<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="5095" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/5095?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T13:40:29+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="15023">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/bd3e049232c6406b3f90d654db4a80f5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>6eb40c828baea8225b3032fede376954</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="17388">
                  <text>..

•

.

-

."

'

•

Brown plans to

Freshmen use

check into hospital·
. after draft, Bt
Page 86 • The Daily Sentinel

summer ternt to adjust
to college life, Bt

Thursday, June 23, 2005

www. mydailysl:ntinel.com

ANTIQUE CAR, TRACTOR SHOW. SET FOR SUNQAY.
RIO GRANDE- The Bob Evans Farn1
in Rio Grande will host the 29th anriual
Antique Car S.how and Amique Tractor
.Exhibition on Sunday. June 26.
Admission is free to the even t, which
lasts from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The car show is sponsored by the
Appalachia Old Car Club and the tractor
exhibition is sponsored by .the Southern
Ohio Agriculture Heritage Club . .
Collectible cars froin the Model A 10
modem classics will be on display for the
public. First and second place awards will
be given in each of 27 car show clhsses
and eight motorcycle classes.
'
Farm equipment, whiCh will be displayed or demonstrated, includes steam

engines. antique tractors and other antique
power eq uipment. Trophies will be
awarded to the best restored tdctor or
engipe. beSt disp lay. oldest tractor. longest
distance travele.d and judge ·s choice.
Visitors to the car show may also enjoy·
the Bob Evans Homestead Museum and
Underground Railroad Exhibit. which
both offer free admission.
The Craft Barn on the farm will .· be
open. featuring a large assortment of line
folk art and one-of-a:kind items. For
more infornuition about the farm or oiher
Bob · Evans Farm events and activities, ·"
those interested should call (800) · 9943276 or visit the Web site at www.bobe- ,

Bob Evans .f.arm
in Rio Grande will
be the ·site of the
ar,nual Antique
Car Show and
Antiqu~ Tractor
Exhibition on
Sunday. Visitors
are also encouraged to visit the
Bob Evan.s ·
Home~tead ..
Museum and
Underground
Railroad Exhibit.

ANTJQUI ,,. . . .

JuRI 21 ,___

JD;S

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio
.) 0 t'E:'\TS • \ 'ol. :i4 - '-'" · 2q

• Spurs win NBA
Championship.

Bv BRIAN J. REED
tions tb be approved for 2007 Pomeroy
and
Chester Memorial Hospital officials
BREEOOMYDAILYSENTINEL.COM
&lt;;an benefit local communities. Courthouse, for example, have begun to discuss plans
· .
"Whil e we're tal~ing about were tunded through the cap i- for a "hea lth care campus" m
POMEROY . . - M et~ s 2007, it 's never toQ· early to tal budget, and funds have an undetermined . location.
County CommtsSioners wtH .. begin thinking aboul how the · been prqmised for the new O' Bleness
ha s
alreadv
wor~ wtth State Senator Joy budget can help local fo m- University of Rio Grande announced plans to open ;,
Padg.ett, R-Coshocton, to seek munities, and for lo~al nead- Mei gs Center from the appro- · health clinic in the Medical
"fundrng through the stale cap- ers to begin di scussing priation, as well.
Arts 'building &lt;(cross from
ttal budget for constructiOn of plans ," Padgett said. "You
Board President Mick Veterans Memorial Hospital.
a new medtcal. campus m can ' t just have an idea, you · Davenport said the county . Capital funds cannot be
Metgs County. .
. . . must have a plan, and that's will likely, see k funds to assist used for operations and main. Padgett met Wtth commts- where working together can m the development of a new ·tenance, or for land acquisiSioners at thetr regular meeting make things happen."
n:edical facility, although he tion, and arc generally used as
on Thursday to propose a
Capital appopriations are dtd not outltne specific plans &gt;_ leverage for other f11p ds.
meetmg with them, vtllage made
for
community for · such a project. He said ·Padgcu saitl. They have been
mayors and other oftkials later improvementS in local com- commtss_toners. health depart- used in the past for ettuipping
thi s year to discuss how the munities. Renovations to the ment otltctals. the Counctl Qn emergency squads and non. state capital budget appropria- Meigs County Courthouse in Agmg . an.:J
O'Blenes~ profit health c,linics . .

See PageB1

•
Bv CHRISTY I:EMIRE
AP MOVIE CRITIC

N

o magic spells could make
CHARLESTON - The West California: and Delaware Center for
"Bewitched" enjoyable, after
Virginia Divi ~ion of Cu.Jture and Contempqrary Arts. Wilimgton.
all the work put into it by a
· History will join in the celebration Del., among others. Her work has coven of rotating .. cooks , stirring the
qf Festiv All Charleston with art been in juried exhibitions nation- long-simmering cauldron.
programs on Saturday, June 25 at wide and won awards at the West
The brew that sisters Nora and
the C.ulture Center. State Cap.itol Virginia Juried Exhibition at the Delia Ephron ultimately created
Complex, Charleston.
Cultural Center: Crosscurrents at · reeks of antic desperation, though it
The day's activities, which the Stifel Fine Arts Center, features a solid cast in Nicole
include movies, a drumming Wheeling: Allied Artists of West Kidman, Will Ferrell. Michael Caine
demonstraton with audience partie- Virginia Annual
Exhibition. and Shirley Mac Laine.
•ipation, hands-on art stations, ·and Charleston; · and at the Print,
In adapting the '60s sitcom for the
an open mic guitar night, are free ·to Painting and Drawing E~hibition at big screen. the Ephrons (Delia as
the public.
the Parkersburg Arts Center, to director/writer and Nora as writer)
The Division's continuing movie name a few.
have come up with a conceit that's
series will feature The Neve rending
Her work is included in numerous admirable in its attempt at innovaStory (1984, 92 minutes), directed collections. including the South tion : An updated version of
. by Wolfgang Peterson (Das Boot), Bank Corp., Miami, Fla.; the First "Bewitched" is in the works. with a
at I and4 p.m. Barret Oliver plays a Huntington
National
Ban.k, real-life witch . playing Samantha.
lonely, dreamy kid who misses his Huntington ;
Museum
in You have to give them credit for at
dead mother. While hiding out in a Community, Hurricane·; and many least trying something different, and
store to avoid some bullies from his more.
not just another camped-up transfer
AP F!hoto/Co!umb!a Pictures/John Bramley
school, he picks up a book and · In addition to "her art, Toth, of from TV to film, like "The Brady
begins reading a tale about Fantasia, Hurricane, taught for more than 25 Bunch Movie" or "S tarsky &amp; Hutch" In this photo provided by Columbia Pictures, Will Ferrell and Nicole Kidman
a land where a dreadful force called years. From 1980 to 2002, she was - that is, until Steve Carel! from star in the romantic comedy "Bewitched."
The Nothing is destroying the coun- teacher for the artistically gifted in "The Daily Show" shows up,. doing urban, mortal life .
course, he has no clue she really is a
try.
Putnam County Schools, earning a his flamboyant impersonation of Paul
Ferrell plays Jack Wyatt, a washed- witch, and figures she\just an inno· As he's reading the stpry. the boy Teacher of the Year Award in Lynde as Uncle Arthur.
up actor looking for a comeback by cent girl he can upstage. Meanwhile,
realizes he 'is ·the only one who can Putnam County in 1982 . She
In execution, though, the premise starring as Darrin on the new she's instantly, inexplicably smitten
save Fantasia and magically, he enters received her bachelor's and ·mas- feels too cutesy - as does the per- "Bewitched." (He actually does his with Jack, despite his obvious·
the story. By becoming part of this ter 's degrees from Marshall formance from Kidman ,. who 's more best work in the film at the beginning, smarminess.
adventure, the boy is given the self- Umversity.
. than capable of comedy . (see the when he's unshaven, insecure and
Isabel's father, Nigel (Caine, proconfidence he needs wherr he returns
An open mic · guitar night for darkly funny "To Die For") but is too ,withdrawn, and nervously meeting viding the film with a .modicum of
to the real world. The tllm has an · songwriters and . accostic guitarists substantial an actress for the dippy- with the TV show's execs for the first grace), is appalled by the idea of his
imaginative premise and features . will wrap up the day's activities at 7 fluffy routine she's got working here. time. It's a darker side of the comedi- daughter's involvement with the sitsome interesting characters, including p.m. in the Norman L. Fagan West It doesn't help that she and Ferrell, as an· that we've never seen, and it sug- com. 'That's an insult to our way of
a "rockbiter" and a dragon.
Virginia State Theater. Ron Sowell the actor playing Darrin, have zero gests an untapped complexity that's life!" he .scolds. But he softens when
Afternoon art activities from I to. of Elkview will emcee the evening chemistry with each other, despite enticing. But it doesn't last long.) . . he realizes who's playing Samantha's
5 p.m. are· geared for children, but event.
.
.
their individual appeal.
Jack spots Isabel in a bookstore and mother, Endora: his favorite actress;
Participants in the open mic sesvisitors of all ages ;;u-e invitecfto parKidman plays Isabel Bigelow, a notices her twitching her upturned, Iris · Smythson (the . mystical
ticipate. Mark Davis, musician and ·sion will perform one song, which blissfully naive (and good) witch Elizabeth Montgomeryesque nose. MacLaine, .ideally cast and approprieducator, will lead participants·in a must be original music. Instruments who wants to give up her super- He's instantly drawn to Isabel as the ately over-the-top in an arniy of
"Different Drums" program. Davis are limited to acoustic guitars; and natural powers for mundane , sub- ·ideal person to play his TV wife; of brightly colored feather boas).
will brinjl his collection of drums 'those competing may have one
from vanous countries, share their ·accompanist. Prizes will be awardhistory, demonstrate different edina children's category as .well as
drumming techniques and invite an adult category.
·
visitors to play them.
Sowell. best known for his role as
One of West Virginia's most tal- the musical director of the intemaPORTSMOUTH - Within 50 visiting incorporated into the play as antique appraisal and sale, and lots of
ented musicians, Davis was the . tionally acclaimed public radio show. miles of Portsmouth more than 300 it follows the floodwall murals and fun for the whole family.
drummer .for the Charleston alterna- Mounrain Stage. is also a singer, song- famous people made their home at the history of Scioto County.
Appalachian craftsmen, inflatable
live rock band Crazy Jane for eight writer, guitarist, performer and pro- one time. Movie stars. musicians,
Unicorn Players and the Scioto ville rides and activities are ·planned every
years. Currently he plays with the ducer. In 1992, he released his first sports figures, artists. doctors, busi- Theater Project will present "As You day - something for everyone..
VooDoo Katz, the Montaneros and solo CD, Oil and Watet; featuring 10 ness people, writers and many more Like It" Appalachian-style, during
This is a citywide event presente&lt;l
Comparsa.
original compositions. The songs - past and present - have either the festival. They will also be per- · _by the communitY and surrounding ·
Davis, qf Charleston, is a native range from humorous to socially con- been born in a 50-mile radius of forming at the Edinburgh, Scotland . areas of Portsmouth with the cooperWest Viqlinian and graduate of scious. Sowell has also played in . Portsmouth or spent a significant part Fringe Festival; the largest theater ati~n of the. city of Portsmouth,
West Virgmia University, where he numerous bands, includidng the of their lives in the area.
festival in the world, representing the Convention &amp; Visitors Bureau,
majored in voice and was a me!ll- Putnam County Pickers and Stark
"After extensive research, we have · Portsmouth area, allowing a unique Community Common, Shawnee State
beer of the highly acclaimed WVU Raven.
~iscovered that more famous people opportunity for area residents te per- University, Ramada Inn, Copy-Cat
African Drum and Dance
For more information abour were born or lived within a 50-mile fonn and act as international "good Printing, AI Oliver Foundation,
Ensemble.
FeslivAII Charles/On activities at the radius of Portsmouth than anywhere will ambassadors .'.' .
.
Portsmouth Murals, Civic Forum,
He has studied at tl\e African ·c,lwral Cemer. comact Jeff in the country," said Shirley Adams,
Artistic director, professional actor Boneyfiddle Events Committee, · the
International Center of Music and Pierson, individual anisr coordina- MeD, executive director of Unicorn and adjunct professor at Shawnee Portsmouth Daily Times and numer.
Dance, UniversitY. of Ghana in West tor for the divison. at (304) 558- Players Inc . and chairman of the State University Jim Hayes will ous area businesses and organizaAfrica. His travels to Africa have 0240, extension 7I 7. or by e-mail at Celebri!Y Festival committee.
direct the pageant. Hayes has worked tions.
made his love for drumming a life- jeffpierson@wvculrure.org. ·
"Not all the famous. people will be in the entertaiJ]ment industry for 40
The Celebrity Festival. begins June
long passion. In addition tQ his work
The Wesr ·Virginia Divison of here, but we will· have some to honor years.
30 and culminates on July 4 with the
with bands, Davis teaches music Culture a111:t History, an agency of during the week," she added. "You .. Numerous activi!ies will be pre- . Civi.c Forum's annual concert anq
full time at Elk Elementary Center. the West Virginia Department of never know .who you might run into sented throughout the five-day event ftreworks on the riverfront. , ·
· Artist and educator Caryl Toth Edtocarion' cmd the Arts, brings at the festival during the week.".
including an AI Oliver Expo. and a . The committee is looking for velwill set up three ;;u-t stations in the . rogetherthe stare's past, present and
Adams is past chairman of the different kind of music every day unteer~. organizations who would
Great Hall and invite visitors to ere- jill tore through progrqms and ser- Sternwheel Regatta productions in including bluegrass, gospel, country, like to participate, and names to add
ate . their own works of art. vir.-.1 irt the areas of archives and Hollywood, Calif., . worked with . rock, classical and jazz. . The to the hst of famous people in a 50- .
Participants will be able to try their ,history, the ar/s, historic preserva- . numerous . organizations and as cos: Appalachian Fringe, a festival of the mile radius of Portsmouth. The
hand at simple printmaking. sponge tion and (mtseums. .
tunie mistress at the Vern Riffe arts with theater, dance, visual arts famous person must be nationally
stamping and.mJxed media projects.
The Cultttral Center is West Center for the Arts.
and film is planned throughout the known.
A skilled ·artist for more than 30 Virginia's official showcase for the
Unicorn Players Inc. is producing a week.
For more information or I{} add to
years. Toth has had solo exhibitions arrs. Visit the Division's Web site at colossal pageant "Fifty ' Miles of
Different organizations in the com- the list of names, call (740) 353-8956
.at The Art Store. Charleston; www.wvculture.org for more in/or- Heroes," with more than 200 actors, in unity will be presenting their own or (740) 353- JJ /6 or e-mail: skiUniversity of Charleston; Maxine mmion abolll programs of the divi- elaborate scenery, costuming, lights special progr&gt;~ms, including a bed adamsa@aol.com
·
or
Gold Gallery, . Mill Valley, sian.
and sound, with the "famous person." race, a parade, a "living" mural, an· portsmouthcvb@yahoo.com.

'Fifty Miles of Heroes' set for Portsmouth

. Commissioners also:
· • Approved appropriations
and appropriation adjustments
for the board of ·elections,
council 01\.-aging, and engineer.
• Approved payment of
bills in the amount of '
$371,567.72.
• Denied · an . animal claim
filed by Don Lambert, due to
inavailability of funds.
• Acknowledged a donation
toward jail renovations from
Ronald Miller; Jr., Pomeroy.
Commissioners .
Mick
Davenport and Jim Sheets
an&lt;i Clerk Gloria Kloes were
present.

Special Olympics' athletes compete ·to win.Racine rills
. Bv BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYDA!LYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Jack Boyd, 67
• Timothy Roush, 49
• Betty Schomburg, 67
'

INSIDE
• A Hunger For More.
See Page A2
• Bible school to begin.
See Page A2
• Church to celebrate
1'25th anniversary
Sl,!nday. See Page AS
• Water conservation
order issued.
See Page AS
• Band pratice to resume.
See Page AS

WEATIIER

.

SYRACUSE - Ten athletes' from Carleton School I
Meigs .Industries are leaving
today for the Special
Olympics State Summer
Games in Columbus· not just
. to compete· buno win.
When asked whether or not
it was more important to finish
a race or to win it, the Carleton
I Meigs Industries Special
Olympic athle.tes answered
with a resounding, "Win."
When ~the Meigs Special
Olympics Delegation arrives
in Columbus today they will
attend opening ceremonies in
the Jesse Owens Memorial
Stadium which will include a
parade of athletes. The cere~
monies will culminate in the
law enforcement torch run.
Competition will begin today
and extend through Sunday
morning.
For athlete Mary Jane
Curry this will be her second
trip to the state games. Curry
said her favorite . part about
Special Olympics is the fact

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@MYD~ILYSENT!NEL.COM

that, "It's fun."

Athlete Mark Weber will be
competing in the .softball throw
and I00-meter walk but his ·
faV.orite thirig about this year's·
Special Olympics is the bus ride
Please see Athletes. A5

BY CHARLENE HoEFLICH
HOEFL!CH@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Detalto on Pace A6

INDEX
'

2 SEC110NS -

Calendars
Cla~sifieds

l:i PAGES .

A6
.

Comics
Dear Abby
Editorials
Faith• Values
Movies

B2-4

Bs
A6

A4
' A2-3

As

NASCAR

B6

.Obituaries
Sports ·
Weather

As

BSection
A6

CHESTER - . Renovation
of the
1839 Chester
Academy, companion building to the restored 1823
Chester Courthouse located
on an adjacent lot, got a boost
recently from the Ohio Hills
Heritage Foundation.
.,
The Foundation awarded
ihe project a $2,000 grant to
go toward improvements to .
the building. Last year a new
roof was installed and currently workers are doing
some inside work and taking ·
action to shore up a corner
foundation of the structure.
.Volunteers are in the
process of removing old paneling from the inside walls.
Sheet rock, a moisture proof
drywall that can be plastere4,
..will be installed. Funds .for
the project were made available from First Lady Hope
Taft's Make a Difference Day
' program and the Governor's

Botti Sergent/photo

Meigs County will be represented by a delegation· of athletes at the. Special Olympics State
Summer Games in Columbus today. Athletes will attend oitening ceremonies tonight and compete in events throughout the weekend. Some of the Meigs Delegation will include (from left)
Mark Weber, Mary Jane Curry, Mary Rankin, Roger Lance, Jr., Thomas Hill.

Office .of Appalachia.
Mary Powell, who is active
in the Historical A.ssociation,
described the Academy as a
"prominent school during the ·
1800s when tnost people
only went .through fourth or
sixth grade." She said that ,
funding is needed to continue
the project and anyone interested in giving cab contact
her at 992-2622, or JoAnn
Ritchie, 992-7362.
Funding for the new roof
came from a Governor 's
Office of Appal&amp;chia award
of $15,000 and various other
moneys raised through projects of Chester Council 323,
Daughters of America, and
the Chester-Shade Historical ·
Associat~on . There have been
several sizable donations to
the project from organizations including the Modern
Woodmen of America.
Last year U. S. -Senator
Mike DeWine (R-\)H) had
Please see Gr..t, A5

. r----~

Submitted photo

Volunteers. like Bud Blosser, left and .George MOrrison shown
removing paneling from an inside wall , are doing part of the
renovation worl&lt; on the 1839 Chester Academy which has
been described as a historic treasure.

.
Some play for money. Some play for glory.
Some play for the occasicmal trip ~o the Ice cream shop.
.
. .
·'
AlAI-'
,.....,.........,
. ----"""-·~~~~~
......
up In 1M big'
1 w, but IIIey .clollll
loan! 1 - •
•IS. L i b - to- 1 plli:h. -ID 1bllch tlw

••

~

-And-

•
•

"'*'you

PI Jl

·.·

--•won,_
-to

"*"you
don' juat loan!
1111 • ·lid to kl II
li: lftd 1llklng C8N of

ID awfr1U lor tlie lone aa
plrf
........_, IIIII I . . . . fWiWIL And - a iiilflwcwll: ~ . . . . dl ~

•

another
vacated
council seat
. .

Grant gives boost to Chester Academy renovation

© zoos OIUo V.Uey Pubtisbing Co.

'

W&gt;lll.m•tlaih-.·utllwl.
c""'
-

.

1-'RID.\Y. ,J( :;'I;F ::q, -2CHI;}

·

County ~II see~ ·capital funds for health.care campD:S

SPORTS

Kevin Ke!!y/P.hOtO

vans.com.

Culture Center to celebrate ·
FestivAll Charleston

.

XCI
,WI'.. proudiOepot-aiNJIMof . . . . . -no-"'*~llilmiDI!•

RACINE - At it's recent
recessed meeting, RaCine
Village Council appointed
resident Ivan PoweJ[ to the
council seat vacated by for-.
mer
Councilwoman
Charlotte. Wamsley.
Powell's council seat along
with
seats
held
by
Councilmen Duke Bentz,
Jason Shain and Greg Taylor
will be up for · reelection this
November. Powell anticipates
that he will run for reelection.
A veteran of the United
States Air Force, Powell is
retired from the Rockwell
Plant in Gallipolis and was
previously on the Racine
Board of Public Affairs. ,
Raised in Antiquity, Powell
moved to Racine in the late
1960's with his la\e wife
Carolyn. The couple were
married for 46 years.
' "I was approached by some
members of council about
filling the seat and I told them
. I'd be very happy to serve the
town,'' Powell said. "I live
here and !.don't like to be .a
taker my whole life: I like to
give as well. I appreciate the
fact that council had enough
faith in me· to appoint me."
In other business from the
recessed meeting:
Council authorized the
placement of a 2-mil current
expenses renewal levy to be
placed on the November
electi(ln ballot. ·
Dave
Clerk-Treasurer
Spencer reported that Ohio
Tax Commissioner William
W. Wilkins said that Johns
Road and Spencer Alley, and
the old fire hpuse s\ation
were approved for tax
exemption status.
Council approved the purctmse of evidence collection
materials. estimated at $300,
and a fan for the trunk mount
vault in the police car not to
exceed · $50, and an oil
change fpr the police cruiser
at jiills Garage. The items
were requested by Mayor J.
Scott Hill on behalf of Racine
Police Marshal Curtis Jones.
Council approved. the third
and tiQal reading of Ordinance
Please·see Radnt!r AS

.aMERI"aN
f'&amp;MI•v
""'
"f t
••

ft

INSURANCE

ad.

· ·WE BELIEVE II THE POWER OF SPORT.

HANGING BASKETS
Over 50,(XX) Beautiful flowering !l.sten

•v-..

• ~ Grinro Hybrid lmpo.tio:no "
C«aniunw

·Zooal~
' . Fans &amp;: Mon:l

RUed witb your
uvorite flowers•..
Ready to Set on your

pon:h or drdcf

I

'

Two Conyen!tnt • rclllonl:
2400 Eaatem Ave.
1/4 Mile Noilh
(Across from KMIIrt) Pomeroy/Mason Bridge .
Galllpoll-. OhiO 45631
Mason,~ 25260
(740) 446-1711
Phone (304) ~

1583 St Rt 160
Gallipolis, OH 45631
(740) 446-0214
pool @amfam.com
Mon. - Fri. 9:00 am • ~:00

·''

225 Broadway St.
Jackson, OH 45640
(740) 286-4385
jwoOd@amfam.com

American Family Mt.Jtuallnsurance Company ;ind its
Subsidiaries

Home ()fflce - Madison, Wl 53783

American Family Insurance Company
American Stand&amp;rd InsuranCe Company of Ohio
HonJe Office - Cofumtws. OH 43240

·- •--'-----.:---------

•

•

American Standard Insurance Company of Wisconsin

•

�•

'

• VAL

FAITH

The Daily Sentipel

Be not made a beggar by banqueting ujJOn borrowing
" Be nor made a beggar by
banquetmg upon borro wmg"
In my personal devotiOns one
day I ran across thts stnktng
proverb from the anc1e n1
Jew1 sh sage. Joshua ben
S1rach I say It was "stnk1ng''
becauss I know only too well
from bitter expene nce what 11
IS to "banquet upon borrowmg"
I d1shnctly remember hnw
exc111ng 11 was to pull a credIt card out from my wallet lor
the tirst lime. to buy somethmg I really didn 't have
money to pay tor. I remember
how all-too-easy 11 was tn
college to go out wtth friends
for the iu ght. slappmg down
that plastic hke there was' JIO
tomorrow. Oh we h.1d some
great t1mc, d1dn't we·&gt;
For a long t1me I made the
mimmum paymenls each
month. some11mes more
but then 11 hH No more credIt and reah sttc.llly not enough
mcome I '"" m debt had
other btlls to pay and a JOb
that JUSt wouldn't supporr all
of my tinanc1al oi;Jhgations
Horror ot .11l horrors. I was
essentmll y reduced to the
level of beggary
Unfortunate!~ . in our culture of inst,1ni grauftcation.

Jonathan
Noble
Pastor,
Church

Tnmly

,
my 'tory ts not at all un1que
How m.my peop le aero" our
gre.11 land h,tve become beggars h} banquetmg upon borJO\\-Jng '1 Fuuncml debt IS an
.l l b&lt;~truss mound the n~ck o l
AmeiiC,II1 soc iety, no doubt
.:~boul It. ·'Even our government b,1nquets upon borrowIng
.tlthough Congress
doe'n ·1 beg They JUSt ta x
more!
What m,my people ,1pp.1rentl y do not 1eahze - or t!
they do. they tend to 1gnore 11
- is th.tt when you borrow
you ,1re beholden to the
le nder unttl you pa) back
your debt We read th1 s sunpi e truth in Pro vet bs. 'The
borrower ts the slave ol the
lender." How tnghtenmg but
how true' "Woe to hun who
stores up what IS not hts."
warns the prophet Habakkuk

"How long can 11 last! He
lo.tds h1mse lf dow n w1th
dehts. Shall not yo ur credttors nse suddenly '' You shall
become \hetr spoil!"
Borrow1ng ts so met1mes
nece"ary, ol course, but it
espeCially
behooves •
Chn stians to rid themsel ves
ot debt as soon as posstble.
Ultunate ly. the only One to
whom we should tinct ourselves 1n ' debt is our great
God .md Saviour. not other
people or so many human
institutions. We are called to
be a people beholden to our
S"overe1g1)' Lotd and only to
H1 1n . I
.
So "be not a beggar by
, banquetmg upon borrowmg ,
rather. "m generous spint pay
.homage to the Lord
Gt ve
to the Most Ht gh as he has
g1ve n to yo u, generously.
accotdmg to your means." As
the Psalhust says. "Pay your
vows to the Lord m the presence of all people ,"' after all ,
our mdebtedness to God ts
foreve r .. but that's a debt
wonh havmg!

Editor's Note: The Rev.
Jonathan Noble may be contacted by e-q~ail at or by mail
at Trinity Church, P. 0. Box
419, Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769. ,

Church Briefs
halfway between Reeds ville and Hockmgporr.
Refreshments foll ow ing

Free dinner
MIDDLEPORT-Afreedmner wtl be srved
from 4;30 to 6·30 p.m. Fnd&lt;~y (tod,ly) at the ,.
Middlepon Church ot Chnst
!

Gospel sing Saturday

CARPIENTER - Gospel sing 6:30 p.m.
Saturday at the Carpenter Bapttst Church, State
Route 143 , Carpenter. Smgers will be Mercy,
Roush Famtly, Dan and Fa1th Hayman, Tidings
Tr10, and Luke and Kay Osbome. Love offenng
hours at God's will be tnken to supporr Bend Area Gosptel
Mulberry Ave. , jubilee.
Tuesday and
and Fnday and

Summer hours at
God's N.E.T.

POMEROY - Summer
NET youth center, 260
Pomeroy, are Monday.
Wednesday, noon to 5 p m
Saturday, 6 to I 0 p.m.
On Mondays from noon to 2 p m the center
has a fishing with fri ends program. The group
PORTLAND - Spamsh-language Mass at
goes to the pond on Mulberry A'enue to fish and
Our
Lady of Guadalupe Miss1on wtll be held at
then returns to the center tor free food and fun.
6 p m.. Sunday at the Harns Farms Market,
Ohio 124. The Mass is a ministry of Sacred
s~hool
Heart Church, Pomeroy.

Spanish-language
Mass"offered

Bible

to begin

POMEROY - Vacauon B1ble school will
begm Monday and contmue through July I, at the
Calvary Ptlgnm Chapel on Route 143 For more
information call Pastor Charles McKenzie, 9922952 or Ruth Ann DeLong, 992-2469.

Hymn sing to be held

Quartet coming
to Carpenter
CARPENTER - The Gabriel Quartet wtll
be m concen at 6:30 p.m. Sundar at the Mt.
Union Church near Carpenter. For mformation
call Pastor David Wiseman, 742-2568.

LONG BOJ'TOM- A hymn sing featuring
"Delivered" wtll be held at 7 p.m. Saturday at
the Mt. Olive Church, Long Bottom.

Slngsplratlon set
.
REEDSVILLE- Singspiration wtll be held
at7 p.m. Saturday at the Eden United Brethren
in Christ Church, located on State Route 124

i

r

i'

i'

Vacation Bible school
POMEROY - Vacation Bible school at the
Bradford Church of Christ, will be held
Monday through June 30, 9 to 11:30 a.m.
. Classes will be held for preschool to teens. A:ll
youth ·are mvned For more mformation or
transporration call 992-5844.

i'

The

r

r

r

r

r

r

PageA2
Friday, June

.

r

of this church

posto

1

:
Rn t' r \ ,,u, 1
\f'l"l•ln \\ l'l11p { tii!LI )\1\ S 'ld
\1
\ I ldk i•••ll 1\&lt;llll 1\•mkl , Pt.,lnr
\nlltill ,lti 111 o Ill
\hdlll 'd II /1~)
I' ill ~ "IIIII ) II 7 •ll l&gt;lll

For More

1,1111111111111 \p u.,l ol ll luht rn.u lt 1m
I "I' l{d "II :-..~,, I IIIl i Hd fi"111lntd
\,!\I
&lt;.,U!I 111 111,1 1 111,\.. ]'l() jllll

c.:

l lu '~ onpn

" "' 1 \ l n i&lt; I~ ll ull&lt;'ll

Assembly nf God
lilll ll\ h.« ~mhh qj(,ml
I~'''

]li ldd i n ~ 1 111~

\ t ,,~ '''

\\\1
l'hl•l 'ltl l lcnn ml
s,1, ,,, lililllllll • nd~f' ll l

;.i u11 cl 1-.

I'll

If 7

1

r

\und 11

r

do so

r

i'

i'

r

r

i'

I 1&lt;11111'

10 101111

~ hl ..lurt• 1t.11111q thunh
Si&lt;' I 111 1~ Su nd 11 'i&lt; huol 'J 111
1111 \ [, n Ill ~ \\ ,.,,IJij IOiil 111 1 Su ml l&gt;
cl 1111! 11 ' 11 p111\\cdll&lt;'d 1h 'lll plll

,

l'1 -.1~o

ll\1111 llnpl i'ol I hn n. h ~Sou th~ rn)
(,, 1111 St \1 1tld lq 1"n SunJ 1\ '&lt; hnol

'J '\If • 111

\\"r'h1p

'''''' lnp x
\\u l 11c~d,11

1m 'J , , m1N. 7 1Klr 111
"i1 11 " ' 7( HIJI TI I

l 1r~1 llu p 11~ t

'i und 11 SciJUill

{} I'; .1111

ID l 'i .1 111

- '"" ' 'h'l'

s~ll

\\ulnc-d II

11.1. 7

700 pm

()()rIll

\\ l' i'h'll

Sund~} \~

hn11 l

]() ..\11 ,! Ill

t)

Sll~1

r Run

\\ ~ dll&lt;

-.1.1\

s~r• ,,~,

7 i)(J rIll

Mt l 'nlnn Hap tlst
;.~m

\~ ~: d n~'tl l\

4liJdll&lt;k1i,lJij
r.1vh.1JftJn.'
!: '.J

lJc/()\Ywn.J

499 Richland A"enue, Athens

Rt 7 M!dJ ieporl SunJa;
Sdh1ul
Ill 1m F.w mng i OO pm
I hUI'•l),l\ 'i~ r' ll c., 7 I}(J
lllli~Jdc

k

,\ ~re t•

Sr

Sundn } Un 1f1 ed

s,r,,_, \\ uro,hr r
10 10 a m
\\ nln.;,i.Ju• ~.n,,c) -7 p m

6 pm

C hur~ h

7 p rn

Huurs

"
\\ or, hrp

SuuJu) Sdu "I
Ill .t m
IO~ 'i" '" Sun&lt;I.J&gt; I •elllng·600 pm
1)

~udand 1-r~

'

[I)

Will R:.pli.'il
1-nrtner SundJ)

Jo~1111~

am

\\~1hll.:'d 11 Scn1~~·

l::\~nmg

~ p m

II)

;o 1m \l 1•r, lup

11 no,,, 1l

ll lll, htp
1 j'

'
111

pIll

~~ S,],~ ,j

Pl \1&lt;&gt;1 B11 h Rl•blll "'-'11 Su nd
,1m \\ pr,hlp 10 J 11 1

Pcu rl { hlljWI
'iUIJ&lt;l,l} S~ h nul ') 1 Ill Wor•hlj1

P~u l

FI Pill ll~

'J

S1

P1~ t nr

r.. 1,ddkl"l 1n

Sti llc!U)

fll ll

Rlt~

Sllu 1 I Ill 1 Ill \\ iu • lllr
S ~11ld.IY I ll
7 IHI I' 111

~0 1 7

I ll 10 .1 111 , i3 (1h J \\l'rry

llrmlfottl Chunh ollhnst
Co rn&lt; 1 ol l 51 Rt 12-1 &amp; I:Jr ~d tou r ) RJ
;..1 11
r Dou g Sh &lt;1m hhn Youth r-.hnl ~t l· r
~'&gt; till

,

I(),, 111 Wnr~h1p 1J

t

Y a m,

M1ke Mt iU rc Sunday

G knu K t•\H Suml.n Slhn11 l
\0 1 111 \\ ur, hlp
Ill l(J :.1 m untl (•
1n \\ ~d n~..._1, \
n ,,, 7 01 1 111

s. .

r

Wo r~ h 1 p

10 ,, m

b

~()

S oc l t:l)IPr l " l h !~«Li

G ilmt1r~

Sac r.un &lt;' lll

S cl\ 1 ~~

llo ml! nMktn ~

llko.:ll ng h i Thur-,

Ph1hp Sturm Sunday Sd11Jul Q

~U

IJnlf r ( hurch nr l hri sl
Sunday sd wo l II ]() a 111 S unda) v..ur~l n p
10 10 am

s~ h&lt;•&lt; • l

SunJ,, )

Christian Union
lbr.lford (hurch lJf C hrist 1n

Union

P.1 ~ 1nr Davtd Gre e r

9 30 ;! m
pm

(;~rm d
p,, ~ lnr

Clllnuei-S ul lnn
&amp; flt ~ han Rd . H. a1.1 11&lt; Uh1&lt;1
John G ilnlu r&lt; SII I\J,!\ s, ht•n l

10

S~h tXII

R us~ cl l

I 0 00 am 'W n r ~ h1 p

S unday

IIam

S c. Paul Lutheran Church
Curner Syu mmrc &amp; S c~ muJ St l' omt:rov,
Sunday Scht)ol lJ 4 ~ am WtJf ~ h1p I I

'"'

United Methodist

Ptslnr lnh11 G1 Im•' r~ Sund1 ' Sil huo l
1111 \\onr ~ hifl IOt m

,\IJ d(;I~IJ II

Wursh rp

•

Mona II C hurth of God

lli iHl lh

~ \ ~ lllllj!;

Eh nmg 6 r m V.ed ne'Oday S&lt;.'r. lteJ 7

I'J ~t or

pm

Sun ll a) s~h• ln l
Scn1o..t:~ • 7 p m

Jan~ B ~ at11 c,

Wo rsh1p

10 am

'J am
Thursday

Pclc Sh.i!l cr Sunt.la)
Wor ~h1 p

• II am

School

We dn~: hd a \

am Sund.tl Sehoul . 10 10 am

pm

'

Sfracust 1-"trst Ch urch of (,od

and ~~~nnd l) t ~ Pa&lt;,IIH' Rc \ l llt.~o~d
Sunda} Slh·~·l .1nJ \\ or, hlp I()
a m
h&lt;.: ll llll: Sen~&lt; ~:~ 6 lO r m
W~:llu~"''...J'r :Scn.Kt' 11 1flp m
R u ~~~~

7pm

'

I nn1,1 Bo ttum
Sund a} S~hnol
IJ 10 a m
II)!!]., m
" · •r~ hlp

111 Sul)da\ Sthilill
\II \0 am Ftr, l Suno.li1 &gt; ul Month 7 ()()

Hm' l"r

Lllllnlc

(&lt;lol l ~ ~ unJa1 Wo r ~h • p I U UU · ~m

\hJn ~ ,..J~}

W~ dn &lt;'ti ~ ; Srn l l ~

R ut~ d

fdlo\.\ ~ hlp

ll ~{J ..,

P 1\lur '

&lt;\ thnl '

i Ill\\

l11ngs\ lilt' t

hrt ~ lran

Church
Kohe n ~~u ~~ c r
Sunda v Sd1WI 9 \0 am \\vr , lllp 10 10 ,•
un
7 00 pm \\~Un~ ~ da y S ~:r\1 ~~ I 00
~ull

Uo~ pd

P.1s to r

[1111

Pentecostal
St

Su nda)
6 pm ,

Rl

Coolvlllr Untlrd Mdhudbl P11.rtsh
Helen Klme Cooll'illc Churc h
Mam &amp; F 1t1 h St SundaV&lt; Sehou l 10
a m Worsh1p • 9 am Tu e'idav Sen. It o

R a c rn ~

\\rlh,un
10 a Ill
Serv1ce~ · 7 .

Pa stor

s ~h oo l

S UIJda y

Wcdn~ sda )

E\ en1 ng · 7 11 m
'Pm

Presbyterian
S)racuse F'trsi United Preshytenan
Wor~ h1 p II am

Pas lur Robert Cru"

Harrbon,JIIe Pre~ byterlan Church

Oyesvlllr Commnnllv Chun.h
Y ~() J 111 \\.ur&lt;;hip

Pu ~ tor

124

H u ba~k.

Haztl CommUnny Church
Ofl Rt I 2..$ Pa ~ wr E d ~el Hllrt Sundll)
Sehoul ll :10 am Wur ~ h1p ][) 10 am

10
7

P.1~1m

Su!ld:.l)l. Sdw1il

Rohen Cm" .

Wor~ hlp .

9n

n1

IU 'lO a m 7 pm
Middleport Presb)ttrllln

'pm
1\totse C hapel Church
Sumi~) sc hool
10 am Wm, hlp
a 111 WcJn~ ~dll l' Ser \i ~ c 7 p m

Bt'lhel Church
Townshrp Rd , 46 8( Sund a\ Schoo l g
n m Wn nhlp
10 [I m Wedn~ ~d11&gt;'-\
Sen1 ce~
10 am

Pastot Jame s Snvder Wohhlp • II u m

lI

Seventh-Day Adventist
Se'enth·Day Ad venta5l

f111 11h Gospel Church

11.1ulbem

1-lts Rd Po meroy, Pastor
Be nnett Lulkl e&gt; h Sa turda v St'"IICe s

Lo n g Bouom Su nda ~ Sc hoo l

'¥\u rsh1p

10

o.l ~

\\ednesda\ 7

'~0

pm

am

9 ~ 0 a 111
7 30 p m

s~ bhalh S ~hoo l

t,l :'Ill J m

9 30 a 111

Sen1ce

Nazarene
l ~()..} 5

EH:nmg

(!l O p m

m Chnsl Chun:h
leu s Co 1nmu n1ty 36411 \\o1c~ h alll Rd

7 pm

Pastor Pe1er ~ artmdalc , S und a~ s~h•-.ol
~ 0 .1m
Wors!11p • 10 l O 1 m 7 llO

Full Gospel Light home
H 1l:.~nd R1md Pomeroy P::mnr Ro)

9

r

m We dn e~ d a } Ser\ 1~c~
'routh group rncc11ns: 2nd &amp;

Sunday S ~h uo l IU .tnt EH nmg
7 30 p m Tue~ dil ) &amp; T hurlldav 7 3 0
pm

Stat~ Route t24 Rceds1 1lle

Rudmllt Ft llmuhip
~ aLarcnc Pa'&gt;IOr Ja nm
Pett n. Sunda) Xhool 9 30 am Worsh1p
10 4 ~ a m 7 p m Wedne ~a v Ser\ICe"
7 pm

Su nJ~ )

.XhooJ • II a m SunJa \ \\ u • ~ h1 p • 10 00
a m &amp; 7 00 p m Wedn esd ~) SeT\ 1\:t:S

P&gt;~ s t ur

Lmd.1 Dame v.ood
Sunda v SchOt•l • 9 11 m Wo!'ll htp SerH~e
10 am :!nd anJ ~ th Stmda)
~

of the

7 00 p m

\\ cdnesda .,. Ynu th S.::n 1Cc

7 00prn
Ca rleton lntudenomlnatlon.al Chun:h
Kmgs bur) Roild Pa1tor Ro bert Vance
Sund a) Sc hoo l
IJ 10 .1 m
Wor.Jl1p
Se n' l ~~ 10 ~0 u m F\en mg Scrl' ll e f!

txlttend C3AawA

!llegataug.

pm
Fl'tfltom Gosptl Mis&lt;ilon
Ra id Kno h on l tl kd 11 P.u,lnr Ill.!\
Rog~ r

Naza~nr

7 pm

no p m

Edrn United Brt tbrrn In Chris•
S1h cr Rtdge

pm Wtd n~!!dayS~r\ IH~

7

~th Sunda\ ~

' pm

South Brthell ommuml) Ch urth

-\lien \fldcap

P001rro• C hurch of lh~

m

\It Htrmon l Tnhtd Brethrtn

Wcd ncd.ty

Hunt~:r,

Mlddltpurt Church of tht ~aurtnf
P a~ tnr Alle n \li dla [l S umt.1~ So.:hoo l
\:IJO am Wu r~ h t p IO JOarn O&lt;O pm
Wedne5day Sen 1 ~ cs 7 p m Pa ~tn r

~ p

] p m , Wof'ihl p

United Brethren

\1t Olive Communlt' Churth
Pastor Lawrence Rush S uml.1y S ~ huo l

\I(J IIIurU Sun..Ja v Sd KK d Y 10 am

" n hhtp- 7 p m

l'a:.lllr Jan LaYc ndc r SunJa) St hool
ll 1() .t m Wur~ t11p
!() JIJ a m a J 0

&lt;J 1(1 J

{ hr!stlun F'('[lnMhlp ( hul'l'h

H n~ .. h ~ l

Hestorat mn t hrls tlo.n

7 10 p m

Ymr~ htp

lt l't'd.'ivtllt

•o r m

1-lll Brtdgeman Sl, S~ ru cus e
S~ h cu1\ · 1.0 n m E\~.: nm g

SyracWit' C hun:h of tbt ~ lila rene
Pastor \ftkc Adkms Sunda) S&lt;: hool 9,30
a m Wnt 1h1p . 101 0 a m f'J rm
Wedni! ...UU) Sen I Ll!~ 7 [1m

J oppa

B1hh Stud }

7 OU pill

J\ontet'OSIO[ 1\.SS('mbl}

or

Kutland C hurch GOO
P a~ tor K&lt;lll lkath Su nda' \\- on.hrp
10
am b p m \\ ctln c"la ~ Scr\ILC • 1

~0

Sr MiJd lc p11rt P1 ~ !t l r S.m1
Sunt.l ! I SdJP ill l!l a 111
7

7 11() pm

(_ nmmunlll Church

Rar1nt'
Pa~ 111r

\l ,Jfri~

Wh11e '&lt; u n d~ ) :..L1111111
I() 1111 Sund.t} CIIUt l h ~ CHile (J \IJ fllll
Wl'dm ,Jiv 7r•m

Wcdncsd a) Se n1cc 7 p m .

Chu r~ h

C hHII!r

P.1 ~ tn r

~ Syr111~Ust i\llse~mn

"&gt;t T\ Ke :f00 pm

Torch Church
Co Rd 63, Su nd a) s,hool
WO[Shlp 10 ~ 0 a Ill

,\Id e H1 l l HJ R a~. mc PaMor Jame'
Sull&lt;!rfid..J Sun da y s~ h ,IO I 9 4 5 a m .

Huh~tm

p 111 Fntl.l\

\'alley luh~rnud c Chun h
K. ~ \ I lllm .:: ll
H.a\.\ ., (ln Sund.l) [\~:llln g 7 pm
ThliNia) Scnlu! 1 p m

Pht o r Btl! Mar ~ hull Su nday S ~ hno l
Ill ~ 111 1, t Sundn}

p1 .t;cr ,mJ l3ihk S tuJy

\ltigs loopt'ratn" l'orL'lh
No nhc a ~ l Clu, tt:r Alhcd Pas i!Jr Jane
H ~a t1 1c
Sunda v Schnol
Y lO am
Wur~h t p ! t am 6 30pm

7

r 111

9a m Wnr •htp

llockingport Church
Grand Street Sundn} St hool g 30 am
Worsh1p 10 ~ 0 a 111 Pa.-tor Ptullip Bell

M1 Oh•r LnltW 1\fechodttt
Ofl 1:0-l h~hmU W•lk ewrl le Pni&lt;tnr Rev
k ilph Spm, SunJ~ ~ Sehou l 9 ]() ~ m
\\ o r~ h1 p
I O~ Oam , 1 1J II1 lhwsda)
Sen itt~ 7 p n(

SunJ,,v
•J 10 t m

Ba1lcy Run RIJI\.1 P~ ~ to r

Ea.'it lclar1

J,.,,l

t•u , tnr

Sic &lt; ~ lh~&lt;l

P"1111

~ 111th

II

( hunh

S,lll lrtl.t&lt; 2 1)(1 p m

'\'l.cJn ~ ,d.l} SCf \I C ~

\ ltddlcport t11mmumt \ Church

E1~n 1n g

II a n1 Pa~tor R1cha.rd N&lt;!a ~e
Becht el Unhed M t lhod~t~l
'
~c v. H 11 1 ~ 11 R1 c hard N c~'c
Pa §lllr
Sund.l) \.\ llf!ih lfl 9 30 am Tue&lt;; f! l.(J

Wor~ htp

7pm

W~: J111 ' til)

17~ P ~ .1rl

Bahle

4'i ol Ill

(,q~pd

A.nll lJU t!~

s~nl&lt;l'

') 10 1111 \\ Pt&gt;h l[l

H11.rr•~nu v•ll c

rm
Da11tl

~ ~ 1~11

Mormn)ol St.1 r

a m,.

Pa ~ lnr

tull

of lht• Ln1ng Sal 111r

IU

\\~:..J nc\d r,)-1 7 f' Il l

10 00 a m Pastnr Ja me s P

s,n ,.

1 111

P 1 ~ 1&lt; 11 I hunn Durh 1111 Sunday •J
am ,mJ 7 p 111 \\ ~&lt;..h1~: •d I) 7 p m

y \ (],[Ill \\or., Jur
Stut.ly Wu l 7 ()(] p 111

~: l,r V

\h J II ~'&gt;J ay

Church of God
~II.

pm~

N1•w l1fe \'idun ( t:ntu
!-l.t t,ul U.1111pnl1' Oil
)';a , tll f H I] ] Sl ii {~ll S un d.l ~
~,
10
I t)l &amp; i f' Ill
\1.\ dllL Sd&lt;i )
1 f' Ill &amp;
, ,,uth 1 r m
1'7~ ( ,l l ll ~ c 'o (Tl Ck.

2.:!!lk Sund.l} S ~ h11n l 'J Ill .1111 Su nd I}

\\~:dn~:,Jo~\

l Ill

Gruham l lmtl'd Melhodtsl

Denm ~ Sar11•:n1 Sunday Btb lc S tud y
9 30 a rt1, Worship !0 30 am and 6 30
p m Wedneo;Ouy B1h lc Stud y 7 p m

S1. hoo t

um
1

liruU y

C hurth nf Christ
lnterset:,llon 7 and 124 W E\ange lm

tO 'I) J m
7 00
S&lt;!r\lcc' ~oo pm

liJ I ~

Lutheran

\\ Va ,

am, WoVJ.h1p Scn1 ce 10 'OJ m Bthle
Study, WcUnc ~da ; n 10 p m

Sum\a ~

':l

Our Saviour lutheran Chur..:h
Walnu1 [Jnd Hc nr) Sts Ru1 ~m; w oo d ,

Het'ds' llle Church of C hrt st

I

rm

fell t &gt;l\ '&gt;hl p WI I II.&lt;. i ]' Ill

101 111

II 1 1 ~- 1 2 00 nopn

I'm

WcdncsJ u; Scrvtcc s 7 p m

Pa ~ tt1 r

I he (,' h1~rch of J es us
( hn~t 11f lilttr r-l&gt;a J Sam t~
St H.1 IMI -l4Cl fi 2&lt;l7 11r ~.J.6 74~11
S unJ o~) Sdiu&lt;&lt;l HI :!0 I I ,, ,iJ
1\dtd

S1. hoo l

s ~ hu u l

111

\\ nl n~ S&lt;..i:l ) ~~ 111 n

SdH•t ll

111

hl'lhUill

St John I ulh eran Churc h
Prnc G rt tVL \\ ur,h •p q O{l a rn SunUa'

nr Chmt

10 ,,

Sa lem lmnmumly l hurr h
B tc k t• f Wls t c .,ru mbll \.1. \ ,, ,1m t..re1 mg
J.l &gt;It\ p,, , tnr ChMft, Rm"h 110-ll f1"' "

anJ 1 jllll

\\.uhlllp • 9

11 1~ 0

lim e 'i und.l l
7 pm

Lur1g Roll ot ll

"t' r

111 10 a m 7 no

1

(_ hurth

\V, d tll'&lt;i ll Sll\1&lt;&gt;

" ' ~ 11111g ~ ~T\I L ~

I ,,url'llhiT Fru Ml·thud1st ( hun:h

910 o~ m

p 111 W~J n ~\dol ) ~ ... n a. c~ • 7 00 p m

o!l) ,

'J1l S fh1 rd St Mitldlq -.. ,rt P t&lt;.torlcr~' '
D a 11 ~
Su tnl.l\ 'r f\I L~:
II)
1 111

1 'll

v.,.r~ l 11p ~ nu

7 pm

\\ ili' lu p

huch lull Gnstl&lt;'l ( hunh

7 lOpm

Latter: Day Saints

&lt;J &lt;1 1 .. 111

lllfto.-TIIbl'-rnlld~

r'h l1nn \\ V 1 'i und,l\ St:hnn l

Ahundanl (,r,n t R I

•

Kullund l hunh ut C hml
Su11J IV Sl h!K•l

P l, l •r

Ll\1 r~ I ILI: Fort.: lllilll Wt •r~hi p 10 ~)(I
\\~Jm.,.J.i l Sei dL!.'- 7 p m

h 1() 1'111

s~l\ l l'

\\ ~d n ,, d ,JI

Sult•m c~ ntr r
Wil li 1111 t..: M ar~h til Su nJ ,I}
SdHKll II) I ' .1111 V. !IJ '&gt; !ll[l I) )'i Jill
B1hk Study \1,111d 11 7 ( ~l pm

Senl ~l''

Ill Ill ,1 111

n rM J p 111 R1h k

') I ;

Pa, lnr

3 111

r

'muh S&lt;.'II ll~

(, lO pm

R 1du 'iuml.ll S1hn111

lh M·II Hun ( umnHunh ( lmrth

'J

•

Sdio •I
](I ~ ( l im &amp; 1'1 lt lpm \\,'dn,-.. [1\ S&lt;rl l&lt;•

7 jllll

i•a, lor J1lhn

1(1

ty

7 {1(1

Mllldl ~: f'llrl I' ' "' " '
""' cl 11
I) i (l 1m ~I 1111 ng W, r- lll p

\ ' h S1

l',,, hll R1d; li uurnc Suml.11 S&lt; hou l
ol lll \\ ur'lil[' - II! •(i 1111 fl iUI'd 1)

t hur.....l l&gt; H1hl ~ St 11d; ,UJJ Yuu 1h 7 p m

lJ

Slr&lt;l1&lt;'

Ash Sl rut { lntnh
II)

l,l

R.Jttl.md '

S tuJ ~ Wn hl ,,i.J,,) 7

t-.hdtllcpur l Su m ln Sd}lltll

S1111 J " 1\&lt;,rshlj)

J, ..,.~ u

w~u nc~..J

RtJOilltt lt I tfe ( l1t1rd1
2nd A.1~: 'l. l , d d k p &lt;~rt

I u ll c;,~ pd Ch urc h p,,, t"r' ) u hll .\:
l'.m \ \\o 1d&lt;' hil l s,·d,ntl \,, ,11.1,.,,,, n,

l' t&lt;l\11 K11 Lur) I ~ 1t1lq Sundl) S 1. h1~1l
') lr,,~tli \\o&lt;r,liip I O~ "i 1111 7 pm

""·'J

n•

"i( ll) 1\

\\ i•h llll ' Ill 1111 I 1l.: nmg ' """11111 !1 pm
~ o&gt; lilh gr&lt; lllf' (J )' Ill W~d111: •d 1\ p, &lt;1 1 Ill
f'r lhf ,md li1hk SIUtil 7 [1111

Ro ~tk S11rln~~
K~ llh

l',l, tn r

Sund.t\ 'id1 ~1ol

I'

h IM l r

llt' lhrl \\n rs hl p ( t n hr
( h &lt;'' l ~r St hiH•I p, , t,r R.oh 1 11rJ'1~t
\ '-' i'llo!lll Pl'&gt;tu r I\ nell 1),,,,, Sun,[l l

I(J 1111

p,, , lur Br1u1 IJU IIII.inl Vw r' ll)p
u' m SunJ,,\ Sclu•nl Il l l~ 1 111

Wcdnl'"'-.l.l\

\\t•' h'm' U1hh llnli nr's (_ hmch

ll radh urv ( hunh of C h r1st
1\ lill l,ll r l11111 H. u11 11111 W~"HI Hrudh1111

llmrch
p ,,t,n W• 1nc R

hr"l

rm

'i''riiH.,

lii.J.'i

pm

11r (

We\1 11~'11 ,1\

Il l 1() ,1 111

\ll mrs\ al lt

11tnl (,r!IH H1bl~ ll 11 lmc s~ { hur(h
II~ nu h: ot t ~ I ~~'i l'.l•tnr H.c 1 0 !,)ell
\l1 11k1 ~u nd .t ~ Sdm11l
I) 1(1 1111
\\ ,,r, h lp
7~0
1' 111
1(110 ,lltl

S l.! riU~

( ummmutl \pn&lt;itnllt

7!1fl ptll

'i uml 11

7~

S t iHr~H IIt

i-'1111l,md H. o~u n&lt; ~ d I'"' '' In• l'n •ll 1tt
Sun d.t) Sl ll llll l
'J I{] 1 m \\ ,",fl ip

PI' lo r Hn !II !lun iM m o.; llll.;l.l\ Sdltl&lt;l l
'J

p 111

Suu h

.... 7 p Il l

l'lam thur(h (lf l hrlst

w••r,ll lfl

h rt~ ll llll

ltlln\\\hl p
11il ll li&lt;lll -,h ljll
\I ll !I ll)! Ill l it&lt; ll[d \IIIli I&lt; lll i &lt;~Bltl Ll I[ I
Soulh I &lt;lllllh \ I&lt; IH h \ lnldkpoll
p,, hlr (lili ,S ILI&lt; !tll li• llln i!Su nd l\
Oth~l mu: llll!!• 111 hum,,

Hun
Su ncl l\ '&gt; .. lint &lt;I

(.

1' 1 ~, ( '' f{d
l't •lt&gt;l "~'
HI !d-.1\IUl&lt;.! Snnd 11 'ilitoK&lt;I I) 111 1 111

\\ pt ,h lj' II' ' It ,1 m ' 7 &lt;11
\\ n li]&lt;•d ll Sull~l 7 l!lp111,

\\ 1 l 'hl ]' , 1J I Ill

~pm

Rost ol Slm run llolm~ ~~ ( lumh
l &lt;. i&lt; ll n~ ( I\&lt;. ~ l&lt;d 1-tutlmd l' ••t ur ~~~
JJ ~,\~1' K 11 1,: 'l und• J ,, [u K,) l J IO 1111

7 11m

..
........
...............
.fifbtr .funml J1omt

·Let your ltght ' o $hlne bctore

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

rm: n. ttl .11 1hey ma) ~ee
gnod "-Ork ~ and glorif y
Father 1n hc.tvcn "

212 E. Main Street
· Pomeroy

Matthew 5 16

t•

-~.-.­
MIIIIIUt

Middleport, OH
Davis-Quickel Agency Inc. If ye abide in Me, ·and My, Brogan-Warner

INSU RANCE

A. •'

~E:"CIES ln.:

Full line of
Insurance

Products+
F1nanc1al
Serv.ces

words abit/e iu you, ye shall
ask what ye will, and it &gt;hall
be done unto you.
John 15:7

Btll Quickel

White Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 fifth Str€!el

E. Mam Sueet • Pomeroy
992-7270

I

\dln• •l

Pa~liJr

I II

l~nh lll.,,n

()u~ i '

I 11hu n IJ1hl t l hunh
Pnnlll•l\

\\ hu "·~ ( haptl

'

Cuo l11 1lc H. nnd

\\ ~lt,an

Pa • tm

RRkrmur '5unda \ Sc h110l

An Income Tar &amp;
FIIUUiciDI Slt:rU:II Finn

'I

7 1111

-\ppl~

\t

l'.t, li &lt;r Hoh

') ol Ill
( u mmun111 11 10 ,1111 Sundi.l) S• huol
l l} I 'i , 111 'I &lt;Juth 'i .1(1 p111 Su mlJ) U1 hk

Ill

\II, Mon.ah Daptl§t

740-992-6128

618

Scf\ltt

'

BUSINESS SERVICES

"Do not steal. Do not J

10 1() a Ill

s~ ~~ ll~'

H~1 1fnru' WV,,

Forut kun BaptJst
l'o •l&lt;•r \ rw~ Hu n SunJ~y S. hool
" m \\ ,!(~hlp 11 • m

KEHLER

Blessed are the pure
in heart; for they
shall see God.
Matthew5:8

l n ~ lnllllclll ll

81lpttst Church
I.J.I Jll~ t t1ll Rt 7 Pastor Rn

&lt;.,t 1(1

1\,ddll

1.11 1111

.tm

Cahu n l'•lwm• ('hupl'l
l ln ll'l lll: il k
Ht&lt;id
J',I ,I I H
{h trll'
~I .. K . n ll~:
Su nd ," S~,huo l 'J •ll , 111
\\m , hlp II 1111 7 l ~l p rn \\! dn n d ,l\

w, , l "~ 'd t; ' ' ' ' '~"
ru,lper~

'

MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp;·TEEs

Jo"n 15:7

l-800-45t-!1886

~\ IIT\ Illfl

Ill

':it

6am - 8pm

St.

1(1

'

p '"

! \1&gt; 11 11&lt; ll!llllllll li

~II)

lhrkury Hill ~ C hurrh

Old llelhtl I ret: Will Baptist Churth

\\t'dn~"lo~• S" J IIcc~

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

190 N Second

11 10 [l m

' •' ( h unh ,,1 C hrtst
1111111&lt;1"1 IIM II-.olll l l l ll H.d 11{ 1 14'11
p 1 ~111r Rill'&lt;r \~ 11 " 11\ Stllld I~ S, hnnl

0 '10[1111

H ct hlt'h ~ m Ha plisl Church
1t lhn&lt;l Route I:O.J. R,IC Jill O H
P,l,tor D.uml 1\k ~ ~ .l Sunda) Schw l
')'II .1 ltl "iundil} Wor' h1p 10 :10 am
\\ u.Jn~•tf.t) liiblc 'iwd; fiOOpm

J ,un~,

1J ~~~

I

\ lllun Rap tist lndtpend ent
'\2'i \ 2nd S1 \1 uldlcpo n Pa ~ tflf Jame~
1- 1\ cc•c~: \\ m~Ju p
J()a m 7 p m
\\ .: 1ln~~J~• 'i~; I IJ~~~ 7 p m

740-992-7713

740-594-6333

1 111

6 •y, p m

l \~ nm y

Scf\ II,!;S

{H~

Open 7 days a week

parad1se, wam1 insade
. of us, for then God
dwells within our soul.
It Wt love tho.. wh,..liv., we touch rach day, they will JUw.. it and
tlwy will bt. drawn to us. love has a way of mushrooming. Oncr bosun, it
spills mdt...ty upon your tifelikt •unlight from the sky.
Gin yOUI!Ittf a Valftltine thu year. Wonhip God tach weelo. You wilt
tum to givr lon ... and Y"" will m:rin lov~ that know• no boundo.

Vt:nr"n lln" R1d ~~ l hunh ol Chn,~l
r~rrl Sund ,, Sli\PP I 'I lO

E\an g~ l ~S 1

~H hll1

~illl\1" "''' 'hi ]'

r '"'·''

IJUrdJ

I up['!. I ' Pl;allh \un v. , ,h p 111 1111 &amp;
(, ~llp111 I hu1'd 11 1111 •1. \111 I\ ~ 110 p 111

lltuth ~~ li41dl~po rt )

~'i I a n~~~ lie "·''"'r

H.• u-.h Suml t&gt; •diu.&gt;]

1

prn ~r mc~ l m~

wm~ htp

Jl.pid \\J ~~ m wn Suml.l\ \ !!Utll

r•,,.,l\ !1

1/Dme Copktd Meah &amp; Dally Sp~craiJ

heart i§ our own

'I '\1 ~• Ill Snnd &lt;I s, h&lt;~ul
Ii ll O IIU I l•l&lt;•t Jdlr&lt; 1 \\ ,!l ,tc\ l ' l mJ
l 1tl S1n1 d 11

AIIIAm•l,l ul'-.lln do i S~ht ml

'J..I~

\ 1d•

1

\l cJ uo.:'d i.l\ l' !l\d'&lt;i\.ll c

Rup11~t

Homemade Desserts Made Dally

Me, and My
you, ye shall
and il shall

L''"

{&gt;

Wo1 ' IHp

Commun 11 •n

l ••hn ).;\.\llll'lln S uudd) Sllum l
1111111 1.\ tu -, lup
111 11 1 7 00 p,m

Other Churches

l't'h '' \ ~ l .mJ K 111 ~ "lllltill 'idu 1u l
jll 111 till \\ ''l' h 'l'
l/ 1(1 1 111 H1I•IL
'11ud1 \\ o.d 7 \CJ
1-laluuo(f/.;
]',,,lol Kc11 h R uler Silld ll Sch&lt;•&gt; l II \
1111 \\ ur'l1 p I I ,, 111
h•n~l

p111 \\ ~:~lll'&gt;dJ' H1h!c S1u1h 7 Hlpm
1 ,uth I tiJI!u~hlp I 1 U~IHII lm ( h1J~1
1' 1'1"r f{ ~\ l r111kllll Jl1chn' . 'HI\ 1\c

1J

\\ ll!o,[IIJ'

7 1() 11 Ill

Pom ~n"

Iii

7 ()\1 pIll

I'''''''

%i[fie's t]{estaurant

7

'iuud"

fiir~l llapll ~ l

I nurlh &amp; " l ~m St \ luJJlcpo rt Pas tor
K~\ 1Jdhert Cra 111. Jr Su nd a~ Sc hiVII
y 111 " m ' \.l. r•hhtp 1rr ..1'\ a m

Atmosphert:

H. d

Muwa ~ 1

r

Wa nn Fr~endl~

•111~:

U lll

\\ ul111' 1"1 S&lt;illli:' 7 (l(l p Ill

333 Page Street
Middle rt H

PO Box 683
Pomer Ohto 45769-0683

1-1

1 [1 1 ~7 S'lil l&lt; k t•ut&lt;

Kuu1 t lmuh o l l hnsl

\Vor ' h ip

Raunl'
l'.t-,l llr Rl&lt; k Rule
I Ill

· Holiness
I Oll11111111111 ( hu rd1
1'1•!&lt;11
Slc\11111111.k
~ 11111
l.; ll, d
)( lll lllld
Snml,11 \\u r,) np IU (10 Ill\
Sun d,n S~ 1 1 lu -' f' Ill

Chun h

~~ &gt;flll\1 f11h\ IIlli l'a[m d Si

\1 1rk

\l alt!kpo11

Michael L. Crites
Director er Family &amp;
Community Services
0\/etlnwk
Rchabilitatiori Ctt.
· A Celebration of Life"

"Still

l'hn~t

{ tum h ut

Sth .md M.1 111 f•,,,IPI ,.\ ! l l llh&lt;lll h•n1h
:o.li nJ•kr J1" h Llf n1 ;.;u nd 11 SdHK•I &lt;J &lt;n
l tll Wn1 •h1 p ,:0: l'i Ill 1(1 1111 7 pnt
W~dlll v i i \ 'l~ l I l&lt;l, ~ [1 il l '

1'1~ c

1~

Il l

!i~f\IH ~

(_ ommun11'

,\l1ddlqmrt ( hunh nf I hn~ l

p n1 • Wl dn~, J , ,I

S ou th~! 11

f 1111 h lhpu st

26 years In locsl business
Roofing &amp; Building Work

740-992-6215

l liil th ~ ll ~

\} 1 (1 ,1

llapi! SI
l'1 •1nr I Lam11
"111 11tl 1 S, hmll
'I ~I I ,1 111

I) Ill 1 1111

bur

· Pomeroy, OH

Isn't it wonderful
that love is limitless! It
set.&gt;ms that lhe more we
g1ve~ the more we are
able to give. The late
actor, Eddie Cantor .. id
it this way ... "Love isn 't
lib a resenoir~ You' ll
never dnin it dry. It's
much more like a
notural &gt;pring. The
longtr and lht forther il
ftow5, the stronger and
the deeper and tho
dearer it becomH."
I John 4:3 trllsus,
"Cod is love." Thl! is
th&lt;: way God manifests
Hinutlf on Earth Yes,
when we truly love, our ·

Wt!~t~idt

I() l()

&lt;.,ltltll I Hlpm

II

\\ t·dn,,J ,\"crll&lt;~' 1 pm

1111

I'&lt;IIlli rm l1 r~ t il t• pll ~l
l' " lu r I •II H 1"ck ~: 1 t I ,,, ~ hu n •!
'-'uwl.11 \\ ,,,.,111p IOfltl 1111 Wl'd B1 hlc

I 1n.:t

\\ lll ti~\ J

1-'n u ' rllrl'&lt;[

l d" ud I' IIlli.

I p Ill

)',,,lt&gt;r link&lt;

Kml.uul 1- 1r'' Hap11.,1 ( hun h
"i11nd11 S&lt;luonl
•I 1ll 1111 Wor,hl [l
'[ II ! 'i I Ill

. 1 :0~ P1u11c t "

I nl

I' &lt;llld&lt;~l Suml 11 Sdu~•l
l u,_hn"l !II~) u n1 1{1 \ .

llo h

md

lt)
Bli 1!.
l,l

L.) .J. ~ I

&lt;., um.l,JV S&lt;.ilnu l

I Ull\llV. ll d&gt;l1 I hu uh
1,, 111 \\ ' , 1&lt;1 1 r .1,l1•1 111 11n ' I ,,
liun,ll\ s, II ,,.] •J 1.11 nl \\ 'r'1 11 p 7 llil

Su nd 11 '-,,h••nl
'' 'li I Ill \\p 11 t11 p
Ill 1(1 1 111
I
~ I I f' Ill
\\ ,d i ~,,[,JI
S~lltl&lt;' 1 pnt ](,, \ l1k, t In\..

r\.,hUII IS\ 1,\l lhLI i'"l llf li ooh H. ohlll 'r 11

HI

1111 lipill

•\nJ,I:I'I/1~ ( , filii ( UU HIIIIIHI I (

1'(, 1 \ 11111 ~~

l'nnH nn ( h 11rt h nr ( ' hr Jsl
J I:! \\ \ l 11t1 ~ I Sund,!l SdJ1&gt;&lt;11 () 'II I
I Ill
\\1 i' hi[l
Ill \( ) I Ill ( I jl Ill

II 1111 mtl 6 pIll
~!)Ill

\\,.h,,,[LI '-'cll lcc

I''''"'

Pa,lt lf H.&lt;'l
]llllllh Ill \uhk
\\ , i'lil jl Ill 2~ 1111
'il mlt l "!, 11•11&lt;1 11 I ~ I IH

II

I'

~hJ1 1• d&lt;' '-!~"f"\1~~

Iii 1() 111

\'. oH,f11['1

J.lutlan dthur• h ull lu\uJnr~·m

( r ru r !II lus tt'r

I ll~ II ''

,\... I \ 1111 l'o

\\u,,J1q

~·I

\\ H IIll-,dil'&gt;&lt;llu,, i ]\lll

l• ~e, d t; 'i ~ ''' '''

lll•n1

Episcopal

\l 1111,1u i .11 11 IJ""'n Wn , , lllr
1 111 'iund 1 Sdt&lt; ,. J Ill &lt;11 1111

()l(! !!I!

')

'10[''11

hunh

(,r ,l ll f pN:opll l C hu rd1

llt•mlm k (, ruH ( hns ll.m ( hun h

'i&lt;r\iu.

~ll(lptl \\,dl1l'llll " '"" 'iiudv 7 [)() lim
lull 11111 I r~ ocliu I h•\\l ~ . ~'

~~n

~~u 1 11 J

1111 l) uii M•' ' "'ll) o11 1

I I 1m \\pr' hip Ill 111
\\ c dn~~d ,i l Scrll&lt; &lt;' 1 p lll

Rul r••Jd S1 \ l1 ~on Sundav Sl hn o j I()
'111
\\ or,hlfl
II ~ m
fl p 111

J3imi!less f6oo'e

1' 1-.111 l&lt;: c\ \\ ,11 1&lt;1 ~ l ll lll/ S 1t ( &lt;111
'i l'i jl lll r&gt;.l1--, 'i •0 pm 'inn
(PII
X~~&lt;) I~ 1111
Sun \I J~~ lJ 111
-.1 ~'i

C hrl ~ t hl n

Young's carpenter Service

l rtl'l ll\ (

. " •h 1 •I

-., 111&lt;&lt;

.

1111 \\ , ,r,h p

Congregational

l'"llllll') 'N 2 "i~.;&lt;J~

I f• I \ lilll&gt; cll \ An

'i tuch

hljljllr~ l 'hun-.St l'uu l
'-, 11nd1 1 Se houl

11L,Iill J.tn ~ lk.lllll

I hurt ( 11111111n ( hurdJ

Sdh •n l

1

r

•

t•,,tt,r lh1 tlcd•ut tntt• "iur 1d 11 -,,11

pi n

Catholic
SuH~d

I 1:;!:!(1

1

r

Jllll

\h.tn,,d 1/p1n

Pllmt•rtn

111111 II I II l!ap11•t ( hu n h

t

a

r

\1 "1 1 1 11 1~ 1 1 11 1 'l i l j 'll.mtllcll lll~

h •pn~

1
,,, '&gt; un,t,, "·h·'"l
111 1111
\l .,r,h tt ' ll1111 \\c1drhvl.n"; 1 n tu'

Dun \I l l~ llol lm~s ( hu r~ h

Baptist

1

i'

lif 1111

Church of Christ

1

The Daily Sentinel • Page A3

HIP GOD THIS WEEK

~.,,,\1(~'' -.;,tll"'l

R 1\clh\''"'d \ \ \

( lum.h ul h~u ~ Ch11 ~ t \po~lolt&lt;
• 11 11ndl 111.! \\nil 1&lt; .1 l'1h lor J un ~·
\\ill&lt;~
".und '' \1111•ul
lit \0 1 1
I 1' 1111 1~ • ~~ t I' •m

I1

Www.mydaiiYsentinel.com

'

~~llows\Vf'--------,.-.-.-.,-~~-.-r.-"-'-,+-,-"_"_'--.--,-u-"-,,-,-".-'.-.-,-,-,-,-,-..-,-.-,.-..-,. -,-,.-,---,-..-,-.-..-..;;·:,.-----------~,~,-.-,~"-,-,-. ,-"-,-.~-,-,..-,-.-,-"Jtrli
.

I

i

'

Q .WOR.

24, 2005·

12, who would even listen tmaginatJOJ\ was undoubtedly
anyway'!" ,
inflating the reuhty.
I
I
letll drop, lookmg dtsThe mus1c was wonderful
ap~omted (prob,lbly because as the g1rls used their vmce talthe~ reahzed that oiJe ol them ents for God. The boy who
Pastor
l"~fllp 1now ha;e to share the played the horn had every
Thorn
serrron) f sl1pped OUt that hear1 thumpmg, as his 111USIC,
Mollohan eventn~ afte r the meetmg rallied the soul around the banbreathmg a s1gh ot reltef. ''That ner of Chnst's love The
wa~ I: lose !'' I thought em my greeters wete fa1thtul and gra' 1 wa
home.
ctous, makmg sure that everyut God had other plans one who walked through the
tor ln;te. When I got. hof!le. I door fe lt welcomed The testireached mto my pocket and many of the gtrl was powerful.
fo und a small Bibl e verse movmg, mspiring and. long
that one Of my yo uth leaders In tac t. she spoke for about 20
h&lt;td "'n n en for me some time mmutes (tar and away beyond •
Although I had been ·a belpre. II! was also a verse the five nunutes allotted to
Christ1an smce I was a much tha i )my gra ndparents had her) Sttll, I think every eye in
youn~er child, I was Fonfront- f!U 8ted to me, shunng wtllt the btuldmg had shed a tear as
ed with one of the most impor- ln~ l lm ,//J momtmn to not se't- livmg water paw ed through
tant Chnsttan questions \~ tth tle jllfbr :lanythtng le ss than thi s young woman's words
»'htch we must come to g~ps !llqd'$ dreams for my hte
When my tum finally· came.
when I was 12 years old Some !I r'l urge you therefore, 1 was glad that the pod1uni was
Chnsuan teens, With whorl) I 1\rclltren j by the merc1es of very large and made of hea vy
ha? been assoCiated, Wtfre ([Jdd, to present your lioches a wood. It both Iud my trembling
a~~ed to lead the wo~sh1p ser- hving and holy sacntlce, knees and also served as a solid
VICe at the church .we attended accegtable to God. WhiCh IS found,ltiOII for me I felt a need
After a great deal of bram- your· spmtual service of war- tor somethmg strong and
stormmg , dtflerent roles and shtp And do not be conformed steady on whtch to lean ·
contnbuuons were thought up to this world but be transThen I opened my mouth
and asstgned
.
.
~armed by the ;enewmg of your and began to talk about tile
Two g1~l s would each smg a mind, that you may prove what verse that God was usmg to
song of ~rrn~e t~ God. Another fre W1ll of God 1s, that wh1ch 1s tame my wtld heart and atded
would lead a prayer of thanks- ~oo&lt;J !md acceftable and r.r- me in 1enderinQ it to Him ,a
g1vmg to the Lord One teen
'•
',
'. 2
s
fi "'
boy was to play a tnbute to God ' eJ (Romm;s 2 1- ,NA
"ltvmg sacn tee. '
I have leamed that as we
I spoke ·only about eight
with his trumpet Two other
boys would be greeters and fe~ H1s Word, Goo can minutes but when I was done
help people feel welcomed a~d embrace us so closely to with what I beheved God had
at home. One older teen gtrl !"l[llSelt, that the\e IS no escap- g1ven me to share, I knew that
was gomg to share a testimony , mg the reahzat1on that you I had done Hts will and that my
as 10 how wonderfully diflerent have ~nco~ntered Htm. So 11 obedtence had pleased Him.
her life became when she met · was :-'-''th thts lijStance
As far as the message goes, I
Jesus as her personal Savior.
Ltke a thun~er~lt. the de(lth thmk thmgs went' well .. at
And then someone asked and breadth ot God s mercy tor least, people told me that they
,"Now. who wt)l preach th~ me was starkly ptctured in my had. Even if people simply felt
sermon?" 1 have smce won- ,rrlind. T~e jmage of God's Son, that they jusl need to be mce to
dered 1f there had not been a dymg upon a roughly hewn . the "_green-hom" 12-year-o(d, I
consp1racy afoot with 'that cross for my benefit, was so didn 1 mmd for I had done the
bunch. They all got, qui~t, clearly etched in my mind that I one thing that needed to be
turned and began to stare at me was overcome w1th awe and done I had offered myself to
I stared back. After a love for Ht_m Then a little my Sav10r as hvmg sacnfice
moment or two of exchanging 1shame crept 111, too, as I under- And I had found that as I
our meaningful stares, my stoocl that were He as reluctant depend on Hun, -1 have truly
blood began to run c'Jid and I ltl take on my pumshment for found Someone strong and
abruptly sat all four feet of my sm ~s I was f" speaking in steady on whtch to lean
a
metal chatr down from where 1 pubhc for H1m, I would have tact wh1ch datly renews my
had been leaning back agamst had no Savior But thankfully soul as I tum to Htm for wisthe wall. "What'!' I asked, He had not been reluctant in dom, grace and strength
breaking the silence.
·
secunng my salvation for me.
That event was the occasmn
"Well, we thoug~t maybe He h~d not dragged His holy that God ~se4 to bring me
you could preach the 1sermbnl" feet atl the way to Golgotha, face -to-face wtth how I was
they said I laughed qervoltsl~. ,ebi;'?I~mmg abou~.ho"; "tt isn' t gomg, to hve my life. Would I
trymg to sound Ii.ke1I thpl!ght \a•r fir whm~ng ca~.t some- live 1t for ,myself' Or for God
and others !fhe reahzatton that
that tt was merely a joke.: F?r !lime eJ~e do II mstead?
some reason though) my 'blo&lt;\P II ti Pr ha~ He reluctantly living my life for Chnst was
ran even colder. Bur I dulrt't ' ~ec9iyed tjle as His child when both "reasonable" and rewardanswer I thought that they (I turned from my sm and mg anchored me m years to
might burst out laughing at any pl~ced m~ faith m Him. Jesus IS come and is the bedrock for
moment and move on to some- ~ by no means a "reluctant sav- how I hve my life now My
one who could REAL!JY tor."
'
· hearr's deme IS that others also
.preach the sermon.
I " A hving sacriftce?" I know that He Who mercifully
But they didn' t movP, on mused as I reflected over my calls us to Himself through
They JUSt kept starip'g at me. dilemma. "It does seem pret- fatth m Chnst IS worrhy of our
"We're serious," they said ty reasonable. So how can I love and service. And take
without a trace of humor in say no to Hi!11 in thts?" I heart' There 1s surroundmg a
their express1ons. (
1walked slowly over to our wholehearted walk with Jesus
"Uh, I don't think ISO. telephone, dialed the number an orchard of ummaginable
Couldn't I do so~ other jaM" of1 one of the Jouth group blessing as well as streams of
I asked implorin~ly.
le~ders and tal htm that 1 cool refreshment that flow
"Nope ... we ve got every- had chanaed my mind.
from fellowship with Him.
(Thorn Mollohan has ministhing covered and 'allll:le other ]I l'jOreatr• he exclaimed. "I'll
jobs are filled. There is dnly 11ut ,you down for it."
tered in souJhem Ohio the past
one thing left to do and you're 1 When the night of our ser- 10 years and is the pastor of
the only one who \sn't alrelidyl ~ice finally arrived, the Pathway Community Church
listed as doing something."
church building seemed full He and his wife are the parents of
"I don't think so, guys. I ... fuller than I ~auld ever four children. He maybe reached
don't even know what I'd talk' remember. But then again, I by e-mail at pastonhom@pathabout," I said. "Besides,
/ was petrified wah fnglit. My wayga/lipolts com).

AHung~r

I

Friday, June 24, 2005

Coolville, Oh1o
740-667-3110

not deceive one another."
Leviticus 19; ll

Jn1
ANDERSON
FUNERAL HOME
174lay• Sfmt • PO &amp;1l70 ~
Sf• Haven. \\ \ 15265
Jama H. AndtrlOfl. LKtwd f UntraiOirrrtM
Hndt ~.

rantnl Planmftl

INSURANCE
SERVICES
214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

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

::;.;~R~o~c~~~~~i".;:;;lrLer

,h,,e

ltghr w
before
REHABILITTION CENTER me 11 that they 111"' 1ee 10w
The care you deserve, clOse to home gnod ~'o rks anti g]rJrfj\ \OIH

36759 Rocksprings Rd.'
Pomeroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

·SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

We Fill Dectors'

}0!11

74().992-2644

For God m loved the \\'orld
he gave his oJII\'
&gt;eo•ntJrpn .wn ...

Joltn 3. 16

....

IW

·--

......--·-. ......................

OIIIUtlnl
~-

740-992-6298

992-6376

•

•

W

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

tOlW8D

'

j/IJj

MY erace is
for thee: for my
streneth is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9

&amp;nouffrr's
:ftrt &amp; &amp;afrt~

"So I strive a lways to kee p
my conscience clear before

Acts 24: I

Count ) ·., Olde-.t Fl on .. l

East Mam
Pomeroy, Oh

Father 111 hem·en. "
Ma11he11 5 /6

Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

God and man."

Me t~··

l~iih 2152

•

'

�I.

.,
I

, ~The

PINIO·

.

Daily Sentinel

•.

PageA4 -·
Friday, June 24, 2005

'

111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio·
~140) 992-2156 • FAX (740) 992-2157
www.mydailysentinel.com

Ohio Va11ey Publishing Co.
Jim Freeland
Publisher

Charlene Hoefiieh
·. General Manager-News Editor
•

Congress shall make 110 law respecting an
estabfishmeni of religion, or prohibiting the
free exercise thereoj; or abri~gi ng tire freedom
of speech, or of tire· press; or tire right of the
people pcaceabiJ' to assemble, and to peritiou
the Gor,emmerit for. a .redress i!_{gr·ievances.
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN HISTORY
Today is Fri day. Jui1e 2-1. the I 75 th day of 2005. There "re
ll)O da ys le ft in the yea r.
Today·s Hi ~hli~h t in Hi story: On Ju ne 2-1.. I Y-18.
Communist forces cut ot'f all land and water rout es between·
West Germ&lt;lllV and W.:&lt;t Berl in. prompting the \vestern alli es
to orua ni ?e the mass ive Berlin Airlift.
·
On' th is date: In 1.114. th e for ces of Scotlan d's Kin g Robert
I defeated thl' Engl ish in the Battle of Bannockburn.
In 150'1. He nr{VIII
was crown ed kin t:" of Ennland.
•
'
.
::;.
In 1647. Marg:aret Brent. a niece uf Lord Baltimore. was
ejected llomthe Mary land Asse mbl y after demanding a pl&lt;lce
and vote in th at gci\'e rning bod y.
·
In 1793. the tirst republ ican con, tit.ution in France was adopted.
In IYOK th' 22 nd and 24th president of the United States.
Gro ver Cleveland, died in Prince ton . N.J .. at age 71 .
In 19 15. more than 800 people died when .the excursion
steame r Eastland caps ized at Chicago's Clark Street dock.
In I '1-lO. France signed an armi stice with Ital y during World
War II.
'in I '168. Res urrection City. a shantytow n constructed as part
of the Poor People's March on Wasl1ington. D.C. . was closed
. down by authorities. .
.
.
In 1975. 11 3 people were kill ed when at) Eastern Airlines
Boe ing 727 crashed whil e attempting to land -during a thunderstorm at Ne w York's John F. Kennedy International, Airport.
In .198 5. a fede ral judge in New York found fon;ner Wall .
Street Journal re porter R. ·Foste r Winans guilty of illegally
using his position atthe paper in a get-ril:h-quick insider-trading scheme. (Winans sen ·ed eight years in federal priwn.)
Ten year&gt; ago: ln . his weekly ri1dio address, President
Clinton bl&lt;lmed the fai led nominatio n of Dr. Henry Foster to
be surgeon general on ri ght-wing ext.remists who, he said,
would "stop at noth1ng" to outlaw abortion . The New Jersey
Devil s won the Stanley C up &lt;I S they co mpleted a sweep of the
Detroit Red Win gs.
.
Fi ve years ago: Revi si ng an ~ arlier plan. Jlres iqenr Clinton
proposed usitigf$5 8 billion fro m the growing budget surplu s
to help senior citizens pay fo r prescription drug s in 2002.
After months of politi cal \' iolence. Zimbabwea ns crowded
pol ling ~ booths in the coLJJltry ·, mos t competl ti ve election
since independence .
One year ago: Federal inve,t i ~ at or s qu estioned President
Bush for more than an hour in connect ion with the news leak
of a CIA operative's name. A federal appeal s court struck down
11 Federal Communications Cummtssion etfort to make sweep. ing changes in media ow nersh ip nile&gt;. In a bizarre conclusion
to a huge upset, the chair umpire c&lt;J IIed the wrong score in the
second tiebreaker, and•Vcnu., Williams fell 7-6 (5). 7-6 (6J to
Karolina Sprem in the second round at Wimbledon .
·
Today 's Birthdays: Actre&gt;S Mic hele Lee is 63. Musician
: Mick Fleetwood is 63. Actor-direc tor Georg Stanford Brown
: is 62. Rock musiciati Jell Beck i, 61. Ruck singer Colin ·
· Blunstone (The Zombie' .) is 60. Actor Peter Weller is 58.
Rock musician John II Isley 1Dire Strai ts ) is 56. Actress Nancy
Allen is 55. Regg.ae singer D erri ck Simpson (Black Uhuru) is
·ss. Actor Joe Penn y is 49, Reggae singer Astra (UB40) is 48.
Singer Glenn, Medeiros is 35 . Singe r Solange Knowles is 19.
Thought for Today : "There is a way to look at the past.
· Don' t hide from it. It will not catch you if you don ' t repeat it ."
•- Pearl Bailey. American 'inger and actress (I 'II ~-1990 ).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
. Leflers to the editor are ,.·e/mme. Thev should be less them
: ) 00 words. All "'lien are .wh;ect to editing, must he signed,
and include wldrns and 1eleplwne number /Vu unsigned leiters will he puhli&gt;hed. Leikrs should be in goad /lis le,
addrening issues. 110t p ersonali1ies. Leuers of tlwnks to o rga·
. ni:arion.1and indiridua/.1: .,·ill not he accepted fo r publication.·

The Daily Sentinel
Reader Services

(usPs 213-960)

Correction Policy

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Our main concern' In all stories is to be
accurate. 11 yoU know of an error m a
story, call the ne~sroom at (740) 992·

Publish.ed every afternOon, Monday
lhroug'fl Friday, 11 1 Court Street,
Pomefoy, Oh1o . · Second-class pos'a~
paid at Pomeroy.
Member: The Assoc iated Press and the
Ohio Newspaper Associ'ation.
Postmaste r: Send address corrections
to The Da 1ty Sentinel, i 1 1 Court Street
Pomeroy. Oh10 4 5769.

2156.

Our main number Is

(740) 992-2156.
Department 'extensions are:

1

News
Edttor: Charlene H ~fhch . E:~~:t. 12
Reporter: Bnan Reed, E :~~:t. 14
Reporter: Beth Se.rgent. E:~~:t 13

Subscription Rates
By carrier or motor route

One month . .. . ·. .... . .' 10 .27
One year .. . . . . . . : . . .' 123.24 ·
Daily

' Advertising
Outside Sa~s : Dave Harns. Ext 15
Outskte Sales : Brenda Dav1s. Ext 16
C.lass.!Cin:.: Judy Clark. E&lt;i . 10

..

Circulation

•

One

. \)ne year . ,. . . .... . .. .'96. 70
Subscribers snould.rernir in a£Mlnce diracl
to the Da~ly Sentinel. No subscription by
ma11 permitted ·•n areas where
earner ~rvtee IS ava1lable ' ·

Dlatrk:t Mgr.: Jason Patter$Qn . Ext 17

General Manager
· Charlene Hoethch, Ext 11112

.. : . . . . , ... . .... . .50'

Senior Citizen rates
month . . . ... .. . ...' 8. 70

home

Mail Subscription

Inside Me igs
t 3 Weeks
26 Weeks
52 Weeks

County
'' 32.26
.'64 20
' .127. t .I

E-ma il:
Outside Meigs County

news@ mydallysent1ne1·c&lt;:.m

Web:
www.mydallysent1ne1com

13 Wee~s
26 Wee~s
· 52

Wee~s

. .'53 55
sw11 0
1

21 4.21

·church to celebrate 125th anniversary Sunday

Betty Jean Schomburg

WHE ELERSBl,JRG [Jetty Jean Schomburg, 67 ;
Wheelersburg, dted · Wednesday, June 22, 2005 .at the
· Rocksprings Reh~bilitatlon Center in Pomeroy.
Memonal services WI II be held at the coAvenience of the
family. There are no calling hours.. Cremation servi'ces .are
under the direction of the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.
Gallipolis.

sr

Local Briefs
POMEROY - Gregory M. Stewart of 33:i85 Crouser Road
in Langsville, husband of Laura Stewart, is not the Greg
Stewart charged with domestic violence .as reported in The
Oaily Sentinel last week.

Offer immunizations .
POMEROY- Meigs ,:::ounty Health Department will conduct a chiidhood immunization clinic from 9 to II a.m. and I
ta 3 p.m. on Tuesday at the health department. Children must
be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian, and shot
records and any medical cards must be providtd. A $5 don~­
tion will be accepted but is not required.

Water conservation order issued

DRES~-To- KILl

SYRACUSE- The Syracuse Board of Public Affairs has
issued a water conservation order to be in effect until further
notice.

ISSUE.

Band pratice to resume
POMEROY - Summer practice for the 2005-06 band will
resume on Monday at Meigs High School. Rehearsals will be
from 9 a.m. to noon. Anyone with questions may call Toney
Dingess, 591-2260 or 992-7141.
·

Attended Boys State

a

POMEROY - Kylon King,
student at Meigs High
School, attended the American Legion' Buckeye Boys State
held last week at Bowling Green University. His name was
·not included on an earliM, Jist of those attending ·under sponsorship,of Diew Webster Post 39, Pomeroy.
'

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

Grant

Have ·the Democrats gone too-far? ·
li ves lost in the Vietnamese
war that presidents 'of iheir
own party began and pursued. They helped keep the
memory (and photos) of the
scandalous behavior of a few
military guards at Abu
Ohraib circ ulatin g around
the globe for month s, in the
futile hope that do ing so
would des troy Defen se
Secretary Donald Rumste ld
and hurt Bush. More recently, they have called for the
closin g down
of ·. the
Guantanan\o Bay detention
fac ility on the basi s of
charges of prisoner mistreatment there.
· ·
Last . week Democratic
Senate Whip Dick Durbin of
Illinois upped the ante by
comparing
th e all eged
beha vior
of . American
guards in GUantanamo B'ay
to Hitler\ Holocaust, Stain 's
gui&lt;Igs. and Pol Pot's
Cambodian killing. fields which generated 6 million,' .
20 million , and 1.7 million
death s res pecti ve ly. What
danger thi s charge , now
bting circulated around the
world. · is subjecting our soldiers to remains to be seen.
_As Mr. Dooley observed,
"Poi Lti cs ain't bean-bag."
But are the Democrats in .
danger of overdoing it j ust a
little"'
(Williwi1 Rusha is a
Dislinguished Fellmr of tit e
Claremont l11stizute for the
S tudy uf Stalesmanship and .
Politico/ Philosuphr.)

'

L

..

"

' .

.

' .-•

.

from Page A1
and a chance for a road trip.
Spei;ial Olympics is for both
adult and juvenile partici)fants.
The athletes from the Meigs
County ·Delegation range rn

Deputy Police Officer, $6
per hour, payable biweekJy for
number of hours authorized. ·
Commissioned Officers
from Page A1
will volunteer a minimum of
976 establishing pay rates and 16. hours a· month to retlin
pay periods for officials and commission,
Fire Chief, $200 per year,
employees of Racine Village,
and repealed any existing pay payable semi-annually.
Members of council, $16
·ordinance . Ordinance '976
took effect upon passage and per month for each month's
is retroactive to April I , 2005 service, performed by attenwith the exceptions of the dance of the council meetmayor's salary which will go ings, payable quarterly.
Trustees of the Board of
into effect next year, and tile"
clt:rk-treasurer's salary which · Public Affairs. $16 per month
will go into effect followi(lg for each month's secvice, perthe next election to fill the formed by attendance of the
BPA meetings,
position.
Street
Commissioner
Pay rates and pay periods
for respective positions are as helper, $8 per hour, 40 hours ·
a week, payable biweekly ..
follows:
Extra help, $6.50 per hour,
Mayor, $5400 per year.
paid
biweekly.
payable monthly. The mayor's
Solicitor, $3,000 per year,
current pay rate is $3600 per
year and was raised to comply payable quarterly.
Gnmts Administrator, $3,080
with a minimum· salary .
requirement established by . per year payable quarterly.
sections
of
·. Other
the Ohio Municipal League.
Clerk-Treasurer, $17,280 Ordinance 976:
Life insurance in the
per year, payable semi-monthly. The clerk-treasurer's cur- amount of $10,000 provided
for each full time employee.
rent pay rate is $14,200.
Street
Commissioner,
Medical insurance will be
$26,500, per year, payable provided for the street com·
semi-monthly.
missioner.
Marshal, $7 per hour.
Mileage paid to employees
payable biweekly for number while conducting village
of hours authorized.
business with their personal.

-9•

Trick011
FARMERS BANK HAS
PREMIUM MONEY MARKET
And There's No Catch!

3.00°/o

Interest Rate
On Balances of

APY* .

.

.

$2 5.000 O r More

.

banks offer a "Special Introductory Rate" that's
only good for a few months. At Farmers Bank, there are no
unwelcome surprises. Just an attractive, consistent return
your money market deposit that's good today ... and tomorrow!
Oth~r

Fo

'

meter das h. softball th row:
Jessica Bulstrom. I00-meter
walk, softhall • throw: Man
Curry. Ioo, merer walk. shotput: Joan Hm1. lotib;ill throw.
100-meter walk; Thomas Hill.
softball throw. I 00-meter dash:
Roger Lance. Jr.. 50-meter
das h. softball throw: Jamal
. Lee. standing long jump, 50meter dash: Mary Rankin, I00-

·Farmers
Bank
&amp; Savings Company

Membe~ Fo1c

•AYr ll annual percentigr -y iekl. Rate .as of June 14, 2005. Interest c:ompounded monthty. $25.000 minimum
to three transfers. Interest ra,te fctfts to t.OO'MIIf biMnc:e falls beow $25,000. If balance falls brlow $1 ,000. ~

meter walk . \Oftball . throw:
Christopher Tac kett. standing
long jump. 100-meter · dash;
Mark Weber. softball · throw,
I 00-meter walk.
The athletes. will be accom- '
panied by Carleton School 's
Director of Curriculum Kay
Da\' ie s and four chaperones .
Th e crew will return on
Sunday. all of them winners.

vehicles, 30-cents per mile.
adjustment.
· An amou1ot not to exceed
The next ·meeting of the
ine Village Council will
Rac
$150 per year provided for
purchase of coffee , meal s. be at 7:30 p.m. on July II in
refreshment
sand other council' s chambers, The
amenities, for village workers. nieeting will be preceded by
· Free water to the minimum a public hearing of the vilgallons and refuse will be pro- . lage's 2006 budget,
Members of council were
vided to full time village
joined by Hill, Street
employees. An employee must Commissioner John Holman,
work a minimum of 32 hours Racine Fire Chief David
to be considered full time.
Neigler and Spencer. Bentz
The clerk-treasurer was was ab se nt.
authorized for purpose of
accounting/balancing ,
to
adjust the pay dates. Council
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
will be informed prior to any
446·4524 MOVIE HOTl'fJE
FRI 6/24105 · THURS 6/30105

7

(JamihJ
OXYGEN .
&amp; MEDICALEQUIPMF.NT

Home Oxygen
Portable Oxygen
• Nebulizers

BEWITCHED (PG13)
1:20,3:20,7:20 &amp; 9:20
LAND OF THE DEAD (R) .
HERBIE FULLY LOADED (G)

1:t0 3:10 7:t0 &amp;9:10

• Diapers
•Chux
• Medicare/Medicaid

Box Office Opens @ 6:30PM Nightly ·
&amp; !2:30PM for Wed· Sun Matinees
. NOW SHOWING SUMMER
MATINEES. WEO THRU SUN

t:15 3:15 7:15 &amp;9:t5

• Electric Beds
• Wheelchairs
~

We do the blUing locally

740·446·0007
Toll Free 877·889·0007
70 Pint Strttt • Citlllpolls

lsYour Bank Playing A

from PageA1
announced that $237,000 in
the "Save America's Treasures
Grant" program had been
included in the 2004 Interior
Appropriations Bill for work
at the Academy. However, a
requirement established due to
federal budget sh&lt;?rtfalls now
require a dollar-for-dollar
match available beforu grant
·
money is released.
As a par(·of'the fund raising
program for the renovation
needed to prese~e the histhree-story.· brick
toric
Academy, memorial plaques
are being offered for $500.
The' plaques can be given in
remembrance of longtime
members of the Daughters of
America which has met in the
building for. many years, 'for. mer students or teachers or in
tribute to family members.
They will be placed in the
. building once ,the work is
completed . . Donations of
under $500 will be recorded
in a book .to be dispiayed in
the Academy.
Both · the courthouse and
the Academy were built on
land donated by Meigs
County
pioneer
Levi
Stedman. The Academy
\)uilding first housed the
Meigs County High School
and Teachers Institute and
later became known as the
Chester Academy of Higher .
Learning. In the .Iat~ 1880s it
became the Chester elementary and high . schoo~. It was ·
vacated in the 1928 and
e,mpty until 1959 when the
Daughters of America began
holding meetings there.
The goal is to •renovate the
building so that it can be
used for community meetings and other activities,
according to Dale Colburn,
an active Chester-Shade
Association ·•
member
involved in the project. .

Athletes

age from I0 to 44-years old.
· · The athletes earned their
· place in the games by qualifyc
ing in their events at the Special
Olympics Regional (lames
held earlier this year in Athens.
Representing Meigs County
in Columbus this weekend are
the following athletes and
their respective events:
Nicole Blumenauer, 50-

Racine

ClarificatiQn

IT'S THE

•'

.

Free Methodist. and many. of at the Laure l Cl iff School. a tioncd air condit ioni ng in the
those early conve rts joined one-roo m "trtlc tLtre in· the ' anctumy. a hand i ~apped
him as charter members of the Laurel Cli t't comm tJJl it\ . re'-ltroom up~ tai r ..... and some
church he organi zed. Earl y Headley wa' ,aid to preac h· a n.·Ue ~:orat if.)tl .
record' indicate in 1886 there doctrine that t h ~ peop le had
Donna Jacob' Gi Imore and
were 48 full members, 60 neve r he.ard before and .'"" Wanda Jawb' Eblin of
attending Sunday school and even a c.:t: u ~eu o f u"'in~ a dif- Lau rel Cliff Road are the two
'
pastor's salary was $2'30 year- fe re nt Bible.
olde&gt;t li1 ine me mbers still
ly. The mini,ter had a ci rcuit
As an ou.tcome of that min- attc ndi n ~ the church .
of several churches.
istrv in the onc- n ~1 m ' chool
Sunda}··, celebration will
The first church buildin ~ at ho~se. the Laurel Cl iff ,Free get underwav at 8:-l5 a.m.
Laurel Cli ff. dedicated' in Methodist Churc h was oma- :,·ith a co ntii1ental breakfast
1888, w a~ va lued at $400. . ni zed under the l.~ade rship "or fo ll owed at ',1:30 a.m. by
The first parsonage was ded.i- l'!cadlcy. · j'carsi later after the Sunday 'choul. At I0:30 a. m.
cated op Dec. 17, 1899 . A sc hool closed. the bel l 11·a, Dis trt ct
' uperintende nt
new parsonage was built in removed from the bu i l di n ~ and Charli e You ng w ill speak.
1962 . The new church was used at the church. a ren1indcr . Foll ow ing a noo n carry- in ...
d~di cated May 16, •1971.
of those earlier rc\' ivals.
meal. there .will be an after In an· did history of the
Tlie Rev. Glenn and Linda nou n sen·ice at I :30 p.m.
Meigs
County
Free Rowe arc the 50th pa&gt;tors of with "Toget her fo r Christ"
Methodi st mini stry, Percy the church. They came here in and reco ;wit i!jln oi· fo rmer
Peoples, a teacher and later a February 2004. lmprovc mems pa"'"·s. There will be no .,
judge. tells about the se rvi ces . since they canie incl ude addi - " Sunday C\'eni ng ~e rv ice.
·

Timothy Robert Roush

-

Appeals.
until
· the
Republican threat to ban fili busters against judicial nom. inees altogether scared some
of their wi ser heads (like
Sen . Robe rt Byrd , D-W.Va.)
William
so badly that they forced a
Ru.s her
. compromi se. They are
- - - - • blocking Bu sh's . choice of
John Bolton as our ambassador to the United Nations
more aggressive strategy. with one dein and after
They would take ever y another. and seem prepared
chance to oppose the to lilibu ster it to death.
Abave all , as the aftermath
Republicans. deno un ce their
policies without constraint of the att ack on Saddam
or excepticm - and al so Husse in h'as turned into a
without proposing alterna- . long battle against his sur-.tive policies of their own. In . viving Sunni supporters and
reinforct;ments
retrospect, it seems clear that terrorist
from
nearby
countries, the
their rather surpri sing choice
Democrats
ha
ve seized .on
of Howard Dean as chai rman of the Democrat ic eve ry admini stration. setback
national committee was a to discred it and embarrass
major step toward imple- Bu sh and hi s top · aides,
menting th is strategy. And . whateve r th e · cost , to
however maladroit Gov. America·, re putation, or ·.
Dean has been in di scharg- eve n to the li ves of its ti ghting his assignment. he has mg men and women.
They have acc'used Bush
certainl y been tru e to .'Its
spirit.
·
of "lying us into war in Iraq"
So we have . seen the by claimin~ falsely that
Husse in
had
Democrats in Congress Saddam
reject President Bush' s pro- weapons of- mass desr~cp&lt;)sals fo r reform o f Social lion, eve n ' th ough eve ry
Democra t
in
Sec urit y outright. refu sing major
· even to negotiate on the mat- Washington w.as on record
ter unless he first withdrew as claiming ex actl y ttillt.
his proposal to give younger llefnre Bush was ever electAmericans the choice of pri- ed·. They have mourned
vati zing a &gt;mall part of their loudly. one by one. the
Soci al Securit y pay menb . inevitable cas ualties - less
They filibustered ro ughl y a than I,ROO dead thus fa~. in
third of all his nominati ons two years - withou t recallio the U.S. Co um . of ing the 50.000 American .

The Dally Sen t inel • Page As
(

Jack Boyd

ce nt of Americans "'Ythey going to church may kee p
believe in God. In most of you fro m going Ill he ll. That.
Eu rope thm figure j, closer · Jt any rate . \Va~ th e view pf a
to 50 perccn r. ··
Mi 'Snuri Sy nod Lutheran
13ut
are
thin
gs
better
in
th
e
pastor in Lansing. Mich.
to j a il. A ~ c ord in g to a n
Uti ite,d S t a te~ ·! We mi ght
The late Re\'. Will ia m
A'sociated Press dispatch.
George
thin k that a Chris tian nat io n. Rid1at:dt not only cxco mthe judge believes the church
Plagenz
such "s Ame ri ca wo uld be a mu nica ted membe rs wh o
could have a salutary effect.
beacoil of ci\' ility i,n a pagan didti' t come to churc h reg uon the dru g and al co hol
world. But th e new Bi shop larl y but consig ned them to
offenders and do w~at rehab
of the Catho li c Di ocese of hell unl es s th ey re pented
or jail can' t do.
Co
lumbu s (Oh'io ). ih a and started w ming · to
. T. R. Re id , in his book,
A co nt ine nt that is ful l nl'.
"Th e · Untted St;ite s of an c ient churches fi nu·s speecl1 to " praye r breakfast chu rch . These we ren' t
Euro pe:
The
New th e m in cre a \ i ng ly empt y in May. lame nted . the grow- . empty th re ats. He excom Superpower illld the End of on Sunday mornin gs, ..;a y s ing co~tr~tne ...;s df'4 ife in thi s munic itcd an average of 2tl
cou ntry.
m e mber~ a vear.
,
Americ an
Supremacy" Reid..
"Om
cult
ure
·
has
become
How
·
did
·
Richardt
's
'
con1Penguin ,
2004), asks ,
In
Bri tain .
Fra nce .
" Ddc' 'it m a k~ any differ- Germany, H olland an d sc lt.'-cc ntered and eve n ~oret!ation.., take to such irone nce in our dai ly live s Belgium . fewe r than I()' pe r- me an. " observed Bis hop· handed trc·ut mcnt "'
We ll. fi1·c yea rs after he
whether we do or do not cent of the population attend Frederic k Campbell. He said
he
longed
for
a
return
of
th
e
.
came
to St. Matthew' s
b el i ~,ve in God or go to
church as often a&gt; once a
c hm't'h .,..
day
"w
hen
you
co
uld
he
,
Chu
rch.
th e congregat ion
month . On ly 12 pe~ce m of
" Yes, Ameri cans pur. up Briton s describe themselves tra\'cl ing do wt' the free way had ;:rmvn from I00 memhu ge billboards readin g as "&lt;tctive•· menibcrs of the and the dri ve)· of th e car bers to 1.600 and was the.
"Love thy neighbor." . Reid Angli can
Church.
In ·passi ng yo u would wave at fastest grovi'in'g church in the
observes, "bur they murdet Amsterdam, the church hie r' yo u with all fi ve fingers." .
. Mi sso uri Syn od.
If Euro pe's population s · Of th o'e who were
and•'ra pe their neighbors at archy is conve rting its cath efor
rates that would shClck any ' drals into luxury apartments with the ir low rate . of exco mmun ic at ed
Eu ropean nation ."
ch
utr
hgoing
put
..
u·
s
to
shame
nonrott
endan
ce.
a.lnH)st
ha
lf
to pay it s bill s.
Reid adds. ·'Norwegians
In his book . Reid notes with thei r hi gher moral stan- as ked fo r rei nstate meill
don' t go to church much but that beneath the towerin g dard how important is and we re · ta ke n back into,
they give away I0 times as stee ple 'of 700-year-old
th e church after inu icatin g
chu rchgoing in our c ulture"'
l.
the
news
·is
not
all
th e ir will ingness to parti ciWel
much
per
capi ta
as Jacob' s
Church
in
American' do in aid to poor Stockhol m. Swede n he bad.
pate in reg ular worship in
countrie s. Indeed. eve ry counted 29 people at a
Going to church e very th e future.
west European government Sunday service in a stru c- wee k C&lt;l !l add six years to
"It just shows that people
de votes a considerably hi gh, ture that would comfortabl y your life expectancy. Going re spect a chu rch that
er sh ilre of its budget to for- seat 900. At morning prayer to church reg ularly can also demands di sc ipline an d
eign aid than the U.S. doe s.'' the da y he· was at . hd p you stay hea lthier while commitment .'' said Richardt .
Of course just thinking
Yet western Europe. with Canterbury Cathedral in yo u are still alive , some
it \ .higher . standard . or . England. · mother of th e studies
show. 'about spending an eternity in
morality: has turned it s worldwide Angli can faith , Nonchurchgoers wh o were hell can be pretty per, uasive
·
back o;1 reli giotl. One soci - the church "hosted a total or · hos pita lizecl' had average by itself.
yearly hospital stays of 25
(George Pla g m ~ . is an
olog ist write s that 21 st cen- 13 worshipers.''
tury Europe has "gne of the
"Christian Europe'' IS days compared to only II ordained mi11is1er and ,·eterm1
newsman · ./wsed 111
least reli gious populati ons hardly Christian any more. days for churchgoers.
in th e world. "
But perhaps best · of all , Co lumlms. Ohiv. )
notes Reid. "Up to ·95 per-

The Democratic campaign
to undermine the Bu sh
administration has recently
taken a turn that should concern everyone who cares
about the safety of the country - and especially of its
. soldiers abroad.
First. let us remember that
there's nothing wrong with' a
party out of power doing its
level best to weakeo1, and if
possible even destroy, its triumphant, opponent. People
who whine that the two parties ought to "get together
and work for the good of the
country''
simply don ' t
understand the essentially
oppositional nature of two-·
party
' politics,
The
Democrats today are in a
trul y desperate situation.
The Republicans hold th e
presidency, both Houses of
Congress, almost all of the
big governorships, and even
the mayo ralty of New York
City. What · ~ hould we expect
the Democrats to, do. if no t
fi ght back with all the power
they can muster?
Shortl y after last year 's
presidential election, therefore. the Democrmic leaders
made a dec ision. One can
argue that it was the wrong
deci,ion - th at they should
have bi de d thei r time.
wa tched th e Republ ica ns
govern . cho&gt;en their issues
·care full y. and th en pu t fo rwa rd counter-proposal&lt;. of
their ow n. lns1ead. however.
they decided to adopt a far

'

'

'

•

·www.mydailysentinel.com

POM EROY - The Laurel
Cli ff , Free Methodist Church
whic h will celebrate ih I 25th
RA CINE - Jack Boyd, 67, Tall ahassee,' Fla ., formerly of ann ive rsary Sunday was
Racme. doed March 26. 2005 at his residence in Tallahassee. organi zed by J. W. Headl ey
He is survived by hi s wife. Carol y n Lind sey' Boyd. in the conference years of
Gravestde servtces wtll be held at II a.m. Saturday. June 25 . 1885-86, accordin g to th e
tn the Greenwood Cemetery in Raci ne. Ofti ciating will be his church history.
brother-In-law, C harl e~ Wilso n. The Cremeens Funeral home
The church records indiin Rac ine is in charge of arrangements:
·
cate the Rev. Mr. Headl ey
had converted to Chdstianity
from the Cathol ic priesthood
in Cuba and come to
PARKERSBUI{G, W.Va.- Timothy Robert Roush, 49, of Pomeroy to do evan gelistic
Parkersburg. W. Va . di ed Wednesday. June . 22 . 2005 in work in a church here, Under .
hi s mini stry, a numbe r of
Camden-Clark Hos pital.
'
.
people were converted but
Funeral services will be held at I :30 p.m. Saturday at the
qecause ,qf their shouting he
Fogelsong-Tucker Funera l Home in Mason , W.Va. Rev.
reportedl y was put out of th e
Ri,hard Nease will offi ciate. Burial will be in Graham
church' he was pasturin g at
Cemetery, Ne w Haven . Friends may call at the funeral home
that time.
6 to 9 p.m. Friday.
'
He continued hi s ministry
.• .
in a schoolhouse, became a

A judge in Kentucky is
offering repeat dru g and
alcohol offender' the choice
of goi ng to church or going

...!.

2005

Deaths

.,

··Go to church or go .to hell

The Daily Sentinel

'.

Friday, June 24,

THE PERFECT tiiAN (PG)
t :20, 3:20, 7:20 &amp;9:20
BATMAN BEGINS (PG13)
1:00, 3:30, 7:00 &amp;9:30
MR. &amp;MAS. SMITH (PG13)
1:00,'3:10, 7:00 &amp; 9:10
THE LONGEST YARD (PG13)
t:tO, 3!20, 7:10" 9:20

�•

,

•

-

The Daily Sentinel

BYTHEBEND

Community Calendar .

Local Stocks

&lt;lnd ·
1&gt;
Hm: kin~porl.
Refre,hm~n t s follow i ng~
CARPENTER - Gospel
;ing li:30 p.m. at the
Carpenter B&lt;~p t i s t Church.
Sunday, June 26
Stat~ Route l·U. Carpenter.
TUPPERS PLAINS
VFW Post 9053 will have a I Singers will be M~rcy. Roush
p.m. dinner for members and Family. Dan and Faith
their. families at the Tuppers Havmun. Tid ing, Trio. and
Luke and Kav Osborne. Love
Plains hall.
offering w ill-be taken to suppori Bend Arc&lt;~ Gospel
jubilee.

ACI- 54.02
AEP- 36!38
Akzo- 39.68
Ashland Inc. - 71.13
AT&amp;T -19.06
BLI-13.65
Bob Evans - 22.59
BorgWarner - 52.89
Champion - 4 ,20
Charming Shops ·- 9.10
City Holding - 35
Col- 47.60
DG -20.30
DuPont - 45.43
Federat ·Mogul- .85
USB- 28.90
Gannett - 72.55
General Electric - 34.66
GKNLY-4.95
Harley Davidson - 51.25
JPM- 35.93
Kroger - . 19.48

~·

Clubs and
organizations

Church events

Saturday, June 25
LO NG · BOTTOM A
hymn
smg
· featuring
''Delivered" will be held at 7
p.m. at the Mt. Olive Church.
Long Bottom.
REEDSV ILLE
Singspiration will be held at 7
p.m . . at the Eden United
Brethren in Christ Church .
located on State Route 124
halfway
between Reedsvi
lle
.
.

Birthdays
Saturday, June 25,
POMEROY . - · Kathl ee n
Bailey Scoft will cele brate
her I DOth birthday at ~i party
to be held 2 to -UO p.m . on
June 25 at the Forest Run
United Met hodi st rhurch.
Her daughter. Mary Wi se and
family. are hosting an open
reception .

.

Ltd. - 21.33 .
NSC- 31.17
Oak Hill Financial- 27.51
OVB- 26.14
BBT -'39.82
Peoples - 25.87
Pepsico - 54.87
Premier - 10.78
Rockwell - 48.20
Rocky Boots - 28.64
RD Shell - 62.71
SBC- 23.66
Sear&amp; - 150.06
Wai-Mart- 47.88
Wendy's "'"",46.85
Worthington - 16.26
· Dally stock reports are the
4 p.m, closing quotes .of
ttie previous day's tra.nsac..
tlons, proylded by Smith
Partners at Advest Inc. of
&gt;
Gallipolis.

'

PageA6
Friday, June

'

Maso~

fares weU at HHlbilly Classic, Page B2
Red Barons sink Clippers, Page B2

Friday, June 24, 2005
Friday, June 24
Aftemooll ( 1-6 p.m.)
Humi d
aft ernoon.
Temperatures will· remain
around 89 with today's high
of90 occurring around 5 p.m.
Skies will be sunny to mostly
sunny with 5 MPH wi 'nd s
from the south turning from
the so uthwest as the afternoon progresses . .·

Temperatures will stay near

TJ Skies will range from partly

cloudy to mostly cloudy with 5
MPH winds from the south.
Saturday, .June 25

Morning (7 a.m.·N01Jn)

Overnight (1-6 a.m.)

Today's

g;~mes
Marie«a at F ee r~ey Bennett, '6 p.m.
Mason County at Parkersbu rg, 6 p.m .

Saturday's games.
Logan at Feeney .Bennett . 1 p.m.

Afternoon (1.6 p.m.)

Mason Cou nt y at Richie . 2 p.m.

It should be a humid and
cloudy
· afternoon.
Temperatures will
hold
steady around 90. Winds will
be .5 MPH from the south
turning from the southwest as
the afternoon progresses.

Sunday's game
Pickerington at f eeney_ Ben nett . 1
p.m .

Sports Briets
'

URG Women~s
·Basketball Camp

..

s

·

RIO GRANDE -'-- The
University ' of Rio Grande
will hold its women' s basketball camps beginning in June
at the Lyne Center.
The sc hedule for the
camps, with fee s are as follow ~ :

- Varsity and JV Shootout·;
June 25, $215.
- Varsity l!nd JV. Shoot.out,
July 9, $215 .
- Junior High Individual
Camp, July 17 -20, $225.
·. Varsity and J V Team
Camp, July 21-23, $225.
For more information. contact David Smalley at 2457491 or e-mail him at dsmalley@rio.edu.

flfl fUIIAIIIIAf Ill
· IIIIAY filM IIIIMIIII'I

PftOOUCf PROYIOED ir.

If PAIKIIIIBI

· EHS sets date for
volleyball camp

:;;a •

n:x~•-~'ia

Uti&amp;~

visit us oniiM
- . :at www.tompetiH.co•
.

HURRY FOR THE BEST
SELECTION!
IMW lEW :lOOii CHIVY

, - TUPPERS PLAINS - The
· first-ever Eastern Volleyball
Camp for gir~s entering
grades 6-8 will be held July
5-8.
Camp staff includes players and coaches from the
2005 Tri- Valley Conference
and sectional champion
Eastern Lady Eagles.
Cost is $30 tf pre-registered or $40 on the first day
ofthe camp. Included in the
.cost is a camp T-shin and
volleyfiall.
Contact Howie Caldwell ·
for more information.

WE'LL GIVE YOU TOP
DOLLAR FOR YOUR 'I'RADE!

I

·,

• ALL .NEW zoos BUICK

SILVERADO PICKUP

LACROSSE CX \·

• Vortec V·6 Power

• Six Passenge-r. Seating
• Driver Power Lumbar

• Air Conditioning

• .AMII'M Stereo

.
19. I 990 .

• Power Windows &amp; locks

*

29MPGonHighwa$

RVHS sets dates
for hoops camp

IIRAMD IIIW ::tOGS DNII9Ulor
~W~Itl SUII • m•a
• Air Condltlqn,lng
• 60/40 Split Bench Seat

• Power Sunroof

• CO.tJIPl Plllyer
• Cruise &amp;' Tilt

36 MPG

~n Hlghway!$13 .

.
ALL NSW :aoo5 CIIIW
CO'"T • 110111

14 MPG on Highway!

380 *

• Electronic Shift To 4WO

I
''W . . JOIIICIIIW
COUIIIiiiiO IXT.

ALL lliW :liDOS

CMI . ~W

MMIWGI

H MPG on Hlghwoy! ·

- M . . DIICIIIVY
II.IJWIAIOIXT. CMI4M

..

ll MPG on Htglhwayl

$12,480 * $13,990 * $18,960 * $21,990 *
• l.~ uttr Engine
• All Cvndltlonlnt

• Air condltiDnlng

· -: co 5tfftl;) 'systtm
•l.ZUtttDOHCEnglnt

VIRGINIA JOBS FOUNDATION

BINGO!

•45ptHA ..~k
•VOrttcV .. PfNitr
• Air condltlotMPlt

• rOWflr lMndOWI • Lcxltr.

• Atumlnlln'l 'Nheeh
• ~leu ffttry

• AM.fN ltHotO

.......
.

MII • .W:IOOICIIIW
'Ill''"'
!Utu
. .

a.1IY Al'FII- D'I4M

•

. . . . . anY
TAla &amp;.14M

DOORS OPEN AT 4:00PM
EARLY BIRDS 5:.15 PM
REGULAR SESSION 6.:10 P~
• Vorttc

.aoo v.a

• Air Cot'ldftlcnln9

• AM.fM Stlrto

.

• 4200' C)tlndu fngln.

• 17" Alumtnum Wb•tll

• Pewtr IMndotM I lCW:IG

• Rtft\0(1 K~tJI Entry

• bW Jdt CORdti:IOfllftg

• onstar Slf«y s~ em

• atriiect ~~ Entry .

•

IT~~rlng

Pakagt

.

• Pow..- Snl 6 Windows ·

• Tuxes, T~ nile hes exto. Rebate included In sale prklol 111W vehidt li511t1N~ applkaWe. On appmed aedil.
·· On Seledld models. Mot rllqlOII5ible.f011ypographkli lll'an. I'Tka goodJunt 23rUweu;. Jun 2611L

Brown plans to check into hospita,l after·draft

.

Expect a clbudy morning.
Temperature s will climb from
74 to 86 by late this morning. ·
Winds will be 5 MPH from
the south .

Evenirzg (7 p.m.-Mid11ight)
Temperatures will fall from
89 early this evening .to 75 .
Skies will be mostly clear with
5 MPH winds from the "southwest turning from the south as
the evening progresses.

!tjitJif cfe~tla!'t

Woman intuition makes her.
think twice about marriage
DEAR ABBY: I am a 37year-old
woman · who ·s
engaged to be married. It will
be a first marriage fo r both ol;
us. I l0ve my fiance, ''Gill ,"
very much, but I have a gut
Dear
• feeling something is not
· Abby
right. Since our engagement I
am noticing things I ei ther
didn't see or ignored before.
Some
examples : Gill
recently moved back to hi s
home state, so we talk on the ERA: 1 can't "fix:· you r probphone every other day. When lem. but it may comfon you
we talk, he has to make what· to know that many people feel
ever we talk about sexual. the way you do about various ·
Not that I have anything eras - and that includes the
against sex - it just annoys roaring '20s. the romantic
me that Gill can' t think '30s·: the fa shionable '40s. the
beyond his zipper when l' m revolutionary '60s. the ex pertrying to talk about a movie I imental '70s, as well as the
just saw.
.
"awesome" ' 80s.
· He also neve'r reallv has
Wheit ·you're older, you ' II
discussed his family or his be able to satisfy your "itch"
past. He has met the majority to live in the '80s by collectof my family, but I have yet ing music. clothing and
accessories from that decade.
to meet anyone from his.
Gill makes .a point of say- It's not exactly a trip back in
ing, once we are married he time, but. it will capture the
firmly . beli~ves the man nostalgia.
.
. .
should be "the head of the
DEAR ABBY: l have
...
household , the decision always ' fiad my election b'a lmaker." !told him that I don't lots sent to my mother 's
believe in · that ·"caveman. house. (Sne lives only three
cavewoman" mentality and blocks . away.) While I was.
for him to get over himself.
out of (own on a recent. busi~ ...
Although he has never ver- ness trip, my mother reques t- ~
bally or physically abused ed an absentee ballot in my
me, I'm getting strange vibes, name and then voted for me
and I'm ready to call off the without my knowledge.
engagement. Am I being When she told me over the
paranoid or a ... NERVOUS · phone what she had done, ·I
told her it was illegal. I am
BRIDE-TO-BE?
·
DEAR NERVOUS: You're less concerned about ·. who
not being. paranoid. Listen to and what she voted for than
your intuition . .For all of the the fact she did this at all.
reasons you have stated, you Other than my wife; no one
should not marry this man know s becaus&lt;f I have kept
without extensive premarital this issue · di screet. What
counseling.
should I do? - TROUBLED
DEAR ABBY: I an1 10. I IN CALIFORNIA
. was born in 1994. My probDEAR
TROUBLED:
lem is I really, really wish I Contact the registrar of voters
had lived in the ·'80s. l know and give a change of addre ss
this sounds stupid,. but the to the house in which you
style was awesome - not reside. That way your voter
skanky. The musiC was great information and sample bal- . not rap. The '80s seem lots will no longer be sent to
awesome! I mean, they had your mother' s address, and
good songs like "She Blinded she won' t be tempted to comMe With Science." The '80s mit voter fraud again.
Dear Abby 'is written by
seem so cool - at least peapie are always saying so.
Abigail Va11 Buren, also
Help, Abby, please. I' m sit- know11 as Jeanne Phillips,
ting here listening to '80s and .was four~ded by her
music now. I wouldn't admit mother, Pauline Phillips.
this to anyone else except my Write
Dear Abby at
mom or dad. - BORN IN www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
THE WRONG ERA
Box 69440, Los A11geles, CA
DEAR IN THE WRONG 90069.

CHESHIRE
River
Valley High School will have
a basketball camp for boys
and girls entering grades 4-8
on Wednesday, · July 6
through Friday, July 8 at
Bidwell-Porter· Elementary
School.
The three-day camp will
take · place from 9 a.m.- to
II :30 a.m. and will focus on
instructions in fundamental
basketball.
The cost of the camp is $30
if you are registered before
July 4, with the cost moving
up to $35 after July 4. ·
All
participants
will
receive a camp t-shin.
For more information, or to
sign-up, contact RVHS boys
basketball
coach
Gene
Layton at (740) 245-5753 or
call him at River Valley High
School· at (740) 367-7377.

· Bv LARRY l.Aae
ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN ANTONIO ~ Detroit
Pistons coach Larry Brown
said Thursday he plans to
check into the Mayo -Clinic
after next week's NBA draft
for a three-day stay.
' "Shelly has it set up for
Wednesday morning," he
said, referring to his wife.
Brown will be in the hospita l to address a medical problem that developed from com-

'

pli cations followi•i,s ·hip
surgery in November. and did
not go away afte r a second
procedure in March ..
The Hall of Fame coac h has
said if · doctors deem him
healthy enough. he wants to
return next season with the
Pistons and insists he will not
coach another NBA team ..
If Brown ·can't coach, he is
expected to ·be an executive,
perhaps with the . Cleveland
Cavaliers. Still , some wouldn "t be shocked if he ended up
coaclJing. the New . York

Kni cks next seaso n.
Before Detroit played the
San Anton·io Spurs in Game 7
of the NBA Finals. Brown
said he didn't want to think
about what he would miss
about the game if his coaching
career is over.
"If 'it happens, I've got a
young family," he said. "''ve
got a lot of neat things that
have happened to me because
of the opponunity to coac h.
I' m sure I'll be doing some
coachin g in some capacity. I
want to help the game."

Spurs win NBA Championship
SAN ANTONIO (AP)
- With the NBA title on
the line, Tim Duncan and
the San Antonio Spurs
proved themselve s wonhy
champions.
Duncan came up ·huge in
the second half and was
chosen finals MVP after
having the worst playoff
series of his career, and
Manu Ginobili had another breakthrough performance Thursday night to
lead the Spurs past the
Detroit Pi ston s 81-74 in a
Game 7 that was as
thriiling as it was rare.
In a matchup of the past
two NBA champions, the
Spurs came through in the .
clutch to win their third
title in seven years and ·
deny Detroit the chance to
repeat.
.
The Spurs are cenainly
not a dynasty, but their
staying po·wer as a championship caliber team
helps validate a legacy that
history wi II respect.
Duncan had 25 points
and II rebounds while
shrugging off a stretch of
eight straight misses that
ended in the third quarter
with · the teams tied .
Ginobili scored 23 points
with a series of slashing,
scintillating drives and big
passes.
Behind Duncan, the
stoic established star, and
Ginobili , the flashy young
Argentine, the first Game
7 in more than a decade
ended with the Spurs celebrating on their home .
coun.
"We just played a great
team. I don't know bow
· we did it, · but l am
thri lied," Spurs coach
Gregg Popov1ch said after
embracing his good friend,
Detroit
coach
Larry
Brown, as the game ended.
Popovich became the third
APphoto
coach with three titles.
The NBA had waited a San Antonio Spurs' Tim Duncan (facing camera) embraces Manu Ginob ili during the fourth
quarter of game seven df the NBA finals in San Antonio Thursday. San Antonio won 81-74
Please see Spun, Bl
to win the championship.
· •·

OF Kenny Kelly
has knee surgery

675-3877

.

.'

•
'

.

Fri. &amp; Sal . 0 am. 0 pm • Sun . 1 pm. 8 pm • TOLL FRU 1-800 -822-0417 • 421-0756

Bv LARRY CRUM
LCRUM@MYOAILYREGISTEA .COM

Contact Information
Fax- 1-74o-446-3006

,.

(304) 675-1333 . .... 19
Ierum 0 mydailyreglster.com

.

COLUMBUS (AP)
Alex Boone committed to
Ohio State when ·l)e was just
· a sophomore, thinking the
early decision would help
hi in enjoy high school.
''A week later. I was thinking , 'I cannot wait to leave. I
cannot· wait to get out of
here,"' Boone said:
"Now college is here, and I
am anxious to get going. It's
going to be incredible."
An offensive lineman from
· Lakewood
St.
Edward,
Boone is one of four freshman recruits who started ·
summer school at OSU ·this
· week, using the early start to
get a leg up on team workouts and settle into college.
Maurice Wells, / Doug
Worthington and Jamario
O'Neal, a defensive bat;k
from Cleveland Glenville,
also entered the classroom
Monday, taking advantage of
an NCAA rule that allows
incoming recruiting classes at
major colleges to enroll in
summer school.
Incoming basketball players have been able to take
summer courses and use the
extra time to adjust to campus life since 200.1. This year
is the fir st time the opportunity is being utTered to football
recruits.
"With the new NCAA
rules, they pay for the dorm
room and the education, so
why not get the head start on
Please see Summer, Bl

Point Pleasant falls by default

·

Bryan Watters, ~Writer
(740) 446-2342 .•• , .. 23
bwattersOmydaiiYtribune.com

Mon •• Thurs. 0 am. 8 pm •

.

'

CIN(INNATI (AP) Cincinnati Reds outfielder
Kenny Kelly had arthroscopic knee surgery · Thursday tQ
repair the torn meniscus he
damaged id Tuesday's game
with the St. Louis Cardinal s.
He · is expected to begin
.running in about' three weeks ,
said team medical director
Dr. Timothy Kremchek, who
performed the 30-minute procedure.
Kelly is expected to go on
the 15-day disabled list
Friday, with a corresponding
roster move to be announced
before the Reds start a weekend series with the Cleveland
Indians.
··
·

La,;ly Crum, Spona Writer

Freshmen
use summer
term to
.adjust to
college life

Babe Ruth League

Sllorman, Spolu Editor
(740) 446-2342 . .... 33
bshermanO myde~vtribune. com

(Old Carolina Lumber Building Across from CSX)

because that's all we ever do."
Detroit'~ Chau ncey Billups
said he hopes Brown .is not
forced to end hi s coaching
career because he is more passionate about basketball than
anybody he·s been around.
" I don' t anticipate it being ·
over for him, but if' it is, it's
going to be a dark day for the
NBA," he said.
Last year. Brown became
the first coach to win NBA'
and . NCAA . championships .
He won the college title with
Kansas in 1988.
'

-

Soorta Staff

PT PLEASANT, WV

The win over the Spur&gt; in
·Game 6 was Brown·s I OOth in
the po. tseason~ moving him
past Red Auerbach for tbin.l
place on the all-t ime l is~/
The. night before the fin al
game of the . NBA seaso n:
Brow n had dinner with his
good frU!nd , Sm~ Antonio
coach ·Gregg Popovich.
"We've b~en out several
. times, but last night was real
special for both of us,"
Popovich said Thursday night.
"We talkec;l very little about
basketball, which is awkward

NBA Finals

E-mili - sports 0 mydaltysentinel.com

124 HIGH

Jll

The Daily Sentinel

INSIDE

24, 2005 ·

L.erry Crumlphoto

Point Pleasant's Ashton. Jones , teft, comes home after a
passed ball. The ball sailed past Putnam County's pitcher on
the ptay, allowing another· run to score in the second inning.
. J. •

'
POINT
PLEASANT,
W.Va. -· No . one really
understood what happened ,
but when Thursday's game
betwee n Point Pleasant and
Putnam County C was over
one thing was sure, no one
was happy.
hi the sixth inning of last
nights Babe Ruth League
game ..a call that wa ~ unpopular with the Putnam bench
sent its coach onto th e field
to discuss the call with the
umpire . Three ej~ctions and
an argument later, Putnam
decided to quit the game out
of frustration, but because
they were already ahead,
Putnam was awarded the
wiq over Point
l 0-7
Pleasant. ·
"Misbehavior by
ihe
Putnam C coach caused 'the
game to be canceled." said
Point Pleasant coach Reece
Dalton.

During ' the discus sion inning for Putnam County C
the COaches and left Point wondering what
umpires, one Putnam coach had just happened. During
was ejected for arguing, that inning, McDaniel manwhile two fans who were aged to get a double and a
unh.appy with the decision .s ingle. with Witley also .
were ejected themselves, addi ng a hit in the inning .
Point followed up the visalso for arg1,1i ng with tpe
itor
with two more runs of
umpire .
.
its
own
in. the 'third with
· Putnam' s coac h arg ued
· that he was only asking a John Wam ~ l ey and Jones
question, coach Dalton of scoring. One more run was
Point said 'that he was on ly added aft er a Ricky Wyant
trying
to defend
the hit in the founh .
Down I 0-6, the home
umpire s, regardles s, the
squad
added yet anotller run
-game ended with the visiting team walking out of a in the fifth in ning before the
game in which Point• fia sco broke out between
Pleasant looked as i.f it the coaches. ca using a walkmight mount a comeback , out and loss by default for
we Will never know.
the Point Pleasant Babe
·. Point had jumped to ari Ruth squad.
early 3-0 lead in the game
In the gam~ . Ricky Wyant
with Ashton Jones scori ng had a hit, Chris Casey manafter being walked, Todd aged two hits including a·
jJurris hitting for a single. double , · Burris and Meaige
later scori ng and Nick also allded a hit in the game
Stalnakeralso getting a run before it was .called.
\n the mmng .
Pluse - Def•ult,; Bl
However, a I 0-run third

. between

•

�•

'

.)

Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

'

Mason finishes 3-2 at Hillbilly Hardball Classic.
BY lARRY CRUM
LCRUMrJ~MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

----------ELKINS, W.Va. -During
a long trip to Elkins this past
weekend, the Mason CCJunty
le~10n squad walked away
Wtth a 3-2 record in the
Hillbtll y Hardbalt Classic.
Mason Count y got tlff to a
good start on Fnday. hav ing
no problem with the Preston
County American Leg10n
team, walking away wllh a
• 13-2 win after on ly fi,e
mmngs.
In that game, McCoy man·
· aged to be the l&lt;cy hmer,
pos ting a smg le. double.
tnple, RB 1 and three runs
scored. Also adding to the hit
list was Ned Park who posted
three hits incl udi ng a double.
driving in live RBi s and scoring a run. ,
l)!ler Hern. Josh Whitlock ,
Bryan Reed. John Ullom and

Spurs
fromPageBl
long time for a game with so
much at stake and so little
room for error. And the dif·
ference came in the fourth
quarter, when the Spurs were
able to make the plays the
Pistons couldn 't.
Midway through the period, Ginobili assisted on a 3:
pointer by Robert Horry and
Duncan found Bruce Bowen
alone outstde the arc for
another 3 that put San
Antonio ahead 67-61 . Detroit
pulled withm four before the
Duncan-Ginobili
combo
clicked perfectly on two .
· straight possessions.
First, Ginobili 1 drove the
lane and drew Duncan 's
defender, zipping a pass to
Duncan all alone on the baseline for a 19-footer.· Next,
Duncan had three defenders
collapsing on him when he
saw Ginobili all alone at the
3-point hne. The shot was
perfect, and San An'tonio led
72-65 with 2:57 left .
Detroit's ne xt three possessions brought an airball, a
foul shot and an offenstve
foul , but all San Antonio
could produce over that shot
was 11 single free throw by

•

Friday, June 24.

·' www.mydailysentinel.com

Brenton Clark also added hits
, to the totals m the dommant
win. Nate Adkins got the' win
pitching live innings and giving up only two runs and two
hits wtt h four strikeouts.
Game two on Friday was
another story however as

Mason County barely lost to
Ca in
· Townshtp
m
Pensylvania 4-3.
McCoy again showed his
strength 111 the. tournament,
hllting for two si ngles and
driving in an RBI. Kameron
Sayre ddded a hit and Park
added a do uble to the total
b'L ll could not escape wtth the·
\\-ill.

Park pitched the first five
inntngs aga in ~Caln. gi,ing
up three ru ns, fi ve hil s and
strik tng out six while his
rel ief. Jon Ullom. was cred ited w!lh the loss m the two
in111ngs he pit ched. gtvmg up
one run and one hit· wtth hi s

two strikeouts.
Mason Couniy reached for
On day two in Elkins, top pitcher Whitlock from
Mason County got back to Surry College to face the
action handing Beckley a 7-4 tough iquad and pitched a
loss. Potomac State player good six innings, giving up
Dale Kestner hit a homerun • only one run .on six hits ans
and drove in two RB!s for sitting down nine . His
Mason on, the day, with replacement Nate Adkins
McCoy, Hern, Whitlock. pitched the final two, giving
Reed and Ullom adding hits up the other run and three hit s
to the home team. Park also in the game .
cominued hi s great weekend
Keeping up the big numwnh two hi ts mcluding a dou-. bers for the weekend, McCoy
ble and three RBi s.
added another so lid game
Dale Kestern pitched the with two hit s along with
full seven mnings to get the Whitlock, whtle Hern , Park
win with four runs and fou r and Sayre had a hit a ptece in
hits gtve n up and striking out the game.
,
seven.
Mason County would not
Opponent number tw.o I on let that game end its weekend
'Saturday proved to be a tobgh as the final day produced a 9opponent as Morganto'wn 5 win against Charleston. with
ranks as one of the top three a collection of su'bstitues
teams in the state . Mason commg in m the fifth inning
Co un ty played the squad while trailing 4-0 and confrom the north tough but ulti- tributing to the come-frommatly fell short in a 2-1 loss. behmd victory.

Duncan. The score was 73-68 besi · effort," Duncan said
entering the . fina l minute after winning his third finals
when Gmobili made the play MVP. "We fought for this
that clinched it, wea ving thing."
Duncan came up short on a
through several defe nders for
'a layup that was almost too dunk and a 21-footer early in
the third quarter, giving him
easy. maktn g it 75-68.
The Pistons, who were six consecutive ni.isses, and
outscored 24- 17 in the final Detroit slowly began to build
upon its lead. · A dunk by
quarter, couldn't recover.
Detroit had won 10 straight Tayshaun Prince, a steal and
postseason games with a two foul shots by Chauncey
chance to eliminate its oppo- Billups, a poor 'possession by
nent and was tr;y ing to san· Antonto and a spin move
become the first team in by Antonio McDyess made it
NBA history to win two 48-39. .
Duncan's string of misses
Gar11e 7s on the road in a
postseason. As resilient as reached eight before he conthey were, that turned out to verted a three-point play, and
Gtnobili drove for a score off
be too tall of a task.
"I am unbelievably happy. I a turnover to complete a 7-0
couldn ' t
be
happi er, " run that got the Spurs right
Ginobili said. ''It's just an back in it. A 14-foot bank
unbelievable feeling . I need shot by Duncan - a part of
anbther body to feel it."
his usual repertoire that had
Duncan's legacy was as been absent in this series much in question as his produced a 53-53 tie before
team' s. He had struggled he knocked down another
through out the series against shot off t~ glass, this time
a superior defensive team. from a few steps further
the Pi stons presenttng the away, to help produce a 57toughest' test the Spurs had 57 tie entering the fourth.
Duncan had 12 points and
faced in the finals after
defeating the 1999 Knicks six rebounds in the third
and the 2003 Nets, teams that quarter.
After a flat start, Popovich
might have been a little too
pleased just to have a shot at told the Spurs during a timethe title.
out to start creating for each
"I don ' t listen to anything other - to stop standmg
that was satd. I wanted to around on offense and letting
come .out here and giye my the Pistons be the aggressors

with their defense. There was
a change ln Duncan immediately thereafter as he had a
blocked shot, an assist and a
tip-in to start a I 0-0 run that
gave San Antonio a 16-12
lead.
Each te'am's defensive.
intensity was a bit sharper'
than their offensive execution, in large part because
Billups and Gipobili each
picked up two · early fouls ,
and the first quarter ended
with the Spurs ahead 18-16.
Points continued to be difficult to come by in the second quarter, the Pistons hurting themselves with too
many long outside shots and
too few possessions in which
. the ball moved around, and
not enough second-chance
points generated by their better work on the offensive
boards.
The Spurs were having
their own problems, almost
never getting an easy shot
while trying as hard as they
could - too hard, perhaps to force their offense through
Duncan . Ben Wallace had
dunks on three consecutive
possessions late in the first
half to give him a team-high
12 points on 6-for-7 shooting
as Detroit led 39-38 at halftime.

Friday, June 24, 2005

2005

1--·--Sports Briefi - .- .- -

I

·if.
~

'

'

Red Barons-sirik Clippers, 9-8

everything?"
said
Wor!hington, a defensive
end from Athol Springs,
N.Y. -.
Buckeye s coach Jim
tressel didn't push players
during recruiting to move
into the dorms early but told
them it was an option they
should consider if they
thought it might make them
more comfortable on campus.
Wells, a running back
from Jacksonville, Fla., said
he was 'too eager to wait
until the fall.
"As a football player, col-

· m:.ribune Sentinel .- iRe ister
CLASSIFIE· D

In One Week-With Us
'
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
'
PLUS YOUR AD NOW ONLINE
To Place
. \!Cribune
iaegister
Sentinel
Your Ad,
(740) 446-23.42 (740) 992-2156 (304) 675~1333
F--C_a_I_I_T_o_d_;__a_v_._··__.::.o:..:rF..;;a;;.x.;.;ro (740) 446·3...o.....os_·___o:....r_F_ax_r_o...:.(7_4...:;0l:...:9..:.92_-2:..1..:.s7_ _ Or Fax To (304) 675-5234

.'

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) - Longtime Huntington
High wrestling coach Bill Archer is retiring.
Archer has taught and coached in Cabell Count~ f~r
more than 30 years, and has served as an assistant pnnctpal and athletic director.
He plans to retire at the end of June.
Archer coached 25 state wrestling champions at
Huntington and won regional titles in 23 of his 34 seasons.
This past ,Year's team placed fourth in the Class AAA state
meet, givmg Archer 17 consecutive top 10 finishes.

fromPageBl

.

We Cove
Meigs, Gallia,
And Mason ·
Counties Like
No One ·
Else Can!

Huntington wrestling coach to retire

Summer

'

•

MOOSIC, Pa. (AP) - Shane;Victorino, Jim Rushford,
Danny Sandoval and Ryan Howard homeml as tl).e
Scranton/Wilkes-Barre Red Barons defeated the
Columbus Clippers 9-8 Thursday night.
·
The Red Barons took a 9-71ead in the sixth inning when
CUppe!S reliever Colter Bean hit Chris Coste and John
Castellano with the bases loaded.
'
Mitch Jones -homered for Columbus in the seventh to
make·it a one-run ~arne. He went 2-for-5 with two RBis . .
Franklin Perez p1tched out of a bases-loaded jam in the
eighth and struck out the side in the ninth for his 14th save.
The CliJlpers scored six runs off Red Barons ~tarter
Mike Bacsik in the first inning and added another m the
second for a 7-3 lead.
Scrant4n1Wilkes:Barre scored once in the third and
three times in the fifth, tying it 7-all on Rushford's solo
homer.
Sandoval went 3-for-4 with three runs and two RBis.

.

www.mydailysentinel.com

Offtee · 11(1~~
Monday .thru Friday
8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.

' l'ege is the. next step, and
you don't want to have to sit
around and wait for it if you
don ' t have to," he said.
"You want to be a part of the
team as quickly as possible."
The players hope thetr
work dunng the summer
will' translate into earlier
playing time on the field.
Worthington said leaving
home a few months early is
worth it because it will give
him the chance to make new
friends and prepare for both
the season and the academic
semester.
"That way, .when the season starts and all the may. hem happens, I' ll be more
adapted to what's going to
come my way," he said.

~iQ~~T60QlW~RijiTijE~AMN~AMDi""-:.~.:,.:rt:-;vo:u:r~A=d=s~W:ith
Successful Ads

Should Include These Items
To Help Get Response...

r\:"li\Ol 'J"olCt\lb'VTS

Horse Pull, June 25 2005.
1pm
At !len s
County
Fatrgrounds wetgh horse
332.11H &amp; under, 9 30a m
12 30p'Tl concesston stan d
SS per person more tnfo call
Rtcha rd Douglas (740\767·
4501

r

Gn FA\\r\\'

Default
from PageBl
Ricky Wyant was credited with the loss, pitching
for the Point Pleasant
squad while Robinson
managed the win for
Putnam.

Point Pleasant will return
tcp actiorr 1 6:30 Monday
against Southeastern at
Point Pleasant Htgh School
before traveling on the .
road to face the Putnam B
squad at Hurricane.
00(10) 000

032

-

11X -

Public Notice
NOTICE

OF

SECOND

PUBLIC HEARING
The
Metgs
Co lJnty
Commtssioners tntend to
apply
to
tl1 e
Oh to
Department
of
Development, lor lund tng
under the
FY ' 2005
Community Development
Block
Grant
(CDBG)
Formula
AllocatiOn
Program lldmmtstered Dy
the Slate Metgs County tS
eligible for up to $145,000
ot Ftscat Year 2005 COBG
Formula Allocatton fund·
tng , provtded the county
meals applicable require ments On March 29,
2005, the county conduct·
ed tiS ftrst P',J bltc heahng to
tnform ctltzens about the
CDBG program, how 11
may be used, what actiVI·
ties are eligible and other
important program requ.re·
ments. ·
A second publtc heanng
will be held on July 7,2005
at 1 30 pm at the Me~gs
County Commtssto ners
ottlce.
Mei gs
County

'

2005
ACTIVITY·
Ftre
Factlttles
and
Equtpmen t
Orange
Townshtp
CDBG Fundtng $ 16,000
Other Funds None
Nattonal Ob]ecttve Area

LMI
AC TI V I TY H tslo rt c
PreservaltonC h est ~r­
Shad e
Historlc
ASSOCiatiOn·
Chester
Academy
CDBG Fundtng $17 ,400
Other Fu n(is 521,300
Cheste r
Shade
Assoctatton
Nahona l Obtecttve. Area

LMI

ACTI VITY Admtntslratton
and fatr Housing
'
LMI
CDBG Fundmg· $25 000
ACTIV ITY Water and
(Admm . $ t 2,500· Fatr
Sewer Fac tllltes· Sal em · Houstng $12 ,500 )
Townshtp ,
Cthz~ns are encouraged to
CDBG Fund1ng $25,000
attend this meeltng on July
Other Funds None
7 2005 to elCpress their
Nattonal Objecttve· LMI
vtews and comments on
ACTIVITY '
Public
the County' s pro posed
CDBG FY '2005 Formula
Serv1ces· Metgs County
Allocation
Counctl on Agmg
App licahon
Wntten comments wtll be
CDBG Fund•ng $27,000
Other Funds
$3 400accepted until 1,00 pm,
Counci l on Aging
July 7, 2005, and may be
NatiOnal Obtecttve: Ltmtted
matted to the Metgs
County
Courthouse
Cliente le
Pomeroy, OhiO 45769
ACTIVITY
Street
If a parttctpant will need
lmprOW!m&amp;I]IS· Vtllage ol
Syracuse- Vartous Streets
auxthary atds (Interpreter,
COBG Funding $24,100
bratlted or ta~ material,
BSSIStl\le hstemng dENICB
otl1er) due to a dtsabiltty,
Help Wanted
· Help Wanted
please contact Glorta
Kloos, Clerk, pnor to JutV
7, 2005 at (740) 992-2895
tn order to ensure ttlat your
needs will be accom~
Emergency Relief Workers
da tftd Tht Mtt",t County
1
Commissioners ofhce I&amp;
1
•
(Subetltutee)
handiCapped accesstble
Needed to work with people wtth mental
1
Midi DaVenport, Pretldef1t
retardation '" Metgs County. Hours:
Melgt
County
Evenings, weekends, and overnights as
CommtstiOnera

.I

WANTED:

I

needed or as scheduled . Must have high
school diploma/QED. valid driver's .
license. three yeara good driving experi·
ance and adequate automobile
insurance. $7.00/hr.
Send resume to

Buckeye Community Servlcee
P.O. Box 604
Jackson. Ohio 45640
Deadline lor appliCants: 6128105
Pre-employment drug testing
Ecau-1 ()pportiJM'l'

- _I -

EJT1910yfl

Each btd must cootatn the
lull name of every p&amp;fSOil
or company Interested tn
the bid The outside of the
sealed bid must be marked
~as phalt pavtng bid"
The Vtllage Counctl of
Pomeroy reserves the right
to reject any or all bids,
and to wa1119 wregularities

• Power Nozzle to a Aatnbow
: Sweeper (304)458-1657

·amya
e
Fnday, June 24 and
Saturday June 25
8AM-5PM 3399 State
ROute 141 · Just past
the Jumbo on the left

Apartments for Rent ................................... 440
Auctton and Flea Market .............................OOO
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories ..... .......... ........... 760
Auto Repair .., ........... ............................... .... 770
Autos for Sale ..............................................710
Boats &amp; Motors for Sale ................ .. ........... 750
Building Suppties ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity ........ :........................ 210
Business Training .. ..................................... 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ........................... 7,90
Camping Equtpment .......................... ,,.,, ... ,780
Cards of Thanks .......................................... 010
Chitd!Etderly Care ...................................... 190
Electricai/Refrigeration .. ...... ....................... 840
Equipment lor Rent .....................................480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equipment ................................. ...... ... 610
Farms for Aent ............ .................... ...... ....... 430
Farms for Sate ............................................. 330
For Lease ......... ... .. ....................................... 490
Sale ........................................................ S8S
For Sale or Trade ......... .. .............................. 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ..................................... 580 .
Furnis hed Rooms ............... ~ ... ..................... 450
General Hauling ........................,......., .......... B50
Glveaway...................:..................................040
Happy Ads .................................................... 050
Hay &amp; Graln .......................... ........................ 640
Help Wanted ................................................. 110
Home lmprovements ............................ ....... B10
Homes tor Sale .. ..................... ~ .......... .......... 310
Household Goods ....................................... 510
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
In Memo{lam ............................................. ,.. 020
ln•urance ..................................................... 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment,...................... 660
Ltveotock ......................................................630
Lost and Fourid ........................................... 060
Loto &amp; Acr~oge ............. ................. .............. 350
Mlsceltanoiluo.. ..............:.............................170
Mlacellaneous Merchandise.......................540
Mobile Home Repalr....................................660
Mobile Horneoror'Rent ............:.................. 420
Mobile Homes fo• Sete .............. ,................. 320
Money to Loan .............................................220
Motorc)&lt;Cieo &amp; 4 Wheelera ..........................740
Musical Instruments ................... ......... ....... 570

For

..

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Orange ' Township
Trustees wiH hold a public
heanno on the proposed
Ju~

8.

Personata ..................................................... OOS

2005, 7:30 at the home of
me c)trk, Osle Foltrod
(e)24

Pets for Sale ................................................ 560
Plumbing &amp; Heattng .................................... 820
Professional Servlces .................................230
CB Repoir .. ............................. 160
Radio, TV
Reel Eotate Went&lt;d ..................................... 360
Schools lnatrucUon ..................................... 150
Seed , Ptent &amp; Fertilizer ..............................650
snuatlono Wanted ....................................... 120
Space for Rent .............................................480 .
Sporting Goods ...........................................520
SUV 's lor Sate ................................, .............720
Trucks for Sale .,.......................................... 715
Upholstery .........: ......................................... 870
Vans For Sate ...............................................730
Wen!ed to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplleo ..................620
Wanled To Oo .............................................. 180
Wanted to Ronl ............................................ 470
Yard Sole' Galltpolta .................................... 072
Yard Sole-Pomeroy/Mtddle ......................... 074
Yard Sole-Pt. Pleannt ....................... I........ 076

on

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed
bldl will

bt

received In U1e ottk:• or tl1e
Village Cltrk, Romt~Oy
Murilclpal Building , 320
East
Mam
Street,
Pomeroy. C&gt;niO •5769. until
11 00 am MorKlay. Juty 25,
2005 lor the lcllowing proposal
concern ing
the
paving ot venous srreets tn

lwtight@tc net
3rd Annual CVS Pharmacy
Flea Market/Yard Sale
Brtng your stutf (over 50
sties avatlable) Call 740446 -7459 June 25th Sam-?

•

r

I~alhpoli~ lailp tribune The Daily S~ntinel ~oi~t l}lta~ant ltgi~ttr!

S"op

L~~~~---~~~~---~~~~-~

Classlfle~s!

I

Light Dump Truck Servtce
stone gr:;_ve l sand dtrl
(740)949-4700 ,

Yard sale· Furntture. clothes.
tools toys Someth tng for
everyone MultHamt ly 8
mttes out St AI 218 on the
rtght Thurs -Sun S/23--6/ 26
Yard Sale Saturday 25 Lots
of thtngs for everyone tOt
Stsson Ad . Bidwell, JUSt oft
554 Watch for stgns
Yar d Sale Take 141 to
Lmcoln Ptke turn left Follow
Stgns

Sat

on ly 8"4

Ftrst

ttl'ne

LOW-MOISIUre

Y ·\Rll SM.£-

Po\IEROY/MttlllLE
Btg Yard Sale
23 24,25
Between Chesh tre and
Mtddleport on Route 7
Garage Sate· Fpday and
Saturday June 24 &amp; 25 ,
8 00-4·00 at Delong's 1
m tte oft SA 7 on SA 143
Pomeroy clottles. hOuse·
hold
tlems
co llectable
Barbies, and other mtsc
ttems
Huge carport dnvewaY and'
out tn to the yard sa te. Jurie
24:25, 9am·4pm. prtced to
sell , ant1ques collectables.
crafts, cUr tatnS bedd tng,
large stze clothes , teens
name brand. lots of mtsc.
somethmg for everyone, turn
off 7 onto 143 (2 114 mt)
Thursday and Fnday. 6·23 &amp;
24 Sofa, love seat , chair,
coHee table end tables, plus
c!othmg
and ' mtsc
HousehOld goods Corner of
Broadway and Vtne . Racine

4 Bedroom home 2 blocks
from school, good netghborhood 648 4th Ave Cal l
Wtil-do Babysttttnq tn my (740)388·8164
home.
t Oyrs/eKperetnce
Ltnk approved Loads ol Fun 4 Sale or rent Country &amp;
(304)773-5 137 ask for Kelly qwet. 3 bed room full base -

(304)675-0022

hardwood 11oors
ment,
Cadmus (740 )379·2540

tO

BustNf.~

~-Pf
~

Jffu:A

2005 by NEA, Inc.

Cashland- now htrtng a partlime teller ror thetr Pomeroy
locatton computer experi ence preferred. evenmg &amp; ·
weekms reqwed greal pay
Send resume to 397 W. Matn
St, Pomeroy, Oh 45769 or
Fa:M (740)992-9001
--------Construc!IOn company look·
mg lor a lull hme secretary
to start immed1ately Job wtll
last through 2008 Send
re sume to Da tly Sen ttnel,
PO Box 729·22 Pomeroy.
Oh 45769
--------Dental Hygtentst needed
Send Resume to PO Box 45

OUTSIDE SALES
REPRESENT"+.TIVE "

The
Ga ll1polts
Dal ly
Trtbune
tS
acceptmg
resumes tor a full time
outstde sates rBpressntatrve to JOm our sa l ~s team
and to manage an estab·
ltshecf accoun t list wt1tle
calling on new accounts
The successful candtdate
w1ll be a dtsc•pUned, selfmotwed team player that
understands the tmpor·
ta nce" of
developmg
strong mutually benelt·
ctal busmess relallonships wtth our accounts

304-675-6553
Ortvers Needed ·
COL Dnvers wtlhng to drive
for local ready·mtx·concrete
company Expenenc e IS
·prefe rred but not necessary
Dnver must be wtlling to do
pre-matntenance on trucks
&amp; eq utpment yard work &amp;
other mtscellaneous chores
Expe nence operaltng equtp·
men! &amp; extra sktlls such as
we ldtng a plus
Call (304)937-34 t0

The tdea l candtdate wiH
ha\le sale ixpenence For
conftdenttal
tntervtew
pl!i!ase send resume and
cover letter to Gallipolis
Daily triblJne Attn' Jtm
Freeland, 825 Thtrd Ave.,
Galltpolls. Ohto 4563 1

Person to care lor older
handtcapped man, 40 hours
a week List prevtdus
employers and gtve references. Employee subject to
drug
testtng Send resume
Full ttme mechantc needed
to work on Helavy equtp- to The Dally Sentinel, Box
rnent Send resume to Datty 729·5, Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Senttnel PO Box 729·22.
Replacement workers needPomeroy, Oh 45769 '
eo for housekeeptng/leundry

Full·t 1me babys 1tter needed
· Barton Chapel Road , Mason
County No students apply
call spm-9pm 304·576-3353

department, could le ad to
full·ttme position ' con tact
Vera West (740)992·6606

EOE

Stylists needed at Fantasl •c
Sams new location tn the
Wai-Mart Plaza Stgn on
bonus Free CEU hours,
oatd 'vacat ion. full 8o part
ltme help needed Come &amp;
work tn our fnendly family
atmosphere Ca ll (740)446
7267 or stop tn
Tractor/trailer drtver needed
to start tmmedtalely Full
ttme th roug h 2008 WVA
area. Must have good dnvtng record Send resume to
Oatly Sentmel, PO Box 729·
22 Pomeroy Oh 45769
Transport dn\ler needed for
100 bed sktlled nurstng facti·
tty Prov•de tra nsportalton 101
phystcian
app ointments
consul ts e1c MlJst have
good dnvtng record, enjoy
worktng wtth restdents · and
fa m1ltes PoSIIton ts par lttme, stale tested nursmg
ass tstant preferred
not
requ tred Interested applicants should apply tn person
to
Aocksprtngs Rehab
Center. 36759 Aockspnngs
Ohto
Road ,
Pomeroy,
45769

R1oGran de
lmestment Property walk to '
Urtverstty (2) Aparttllent
bu ldmgs, (3) two BR untts
$129.000 Call (740)24~·
94 13

Roush
lane
C heshtre
Beautiful 3 bedroom formal
dmtng room , Oak kttchen
Oak floo rs, carpet ed Sun
room
2 1/3
ba1hs,
St17,000 (740)367 ~ 7615

40 ~ Spnng Ave
Pomeroy
Ohto One 1arrnl y horne for
80 years Sttll hke new, 3 ,.• .,... ~-' "'lltr'
For Sa le,
Neat, Clean. bedrooms, t 1/ 2 baths, 2 car
Thrtvmg Restaurant near garage, $50,000, 740-992·
Construction . 2426
boomtng
Owners looktng to Rettre - - - - - - - - Call (304)882-2490
7 rooms 11 /2 bath garage
baseme~t
deck. tocludtng
deed to nverbank. fo• mto
www.orvb .com
eNOTICEo
~HtO VALLEY PUBLISH call 740-992-3424 740-992Homt Listings .
1949 740-742-2007
lNG CO recommends tha
List your home by calling
~u do busmess wtth pea
(740)446-3620
le you know and NOT I
end money through thE
Vlf!W photoslmfo onlin e
~at I unltl you have 1nves11
ated the oHering.
% DowntJ bedroom. 1
All reel estate advertistrtg
14 bath LIR 0/ R , FIR
In this newspaper is"
ar garage fenced 1n
subject to the Federal
'IU loAN
ad&lt; yard 1'2 acre
Fair Houamg Act of 196B
'
lose t o to~m. S 132 500
whtch makes Hlllega! to
ode 45(!5 or call
advertise "any
••NOTICE**
740)446-8325
prel!;!rence, limitation or

0Pt'ORI1JNI1Y

r

MoNEY

G:t

I

!Borrow Smart Contac
he OhiO DIVISIOn 0
~i~anctal ln sltlut!on'
~!lice of Consume
fA_ffatrs BEFORE you reft
ance your nome o
blatn a loan BEWARI
f requests for any larg
dvance payments 0
ees or rnsurance Cal
he OHtce of Consume
~Hat rs toll free at 1·866
78-0003 •to learn tf th
fortgage
broke r
o
IS
prope r!
ender
l~nsed (Thts IS a publl
ervtce announcemen
rdm the Ohto Valle
!Publishing Company)

di:scrimmahon based on
race, color, rehgton, sex
tamiltal status or nattonal
origin, or any Intention to
make any such
prelerence, limttahon or
dtacrlminatlon.'
This n~spaper wit! not
knowingly accept
advertle ements for real
estate whictl Is tn
~lolatton ol the law Our
readers are hereby
informed that all
dwellings advertised in
thlt newtpaper are
available on an equal
opportunily ~?ases

I.

ts a Steal114 bedroom,
bath, 2 car garage
ew Haven WV CoCk!
505 or call (304 )882-

368

i

MOIII.I' HOMF~
IURSALE

1 2~50
1968 P1ne Rtclge
mobtle horne Good conclt·
tton all 91edrtc 2 be~room
1 bath major a pphances
1ncluded, S7 300 Present lot
ava tlable
rent $150
monthly (740)446-2796 or

,,

{7401388-9687.

Duplex each wtlh 3 BR LA ,
1993 do ublewtde 3 bed
OR Kttchen, Bath &amp; Porch
room 2 baths, must be
fl30
House 3 BR, LA Kttchen ,
moved. $25 000 (740)388·
SERVICI1\
Bath
Both
Po tn t
8978
Pleasant
(304 )675·2 49 5
after 7 OOpm
reuy t"a t
.n M8SO
1997 D oublewtde . 3 bed·
Spec1a1• for summer t5'l-C
ro[Jm
t +acre
2 bath
SLltOOLS
Begtnnmg on June No Down Payment even (304)675-1019
INsmucnoN
bst • July 5th 304-773 w1th less than perfect cred1t
on th ts 3 bedroom, 1 bath 2 BR !ratter god shape, on
600
.home m Middleport Corner 3/4 acre ground
North
Galllpolia Career College
TURNED DOWN ON
lot. carport. wrap-around Gallta area. t740)446·t 400
(Careers Close To Home)
SOCIAL SECURITY ISS!? po rch . fenced tn yard base ~
Call Todayt 740·446-4387
No Fee Unless We Wtnl
ment, payment same as 2000 28.K80 Patrtot 4 bed1-800-214-045.2
room, e.Kcelte nt cond ttton
1-888·582·3345
rent 740-992-6300
-w.gelipO!IJureercoH.ge com
Ask ing
$48 bOO .
Neeos
A~cret1ilild MemDer M:c redlttn~
moved
(740!367·7245
COUIICII lor lnnepenoenl Colleges
I~ I \ t I " I \II
No Down Pay ment PossJble

l'lcotUSIONAL

•n

ptt

lnc:l Sci'IOOII 127'18

1900 square It house, 3
beoroom , .2 bath, lull basement, new heal pump sets
on 3 acres SR 7, Eastern
School Dtstnct. (740)9854321

Keyboard Player tor ~Ktsttng
Band. Must be expertenced
&amp; versattle (304)675· 16t6
Looktng for a pianist for
gospel and cl1urcl'l groups

Yard sale at Smtih residence [740)245·5078.
on Pme Grove Road,
Aactne , 9-?, Thurs , Fn. , Sat.

r.

Hmn-:s
mRSA.LE

3br 2ba, pool garage, slorage bldg, appltances rnctud·
ed. 5 mtles !rom 33 on
Al681, (740)592-0426

Brand New Method
Dry In 1 Hour
No Steam-or-Shampoo
Free·Esttmates
u•ciearly Clean •••

Pt Pleasant or fax resume

74

Hom:s
FOR S .M.E

3br 2 1/2 ba "Approx , 2acres, lg -2-Car Garage &amp;
Barn Count ry se11mg asktng
$ 120,000 (304)882·2890

Carpet-Cleaning

QQnj MISS Thts Oneil
Fnday &amp; Sa turday Jun e 24
&amp; 25 Posstble held over to
Sunday, June 25th 9-? 3719
St Rt 160· 1st house past
Holze r Hospttat &amp; Browns
Market Just nor th of the btg

B used homes under 51 000
Will help wtlh
deh~er~
17401385-9621
Great 2000 Fleetw,ood 2
bedroom w~h full -deltvef")'.
sel·up and central atr Call
Russ (740)385·2434

WANll'Jl
TO BUY

..
I \11' 11 1,\11\1

-.II.:\ HI"

a

SAVINGS

16)24

L,I'.Bti--~•,~•NTE•no•n--'1 r.o

Robmson and lddego. Wyant and
Casey. WP - Robms on LP -Wyant

{6)24 1711 . 8

b&lt;ldget for 2008 on

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

10

Place Your Paid Classified Ad In Wednesday's
Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Point Pleasant Register, or
Daily Sentinel, And It Will Run For FREE In
The Tri-County Marketplace!

1740)992-2166

POLICIES. Ohio Vallty P,ubllah1ng r11erv11 tha right to edit, rtlect, or ~:an~:tl any ad at any tlma Errora mual be reported on the firal day ol
will be raaponalblalor no more than tht~ ~:oat ot lha apace occupied by tha error and only the flrat Jnser'llon We
eny lou or eKpense thaf reaultl from the publlcatton or oml&amp;lton of an advertisemen t Correction will be made In the f!rst available edition.
are always ~:o nlidenlial. • Current rate card applies. • All real eatataadverllaementa are aublect to thtt Fedara l Fair Housing Act of t968 .
accepts only help wanted ada meeting EOE standard&amp;. We w•ll not know•ng!y acce pt any adverl!tlng 1n v1olet!on of the lew

7

Announcement .... ............. ... ... ... , ......... .. , ... , , 030
Anltques ................... ............. ....... .. ... ... ....... . 530

16)24

6a.

T ri bune-St! ntl ne!- RegiSit~r

Pulnam 10, Poinl Plaaaanl 7
Putnam
Point

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

the Vtllage of Pomeroy
3075 To ns more or tess ol
speciftcation 404 asphalt
pavmg Installed 1720 gal·
Ions more or less of spec~·
ftcatton 407 tack coattng
tnstalled , · and
12959
squ are yards more or less
of spectftcatlon 254 pavement planing . The V1llage
of Pomeroy wtll provtde a
stte Within the vtllage for
the stockpiling of the plantngs matertal
Alt matenals and ~ equtp­
ment are to meet Oh10
Departm ent
of
Transportatton speclltcattons. Prevadtng wages wtll
apply to this prOJect
Spectfteattoos and btd doc· .
umen ts may be obtamed
t&gt;y
cont acting
John
Anderson
Vt!lage
Admtmstrator, Pomeroy,
Muntctpal Bl.'tldtng, 320 E
Main Street, POB 666
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769

A Keyword • I nclude complete

www.comtcs.com

CLASSIFIED INDEX

Other Funds
$13 ,000
Syracuse V11tage
Nattonal Obj ecttve LMI
ACTIVITY
Public
Rehablhtatton· Portland
Commumty Center
CDBG Fundmg 's10 500
Other Funds· None
Nattonal ObJective

All Display : 12 Noon 2
Business Day&amp; Prior~ To
Publication,
sunday Display : 1:00
Thursday for' Sundays

Now you can have borders and graphics
~
added to your classified ads
Jm
Borders 53.00/per ad
Graphics 50¢ for small
S1.00 for large

o!

Rabbtl s for tree Call after
5 00 -740-742- 10 t 9

Courthouse,
Pomeroy,
Ohto to gwe ctlizens an
opportunity to revtew and
comment on the County s
proposed COBG FY' 2005
Formu la Alloc::atton prot·
eels
Based on both citizen Input
and local otftctals assessment of the County's
Communtly nee ds, the
Cou nty IS proposmg to
undertake lhe following
Formula Allocatton CDBG
actMttes for F1sca! Year

Dally In- Column; 1 :00 p.m.
Monday- Friday for Insertion
In Next Day's Paper
Sunday In - Column: 1:00 p.m.
For Sundays Paper

Description • Include A Prh::e • Avoid Abbrevliltlons
• Include Phone Number And Address When Needed
~ A~s; Should Run 7 oavs

r

Lost Small whtle dog w•th
brown patch ove r eye
weighs about 5 pounds.
Male Answers to the name
Ju111or Reward $100 North
Rt 2 t ·m tle past Paul's
Exxon (304)675 1990 or
(304)444- 1742

Display Ads

GET YOUR CLASSIFIED LINE AD NOTICED

• All ads must be ptepald'

_Los.....,.rANJJ;:;...-'
. 1
Ln.....:iyAJID~SALE:;::
:;..-_.~·I
~
FOUND
. ~
GAUJPOI.IS
lost 2 hereford cattle lost
tn Peach Fo rk/Ball A!Jn area,
call (740)992-51t5

Word Ads

Lost
Whtte German
CVS sale 011 Saturday. So
Shepherd wtth a red•Gollar .
2 Beau ttful Female Ktttens
come see us at the same
lost at Be llemead (304)675·
6 wks old to good Home
lime. II you've not been here
4812 A Reward
i3041682·32t 8
before you gotta see tt to
Lost Famtly pet tn the area belteve tl II have you wont
3 beaut•lul ktttens , 8 weeks
Sptres and Morgan belteve all o f the new stuff
old fema les &amp; male. lttter Center Road Large lemale added stnce the last sate
u atned wormed dtlterent all while German Shepard Name brand clot hmg for the
co lors (740)742-2954
leatures Reward {740)388· wl1ole lamtly tnc ludtng wornens stzes from 1 to 28. alec·
0523
Ca ltco Kttten litter tra tned - - - - - , - - - - - trontcs baby lurn tlure can·
Reward tor sa fe return
d ies, scrubs floral arrange-·
(3041675 . 2793
Mtsstng female gray Tabby
ment household ttems, toys
Weanng pmk collar wtth fake
&amp; much more
Da lmattan female pup Born
dtamonds and red name tag
3 23-05 Free to Good Home
Lost near old Bidwell school
Ca ll (304)773-5737
(740)38S-8166

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!

The
Sctpio
Townshtp
trustees wtll hold thetr FY
2006 budget meellng
6/13105 at 6 30 pm at t)"le
Pagevtlle Townhall

.,

100 WORKERS NEEDED
Msenlble crafts
wood ttems
To S4801wk
Ma t91'lals provi&lt;led.
Free lnformatton pkg 24 hr
501·428-4649

Needed.
Expenenced
Keyboard p{ayer tor estab·
lished band Must be versa·
tile, vocals a plus (740)446·
eng or (~)675- t 6t6 after
·
5pm
'

I Buy Homes- Local person
buys homes Confidenllal.
Oulck cash. Jtm, 740-992·
6300 No calls after 9

Now Htring Safe Onvers
AWIY tn Person at your local
Domtno's Must be over 18

Give Guttar &amp; Bass lessons 3__. Bectrootn. House, 1 1/2
Call Travts at (740)445- .Bath, Mayo Dr m New
2709.
Haven Totally Remodeled

Oral Surgery Assts tant for
Saturday
tn
An E•cellent way to earn every
Mtddleport.
OH
Fa•
money Ttle New Avon
Resume to (6 14)800.:7507
Call Martlyn 304-882·2645

lntertorl exterior
patntmg
reasonable rates , refer·
ences, expenenced, lor free
est tm ates call (740)742·
201 3.0f 645-2638.

&amp; , EMT's
AVON I All Areas! To Buy or Paramedics
Sell. Shirley ~pears, 304· needed. App ly at t354
Jack&amp;on Ptke, Galltpohs.
675-t429

--~

'v

$83.500 {304)88"'3131
3BR. t BA Ranch Sly1e
house. located 6 miles past
Holzer I'IOspttal on Rt t60

{740)388·9263.

�•

· Page 84 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, June 24, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

AI·\KI"\IE.¥1~

mu Rtsr
Pl y~outh Acclarm, Auto,
Carm ichae l AC $1000 080 [304 )675·
Equrpment (740)446 -2412 . 6628

Tara
Townhe~use NEW AND USED STEEL
Apartments Very Spacrous Steel Beams Prpe Rebar
.
2 Bedrooms C A 1 1 2 For
Conc rete.
Ang le .
2 Houses·· (1) 4 bedroom. Bath . Adut Pool &amp; Baby Channel , Flat Bar. Ste el
(1 ) 3 bedroom S900 &amp; saoo · Pool Patro. Start S385 Mo Gratmg
Fo iDra rns.
ptu s deposrt
[740r256- No
Pets
Lease Plus Dnve ways &amp; Walkways L&amp;l
8152.
Secunty Oepos t ReqUI•ed Sc rap Metals Open Monday,
(7 40) 44 8-3 ]1
Tuesd ay, Wednesday &amp;
3 bedroom.. 1 Bath. house
Fr,rday 8a m·4.30pm. Closed
on Vmton Ave • GallipoliS Tw1n A1vers Tower IS accepl- Tt1 ursday.
Satu rday
&amp;
$475/month no ca Is alter mg appllcat1ons for wai!H' Q Su nday '(7 40)446- 7300

8pm . (740)446-4559
4 room !louse. You pay ren t
depos tt: gas &amp; e1ec tr1c
Water &amp; tra sn turn1shed .
(7401446-0974
:___:___:___:______
Small 2 bed,room house
w/large yard. 68 1 West 4
miles from Tupp,ers , Pla1ns.
$290 per mo •. (740)9853504
. ·

John Deere 10 11. No Trt Drill 92
to ~

Sl'\( V"
m K l{&gt;st

"---~----_./

Wo r~ site

New John Deere Round
81llers @
. 1 guo F1xed Rate
·Fn1t1ncmg 101 49 Months or
New Model 45 7 Standard
Ro~ nct Baler Only -$13,250
cash Makes 4X5 Bale.
Ca rmichael
Equipment.
{740)446-24 12

1420 MoHnJ-:

r~·
cau

'3936

H)R~t.E

r

the~e

Gt)(N&gt;S

or sell . Riverine
BE~UTIFUL
APART- Buy
MENTS
AT
BUDGET Antiques . 11 24 Easf Main
PRICES AT JACKSON on SR 124 E. Pomeroy, 74Q·
ESTATES, 52 Westwood 992·2526 . Russ Moore .

ENERGY EffiCif T

1998 Ranger 4xt\_ 5 spd. -3L.
AMr'FM casseno. AJC. ott

WI'll's ATV
parts

Alfalfa hay $2 50 bale. 95 DOdge truck, 4x4, au toSiamese kitte[1 S $75. New matiC.
$3,000.
Call
bed &amp; me.ttress $300 : c(7i'l4ii0;;;13;,;8;;;8..;·00~11~---.,

~

Qualit)' Guaranteed·

A 11 Ty

Fo~'s~u:

3Z119 Welsh1o""

. 25 Years Experience

Rd.

D

Pomeroy, Ohio
45769

992 • 243'•

( 7401

SO

h

Pure bred Siberian Husky
Puppy. Female. Sable and
white , mask. loves people,
' de or ou I.
Can b e lflSI
wormed, 12 weeks old, very
"' s·16000
h
11
n•ce...
·
eac · ca
740 ·441-4462 or 740-9925885
Pure Jack Russel puppies at

{740)446-2412.
--------Rrding Mower 30" cut. rear
Engine. $499. call for details
(304)675
1 ---____
~ 173
--

nice, $1700. (740)742-2662

Lincoln

LS,

loaded,

s e"en
week temale AKC
~
Black Labs.
Shots and
$
p
wormed
200 00
arents
·
· l
on Prem1ses. 740·992·3357
or. 740 _416_2050

24.000 mites. $23,700. Call
(740)446·348 7.
Ch
F.
t 948
evro 1et
rve
Passenger Coupe , WV
s trc· ker. New T'1res, Goo d
Toy Poodle female cream Paint •'Sh arp• (3 o~ 1576color. 7 weeks old. $300. 2288
(740)367-7095 or (740)7t07 ---~----647 10.
~
· f 952 Plymouth 4dr, lm
Re storation,
no
A~:~ s t ,
FRUITS &amp;
Engine ru ns, Body Original,
VEGt-..~:.WLES
no Dents. 31.000/iniles
[304)576-2532

r

L....-:;.;:;;.;;;;;;--,..1 .

Drrve from S344 to $442. oWner
Walk to shop &amp; mov1es Ca ll
740-44 6·2568.
Equal Wanted to buy antique. used
furniture
&amp;
estate s.
Housing Opportunity

' Ho-es
,.,
r Septic Systems
• Roofing

~Back hoe

·

:- Site

· Townho use
apartments .
and/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call (740)441-1111
for application &amp; lllfo,mation .

5'10

f

Dozer

.

G

~ arages
~ Utilities
p 1 B
· ~ oe arns

7.an-992-162I
30 Ye~r~

Exrentn,·e

2002 Yamaha 660 Aaptor
yellow/black
wl matchlng
Excellent
KBC I' helmet.
Condition $3,700 (304 )~751015

_._IQ

•

~

!

•

CARPENTER
SERVICE

0

0

THE BORN LOSER

• Electrical &amp; Plumbing

,-omrro~·

CHEATER'S ntUMB !!

!
'
i'
••
••

II

•Roo mAddltlons&amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages

YUP, A CLASSIC CASE OF

YA DON'T
MEAN ...

• Roo ting &amp; Gu!lers

. Sam 1, Grear Low Price.~

• Vinyl Siding &amp; Painting

TI:\E'.'&lt;' ~'{,)I ME
u ; - - - FLIES Wf\E:.N
'{OU'RE:
1;\!-..VING.
FUtl. ...

•P.!tioandPorchDeoks
We do It all except
furnacework

and Smifi"K
rwn dl.v Facf'J. ·

f" '

OPE~

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Mon -1-"ri.

992·6215

9amto .'pm

.M,o··-•
n v

,.,,.

Pomeroy. Ohio
25 Years L.otsi·EJI rlem:e

IT FL.\(5 Wf\(N

WE.LL,TN&lt;.(

IT FRO!'\

Mt.. ..

FUt-~;TOOI

I

/

Storage

MANlEY'S
SElf STORAGE

· FoRSALE

Ml.'iGUA"'EEl JS
MERLllAM)L~E

·97 Beech Street
Middleport. OH

HOWARD l.
IWRITESEl 6 SONS

trailer. many extras, IJery
2001 Ford Excursion Li mited cle an 304·675·5563
58,000 miles (304)773-3711
2000 Chevy Blazer two door 2003 22ft.
Sweetwater
52.000 miles (304)593·6979 Pontoon
boat
4Dhp.
Johnson
motor,
power-trim,
- "l"FF.~~~~~
~
f001 1 Mercury Sable LS 48K
Hoosier trailer w/ladder.
SPA f..\.noRY OUTt£T
miles, loaded, leather, excel· spare tire/bracKet , AM! FM
Top Quahly, Warranty,
tncra'd1ble Deal, with Ford lent · condition.. asking stereo/C O, fTIBny extras.
Wh01esale. F1nanc1ng,
8000 , t 05hp, like-new $6 .500. Call (749)446-,1776 Asking $10,995. (740)446·
Deliverres.
Totally remo dele.d mechani·
2016 or (740)339·0324.
2 1ocalrons
cat and structurally. New 77 Monte Carlo ,305-2bbl
Milton Flea Market
new
tires,
Dual
exhaust.
rear tires . Back log and hay
&amp; Ashland Kentucky
hook added. $10 .000 Great $650. Call lor into (304 )675·
(606)922· 7185
59791
Deal (304 )773 -5333

.

r: M~O\~IN I

'

·'

,BUSINESS

•
v

•

ON THIS PAGE FOR·
•

'

AS lOW AS ,.

l

.i

•

"Middleporfs only
Self-Storase"

Flat MetalNew or Repair

Shingle,

'

$26.00 PER·MONTH!
.

I

ROBERT
BISSEll

•Fretlsllllltlb

CONSTRUC711N

949-1405

• New Homes
• Garages

• Complete
Remodeling ,

STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING

1999•·Trall Lite Bantam
Flyer, E)(cellent condition .
Loaded. Must see . 740·
949-2709: ~600 . 00

Call Gary Stanley
740-742-2293
• Leave a message

30 ' · 2003 Celebrity by
Skyline with 12'· slide. FUlly
equipped and In very good
conditiOn.
$17,000 .
(740)379-2428.

Hill's Self
Storage

BIG NATE

'

Rocky
"RJ'.'l
,' . '
.

"· Hupp

THE

!

IRONY
~~, Tt11s·

"' FOR

IMPORTS

Tl'-tPLE
S O&lt;;EY.

Athens

740-992-1m
Stop &amp; Compare ·

•

Parts
740-992-70 13 or 740-992-5553
Restockii19 l..ale Model Saha,ge
and Arter Markel fbrts

'·

Advertise
in this
space for '$1 04
per month._

SUNSHINE CLUB

''

ARlO FOR, EI..L.EN·

.

ADVERTISE

siding, add-cn1!,
remodeling eh:.,
free estimates
(7401 '192-2979

Hours

High cost of fertlllzer got you
17-17-17,.

$35 · I ,000

lbs Approx. weight

18 spreader buggies

available for use

':~:r,:~~~~~·,
renovators and seeders
a• 1 I to rent.
licensed agronomist on

staff available for

· consulting.

SHADE RIVER AG SERVICE

35537 ~t. Rt. 7 North

Pomeroy, Ohio

Now Available AI

•

GRIZZWELLS

"Takirtg The Sting Out OJ
Hard Work!"
Mid -Size 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with 30hp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

St.

f\t. 124

Pass

26

East
Pass
Pass

28
29

· Pass

30

LUMBER
Chest~r

985-330 t·

,

34
38

39
41

When yqu have a minor-suit fit, yo~ first
think three no-tru,mp. But lor that contract
to be playable, the opponents must be
unable to run a long suit. How do you
check that you have all of the suits
, stopped?
SometimeS, you do "nOl! For example.
partner opens one no-trump, arid you
have a respectable hand With a decent
six-card minor. Unless you have a void (or
perhaps a singleton) , you shOuld iust
close your eyes and jump to three notrump. However, sometimes you can
check things out- as ln th is deal.
After South opens one club, North ·makes
a limit raise to th ree club,s, promising 10·
12 support poirits (eight losers) wit~• livecard or longer club supPort (and no four·
card or longer major). Now South should
concentrate on tfiree no-trump. A bid ol a
new suit at the three·level shows a stop·
per in that sui t. If a suit is skipped, it
denies a stopper in that missed suit. So,
here , South rebids three diamonds,
reveali ng a stopper there. And when
North highlighls hos heal! holding. Sotrth
converts to three no-trump. (Note that
with this layout South must guess the
trumps to make live clubs .}
West leads th'e spade seven: three, jack,

Astro-

Graph

'bJr 'llirthday:

--'-----·------ - ---------~-'----'--- 1 -'·---------••

ptaees

46 Dry run ·
48 KWh bill
49 Euttl8t!ltl1tenl
50 Cold spell
54 Through

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
~br 1~

C1pller ayptogrsmsl!r~ cre&amp; :ed trom cuo:a ~OflS by f.!l mo.JS ~ pie pas! ancl prer.em
Ei'W:n le:ter mthe

tJ~er ~ tl! l'lds for

.

another

TOday $ Cf~Je. Requals K
.

IyJ

"U A
YA

0

KDH

.I 'YJMXGEA
OZYEG

LZG

LY

0 KDL

ZI

U
TKMUX

CKRG

AJD

TEKI

UDLY

XLGMGYLITG ,
ZKNG

K

Z UL

L' Z G D
X Z Y 0 ."

ZUELYD

PREVtous·soLUT ION - 'The worst ;oke Goa can play s 10 rcake you an
artist but only a mediocre artist: - D~~ id Bowie
(c) 2005 by NEA. Inc 6·2 4

.tt~
lA- ~ t ~s·
-':'_.~_:~_;~'--'S__ct:...;loltoo
h ClAY l . POIUH
1etttrs of
0 four scrambled
words

won
IAMI

Saturday, .June 25, 2005
R•1Jrrang1
By Bernlcti Bede Osot
It's to you r advantage to function as
low 10 form four words
Independently as possible in the year
ahetld, be cause you'll fare bett er
when you can act qn your ,o wn. 11 '
doesn't mean you shouldn't counter·
2
act with others. just be your own pe r· .
son.
CANCER (June 21·July 22) - Be
realistic about using your talents.
sk ills or abilities for what you hope lo
aoin ieve today. Keep your objectives
3
within your c apabilities or you will be
trippt;Jd up by your own limitaiions.
L E O {July 23·Aug . 22 ) Much time
and motion will be wasted todaY con·
cerning a personal goal if your logis·
C RY0 K
An elderly gem was looking
lies are poorly planned and timed . Set
at new cars. Shaking his head
up a sanslb1e itinerary that you can
. . . . _ _ he said , 'I remember when it
co.mfortably follow.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) .._ Be rea·
,....~_..,..._ _:___...., cost niore to operate a car than
sonable about the term s and condi·
lions you attached to
commercial
it did to- - - • ..:
.
deal you're pu.tting 'together today. If
·Compfele rhe cl'ivckle quol•d
they are too harsh or unrealistic,
they' ll be rejected or counlera(ll by an
. _J..-.J.-.J.l-..J
by l ill1ng il'l lhe missing words
1.-.1.-.L
yov develop froM srep No. 3 below.
outsider.
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0 ct. 23) - One-on one re'tationships with frie nds or
strangers c;:ould be a critical area foryou today, so treat .thosa you
encounter with 'kid gloves . It won't
take much to s tir up the waters and
rock the boa t.
SCORPIO {Oct. 24-NQV. 22) - It is
SCIIAM.UT5 ANSWERS • z; • o5
OK to m8ke play QUI of your 'NOfk
today, but don't play and avoid ,you r
-,
, Worker· Wager - Brick - Offend- GRIEF
work altogether. The formt;Jr will make
.
The
teenager had broken up with her boy friend . Try.
thinQs a lot easier for you, but the lat·
ter will cause you severe problems.
to console her, the mom $aid, "Pauance is the cure
SAG ITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.' 21) for all.GRIEF. ~
.
There a're''no 9)(Cuses for being -over·
ly po ssessive ol those you love today.
They will resent being made to feel
th ey must account to you for all their
actions. and be anger over being
WI1A1' TH', .. ! OH. IJO!
Smothered:
·
CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan. 19) IJQT RAIIOKW CtY$.1
UnfortunR.tely, it isn't likely lhat others
will readily go· along with what you
mav want to do today and this cou ld
0
cause you to become undulv
angered. Watc h your temper and
beh~tvl or.
AQUARIUS {.Jan. 20·Feb.,; 19) - It'S
so unlike you to speak" nastily about
someone bel)ind hi s or her back. so
don't stan today. If vou go ttial ro ute,
yo u can expect a painfu l lesson to
result - one you won't easily forget .
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) - Be
watchful and prudent In the manag51 m8nt ol your resources today, even il
you are with those who can easily
spend a lot. li won't 'take much tOr you
to go on a spending spree.
ARIES (March 2 1· April 19)- E\len a
· harmless rendezvous or flirtation
could be seriously misjudged today,
so walk the n(urow road in the
romance department. If you if&gt;nocent·
ly step out ot 11ne , e11plain yourself
Immediately.,
·
·
TAURUS (April 20·May 20) - Don't
play favorites among your friends
today or It could cost you the goodwill
of the others. If you do something nk:e
fOr one pat, if&amp; b4tat you do the same
for awrybody else.
GEMINI (M~ 2, -.Juna 20) - Do not ·
anum• thlit you ar. tHe apok•aper·
eon klr your pe•r group today. Unl. .a
you are duly elected by th• mrljortry,
your lelf·•ppolnled retgn will be
r•••ntad •• well •• ahort·llv.d. ,

I

I

PHMUC

I I I 1

I

If

I I " I :.
T A V '1 N y

I
I~-..,..S~,;._;:.,..,:....:.;Ir-,6.:..11'""-l G)

liCI&lt;Lf,11CklE. MoT~:Cict.e.'
... IIO lHAI '!b\JR I¥JSE OR

I" THAT

I

I

•
!

a

PICKLE ?PP

I
'·

'

45 Watering

SOUP TO NUTZ .

BAlll\1 Llll\IBEI{
Scorpion Tractors

B.~UM

North

coins
41 Put a
dent In
42 Energy
43 Us. Io Pogo

ARLO &amp; JANIS

'

4sn1

repair needs, roofing,

West
Pas,;
Pass
Pass

scrolls
37 Clumsy
40 Turkish

tng

DODGE

Call B.D. Const.

23

a

See Brent or Bri an Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
8:30-Noon
Sun. Closed

• Gallipolis
15.5 Evenings

• Mushroom Compost
. Available

Unconditional ltfetime guar·
antoo. Local references furnrshed. Establ ished 1975 .
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 4460870, Rogers Basement
Waterptooring .

PEANUTS

1'HA1''5 NOT WHAI SPOON&amp;

$265 ton (While Suppy Last)

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

rl&gt;;:v;r

~~~~~ no~~~

SI. R1.68l Darwin, OH

IN THIS SPACE
7:00AM • 8:00 PM
FOR $52 PER 'MONTH
leave messa e
Antenna,Camper.
· wired forAC.Cable,
~
Truck
TV · ;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~ ~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

3353

~P.i~~Q;Iij : ~l-!1

" Insured"

74().949-2217

21

or Tolstoy

35 Anc6ent

,1'11 11

NESS.

Whaley's Auto

29670 Bashan Road
Racine. Ohio

20

1 3
A K.J

33 Buscaglia

IIRMEEN

You
CAN' T

for all your home
Starcraft fQid·up camper.
Air/heat, sink, stove &amp; refrig·
erator. sleeps 4. Was $4,995
reduced
. to
$3,995 .
('740)446-2282

'

9.92-2155

Seamless Guucr ·

! Dow n spout · Siding

• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
·• References
. Available
·Free Estimates

like now $6,500 (304)675-

The Daily $entin.el

1

1999 Damon Camplite Pop·
up Carriper. Heat. air,
awning, refrigerator. 3 burner stOWI, porta·pot , and all
accessories. Excellent condition .
$3 .500 .
Phone
(740)446-9220.

Coleman Camping Trailer
12~. 2 King Beds. $4,995
call lor Details (304)6751731

10x10x10x20
992-3194
or 992-6635

•

G

Pho.ne

See

19

South. has seven top .tricks : one spade
{trick one). two hearts, two diampnds anct
two cl ubs. He can get the extra tricks from
clubs, but must make sure that East can-not gain the lead; otherwise, he will push
a spade straight through . So, declarer
plays a club to dummy's king, ending with
10 tricks. Bvt even if East were void in
clubs, the COntract would still be' safe.

'{00 i&gt;.REN'\
1-\1\VIt-\G

/

High and Dry

(740) 992·5232
SxiO, IOxiO,
IOxlS, 10x20,
10x30

South
• K Q 2

kinQ.

RUSH

2000 'Bayliner 21 ft. cuddy w/

•

FINAU.Y
TOOK ITS
TOLL

I

GRE"T·

All types of roofing :

•

ALL THAT FANCY
SHUFFUN' AN'
DEALIN'

inch cutting width 3 ,n ar warranty
T&amp;D TRACrDR SAl£~ lk EOlJU'MENT
' rightintheheartrl~1er

Janet Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy. Ohio

I ROOFING

"

l oadcrs,linish mowers. tillers

n

rtte

FALt.."?

. NEW ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Turn
Radius Mqwer) 30 inch nittin~ width to "'50

Pll: 992 4IHJ

• lnsul'fl1-F~
Es1imates
• s~n ior C itizen
discount

1999 Harl_ey Road King
9,000 miles. tour pac touring
seat, 4 helmets. heavy duty
co,er. $13 ,000. (740)446·
4525 after 5pm.

~~

~

Mye r s Tree
Service

(740)446-203~ .

r/.i· ...:~'"1..,_

(S.Iooa 6pm
'&gt;='. "' ' '
LeaveMes~)d~ .

~40-9~-7. 9!'iJ
740-&lt;116-2SD
740·591-4641

1 988 Harley Davison 883.
Aprox. 19,000 miles, black,
nice starter bike. Calf

liNDA'SPIINnNG

Q "

How do you know
if no-trump is safe?

FAMILIA~ vJITtl
n~t Ptt~Ase .
"Ttle SIG6~~
A~e.
tiA~oe~ rtteY

rtteY

4-wd. remote hvdraulics J vear warrann· ·
****A-lso availabiC**""'
··
• Task Master Tractors 26 horse • 38 horse,
4wd (I year \\'atrrailh')
• Farm l'rn TraCtnrs 20 hors~·- 30 h drst:

'fhe\lulbern
C
· • ,. ·
ommum1y ... enter
260 :'t·lulb~tT~ .-\\'e.

16

17

36

starting at 21 horse· 57 horse
with shuttle transmission

IS NOW OI'EN
, ' ,-\ '1'

15

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

flew Deal~r lor Monlana Tractors

Former!~· atiOH
w.~\lain Pmntro_,.

14

Opening lead: • 7

1---..:F,:r&lt;~'&lt;;,f:,::s;:1;:it:,:n:,al:;;e;;Js !========985:::-4:;311-1=======~
YOUNG'S

After 6pm
·~
·

Pomeroy, Ohio

0 2 400 ex Biggun pipe,
Holeshot tires, great shape.
$2.500. (740)388·9701 .

Furnished upstairs. 3 rooms
&amp; bath. Clean , ref. &amp; dep
required. No pe1s. (740)446·
1519.

Pieasant Valley Apa rtment
Are now taking Applications
tor 2BR , 3BR &amp; 4BR .,
Applications
are taken
Monday lhru Frrday. tram
9:00 A.M.-4 PM. Offrce is
Located at 1151 Evergreen
Drive Point Pleasant. WV
Phone No. rs (304)6755806. E.H.O

7

.

.[1110J985-4180

;o Preparation

(740 ) 245~5078

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED &amp; AFFORDABLE !

Top • Removal · Trim
• Stump Grinding
Bucket Truck

The Parish Shop

-.;;,;;......;;
-=rl
O ______...;;...., L...,;iioi.iiiilitiililiiiiio--,.1
Atrf(~

•

eWtS
69 ]
Jns11rt'd

as $39 month with
down . 160L, St700: 90 Dodge L---';..'a_o_o_.c_o_n_1_ _.
Carmichael
Equipment Oa~ola, 2 WD. V-6. auto,

FOR SALE

'd L

3VI

740- 9.92 •

·

Email:jwill45769
@

Of

pes
C.oricrete Work
ll

Owner

·J

/

and Replacement

ATV Parts &amp; ACC.
James A Will Jr.

John Deer.e Ridi ng Mowers ~~---.iiiiiiiili;iiillil_.l
starting at $1,399. F!nancing 2000 Ford Windstar mm r
. bl
b'
ava1 1a e su JeCt to John van . 4 dr .. auto. ai (, TV, DVD.
Deere Credit appro'"!. Your. CD 126K ·
S3900 96
·
· mc~
: ·
'payments' could be as low FordWinds1ai', 3dr. auto,air,

lure) .
vet
checked.
5400
each ;
Pomeran ian puppies, AKC.
2 tamale , light brown, $400
·
each : (740)696-1 085
04

j NT

· A~t YOU

£DVIS
CONCRI!'I'E
CONS'l'RUC'l'ION
Concrete Removal

•

3,.. ,3..

Tree Service

o

13

Dealer: South

JONES'

I

r

46 Theater
trophy
47 Finders '
of system
foes
Southeast
51 Waler
Asian
pitcher
Btquse trim 52 MeloThe
dramatic cry
younger
53 Packing slip
Guthrie
55 Highway
Frequent
cruiser
007 foe
56 Bone-dry
Wire nail
57 Chiang-·
Coil around
shek
Dalry·case 58 Have a go al 9 Uh-oh!
buys
59 Investment 12 Detroit dud
Track
options
of yore
13 Maria
posting~
60 Smog
Ms.
monitor
C9 n c hlla 18 Desperado's
Thurman
Fish--ealing
DOWN
piece
eagles
22 Tearto
1 Gen·re
Sports
pieces
channel ·
23 Nonh
2 Hard to
Big blows
Woods
corner
Wahlne 's·
3 Freight
roamer
welcome
hopper
24 Octopus
home
Ring thing
4 Stamp
Peace Prlze
holder
25 Dom ino dot
founder ·
BBs
~ ~~~~~rr, fire 27
29 Chokes
Frat letter
cat! "
31 Street
Zany
Cav1ar
7 Wear away
salutation
Softly lit
8 Clumps
32 L-o- n-g
Pre-stereo
of dirt
time

Vulnerable: Nei ther

South

Owner: Brian Durham
Phone: (740) 949-4011
Specializing in custom homes
and additions.

AK4

t

Licensed in Ohio und WV

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION

•

44 RV haven

muiiCies
Kind

11

. A J9 .64

740. 667-0700 1-888-HUPP234

road package. n~w par r'lt
$5,500 OBO C811 alter
4 ;3;Jpm (740)256-6257.

r

·-

Home • Auto • Life • Retirement
• IRA • 401 K Rollovers • Major Med •
Medicare Sup. • cancer • Accident

Residential • Commercial

96 Ford Windstar. Power
Wl.ndows, power locks,
~ ~c . 160.000
cru ise. rear ""
mile s $2600 [740)256
Zero Turn Z· Trak Mowers 8152 '
·
·
J h
.
·
lrom o n 0 eere avat1iible at
4.9%'
fixed
ra te
fro
Full-sized luxury van, sea ts
Carmichael Equipment with 7
· mechanic owned, beauti·
J h
C dl
FEED STOP. . Friday &amp; on 0 eere re t approva 1. ful , 1993. 77.000 mi le s.
Satu rday. Wormed &amp; shOts i 7 4 0 ) 4 4 ~ - 2 4 1 2 $6.999. (740)446-996 1
$ 125.
wwwcareq com
40 MUIUKCYC~
Sch'nauzer puppies {mrnia· "
4 \\'HEELE
. RS

I

i

$61 Ofmonth. No utilities
pa1d. No pets. Call (740)446ANllQUI-.::.5
.
9961 .
· ~--------,.1·

L1\'lo~~1't)CK

Plains, OH
1,. ._;:!,~T.~u~ppers
... 45783

Mobile Homes • Metal Roofs
Flat or Low Sloped Roof • Carports
Barns • Porches

6 3

• 9 5 z
.KI0 872
West
East
. A1 0 874
• J 9 5
• 10 8 5 2
• Q J 96
• 10 8 3
• Q 7 6'

41BOOSR#7

'1he WilMs Best Roer

06·H-oa

•

42 Son drink
brand

1 I, to Fritz
4 Tummy

10

~ orth

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services

R~~:C~IInt~

~R'-e~l.'-,"'=i'::"s::c...:'c__ _ _ _

AK
c. 4 · colors.

ACROSS

I

2003
Jeep
Liberty
Ask abciut OYJ- AQHA Renegade. Loaded , 4x.4,
Member Di~~dt!AlS on new $13.900. Call (740)256:
John Deere Equipment. I 6 I 8 or .('(40)256-6200.
Car michael
Equipment
(740J446-241 2.
a9 s" 1 stazer.. 4"" · 4·3
H &amp;
motO{. metra motor. good
AY
tires : needs work $2500 .
Gw..~IN
alter 6p~ 6·40)843·1 233

1470

'

T

t 999 Chevy Suburban 4x4.
good condition. loaded. new
trre s.
Ask ing
Slt ,OOO
Spec1a1 Purchase · John
(740)441·0658 or (740)709·
Deere 102 8 &amp; ~ 0 Wheel
Rake s/ John Oe8re Dr sk 1931.

I

2 bedroom. on 1 2 acre
32'x44 Block
~
Nichol s Rd , s::,oo Uep6sit . For Rent
Oar age
$350 re'nt . .(740)992-9052
wth
12'x44'
block . __
altachea
Beaulitul nver vie .,., 111 aPartment ottice Large lot
4 Sale S; aJL Beagle Hou~d
Kanaug a. Ideal tor 1.-2 peo- ur letart. WV SA-00 per
puppies M &amp; F_ more mfo
ple
No · pets. pli:ase monin (304)675·75 16
'7 AM--7PM. 740-74 2·0528
Appli cat ions belflg 1a~ e n
Mot&gt;lle home space tor ren1
Call (740)44 1-0181
Clos,e to Green School .
9s,, w otte.s Husky pups.
Very small 2 BR 1n Brdwell $140/mo (740)446-4053.
575.00 F e ~a l e . red/white
Water. tra sh. sewer pard . no
mask Wolf/Husky. sso.oo.
pets. 5325/Dep. S3251Rent. Tra1le r lot 2 5 m11es ou1
Ne1ghborhood Ad . Call Female while Wolf/S.Husky.
{740)388·9325
740-742- 11 2 1 or 742-3019
(740)446· t685
[+If ~I'AKT\IE\-JS
"
AK C Chihuahuas $350 . 1Sl
Wwml
HJK RE'fl'
shots &amp; 1st worming. Call
mRtNr
74 44 444
&lt; Pl 6·
6.
1 and 2 be droom .apartmen'l s. lurnished and unlur- Lock1ng tor hous-e. to ren t Please adop1 one ol
mshed . secun ty oepos1t locally. Mason or rne1 gs co. dogs tr.om· 1he Meogs Co..
required . no pets. 740c992· ca ll --304 ·773-5600
Dog Pound. cal l (740)992\IEill'll IN IllS!'
3779. 1 Rot-Doberman mix
221a
Sh
d .
1A
puppy.
ust.
epar mox
1br Apartmen t lor ren t.
10
puppy : one 2 yr.· old Golden
HOlSEIU)J .D
Ret . mate : severa l Labrador

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE
· Phillip
:Alder

Mowers. Call for • priCe. 2001 ForQ Explorer 4x4
Carmrchael
EQUIJ2ment. Loaded, recen tly detailed,
59 .'000 miles, new tires ,
(740)446-?41 2.
$ 12,000 .'
(740)256-6536
.
leave message .
. ___

740 _245 _5 121 .

The Dai.Iy Sentinel • Page BS

~r. . ·.~R.~....~-.-.__.~I ·
L

John

Downtown OfiiGS Svau.l· 5
room S'Uil€ S650.mo t room
OfriCe - $22 5 mo. a rourn.
SUllO S250 111 0
~·lrunly
dBpOS II 1eQt1·1eJ 'I'ULI p,JV Sonrs J2 .. ~C u l .ndlr.Q·Iawn
HD.\Il·~"i
LJ.IIIii1Ps P. ii ~ I',H':Js llf'ry nwt• mower . hlo.e new [used vur ,.
..J._
lOR Jbs 1·
Elevator Cttll·· l·IO).J4li-36&lt;1·1 1r 11 1e1 (7 40)985· 41 66
for dpiJUII.Itl' oUilt
rwo brand new l ove Seal s,
1·3 br $440.00 a mon +
Dark Tan m calor $350 lor
For LCdSe 011 ce 01 reta1l
Oolt1 call (3041675-6722
$400. dep.
spaces 111 very goo d con d 1·
1·2br.S350.00 a mon
$300 _00 dep
f;on Downtown Gallipolis
Bl'ILI))~ ;
Aof,lr o ~~: 1600 s~ach 1
Stltt~JK~
304 _882 _1107
- - - -- -- - - · or 2 !:'"'ths. L"EtaSe prrce
2 bedroom. A/C . very nic.;e . negotiable to encourage
bus ness
Call Block: , brick. sewer pipe s.
no pets. m Gatlrpolrs new
wmdows, lintels, e1c. Cla ude
(7401446-4423 or (740)446;- Wrnters. Rio Gra nde . . OH
(7 40)44 6-2003

www.mydallysentinel.com

Ren t

Deere Commerc1al
15
Produ cts In Stock!1
....
FOil SALt:
.
Compact Exca vator 27C
35 0 , SOD/Sk1d Steers 371
320.
325.
328/Tractor t983 Ford F250 400 819
Loade r Backhoe 110TLB Block Dana 60s, front &amp; rear
Check out our rental rates 36" Super swampers. runj
Gre
F1nanc1ng Available· good. solid body. $4 ,56"0
Olfrce desks. krds adJUStable Ca r rchael
Equipment. OBO or will trade tor good 4
wheeler. (740)256· 1768. ·
desks. frilng ca·brn ets tables. (74
46-2 412
all srzes at charrs (740)245New 00 3, 5005, &amp; 5020 2000 Dodge Dakota Sport,
5078
Serres John Deere Utility 3.9L V·6. Ssp. AC. CD. bed·
Pole B~rn
30~~. 50x 1OFT Tra ctors @ Q0 0 l1xedl 36 liner. new tires , $5900 OBO.
·$6795· Includes Pain teo mon ths Used Utilrty Tractors · {740)992-2335
Me tal .
Free
Dot very ~
4.9°..o Var iable/ 60
~
4x4
www naliOnwldopoloDarns c manths,
Carmrch ael
om (q17!~59 · 8~85
Equ1pr~u)nt 17~ 0)44&amp;-2412
FoR S.o\1.1-:

list for Hud-subs1zed. 1- or
apa n ment call 675-6679
EHO

Do wnstairS in 700·Biock
Viand
St .
Reference s L.__..,;;,;,;,;~;;,.-.,J
r~qUired avai lable June 1 Mollohan carpel. 202 Clark
(304 )675-3554.
between Chapel Road. Porter Ohio.
l t am- ?pm
( 740 )446 _7444 1. 877 _830 .
2 bedroom newly renovated 9 162. Free Est1mates. Easy
Apt s for ren t. Downt own flnancmg, 90 days same as
Gall1poi1S River&amp;Park view · cash_ V isa I Master Card .
S560/mo. Some uttl ittes Drive- a- llltle save · alot
paid . Now cicce pling appli·
Th
A I'
&amp;
cations Ca ll (740)709- t 690
omp sons
pp Lance,
Repair·675·7388. For . sale,
[ local call)
re-conditioned automatic
3 rooms &amp; bath , aiJ ut1lit1es washer s &amp; dr yers. refrigera·
pa1d.
DownSta irs.
919
1or.s , gas and ~lecth c
Seco nd Ave .. suitable for 1. ranges. arr ~;;o nd1tia ne rs. and
$295/mo. (740)446-3945.
'''ringer Washers. Wrtl do
repa1rs on major brands' in
Air
Conditioned
Large
shop or at your home.
2br.
Upsta irs Apartment
App liances
fu rn rshed . Used Furflll ure Store. 130
Q9posit
Required~ 8utav1lle Pike Wash ers. dry·
·
$300/month (304)675-7783 ers. re I ngerators.
ranges.
manresses. dres ser. couchAvailable
1mmed1ately.
. es. done1tes . rectoner.s, gr.a'e
Beautilul, clean . and spamonume nts. much more .
clo'us 3 bedroom townG
attipoli s.
hOuse . With storage/play· (740)44 6- 4782 ,·
OH
Hrs.
11·3
(M·S
}.
room . DO"Wnlown Gallipolis.

.

•

•

HOLSK~
FOR R ENT

..

Friday, June 24, 2005
ALLEY OOP

--·-·-

'

·-

.

I ,

�••

..

'

B6 • The Daily Sentinel

•

Friday, June 24, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALONG THE RIVER

LIVING

How they got around:
Reflections on the rise and fan ·
of Me,igs County's streetcar industry, Cl

. House of the Week:
Home highlighted by s~larium, 01 •·

.
'me

. I
\

II&gt;

If

Race: Dodgej SaveMart· 350
Where : lnfineon Ra cel/:'ay.

.,

.f·J,;W!\Bt .)lad been \!1? .domlnauon

; mtwQ,teams - R'/i'Sh and Hendrick. ~

s~ms

to be down to

one, Roush Follis have won

~.

• ihfeelnarow. , ·, .
~ttFoids - Roush Fords, In faci
il' ,..... bav~ won eight' of the S!IB·
£~110n:s 15 races, and Ford, al"' most solely on the strength of
Jack ROiJsh's t~am, has wrested
the manufacturer points lead
I!WBY'from Chevrolet. .
:,.• Tony Stewart h1ls now led the
·./·III.Qst laps three times without
:~ rnlmaging to win. Greg Biffie has ·
~~ 'led by far the most laps, 953 .
. thiS .season, but Biffle is the
·: · season's biggest winner with
.flw victortes.
!&gt;Owner Chip Ganassi raised a
. few eyebrows when he ex·
pressed hope that lame·duck
driver Sterll~g Marlin would be'
come "an ambassador" for his
team and sign a personal-services contract. Marlin has no intei&gt;
!ion Of retiring !lnd iS ac\ively
seeking employment elsewhere.
.. An obviously uninformed.Da~ell
Wal!np ·suggested to TV viewers
of the Batman Begins 400 that
Marlin had decided to retire at
· ·the end of the season. Fox's
other analyst. Larry McReynolds.
tried to correct Waltrip's gaffe.
but the damage had already
been done.
!&gt;Carl Edwards' triumphant sea·
son continued with a· ausch Se·
ries victory in Kentucky and a
· flfth.place finish in Mich1gan.
.. Roush's 'fords finished in four
of the top five positions. At the
previous visit to Michigan. in Au·
gust 2004, Roush Fords took
fwe of the top 10 spots.
11&gt; Dale Earnhardt Jr. finished
17th and dropped 17th mthe
Nextel Cup points standings.
· Earnhardt's qualitying woes conU~Ued. He has qualified no bet·
ter than 11th thiS year, although
he started filth in the Daytona
· ~00, thanks to the fact that
· 15CHillle qualitying races play a
major role In setting the field for
)hat event.
·
I" With 11 races remaining before
the Chase, drivers outside the
top 10 include Gordon. Earn·
'hard! Jr., Jamie McMurray, Jere·
· my Mayfield, Dale)arrett and

to

. Kasey Kahne.

known as the .Batman Begi~ s

~

t

,;,·

.

&lt;,

.

'· I" Mill.. .bat - Mark Martin
, has scQred three·straight top.

~'' . ~0 ff!llshes.... Michael WBitrip

,. ·, a!ld Joe Nemeohek have two
'·' .··;n·a iu.v,

:i-'t~

Race: SBC 250
Wash ., has wan· a thir,d of the Where: The Milwau kee Mile.
races . tw o mo re t ha n Jeff W
est Alli s. Wi s. 11.0 m1le),
Gordon and three more tha n 250 laps/miles:
poi nts leader Jimmie Joho· When: Saturday. June 25
son. For Biffle, who began ' Last year's winner: Ron Hor· ·
·the season with three career nadayJr.
vic tories. everything iS com- Qualifying record : David
.ing Up roSes . He and Chevro- Stremme. Dodge, 122.553
let driv.er Tony St8wart waged mph, ,June 26, 2004.

out

ma~a ging

,'

•

RSce

record:

I

\

'

•

SPORTS
• Feeney Bennett sweeps
Logan. See. Page 81

Brendan

.

'

I

'

I

.

Hometown News for Gallia &amp;.Meigs corm.ties

Ohio \ 'aile~ l'nhli,hing l'o.

Gaughan, Dodge . 109.689
mph, June 28, 2003.
Last week: Dennis S~tzer, in
a Chevrolet, won at·Michigan
lnternati,onal ·Speedway in
Brooklyn . M.ich.

Pomcro} • Middleport • Gallipolis • June 26, 2005

.

No. 21 MOTORCRAFT FORD
VERSUS

$1.50 • V11l. 39, No. 2 :1

Grant will aid.GKN
BY

PAUL DARST .
. PDARST@MYDAILYTR IBU NE·.CO M

On June 7. the Southern Dhio
Agricultural and Community. ·
Development Foundation presented 1
cheCk fo r $490.000 to GKN Sinter
Metals Inc.. to help with an expansion
proJect at its Gallipolis plant. From left
are Richard Best, president of North
American Openltions for GKN, Curt · ·
Lindell , Gallipolis plant manager, Don
Branson. executive director for the
SOACDF, State Rep. Clyde Evans.
Becky Nesbitt. Ohio State Unive'rsity
Extens1on educator and grant 'commit·
tee member and Harold Montgomery,
· Gallia County commissioner and grant
comm1ttee member.
'
. photo
. Submitted

GALLIPOLIS -· As part of an effort to retain
area jobs, Gallia Count y r ~ce ntl y awarded a
$490,000 grant to the GKN Sinter Metal s Inc.,
Gallipoli s plan!.
The money constitute s the total amount of the
county 's annual allotm'ent from the state' s Tobacco
· .
Master Settlement Agreement Fund.
This wa s the first time the county 's .entire apportionment went to a single entity, said Harold
Montgomery, Galli a. County Com l11is s ioner~ presi - ·
. dent and member of the Southern Ohio Agriculture ·
and
Community
Development
FoU11dation
(SOAC:DF) grant .committee, which was respon sible
for making .the award.

· FEUD OF THE WEEK ·

RICKY Ruoo

,I •.

.,

Race: Milwaukee 200 ·
Where: The MilWaukee M11e.
West Alli s. Wis. (1.0 milej,
200 lapsj mile.s.
·
When: Friday, June··24
Latl year's winner: Ted Mus·grave
'
Qualifying record: Ted Musgrave. Dodge, 121.980 mph,
June 25, 2004.
·

to ~in .

.

.

Plea~e see Grant. A6 ·

•

·Local outfit.featured on national hunting .show Power plant ,·

Brian
VIckers

BY BETH SERGENT

Brian VIckers
vs. NASCAR officials
Vickers' crash into the Michigan
International Speedway tire barrier
came partially as a result of offi·

BSERGENT@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

OBITUARIES

cials' reluctance to bring out a cau-

Page AS
· • Karen S, Rowe, 63
• Sushila Subramanian,·40 ·
• Eugene Martin Wolfe. 87

tion flag. Feelmg a vibration in his .
Chevrolet. Vickers said, "I was this
close to JUSt coming in anyway and
sayin·g. 'I don't care, we've, got tb
come in. I've got a prOblem.' Then
NASCAR said there might be debris
in turn one. ·so I wen.t around one
more lap, thinking there would be a
caut1on." Vickers had a blowout try·
lng to make it back to pit road.

INSIDE

· NASCAR This Week's Monte
Dutton gives his take: ."Vickers
rolled the diCe and came up snake·
eyes:

.. • Stickland to appear
at parade, reception.
SeePageA2 ·
• Two. histol'ic homes
are at crossroads.
SeePageA2
• fireworks set for
Centerville. See Page A3
• Blood drive at HMC ·.·
Monday. See Page A3
• For the Record.
. See Page AS
• Report says farmhouse
shooter had history of
violence. See Page AS

·

These llx won big then
John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

Ricky Rudd checks under the back end of his No. 21 Ford before ~itting the track at Daytona earlier this season.

Rudd finding success elusive in latter stages othis remarkable career
'

BROOKLYN, Mich. - It's not the
best of times for veteran drivers, and
·Ricky Rlidd', a winner of 23 Cup races
dating back to 1983, is no exception: ,
Rudd, 48, has only a pair of top·lO
finishes to show for the season to
date. Rtidd, Who drives the No, 2l
Ford of the Wood Brothers, ranks
33rd in the Nextel Cup points stand·
ings but hopes to improve significantly during the season's remaining
21 races.
One highlight stems f~om the
· longevity of Rudd's career, He has
· been competing in Cup races since
1975; and his most recent. race, at.
Michigan Internatiomil Speedway,

was his 57that the two-mile track. He ·
h;)s competed in more Michigan races
than any driver in the track's history.
"This has been a fun track to come
to over .the years," he said. "I rem em·
ber the first time I sailed in here,
about 1974_nd; to me, it was just a
nice, big sweeping racetrack that you
could have fun on and pass on. I've al·
ways done fairly well here. We've got
· a win in the· past (1993) and a lot of
top-fives (9), but I've a)ways enjoyed
the track because it's a big, wide~open
track. · It's not a follow-the-leader
track. It's a track where you cart make
your own line and make it work. I've
always enjoyed coming here for that
reason; aild .the fans up here have al·
ways supported us well."
The record-breaking start wasn't .

never won again
Six drivers in NASCAR history
have won their very first races in the
ruliQg body's premier series. They are .
· Jim Roper . (1949), Jack 'White
·· (19491. Harold Kite (1950), Leon
Sales (1950), Marvin Burke (1951)
and Johnny Rutherford (1963). None
of them ever won again.

•

NASCAR This Week

WHO ' S HOT
AND WHO ' S NOT

.•

-"~·/

400. Biffl e, from Vanco uver.

•

• ORAASMAN TRUCK ·

'10

By .Monte Dutton
~-.,.

•

Sonoma. Cal if. (1.99 mi les).
110 laps/ 218 .9 miles.
When: Suild~y. June 26
Last year's winner: Jeff Gor·
don
Qualifying record : Jeff Gor·
don, Chevrolet. 94 .303 mph.
June 25. 2004.
Race record: RICky Rudd. what wa s litt le mo re t han a' Race record : Jason Keller,
Ford . 81.007 mph, June 23. two-way battle. After three of Ford. 103.093 mph, June
2001 . .•
.
the race's four ca ution fl ags,
29. 2003.
Last week : Greg Biffle 1sn·t Stewart' se11ed the advan· Last week : Carl Edwards, in
the on ly dnver out there. It tage first only to be eventual·' a Ford , won at Kentucky ·•
only ap pears that way. As 1n· ly hunted down and eclipsed Speedway in Sparta. Ky.
credibl e as it seems. Biffl e by Biffle. Stewart led . 97
won for the fifth t1me th1s la ps . marking the third time .
season at MIC.higan lnterna· th1s season he has led more
tiona l S p ~e dwa y in a race laps than anyone else wi t~·

•
h

BUtiCH :&gt;ERIES

j

l, ' ' \ !' .'

you have.' a -,question or a comnieqt, wrtte:
NASCAR This. Week, cjo The Gaston Gazette. 1'0. Box 1893. Gastonia, NC -'"''"·'
'
.,
•

'

particularly impressive in terms of ·
performance. Rudd finished 33rd his position in the points- in the Batman Begins 400, three laps off the.
pace. He shrugged the disappointing
performance off.
"The.main thing is that the car has
been competitive on the race track,"
he said. "We ran 'well enough to run
fifth last week (at Pocono., where he
·finished 2Sih) and it's bee.n like that
week in and week out. (I just seems
like it's been one thing after another
'
that has been biting us.
"It's not like we have to completely
overhaul the team and get. rid of
everybody and start over again. The ·
team is solid. We just need to quit.hav·,
. ing such nonsense little things bite us
when we're having a good run."
·

·

YOUR TURN

The BuschwUc:kers need

N

should make a new
nule: If the (Nextel) Cup drivers
want to be suschwtiackers on
Saturday, when the Cup and Busch
races are held at the same track, the
Cup drivers should be made to start
last on Sunday in the Cup race.
For every Cup driver going over to
the Busch race, there's a young
Busch driver going home without
money or points.
ASC~R

Abilene. Kan.

Although plenty of fans feel the
$ame way about this as you, owners·
. of Busch teams feel differently. For
them, they just want the bf!St dri~.er
available to drive their cars. If that's
Tony Stewart, Greg Biffle or even Dale
Earnhardt Jr., that's fine wnh them:

oetallo on

INDEX
Afound Town
Celebrations
·Classifieds

COmics
Editorials
Obituaries
. Regional
Sports

Weather

I

'

•

Pace A2

'

4 SECI10NS -

..

..'

:14 PAGES .

A3

C4
D Section
insert

A4 '
As
A6
B~ection

A2

BY PAUL DARST
PDARST@MYDAILYTRIBUI'iE.COM

GALLIPOLIS After
only al1o'ut one . month of
planning, the University of
Rio Grande/Rio . Grande
Commu!}ity College is ·about
to unveil a new program
aimed at preparing students
to work in area plants.
.
Officials from the universi. ty, American Electric Power
· and the Gallia County
Commissioners are hopeful
that plans for the course will
be finalized during a meeting
next week. said Dr. Greg .
Sojka, provost and vice president for academic affa.irs.
"We ' ve pretty much finalized the curriculum," Sojka
said. "We' re working on the
entrance· requirements now."
Officials must decide what
10 do if, as expected; there aie
.more people interested in the
class than there· are available
seats. he said. Possibilities
for selecting students include
using high school grade point
. average, work experience,
college entrance test scores
or other criteria.
The new course is expected
to be widely popular because
of educational requirements
of AEP and othe.r plantopera- ·
tors, Sojka said. AEP, which
Bv BETH SERGENT
tion l~ading to the arrest and operat ~s Gallia County's Gen.
James M. Gavin Plant. is
BSERGENT@MYOAILYSENTINELCOM · conviction of those responsiBY KEVIN KEUY
expected
to build at least one
ble for the crime. or for full
KKELLY@MYDAILYTRIBUNE .COM
new
Integrated
Gasification
POMEROY - When the recovery . of the item..s.
employees
of · ·Gheen Anyone who has information Combined Cycle . (IGCC)
GALLIPOLIS . - · She 's;
Rental s arrived for work is asked to phone the Meigs power plant in the area.
only 21, but Miranda
Additionally. the company
it County Sheriff's Oft1ce · at
Thursday
morning
Lambert is cutting a swath
expects a wave of retirements
became apparent that not all· 992:3371.
.
through the country music
at the existing area plants,
was as they ' d left it the
Althot~gh the Gheen's had
scene with her first major
their
policy officials have said.
night hefore. Rental equip- insurance,
label CD.
Students who take the uniment and hand tools were requires a $5,000 deductible.
She's bringing the sound
'mi ssing as was a four, foot, The breaking and entering versity's two-year course will
that's becoming more
section of chain link fence also requires the couple have a leg up on other appliknown on radio and by fans
invest $10,000 in a new secu- cants because they will not
around the .facility.
to the main stage ·of the
Gheen Rentals owners' are rity and surveillance system. only have applicable classOl!llipolis River Recreation
Besides the security sys• room work, but .also ac.tual
husband and wife Danny and
Festival as the ·featured
Randi Gheen · who estimate iem. the Gheen's received · experience in area plants ,
entertainer ·on Saturday.
Miranda Lambert
·
their losses to be between permission from their neigh- . Sojka said. '
July 2 at 9 p.m.
·'Rather than go to a lab (on
. . "One thing we' re excited ' gia,'; placed on the charts $20',000 - $30,000 at this bors and . installed large
campus),
'why not go to a real
. time though they are still per- posts arid cable to rope off
· about is Miranda Lambert · earlier thi.s year.
lab?"
he
said.
But it is poly one facet of forming .inventory of their the area the thieves used to
coming l)ere," said Lorie
And the on-site ellperience
hide the ir truck.
Neal, executive director of her musical talent, which · facility for a final figure .'
will
not end there, Some stu"This
is
d~vastating
"This hampers oliF ceothe Gallia County ·Chamber .ranges from tiie pounding
dents
will have the chance to
of COflliilerce, which plans "Kerosene'' to · the philo, because Dan and 1 work hard nomic growl~, and hurts t~e
the
River · Recreation sophical "Love 's· Looking for what we have and that · .whole community because participate in a summer co· ld k h
there are people out there op program during which
Festival each year.
·for You" as she displays her · some b0 dY wou. ta e 1 at that would do this," Mrs. they wi,ll work as paid
'Liunl&gt;ert's single ~Me .and versatility path ·as a vocalist away, . it's a big setback."
Gheen said.
employees either · at the
Charlie Tl!lking," described and songwriter. ·
Mrs. Gheen said. .
The Gheen's believe the Gavin plant. or the · Mason
The Gheen's are offering a
in her publicity as a hallmark of "innocent nostal52,000 reward for informaPlease see Gheen, A6
Please see Fesllwal, ~6
Please see. Course. .AS

TO APPEAR AT FESTIVAL

·to stick to Nextel Cup

Jack McVan

. POMEROY Ohio
Valley Game Birds &amp;
Guides of Rose Hill Road
in Pomeroy 'will be featured on a. hunting program
by A-Way Outdoors .this·
we~k
on the Men'.s
Channel on Di sh Network .
A-Way pr9grams is produced by Michigaw father
and ·son team Fred and Greg
· Abbas whose programs used .
to be featured on the Outdoor
Please see Hunting. AS
Network but. have since
movep to the Men's Channel.
father and son had fi:lmed
Bill Brothers poses with a'
all over the United States
lQ.point buck he killed on
and Canada but had not his farm outside of Pomeroy.
made it to Southern Ohio Brothers' farm is also home
until they met Bill Brothers,
to his business Ohio Valley
owner of Ohio Valley Game
Game Birds &amp; G~ides which
. Birds &amp; Guides at a hunting- will be featured on a hunting
expo in Columbus last year. · program that will run on the
Brothers recognized the
Men's Channel on Dish
Abbas' from their , many
Network this week. The proappearances on hunting
gram was made by father
programs and began talking and son team Fred and Greg
to them about his n~w ·oper·
Abbas of A-Way Outdoor
ation in Pomeroy.
.Ohio Valley Game Birds ' · Television whose programs
&amp; Guides offers turkey, trohave also appeared on the
phy deer, goose: and duck
Outdoor Network.
hunting in season . They
Submitted photo
also offer dog training with

RISING
COUNTRY STAR Gheen ·Rentals B&amp;E results
.

WEATHER

LffiERS FROM OUR READERS

course ·set
for launch

an emphasis on both hunting · and obedience skills.
and year-round daily pheasant and quail hunting with
no kill limits. The business
that began on 33-acres will
soon expand to 2,000.
After listening to Brothers
sales pitch, the Abbas' found .
it the perfect opp011unity [o
finally film a show in
Southem Ohio which they
did last Novetilber. . ·
· "Within four hours of' get- ·
ting off the plane and . one

in nearly $30,000 loss

r

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="505">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9956">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="17390">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="17389">
              <text>June 24, 2005</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3055">
      <name>boyd</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="100">
      <name>roush</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4420">
      <name>schomburg</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
