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·P omeroy prepares for .

·

flood,A6 .

Senior Quarterly
Inside Today's Ec•ilion

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Page 86 • The

Thursday,
January 6, 2005
I

www.mydallysentlnel.co.m

Daily Sentinel

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Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
'. ~ .

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SPORTS
"

Freestyle
ing lawnmowers. ·
four· · til reach speeds
·in. excess of 70
mph
main areim:

• OSU women down
Spartans. See Page B1

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Meigs County's latest flood could be a 'dandy'
BY BETH

SERGENT

BSERGENT@M~DAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - "Based on
what they're saying we're
going to get a dandy," said
Meigs County Emergency
Management
Agency
Director Robert Byer about
the projected flooding.
As of 6 p.m . yesterday the

National Weather Service
predicted the tlood waters
would crest in Racine at 5 L.6
feet at I p_.m. on Satu~day.
During the September flooding the river crested at 50.1
feet in Racine.
'
If these predictions com~
to pass, Pomeroy will crest .
near 54.6 feet, ·exceeding the
level of the September flood-

ing that reached 52 feel .
Byer estimate-s the water.
will be on the streets in
Pomeroy by 7 ·a.m. this
morning. reaching water
level s of 48 fc.et and pos sibly seep ing into busines ses
lik e City National Bank
and Dan's.
,
The
Meigs
County
Commission gave Byer the go-

ahead to declare an emergency tll re of Meigs County.
when he deems it appropriate,
The EM A's Emergency
which he anticipates will hap- ' Operations Building should
pen thi s morning if the water also be opened by this mornlevel prediction's hold.
. ing to keep the phones
The · declaration is · th e answered and information
.fi rst step i.n getting . a tlowing :
Presidential
emergency
The EMA is ready to
declaration , which ·results open shelters and has stockin FEMA money, .resulting
in help for the infrastruc:
.Please SH 'Dandy,' AS

Mayor appeals for public .coop~ration
BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLIC H@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - Pomeroy
Mayor John Mitsser called
for the cooperation of the
public as merchants prepare
for a fluod.
He appealed to sightseers
to. park vehicles outside the
business district so as not

hinder the merchants .
working' to sec ure their
merchandise.
·· we will require the nanie
of the merchant you claim to
be going to help and the
owner ofthe business may be
contacted to ·see if you are
truly going to help them,"

to

Pleaie SH Mayor, AS

OBITUARIES

'"

• Page AS

• Zander Allen Burgess
• Johnril'e Hoschar

INSIDE
• Fallen Kentucky
congressman goes from
prison to the pulpit. See
Page A2
• Roadside bomb kills
seven U.S. soldiers in ·
Baghdad, two Marines die
in Anbar. See Page AS
• Sen. Padgett nami3d to
education committee. See
Page AS

AS CAP award winning recording artist Steve Free
&amp; band will perform 7·p.m. Saturday, Jan. 8 at The
Red Parrot Cafe in the Historic Lowe Hotel on
Main St., in Point Pleasant.
Free has won numerous music industry
awards including seven ASCAP awards, a
Platinum Record, and an initial round
Grammy nomination, while placing 10 songs
on the National and International Charts.
He Is an "Artist on Tour" with the Ohio
Arts Council &amp; The Midwest Arts
Council.
For more info on Steve Free,
visit www.stevefree.com or
&lt;http://www.stevefree.com&gt;

WEATilER

The Promised Heirs Quartet

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MIDDLEPORT - The Promised
' Heirs, a southern gospel quartet represented by Capitol Anists of Colorado
Springs, Colo., will be at the Middleport
First Baptist Chw-ch at 10: 15 a.m. Slmday
.to present their ministry in music.
The quartet. based in Greenville, is
considered one of the tri-state's leading
gospel quartets. While the quartet is
sw-e to be entertaining, they state their
main goal is to/resent the message of
Jesus Christ an the plan of sal vatton.
"We want this ministry to impact
people. To see the lost come to Christ,
·the broken hearted mended, the
wounded restored and the Christian
uplifted," said one of the members.
David Oglesby, tenor, has been perfanning soulhem gospel music for many
years. He has been a youth leader, ))as been
an active pan of the music ministry in his
home church. He resides in Mason, Ohio.
Ryan Berry sings lead for The
Promised Heirs and comes from

Pitsburg. Ohio. He has been involved in
gospel music nearly all of his life. He .
has been a praise and worship leader
and has sung in various churche~
throughout the area with his wife and as
a solo artist. But his true love has always
been southern gospel guartet mustc.
Bell)l is the mana!ling ednor of a weekly newspaper in hts home county.
.
Gaylen Blosser is the baritone and busi•
ness manager. He has served as a deacon in
his chw-ch for many years and enjoys par·
tici~ting in the choir and wor.iliip team. A
restdent of Greenville, he is a Vietnam vet.
eran having been awwded the Combat
InfantryB~eandtheBronzeStarMedal.

Noah Wifson of Franklin, Ohio sings
bass for the group. He is a studio musician
and can be heard singing in the background on many .recording .J!Ojects. He is
a past volunteer fireman WJth the Carlisle
Ftre Depanment, is also a Vtetnam veteran. havtng served as a medic, and has
received the Bronze Star Medal.

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.C~"Ve f
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Two Convenient Locations: aj
2400·Eastern Ave.
114 Mile N_
o rth ·
(Across from KMart) Pomeroy/Mason Bridge ~
Gallipolis, Ohio 4S631
Mason, wv 2S2,60 .
(740) 446·1711
Phone (304) n3-S323 a..

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Pomeroy braces for
biggest flood since -1948
'

Lopil band to perform
Local
band·. member~
Jammin' on the Break ·will be
performing 7-10 p.m. Saturday,
Jan. 8 at the Southside Community
Center.
Admission is $3.

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tan McNemar/photo
Denis R. Schuler signs a paper acknowledging the .charge of
first-degre!l murder for which he was arraigned in Gallipolis
Municipal Court Thursday. Defense attorney Jeff Finley looks on.

Schuler leaves hospital,
cQnfesses to killing·Cardwell

toward Main Street to begin the process pf
,t,fl -,; :, ' ' " J,..
HOEFUCH@MY.DAILYSENTINEL.COM
moving, everyone was hu stling ThursdAy
'~
afternoon to empty shelves and racks.
'
Box.es and' tiaskets were packed.with merPOMEROY Merchants began the
, - ""-'4. '--.- - t~diou~..task of moving merchandise up and. chandise to be moved to the second stories ntlJ.'- "'--+L-,-out of th.e wax, of the tlood waters Thursday buildings or to 0ther : loc~lions, and trucks'• · GALL!POIJIS-- Denis R.
as•Plt'Qleroy braced for a second .flood in less and vans were broukht in to haul tl'way store Schuler, 42, of Langsvill ~,
furnishings and large piece s from local confessed Thursday to killi'ng
than four tminths.
B e nni ~ . Cardwell and was
The Ohio River is predicted to crest at 54.6 antique stores.
was
plenty
of
scurrying
around
to
g'l:t
charged
. with ·first-degree
There
feet on Saturday afternoon .
Contrary to what hap(lened in September, everything out of the reach of the mighty murder.
Schuler had been laying
when many merchants waited until water
Please
sH
Pomeroy,
AS
,
under armed guard at Holzer
moved into the parking lots and inched
Bv. Cti:&lt;RLENE

. Jam session in Letart
A jam session will be
6:30-lOp.m.Friday,Jan. 7
the Letart
Center featuring cm1n
bluegrass and gospel music.
The Letart Pioneers 4-H
Club provilfes concessions.
Admission is $1.

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Charlane Hoeftlch/photo

Keith Bentz and Shaun Seth move antique furniture from Hartw!lll House Ttiursday ·.afternoon
when the flood level prediction moved to 54.6 feet, which .will put several feet of water on the
floor of the store .

HoEFLICH

Detallo on Pace A6

INDEX
SEcnoNs- 12 PAGFS
· Calendars
A6
Classifieds
'B3-4
cOmics
Bs
Dear Abby ·
A6
Editorials
A4
Faith•Values
A2·3
Movies
As
Obituaries
As
BSection
Sports
Weather
A6
2

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© 0004 Ohio VaHey Puhlt.hlng Co .

&gt;)

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Medical Center since the
shooting on Dec. 31. He was
dis~harged Thursday morning, and immediately taken td
the Gallia County Sheriff's
Department, where he ~;~s
questioned ''by- {?-apt.' Jooo
Perry and
Chad
,, .Detective
,
Wallace .
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Pluse SH SChuler, AS

Racine prepares for wo~t

Racine Locks and D.a m still
relaying flood crest predictions

BY BETJt SERGENT

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

BY BETH

' the source of some confusi'on
during the last tlood .
"People
see~
pretty
RACINE - The staff at calm," said Head Lockman
the Racine Locks and Dam is · Lois Canterbury about this
still faithfully ~nswering latest flooding, adding that
phones to relay flood cre.st everybody seems "used to it."
information to the residents
Canterbury also reported
that as of 6 p.m . ye~terday
of Meigs County. . ·
· This service is offered as a river traffic was still . moving
courtesy, and the flood crest through the Racine 'Locks
predictions do not come from and Dam altpough sloWly.
"Most boats tie off," she
the Racine Locks and Dam,
but from the National
Please SH L:ocks, AS
Weather Service. which. was
SERGENT

RACINE - Residents of Racine were bracing.
for the worst 'yesterday and making plans to outsmart the Ohio River which continues to spill out
of its b ~mks.
Beginning Saturday the Racine Post Office will
be closed according to"Postmaster Bonnie Brown.

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

PIUHHeRadne.AS

The Racine tacks and Dam raised th!lir hanger
gates to the · all out' position Wednesday ~vening
to prevent damage to the equipment. The facility's
on ly function is to maintain river traffic with no way
of holding back water in flood conditions 1

••

!lath Serpntj plloto

Is Giving .UP Smoking - You,r
·New Year's Resolution?
.

.

Holzer's Tobacco Prevention· Center is here to help you
accomplish you/ goal ·. ($all us for more information ...

' 740 . 446-5940

MEDICAL CENTER
''Healtltwre in You r Own Backyard"

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

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LITTLE HELPER •

It frequently happens that

one of my children will construct very comprex and
impress1ve·structures with toy
building blocks. Occasionally
blessed with the privilege of
joining theJTI in their enterprises, I can sometimes personally . witness . them design
anil build some amazing
things. While I don't always
know what it is that I am looking at, my children have
always been able to eome up
with impressive .titles and
elaborate explanations.
Sometimes they show me
sky-scraper. Sometimes a
spa~;es hip. Sometime.s il is the
surface of a planet, and sometimes it is a creature that they
have created.
Whatever the case, it is a
masterpiece each lime. And
mvanably, at the insistence
of the inventor/artist, each
completed work m~ s t be
placed in a safe place so that
the genius invested by its ere, ator will be preserved.
Sadly. sooner or later, each
work meets its demise. Too
often ·a finished piece is
taken down and enjoyed as if
it is toy (which, of course, it
is although its maker generally forgets that). I have
.noticed thai toys of the Lego
genre come apart most
inconveniently.
On the other hand, sometimes the project is simply at

a

Beth Sereent/photo

Olivia Cleek of Pomeroy does her part to save prayer books
from the rising water near Trinity Church where she attends.
Several congregation members were clearing out the first two
floors of the bu1ld1ng after being caught movmg 1tems in water
during the September flood. Church serv1ces at Tnmty have
been canceled for Sunday.

Fallen Kentucky congressman··
goes from prison to the pulpit
Bv ROGER ALFORD

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Friday, January 7,

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PageA2

e.VAtUES.
A Hunger For More

The Daily Sentinel

It was in the midst of the

emotional and legal turmoil of. his political demise
EZEL, Ky. - Microphones that Perkins turned to relihang unused next to the pul- gion. And it was in prison
pit. The Rev. Chris Perkins that he says he began to
has no need far them.
realize God . was calling
His voice booms across the him to the ministry.
Ezel United Presbyterian
"I thought, nah, come on,"
Church, filling the .spiritual Perkins said. "But it just
center of this sparsely popu- never went away." .
lated Appalachian communiThat's not to say Perkins
ty with a message of hope didn't second-guess his calland redemption.
ing. He had to make certain
"My friends, the Gospel in his own mind that he was
is not about power and sta- doing the right thing.
tus,'~ he tells the 60 congre"At times, you think
gants. "The Gospel shows maybe it's a way that you're .
us that God picks up the trying to cope with things,
earthly notions of what is maybe even by escaping to
powerful and glorious and something else," he said.
honorable and turns them "But over time, I came to
upside down."
the realization it was more
· Perkins, a former con- than that."
gressman and son of the
Perkins· took his first step
late U.S. Rep. Carl D. toward the pulpit in 1999 by
Perkins, knows all too well enrolling
at
Louisville
what he's preaching abo,ut Seminary, a Presbyterian
- he served 21 months in school where he earned a
prison for his part in the master's of divinity degree
House banking scandal of while serving at Ezel. He was
ordained last year.
the early 1990s.
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER

a

Frida

sentinel.com

Fellowship
Apostolfc

'

Church of J~ms Christ Apostolic
Mtllt:f

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Suud01y Sdwul .
7 10 p m

E\~nin~ -

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Wl'dlll \i.t.ty 7 p m

IAor ~ htp_

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K!.'lttl Konkle ,

Pa~ t nr,

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Wl.'&lt; h w~d:t y 7 00
p111. YPu!h Fn. 711Jpm '
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sl' l\l~ e

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b cn mg ScrVIC\'
7 OOpm W~dnL'"lLty 1-Mdl' Study 7 IJ(l pm.
lmcnm Prl!.tdu:r rl•)yd Ro ~s
10

C hunh or Chri~l

1-/!\rne Rd . Su nd:.~v
Sdlrl4 ll , II am . Worship - Hl&lt;L m , fl p 111
Wcdnc&lt;;tl.ly Scr\I~CS . "! r m
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Middleport Chur~h of Christ

'ith .md Mam . 1-'.tstor AI li .J rhon . Ynnth
MumiCI Jo~h U.lm. Sund{ty Schntll - ') JIJ
.1 Ill Wor ,h•p- X I 'i , Ill· lO .1 m 7 p m .
W~dnc~day Scrvu.:r~ ( p m

( lu·sh trc naptist Churr h
Pa .. tut Stt:w Little. Sw\Jay Sdl(ll•l. t) '0
,un Morumg Wor~l11 p 10 ~0 um. Suml.J\
C\l'lllll_!! (, 111 pm Wl'd nc~d. t ) 6 1Up m

K.-nu Chur"'h or C hrist
l) m .t i l l ' Su tu.J.,t)' SLhnul 10 10 am Pa'-1 11r Jelfrc\ 'A:.t llan l~t .mJ
.lrJ Sundny
\l;nr-.hip .

llupt' Uapli~t Chun: h (Southern)
"i70 Gmnt St \hJdlcpori Sv nJ .ty ....:hnol

· IJ .JO ·• m. \Vor~hip · II a LH .mJ (J p 111,
\\ cJ nr-.J.ty Sante - 7 p 111
Rullund ••irit IJaJ)tist Ch'urd1
S und.t ~ s~ hool
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u..arwallo,. H1dge Uturch of Christ
PU'&gt;i(lf' Brul·e Tcn y Su nd.J\1 SduHd 9 1(1
.Llll

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l,omcro}' First Haptisl
P.hl!)l Jun Hrt1 ia kl:rl !-:. 1 ~ 1 Vl .1111 Sr ,

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10 10 .!

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rirst Soulht·rn Baptist
tiK72 Potneroy P1~e P.t'&gt;lllT E L:mmr
O'Rry.u11 Sund.Jy Sdum l . 1} 10 .t m ,
\\,lr,htp K 15 ~ rn . 1;1-15 am &amp; 7.0ll p 111.

pm , WcJn~,d.t} Sen KC'-

Wo.:dno.:,da\ Sen 1 ~6 - 7 110 p m •

Co mmunion - ltl a m SundJ) Sdu~'l
llll:'i .1111. )\ lut h· 'i 30 pm Sundny. Bthk

\\'L·dn c'&lt;tla~

7 p 1H

Sani Broadway. who owns
20 Black Cat F'1rework s
Warehouse stores around
Hou st01i. said partnership s
with churches and other nonprofits provide a reliable.
sober work force .
~
Broadway's father, the
Rev. Ted Broadway, pastor of
Channelview 'fabemacle fm
49 years, set up a firework ~
stand in the 1960s to raise
money. Bwadway followed
his father's foot steps, not
mto the ministry but the fire- ,
works business.
'The best part about it is
knowing that so much of the
money you make goes to
such
good
causes,"
Broadway said.
He cited participating
groups that built a day care
center and a family life center
and funded a children's shelter. A high school band and a
drama club also support programs with fireworks sales.

l n~ t rmncnt.1l . Wllr~htp ' Sl'nllc

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P,J,II•r Julm Su.an,.,.ln, Sund,tv Slhtl&lt;ll • .
IOa .m . WtJr,htp
II am. 7 no p m
. Wl·J uc'&lt;l.l} Set 1 ~~C' · 7 (I(J p.m.

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Faith Baptist Church
R.tilru.tJ S1. Ma'&gt;\.!1\, Sund!tY Sc hool • 10

Young's Carpenter Serulce
26 ynrs In local business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy,OH

740-992-6215

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family '&amp;
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation Ctr.
"A Celebration of Li1e"

Coolville, Ohio
located less than 30 minules from

fWCdll\'~d.ly p r,ty~ l

Athens, Pomeroy or Parkersburg

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

333 Page Street
Middleport OH

.

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

Acts 24:16 '

209 Third
Racine, OH

740-949-221'0
"A Home Bank for

Home People" '
(740) 99 2·6451

~l..t:IOk, Ded •nd
ride onr sled!
, ~Jutlwrrtl. Mark and Meehan.
how mun) mowftlll&lt;a rome"""'"· J..,l rr
row_, moll. bullritcondn- to-w. they win ..id&lt; IO!telhorrrnd lhriiiOWwlU

become deeper lmd form a stronatr !liUrface tor )OUr 11td. Maybe wt can Olllke a
,...,....,n.too." llllll&lt;n noilllono of soown- to rnoke cooullh •-to play in.
We ha•o - n hoard that "11lt"' h Olr&lt;lll!lb In numbers". AI dtl1 applies to
....- . i t IIIIo rrppllcs to 111. &lt;Jod'l dliklren. "From lllm the b&lt;Jdy, joinorl
IUldholcl ""'tiler bJ
IIUpportin~ lip,_L ~rows rrnd lluikb tllielfup In lo••·
• - " pal1-lts work."lt:phcsiano 4:161
~n~ when "e worship God as a group or • cun~lun. we 1;ntw in strmgth.
Tlrio 1 - our abllltr to perform a variety or funrtio"" to hrlp 'uthrn "",..
81orffy Him. In the wonll of Andrew Mrrrnll ...
"l..rt ld' roll all our srn•JM •11d IIIJ

Hills Self StQrage
29670 Basha~d­
Racine, OH

P.O. Box 683
Pomero Ohto 45769-0683

740-949-2217
SIZes ava•lable Sx 1 0

to 10 x 20

If ye abide in Me, and My

•••I')

4911 Richland

740-594·6333

Avo,j~ue,

Athens

1-800-451-9806

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

Our IWUIIJI$1 liP INIU IUit IHJIJ,

,A.mt lftll' Ullf pltfDurn willr nN.tlr strlft
Tllm•p IA&lt;Ifflff lf&lt;ll&lt;• N/11/r."

(\10111 IOpdtor..., IK'COIIlpUih.....,. than- .,....,. orlori.. Woa't JOU.-Ip
with,....,,,._
rmd .....,_ 111 yourlo&lt;8l dNrdlwtyracocue 1111•
~h?

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for (hey
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
·'

MEIGS FAMILY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAILES, OD

507 Mulberry Heights
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ~
.~
(7401992-3279
~
Tol Free 1·877-583-2433

Mt. Moriah Baptist
Fuurth &amp; MJm St MtddlquJrt, Paslllr'
Rc' Gt ll"len ('ra•g. Jr , Sunday St huol ·
9 10 am w~ ,r~hlp. 104 'i 11m

(740) 992-6472
Fax (740i 992·7406

-

•

Hou rs

Wann Fnendl,\
Almo,pht•rr

6a m -8 pm

Mi[[ie's !l(estaurant
Hom~made

p.M.

Antiquil~

naptist
Su nday s~·htltJI 1;1 30 am, Wo r ~htp ·
10 .t) am, Sunday btnln!! - ti 00 p m,
Pastnr Don Walker

Desserts Made Da•ly
Rutland f ' rt't Will Baptist
Sah,!m St Pa~ror Jam tl· Furtncr. SunJ. 1~
Sehoul - 10 am .. Evenmg - 7 p m.1
Wedne-.da) So.:n' KC ~ · 7 p m

Home Cooked Ml!tiiJ &amp; /Jaily !;pedals

Open 7

day~

a wt.:ck

740-992-7713

l&lt;c1IIL K.11k 1, S un d&lt;~} Sdtno t - 10
.t rn W\) l ~ htp - I I a 111

Cuhury Pilgrim Chupcl
Ha1n-.unVtll l' l{n 11.!
P.htnr
Ch,ark'
Mc Kcn11c Su nda) Slhtll)l Q 'O a 111
Worsh1 p - ! I .1rn . 7 Oil p rn Wnlnl·-.l.11
Semcc 7 no r m

Jla,tnr Bniln Dunham, Sund&lt;~)
') ~0 .1m . Wnr ~ h1p - 11 00 a m

Rose or Sha ron Holiness Church
(' ll•d. Rd l&lt; tlll.md, Pa&lt;:;hlr. 1-h 1
Dl'\1('~ Km g. Sun1l.t v ,...hutll I) ~0 .t.m ..
SunJ.1y
&lt;Aur•htp' -7 pm \\hlnc-.dl}
p ro~ycr mcetmg 7 11m•.
l'inc Gro\1' lliblt• Hulincss Church
1 2 ll!ik ulf K1 1~~. l'.t'l"r Rc' O' Dell
M:mk'y. S ural.!~ Sdtool
lJ 'O a 111
Wt~t-.ltrp
. 10 .11 • &lt;~ Ill
i 10 Jllll .
WcJIIi. ''tl.ty Sl'fl IU · i l,O p 1t1
1

Wcslr~an

Bthll' IIHiincs&lt;; Chureh
7~ Pe.nl S1. M1Jdlcpon P.1.. h\r Rt L ~
li llurnr. ~unda&gt; Schoo l I i f a 111 Wo1sh1]l
-l O.t~ pm . Suitllav E:n
700 pill,
Wuluc\d.lt} S--t\ ILl · 7 ~(l p 11\
H.1ml"ommumty Ch un·h
P.1~1u r Rc, , l.diL )' l.cmley Sum\,1\ Slht~•l
'J \0 .t.m. Wo1~h1p 10 :;15 u m. 7 ]l lll .
Thut !&gt;&lt;ll:t)' B1hlc Stud~ anJ Vuuth - 7 p m
l.aurd &lt;:lilT • rl'tl 1\lt-dwdist C hurd1
P.t ~ ltl t Glenn l~rov.c'
Suntht) Sdhl411 ·
9 1(! ,, 111 . WPr~lup
1 n \I J ,1 m and f1
p m Y,ictlnc .. d.t )' Savll~· - 7 I~' r m

Chri st orLattt'r-Da~ Saints
HI 160 H(l -(.124 7 01r -4-'f'l · 741H• .

Sl

Rcltl'f

l I lf'i- l 2 1ln I11M!h

Sl·htl ~

Y- 10 1.:.

,t rn ,

H&lt;HHCnL.tkmg mec!tng h i I hur~ - 7 p m

Lutheran

'

Pomero~

Br1&lt;11l 1Junh.1m , Wnr~htp 111 , Sunda} Sdn1ol - 10 J5 a 111

J

St. John LuthHatn Churc h
lj

IMJ 11m, Suntlay
Jamo ~

P

Brudy
Our Sa ,•lour l..uthrran C hurch
Walnut anJ H l'nr~ Sls H. a~&lt;.'n~woo d
W Va Pastor D:tvld Ru s~ ell. Sunday
Sd 10ul · 10 ()()am. Wor.. ht p • 11 am
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second Sr.. Pomeroy,
Sunday School - 9 4~ &lt;~ m wor!ohtp- 11
' n m Pa~tor Jutncs P Brlld}
Sat 7 00 pm CuniC'mpor&lt;lf) Sen tee

United Methodist
Wor~lll]l

-

I)

IU ·1 m 1 f ~ ~ &amp; 2nd Sun ). ,

I 'O p m 1~ rd ~ &amp; 4th Sun ). Wednesday
Scn,tce • 7 JO ll m

Mt. Olhe Uni ted \telhodtsl
Off 12-1' hch1nd \\Jl~c ~v lllc , Paqnr Re\ .
. ..... , • ..,.._ Ral ph Sp1rc,, Sumla} School • 9 30 a m
Worshtp Hl'30 om 7 p m. Thuf'Wa\
S..:1vkc' · 7 p 111

Chri5ti&amp;n Union
Hartford, W.Va ., Pastor D;:n td Greer.
Sunduy Scht)O[, 9 3U a n1.. \\lorship 10.30 a.m, 7,00 p m. \\ ed nc'dll}
Scrvtcc~ - 7 110 p m

'lt•i ~~:s

Cooptrallle PariJ~:h
Clu,lcr. -\!fred. Pa ~ lor . J un~
8 COI1LC. Sunday Schlt~•l - lJ JO a.m ,
~orth~a~t

Wnn~l]l -

t 1 ,,

m, 6

~I t

Rod1: Springs
Pu ..tor KeLth l{adcr Sunday St huo l - 'J IS
a 111 , \.1/or-.h lp - I 0 am .. Ynwh.
rcl l nw~hJ p S und ~y · r-. p m
J

'

Rutland
P,tstor. Rt l k Bou rnl' S unda y

S dH&gt;~'I

Y· Hl.trn , IA im lu r - I ll llf .1m

1huNlay

Ser~lf.'C ~.

7

Chesler

Mrlc IlLI I Rd. Ral'Jnl'

P:~~tm J.111c lk J llt e \\'tus11'1p - 9 u' m

Sancrti~ld.

Sun tl.t y 'ilh(lnl · ]() 11m

Pa stnr Ju me~
Sunday Schunl · 1;1 45 am .
b cnmg - b p n1 , \\-l'dnl'.-.dfty Sclvl..: .:s - 7
pm
..,r

S~TI \;;l"\ - 7

. Thursd,t\

p In

r Ill
Sall'm ( ' e-nlrr

Rutland Church or God
!,astor Rnn 1-k a~h. Sunday Wnr&lt;iiH p • 10
a Tll .. 6 p ,111 . Wednesday S~n llC ~ 7
pm

Chun:-h or God

Ap r lc i.i nll St:lonJ Sb ,

Wil h ~ m

Marshall. SunJay
Warshtp ·Y 151m
Study Mond.L} 7 (I() pm

Slhool ·

• H ih l~

P a~t m R l·~ .

Da&gt;1d

R U~sc ll . Sunlloy s~ h~l l and \\'nr..htp · \0
il .m EH:ning Sc1 \l~c~ - 6 JO p m
Wedhc~day Sen IL'CS- 6 ~0 p.m.

Pa~ t i"tr

ll

Bo1h lhndnlp h \l.nrsh1p · 9 1:!1

m SunJ:t} Slh(IO[- 10 \(l :t.m

l.ong Bottom
SunJil} "&gt;t ho'H.1l - 9 10 a m , Wor,htp

10.'0mrn
HeedsHllt
o 111 , Su nd.ty Sc h110l .
10 ll) u m l1r-t '\und,!) nf :'\-1mllh - 7 IKl

\\m ~ h•Jl

p.l11

~ en

K

IU · l~am

S no~\·ille

Sund.ty St ht1nl W ttm , Wur&gt;IHp Y a m
Bethany
P,1,tor Jo hn Gtl morc . SunJay Schtl() l - I(]
a 111 , Worshq1
9 am. Wednc~da \
s~r'tlc' - lllam

C:mnel &amp;
P.t ~ l o r

Ca rmel-Sutton
Rd ':&gt; Ra., me, O hHl

Jt)hn

Gtlmor~·

4 1(1 .1m. Wor ~h 1p
Study WcJ 7 00 p m

~

m'

S und~ y s~ hnol

10

4~

w~.u~hip .

,

u m , 81hlc

Morning Star
G1lmore. Sunt.la~ Scllool

ll ~0

kc

Lhat thr·y may :;ee

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

works and glorify
IFath•er in heaven."
Matthew 5: 16

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp; TEES

992·3785

Middlepon , OH

Davls-Quick~l
ANCE

740.992-6128

local source for trophies,
Ia ues !-shirts and more

KEHLER
BU~INE~ SERVlCES
A rr Income Tax &amp;
Fina11cial Services Firm

Bill Quickel

(740) 992-7270

•·no not steal. Do not lie. Do not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19; 11

·-·-

'MI-IIH'MI

-~~­
7UIU......

'
Agency inc. If ye abide
i11 Me, ar1d My - Brogan-Warner
Full ltne ot
words abide in you, ye.-UJrllJJ'"l INSURANCE
Insurance
SERVICES
Products+ ask what ye will, a lid it
Ftnancial
214 E. Main
be do11e until you.
Services
992·5130
]ohrr 15:7
Pomeroy

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

618 E. Main Street • Pomeroy

..
...............
:filbtr .:funtral "omr
.............. fn ,.

'

ANDE RSON
FUN E RAL HOME

1.14 Ll)nt sn.,t • PO Bo•l70
Ntw Ha1erl, ~V 2Sl6S
J1mts H Andti'JOO, Lkrn.W-d fu~~trJtl Dim:lor

Heidi S.

Fortthoogbt f'l~Mntl Plannill2

W(.: dtlC~d~ y

Letart
P u~tu r B11t Mur~ hall Sunday School 9:t m Wurslup - 10 a m , ht Sunday
C\C r ~ 11101\lh C\'C n~n g SCf\ IC C 7·0() p ffi ;
W~Jn csdily- 7 p m
Racine
Pete Sh.tffcr. Sund~y Schoo l 10
a m , Worshtp · II a m , Wednesday 7
pm.

C hun:h
TownsM 1p Rd .. 468C. Sunday School - 9
am . Wur~htp • 10 am .. Wednes da y
Srr1·1ccs- 10 n. m

p.m
Aga~

l.irt' Cent~r
Churlh", P.t ~tors John &amp;
, Po~ u y \\-adc Nn Se(·o nd Avl' M.t ~on 77150 17, S c m~l' ume Sunda } 10 30 ll m
Wcdn c~&lt; d a} 7 pm

Full Go!!:pel Church
of the Lhin.:Sll,ior

·· Full - Gu~pcl

Rt ~1K r\niH.JU1l) l'a.!nr
Sen Kl' ~ . S,nurd:tl ~ 00 p.m

J I.'"'C ~h\rn~

Salem Com munity Church
B&lt;1d.: ol wl,l Co lurnht &lt;~ \\ V,1 ,,m L!l'lmg
RoaJ . Pa~wr ·C'h.1rlc-. l&lt;&lt;~u i'&gt;h L~!UJ oi.:.~ 2RX. ~ und:l) S ~ h, &gt;ol lj 1n am Sunda&gt;
C\emng M.ntte 7 00 pm. l:h hl\ S1u1.h
\\ednnda y 'en tee 7 111.1 pm

Abundant Grace R.E I,
I}~' S rlurd St M1ddlcpon. Past~&gt; ! Tcre'4!
', ll.t Vi~ Stttl d:J) •crv t l~
10 &lt;I rn
Wl·Jnc.,d:t\ ,c1v1cJ, 7 p m
Faith Full Gospel Church
L•mg Hn!l•llll Pad(lf Stnc Hc,·d Su n d,l~
s~h11t1l
4 ~0 am Wnrsh 1p 9:10am
.tnd 7 p nt , Wedncsd.l) · 7 p m Fn d a~ ·
Jc[ l,lwsh tp ..cmce 7 p m

llobson Chrhtlan
Pa~t or

~ellowsh1p

Hersche l While,

( hurf'h
Sdlool-

Sunda~

ld .un 'Sunda) Ch urch ..en Ill'

0

1()

rm

Wcdnt·sdal 7 pm
Restoration Christian fellowship
1;111'1 5 Hooper Road Arho:n~ f-'~~rnr
Lo nn tt' Co:m Su nday \\-o~lup 10~ am ,
Wednc,da) 7 pm

Harrison'I'Uie (}ommuhlt\ Church
Pa-.Jor Theron Durh ilm S un da~ - Y lU
a 1ll and 7 p m , Wcd ne~d a) - 7 p.m
Middleport Co mmunit~· Chul1'h
)"'~ P(.:arl St
M!ddlcporl , Pastor Silm

Langli1"illt' Christian Church
Pull GospeL Pil ~tor Rohcn Musser
Sund.ty Slhool ll J(J ,1'm. w(lf~h t p lU I()
am 7 00 pm. Wcdnc,J:l) Scr.tce 7 00
pm

l"ailh \'alley Tabernacle Chul1'h
B.u le) Ru n Ruad . Pu~ l o r Re' Emmett
Ruv.so n. Sunda) Evcntng · 7 p m .
Th ursday Sci"\' tee - I p m

Pentecostal
Pente-costal A~semb1~·
R1 124 Racme, Pasw r Wilham
Hobad: Sun.la ~ S.:honl · lO am
Evcmng i p m, ~ ell neMia&gt; S!.!n.n·s - 7

St
Syracuse Mts~ion
I.til Bndgcman St . Sy ra.c usl!. Sunday
-

lllamE&gt;~ntng

Wcdnes~b y

6pm

pm

Serm·c - i p m,

· Presbyterian

Hazel Community Churcb
Off Rl J 24, Pastor Edsel Hart , Sunday!
School · 9 30 am, Word-up - 10 30 am .
7 30pm.

Syntuse First Uolted Presbyterian
PaJllOr. Robert Cro~. WOl1hlp · II a. m

HarrlllOn\'illt Pn"sbytenan Chul1'h
Paswr Roben Ci"ov., WOO h1p- 9 am

Dyes"llle Communh~ Church
Su nday School . 9 30 a m . Worsht p •
10·30 a.m . 7 p.m.

Middleport PrubyterUm

Morse Chapel Churtb
Sunday school - 10 a m , Worsh ip - 11
u m Wednesday Service - 7 p.m

R o~r

Crow Wnrs h1 p · 10 a m

Seventh-Day Adventist
Stventh-Da~

Adventi!t

Mulhcrry Hts Rd Pomeroy Pastor
Bennett LucK11:sh Saru rda ~ Sl!'r\tces
Sabbath School - 2 p m, '-"orsh1p · 3 p m

•·ahh Gospel Church
lon g Bottom. Sunday School - 9. 3011 m .
Wors hip - 10.45 a m, 7 30 p m.
WcJn~sday 7 30 pm

Hockingport Church
Grapd St1eel, Sunday Sthool - 9 30 a m
wor;-h1p - 10.10 a m . Pa~or PhLihp Hell

1\1 O(J am

Pa~lot r ALII Sl.tiCil Sund.l) \~ntce~ · 10
:.t m &amp;7pm 'WcUnc-.d:.l ) -7 pm &amp;
Youth 7 p m

Pastor
8et~l

Wnr~h tp·

Scrl I I.:C~. 7 rIll

'~"" Lif~ V~tnr.y Ct&gt;nt~r

Pa~tu r

Coohilll' United Methodist Parish
Pastor· Helen Khne, Cno h•1l le Churc h,
Mum &amp; Ftfth St, Su nday School • 10
am . Worsht p- 9 am . Tuesday Servtces1 p.rn.

·

-J/73 George~ Creek Hood. G~lhpoh~. OH

II

Ea~l

~i'n • ~c

Cli tton Tabt!rnal'lt• Church
Clt llon W V. 1• .Su iol,i•L)' Scho~!l - I! I ,1 m ..
WtlrSIIIp · 7 pIll , Wcdnc~Ja1 S~rltll' · 7
pm

Ande rso n. SunU,ly Sch oo l 10 :.. m .
Evcn mg- 7 .~ 0 p m . \\.•eJn6dil) Serv1cc ·
7 10 p m. ,

]() lllll

pm

Rej01dn11 tift' ('hurch
~nd Ave, M1dJiql&lt;ll1 , P,1s1or
~orcma n
. Pa~1111
Emcntu \

L ·twr~ nl~ f-nr~ m&lt;.~n

, Ash Stred Church
Asl1 St, M1Jdlcpun-Pusw r Greg Sear~
Sun day Schoo l - I.J 111 a 111 M&lt; \fll!n g
Wor~l11p - 10 30 a m &amp; ti pm Wl'dneM.l ay
Sc r.' ICC • f&gt; 10 p m . Youth Sen ICC 0 J(t

United Brethren

~

lort'h Church
Co Rd . 63 Su m.ilty Slhool - 9 ]fl am .
\.\'nrsh1p - ]1}10am

Nazarene
Middleport Church of tht' Naz.arcne
Pa•aur Allen Mtllli.ip, Sunda\ Sl hool f.JlOa m \\of!'lht p- 10 \Oom.fi ·30pm.
\\ e dnc~rlay Sei"I I.: C"
7 p 111 , P a~lor
-\lkn M1dcap
Reedsville Felln-..&lt;r.hip
Ch url h. of the Nazarene, P:.~st\J r Jam te
Pellit , Sund11y School 1,1 3(] am Worship
. 10 45 a m.. 7 p m., Wednesday SenKes

S~

racuw Ctiurrh nf the- !'lriaz.arenr
M1ke .-),d km~. Sunda v School · 9·JO
.1111
Wor,h•r - l U 10 a m . f'l p m .
Wednl•sday Sen !Cl':!&lt;- i p.m
P.l ~ tor

Pomero~ Church of lhe Nazan:rR
Pa •ltlr Jan l a;•en.J.:r Sunday Sc h1~l ·
'I JO ::t rn .• Won.h1 p
10 .10 am and 6

rIll

Wl·dn c..day

ScT\ JCC~.

'
Full «;;ospel Ll~thouse
\~()4~ Hila nd Road. Pome roy Pa~tnr Ro~
Hunter. Sundav Schoo l 10 a.m. E'en.ng
7 30 p m Tuesd ay &amp; Thur~da.y - 7 1{)
pm

Edrn United 8rt"thren in Christ
Slate Route 12:4. Reeds vtllc

Suneia\
School 11 am .• Sunda} Wo~h1p · 10 00
a m &amp; 7 00 p m Wednc&lt;tda) Sen tt'l"~ ·
"'I 00 p m We dnesda~ Youth Scn1 ce 7 OOp m

South Bethel Communit~ .C~ urdt
Sti ver Rtdge · Pt.~ ~to r Lmda Dam e ~ ood,
Sunda y S..:hool 9 a m . Worship Sen tcc
10 ll m .:!nd anll..\.th Sunday
Carleton Interdenominational Chun::h
Km g~ h ury Road. Pa~tnr Robe n Vance
Sundu}' School • 9 30 a m Worship
Scn ll'C 10 JO a.m. E\em ng Serv1..:e 6
pm
Fl'\'fltom Gospel Minion
Bald Knnh. on Cn Rd .~ I . Pa sto r. Re'
Roger Willfonl Sundll' Sd1ool · 9 30 am
w.,r~h tp· I p m

7pm

White's Chaptl
( 'hestrr Church of the

Mt. Hrnnon Un1ted Brethren
In Christ Church
Texas Ca mmunll) ~b411 W1ckham Rd .
Pastor Peter Manmdale. Sunda} S~houl9 30 a n'l . Wof'ihlp - "'JO·JO a rn 7 DO
p m , Wednesda&gt; Servtce!o - 7 00 p m
Youlh group mectin~ 2nd &amp; .lth Sunday~
7pm

J\.11. Olhe Community Church
Pastor Lawrence Blish. Sunda) School
9 )0 il m, E&gt;enmM - 6 JO p m , Wedneday
Scr.·•ce 7 p.m

~a7.a~ne

Cuoh tile Rl1aJ

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITIION CENTER

\\tsle~an

Pa stm

S unda ~

Slhoul

•

K&amp; C JEWELERS

.'\IKJ N
M1kc

'

Ba~han

· 7pm

Joppa

S~rllCU!il' First

1'.1!&gt;101

-

pm

-Cburch of God
MI. Morh1h Chm:t:h or God

l)· ~II

Sthool

Gr11.hum United Methodist

Christian Union

-9

l'carl t:ha~l
Suuduy Sdmol · 9 il 111 , Wur•ltip - 10 a 111

Pa~tor John

(!( Je~u s

I ht I hniTh

Church
W.1) n ~ R Jcwc!l S.unt!.l)
6 ,00 p m . WcdiJC'&gt;dll\ - 6 ()() p m

Worship Ct&gt;nler
(h e~ t c r SLhno l, P.t'i tnr
l&lt; oh Ha rhcr.
As\ l ~ l ant Pa stm Karen Da v 1 ~ Sunda y
Wurshtp 10 .un. bt:nmg Wm~htp n prn
'r'ou1h g1ou p 6 pm , WcJn(.: sJay Pov.~r 111
Pr.1yer , and Rthlc St udy · 7 pm

L~.tJm g

C hun:h ~I' Christ

ln te r ~~d1un 7 and 124 W, E\ .mgch~l.
Dcnni~ S arg ~ nt. Sunday Bthk SIU d\ •
Y lOom \\-nr sh1p 10 30 a.m and 6 JO
p m , Wednesday Bthle SIUd y 7 p ~l

S~huul

i "\0

.1m,

· 7 'II p m

l'.t ~ll•r

·-

8~thl!l

am

\(I

R~ v

1.1 ~ 0

,Sdtool

Slnnndlr I mnmunif) ApO!&lt;ilolic

Cnmnmnit~· nf Chri~t
Ponland-R:.tcme Rd . Pa""nr Jm1 Profli u.
Sumhty Slhnol - 4 IU a m Wur,htp 10 'O :t m Wedne ~ da y Ser v Kc ~- 7 00

-

I{U , Pa~lllf

~ \Ul i.l l )

Wcdn e~d,l) Slri iL~

(N!m- donl' lllmau nnu ll c l lo"' ~h lp f

pm

Minersville
Pastor l:lnh Rohmsun, Suml:ty
a.m, Wursh1 p - 11 1&lt;.1m.

p ~,tor

Pmc Gmw . W11r'h1p -

Dexter Church uf Ch'ri~t
Sunday s"hool 9 30 a m , Su nd a~ v.or~htp
- 1030am

s~hmol

H1hlc ( hur&lt;:h
(o

1!1

Wm\ hl ]l

M~\'1 111~ m1he n iJ Am~man LeL!I1;n H.lll
South f oun h A\c nuc M!ddkpun
P:.mnr ('hrts Stell ~n 10 00 am Sunday
IJihcr n ~&lt;.:llm~~ m holll~~

P.t\ lor lh1h l{ohuN•n. Sundav S(hoo1 - 10

~har~

(

Blotd.&lt;A ll&lt;HI

()asis (' hnstiun J.'t: lluw~hip

P. t ~lo r

, Rtdcnnur.

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

190 N. Second St

illll

[)I)

7 p Ill

SC(VLL:C

p rn ,Wc dnc ~ d.!~ Se r.t ~c~ · 7,00 r m

Forest Run Baptist
Pu-.tnr AriUs Hun Sunday School - 10
a Ill, WN ~ ht p II .1 m

@

rh.tuuod~

.

p,)mcJO) Prh

.tm W\)T-.h tp- 9 it m

110'i7 Stat~ Roulc l~~. l ..t n !' ~'1k Pa~hlr
Vil'wr Rnu ~h S und~ y •lhuol 9 'II ant,
Su ndol) \\11!~h !p • l!t 10 am &amp; 7 Jl m

Bradford Church nf Chml
Corner of St R1 I ~4 &amp; Br~dhury Rll ,
~rmsll.' r Dnug Shan'ilil m Yo uth MtnL ~Icr
B11l Amberger. SunJa) s~·hnol - 9 JO am .
Wor .,h tp - X un a m . I 0 10 a m 7 (Kf

or

Sen ICC"- 7 00

Hill:r.ide Hapttsl Church
S1 Rt 14 3 JUSt off RL i, Paswr: Rev
J.tme~ R Alrt::.c. Sr , Su nd,ty Umll cd
Scr\ll'C, \\-or ~ h1p
10.30 a m.. 6 p m.

Sm.! ~'l.

Uam·ilk lluliness Chun:h

S.tcr:1m~tll

Harltord C hun:h of Christ in

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER

7 JU

Heath ji\Jiddleport)

Sc hoo! - I 0 00 a m Paswr

Old Bethel t'l'f'E Will Baptist Church
Sl Rt 7, ~ltdd l cpo rt , Sumld}
School - 10 am, Eve nmg 7 00 p.m,

Wur~b ip
11 a ;n , 6
'W,:Jnl!sd:!) Sen L L: C~. 7 r m

Wnr\h tp--10

S o rLL C II / P n ,·~tlw&lt;,J

R«dsvllte Church Christ
Pastor ' Ph1l1p Sturm, Su nday Schwl 9 10
am Worship Servtcc· JO·JO a.m, B1hlc
Study. Wcdnc$dily, ('i JO p m

W,1ync Dunhlp, Stat..: Kt OK I.
'·1uppr rs Pl.tnh. Wo 1r~h1p 1tf \1\J at;,
Thur~dily A1hk Study 7 00 p m I

t 'nrelli Run

Sumhl y Sl hunl 10 20- 11 am

Muu-.l~r

Hickory Hill~ Church of ChrUit
Evange li st M1ke Moore. Sund~y Sc~'nol 9 a m , Wllr ship . 10 •l m , t. J!l p m
Wcdncsda&gt; Serv11oes 7 p.m.

~B60 1

Wcdn~sday Se r viCe~. 7

W~;d

Stud}

Latter-Day Saints

Sl'f' ll cs - 6 "\(lp 111

Hclhlehem Boprlst Church
Gn:ut Bend Ro ute 1~4 . RaCI'ne, OH .
Pu~tnr Oamcl Mr~~!l Sunday School 4 '0 a m Sunda) Wnr o,h 1p - J(l JU am ,
Wednesday Bible Study · 6 00 p m.

TJw rl!.Ja~

Sunlli ~·

.1-'il ~l m

Aii.ULJ KLLL!I- s -·nd.t) Sd lUill . :
'U um. Wor~ t11p - 9 l Oa Ill Bt hil

Sunll:l) Sl'll'lll' 7 p.m

10 \1J :.t 111

Rutland Chunh uf Chri .. t
Suwl.1y Sc hool - ~ 10 a m Wnr'&gt;htp and
Com111qntnn lO JO .1 rn , Bnh J WnT)'.

Sil~· er

f&gt;Cillll~

](I

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l'a'&gt;hlL- ' Stc&gt;·e , T!lmck.

hirvi ~ YI fhblt&gt; t hun·h
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Sunda) S(h•~ll · lJ :WI il m \\or-.ht p- ") (.1()
p m . Wcdnc,dal H1hlc Swd} 7 ( )If pm
Failh ··clln"'~hip l'rusa d.- ror ( hnsl .
Pa~ t m· Rt:l
1-ranklm DKkc n\ 'ient~c
Fnd:1y. 7 p m

Other Churches

P il~\0! 1 ..

Holiness

Sci"\ IL'C'o 7 p m

Muthmd ( 'hurch of lht- 1\a:tarentSu nll.l) s~hoo l 1..\lO .1 m . Wor,hlfl ·
10 JO a m
(, \0 p m , Wednc-.day
Scr\lte~ 7 p 111

Enlt rpr1sc

lZ ~ 1: Mam St l'nmcl\l}' 'i und.t) Scl].nul
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Rutl:tntl

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. 7 rIll

Amlllmg t, ntct' Community Chun·h

'

Br:~dhun Chunh ui'Christ
Jl.hn h!C r rmu Run yon ~·J'i~li H r,H.i tlur~
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Swdv \\.cdnc\da v 7 pm

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Church

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SlrHll' 7 00 p Ill

•1m

-- - - - - - - - - "

Jon.11ha11 Noble,

, I ll)

HOUSTON (AP) - Local
churches and other other
nonprofit ~roups operate 20
of the b1ggest fireworks
stores in the Houston area
and use the profits to help
pay for new churches and
other projects.
Groups that, man the stores
before New Year's and Fourth
of July can make $10,000 or
more in a I 0-day season.. the
Hduston Chronicle reported.
"That's a lot of bake sales,"
said Donna Fritz, who· manages a store in Angleton for
the Christian Tabernacle. ·
There are no signs at the
stores indicating any connection to a church and workers
don't preach anything other
than safety. •

&amp; lynn

,

7.11111 Church ollhri~l
Pomeroy HUrrtMlll\ Lik I{J ! RI 1-I'J
P.1'1nr l~li!,!CL Wilt,t&gt;Ll Sund.t} o;;c~w.ll ·
~ ~0 .t , l\1
Wor .. htp
]() 'O il m 7 01)

t irs I llapti~l l'hun-h
Pac,tor Mark MNrnv., 6th :.nJ Palmer Sl ,
~1rddkpurl Su nJ&lt;Ly Slhou ll - 9 I ~ .1111
Wurstnp . 10 1~ ~ m . 7 on p m

Religion News in Brief

7

Grat·e Episl·op:d Cl.urch

Churdt of Chn&lt;~l
2 12 W M~1111 St, Mtni siL'r Anth•m v
Mnrns- Sund[ty SdmuJ - 'I W .t m .
\Vorsh 1p- I0 30 ,L m p p.m .. \\!l•Jnc~d:.t y
S c n' LLC~ - 7 p m

Baptist
S.::huoll

Ill'~

Episcopal

l'om.-ro~

PO Bm 467. Dudding l.an.:. MNlll
W V.t, l',&lt;~~tllt" Nl•tl !cn n&lt;~n t Sund.l)
Set' K'l'~ - I0 ()(1 am ~nJ 7 p rn

SunU.t}

I() ,, tn

•

Re'.' Hcrhcrl GrJtC Sunday Sehoul
I I &lt;I Ill (J r Ill '

. () 'll •• Ill ' WHr~lll p

l'up1H!rs l•lains Sl. Paul
]',,~ tut J,mc lh' .tllrc . Sunda) O,chuol - 4
a,m ' W\J r ~htp- 10 a Ill ' ruc ..U.I} Scnlce~
. 7 1(1 p Jli
'
Centntl Cluster ,
·,hhor~ !Syr:.t~·uloe l. Pa~1or Boh Rohm~nn
Sunda) Sd1d&lt;JI • 9 4'i am , Wonlup - II
il Ill, Wcdncsd!l)' Scrvl\.'1.' ~ · 7· '{) p II \

c_.,mmumty Church

Assembly of G.od

of this·church page do s(j

.;__

1!)

lh·n~lock Grove Christian Churd1
Mttll\iC I L. ury Brow n Wunl11p - 11 111
a m Su nday S chllt\1 - I0 30 a m , ll ihlc
Stully- 7 p rn

Sun IOIIil&lt;im &amp; 711lpm ,

S•h•)l•l

Trinit~
St·~: .,nd

Church of Christ
•:mmu.nuel Apostolic l'aht•rmult• lnc.
Lr11 •p Rd ult Nn\ Lnnt Rd ... H.utl.md,

Sun1 l.1y

II .1 m , W!.!dncsduy Sc r\

Congregational

161 M11Jherry Ave Pnmerny, 1 j&lt;.J:~( IW/(,
Pa sror: Rc\ Walter E Heinl, Sal Cun
, ..t ·4"i -'o l 'ip m , M :t~•· i·10 p m Su n

Jrd

Vh:tory Baptist lnd ~pe ndt'nl
N 2nd St Mtddlcppn . Pa~mr h m c~
E Keesee, Wt•r!&gt;&lt;htp · lOam . 7, pm ,
Wcdm:sib y SCr\'ICelo 7 p.lll

_____

Cll.tp'man

rrn

52~

&gt;

Churth llf lofxl

Sa,· red llrart Catholic' Chu rdt

Ccutct. Ml \ S

Pol~ll !r '

OJ Wh tte KJ t)lfSt Rr J61f, P&lt;to,t,JJ I'J

10 Jl) ,1111

Ri,tl'r Valley

nr l'rOIIh('('\

St.&gt;cond Uaptisl Chun·h
WV. Swul,l\' Sd1nul l 0 ,un, Murnmg w~r~h1p 11 ,ml.hcnrng 7 p111
R .ll'l:: n ~~~~od.

VanZ:mdt and Ward Rd. l'.htor J.tml.'~

a

Fireworks sales
help Texas
church groups

eA3

2005

thing in which I am still grow- bufteted him, he did not ultiing in the context of God's mat ely despair. Having lost his
kingdom. When you lose what wealth, -his beloved fami ly.
you thought ·you needed and and his health, as well as being
wanted, for whatever reason, fal se ly accused by his
Pastor
how do you begin agmn?
"friends," he en~ed up being a
Thom
~n
important
question
for
us
shining eKample of God's
Mollohan
as we each must deal with it in grace as God helped h1m start
at least small ways (e.g. Lego all qvcr.
blocks). But it is especially ... "If a man dies. will he li~ e
the wrong place. at the wrong important when we deal With again'' Ali the days of my hard
time. Someone accidentally th1s issue on grand scale. The service I will wait .for. my
steps on it, for example: Ouch! death of a loved one, the loss renewal to come. You (God)
Sometimes it is innocently of a job, or the breaking of ·will call and I will answer You .
picked up and put away by a. one's health, can all leave_us You will long for the creature
well-meaning parent: Oops! asking the question of how to Your hands have made. Surely
And sometimes a dog, waoti- start over.
then Ym1 will count my steps
ng attention, will cqme and lje
Of course, this question has but not keep, track of my sm."
down on it: Eww!
inconceivable implications for (Job 14: 14- 16).
The greatest heartaches · tsunami survivors, particularCan ymi start again when all
always come, however, when lythose who lost not only their of life as you've known it is ·
an existing work contains a entire families but their homes lost or destroyed'7 Can you yet
piece necessary for the build- 'and livelihoods as well.
live again when tragedy and
ing of another 'artis.t/inventor's
As was said last week, there hurt come as robbers to take
proJect. The currently existing are no easy answers. But if you away your joy? Yes. There is
work is dismantled, without are facing heart-breaking loss One Who will see to it that
regard for anyone else's feel- even now in your own hfe, renewal will come. And when
ings but also without any par- there is life still yet to be lived. God p1cks up the blocks of our "
ticular mal-intent: it just hap- Granted, it won't likely be the broken li ves, He can put them
pens to have a piece the·other same as before,' but there is back together in ways ' we
still life ... and hope for you if never imagi ned.
child v,ants.
However these tragedies you ' ll. trust that God can and
(Thom Mollohan has
happen , the destruction of will walk with you through the ministered irr Southern
treasured creations always dark tunnels of despair as you Ohio the past nirre 'and a
translates as angf!.r and grief hold His hand in faith.
half years and, is tire pastor
on the part ·of their creators
Consider the magnitude of of Pathway ' Community
(and then also for the parents Job's loss and know mdeed Church. He and Iris wife are
trying to negot1ate Wisdom that you have a kmdred spirit the pare11ts of three chil'and cooperation among the in him. Yet; in spite of all his dre11 with another orr the
young inventors),
sorrow and pain, he would not way! He may be reached by
, It also means somethmg turn -his back on God. In spite email at pastorthom@pathimportant for me and is some- of the discouragement that waygallipo/is.com).

CAIRO, Egypt (AP)
town of Damshwai Hashim,
Authorities said I 0 Coptic claims about a new church
Christians, detained during fomented Muslim-Christian
violent demonstrations in clashes in which police misCairo, have been released takenly killed one. Muslim,
because of their young ages. and 23 Muslims and
Thousands of Copts waged Christians were arrested.
The Interior Ministry said
protests at their cathedral last
month over a supposed kid- the violence resulted from
napping of a priest's wife to rumors that two Coptic brothforce her to con vert to Islam. ers had turned their house
Church offici·als say Wafaa into a church and urged othConstantine ,considered con- ers to pray there. Some 200
verting · after the church Muslims marched on the
refused to let her divorce her house, hurling stones.
husband, a Coptic priest she
Authorities had rejected
had accused of abuse. False Copts' demand to build a
rumors spread that she had local church so they wouldn't
been kidnapped by Muslims need to travel to worship in
and forced to abandon ~nother village.
Christianity.
Copts, around lO percent of
The freed Copts were the 70 million Egyptians,
among 34 protesters detained form the largest Christian
for illegal noting, resisting and minority remaining in the
attacking ·security officials and Mideast. They generally live
damaging property. Thirteen in peace but complain of job
others were released earlier.
discrimination and restricIn the s_outhern Egyptian tions on building churches.

The Dall

~~

men, that th er. mar
. see .rour
The care you desen•e, close 10 home- good w~rks a11d glqrify vour
36~9 Rocksprings Rd.
Father Ill hem'ell. "
'

Pomeroy, OH 4.5769
740·992-6606

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

!JT'llllds Florist

Let .1our light so .&lt;hi11e before

Mc1gs Counlv ';; Olde!i&gt;t RNi!i&gt;l
~

352 East Mam
Pomeroy, Oh
·~tt

Mauh ew 5: 16

~and \IC 'Jt

rt.oug.hfl with

~!Jeel • l

eare"

740-992-2644 740-99H298

MY i!race is
for thee: for mY
'streni!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

God so lm•ed the world
he !/Ol'e his or1ly

We Fill Doctors'
lbef?olrten son ...
Prescriptions
Jolm3:16
992·2955
Pomeroy

Blessed are the pure ''So 1strive alway.s to keep
in heart; for they my consc1ence clear before
God and man .''
shall see God.
Acts24:16
Matthew

ut

~

'W

l!lnoafftr'l
:fire &amp;; l!laftt!'

Office Service &amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH

...

::~.,·

992-6376

•

�•

•

•

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel

The Daily .Sentinel

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

{740) 992-2156 • FAX {740) 992-2157
www.mydallysentlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

..

•

•

.

.
Charlene Hoeflich ,
General Manager-News Editor

Congress shall make no law respecting an
.establishment of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the press; .or the right of the
people peacea~ly to assemble; and to petition
the Government for a redress ofgrievances.
·
.
'

-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

VIEW

READER'S
•

Bush

•

Social Security? ·
Dear Editor:
President Bush is endangering my retirement and the retirements of !llillions of Americans by taking the first step in his
plan to dismantle Social Security.
Recently. White House sources revealed their plan to cut ·
promised benefits to retirees by nearly a third. And these cuts
are guaranteed -- whether ..you opt in to the Bush plan or not.
· For those entering the workforce today. that means more
than a 25 percent cut in the retirement benefits they're counting on; for their children,'it guaranteeS/a 46 percent cut.
We can't stand by and let George W. Bush and the
Republicans cut our promised guaranteed retirement benefits
-- especially when so many of us are counting on Social
Security to help us lead a happy, healthy life when we retire.
This will be terrible for the uneducated in this country leav·
ing' a horrible burden on the' country.
·· ·
Sincerely, ·
Blis De Vault
Albany

. Judging from the spectacular success of the end-ofthe-world series of novels,
': Left Behind" (70 million·
copies already sold), mucl:l
of the world js waiting for
George
the world to end. A recent
Plagenz .
poll shows that 17 percent of
Americans think the end will
come ·in their lifetime.
It"s been a bumpy ride for
"
'
millions upon millions o( bolically or metaphorically,
Other authors put an even
years. Now are we all going
to have to 1 get off? What diff~rent spin on the end-ofcomes next? · Well, it the-wor!O stories.
Hunter,
depends. According to a . Take Nicole
author
of
the
new
novel.
cover story in Newsweek
magazine (May 24, 2004 ), "Waiting for the World to
"The end won't ~e pretty for End" (iUniverse, Inc., 2004).
those who are left behind." She is unlike the evangeliBut those who "listen .up in cals who write of the end of
· time" will be taken•to heav- the world. They are speaking
en in something known · as of . global destructivn . in
the Rapture -- from the Lf1ti n which the entire world will
word meaning to seize or be destroyed with the excepcarry off -- when )esus tion of "the believers."
removes the faithful from Hunter's end of the world is
written in a more personal
the Earth. .
·
All this is taken from the vein that many can identify
Bible -- primarily the book with.
Her main character: Tom
of R~elation and the letters
Olsen,
is popular and sucof 'St. Paul to the . early
cessful (he is head of the
Christian church.
Other Bible believers,criti- English Department and
cize the. likes of Tim LaHaye . basketball coach at an
and Jerry Jenkins; authors of Indiana high school) but he
the "Left Behind" series, for is troubled by an unending
"'over-literalizing"
Bible loneliness because of a devprophecies which are, they astating secret he is hiding.
He and his · riancee,
say, meant to be taken sym-

cusPs 213-960)
Ohio Valley Publishing ~-

Our main concern in all stories is to be
accurate. If you know of an error in a
story. call the newsroom at (740) 992·
2156.

Published every afternoon , Mondav
through Friday, 1f1 Court Street 1
Pomeroy. Ohio. Second-olass postage
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Associated Press and the

Our 111111n number Ia..

Ohio Newspaper Association.
~tmeater:

(740) 992·2156.
Department extensions are:

Send address corrections
to The Daily Sentinel, 111 Court Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

News

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tio&lt;1 by mail petii*llld in -

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MallSubecrlptlon
carrior
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........ Metge County

13Weeks .............'30.15
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•

Alexandra, agreed on an makes people cry and mourn
abortion during their gradu- because he takes away their
most important possession,-ate school years.
Olsen called their wedding life. Sometimes he takes it
off.
leavil)g Alexandra from 'the . people who are
behind -- and leaving him most deserv ing of life. But
with ,the ,guilt weighing , there is no getting around
him. In a million years we
heavy on his shoulders :
"For every serious choice will still feel his spear of
in life that we regret, we feel death.
we have done damage too · "But then there is the God
great to repair," said Hunter of Hope. He dwelis in those
in an interview.. "so all we who rer1ember -- send cards,
can· do is wait for it all to be bring !lowers, express sympathies.. .The 'God of Hope
over. n
makes
ihis world a better
In the end, an accidt;.nt-th~
no one could have foresee(! place . Although ,there is
always thl· emptiness which
changes Olsen's life.
While this is Hunter's first the God of Lost Hope leaves
novel, she has been writing behind,· the God of Hope·
does a good job of filling
sin,ce she was 12.
.
At nge 1), she wrote "The that emptiness ... " ·
Let learned theologians
Story_of Two Gods" after the
death of uyoung friend. Her wring their hands over the
story is in the form of a letter idea of two Gods. The fact .
remains their theologies
to the boy's father.
Th'e question that torment- have too often proved comed her was~ "How could a fortless. ·
Dean Willard Sperry of
loving, all-power(ul God let
such ~ thing happen? Maybe Harvard Divinity · School
there isn't a God after all ." once said, "If I had to make
Gradually, however, the a choice between the
clouds of bitterness and omnipotence of God and the.
bewilderment began to lift goodness of God. I would
and a ray of hope shone . take the goodness and let.the
through. She took up pen omnipotence go."
(George Plo!(en z is- an
and began to write.
"I believe in two Gods," ordained mi11ister and vetershe wrote the boy's father. an newsman hosed . in
"The God of Lost Hope Colwnhus. Ohio.)

I

•

www.mydailysentinel.com

·Johnnie Hoschar

SOUTHSIDE - 1 Johnnie Hoschar, 93, Southside, W.Va.
died Wednesday, Jan . .5, 2005, at his home .
Bv NICK WADHAMS
Funeral services will be held at I p.m. Saturday, Jan. 8, 2005
ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITER
at th~ Wilcoxen Funeral Home. Friends may call from 7 to 9 - - - - - - - - - p.m. Friday at tl1e funeral home. Burial will be in the Creston · BAGHDAD, Iraq - A
Cemetery, Leon, W.Va.
roadside bomb killeg seven
,. · U.S. soldiers in notthwe st
Baghdad and two Marines
. were killed in western Iraq on
Thursday, the deadliest day
MIDDLEPORT -Zander Allen Burgess of Midd-leport for American forces since a
passeo away ·on Jan. 6, · 2005 at Cabell Huntington 'Hospital suicide attack on a U.S . base
unexpectedly. He was born on Sept. 15, 2004 in Morgantown, last month.
W.Va. to Tabitha Lynn Burgess Browning.
The bombing came as Iraq
He is Survived by his mother, Tabitha Lylln Browning of extended a state of emerMiddleport; brothers, Steven and Br&amp;ndon McKinney of gency by 30 days to battle
Middleport; maternal grandparents, Tom and Debrah Darst of· militants whose attacks have
Middleport; uncles, Tom Darst of Pt. Marion, Pa ., Duane surged ahead of this month 's
(Wendy) Darst of Masontown, Ohio, an auill, Mary (Terry) elections. The prim~·minister
Daughtery of' Pennsylvania; great "aunts and uncles, Carol warned the number of
(Mick) Schartager of Middleport; cousins, . Kay Ia, · assaults would only rise. as
Mackenzie, Kaden Darst imd'Dillio11 Shipley; and a beloved voting day draws closer.
friend, Scott Porter, Mason W.Va.
Just three weeks ~efore the
Service will be Saturday, Jan . 8, 2005 at I pm at the Fisher Jan. 30 elections, the comFuneral Home in Pomeroy. Burial will follow at the Meigs mander of U.S. gro.und forces
M~mory Gardens in Pomeroy. Visitation will be held one hour
in Iraq acknowledged that
prior to the service at the funeral home.
security is poor in four of 18
Online condolences may, be sent to www.fisherfuneral- Iraqi provinces. But Lt. Gen.
homes. com.
Thomas Metz told a briefing
in the capital that delaying
the vote would only increase
the danger.

Local Briefs

VICTIMS ...

'

. The Daily

S~T]tinel• Page As

•

"I can;t guarantee that
The two other U.S. Mar~ne s
· every person in Iraq that killed, in action Thursday
·wants to vote, goes tb a were both members of the Ist
polling booth and can do that ·Marine Expeditionary Force
safely," Metz said. "We ' re, and lost their lives in Anbar
going to do everything. possi- . ~ province, which is home to
bie to create that condition the volatile city of-Fallujah.
for them, but we are fighting · The previ'ous four days had
an enemy who cares less who seen a string of assassinahe kills, when he kill~ and tions , suicide car bombings
how he kills. A delay in the and other assaults that killed
elections just gives the thugs 90 people.
and terrorist s more time to
On Tuesday, five American
continue their intimidation, . troops were killed, including
their cruelty, their brutal niur- three Task Force Baghdad solders of innocent peopfe ."
diers who -died ill a roadside
The soldiers with Task bombing,.one who was slain in
· Force Baghdad were on patrol Anbar, and anoiher who died
Thursday evening when their in Balad, north of Baghdad.
Bradley fighting vehicle hit
But Thursday ~ toll was the
the explosive, the military highest for the u.S. military
. said in a statement. Everyone in Iraq since a suicide bombinside the Bradley was killeq. ing at a mess tent in Mosul on
No other details were Dec. 21 liil"led 22 people,
immediately available about including 14 U.S. soldiers and
the latest attack. But Iraq 's three American contractors.
insurgents have frequently
The latest deaths brought
targeted American troops the number of U.S. troops
wiih crude explosives plarited killed since. the beginning of
in roads and detonated the Iraq war in March 2003 to
. remotely as patrols pass. ·
1,350, . according to an

Associated Pre" . count. At
least I.Ofi3 died as a result of
hostile action.
The military said the names
of the troops who died
Thursday were being withheld
until their families are ~otified.
·A s militants continued with
the attac ks, Iraqi authorities
made some gri sly discoveries. Police in the souihern
· city of Basra found two
charred and beheaded bodies
in. a hou se used by election
offi cials.
Pol ice
also
announced . ~hey found the
. bodie s of 18 you ng Shiites
killed last month while seeking work at a U.S. base.
The stale of ·emergency,
originally announced two
_months ago. was extended for
30 days throughout the country except for the northern
Kurdish -run 'areas. a govern· ment statement said : The
decree inc ludes a nighttime
curfew and gives th~ government additional power to
make arres t~ and la~ncl) mili:
.tary &lt;1r police operations.
•.

Sen. Padgett named
to education committee

TH£TSUNAMI

•

Roadside bomb.kills seven U.s~ soldiers
in Baghdad, two Marines die in Anbar

. Zander Allen Burgess

•

'Dandy'

Pom~roy

As,ked about how she employee. Debbie Gilmore,
was handling the impend- takirig money from a cusing flood, she laughed and tomer. commented that
· from Page A1
from PageA1
said , ,"We had a wonderful "things "could be worse .'' She
Christmas here and I'm has a son in Iraq .
COLUMBUS - State Sen. Joy Padgett (R-Coshocton),
Ohio 20th Senate District. has been appointed to the Senate piled flood cleaning kits Ohio. Some of the merchants just trying to keep everyDrenner had · considerable.
. Education Committee for the !26th General Assembly. ·
thing
in
perspective,
and
loss
in the September tlood
across the count~.
reflected on their losses in
·
Padg.ett, who worked as an educator for more than 20 years,
and said she now ~now s to.
Byer guessed there would September and the lessons not get too upset. "
Bobbi Karr at Hartwell start moving merchandise
has distinguished herself on issues Jike school funding, char- be a need for volunteers and !hey learned, and said they
ttr school~. proficiency testing and other important matters cleaning .crews by Sunday weren 't taking any chances House, at the corner of Main right away when high water
that affect education in Ohio.
~
and Court, was taRing every:- i~&gt; predicted .
night 'into Monday. Anyone this time around.
"This is a great r~sponsibility that I am both honored and wishing to volunteer their
For those at Swisher-Lohse
For a coupk of new busi- . thing in stride as she and her
e;tger to accept," said Padgett after being appointed bJI Senate services may· phone the EM A ness owners, the September employees systematically Drugs,· it seemed ·aillmst "old
Pre~ident Bill Harris (R-Ash land).
flood was a wake-up call. packed up and moved to the · hat .'' The clerks. waited on
·
office at 992-4541.
"There are a number of issues f cing education in Ohio that
Byer hopes there will be Jane H~rris, who operates second tloor. " How • do I .customers. bandied pre scripwe will need to address as a team and I am confident that my no need for the National Dan' s and moved to Pomeroy feel?" she said in response to lions with the pharmacists
experiences both as a·teacher in the classroom and as a legisc Guard but added if there is, "1 from Middleport just l.ast the question . "Well. it's no! as who were busier than usual
as people prepared for the
lfttor in the Statehouse will serve nie as I work to build on the will be very specific about summer, was wasting no time bad as a tsunami."
Karr is one of several mer- drug store to be closed a few
progress created on · the Senate Education Committee in , what we need."
Thursday afternoon ·getting
chants who are experienced days , and when they had
recent years... • He added that the. biggest everything out of her store.
Padgett also will serve as a member of the finance and problem his agency faces in a · " We're taking everything in . coping with tloods and time, emptied shelves into
financial institutions comfJiittee that will work to craft a bal- flood are people who attempt upstairs," she said, "be.cause just seemed to be taking it baskets to be ' moved to the
· second floor. The store had
anced state budget plan for the new fiscal year set to begin in to drive through high water I ' m not going through what all iri stride.
Those newer to the tlood abOut four feet of water I@
in
September.
July. In addition, she has been appointed vice chai,rman of the and then become stranded. So I did
scene
say they learned a lot Sep,tember and employees
Employees
and
vol
untt!ers
remember,
"Don't
drown,
agriculture committee and will serve as a member of tpe high- .
from the first time around. are preparing for an additionload~d baskets and carried
turn around."
·
·
ways and·transportation committee.
sJacks of trousers to a place . They now know it's no easy a! foot or so this time around.
On · Sept. 20 , the Ohio
near the door to the s~cond chore to move merchanunable to interview Schuler his Constitutional rights, floor while others ran up dise, that it takes longer River crested at 52 feet, the
·as they waited for him to such as his right to have a and down moving the mer- than you -think; and that it highest since March · 13,
is better not to take a "wait 1964, when it crested at
copy . of the charge against chandi~e upstairs.
recover.
'
from Page A1
52.8 feet.
"We had four feet of and see" attttude.
"I don't think his wound is . him, and his right to have it
"I'm laughing a lot and
If the river reaches the prewater
in
"here
last
as serious as they thought it read in court.
"You need not make any September and if the pre- crying a little," said Eloise dieted 54.6 feet level this
. Perry said Sch4ler con- was," Perry said .
Schuler was brought the statement h~re today, and . dictions are right this time Drenner of Weaving Stitches, time around, it will be the
fessed to shooting Cardwell,
and said Cardwell had sho! short distance from the anything you say can be held we'll have 5 112 feet in here as she stood on a ladder mov- highest since April 16, 1948,
ing merchandise to a loft. An when it crested at 56.5 feet.
this· weekend," she added.
Gallia County Jail to the against you," Evans said.
him in the stomach.
Schuler waived his right to
Schuler was armigned in . municipal ·courtroom . across
Gallipolis Municipal Coun, Second Street by van have the charges read in
high water, the period lights
chants," he added.
and·is being held in the Gallia . Thursday so thau.J:!e would court, and signed a paper
''This is an extremely difti· 11long the p~rking lot promacknowledging the charge
County Jail on a b!Jnd of $1 not have to wall~.
cult
time for all of us and we .· enade have been removed .
While sh~ waited for him against him. He faces a
million. His preliminary
from
Page
A1
certainly will not hiqderyour The heads on parking
hearing was set for II a.m. on to arrive, Judge Margaret charge of first; degree mursightseeing. However, . we meters were also taken off
Evans asked Perry if Schuler . der, which carries a penalty
Jan. II.
must insist that you park out· · Thursday.
Though the motive for the would be able to walk up the of 15 years to life in prison, said Musser.
Several -meetings~-in
"Workers will oe allowed side the business district and
.shooting still is not ·clear, steps to \he second-floor ~and a maximum fine of
to enter the business district walk into the downtown Pomeroy have been "canceled
$15,000 .
Perry said Schuler and his' .courtroom, which he did. ·
including Sunday services at
Perry said it will be up to and work in their own busi- area."
Once he eniered the courtgirlfriend were tenants in a
In preparation for the Trinity Church.
rental prop"erty owned by room, Schuler walked gin- members of a grand jury to nesse·s or help other mergerly and moaned repeatedly. decide exactly what charge
·cardwell near Vinton.
· Perry said Cardwell was He met briefly-in &amp; side meet- Schuler ultimately will face.
September when the water
killed with a .32-caliber auto- . ing room with defense attor- He said it is possible that a
reached a record high of ·
matic weapon, and that ney Jeff Finley before · grand jury could decide to
50.1 feet.
.
.Cardwell had returned fire a'pproaching the bench \n increase the charge to agg![avatfrom
PageA1
As for the phone calls
front of Evans.
· · ed murder, which carries the
with a ..38-caliber handgun .
'
Canterbury
doesn't mind and
"Are you going to be OK possibility of the death penalty.
Schuler has entry and exit
&amp; MEDICAL EQUIPMENT
When aske,d by Evans if he said. "they 're probably hav- insists that no one at the facilwounds to hi s stomach that here'" Evans asked.
had any questions, Schuler ing a hard time navigating in ity lets the phone ring with"No," Schuler said softly.
have been closed with 36
SALES/RENTALS
·
out ans\\:ering .
"Are you able to under- replied quietly, "no, ma'am." this water."
staples. The bullet fired by
SERVICE
"We feel for those people
When ' the water levels
Finley told Schuler he
Cardwell also had nicked stand your attorney?" the
would visit • him · in jail .rise to 49.4 feet at Racine getting flooded," she said.
judge asked.
his bowel.
before his preliminary hear- boats can no longer lock "There's been a few that have
''Yes," -he said"'
•• During the days ·following
. through as was the case 10 gotten to·me."
Evans informed Schuler of . i~g next week .
the shooting. authorities were

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Schuler

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Mayor

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Correction Polley

i

· IRAQ

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR

The D~ly ' Sentinel

'

•

,Qbituaries·

l

CIILVMSVS DI5PAlCM6'

- OVER TO THE
U.N. AND
REDEPLOY THE
TRC()PS To WELP

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I

20~5 ,

RJST·WAR

Today is Friday, Jan. 7, the seventh day of 2005. There are
358 days left in the year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On Jan. (, 1789, the first U.S. presidential election was
hdd. Americans voted for electors who, a month later, c)lose
George Washington to be the nation's first president.
On this date: In 1610. the astronomer Galileo Galilei sighted four of Jupiter's moons.
In 1800, the 13th president of the United States, Millard
Fillmore, was born in Summerhill, N.Y.
In 1927 i commercial transatlantic telephone service was
·inaugurated between New York and London . .
In 1942, the World War II siege of Bataan began.
Five years ago: U.S. Representative Dan Burton, R-Ind.,
subpoenaed Elian Gonzalez to testify before Congress in .a bid
to keep Elian in the United States for at least another month
while courts decided whether the 6-year-old should be
returned to Cuba. (Elian never actually testified.)
One year ago: President Bush proposed legal status - at
least temporarily - for millions of illegal immigrants working in the U.S. Swedish actress · Ingrid Thulin died in
Stockholm at age 77.

· Letters to the editor are welcome. They should
be less than 300 words. All letters ·are subject to
: editing and must be signed and inClude address
: and telephone number. No unsigned letters wilt
. : be published. 'Letters shoulfl be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities . .

Friday~~anuary 7, 2005

~AHlffi.
(91iiE

TURN

TODAY IN HISTORY

1

Friday, January 7,

l

Choices and faith

'

Reader Serv1ces

PageA4

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The coming battle in ·the Democratic party·.
'

It has been clear for quite a
while that the race for the
Republican · presidential
nomination in 2008 will take
the form of a battle ..royal
between the so-called neoconservatives and those who
want to clip.their wings as a
major • influence in the
Republican Party. But what
"is only now becoming ap)larent is that a fight. at least as
dramatic looms for the soul
of the Democratic Party. ·
What's more, without an
incumbent president to keep
a lid on party disputes until
ihe 2008 campaign actually
gets under way, the
Democratic battle ·is already
breaking out.
At the Democratic convention in Boston last summer, it was clear that the
Kerry forces consid,ered
President Bush's high reputation as · a war leader the
· chief problem they had to
overcome. As a' result, they
their
concentrated . all
resources on highlighting
Kerry's performance, and the
medals he won for it, during
four months as a swift boat
commander in Vietnam.
Kerry hims•lf, opening hi s
acceptance speech, ·declared
that he was "reporting for
duty" •• 3Qd resolutely saluted the delegates. Finally, to

•

than a thirst for cheap oil and ppposed at all costs. The
to enrich Dick Cheney's .for- "bards" formed Americans
colleagues
at for Democratic Action, and
• mer
Halliburton . . For people in Harry Truman's re-ele'ctioil
that mood, the solution in in 1948 (defeating in the
Iraq, and to the "war on ter- process the third-party can-·
William
ror" in geneml, is to pull out didacy of Wallace) sealed its ·
Rusher
of it. To the extent that ter- dominance
of
the
rorists are a genuine prob- DemocraJic Party.
. lem, they can be dealt with
Beinart calls for a similar
by heightened security mea- mobilization of D¢mocratic
add still more military flavor sures and the American legal "hards" (e.g .. Sen. Joseph
to the whole affair, the Kerty system.
Lieberman) against today'.s
strategists decorated the · Enter Peter Beinart, editor · terrorist threat, and those
convention stage With so of that influential liberal pub- Democrats who refuse to
many retired generals and lication The New Republic. recognize it as the central
admirals that it began to In its Dec. 13 issue, Beinart problem
now
facing
resemble a meeting of the sharply warns that such an America.
.
German General Staff.
attitude to the war on terror- . The trouble is that, in the
The irony, however (and it ism simply will . not do. He modern Democratic Party, .
was not lost on the reporters cons'iders. the West's con- the "softs" are a good deal
wlio covered the conven - frontation with fanatical , fun- stronger than their predecestion); was that the delegates damentalist Islam the' modem sors were half a century ago.
who nominated Kerry were 'equivalent of the Cold War They certainly dominated
bitterly opposed to the war '· \lftWeen the Free.Worlc\. and the Democratic convention
in Iraq and not much less Communism. · •
iri Boston, and they will
opposed to Bush's whole
Beinart rightly recalls that, dominate the 2008 convenconcept of a "war on terror- in the opening days of the tion as well unless they are
ism." The great majority of Cold War in the late 1940s, beaten in the· primaries that
them were, in fact (like the Democratic Party was precede it.
· Kerry himse!O; members of split between "softs" like
All of which promises to
the Vietnam general ion . Henry Wallace (ironically, proviile quite a. spectacle,
They had drunk deep of its the editor of The. New • and quite a problem for
hostility to America's geopo- Republic at the time) and would-be presideniial nomilitical purposes, and they "bards" like Sen. Hubert nees like Hillary Clinton.
have not abandoned that Humphrey and professor
(William Rusher · is a
'hostility, To them, the Bush and U.S. hi storian Arthur Distinguished Fellow of the
administration's whole pre- Schlesinger Jr. over whethef Claremont bwitme for the
occupation with the Middle world Communism could be Swdy of State"smarrsllip and
East is based on little more · accommodated or had to be Political Pl1ilosop/1y.)
,.

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Locks

OXYGEN

Racine
from Page A1
Racine postal carriers will
be , working out of the
Pomeroy office as they did
during the ,September tlood.
The carriers will atteiJipt to
(leliver in the Racine area "as
best they cart" said Brown. •
Anyone with a post office
box in .Racine will not be able
to retrieve their mail. Still,
Brown maintains that she
. . will hel p Racine customers in
any way that she can and will
take phone calls .at the
Pomeroy post office to
address special needs.
Brown added that medications, _express and .'first-class

--·-

mail wi"ll be giving high pri.orlty. ·
She estimates that it will
be Monday before the
cleanup can begin at the
'Racine. {'ost Office.
"The . mail · will go
through," said Brown who
al so thanked Racine residents
for their patience.
"We never expected this to
happen so soon," added
Brown.
As for moving to higher
ground that will take place
today for the post office and
other busi nesses in Racine.
"We had practice three
months ago," said Home
National Bank President Bill
Nease .· " We're prepared ...
it's unfortunate that this has

become a common event."
out," said secretary Jan
During the September Cardone. "We had a little more
flooding J.D. Drilling had six warning this time. Last time
inche s of water · in their we were moving in water."
building and sustained
"Last time people came
$45,000
and . off the street and pelped us,''
between
$50,000 worth of damage 'to 'said office manager Cathy
Carleton . "I've been here 33
the business.
"We 're moving everything • years and September was the
If you at so-• you kaow lllvt tlktl .

\

ulllolll EU..ID IHrw

ollalrt ,,.., legal rftllts.

ELLEM LAw OFFICE
SOOGffHi &gt;i'RET , ME'RSiliiG. WV Mt01 U«N'iD ltli Wt' C»!

first1ime it llooded and now
this will be the second in
four month s."

Home
Portable
Free Back Up Oxygen
Portables Delivered when
you want them
7 days a week 24 hrs. service
Complete line of respiratory
products
Nebulizers, C-pap, Ventilators
and much more.

�\

'

•
,•
¢

. P~geA6

'

·By THE ·.·BEND·

The Daily Sentinel

INSIPE

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Fans sh1.1nnlng Kobe's jersey, Page 82
Singh picks up w~ere he left off, Page B2
Herd stumbles to li1G, Page 86

Friday, January 7, 2005

Bl

·The Daily Sentinel

·POMEROY PREPARES FOR FLOOD
.

0

Eloise Drenner moves
baskets and things to
the loft over the front
door of her store,
Weaving Stitches. In the
. September flood she
lost some merchandise.
This time around she is
starting early to move up
and out before-oLd man
•
river comes
to her door.

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Prep Standings

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BOYS BASKETBALL

Merchandise in Dan's on
. Main Street was being
. moved to the se,cond
flpor, safely away 'tram
flood water. Here S,arah
' Carleton, daughter of
owner; Jane Harris ,
as~ists with the moving.

ABBY: I am a 10year-old girl who has been
playing after schopl on a Web
site for pet lovers. I like to
talk to kids older than me 14- or- 15-year-olds. A lot of
the boys' I've talked to have
asked for my picture, so I
went to Google and found ·a
picture of a pretty blond girl
around 15 ·years old. I have
been sending this picture to ·
all the people who have
asked me for one.
My mom looked into my
e-mail and saw what I had
done. Now she won ' t· allow
' "'me on that site or to send pictures, either my own . or' a
stranger's, to anyone.
Was she right to look at my
· e-mail? Is it really dangerous to
do what I did? - GROUND. ED IN ORINDA, CALIF
DEAR GROUNDED: Yes,
and yes! When someone asks
for ' your picture, that person
is interested in more than just
talking about pets. Although
you are intelligent, at age I 0
you are not experienced
enough to be in a relationship
with boys who are 14 and 15.
And on some level, I think

Monday, Jan. 10
RUTLAND
-Rutland
Township Trustees, January
meeting, 5 p.m., Rutland Fire
·Station.
POMEROY - The Meigs
Coun\)' Republican Party will
meet at 7:30p.m. at the Meigs
County Courthouse.
POMEROY L- The Meigs
County Library organizational board meeting will be held
at 3 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Library.
POMEROY - The Meigs
County Board of Elections
will hold a regular monthly .
board meeting at 8:30p.m. ,at
the office, 117 E. Memorial
Drive.
Tuesday, Jan. II
, POMEROY - Meigs Soil
and Water Conservation
District will meet 11:30 p,m.
at the Meigs SWCD Office,
33101 Hiland Road.
VVednesday,Jan. 12
· POMEROY - Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
in special session, I p.m.
Wednesday at the township
, building on Rocksprings road.

Walle'-'
pRiff'!S·

3-0
3-0'
1-2
1-2
1·2
0-3

TVC Hocking
Federal Hocking
9-1
Eastern
8-1
Tri mble
6-3
Miller
3-5
Southern
2-7
Waterford
2-7

3-0 .
2-1
2-1
1-2
1·2
0-3

BASKETBALL

. TVCOhlo

Nelsonv.ille-York
Belpre
Vinton Co
Alexander
Meigs
Wellston

'

Between waiting on customers and deliv~ring
prescriptions to the pharmacists, Bobbi
Friday, January 7
Morning
(7 a.m.-Noon).
Parker.. front and Jeanette Radford empty
Temperatures will rise to
·shelves into baskets at Swisher-Lohse Drugs,
a step in preparing the store for a~ anticipat- '38 with today's low of 26
oc~urri~g around 7:00am .
ed five or so feet of river water.
Sktes wtll range from mostly
Charlene Hoenlch/photos
sunny to mostly cloudy with
5 MPH winds from the southturning from the southeast as
the morning progresses.

. Aftemooll (1-6 p.m.)

evening progresses.

Overnight (1-6 a.m.)
It will be a cloudy
overnight. Light . rain !s
expected. The ramfall 1s
expected to end around
6:00ani with total accumulations for this event near 0.96
inches . Temperatur!ls will
hover at 43 with today's
high ·of 44 occurring around.
6:00am. Wmds wtll be_ 5
MPH from the east turnmg '
from the southwest as the
overnight progresses.

Cloudy afternoon. Light
rain
is expected. The rain is
.. and the attendant screamed at · planned this wedding before
to start near
predicted
me that I could use it only if I the groom's divor~e was
left a tip. Another time, I saw final. It still isn't final , but the 3:00pm. Anticipate rain accumulations of 0.23 inche~ for
a girl eat one of the mints, · couple has decided to go this afternoon. , Temperatures
Saturday, Januar::~: 8
and the woman demanded ahead with the affair. minus will hold steady around 41.
Morni11g (7 a.m.-Noo'iNo. /
money for it.
the ceremony.
.
Cloudy morning. ner&amp;ris
Dear
Winds will be 5 MPH from
a
slight chance we could see·
Was
this
appropriate·?
I
'
My
.
boyfriend
is
'in
the
the
southeast.
Abby
rain. Temperatures will
·
s
ome
Eve11ing
(7
p.m.-Midnight)
was under the impression "bridal party" and has to rent
remain
around 48, Winds
It will ·be a wet and
that, because I pay a cover a tuxedo. I . have already
charge to get into the club, 1 - spent a lot of money on a cloudy evening .. You will will be 5 to I0 MPH from
·
see ·moderate rain. Expect the west.
·
!was not obligated to ·put beautiful-dress. ·
Afternoon (1-6 p.m.)
accumulations of 0.54 inchyou are already aware of it, or / 'money in the tip jar - even if
Mustwe also buy· this coo- es. Temperatures will linger
Temperatures will stay
you woul'cl not have. sent out I used the cologne. Besides. pie a wedding gift? They are · at 40. Winds will be 5 near 44. Skies will .be sunny
pictures of a pretty blond doesn't the club pay for the not actually being married at MPH from the southeast with 5 to I 0 MPH winds
this time. My thought is to turning from the ea&amp;t as' the from the west.
teenage girl who is older. You cologne and candy? are lucky to have a mother WOULD LIKE TO KNOW
hoi~ off until they actually tie
DEAR WOULD: The club the knot. What do you think?
who is vigilann and protective
of your safety. She may have may pay minimum wage w -DOESN'T WANT TO BE
helped you dodge a bullet.
the attendant, but the supplies CHEAP IN NYC
she' brings - the makeup,
DEAR DOESN'T: What
DEAR
ABBY:
After
'
J
reading the respon ses to · perfume, gum, candy,. etc., you have described is not a
NSC- 36.41
"All Tipped Out's" letter, l . are paid for by the.attendant. wedding - it's a costume ACI- 33.83
Oak Hill Ananclal - 38.30
.was reminded of a question They are · her "concession," party. Give them a token gift, AEP- 33.50
OVB33.63
that ·! have. ·
and her chance to make extra. and if the marriage ever hap- Akzo -42.13
BBT- 42.00
1 frequent a cer(ai~ night- money. The cover charge yqu pens, send them something Ashland .lnc.- 55.86
1
Peoples :.... 26.66
AT&amp;T-~.49
club, and in the ladies' rooin pay to get Cni:o the club does when it's official.
Pepsico - 52.00
Dear Abby is wriJ!en by BU -10.85
there is an arniy of toiletries not include those "extras," so
Premier - 11.96
and breatl) mints. There is if you use them, you should Abigail Van Buren, also Bob Evans - 25.28
'
Rockwell46.58
BorgWarner
51.60
also a tip jar· and an attendant. give the person who provides known as Jeanne Phillips, and
Rocky Boots- 28.47
I visit the club almost every them a gratuity.
.
was founded by her mother, Champion - 3.65 ·
RD Shell- 55.93
week, and sometimes l leave
DEAR
ABBY:
My Pauline PhiUips. Write Dear Charming Shops - 8.30
SBC- 25.15
City Holding - 34.70
a tip and sometimes I don' t. . boyfriend and I have been Abby aJ www.DearAbby.com
Col- 37.69
Sears - 49.90
One night . ·I was merely invited to a. wedding .- sort " or P.O. Box 69440, LOs DG -20.46
USB- 30.99
looking at a bottle of cologne of. The bride and . groom Angeles, CA 90069.
DuPont- 47.41
Wai·Mart - 54.05
Federal Mogul - .37
Wendy's- 38.34
Worthington - 19. 94
Gannett - 81.20
General Electric - 36..22
Dally stock reports are the
GKNLY4.90
,.
''·.
Harley Davidson - 60.12 4 . p.m. closing quotes of
JPM -38.71
. the previous day's transac·
Tentative. appropriations will Harrisonville ·, Lodge 411 on Saturday at the Humane Kmart - 94.29
tlons, provided by Smith
be reviewed and other regular meeti.ng at 7:30 p.m. at the Society Thrift Shop in Kroger- 16.42.
Partners at Advest Inc. of
hall. Refreshments. "
Middleport
business transacted.
Ltd.- 22.32
Gallipolis.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuesday Jan. H
.
POMEROY- A childhood
Eastern Loca I Board of
immunization clinic IWill be
Education will have a budget
•
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hearing at4:30 p.m. followed
held at the Meigs Cqunty
Friday, Jan. 14
•'
by an' organizational· meeting
BIDWELL - A gospel Health Department from 9 to
J
•
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at 6 p.m. at the elementary sing will be held at 7 p.m . at II a.m. 'and l io ·3. p.m. Take
f•
,..
'
school library conference the Poplar .Ridge Church at child's shot records. Children
,....,
Singers · will must be accompanied by a
room. The regular meeting of Bidwell.
, A'
;'Ill:
'
t&gt;ry
include Ray and Deloris parent/legal· guardian~
the board will follow.
Subscribe today • 992-21S5
I
Cundiff, Earthen Vessels,
' www.mydailysentinel.com
....... ,
ahd Sharon Faye. . ·
.4

Local Stocks

Community Calendar
Public meetings

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TVCOhlo
Belpre
7-2
VInton Co ·
7-2
Alexander
6-2
Meigs
3-s , •
Nelsonville-York
3-5
Wellston .
1-6

GIRLS

Girl's Internet pidure prank is no laughi11g matter to mom
~AR

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Church services

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PROUD TO BE kPART OF YOUR LIFE.
Th'e Daily
. Sentin-el '

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Clubs and
organizations ·

Other events ·

Friday, Jan. 7
Saturday, Jan. 8
tiEMLOCK GROVE
MIDDLEPORT - Meigs
Meigs County Pomona County Humane Society will
Grange, 7': 30 p.m., Hemlock distribute free straw for pet
Grange H;tll.' All meriibers are boxes · from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
urged to attend. Hemlock
Grange wili be the host.
Saturday, Jan. 8
SALEM CENTER - Star ,
Grange No. 778 and Star
Junior Grange No. 878 will
hold their January meeting. ,
Potluck supper at 6:30 p.m.,
followed by meeting at 7:30
p.m. All members are urged
to attend.
H ARRISONVTLLE
'

VINYL
FLOORING
IN-STOCK!

· =~Alt 'IOU CAll EAT FOR 11.00
Wlleni hiland American Lepln
,.,..: January 9, l005
~ 11:00 AM undl5:00 PM

WEST VIRGINIA JOBS ,FOUNDATION

BINGO
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79~.fl

ALSO IN STOCK!

GLUE LESS
LAMlNATES!!

Doors Open •t 4:30 • Early Birds
.Regul•r (ill!mes •t 6:30

at 5:10

SUN PAY SESSION
DOORS OPEN AT 2:00 EARLY BIRDS START AT 3:00
REG. GAMES START AT 4:00
GAME SCHEDULE
'
1. Top or Bottom Row ............ $100 10 Block of Nine ..... :............... $500
2. Six pack (w/free space) .... $150 11 . Regular Bingo ....................S100
3. Regular Bingo...........:...........$1 00 12. Small Diamond ................. $100
4. Regular Bingo .......................$100 13. Letter X.................................$200
'
5. COVERA1L....................... S1300 14. Regular Bingo .................... $1Dp
6. Regular Bingo .......................$100 15. Outside 4 corners .............$1 00
7. Postage Stamp ..................... $100 16. Regular Bingo ....................$100
8. Crazy L ..........................'......$200 17. 4 Leaf Clover -Winner take.all
9. Regular Bingo .........:.............$100
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5-0
4-1

7-4
4-8
3-9
1-11

4-2
2-3
1-4
0-6

TVC Hoelting
8-3
10-1

4-0
4-1

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Trimble
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Miller
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7·3
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124 HIGHLAND 'AVE.
PT PLEASANT, WV
(Old Carolina Lum~er Building Across from CSX)

675-3877
,,
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'

'Ohio State .women·knock off Spartans,. 68-54
BY RUSTY MILLER
Associated Press
COLUMBUS - Jessica
Davenport. scored five of her
14 points during a late 16-0
run to lead No.9 Ohio State to
a 68-54 victory over No. 6
Michigan State 'on Thursday
night.
·
Brandie Hoskins led the
Buckeyes (13-2, 2-1 Big Ten)
with 17 points. Caity Matter
added
12 points, and
Steph&amp;nie Blanton had I0.
The ·game was billed as an
early showdown between the

Big Ten's top two t~ams. Ohio
State came in leading the conference in scoring, field-goal
percentage, 3-point percentage and free-throw shooting.
Michigan State was first in
steals and rebounds.
Ljz Shimek scored 17
points and Kristin Haynie had
II points and to rebounds for
the Spartans (12-2, 1-l), who
had an eight-game winning
streak end .
The · Spartans came in 5-0
on the road. including wins
over Connecticut and Notre
Dame.
The Spartans broke open a

28-28 tie at th.e half. scoring
on their first five possessions.
Three of the baskets were by
·
Kelli Roehrigand another by
Shimek - all
of them 'inside.
T h e i r
·biggest .· lead
was
42-34
after . a three-point play 1\y
Shimek with 15:34 remaining.
Ohio State picked up the
tempo ow defense, pulling to
47-46 on a rebound follow by
Blanton and then taking the
lead on a three-point play by
Ashley Allen. Allen 's bucket

.

came . on a fast-break touch . 28 seconds remaining .
pass from Caity Matter with · After Davenport's free
S:09 left.
throw, Packer took a long pass
· Michi gan State tied it on a from Kim Wilburn for a
left-handeo scoop shot by breakaway layup. Davenport,
Shimek, but then · the playing with three fouls, then
Bucke yes pulled away for added two baskets inside, one
good.
off a loose ball .and the O\her
. Marcilla Packer hit a 3 from on a follow. t
the right corner against the
The Buckeyes then scored
Spartans' matchup zone eight more points in a rowbefore Lindsay Bowen hit two six by Hoskins -· as the
free throws at the 6:57 mark Spartans continued to struggle
~ Michigan State's · final at the offensive end .
points until the last minute.
Davenport fought foul trou· The Spartans missed 13 ble most of the night after
shots from the fie ld in a row ·picking up two midway
until Shimek hir a jumper with · through the first half.
•

I

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Three
Steelers
make AUPro team

Prep Schedule
Today's Games ·
Boys Basketball
Marietta at Gallia Academy
Wellston at Meigs
Eastern at Southern
lrQnton St. Joe at South Gallia
01/C at Adams County
River Valley at Cheaspeake
Girls Basketball
OVC at Adams County
Saturday's Games
·Boys Basketball
~ortsmouth at Gallia Academy.
• Meigs vs. Meadowbwok
· • Eastern vs. Claymont
.
• Southern vs. Crooksville
Girls Basketball
Coal Grove at. South Gallia
Wrestling
River Valley Invitational .
• Games at Ohio University
~

Convocation Center

Gatorade Hoops
Classic schedule
Saturday's Games
at the Convocation Center
Southern Vs. Crooksville, 9:15a.m.
Alexander girls vs. logan girls, 10:45 a.m.
Wellston 'IS. Grandview Heights. 12:30
p.m.
· Meigs Vs. Meadowbrook, 2:15 p.m.
Eastern vs. Claymont, 4 p.m.
Nelson.ville-York 'o'S. Eastern ~Pike) , 5:45
p.m.
Alexan&lt;;ter vs. South Point , 7:30p.m.
Zanesville RosecranS vs . Greenfield
McClain. 9:1 5 p.m . .

Meigs eighth ,
graders knock ,
off Gallipolis 1
GALLIPOLIS
The
Meigs eighth. grade boys basketball
team
defeated
Gallipolis Wednesday by a
- score of 50-42.
. The Marauders jumped out
to an ll-5.frrstquarteradvantage and never looked back
en route to the 8-point victory. .
•
Aaron Cordell paced ·the
Maroon and Gold with 25
points, with Damien Wise
and Eric Tolar adding eight
and seven points respectively
. to the win. ·
Beau Whaley paced the
Blue Devils with 12 markers,
while Kyle Mitchell added
I0 in the setback .
Meigs led 27-20 at half and
39-28 after three quarters of
play.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis seventh grade boys
basketball team defeated
Meigs Wednesday by. a score
· ·
of 38-21.
The Blue Devils improved
to 6-1 on the season with the
victory and were led by John
Troester's 12 points. Nate
Allison and Chuck 'Calvert
each had nine in the triumph,
and Kyle Dinguss, Cory
Eberhard, Nick Mitchell and
Jordon Cornwell ·each had
two points for OAHS.
.
Whitlatch and Deem led
Meigs with six and five
points, respectively. ·
The Blue Devils travel to
Warren Saturday to be part of
an eight-game junior high
shootout. The Blue· and
White will play host \\'arien
at 5:30p.m.
I

•

Friday, January 7, 2oo;;

3-2
. 2-2
1·4
0·5

GAHS seventh ,
graders down
Marauders

'

SATURDAY SESSION

S7.95sq.yd.

C41fEAll!
EVERYONE
lffi&amp;aWt

•

'

CARPET

• etwfONEt

..•

1\Jesday, Jan.l8
MIDDLEBORT
Josephine Smith will observe
her 95th birthday ·on Jan. 18.'
Cards may be sent to her ·at
Overbrook Cehter, 333 Page
St.; Middleport 45760.

IN-STOCK

Fish

""'

Birthdays

.. 8-4
6-4

'

BY ALAN ROBINSON
Associated Press
PITTSBURGH - Days
after the Steelers ended their
dubious, season-long dalliance .with
a
passh e a v .Y
offense in
2 0 0 3 '
coach Bill
. Cowher
promised
to get back to their traditional
strength: the running game.
That recommitment to the
run was a prime reason for
the Steelers' return to the
NFL's upper echelon thi s season, and it was rewarded
Thursday when left guard
Alan Faneca and center Jeff
Hartings made the APAll-Pro
team .
Inside linebacker James
Farrior also was chosen as
the
Steelers had three first,. ·
AP photo
team NFL All-Pros for. the
Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger looks to pass against the Carolina Panthers in a preseason game in
first time since 1997.
.
Pittsburgh in this Sept. 2, 2004 file photo. Roethlisberger did what John Unitas, Joe Montana, Dan Marino, Brett Favre ·
The Steelers ( I S-1 ), idle
and every other NFL quarterback never managed by wiqning The Associated Press Offensive Rookie of the Year. award.
this weekend as they await
Wednesday. The first quarterback to win the honor since its inception in 1957, Roethlisberger did so unanimously, the
their second-round playoff
second straight rookifl to get all the votes. .
·
'
·
opponent, also . placed wide
receiver .Hines Ward, outside
linebacker Joey Porter and
safety Troy Polamalu on the
second team during the best
regular season in franchise
history.
One season after the
· Steelers finished next-to-last
'
'
BY ALAN ROBINSON
first-round draft pick. He while subbing for the injured cess, · Roethlisberger wasn ' t . in rushing, they had lwo firstteam All-Pro offensive lineAssocia!ed Press
never realized it would Tommy Maddox: poise , ready to celebrate despite
men for the first time in team
occur so literally. in a dark, patience, a commanding on- being the first quarterback
chosen
since
the
award
was
·
field
presence
and
the
qualihistory. Poring their Super
PITISBURGH _ Hours scary setting more suited to
a Stephen King novel than ties of a leader. He kept dis- initially presented in 1957.
Bowl run in the Iate 1970s,
away from his first NFL any depicted in an NFL playing them during the
The list of those who didcenter Mike Webster was
start, Steelers rookie quar- playbook .
most 'successful ~ea~on ever n't win - Johnny Unitas,
their only All-Pro offensive
"Talking about getting by a rookie quarterback, one Joe
terback Ben· Roethlisberger
Namath.
Peyton
lineman.
was hunkered down in a thrown into the fire," that
was
rewarded Manning, Dan Marino, Joe
"It says a lot a lot about the
powerless Miami hotel as Roethlisbet'ger said, using a Wedne~day with his unani- Montana, Brett Favre guys who are here and the
Hurricane · Jeanrie swirled slightly twisted analogy, fol- mous selection as The makes up a mini-Hall of
year we've had and every·Assoc
iated
·
Press
NFL
about, dumping an ocean's lowing the Steelers' 12-3
body playing together,''
Fame of its own .
Fane·ca said. ·'It's a lot like
worth of rain and scaring victory on Sept. 26. "Pia.ying Offensive Rookie of the
"It's one of those awards
the Pro Bowl. the better .you
players and coaches alike.
· in a hurricane and against Year by a national panel of that is nice to accept today .
writers and·broadcasters. · and we can look back on it
are the mo~e guys you get,
Roethlisberger knew he that (Dolphins) defense."
·'
Though his entire season
would be in the eye of a
Roethlisberger showed the
Pliiii!H see Stell!lll!rs, B&amp;
Ple•se lee Rookie, B&amp;
storm as a highly scrutinized Steelers a lot that night has been a whirlwind of sue-

Roethlisbe.rger unanimous
choice for top offensive rookie

--.---'-------'----- C 0 L LEGE BASKETBALL

Cincinnati burns Blue Demons
BY JoE KAY
As~oclated Press
CINCINNATI - During '
Conference USA's nine years,
Cincinnati has dominated
with defense. The Bearcats'
farewell season is starting the
same way.
,
Jason Max iell scored 19
points. and No. 23 Cincinnati
rattled DePaul with its intense
man-to-man
defense
Th.ursday night. setting up an
83-54 victory in the conference opener for both teams.
Cincinnati ( 12&lt;I. 1-0) has
won or shared eight of the
league 's nine regular season
titles. The Bearcats want one
more before they head to the
. Big East next season.
"We' re trying to win another . conference •hampionship.
photo and thi' is the first •tep,"
Cincinnati center Eric Hicks (14) blocks a shot by DePaul for- coach Bob Huggins said.
The Bearcats have dominat~
ward Quemont Greer in the first half Thursday in.Cincinnati.

ed DePaul (8-4. 0-1) in particular, winning 26 of their last
29 meetings. The Blue
Demons . have
14
dropped
straight games
on the Bearcats'
home court. and
this was one of
the mo st discouraging.
Once thev fell
behind. the.Blue
Demons looked like they just
wanted to leave.
''We· ve lost here before and
we 've lost big before, but 1 try
to read · beyond the score,''
DePaul coach Dave Leitao
said. "I don't thirik we did
anything very well today. We
could have played a spirited
game and still lost, .but when
they threw the first punch, I
don't think we thought about
punching back - not in a literal term."

There was a punch ·the last
time these teams played .
DePaul lost the conference
tournament title to the
Bearcats at a downtown arena
last year, a game remembered
for LeVar Seals punching
Cincinnati 's Tony -Bobbitt in
the groin. Seals got a onegame suspenston.
Tempers flared on Thursday
after Seals knocked James
White to the coon while trying to block his shot in the
first half, Referee Tim
Higgins. wllo also worked the .
conference 'title game, called
a double technical foul after
several players went nose-tonose on the next possession.
Higgins also gave DePaul's
Quemont Greer a technical his fourth foul - for talking
trash after a second-half dunk.
There were no other problems. ·

PluM- ...rail. I I ·;:.
,·
I

�..

'

•

-·

Page B2 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, January 7,

www .mydailysentinel.com

2005

Friday, January 7, 2005

••

NATIONAL BASKETB.ALL ASSOCIATION

The Daily Sentinel
. - • Page 83

ijtrtbune - Sentinel - l\e

Fans worldwide are shunning Kobe Bryant's!jersey

C' L A:S. S-1F .I E D
'

'

more;" said Patrick 'Buan, 27, pionship team.
of Victorville, Calif., who las t ~ "I think a lot of people were
month put up for sale his four understanding of the rape
trial, because there are a lot of
· PORTLAND, Ore.~ Kobe Bryant jerseys on eBay.
r1
Bryant 's
agent,
Rob cases of players being
said
Bob
oryant is no longer a fas hion Pelinka, di" no t return calls entrapped ,"
icon.
"
seekurg comment . Nike Inc.. Dorfman, execu'tive vic~
For the last month, Bryant's Bryant's main sponsor, also president
of
Pickett
No. 8 Lakers jersey. prev.i- declined to .comment. say mg Ad'v_ertising in San Francisco.
ously one of th~ ~.st sellers m only t~at )3ryant remains "But it's all about wmning t~e world - has fallen out Of under contract wilh .the com- that's wbat tlcl\.les the cash
register. When he Jeopardized '
t e top 50, ~c~o rd' ng to pany.
pOint-of-sale. data tabu lated ' Officials at . AEG, the that by singlehandely blow~y a Flonda market research Lakers' parent company, said . ing apart the team, it was the
'r8m.. nt''s NBA . s
. . sales •of Bryant's jersey ,had final straw for a lot of peqry,,
Jer.ey w.ts d' d
. bl
h t
I "
.
still the lOth-hi hest selling . 1ppe nollcea y at. t e sore p e.
'·
.
.
jersey for the yetr. but he fin- 1n Staples _Ce nter m recent
The drop m sales. IS be1n~
ished the month of December weeks. They s,ud the problem felt m a w1de var1ety of reta1l
at No . 72 _and 10 one week began· early th1 s su.mmer as venues - from s mall sportplunged 10 No. 90, a drastic Bryant prepared to face cnm- mg g?od chams to the
slide for the player many 1nal rape . charges - wh1ch Lakers memorabtha hub. at
once saw as the sport's next w~re . later dropped after hts St~ples ~~ nteL
. .
ac.c user sa1d she d1d not want
~obe s Jerse~ was a c,ore
marketing go lden boy.
"I would never have to part.'c1pate m the tnaL
part of. our bus mess -. a~d
thought it would have
"He s s ue ~ a SJ?nlfJcant now ~lth .the team gomg, m
dropped off like this," said player that we weren t.wllhng the dJrectJon 1t has, we ve
Neil Schw artz director of to make all those goods and ordered less and seen less of a
marketing · a~d bu si ness have h1m go to j ai1," ·said demand ," said .Mike Batt,
development
for Alan Fey, vice president of general manager of Fanzz in
SportsScaniNFO in West merchandising for AEG. , Salt Lake . City, . a s ~orting
Palm Beac h, which trac ks
Schwartz satd Bryant s goods retml cham w1th 32
weekly sales. data from sport- legal troubles could account stores.
.
.
' ing goods retailers Qat ion- for a drop m ~ales m the sumThe drop. m sales ts b~d
wide.
mer and posSibly at the begm- news for Ntke Inc., based m
Bryant's . market~bility has ning of Lhe season - but not Beaverton, Ore ., which sank
a reported $40 million into a
likely been hurt by the flurry ~ in December.
In June- wh~ lhe prepa- ,multiyear contract wit h
of bad press he's been receiving lately, aqalysts say. It rations for Bryant's rape trial Bryant.
.
began with his rape case and · were going full tilt- three of
While Nike does not make
included his feud with former Bryant's jerseys occupied the his jersey - Massachusettsteammate Shaquille O'Neal, first, tl)ird and fifth spots in based Reebok, Inc. recently
his spat with current team- terms of units sold, according bought the licensing rights to
mate Karl Malone and a new to Schwartz, whose company all NBA player jerseys from
book by former coach Phil Iallie~ numbers from a wide Nike- the decline is further
Jackson that portray s Bryant range of · retailers, including evidence that they may not
. as an aloof. prima donna.
JC Penny, Sears and Sports see a return on their investBefore Lhe season started, Chalet.
ment.
O' Neal was traded to the
Industry insiders say that
While both McDonald 's
Miami Heat and Jackson while fans may have been and Nutella have since
retired - departures that willing to look the other way dropped him, Nike has stood
many fans have blamed on during the rape scandal, they by Bryant, but has yet to use
Bryant. .
seem far less willing to fo.r- him in a single ad, evep in
"!·was a big fan, but I just give him now for what they ones touting Bryant's own
can't wear his jersey any- see as the breakup of a cham- shoe.
·

www.mydailysentinel.com

we.Cov•.,.l.--7
M• • Qallla,

BY RUKMINI CALLIMACHI
Assoc1ated Press

. ~Masqn

..co~uLlke

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~~------~~~----~-~----------~~--~-.-

Offtee 11o~&lt;f'

"
AP photo
Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant (8) is fouled by Miami Heat's Shaquille O'Neal during the second half in Los Angeles, Dec. 25, 2004. Kobe Bryaot'.s antics appear to be costing him the
shirt off his back. For the last month, Bryant's Los Angeles Lakers Jersey, prev1ously one of the
top-selling NBA jerseys worldwide, has fallen out out of the top 50. according to point-of-sale
data tabulated by a Florida market
. reseach firm.
Nike spokesman Rodney managing director of the Forbes. Com ranked him as •
Knox declined to say whether Warsaw Sports Marke ting the IOth hi ghest-paid celebrithe manufaqurer intends to Center at the University of ty of 2004, earning $26.1 million from Ju ne 2003 to June
use him in futurc;,.ca_mpaigns. . Oregon.
While the drop in sales ts 2004 in salanes. bonu ses,
"There 's too much at stake
for Nike to want to tarnish surprising, it'); unlikely to prize money, ~pp~arance fees
their brand image by using make a dent in Bryant 's per- - as· .well as hi s Nike
him," said ·Paul S,wangard, sonaJ fortune . In June, endorsement .

.

BY TOM WITHERS
Associated Press

NEW YORK - Randy
Johnson and the Yankees
reached a preliminary agreem,ent Thursday on a $32 mil lion, two-year contract
extension, leaving a physical
as the last step needed to
finalize An zona's trade to
send him to New. York.
The Big Unit waived hi s
no-trade clause as part·of the
agreement, a baseball official and a person close to
Johnson told The Associated
Press on condition of
anonymity.
Arizona wtll rece1ve pitchers Javier Vazquez and Brad
Halsey, ·cat~her Dioner
Navarro and $9 million in
the swap.
The
Yankees,

of which $6 million is
deferred at 2 percent interest. New York and Johnson's
agents, Alan Nero and Barry
Meister, were completing
the structure of the new contract Thursday.
Arizona also had a preliminar}' agreement in place tq
trade Navarro and pitching
prospect William Juarez to
Los Angeles for outfielder
Shawn Green and $8 million. That deal was contingent on the Diamondbacks
and Green agreeing to an
extension.
"The window 'has expired.
There is no agreement,"
baseball spokesman Pat
Courtney said.
Los Angeles and Arizona
could attempt to restart those
ta'lks, however, and ask for a
new window.
·

CLEVELAND
Free
agent right-hander Kevin
Millwood and the Cleveland
Indians are a phone call or
two away .from agreement on
a $7 million, one-year contract.
Indians general manager
Mark Shapiro said 1hursday
that he and Millwood's agent.
Scou Boras, have made significant progress in negotiations over the past 48 hours as
they work toward finalizing a
deal.
"I feel optimistic about it,"
Shapiro said.
Boras also said he was confident a deal would be completed soon.
Talks between the sides
have dragged on for weeks,
slowed by medical tests the
·Indians required of Millwood,
personal matters and Boras
being tied up with other highprofile free agent clients

As long as there are no further delays, the lndtans are
likely to announce the signing
in the nex! two days. The deal
would contain $1 million in
performance bonuses, with
Millwood earning the full
amount if he makes 34 starts
or pitches 210 innings.
Cleveland also has had pre!iminary talks with outfielder
Juan Gonzalez on a mmor
league contract with an inviIation to spring tra ining.
Gonzalez, who had one of the
best seasons of his career fur
the Indians in 2000, was limited to just 33 games last season ·With the Kansas City
Royals because of lower back
problems
Gonzale'z made $4.5 mi 1lion in 2004, but would have
to settle for an incentive based contract with the
Indians 1f he makes their ruster. In his only season with
Cleveland, Gonzalez batted
.325 with 35 homers and 140
RB Is.

Adding a quality pttcher to
their rotation has been an ·offseason. priority for the
Indian s, who have offered
multiyear deals to Jon Lieber
and Matt Clement und a oneyear package to Davis Well s
onl y to be outbid by other
teams.
Before they turned their
focus . on Millwood, the
Indians put the 30-year-old
through some length y medical exams. Mill wood straineu
an elbow ligament last season
fur Philadelphia, an injury
that limited him to 25 starts
and 141 innings - the second
fewes t of hi s · major league
career.
Mtll wood ,had two 18-win
seasons and went 75-41 in six
seasons with · the Atlanta
Braves, who traded him to the
Phdli es in 2002. Millwood,
who has p1tched more than
. 200 innings four ti mes, went
14-12 with a 4.01 ERA in '03
and 9-6 with a 4.85 ERA last
season.

Singh p·icks up where he left off
I .

BY DoUG FERGUSON
Assoc1ated Press
KAPALUA, Hawaii _ T1ie calendar
changed. Vijay Si ngh didn't. ,
Coming off one of the best years in
golf, Singh opened the new season'W ith
an early statement Thursday at the
Mercedes Championships, overpowering the Plantation Course at Kapalua and
making just enough putts for a 7- under
66 and a one-shot lead over Craig Parry.
It was the same kind of golf that carlied Singh to nine victories and a record
$)0.9 million m 2004. And even with
Tiger ·woods shoWing more signs that
his game is back, the 41-year-old Fijian
remained an imposing presence.
"TI)at's the way he's been playing,"
Woods said after opening with a 68. "It's
a continuation of it."
Singh had said he wanted to start. the
year strong at the winners-qnly
Mercedes Championships. just to
remind everyone that he wa~ still the
man to beat.
No one could argue with that on a
sunny, tropicill day along the rugged
shores of Maul.
All It took was a three· hole stretch at
the tum - short birdie putts on Nos. 10,
II and 12 - for Singh to quldtly work
hll way up the leoderboard, Into a posl·
tlon that ha~ become all too familiar.
Wood1 was ~~mona those tied .for the
lead on the back nine, but he strugalesl
on the areena and he could not keep pace
with Sfngh, who put himself In enough

•

I

good positions to make birdies.
"I made nothing today," said Woods,
who missed eight birdie putts inside 18
feet. "I had a hard t1me getting the speed.
You rely so much on memory, and this
time 1t messed me up a little bit."
But he had no problem with the rest of
his game, especially off the tee. Woods
routinely launched drives over 320
yards, and all bu\ three of them found
the short grass.
It was a solid start to Lhe year, not just
for Singh; but for the rest of the PGA
Tour. Anticipation is high for most of the
elite players to be on top of their game,
and Thursday did not disappoint.
Sergio Garcia overcame a sl uggish
start for a 5-under 68, joining WoOds,
Stewart Cink and Jonathan Kaye. Emie
Els, Chad Campbell and Adam Scott
were among Lhose another shot back.
The Plantation Course has never
looked so lush, although Singh and
Woods said that's w~at might have kept
more players from shooting low scores.
With so much grass on the greens, the
thick grain made it diftlcult to find the
proper pace and the right line.
"I was surprised nobody went lower
thun me," Singh said.
Slnah .11lso missed a half-dozen birdie
.putts Inside 18 feet, lncludlna a IO·footer on the final hole. Still, he got the start
he wanted ln the fl~t tournament of the
year.
.
• "I'm here,'' he said with a,1mlle. "You
want•to stltl'l the year off strong . This Is
a huge ·tournament. All the winners are

here.
win.'!

r

\'\'\ ( H '\(I \II '\I"

My intention

is to play sohd and

The 31 winners from last yelll'- only
Masters champton Phil Mickelson elected notto play - eased their way into the
new season. This was the first competitive round in more than a m,onth for
many of the players, although the generous fairways at Kapalua allowed for
some rust. ·
"I basically got away with the fact that
the golf course was pretty wide open,''
Woody Austin said after his 69. ''I hit it
all over the place - just very lucky." .
Only four players shot over par,
including .defending champion Stuart
Appleby (74).
,Cink and Parry both got off to steady
starts, making the turn at 5 under par, but
neither of them could ,keep it going.
Parry was fortunate Lhat his tee shot
stopped just short of the banana grass
framing a bunker on No. 12, although he
could barely get it into the fairway and
made bogey. He wasted a great chance
when he reached the par-S 15th in two,
but then three-putted for par - his first
three-putt on tour since the 2003 seuson .
He flnlshed with u IS-foot birdie for

I

Grv~w~r

Dally In-Column: 1:00 p . m.
Mond~y - Friday for Insertion
In Next Day 's Paper .
Sunday In-t;olumn: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paperl

i.F'rl&lt;lay

''This Is the best I'Ve felt ltoinalnto 'a
POA Tour event," nld Parr~, who
played In Japan and three thnet In
Australia over the l ~lt few months . "l
AI' photo
feel as thouah I'm p~tty sharp." ··
OIII'Cia, who won at Kapalua two years Vljly Sin&amp;~ . or Filii'. hits' out of the send trap on the 18th areen
BllO, played boaey.free after B slugalsh durin&amp; the Mercedea Cnemplonahlpl Thuraday In Maul. Hawaii.
start.
Slnllh led all playera with seven under par on tne dey.

'

\11 '\I

POLICIES Ohio Vall•y Publl1hlnv r~a•rv•• th• right to •dh, re)Kt, or canc.lany ad at any tlm1. Errors mu1t.~ report.d on the ijr1t d1y of
. Ttlbune-Sentlnei -Aeglller wlll be re1pon1lbte tor no more then the coat ot the apac• occupied by the error and only the flr1t 1n1ertlon. we 11ha!l not
11ny loes or eMpense tt;et ra• ult1 from the p~,.~bllcaHon or oml11lon of an advertl•ment. Corr.ctlon will be made rn thellralavslilb4e .clition • Box o ~;~':,:.:;l
are alway a confidential. • Current rate card applies. • An real Meet a adveniumentt are IUbject to the Federal Falr Houalng Act of 1968. • Ttl Ia n
accepts only help wanted eda meeting EOE standard• We will not knowingly •q:ept any ed vet1\1lng In violation ot the law

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

r:o

.I

SIR\HI'•

'

3 pupp1es 2 part Border
Colh e, 1 mm•ature Elk
}1oun.d Call (740)256-6169

r

238 F1rst Avenue, IBR , 1
bath . k•tchen furni shed .
Rive1 v1ew New carpet and
1 bedroom. Pomeroy $270 pa1nt. Easy walk downtown
3Bdr. 2Ba on 6 ac res per month plus deposit , No pets $350 morith plus
w/ 28)148 barn. 1nground (740 )992·0175
ut1ht1es Re1erence. deposit
pool. hollub (804)576,2920
(740)446·4926.
2 bedroom . 1 bath , $300
month Call(740)446·3481 2br Apt 1 t /2ba , Ulllit1es
Pa1d.' near PVH call before
2 or 3 bedroom house 1n
8pm (304)675·8872
Pome roy for rent no pels,
(740)992·5858
2aR. CIA refngerator/stove
mctuded . _ washer/dryer
~t:tous e 3 Bedroom 1 1-J2
B
H
p
--:3 DiKfrOOi'T'IFIOuse for renf·
hook
-u p.
10 mm from
ath
e.at
ump, new Horse property 3 m1les from
(7 40)441·0 194 or
Carpet, Wmdows &amp; Roof. Holzer on 160 J ust rer:nod - Holzer
Atver Vlf!W 12 Smith St. No eled
Call
after
Spm (740144 1· 1184

'

pies to g•ve away
(740)446·6233

Call

1

W1nted To Do .............................................. 180
· Wanted to Rent ............................................ 470

· Yard Sale- Galttpotla ....................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Mtddte .........................074
Yard Sale-Pt. Pleaunt ................................ 076

0

740)992-4236 (740) 992
456.

POSITIONS AVAILABLE

A1c hland Avenue, Suite
#108 , Athens. Oh 45701-

ou do bus•ness With peo

a

s

ParamediC&amp;
&amp; • EMT's
needed. A13ply at 1354
Jactl:son Pike. Galhpotis.
Wanted Bar· Malds, Double
0 Lounge, Pt. Pleasant. WV
Apply tn Person IO.OOam to
5 :00pm See Davy w ills.
Experience a plus. will-train
TE LEMAAKETEAS NEED·
ED· No Experience OK. 579 Per Hour, Easy Work 1·
888-974.JOBS

This n•wspilper will not
knowingly acc•pl
advertisamants for r.eal
eatat• which l1 In
vlolatlon of the Jaw Our
readera are hereby
Informed that all
ctw.!Unga advertind Jn
this newspajMr are
available on an equal
opportunity bases.

COM

ETtnON. WILL TRAIN

"'

PUBLI SH

le you Know. and NOT I
end money through th

Ij

ML&lt;iCEt.l.ANWliS

EOE

UNIQUE/NO

·

3700. ApplicatiOn Dead line
HSCC ~s a 70 bed long term Januarv1 14. 2005. The
a11 until you have 1nvest1
t are nurs1ng I ac111'1y 1oca1ed AM ESC 16 an equal opportu·
Inventory BlowoUl!
ated the offer1
I G II Co
h
1n rura a 1a
unly w ose "' niiY em ployerlprov•der
:;~~~~==:: All s1ngle wides must go'
miS SIOn focuses on quality
Oakwood
Homes

Lett-

1-1188-385-2567

ERV

-Gompet1t1ve WaQes·
•Expenence Credit
' •Health In surance (FT)
•Ute Insurance (FT)

'

School
Jumors,
H1gh
Sen1ors and Pnor Serv1ce
you can f11J vacant pos1110ns
m the West V1rg1n1a Army
•40 1K (alt er 1 year)
Na!IOnal Guard If ~ o u are
between the ages ol 17- 35
tf work1ng m a fnendl y, "1eam or nave !{fiDr m1lltary s e~vonented" lacthly appeals to 1ce, you w8n't want to pass
you plea se co me see us at th1s up For Opp ortun111es 1n
380 Color1181 Or, Bidwe ll, your area, call
304·6 75·
Oh1o, or call {740)446-5001
and ask for Phyll iS Cantrell ,
!80
WH..!
..~ 1 ~
RN or Barb Peterso n m
Human Resources

-

~

9mB

nw-~
1' 111 0 1

c.u• c~u•

~~N

:~oursv111e.

.
••NOTICE••
BlHfOw Smart. Contact the
Oh io D1Vis1on of Financ1a
Institution 's
Otf1ce
o
Consumer
Afta1r
BEFO' i you retmanco
tfO_ur ho
or obl am a loan
BEWARE ot requests lo
ny l arge advance pay
~-nts ol fees or msurance
Call
th e
Olf1ce
o
Fo~tumer Affa~rs toll lree
t 1·866·278-0003 to lear
f the mortgage broker o
ender IS properly licensed
ThiS tS a pubftc service
nnooncement !ro m I he
ph tO Valley Pubhshm!;

SSI! Soc•al Secunty
you a home. Call (304 )736·

I

_34!:00~~--~--.,

L

t.,~---t'CiiiiiRiiiiiAiii.Fii.il
' _,~.

~-~-Mn~n I
I'RofSER~VIO.:S I CO!IIract
Owner w&gt;ll f&gt;nanco
w1tM 20% down Call tor
1
•--•TiiooiDoii.ii--,J
d'otalls (740)446·3481
'
Jewelry Buy Sell Gold, -Fo_r_s_:a- ;. o.:..r_
· -r.-n-t·-lra-,"'-r,
__

,

10

10

Chnst1an lady would love To Diamonds ,
GemstOnes
help care tor elderly .n t1'1elr Repair , Ap'prarsals: Gem t4x50. 2 bdrm. mce, lot

'udor's Biscuit '''arid ·s hlr· ' 8ahome p40)3.8,8·9645, call Testing
Graduate
''
"
'
m· 9 pm
•
Gemologist.
Jewel er
ing cooks and cashlttrs Our
·(740)645 _6365 or (740 )446•
hours of operation are 5·30·
·
3080
2.00. Apply w1th 1n
Jim's CarpenHy
We do remode ling and most
TliRNED DOWN ON
The
Athens·Me•gs any unflmshed work. also · SOCIAL SECURITY ISSI'?
Educational Service Center small
tree
removal.
No Fee Unless we Win I
is seeking a Full T1me (740)446· 2506: (740 )361·
1. 888 . 582 _3345
Mull•ple Disab iliti es (MD ) 0437
~ lddl e School Educat1onal
1~1 \I l '-l\IJ
A1de for Athens County.
Snuggle Bugs Ctltldcare
Applicants must be able to
1140 2nd Av.s , G.alllpolls
obtain en Educational Aide
Open •ngs an sh ifts security
License. Salary w• !l be
vi deo cameras for e-very
based on tre.1ntnQ and expe· ones secun ty Installed 1n
nence .. Applicants must prolatter January Open house 1 Bedroom House on 5
vide Jheir own transports ·
f!Nery Sunday, after church . acres In country. ·city water,
tlon. Please subm1t lener of
1pm to 5·30pm Pl&amp;a!le call cab!e $28 .000 (304 )713·
tnterest and resume to . John
(740)446·7122 for brocr1ure 6103
D.
Costamzo.
~ntormat•on
Superintendent,
Athens·
m
West
2br
House
Meigs Educational Servtce
Columb•a. call (304 )773·
Center,
507
Ric hl and
Avenue. Su1te f 108, Athens ,
5284
Oh 45701·3700. Appl!cahon
Deadlme. January 14. 2005
3 bedroom all electnc one
The AMESC IS an equ al
sto ry hou se lor sale 1n
op p or t u n t t y
Middleport. 371 Broad way
Grafte rs wanted ror new Stroe1. $26.000, 17•01992·
employiu tprovider
The
Ath'e ns·Me•g s craft bOOthS opemng 1n ~ h e 3194
Educat1onal Servtce Center Jackson downtown a rea.
1s see ~i n g a Pa rt· T1me Booths, starting at $75 3
bat h,
bed roo m ,
1
Anendance OH1cer {20 !irs mpnth For more 1nrormat10(l detached garage. Gr•erl
per week with no benefits) call (740)286 9929 allor schools,
a rea
nice
tor
Athe ns
County 4pm
(740)4.1 ·0818

---::-::-=-:-:--

•

-

..

·~

.

"' ~

-

4B A , 2 bath house m
GalliPolis
$650/month .
deposi t reqwred . (740\441 0194or(740) 44 H 184

MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICE S AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
DriYe from $344 to $44.?
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Call
740·446·2568
Equa l
Housing Ojiportumty
_ _..:__ _ _ __
Clean . Ground Floor 2br.
WID hookup Aet &amp; Dep, no
Pets (304)675·5162

100'xl20', bldg. 1/2 efficen·
cy apartment. 1/2 garage.
bidg 32'~~:32': lot 100 )(120',
r1Yer1ront lot , 12S 'x200',
(740)992·5888
For sale: 14X70 WlndSOf, 3
bedroom, set up In COuntry
Homes, S6,995 00 Mll'la tn
tOdayl Call (740)992-2167 or
(740 )385-4019
Immediate possession! Only
5213.68 permo New 3 bed·
room, 2 bath mobile home:
Only minutes from ~!hens .
1·800·837·3238

APART·

House- 3 bedroom. 1 bath,
mce nerghborhood Green
Schools. $600/mo rent &amp;
$600/sec dep You pay all CO~VE~IENTLV LOCAT·
uWIMS. Call (740)446·3644 . ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
Racme, $500 deposrt, $500 andlor small houses FOR
rent plus ,gas &amp; electric RENT. Call (740 )441 -111 1
(water. trash. sewer Included lor applicatiOn &amp; rnformatton.
1n rent) . 4 bedroom &amp; 2 full
bath, calheat. must have ref- For Lease One bedroom
erences,
(740)949 ~ 2217 niCe 2nd floor apt Corner
7am -10pm
P1ne and Second Large
K1tchen w1th dm tng area
New range ,
:.1~ •
• Water 1nctuded References
required $300fmo Security
No pet'
Gill
2 bedroom, 2 batll , no pets, depOSI!
ref. reqwred. $3001deposit. (740)446·4425 or (740)446·
$400/month. mcludes trash 3936
R1o Grande area (740)367·
Grac1ous liVIng 1 aM 2 bed·
7025.
room apartments at Village
and
Rl'w'ers•de
For ref}t 2 and 3 bedroom Manor
mobile homes starling at Apa rtmenls 1n M•ddleport.
$260 00 per month Call From $295-$444 Call 7. 40-992· 5064 Equal Houstng
(740)992·2167 .
Oppqrtun1t1es
Nrce 2 bedroom mobfte
home Nope 15 ,1740)446 • N•ce
2 BA ap1 Cen1enary
•
2003 or (740)446-1409
Ad waleritrasl1· pa1d, fur·

I

Two-. 2 bedroom mobile
homes m B1dwe11 Water.
trash, sewer pa10 No pets
.1740)388·9325

1982 Shultz 14x70 56.500
Two·Mobtle Homes lor Rent
call (304)675-6349
Bi(th two•bedrooms ' One
1995 Clayton Double W1de . with den &amp; pullout 1n hvmg$350 &amp; $450 No'52X24 , 3b r 2bath Total room
Elecmc 522.000 (304)675· Pets Depqs1t &amp; references
reQuired l ocated 1n Potnt
2907
Call {304 )675Pleasant
2000 Oak1Nood 32)176 home 3423

~ompany)

i

(304)736·

H
081f.FS OMIS

BEAUTIFUL

L

$1 300 Net, We can hnance

M

Apartment for Rent. $350

deposit (304)882-2890

:: 1\-loomtu:RREM,~~

No down payment possible'
3 br 2 ba .. fUlly equlppea
kitchen , firep lace. 2 car
attached garage. 6+ acres,
(740)742·7200

~

room
and
bath
stc;weltetngeralor.
down·
sta1rs. all ulil1tres paid 46
Ol1ve
Street
$450
1740)446·3945

Clean 3 bedroom, no pets.
Reference &amp; deposit PatriOt
area. Call (740)379·2540.

dl&amp;crlmlnation."

OCAL'
ESTABLISHE
USINESS (1 5 YEARS)

tra1nrng and exper~e&amp;e
Ap plicants Q mus t prov1de
their own transpor tation
Please ~ubm1 t letter ol mter·
est and resume to John 0
Costan zo Superintendent
Attie ns -Meigs Educat1ona1
Servtce
Center
SOY

1150 ,

Oh10 Operat•ng Engmeers
Apprenticeship &amp;
, , Tra1nmg Program
Local 18
, 4- Veer A.pprentl~shlp
2005 APPLICATION QAJES
• Jan 24,25,26 &amp; Feb 3 4 5
9·00arp to 3·00pm
Operat1ng Engineers
are the men and women
who operate ant1 repair the
equ1pment thai builds
Ame nca l
" Eam At You Llltn "
We w111 be acc ept1ng
appi1Cet10ns, w1th a S 10 00
cash non -refunaable lee
at the tollow1ng location
Logan Training Center
' 30410 Strewn Road
Logan. OH 43138

~
~

envtron ment Allows for Ga
sem •·f!e)l•ble
il:hedulfi!
between
to
on Monday
through Fr1day Please send
resu me to R1o G rande
BooK store , 2 18 N College
Ave , R• o Grande , O h1 0
45674.
Jl

Openings
Immediate
Treatment care for our reSidents
Res1denMJ
ScHool.-;
Fac1l1ty lor boys, now hlrtng
INSTRUcrtON ,
We have the follow.ng
Youth Worker pos1110n Pa1d
openmgs
Medical . Insurance
Ca ll
between 9 ooam-4 OOp m fiN· one futl-t1me and one Gallipolis Career College
(C areers CIQse To Home)
{740)379-9083 .... • .. . part-t•me
Can Today • 740-446 -4367
o~e iut1-t1me
New Year· New Career
1-800-2 14-0452
SIMAJI·IImlted pa rt-t1me on
Chr1st1an based Te ch Co
www g&lt;~lhll(lhSGarl'!ercollege com
all sh!lts
Expandmg in your area
SacretarvJCierk· one~patt ~ cc•edllad Member Accre diting
Caunctl lo r !ndependenl Colleges
~anagers/Sales Rep
11me pos111on m our busmess 11rod Schools 12748
Needed
o'tf•ce
t70
Call800·470·6843
(24 Hours)
Benefits Include
Nursmg Ass1stan1 Classes
beg1nmng January 17. 2009
thru February 1. 2005 If y ou
enJOY elderly peo ple a nd
, want 10 become a member
of ou r..health care team .
please stop by Aockspnngs
Aehab ii iiBIIOn Center at
36759 Rockspnngs Road,
Pa m er~. Oh1o ~769 and 1111
out an applicatiOn tor the
classes Edendicare Health
ServK:es-, Inc IS an equal
opportunity employer that
encou rages
worlcplace
diverSify MJF DN

Inc.

~~-~~--•-,

I, F'

tnlerested send resume to Pe rm anent PT pos1t1on E xpenenc~ 1n the Juvenile
CLA Bo)C 548 c/o GallipoliS available Work1ng 1n reta1! JustiCe System 15 prefe rred
Da1Jy .Tnbune, PO Box '469, st ore settmg •n u mv~rs1ty Sala ry w1U be based on

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Seed , Plant &amp;Ferttttzer .............................. 650
. Situation• wanted ....................................... 120.
· Space lor Rent .............................................460
: Sporting Gooda .............. ,............................ 520
SUV'a lor Sala ..............................................720
Trucks lor Sate ............................................ 715
Uphotat6ry ................................................... 870
Vano. For Sele ............................................... 730
Wanledto Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy-Farm Supptl411 ......,........... 620

1'1'::!"-------,

Ho.P

HFJ..PWAN'rnD
"--------,J _______
,..,

4x4's For Sate .............
725
Announcement ............................................ 030
. Antiques ....................................................... 530

Auction and Fteal/larket.............................080
Auto Parts Accessorles .......................... 760
Aula Repair .................................................. no
Autos for Sale .............................................. 710
Bollls &amp; Molars for Sale ............................. 750
Building Supplies ........................................ 550
Business and Buitdlngs ............................. 340
Business Opportunity.................................210
Business Training ....................................... 140
Campers &amp;Motor Homes ........................... 790
· Camping Equipment.. ................................. 780
Cards of Thanks ..................................., ... ,.. 010
Child/Elderly Care ....................................... 190
Etectricat/Refrigeration ............................... 840
Equlpmenl for Rent.. ................................... 480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment .......................................... 610
. Farms for Rent ............................................. 430
Farms for Sate ............................................. 330
: For Lease ..................................................... 490
For Sale ........................................................ 585
· For Sate or Trade ......................................... 590
· Fruits &amp; Vegetabtes ..................................... 580
Furnished Rooms ........................................450
General Hauling ........................................... BSO
Giveaway ......................................................040
Happy Ads............ :...................................,...oso
Hay &amp; Gratn ...................... :...........................640
, Help Wanted ................................................. 110
. Home tmprovemenls ...................................810
· Homes lor Sate ......................................,.....310
' Household Goods ...................! ..,................ 510
Houses for Rent ..................:.......................4t0
In Memoriam ................................................ 020
lnaurance ............................,........................ 130
La"'" &amp; Garden Equipmenl ..:.,.c.................660
: Liveotock.......................... ,...........................630
· Lost and Fouild ........................................... 060
·-' Lola &amp;Acraage ............................................ 350
. Miaceltaneoua .............................................. 170
Mlacellaneoua Merchandlae ....................... 540
Mobile Home Repair .................................... 860
Mobile Homes lor Rent.. ............................. 420
Mobile Homes lor Sate ............................... 320
Money t" Loan.............................. o.............. 220
Motorcycles &amp;4 Wheelera .......................... 740
Musical fnetrumanta ................................... 570
· Paraonata ..................................................... 005
. Pate lor Sate ............................................... 560
· Plumbing &amp; Hutlng .................................... 820
· Pr,ola11lonal Servlcea ................................. 230
. Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... 160

@ 2005 by NEA,

www comics com

Established Heahng-Cool1ng ~"1l:'-------,
110
Company m Gallla Co lookWANIFD
'liO'
mg't, for
Expe·penced •
•
Installers &amp; techn iCianS I(
~.,

Buy1ng Junk Cars. up to Gallipolis, OH 45631
.7y r o ld Smme se female. $50 If no answer, please Establi shed
Law
F1rm
' declawed cat Not good w1th leave ~a message (740 )388- . expand 1ng
ser v1ces
fo
kidS .(740 )446..{)650
00 11 .
Mason County areas, see Ks
to l11! the foHowmg pOS itions
Recephon1 s1
Paralegal .
Please se nd re~ u fQe , cover
! .. , .............................
letter. 3 references ahd
salary requirements
by
Januar~· 14 .2005 to Law
Apartments for Rent ... .........................,l .. ·• 440
Off1ce P 0 Bo)C 45 7,
RavensWood W V 26164·
&amp;
0457

In this newapaper Is
subject to the Federal
Fair Houaing Act of 1968
which makes Jt Illegal to
advertlae ''any
preference, limitation or
dlacl"'mlutlon jNMd on
ntee, oolor, rWiglortt • •
familial statu• or nath)naf
origin, or eny Intention to
make any such
preference, llmltetlon or

~~~

TO B UY

3

4-Aenl. 2br, House 1n New plus deposit Water &amp; Sewer
Haven , $350/mOnth , plus paid phone (304)675-6668

Att reat estate advertising

/·7-J.oo&lt;:;

Aenlals (740)992-1438

l'llRRENT

FUR RFN r

Money Down to quahfy•ng
(740)645-6 157, (740)446 1
Bu..,er $425/month wfw Rent
•
'
2012
(304)175-2749
3 bed room house in
Pomeroy, deposit &amp; references'· requued, no an1ma1s
(740)949·7004

Class A COL dnVar with
Mechamca! skillS needed .
t.,_________.l call or app ly @ Gheen

APARTMF.NTS

·uo'-'~~
·~

1o

3Bdr, 2Ba. on 6 acres
w/28)148 barn
tnground
pool. hol1ub (304)576·2920

\VANTil&gt;

'4·male, 4- lemale ffii)(Bd
Absolute Top Dollar U S
breed puppies to a good
home. Take one or take S1lver and Gold Cams.
Proofsets:• Gold Aings, JJ S
e1ght-rust like one All must
Currency,-M.T S Com Shop
·gal (740)256·1419
151 · Second
Avenue
6 part Cocker Spaniel pup- Gallipolis 7 40-«6 - 2~42

r
,;;::::::;:;::=:,
r

HOMES

'-~_...miiioiRSALE--.
: _.I

lwrtght@Jic net

Ma~agtH- lo~al

I

.

~~\

I

All Display: 12 Noon 2
Business Days Prior To
Publication
1
Sunday Display: 1:00 p .m.
Thursday for Sundays

• All ads must be prepaid•

Calico 1 year old, hxed.
HEI.r Wi\NJW
(740)446-0650 or (740)446·
Healthy• Herbal Teas Cold 2700
care teas , women 's health
An Excellent way to earn
teas anti more! Rutland Color TV &amp; VCR to g1ve money The New Avon
Department
Store. awa(i7 40)992·3244 '
Call f/lenlyn 3~ · 882- 264~
www herbalsage com
Flame
Pomt \
le'Mie
Assistant
Himalayan, lh1ed. 7 .Y. S
,electrontc/cellular store pa1d
old
(740)446-0650
or
vacation &amp; hollda~s. salary
(7A0)446·2700
plus comm1s s• o~
"s end
15 m1xed pupptes to good
resurne to Dally Se r:111nel,
Free to good home 2 year
PO Box· 729-1 1, Pomeroy
home Call t740)245-9644
old
Black
~ German
Oh 45769 ;
2 Beagle pups 1 male,' 1 Sheppard Good With Kids,
female Call (740)256·9234 loves to pia~ Must have Attendant·Hostess Mu st be
lalge area to run . (740)992· Dependable. Fr1endly B.
Honest • Vanous
Sh1ft s
2 mature male kittens, wh•te 67!;4
Avatlable The Pornt Ca1e
w/blue eyes exot1c marklnQ6. clean healthy mdoor. Golden Ae tnever pupp•es 5 located at 20 1 Jones St
(740)992· 7680 , 740·992· male &amp; 2 female Call behind PI Pleasant VISitOrS
Center applications .avail(741jj643·2749.
6236
able 9am to 9pm 304·6752 so11d wh1te fem ale cats Small medium s12e brown &amp; .:.666_6_ _ _ __ __
Fllred. (1 )-2 yea rs old. (1)-1
white dog . very rnendly AVON• All Areas• To Buy q[
year old (740)446-0650 or
love s ~•d s (304)937-3348' Sell
Sl11rley Spea rs. 304(740)446· 2700
afler 4 pm
675 1429
.

Real Eetate Wanted ..................................... 360
School• lnitructlon ..................................... 150

67.

..

ANNOtJN(.'EMEr&lt;JN

t

I '11'1

Now you can have borders and graphics
"-' ·
added to your classified ads
(. ~
,.,.,
Borders$3.00/perad
~
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

Display Ads

• Start Your Adll With A Keyword • lndude Complete
De\crlption • Include A Price • Avoi d Abbreviation•
• InclUde Phone Number And Addr,es5 When Needed
I Ads Should Run 7 DiiVI

Yankees, Johnson agree Indians, Millwood·· near~ d~al
on contract extension
Diamondbacks and agents
for tpe players were working
Th~rsday on the logistics of
arraf!ging
the medical
exams needed to final IZe
!he
trade.
Johnson, a
five-time
Cy Young
Award winner, would
join a startJohnson
ing rotation
that includes Mike Mussina,
Kevin Brown, Carl Pavano,
Jaret Wright. Tanyon Sturtze
is viewed as a pQssible sixth
starter should Brown, who
has h·ad back problems, get
hurt again.
·
The 41-year-old left-hander's current deal calls for a
$ 16 million ·salary in 2005,

OearllfirM

Word Ads

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

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

BY RONALD BLUM
Associated Press

•

r. .

_.F_ARl_~.IS
__,..,I.
FOR RENT
~

22 acres of farm land tor
corn, soybeans or vegetables. located ilt Racme corporation hm1ls, please call
740 949·2306 tor deta1ls

retn~erator

n1shed
kitchen ,
washer/dryer hOoKup, no
pets .
depostUrete(ences
req w red
$375
month
' [740 )44S:9442
TownhOuse
Tara
Apartmen ts Very Spac iOus
2 Bedroo ms 2 F J~rs CA 1
11:2 Balh. Newly Carpeted.
Adult Pool &amp; Baby Pool
PatiO Start S3B 5.'M 3~ .No
Pets. - Le ase Plus Secunty
DepoSit Aequ1red Days .
740-446-3481
Evenings
7 40·367 -o502
1W1n R1vers Tower IS accepting applicatiOns tor wa1t1ng
l!St for Hud-subs1zed. 1· ' br,
apartment. call 675-6679
EHO

r

SPACE
FOR RENr

For Lease Off.ce or reta1l
spaces in very good condi·
lion Downtown Gallipolis.
Appro11 . 1600 sq. rt each 1
or 2 baths. Lealie price
negoti able to e ncourage
new
business
Call
1 b6droom upst81rs . unlur·
(740)446-4425 or (740)448·
n1&amp;hed ept Newly pa inted,
3936 .
no pets
Reference &amp;
depOSit
required .
Call
WAN:J'ED
(740)446·2468 ahor 4pm
roREI.'T

1 and 2 bed r-oom apart·
ment&amp;, furnished and unlur·
nished, security depOSit
required. no pets , 7o4G·992·
2218 .

r

Mobile nome &amp; land tor sale
Rac;:•nB
area, 515.000. 1 bedroom, $250 montr1 plus
(740)99f-6762
ut11ltrea, $250 deposit 1005 Mature professronal woman
'-SA-V-'E-·S""A-V-E-·5-A~V-E_ _ _ 'Th;rd A'a Call (740 )256· seeks to renl room In home
or apt to share Call
6681 .
StOCk models at old priCes.
2005 models amvmg ~ow , 1.BR Apt In Spnng Valley,
Cotes
Mobile
Homes, $290 pe r montt1+deposlt
15266 US 50 East. Athens , WID hookup Pets welcome
HolWlOIJJ
Oh10 '5701 ( 7o10)592 · 197 ~ with addttlonal deposit
•
GootJS
· where You Get Your (740)339-0362
Money's Worth ~
2 bed room apt. 1n Ato Mo ~ ha n Ca rpet. 202 Clark
Grand e. S325 a month. Chapel AoiCi Porter OhiO
$325 deposl1 Call (7 40)245· (7 o60 J'-'6·7 44o4 1-877-8309060
9162 Free Est1mates. Easy
financing, 90 days Same as
2 or 3 bedroom apartment In
cash VIsa/ Maste r' Card
Middleport,
no
pets,
Drive· a- 11nte save a lot
(740)992-585a

·- • •

~

, • •

&gt;; ....... .

�•

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Page 84.• The Daily Sentinel

It

HAv&amp;
GRAIN

I

r

S).

1991 Olds Cutlass Supreme
SL, leather, factory sunroof,

gteal

work

J

Friday, January 7, 2005
ALLEY OOP

I

° you.

. JANETS HAIR-GO-ROUND
3rd St. Mason
773·5404

•
•

is now at

!::::·:P:a:tty:;5;'11:a:in=::::

Box

..

SlNS

ofo QBS3
West
East
• J 1 4
• Q8 6 2
. 8753 .
• J 6 4
+ AQ63 .
• 8 2
ofoAJIO
S
"' 9 7
South

Middleport

• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major IVied ~
Medicare
• Cancer • Accident

BINGO '

American 'Legion Middleporj
January 8
6:30 pm
First Packs $10.00
All After First $5.00
Paying $100.00 a Game
$200.00 for the X
$300.00 Picture Frame
$1 ,000.00 Coverall
Crank It Up $16 ,000,00
Starburst $1 ,000,00

· •K9 3

•

+K97

YOUNG'S

Deale" East
Vulnerable' East·Weat

JONES'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

.South

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

• Electrltal &amp; Plumbing

Bucket
Truck
.
.

• ROoting &amp; Gunera
• Vlhyl Siding A Painting

tiOUflS' ·-·l.'M

30 Yrs, Exp. • Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

FA$T' fA

Free

BISSEll
BUilDERS InC.

A

BARNEY

r-;;;•R~E~DDSS;i;K:iiiE~S~IN:i'j:~!i\iii:F:'",..,
SAILORS TAKE WI\RINitll'

,...,.--:----&lt;1
QUIT

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guar-

.

lntee. Local references fur-

0870, Rogers · Basement are requesting sealed
bids for the following
Waterproofing.

vacation and abaft·

S~VINGS

... ·'

If so, you qualify for a

:

Senior Discount*
ori your home delivered
subscription!

ll\.egt•ter

The .D aily Sentinel

Ctme- -6enttn.e l

----•
Subscriber's Name - ' - - - - - - - - - - -

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

I
I
I

Address _ _ _ _ __:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _...;,

donment of Slate
Route 338 within
projocls:
L'banon Township,
PROJECT 1
Meigs County, Ohio.
Slip repair on T142
Pagevllle Road .6 The proposed action
miles
easl
of spaclllcally pertains
Pagevllle off SR 692. to the section of S.R .
338 currently closed
Work
lo be completed: A to lralflc due to ero·
21 .72, and there ler·
slon and · dlimll!le
120 ft. X 20 ft. X 8 ft.
mlnate.
daep excavation · of along the Ohio River.
PROPOSED, THE
The
abandoned
loose material to
portions shall revert
solid base and place- VACA1ION Of' A SEG·
to the Meigs County
MENT OF STATE
ment of 2ft. of coarse
Highway
System
ROUTE
338
IN
rock placed , In lhe
once the final aban~
LEBANON
TOWN·
bottom. Then
donment Is author·
crusher run stone to SHIP,
lzed by the Diroctor of
Said vacation shall
be placed In 181nch
begin at a point along Transportation.
compacted IHts to a
The total length of
lotal depth of 8 ft. to , S.R. 338 ldentHied aa
S.R. ·338 to be aban·
Straight Line Mileage
an excavated eartl;1
doned
shall
be
(SLM) point 20.00,
cap on the road edge,
approximately
0.8
seed and straw to said point being 0.60
miles, as measured
miles north of the
prevent erosion,
along the centerline
intersection with S.R.
PROJECT2
of the roadWay, and
338 and U,S, Route
Slip repair on T14 MI.
specifically identillea
Union Road SE of 33; jheni:e extend In a
Carpenter approx. 1 nortliwesterly dirac·
by the above-refer·
1 mi. all SR 143,
lion along S.R 338 to
anced Straight .Line
Mileage points.
· Work to be camplet·
a point Identified as
Maps , drawings,
ed: A 50fi:X 20ft.x SLM point 21 .52, said
point being 0,2 miles
1Oft. deep excavation
environmental data,
· southeast of the lnler· ' other pertinent lnforof loose material to
matlan developed by
solid base and place- HC\IOn with S,R. 338
ment of 2ft. al coarse and S.R 124; and
Transportation ·
the
'
.Department, and any
rock placed In the · there terminate,
written · comments
·The vacated por·
bottom. Then
received as a result of
slhlaled
In
crusher run stone Ia tlon,
Lebanon Township , coordination
be placed In 18 Inch
with
slate
resources,
compected IItts to a M'lgs County, Ohio,
not necessary for the
recreation, planning
total dept of. 1Oft, to
construction or main·
agencies,
federal
an excavated earth
tenance ol tho corre· agencies, local public
cap an the road edge,
aaed and straw to spondlng facility or officials a'nd agenneeded for any other cies, and public advl·
prevent ero1lon.
aory groupo will be
public highway shall
Sealed blda will be
made available to tha
revert to tha abutting
opened Feb,
2005
0 t:30 p.m, 0 the property owners at public for viewing at
ouch time that the the Qhlo Department
Pagevllle Town ·Hell.
The Scipio Township Director has complied of Tranaporlatlon'a
with the provisions of .Oiatrlct Office; 338
truliHI reHrva the
Mulklngum
Drive,
right to accept or ·Section 5511.07 of the
Martella, Ohio 45750.
reject any or all blda. Ohio Revised Code.
The total length of · Anyone wishing to
Sealed bldl may be
a written
Hnl
to
Randy S.R. 3381o btl vacated · submit
atalement of exhibit
ahall be approxlnuoteButcher, .
38754
Mudfork
Road, ly · 1.52 miles, · ae ,concernlng• thle pro]·
ICI may do IO'by prePomeroy, Oh. 45789. measured along the
cei118rllne of the road· senting It at the hear·
For further Inform•·
lng or mailing II to the
tlon contact Randy way, and apecHieally
Ohl9 Department of
Identified by the
Butcher 0 742·2302.
Tran1portatlon ,
above-referenced
1n
Deputy
Straight line Mileage District
Director, George M.
polnta.
,
Public Notice
. PROPOSED, THE
Colllnl ,
338
ABANDONMENT OF
Mulklngum , Drive,
BOTH
REMNANT
Marlette, Ohio 45750,
ST~TE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT
OF SEGMENTS
OF Th•tlnel date tor oubmillion of alate·
STATE ROUTE 338 IN
TRANSPORTATION
menta
will
be
LEBANON
TOWN·
LAgal Copy
February 6, 2005.
SHIP, THE ACTION
No. D1 ·12-D4
GOrdon Proctor, ·
In accordance with WILL INCLUDE THE
Director
·
CONSTRUCtiON OF
the provlalona ot
(1) 7 l14 2T ·
Chepter 551 I of the TURNAROUND
FACILITIES AT THI!!
Ohio . ReviHcl Code
.rid Chapter 23 of the TERMINAL ENDS.
CCide
of· Federal •
llllld ab8ndonment
Public Notice
Ragu!Mtona, 771 .123, ol the southern rem·
The
Annuel
the , Director of the nant shell bagln at 1118
Ohio Department of . junction or S.R, 338 ,Finenclel Report lor
Tranapor18tlon will and U.S. Route 33, · Rutland TQWnahlp Ia
hold • public hellrlng btllng Jdtntlfl4ld •• complete and avail·
an Thureday, Jonuory SLM 19,40; lhenca able for review by
27 , 2005, beginning at extend In a northerly appointment, at the
1:00 P.M, In the Mllga , direction along S.R. olllce of the Clerk.
C o u n t y 338 a distance of Opal Dyer, Clerk
Commluloner• ' opproxlmately
0.6 P.O. Box 328
Oflli:e which Ia local· mllea to SLM point Rutland, OH 45775.
eel In the Courthouse 20.00, and lhero tar· tfr
at Pomeroy, Ohio, for mlnate. The aiHin1lon·
ment ·of the northern
lhe purpoae or hear·

J'

Here's all you
need to do ...
Fill out .the coupon
belovv and drop off or
: · mail it -with a
copy of your photo ID.
«f§alltpoU~ iiBail~ Qt:rtbun,.e

•
I
I

i 'o
I
I

Clty/$tate/Zip - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone_~---------------Mall or drop oft thla coupon along
wlth • copy of your photo ID to
Ohio Valley Publlehlng P . O. Box - 8 , Qalllpolle. OH 41183'1

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

I

. remnar:tl shall begin
at SLM point 21.52,
said ,.. polnl being
located 2.12 miles
lrom the junction of
S,R, 338 and U.S.
Route 33; thence
extend In a northerly
direction along .S.R.
338 a distance of
approximately
0.2
miles to SLM point

-·---·----------------------o,

..

·----·-- -

-~-

----- --'

TMIS BOAT'S A COIN
TOSS NO MATIER WHAT
COLOR TH'
SUNRISE

goops .

50 Try to lind
54 LoCk's
companion

i 1),;,1'1,
ll

coming Australian Inter-State Team
Champ1onship.
First, Iars look at trick one. You should
play the diamond eight, not because it is
third hand high , but because you have a
doubleton. When yoyr best card is lower
than th~ nine, give count.
At every other table, East took the second
trick and 1"1ad no winnin'g defense. The

IS!!

J

spades were frozen

I

"-----~
-...J~

end'ed

( H\lt-&lt;K.

JrTf-IE:.RE:.

::,E:, (&gt;,:':.I (.1( I

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity a~ cryptOgrams

~~~\ NW

M.\LE:.~ OF U5!

Bill

cre~ed !rom CJ..Oia!iol'll ~ famous~. pastan:l pr&amp;Eent
·

Each lfltar mthe Clp!l&amp;r stand5 tor ar1Cttle1.

with at le ast two spades.. fo ur

T~y's

hearts, two·diamonds and one club.
At th e table under our' spotlight. Gill calmly dropped his club five under dummy's
qu8enl Now South could have got home
by switching to diamonds 1 but understandably h8 called for a club and played
low from hand when East put in th e 10.
Gill cashed two more club tr icks, then
returned his last diamond. The defenders
got th ree clubs and two diamonds .

WI\TE:.~ W\Tf-1\N l:U~

tM. GE:.\1\t-\G

(a spade shift woold

give declarer three tricks in the suit), and
even a low-club return wou ldn 't hurt
South . He could play diamonds himself to
build up another trick. Each declarer

~

.x&gt;l41:1

"Middleport's only
. SeH·Storage"

N'1owsp·apl'1&gt;.

Yoor Righllo Know, O.li&gt;ered Righllo Your Door.

lng statements on the
propoaed
highway

on

6unba~

l'u~k Notices in

Scipio
trustees

nished. Established 1975. , The
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446· Township

Get A Jump

1

I

99l-3194 .
or 992-6635

IC
NOTICES
.

to Fritz

49 Hair-styling

International Bridge- Press Association's

YAMMERIN' J
AN' GIT IN, J!
LUKEY !!

97 Beech Street
Middleport, OH

I( I ...,

40 Runs
slowly
41 Kyolo ,
honorlllc
42 Eagle's lair
43 Reaqrtlng to ·
45 Give~
a party
46 Seductive
woman
48 Tree,

This deal. arose during the trials to pick
the New South Wales team for the forth·

10x10x10x20

BASEMENT

•

II"

MANlm
SELF STORAGE

(740)44B·0223.

57 Spike orAng
58' VIQIIn Rnob
59 Rx givers
18 PFC mall
60 Cloud
drop
19 Covers
backDrop · 22 Head
. 20 Frat letter
support
DOWN ' 23 Army off.
21 Battery
terminal
24 One,
23 Wrestling
1 .-Mahal •
lor Pierre
style
2 !&lt;'ournful
25 Beauty
26 Hollows
cry
pack
28 Dlk·dik
3 Almost,
27 Not tor
· cousin
in poems
29 Media
29 Pullet
4 Puffs along
excass
30 Preside
5 Le1 bygones 31 Volcanic
at a meeting
be bygones
.emission
34 Cuddly toy 6 Opera box
32 Dublin's
7 Muggy
'36 My, my! .
lbc.
.
38 Delhi
8 Form a gully 33 Disposed of
honorHic
9 Tousle
35 Bowser's
39 Telescope 12 Foot lever
ID (2 wds.)
lens
·
37 Burned ·
13 Rubber
41 Slough off
badly
shoe

Declarer wins cheaplY in hand and plays
a club to dummy's queen. How would you
plan lhe defense?
,

Reclining lift ctiair, li ke new,

WOOJ~IIIii--•ooiii61i

aource

entreaty
16 Mal,
.
- Hoople
17 Caughtllles

hands. After a Simple one no-tr~mp -

740-992•7599

"""""'"'

15 Make an

. three no-trump aucti.on, yo.ur partner
leads his fourth-highest diamond th ree .

FREE ESTIMATES

$200 080, (740)992·7312
or 740-992·7207'

vue·

teacher

14 Snag or rip 56 Tallow

award for the best defensiv8 play of 2004:
Peter GiU, from Sydney, Australia. II yolJ
wou ld like to try to duplicate his· maneuver. look at on ly the North and East

Let me do 1t for you'

COMMERCIAL and .
RESIDENTIAL

New: Titan 5500 Diesel ACDC Generator, Electr ic
Start, $'1,800 or trade for 4·
W1"1eeler PhOne (304)6756460

+3

'

a pension

47 Rectangle&amp;
51 Diva's
rendition
52 Youngsters
53 Startled cry
55 Porcelain

Today, we feature the 'player who won the

V1iA-

New Home&lt; • Vinyl
Sidi ng • New .Garages
Windows • Roofing

All pass

The defender ,
comes from below

Me the PAIN
out ot PAINTING!

• Repl ~cem e nl

East

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

Yt:S • .I. kNOW IT'$ ONLY
· ltr:N Ttlllt:r: .........

rlence

3 NT

Opening lead:

V.C, YOUNG Ill
. 25 Years Local Ex

Pass ·~

· 1 NT

We do It all except
furna'ce work ·
992..fi215 WY 036;25
Pomeroy, Ohio

West .North

Pass

Tree Service

• Roam Additions &amp;
RtrOOdellng
• New Geragea

Thank You
all my customers for
r.h1ri!':tr'"'"' gifts.
,Bernice Durst

I ~\

,

AK 92

of, K 4 2·

• Patio 1nd Porch Decks

200l Yamaha ·Raptor- 80, 4
wl1eeler. E~&lt;cellent condition.
$1,200. ·Siue!white . Call

01 ·07-05

A 10 5
Q 10

• J 10 5 4

~B9

• • ' . ~.~ 45760
Home • Auto • Life • Retirement

· Walk·ins or Appts .
Perm Sala$10.00 off

FOR S.u.E

"I

cry

46 Guarantee

7 Finish
a dress
1.0 Rope-a· .
dope-boxer
11 Barrel part
13 Splrl1ual

I
North

if

r

~

In the sun

4 Grey Cup
sport1 org .

YVONNE OHLINGER,

car. '$1 ,500, ___

42 Ice-fishing
tool
44 Detective's

1 Baal&lt;

Alder

(740)245·9652.

~lea-ant

'NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

who wrote notes
reca lling old times.
I was so blessed.
May God bless all

•

The Daily Sentinel • Page 85

Phillip

1998
Silver
Plymouth
Breeze, 4 door. air, tilt.
$1,600 080. 'Call (740)256 1652

¥totnt

•

www.mydailysentinel.com.

0•

December 25th
birthday. Special
' thanks to tlwse

shop O( at your home

EXT 3\)01

•

My sincere thanks
to each mzd
everyone who sem'
a card fo r my

l

Wood &amp; gas Cook Slave $5001 Honda's, 'Chevy's,
Eel.
Police
$350. Wood&amp; Coal Heating Jeep's,
Impounds! Cars from $500
Used Furniture Store, 130 Stove $250 (740)388-8075
for' listings 800·39~ ·5227
Bul~vine P1ke. Appliances ~

,

BRIDGE

repairs on major brands in .

couches, dinettes, reclinerS,
grave monuments, muc'h Block . . brick, sewer pipes,
mo"re.
(740)446-4782, windows, lintels, etc. Claude
Gallipolis, OH . Hrs. 11-3 (M- Wln l ers, Flio Grande, OH

'

Car,d of Thanks

New coUch $250, 2 new NEW AND USED STEEL Hay- 1st &amp; 2nd cuttings,
barstools, $50., bookcase in Steel Beams. Pipe Rebar square bales. -~ st cuttlnQFor
Concrete.
Angle , $1.25/bale; 2nd cuttingbox $50. (740)446·1613.
Channel, Flat Bar. Steel . $2.00/bale. ·call 740 -25~Thomps·ons Appliance &amp; Grating
For'
Drains, 1995 .
Repalr-675-7388. Fm sale, Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L
re-conditioned automatic Scrap Metals Open Monday,
I I{ \ '-"'l'i ll! I \ I \I •'\
washers" &amp; dryers, refrigera- Tuesday. Wednesday &amp;
tors, gas and electric Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
AIJI'OS
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bunkbeds , twin , full, queen,
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Friday, January 7, 2005 .

www.mydailyseniinel.com

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P ~INf NUMBERED
lfiiERI IN )OUARfS

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS 1- •r o 5
Wlrully · Wl11ll . Hale:/, - SlearJy . WHAT yo11 00
As a youth I lound 11 d1ff1cu1t to dec1de on a career A
college counselor laid me that 11 was ~esl not lo do whal
you like bul to like WH AT yotJ DO

ARLO &amp;JANIS
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CANCER (June 21-July 22) - lnstaad of
mere ly frittering your time away on
unproductive nothings. devote your energle s on labors of love. You'll get great
enjoyment out of being imaginative and
creative . .
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22)- Dan Cupid may
single you out tor some of Ais special

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and soak up nature's show

of beauty.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) - Through
new Ideas, your chances .fur major accumulation look good today, especially If
what you want Is tor your family or .orneone you love . It'• the motivation · that
maket you work amarter.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ee. 21) Prolect• you launch toda)' will hallt tongrange beneflll '1rt1et'1ed to tnem. e .....n It

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LIBRA (Sept 23-oCt. 23) - Instead of
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today, get outdoors. even It it's snowing
where you live . Take a walk in the park or

SOUPTONUTZ

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altentlon today. There's a Strong possibil -

ity that you could catch someone's eye
and the arrows will start lO fly.
VI~GO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) - You have a
specia l kMck today lor handling compli cated emotional Issues with a great deal
of kindness and skill. When fOU apply
your touch , no one will end.-L,Ip with

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your life can be resolved today. EaCh ·is
now prepared to see· the value of com-

PIF'JV BU&lt;'KS .BUT I J;a.l'T
HAV£ TO SHOIO UP IN CLP6S

NUT T S

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your goals.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) - Make the
time today to offer words or encouragement to a friend who :IS desperately in
need of a lift. Sometimes be!ng a gooct"
listener is all that It takes. but cheery
praise can buoy the spirit.
TAU RUS (AJ)rll 20-M ay 20)- Something
personally profitable to you could come
your way today through an enterprising
friend. Listen wen when your friend
speaks, because som9times opportunity
knocks very softly.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) - A ticklish

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Storage
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AOUAR IUS (Jao . 20-Feb. 19) Vigorously push any new ~~enture today
in which you're enthralled . Wilh your
interests and enthu siasm keyed to a hiQh
pitch. you 'll have no trouble gaining all
th e support you need.
PISCES IFeb. 20·Marc h 20) - Aim for
high and Iotty ta'rgets today, because
your chances for achieving your goals
are bett9r than usual. You 'll use both your
clever Ideas and creative talents to reach

DO 'iOll 1-lAVE AN'li STORIES
WHERE THE PRINCESS KISSES
A FROG, AND HE TURNS
· INTO .A 5EA&amp;LE ?

12

·

L....J..~.J.._.J.._.J.,_.l..-.J

CAPRI CORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) .---Your
.charitable instincts will be easily stimul ated and acted upon today, and this Is a
nob!e virtue. You'll aid people wher'e help
ts needed and encourage thOse who are

Parts

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See Brenl or Brian Whaley

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HER

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YdU MEAN , AM I
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Saturday, .lan'. 8, 200.5
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TO BE MY
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Re.~tockins

Gr~ph

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sided loss Of the season.
Muhammad, a point guard
who was only 2-of-12 against
from Page 81
Illinois. hit his first ,t(lree
attempts from behind the arc ·
in a game that was well in · as Cincinnati took control. .
His third 3-pointer started a
hand before halftime.
Looking to rebound from a 12-point. spurt that put
67-45 loss to No. l Ill inoi s, Cincinna~. up 29-1.1. .
the Bearcats turned up the
Hicks, who gu&lt;i'rdcd Greer
defensive pressure and pull ed m'ost of the time, hit a bank
ahead 43-20 at halft ime. shot over him that built the
flustered DePaul had more lead to 33- 13 with 7:04 to go
turnovel;;) (9) than field ,gu.als · in the half' and left the Blue
(8) in the half. shooring only bemons with dazed looks.
25.8 ·percent from the field .
"Fur all intents and purpos''lt was very important,''. es. this game was decided
forward .Eric Hicks said. "We once it started," Leitao said.
had three · good practices, "Once they had 20 points,
three of the be ~t this year. We there wasn't a whole lot of
played so horrible again st resistance from our point."
Illinois. We wanted to come
DeP&lt;iul .couldn ' t find open
out and show we're really shol' against the Bearcats'
pretty good."
tight defense, which is·one of .
Annein Kirkland scored 18 the nation 's be st. Even
points and Jihad Muhammad Illinoi s had trouble. shooting
added 16 for Cincinnati,
39 ..3 percent.
.
I
I
h
d
which didn't lett e ea s tp
'fhe Bearcats' defense
below 20 in the second half.
holds opponents to 35 .8 perGreer, who leads the con- cent shooting, fourth-best in
ference in ·scoring at 24.1 the national rimkings. It· did,
points per game, managed
only four points in the first n't take long for DePaul to
half. He finished with a team- feel the pressure and stan
high 12 on 4-of-13 shooting, tlinging them up. Drake
ending his school-record Diener missed badly on a ·
streak of eight consecutive hurried 25-fopt shot in . the
games with at least 20 points. opening minutes, and Greer
DePaul shot only 30.3 per- · missed the Fim on a fadeaway
cent from the field and had jumper that he shot quickly to
16 turnovers in its most lop- · avoid a block.

.,

r'

B6 • The Daily ~tine!

.
a
rcats·
Be

Steelers
from 'Page 81
and it's a .little bit of a retlec- tion of how you all played."
Hanings made it · for the
tirst time in his nine-season
career, beating out Jets center
Kevin Mawae by one vote,
·18-17, in balloting by NFL
writers and broadcasters.
"There's a few (Ail:Pro)
guys who -are standouts and
· are going to the Hall of
Fame," Hanings said. 'The
rest of the picks usually come
because · you're. playin~
around a lot of good players. '
The voting also reflects the
success of a running game
that was so strong all season
that three· different running
backs had JOO-yard games:
Jerome Bellis (6 · games),
Duce Staley (4) and rookie
• Willie Parker (I).
It 's a . remarkable turnaround from a year ago,
when their line became such
·3 mishmash due to injuries
&lt;md poor play . that F.aneca,
arguably the league:s best
guard, spent a half-season at
left tackle. During a midseason game in Denver, line
coach Russ Grimm rotated
linemen from series-to-series
in a desperate search for a
workable mix.
· This season, left tackle
Marvel Smith, Faneca,
Hanings, right tackle Oliver
Ross and right guard
Keydrick Vincent played
every meaningful snap
together "s the Steelers
rushed for 2,464 yards

Rookie
from Page81
and reflect on it after the· season; . but, right now,
it's,'Thank you,' and let's
move on," Roethlisberger
·d
s~;anslation: Despite being
13-0, Roethlisberger won 't
.be satisfied unless he goes
16-0. That means winning
the Super Bowl, something
no rookie QB has done.
Of course, no rookie quarterback has ever led his team
to .a 15-l record, either even though Roethlisberger
got ~lenty of help from' the
NFL s No. 2 rushtng offense
and a defense that allowed
the fewest points and yards in
the league.
"It's one of many accolades
that he's going to get, and it
couldn't happen to a greater
guy," Steelers wide receiver
Hines Ward said.
Even if Roethlisberger
wasn't considered the greatest quanerback or, even the
Nq. 2 quaiterback, by many
scouts tn last April's draft.
Two w,ere taken ahead of him
- Eli Manning and Philip
Rivers - and 10 teams
passed on him before· the
Steelers drafted him No. II
- coincidentally, 21 years
after they didn't draft a Pitt
quanerback named Dan
Marino.
Now, nine months later,
Rivers . has only- one touchdown pass and Manning has
only one victory· to show for

nearly 1,000 more than their
I ,488 yards of ;1003. That
represented their worst rushing season since 1967.
''We worked hard this year
to be part of the solution and
not the problem, and it's paid
off," Faneca said. "We've all
been on the same .page and
we've worl(ed hard, and the
hard work showed,Joo."
Farrior, a nearly unanimous
selection by his teammates as
the learn MYP, enjoyed one
of the most productive sea-.
sons ever by a Steelers line•
backer. He led the team in
tackles, forced five fumbles,
recovered three, had four
sacks and four interceptions.
"It's a nice compliment,
. but I'm not a guy who strives
for individual accolades,"
Farrior said. "I'm a team
player and if it's good for the
team, it's good for me."
. Farrior had a big season
even though pittsburgh's
other starting inside linebacker, Kendrell Bell, missed
nearly the entire season with
injuries, forcing . Farrior to
adjust ·on the fly wit!) new
staner Larry Foote.
.
, "A lot of guys come out
and have bad . games, but
James is always above that," .
Foote said. "He's there every ·
week.''
When they last went into
the playoffs top-seeded in
200 I, the Steelers had two .
All-Pros, Faneca and linebacker Jason Gildon. They
last.had three first-reamers in
1997: center Derrnontti
Daw~on, linebacker Levon
Kirkland and safety Carnell
Lake.
their
rookie
years.
Roethlisberger has a 13-game
winning streak, plus the kind
of statistics most veteran
QBs would love to possess:
'196 of 295 passes for 2,621
yards, 17 touchdowns, II
interceptions and a 98.1 passer rating.
But after Roethlisberger
recei ved considerable atterition while winning his first
four stans, it was consecutive
midseason victories over previously unbeaten
New
E 1gland and Philadelphia .
that made him a certifiable
·star and stamped Pittsburgh
as the Super Bowl favorite .
His No. 7 jersey quickly
became ,a hot seller and his
popularity - perhaps unri- ·
valed by any Steelers rookie
since Franco Harris in 1972
- spawned Roethlisberger
sandwiches and several
endorsement contracts.
Still, Roethlisberger insisted he paid little attention io
his fast-developing :Stardom.
"C'mon, you guys know
me . better than that,"
Roethli sbe!8er · said when
asked by reporters if the
award excitM him. "I didn 't
even think I was. going to
play this year, so it really
wasn't a goal of mine. It' s an
honor, but it speaks a' lot for
this team and not just me. I
wish I could put the whole
, team on it."
Roethlisherger ·is the founh
Steelers player to win the
award, joining receivers
Louis Lipps (1984) and
Jimmy Orr (1958) and Harris
( 1972).

.
Friday, January 7,

www.mydailysentinel.cont

.
.
COLLEGE :BASKETBALL----

2005

--

Herd stumbles to B.owling .Green
HUNTINGTON , W.Va . 12 and Joe Miles scored 10 points during an 11-2 run as . Marshall also .struggled
John Rei mold in the lo ss, Marshall's Bowling Green took a 58-52 w1th foul sh~otmg, but the
scored 22 points Thursday eighth in nine games.
lead with 5:40 left in the Falcons flounshed from the
night to lead Bowling Green ·
Reimold, game.
'.....
line. Bowling Green hit li to a 69-64 · win over
a p~e seaThe si)l-point lead was the of-13 foul shots with the
Marshall .
son,
All- biggest of the half for either first miss coming with 12 .
·
k
ff
M ·A c team · as
both
teams seconds left ·in the game.
Reimo!d got a ey 0 en·
Marshall finished I 0-of-16
sive rebound · ·and · hit
·· se lection, exchanged the lead eight from the line.'
Germain Fitch for a lay-up
had . I !I of times in the first 13 minutes
Each team shot from lht:
to give Bowling Green the
his
22 of the second half.
outside well in the first .half,
lead for good with 48 secpoints in · Marshall' s
veterans but Marshall fizzled in the
onds left.
the second stepped up to lead· ihe come- second half going 3-of-ll
Josh AI manson and Cory
h a I f . back ·with Hamilton and from
3-point . range.
Eyink joined Rei mold in be'coming the 3.3rd player in Patton scoring . ll apiece in . Bowling Green shot 4-of-6
double-figure s for Bowling Bowling Green history. to . the second half while Miles in the second half and finGreen (8-2 , 2-0 Mid- score I ,000 points.
struggled.
ished the game IO"of-20
American Conference) with · F.itch's lay-up came ·after
Miles, who averages 14.5 from beyond the arc .
17 and 14 points respective- Marshall tightened · the points per game, could not
Bowling Green used a 13ly.
defense and scored SIX get free against the Falcons . 0 run over a 4:30 span of the' ·
A.W.
Hamilton
led straight points to tie . the defense as he shot 2-of-10 first half to take a 26.-22
Marshall (2-9, 0,3) by tying game at 60.
from the field . Most of his lead with · 6:37 left in the
hi s career-high with 17
Marshall had to play points came from the foul first half and went into half' Points. Mark Patton added catch-up, sconng ·eight lit:~e where he was 5-of-6.
time leading 34-31.
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