p m ,
Wednesday Serv 1~ e s · ? 00 p m

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Carpenter Baptist Churth
S unda~ School - 9 JOam
Pre:K hmg
Strv1ce 10 JOam , 'Evemng Semu~
7:00pm , Wednesday B1ble Srudv 71)0 pm
lnrenm Preacher- Floyd Ros~

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a m Tu e~ 6 10 p r~v~r Wed 7 pm llrhle

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Mrchael Br.trih:m.l P3stor Sunddy 10 :-n

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Hillside Baptist Chunh
S.t Rt 143 JUSt off Rt 7 PaMu r Rev
James R Acre e, Sr, Sundav U111 ftcd
Stmce Worshi p - lO ~ 0 am. 6 p m .
Wednesd11y SerV t&lt;eS -7 p m

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Let your light so 'hine befo rt&lt;
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�OPINION
Potential conflicts of interest in Wall Street buyouts

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
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Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoeflich
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no lmv respecting an
establisllmeut of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of
speeclr, or ".f the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and tl1 petition the
G01&gt;ernmet1t for a redress of grievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Toda) is l'ttday, July 2K tlie 209th day of 2006. There are
156 day&gt; left tn the year.
Today's Ht ghl ight in Hi story:
On Julv 28. 1945. a U.S. Army bomber crashed i!lto the
79th floo-t ot '-Jew York's Empire State Building, killing 14
people.
On this date
In 1540. King Henry VIII's chief minister, Thomas
Cromwell. was ~xecuted, the same day Henry married his
fifth wife, Catherine Howard.
In 1655. French dramati st and novelist Cyrano de
Bergerac. the inspiration for a play by Edmond Rostand,
died in Paris.,
In 1821, Peru declared its independence from Spain.
In 1868. the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S.
Con&gt;lttutton, guaranteeing due process of law, was
'
declared in etTect.
In 18'16. the city of Miami was incorporated.
In 1932, federal 'troops forctbly dispersed the so-called
" Bonus Army" of World War I veterans who had gathered
in Washington to demand money they were not scheduled
to receive until 1945
In 1965. Prestdent Johnson announced he was increasing
the npmber of Amencan troops in South Vietnam from
75,000 to 125.000.
,. In 1976, an earthquake devastated northern China, killing
at least 242,000 people, according to an official estimaie.
Ftve years ago: Alejandro Toledo. Peru's first freely
elected president of Indian descent , was sworn into office.
One year ago: NASA said space shuttle Discovery had
escaped uny serious damage from the potentially deadly
ptece of foam that broke off from the fuel tank during
ltftoft and looked safe w fly home in a week. The Irish
Republican Army renounced the use of violence against
Bnll sh rule 111 Northern Ireland and said 11 would disarm.
Ligh tning struck a group of Boy Scouts taking shelter from
a storm tn Scquota National Park in California, killing an
aS&gt;tstdnt troop leader and a teenage Scout.
Today\ Birthdays: Movie director Andrew V. McLaglen
is 86. Actor Darryl Hickman ts 75. The former president of
Peru . Alberto Fujimori, is 68 Fonner Sen. Bill Bradley, DN.J .. ts 63. "Garfield" creator Jim Davis is 61. Rock musici,m Rick Wnght (Pink Floyd) is 61. Singer Jonathan
Edwards is 60. Actress Linda Kelsey is 60. TV producer
_Dtck Ebersol is 59. Actress Sally Struthers is 58. Actress
Georgia Engel ts 58. Rock musician Simon Kirke (Bad
Company) is 57. Rock musician Steve. Morse (Deep
Purple) is 52. Broadcast Journalist Scott Pelley is 49. Actor
Michael H~yden is 43. Jazz musician-producer Delfeayo
Marsalts is 41. Actress Elizabeth Berkley is 34. Singer
Afrom.m is 32 Countt)' singet Carly Goodwin is 25. Actor
Jonathan Osser is 17.
Thought for Today: " It is imposstble to write ancient history because we lack source mat~rial s, and impossible to
write modern history because we have far too many." Clldrle' Pcguy, Ftench poet and writer (1873-1914).

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we advise on · and arrange
AP BUSINESS WRITER
tinancmg for deals.''
So far, the strategy is payNEW YORK - Merrill ing off: Earnings tn its pri Lynch &amp; Co. Inc.. best vate-equity segmc111 nearly
known for as retail broker- tripled in the second quarter
age network, has also from the year before. While
become a powerful player . Merrill dedined to give
as an investment banker for specifi cs. a report from
companies looking to buy Sandler O'Neill Partners
other firms or sell parts of put that figure in ex~ess of
their operations. This week, $700 million tn revenues.
the firm took on a new and and esttmated that such
potentially troubling role in gains contributed 19 cents "
the massive buyout of hos- share to Merrill\ 'per-s h.tr~
paal chain HCA Inc.
net of$1.63 .
Besides being the HCA's
It 's not surprising that the
long-term adviser, Merrill
securi
ties ftrms are Jttracted
also was one, of the princito
the
private-eyuil) bust·
pal investors in a consortium that bid $21.3 btllion ness. That market i' buoming wtth a rush of buyout.,.
to take over the Nashvilleespecially
in the heal th care.
based company. It also
advised that group on the retatl and tran sportation
sectors.
deal and how to finance it.
So far this year. buyouts
That involvement showcased Merrill 's initiative to ha~ e totaled a record-setting
build its private-equity busi- $372.6 billion , more than
ness, something that it plans double the $ 176.9 btllion
to grow by tapping tis extst- over the same period in
2005,
accordtng
to
mg business connections.
Dealogic.
"Our growing force of
Ftrms like Kohlberg
investment bankers is
Kravis
Roberts &amp; Co. and
increasing its focu s on
Bain
Capital
LLC have gensourcing scale opportunities, where we often find erally been bchmd much ot
ourselves investing along- the activity. Not only ha ve
side our clients,'' Merrill's they been able to build maschief financial officer Jeff sive war chests with btllions
Edwards said during a con- of dollars in funds, but they
ference call with analysts are also seeing an increasand investors last week, ing interest from corporate
according to a transcript America to take companies
provided by Thomson private as a way to shield
themselves ftom regulatory
Financial's.StreetEvents.
"Private equity invest- and shareholder scrutiny.
ments often give ri se to
And the returns on such
additional incidental rev- inve stments have been
enue opportunities for huge. They've profited by
investment banking, where cutting costs or changing
Bv RACHEL BECK

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-----------------'-'

Rev. John W. Elswi~k.
68, of Ath~m. died
Thursday, July 27, 2006 at
Ohio Stat~ University
Hospital. Columbus.
Born January 2. 1938 in
Lawrence Co .. Ky., he was
the Mlll of the late Fred and
Maltssia
Ellen
Bogg~
Elswick .
He was a 1957 graduate of
Shade High School. He was
retired from Ohio Univers ity .
after 3 1 years. He was also a
mmister for the past 38
years. He wa, recently the
pastor pf the Carpenter
Baptist Church and Poplar
Rev. John Elswick
Ridge Baptist Church. He
was a member ol Grahams Chapel Church. He was
involved with the World Chnstian Outreach Ministry with
Rev. Dr. Da' id T. Rahamut.
•
He is survived by his wife of 40 years, Marlene; a son,
William Roben Phillips of Albany; a daughter, Tamara
Marlen~ Lontbbio of Albany; four granddaughters, Ashley,
Amber. and Amanda Phillips, and Audra Lorubbio; sisters
and brother, Catherine Fannin of Grayson, Ky., Doris
Vanderpol of Rush, Ky., Ruby (Paul) Chapman of Athens,
Rev. Paul (Marie) Elswick of Circleville, and Linda
(Wayne) Rhodes of Shade; and sister-in-law, Maxine (Paul)
Schau lis of Albany; and several nieces and nephews .
Bestdes hts parents, he was preceded in death by two sisters, Helen Kennedy and Louise Sutton; and two brothers,
Pvt. Earl Elswick killed in the Korean War, and Jack Elswick.
Services will be Monday at I p.m. at Athens Church of
Chnst with Rev. Dr. David T. Rahamut officiating. Burial
will be at Grahams Chapel Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Hughes-Moquin Funeral Home
on Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m. and also one hour prior to _the
service on Monday at the church.
Flowers wi II be accepted or contributions may be made
for World Chnstian Outreach Ministries, payable to Rev . Dr.
David T. Rahamut , P.O. Box 427 1 Rio Grande, Ohio 45674.
Message of sympathy may be sent to the family at
www.hughesmoquintuneralhome.com.

business practices. They· ve Center for Private Equity
paid themselves hambome- · and Entrepreneurship at
ly with fat dividenlb and Darttnouth Coll ege's Tuck
management fees . Then. School of Business. That's
they ofteti make huge wind- why he suggests companies
falls by sdltng s~ares back wtth many hands in a given
to the public through IPOs
deal "create an open and
Now. Wall Street ftrms transparent process" to
want a piece ol the action. avoid accu,ations of ethical
To succeed, they lllltst tread l:tpses.
curelully. Put simply, 11 raisIn the case of Merrill, he
e' que,ttons over whether , s,ud thin~s llltght not be as
they arc placing their own b.td as they look. He notes
uctivttic s ahead of · tlte it that Mernll took some careclient; concerns when thc v ful steps to insLlte itself
stan steppmg up their pri- ,tgatnst major conflicts.
' ate-equity bu,iness
For lllslance. the securiIn the case of HC A. ties finn stepped down as
Mctrill jomed Batn attd HCA's financia l adviser,
KKR in what is being c,tl led and two other fitms, Credit
the l; trgest le1·eragcd buyout Suisse and MorgJn Stanley,
evct, wt th the btd includm~ were brought 111 to advise a
'521 .J btl lion in cqutty and special HCA committee.
the assuinpt1onof $11.7 btl- Merrill also helped facilitate
lion 111 debl. Should that what 's known as a "club"
deal go through. it would deal for HCA , meaning that
ccltpse the 530.6 bt lli on a group of in vestors togethtakemcr of RJR Nahtsco tn er are buying the· company
l lJHl),, · lt ~n th&gt;t &lt;tdjusted for
rather than Merrill compet1nt hllldH.
mg wtth the private-equity
.\ccotdin~ to The Wall
finus for ownershtp.
Street lou~nal , Merrill' s
Still, as more Wall Street
hanket s le'amed of HC A's ftrms advise, invest and
intetest in got ng private ,md finance private-equity deals
they connected the compa- - Goldman Sachs, Morgan
ny's
executtvcs
wtth Stanley and others are also
l\1crrill's
pri v.tte-eqm ty making a btg push mto tlus
team. who came up with the husine's - their involvebuyout deal. Mern,ll also ment has to be closely
advised the group of pri- watched
vate-equity i nvestnrs, as
There is plenty of room
well as put up it s own lor conflict to take place,
money in the buyout hid.
but that doesn't mean it has
Mernll dtd not return to happen.
requeqs for comment
(Rachel Beck is the
With such connection s. national busintJss cohmmtjf
"the potential for contltct is jor The Associated Press.
certainly there,'' said Colin Writ e
tv
her
at
Blaydon, who heads the rherk@ap org.)

Marabel Frecker

WOULD
KISSINGER
DO?

Marabel Seidenable Frecker, cherished mother, grandmother, great grandmother, and friend , went t-o be with
her beloved son, James Roy Frecker, and her Lord on
Tuesday, July 25,2006.
'
She passed on at her home with family at her side. Marabel
was bom Murch 3, 1'120. tn Pomeroy, daughter of the late
Ray and Marguerite Bowen Seidenable. She was an employee of Veterans Memorial Hospital for many years, and after
that, devoted her time to the women's auxiliary at the hospital. Murabel's joy in life was her grandchildren and great
grandchildren, and the many "kids" she raised during her
years at the hospital. Marabel touched countless lives during
her life and will be sadly missed by her family and friends.
She is survtved by her daughters and sons-in-law,
Jacqueline and Roger S!archer of Racine, JoAnn and Larry
McGraw of Gallipolis and Sandy Iannarelli of Middleport;
grandchildren: Tammie Starcher Smoot of Raleigh, N.C.,
John David (Tnna) McLaughlin of Jupiter, Fla., Terrie
Starcher Rees of Racine, Joelle McLaughlin Gensert of
Highlands Ranch, Colo., Roger Scott (Jenifer) Starcher of
Austin, Ark., David (Tori) Iannarelli and Andrew (Debra)
lannarelh, both of Charlotte, N.C.; great grandchildrell:
Jenniffer Starcher, David Starcher, Taylor lannarelli , Justin
Rees, Brooke McLaughlin, Tristin Gensert, Jacob Rees,
Dylan Gensert, Jessica Rees , and Sara Starcher; long-time
friends Jean Sim and The Tuesday Gtrls; nephews, John

.I

Insurance
from PageA1
a tradtttonal health insurance plan will kick in to pay
addittonal health care costs,
Commissioner
Mick
Davenport satd Thursday.
While their health care is
covered under the HRA
provision , employees will
no longer pay any co-payments or deducttbles out of
pocket. The HRA wtll al so
pay the t·ost of prescription drugs covered under
the plan.
Employees can, each
year, carry over the
unspent balance in their
HRA's , for up to five years.
and can use those accounts
to pay expenses associated
with msurance plans in
retirement , such as the
insurance offered to rettred
public employees through
Public
Employees
Retirement System.
The county now pays for
50 single plans and 21 family plans for employees paid
through the county general
fund, and another 50 polictes for employees at the
Department of Job and
Family Services.
Commissioner
Jim
Sheets said the county
stands to save money

No peace in the Middle East
helps lL1 infldme Muslims anywhere, and never will.
everywhere against Israel Richard Cohen may have
and its gteat supporter. the been right to argue recently,
United State;.
in The Washington Post, 'that
Every three ye.trs or so. I establtslung a Jewish state in
lind it necessary to wrilc a
the midst of the Arab Middle
column l'l'p~m in g my con ~
tentiott there ts no po"ihle East was a "m istake"; but, if
pe.tceful so lu ttll n to the so. it was a mistake made 58
quatTel hetwecn hrael and years ago, and there is no
the Palestinian, As Oliver undomg tt now.
What the festering controWendell Holmes Jr.. ' said,
"Betwee n two gro ups of versy betw een lsraeJ'anq the
peop le v, ho want to make Pulestintans can do. howevttlL'onsistent kinds of worlds, er. is serve as a useful disI sc~ no rem~dy but force " tractton from other issues mostly as Iran is clearly using ii
The ls rae lts tcl'ugees fr()m the European now
(by
encouraging
Holocaust - proclaimed a Hezbollah to attack Israel)
Jewish state 111 thctr hi,tottc
to draw attention away from
homeland. Palcstipe. in
I')-18. Rtghtl y or wrnngly, tis own defiant aim of
the
Palestini an
Arabs becoming a nuclear power.
That is the general state of
belt~ ve th ey were simpl y
ousted from a reg1011 in play tn the Middle East
which many of them had today. anJ to call it a •'mess"
lived for ccmunes, and they is to understate the case. If it
ate determined to rcguih tt. doesn't escalate into a more
In this, they have the full general conflict. complete
backing of the Arab world, with nucle&lt;~r bombs, it will
and inany observers iit be only because none of the
Europt· ami elsewhere.
world's mjlJOr powers who
,Nctthcr stu\! wi ll ~ver gtve possess such weapons have
up it&gt; basic demc~nd : for the
Palestimans. the re turn nf a serious stake in the victory
the land. and for the Israe liS, the militant lslami sts are
the survival of their state. scckmg to achieve.
(William Rt11lter is a
The Camp David AClords.
the Oslo Agreement. the Di.lfingutslted Fellow of the
American "road-map" and Claremont Institute for theJhe intermtnablti "peace Study oj Statesmanship and
procc~ s" have never gotten
Pulitir ctl Philosophy.)

William
Rusher

spectalize m sui&lt;.:idc bombings, beheadin gs and the
mass murder of innocent
ctvilians. His strategy is not
to defeat the West on the
battlefield (which he could
not possibly do) but to wear
down resistance, and es p~­
ctally American rcststancc.
until hts foes gt vc up the
light.
All thi s would be bad
enough, but - as William
Knstol has pointed out in
The Weekl y Standatd - it
i&gt; made mfinttely -wm se
when a ge nuine state or
states offer their aid to the
lslamist terrorists. That ts
w.J12t Iran and. Syna have
r~Qtly begLIIt doing on a
significant scale, and it represents a major escalation of
the war.
To all this, the hraeltPalestinian coniltcl consti tutes little more th,tn a footnote. But II ts an important
footnote, because 11 ptts
Israel against a subset (lf
Islamic society. and thu s

'

..

Paving
from Page A1

•

include C herry, Apple,
Worchester and Second
Streets. Mistletoe Lane.
Although no definite date
has been set' for pavtng 111
Syracuse Shelley will have
90 days to .complete the job.
The Pomeroy repavtng ts
described as a "regular mill
and fill process" that does
not require the asphalt surface be completely removed.

The Daily Sentinel • Page A5

Local Briefs

'•

Rev. John W. Elswick

WHAT

Matters have flared to a
thoroughgoing boil in the
Middle East, and it is important · that we sort out the
players and the prospects.
The overarching fact ts the
war against the Western
world that radical Islamists
began waging nearly two
decades ago~ and that was
declared
officially
by
Osama bin Laden's attack
on the World Trade Center
and the Pentagon on Sept.
II , 200 I. Since then, and by
virtue of its dramatic
impact, hundreds of thousands and perhaps even millions of Muslims have
joined the battle, and - as
Winston Chuwhill satd ol
our enemies in World War II
in liiS.,speech to Congress in
December 1941 - "a quarrel is opened, which can
only end in their overthrow
or yours." The war is global:
There have been attacks in
Britain,
Italy,
Spain,
Indonesia , India a!ld elsewhere, as well as in the
United States.
The American counterattack s in Afghanistan and
Iraq, and our occllpation of
those countnes, are only
fronts in this global war with
mtlttant Islam. The enemy
has no assailable state or
capital; his soldiers wear no
Llniform ; and his tact ics
include insurgencies that

www.mydailysentinel.com

2006

Obituaries

Friday, July 28, 2006

The Daily Sentinel

Correction Polley

_Pagei\4,

•

The Daily Sentinel

Reader Services

Friday, .fuly 28,

(Anne) Seidenable and Ten·y Setdenable. both of Rutland .·
Services will be held at I p.m. Saturday, July 29 , 2006 &lt;tl
Acree Funeral Ho_me, 244 North Sewnd Ave .. Middlepon.
wrth bunal followmg at Sacred Hean Cemetery in Pomeroy.
Friends may call from 7 to 9 p.m Fnday at the funeral home.
Memorial contributions may be made to a charity of
choice, or flowers sent to a loved one.

REEDSVILLE- The Meig; County TB clinic staff wtll
be at the Reedsvtlle fire house from 4:30p.m. to 5:30p.m.
on Aug. 7 and will retum from 4:30 p.m to 5.30 p.m . on
Aug. 9 to read skin tests. The Meigs~ounty TB Clinic will
also be open until 6 p.m on Aug I at iis oiTtces in Pomeroy.

\flckilynnJohnson

Evening clinic

Vicki Lynn Johnson, 56, Pomeroy ..passed away unexpectedly at her residence on July 19, 2006
She was born on June 20, 1950. tn Meigs County. daughter ol the late Robert J. Gale and Venora Max me Roush Gale.
She was. a school teacher._She was a restdent of The Maples
and partiCipated m actlVltics at the Sentor Citizen Center.
She is sun ived by a daughter. Dawn Htll and John
Chaney of Pomeroy: grandchildren. Marcus Hill , Hannah
Hill. Haley Hill , Kassidy Chaney. Tori Chaney and
Chri,topher Chancy; sister&gt;. Ann (Lee) Burnem of Rutland ,
and Mary . (Kenny) Birchfield of Patriot; brother. Wayne
Woody ol Columbus; stepfather. Don (Pat) Woody of
Patriot; and friends. Roger and Charlotte Johnson of
Racine, and severa l nieces and nephews.
A memorial service will be .held at II u.m. on
Saturduy, July 29. 2006. at Morse Chapel Cemetery in
Portland . Arrangements were handled by Ftsher Funeral
Home tn Pomeroy.
Online condolences may be sent to www.fisherfuneralhomes.com.

Ralph D. Well
Ralph Dean Well, 80. of Guysville, Ohio passed away
late Wednesday afternoon at his home .
Born on Sept. 27, 1925 in Meigs County, he was the son
of the late Sanford and Florence Dean Well. He was retired
from Tri-County Career Center where he was an auto
mechanic instructor. He was formerly employed at auto
agencies in Middleport, Chillicothe, and Athens.
A veteran of the United States Coast Guard he served in
the Atlantic in World War II . He was a member of the Free
and Accepted Masons of Ohio, Savannah Lodge 466, Order
of Eastern Star Mmear Chapter 274. Scottish Rttc Valley of
Cambridge, Aladdin Temple of Oriental Shrine, Colunbus
and the Athens Allemanders . .
He is survived by his wife of 59 years, Dorothy Russell
Well; a daughter, Candace (Charles) Byron of Stewart; a son,
David (Deborah) Well , Oak Harbor; grandchildren, Nicole
Well and special friend, Gino; Chnstopher (Dianna) Byron
of Stewart Casey Byron and special friend, Melissa, of
Toledo, Chad Well of Defiance, Nicole (Eibie) Taylor of Pon
Clinton, Denton Goodin and special friend, Lindsey of Port
Clinton; and great-grandchildren, Coleen Byron of Stewart,
Joseph Well, Elizabeth Well, and Aaron Smith of Norfolk,
Va.; Zachary Smith and Shyanne Taylor of Port Clinton.
Also surviving are sisters , Genevieve Brooks of Athens.
Virginia (Glenn) Brooks of Albany, Gladys (Garold)
Gilkey of Athens , and Martha (Terry) Litz of Glen Heights,
Texas; brothers, Richard Keith (Jean) Well of Chillicothe,
Rev. Roy (Beverly) Well of Africa; Rodney (!Peggy) Well
of Lancaster; aunts Jenny Blackwood, Sylvia Robenstein ,
Ardis Waggoner, and Mary Paynter;. many nieces,
nephews, cousms and friends,
Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday in Jagers
and Sons Funeral Home conducted by Pastor Rob Doner
with burial in Bean Cemetery, Guysville. F~iends may call
at the funeral home Fnday, 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 where
Savannah Lodge will hold memorial services at 2 p.m
Friday. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to
Special Trust Fund Tri-County Career Center, 15676 State
Route 690, Nelsonville, Ohio 45764 or Savanna N.Park
and Michelle Schall, Guysville.
·
Military rites will be conducted at the cemetery by K. T.
Crossen Post 21, American Legion, and Post 9897 VFW
honor guards.

through the use of the HRA
Scally urged residents
program if employees
with concerns about neighspend down their HRA's.
borhood rental properties to
Last year, the county spent
seek enforcement of' HUD
from PageA1
$461 .19 per 'month for a
housing standards by callsingle plan , and $1,172.75
The street value of the ing (800) · 645-8470 to
for a family policy .. The crack cocaine and mariJua- report landlords whose
costs would have increased na seized in those tecent rental properttes are in poor
to $535.90 and S I ,362.74 raids,
alone, exceeded condition or who allow
this year, Sheets said.
$31 ,000, according to drug traffickmg on their
"This wtll cost about the Smith . Police have also properties.
same as our old insurance seized contraband Valium.
She also urged local
plan would have cost when Soma,
landlords
to ask the quesPercocet
and
an annual premium increase Oxycontin - worth $80 a tion. "Would I want this
is figLIIed in ." Sbeets said. tablet on the street. A dozen family to move in next to
"The first year will tell the officers were involved in my family?"
story. but we hope that we the. enforcement acttvtty Those attending the
can save money through 2,595 man hours - JUSt mcettng also discussed forlower premiums and a within Middleport.
mation of a police departreduction in claims."
Many homeowners on ment auxiliary and a neigh- ·
"It looks promising ," and around Walnut and borhood watch program. It
Davenport said.
Coal Streets have placed is almost certain that civilThe plan will be adminis- part of the blame for the ians must become involved
tered through Jeff Warner drug problem on local land " 111 ftghting the drug probInsurance of Pomeroy and lords , who are rentmg their lem in the community
Oak Hill Financial Services housing units to those because of a shortage of
of Oak Hill.
officers .
The
involved in the drug trade . police
At yesterday's weekly While many belte vc those Middleport
Police
meeting, commissioners la'ndlords are restricted by Department almost always
also:
federal housmg regulations operates with just one offio Approved vacating .15
di scrimination , cer and one dispatcher per
against
mtle of Sunny Hollow Road Yvonne Scally, who con- shtft , The sheriff's departtn Orange Township. fol- ducted the meeting. said ment has just eight deputies
lowing a publtc viewing on that is not always the case. on st:iff covering all shifts
Thursday morning.
o Accepted a btd for bitummous materials for August
from Asphalt Materials,
Inc .. Manetta .
Subscribe today o 992-2155
o Recessed until II a.m.
on Friday for the payment
of bills.

Meeting

Proud to be apart of your life.

The repaving project for
Ohio 833 was origmally
scheduled to be sold in 2007
but was bumped up to sell
in June due to the condition
of the road.
ODOT detcnnines whtch
roads are repaved and when
by assigning them a pavement condition raung and tf
the ratmg falls below u cenam
number on roads. those roads
are given priority. Traffic
counts and meetings with
ODOT County Managers me
also a factor in choosing
which roads get repaved.

TB clinic

RAVENSWOOD
CHIROPRACTIC CENTER

Dr, K~ Il ~ Hfllikb
CHIROPRACTOR
Auto Acctdents
Worker's Compensation
• Sport~ IIIJUfll.''

• ~ho ~ t

• Mc1h~ar~
• i\cupUill.'ture

• Suml' d.t~ .lppt

C;

ln ~UrJnu·,

Chmlpr!ICtor llf Ihe

~~ tf

'"'"
\km~r

ol

BoarU uf

Anll'n~

m

Fun·n~K

20~1"icxpc r tcn1c
~ll'mht:r

nf An~t:m .m

A.::.ulemy L'f ~kd! CHI
,\cupum. turr •

304-273-5321 :!!:

316 Washington St

POMEROY - The Meigs County Health Department
will conduct an evening clmie unit! 6 p.m. on Aug. I.
Servtces include childhood/adult immunizattons , vital statistics, pregnancy testing, blood pressure/blood sugar measurements, env ironmental health. head lice screenings.
WIC (by appomtment) , answers to general health questions. Call 992-6626 for more information .

For the Record
Vandalism
POMEROY - Sheriff's deputies are in vestigating a
number of complamts about mailboxes betng burned or
vandaltzed on Tuesday night. The incident' occurred on
Yost Road. Johnson Road and Flatwoods Road. Sheriff
Robert Beegle said.
One of the mailbox owners heard and saw the subjects vandalizing hts matlbox but did not call unt il Wednesday moming.
"Ca ll when the mctdent ts gotng on.'' Beegle Said. ·'Maybe
a deputy will be nearby and able to apprehend the subjects."
Mike Warner of Rae ine reported to Bccg le that someone
had stolen a Craftsman generator from hi' shed
. Sandra Coy of School Lot Road reported that someone
threw eggs at her daughter's car. This is the third vandalism
incident &gt;he has repo rted &gt;tnce Easter. Food. patnt and eggs
have been thrown on the car, and investtgation rs continuing. ~
Carol Duckett of Langsvtlle reported theft of 50 to 100
pounds of No.2 copper.

Community Calendar
Public
meetings
Friday, July 28
RUTLAND - Rutland
Township Trustees, 5 p.m.,
Rutland Fire Station.

Clubs and
organizations
Friday, July 28
POMEROY - Make-up
JUdging fo,r Girl Scout fair
projects, 6 to 8·30 p.m,

Supplies
from PageA1
backpacks. God's NET wtll
take used backpacks as long
as they 're tn good shape
with zippers that work and
no tears.
Items can be dropped off
from 9. a.m. to I p.m ..
Tuesday-Friday at the
otltces of the Mulberry
Community Center. from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Parish
Clothing Shop and from 5
p.m. to 9 p.m. at God's Net
which
is
closed on
Thursdays.
During the gtveaway volunteers at God 's NET will
be armed wtth school supply lists from all district
schools for students from
kindergarten
through
twelfth grade. The supplies
will be given away on a first

Pomeroy Ltbrary. Call
Jcrrcna Ebersbach at 9927747.
Saturday, July 29 .
Southern
RACINE Athletic Boosters will hold a
cleanup day at the football
concession building. lO a.m.

Other events
Friday, July 28
MIDDLEPORT - Free
communtty dmner. 4:30 to
6:15
p.m.
Middleport
Church of Christ, comer of
Fifth and Matn.
come. first serve basis for as
long as they last.
The gtveaway ts for all
children of any income .
Parents or guardtans must
have their children present
to receive the suppltes.
There are no forms to fi II
out beforehand. JUSt show
up and be patient
"We want to serve all the
children of Meigs County,"
Rader satd of includmg
kids of any income on . the
gtveaway.

A!!~!~
The Ariel Summer Theat~ Presents

SHOWBOAT
Aug. 25 &amp; 26 8 PM Nightly
www.arieltheatre.org
The Ariel-Dater Hall
428 Sec. Ave. Gallipolis, OH

740-446-ARtS (2787)
.

PUBW.: NOTICE
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING #I
Date of Puhlication- July 2R.1006
to .tpply to the Ohto Depan nwm nt
Communi!~ Dt:\d&lt;lpmo.:nt B\oo;k G1·ant
{COBG l Sm.tll Cttte!-&gt; Prugrill ll .•1 t~..: Ut:t.tl l) llt mbl p1 ogr ,till Hl.hllill l:-. tcn:J
by the State llf Ohw
.

The

Y 1ll ag~

ot Rmland

tntend~

Development tund1ng under the

The hr:-.t of tw() puhlu.: ho;atlll!' ~ \\Ill he held .tl 7 lll.l p 111 01 1. \ugl•~1"'
2006 at Rutland's VillagL' Council Ch,llnlll'!'' k)..:atnl dl U'"' \1run StrL·ct
R u tl~nd . Ohm 45775 to plUVJdc Cl11lCI1~ \\ 1th p~..!t1111CII1 m lnllll Jtllm &lt;~huut
the CDBCl progrnms . mcluc!tng :111 ~xpl&gt;~n&gt;~ll(lll ol ~..!l1g1hl~ acm II IL'\ .md
program requm.:mcnts The CDBG progr.un c.ul ftmd .1 bro.Jtl runge o!
aL'II V J1 \e~. tncluJ.mg ccononH~ dc&gt;clopnll.:nt pruJC~ t~ ..,ttccl •~.tl\:r
supply. dramagc and san nary ~1.'\,.CT 1mprm cmcntS. ])dl'k .ll'CjUI"Ilion and
1mprovemerlts, dcmol!tnm of un:-.ur~· '-lruL·turc!&gt;, rchah•ltt,Jilon o! hou,•ug
and nc1ghhorhood facilit ies .md plam11ng The aLII\ lilt.:\ mu~t he
dc"1gncd to pnmanly bencfltloY.-,I!ld modcraiL'-IIlcomc pCNm~ .ntl tn
'the prevention or elilllll\d!JOII ol !&gt;lum.., .1nd bl•gl1t. or llR'CI .1n Ulgcnt llL'Cd
of the community
Citltcns arc cnct1umgcJ tu .1ttcnd ih" mcct;ng Augu't
thei r mput on the V1lla£C 's CDBG program

Ravenswood. WV
Y11lngc of Rutland

~th Ill pn•&gt;•lk

�, The Daily Sentinel
ANNIE'S MAILBOX

Son must open up
about his withdrawal
through my mother's head.
When I have a snack,
Mom tells me the exact
Dear Annie: l am a 60- calorie count. If l don't have
year-old mom of four respon- time to go walking with her,
sible, well-adjusted children, she becomes agitated. When
but I have this ongoing prob- she starts pressuring me, all
lem with my youngest son, I want to do is cry. If Mom
would stop nagging, I
"Brian," who is 28.
As a child. Brian and l would probably drop a few
had a close relationship, but pounds. What can I do? around seventh grade, he Depressed Teen
Dear Teen: Your mother
started distancing himself
from me. He actually knows what it is like to
appeared to dislike me. struggle with weight, and
Through the years, ·J've she is worried you will have
become more and more the same problem . She
stressed that his attitude thinks her nagging will keep
you healthy. Instead, it frustoward me is so strained.
We've talked about it and !rates and depresses you, ·
even had counseling togeth- which, by the way, can lead
er, but Brian claims he has to overeating. Ask your
no idea what the problem is. father, or another adult relaHe says he isn't bothered by tive or friend, to talk to Mom
me or anything l do .. He on your behalf and get her to
once said it could be the back off: You also can show
sound of my voice that irri- her this letter and tell her you
tates him. However, if l wrote it. Good luck, honey.
Dear Annie: I read your
scratch my arm, he recoils.
If I make a comment during response to "Help Us Help,"
a conversation, ·he'll ~ive whose daughter's house was
me "the look." My feelings filled with junk. You quite
get so hurt! just want to go rightly suggested she might
be a "packrat" and referred
in a corner and cry.
Brian lives far away and , her to the OC Foundation.
is hcime visiting. Since he We identify this problem as
arrived, I have had severe compulsive hoarding.
Our research suggests that
stress and heart palpitations.
My doctor says F m in good hoarding is a complex probshape, but when I know lem in which people have
Brian is coming home, even difficulty processing inforthough I'm glad to see him, mation to organize items
I get nervous. I hate to say and solve problems.
it, but all the stress goes
They have unusually
away as soon as he leaves.
strong attachments to objects
We keep in touch via e- and paper that stem from
mail, and he writes the nicest mist.aken beliefs, and fearful,
notes and says wonderful guilty and . depressed emothings that he would ne'&gt;!er tional reactions that make it
say in person. I love that upsetting to get rid of items.
young man and cannot make
Thank you· for providing
sense of this. My heart is so good information that will
heavy. - Unloved Mother
ultimately help many peoDear Unloved: We think ple.- Gail Steketee, Ph.D.,
Brian loves you very much, Dean ad Interim, Professor,
but for whatever reason, he Boston University School
finds it difficult to be in of Social Worli, Boston
your physical presence.
Dear Dr. Steketee: Thank
Unless he is willing to open you for your insight. Again,
up in tht;rapy, he is not like- . re.aders, the address is
Colllpu.lsive
ly to make much progress Obsessive
deciphering the reasons and · Foundation
(ocfoundaovercoming the problem. · tion.org), 676 State St., .
When he visits, consider his New Haven, CT 065.11.
odd reactions and "looks" to
Annie's Mailbox is writbe ·a behavioral glitch and ten by Kathy Mitchell and
ignore them. Once you Marcy Sugar, longtime ediaccept that it's Brian's prob- tors of the Ann Landers
lem to fix, you'll de-stress column. Please e-TtUJil your
and the visits will be easier. questions to anniesmail·
Dear Annie: Recently, my box@comcast.net, or write
mother underwent bariatric to: 'Annie's Mailbox, P.O.
surgery and lost 160 pounds. Box 118190, Chicago, JL
This is wonderful, but since 60611. To find out more
she lost the weight, she has about Annie's Mailbox,
been · on my case to do the and read features by other
same. I eat healthy and · Creators Syndicate writers
weigh an OK amount. I am and ·cartoonists, visit the
not skinny, but I also am not Creators Syndicate Web
fat. I cannot seem to get this page at www.creators.com.
BY KATHY MITCHELL
AND MARCY SUGAR

·COMMUNITY
POME~OY Meigs
O;JUnty is currently well represented at the Ohio State
Fair Horse Show by not one,
but two local young women
- Miranda McKelvey and
Alyssa Newland.
Both ladies earned their
spots at(he slate fair by competing at the Performance
Against Standard Qualifying
Show at Henderson Arena in
Jackson.
For McKelvey, she galloped
to victory on the back of quarter horse April who was said to·
have been born on April Fool's
Day but is no joke in the show
ring. McKelvey and April only
had to qualify in two events to
move to the state level but
ended up qualifying in all four
gymkhana classes. The two
raced ag-.tinst the clock in barrels, cones and barrels, speed ,
··

percent.
Saturday night. •• Partly
cloudy. Humid with lows in
the upper 60s. West winds
around 5 mph.
Sunday
through
Tuesday
night .•• Partly
cloudy. Hot. Highs .in the
.lower 90s. Lows around 70.
Wednesday
and
Wednesday night ... Partly
cloudy with a chance of
showers and thunderstorms.
Hot. Highs in the lower 90s.
Lows around 70. Chance of
rain 30 percent.
Thursday.•• Partly cloudy
with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms. Highs in .
the upper 80s. Chance of
rain 40 percent.

McKelvey
attends
Southern High School and is
the daughter of Bruce and
Teresa McKelvey of Portland.
Newland rode to victory
in Jackson with the help of
horse Skeeter, qualifying in
all four events and earning
her a place in the showm3JIship and hunt seat equitation
events at the Ohio State Fair.

and control and pole bending.
McKelvey and April will
be the only ones to represent Meigs County at the ·
Ohio State Fair Horse Show
in the speed events.
This will be the third trip to
Columbus for the duo. Last
year McKelvey and April
finished fourth m the state in
the pole bending class.

With injury to Bentley, Rauen moves
front and center, Page 82 ·

Friday, July 28, 2006

B.rowns lose Bentley for season
.

BY TOM WITHERS ·
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BEREA - Stretched out
on a flatbed cart, l.eCharles
Bentley covered his face
with a towel to hide his disappointment and tears.
This wasn't the homecoming he had planned.
His first season with the
Cleveland Browns ended
before it began.
Bentley, a two-time Pro
Bowl center and one of the
team's prized free agent
si~nings this winter, sustamed a season-ending
injury to his left knee
Thursday in the first 11-on11 drill of training camp.

.Days Until
High School
Football

.

.

The loss is .
" cru'shing
blow for a
club that
has been
cursed by
m aj o r
Note'book injuries
the past
few seasons but ha~
improved its roster and has
high hopes for 2006.
"He was the face of our
free age.nt class," general
manager Phil Savage said.
"We feel terrible for
LeCharles, but life goes on."
Savage said Bentley tore
his patellar tendon and will
undergo surgery as· early as
Friday. Savage declined to

say if Bentley's tear was partial or complete and would
not speculate on a time
frame for recovery:
· Blocking for Reuben
Droughns on an off-tackle
running play to the right,
Bentley, who played four
years in New Orleans, was
briefly engaged in a block
up front with nose tackle Ted
Washington when his left
knee buckled .
Bentley screamed, "No! "
and grabbed his knee as
coach Romeo Crennel and
his staff blew their whistles
to halt play. While on his
knees, Bentley, one of the
NFL's premier centers ,
punched the ground in dis-

gust as the Browns moved
their scrimmage up the field
so the club's medical staff
could attend to him .
As Bentley was · being
helped,
linemates Joe
and
Cosey
Andruzzi
Coleman came over to check
on the 26-year-old, who sat
on the ground for several
minutes before being carted
to the locker room.
Bentley's injury is the latest for a Browns team beset
by serious medical setbacks
No. I overall 'picks
Courtney Brown' and quar
terback Tim Couch had several major injuries - · sirce

Bush still
unsigned
Team
says
Landis
tested
positive
during
Tour
as Saints
camp opens
Please see Browns. B2

' BY STEPHEN WILSON
ASSOCIATED PRESS

. LONDON
Floyd
Landis' stunning Tour de
ASSOCIATED PRESS
France victory just four
days earlier was thrown into
Vince Young's deal is done. question Thursday when his
So is Chad Greenway :S and team said he tested positive
Jay Cutler's.
for high levels of testosFirst-round draft picks are terone during the mce.
•
signing contracts and making
The Phonak team sustheir way to training facilities pended Landis, pending .
as
the · results of the backup "B"
majority sample of his drug test. If
of NFL Landis is found guilty of
teams pre- doping, he could be stripped
pare
to
o p e n of the Tour title, and Spam's
Pereiro
would
camp. The Oscar
become
champion.
one
big
It wasn 'I immediately
name with
known
when the backup
no agreeNotebook m e n t : sample will be tested.
The Swiss-based Phonak
Heisman
Trophy winner Reggie Bush. team said it was notitied by
Neither Saints general man- the International Cycling
ager Mickey Loomis nor Union·(UCI) on Wednesday
Bush's agent, Joel Segal, that Landis' sample showed
would comment on negotia- "an unusual level of testostions Thursday, but Loomis te rone/e pit estosterone"
' said recently that negotiations when he was tested after
with Bush are running a "nor- stage 17 of the race last
mal" course.
Thursday.
Bush, the star running back
"The team management
and kick returner from and the rider · were both
Southern California, is look- totally surprised of this
ing for top pick money. physiological result," the
Defensive
end
Marui
Williams was the first overall Phonak statement said.
Efforts to reach Landis
choice in ApriJ ·and signed a
not immediately sucwere
six-year, $54 million contract
cessful.
with Houston, with $26.5 milThe 30-year-old Landis .
lion
guaranteed.
On
Thursday, third pick Young made a remarkable comeagreed to a five-year deal, back in that Alpine ~tage,
with an option for a sixth, racing far ahead of the field
with $25.7 million guaranteed for a solo win that moved
with Tennessee. It could have him from II th to third in the
an overall value of $58 mil- overall
standings.
He
lion with option and roster regained the leader's yellow
bonuses and salary.
jersey two days later.
"It was a great deal for us,"
Landis rode the Tour with
said Major Adams, the 4uar- a degenerative hip condition.
terback's agent. "Both sides that he has said will require
had one goal, and that was to surgery in the coming
get him in on time. We weeks or months.
accomplished that, and we
Arlene Landis, his mothworked diligently to get him er, said Thursday that she
in."
Young led Texas to the . wouldn't blame her son if
national cham!'ionship last he was taking medication to
season with a victory over treat the pain in his injured
Bush and USC in the Rose hip, but "if it's something
Bowl. Another Trojans run- worse than that, then he
ning back, l.enDa!e While, is doesn't deserve to win."
"I didn't talk to him since .
now a Titans teammate of
Young's.
Please see Landis. B2
Wh1te, like Bush and
Young, came out of college
after his junior season, but he
slipped •to the second round,
45tn overall, because of a
right hamstring injury and a
perceived poor attitude and
work ethic by some scouts.
He is behind starter Chris
Brown . and .veteran Travis
Henry in the backtield.
OXFORD
(AP)
Greenway, a linebacker out
of Iowa, was the No. 17 pick Basketball coach Charlie
Coles got a three-year
Please see Bush. 82
extension
Thursday
from Miami
of
Ohio,
CoNTACfUS
keeping him ·
onder conOVP ScoreLine (5 p.m.·1 a.m.)
tract through the 2008-09
1-740-446-2342 e•l. 33
season.
Coles has gone 175-126 .
or 992 -5287 (Meigs Co.)
during 10 seasons at
Fax- 1-740-446-3008
Miami, winning three MidE-mail- sporls@mydailysentinel.com
American Conference regSports Sta~
ular season championships .
Brad Sherman, Sports Editor ( 1997. 1999 and 2005) and
(740) 446-2342 , exl. 33
one conference tournament
bsherman 0 myd~i lytribune. com
title. The RedHawks went
Bryan Walters, Sports Writer to the NCAA tournament
(740) 446-2342 . ext 23
in · 1997 and 1999 under
bwaltersOmydallytnbune .com
Coles.
Larry Crum, Sports Writer
Before coming to Miami,
(740) 446-2342. ext 33
Coles coached six seasons
Ierum @ mydei lyregister.com
at Central Michigan.
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BBT-41.58
Peoples - 29
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Wai-Mart - 43.53
Wendy's- 59.53
Worthington - 19.93
Dally stock rePQrts are the
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the previous day's transactions, provided by Smith
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Alyssa Newland ·

Miranda McKelvey

This is also Newland's third
trip to the Ohio State Fair
Horse Show where she had
previously earned reserve
champion in showmanship,
grand championship in equitations, Outstanding Youth of
the Day, a win in her age divi.sion for equitation, reserve
championship against ·all ages
in the same event in 2005.
Newland will be a sophomore at Eastern High School
where she participates in a
variety of sports. She is also
a member of tile Klassy
Klovers 4-H Club and will
show a commercial feeder
calf at the Meigs County Fair
for the third year in a row.
She is also a Meigs County
Junior Fair Board member.
Newland is the daughter
of . Grant and Linda
Newland of Chester.

Bl

The Daily Sentinel

Season!!!

Local Stocks
ACI- 33.85
AEP-35.88
Akzo- $4.12
Ashland Inc. - 65.68
BLI-15.86
Bob Evans ..:.. 27.03
BorgWarner- 59.92
CENX- 30.73,
Champion - 8.02
Charming Shops - 10.12
City Holding - 38
Col- 53.65
DG -13.08
DuPont- 39.77
Federal Mogul- .36
USB- 31.65
.l Gannett - 51.67
General Electric -32.65
GKNLY-' 4.65
Harley Davidson - 55.30
JPM- 44.70

Inside

Friday, July 28, 2006

Mcllllv8V and Newland qualifV r. Obio.Stal8 Fair Horse Show

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Friday night ••• Mostly
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thunderstorms.
Showers
likely in the evening ... Then
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midnight. Humid with lows
in the upper 60s. South
winds 5 to I 0 mph. Chance
of rain 70 percent.
Saturday•.• Partly cloudy
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APpholo

2006 Tour de France winner Floyd Landis of the US, holds up his trophy after the final stage
of the 93rd Tour de France cycling race between Antony, south of Paris, and Pans, this past
Sunday. Landis tested positive for high levels of testosterone during the race, his Phonak
team said Thursday. The statement came a day after. the UCI. cycling's governing body. sa id
an unide[Jtified rider had failed a drug test during the tour.

.'·.............. ,,,,,,., .......... ..

BY CHRIS DUNCAN
ASSOC IATED PRESS

HOUSTON -· Adam
Dunn and Ken Griffey Jr.
homered and Cincinnati
starter Elizardo Ramirez
struck out ~ even straight hitters, leading the Reds tc&gt;an 84 victory over the Houston
Astroson. Thursday night.
Dunn went 3-for-3 with
four RBh and Ramire7 (4-6)
went 6 2-3 innings to win for
the tirst time since June 25 ,
· allowing six hits and striking
out eight. He struck out seven
in a row from the third inning
to the fifth.
Lance Berkman. · Luke
Scott and Eric Munson had
RBI singles in the eighth off
Reds reliever Billy Bray to
make it 6-4. but Todd Coffey
came on and struck out Adam
Everett to end the inning.
Dunn and Rich Aurilia
added RBI sin~les in the
ninth off 13rad Ltdge. ending
the Houston bullpen's scoreless streak at 27 innings. the·
longest in the majors this season.
Astros starler Taylor
Buchholz (6-9) lasted only
two innings as the Reds hammered him from their first at. bat.
Ryan
Freel
ripped
Buchholz's third pitch mto
the right-field corner for ~
double and Dunn followed
'with a liner to left-center for
his eighth RBI since the All Star break.
Griffey then hit his 20th
homer or the season. a towering two-run drive over rhe
Astros· bu)ipen in rightcenter.
'
·
The Reds didn't let up in
the second.
. Royce Clayton led off
with a hard single to left and·
stole second. Ramirez, a
career ,100 hitler (3-for-30).
then hammered a double -~
his first - to the wall in
right. Clayton scored. gi ving Ram1rez his second
career RBI.
Dunn. hitti n~ .340 si nee
' June 25, then crushed a 3-2
pitch over the fcm:c in center.
his 31st. It was Dunn's sixth
straight hit in the series after
he tied a career hi~h with four
hits on Wednesday.
Notes: Griffey recorded his
1,591st RBI. tying Andre
Dawson for 24th all-time.
The homer was the 556th of
Griffey's career. ... Jerry
NatTon earned his lOOth win
as Reds manager. ... The Reds
impnwed to 36-10 when they
score tirst. the best percentage in the NL. ... The Astros
have lost se\·en of nine to the
R d 11 .
Tl

A~tr~Js! ~ulf;~,~~t s~~rele~~

streak was the team's longest
since IQ89. when they went
29 1-3 innings without
allowing a run.

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1 -·-

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up Houston

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-----

�Bush
from Page 81
overall His contract could be
worth up to $1'125 tmlhon
wtth roster and perlonnance
bonuses.
"When I was dotng the
agent (Interview) process, I
started off by saymg, 'I don' t
want to be a guy 1that's gomg
to hold out of camp, and
we' re not going to be too
proud as an agent or as a
player to hold out,'"
Greenway satd. "If that's
what thev're oftenng, that's
what we'"re gomg to talke"
The Ytki ngs,' rookies begtn
workouts Fnday
Quarterback Jay Cutler, the
lllh ptck tn the draft out ot
Vanderbtlt, agreed to a J?UCkage wonh up to $48 nullton
over s1x years. The deal was
expected to be signed in time
for the Broncos· first workout
Fnday.
"We got tt done," agent
Bus Cool&lt; satd of the deal that
mcl udes a tean1 optmn for the
SIXth year
Cutler was the last ot
Denver' s
seven-member
draft class to reach a deal
The Broncos also stgned
punter Mtcah Knorr to hll tn
for Todd Sauerbrun, who will
serve a four-game suspenston
for usmg the banned dtetary
supplement ephedra
Kansas Ctty Chiefs agreed
to terms wtth frrst-round dmft
ptck Tamba Halt, a defenstve
end !rom Penn State and the
20th overall pick Hali
recetved a five-year contract

Landis

The 6-loot-3, 275-pound
Hall had II sacks dunng hts
semor season, mcludmg four
agm nst Wisconsm, tymg a
Nitta ny LIOns smgle-game
record
Mathtas Ktwanuka stgnc u
" live-year contract wtth th&lt;'
Gtants that agent To.• .
Condon satd could be won'l
up to $10 mtl hon if the
Boston Collefle defens tve
end htts all hts mcenuves
Kiwanuka ts guaranteed $5
mt lhon
'The mtlhonatre part ts
good," Ki wanuka satd "But
I thtnk the most exctttng part
ts that thts ts Day I for me.
This ts the official Day I. I
have been a part of the team,
kmd o!, now that it ts stgned
and over with, I' m happy"
Kt wanuka had 32 1/2
sacks m his final three seasons at Boston College But
he JOinS a crowded defenstve
lme led by Pro Bowl ends
Mtchael Strahan and Ost
Umenytora and htghly
regarded second-year player
Jusun Tuck
Late Thursday, Tampa Bay
agreed to a deal wtth guard
Davm Josel(h of Oklahoma,
us No I ptck and the 23rd
overall selectton Joseph is
expected to compete for a
startmg JOb nght away.
Three veterans standouts,
Jets runmng back Curtts
Martm and Patnots defensive end Richard Seymour
and safety Rodne} Harnson
were placed on the physically unable to perform hst. All
three are expected to be fine
well before the season.
Players can only be put on

the PU P list before the tirst
practtce of trammg camp. It
they are not removed from 11
before the final roster cutdown to 53 players on Sept
2, they must stay on tt lor the
tirst stx weeks of the season
At any ttme dunng Weeks 7I 0, they can be acttvated or
work out with the team
After the frrst 10 weeks of
the season, they must be acuvated, wa1ved or placed on
mjured rese rve, reqUiring
them to mtss the rest of the
season
Any of the PUP players
can be talken off the hst tn
trammg camp once they're
ready to practice
Thomas Jones, who last
seaso11 JOtned Walter Payton
as the only Bears running
backs to eclipse 1,300 yards,
stratned h1s hamstnng whtle
ru nnmg dunng a phystcal
Thursday and wound up on
the PUP list.
"It was something where I
ran tht s mormng kmd of
early I may not have
stretched as much as I should
have been It was somethmg
that JUSt happened. It could
happen to anybody," Jones
smd.
San Franctsco traded backup quarterback Cody Pickett
to Houston for a condtttonal
draft ptck Ptckett started two
gaanes for the 49ers last season - and completed a franchtse-low one pass m a loss
to Chtcago The former
rodeo cowboy gamed hts
greatest notoriety from a
bnef stint as a spectal-teams
player covenng kickoffs and
punts

that hit the fan , but r m
keepmg thmgs even keel
unttl I know what the facts
are."
she
told
The
Associated Press tn a phone
mtervtew from her home m
Farmersvtlle, Pennsylvania
"1 know that th1s ts a temptation to every rider but I'm
not gomg to JUmp to concluSions II disappomts me "
The Phonak statement
came a day after the UCI.
cychng's world governmg
body, satd an umdenttfied
rider had failed a drug test
dunng the Tour
Phonak saud Landts would
ask for an analysts of hts
backup sample "to prove

Friday, July 28,

2 006

Friday, July 28, 2006

www.mydailysentlnet.com

Hallen moves up front and center
BEREA (AP) - In one
snap, Bob Hallen went from
second-stringer to the center of attentton
Hallen, a nme-year veteran stgned by the Browns m
March as a backup, wtll
take over as Cleveland's
starung
center
after
LeCharles Bentley was lost
for the season With a tear m
the patellar tendon m hts
left knee dunng practtce
Thursday
" Yo u' t~ always one play
away th'm startmg," Hallen
satd
Th e 6- foot-3,
302pounder was watchmg from
the stdehne when Bentley
went down on the Browns'
ftrst 11 -on- 1I play of trammg camp. From h1 s vantage
pomt, tl seemed to be an
ordmary pl ay until Bentley
d\dn ' I get up
" II was JUSt a ptle-up."
Hallen said
Hallen has played m 86
games, making 4 7 starts
with Atlanta and San Otego
The Browns s1gned the former Kent State star to a
two-year deal for depth and
tn surance 111 case of an
tnJury to one of thetr mten-

Browns
fromPageBl

the club returned to the
league as an expansiOn team
Ill 1999
etther that thts result is com- Dopmg Agency, satd "I'll
On Thursday, ltght end
mg from a natural process or malke thts very bnef No Kellen Wmslow had his
that thts ts resultmg from a conunent '
first contact after m1ssmg
mtstalke."
UCI spokesman Ennco the past two seasons with
Phonalk satd Land1s has Carpan1 satd Land1s was noll- maJor leg mjuries The
been suspended and that he tied of the test Wednesday Browns also are without
wtll be fired tf the second morning. He said the cychng wtde receiver Brayton
sample confirms the tmttal body doesn't requtre analys1s Edwards, their first-round
finding.
of the "B" sample, but that pick m 2005, who 1s expectUSA Cycling spokesman Landis requested it
ed to be out until Oct. I folAndy Lee smd that organiZa"We are confident m the lowing knee surgery.
tt'on could not comment on first (test)," Carpam satd
As Bentley lay on the
Landts
"For us, the first one ts ground, several of the
"Because tt's an anu-dop- already good "
Browns were remmded of
mg matter, tt's USA
Under World Ant1-Dopmg ~~~team 's star-crossed hts;,
Cyclmg's pohcy not to com- Agency regulations, a muo of
(Suggs) sa1d,
"Lee
ment on that subJeCt out of testosterone to epttestosrespect for the process and terone greater than 4:I 1s con- 'Another Browns lliJUry,"'
Floyd's nghts," Lee said sidered a positive result and said Droughns, who slowed
"Rtght now, we have to let subJect to mvestigation. The up on the play when he
the process proceed and we threshold was recently low- heard someone yell that a
canlt comment on tt "
ered from 6. t . The most like- player was down
Crennel and Savage sa1d
Carla O'Connell, publica- ly natural rauo of testosterone
teammates
uons and commumcauons to epitestosterone m humans Bentley's
hts
mJury
shouldn't
let
dtrectm for the U S Anti- is I I
1

fromPageBI

'

www. mydailysentinel.com

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

or starters.
"We were looking for that
center/guard combmatton,"
Brown s coach Romeo
Crenne I satd.
Before he knew the extent
of Bentley's tnjury, Crennel
was asked 1f the club would
try to s1gn another center
"If it's bad and we' re not
gomg to !)ave Bentley, we' ll
look at our short Its! and see
who ts available," he said
"We Will see tf tt's worth It
to bring a guy in. It doesn't
do ~ ou any good to have a
guy just to have a guy. You
want as much qualtty as you
can get."
Beyond Hallen, who
appeared m mne games fof
the Chargers last season,
Crennel satd the Browns
have other options at center
"We haye Atlas Hernon
He's been to (NFL) Europe
and has had some work at
center," he sa1d (Startmg
guard) Joe Andruzzi has
al so taken some snaps at
center We have guys who
can lme up there."
General manage r Phtl
Savage sa1d the club would
look tnto stgntng another
ltneman to back up Hallen
affect the team's chances
"We're stilllookmg for a
good year and I expect a
good year Nothmg really
has changed," Crennel satd
after the evening practice,
"Any ume you lose a Pro
Bowl player, you're not
qutte as good. 1 told the
team that everyone else has
to ptck up some slack,
which I thmk we'll do."
The
Browns s1gned
Bentley to protect secondyear quarterback Charlte
Frye and help an offense
that scored a league-low
232 points last season On
Wednesday, Crennel cited
center as the club's b1ggest
need, and after Bentley was
s1gned, the Browns traded
center Jeff Faine on draft
day to the Samts.
Savage said the club wtll
look to add a free agent
hneman 111 the next few
days to back up Bob
Hallen, who will move 111to
Bentley's starting spot.
Crennel satd players are
remtnded to be careful
"The f1rst geneml rule ts
to stay off the ground and

\!tribune - Sentinel - l\e

in the commg days
BA CK :
BERNIE 'S
Former quarterback Berme
Kosar, who hasn' t been
mvulved wtth the club tn
recent years. could be JOtnmg the team's broadcasts
for preseason games
Kosar attended practtce
Wednesday, chatt tng on the
stde line wtth Hall o! Fame
runmn g back Jim Brown
o!
and
members
Cleveland 's fro nt office
Owner Randy Lerner has
tn ed to reconnect with
Kosar, who remams one of
the club's most popul ar
players.
ORANGE,
BROWN
AND GRAY: Cornerback
Daylon McCutcheon, bat"
tling Letgh Bodden for a
starting JOb, fee ls hke the
old man on the Browns.
McCutcheon IS the onl y
member of the club's 1999
draft class stt ll wtth the
team He' ll be 30 tn
December
"The se gu,l:'s were born 111
'84 and ' 85,' he satd " I say
' 76, and they start gtgghng "

protect your teammates,"
he satd. "Som'ettmes guy s
will give an extra pu sh m
co mpetl!lon. Someume s
they pull a guy down We
talked to them about not
g1v111g them that extra pu sh
and not pulhng guys
down "

Bentley took over as the
Satnts center in traimng
camp two years ago. He
started all 16 games m 2004
and was named a Pro Bowl
alternate Last year, he
made 14 starts before mi ssmg the fmal two games
wi~h an elbow inJury.
Bentley, who played at
Cleveland 's St Ignatius
H1gh School and Ohw
State, dectded not to re-sign
with the Samts for a chance
to come home and play for
the Browns He stgned a
s1x-year, $36 mtlhon deal m
March that mcluded $12.5
m1lhon m guaranteed
money.
"He probably wanted to
play for the Cl eveland
Browns as much as anyone
we have," Savage satd "We
feel real bad for him "

Public
Meeting
Scheduled lo Review
Draft Natural Resource
Restorallon Plan for
Leading Creek and
Final
Acid
Mine
Drainage Abatement &amp;
li'eotmenl Plan
The U.S Fish and
Wildlife
Service
announce the release
ol the Draft Leading
Creek Stream System
Restoration Plan and

beyond the Management and from or producing; also
the Meigs Soli and reserving to the alate
Alternative B Is pro· Water Conservation of Ohio the uae of
posed as the preferred District will be avail· streams
flowing
alternative
and able to explain lhe plan through said lands or
Includes aquatic habi- and to answer ques- ebultlng upon the
tat quality Improve· tions. Anyone who same and so much of
mont proJects, sedl· would like a copy of the banka thereof, as
mentation reducllon the AMDATPtan can may be necessary for
projects, acid mine vlsh the Meigs Soli and such enjoying, aqd the
drainage abatement Water Conservation protection of such
and treatment pro(· District at 33101 Hltand streams from erosion,
ects, wetland and Ad , In Pomeroy, Ohio contamination,
or
associated
upland or call 74Q-992-4282.
deposit of stcllment.
Environmental habit
preservation , (7)11 , 28
The Petitioner further
Assessment (RPIEA). reestablishment,
or
alleges that by reason
The purpose of the enhancement projects, - - - - - - -of default of the
resource
Draft RPIEA IS to fishery
Defendant(s) In the
Public Noltce
describe the types of enhancement proJects
payment of a promls·
the and natural resource- LEGAL NOTICE
sory note, according to
projects,
and
process for choosing based public aware- Merllage
Mortgage Its tenor, the condiCorporation, whose tions of a concurrent
them, which will be ness projects
Implemented
using The assessment area l89t place of business mortgage deed given
funds
from
the under Alternative 8 Is known as 7965 to secure the payment
Creek Includes the Leading North High Street Suite of said note and
Leading
Improvement Account. Creek adJacent flood- 50, Columbus, OH veying the premises
The restoration proj· plain and ecologically 43235-8402, but whose described, have been
uplands, present place of busi- broken, and the same
eels will Improve the associate
and ness Is unknown will has become absolute.
aquatic tile uses of the sub-watershed
Leading Creek Stream tributaries to Loading take notice thai on The Petllloner prays
System and/or acquire Creek, and supporting April 18, 2006 al 1:54 that tho Defendant(s)
resources equivalent ecosystems In the p m , HSBCBank USA , named
be
above
lo those affected by Leading
Creek as Trustee for Merrill required to answer and
the 1S93 dewatering of Watershed.
Lynch
Mortgage set up their Interest In
Meigs Mine No. 31. This Any Interested per· Investors,
Inc. said real eslale or be
RP/EA also serves as sons, agencies, andJor Mortgage Loan Asset· forever barrtcl from
an update to previous groups who would like Backecl Certificates, assertlhg the same, for
plana and utilizes cur- a copy of the Draft Series 2002·HE1 flied foreclosure of said
rant dat8 on the status RPIEA can contact lis Complaint In Case mortgage, the marof the Leading Creek Mary Knapp at US No 06CV050 In the shaling ot any tlena,
Stream System
Fish
and
Wildlife Court of Common and the aale of said
A public meeting to S e r v i c e · Pleas Meigs County, real estate, and the
discuss lhe RPIEA will Mary_KnappCI!ws.gov, Ohio alleging that lhe proceeds of said aale
be held on Tuesday, (614) 469-6923 ext 12 Defendant(s) Merllage applied to the payment
August 8, 2006 at the Acopy Is also available Mortgage Corporation, of Pelllloner's Claim In
Rutland Civic Center. h to 'view al the Pomeroy have or claim to have tho proper order of Hs
will begin at 7 p.m and library a"nd Albany an Interest In the real priority, and for such
described other and further relief
end al 8 30 p.m and Library. Written com- estate
will Include a preaenta· ments also can be sub- below.
as Is Just and oqul·
lion
about
the milled to Mary Knapp Shualed In the Stale of table.
Restoration Plan and at U.S. Fish and Ohio, County of Meigs The last date of
Is
questions from the Wildlife Service, 6950 and VIllage of Racine. Publication
public. Comments will Americana Parkway, Being Lot Number September 1, 2006 tho
(16)
and Dofandant(l) named
bt accepted at the Suhe H, Roynoldeburg, Sixteen
public meeting or In OH 43068 through Seventeen (1 7) tn tho above are required to
Myers Addition to the answer twenly·alghl
writing at any time dur· September 8, 2006
lng a 30 day review The public meeting on Incorporated VIllage of (28) deya after the teat
August
8 al tho Racine, Meigs County, date or publication.
period.
The three alternatives Rutland Clvtc Cantor Ohio, reserving lo lhe By Reimer, Lorber &amp;
will atao Include a State of Ohio, however, Arnov/IZ Co., L P.A.
being propoaed ere
A. taking no action, (a presentation on the all oil, gas, coal and Paler
Mehler,
L
complolod other mlnerala, with Attorney at Law
roqulrod Alternative recently
under the National Acid Mine Drainage the rlghls of entry for Attorney for Plalntlffpurpooe
of Ptllllonor
Environmental Polley Abatement
and the
Treatment
(AMDAT) prospecting, develop- PO Box 968
Acl (NEPA));
8 natural resource- Plan
Loading Ing, producing or oper- Twinsburg, DH 44087
for
baaed restoration wllh· Creek Stan from the ellng for lhe same and (330) 425-4201
In the Leading Creek Ohio Department of the right of occupancy (7) 28, (8) 4, 11 , 18, 25,
aaeeaament area; and Natural
Ruourcu, In so far asia essential (9) 1
C natural resource- Div ision ot Mineral to such prospecting,
baaed rellorstlon with· Re s our c e s developing, operating
In

and

assessment area.

con-

I

'.Michaef Patnc~

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

i
I

\\\01 \(I \II \IS

r

Lost \ Nil

~

GlVEo\WAV

Btrtltday
Sadly nussed by

Home Depot Monte Carlo
&amp; J.J. Veley's #18
Interstate Monte Carlo

Saturday, July 29 '
9 am to 3 pm

BINGO
Middleport American
Legion
Door open at 4:00
Bingo starts at'6:30

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

Smith
Superstore

Publlr;atlon
Sunday Display . 1:00 p.m .

r l day For S unday s P a per

·'

'

Thursday for Sunday•

• All ads must be prepaid'

POLICIE S Ohio Valley Pubtlehlng re1ervea the right to edit reject, o r canc1l1ny ad 11 an~ t ime error• must be rtported on the f1rs t day ol publication and
Trlbune-Se nll nei·Raglater will be reaponslble for no moJI than the cot\ of the epece occu pied bw the error and only the I r11 msert1on We •ha ll not be ho b!.,
any lou or expenae tl'lll rasultl from the publlclllon or omlselo n of an advertlllment Corractlon will be madaln thai rst evallable ed1t1on • Bol( number
ere alweyt c onfidential • Current r11e
appll" • All real aetate adve11t11manta are subjsct to tl'le Federal F'a1r Hou11mg Act of 196B • Tl'l1~
acce p~
I
Wt will no! knowingly ac ~t an~ advertis ing In violation ol tl'le l~w

Mw''''"'l

KIT &amp; CARLYLE
Ohro Valley Home Health
Inc hrflng for Part Trme and
Full T1me CNA STNA
CH HA PCA Compehlt\ e
Wages and Benefts rnclud
1ng health tnsurance and
Mileage Apply at 1480
Jackson Prke Galltpolrs or
2415 Jackson Avenue Pornt
Pleasant WV or phone loll
1ree I 866 441 1393

Loves children very tnendly
Nee ds
room
to
run

(740)388 0069

'
Y'-llll SAt EG M lii~ JLL~

Free krne ns to good home
Seve ral to select from Call

~
com

Frtday &amp; Saturday 9 5
approx 4 miles out Bll lavrlle
Pr ke Vafloty ot ttams

.130

Lawn ll Qardon Equipment ......... .. . ..... 660
Livestock. ......
.. ... 630
LOIIInd Found... . .. .
. 060
Lola ll Ac~eago .. ........... ..... .. ....... ..
... 350
Mlecellaneouo ..........
....... 170
Mlecell1neoue Marchandlao.. ....
.. . 540
Mobile Home Repair.... ..............
.. .. 860
Mobllo Homnlor Rent.. ...... .......
. ..... 420
Mobllo Homo for Sale..
...... 320
Monoy to Loon.... ........ . ...... .... .
. ..... 220
Motorcycteal4 Whetloro.......
. ..... 740
Mualco tnatrumonlo ....... ... ........... .. ... 570
Pereonola ...... ..
. ..... 005
Pota for Sole ......... . . ..... . .. ....... .
.. 560
Plumbing I Heating ........... ..................... 820
Protonlonot Sorvlcoo ............................. 230
Rodto, TV ll CB ~epalr .. ......
. • .. 160
Ro1ll!allto wanllll...... . . ..... .. ....... 360
School• lnatructlon....................... ........... t 50
9Mc1 , Plant 6 Fertilizer
..... 650
lltuotlona Wanted .......
. . t 20
Spece for Rent............ .. ............
.. ... 460
Sporting Good• ........ . ............. . ....... 520
SUV'I for Sale.. ........ .. .
.... 720
Trucks for Solo .............:
... 715
Uphotatory ...... . ........... .. ..... . .. ... 870
Vono For Sale . ....... . ... .. .. .
............. 730
WontiiiiO Buy ............
. ... 090
Wontllllo Buy· Farm Supplies ..
.. .... 620
Wonttcl To Oo .. ........ ............. . . ..... t80
Wantllllo Rent. ......... . . ....
.......... 470
Yard Sale- Qotllpolla . ... . . .
072
Yard Slllo-Pomeroy/Mlddle...... . . . .. .. 074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleasant
. . ....... 076

29th 9am 3pm Sunday July
30th 11 am-2pm
Antique
Plano r.h1 na cab1net Go
carl and ~' tot of houseMid
9oods w1ntet coats and
clothes Muttr tam1ly Enj oy
the scenrc drtve State Route
7 to Eagle Ardge Left on
Sand Rrdge·(3 m11es]·FOI!ow
signs

AtenoN A~IJ
F'uA M -I.RKF:T

c omics

© 2006 b y N EA Inc

r

W AM }.IJ

. _ _....
TO
...
HLiii~.__.~

7/28106 7f2!l! 06 9 5

72 5

Pa rt T me
CookJHelper
needed for I 00 bed skilled
nurs1 ng fac lrty
Intereste d
applr cants sho uld app ly to
Aoc ksprrngs Rehab1 1ltatron
Cente r 3675 9 Rocksprr ngs
Ohro
Road
Pomeroy
45769 Extendrca re Health
Se rv ~ees Inc ts an equal
opportu nrty employer tha t
encourages
workplace
drve rsrry M!F ON

7 -~-

oc

103 L1ncoln Prk.e C a nte~my
Frtday 28th 9 4 Lots of
Treas lJ rers
motorcycle
Greenhouse 8~ 1 2 Ft frame k.n ck knacks furmture etc
witt) gl ass door call anyttme _
304 87 5-37 18
Farr week yard sale Name
ll your Prrce Appliances bed
Male English Pomte r Ca room surte WICker day bed

(740)256 8884
(h)
(740)441·7667 (cl

Valley Home Hea lth
Inc hrrrng lor Fu ll Trme AN
Full Trme and Part T tma
CNA STN A CHHA PCA
and Per 01em OT ST
Acceptmg app lt catrons for
LPN s CompelttrV'EI Wages
and
Bene1rts
mc ludrng
tnS tJrance
and
hea lth
M1 leage Apply at 1480
Jackson Ptke Gallipolis or
24 15 Jackson Avenue Pornt
Pleasant WV or phone toll
free 1 866·441 1393

0

r
n

The Eastern Local Srllo:c
Orstr ct tS soektng q 1~lhf eo
candid&lt;! I S~ tu frll \a,_,am;res
fo r The fottow1ng po;;I IIC''I~
lnterventJOn Spec1alr s1 mttMD Ccrt,h catun Llcen sur~e
Educat,onal
A1dP.
Interested
candrdates
should
contac1
Rrck
Edwards Supen ntend!?nt at
740 667 6079

1· \ll'l 01 \II· \1
' I.R\ U F'
110

Ht u•W.wtw

..__ _ _ _ _ _•

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Assemble crafts
wood 1lems
To S480Jwk
Materrals prov1ded
Free mformauon pkg 24Hr
801 428 46 49
A 9 year company rs looking
for a well rnottva ted HVAC
lndrvtdual Must have a teast
1 year hands on exoerlence
tn tnstall atron Pay rs based
on experience 11 1nterested
call [740)441 1236 ana
leave message wrth recap·
IIOniSt
An Excellent way to ea rn
money The New Avon
Call Manlyn 304 882 2645
AVON I All Areasl To Buy or
Shrrley Spears 304
Sell
675 1429

1"0
...,.

E~PE RIEN C E N E ~ ESSAAY

FtJLL Tii.'E C..A SS ES
CDL TRAINING
FV• .t..NCING AI/A I..AeLE
JOEl PLAC EMENT

' E"lROU lNG NOW

ALLIANCE
TRACTOR TRAILER.
T!:!A INING C~l\ TEAS
WYTHEVILLE VA

Ccass Cceek A"tmn Buffalo

1·800-334" 1203

Auctron Saturday 7pm New
deale r tror1 Fa1rtal\ , VA
area
Large tra 1ler load
Used consq;tnments Maple
Drop Leaf Table e~~:cel l ent
condrhon Kt tchen Tat:Jte &amp; 6
Charrs Bu tld ng IS full as
alway s Air Condrtroned
Bu•ldlng We gladly accept
VISfl and Master Cur o.

L-~
~
~
"~"-'!
"~'"!l::"'~"!l!"'~"!::"~m...J
Certtt le d
Therapy
Opening

O cc upational
Anlstant

at

ROCKREHAB

Hw&gt; WANtlill

Domtno s Ptzza Now Hrrt ng
Safe
Dnve rs
Pmnt
&amp;
Pleasant
Gallrpolls
Pome roy localtons Apply 1n
Person
OH and WV Coal
EXP
Mtners needed!
Send
resume to Davtd Stan ley
Consultants Coa l Mmerc
152 Roush C rete Far rmont
WV 26554 or Fax to 304
53 4 39 17 or go to DSC
LLC com to apply Onlm e

FEDERAL
POSTAL JOBS
$15 67$26 19/hr now h r·
ng For applrcatron and free
governament JOb rnfo call
Amencan Assoc of Labor 1
9 13 599 8042 24/hrs emp
serv
Gatlia Mergs Comm umty
Act1on Agency rs accept mg
app,rca110ns for a program
mana~;~er for the Help Me
Grow
Program
Aespons 1brlliles
rnclude
supervrsmg prog ra m staff
mamtarntng standards los
tar fuMe program develop·
me nt
Quahfr cafiOns
Knowledge
of
Early
Childhood literacy develop
mentally appropriate prac
trees and lamtly support
programing strong y resen
tatlonal sKills setr starter
abllrty to work whh a team as
welt as possess leadershtp
skills Resume and apphca
t1on will be accepted untrl
4 00 p m on August 1 2006
Forward to
Galha Metgs

r--------, Commu
nity Action Agency
aofo North SA 7 Cheshire

t 0

1"0

w.,.'i'l_fED__. .

-·lli·:-ll·'

Pleasant Va lley
Nurstng &amp;
Aehabrl1tatron Cente r
rs currently acce pting
appl1 catto ns for a full
11me Social Worke r
Aequ1red a S SW or a
four year degree In a
re lated fretd w1th two
years e~~:pe nence rn
long term ca re Must
be licensed by the
state of West Vl rglnta
as a Soctal Worke r
Must demonstrat e the
abtlrty to affectrve ly
co mmunicate with all
resrdent s eKh tblt out·
standr ng custome r
ssrvrce and tllustrate
exc ell en t problem
solVing ski lls
Great oppo rtunity to
work wr th an organtzed
team of professionals.
For more rnlorm atton:
Pleasant Valley
Hospita l
c/o Human Aesources
2520 Valley Drive
Poi nt Pleasant WV

25550
(304) 67 4·2 41 7
AAIEOE
1. ._ _ _ _ _ _

.0

Local Electrtcal Dls trtbutor
se eking a part t1me driver
must be 21 ye ars old with a
valid drrvers license Send
resum e to HR Dept 250
12th St West Hunting ton

wv 25704

Local fast paced busmees
n&amp;adlng Office Manager
Must be frien dly and work
well w1th the public Able to
multr task and ma nage

stress IS a must also must
have goOO telephone skills
and computer kno wledge
Outpaltent
Inpatient
$7 50/hr
TransportatiOn Send resume to CLA Box
BEAUTIFUL
Pedratncs
posstbly ava1lable
416· M.S. c/o Galhpohs Tnbune
TherB!lY gyml Call Jenmfer 1771 Between B OOAM &amp;
PO Box 469 Gallipolis OH
'WeJmer ·· 800 395 SOGO 5 OOPM
45631
578
(304)!137 2118 or {3041550 xB
..101n the Avon team Local - -- - - - - 16 16
Corporate trammy
Call Posrt on avarlable mau1 te
C l t;~r cal Medical Asststam (740)379 9422 to start today nance suparv,sor Basic AC
\VANll:l&gt;
needed lor pedratrlctans tor only $10
heatmg
electrtcal
and
plumbing skrlls reql)rred
ro
Hu'
.Dihce Pay commensu rate
L.,o______,... wrth experence
Takrng applicatiOns for Prep Salary 20k 25k to start
Coo~
Apply m person based on expertence Apply
Fax re suma to
want to bu' Junk Cars
Jtmanettr s
Przza
Am m person Absolu tely No
(304)675 4233
/304)773·5004
Grande
Phone cal ls Holrday Inn
Must love krdsr

SPRINGS

5 '5 OJ

9 OC

v.v

'J1ascn

"'l;:rss
2nub
VFVo

1:'1

P"'

71

l

5l. •5
--- Gallrpohs Career Col1ege
\Careets Close To rl o01e )
Call Tod&lt;'IY1 140 446 4307
1 800 214 0452
'IY'II"W

gn ll p als :A1ee1colle gt&lt; com

Coum I lo1 nj!!p!l

u ~1 1 C~•IIBLJ~~

r, r4B

~nr.~ s~nco s

1180

Truck Drrvers
\\M{ItJJ
Ohro Based Small Truck1ng
To flo
Company
Look mg
for ..__ _ _ _ _ _,...

""'"""""ror:;r.""':;-·"1!i5i1

Tractor Tra der dnvers wtlh
flatbed experrence S600 to
ouse Cali Ha1r Care
$900 take t1ome aher ta ~ es D sabled Shut Ins
C ut s~
Home every weekend and Style s Manrcures
Scr l!
some weekday s del 1 ~enng
reas Belpre lo Athens
to OH KY VA &amp; wv M1ddlepon &amp; 1tl between
(330)52.' 2789
all Jenny 740 378 5~ 62
18 ear::; 8K err~m c e

VACANCY
ANNOUNCEMENT
The Gallia So t\ and W&lt;~ter
Co nservatmn Drstt rct cur
rently has a posttton ava11
able
tor
Edu~.;at r on
Coord inator

I'll CHn t&gt;'Et nt JH \
CARl
Bonn1e s Prrvate C1'11ldcare
Now
has
Opentng
Conven rently loca ted t, 1 nev1
htghway on SAT 7 Call 740
985 4326

1"he ful l-t1m e positron ts to
provtde leadershtp 1n devel ~,:-~~----,
0
oprng and conductu1g the
BL SINF.S.'i
Gall1a SWCD conservatron
OPPOR'I ~r11
educat1on and publrc nfor
Parts Salesperson wanted
matron program s as drrP.c ted
Comp uter e~penence and
• NOT Iff•
by the Board ot Su perv1sors
knowledge of farm equ p
OHIO VA l LE i PU(ll r..,H
ment preferred
Sa rary
lNG
If.
r..11nrmum quR hf c.c • ,o~s are
negotmble depend ng on
an Astoor.1a lc de(]' r: ~ ' 1 ..,ud 1 tnat fOu lu bt c 1 '- t'l
experrence
H e:~ th
ptil;:: f' v
~ ('
l~r-;ldo;
as lntr,q)• ~I l 1i 11
Insurance provided Sertl ~=oro~l , W1l d t I ~; Ne~li!lal
NOT r
t.llr:l
resume to CLA Box 5.69 C!O Resourco., ur E dU ~' &lt;l llu 1
lh "t gh It'"' I"' llofl 11
Galhpohs Tnbune PO Bo~
ll&lt;:ue
;;. : '" ,
8a:.r c comput er skIts are
469 Galhpolrs OH 45531
req urred Excellent orcrl und offertrry
Peopl es Federa l Credit wnnon communrcatlon sk1J!s
opentng new branch tn PI are requtred

co

LICENSED
SOCIAL WORKER

OH 45620 GMCAA rs an "
,
equal opportunlt:. employer llnle Caesars now hiring All
levels o1 Mgml Expenence
Advancement
Gallrpolrs Ferry man needs ne eded
rrde toll rom Moutameer opportun Ires avatlable Marl
Plant $:50/wk Work hours resu me to PO Box 689
Call Proctorvrlle OH 45669 or
M F
7a 3 1 5p
[304)675-6782
lax to (740)886 7425
Healthcare Servrces Group
the nations largest provider
of laundry and housekeep
rng servrces for long term
care Is currently saekrng
la undry and hOusekeepr ng
managers m the Gall1 polra
and Pomeroy areas If yo u
want to grow wtth an estab·
II shed publicly Meld company
fa~~: resume to 614-5770125
-M,-R-IN-G-Io_ca_l-,n-d-,,du-.-lor
1
resrdentlal
CONSTRUC·
T ION
Startmg
pay

Cnnr.ea led P:.. ol
Oh o WV Al J l

Ac.reCieC '1&lt;1flntmr Acc lt C: II nq

Ohao

$200 00' 740 843 5437

Black lab male, 11 mo old

("iSTIH t:I IU\

kllncarlyle@comcast net

In Rocksprtngs/Fiatwoods
1&amp;2 yr old cats lttler tra1ned (Sat)
lost small
dog
Indoor or outdoor males &amp; Reddrsh brown and ~Jhr t e
females 304 675 5587
Call to p1ck up dog
740
992 3216
2 Lab M1x Pupp es Black 7
weeks 1 Male 1 Female Lost Black Mate Dog with
(740)441 5305
Red Coll ar m Pomeroy
LE'Iurel Cltff area
Reward
4 kttte ns
2 gray and 2
Call 740 992·3923
black Four weeks old 740
985 44 90
Lost
Black
Roit we1ler
approx 1201hs Las t seen on
Amencan Stafford Sture
Smtth Ardge Road n Long
Tame r male dog Free to
Bot1om (Portland area)
goOd home Great w/ktds
FAM ILY PETt REWARD
Aonme Wnghl
(304)576

2273

&amp; "'~"·'

150

1 Golden &amp; I
Aetneve r (304)458 2214

ln•uranc............................. . ......

Next to Wai-Mart
Gallipolis

I

I n Nex t Da y 's Pape r
S und a y In -Co lumn : 1 : 00 p . m

FOUNil

Antiques..... .. .... ..
530
Apartmenta lor Rent..
. 440
Frtday 7128/06 an d Saturday
Auction and Flea Markel... . . ........... . ..080
7129/06 9040 St Rt 7 South
Auto Part• &amp; Accessories.......
760
(Raynor Pea ch Farm) Baby
Auto Repair .. .......
770
Clothes Hrgh cha1r Baby
Autoa for Sale .......... ....
71 o
bed and cnb Car Seat
Boall 6 Motors for Sale..........
750
Maternity Clothes Womens
Building Supplloa................. .
.550
Clothes most srze 12 16
Bualneoo and Buildings .....
340
Buolnass Opportunity.....
. 210
some smaller compute r
Buolnaao Tralnlng ................ ..................... . 140
prrnter small kttchen apph
Compers I Motor Home a......... ............... 790
ances and much more
Camping Equipment . .... ...... .. .. .... ,780
Yard sale
161
Green
C1rd1 of Thanks.....
01 o
Terrace Thur Sat Bam
Child/Elderly Cart ...................................... 190
4pm Name brand clothes
l!lec:trlcaURefrlgaratlon .......... ................. 840
Equipment for Ronl
480 ,.. Ra n Of Shtne
EKCIVIIlng ................... ........... . ............ 830
Yardlmovrng sale X l arge
Form Equipment .................. .. ................. .. 610
name
brand
womens
.430
Farms for Ront..... . .......
clothes Kttchen A1de mrxer
F1rm1 for Sale ....... . . ... . ...
330
lots of unique rtems 7/29/06
For Lone.... ............................ ..
490
9·? 15372 Hwy 160 Vrnton
For Bolo ....................... ........... ................ 585
For Salo or Trade.
590
Frulll 6 Vegetable• . ..... .
. . . .... .
580
Furnlohlll Roome ..
.450
.. ................850
Oonorol Hauling .. ........
Garage
Sale August
Qtvsawoy . .......
.. ..... . . .....040
1 2 and3rd 9a m ? Webe1
Hippy Ada...... . .
. .050
restdence across tram dam
ltlly I Qroln.................... ...
.640
in Reedsville
Varret~ of
Hlltp WOflltcl .......... .......... .. ...................... 110
ttems twtn tred and dresser
Home tmprovomonts.....
. ...... .
810
clothmg and household
Hornet for Sale.... ...... .
310
Housahold Qoode ............. , ................. .510
rtem s
Houaeo for Rent ....
...... . . ............... 410
Ga age Sale Saturday July
tn Memoriam......
020

011

ONE DAY ONLY
Tony Stewarts #20

All Dlaplay: 12 Noon :z
Buslnl!!ss Days Prior To

Now you can have borders and graphics
added to your classified ads
Borders $3.00/ per ad
Graphics 504 for small
$1.00 for large

Found Puppy rn Gall poh~
OH
Call
to
1denttfy
Black (740)446·9457

Announcement ..................................... 030

Tuppers Plains
VFW#9053
Friday Ntghts
Doors Open at 5 pm
Bingo starts at 7 pm

D a ily In- Column : 1 :00 p .m .
Monday- Fri da y for Inaertlon

• St art Your Ads Wr th A Keyw ord • Incl ude Compl l!lt l !!
De5trlptlon • Include A. Pric;e • Avord Abbrev!a t rons
• l ntl'ude Phone Number And Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 1 Days

4x4'a For Sate. . ...... . . ..... .

-~
':--:-hts J 9th
Mom, Dad
&amp; S1sters

lJecultirf!4
Display Ads

Word Ads

CLASSIFIED INDEX

'Bisse[[

County Otl

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
~rtbune
Sentinel
l\egi~ter
ct~s:G~A~!
Your Ad,
(7 40) 446-2342 (740) 992-2156 ,(304) 675•1333 •
VISA
Call Today. •• or Fax To 446-3008
or Fax To (740) 992-2157
Or Fax To
675-5234

i

bt Lrwtng
Memory of

~tlv

Gdlla Coutny OH

tools household
Lorr ANIJ
ttems etc 1/4 mrle north of Absolute Top Dollar US
FOUNI&gt;
Porter on SA 160 look for Srlver and Gold Corns
..__ _ _ _ _ _,... srgns 7!31108 8/3/06 9am Proofsets Gold Rmgt; Pre
1935
US
Currency
4pm
Found on SR 14 1 parr ot
Solrta1ra D1amonds· M T S
btfocal eyeglasses 111 a ha rd Frrst 11me ever garage sale Corn Shop 151 Second
Perry Ellr s case (740)446 Frshrng &amp; camp1ng gear Avenue Gatlrpohs , 740 446·
4753
household ttems old corn 2842
- - - - - - - - sheller seeder mt sc garage
uspa r"l MO a :::.a vage 1
FOUND Black dog young ttems men s &amp; wo men~
lemal e, purple collar Oshel clothrng much more 17705 ~uytng all metals at to
nces Call for more tnfo B
Road (304 )675 4027
Sta le Route 554 bet .... een
rrces 304·593·1 904
A o Granr.le ,md 81dweH

In Memory

t~ter

CLASSIFIED

~(7:!:40;.;1.
4 4""1 0:0~40..5, __ __, clot~lflg

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

The Daily Sentinel • Page 83

Pleasant
PoSitro ns avarl
able
Bran ch Manager
Lo an
Offtcar Teller Expenenced
preferred Full benefrt pack·
age Sub mrt resume wrth
sal ary reqwements (o
Peoples Federal CrMrt
Umon, 4 19 Ftrst Avenue
South, Nttro WV 25143
Attent1on Lars Nogoda
Peoples Fede ral Credrt
Union is en equal opportunl,
ty employer

The Educatron Coordtnator
posrt on wrll be located rn
Gallla
Sort
&amp; Water
Conservatron D stnct Off ce
rn Galhpolls Ohm Stantng
salary depends upon educa·
11on and e~~:perrence Benel1t
package 1ncluded
A valid dr1ver s l1cense ts
requtred
A background
check and secu11ty cl t1 ar
an ce will b~ rerp nf•t A.
10

R&amp;J TRUC KING

e

('11

de~ leU J ll II' _,r IP
a rl d diiP "d IO'l
re

u~ ur

"' 1 VrlnCt
:1&lt;1,
I '(;, l 1 'f -.u Hlf

tt,L..tJ-;

~Air

l11&lt;&gt;"j &gt;J

.C. 'Ioms

Lead1ng Th e Way

avo a:Jifl
OltOSIIO'l:,

R&amp;J Truckr ng now H r ng at
our New Haven WV
Termina l For Regional
Hauls-Dump Dlv 1 year
OTA
verll 1ebla eK p

to Jenn fer Harrrson n Sl !iC \
Manager at 446 61 ·!

111&lt;1~ t~

Borrow Smart Cohtact
the Ohro Dtvrs1on of
F nancral
lnsti!Ul lon s
Olf1Ce
ot
Consumer
AHa rrs BEFORE you roll
nence your home or
obtarn a loon BE WARE::
01 f(l ::IIJ€'~' · f
1IW I •

Completed appltcahvn and
resume Wllh references
must be received at the

Call 1·800·462·9365 ask fo r Dlstrtct Offlc;e at 111
l&lt;ent
Jackson Pike Suite 1569
-R.-,-c-.-,.-/M-Id-d-le-lo_n_E_SI_a1es Gallipolis OH 45631 by

Interviews for the posii!On
wrll be tentatrvely sched uled
for August 24 alld August

25 2006

M·F
Res Care IS
Opportunrty

an Equal
E mployer

The
Aths ns-Mergs
Educahonal Servrce has a
posr tton openrng for a
Teac her at the Hockmg
Valley
Resrdenna l
Commun1ty
Center
Applicants must be cert r·
ftedlllcMsed to teach students In grades 7·1 .2 Th1s Is
11 12 month poSition SBiary
will be based on exp enence
and cerllflcafionlllcensure
according to the salary
schedul e
and will have
Boa rd approved benelits
Subm it letter of Interest
resume and references to
John
Costa nzo
Superrntende nt
Athens ·
Meigs EducatiOnal Serv1ce
507
A chland
Center
Avenue Sutte #1 08 Athens

OH 45701

A ~pliCa!ICn

deadline Augusl 7 c1 )r
The A.MESC ts an e~uat
o p p o r t u n i ty
em ployer/prOVl der

s

1

1

I

1

Jr J

•P;u~b:
l";"':'i:C:o:m:p:•n:y:)=~
PRO~ IOl'iAI.

SERVICES
TURNED DOWN ON
SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We Wrn 1
1 888 582 33« 5

lim 11 '

FIJ~ 'II I
t l ES r~ark Dr o;bJ
story ~~ h,?\e f1€c~
ground po~l c_l' ~
7808 afler/t~ pm

Wanted COL Driver B
with
llmKer
License
endorsarnent
Regronal
routes Start and stop In
Gallipolis
everyday
$10 55/hr (740)245 5514

We are now acceptrng
appl1catr ons for ~art l1me
he! oers
Merlroom
.Apphcants 'Tlu~l h"~e
~awJ 11 Pn&lt;
Tr aop v
(
' 1,..'1::
Darty 1rrtJune l-.1tlrpt; 11J.
0~110 45631

'

'

'.

FIND AJOB OR ANEW CAREER
IN THE CLASSIFIEDS

-- --~ --

~'-f' ~

1

Ill:

10

FIMIDIV

t)

!

t

1

!
II

hce ns"'CI 1,, ~ ,., 1
ser v1c e announceme 11
from the Ohto Valley

will be hmng a l ull·t tm e August 18 2006 at4 30 PM
Admlms1 rat 1ve posttlon Must
be profici ent 1n Microsoft
Word
and
Excel
Applicati ons wdl be taken at
82 Cl4 Carla Drive, 8 00- 4 00

&lt;..:

•

- ---------- -----

~til

Jt ~
J~

'J

t

2 homes for sale close to
town c 1t~ schools 1 3 bed
room ranch 2 baths newly
remodeled alec heat CIA
c1ty water
1· older 3 t:ed room 1 1 2
bath large famtly roo iT' gas
heat &amp; cookrng
c A
(740)448 3907 (4' 9)565·
4137
2 or 3 bedroom hOLJSe tor
sale an land contract 1670
L1ncoln He1gnts Pl)merc~

/740)992 5858
~ oeoroam 2 D~
ptac11 4lhr" • 1
Gra11de area On '1
$1 20 000 (7401709

f r"

1

oc

Lovely starter or ret1remer,t
home rn cou ntry N ce ne gh
bortlood 2 Bedroorn LA
DA K11ct1en 1 Bath 6 acre
$58 000 00 1740)446 2R01
to1 more nlo

�Friday, July 28, 2006
1-i I '\ I \ I '-

HOME&lt;;
FOR SALE
3 BA, 1 batf\, 1 , 12 story NO DOWN PAYMENT even
house , basement, heat w1th less tllan pertect crecbt
pump with propane furnace.. Is available on this 3 bedlg eat-In kitchen w1th oak room 1 bath home In
cabmets, 12x24 dining M1ddleport Corner lot, v1nyl
room l arg~ concrete trent Siding, !~replace 1n living
porcn, back deck, vinyl sidmg. 2 car carport, snape
trees. 1 acre llat lawn. 1 m1le
south of A1o Grande
$85,900 PhOne (740)245 ·
581 1.

room . good carpel , t1le noor
1n kitchen, Froncll doors
open to master bedroom ,
JSCuZZI tub, off street pari&lt;·
1ng Paymenl around $5.50
per month 74 367 . 7129 _

a-

Ranch Style Home, Yost
Road w11h 2 Acres . 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, garage,
enclosed breezeway. Pool
and Spa included.

3,100 Sq.Ft Cape Code
4BA , 4bath, 40 "x50 " Bl·level
deck that wraps around 27'
above ground poo l lull
basement 2.5 car garage.
lots of extras. 1 acre. River
Valley School DIS1f1Ct, 15
minutes from Gallipolis.
Must see to appreciate
ONLY $250,000 (Neg.) Must
Seel Call (740)367-0126

5 year old Colonial on 3
acres. approx. 1.900sq. ft. 3
bdr, 2 baths. 2 car garage.
master bdr. IS 28)(24 Wl1h a
jacuzzi tub. $125.000. V1ew

~7n~~):46-7;~9.

orvb.com .

$83.500.
Call 740-992·
4001 .
THREE bedroom, TWO
bath
Oversize 2 Car
Garage, Storage Bldg.,
newer ca1pet. and rool. 1/2
acre level lot
Well mainla1ned Home
$95.000.
Vine S1reet, RACINE . 740 949-8010.

COUNTRY LIVING

16 ao
I
2bd
x
lral er.
rm, 2b a,
dream kitchen wlall appli12 )( 16 covere d
ances,
porch. plus shad "'Rented
land near Green.(740)339·
3 42 9.
---------

2BR, large llvlngroom, wash
room, porch with awning,
·
storage building, A/C, very
1 FL, 3BA, LA, DR, den, nice, no pets . In Gallipolis.
Fam R, garage, 2 baths, pri- (740)446-2003, {740)446vats drive $700. (740)441- 1409
0514.
-:--:--:----:--~ 3Br. Aefrldg &amp; Stove, Washer
2 bedroom house in &amp; Dryer Included (304)576Pomeroy. $450 plus utilities. 2934
No pets. References &amp; - - - - - - - - Deposit. 740-992-5502.
5 1-4x70 trailers lor rent. Call
{740)367-7762, (740)446·
2· 3
bedroom
on 40f?O or (740)367·7762.
NeighbOrhood Road, no
inside pets, $400 plus Mobile home sites lor up to
deposit,
references. 16x80 In Couiltry Homes.
17401446·6890 anyllma.
(7401385·4019.
2BR home- Vinton St. $375 Mobile Home sites lor up to
mo.+ sec dep. Yot1 pay utili- 16x80 !n Country Homes.
ties. Gas heat. {740)446- (740)385·4019.
3644.
=:-:-:---::-::-::-:- Trailer 2BR in Mercerville.
2BA house- Garlield A11e. For sale, 3aR doublewlde
$460
1&amp;
d
3BR
ren
sec. ep.
off Teens Run. Possible
h
L G d
Bl d
ousee ran e
v · financing. (740)256-8132.
$600 rent &amp; sec. dep. You
pay utilities. Lease &amp; refer· ·
AP..unMENTS
ences required. (740)446fOR

c

L.-------,J
RENT

New Sofa &amp; loveseat, $400.
Sofa &amp; Chair, $350 :
Recliner. $200. Open 9am·
3pm Sal., Mollohan 's, 202 ·
Clark Chapel Road, Porter.
Ot1io.
(740)388·0173,
(740)446-7444.
-------Thompsons Appliance &amp;
Aepair-615-7388 . Fer sale,
re-conditioned automatic
washers &amp; dryers, refngerators, gas and electric
ranges, air conditiOners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on major brands In
shop or at your home.

r

Alder

NEW

SINGLEW1DE •

$22 ,572 Midwesl Homes
{740)828-2750.
NEW
SINGLEWIOE·
$22 . 572 Midwest Homes
{740 )828 _2750 _

Hill 's Self
Storage
Bashan Road
Racine, Oh10
45771

740·949·2217

•~---GooiilliililllSiii.-.-J • ~5'X10'

to 10'1130~

For Sale: Remington 22·250
Bolt Action, 4 shot cl1p, Like
New. 740 6·2724

"i~:,:::t;;;;;:;:;,:,;;:

3

__.,

4 to 5 Bedroom Home in
Mason ,
$425/monlh,

or

sell.

Brand new 2 Bedroom
Apartments Washer!dryer
hookup, stove/refrigerator
included.
Also available units State
Route 160. Call for details
r.
or (740) 44 1I7401441 -0h-4
1184.

Pinscher pu ps POP, tai ls,
docked &amp; dew claws. Shots,

ti)

Furnished apt, 3 rooms &amp;
ba1h, upstairs, clean, no
pets. Ref/deposit required
{740)44 6· 1519 .
Gracious living 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport.
From $295-$444. Call 740992·5064 Equal Housing
Opporfunities.
Immacu late 2 .bed room
apartment in the co untry.
New carpet &amp; cabinets,
fre shly painted &amp; decorated.
WID hookup. Beautiful coun·
try sel1ing. Must see to
appreciate.
$ 399 /mo
(61 41595·7773 or 1-800·
798·4686.

(740)441-0194 or {740)441 ·
1184.
Newer 3 Bedroom, 1 Bath ,'
attache d garage. Good
Neighborhood. No Pets ,
Reference
&amp;
Deposit
requ 1red .
No
Smoking
Inside, $500/mo. (740)446·
2801
-:---:-----Nice 3 bedroom on 160 big
yard, 3 miles from HOlzer
$500 plus deposit. (740)44 10489.
Rapine On town) 4 Br, 2 full
baths, C/A, Water, Garbage
mcluded.
$500 dep.,
$500 per Month, references.
740-949-2217

Utilities Avellaflle
S11 ·000
{304)295·909(1

I

Yorksh1re Tl:lmer fema le
puppy, beautiful baby doll
1ace.
'
s wee1 as can b e, 1ess
than Sibs. 10 months ald.
CKC Registered. $700.
(7 40)742·2803.

i

j::;:'~~.;.;.....-::---,

FRUITS &amp;
V~ETAHLES
~~--tiiiiliitiiiiiililiioo.,J

Blue Lake Green Beans $24
a bushel. B-K Farms, Letart.
&lt;3041882 "2567

10 7
. A K 1096

740-992--6121

West

Qefi 8 Uikcry

John Deere Mini Excavator/
Tractor Loader Backhoe/
Skid Steers. Carmichael
Equlpment (740)446-2412
New John Deere Compacts
and 5000 Sarles Utility !rae·
tors @Oo/• Fixed for 36
month1 ttuough
John
Deere Credit. Carmichael
Equlpn'lent (740)446-241 2

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

• Poria hie Oxygen

• CPAP

• Helios

• Hospilal Beds

• Hortlelill

• Wheelchairs

ANI&gt; IT ONt.Y COSTS

tMLf AS MlJCti M
A ST~ALTtl \

Delivering Daily *One Stop Shop*
Tol! Free 87l,·6119-4I0071
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. owner: Ronnie Jones
Free

80M8~~~

'East

•r,1 o~"""""'___..;,_;;;l

BARNEY

~;:=====~~;,;;:=::;;;;:=~
10

AlJIOS
n)R SAtE

sition
Contact
Wayne
McGuire (740)256-6864.
A .
d
Cl
eg1s 1ere
laro 1BIS
Yearling Bull , $1.200 born
6122!05, great dispoSI1ion
medium frame size and
ready for breeding contact
Larry Leport(304)675·2311
or Tony Lepor1 (304)6753105

j

1bte; 1993 AS Cavalier con·
ver-tible: 1991 Ford Mustang
50 , VB convertible 1997
Olds Cutlass. 2001 Su;.:uki
250 streel bike, 750 actual
mies. Other .t o choose from.
( 740 )245 _0045 ,
cell

( 740 ) 20 ~_ 0028 .

Bedroom suite, loveseat,
chai r, antique table , washer.
lamps, tables, kitchen table
&amp; 6 chairs. (740}446·4202.

~:;~:bull:or ::~:~y :~~
Livestock

Trailers .

Many

WHAT KEEPS
YA GOIN',
GRAMPY?

740 446 9200
t

.

2459 St. Rt.

YA KNOW WHAT THEY
SAY, SNUFFY,
BEHIND EV'RY MAN,
THAR'S A GOOD
WOMAN!!

t

160 • Gilllpolls

CARRYIN' A
BIG STICK ! !

~~;;~;;F;O;R;F:R~:::~T:miiiiii~

ROBERT
BISSELL

CONSTRUCTION

L&amp;L Auto Sales
01 Neon 4dr, $3,500; 95 S 10
I 111-., .'( (, \IWI-.. EcJI II '
4x4 ne-1( motor $3,500: 98
SWISher pull behind ATV fm· Chevy Cavalier 4 dr $25,00:
ish mower. $550 . (740)367· 96 D{Jdge Grand Caravan.
$2,800; 86 Jeep Cherokee
7630.
$900. Buy here pay here 91
Ill 1\'i'Oill I 110\
Buick Century ; 92 Ply.
Su ndance. 98 Sunfire. Have
AL' IUS
10
many more. Buy here pay
·--·HliRiiliSii
Aiil.fiiC- r l 11ere. On 325 South off t41.
.
(740)379-2354.
$500! POLICE IMPOUNDS!
ca1s!Trucks lrom $500! Fo1
MF165- gas tractor $4,000:
liStings 800-391-5227 x3901
49 Cub tractor w/ equipment
1973 VW Super Beetle 95"0 S1,500: whi te d1ese l 4x4
restored to ong1niil $6.500 11aChJr 1300 hrs $6,500: 99
Suzuki Vilala-4x4 2 dr. 5 sp,
Ph 1:740)446-7616 .
---C..---~- wl soh toP $4.000: 93 Buick
1990 Pontiac Grand Pn)(, 4 Road Master Estate SW
door, 110.000 miles, tamily wooUgram
53.000:
91
owned. damage to passen· Dodge Ram 1500 · 4x4 pu
ger door. $500 Call 740· VB. auto, NC 2 ton e $3,500.
992-7689 aliBI 5:00
Souttlern Auto Sales
-:-cc-:-:--:--:--:--::-=
(7401446·8554
1993 Honda Accord $2.995
1997 Honda Accord $4 ,995
IS
1998 Ford Explorir 4x4
TRUCK'
$3.995
fOUSALE
1998 Toyota Camry $5,995
2000 Grand Am GT $5.995 2004 Dodge Dakota 4x4

• New Homes

·Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

740-992-1671

THE BORN LOSER
26 Years Experience

'

David Lewis

""n\~ OLI&gt;E.IZ l

OC i, Tfi.E.

SI-\1\~P /'\'1' 1'\I~D

LE.~~

&amp;.C.ol'\e.!.!

rrf\(.R£. 1!. M&lt; U\&gt;Sit:&gt;E,
T f\OUG.~ ..,

~"":)UMME.~ ~t-&lt;!. /&gt;$.£ ~N:J'f..€:
Ef'\JO'{/I.\)LE. 1

740-992-6971

Stop &amp; Compare
Free

·i

p•~:~:~~r

diM

Advertise
iri this

space

All types of roofing:

Four SeaSons Auto Sales
17401441-8585

PEANUTS

for
'54 per

1990 7 3 diesel 5 speed,
4x4, 150,000 m11es. $4,700.
1994 Ford Tempo 4door pur- 17401388·8358.
ple l1nted WindOWS n6w tires
FREE
spoiler awesome stereo
1999
Chevy
Silverado
4WD
ESTIMATES
2000 firm 256-1020
P'U. , 85,000 milss, 5.3 VB,
, 1995 Corvette red, new
wheels , tires. Price $12.000 all options short bed with
1opper. Excellent C&lt;indilioo. p
firm. (740)446-1062
s••.ooo. !7401645·0626
1998 Dodge Ne.on 115,000
miles. Runs great, great on
5
d
·
K e!id:ntlal•
5 88
81
985
$ 1 400 0 ~Q (l40 1 2r5c6r~~s;;
Painting • Doors • Windows •
'
·
•
• Sidmg • Roofin g • Room Additions
99 Chevy Astro Conversion
or (740}256-1233 .
• Plumhing • Elcctrk:a l
Van. Excellent 'condllion . WI/ 038992
OH 38244
• A.:coustk Ceiling
1999 Toyota Corolla S4,200: load ed, TVNCR, capta ins
1993 ·Nissen ex tended cab sea ts, tow1ng package.
$7,300.
Call
$3,200: 1997 S·10 81azsr Asking
$4,500; 1995 Firebird red, T· 1740 367&lt;)622.
tops $3,500;" 2000 Neon
40 MoroRCYLU.sl
$3,800. Others in stock from
4WHF£ LERS
51,600 1o $6,900.
Cook Motors
t989 Kawasaki ZX600A
328 Jackson Pike
Ninja
(Crotch -rocket) .
-,-,c.I7_4-,01:-4_46_._01-,0-,3-:--:- 18,300 miles, New Tires,
2000 Ford Taurus . Call after $1100, willing to trade .
tpm 17401446·0425.
(7401256·6989 , (7401645·
-'-:,-:,-'--:--:--2002 Mercury Mountaineer. 3763.

6UESS WflA\ MARCIE ..

I'VE BEEN DOING
A liTTlE SUMMER
READING ..

month

MA'IBE YOU CAN HELP ME ..
WHY DID VANNA W141TE
TAKE T~E CAI{AMELED APPLE
FROM Tt:IE WITCH ?

''SNOW" WI41TE

SIR .. AND IT ,
WAS A
PLAIN APPLE .

fi{ETT~

(740) 949-1405
~'1!ll!!~'1!ll!!~'1!li!!~&gt;"';;'"';:""';;""'"'~'I!!~'I!!;;!!I!!~'L.!:::::::::~

r

Fo~&amp;~u: I

I\

Cornerstone

C~m?.~1~~~.?.~~~~!!~1
Decks

• Remodeling
7.. 0-367..0544
7.. (1.338-3412

SUNSHINE CLUB

ADVERTISE IN THIS
SPACE FOR $54 PER
MONTH

2002 · Harley Davidson,
Electra Glide Classic. 6,600
miles, like new with lots of
Chroma $18.000 13041875·
8172
-~----:----:

2002 Yamaha Vstar 1100
ClaSSIC, 5,500 miles, black.
n~:ov conditiOn, leather bags,
SOmpg , $5 ,000. ( 74 0)2 455934 .

CM U'I:RS &amp;
MvmKHOMF.&lt;;

·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

Why Drive Anywhere Else?
35537 Sl RI 7 N • Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
740-985- 8 1

FOR RENT· MEIGS COUNTY
1·4 BR Houses &amp; Apts.

1 Luxury- Also HUD
Also Commercial Space
740-416-5547
I

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE
97 Beech Street
M1"ddleport,

GRIZZWELLS

YOUNG'S

OH

1OX 1OX 1OXlO

o~:~;~!:j5

options avaiab1e· steal , olu·
"Middleport's only
minum, dressing rooms, livself·Storaae"
1ng quarters. (740)446 -21\ 12. '--------~-----------' L.._ _ _ __:._ _.J

'

Wt:I.L., HAPf'!,&gt;

EIIRTHPAY, TOO

Shade River AG Service, Inc

20Q3 Log cabin camper,
sleeps 6. Brand new.
(7401446·6783

ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS
IN'THE CLASSIFIEDS

GARFIELD
90 "'"
l;
ANP
IT'S MY

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Room Addltlona &amp;

WARREN , t:OYO\l ~ ~'i)~
WE MY~TE~£$ 0\" 1\.IE

A~

U~\Vt~E ?' r-:-7:7\~~

Remodeling

New Garage~
Electncal &amp; Plumbing
Roofing &amp; Guttert
Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting
Patio and Porch O.C:kt
036725

V.C YOUNG Ill
992·6215
PomC'roy Oll1o
'!'Par~

Locn l Exp"tll'nce

Ti ',

l

"•"
YOU c;.er
SOMETHING
NICe?

PllcnetMII!n

14

DOWN

Diamond
sial
17 Clicked
16

"send"
(hyph.)

AirP1B JI'XU:I

9 5
3

West

••

Pas!i

TV knob

Klllor
whales
26 Rubber rtng
29 Honey
23

,. 1.
Sorth

East ·

Pass

Pass

Is it another
overruff or not?
We ha11e learnt this week tt1at a defend.er with a trump holding at ace-doubleton, king-third or queen-fourth st1ould
not overruN if he is going to score the top
honor late r and may win an extra trick
w~h ooe of the lower cards (unless it is
v1tal for him immediately to shift to
another suit, where h1s partner has one
Irick or more to cash). But how tow a
card ll)ight be promoted, and when does
a defender know if it is vital to overruff?
Against four spades, you (West) lead the
d1amond eight. East wins With his queen,
cashes the ace. and continues .with the
kmg, South ruHing with . the. spade
queen. How would you defend?
South _might respond one spade, but
with a strong eight-card suit and no values outside, lour spades gives the best
description of his hand. ll there Is a slam,
North should know to move higher.
If you overruff, where is partner's reentry? He surely cannot be rulfing a
club. South started with two diamonds. II
he has eigt1t spades tor h1s four-spade
bid oppOsite a potential void, he cannot
have four clubs. Also, with a club void,
East should play his di amonds in
ascending order: queen, king, ace, not
queen, ace, king.
Instead, since you do not have something 11ital to do (partner cannot have a
fast entry), don't take an overruff 'Mih a
card that will always win a trid&lt;., especially when you have a lower trump that
might be promoted - even an eight
Discard a club (or heart) . Then, since
partner holds the Singleton spade 10,
however declarer wriggles. yo ur spade
eight will Win a trick.

By Bernice Bede Osol
Several situations and events during the
year ahead cou ld be responsible lor stabilizing your financial affa1rs. With this
propit1ous growth pattern 1n effect, you
should be able to do many things you
couldn'1do previous ly.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) .- Chances are
you w111 lind protects 1hat are more menIal 1han pt1ysical the most satisfying.
Give those hardworking muscles a rest
and give your brain tile workout
VIRGO (A ug 23-Sepl. 22)·- You should
do quite f1ne materi ally, especially II you
opera1e strictly along 1radilional lines.
However, the p1cture could change con·
siderably if you become Inclined to take a
fisk.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23)- Your excellent leadership qualities remain we ll
intac1, bu1 1hey're ap1 to be · dormant
. unl ess a specific need stlould pop up.
Even then , yoll'll use ihem with grace
and 1act.
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov. 22)- There's a
possibili1y you could become involved in
something that aflects others more lhan
you Rather than being drawn into 11.
you·n play your part !rom the background .
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 2.1) - Wi1tl
your laid -back attitude, you"ll tlave a marvelo us faculty for be1ng able to enjoy
yourse lf regardless of the hand that IS
dealt. You will be able to cap11ali:ze on th1s
gift 1n tWo situ ations.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. i 9) - Even
thOugh you m1ght not be aware of your
impact on o1hers, you're liKely to be 1he
cen1er ol attention with fnends. Your personality will enhance the gathering.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) - It has
always been one of your l:lest qualities to
· make lnends w1th people trom all walks
ollile. Th1s env1able asset will be accentuated and end up be1ng used to your
advantage
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Possibilities for personal gain look
excep tionally good lor you, even !hough
lhe benefits you reap will be due more to
the efforts of another. You'll balance 1he
accounts another time.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - The best
· thing you can do lor yours&amp;ll is to keep all
of your involvements in proper balance.
Have a tist of projects to accomplish. but
plan some downtime for yourself as wen.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) - Work on
something you deem to be a labor o1
love, and you guarantee yourselt a successful day. The sacral to having a wonderful time IS to engage,i'oursell in enjoyIng what ~ou do.
GEMINI (May 21·June 20) - Seek ou1
fun ac1ivities that bnng you toge ther with
good friends who~e comRany you en}oy.
but avoid competition . 11's ·better to merely relax and not compete .
CANCER (June 21-JIJiy 22)- This can
be a better-than-average day for you 1o
invite over friends 1o Whom you teal
socially obligated. E11en an im~ompJu
afla1r will h.Jrn outlun
.

Fin (aboul)

61

15 Cable

•
•

SuuLh

60 Weakens

maker

Sltip's boom
Utter a dis·
mal crv

30
32

34 - 5DD

36 Lunar valley
38 Pen point
39 Minor cleric
41 Kicks out
43 Eur. airline
44 Dumpstor
45 5eon:lt party

1 VetYbadend
2 Home olthe
Bruins
3 Lady of
Coventrv
4 Drv off
5 Roman poet
6 Asphan
7 Goealo the
polls
8 Heavy
siring
9 Movie pig
10 Blend
11 Amigo of
Fidel
18 Insurance
claim
20 Yucky
22 Nobleman
23 Kimono fa&amp;·
loner

..

24 Break up

46 Atlanta

Yield, as
torritorv
26 Make a
profn
27 Ages
28 Kid
31 Tux·renlsl

stadium

25

47 Justfor

guy a
Nerd
49 Very small
48

amount

50 Camelot

even1

33

Flour sack

51

abbr.
Chatters
"Dally
Plane!"
reporter
&lt;W Proves
lnnocenl
42 Dlsconnecl
44 Waits
45 Henry VIII's
slxlh
35
37

54

lady
CSA mono·
gram
Secrel ·
govt . group

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~Ciphef cryplograms

!lie created !rom ql101811011s b~ liJT'IOvs ~e. past ~rd present.
Each ltller In the oph~tr stand&amp; lor aoother

Today's ciU6: Z 9qua/s V

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imponant, and whetl'1er it will make ~istory nas y~t to be seen.· - Billy Preston

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ICIIAIIIL!T11 AHSIIRIII m71116
Groucb- Jabol - Jerky- Hollow - BORROW
"You beller m.U up your mind which job 1 take,""
granny advised her grnnddaugluer. "Opponuniry only
knocks once. After lhat it's a neighbor askinl; 10

BORROW something:·

'

ARLO &amp; JANIS
OU, COM€. OIJ ! vi.I:1T PLAY
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fl~ve To Malle BeR:;&lt;e

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PI{Q"OUND

STORI', ~U~ , MARC IE~

58 Tet or alec.

59 Ou"ll

22 Handy abbr.

•

Saturdav, J~ly 29, 2006

Alhens

sequence

57 Frosl

Running
track
13 Nutritious
grain
12

74

&lt;1bur 'lllrlhdttr:

IMPORTS

friend
56 Genetic

•

~ Astro~~Graph

BIG NATE

New or Repair
Seamless GutTer
Qownspoul

" - - - - - - - - ' 2 Aegis1ered Black Angus (toeided) S 17,900
Hailers
$900.00 each. 2005 Ford M_ustAng V6
Ready to breed. 740·742- $16,900
tO
HoM•;
1516.
Four Seasons Auto Sales
L\111U)VE..vr•NrS
Appliance
3- Horsas, 18-yrs old, Reg. !740144t-8585.
BASEMENT
Mare.
Warehouse Standard bred
WATERPROOFING
$1 ,000.
11yrs old reg. 2003 Ford Mus1sng, bright
Quarter Mare. $1.200 . 7yrs yellow. e.:cetlent condition Unconditional lllellme guarin Henderson. WV
Pre Standard bred Mare, $800 44 ,000 miles. $8,200 080. antE&gt;e. Local references lurownecl Applian ces starting
(7401709·1 989.
ntS had Establi shed 1975
(3041675·4514
at $75 &amp; up all under
G6 GT Cal! 24 Hrs (740 ) 4465 P I,
200
onoa c
·
·
Warranty, also have recon- - - - - - -- m'le.." 0810, Rogers Oasemenl
I' ·000
Quality horse and livestock Ioa ded ,
• d1tioned B1g Screen "TV's trailers now available at (304)675 ·4230 or (304)593- Wa1e11Jraollng
by Ron's TV (304)675· Carm 1chael Equipment. New r5-59:-5-::a;:,h:-:er;:6=p:m:=;a;-;-;;;;-;-;o;;:-;;..,;;;;;;;a,i"l

1m

Hardwood «ablne•ry Alld FurnHure
www.tlmbo.--kcablnetl')'...,m

Registered Angus bull born Bo's Class1c Cars
312Bf02 $1,500 Great depo- 1988 -24 Cavalier convert-

loaded with only 48.000
m1les.
2002 Ford lighting F150
pick up 30,000 miles. Call
(740)256-1245
evenings
Quality John Deere May . and weekends.
E(lull)ment lor less-round - - - - -- - - balers. square balers &amp; 2002 Monte Car lo pace car.
mower conclltloners @4.7% E)(cellent coodltion, loaded
Fixed tor 48 months throu~h 1984 39 112 ft. Ty Brook
John .
Deere
Credi t. , lrameless dump trailer. 1983
Twin Rivers Tower is accept- Carmichael
Equ1pment D 15 Dodge Ram pickup .
Ing applications 1or waitin ~ 17401446·2412.
(7401446·6783.
list tor Hud·subsized. 1- br,
apartment, call 675·6679 Two hay wagons with new 2002 1oyota Camry 4 cyl
Equal Hous1ng Opportunity beds on them. 740-985- $12,900
3538.
2002 Toyota Camr y V6
\ II IH I I\ \llh l
$12,900
LrvESTOCK
2oo3 N1ssan Altima 2.5s
HOI.!&gt;EHOUJ
b
$13,690
GooDs
.
2003
Hoi1de
Accord

11111!"-----..,

52 lnvtMce no.

19
21

Opening lead: t B ·

&amp; MEDICAL EQUP.\1F.NT

FoR SAu:

I \tnt \I 1'1'1 II'-&gt;
8.. 11\1\l()(h

1 Excavated

Answer to Prevloua Puule

4 Big tadtog 53 Battert fluid
8 Truckers' 55 Like Tonto's

South
4AQJ 76532

Dealer: North
Vulnerable: East-West

Nebulizers

t.-------

8 2

Killhn's Bologn.a SJ.OS lb Honey Ham 54.70 lb
Turkey ~rust S4.85lb
Swhs Cheeae S4.051b
Fresh Mozurella 56.59\b.
Hummu~~o S5.59 lb.
1\mlsh Potato Salad S3.4S l b.
Pa ~ ta Sill.ld $~.SO lb.
"Drive Thru For Loca l Tnrna l o&gt;P~ and ot her Produ c..-"
8'1t Z liter of Pepsi, Oil!'l Pep!ii Ul" Mt. Dew

iOXYGE?

Bucket Truck

LIVESTOCK

8 6 52

•

35c o:-up of coffl'e 7·8•m'

("i:r- ,_.~ :I,,

Top •' Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

iCi

•

• 8 54 2

SauugP Ufacuil w/GuoVy $2.50
nonut~~o , Thmovl:"rw &amp;: lillltkes

Tree Service

East
.. 10
• 10 9 3
t AKQ643
• Q' J 7

A K 8'

!Whll• Suppli... l••!J

Green beans, corn. &amp; toma- 2002
Hyundai
Accent 26.000 miles, $13.500.
toes. (740)985·4121
$6,900
Daytime
(740)645-4473,
2003 Kt·a A 1o $6 900
7401388 ·9804.
•
Peaches U Pick. Bri ng 2004 Ford Taurus $7,950
4x4
containers. SA 7 Sou1h, 2004 Ctlev. lmpala $9,995
Gallipolis, OH Raynor's.

Large I bedroom apt. downFAm!
town GaiNpolis. newly reno·
EQuiPMENT
vated . 2nd floor. $375/mo.
plus utilities. Call James at
Tractor.
dual
(740)446-7889.
. Gravely
wheels, Brush Hog, S1ckle
large, Newer 2 Bedroom Bar Mower. Rotary Plow.
unit with 1 car attacahed ex tra mo1or, $800 for all
[304)675·4514
gara~e. Very quiet neighbor- - - - - - - - hood, $450lmo, Reference/ Have some hauling to do?
Deposit , No Pets , No Ca rmichael
Equipmen tSmol&lt;ing InSide, (7401446·
yo~ r source for quality
2801
goosenecks, dumps and u1il·
Illes. Your dealer for Prostar
Modern 1 bedroom apt.
and lo,ad Trail trailers.
Phone: (740)446·0390. ·'
(740)446·2412
North. 3rd Ave,. Middleport,
2
bedroom,
furnished, JOhn Deere 10 tt. No Til Drill
for · rent.
Carmichael
deposit &amp; previous ren tal
referen ces requi red, No Equlpment (7401446·2412.

Owner
will
Fmance
"';;:!""::':':~~~~~
Mooroll.ERRENTHoMI:&lt;l
:pe-,•_•._17_4_01_99-,2-·0_16_5_ _
13041562 . 5840 . 13041552 . Ridga Ad Gallipolis Farry
$15,000
fo
r
more
mfo
0756
(304)776·5322
Rooms
for
Rent.
Construction
workers
l'i)ce. 3 bedroom. 2 bath, 1 5
RI-AL F11A1E
2 bedroom wa1erllrash paid, $150.00 per week, utilities
&amp;ry, gas fireplace. AC, nice
\VANfFD
near Rorter, NO P.ETS. paid. Kitchen privileges.
llatlawn, not quite an acre,
Reference, deposit required . 740·992·3569,
740- 992·
nice covered porch, large Need to sell your home? $325Jmo.(740)388·1100.
0031 , or304·882-3449
building included, that could
be us'ea lor e business or Late on payments, divorce, For rent· Nice 2 bedrOom · Tara
Townhouse
ob translar or a daa1h? I
workshop. Located 1 mile J
mobi le home in Country Apartments, Very Spacious,
lrom new Gallia Co local can buy your home. All casn
Homes. $325 + depos it · 2 Bedrooms. C/A, 1 1!2
and quick clos1n~. 740-416·
schools. (740 )386 _0301 .
(7401385·4019.
Bath,, Adult Pool &amp; Baby
3130.
Pool, Patio, Start $425/Mo
No . Pets, Lease Plus
Security Deposit Required ,
(740J38H086.

$27 .oo PERMoNm!·tlv:~

5
male
Minia1Ure
Dachshunds first stlots &amp;
wormed ready to go 304·
593·3820
AKC &amp; CKC MinlaltJre

CONVENIENTLY LOCAT· AKC puppies 2 yellow, 1
ED 1 AFFORDABLE!
choc. Males, born 6!1!06.
Tow nhouse
apartments,
Price $100. (740)446-1062.
andlor small hou ses FOR
RENT. Call (740)44 1·1111 Toy Poodles, 2 females, t
for applicatiorl &amp; informatiOn. male $300. CKC papers 011
hand.(740)256- 1t 01
Currently taking appli cations
for 2 &amp; 3 bedroom apts. W1emaraner Reg1stered 7
Pleasant Valley
month old puppy, house
Apts
Call
trained, mov1ng must sell 1o
(304)675·5806.
•
good home (304)593·0675

lortable Central air, laundry
room , also New 1 Bedroom
HousEL Call lor details

ON THIS PAGE'FOR ·
. AS LOW AS . ,·./ ·,,~~-~~,,

S1eel Beams, Pipe Rebar
For
Concrete,
Angle,
Channel, Flat Bar, Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways.l&amp;l
Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday &amp;
Friday, Bam-4:30pm . Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;

wormed (740)388·8788

s·

ADVERTISE'YOUR~ ·'
BUSINESS

992-5682

JONES'

I

r

-:---':'-:=-:--::--,-

rt..------_.1

3 miles west of
Pomeroy,OH
on State Rt. 124

• J

r(lm~roy, DH

Cli1 Ah~iiid For Daily Spt!cl.tls IJ9l-6121
.
Try Our Brukfalt
Breakb.st Ham &amp; Cheese Bale. $1.75
Breakfast Tom.ado~tl 21$2.00
Sausage Bl1cult $1.75

Repair

Rive nne

ESTATES, 52 westwood Sunday. \740)446-7300
Drive from $344 to $442 . .,,...--,,....--......,
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
PITS
740·446·2568.
Equal
FOR SALE
_H_o_us_in_g_O_o_o_or_tu_n_ily_._ _ L~--ooiiliiioiiiii!lii--'

same as rent.
Mortgage
Locators.
7401367 0000
cl:=-:=::.-:=::,--:~
.
CONSTRUCTION WORK·
ERS- 5 bedroom house lor
rent in New Haven. $300.00
month per person or
SIOO 00 per week. 304-882·
3200.

i

Auto &amp; Truck

• A K QJ

636 E,ut Main St.

(j~tiSJ

OHII-06

.. 9

Apartment , 800·537·9528.

Washer/Dryer
hookup.
Jackson Avenue, Pot·n1
Pleasant No pets. Deposit
required . $345/month, plus
utilities. Call after SPM
(304)675-7 499
:..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
BEAUTIFUL
APARTMENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON

3Bdr + 2 1/2 baths, 2 car
9arage, aU appliances. cloee
to Holzer Hospital. $750
month. (740 )441-031 0.

Small house for rent in
Middleport $400.00/plus
dep. Call 740·992·3823.
-,-.:.:.:c:.c.:.:..:.:.:.:.__ A
1.8 acre lo1 on Pleasant vailable August 1st.

:.~~

111411 1"1'10. pd

BIJY

48 More inaut&gt;slanlial

of fashion

Nort h

u•JULY MONTHLY SPECIALS•••

stove/refri~ erator included. _N_
E_
W_
A_
N_
D_U
_S
_E
_D
_S~TEEL

r

1.34 acres. with nice Cinder
block, 2 bay Garage, sui table lor small Business on
Pleasant
Ridge
Ad.
Galllp0t1s Ferry. Owner Will
House lor Sale in Syracuse. finance w1th 10% Down
two-bedroom with bath, {304)776-5322
attached, gar~ge and base·
1.75 Acre Lot
ment. An es1ate sale
Mason Co. wv
$70,0dO.Phone (740}992Rt 2 Bqx 127,
3690.
Leon, wv 25123
Mason Co. Rebel Ri dge Ad ;
Appt"ox. 500'
Road Frontage
2 miles from Hannan High

Bedroom

'

Hours
7:00AM· 8:00PM

1BA apt in Spring Valley.
WID hookups. ·HUD/P RC t5,000·wattMobil generator,
accepted. Call (740)446- 4cyl, gas or propane, Q.,_OOd
OB34/(7401 339·0362 .
for emergency bac~ up or
3 bedroom, 2 bath, near
constructions work $2,800.
Holzer,
$650/mo
plus 2 bedroom Apartment avail- GE relrigerator 6 months
deposit No pets, no smok· able in Syracuse. $200 old, freezer on bottom, looks
in~ in house. (740)245· deposit $350 pe r month new.$350.(740)367-7025
9880, (740)645-3836.
rent. Rent includes water,
JET
A
G
C
sewer. trash .
No Pets.
3·4 8 home, eo. reek
AERATION MOTORS

17401446 3644
-------3bd .HUD home! Buy lor
$15,900! For Listings 800.
391·5228
)(1709

ROGER HYSELL I
GRRRGE I

29670

SPORIING

E

ACROSS

11 Chane!

I

1!'!1!-.;...~----.;...-

r

AEPO 'S &amp; USED from
$1,900 down. M1dwest
Hom es (740)828-2750
House tor rent. · No Pets.
740·992 -5858
F.\KMS
. · SALE
House for rent. Will be ava11FOR
__
able July 15th. Newly reno·
vated. nice quiet neighbor·
36 acres +or· with 1, l OOft on hOod Can show on notice.
the Ohio River, approx The Tan .Shak call (740)4462.4001t on State Route 7 &amp; 7425 for an appt.
Valley View Dr, 312. C.H. &amp;
air, 10 room house. barn In Syracuse 4 Bd.--1 Bath,
59'x79 f1 shop w/220. Newly remodeled, all alec· Country setting
· Wll· h 1g
$265,000. (740}256-6868.
tnc.
• $650
h
d!
d
yar trees an s fUL!S.
Ford 532 square baler. Month. CaU 740-843-5264.
$1 ,800 !740)578·1067
New 2 bedroom house in
GaU1pol1s. Clean and com&amp;

i•---Aii(iii"R&amp;IiiiiGiliitt:-.,J
lors

NEA Crossword Pu;,;zle

radloa

Antiques, 1124 East Ma1n
1 and 2 bedroom apart- on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740·
· hed and un1ur- 992·2526 Russ Moore,
1 1urn1s
mens,
nished, security deposit i
ow::n:;:•;or·~----.....;,
. requil'!d, no pets, 740-992·
MlscEu...ANEOUS
2218
l\fERCHANDJSE

$300/deposlt.
No Pets
(304)88 2- 3652
4BA house tor rent on State
Route 75. $650/mo_ plus
dep. Call !7 40)446-3644 for
· to
In ·
Anentlanl
Local company offering "NO
DOWN PAYMENr programs tor you to buy your
home instead of renting.
' 100% financl ng
' Less than perfect credit
NEW 3 br doublew1des from accepted
.dw es 1 Homes • Paym ent cou ld be tne
$269 mo. M1
(740)828-2750

The Daily Sentinel • Page BS

Phillip

~~~~g.~~~~g~la~::
:~ ~:o·OI~~~_ ~:~ki~~Pre~:~l~ ~:~~;.~~n1c~me to quaiWy. ~~=i-re~~~~~~n&amp; :vaabnu~~~ ~~
Pump. New Carpel, 6 other
_

By Owner 2 acres. new
ranch . 4 bdrms, 2 baths 1n
dry wall stage'; less than I yr 1 acre +. Prime LocatiOn, 6
from Gallipolis $74.500 mile out At 2 (304)675·7262
Owner F1nanc1ng. (740)4891.18 acres
Sandhill Ad
9146
ready for development. .. Call
304)675·8039 11 no answer·
teave message

Sct1 oo!. 3 bed/ 2 bath. 3-car
garage.
Living
AM/
Fire pl ace, 2 ac. L8nd Lived
m 2 mon ths. $20.000 down

rt:'C'

3644forappHcatloo.
3
Bd.
House,
HUD
approved, $350M. Quiet on
14)(70 mobile home 38R, dead end street.. Call after
2ba, w1th large expando. 740-992-3314 after 6:30PM
new stainless steel appli·
3 Bdrm, Parrish Avenue ,
ances, completely remod·
$675/month &amp; $675/00,
elsd. $9,500. 17401388· Available now. (304)6170010.
1456 or (304)674-4687

www.mydailysentinel.com
BRIDGE

H....
vv.x.;:~
..__ _roiiiiRii
. iiRENTiiiiliioo_,..

n&gt;R SALE

ranc~

This newspaper will not
kllOwingl~ accept
advertlaemants lor real
estate which is in
violation of the law. Our
readers are hereby
Informed that all
dwellings ad11ertised in
this newspaper are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

tO

. MOHII .E HoMFS

homes on lot. Call for
5bd FORECLOSURE! Must Prtcmg.
(740)388 -0000Sell $33,000! For listings days,
(740)388·8017·
800-391-5228 ex1 F254
. gs, 17 4o)7 94- 0 460evenm
- - - - - - - - ,cell, {740)645·6150· cell.
AAA MODULAR
models $55,838. Midwest 2007 28x80 w/ game room .
Homes (740)828·2750
Only $59,995. Includes free
delivery &amp; set up · Call
Attention!
{7 40)3 8S-2434.
Local company offermg "NO
DO~N PAYME-NT~ pro- 9 1 Breezewoefd 14xlO 3
1
grams lor you 10 buy your bedroom. 740bath,
6687etec·
256 loUd
home ins1ead o! renting .
me_Call (
)
·
AAA MODULAR ranch
' 100°t. financing
• Less 1han perfect credit models $55,838 Midwest
accepted
Homes (740)828-2750
• Paymen1 could be the
same as rent.
Great used 3BR home only
Morlgage
Locators $9.995. Wilt help With deliv·
( 7401367 _0000
ery. Call (740)385·7671.
LAND &amp; HOME PACKAGES· fst time buyers &amp;
FHA
Midwesl
Homas
.
2750
7401828
1

All real el!ltate advertil!llng
In this newspaper is
subject to lhe Federal
Fa ir Housing Act of 1968
which makes It illegal to
advertise "any '
pref&amp;Jence, limitation or
dis crimination based on
race, color, religion, sex
familial status or national
ortgln, or any Intention to
make any su.(: h
preftnence, Umltatlori or
discrimination ."

r

•

Friday, July 28, 2006
ALLEY OOP

~E.ME.M&amp;.~ WHW 'r~E.Rg

WAO A CA~TOOiJ i'&gt;E.FDRE.
fHE. MOVIE.~

�Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel .com

Friday, July 28, 2006

ALONG THE RivER

LIVING

Honoring Welsh heritage:
Tyn Rh.os area key to local settlement, Cl

House of the Week:
Getaway home with ample deck space, Dl

un a

~ If iou have a quHtlon or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, r;o The Gaston Gazette,
. . .. . . ---··-··.. .....

.

-

.. ... . .. . .- . . .- .
. ..... .. . ... .

II\

-~-

• lleco: Allstate 400 at the Briel&lt;·

hind him, though. the Pennsylvania
SOO was anything but uneventful.

)'ard

•Whefe: Indianapolis Motor

Speedway, Speedwey, lnd.(2.5
miles),160 lapS/400 miles.
• -: Sunday, Aug. 6
.
• Last_.. wlnnor. Tony Stewart
aQo·~tC :Casey Mears,
Dodge, 186.293 mph, Aug. 7, 2004
• Roce : Bobby Labonte,
Pontiac,155.912 mph, Aug. 5,

2000.

• LMt week; Denny Hamlin, the
front-runner in the rookle-of.1hevear race, dominated at Pocono
Raceway for the second time in as

T~ Stewart, whose own chances

at repeating as chQmpion remain a
bit tenuous, played his cards so
wisely that he caused a crash, apparent!~ shook his fist at dtiver
Clint Bowyer while doing it, cultivated a mUrderous rage in another,
Ca rl Edwards, by firing B derisive
gesture his wrry .. , and finished
seventh despite being penalized a
lap by N~CAR for rough dn~ng.

Pocono has the longest straight·
aways In the sport, and for a good
portion of the day, Hamlin, in a

many tries. He led 151 out of 200

Chevrolet, led by the length of OM

laps and descfibed the race after·
ward as 'pretty uneventful, for
once." Hamlin dimbed to e1gtlth in
the NeK'Iel Cup po'ints standings
and increased the likelihood that a
rookie will make the Chase. Be- .

of them. His vast edges were regularly erased via caution .fl ags .. Kurt
Busch finished second in a Dodge ,
while Jeff Gordon took third in a

Chevy. Chevys finished in six of

the first seven positions.

I~

.

C/1 ',I 1:11

-~ I L•:

~.

a -: Busch Silver ·
Celebtat ion 250 Pre
semed by Shop ·n Save

!•,••:·;

. .

r:~-~

:

• Only the l'l!&gt;'IVO\O i!P,Dl51!' u..
Cl.Q poi!~~,~~~~~- lie-

.

~- ~l'!e~mOtt
,'

~ln i qi!tthe.....,lnlni

ellhl lllOIIIiiU·IWiy come

""ormances of

the next 11 driwrs.
• NineJeen-yea&lt;.... Stephen Le
ICht. made hla Cup debut at
Pocono, and Robert,'Illes wiN
el8o enter t.eioM in one of his

Indianapolis. ~Leicht
does welt, he could earn a Cup
fonle at

.

~de.

• Yates now has two vacaneies.
with Date Jarrett moving to
Michael Waltrip's Toyota team
~nd Elliott 5adler announcing
that he too is leaving at sea·

lOti's end.
• Sadler.SllyS he's made no deci·
alon, but h's widely believed
that he milht """" over to

Ray
Evemnam's Dodge team to succeed .le!emy Mayfield, who. like
wise, mi&amp;ht be heeded to one of
the , _ Comry teams.
• io.thllre anything more annoyInc- end misleading -than
TV's insistence on showing
points lllandings in

the middle
of-? Points aren't awarded
until the end Of races, and the

Whole Ideals llllsurd. 'Kasey

Mahne just fell to eighth in the

points." Why? lie pitted .
.,. Only slightly less ridiculous Is
proctaiming that a driver is .. Out

of the Chase.' No •.The Chase
field icin~ set until the 25-race
rlllJier season comes to an
end, and that wont happen until
after the Richmond ra&lt;:e on
Sept. 9.

\,\,i , •• v '; ....
~ ..
·

....
-

'\.,r l l t l

~

•••••

~---~·-

CuP

• -: Saturday. July

Hometown News for Gallia &amp; Meigs counties
Ohio\ aile) l'uhlishin~&lt;'o .

aLaot-'ownw:

29

Dennis Setzer

•IMtiN''t-:
Reed Soranson
onl:
Martin Truex Jr., Chevro-

aQulllylnc -

SPORTS

: Joo

Ruttman, Dodge,
111.643 mph, Aug. 2.

•Quo..,.. ...

• Meigs honors team
physician. See Page 81

2000.

let. 135.021 mph. July ·--:Greg Blf·
30.2005.
fle, Ford, 88.704 mph,
aAoco record: Kevin
Aug. 5. 1999.
Harvick, Chwrolet,
Jack
116.595 mph, July 29, Sprague. in a Toyota.

•Last•-:

2000.

won for lhe 26th time
in the seties at Memphis Motorsports Park.

al.att-: Kevin Har·
vick won the first series

race at Martins•ille (Va.)
Speedway since 1994.

No~

SERIES

49

i11E
WFf:'t1.
"
- .. -·

v

LOANSDEPOT.COM DODGE

E
R

I

s
u

o w1ns, no

Stewart

s

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This We.ek

St.!)O • Vol. 40, No. 27

Union workers reject Century Aluminum offer
BY TIM MALONEY

on afternoon turn Tuesday,
and work will slop at midnight that day.
RAVENSWOOD. W.Va.
Eli Morris, met11ber of the
- Members of United negotiating committee for
Steelworkers Local 5568-04 the local. said he continues
at Century Aluminum have to hold out hope that lastrej~cte d
the co mpany' s minute negotiations can
"last, best and final offer. "
avert a strike, but said he
Mailed b&lt;tllots were was very pleased with the
counted Friday at US WA vote. The negotiating comheadquarters .in Pittsburgh. mittee had refused to submi t
The final total was 299 the contract offer to · the
against, and 218 in favor.
membership for a vote. but
Unless last-minme nego- were oveflllled by a federal
tiations save the day, the mediator.
union will work its last shift
~' I'm elated," Morris said .'
TMALONEY®MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

"They're asking the people
to take a cut ·in health care at
a ti me when the top five
executi ves are making more
in bonuses than they' re
offering in the contract.'"
In a press release issued
early Friday evening, Plant
Manager Rori Thompson
said the company " is disappointed with the vote. " The
release alTe red no further
comment.
In the past several weeks.
Thompson had said thi s was
the company's " l,ast, best .
and final offer.''

"We think we have made
a · fa ir co ntract offer."
Thompson had s&lt;tid.
Oth er thim a · 2,4- hour
wildcat strike in I \1\19. there
has not been a wmk ,toppage at the Ra vc n,_, ·ood
aluminum maker ~ incc ;he
violence-marred. leng thy
strike in the early I'J4Ch,
when the plant wa, llll'ncd
by Emmett Boyle.
USWA
Internati ona l
spoke·sman Tim Dean sa id
the main iss ue is a proposed
change to the employee
heal th care plan th at would

Edwar.

Stewart's anger at Clint Bowyer
turned into a crash that cost Edwards dearly. Then a blunt gesture

from Stewart angered Edwards so

'

road. Both were oenalized for rough
driving. Of Stewart, Edwards asked:
'How can a person mak&amp; it this far
ln life being thet much of a jerk?• He

added: 'There are a1ot of things you

OBITUARIES

can't control, and I guess we just

have to chelk the driver of that '20'
car (Stewart) as OQe of them: "What
· happenad with me and Clint (Bowyer)
had nothing to do with Carl ," said

. Stewart. 'I'm sorry he got into it, but
nall starleo w~h the '07' car:
NASCAR This Week'o Monte ·
Dutton Pet his take: ·stewart's a

hard racer, one who considers it im·
portent to 'race others the same wa,'
they race me.' This time, he managed to surmount his troubles and
finish seventh. He's surviving in the

Page A5
•Ivan Elwood Brown
• Howard Sisk

BY BETH SERGENT
RACINE - Most. public
school teachers know who
they work for, hut for
teachers in the Southern
Local
Education
Association (SLEA) the

INSIDE

.unswe r is not so clear.

scew.t, Will-pInto
Wllk of .... this yEach year, two drivers - one act i...e and one retired- arc inducted

imo the Talladega.Texaco W.lk of
Fame. Fan voting ended last ...,ek,

and this year's honorees are Tony

Stewert and Rusty Wsllaoe. The Wslk
of Fame is located •n downtown Tal·

Kevin Kelly/ photo
Chris Harrison of Gallipolis hangs some bunting above a beef barn stall area while wife Tammy and daughter Kayla watch
Friday. The Harrisons, Kayla and brother C.J . were preparing this weekend for the 57th annual Galli a County Junior Fair
that opens Monday.

ladega, Ala . The induction is scheduled for Oct. 7,

'
i .ii-fi'4

u·1 H:r1:: l' fl ' J'(I !J IJfl flf;f,f)t I• :J

-···

..

,

'

~hlllpenedto

the 'Winlton' Cup?
am a great lan of NASCAR racing,

l

but I am in the dark about recent
changes m the name. I assume

that Nextel is the nome of all the
raoes this year. What..er (and please
explain to me ) happened to Wmston

Cup? ...

l.arry Witton

Orillia, Ont.

Winslon (RJ. Reynolds Tobacro)

was the corporate spotlsor of
NASCAR's premier series fmm 19 72

through 2003. At·nrst the series was
known as Grand National, but the winner reoeiVIld the Winston CUp. Beginning in 2004, Nextel t&gt;ecame the corporate sponsor, and rhus the name
changed ro Nexlei Cup.

• Singing lhe blues.
See PageA5
• Local Briefs.
SeePage AS
• Jury acquits Pomeroy
man on rape, related
charges. See Page AS
• Gallia agency plans
job information fair.
See Page AS

WEATHER
• &lt;n'

\.

'DG-it-all' McSwain returns as Schrader's crew chief
I

fuJi' b l\f-d1 hoi.. i:,...
~

~

~

Driver's market - Elliott
I
Sadler said his decision to
leave Robert Yates Racing was
A little better, auyway difficult, but not for lack of op· Rookie Davjd Stremme began
portunity.
the sea~on with no finish bet"Right now it's a great time ter than 28th in the first six
to be a driver because we're races. He still doesn't have a
pret.ty much in high demand top· IO, but he's edged closer
right now," said Sadler. "There in the past month. His finish
are a lot more seats open than- in the first Pocono race was
th!!re are drivers available, I 26th.
think, and that's what caught
"By no means has our (irst
me off guard this week with half of the year been what we
some phone calls I got. "
expected," he said. "There
Sadler said he's made no de- IUive been a lot of changes with
cis ion on' his future, but one ' the crew chief and building
widely·held theory is that Jere- new cars and all kinds of stuff.
my Mayfield is headed from We've been through a restrucRay Evetnham's Dodge team to turirig stage the first part of
Michael Waltrip's budding Thy- the year and have actually
ota team - thus creating the been running better. We're still
three-driver juggernaut of not where we need to be but ...
Waltrip, Dale Jarrett and May- it's a time process. It's not gofield - while Sadler moves ing to change overnight.
over to beCome Kasey Kahne's
"We go to some or these
teammate at Evernlulm.
places and look forward to go·
Sadler said it's not so simple. ing back to them because our
"There are a lot more people year started out so horribly,
stirring the pot underneath than and we feel that we could have
you really think, so it's great to had better results at many of
be a driver like this," he said.
these tracks."

I

Go figure - Kevin Harvick,
who shuttled back and forth between Pocono and the ·Busch
Series race in Martinsville
(which he won), said it makes
no sense to hold two races at
the same track with so little
time between them.
"Why we would race at the
same place a month apart (ac·
tually six weeks) is beyond
me," said Harvick. "It is what
it is and, hopefully, going for·
ward they can at least spread it
out. Or put another race in
there somewhere that we can
go to, to spread the series out
somewhere else."
I

A Leicht cues on - The
Pennsylvania 500 figured to be
pivotal for Stephen Leicht. Le·
icht, 19, is a development ·driv·
er at Robert Yates Racing, but
.he's made his Nextel Cup debut
here, and a ·good run here and
at Indy could give him the inside track to succeeding either
Jarrett or Sadler.

"He's got a lot of talent and
just needs some racing experience," said Sadler.
"Is he ready for Cup next
year? I don't know," said Doug
Yates. ''We'll let that take care
of itself these next few weeks
and the rest of the year."
Leicht knew he had a lot riding · on the two-race experiment.
"My mindset, when I got out
for the races right now, espe·
~ially these first two Cup
races, is don't make any mistakes, be smooth, finisb on the
lead lap and go out and earn
the respect of these other drivers. That's what I tried doing in
the first two Busch races and
that worked out.
.
·"They said, 'OK, next year
we're going to pu·t you in a
bunch of Busch races,' so hopefully it will work .out the same
way.... Yeah, it's hard to think
about it, but when you sit down
in the race car, it kind of all
goes away."

Contact Monte Dut!Dn at
hmduttonSIJ@aol.com

a's 51th iunior
BY KEVIN KELLY
KK ELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

GALLIPOLIS - As of Friday after·
noon, the Gallia ''County Junior
Fairgrounds were still quiet as fair
board directors, workers. parents and
children worked in and out of the barns.
That will all change today when
livestock and non-animal projects are
brought there in preparation for
Monday's opening of the 57th annual
Gallia County Junior Fair.
The fair, the primary objective of the
Gallia County Agricultural Society,
offers six day s in , which local youth

starts Mondav

get the opportunity to show otT a 163, while 543 hogs ha ve been
year's worth of effort and endeavor. _ entered. There are 155 ' hccp ;~long
Livestock and non-agricultural pro- with 50 goa ts and 46 horses.
jec[s by 4-H youth, FFA chapters, Girl
Additionally, .the fa ir will fc;~ ture
Scouts and others are Jud ged and 11 3 small animals. 39 toh&lt;Jcco proawarded, culminating in the annual jects and 937 non-livestock projects,
livestock sales on the weekend .
467 of them falling into lhc home enlRide s. entertainment, tractor pulls. nomi cs category.
motocros s and the ever-popular · ''We're up in sheep , hog.s. goats, a
demohtwn derby. are JUSt some ol lot of lhings:· Winters said. "So far,
the numerou~ act!VIl!es found every we're doing good and I believe it will
year at the faiL . .
be a good fair. If everyone shows up,
ProJeCt parttclpatton sllowed . an the barn s are full. The Activitie&gt;
increase this year, 4- H. Ex1ens10n Buildin&lt;&gt; is filii no up .
Educator Tracy Wtnters satd.
"'
"'
· The total number of beef enlries me
Please see Fair, Al

Authorities identify theft ring's booty
J;ly MICHELLE Mtu.ER
MMILLER@MYDAILYTRIBU NE.COM

COLU MBU~ ~

Details on Page A6

INDEX
4 SECTIONS- 24 PAGES

Calendars

As
As

Celebrations

C4

Annie 's Mailbox

Classifieqs

D Section
insert

Comics

A4

Editorials
Obituaries

A3
As

Regional

"A3

Movies

Sports
Weather

r

B Section

A6

© aoo6 Ohio Va lle,· Publis hinJ; Cu.

Logic di ctates that the
teac hers work for the
Southern Local School
Oi strict which is gove rned
by the Southern Local Board
of Edu cation. but when the
bo;~rd approved " I percent
pay raise for teachers la' t
year it wa s neve r implemented because the state \
Financial
Planning
Superv ision Commission
denied the request.
Th e Financial Planning
Superv ision Commission
orer&gt;ees all financial deci sinrb in 1he district that has
been in fis cal emergency for
nearl y seven years - a
duhious state record .
The 'co mmi ssion is an
agency created by the s tat~
to adopt and implement a
Please see Southern; Al
, _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _

Hoffman
named
manager at
Gavin Plant
STAFF REPORT
·NEWS@MYDAILYSENTINEL.C OM

CHESHIRE David
Hoffman of Middleport has
been named manager at
American Electric Power
Ohio\ Gavin Plant. according to Mark McC ullough,
AEP vice pres ident for
baseload ge neration &lt;~&gt;sets. ·
He
';. ucceed s
Roq
Osborne. who wa' recently
named direc-

Details
of a cooperative investigation by sheriff's departments of Franklin and
Gallia comnies ca me to
light at a joint press conference Friday.
t u r- co n ~ truc ­
The event occurred in a
tion services
Colum bus warehouse full of
111
AE P's
items se ized in Gallia
E ngine ~ ring ,
County in Jan uary.
.
Projccl&gt;
&amp;
The seizure was part of a
Fie ld Services
two-month probe of a susorgun JI.ation.
pected theft rin g involving
Huffman
Ronald A. Miller, 60. of
init
ia l! )'
Galli a.
joined AEP as
According to Franklin
a su rnmer stuCounty Sheriff Jim Karnes,
den
t
at
the
Sporn
Plant in '
a tip from Crimc stoppcrs .
New Haven, W.Va. After
ki ck-started the investigagrad
uat ion fn)m Ohio·
tion that ended in 14 se!niUnivers it y in 1986 with a
truck loads of suspected
hacheh1r
of &gt;Cicncc in elecstolen items being confistrical
~ng.1ncering
dcgrt:(:. he
cated from Miller's proper1oined
the
,;all
at
ty in Greenfield Township.
·Mountaineer
Plant
'"
a
perMiller was an·ested after
Michelle Miller/ photo
deputies made scveml buys A joint investigation between the sheriff's departments of Gal lia and Franklin counties formance e n ~lnecr. He
lll&lt;ll'ed to...the G7Jvin Plant in
from him in Franklin Cmmty.
ended in 14 truckloads of Items be111g confiscated from Greenfield Township las t January.
Please see Theft, Al
Over $100,000 worth of items have been identified as being stolen.'
Please see Hoffman, Al

·------------------;--------------:-----~~---- --..:.. -.~.~--,-~-

•

Please see Century, Al

8 SERGENT@MYDAI LYS ENTIN EL. COM

bid for a third championship, but
he's certainly leaving a lot of hard
fe&lt;!lings in his wake:

·¥·•• ;r·. ·;

mo ve wo rker-. into a
network .
prov ;cla
Cur rently. employees can
obtain health care service s
from any provider.
'"There are some providers
that are in thai parti cular area
that were not in lhe network,"
Dean said. "There also was
concern over whether .or not
providers in the network
wou ld remain in the network
once they would be
approached to provide services at network (charges)."

Southern
teachers
still seek
pay hike :

that he rammed Stewart's car on pit

LONG POND, Pa. - Kevin Lepage has come pretty close
to seeing il all, or at least all of NASCAR during the growth
of the past decade and a half.
. Lepage, 44, has won a couple of times in the Busch Series·
but never in Cup, though the Pennsylvania 500 marked the
19t•t start of his career. He spent two seasons and part of a
third driving for Jack Roush. For most of the current sea·
son, he has tried to raise tbe fortunes of BAM Motorsports,
the team owned by Beth Ann Morgentbau. ·
"It's not getting any easier," said Lepage, l'!hO is from
Shelburne, Vt. 'Tve been in a lot of good situations, and
I've been in a lot of bad situations. The good situations
taught me a lot. The bad situations taught me how to be patient and just take wlult things come.
"This year has been an interesting one, to say the least,
because, you know, I had three different car owners in 10
days. Now I'm here at BAM Racing, trying to rectify the
team's problems. They started with a rookie (Brent Sherman) earlier in the year. The team has to be patient, and I
have to be patient, too, because of all the changes that need
to be done."
For now, getting the No. 49 Dodge in starting fields is the
majot goal each week. Lepage can't rely on an automatic
spot beClluse the team isn't in the top 35 in owner points.
The team made the field in the past two races, but it's a dif·
ficult battle since there are only 43 spots in the lineup and
most weeks find about 10-15 similarly unprotected teams
trying to earn one of seven or eight·available spots.
"The guys already in the top JS have two and a half hours
of practice on Friday to get ready for Sunday's race," Lepage said at Pocono. "Now we're in the show, and we're two
hours behind these people already because we had to emphasize qualifying: It rained on Saturday, so now you're
even further behind the eight ball. You look at what's going
on in the race. The guys outside the top 35 usually race in
about the same place.
"I understand that NASCAR needs to protect people, but
Beth Ann and Tony (Morgenthau, her husband) pay the ·
same entry fees. We spend the same money on fuel for
transporters. Have the same expeoses, same tire bill, same
everything, and yet we can only race for seven or eight
spots, whereas the top 3S is already guaranteed. They need
to look at tbat different. They need to do something else on
that deal."
Lepage, though, has few regrets.
.
"The day I retire will be the day I get discouraged," he
said. "A lot of people ask me wlult's my favorite race track.
.loh1 Clari&lt;/NASCAR This Woek
Anyone that has a grandstand, because, without the fans,
~n
Llpllp,
44,
has
won
a
cotqlle
of
11In tile 81110h Serln
we don1 need to be here.
In Nutel Clip, lltou&amp;ll lilt Ptnnaylqnla 100 11arlled
"When I retire, I know I'll be able to say I've done every· but thing I could .... There'll be no regrets."
t1tt 19111 11art of hll c.-.
·

LONG POND, Pa . - The
Wood Brotbers/JTG Racing has
· . restored Michael McSwain to
ihe role of Ken Schrader's
crew chief.
McSwain has been the team's
competilion director and will
continue to hold that title in ad·
dition to being Schrader's crew
chief. David Hyder will now
handle crew.chief duties for
Jon Wnnd's Busch series team,
and Ernie Cope, formerly Sta·
cy Compton's Busch crew
chief, will assist McSwain with
Schrader. Compton's crew
chief will be Jay Guy, who had
been working with Wood.
The historic team merged
this year with Tad Geschick. ter's Busch Series operation
and now fields entries in all
of' NASCAR's
major tour.three.
,,
mg senes.
"We've been playing calch·
up and wanted to get a jump on
next year to see how everyone
progresses with these manage-.
ment moves," said co-owner
EddieWnnd.

l'nnH'I'n) • "idcllc•IJtll"l• G:tllipolis • .Jul) :~o. :.wo6

Tony stew•t
v-.CIII'I!clw•ds

Veteran Lepage keeps on plugging away despite long odds

By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

\

200

aWhere: Indianapolis
•WI-.: Getcway lnter- Raceway Pork, Cler·
n&amp;tior~al Race-,yay, Madi· mont, Ind. (.686 miles).
son, 1!1. (1.25 n1Jes).
200 laps/137 .2 miles.
200 laps/250 .n11es.
· -: Friday, Aug. 4

'

min ille~ ~·w
earn ~· pljlj:l,in(he ~,:flor •
tile ~·tCU!&gt;. ~~mml~ Jqfli1lon

do!m wthe

NEXTEL

tme -

•A-: Power Stroke

i"t:IJi~ (jf. . -

KEVIN LEPAGE

'

•

,,

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