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Page' B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, July 14, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

,.

NASA takes first step
in trying to figure out~
fuel-gauge trouble, A2

Races, Triple Crown chase, trade .talk highlight baseb~l's seco~d half
NEW YORK (A P) - From Fenway Park, Curt Schilling
opening day through the All - is off the disabled and ready
Star game, they were base- to re turn - as a doser - on
Thursday night when the
ball's feel-good story.
Now it gets serious for the World Series champion Red
Sox take on the New York
Washington Nationals.
" It was tough in the tlrst Yankees.
Thi s is the tir" ti me in I0
half, and it will b~ even
years
that Boston has led at
• tougher in the second hal f,''
manage r Frank Robinson the break. The Red Sox tried
said. "Everybody's go ing to to boost their bu ll pel1
Wednesday with_a tracle. !!CIbe coming for us."
.
For the NL East leaders and ting · re liever Chad Bradford
everyone else in tile majors. from Oakland for m11fielder
·
the races resume Thursday. So Jay Payton.
" I th ink our best baseball is
do the x:hases Ra fa~ l
Palmeiro needs ·two hits Jor ahead or us:· catcher Jason
3,000, Roger.Clemens is aim- Varitck _,aid. " We· vc had
ing at his eighth Cy Yo ung some good ~t int s. we've been
Award and Derrek Lee might 0-K. To be where we are and
make a run at the Triple not ha ve evc ry·thing complete ly click yet is fortuna te."
Crown.
Sti ll on deck: Resolution of
And, there's more .
Kenny
Rogers ' 20~ga m e sus.Barry Bonds coul d make
. his season debut, CSJming bac.k pension · and $50.000 fitk.
from knee surgery and 'j ust 52 Plus. the July J I trading de aLlhome runs short of Hank line to make deals wi th out
Aaron's record of 755. At. wa ivers. wit h lots oC bi g

-Leads
from Page 81
sprint.
The win was Vinokourov·,
second in tive Tours. His first
was in 2003.
Armstrong. flank ed by
Di scovery Channel teammates, scaled the ·Galibier
more than two minutes behind
Vinokourov in a group of
about 20 riders. They reeled in
some of the ileticit with a
speedy descent, finishing 1.:15
behind Vinokourov.
"Our objective today was to
stay toget h~r," he satd. "We
wanted to be as conserv attve
and relaxed as possible and I
think we did it.'
.
Vinokourov ean\ed a time
bonus for winning and cut his
defi cit to Annstrong to 4:47.
climbing 'from 16th to 12th
· overall.
Armstrong's lead over sec'
ond-place .
Mickael
Rasmu ssen of Denmark
stayed at 38 seconds. Freqch
rider Christophe Moreau rose
to third overall. 2:34 behind
the six-time champion .
Rasmussen is the runaway
leader of the Tour's mountainclimbing competition. where
points are awarded on climbs.
conferring a polka-dot jersey
to the winner. He was not
touted as a rival to Armstrong
going into the Tour. but is now

warrantii1g the champion \
altl!ntiun.
" He is rid in).! strom;. cl imhi tll 1 vc ry well.·· A1':"ms tron 1!
r ··He 1
. s no w at h!,"Cat m
. t I1e
"
s;ml.
fi.ll' C,"

Armst ro ng· s

advantage

over riv;ds J;Jn Ullrich of
Gc rm;ll1y and Ita lian Ivan
Basso · stayed un l'hang~d. as
tlley all. tin ishcd ·in the same
time . Basse&gt; i&lt; ~:4 11 back ,
fnurth overall. with Ullrich
4:02 bcl1 ind in· ninth. •
Vinokourov saiU he began
th L' day determined to make
hi s mark after his disappointmg climb Tue.sday to
Courcl1cvel .
"I ~ c pt m~ spirits. ! . ~ai d to
myself ' I am ~t ill goi ng to
attack."' Vinokoumv said. "I
said ' I have noth ing to lose."'
He said Monday\ rest day
mav have contributed to hi s
ditiicul_tics the next day on the
first Alpine stage .
"I th ink the rest day broke
my rhyt111n a little bit." he
said.
The linal Alpine portion on
Thursday. a l lo.2- mil e run
from Briancon to Digne- lesBains. takes the riders over
li ve easier ;tscents . The Tour
then races across southern
France before entering the
Pyrenees on Salllrday.
"We arc in a good position."
Armstrong ' s team manager

Johan 13ruyneel said . '_'It is up
to us now to defend it."

names sure to be in the mix.
The Nationals got an early
jump. signing reliever Mike
Stanton on Wednesday after
he was cut by the Y;mkces.
Washington might Jo something a lot higger soon. per-

haps trading for Co,limtdo nutfielder Prl'Ston Wibon.
While W;i'hingto n trie s tq
bring the rirst World Series to
RFK. the St. Loui s Cardinals
hope to bring one last Series
to Bus&lt;:h Stadium bcfnre their
new park op~ns nex t season.
"We started thi s srring with
the steroid iss ue and everything else. and I lo\•e the way
the senmd ha lf of the season
is Sl~t up.'' l'lHllmis~ioner Bud
Selig . said durin g the break.
··V..'e. .'r~ going tt) have some
great. great ra~:c.:s right down
to tl1e e1id."
Of the 14 teams in the AL .
I0 are at .500 or higher. The
best race might be in the NL
East. where all five dubs arc

at least .500 and within eight
games of first place.
The Nationals - who tinishctl last in 2004 as th e
Montreal Expos - lead the
Brave s hy 2 112 games in their
fi rst seascm in Washington.
Seeking .its 14th stra ight
divi sion ti tle. Atlanta leads the
wi ld-card race tk&gt; pi te having
three ~ t arters 011 th e 'DL.
Because of the inJuri es, a rotation· th.1t once boasteil Greg
Maddu x and Tom Glavinc has
lately fc·awrcd the lik es of
Roman Colon and Jorge So_,a.
Bad in til e wiltl-c ,ml _race
is last year's wi 1111Cr. With
Clem 1:11s "" nia" a· ma jor
lcagu~ - hcs 1 1.-ll ERA •tnd
emcrgin ~ as a ta vorite for hi s
e1gl&lt;!th Cy Young award.
Hou ston has pul led w1thm
five ga mes of the Brave s.
There also are indi vidual
achievement s to wat&lt;.:h for in
the se&lt;.:Ond half.
Palmeiro is set to become

the fourth player with 3,000 they may choose to hang on.
hits and 500 homers. Along
"I don't think we get ourwith Miguel Tejada. MVP of selves in better position by
the AL's 7-5 win in the All - trading Jason Schmidt," assisStar ~ame Tuesday nigh t, tant general manager Ned
Palmetro and the Orioles will Colletti saitl.
play at Seatt le on Thursday · Minne sota made a move
night.
~
during the break, acqu iring
Lee, leading the majors· second baseman Bret Boone
with a J78 &lt;lverage. tied for from Seattle. Nine games
the major leag ue lead wi th 27 behind the major league-best
homers and 'cconJ in the NL Chicago White Sox in the AL
with 72 RBis , can become the · Central. the Twins probably
first Tripk Crown winner wi ll be forced to C&lt;incentrate
si nce Carl Y·rstrzcmski
in un the· wild card, where they
1
1967.
·
are slightl y ahead of the
Bonds hepes to get a few Orioles and Yankees.
swin~s. The seven-ti me NL .The Twins have made three
MVP has 703 homers tra iling straight postse ason appear-'
tllll y Aaron and Babe Ruth anccs. the Red Sox two, and
(7 14) .
the Yankees nine in a row.
Minu s
Bonds ,
Sa n
"If you' re playing well , you
Franci~co has gone 37-50. don' t concern yourself with
Pit&lt;.:her Jason S0hmi dt has how 1na ny games you have to
. been mentioned as a trade win;: Yankees manager Joe
possibility, but··· with the Torre said. " I just hope the
Giants ·(\nly 10 games out of way we 've been doii1g it .car.
''
.
tirst in the · weak NL West, nes over.

to be played," Woods said.
"You have to th ink about . your
placement . You have to picture a trajectory and shape and
try to hit that shape and that
tra jectory on yo ur spot. and. it
will .be fine. If you don' t.
there's a chance that vou can
get. some pretty bad spots out
here."
Woods wi ll try to avoid
them again when the !34th
British Open begins Thursday
at St. Andrews.
.
Thi~ figures to be a momentous occasion, as it usually is
whe n the oldest major returns
til the home. of golf. For
starters. Jack Nicklaus is playi'ng his !64th and fmal m;yor
championship. Nicklaus once
said there were three types of
Briti ., h Opens - th ose in
England, those in Scotland
and those at St. Andrews.
As much as he has played
the Old Course - this is his
eighth Open at St. Andrews
- he so unds as though he has
deve loped a close and personal re lati onship with it s
bunkers.
" I don ' t know all the
bunkers. obviously. but I
know a fair number of them ,''
Nicklaus said. "I guess nol
mi.iny course'S have names.
but I go through the golf

course and I name 15 or 20 par by one shot. and the difbunkers. however they pop ference might have· been the
out of my head. I would never oi1e bunker Faldo found that
think of that in any other year.
.
place."
.
.
"The strategy of tpi s gulf
The bunkers can be so course is respec t for the·
treacherou s that Ni cklaus and bunkers." Fa ldo .said. "When!
Gary Player. who had nearly a won it , l hit it in one. And
ce ntury of · major champi - that 's the whole key to this
onship go lf between them , place. Anything can happen .
asked a fu les official in 2000 You get-under the lip, and you
whether they were alloweJ to have to come out backward or
take an unplayable lie out of a whatever. and you can't even
bunker, and whether hitting get to tt.
the sodJ cn wall in the back- , Nicklaus knows that all too
swing was a penalt y.
welL
Wt)(ids sa id his ·legacy at St.
It was in 1995 when he hit
Andrews - no bunkers his second shot on the par-S
required no small amount of 14th' into Hell Bunker, a masluck . There was that tee shot sive sand box with 6-foot
on the lOth . hole iri the tina! walls that feel like · a &lt;.:rudely
rO ll!ld th at was headed for made prison. which might be
three pot bunkers when it how it got it s name . Nicklaus
sk ipped over them.
took four shots to get out on
" I should have been in hi s way to a 10.
probably three or five
The mb~t infamous incident
bunkers, easi ly,'' he said. ·'Ju st took place at the most famous
off the tee shots alone. it hap- bunker on the Old Course pened to hop over a bunker the Road Bunker that fronts
and catch a sil\e and kick left the 17th gree n. Tommy
or right -of it. That happens. Nak;yima was in contention
Fortunately for me, it was in the '78 British Open and
happening that week. I got see min~ ly salt: ott the green
lucky a few times."
v,:hen hts tirst putt was struck
Nick Faldo almost ·set the too hurd and went' into the
standard when he won in bunker. It took him four shots
1990 at 18-under 270. Woods to get out. and he fell out of
brokt: his record in relation to the hunt.

Fends
from Page Bl
in the third when· an e rror
allowed Jeff Mende nhall \
to reach safely. the n a sacrifi ce riy by Eng le plated
Mendenhall for th e 2-0
edge.
Post 128 rail ied to tie
the ga me in its ha lf of the
fourth inning. as Jeremy
B lac kst'on
sco red
on
Brandon Fackler 's RBI
single . Desig nated · hitt er
Ken Am sba ry pl ated on
Luke ' Haislop 's sac ri fice
fly to e ven the co nt es t.
Moone y indu ced th e
. fir st two Beverly batters
to fl y out to sta rt the fifth.
but Bart h connec ted on a
solo shot to provide the
g uests with what would be
th e wiij nin g run and a 3-2

.

adva~tage .

Post 3891750 tacked on
tw o big in suran ce run s in
th e top half of the seventh. · as Engle and Matt
Naw " both ~ t arted with
consec ut ive walks .
Barth once again provi ded the offen sive punc h
for Beverly. as .li is double
plated both ~ng l e and
Naw for · that 5-2 advanta ge headed do_wn the
s tretc h.
finished
the
Barth
evc nmg 2- for-3 and had
four RB I ~ fo r th e victor&gt;.
Am sbary.
Fadlcr.
Durst . Eddy and Luke
Haislop e~ch had a hit lor
Feeney Bennett. whic h
plays its regu lar ;ea,on
finale toda y at MHS
against Parker,burg· I 0-1 . ·
Game time is sla tcO for 6
p .m.

Feeney Bennett's Ken Amsbary singles during the fourth
inning of Wednesday's 5-3 loss to Beverly.

FOOTBAll SHOES
IN STOCK!

• Strike Force Mid
• Land Shark Mid
./ Receivers GlfJIVeJ~'
./ Mouth Guards
j Chin Straps
./ Chin Shields
.t Elbow Sleeves

Page AS
• Marjorie Leonard, 79

INSIDE

Details on Page A2

Calendars ·,
Classifieds
Comics
D-rar Abby ·

at

Editorials Faith • Values
Movies
NASCAR
Obituaries

992-2155

FOR MORE INFORMATION

The

Sentinel
'

.

POMEROY - . The doors of the new Meigs
Medical Clinic, an affili ate of O'Bleness Health
Systems, will be open and the facility staffed with
several physicians ready to see patients on Tuesday.
The clinic, located in the west end of the medical
building across. from Veterans Memorial Hospital,
came to Meigs County at the invitation and urg ing
of offi cials, O' Bi eness representati ves said .
Ph ys icians from Rive r Rose Obstetrics &amp;
Gynecology and a podiatry phys ician/surgeon are
curre ntly scheduling ap pointments at the Clinic,
11 3 East Memorial Drive, SuiteA.
·
According to O'Bieness Health System execu'
tive vice pres ident, Ward Howe, the clini c will
ex pand options· for Meigs County residents to
have acce~s to quality hea lth care. "People
deserve to have th e very best medical ca re possible," Howe sa id . "Opening a clinic in Meigs
County is a way to provide more healthcare
options to the residents.:·
The cl inic suite was previou sly occupied by the
Veterans Memorial Rural Health Clinic and is
owned by Meigs County. Meigs County co mmi ssioner, Mick Dave nport said the commissioners
consider the new clini c .a maj or step in partnering
with O'Bieness· for more healthcare opportunities
for Meigs c'ounty res idents.
Cherilyn Warner, director of clinic operations.
said, "We are very pleased to prov ide more choic -

• Federal appeals
· court overturns ban on
Canadian cattle imports.
See Page A2
BY BRI.\N J. REED
• Scholarship receives
BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.CO M
donation. See Page A3
'
POMEROY - A public
• Baileys announce birth. mee ting scheduled for
· Friday evening about the
~Page A3
coll ec tion -o f C8-related
• Engineering firm
.health data is de signed to
awards scholarships.
answer questions about the .
health stud y and how local
See Page AS
res ident s can partici pate , but
• Homecoming planned.
attendan ce is not mandatory
to participate in the studies
See Page AS .
or
to receive the $400 in
• Swimming lessons
cash offered to parti cipants .
offered. See Page AS
In fact , the C8 Health
Project
is encouraging partic• Rio Grande and AEP
ipants to regi " er online and
program. See Page AS
seek an swers to their question s
at
a
website.
• Friday Chautauqua
www.C8HealthProject.com .
worl&lt;shops. See Page A5 The turnout at meetings held
• ·A Hunger For More.
in Wood County, W.Va. and
Washington County has been
See Page AS
"tremendous," Usa Collins
• Church briefs.
of the C8 Health Project said
Thursday, and in one
See Page AS
instance, two meeting_s had to
• If the Lord be God.
be held in one night at one
See- Page AS
location in order to accomo-

2 SE&lt;.'TIONS -

..

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
HOEFLICH @MYDAI LYSENTINEL.COM

·Sports

Weather .

16 P AGI;5

A3
B4 -6
B7

A3
A4
A6-7

As
B3

As
B Section
A2

© 2005 Oh io Valley Publishing Co.

•.

Chartene Hoeftlch/ photos

Above: An open house for the new Meigs Medical

Clinic. an affiliate of the O'Bieness Health System.
will be held Wednesday. 4 :30 to 6 p.m. It iS&lt; located on the west end of the medical building across
from the Veterans Memorial Ho s p1tal build1ng.
Left: _Cindy Koblentz , LPN of Chester, who has

worked at O'Bienes s for n1ore than 15 yea rs, will be
doing secretana l work and nurs 1ng at the new Meigs .
Med ical Clinic. This ¥'lee k she is scheduli ng appo intments fo r the doctors who wi ll begin seei ng
patients there Tuesday.
es in high-quality health service in Meigs County. Gy neco logy : and EarlL. Driggs. D.P.M.. pod iatric
Some peopl e were already using Athens-based physician and ~urgenn . .
They wi ll he joined in the futu re by cardiologists
phys icians, and opening th is clini c wi ll save them
from MidOhio Cardiology ·and . Vascular
the time and expense ot' driving a long c,Ji stance."
Several physicians, who are based at the Castrop Consul tants. Howe sa id it is anti cipated that a fam Center in the 0' Bleness Medi cal Park in Athens, ily pmctice physician. as well as a surgeon also will
are currentl y scheduling appointment s 'at the offer office hours at the cl inic.
Communi ty members arc in vited to an open
Meigs Medi cal Clinic. Th ey incl ude Jane, E.
·
hou
se and ribbon cuttin g ceremony Wednesday
Broec ker, M.D .. Michael J. Clark, D.O. and Jack
M. Ramey. D.O .. of Rive r Rose Obstetrics &amp;
Please see O'Bieness. As"

_Meeting
Famed 1920~s writer comes ~to Chautauqua _No levy. for
attendance
London Pool,
Writer Zora Neale
not required
this year
Hurston made an
at last
to participate appearance
night's Ohio
Chautauqua in the
in C8 study
form ol scholar
· SYI{ACUSE - There will
Dorothy Mains

INDEX

BE SURE YOUR BUSINESS IS .
A PART OF THIS YEAR'S
FAIR EDITION ...
CALL TODAY!

·DAVE or BRENDA
North 2nd Avenue
Middleport . Oh1o

OBITUARIES

Once Again, The Daily' Sentinel Will Have ,A ~
Special Meigs County Fair Preview Edition.
This Year's Edition Promises To Be One Of The
Biggest And Best Evert Look For this Special
Edition In Your _Friday, August 12th Paper.

Call

Beverly 5, Feeney Bennett ·3
Beverly
101 010 2 55 0
F Bennett 000 200 1 3 51
Ad l:tm Canaday. Ky le Oliver (7) and .
Jordan Thornhrll . Mall . Mooney and
Tarry Durs1 . WP - Canaday LP Mooney S - Ohver H R 8 - Alex
Bar th, hf\1'1 rnnmg , nobody on

• Woods stands atop
leaderboard after opening
round. See Page 81

WEATHER

Bryan Walters/photo

lfl?-.

O'Bleness opening Meigs Medical Clinic Tuesday

SPORTS

One rule at this British Open: Beware the bunkers
ST. ANDREWS. Scotland
(A P) - The names Tiger
Woods mu~t imtste r at this
British Open are not the usual
suspec ts he faces at other
major championships: like
Vijay Singh or Phil Mickelson
01: Ernie Els.
.
It' s Sutherland - not Kevin
or David, but the tin y pot
'hunker that looms large on the
fout1h fa irway at St. Andrews.
There is Cart gate and
· Coflins, Cat's Trap and Lion's
Mouth. Kru ger and Mrs.
Kmgcr.
And. of course, there's Hell.
The s t rolfee~ t line of
defense at any"B ~it ish Open is
the wind that whips across
links courses. although make
no mi stake about the Old
Course. It 's all abo ut a-vo iding
the brutal bunkers. 11 2 of
them in al l. some of which
can't be seen until a player
gets to the . gree n and looks
behind him.
Woods won ti ve years ago
atS t. Andrews by failin g to
hi t into a single bunker over
four day s. ·which helps
explain why he set a m&gt;tjor
championship record at 19under 269 and lini &lt;hed eight
shots ahead of anyone else.
"That's how golf is meant

Home Remedy
releases new
album,A3

date those attending .
The tests will begin thi s
month for residents who
receive tlieir dri nking water
fro m six public water di s.tricts. or from private wells
within the districts, where
concentrations of ammonium
perfl uorooctanoate,
· also
known as PFOA and C8, have
been found: DuPont agreed in
February to pay for the
screenings as part of the terms
of sett lement of a class-action
lawsuit. About 80.000 residenl.s li ve in the districts, and
it's hoped at least 60,000 will
participate in the screening.
Customers .in the Tuppers
Plains-Chester and Pomeroy
Village water systems. both of
which have been found to be
contami nated with .C8, are
invited to attend the town
. meeting at 7 p.m. tonight at
Meigs High SchooL The
.meeting will provide details
about the health study planned
to de termi ne any health
effects from dri'nking waicr
containing the chemicaL C8 is
used by DuPont at its
Washington Works plant near
Parkersburg, W.Va . to make
the noiiStick substatfce Teflon.
the
material
Gore-Tex.
Scotchgard stain resistant. and
the building 1~1aterial Tyvek.

Please see ca ~tudy; AS

BY BETH SERGENT
BSERGENT@ MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

Prince. In first person
dialogue, Prince presented the famous
writer and then in
character as a
famous AfricanAmeric an writer that
blossomed during
the 1920's Harlem
Renaissance
answered questions
from the audience.
Prince is the founder
of Sojourns, an
ente rprise designed
to bring the lives of
outstanding African
American women to
students and community organizations
across the country. A
melodrama presented by the River City
Players opened for
the Hurston's historic portrayaL
-Tonight's 8 p.m. program will feature
famed gangster John
Dillinge r, portrayed
by Jeremy Meier. It
will follow a 7:15
p.m . program of
music by the Meigs_
Community Band.

-·

be n&lt;&gt; leY y ·placed on th e
November ballot for opcratin~ costs at the Lo ndon Pool.
The dec:ision was made at
last night 's mee ting of
Syracuse Vi llage Counci l and
was made in part by the fact
that t h ~ viIIage has not yet
received a c h~ c k from . the
Fcdera I
Emergency
Management Agency· for 'the
I)(Xll\ repair. tho4gh It has been
approved to rece ive funding .
Anot her fac t(&gt;r was C0Un,-il 's uceis ion to place a 2- mil
lc•·v· on the No,emher ballot
rm"thc purpo,'c of police pro\Cl'l ion. The levy would be
for a five-ye ;~r p~riod .
If the police department
lc t·y passe; it may free up
mone y in the ge nera l fund
that cmtld possi hl y be used
toward.' the pool operations,
if council decides reopening
the·
pool is a financia lly
1
viable option .
, .
The deadline to pass H _res- ·
nlu~int ~ for placing a levy ?n
the ts;o,·cmber ballot tor
op~ratin g .co . . IS at London
P•••l '"" I'"' ni ght, IT)aking
time constraints yet another
factor in c·otllll'i l's decision.
Out of X79 people' in the Vi l_lagc. wu ncil received S6 ~ur­
I C\'' from residents who
\()iced thei r opinion about
v. hether ur not they would support a levy for opcmting costs
ol a rnol or new playground.
Of those X(, Survcvs. 50
sa id the\' wou ld sup'port a
k\ \ . 2X ... aid !he\ \\ot!ld not
"q)pon either le, ·v. and Rsaid .
I the\ \\ 1shcd ttl support a new
_·. ,hdta arc:1 and 'pia~ ground
1 equirnll'nt.
c1, 1111 ,-d uid re 1 ic" the sur, '"' , · hul "1Wwut the FEMA
1 nH-1nL'~ in hanJ fe lt that they
l cnuld nll t ma!..e a definitive
,~ec· i,inn ahout the poul at last
' ni~ht's meerin~ .
"
1
1.
~- I h;ltl' 10 '"~.:c it dose."'
~1 a~ ur Eric' Cunn ingham said
"~tl.ll\ Lllndon Pool. "If the
police In ~ · passes maybe that'
''il l free ·ur 'omc monev:·
c·unmut.
· •I1.1111
. ,1
. 1~o ho pe~
· - 10f
•
' dnn"lllllls" ur mtllll'\' or labor
.
•
.
.
' !ur ~IIK: r•••l 111 the future.
1

I

Charlene Hoeftlch/ photo

1

Parade will be held.. to honor 3664th
members
.
BY DIANE POTTORFF
DPOTIORFF@MYDAILYREGISTER.COM

•POINT PLEASANT, W.Va .
Eve ry member of the
3tjti4tll Maintenance Unit of
the We st Virginia National
Guard has made it home .
On Sunday. area residenjs
can welcome them -back during a parade that wi ll' be held
in their honor.
. ··Red. White · and Blue"
Sund;~y will be the patriotic
tribute to the soldiers·. military
personnel, veterans and their
families . The parade will
begin at I :30 p.m. at the
Board o( Education oftlce or
old Central School and travel
down Main · Street to the
Farmer's Market under the
Bartow Jones Bridge.
"W~ wante(f to honor the
3664th and welcome , them

home. Denny Bellamy. one
of the orgamzers. sat d.
.
Most of the unit has been
home since April. but they did
not want ~parade unltl all ol
them were back. Bellamy
?aid. The last men~bers arrived
m West Vtrgmta last month.
Also, th~ ~ati?nal Guard
wanted to gtve thetr personnel
at _least a ~10nth ofl trom
active duty to be home and
spend time with thctr famlltes_
after servmg
· m Iraq for
· over
_ a
year. he ~atd. They ptcked the
time for the parade .
Th .IS wee.ken d• t he), WI-11 be
ba'c~ to acttve duty
"F
h . · d . h . .II
.
of
r
ltl
para de.ht ey lwl. t ·tbe m u deress
an ave'' o
their
equipment"
Bellamy
.
•
satd "I hope everyone turn'
· ·f·
..
,·
ou t or the parade. .
Because the umt had left
their homes. familie s and j.obs
.

to help protect our ,·ountr~ .
Bd l;tmy satd·the parade was a
smal_l wa) to show the cummunity's gratituJe for their
sacrifice .
Parade watchers are 11111 the
on ly gr~p or people he· hope'
that show, _
.
O n.m nit.cr~ arc loo~i;H! for

grlmps. band s and nthcr ,fi~ni tarie&gt; w· dewrate lluat' ((1 he
in the parade. Bel lam~ 'aid.
"Thi s is the time li&gt;r l''&lt;'f\ .
.
one to turn l1Ul ·md ,ho\\ thl'Jr
. ., .·. ·
,· 1 , \('(" .. 1 ,
apptcu.Jtuln 11 t ll . 1 H. k
sa td . " Thev descrw the
. . d....
·
p.tr.t c .
Those who . \\ou iJ l"c 1\1
ilat1iL'iiJilte in the parad,· can '
.
call Bcllanw
at LI(J4 1 h75.
·
(J 78X. or they .:an also ,·all
AI ·· . c 1· ·k 0-· 1·h· ·
a.. ~
tee lc ·
"' num."' r' t,'l
comart arc 675-1940 11r !30-1 1
R95-35LJO .

1

1

.,

the S\1 racu ~e
. ..
\\a tL·r Rnard pC~lll"l(.&gt;n to
(

.

tHIIll'll ~, t n~

•

pur-~1,. rc~n,llllt.ng tunds m the
\1 •1.. , ( 1111 m 1 Commumty ·
.l)c ~ 1
- Bl k G
C\ ~ '-'pmc nt
oc , ,ram
R 1·
L
~ ~ totwmJ c
c~· o nn g ~
oan
fund in 11le amount of SI ~.700.
;Please
see
Levy, AS
.
"

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I ·.

The Daily Sentinel

NATION •

WoRLD

.PageA2
•

•

Friday, July 15,2005

NewsChannel

0

Public meetings
Friday, July 15
SYRACUSE Sutton
Township Trustees public
hearing on the 2006 budget
year, 6 p.m., Syracuse village
Hall, preceding regular meetmg.
LANGSVILLE - Salem
Township Trustees 2006 budget meeting, 6 p.m., Salem
Firehouse, Ohio 124.
·
Monday, July 18
RACINE Southern
Local Board of Education
meets in spep ial session. 7
p.m., hrgh scliool.
LETART FALLS - Letart
Town ship Trustees, 7 p.m .. at
office building .
Thesday,.July 19
POMEROy
- Meigs
County Board of Elections,
8:30a.m., board office.

.

I_

,,~ .

'

·

LIUUIFifO HYDROGEN
FLAMMJiBLE GAS

The Space Shuttle Discovery sits encased in the Rotating Serv1ce Structure on Laurich Pad 39B at the Kennedy Space Center
·at Cape Canaveral, Fla .. Thursday. NASA officials are trying to determine when they can attempt another launch of the STS-114
which was scrubbed Wednesday after a malfunctioning fuel sensor was discovered.
·

.

NASA's first step in trying to figure out fuel-gauge trouble: The Wiggle Test:
.

.

BY MARCIA DUNN

gauges in Discovery\ external
AP AEROSPACE WRITER
fuel tank malfunctioned during a n\utinc prelaunch test
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla . Wednesday.
- NASA's first step in trying
The seven astronauts were
to figure o.ut what caused a fuel already on board, liftoff was
gauge to fail shortly before little more than two hours
liftoff and keep space shuttle away, and the astronauts ' ramDiscovery grounded is about ilies, members of Congress
as Jow-tecl1 as it ge t&gt;\: The and space bulls around the
Wiggle Tesl.
·
world were eagerly waiting.
The. onfy way NASA can The 12-day missi_on was
launch the shuttle on S~nday loaded with interest ing chal- the earliest option- is "if Jenges that called for testing
we go in and wiggle some of · new safety ~nd repair methods
the wires and find a ·loose con- and delivering supplies to the.
nection." deputy shuttle pro- intenvttional space station and
gram manager Wayne Ha1e

said Thtlrsuay.
"You laugh .'. he told a
packed room of grinning journalists. ·That probably is the
first step in any troubleshooting plan. Sqme technician is
going to put his hand on the
wires and the connech)rs ' ...
and start wiggling them."
Hale conceded that probably
wouldn't fix the problem:
"The folks who put those wires
together' and do those connections do a tea lly good JOb. so
the chances of that? Not high ."
H.e called Sunday ''a really
optimistic good-luck seetlario" and not very credible.
NASA's first mission since the
2003 Columbia disaster could
· be delayed well into next week
oreven September, depending
on the extent of repatrs needed.
" I wish I had more answers
for you," Hale .said.
For .the second day in a row.
NASA was stumped as to why
one of four hydroge n-fuel

its two-m an crew.

But everything came to a
halt when launch controllers·
sent itit(lrmat ion mimicking an
empty fue! tank. One of the
fuel gauges remained stuck on
"full. "
Hours later, long after the
tank was emptied, the trnublesome ga uge finally started
working. That makes it an
intermittent problem, Hale
said, "which is the worst kind
of thing to troubleshoot."
The problem could be in the
ga uge at the bottom of the lank.
an electronic box aboard the
shuttle that serves as a daturelay hub. or in the inordinate
length of cables and wires in
between.
NASA has set up 12 engineering teams around the
country that are trying to pinpoint .theproblemandcome up
with :1 repair.
,
The fuel gauges are critical
and even though Qn!y two are
needed , all four musrbe work-

'

29.60

OVB....:... 25.55
BBT- 42.47
BLI -11..55
Peoples - 29.07
Bob Evans - 22.83
Pepsico - 55.4 7
BorgWarner - 57.70
Premier 12.85
Champion - 4.20
Rockwell - 53.94
Ch'a rmlng Shops - 11.45 Rocky Boots - 29.75
City Holding - 37 .19'
.RD Shell - 64.61
Col- 47.08 ·
SBC- 24.10
DG -19.90
Sears- 158.15
DuPont - 44.20
Wai-Mart - 50.51
Federal Mogul - .83
Wendy's - 45.5.0
USB- 29.93
.
Worthington - 16.09
Gannett - 72.69
General Electric - 35.63 Dally stoe&lt;k reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
GKNLY- 4.75
Harley Davidson - 51.23 of the previous day's
transactions, provided by
JPM - 35.69
Smith Partners at Advest
Kroger 19.~
Ltd. -22.60
Inc. of Gallipolis.
'

I

ing prope rly for a launch to · reliable. lf engineers have to
proceed. Hale said these low- put t9gether a ·box from
level fuef gauges never failed scratch, the work could take
over the decades until April, anywhere from 10 days to·
when 'two malfunctioned dur- three weeks, Hale said.
ing a fueli.ng test of
It will be considerably more
Di sco very 's original tank . complicated if workers have lo·
That tank was later replaced get to the fuel gauge.s inside the·
for other safety reasons.
tank.
If the l'uel lank was empty
NASA is up against the.
but the se nsors indicated full. olock. If Discovery isn't flying.
the engine turbines would spin by the end of July, the shuttle
too fast and likely rupture must remain grounded until•
possibly damaging the tail of Septemberto ensure a daylight
the spacecraft and dooming liftoff for gobd camera views.
the crew. A ground test that a requirement for spotting any
accidentally caused that to tlamaee to the shuttle at
happen back in the early 1980s launch. That's one of the many
resulted in severe "uncon- changes cal leu for by . thC.:
tained" damage. Hale said.
Colurnbia accident investiga-:
NASA is loath to repeat such tors
.
a test on the shuttle·s new and
When Columbia blasted of(.
stronger turbopumps. Hale on its doomed mission, NASA,·
said.
had no clear pictures of the;
On the other end of the scale. foa m insulation hitting the left,
if the sensors were to trigger a wing and knocking a hole in it~
premature shUldown of' the The gash caused the spacecraft:
niain engines on the way to to break apart during re-entry:
orbit, the shuttle would be on Feb. I, . 2003. killing all·
forced to att.cmpt a dangerous seven astronauts.
•
emergency landing in Europe
The latest launch delay -·
or elsewhere.
and the uncertainty of what to
"None of those options arc do next - has left the entire really what you·d like to have launch team "tren1endousJy:
happen to you:· Hale said.
disappointed, " said Michac~
. Workers will need to enter Wetmore. director of. space;
Discovery 's engine compart- shuttle processmg.
ment to get to the electronic· "But everybody was ·also:
box that is associated with the here 2 1/2 years ago and saw ·
fuel ~auges. The box contains that we failed in our mission to
trans istors that may not hav.e . protect the crew," WetmorC:
been assembled correctly.
said. "So there·s no one who'
NASA has a spare box ready wants to go forward with a:
to put in. but the device is potential risk to the crew thar
ex hibiting a signal interfer- hast1.t been appropriately ana-·
ence problem and may not be lyzed and addressed."

Monday, July 18
POMEROY - Pomeroy
Chapter I H6, Order of
Eastern Star, 7:30 p.m.,
Masonic Hall in Chester.
Initiation. Wear chapter
dresses. Refre shments.
Thesday, July 19
POMEROY
Stand
meeting, 5-6 p.m., Pomeroy
Library.
CHESTER
Past
Councilors Cluh of Chester
Council 323, Daughter.\ of
·America will have a supper at
the Coolspot at 6 p.m. pre.ceding the 7:30p.m. meeting
at the Masonic building in
Chester.
Wednesday, july 20
POMEROY
. Meigs
County Cancer Society Task

Force, noon , conference
room of Pomeroy Library.
Lunch provided. RSVP to
Courtney Sim, 992-6626.

Church events
Friday, July 15
LANGSVILLE ·- Gene
and Trina Williams of
Barboursville, W. Va. will bC
at the Langsville Full Gospel
Church. Ohio 124 near
Rutland. 7 p.m. nightly
through Sunday to minister,
and sing. Pastors are Robert
and Roberta Musser. For
more information call 9923630.
POMEROY Gospel
songfe st, · Pomeroy Severth
Day Adventist Church,
Mulberry Heights, 6 p.m ..
fcaturin·g local and area talent.
Sunday, July 17
PORTLAND -Spanishlanguage Mass at Our Lady
of Guadalltpe Mission, Harris
Farms on Ohio 124. Mini stry
of Sacred Heart Cathcilic
Church, Pomeroy.
MIDDLEPORT
Vacation Bible School at Ash
Street Church. 39H Ash. St..
Middleport, 6:30 to 8:30
p.m. , through Tuesday.
Professor Dowler will present "Bible Science So Far."
All children welcome. Call
992-6443 for more information.
Monday, July 18
RUTLAND - Vacation
Bible School at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church ,
Salem Street. through Friday.
Classes ·ror nursery-age· chil dren to teenagers 6 to 8:30
p.m. For more information
call 742-2507.
REEDSVILL E

DEAR ABBY: My beautithe kind of activ(ty you have
Riverview
Community ful, intel ligent 18-year-old .
described . And if I were you,
, I'd finu a more mature baby
Vacation Bible School. 6 to daughter, "Lara:• has just '
8:30 p.m .. Reedsville United · completed her first year of
sitter wi·th a more professionMethodist
Church . co ll.eg~ . She's attending
a! attitude than that .. .lovely
Spbnsored by Reedsville and schoo l out of state in the same
young · lady " because
Long · Bottom
United city where her father. ··Grant"
Dear
while ,he was mi your comMethodist
Churches. - my ex - is living.
Abby
putcr: 'he wa' neglel'ling
Reedsville Church of Christ
Abby, Grant left when Lara
your son.
.
.
and Faith Full . Gospel was 5 months old. He left us
DEAR ABBY: I have never
Church.
for his sister. with' whom he
seen th is addre"ed in your
Sunday, july 24
had been having an ' affair,
column .before. When con. RACINE - Mt. Moriah because she told him she was
versing with sonieone who
Church of God · Sunday pregnant with hi s child . The
DEAR ABBY: Woult.l you has a severe stutt er. is it
school picnic at noon at Star - divorce was very hard on us, please suggest tu teenage impolite to help the person
Mill Park. Covered dish. and my daughter ·has been in - baby si tters or young huu,e- fin ish hi s or her se ntence? I
Bapidsing in river. Take lawn counse ling for years guests that they ask pennis - am in the customer service
chairs. No evening church includi-ng at the college.
sio n from th e Ilomcvwner industry. It I know the word.
servlce.
Lara spends her holidays about usmg thetr computer the customer is trying to say,
with her father. her aunt and before just jumping on it ·.•
is .it OK to 11elp - or should
their two children. Sl" 's
We recent ly hired a lovely I Jet the speaker finish on his
&lt;~ware of the incestuou s rela- youn g lady to hah y-sit .o ur or her own? - WANTS TO
Sundav, july 17
tionship and vents a lot of shon. lhdidnh't thdink to me.nti on DO THE RIGHT THING IN
COOLVILLE _ Wat son: a.nger. at . me .Jor the rou.gh t at s e s ou 1.. stay o 11 our LAS VEGAS .
.
DEAR WANTS : Although
reunion noon Jim Wttson \ t11ne we've had . In the past, computer because It wntatns
House '4245S Wood' Road Lara's th~rupists have told se nstttve personal an d bu&gt;~- · you r impul se to be helpful is
Coolvi,lle For directions cali me she dtrccts her anger at ne~s data. Our son later noble. it is inlpol ite to inter- ·
98S- 4 37i
me because "she · can't gel mf ormed us that she had hccn rupt othe r' when they are
angry . at the person she on · the computer even whtlc la lking. The .polite way to
· s t d 1 1 23
ALB:~~ ay, :r~ y.
. 1 shou.Jd really be angry &lt;tl he was sttll awake._Thai s not handle the ,ituation is to
.
e ,mnua
her
father··
what we pay her l or. Parents allow th'c person to finish the
Sl anear l famt 1y reunwn.
·
. .
h ld
· ·t. .
h ·
descendants of Joel and
l\:ly daughter rel uses to tell s o~
. ht.ns .tttc.l .• t. ~!r scn teno.:c.
1 s l&gt;ear Abby i.&gt; written by
L di-1 Steane·trl noon at the her current lheraptsl about teetMgers I .tt ot 1lei JlC()JH
s d' · B. 0 . k the incestum1s relationship home compute r' are otl -ltm - Abi11ail Va11 B11re11, also
Lyk'
"
e
now at
en.Albany.
tg Take
·a
because
. . s1e
·I ·s. &lt;tltatd
. · .. · ·11 _w 'ill its · - FURIOUS· IN M!:'oJ
. - ktwwn as Jea1111e PI11•tt·1ps,
shelter house.
picnic lunch and lawn chairs be reported to the au thonltes NESOTA .
am/ was .fouuded by her
·
t.
'
·
and
the
.children
will
be
DEAR
FURIOUS:
I
have
a
mother. Pauli11e · Phillipl·.
For more 111 1orma ton C&lt;t 11
b
·d
0
·h
992-5502 .
·
·
tak en away. The sister etter 1 ea. wners ol omc Write
Dear
Abby
at
bought Lara a car and a cell computers with "sen.sit ive" www.DearAbby.com or P.O.
phone. and payS the phone information on them ' hould Hox 694411. Lds Angeles, CA
bill , car in surance and some install a password to prevent 90069.
of Lara's other expense s. I
Monday, July 18
suspect the thought of l.osing
POMEROY
-Me igs th e car and cel l phone have
County Right to Life something to do with my
R~member Life Rally. 9:15 to
daughter's hesitati on to level
10 p.m ... Pomeroy Riverfront with her therapist.
Amphitheater. lnfon11ative
How can I get Lara to stop
program followed by candlc- abusing me because of her
·Jight prayer service. The pub- repressed anger at he r luther?
lic is invited to attend and - LOVING MOTHER IN
bring baby care items for ALABAMA
donati.on to the Athens
DEI\R . LOVING MOTH Pregnancy Center.
ER: The . most effective way
to slop someone from abus- ·
ing you is to qui t tolerating it.
The next time your daughter
becomes abusive. inform her
that you do not deserve to be
tt'eated that way and will not
listen . Tell her that unless she
is willing to level with her
6 IDOS. SHIDf HS CIISH WITH IIPPROUfD CRfDIT
therapist. she might as well
•
OPfn 9am · 5 pm mon- frl; 9am -1 pmSat.
quit b.ecausc it's a waste of
everyone' s time. Say it in as
loving a tone as YQU can, and
do not rai se your voice. Then
politely end the conversa\ion.
(740) 992·7028
175 North 2nd Ave . Middleport. OH
You have suffered enough.

Reunions

Other events

INGELS CARPET

~·

!£

.INGELS CARPET

'---------------------......1

EXTRA! EXTRA!
Coming Friday, July 29,2005

Submitted photo

The

Home Remedy Band members are from the· left, Mike Th icken, Jeanie Creamer. Bea Hollback.
John Hollback, Karen. Bump. and ·Jamie Tevis .

Daily Sentinel

·Home Remedy releases
new album
.
.

POMEROY - The Home
Remedy Band of Athens. a
regional old-time string band:.·
which has played numerous
times in Meigs County, has
released "New Harmony." its
third recording.
. Capturing ·the es ~ence of
traditional and contemporary

.Baileys

announce
birth
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NSC- 32.62
Oak Hill Financial -

Clubs and
organizations

AP Photo

&lt;1

ACI- 53.52
AEP- 38.64
Akzo- 40.87
Ashliind Inc. - 60.67
AT&amp;T .- 19.34

'Friday, J~ly 15, 2005

MiJ1n is tired of bearing b'!'l1tt of daughter's misplaced anger

Community Calendar

Friday, July 15
couple of raindrops around
Momi11g (7 a.m.-Noo11)
the area. Temperatures will
It should he a humid and drop from 85 early this
cloudy morning. There is a evening to 77. Winds will be
sligh t chance ol\ rain. 5 MPH from the southwest.
Temperatures will . rise to ~3
Ovemight (/·6 a:m.)
with today's low of 7 1 occurIt will continue to be humid.
ring around 6 a.m. Winds will · and clou(ly. There cou ld be a
be 5 MPH from the south few raindrops aro und the
turning from the southwest as area. Temperatures will hold
the morning progresseS.
steady around 77. Winds will
Ajtimwo11 (/-6 p.m.)
be 5 to 10 MPH from the
It will remain humid and southwest.
cloudy. Light rain is forecasted. The raillfall should begin
Saturday, July 16
Moming (7 a.m.-Noo11)
around 4 p.m. The rainfall
A humid and cloudy mornwill finish around 6 p.m. wi th
total accumulations for this ing. Temperatures will linger
~vent
near 0.14 inches. at 76. Winds wi ll be I0 MPH ·
·
Temperatures will . stay near from 1he southwest.
·
Ajtemoo11
(1-6
p.m.)
R4 with today\ htgh of K6
occ.urring around 3 p.m.
It should continue to be
Winds will be 5 MPH from humid
and
cloudy.
Temperatures will climb from
the southwc;t.
Evening (7 p.m.-Midnight) 76 to 82 by late this afterlt should continue to be noon. Winds will be 5 to I 0
humid and cloudy. Expect a MPH from the southwest. ·

Local Stocks

Pa,geA3

BY THE· BEND

The Daily Sentinel

Federal appeals court overturns
ban on .Canadian cattle imports
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
The dispute pits ranchers
- A federal appeals court
. whose · profits have
ruled Thursday that Canadian improved slightly without
cattle can again be impoqed Canadian competition
to the United States, dismiss- against feedlots and packers
ing a lower court decision that have fewer cows to feed
that resuming the imports and
slaughter
.without
could spread mad cow dis- Canadian supplies.
ease.
Bill Bullard, . executive
The ·u.s. Department of directbr of the Ranchers
Agriculture said it will reopen Cattlem__en Action legal Fund,
the border within days to which brought the suit on
Canadian cattle, which were behalf of U.S. ranchers, said
banned in May 2003 after a the decision imperils U.S .
cow in Alberta was found to beef
.
have mad cow disease.
The USDA ''did not proAgriculture Secretary Mike vide significant justification
Johanns said the government for overturning a long-standwas alrt:ady working with ing pol icy that protected both
Canadian food inspectors to the U.S. cattle herd and U.S.
certify cattle for shipment.
consumers from the introducThe unanimous decision by tion of BSE," Bullard said.
American . Meat Institute
a three-judge panel of the 9th
U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals Pres ident J. Patrick Boyle
overturns a Monwna judge said the industry will be able
who blocked the-USDA from to resume cattle shipments
reopenin g the border · in quickly. "A lot of the prelimiMarch . saying it "subjects the nary work is already done. I
entire U.S. beef ·industry to think ymt'll see the industry
potentially catastrophic dam- move; quickly.'' he said . .
ages·· and "presents a genuine
Boyle said the ruling is also
risk of death for U.S. con- ··a win for American con sume rs who were paying
sumers:·
The justices said · they $1.85 .a pound for ground
would issue another ruling !.Jeef before the border closed
soon explaining their ratio- and are p;tying about $2.55
nale. ·
today."
The decision o.:ame a day
Speaking in Ottawa· before
after the Justic·e Department the appellate court was
urged the appeals court in · rekased. Boyle blamed the
Seattle to reopen the border to ban for the loss of more than
imports. Justice Department 8.000 jobs in the U.S. meat
attorney Murk Stern said lift- pa~king industry.
ing the ban is bused on "good
The Canadian Cattlemen 's
science" and would not result Association. which represents
111
the "infestation
111 some 90.000 beef producers,
estimates the y have lost more
American livest\ick:·
During the hearing. the than $5.6 billion since the ban
three juuges suggested that was established.
U.S . Distrio.:t Judge .Richard F.
"This is a tremendous vicCebuH perhaps should have . torv for the nprthwcst beef
given ucfcrcnce to the incfu stry:·
said
Cody
USDA'.s decision.
' Easterday. who runs an
Judge A. Wallace Tashima 18,000-hcad fccd lot in Pasta.
said the Jaw "does invest the Wash. "It's basically goi ng to
secretary of agriculture with a protect our future for many
certain amount of discretion.·' families that depend on the
Judge Connie Callahan beef industry for their liveliagrecd. saying the USDA is hood."
"entitled to some deference.
Mad cow disease is the
It 's their whole job to keep up common name for bovine
with the &gt;eience to make spongi form encephalopathy,
those decisions."
or BSE. People who eat meat
·cebull issueLI the order tainted with BSE can contract
months bcftire a scheduled a degenerative , fatal brain
trial that will weigh the cattle- disorder
called
variant
men\ science a~ainst that of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease.
the USDA. A t;ial on those More than 150 people died
competing views is scheduled from it following a 1986 outto begin July 27.
break in the United Kingdom.

..

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The.Daily Sentinel
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1

•

:0

LONG BOTTOM
Michael and Kim Bailey of
Long Bottom announce the
birth of a daughter. Cassidy
Shane, July 8, at' Ple:~sant
Valley
ho•pital.
She
weighed 8 ·pounds . I 0
ounces. She has a brother.
Benjamin Andrew.
Grandparents are Kim
Thomas-. Robert and Darlene
• Bailey, Cheryl and Jim
Graham, and a great -grand .mother, Bern,ice Baile y.

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992-2155
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Appalachian must c. the
bands unique sound brings
together a range of tunes.
both sweet and rousing.
From the soulful harmonies
of "Streets of Gold" to the
driving instrumentals of
"New Five Cents" Home
Remedy brings the comfort -

able feeling of friends sharing music on the front poro.:h
as in times past.
Band members Karen
Bump. Jeanie Creamer. and
Jamie Tevis. of all Athens.
Bea and John Hollback of
South Webster. and Mike
Thicken of Glenford.

Scholarship receives donation
POMEROY - · The Dave
Diles Scholarship Fund ha' been
enriched by a $1,000 donation.
Members of the scholarship
committee announced receipt
ofa gift from long-time Detroit
auto dealer Tom M.dnerncy. a
longtime friend of Diles.
"When first we met.'' said
Diles. "it w&lt;is beyond our
comprehension that I someday would launch a scholarship fund. and beyond Tom's
thinking that he would be able
to contribute to. it."
In a letter accompanying
hi s gift. Mdnerney s:tid he

\vas "delighted to help In furthering the . education of
someone In the Ohio Valley:·
. This year there . were ~6
applicants for the Diles scholarship . The award will be
announced early next month.
The scholarship is available to
students from Meigs. Mason
and Gallia Coumics and Is
based on need and academic
J}erfonnance. It can be used to
attend the college or university
of the recipient's choice. Gifts
to the scholarship fund are taxc~cmpt and may be senrto the
Racine Home National Bank .

tmr.. t~¢l!Y nt 11~~~ .
~lill\~OlR~~~RAutoAccidellls Workers'
Coqrpe11satio11
• !\r-lf1\ ln;um·,
• Mc.'l..h.:u.n:
• ,'\t' Ufll.l!K:IUf"('

Chimpr.K1Ct 1f 1'-: }l!ar

I~

\' P. W\ &lt;lllnf"'k.""'t!C S..1('JCI~
ttf r\ll'k,"fh:an H..IRT'd 1i

\km~r

hYl'f~ir rrril~'ii(NI :-.

:!1~ .~ r\ ~ \J).'TIC.Il.'\'
\lrmt'ori 1i 1\fl):ncan At&lt;l!.ktlll\

. The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street. Pomeroy. Ohio -+5769

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Complete the form below and enclos~ a snapshot or wallet siled picture plus
a $7.00 charge for each photograph . If more than one dtild is in the picture .
please enclose an additional $2.00 per child. l:.ndose payment 11 ith picture:
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July 22nd, 2005. Pictures can ·
be picked up after August 1st,
2005.

•, tlf \tf'dl~~l :k~nl1UR'

Ravenswood
Chiropr~c:ric: Center
~

Son of
Charles &amp;. April Roach
Gallipolis

The Daily Sentinel Baby
Edition is a Special Edition filled
with photographs of local
children - ages newborn to four
years old. The Baby Edition will
appear in the July 29th issue.
Be ·s ure your child, grandchild, .
or relative is involved!

Ravenswood, WV

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HURRY!! PICT RE DEADLii t.
FRIDAY July 22. 2 5! ·

�,.

,.

OPINION

The Daily Sentinel
•

The Daily S~ntinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

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

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

Congress shall make no law respectitrg an
establishment of religion, or prohibitit1g the •
free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom
of speech, or of the. press; or the right of the
people peaceably to assemble, and to petition
the Government for a redress of grievances. ·
-The First Amendment to the 'U.S. Constitution

TODAY IN
HISTORY
"

Today is Friday. July 15. the l'l6th day of 1005. There are
169 days left in the year.
Today\ Highlight in History : On July 15. 1975. three
American astronauts blasted off ab&lt;&gt;.~rd an Apol lo spaceshi p
hours after two Soviet cosmonauts were· launc hed ,tboard a
Soyuz spacecraft for a mission that included a linkup of the
two ships tn orbit.
On this date: In 1606. Dutch painter Rembra ndt was born in
Leidcn. Netherlands.
·
In 1870. Georgia became the last Confederate state readmitted to the Union.
In 1916, Boeing Co., originally known ,ts Pactfic Aero
Products, was founded 1n Seattle.
In 194li. President Truman was nominated f(&gt;r another term of
office by the Democratic nauonal convention in Philadelphia.
In 1964, Sen. Barry M. Goldwater of Arizona was nomi nated for president by the Republican national convention in
San Franci sco.
In 1965, U.S. scientists displayed close-up photographs of
tl)e planet Mars taken by Manner 4.
.
In 1971. 111 a surprise announcement, President Nixon satd
he would visn the People's Republit· of Cluna.
In 1976. a 36-ho'ur ktdnap ordeal began for 26 schoolchildren and thetr bus driver as they were abducted near
Chowchilla, Calif., by three gunmen and impnsoned in an
underground cell. (The captives escaped unharmed.)
In 1979 .. President Carter delivered his "malaise" speech
in whiCh he lamented what he called a "aisis of conll·
dence" in America.
In 1985. a gaunt-looking Rock Hudson appeared at a news
conference with actress Doris Day. (It was later revealed
Hudson was suffering from AIDS ).
Ten years ago: A 19-year-old sales clerk was rescued after
bemg buried in the rubble of a collapsed shopping mall in
Seoul, South Korea, for 16 days.
FivB years ago: The United Nations launched a successful
mi\itary operation to help 222 lndbn peacekeepers and II
military observers break out of a rebel stronghold 111 ·sierra
Leone. Lennox Lewis stopped Francois Botha at 2:39 of the
second round to retain his WBC and IBF heavyweight titles in
London. Former Rhode Island governor and longtime U.S.
Sen. John 0. Pastore died at age 93.
On~ year ago: President Bush signed . into law a measure
imposing mandatory prison terms for criminals who use identity theft in committing , terro~ist act~ and other orrcnses. The ·
Senate approved' a plan to pay tobacco farmers $12 billion to .
give up federal quotas propping up thetr prices. Retired Air
Force Gen. Charles W. Sweeney. who piloted the plane that
dropped the atomic bomb on Nagasak1 m the fmal days of
World War II , died in Boston at age 84.
Today's Birthdays: Republican Sen. George V Voinovich of
Ohio is 69 Singer Linda Ronstadt "59. Rock musician Marky
Ramone is 49. Actor-director Forest Whitaker is 44. Actress
Lolita Davidovich is 44. Actress Brigi tte Nielsen is 42. Actor
Kristoff St. John is 39. Actor-comeuian Eddie Griffin is 37. Actor
'Stan ](jrsch is 37. Actor Scott Foley is 33. Actor Brian A. Green
is 32. Rhythm-and-blues singe r Kia Thornton ([)ivme) 1s 24.
Thought for Today : "Love is mdescrihable and uncondiuon: al. I could t~ll you a thousand things that it is not . but not one
· ' that it is."- Duke Ellington. American jazz artist ( 1899-1974).

LETTERS TO THE
EDITOR
Leu en to the ~ditor are welcome. Th~) shouhi be less than
300 words. All /ellen· are .1ubject to editi" K· m1ot be Sl!(llfli.
and include address and telephone 1111111lm: Nu unsigned letters! will be published. Letter,\ should be in guud ta.ltt',
addressing i.\Sllt&gt;s, not persunalitin·. Letters (~f thank\· to urgll m zation.\ and indil'iduals will nut !J&lt;• accepted for fmblica(ioll.

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· Friday, July t::), 2005,

Friday, July 15; 2005

Obituaries

Looking back at Billy Sunday
...

m&lt;Lrried to a whiskeyThey are the · two most
soaked, red-eyed. shaky
famous Billys in the world
spccunen of a jug-handle of
of religion . But Billy Sunday
husband."
a
( 1862-1935) and Billy
Graham were as dtfferent as
He counseled the. young
. night and day. Whik
girls in hi s audience in paterGeorge
oaf tones: "A lways let your
Graham is the picture of dtgPlagenz
father see you r le ila . My litnity and decorum on the
tle daughter Helen used to
platform. Sunday would'
sa,y. ' I have a new beau, Pa ..
foam and mge in front of his.
audiences.
·
Look him over.· One time I
Nearly three generations ing the milk was a frequent · looked one over and I said to
before anyone had heard of pr;tcticc -· to make it go far- her. ' Honey, his eyes are too
the Electronic Church, Billy ther.
close to · hi s nose. Too much
Suncfty took front anJ center
One-evening after Sunday wolf and (oyo te i.n him. Pass
as the Jllost talked-about had ascended the platform. him up.' Let your fathers
evangelist of all time .
he asked hi s soloist, Homer look him over, girls. Fathers
When Sunday got warmed Rodehea ver, "What nigh t is know the earmarks."
llp on the evils of "card- thi s, Brother Rodeheaver'"'
Sunday "'as welcomed by
playmg,
dancing
and
"This
is
Milkmen:s huge crowds at his revivals..
booze," he could be a fearful Night.'' re~lieu Homer
which ' usually went on for
sight to behold.
"How shall we start the , six weeks in tabernacles
Eyes snapping. he woulu services?" asked Sunday.
built especially for the occastand before the tabernacle
''1 suggest." answered s1on.
crowds and shout that '·cards Rodehea ve r.'' that we all
Collections were 'enorand dancing are doing more sing. 'Shall We Gather at the mous . By 1920, Dun &amp;
to ruin the spiritual life of River'?' (a popular ,0 ospel Brad;treet rated · Sunday as
this nation than grog shops favorite).
.worth $1.5 million.
- ' and you can' t m:cust: me
It hroughtthe house down.
Sunday gave up a career as
of bemg friendly to that
After Sunday delivered h1s a· major leag ue baseball
sunking, dtrty, rotteri, hell - Prohtbllion
sermoll' player lo become an evangesoaked business."
("Crooks, Corkscrews and list Hi s nightly audiences
Can you imagine Graham Bootlegge rs"). a newspaper - were always large. Ouring a
saying that''
account
said, "Sunday 71-day stand in 'Boston in
But the fumous Billy whirled . about the platfimn 19 17. a total of 60,000 came
Sunday revival meetin g:-, on hands and knees with the forward to "accept Jesus.''
(comparable to Graham's quickne'S of a cat · and the
, During his 40-year minCrusades) had their lt ght mge of a tiger." shnttting istry. he preached .to more
SLde too.
invectives against liquor.
than IOU million people.
For one of Billy Sunday's
"If I had my way.'' foamed And that was long beforeJhe
six -week revivals in Canton,
Billy, "I ' d have every drop days of television , These
Ohio. in the winter of 1912. of liquor - and every lllilll were "hve audiences."
a large tabernade was con- who voted for ll - 1n hell
Sunday ucscribed his own
conversion like this:
, .
structed. Each night of the before midnight! "
Then nsmg to l1is feet hut
revival had a spectal desig"I "'alked . down State
nation - Butchers' Night, still in a rage, he addressed Street 111 Chicago one
Sunday afternoon with some
Mlrilmen's
Night , the ladies.
Milkme'n 's Night. elc.
"I tell you ..gtrls," he satd , " other bascb;1ll players. We
It was common kuowledge "I'd rather be a ... dried-ttp, entered a saloon and drank.
(ulthough vigorously denied ' nervous, tea-drinking, hatch - then walked to the corner of
by the mifkmen) that water- et-faced old maid than be State ;md Van ·Buren streets

www,mydailysentinel.com

Marjorie Leonard
' POMEROY - Marjorie A. Reuter Leonard, 79, Pomeroy,
passed away on July 14, 2005 at Overbrook Center in
Middlepon.
'
'·
She was born on Jan. 20, 1926, in Pomeroy, daughter 6 f the
late Lorenzo and Anna Grueser Reuter. She was a homemak~r and a n:'ember of the Trinity Church of Pomeroy.
In addrtton to f:ter parents, she was preceded by her brothers,
Lawrence
and George (Lou) Reuter; her sis•ters. Helen
•
(Norman) Heilman and Charlotte (Roy) Davis ; and sisters-in. law and brothers-in-law : Betty Conkle, Dorothy Miley and
Harry (Genevieve) Leonard .
She is surv1vcd hy her husband of 60 . years. Lawrence
Le~nard: Pomeroy :. a daughter. Louann,a Leonard, Groveport:
a Stster-m-law, Lms Taylor of Kenton. brothers- in-law, Jim
Conkle,_ Cheshire, and Gene Miley, Baton Rouge , La.; and
•
many ~rece s and nephews.
Serv1ces wtll be held at 2 p.m. on Sunday, July 17, 2005, at
the Pomeroy Chapel of Fisher Funeral Home with Rev.
• Jonathan Noble ofl'tciating. and burial in Meigs Memory
Gardens.
•
Friends may call from 6 to 8 p.m. on Saturday at the funeral home, and an hour prior to the funeral.
Friends may send online condolences to www.ti sherfuneral homes .com.

where we sat on the curb listening to some men and
women playing on coronets
and trombones and singing
Gospel hymns that stirred
memories 'o f my mother's
God. I turned to the crowd
that sat there with me and
said, 'Boys, I bid the old life
goodbye.' and he · did. He
was 25. Billy Sunday's
strong suit as a player was
not as a hitter but as a base
runner. He had blazing speed
on the base-paths, prompting
the remark, "If only Sunday
could steal first!"
Sunday was known to be a
phrasemaker extraordinaire. ,
Some famous "Sundayisms" include:
• ''Your reputation is what
people say about you. Your
character is what Goq and
your wife know about you."
• "Going to ~burch doesn't make a man a-Christian
any more than going to a
garage makes him an automobile."
• "They tell me a revival is
only temporary. So is a bath
but it does you good."
When people charged
Sunday with being crude in
his manners. he admitted it.
"I'm a rube of the rubes,"
he said. "I am a hayseed of
the hayseeds - and the
odors of the barnyard are on
me yet. I have drunk coffee
out of my saucet and have
eaten with my knife. I have
said 'I done it' when !·should
have said 'I did it' - but I
expect to go heaven just the
same."

"Melting.
Clocks and
Square
Oranges''
Debra Conner, a writer-in-residence
for the Ohio· Arts Council and West
Virginia Arts Commission, and
Zelda ,,Fitzgerald in this week's
Ohio Chautauqua program in
Chester, conducted a youth art
program Thursday at Riverbend
Arts Council headquarters m
Middleport. The workshop covered
Cubism and Surrealism, which
emerged as radtcal art movements
during the 1920's, the penod high'·
lighted by the history-based
Chautauqua program.
B~an

Local Briefs

J. Rood/photo

ca study

.

Plan immunization clinic
POMEROY - Meigs Coucty Health Department will conduct a childhood immunization clioic from 9 to II a~ m . and I
to 3 p.m. on Tuesday. The child's shot records must be pmvided: Children must be accompanied by a parelll or legal
guardtan, and medical cards must be provided. A $5 donation
is accepted but nobody will be denieu servtce .
·
.

·Homecoming planned
CARPENTER - The annual homecoming of the Mt.
Union Baptist Church ncar Carpenter will be observed 0 n July
31. Sunday School begins at 9:45 a.m. A carry-in dinner will
be served at noon. The afternoon &gt;ervice beg111s at I :30 p.m .
featuring the New Creation Quartet singing, and the Rev.
Mark Morrow pastor of the Middlepo~ f:irst Baptist Church
as speaker. For more in[ormatimi, contact Pastor David
Wiseman at 742-2568.

(George P/agenz is an
ordained minister and veter- ,
w1 newsman
based in
Columbus, Ohio.)

The Daily Sentinel • Page t\5

Roush reunion announced

findings. DuPont could be
Only
restdcnt s
who
required to spend a.nother rece tved the Water for at least
$235 mtllion to monitor re s- a year before December ~­
· fro in Page A1
idents' health.
2004. are eligibl.c. but Collins
"The more participants we satd anyone who has rece l\·cJ
Co!fin.s said Th~_rsday the have. the more valid the data water from one of those two
meeting wi II include a 20- is going to be." saiu Dr. Paul districts within a 50-year
minute presentation about C8 · Brooks. who will oversee the period are eltgible to partiCl·
and the health study. fol- collection process wiih pate. Collins sc11d the ex·
lowed by a question · and retired h·ospital administrator Health Project is encouraging
an swer session. She said the. Art Maher. Both were eligible participants to regissame information presented appointed by the Wood ·'ter onlme for the studtes,
Circuit
Court. because 11 saves ttme for both
at the public meeting is also County
will
receive
$150 the a'gency conduct ing the
Residents
available
online,
at
to answer a health question- study and its particip;mt, .
www.C8HealthProject .com.
The project goal is to com- natrc. If they agree to submit Those without internet access
plete the collection process iti a blood sample. they will may call (800) 551 -7658 in
one year and turn the in[or- receive an additional $250. order to register. but it will
mation over to a court- Residents will w'alk out of the take longer . for them to
appointed panel of three epi- co llection centers with a receive appointm~nts, she
demiologists .' Based on the check. Maher said.
said.

DuPont agrc~d. ll) lh L'
he.tlth \l'l't'Cnlllg_.., to -.L·II It: J
200 1 l,tMuit filed b1 te, i· ·
dents ll'ho alleged the tom pan) mten lHlll.tll} 1\·itll held and
mJsrepre..,c-ntc-d inf()rtnattl)n
concerniAg thL' nature and
extent of the human hcaltlt
th reat posed by C8 in drm k·ing w,tter. 'About $70 millio11
ha &gt; been all&lt;icateu for resi ·
dent payments and lah ll'ork .
Though used smcc \Vnrld
War II. • CH's long-term
effc&lt;.:t~
on
human . , ;,m.:
unknown. A federal sc1enufil·
review panel has said ,the
chemical is "likely" to be carcinogen!( to htnnans. but
DuPont officials have disputed the draft report
1

Sheriff's
Office
was recent Pomerov Villag e Township Ttustees who hu\'C
been mainL . unin1! th e :-, Ji t:
installing a new repeater Council meeting. ·
which
deals
with
dispatching.
said
he
believed
he
had
Qrdmancc -+29 to adopt the
Hill
DeGRAFF - The 294th an'niversary of the Roush and
2005
edllion of the Ohio ·
been
one
of
the
officers
in
Poli
ce
The
Syracuse
from Page A1
Allied Families Association of America Inc. will have a ·
Department
dispatches downtown as Syracuse often Basic Code was passed dur·
reunion Aug. 5 and 6 at DeGraf[, located eight miles west of
1ng an emcrurcncv measure
through
the
Sheriff's
Office . assists .Pomeroy on calls.
Bellefontaine. The reunion banquet , auction, group ptctures,
rhis money would be used
that
dtd not requtre three pub''It's
a
gopd
thing
that
we
·Dugan
informed
council
picnic and business meeting will be held at the Wmner 's for well pit repair, a well
lic
readings.
go
down
and
help
them
."
Harvest Barn, on the south side of S.R. 135. Reservations arc pump and motor on one of that the Sheriff's Office had
For legal purposes a motion
to be made and paid for by July 23 to Sheldon F. Roush, 117 Syracuse's two water wells. asked that the villages or . Dugan said . "We're going to was passed to made the fire
Rut land
and go down and help them durMarshall Drive , Mt. Lebonan. Pa. 15228- I 789. The headquar- The Syra&lt;;_use Water Board Racine,
ing the Big Bend Blues Bash. department oftictally known as
ters will be open by 4 p.m on Aug. 5. Famihes are asked to would come up with ·· the Syracu se combine to pay They get swamped."
the Syracuse Ftre Department.
remaining $3.450 \t,o com- one-\hird of the new equiptake photos of any Roush's known or unknown.
Dugan also · noted that and 'the associatmn known a~
plete the $\6.150 esti m~e for ment's cost which was esti- Syracuse re sidents should be the
Svracuse
Volunteer
the repairs.
·
· mated to be $1600 per vil- aware that there is no burning Firefighters AssoctdtJnn
The
Meigs
County lage : Middleport Village was permitted in the vi II age
It was :111nounced that Scotl
Commissioners recently sub- also asked to pay one-third of unless it is brush and even Kimes was named cht el for
MIDDLEPORT ~ Swimming lessons begin . Monday at mitted a request to the Ohio the costs while the Sheriff's
Middleport Pool. The cost is $30. Assistant Manager Jim Depanment of Development Office would pay for the then a permit must be the EMS 'quad located at the
obtained . The tine [or illegal fire department while J.tck
Brewer will be the instructor. Classes will be offered for for approval of the release of remaining third.
.
Peterson was named assistant
Pomeroy was not included burning is $165.
beginners at 9 a.m., and intermedmte at 10 a.m. and advanced CDBG funds for the purpose
chief
of the SyractLSe squad
Clerk-Treasurer Sharon
because its police department
swimmers at I I a.m. , l)nd will continLLe through July 22 .
of well repair in Syracuse.
J. P. Varian. was approved
Cottrill made council memStudents can pre-register at the pool on Saturday and Sunday.
Syracuse Water Board does their own dispatching bers aware that if she became to join the Syracuse Fire
Classes will continue the week of July '25 and Aug. I if there President
Gordon separate from the Shenff's ill or incapacitated at 'least Department.
Winebrenner also announced Office.
is sufficient interest.
All members o[ council
Counoil passed a resolution one of them was lawfully were present for the mel!tmg
that the board voted to raise
required to learn her job and
water bills in Syracuse by $3 allowing Dugan to pay no step in during emergencies
beginning with the August more than $1600 from the
Council voted to deed
SPRING VAlLEY CINEMA7
law enforcement trust fund to
Snowball
Cemetery
to
Sutton
446-4524
MOVIE HCTLINE
VINTON - A meeting for those interested in the Applied statement.
"We didn't want to ratse it the Sheriff's Office.
FRI7/15105THURS 7/211()5
Associate of Technical Studies. a new partnership program but were compelled to,"
Syracuse Assistant Police
Box OH~e Opens@ 6:30PM Nlghlly
between the University of Rio Grande and American Winebrenner said about . the Chief Ryan Hill reponed that
&amp; 12:30PM for Wed· Sun Matinees
Electric . Power, will be held at 6 p.m. o~ July.,, 19 in room need to 'cover operating the police cruiser "'as driven
NOW SHOWING SUMMER
Ill of the Bob Evans Farms Hall. Call 1-800-282'7201 for expenses and get the board just under I ,000-miles la,,t
MATlNE~S· WED THRU SUN
• Home Oxygen
more information .
CHARLIE &amp; THE CHOCOLATE
out of "the red" as he called it. month .
•
l'ortahle
Oxygen
Hill
also
commented
on
a
FACTORY (PG)
·
The new water rates \viii be
•
:'llebulizers
t:OO 3:10 7:00 &amp; 9:10
$16 . for regular customers. Pomeroy resident's co mWEDDING CRASHERS (R)
$14.50 for seniors and $29 plaint that four Pomeroy • Electric Beds
police crutsers were recently • Wheelchairs
1:15 :30 7:15 &amp; 9:30
POMEROY - Friday's Chautauqu,a adult workshop will for businesses.
concentrated
in
the
down·
Syracuse
Police
Chief
FANTASnC
FOUR (PG13)
•·I&gt;Iapers
take pice I0:45 a.m. at the Meigs County Senior Center.
town
area
at
the
same
time.
Kevin
Dugan
informed
coun1:
: 0 &amp; 9: 0
• Chux
Ca'lled, "The Crack Up." the program will deal with Zelda
The
complaint
w;h
made
at
a
that
the
Meigs
County
cil
DARK
WATER
(PG13)
• Medicare/Medicaid
Fitzgerald 's husband. author F Scott Fit zgerald and hLS last
1:t0'
3:20
7:10
&amp; 9:20
years that were marked by depression and gloom in is work .
WAR 0~ THE WORLDS (PG13)
We do the billing locally
Friday's Chautauqua youth workshop will take place at 2 p.m.
clinic
followed
·an
earlier
t :20 3:20. 7:20 &amp; 9:20
at the Meigs County' Library, Pqmeroy Branch. Called.
Lncal/v owned.
announccn)cnt of the emerBEWITCHED (PG13)
We care 'about J 0lt!
"Crayon Enlargements or Life: Stories in the Folk Tradi'tion .''
gence
of
O
'
Biencss
1:20
3:20 7:20 &amp; 9:20
· this w9rkshop will discLLss Zora Neale Hurston's "big olu lies"
70 Pine Street • Gallipolis .
Memorial
Hospital
and
affili
. from Page A1
HERBIE FULLY LOADED (G)
from her book "Mules and Men' ' and participants will also
740·446-0007
ates
into
a
multi-faceted
,
1:10,3:10,7:10 &amp; 9:10
work together to create new stories [rom their own personal
organization.
The
new
des
tgToll Free 877·669·0007
from 4:30 to 6 p.m. at the·
experiences. The youth .workshop is for ages eight and up.
nation
for
the
expanded
orgaclinic. The ribbon cutting cer-·
emony will take place at 4:30 nization 1s the · 0' Blenc"s
The
Health
System
p.m .
Sheltering
.
Arms
..
Hospital
Appointments to see a
l9 X 66
physician
can be maue by Foundation will continue to
Makenzie
O'Hare
of
Sheridan
POMEROY - Annuallv the
Solid
Top- Java
'1wi1 and operate the System.
M.E Municipal Group. &lt;m engi- High School in Perry County. calling 740-992-9158.
distressed
The announcement of the it w"s announced.
neering firm , awards scholar- The company received 94
W/ 6 1/2" Steam
ships to high school seniors applications from students in
Bent
from Southeast counties in 12 southeastern Ohio coun0
ties, including Meigs.
which they had employed.
0
Caprail Rail Side
Q .
Sele'ctiun was based on U1e
Thi s year's $2,000 scholarChairs
ships went to Brice Newton of intent to study civil engineering.
Maysville High School in academic strengths. and volunMuskingum County and teer work ih the community.

Levy

Swimming lessons offered

0
6
•

Rio Grande and AEP program

The battle for the O'Connor seat
Back when everybody
Women .
the
National
assumed 'that the first resigAbortion and Reproductive
nation from the Supreme
, Rights Action League. the
Court would be that of the
Sierra Club. MoveOn.org ,
ailing Chief Justice William
etc. And they have raised
H. Rehnquist, the battle to
tens of millions of dollars to
William
replace him looked relativesaturate the airwaves (espeRusher
ly harmless. President Bush
cially in the states of vulnerwould nominate a conservaable senators) with propative to replace him , and the
ganda ag;.1inst the nominee.
Democrats would spend a
The Republicans have also
"'eek or so howling that the for the" liberals to amass a been rai smg a war chest nominee was "far out of the five -vote majority for their and have been choosing thetr
mainstream ." but eventually jLLdtciar preferences. Their,, ge nerals for the battle with
they would acquiesce in ,his only hope. in fact, wtll be cxrraordinary shTewdness. In
confirmation without a lilt- Justt ce Anthony Ke nnedy, top command. apparently.
buster. The ideological com- who hke Justice O'Connor, will he Boyden Gray, the
plexion of the Court woulu has occasionally wobbled able lawye r who was ge neral
not he changed at all ~ and int\) the liberal camp.
counsel to' Bush 41. As chief
that is the best that the
•public
spokesman, the White
So th e first battle over a
Democrats. in a Bu'h Bush nomination to th e Hoitse has tapped Ed
administration . can po"ihly ' Court, far from being one in Gillespie; the former chairhope for.
·· •
which the liberals h;lvc little man Of the Republican
But this picture changed to lose. has sudde nl y National Com mittee. who is
completely when JLLsticc become · one that liberals known as a particularly
Sapdra D.ty O'Connor sur- must wage wi th all th etr · cffccttvc speaker. And. in
prised the world by resign- might. On the other stdc of what may he the cleverest
ing first. O'Connor has beeii. the coin. Busl1 reah~es that move of .all , the . nominee
for many year,, LLndepenu- winning the battle to rcpl.1&gt;e wil l be uccompanied. in his
ahly conscrvauve. ' Indeed. O'Connor with a steadfast appearance s before the
she has become- tJ1c chief conservat ive -is very proba- Senate Judiciary Committee,
'"swing vote.. on tl1e Coun , hly the on ly chance he ,wi ll
by Fred Thompson, the for-.
JOimng 1ts four sohd f\berals have . to make a meaningful mer Tennc~scc senator who
(Pa ul Stevens. David H. change in the Court's com - ldt pplitics ftlr a career in
' Souter. Stephen G. Breyer plexion .
motion ptcturc' and televiand Ruth Bader Ginsburg) to
For ei ther side. therel(&gt;rc. a sion and is partic ularly wellproduce nmjorities in unum- loss
may
1July
he know,n as the sa lty _District
ber-of vital ca,cs where the Armageddon .
Attorney on "Law &amp; Order."
liberals would othcrwtsc ·
Accordingly.
the Thomp,on is well-liked by
have gone down 10 ·dCieat. Democr~\ls have heen fc\i:r- ' se nJtOl s on both sides of :he
To he sure. she h'" also ~ad i, hly busy mobilizing the aisle. and should be of en or·
her co n:-.t:l \'alive d,ty~. hut \ari" u' prc"urc ~nHIP' they tnou' a"tstance when the
there· is simph no quc,tion can co unt on tn fight at their nom i_nee 1' bcmg gril led by
that her rcpl.tccmcnt hy a ,iJe: Ralph Nca,\ l'eopk ,'tu:h
unappeasable
for
,the
Amcric;tn
Wav.
the
trul y dcpcnd:ihle 'C&lt;HlservaDemoc rat s as Sen. Charles
ti \'e "ill make it f[tr harder Natipnal Organit.atio;l for Schumer of New Yo"rk .

That the battle will be b~- ·
t&lt;il goes without saying.
Senators like Schumer will
insist on knowing how the
nominee proposes to vote, as
a justice, on such touchy
issues as abortion. The nominee, almost certainly, will
decline to answer such questions, citing the recent precedent of such Clinton nominees a.1 Justices Breyer and
Ginsburg. The compromise
hammered out by the socalled Gang of Fourteen will
predictably collapse, with
some of the Democrats
announcing this is one of
those ·:extraordinary circumstances" that, under the compromise, justify a filibuster.
A
number
of
their
Republican colleagues will
' thereupon endorse majority
leader Frist's call for the
invocation ·of the "constitutional option" (or "nuclear
option." if you prefer) to ban
filibusters on judicial nominees, and the fat will be in
the lire. ·
The grim fact (grim, that
is, from the Democrats '
standpomtl is that Frist will
almost certainly hav.e the
necessary 51 votes to winand there Will · go theDemocrats' hope of a filibuster and, with it, their last
chance to beat Bush.
I can hardly wait.
( William Rusher is a
Disti11guished Fellow of the'
Claremont Institute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy.)

Friday Chautauqua workshops

O'Bieness

1

Engineering firm awards scholarships .

tttttttttttttttttt
'

Mid-Valley
Christian School

CIRCUS-IPECTAtULAR

VAtATION BIBLE ICHOOL

Now enrolling for 2005-2006 school
year Students in 4 year old.Pre . . .
Kindergarten through 6th grade.
For information or a tour of the school
Call 740-992-6249
Providing Quality education
- . Since ·I985.

tttttttttttttttttt
.

.

.. j~[j' i8iiz- - ·22ni

"""GAMES. CRAFTS. BIBLE STORIES
AND GOOD MUSIC
""JUlY 22ND FRIDAY FAMILY FUN FEST
""FOOD, CARNIVAl GAMES
BEGIN AT 6:30

liTLAND CHURCH OF

."Americana"
Queen sleeper &amp;
matching chair
11&lt; 1/2 Recliner

'

TJ.;fl:

NAZARENE
Main St. • Rutland

740~742-2202
r

�:
?

FAITH • VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

Pastor
Thorn
Mollohan

truth" different f1om my truth
so You hve by your truth and I
wtll live by my truth."
It d tree tails in the forest. it
tails tn the lorest no mdtter my
taJiure to rccogmze 1t It IS d
tact, and we nldy therefore
make an .tbsolute statement
abou t 11 Yes. It really tell 111
the forest. Moreover, when tt
fell , the energy re ledsed in Its
falling resulted m some V lbr&lt;~­
t!Ons SOUND waves We can
split hai1 s and sa} that 1t d1dn' t
make sounds because no one
he,rrd 11. but 1t sttll produced
those sound waves
A stmtl.tr thmg 1s (dare I say
tt'') true til the realm ot the
sptntudl If .t spmtu,tl pnnctple
or

4l

mordl 1mperat1\e are true,

they .1re true In fact, they &lt;rre
true ev.e n 1f I disagree with
them or refuse to acknowledge·
them And tf somethmg IS no t
true then 1t " " mply not true
Perhaps 1t 1s a blatant li e.
md~be 11\ a mJStakc. or even a
toke.
Most ot us understand how
fhJS works m the matter of our
taxes A blatant lie m your
ye.rr-end taxes could result m
dose encounters. of the pnson
kmd Ltttle tmstakes or miscalculations can qwckly turn into
expensive penalties and tines
And, m case you've never
noliced, the IRS. doe sn't often
appear to have much m the
way at a sense of humor .
unless ot course , they're the
ones makmg the JOkes
As t,lf .ts they· re concerned,
tf you owe taxes, you owe
taxes Denial. rattonaltzattons
to the contrary. and even good·
natured mJscalculattons cannot
alterthe fact that tf you have to
pay &lt;md you have to pay on
thetr terms Of .course, let us
pomt out that It 1s importanl to
get to the WHOLE truth (who
Wdnts to pay more taxes than IS

Church Briefs
Homecoming
planned

31 Sunday School begtns Bapttst Church as speak· Barboursvtlle, W Va will
at 9 45 a m A catry-m er. For more inlormat ton, be at the Langsvtlle Full
Pastor
David Gospel Church, Oh1o 124
dmner will he served at co ntact
noon. The afternoon ser- Wt se man at 740-742-25 68 near Rutland. 7 p m. nightly Frtday through Sund,ty
The VICe begms at I 30 p m

CARPENTER
annual homecomtng of the
Mt Union Bapti st Church
near Carpenter wtll be
observed on Sunda y Jul y

Special meeting

featuring the New Creat1on
Quartet stng1ng, and the
Rev. Mark Mon ow pastor
LANGSYitLE Gene
ot the Middle port F1rst an d Trina Withams of

Friday, July 15, 2005

to mtmster and
smg.
Pastors are Robert and
Roberti! Musser For more
information call 992-3630

'

Friday, July 15, 2005

Fello.wship
Apostolic

Second Haplisr C hurrh
Ra,en~"ood WV. Su nday Schuol 10 am·
, Mommg worship II am Evemng 7 pm .
Wednesday 7 p m

Church ur Jesus Christ Apostolic

Ahab' was kmg of Israel. a
w1cked ktng who h&lt;id "smned
Jonathan
agamst the Lord more than
Noble
any ot hts predecessors." He
Pastor, Trlnlly
Church.
wa s married to a wtcked
woman. Jezcbel, and worshtped the 1false gods of her
people. parttcul~rly Baal
The people of Israel, or at
le,ISt a good many at them, spoke and asked, "How long
had followed then king's will you falter between two
exa mple 111 paymg homage to optmons. How tong will you
thi s de1ty whtle at the same straddle the fence, servmg
ttme pretendmg to worshtp Baal and pretending to serve
the Lord, the one .tnd only the Lord God as well? How
t1ue God, the God of long v.ill you compromtse
Abraham, Isaac and Jacob.
your allegiance?"
Then. followin g three years
Ltke Joshua before him,
of drought sent by God upon Elijah said m so many words,
Israe l as pLmishment for the1r "Choose for yourselves this
infidelity, the Lord instructed d.ty whom you will serve." If
Ht s prophet. EliJ ah, to chat- the Lotd is truly God, follow
len2e Ahab and hundreds of and worship h1m , but tf Baal
fat ,Te ' prophet s to a show- 1s God, then give yourselves
down , to demonstrate beyond completely to him.
all doubt who was truly God
And what dtd the people
And what dtd Eltph do answer to thi s challenge''
first ' What was hts mttial What was their reactton 0
move' Dtd he address Aha b. Were there men and women
who had ''butlt a temple to there that day, who knew in
Baal 111 Sdmana and made an thetr hearts that the Lord
altar tor hnn 1" D1d he move alone was God? Was there a
first to challenge 'the puests man among them JUSt ready
ot Baal? .
· to speak yet held back by
Dtd he gtve a lengthy theo- fear. doubt . or pride? We are
logtcal cj tssertatton on the onl y told "the people
supe11onty of Jehovah-wor- answered htm not a word ..
sh1p o'er pagan religions? Stlence Deafening silence.
No He thd none at thts ,
Do you name the Name of
1athe1, he turned fi JSt to the Chnst0 Have you been recon assembly, the co ngregatton of ciled to God the Father'
lsJael, the people culled and through Jesus, Hts only Son
gat hered by God.
our Lord'' Have you received
And Elijah went straight to the Sptrtt of adoption and do
the pmnl. H1s 'challenge was you mtend to Irve tn the Light
both d1 rect and penetrattng of H1s Truth and walk m Hi ~;
"How long. do you mean to wavs·J
hobble f1rst on one leg then
"Then my friends," as St
on the ut her? If Yahweh is Paul satd, "because of God' s
God. follow htm , 1t Baal, tot- great' mercy to us I appeal to
low hnn."
you. Offer yourselves as a
The kmg needed to be chal- hvmg sacrtti ce to God , dedilenged. ot course, as pollltcal cated to hts serv ice and pleastedders often do The relt- mg to h1m. ThiS " the true
gwus cstabltshment certainly worshtp that you should
needed to be challenged offer."
Muke no miStake about 1t.
No straddltng the fence, no
though, these poltttcal and compromtstng wtth th~ gods
reltgtous instttuttons need not of thJS age, wholeheartedly
have been opposed had the commit yourself to God
people been faithful
th10ugh Jesus Chri st a11d be
Remember. It was to the filled with Ht s Spmt No
people, the whole asse mbly more s1lence becau se ot
ol Israel, that the Lord said. doubt. fear or pride, raise
"And you shall he to Me a your votce for the world to
ktn gdom ot pnests and a holy hear tn pratse and thanksgivnallon ." It was to the congre- mg.
gallon of people, the Israel of " Turn away tram Baal and
God th at the Lord said, other fal se gods, the insidtous
"'Thou shalt have no other phtlosophies of our ttme and
all ot the tllustons and false
gods before Me"
The people were responst- trapptngs of &gt;Oclety. Take up
ble and so "'Ehp h stepped out your cross and follow Htm
Ill I runt of all the people" first who dted and rose again that
with tht s challenge. It was to we mtght dte no more, even
the congregation the prophet Jesus Christ our Lord Amen

VanZa nd1 and W11rd Rd
M11ler Sunday S~.:hoo l
E\emng 7 30 p m

P11stor James
lO 30 a m

River Valley
AIJOS inhc Worohlp Ce nter 873 S 3rd

Ave , Middleport, Kevm Kon~l e Pastor,
Sunda~ l 0 30 a fn
V..edncsday 7 00

Pastor Rev Walter

·r

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·r

·r

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·r

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·r

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'7 00 p m , Pastor Man y R

Thurs

Hutton,.

Hrmlock Grov~ C hnstlan C llurcb
M1n 1s1er La rl) Brov.n Worsh ip • 9 lO
am Sum.la} School 10 30 am B1hle
51Udy-7pm

Assembly of God
Liberty Assembly of God
P O Bo~ 467 Oud.Jmg Lane
W Va
P~stur
Nc1l lcnnaul
Scn.tc~ ~ lO OOa m .md7pm

Pomeroy Church of C hrist

Mastin
Sunda}

C arpenter Baptist Chun:h
Sunda;. S(hou l
9 10mn Prc:K hmg
Scn.• 1c~

10 :\&lt;)am

2 I 2 W Mam Sl. Sunday School • 9 30
am
Worsh 1p lO ~0 am 6 p m

Chtshlrr BaptiSt Church
am Murnm~ Wnrsh1p HI 10 am Su nday
~\ll mn g 6 l(l pm W~tJnc,iJ, I V (l 10pm
Uopt' Bapllsl C hurcl\ (Southern I
&lt;;,JO Gr IIll St M1dd lrport Sunda\ ,:o,: h•"'-11

9 10 ,1m W11rsh1p I I •I Ill ,mJ 6 pIT\
W~dn~ ~d.l) Sen tn
7 I'm

Srhool II am Worship lOa m 6 p m
Wednesday Scn"e~ 7 p m

~l h

i'

i'

·i'

i'

i'

·r

i'

Roofing &amp; Building Work

Pomeroy, OH
740-992-6215

ARCADIA NURSING
CENTER
Coolvtlle, Oh10
Lo~.: att.:d lc:-.s th.m ~0 mmutcs h om
t\t h~n' Pomeroy or P&lt;~rkc r..;h urg

1-740·667-3156
1
' Still small enough to &lt;:are"

Dain.1

l'&lt;~~tor

'~U

East Ma1n St
Ill ()0 1m WeJ B1l'&gt;k

pm

hrst Southern Haph~t
-l i S7~ Pumrro\ P,kc Pa\1 11r E L 1m.1r
0 B ry&lt;~ nt Sunda~ s~ht&gt;!l] • 1,1 ~u I m
"'"' ~h1p

~

Brazier
700 N 2nd St.

'"'

Middleport, OH

740-992-3322
( 7-lO) 99 2-M"i J

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

1; am ~ -l ' um &amp; 7 011
7( KII&gt;11l

r 111

10 ]'\ &lt;~ m
700 pm
Wl.'dncsda\ Sen ILl.: 7 00 rIll

SLIJOI.JI

29670 Bas'han Rd.
Racine, OH
dot ltntc:htd OUt in the III.IA on
hu nothina M do. no pia«! ro &amp;o. ht't just

s th•n OI"J'thiiiJ U puceful U a aJupina

a warm tummtr c1.,r lhis doc

PO. Box 683
Pomero , Oh1o 45769·0683

balltlns.' in cht hot SrUmhint. What • life! Mow. whtn a aqu irn:l runt by or
th• n.eilhbor'$ dos barks. he1111e resttd and ready ~ o a~ ·
When do . . ao when •• need All and peace to ttore up tiM flY for
th• nut activity In Dilr busy livear Somttinws

wt could

sunshine . Perha,a the,. Is anorh•r p~oe I() find rut
ru4.••...uic. where the aood way •. and .... in it. and

warm
W*

use .a nap i n the
In

)'II*

lrt,.miah 6 :16
wtll find real

for your souh.'"

Tht plac.• for ... to diKOWr the "tood war" h coer. h4uM ANn'• . .
lookint far "Goer• way .. t lan"t it the b.st war to find t;he peac;e and rest that
,...wnat:n usr 8r welldnc vrith God in Hb house w• find rht rest for our MOl
that tlfts meanins and purpote to our not actNitr
~- ---~--- .Jf- - ~--

-t99 Richland Avenue, Athe ns

740·594·6333

t ·800-45 I -91106

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

,, m

0

~0

pm

SCI'\ In'S 6 30 pIll

Ponr.:n•) Ha.rn sr nntllc Rd (RI 14ll
Pthtf1r Roger WaiM)rl Sundav Slhnr1l

9 iU a rn . Wor,hlp • 10 1U a m
p m Wedncsu~y sl'rl ILl'S 7 pIll

7 UU

740-949-2217
S1zes avatlable

5x10 to 10 x 20

If ye pbfde ill Me. and My
words abide i11 you, ye shall
ask wlral ye will, a11d it •hall
be done unt(J :rou.
John 15:7

Pa.~tr1r

1J

'Scf\ 1~t:~ 7 IK) I' 111

MEIGS FANttLY EYECARE, LLC
A. JACKSON BAlLES, 00

507 Mutherr) Heights
l'omeroy. Ohio 45769 ~.
t740.) \IIJ2.J279
~
Tot •' rcc t -877-S83-2433

Sundd)

f1c

-~~

Pa,tor Ke1 L.1rr} Lcmle) Sund.1' Sd11K&gt;I
i,i10um \\lohlup , 10 ..!~ Jill 7pm
~nuth

~

Latter-Day Saints

SCHill'~

Mth

Sundav S~.: h uol
I 0 .t m 6 30 p 111

M11nrl'

Wor~htp

Wed nc:&gt;Ja~

Smd}

00

lltlls1d e Hapltsl ( hul'\h
St Rt 14 1 IU• t nff Rt 7 P1stnr Rl.'&gt;
J.u m ~ R Ant:~.:
Sr Sund&lt;l) Lntllcd
10 \0 am

6 pm

f

l&lt; &lt;.:c~n

W\ n~h1p

IO,t m

7 pm

rl 1(J p m

De:\lcr Chur1:h of l' hrt ~l
Suhd,lv ....:houl '1 ~0" Ill SunJa\ ll&lt;!f•hlp

lnt~..r,~ l llnn

7 and 1::!-l \1.

E' mg.:h&lt;a

W~Jncsda)

D1 hk Stud \ • 7 p 111

Christian Union

~

Christian l 'm un
Ha rt ford W Va l'a~lO r D.n 1J Greer
Sund:n Sdn•ul
IJ 10 am ..,...,,r,hq'
S(f\JL~'

S~hool

\\,,r•hlp

Ill

~'i

Su11d~y

llmne Cooli.ed Meals &amp; Ou1ly Specwls
wee~

a Ill

r\ntiquln Bapt1st
Sehou l &lt;; lO am \\tlr,hlp

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

10 am

6 00 ]l m .

Wednesday Sen ICCS

•

7 p m.

E&gt;entng
7 p 111

fl pm

\\o:dn e&lt;;~,ln'&gt;' S~,:nl~o:es

'

your light so shine before
that they may see your
works and glonfy yo ur
I Father 111 heaven."
Matthew 5 16

7

Jane

Snnda1 S&lt; lmnl

pm

s~r\11.~'

am

pm

to

\\cdn (~d~'

10

Scr' llC'

7

P&lt;l,Wr

Ill a 111

Wedncsda\

Scl'\'tc~~ -

6 \0 p m

C hurc h or God of Prophecy

K&amp; C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy
992-3785

Mtddleport , OH

Wor .. hip

to;oam
Refiis, lllr
9 ~U a m Sunda} School •

Wm~h1p

10 30 a m

FIN Sundah.lf M1m1h

l•

...................
·-ll··-41111

.,. ••2.....

740·992-6128

Local source for trophies.
Ia ues l·shtns and more

KEHLER
BUSINESS SERVICES
A 11 lm:ome Tax &amp;
Pi11a11cial Services Firm
61 X E Mum Street • Pomeroy
1740) 992-7270

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
words abide ill you, ye shall
'sERVICES
ask what ye will, and it shall
214 E. Main
be done unto you.
992-5130
Joh11 15:7
Pomeroy

Oavls-Qulckel Agency Inc. If ye abide ill Me, and My
Full l1ne of

•

AGENCIES fnc

Bill Quickel

Insu rance
Products+
F 1nanctal
Serv tces

992-&amp;&amp;n

Whitf;l Funeral Home
Since 1858
9 Ftfth Street
Coolville, Ohio
740-667-3110

tfrr1
ANDERSON ·
FUNERAL HOME
174 la1nt Strttt • PO Rn1 270
fb l tn. \\\ 25265
Jamts H AMerson Lll'fnsrci Funrnl Dirtttor
Ht1d1 S
Fonothought runrral P\anmne

'f"

JhKL Sund 1\ Slh""l

10

~m

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

t\

( hurlh·~rll&lt;c

1&gt; iOpm

7 pm

( om munll\ ( hun.h
1,1

lO

K ~s lu r~tlron
\116~

7 ]I Ill

l h11s1tan • rllu"sh1p

H ""r~r

Rn"J

S~hu1ol
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!nc,,!tiS,ntl"'

1' &lt;~- 11

Su nd.11
s~~

1 ~~~

.

K~:1

r

P.1 ~(m

r\ihcn•

Suml:t\ \\ "r'h1 I'
\\&lt;:dill ,J,i\ i pm

.1111

1(1 Ill/

Lanw;ulle ( hm lum C hur~.: h
I nil Comp~1 l't'l'r Knh &lt;:rl \hh ~ lf
Sund." Sdt""l 'J •o 1m ~\ Pr"ll!p lll 10
.u11
7 llll pm "'··J nc,J.t\ Sl'1' t~c 7 ()(]
pm

~nt lll&lt;.:ll

Pentecostal

I 'liHil g 7 p 1\l

7 J'lll

SH.IlU~&lt;.'

SL

Sund~&gt;

t:\ ~ 11111 1!

)I) a !1l

pIll

(I

I ~J

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7pm

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Kl&lt;. tlll

ll •1hack Su nd
I \~11\nc '7 p II\

1\

P1'tur

\\tlttJm

:-. .. 11&lt;~1

I
Ill J m
\\ cdlll•&lt;lll Scnu.::c, 7

pIll

Presbyterian

Uaze l lommuntl' lh u T~: h
1~--1 PNPr J:J., ~ I H.lfl Suml.n
SdHKJl I) 10 am \\ur-.hrp 111 •n om
Qjf Rt

S nacm~ Ftr,rl nttt'd l'rt..,h\ltrlan

P l"l"l Kul'll l (

~&lt;'"

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'I

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111

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I I .1 111
( hun:h
111

•i 1

7p m
\l1tldl cpnrt Prt'\luttnan
P t•lor J HI I&lt;' '\nHk r \\ ur-.hlp II 1 Ill

( hllpt'l Chun'h

Suml.n "~h&lt; ol
Ill 1m \\,.r •ht p
a Ill \\bln.:~da\ Slfi!L I.' 7 p Ill

Wl'r"h ll'
lrt ~~
\\,dnc,J .I} 7 ltl p m

lloc kiiiJtport thurch
Suml11 Sd11~'1 q \() ~ m
10 1U t m P.1 ~ tr1r Phil lip Bell

II

Seventh-Da) Ad\'entist
\ll lt" llll ~l

~ll

10 10

1

'
•J lllu m

m

P !'tor L
1J &lt;o ,, m

1\ll~n.~

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tull (,ospd l1~hth nu~
ll d.md Rr 1ad PnmLrm 1-'J•IPt f.tr11

f&gt;,hlnr

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7 11

Sund.11 "id1n"l 11 1 111 " "•'Ill]' \ u\1"
10.1111 ~nd md~th Sund,;

I

( 11rleton lntrrd cnnmm aoonul ( hurth
SunJa\
Scf\l l&lt;'

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S.h 1 ~1l

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c:x/ttend enarcA
fi?.egttla :ly.

Pome n" Ch u rrh or the 'i azarene
Stm,[~, S{hool •
10 l(l 3m and fJ

Frwdtml toll\j)t'l \h s."on
BaiJ Km1h &lt;HI ( " l&lt;. d 'I P,t•il' ' J.l., ,
R11gcr \~1llford Sun,la' Sthl~ll II ;nu m

Pa•l• 'f Jan Lallndn
I} l() am \\ or~h tp

\\ or•hlp 7 r m

p m \\ ednc!&gt;da) Scn'ln'' 7 p m

\\ h1te s Chllpel \\ rs le\an
ClHJl\l l k R11aJ PJ ~tu r R ~1 Ph1lhp
Sunda' S•hn1' l

•I l (l

J

m

ROCKSPRINGS
REHABILITTION CENTER

\kt£..,

The rare you desen F, clust• lo home

C0unt1 'Old~·~t Fh•n..,l

Ea,st

36759 Rockspnngs Ad
Porneroy, OH 45769
740-992-6606

"So I stnve alwa}S to keep
my consctence clear before
God and man."

Ill

'

7 rm

Aco -2-1:1

t'

p m

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prescriptions
992·2955
Pomeroy

Pt l~r

li l

p 1n \\ , dm•d.l' s~"~'''
' nulh p •ur lllcl'llll!= 'n,t ~

~

.1m \\ ur,htp

J111

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m ( hrtsl t hurd 1
Tc \J' (o nunttnll' ~f!J II \\ 11 ~h 1m RJ

Pa, lm

1\•ng .. hun
lh u nh ur th t'
.\J~llh 'lundu\

lp m

pm

\\(dll c~f.t) S~f\ILt~

]()..lS lnl , 7 pm

Uu·h Sund 11 s,h,&gt;&lt;•l
f1 1tJ p m \\~..•J ncJ&lt;~\

E~entng

South Bt tht'l ( OIIIIUU nll \ {hun h
Sthc r I( IJn l't'l&lt;lr !' m..l l lll111• 11 oo ld

IJ

SundJ&gt; S.honl

u·•

s,rmll l S&lt;n

United Brethren

Hunl&lt;'r Sunrl.1\ Sl hnn l IO 1 111 I
7 ll\ rIll . l li ~ 'll,l \ &amp; Jhur•tl]\

~uurmc

f'"t" r ~lkn \11,1, 1]1 SunJJ\ S.ho~ul
lJ ll) J Ill \\ t&gt;i, lll[' Ill Ill J Ill 6 II) I' Ill
11 Scr1 I"''
Alkn \ltJc I]'

lu . ~tc'h

ll lnncll

S.tllhnliS,h&lt;lld ::! 1'111 \\•J •Iup

l' t 'l&lt;~l

1~04'&gt;

\h•d tw~J

an,

7 'It fllll

1m.

Mt. Ohu Cn mmuml\ ( hurth

Nazarene

m

j.( ,,]1,n ( 11'\\ \\nr ,h1p

P.t ~lt•r

\\,,r,Jup

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rnrt•h Chu nh
( ,, Rd 0\ Sum/"' S~h•" l

P~nll

H arn~111111IIL l'n:~lllttrtotn

lh es' 1lle (omm u mh l hun:h
Sund.t ~ S;.h,.,,]

\\t d n,~tl.l\

7 00

.1i•bn .1unttal J;oint

.,.......,

Ill ltll Su11 d1)

IJl

TabcrnMdc ( hunh

Hnd~~m.m

l--Ilt

R1d ~n(lllr

..........

h llon sh1p C hurch

ttJ.1m

S)ru~u~

~ ~0

hrt~ha n

' P,t ~lnr Ht:ht.II LI \ \ h11c Sundu\ Sthnnl

S lrii ~UM \11~~11111

Ill

m Tw:~d. ! 'l s~·flll&lt;.'~

\\l'dn~o;Ja&gt; S\'t&gt;l&lt;t!'

I ong Bottom
Suoda' Sdlllol
lJ ll) .1 111

\'alit~

S~h11nl

1r m

s,racuse fli'S t C hurch of God
Appk 11nd SflOIIli Sts Pasmr Rev Da\ td
Russe ll. SunJa) School and \\ orSh1p 10
am E\emng Sen 1ces 6 30 p m.

,I

Wm•hl]l

\\nr~h1p

rtmr~da&gt;

HI Ill J m

7 tN1pm

11lnlliOSial

Uc tht•l ( hurrh

7 pm

11m Sund.t\ S..huol

pm

lloh son (

11m

rm

~11

llllll'\l,t'

Ret'tls ,tllt· Ft llu" "htp
lhur•h t)l 1h~ \.,1/Jr~m l' l'tor )Jilllr;

Joppll.
Bt'h R.md1•l1ph \\or~l11p

p

"111

!.)

7 p m I nJ !\

\\ ~Jn ~.~J 1\

.md 7 pIll

\lnr;~

\\m~h•p

':l a 111

Salem l&lt;lmmulllt' lhurch
B tl ~ &lt;11 \\ .:q ( ,,]umhl.t \\ \'J tUn Lu.:' 111~
H 1J ~·l.,l&lt; r (lt..,r],, Rou~ l, t 'Ill~ I h7"i

\\uln~•J,11 'lf\ILL

I hu11n IJurh.un SundJ \

•a•th

lhur~l11

\\'m•h lp

~Cildu 7

H nln Run Rn,ul

7pm

\hddlt•jMirt thunh urtht

H.:all1~

~~~!rm

St~ ' ' ]{l r:d SunJ 11

W~:d nl',dav

.\nd~r"' l l
Su ndu'
l lc'lltll!; 710prn

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\\or,]n p 9

(nand

('hrsH•r

.r
Pa~tor

Scr&gt;t1 ' ' S1turd1&gt;

~f, lrn~

~;:~K Suml11 SdJnnl 11 10 &lt;1111 Sum.l~)
&lt;lc ll lll c "n1u 71111 pm A1hh St ud \

1\hddltport l'ummuml\ ( hun·h
';.7&lt;;, l'l.i rl S1 Middleport f'J,h•r ~a 1n

Ohu'

Pastm Hdc:n K l1nc Cl'lll\llk (hurlh
i\ l,t lfl &amp; lillh St Sund.l} ~ dhlnl
lO

.

!\.ltiJ:S ( oopt·ratnt l'.amh
'\urthea ~t CJu,tcr. c\ltr.· J P.!•h'r Jct1k
A cal\1~.;
Sumla1 Slhn11l
l) l(l am
\ \ ;lrshlp 11 l m tt 31l rIll

71Xl p m

MI. Mori•h Church ur God

~&gt;cnlng

7 ]im

.1111

4

Lnng B11t1om SunJ 1\ S&lt;ht&gt;n l 'I

\l. l·dnl.'sd.t\

Rutla nd C hu rt'h or God
Pa stur Ron Heath Sunda\ Wor~ h1p

Rutland frt't' \\Ill Raptl~ t
Salem St P~stor J.t.m te Fonner Sunda)

740-992·7713

p m

IOlll am
7 pm

k 1 l"l. ~

l:ooiHIIt• lml~ ,\ ltihtKhst Pllmh

Oft 1~ 4 he lu nd 'W1 Ik ~"\lll~ Pa~t or Rl''
Hal ph Sp1ro.'" SunJ ,I\ Sdttll I 9 1U .1m

\1Jk II III RJ RallllC Pa•ilor Jam"''
Sancrfidd SunJa, s~ hool IJ 45 ~ m

111-lS a m Sunda\ E'~lllll!;
Pa ,tur Don \\oalker

Homemade Desserts Made Datly

1 00

Church of God

IU

Mt. l\l o ri•h B11ph1&gt;l
1 \lUrth &amp; Mam St M1ddlept•rt Pa,\l"lr
R~\ fiill'&gt;cn Cratg Jr Sunda~ s~htJt' l •
1~ ~(Jam

am

t O 30

Fores! Run Hapns t
P.1stm Artu~ ll urt SunJ;n
am \\t)r,hlp II II m

R11t1n ~

f{d,

Ill
P.t&gt;tnr 1'~1r: Sh,1lkr Sunda1 Sd1t~1l
.1 m \\ or•hlp
II .1m \\r;dnr•t.la\ 7

s~nK~·

Ne" Ha \1!11 R1~ harr.l Nea.,c Pa•t"r
Sund .t\ "'or~h1p 9 1{l 1m Tu~., 0 l()
prJ\~ r ~nJ U1hk StutJ)

7

I ull (,o,j)tl Church
ur tilt' Ll\ Ill I! SIH lllr
\nl o..jlll 1&gt; P"1 nr J l·~~~

Ratmt'

am

~lrthnd1st

1' 111

L&lt;~lllllo.: ("II'

Ill 1 111 1-, 1 Su ntl1\
lllflllth c\o.:lllll~ 'lrll&lt; C 7 t){) pIll

T•W.tbhip HJ

"''' f'•hlp

10

\\t&gt;r,]up

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Ht~rrl ~o nHIIt'

Wnr~h1p

am

Grahan1lln1tt'd Mtthodi sl
\\t1 1 ~ lnp
I I a Ill P&lt;~,l&lt;•r Rllhlrd ~ca•l

~

l'J• I• r 1-ldl :-.t t1Ln ~u n dJI SU\I~l' ](I
,\Il l ,\: ~ Jllll \\ d ln,,dt\ "I pm &amp;
), Ulh 7 ]' 111

\\,dm..U
Pa.,l or

• ast l £ 1art
P11.h1 r H1l l \\,tr,haH Sumb\ Sdll tt•l

I Ill

Sln,u: ~

r'IIL,C: 7 f' Ill

'J l[l

R.t ""111

7rm

\It Oint l 'mtt'd \ltthod1s t
llartrord Churt'h or C hnsttn

6 p m.

S&lt;h 10l

.111d 7 p m
lc llo" 'hl p

l',l,h•l J1•hn (,11 1111 11~ Suml.l ) Sdtllol , II
1111 \\or,hp IOum

S t Paul Luth e r11n Church
Corna S\\,llnon: &amp; Scwnd St P1lll11HII
Su nJa ~ Sc hnnl
') -+i •l tH \~ r'r,tu p I I

Rtthtrll n11ed

"t\ I L~

Suml11

7 \0 I' Ill

United Methodist
l hun:h uf t: hn~ t

7 pm

am
w\,r~lur
II .1m
Wcdn&lt;.:Mla\ s~n llC' 7 pIll

'

Our Sa110ur I uther an ( hun:h

Uenm' Sargent. Sundav Hil&gt;k Stud\
9 ~0 a m Wor~h1p 10 ~[) am and 6 l()

10

,\lll

rm
Waln ut and Hcnr' St~ Ra\~11'\\l'l'd
\\ Vt l'a~wr O a1 1d Ru•sc II SunJ:I\
S!.:hnPI l(l Utl ,, m • \\u t, hip J I .1m

\\ nr,htp liltJIJam

"~" l1 fe \1rtun (~n lt•r
ricotJ!&lt;,(rcck Rn1ll (jdh pulh OH

,.,~,

S 1 hud St \ liddkpnn f' t''"' la~ ~ 1

\l.~ t.ln~:•d 11 S~:ntL~

Brad}

Sen1cc' 7 p m

I O~Oam

\l.or ~ htp

10 ollll Wl•l•lnp '1

B 1 ~hm

W~:dnc~rh}

Gn''( \\tor~ h rp IJ ()()a 111 SundJ}
Schon]
10 [JI) am P1hlllT J u m~• P

Ket.'tl s' 1lle UIUn: h of Chnst
P~stnr Pt11 hp Sturm Snml:t\ S~h,1ol lJ 10
am, Wnhh lp s~n!Lo.: 10 ~0 am Bll'&gt;lc

St Rt 7 ~l idd lq,nn S u nJa~
Sd1&lt;1nl
](I 1m
Ehntng • 7 00 pIll

ScnKc

Lutheran

J-' ,..tt•r

~meruu ~

\\ e dn~•d.11 \~:nil~

p 111

\\"r'h1p
pIll

Cu&gt;~ p cl

1\l o rnmg Star

~I U }

P~ •t11 1

Cl1rtun rahernml e lhurch
Clll to n W\ 1 Sund.r1 t;,!l,,,,J 10 A Ill

Sunda1

lu rmei·Sutlun

Ytm

\ht!JI,pu tt

~&lt;ll lll'

\\.;dnt-.d r\

F111th tull (oospcl Chun h

to.,m

C.1rmcl ,'\:

~tld A'~

I (lr.: man

P~ .tor

I &lt;Ill!! H\,l lom P.l ,li' l

Sl John I uthr r lln Chul'l'h

7 ()0 p m

~X6tll

"T

SunJa) ~dwul 10 ~Oil u m
Rdicl
S"o.~et} / l'r l~~lho(&gt;J
II 0~ t~ UO lll"'ll
SaLTamc ll l s~nlll () ]() ) 'i .I Ill
ll &lt;lm~m.tk tng mccu ng 1,1 l hurs
7p m

lentcr

Ash St rtt'l Church
Middleport PJ ~tll r

\hl/ ll~~()a} ~

John G il lll(lll' Sund.1 \ Sdwul 10
WM-,hlp
lJ u Ill
\hr..l llpt.l.t\

or

or

S ~huul,

(),\\I S
Sunr.l.LI

7

Sl

W~dnc sdu}

Old Bethel Frec \\111 8 apt1s t C huKh

llC''I

'.1~ '\

Stuo.h V.cd 7 lltt

The C hurt'h Jl~US
( hr1st
I allcr- Da~ "11mts
Rt 16tJ -+-lt:J 62-1 7 &lt;1r -l-l0-7 -lHil

\\ur~hJp

,\ bundJtlll (.ra(t' R F 'I

Pt,tm J1 ohn Gtllll l&gt;tl StmJ.11 S1hur 'l
•J ~ l l .t m \\pr,lllp Ill -li &lt;~ 111
llth k

Scntll.: 7()(! 11111

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Full

~ tn

Gk nn R &lt;li\L' Suntl.t' Sd1uo l
&lt;) 10 am Y.. M~ h1 p
111 10 am tnd (•
\\~:dn~~da'

1'h~ L

V.~dn c•J;~. I'icflll~'

R eJm~ m~ l1tt (hurt h

Agapt L1rc Ceot~r
Church P,t~l 1 r~ Juhn &amp;
P.tll\ Wad ~ (,()~ Scumd ~~~ \1t'&lt;lll , 771
)1)]7 ScnK~ tllll&lt;: Sunda\ IO ~O Jm
\\utnc , J \\ 7 [1111

9 1S
Youth

lklhan\
P 1 ~1u1

1\unrli\ "nr,htp
l1 I~ ) p m l:hbh:

of{_ hr1"t

lUiO&lt;~rn

w' I Ill Thw~d II

]I )

Salem lenh r
\\ilh,un K /11tfl,h,ill
Ill I~ .1m \\or,htp

Pa~tur

m

lhckor) IIIIIs Chun:h or Chnst

q a m.

Slud' · (,Oil p m

S~hon!
,1 Ill

Rutland C huKh or Chnst

·

Bethlehem Baphsl C hurch
Great Renrl Rom e I ::!-l Ra c m c O H
Pastor Uun1e l Mc~.:e a Sunday Sch&lt;"'\(1 1
') \(l 1m Sundt'&gt;' \\,u ~h l p 10 ~0 1m

s~n

7pm

1 Ill

7pm

k11. ~ ll

OUlm \\ cd nc,dJ'

6

S•hnr1l • lJ lO ,1m ~l01mn g \\ot,hlf'
llJ lU Jill &amp;{1 ~IJ]llll V..cdllL 'oilil\ S~r\ I L~
li \(tp 'm 'luulh Slt'lll L (&gt; 1() r m

Laurd Chff fret" 1\lt'lhodtst C hurch

pm

b.mgcl1~ t

Th uro,Ja,

Sd\lu'~

P111~

Scf\ t~cs 6 10p m

V. ~.:J nc~da' IJ1hl~

\\,lr , htp

•

7 lllpnl

H \Ll rll t

') •o a Ill
P 1\lm
Sdllkl]

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J Ill

lh ur~h

Pa•t11r v.,, ,n, R

itJU \:

A'h S t

B1l•l\ Stud} \ l.,ud,t) 7 no p1 n
S mnnille

711() pm

7 ''l p Ill

•

Thur,Ja) Btbk Stud) und

7 pm

Hradbury Church or C hmt
Tom Run)un VJ~:'iX Brndbl.lr)
~ll dJiepon ' SunJ&lt;I\' S(hnol
9 1[)
10 lO

IOnm

H~ setl Run Communi!\ (hurch

Mumt ~.;r

p 111 Wn Jno:sda\

6arn Kpm

"' Do not stc,tl Do not he Do not deceive nne another ..
LevJI!Cus I 9; II

•

pm

B1 ll Amhcrgcr Sunda} S•honl IJ l() a m
Wuuh1p
8 00 am 10 30 1m 7 00

Drt\IJ Wl!ie man Sunday S~.: ht'o!ll
a 111
E\cn1 ng
6 'I ll p m

WcJ n c ~da'

Hnurs

St

111

'icr\ILc

Stl\trs'lllt' lo mmun1t' \postohc

Roh B trl'&gt;u
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1\hm,t..r Dou ~_: Sl111 nhlm ) pu lh \1m1stcr

\It U mon Baph.!il

333 Page Street •
(740) 992-6472
M&lt;ddleoort OH
Fax (7401992·7406

Second

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Middll•pon P~stnr LR1d
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Comm unl&lt;ln 10 'O .t m Boh J Wcrrv

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lll.tm Wt&gt;r•tur • ll.tm 7 00 p m

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l'uppers Plam C hurch or C hrist
!n~lrum.:ntal \\ rs h1p Scn:1cc • 9 am

'i2"i ~ ~00 St ~llddlepun Paswr Jam~ s

, MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES -&amp; TEES

IJ 10 1111
710 pm

/11Jolcv Sund.1\ S d1ool
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)010 1111

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School

Hills Self Storage

&lt;lll1 Worship

"-Or~htp · 7 fllll
Sunday
pr.11cr mcct mg ., p m

am

P.t ~ tur

Oa!i1s Chn~;t fao F tlJO\I~Iup

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Pasmr Chm Ste."an 10 O(l all) Sund,p,

Mlntlll'lllt'
B11h Rnhrn ..nn Sunda\ Sdwol

Sunday S(hi ol 9 \U am

McKenz1e

Rucmr Flr!it Haptls t
Sunda~

~II pm

6

Jlt'alh 1\hddleporll

7 pm

Cah·arv ~lgnm lhapel
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P,1'ilt1r

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Tupper• Plam• Sun \\. ur• h1p 10

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(, J.ld I'H&lt;,Ior

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!Ill Sumla\ S~,hoo.&gt; l 10 1' 1 111

K&lt;)~d

a m Wurshtp · 10-lil am 700 pm
Wcdncsd I) Srn I~Cs 7 00 rIll

Other Churches

s~nllC

FndJ) '1 p m

Amazing Grace Commum h Chu reh
Pa~lor W1nnt; Dunlap, Still ~ Rt Mil

\0

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lranklln!J!t~t:n'

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Victor Ruu~h SumJa~ M.hool Sl 30 am
Sunday wnrshtp
I 0 iO a m &amp; 7 p m
Wed n c~daypt, l)~r~&lt;.'J\ 1 ~~

p m. \\~,.-dn~:...day B1hl c StuJ' -7 00 p m
Farth FeiJOI-IShlp CruS£~de rur C hri st

6 10 p m \\~dne~dl:l)
7 p m Rc1 Mtl.:c ( ltrk

a m

9 &lt;~ " I

Lcadmg C rc~l\ Rd Kutland P~~~~~~ R ~.,
[k"cy Kmg Sund.t\ •choul ~ ~0 .1m

Wl'r~htp .

Michael L. Crites
Director of Family &amp;
I·
Community Services
Overbrook
Rehabilitation O:r.
· A Celebration of Ufe ..

g

UanviHe Holines.'i Chun:h
1 10.57 Sta te Route 325, Lang~vllc Pa sttll':

s~r~~t:~

\\t•r~hrp

R1d: Rule

\\-m~h•p

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Ftrst Ba pt1s t Church

Pa~tor

P&lt;1 ~tor Bob Rohmson Sundav s~

Wo1slup
IJ 10 1m Sund~) Sdwul
\0 ~0 1 111 P.t~ tnr·Jcffrt} Y..ai iDlc J stand

Stud}
P tSIOI \ l 1 r ~ Murrov. 6th and Palmer St
M1dd kpo)tl Su!lt.IU) Sthuo l - lJ 1~ a m ,

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Ro!it of S haron Holm e~s Church

Cmnmu mon I[) am Sunday Sc hnol
II I Ii t ill Youth ~ lO pm Sundtl} B1hk

W ~dnc)t.hnS~r\IL~~

\\'J.'d11C~tll) S~n ICC~

Open 7 days a

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Stud, 6

Mi{{ie's 2{estaurant

Queen

Wor shlp-10 00
pm

\l.cJnc ~da) S~.:n 1t~

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Lctan W \ra Rt I Pa~ lur Bmw Ma)
Sunday Schi)[Jl ~ lOam \1.11r&gt;h1p 7 00

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Serq~e~

Ill l() J n1 , Wtdne~da\ S~r'1~ c

6pm

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the :'lrla7.11rcnt·
Sunda) Schon]
9 30 a m \\or~h1p .

nat~ood s

Krno Church of Chrlsr

l•nmrn•v Fn"!it Bupttst

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\Vium J ru,mfll
/\lmo\phert&gt;

Holiness
Serv~ee- 7

930am "nr~h1p II am
Wt:dneo;day Sen tee~ • 7 p m

Pas1nr Arluncl Kmg SunJa) ~chno l
10 IU am, Worship lJ 1(1 a m B1bk
Stud~ Wed 7 30
Pastur Ke1t h Rader Sund 1'&gt;' Schnol
a m , Worship· I I am

C ommumly Chun:h
Ste~e
Tomek
Matn
Sunday

7pm

F.nt erpn~

G ra"e Episcopal Churth
326 E Mam St , Pomeroy. Sunda'o' S~.:hool
and
Ho ly Euchans1 II 00 am Rc'&gt;'
Edward Pay ne

Worsh ip II ~ m 7 00 p m V. cdnc~da~
Serv1te 7 00 p m

\'1clor, Baptist Ind ependent

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Central Cluster
Mhur) "(SJr.ICu~ l Pastor Soh Ruhm~on
Sunday Schnul 9 4'! am Wor ship ' I J
am Wedne sday Scr. ~tc~ 7 l(J p m

M1m ~ t~r Jo!;h Ulm . Sunda) Slhool 9 30
&lt;lm Worship 8 1~ 1030am. 7
Wednesda}" Sel" 1ces 7 p m

W~d n.:sda}

Futlh 8apltsl Chun:h
Hutlr.&gt;ad St \ 1ason Sunt.lav School

26 vears in local business

!\.hddleport Church of C hmt
and Mam P11 swr A I Hart so n Youth

lU l\J

l 04~ll lll

Trinity C hun:h
Second &amp; Ly nn, Pom ern~ Pao;IOr Re'w'
Jonathan Noble, Wor5h1p 10 25 u m
Su nday School 9 IS a m

Pt~tor

Uearw111low R1dge Churt'h or C hns t
Pa, tor Bruce Tm) S und a~ S1. hnol 9 30
am

• R111land ~ 1n t ll.apttst ( hurt'h
Sunday Sd 101'l
9 'l[) .1 111 \\mslup

Congregational

Tupptrs Pla l,ns St P1ul
hne Be~;~tlle, Sumla) S~.: houl 9
~ m Wor,hlp
tU a m Tue~da) Se r'&gt;'J~o:e~
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Sunday

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'

Wednesday Scr. ICC' 7 p m

Sen t~r:

Evl!mng

7 OOpm Wed n e~d a ' B1hlr Study 7 00 pm
lntc mn Pr~.ll her 1-lo} d Ross

Pa~tor

Pastor

Pomrroy W ests1de Church or Chmt
33226 C luh.Jren ~ Humc Rd Sunday

Baptist

pm

(htsttr Churt'h or the NHZ&amp;rt,Qr
Pa~lur Rt\ Herbert Grate Sunduo, Schfl'JI

~l'\1cc

Episcopal

Church of Christ '
Emmanurl Apostolic Tabern11cle Inc.
loop Kd oll Ne" Luna fid Rutland
Serv 1~.:es Sun 1000 am &amp; 730 pm

r 111

am OarlyMas.,·8JOam

pm ,YouthFn 73Up m

The sponsors of this church page do so with pride in our comm~nity
Young's Carpenter Serulce

E He1nz, Sat Con

445.S1Spm. Mass 539 pm Sun
Con -8 45 9 15 am .. Sun Mass . 9 30

p 111

·r

The Dally Sentinel• Page A7

'

01 Whuc Rd off St Rt 160 r rhtM P J
Chapman. Sunday School
10 am .
Wnrsh1p II am, Wednes.ia) Serv~ees- 7

Ca~holic
Sa\red Heart Calhollc Church
161 Mulberry Ave, Pomeroy 992 .5R9!l

Wcdncl'&gt;tla) Sen 1~c ~ 7 p m

-

www.mydailysentlnel.com

WORSHIP GOD THIS.WEEK . c!S

Scripture: I Kings 18.21

necessary?), but if you were to perfectly His living Word,
believe that taxes were relative Jesus. "He IS the image of the
to you r interpretation of them. invtsJble God. the firstborn
you' ll fi nd yoursel( on a qutck over all creattan. For by Htm
trip to some hard and humthat- all things were created: thmgs
tng limes,
m heaven and on earth, VISible
Thts ts why, when wntmg and mvtstble, whether thrones
ahout sptntual matters, I make or powers or rulers or authonahsol ute cla1ms m re(?,ard to lies; all th'mgs were created by
God. Hts Word, the tdentuy H1m and for Hnn He ts before
and miSston ot Hts Son, ,111d all thmgs. and m H1m all
the !allen nature of humamty thmgs hold togeth6r And He 1s
It " natural. of course. when the head of the hody, the
one uses absolute terms to church; He ts the beginning
come mto d1rect conflict with and the tirsthom from among
contrary clatms and tdeas. I the dead, so that in .everything
ack now ledge that not everyone He mi ght have the supremacy.
For God was pleased to have
wtll agree wtth me.
But 11 1s qmte mterestmg all Hi s fullness dwell m Hnn,
that Jesus Htmself spoke m and through Him to reconct le
absolute tenns. And hecause to Htmself all thmgs, whether
He spoke tn the absolutes that thmgs on earth or thmgs 111
the truth supplies us, He spoke heaven, by makmg peace
with authority. Real authotity through Ht s blood, shed on the
has u foundution of absolutes cross" (Colossian s I: 15-20
that under gtrd tl.
NIY).
.... when the Sabbath came.
So Jesus IS not only..m eyeJesus went mto the sy nagogue witness to the way things
and began to teach The people REALLY are but ts also realiwere anM7ed at Ht s teaching, ty's author When He says m
because He taught them as John 14 6. :·.. I am the way.
One Who had authonty. not as and the truth, and the hfe ..".
the teacl1ets of the Juw" (Mark He tsn't cla1mmg to be the
I 2 1-22 NIY). Why could He Truth for some people hut not
say th.JI the thmgs He taught others, He is clmmmg to BE
"ARE'' and not merely say Truth. period Thus, when He
that. "' I THlNK they are?" shares with us a prmc1ple of
Because He knew them to he the Kmgdom ot God (e g. ''I
true
tell you the truth, no one can
Any ldllhlul agnostic (.1 per- see the kmgdom of God unless
son who believes that the exis- he ts born agam" in John 3:3)
tence of God, as well as truth or a moral assessment (for
m general, ts not pwvable) will example, "'I tell you that anycorrectly poml out that a God one who looks at a woman
as transcendent as the One we lustfully has already commllCh~tstlans clatm to belteve m ted adultery With her m hiS
ts unknowable: our fmue he.1n" from Matthew 5 28),
human brams, even w1th amaz- He's t ~hng us "'straight up"
mg technologies, cannot per- the way things reall y are
cetve or grasp such an mti mte When He speaks, He tells us
Being But agnostics miss the the truth.
,
point of the Chnstian under·
Therefore, whtle we yet
standmg of God. We agree that may. let us seek to be open and
we ~annot know Htm by any rece pttve to Hts graceful
convention or means that we admtmstmttons and permtt H1s
possess here on earth. But we . Spmt of Truth to ··gu1de us tnto
don 't need to approach Htm all truth" (!rom John 16· 13).
th,lt way tor He has chosen to
(Thom Mollohan has minreve.tl Himself m ways that we istered in southem Ohio the
can understand Small ways, past 10 years imd is the pastor
perhaps. since we are beset of Pathway Community
wtth cogmtive limitat1ons and Church. He and his wife are
moral dementia, but reveal the parents of four children.
H1mself He does
He may be reached by e-mail
He has g1,en us H1s Bible. at pastorthom@pathwaygalthe wntten" word that retards lipolis.com).

.

•

If the Lord be God~·..

A Hunger For More
When I began to wnte "A
Hunger For More" over a year
and a half ago, a personal goal
for me was to never waste the
paper and mk 11 took to pnnt
the column by wntmg mere
opinion (no matter how good
an opimon I have of my own
opimons) Instead. my aim has
been for God to articulate His
perfect truth through my life
ana this pen
\ruth, of course. 1s,the summation ol that wh1ch 1s
absolute. In other words, truth
1s true because 11 1s both
REALLY and THOROUGHLY true Conversely, 11 "'truth ..
1s not "'true" becau se It 1s
mcons1stent w11h someone·,
attit4_des or because 1t doesn't
jive W.ith cultwal sh1fts, then 11
1sn't true at all 1t 1s 111 the 11 nal
analys1s on ly opuuon ·,,fteJ all
Furthermore, 1f sometlung is
true. 11 JS true regardless ol
whether or not anyo ne 1s wJIImg to .lcknow lcdge n as truth
or is mc.!pdble ol perceJvmg n
as true Truth ~&lt; tnnh . e\en 11 I
will not or cannot comprehend
and adnut 11.
May be yo u've he,Jn.l the
one abo ut the tree t.lllmg mthe
forest II 1t ldll s Ill the fmest.
and no one IS thetc to ohser\e
11, does 11 make a wund '
Smce the word "sound"
refers to the detecnon ol "
some \ibl .t tl on perh.tps ll
doesn' t make,, sol111d 1! It t.tlls
and no one he.1rs It
Neve1thebs. 1! n tree t.dls m
the forest . 1t sli ll t.tl ls tn the
forest even 1f no one" there to
wttness the ewm. Seem hkc a
stll y toptc'
Well . hold on rhe tall mg
tree m the lorest th mg has heen
used to "illustr.tte · th,tt truth IS
actually retat1ve to the md~&gt;td­
ual It " Je,t&gt;oned th,ll the
"truth·· ot a sound"prodm:ed "
true onlv because someone
was there to hear 11. The hne of
reasomng lollows then that
spmtual .tnd ethtcal thmgs are
true onl y t! we can perce1ve
and are Willing to .Jcknowledge them . Ergo. one set ot
spmtual 01 moral pnnciples
may be true oj' you. but another can operate under an entirely dtfferent set of moral and
sptntual principles. And so
you ' II perhaps hear. " Your

Pagej\6

1'

Ma1n

-

.

'l11r ~~~ Sl'lld yo 1r l~ll\lght~ 111 11 ~ tll!'tlltl CIU'tl•

1 740-992-2644 740-992-6298

God so' lm ed the "m ld
he gm·e hH on/\
gouen son
John 3.16

tionuuHtt'U
:.fitt &amp;: tioafttp
TOJ.L..faU

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

(U0...4f.477t

...oo-111-0111

MY 2race is sufficient
for thee: for mY
streni!th is made
Perfect in weakness.
II Cor. 12:9
OfficeService_&amp;Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992-6376

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Page A8 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July. 15, 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

---

·- -· --

,•

COME .AND ENJOY ·

I

Tour de France, Page 84
Indians baseball, Page B8

..

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Bl

The .Daily Sentinel

INSIDE:

----

----

.

Friday, July 15,2005

.,.

Jake Venoy nails down regular .season·Jr. G9lf title
~,&gt;tiV.Dt

I Friday, July 15

...

I ell .dllJ :.;.
Saturday, July, 16

6:00 p.m. Community picnic
7:00p.m. Meigs Community Band

. Saturday, July 16
9:00 am- 1:00 pm- Volkswalk Registration
9:30 am - Parad~ Lineup
10-00 a.m. Opening ceremony and parade
10:45 Pet Show, Pretty Baby Contest, and Pie Contest
NOON Lady Diamonds- Vintage Baseball -Game
1:00 pm ~
Children games- Marble Contest, and
Harmonica Workshop
3:00pm- Harmonica·Concert
4:00 pm- Pie Auction
4:30 pm- Harmonica Contest Registration
5:00 pm- Ohio State Harmonica Championship
5:30 pm- Big Bend Cloggers (Chester Courthouse) .
8:30 pm- Civil War Ball, Caller: "Miz Rosebud"
10:00 pm- Chester Courthouse Illumination
Ohio Oldest

.

Chester Courthouse
Tours are Available
Chester Courthouse

9:00am- Camps open to public and armies from for battle
10:00 _am- . Skirmish at Corydon (Miller's Hayfield)
·
' 11 :00 am- Memorial Service ·
·
1:00 pm- Ladies Tea
Silent auction bidding open*
2:00 pm- Medical Scenario- 17th OVI Regimental Hospital
2':30 pm- Governor William Dennison speaks on Ohio in the
Civil War
3:0&lt;;&gt; pm ~ Battle of Buffington Island History and Discussion
4:00 pm- Military Memorial Service
·
5:00pm - Camps close to the public
- Dinner for paid participants
6:00 pm_
· 7:30pm- Bidding on silent auction closes*
(go to silent auction area for results and to settle bills)
8:00 pm - Period Ball (Old Chester Courthouse, Chester, OH)

Sunday, July,

www.chestercourthouse.com

CLARKS JEWELRY
113 Court Street, Pomeroy, OH

740-992-2054

Fisher Funeral Homes
2645 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, OH
740-992-5141

590 E. Main
Pomeroy, OH
740-992-5444

Quality Furniture Plus

992-6687 • · Pomeroy, OH

(740) 667-7388
1·~800-200-4005

Glouster at Feeney Bennett, 1 p.m.

992-5627 • Middh~port, OH

HOME NATIONAL
~
i=Dii BANK
----LEND£f'

'

· 949-2210 Racine, OH
I ·992-6533 • Syracuse, OH
•

992-2955 • Pomeroy, OH

992-2155 • Pomeroy,OH

Chester Ohio

·Downing-Childs
Mullen-Musser

740-992-6466

INSURANCE

"Servjng Southeastern Ohio
&amp; West Virginia since 197 8"

992-3381 • Pomeroy, OH

Wesam
Construction
..

Southern to hold ·
volleyball camp

i

®

L.EHDI:R

CROW&amp;CROW

Open gym, meeting
for Southern voUeyball

ATTORNEYS AT LAW
992-6059 • Pomeroy, OH

·The Daily
Sentinel

RACINE - Athletes planning to play volleyball this .
fall for Southern are required ·
to attend a meeting on July
19 at 6 p.m. atSHS .
Open gym will follow the
informational meeting.

·,,

VALLEY
LUMBER

MMS helmet fittings
slated for Thesday
ROCK SPR INGS
Anyone interested in playing
7th and 8th grade footba ll for
Meig' Middle School are
asked to be at Memorial Field
H'ouse 3:30 p.m. Tuesday
July 19th for helmet fittings . .

992-6611 • Middleport, OH .

Contact Information

Shade River AG Service
"Ahead in Service"
..
,

P.O ~

'

Box 73 • Chester, OH 45720

fERGUSON

-Little League
.all-star tourney
at Kyger Creek

FARMERS BANK
RM.i

BY DouG

Post 128 begins
. tournament
play on Sunday

Chester, Ohio

992-2136 • Pomeroy,OH
985-3385 • Tuppers Plains, OH
446-2265 • Gallipolis, OH · ·
304-773-6400 • Mason,.WV

Evan Dunn was ri ght on
thei r heels with a round or -10.
earning ·third place for the
day and the year. Chri s Long
fini shed fourth in the yearly
competition after a fourth
place tie with Brody Green
on the tinal .day.
, In the 13- 14 age gmup.
Brvan Harri s fired a round or
37' to &lt;.: apturc the -.coveted
Fruth troph y and a&gt;Surcd
himself the season tit le with
30 points.
Will Garri soi1 carded .a 43
on the day for second. and

abo secured the runner-up
spo1 in the, yearly event wi h
21l points Kyle Rhodes tin- ·
i.s hed third in the 13- 14 divi·
sion with 20 points.
The II - 12 seasonal crown
had been decided a week earlier when Nick Saunders won
l)is third Fruth Trophy, but
the fin al eve nt allowed hi s
streak of tit les to extend to
four with a ro und of 47 .
Saunders· 47 was two

Please see Capehart. B2

Woods stands atop leader
·board after opening round

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland
- From behind the seventh
green at St. Andrews, all anyone . could see was Tiger
Woods' head bobbing up and
down from the deep bottom of
Shell bunker.
Thi s was foreign soil for
Woods,
who famously stayed
ROCK SPRINGS
out
of
the
sand all four rounds
· Feeney Bennett will face
when he won the British Open
Glouster in the first round of
five years ago. He leaped twice
the Eighth District American
to lind his way out. Then came
Legion baseball tournament I
a puff of sand, followed by his
p.m. Sunday at Meigs High
ball skirting up to the green
School.
and stopping 4 feet away for a
Check the Sunday Timesbirqie.
Sentinel for a preview of the
By the end of his round
double elimination format
Thursday, Woods was in a
tournament.
familiar spot at St. Andrews. ·
He made seven birdies in a
nine-hole stretch, then ventured twice more into bunkers
and settled for a 6-under 66
· that gave him a one-shot lead
over Mark Hensby in the first
round of the British Open.
,
"I still feel very comfortable
CHESHIRE - A Little
out there ''Woods said after his
League all -star tournament
best start in a major champiwill be played at the Kyger
onship since he opened with a
. Creek Little League Field.
66 in the 2000 PGA
· It will run fro m July 29-31
Championship. "Even though I
and is open to players ages 9h.ad it ~oing, fini shing at 6
12. .
.
(under) IS a great start to the
For more information, con-tournament. I'm very pleased
tact Rick Smith at (304) 674- .
with the way I played all day."
3341 or (304) 576-2485 .
Jack Nicklaus could hardly
say the same.
Playing hi s I64th and" final
major championship at the
home of golf, Nicklaus stirred
hi s legion of fans ever so
brie!ly with a 7-iron that just
RACINE - There will be
cleared the Swilcan Burn for a
a volleyball camp held at
4-foot birdie on the opening
Southern Junior High School
hole, and a nifty chip 'over
on Monday, July 25, through
Shell bunker into 5 feet for a
Thursday, July 28. from 6 · birdie at the seventh.
p.m. to 8 p.m. for grades five
· Three-putt bogeys on . three
through nine . ·
straight holes, however, sent
Please include name, phone
him to a 75 and put him in a
number, grade entering in the
precarious position for making
fall and T-shirt size .
the cut. his goal.
For further information and
"Obviously, I' m 'going to
price of the camp, call (740)
949-2 196 and ask for Roma
and Pete .

985-3301

Tuppers Plains, OH

Frank Capehart

THE&lt;?!!~Q

SPORTS BRIEFS

BAUMLUMBER

"Your Bank For Life"

lating one'
. '
under par 33
in the pre·
·mier 15-17
'ROUND
THE COUNTY,
year
old
division.
season championship for the
J a k e age group. .
slammed the
For a while, brother Josh
door shut on Venoy matched Jake strokethe
chal - for-stroke, but had to settle
Venoy
lengers wit~ for runner-up honors with a
h1s
great round of 37 . Josh also capround and captured the week- tured second i11 the seasonal
ly Fruth Pharmacy tirst plaee competition even though he
trophy. along with the overall missed one event.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

.I

42123 St Rt. 7

THE SHOE PlACE/ .SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
'PHARMACY
.LOCKER219

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Sunday's game
Eighth District Tournament

Tradition -Service- Value

BROGAN WARNER
INSURANCE

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Ritchie at Mason .ColJnty, 2 p.m

9:00 am- Camps open to public .
10:00 am- Period Church Service
11 :00 am- Company drill and Battalion drill .
l:OO pm- 142nd Anniversary Battle of Buffington Island
( Harris Farm)
3:00 pm- Break Camp
• The 91 st OVI is hosting a silent auction as a fundraiser

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Saturday's game

17

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·

Not even the bunkers slow Tiger

during the event. Items will be period to the Civil War. :
Items located near registration.
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740·985-9822

.'

POMEROY - Precariou s
challengers ·faced the TriCounty Junior golfers at Pine
Hill s Golf Course, but the
young swingers highlighted
the final points competition
with a sub-par round, two
more in the thirties, and
exciting, . close · competition
which changed some of the
final positions.
Jake Venoy headlined the
· day traversed the exacting,
lovely layout with hardly a
missed step to fire a scintil'-

F.. -

1-740-44,6-3008

E-mail -

sports @mydailysentineLcom

Brad Sherman, Sports Editor
" (740) 446-2342. ext. 33
bsherman@mydailytribune .com

.(7 40) 985-3831

Bryan Walters, Sports Writer
(740) 446-2342. ext 23
bwalters@ mydailytribune .com
I

Larry Crum, Sports Wrller
(304) 675·1333. ext 19

----

· lcrumOmydailyreglster.com

I
I

have to play well tomorrow,"
he said. "I doubt if par will
make the cut. We ' II just have
to see."
The Old Course was in a far
more favorab le mood, with
only light breezes blowing
across the links toward St.
Andrews Bay. Provided players avoided the bunkers, they
could score.
Hensby had a chance to join
Woods atop the leaderboard
until a 12-foot birdie on the
16th and another 12-footer·on
the final hole just mi ssed, giving him a 67 and another
impressive round in a major.
The 10 players at 68 inc!ud- ·
ed Fred Couples, who birdied
his last two holes; Luke
Donald of England, who
thrived while playing with
Nicklaus and Tqm Watson ; and
Jose Mana OI&lt;;tzabal. who
somehow ~ade 1t around St.
Andrews w!lhout a !J:osey.
Woods fimshed oft h1s round
with a 3,wood just left of the
18th green, then a 70-foot putt
that dipped in and out of the
hollow called "Valley of Sin"
and stopped some 4 feet away
tor bmfie.
.
. .
. But It was a burst of b1rd1es
to the m1ddle, of h1s round that
got ev.eryone s attentiOn.
Cohn Montgomene overcame an openmg tee shot mto
the Sw1lcan Burn tor a 71 and
was qu11e pleased unt1l he saw
how far behm~ he already
trmled the world s No. I player.
" It's ominous who's on toP.
of the board. Ominous, '
Montgomerie said. "If there's a
course bui It for him, it's this
one. He wop by eight shots last
time here, and who sa~s he
won' tdo thesameagain." ·
Told that Woods opened

Please see British. B2

AP p~oto

Tiger Woods watches the fl ight of his ball during hrs first round of the Britis h Open Golf
Championship, on the Old Course at St. Andrews Scotland Thursday. Wood s finished the
day 6-under-par.

Wie ·advances with
two more.APL wins

Four-shot lead for
·Wilson heading to
Ohio Am.final

BY RusTY MtW:R
ASSOCIATED PRESS

LEBANON -' Michelle Wie is 'three wins
.
away from an invitation to· the Masters .
Tile 15-veij r-ulu f{om Ha waii birdie(! three
of the fimi t five holes and beat Jim Renner 3
and I in her seco nd match of the day ..
. Thursday to advance to the quarterfinals of
the U.S. Amateur Public Links.
She conceded that A,ugu sta National has
crept into the ·back of her mind . .
"Obviously I'm thinking about that. but.
· I' m taking it one match at a time," she said.
Wie. the first female to qualify for a men 's
USGA championship, earlier won 6 and 5
over C :D. Hockersmith .
The 6-foot girl who nearly made the cut on
the PGA Tour twice and was tied for the lead ·
last month in the U.S. Women' s Open might
be on the verge of her most stunning feat -of
al l.
Augusta National traditionally in~ i te s the
winner of the Public Links to the Masters,
and chai~man Hootie Johnson has said the
all-male . club would welcome Wie or any
other female who qualified.
AP photo
· Wi e is confident she will play in the
Michelle Wie reacts to a chip shot on the 'fifth hole dur ing
Masters , al\)lough she 's not sure when .
the men's Amateur Public Links Championship at the
· Shaker Run Golf Club in,Lebanon. Wie w.on her third round
Ple1se see Wie, am
match 4 and 1 over Jim Renner from Plainvi lle. MA .

'.

Bv

ANDY RESNIK

A.SY.)CIAT£0 PRESS

ZANESV ILLE -

Chri., Wihon needs .

one more good rounU to win the Ohio
Ama reur on hi s fi r~ ltl' \' .

He shot a 1-unJcr 7'1 on Thursday to
push hi ., threc -da; total to 9-umkr 207 ,cooJ for a

fou r-~ trnl.. r

lead &lt;we r Colii1

· Biles with I K ·hob to jlia; at Zanesville'
Cour11n· Club . .'
A suhllrban Columhth nalive w!lo's the
No. I pla\L"r at '-'orq1west~rn. Wilson has
led aftn each of the fi rs t three wunds.
' He&lt; d o,i n ~ · !n (Hl mh.lini!' hi s name to' a
winner's fist th at inc·J uuc~ PGA tour legend Arnold Palmer and forme r Brit ish
Open r hi!m pion Ber&gt; Curtis - a fact he'd
lik e to fr1r~ e t with more go lf. to play.
'Til tn 111\' best "' think about other
&lt;tuff." sa.id \\'ilson . \1 hr1 didn ' t have time
to qua li fv fr11· the Jnurnament itl the past
hecau:-.c of :-.(hnol con tlirts . ·
.This year. the yu&lt;~ l ifier was held while .
Wilson was lwmc in Dublin during
North\lesJcrn·, nnc-\\ed break ' before

.
Please see Ohio Am. Bl

�.

.

'
Page 82 • The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Friday, July 15,

Tiger chasing a legend with trophi~s older than he ·is

..

ST. ANDREWS, Scotland
- Tiger Woods teed off
Thursday at the Briti sh Open
halfway home to Jack
Nicklaus' major champi·
onship record of 18 wins. If
he needed reminding how
daunting the second half of
that quest will be. there ·it
was·, three gro ups ahead.
where golf's aging lion
wrestled with his emotions
and the ravages of time.
"I feel my age every day. ·
every mimue out there." the
liS-year-old Nicklalts said.
his mood soured by an opening-round 75· in . his tina!
major. "I know exactly how
old I am.''
·
If it 's any conso lation .
Nicklaus has trophies collecting dust at home that are
older than Woods. Anti . he
won them over a span of 24
years, just five fewer than
Tiger has heen alive.
.
Wood s likely .Ji.Jn't neeu
remindin g of that. either. But
it came. : anyway. wi th a
question abou t whether he
was in hi s prime.
"When I won here in 2000,
I knew I was exempt until
I'm 65 ," Woods laughed. "I
mav be here for a while."
Woods has plenty of time.
buiJ'udg ing by hi s start .. he
har ly lacks a sense of
urgency: He got hold of the
Old Course early on a
breezy, overcast morning
and squeezed out eight
birdies en route to a 66 that
gave him the first-round
lead. The mily things that
slowed hh march across St.
Andrews were· two bogeys
and the two minutes of
silence observed at , noon to
commemorate the victims of
last, week's Lon.Jon bombmgs.

Capehart
from PageBl
stroke s ahead of Travis
Grimm, who finished second
and edged our Steven Thiess
for runner-up in the season
competition . Thiess captured

Wie
fromPageBl
·'J don't feel any kind of
urgency, " she sa id. "I'm just
playing. Hopefully, I' ll get
in one of the se days. It
could . happen this year. it
. could .be next year. it could
· be 20 years down the line."
Wie would have to win
two matches for a second
· straight day to reach the
finaL She next plays BYU
junior Clay · Ogden , who
defeated Anarew Black of
Chattanooga. Tenn. , 3 and
2, in the quarterfinals in the
morning . The semifinals are
Friday afternoon. followed
by the 36-hole champi. onship on Saturday. ,
"I was kind of joking and
I actually said that I hoped I
play her." Ogden said. "And
here we go."
So far. she has mer every
challenge.
Wie avoided an early
deficit when Renner mis,ed
fi-foot birdie tries on his

Jim
.

AP

Litke ·

COLUMNIST

Recalling rh:lt hi s mother.
Kultida, was vacation ing in
London at the time. Woods
said that during the observance. "I felt more thankful
than anything else because
my mom was in the building
rig ht across the street !rom
where the bomb blew up ....
"I can only imagine•." he
added. "w hat everyone else
who was in volved, where
they lost a lo vell one or had
loved ones hurl. what they
mi!.!ht have been goi ng
thr(JUg h."
·
With less than the usual·
Briti sh reserve, tabloid
reporters pressed WQods for ·
details. He knew hi s mother
was touring Europe with
frien.Js before coming here,
but said he didn' t learn she
was in
London until
Wednesday and (mly then
because h-is sw ing coach.
Hank Hat1ey. mentioned it.
When
Woods
finally
talked to hi s · mother. he
recounted the conversation
this way:
"Are you OK''"
" Yeah. good. What are you
going to do today on the
course?':
A moment later. Wood s
shrugged' and added. "She
doesn't tell me anything,
That 's kind of how our family is."
For all the comparisons
third on the year. and Chris
McDermilt tini .~ hed the 11 12 division in fourth.
Jacob Leach had already
secured the seasonal 10-andunder tour crown. but ran
into a real challenge from
Hunter Bellamy. In that tight
struggle. Leach pulled out a
narrow two-shot victory
over. Bellamy with a round
first two holes, She took
over from there, going 3 up
at the turn with an 18-foot
birdie putt at No. 9.
Renner, a junior at
&amp;.
Wales
John son
University in Miami and the
NAJA medalist, won two of
the next three holes to cut
into her lead. But then Wie
hit a low ),iron shot from
220 yards into 15 feet and
. made the birdie to go 2-up.
"I'd like to see another
IS-year-old girl - or a ISyear-old in general - do
that," Renner said. "There's
not ·many guys in this tournament who can hit that
shot. "
Even Wie was surprised
when the ball rolled close to
the hole .
"It was an awesome shot
for me because my ball was
in a divot, I was 220 away
and I usually hit my 3 iron
about 2 1O,'" she said.
If that wasn't enou,gh, she
holed a flop shot from
hea vy rough left of the IS.th
gree n for birdie after
Renner seemitlgly had the

Friday, July 15 , 2005

2005

"We've had our fair share guys and very talkative . By
of battle s in the past," said' the third or fourth hole J·
Biles; at S-under ·211. "It 's was comfortable." sa id
from Page Bl
goi ng to be fun .''
.Ross. who's in third place,
Wilson's lead hasn' t fall-· five shots behind Wil son at
final exams . Wilson played en -below three shot s, hi s 4-under 2 12.
Ro ss said he or Biles
his way into the 'Nth Ohio advimtage ·after an opening
'
that's
the
tournawould
:have to play excepround
66
Am and now has the best
lu
\v
score
.
But
Biles
tionall
y
well Friday to overment's
!-thot at winning it.
,"[t' d mean a lot for me." has remained in conrcn ti'on take Wil son.
said Wi Ison. the 2003 Ohio . throu ghou t and isn't ready · "If one of us could shoot 4
llmior champion , " It 's the to concede the trophy to or 5 under tomorrow, that's
what it ' ll probably take."
biggest tournament in the Wilson.
" He could go out ·4nd Ross said . " He is hitting the
state fur non-profe." ionals.''
shoot
77 and .I cou ld shoot ball well. so I don't expect
Wilson maintained hi'
62.
You're
never really out him to do · anything, too
four -shot lead .from the previous day on a 6.778-yard of it." Biles said . "No mat - crazy."
layout that wa' a lillie ter what I' til going' to have · Asked how he plans to
soggy from heavy overnight to make 'omc birdie s and play Friday. Wilson sai'd he
rains. Shots barely rolled put some pressure on him." would like to sta y aggresafter Iandin~ on the wet , Wilson "' iu he was feel- sive and build his lead:
f&lt;tirw~y~ anl(. g.reens . ·
ing
relaxed
Thursday "You can play a little more
H.is c losest ,pur,uer is because one of his two play- conservatively. but you
partners
was really don: I want to sii on it.
Biles. an Ohio State ~olfer ing
who know' ~ few t~ings Northwc,tcrn teammate and You want to try to extend
Kyle it.··
about his opponent'' game. c hildhood friend
The two have been facing Moore. who's in fourth
With a goal of eventua ll y
off since Wilson was play- place at 3-under 213. .
joining the PGA "tour,
ing at Dublin Coffman Hi gh
The third member of their - Wilson wants to witi the
School and Bile; was a star group. 34-ycar-old Scoll Ohio Am now.
at Upper Arlington. They· ve Ros s of Mason , said the two
"Until you turn profesbeen 011 opposite ' ides in 20-year-old' made 'urc he sional. you onl y have '0
&lt;.:ollege. and now they' II go' wa.,n ·t left out ot' the con- many ch;~nc e ' tn \Vin your
against ca&lt;.:h other on Friday ver,atiun while they walked state amateur." Wihon &gt;aid.
in th e Ohio· Am' s final their 18 holes .
In Wilson' s ca, c. one
g(oup .
"They're hoth really .nice Lhance may he enough .

Ohio Am

'

2003

-.~

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Malibu, White, 4dr ............................. $9,900
Impala LS, Loaded, Sun Roof, low
Miles:..................................................... $16,999
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Dodge Neon, 4df, 4cyl, Auto, Air, CO, Only
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~

New England 300,

1:30 p,m., Sunday

Butch Serlel
New England 200,

3 p.m., Saturday

Truck Serlo

· o· ~eilly 200.
8 p.m., J~ly 23

1&gt; Dale

Earnhardt Jr. still has an
uphill climb to. make the "raceefts," but his victory at
Chlcagoland was certainly encourMing. Earnhardt Jr. is now
115 points out of the top 10.
,. One development is that Earnhardt and Jeff Gordon have
swapped positions, basically.
Now it's Gprdon who suddenly
~eems to be the "longer shot."
tncre\fibly, the ·four-time cham pi·
on Ms finished 30th or worse in
six of the past eight races.
1&gt; Over the last 10 races, Tony
Stewart has piled up more
points than anyone else. over
that span, Stewart has scored
115 more points than Greg Bif·
fie, who's second over the peri·
od. Stewart has finished sec·
ond, first first and fifth in the
last four races.,.lt was kind of a blast from the

uphill ·struggle to make the li·
tie-determining Chase. he
ended a personal drought.
"The season has humbled me
quite a bit," said Earnhardt.
·and that's something I damn
well needed." Strategy, not

Busctl

speed, won this one for Ecirn·

F-15(), White, Ext. Cab 4x2.............~.$8,999
Dodge Durango, V8, Auto, Air, Tilt, Cruise,·

Race: New England 200

Race: O'Reilly 200

Where : Ne:w Hamp shire In-

Where :

te rn ational
Speedway.
Loudon (1.058 miles), 200
laps/211.6 miles .
When: Saturday, July 16
Last year.'s winner : Matt
Ken seth
Quatllylng record: Kevin Harvick. Chevrolet, 130.716
mph, May 11, 2001.
'
Race record : Bobby Hamil·
ton Jr.. Ford. 110.368 mph,
May 11. 2002.
Last week: Kevin Harv1ck. 1n
a Chevrolet. won the USG
Durock 300 at Chicagoland
Speedway.

sports Park, Millington. Tenn.
(. 75 miles), 200 laps/ 150

Qualifying record : Ryan New·
man, Dodge, 133.357 mph,
Sept. 12, 2003.
Ra~e record: Jeff Burton.
Ford, 117.134 mph, July 13,
1997.
Last week: Perhaps what
Dale Earnhardl Jr. needed
more than .anything else '"

hard!. who estimated that the ·
Chevy he drove was a fi fth~
place car. The pit crew put
him in pos1tion by changmg
onlytwo tires. The sport's oth·
ei disappointing stl)lerstar;
Jeff Gordon, became entan, gled in a crash ~ one that
sent him reeling to his s1xth

this sepson of discontent was

lousy fin ish in a span of eight

a victory 1n a race (Chicago) in
which he didn't have the best
car. Although he made up rela·
t1vely modest ground 1n his

race s ~ that brought out ·a
yellow flag which bought Earn·
hard! enough time to close
the deal.

JEFF GREEN

NEXTEL CUP SERIES.

Memphis

Motor·

TNT

July 17

miles.

When: Saturday. July 23
LFt&amp;t ye~r's winner: Bobby
Hamtlton

Qualifying record : Greg Bif·
fie. Ford. 120.139 mph , May
7.1999.
.
Race record : Travis Kvapil,
Chevrolet, 89.065 mph, June
22.2002.
Last week: Dennis Setzer, in
a Che.vrolet, won the Built

Ford Tough 225 in Sparta. Ky.
Banking In
stre' hts

No.

43

Green finishing races,
but unable to find
top-10 consistency

past in Joliet, as the race came

· down to·a strategic contest be·
tween longtime rivals Earnhardt
Jr. and Matt Kenseth. Neither
had been performing particularly
well this season ... until Sunday.
,. A'theme of.the summer has
been repeated tire troubles .
This time Goodyear officials sa 1d
the teams shou ld've used
·scuffed' tires, meanmg lhat
slightly used rubber was better ·
than the .new··stickers.
·
.
.
,. Dogged consistency 'ontinues
to benefit Rusty Wallace as he ·
patiently works his way into the
Chase. A 12th-place finish at
Chlcagoland moved Wallace up
from ·fifth to fourth in the points
standings, Wallace has been
running at the finish of 31
straight races.
· ,. Kurt Busch moved into the top
10, white Dale Jarrett fell out.
Eight races remain in the regula r

---

u

' ,. Who's hot - Tony Stewart,·
despite soreness ~rom a hard

crash in practice. turned in his
fourth straight top·five frnish .
... Matt Kenseth led 176 out
· of 267 laps but had to settle
for second place.
,. Who's not
Kasey
Kahne 's
41st-place
finish left
' . him 21st In
points.
Carl
Ed·
wards was KAHNE
39th put
hung on to
12th in the standings.

alley

Greg
Biffle

s

Kevin Harvick
vs. Greg Biffle
This

ri~Jal ry.

whicll has flared up

several time s through the years , d id

so aga1 n when Biffle felt'Harvick im·
properly tri e d to keep him a lap be-

hind in J.he Bu sch Series race. Har·
l}ick went on to win at Chicago land
Speedway. 81f fl e ca lled Harvick "a

chicken driver'· and said no one else"
would have raced him that way.

NASCAR

'

·&amp;Supply

Co.
740-992-6611

This Week's Monte

Dutton gives his take : "As Keith
Jackson might say. these t wo drivers
' JUSI don'tlike each other:·

Goodyear Garage offers
shot at customized truck

Before Daytona's Pepsr 400. Ryan
Newman unvei led a Dodge Ram

pick~

up thai he personally customized as
part of Lhe Goodyea r Garage prograrti. Fans can log on and ente r to

win this truck between now and the
end of t he month . Go t o .
'NWW.goodyeargarage.com . which also
includes ~n auction of Newman 's personally autographed ite ms. wi th·pr,oceeds· to bene fit the Rya n. Newman

Foundation.

John Clarki NASCAR

Laps under caution a
necessary·part of racing

TIHS Wee~,

I

don 't feel it's fa 1r wh en there's a

Jeff Green Is In his se~ond full season driving Petty Enterprises' No. 43 Dodge. The former Busch Series champion Is one of several drivers - Jeremy Mayfield and Michael
Waltrip are others - who ~w up In the stock-car hotbed of .Owensboro, Ky.
Another obstacle isn't related to
technical matters. It's tough for a
driver to keep his self-confidence in
the face of repeated adversity ·
"I don't know. It's tougll," said
Green. "It's very tough at tim.es to
know that you're capable of winning
races and doing the things that
you've done in the past. When yo u

CHE
UT

caul ion (flag ; and the laps (count)

wl11le the ca rs· are fol lOwing the
pace car. They aren't racmg. and they
can't even pass! ... ·

go

have setbacks, it's pretty tough to
throughout that ·day to fini sh that
race . ... You've got tokeep your head
up and look forward to next week.
and hopefully you can turn that cor,
ner."

Booole Helmick
Sebring. Ohio
Its true tnal laos unde r caution
don 't coun t at most short tra cks. but ·
those are races of much sllorrer dura·
tian. If a 500.mile ra ce were run with·
out all those .1 ellow·flag laps counting.
it would probabl} ma ke the races las t
at leas t an hour longer. particul arly
Vt ith the upsurge ir. caution flags and
crashes th1s season.

Contact Monte Dutton at
hmdutton50@aol.co m

St. Rt .7 &amp; 124 •

• Pomeroy, OH

.

'

BEFORE THE RACE, STOP IN AND
VISIT OUR DEL/ OR HOT STUFF PIZZA!

Ice Cold Beer
Available for Carryout!

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-·-

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Banldng In

E

'

JOLIET, Ill. ~ The good news for
Dodge driver Jeff Green is that he
has failed to finish only one race this
season. The bad news is that he has
yet to finish a Nextel.Cup race in the
top 10 and ranks 31st in the points
standings.
Green's best finish was an' JJ!h in
May at Lowe's Motor Speedway in the
Coca-Cola 600. His 241h.place finish in
the USG Sheetrock 400 at Chicago land
Speedway was his best showing of the
past- four races.
Green, 42, is in his second full ·season driving Petty Enterprises' No. 43
Dodge. The former B'usch Series
champion is one of several drivers~
' Jeremy Mayfield and Michael Waltrip
are others - who grew up . in the
stock-car hotbed of Owensboro, Ky.
Concerning the daunting task of
turning around the fortunes of his
team, Green said: "Well, I think
we've just got to work. Those guys
up there are working really hard at
the (fabricating) shop. We've asked
a lot out of them this year, which
every fab shop has; with the new
rules, Plus our new Charger body
-(means) we've had to .put a lot of
bodies on and cut a lot of them off.
"We can't give up, and our motor
package with Everriham Motors, I
think, has turned our team definitely
in the right direction. We go to the race track without worrying about
that anymore, so we've got to figure
our aerodynamics out and our downforce . Our sport has changed so much,
bodywise, and what you do with the
springs and the shocks. And even two
yea'rs ago, it's unbelievable, and we
have to figure that"Out. We seem like
we've figured it out, but we're, like, a
'step behind · everybody. ... It's n·ot

.J

'"''-•'""•

~·

v

CHEERIOS/BETIY CROCKER DODGE

.
. *Corvettes Excluded
,,

____. -

Distance:,,,,. ... :... 1.058 mile oval
Length of frontstretch: .. ,.1,500 ft.
Length of backstretch:, ... 1,500 ft.
Mlles/Laps: .. 317.4 mi. • 300 laps

. By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week

S10 Blazer, ldr, 4WD, Low Miles, Black,
.Roof.............................................!········· $13·.98:5
S10 Blazer's, 4dr, V6, Auto, Tilt, Cruise, CD,
Air, 3 To Choose From Only..........•. $16,850

· ~ · -- --

""·

Sylvania 300
Sept.18

Kevin
Harvick

Sharp~ ..................................~······ ............ $14,900

!!)
1-800-837-1094 7~1P
., __&lt;tr
,
.,.

New England 300

s

now official. There are only 10
drivers within 400 points of first
place. and the trend is unlikely
to reverse.

'·

Race: New England 300
Where: New Hampshire lnler·
national Speedway. Loudon
(1.058
miles).
300
laps/317.4 miles.
When: Sunday, Ju ly 17
Last year's winner: Kurt

R

more than 10 dri\lers in it. It's

e

2002 Silverado, Maroon ......~ ...................... $12,900
2001 - F-15(), White........................................ $1f,4~
2003

B3

The Daily Sentinel • Page

If y~u have a que&amp;tiQn or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette. P.O. Box 1893. Gastonia , NC 28053

., ·easy."

1998

.

NtxttiCup

,. ·Forget about a Chase with

Emplo~

-

-~

All times Eastern

season.

.Lr;;;
__ ~ ft:J~
2003
2001
2004
2002
2004
2004

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.

.tiSh
Bn

short ofthe green. Woods,had
to play . away from the flag,
and had to two-putt from 60
from Page 81
feet for bogey.
made between Woods and · at Aygusta, and even shakier
"If you catch those bunkers
'Nicklaus - the story of a down the stretch before loshere, you know a shot
.
around
young Tiger taping a list of ing the U.S. Open to
wtth
a
66
-.
one
shot
better
.
is
going
to be gone," said
Jack's accomplishments to Michael Campbell last
than hts start m 4000, "':hen he Olazabal. who played with
h1s bedroom wall has beer. month, gives them some reawon by etght - Ntcklaus Woods and Robert Allenby, ~
recounted dozens of umes son to hope.
hardly seemed surprised.
"And that's what happened to
- that. statement provtdes
•·we all know how Tiger
''That's not fast for him . him"
·
some tmportant _contrast. can score," said Jose Maria
That's just_ a nonnal ,start,"
There was plenty worse that
Whtle both can be t.erocwus- . Olazabal. who shot 68 while
Ntcklaus satd. .
.
happened to others.
ly smgle-mmded when the playino with Woods on
Hensby also ts becommg a
Vijay Singh had 10 play a
g~me _dem&lt;~ nds tt. Ntckla~s Thursday. "Overall , he
r~gular fixt~re ~~ the majors. shot Jefthanded away from the
h.ls h.td way more . ~xpen - played pretty s(Jiid."
He !led for hfth tn the Masters lip of a bunker on the 16th
encc
dealmg
wnh
!ties
bllfBL
th
01·
.
,
b·
1
,
dd
d
1
and
tted lor. thtrd at the U.S. hole and was fortunate to walk
dens 1han he pro babl y cares
, . --r 1 en k' .tz&lt;t .1h a , ·e ,
Open,
_JOtntng Woods and off with bogey He still man- .
to ,:emcmber.
.m no1 1oo mg w o 1.s on
VtJay ,Smgh as the only play- aged a 69. JOining a large
He &lt;.:amc out on wur in the !~aderboard or who 1s on
.
~rs wtth t~p-1 0 J?&lt;!rformances gr()ur, that included Campbell.
1961 already married and top.
. ,.
Phtl Mickelson got lost in
the first of hts five kids was
That last btl would have ' m both maJors thts y~ar.
Yet_
even
Hensby
tSsued
a
the
rough on his way to a triple
born that .fall . That mean s he been co nstdcred 'hcre sy ftvc
bogey
on the 15th and shot 74.
wammg
about
the
posstbthty
won his .majors with a grow-- years- ago. when Woods
ol Woo&lt;)s ' holdmg the darer Ernie Els, who thrives on the
ing family at home tugging scorched the. Old Course
JUg.
Old Course, couldn't hole any
at his heartstrings, that he wtth an openmg-rmmd 67
"~e.ople "!.e. scared to saz. it putts and made three straight
kept winning after burying and went on to wtn that
bu~ It s true. Hensby s~td. If bogeys on the back nme, also
the most importam intluence Open at 19-under, by an
he s playmg well, we rc all shooting 74.
in hi s lite, his fath er. almosl-com i&lt;.:al margin of
playing for second." .
Defending champion Todd
Charle y. in 1970, and won eight shots .
Woods, howe.ver, ts no · Hamilton struggled with his
so me more . while tryitig to
Bac k
then ,
th&lt;JUgh ,
longer the ~ure thmg. ,
putter and was at 74. too. He
grow the Golden Bear brand Woods was still a go lfing
Remember, he h~d a two- was hardly surprised 10 see
tnlo a golt course deSign and savan t, dtstracted only as
shot lead with two holes to Woods leading, and not just
equipment empire.
often as he wante.J . Now,
play in the Masters and had to because of what happened five
It also means his car~er he' s married, talking about
go extra holes with Chris years ago,
,
traversed more than a lew a family, and coping with
DiMarco. And just when he
"I expect him to do well in
peaks. and valleys, .even 111 the failin g. health of a father
was making a charge at every tournament, but espehts pnme. Ntcklaus longest who taught him · not just
Pinehurst No. 2 last month in cially in the majors, where it
drought dunng that stretc h how to play golf, but to pour
the U.S. Open, he made two takes a guy that not only has a
reached thr~e years and 12 · every ounce of his being into
straight bogeys . at critical 'good goll game, but under~tnught maJors. before end- ·· it.
moment s and finished two stands how to play a difticulr
mg her~ .. C.ot~ctdentally..
The days when doing just
shots
behind ,
Michael golf course," Hamilton said.
wtth a ~m Ill 1970. And tl that will see m like too much
Campbell.
"And this is a difticult golf
Woods ts mdeed JUSt htttmg
, .
..
.. .
he
·
has
.
b
een
course."
Then
again,
his prime -. an~ he said as to bear arc sttll o,lt 1~ the
playing wen since missing the
Along with two bogeys
much · eariter this week _, luture. But . one gl.mce at
in
Dallas
for
rhe
tirst
time"
from
the bunkers. Woods let
cut
th en the 0-for- 10 ·111 ajor Ntcklaus as the old ,man
in
seven
years,
finishing
no
two
other
birdies get away.
championship streak rh~ll departed the Old Course on
worse than third in his last
One followed a somber two
ended at the Masters in April Thursday should have to~,d
And
his
power·
is
minutes
at noon, when St.
three
events.
may have marked the begin- Woods that when he satd, .!
still
a
big
advantage
at
St.
Andrews
joined
the rest of the
ning of his climb from one plan to be here lor a whtle.
Andrews.
He
had
nothing
country
in
observing
two minof those valleys.
he' d better mean it.
more tnan a wedge into six utes of silence to honor vicWoods' opponents, obvi- .
holes, and twice was putting tims of the terrorist ·attacks in
Jim Litke is a natio11al
ously, are · hoping otherwise.
from just off a par 4.
London last week, Woods
And the fact.. that he · was sports colwnnist fur The
One of those came at the later revealed his mother was
shaky 'before closing out Assucialed Press. Write ro
ninth, \vhen his tee shot in London the day of the
Chris DiMarco in a playoff him at jlilkeaf&gt;.urg
stopped just short of the green. bombings.
"I'm very thankful that my
That was the· start of four
straiaht birdies, capped off by mom is still here," he said.
of 45 to claim his fourth c.on- the grand finale, the roundup
He resumed his quest for t\)e ·
another monstrous drive that
secuti ve Fruth Trophy.
at Hidden Valley in Point
left him a short chip on the Open with a chip on the par-5
Bellamy tinished second in Pleasant, W. Va., on
12th.
14th that went past the hole
the season event. followed by Monday, .July IMat 9 a.m.
But he found another bunker and into the swale, costing
Brett Milhpan on the day and
Seasonal awards are present- the Coffins- on tlie 13th him a good look at birdie. And
on the year.
ed and go lf~rs play with h&lt;md-'
with a 2-iron slightly pulled to he missed a 6-footer for birdie
Libby Leach won the Fruth icaps t.o win prizes to close out ·
the left, and he was barely able on the 15th.
Trophy every week in the the 2&lt;kl5 links cmnp[ugn.
to get back into the fatrway.
Still. he was right where he
girls division and easily cap- · Registration for the event
And a 5-iron from the 16th wanted to be - in the lead,
tured the seasonal title.
at Hidden Valley is slated for
fairway turned just 'slightly and· in ·control of the Old
Next for ·the tour will be 8:30a.m.
.and wound up in Wig bunker Course.
hole won with an approach
to 4 feet.
Wie said she' and caddie
Greg Johnston talked about
her hitting 'the shot - and
then she did it.
"That's not your typica l
up-and-down," Renner said.
shaking his head, "She
played it perfect. That was
very impressive."
Wie closed out the match
on the 17th when Renner hit
his S-iron over the green
and' into a lake .
Wie has left her three
match -play victims intimidated and impressed,
"She's every bit the player I've seen on TV," said
Hockersmith , who lost Jhe
first five hol es . ''TV makes
you look a little taller; she's
definitely taiL " ·
Ogden lost ii1 the quarterfinal s a year ago to eventual
winner Ryan Moore, who
ha s since turned pro. Ogqen
said he won't be intimidated
if Wie outurives him.
"I'm a pretty small guy."
he said . "Every body I play
with hits it past me:··

'

'
"

.'

�•

•

·.·

•

..

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Page B4 • The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July

www, mydailysentinel.com

Friday, July 15, 2005

15. 2005

www.mydailysentinel.com

m:rtbune- Sentinel - l\e

----------------------~'~o~ur~d~e~Fm="~~~ ~2o~o~s___·~·--------------------~

C .L ASSIFIED

Loss of teainmate in crash a setback for Arnistrong
~

BY JoH·N lEICESTER

rouR DE FRANCE STAG E I 3

I

coastal·plalns
Spea....
Ulf

ASSOC IATED PRESS

The Tour p icks up on the hot
Mediterran ean coas t for one oi the
fastest ~tag es o f the event.

D!GNE - LES - BAINS ,
F ran ce N o t every t hin g
w e nt according t o pl an f o r
Lan ce
Arm st ro n g
on
Thursd ay at th e Tour d e
France.
The Ame ri c an retaine d hi s
over all l ead o n the las t o f
three d a y s i n th e Alp s. Th e
loss o f
M a nu e l
B e ltra n ,
h o w e v e r , c o uld b e c riti ca l in
th e up coming Py r e n ees
Davtd M o n co utie wo n t h e
12 th s t age, b eco min g th e
15 th Fre n c hm a n sin ce W o rld
War 1l t o win o n Bastill e
Day. F ranc e's n a tiOnal holt -

Appr 10 m1

'

1 ···, .•_~, ·

;;yi

Fl~stl

j

-...., ~-.

'\1 '11-\~JCI- · 't'
Stage 13~
' ' itt·
Fri., July 15
/ ';:

"

E23

10 km.

.

·~·.

1!!!1!!

'

Flat

Or

Oftfee 11o~~
hi s t; llun r iv.a ls tn a group
m o r e th a n I 0 mmutes bac k .
Arm stro n g w a s 4 1s t.
Ht s l ead o v e r sec ond- place
Mt ck a el
Ra ~ mu sse n
of
D e7l m ark st ayed a t 3g second s. 1v ith F r e n c h ri de r
C hri stoph e
M o r ea u
s till
thud , 2:34 b e htnd th e s i x-

AP photo
Tou r de Fra n ce d oct o rs t end t o M an u el B e ltra n of Spam, o f Tea m Dtsc o ver y Ch annel, afte r h e
f e ll du nng t h e 1 2 th stage of the Tour de Fra nce cycltng race b e twee n Bn a n con . French Alp s,

ttmc

c hampton .
!t a l tan !vat) B a&gt;So r e main s
2 4 0 b ack . f o urth ove rall ,
wll h Jan U ll r ich of Germ a n y
4: 0 2 behind tn n i n t h .

an d D tgne- les-Ba in s , s outheastern France Thurs day,
lain asce nt s. ustn g ht s uphill
speed to sh ake qtf ri val s.
Hi s loss " co u l d b e v ery
nit ic al w tth th e days that we
h ave c: omin g up.'' Arm stron g
satd . " Three to u g h day s in
the Pyre n ees . W e don 't w a nt
t o l o se &lt;~n y c lt m b e r s a nd
T rik t ' ts o n e o t o ur pure
climbers ."
The m o unl u in s th a t se p ar at e Franc e and S patn co me
S aturday afte r a m o stl ) fl a t
stage F nday from M tr a ma s
t o Mont p e llt e r in southe rn
Fr ance

Not
s ince
2 001
ha s
Arm strong f ini sh e d in Paris
without all o f hi s t ea mmates
B e ltr an 's ro le ha s b ee n to
lead th e Am e ri ca n o n m o un -

Arm stro n g still has seve ral
stron g climbers among hi s
t enuining seven support rid e r s . Th ey include Yu10 slav
Popovyc h .
w ho
h e lp e d

'

Armstro n g
l ea v e
n v al s
.b e hind w ith brutal acce l e ra tion o n th e ftr st Alpine sta ge,
and
J ose
Lu is
Rubi e r ,t,
known .tS "C he chu ••
· "[ f e el very l:Onfid e ol t hat
wtth th ose seve n g uys we
c an 111 a na ge ,"
A r m stro n g
sa id .
Bru y n ee f w as l e ss

~ mph at -

ic

'
" The r e

t s no on e

reall y

who c an pt c k up "'hal he
w as d o in g," Bru y n ee l stitd .
" W e need all the g u ys and
e v e rybod y kn o w s hi s rol e
and h e a nd C h ec hu w e r e
working in the early moun tain s . It' s g oin g
to be
tou g h e r o n th e t eam
ol
cour se . b eca u se it 's o n e g u y

less and hi s JO b \w ill h.t vc t o
be sh ared w i t h a few g uys .
" It's to u g h to l ose a n d e r
bu t the good n ews t s th ,tt h e
does n ' t ha ve a n y tl1 1ng se n o u s a nd th a t · i s th e m os t
unp o rt .t nt. .. he adde d
•

M o nc ouue i s way down i n
th e ove r :1 ll "a ndin gs, so
A r m sll o ng d id not lay c ha se
w h e n l1e and a g roup of o t h e r
ra ce r s fat fro m him tim ew t se ro d e o t f ah ead .

M o nco ull c lOok the lead
o n th e Co l du C orobm , th e
f o urth of fi vc a scents o n th e
116 2- mtl e
trek
from
Bnan co n . and cy c led alone
into Dt g n e- l es- Bains p as t
c h ee nn g
cro wd s
The
Coftdi s t e am rider co mpl e t e d th e route ·in 4 hours , 2 0
mmutes, 6 seco nd s.
" It ' s fabulous, " Moncouti c
said. " I'm so happy t o w i n.
It 's Jul y 14th. "

Fre n c h t e l e v t sio n h a tl e d
M o n co utie a s a " cl e an " win ner. ec hoing su spi c i g n s that
oth e r T oLtr rider s m ay b e
dopm g The f uri o u s rac tn g
speed s so far thts ye ar a nd
th e arrest W ed n e sda y of
lt a lt a n ri de r Da r i a Fri go
h ave ren e w e d s u c h doubts .
Fri g o 's wife was cau g ht with
s u sp ec t ed dopin g produ c t s
111 her cd r.
• M o n co ult e satd there IS n o

Arm stron g c rut sed in w nh

HOW TO WRITE AN AD

pro of of wid es pread dopin g
but
n o ted
that
French
c ycli st s who a re mostly
way off the pace again thi s
ye ar are disco uraged.

r

Moncoutte placed si xth at
th e Dauphine Libere before
the T o ur. E Yen with the time
made up
with
hi s win
Thursday, he i s 40th overall
at the Tour, 32 :06 behind

l"'ul»ll c

_ Your

.

'

..

..

c

o

n

u

y

CommiSSioner or by
certified
check,
cashiers check, or let·
tar of credit upon a
solvent bank In the
amount of not less
than 10% of the bid
amount In the favor ol
the aforesaid Meigs
County
Commissioner. Bid
bonds
shalt
be
accompanied
by
proof of Authority of
the offtclal or agent
signing the bond.
Bids shall be seated
and marked as Bid
for: Meigs County
Paving
ProJeCt·
Round 19 and matled
or delivered to.
Meigs
County
Commissioners
The Meigs County
Courthouse, Second
Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(7) 15, 18, 25

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
hereby
NOTICE:is
given
that
on
Saturday, July 16,
2005, at 10:00 a.m ., a
public sale will be
held at 211 W Second
St. , Pomar:oy. The
Farmer's Bank and
Savingo Company Is
selling lor cosh ' In
hand or certlf!Ud
check the following
collateral; ,
1999 Dodge Durango

U

T

1B4HS28Y2XF500488
1988
ShultzMobile
Home- M236455
1998 Dodge Avenger
2D,AES,4B3AU 55 2N1
WE154713.
The
Farmer s Bank and
Savi ngs
Company,
Pomeroy,
~
Ohro ,
reserves , the right to
btd at this sale , and to
withdraw the above
collateral prior to
sale. Further, The
Farmers s•nk and
Savi ngs
Cohlpany
reserves the right to
reject any or ail b ids
submitted. The above
descr ibed collateral
will be sold " as IS·

where is", with no
expressed or Implied
warranty given.
For further informs·
tlon ,
or
lor
an
appomlment
to
tnspect
collateral,
prior to sale date contact Cyndle, Stacy, or
Randy at 992-2136. (7)
13, 14, 15.

.,
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE:ts
hereby
given
that
on
Saturday, July 16,
2005, at 10:00 a.m ., a
public sale will be
held at Far mer's Bank
and
Savings
Company
parking
lot , 211 W. Sec ond
Street, Pomeroy, OH.
Credit Express Inc. Is
selling for cash in
hand , or certified
check, the following
collateral :
1993 Buick LeSabre
VINJ
4D,
I G4HP5316PH492364
Credit Express, Inc,
Pomeroy,
bH,
reserves the right to

bid ::t this

s:~lc,

and to

withdraw the above
collateral prior to
sale. Further, Credit
Express ,
Inc.
reserves the right to
re;ect any or an bids
submlned.
The above described
collateral will be sold
" as is-where Is'', with
no
ex pressed
or
Implied
warranty
given.
For further information,
or
for
an
appoinlment
to
insp~ct
collateral ,
prior to sale date contact Trlsch or Stacy at
992-1 771
(7) 13, 14, 15

Public Notice
Sheriff Sale
Case
Number
04c v1 59
Dey lsch e Ban k Tru st
Company
Plaintiff
VS

V1ctor L. Chevalier

Nl~othl

I

or less.
Parcel
No :
090t 36210901363
Currant Owner: Victor
L. Chevalier at at
Property at: 66303 St.
Rt. 124
Reedsville, Ohio
Prior
Deed
Reference. Volume
t 33, page 929
Appraised
at :
$30,000 00
Term s of Sale:Cannol
be sold tor less than
2/3
rds
of
the
appraised value. t O'lo
down on day of sale,
or certified
c ash
check, balance due
on confirmation of
sale .
Robert E. Beegle,
Meigs County Sheriff
Attorney
for
the
Plaintiff
Lerner,
Sampson
&amp;Rothfuss
P.O. Box 5480
CinCinnati , ·
Ohio
45201-5408
(513) 241 -3100
(7)1 . 8, 15

******
*
*

PUBLIC NOTICE
Separate, sealed pro-.
posals
w•ll
be
received al the Office
of the Treasurer of the
Board of Education of
Southern
J._ocal
School District of
Racine, OH '" Meigs
Cdunty,
until
12
o'clock noon, July 22 .
2005. At that lime ,
opened by the treasurer of said board as
provided by law for a
71 passenger school
bus, according to
specifications of said
board of education .
Separate and independent bids w lll be
received with respect
to lhe chassis and
body type, and will
sJate that the buses
when assembled and
prior to delivery, comply with all school
distr ict
'specifications, all !l'alety regulations and currant ·•
Oh io
Minimum
Standards lor School

CnngJaluhJIHm~

**
**
**
*
**
**
** '\
*

to Jo.,wh T
R,l\\1'\nn nn

nmk mg the

NOW HIRING
0\ l' l 100 Pm a w m AmdqbJe

N ow lnterv tewm g All Posthon s For. Our Potnt Pleasant Location
O pen lnte rv tews For
Bartenders • Servers • Hosts • Cooks • Prep Cooks
Dishwashers • Cleaning Crew
Please Apply @ Bannlgan's
966 E. Main Street, Jackson,- OH
711~1211115

llrru 7116/2005 aud 7!18!21HJ51hru 712312()()5
Betwee" the Hmt~ of 9am- Jlpm &amp; 2pm • 6pm

•
•
•

of

North\\ e:-.tt:rn
Oh1o wllh a ~ 0
avarag~ J o~ i~h
t..,

the

~on

ul

·Jcuy &amp; Dchhoc
Ycaugc r ~

Help Wanted

,

local Area ·Industry seeking temporary personnel. 40 Hour work week anticipated. Rotating
shift work required. Two Year degree preferred.
Entry level wage .rate approximately $10:oo per '
hour · with moderate benefit package being
offered.
,_J

Interested candidates are to submit resumes to:

t!rantlj);\i'l'iirs .an:·* ·Emmt:U &amp; Zor &lt;1

Raw ...on all ol

M1ddkpon. OH .

Congratulation' *
al~;o 10 Jal! my
H 1gg mbo1h:nn

for makm g the
Dcan "s l 1'il at
Norllm ~" l l' rn

malung l l\ l' r u
5 a\cragc . ~on *
o! Carol &amp;
C.1rol
Htggmbotham
of Galhpoh s

Ferry. WV

******

P.O. Box 1051

New Haven, WV 26265- 1051
~eadline Date : July 24, 2005

An Equal Opportunity Employer

1

HlR SAl.l.

Wanted Fronl desk clerk
Apply 1n person at Holiday
lrtn· Gall•polls No phone 11 2 Pleasant Street 3·
Bedroom, 1 112 Baths
calls please
Fam1ly Room. Dmmg Room
Full Basement Storage
150
Sl..1l001 s
Bldg, Garage. New Central
IN--l'RIJCTION
A•r Cond, New Wmdows
Gallipolis Career College (304)675 4034

SAU~·

accessori es, nursing un.•·

Blacklwh1te female shor t
ha1red , 2 years old. Indoor
only. Call (740)446·2700

Killen/cats a\lallable for
adopllen at the Perenn1al
Cal Spay/neuter vouchers
available Call for 1nforma·
tlon
(740)446-2700
(Obnatlons accepted)

(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today' 740-446·4367. 2br 2ba ,(Mason) Sunroom
New Carpet. Heat-Pump
1·800·214-0452
FiniShed Basement Double
wwwgBIIIpollscare&amp;rcollageeom
.
Accrad•ted Memb er Aco&amp;clltll'l Q Garage &amp; Storage Bu•ld•ng
Council lor lndepemlanl Collegos (304)773 5338
and SchoOlS12746
- - - - - -- - 3 bedroom Ranch 2 C&lt;H
170
garage In-ground pool.
MlSCt.l.l .&lt;\N1~Jl"
$90.000 Call (740)256·
1962
OIRECTV
FREE Home _ _ _ _..:..__ _ _
entertainment
System 3 bedroom 2 ,bath , Ran ch
FREE Equipment and Install style house. newly remod·
up to four rooms 145 chan· 9 1 d B1d 11
$69 000
e
we area
'
nels $29 00 a month As~ Cal\ (740) 441 · 1528 or
how to get FREE HBO (740)709-5952 alter 4pm
MAX, and STARS 1·800523-7556 lor deta1ls
3 BA 2 BA LA/FR. UT. stor·
age btd , 2 decks poot. appll·
WANI'EIJ
ances Rodney $85 000
To
(740}245·931B

0

"

Dresser. computer desk, f• sh
tank, kidS, adult clothes
,
Yard sale Fn-Sat 7/ 1 5 ·7/ ~ 6 .
8am·6pm 11 17 Teodora
,Ave

='4-•Y•ARD--S•A•LE"',_-..,
PIJMEROYIMillDUl

L---·F·OU·N·D--_.1
IT\IIe
SA 143
Pomeroy Saturday,July 16&amp;
Monday 18 9 00 lo 4 DO
Storm door, couch &amp; love
seal m1crowave. schoo l
c_l_ol_h_e•...:·_b_a...:by:._•_le_m
_s_ __
4

Found Male Jack RtJ ssell
Tamer. at GKN Plan t m
Galhpohs,Oh iO .(304)675 ·
1907
--------Lost Jack. Russell Terner.
while, 7 months old, w/ col·
lar Reward Lost 1n area &lt;Of
Bunce Road Family pel
Please call (740)446·4706
7 4 0 4 4 1 76 4 6

ro_r_:(__1:._:::c:.-:,.,~=· --,

SHOP
CLASSIFIEDS

4x4's For Sele .............................................. 725
Announcement ...... ...................... :........ ....... 030
Antlquas ..................................................... .. 530
Apartmentalor Rent ...... ..................... ........ 440
Auction and Flea Market... ..........................080
Auto Parts &amp; Accessories .......................... 760
Auto Repair .................. ...... ... ....................... 770
Autos lor Sale ...................., .. .. ... ..................
Boats &amp; Motors lor Sal&amp;....... ...................... 750
Building Supplies ........................................ 550
Business and Buildings ............................. 340
Business Opportunity .... ............................ 210
Business Tralnlng .......... ............................. 140
Campers &amp; Motor Homes ............. : ............. 790
Camping Equipment ......... ... ........ !....... ....... 780
Cards of Thanks ................ .......................... oto
Child/Elderly Care ......., ............................... 190
ElectrlcaVAafrlgeration .................. ............. 840
Equipment lor Rent... .............................. ... .480
Excavating ................................................... 830
Farm Equlpmant.. ..................................... ... 610
Farms lor Rent... ..........................................430
Farms lor Sala ............. ................................ 330
For Lease ..................... .. ....... :..... ................. 490
For Sele .................. ............ .......................... 585
For Sale or Trade ......................................... 590
Fruits &amp; Vegetables ....... .................... .......... 580 ,
Furnished Rooms ........................................ 450
General Haullng ............ ........ ....... ................850
Glveeway ...........................................\ ..........040
Happy Ads ....................................................050
Hay &amp; Graln ................... ............................... 640
Help Wanted ................................................. ItO
Home lmprovements .................... : .............. 810
Homes lor Sale .............. ........................: ..... 310
Household Goods ....................................... S10
Houses lor Rent .......................................... 410
Ill Mamorlam ............................................... 020
lnsuranca .................... ................................. 130
Lawn &amp; Garden Equipment.. ...................... 660
Llvastock .... ..................................................630
Lost and Found ........................................... 060
Lots &amp; Acreage .... ........................................ 350
Mlacellaneous .............................................. 170
Mlacallaneous Merchandlse....................... 540
Mobile Home Repalr ................................,. .. 860
Mobile Homes lor Rant ............................... 420
Mobna Homes lor Sele ................................ 320
Money to Loan ................ ............................. 220
Motorcyclea &amp; 4 Wheelers .......................... 740
Muolcallnotruments ................................... 570
Parsonals ... ...................... ............................ 005
Pets for Sate ................................................ 560
Plum~lng &amp; Heating .................................... 820
Professional Servlces .......................,. ......... 230
Radio, TV &amp; CB Repalr ............................... t60
Real Eslllle Wanted ............. :....................... 360
Schoolslnstructlon .................................. ...150
Seed , Plant &amp; Fertilizer .............................. 650
Situations Wanted ........................... ............ 120
Space for Rent .....:....................................... 460
SpOrting Goods ........................................... 520
SUV'a tor Sale ..............................................720
Trucks lor Sale ............................................ 715
Upholstery ............................................. ...... 870
Vans For Sate ............................................... 730
Wanted to Buy ............................................. 090
Wanted to Buy- Farm Supplles ......... : .. ...... 620
Wanted To Do ................ .............................. t 80
Wanted to Rent.. ............ :.............................470
Yard Sale- Galllpolls ...................................072
Yard Sale-Pomeroy/Middle.: ......,................ 074
Yard Sate-Pl. Pleaaant ... :............................ 076

Estate Tag Sale July 15 and
16 644 S 3rd, Middleport
Furniture appliances, etc
Garage Sale·July 18·23
8am-4pm 3 m1le out 143
F1rst dnveway on lefl past
Wolfe Pen Road Lots of
baby g1fl clothes O·
24months
Other baby
1tems toys, g1rls. mens,
womens
clothing
Houseware 11ems Ram or
shtne Watch for stgns
July 15&amp; 16 on Pomeroy
P l~e. about 1 m1
1e past
Chester Cemetery on leh
Rain cancel 9 00 till ?
One M1le up SA143
Thurs Fr1&amp;Sa t
Kmves
anllques &amp; collect ib les

Road)l
MILE
SALE•
Saturday, July 16th -·5·7
houses w1th 8 10 fam•hesTR 404 (Bahr Road) 3 m•les
North of Chesler oft SA 7
Starts at 9 00 am
"
Sal July 16 9 00· mov1ng
sale. ra1n or shme. St 124
across from Meigs Elem
School

YARD SALEPI: PI.EASAI'H
Big Yard Sale 4-Famlly
Krodel Club House, Fnday
15th 9a m·3pm Ra1n or
Shme

t

WANTEil

roBuY

Absolute Top Dollar U S
Sli ver and Gold Co1ns,
Proofsets, Gold A•ngs, Pre
1935
US
Currency
So1tta1re D•amonds· M T S
Co•n ShOp, 15 1 Second
Avenue. Gall•polls, 740-4462842
Casket l lag lor VeterSn·s
familY (7 40)388-8942
l \11' 1 11, \ 11 \ 1
"' I I(\ If I ..,

LEARN

TO
DRIVE
'NO E:o!P'ERIE~E NECESSAR'Y

,

' fUlL HME CLASSES
• COL TRAINING

' F INANCING AVAII.ABLE
• 100 PLACEMENT
" ENFI()LLINO NON

'1- •&gt;

~.-,.,~-.

110

li m~

Call 800/548-8694 or ema1l Need help for ParkinsOn"s
mquu•es
to pat1ent 1n Maryland Lrve 1n
mce couples home All
e)(penses paid. plus salary
Need dnvers licenses Call
(740)288-0290 lea...e mes·
sag~

100 WORKERS NEEDED

Assemble crafts,
wood 1iems
To $480/wk
Mater1ats pr01(1(1ed
Free 1nformat10n ~g 24Hr
80 1·428-4649

J(,.,,.,,n· LICense w1!h

STNA'S 0\/el'brooi{'Center
IS currently accepting appll·
catiOns for lull-t1me STNA S
7A·7P. and 7P·7A. and 3A·
C
liniCal to
r esu~e
3P·······
shtfts are ava1l·
a~
If you are Interested.
Career Center
please come in and hll ou t
157. R1o Grande
an apphcahon at 333 Page
Street, Middleport Please
iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!l "No Phone calls EOE

Board
l ~eS&lt;•oralo') Care

e:~:~:~::~l

No Down Payment Poss•bte
1900 square ft house 3
bedroom 2 bath full base
men! new hf,!aot pump sets
on 3 acres SR 7 Easter'!
SchOol D•stnct (740)985·
4321

320 Monn .E l-10\m;
fOR SA LE

1974 12x60 2 BR, needs )
moved has sk1rt1n g aod
~ ron! porch $840 , (937)322
"
1719
----~-

1995 Clayton Doubtew•de.
24x52 3br 2ba total elec·
tnc
$18 000
OBO
(30 4}675·2907 ·

-5-H'-om-es_u_n-de_r_S~I0~0-0-0

W1U deliver (740)385 7671
97 ~l eet wood 14x70 total
electnc W11! help w•th deltvery Includes central a1r Only
$10 995 Call (740)385·
962 1

1

1 1 11

Pa ramediCS

&amp;

EMT's

lO

1

.Ill 1SIM :.\.~

~==0:1'1:':':R:ll;IN:r:n:·:::

needed P1ke
Apply
at 1354 .
Jackson
Galllpol•s

1

•N OTIC E•
AN/LPN 5-· Overbrook cen
HIO VALLEY PUBLISH
ter IS currently accef}lulg
applicatiOns for LPN S and lNG CO recommends tha
ou do bus1ness wilh pea
AN S 7A· 7P and 7P 7A
te you know, and NOT t
Shlfi S are available If you
end
money throug!'1 th
are Interested please come
a1l unt1t you have 1nvest1
1n and 1111out an applicatiOn
aled the olferm
at 333 Page
Street
M•ddlepor t or call and "1':::"'--:''!",;.,_ __,
speak
With
Hothe
Bumgarner LPN
Staff
MONh'"l'

r

Deyetopmenr
_...:_...,...
_ _EOE
_ _ __
Teacher- Posl tlon·Ava•lable
Early -EducatiOn-StatiOn
INC Credentials preterre/l
Send RestJme ' 2122
Jt!llftl:,un

PI Pleasan t WV
July 22nd

A"

25550

by

The
A!Mns·Me1gs
EducatiOnal Service Center
IS seekmg a HEAD START
FISCAL ASSISTANT An
Assoo1ate degree preferred
1n busmess Adm1mstra110n
or 3 years e~pertence 1n a
F1scal or Payroll OffiCe ThiS
poS111on has Board approved
t&gt;enef1ts Submit letter of
Interest resume and refer·
ences to John D Costanzo.
Supermtendenl,
AthensMeigs ESC PO Box 684
Pomeroy
Oh
45769

~;:;l~l~l~Lo~AN~=~
••NO 'I"I(' F. '* *
arrow Smart Contac
ne Oh1o Dl\llslon o
manc1al
lnst•tut•on'
lf1ce of Consume
ffa1rs BEFORE you reh
ance your homO o
bla1n a loan BEWAR
f requests for any larg·
dvance payments o
ees or Insurance Cal
he Ofl•ce of Consume
fta1rs toll tree at 1·866
78·0003 to tearn 11 Tht::
bro~er
or
ender
IS
prope r!
teensed i~tS tSil~

r

All reel estate edvarttsJng
1n thiS MWS~per Is
subject to the Federal
Fai r Housing Act of 196e
whi&lt;: h makes ll tllegalto

ndvert•se nny
hm1tal1on ot
d ls cr~mma t1on based on
ri!ICe color ret1g1on sex
pre ference,

familia l status o r naUonal
origin. or any Intention to

make a~y suc l"l
pre larenca, limitation or
dl serimiMtlon .··
Thla ne Wti JMJMr will not
knowingly accepl
,
advertlaemenla for rea l
estate which Is In
violation of the taw Our
readers are hereby
lnlormed that all

advertised In
th1s newapaper are
' avallab!e.on an rtqual
opportunily biiHt .

For sale 2 bedroom house
Single Oath Wlthm C1ty limiTS
a~kmg
S60 000
Call
(7 40)446 8595
alter
9 OO!;!m
...:.___ __ _
F~.•r sale by owne' T1,11 pr '\
lot at 109 Ceda r ~t 1i.:.t' '
Gatlipol•s at end of (, t.,, . ...,
foo tball l1etd Ciir( 4 f,w., I\4 195 Jo• deta•ls

r

The Gall1p0hs Super 8 IS Cakes by Kathy· wedding &amp;
accePting applications for all·occas•on also Karaoke
PT Desk Clerk A.pply m per- call (740)992·0723 alter
son no phone calls please 3p~
Wanted
E~~:penenced - - - -- TURN ED DOWN ON
Timber culler and dotEtr
opera tor ' Please
call SOCIAL SECURITY /SSI?
No Fee Unless We W•n•
(740)256·6963 0 1 (740)25&amp;
1·686·582·3345
1321

n

dl'l'~hng!l

Appilcat•on Deadlme July •=------~
Needed· baby s1ner tor 1n 20 at noon The AMESC ts
l'lloFI-:'\stoNAL
Equal Opportumty
our home (PortlancU.. 2 days an
Employer/PIOVIder
5EKVI(B
a week. (740}843·1103

TRACTOR· TRAILER
TRAINING CENTERS
WYTHEVILLE VA

1-Jo~n s
HJRSM J

New 14x70 3 bedroom 2
bath Only $198 63 per
month Call Ela•Ae (740)385
Georges Portable Sawmill. 3BR 1 1/2 bath Ranch 2 ca1 2434
don't haul your Logs to !he garage. m·ground pool
New 3 BR Home Only
• _ _ffi_CL_P•W•A
•NTE-•J•l• . Mill just ca ll 304 675 1957 Green school d•stnct $189/mo
Includes ale del1v·
,
$11 5,000 (740)446-16 191or
er
y
and
set up (740)385·
photos &amp; more lnlormat.on
Rooftng, Decks. HHdwood ht!p //www geoctltes com/bs 4367
OUTSID E SALIS
Floor and Ceram.c T1le
m~p~sc~o~!~32/~---I ...C:HS &amp;
ms!allat•on
New ~h~o~
REI1 RESENT A TJVE
Constru ction Pole Bams Jbr 2ba, pool, garage star- .,__..,;A,;,l;;;'R,;;!,A
;,;;;l;;·•,;,·_.,..
Top
Notch
Bulldmg
The Ga11 •po115 Dal1Y Con tractors (304)675·3042 age bldg
apphances
Tnbune 19 accepti ng
$130 QOO 5 m1les !rom 33 I Wooded r~ cre Country
Home S• le near Umon
"W"V,;0;.;;3;;.
66;,;6.;.7_ _ _ __, on Al66 1, (740}592·0426
resumes for a full lima
Campground EtectndRurat
190
Cltll
.l
'nc:t.'~'m
.\'
outs1de sales representa·
.u ::. ._.........
e' room house In Galtlpohs waler (304)882 3772 call
C
t1ve to JOin our sales team
o\Rf.
Needs work
$29 500 alt81 9prn
d
b
an lo manage an esta
(740)441
·
1078
or
(740)446·
--------1IShed accoun 1 11s1 wh11e
For sale A•ver1ront acreage
Ch1ldcare ava1lable near 0974
11
ca mg on new accounts Holzer Charola1s Lake --------~ a10und 6 acres on At 7 mce
Th e successful can didate Esta tes Anytime Man Sat
Attention!
Plilee for a new home Ca ll
w1 11 be a diSCiplined self· 12 yrs exp $3/hr $25/day Local company offenng ' NO {740)446·8595
alter
motwed team player that Debb•e (740)446·2451
DOWN PAY MENT pro· 9 OOpm
understands the 1mpor·
grams for you to buy your r.:l~~R~t. ,·,~~~·:o.;-_•••.lance of developmg
Home ch•ldcare. stare cerl• home Instead of rent•ng
\\ \ \-11- H
strong, mutually beneh
fled and pr1vate pay accept· • 100% l•nancmg
c1 a1 busmess relation
ed Clean safe home looat· • Less !han perfect credJt
sh1ps w1th our accounts
I Buy Homes· Local person
ed 3 1l2 m11es off route 33 accepted
buys homes Co•ll•denllal
KlngsbtJ ry
Road • Payment yould be the
The •deal· cand1date v. 1ll on
Ou•ck cash Ju,1 7-10·992·
have sale ekpenence For Excellent references avail· same as rent
6300 No calls atrcr 9
able
Perfect locatiOn for Mortgage
Locators
co nf1de ntml
mter\llel'i
HY\ I \I.S
67
please send re sume and parents who work Wllhlfl the(•7_4_0&gt;
_3_ _._0000
_ _ _ __, ~;;::::::::::::::.
cover teHer to Gallipolis Pome'oy and Alhens 8'ee
Dally Tr1bune Attn J1m C,all 740·992 -9066
10
H(Jl ~•·'
Freeland 825 Th1rd Ave,
1-1\1 \( Ill
HI~ K~Sl
GallipOlis OhiO 45631

1110
· _.I
1L--liEL-•P-W•ANiliD-An EKcellent way to earn
Dlrecl Sarvlco
money The New Avon
Employee Needed
Call Man lyn 304·882·2645 REM Opttons 1n St Albans IS
currently acceptmg applicaAVON 1All Areasl To Buy or lions lor a D1rect Serv•ce
0 - 11
Shlr 1ey Spears 304· Employment m the Pt
.,
675 1429
·
Pleasant area for a yotJng
Background Screenmg •nter· mental
adult female
ith developdelay WMust
be 18
\llewer EKce/len t commum· .uoars of age, have a vaUd
cat1on and computer sk•tls ,~
dnver's license. and be·
reqUired $10 00 per hour ·
reened through a "rlmlnal
no benefits Call Mark 1· SC
"check
background
800·556·3583
Weekday nours des tred
Brand new salon lodk1ng lor Part-t1me pos1uon available
&amp;Kpenanced Cosmetologist w1th po tential 10 become full
Contact Nancy
Chargmg booth rent only t1me
Gordon or Cnsta Hill lor
(740)367·0502
more 1nformat1on (304)768 .
Brand new shop w1lh new 5575
equ1pment· Chargmg booth
rent only Seek•ng eKpe n· 'F:-u-II-=Tome
_ H_e_lp_W
_a_n_Jed
_ R_t-35
anced Nmt Tech that also Adult Video &amp; Book Store
prelorms ped•cureslmam- Evenmg shift &amp; M•dn•ght Do
cures {740)367{)502
Not Call Store
Call
Cerllfled
Nursing (304)549 5696
Assistant for fu11 l1me and
Full·tlme babysltler n9eded
temporary (90 day) work 1n a
Barton Chapel Road, Mason
11 4 Bed Long Term Care
County No students apply
State Fac•ll ty Full·t•me
call 6pm-9pm 304-576·3353
emplovment ot1ers an exten·
s•ve benefit pacKage. •nclud· Help ~ wanted
Tomato
1ng State crv11 serv1ce retire· P1ckers
(740)247·3901
ment earn up to 15 days 740-247-2165
vacation per year, 18 ·days
SICk leave, and 12 ptus pa1d Holtf.!r's Holste1n Farms of
hOlidays healthllile .nsur· Pomeroy Oh •s currently
ance IS available Salary •s seek•ng to 1111 a fu U-11me mltkcommensurate w1th e~~:pe n· mg poS1110n Applicant must
ence Must have CNA cer· have val1d driver's license
tHicatlon to work In Weat and reliable transportation
Virginia
Contact K1m Expenence a plus 740-992B1llups or V1cky Berklev, at 5010 or (740)992·5158
LBkln Hosprtal. Lak1n WV a!
openmg
(;J04l675-086q, ext 1241125, Immediate .
Warehouse Assoc1ate, qual·
Monday lhru. Fr1dav !rom
•f•catiOns
mctude
8 ooam · 4 oo pm Lakin 1
1ed to ab1
il1y tObut
lihnot
501bs,
HoSpital IS an EEOIAA drive a standard shift transEmployer
m•ss1on. and abll1!y to oper·
ate a computer eH1c1enny
Class A CDL Dnvers
Must be a\lallabte to work
Wellston Area
Immediate Opemng Local , Monday mru Fnday Send
Res'ume lo TSC13 c/o Po1nt
Hauling
Pleasant Register
Pam!
If you have T&amp;nker endorse· 200 Ma1n St
ment wrth excellent dnv1ng Pleasant WV 25550
record (m1n1mtJm 2 yrs
Local trll(:kmg company
&amp;Kp&amp;nenC§ dnv1ng SefYJ•S)
f",nd like Work•ng Mcn~ay seek•ng Class B CDL drivers
lhw Friday, some Saturday's With gooq MVA , salary pay,
Home mghtly· Pa1d by the home weekends. good
equ1pment (740)386..0855
hour (excellent wages)
or {740)709· 1581 ,

1

Do

&lt;CJ 20D5 by

www.comic •. com

ALLIANCE

1-800-334-1203

~o%'
NEA, Inc.

10

lioMJ:'

10

L--·GiiiiAiit.iiLtiii'O-LiiilS-_.1

lniT AND

IH \I I·.SI \II

lwrlgttt®ic net

_o_r_(3_o_
40_5_9_3_
·2_6_49_ __

CLASSIFIED INDEX

•

Help Wanted

110

Garage sa le July 14·1 6, 2 5
Ae gcstered male Chocolate m•les east of Porter on 554

Free to good home BwK old
Black Lab miK pupp1es 1
female, 1 male (740)256
1355

Help Wanted

*
*
**
*·
*
** HUMAN RESOURCES DEPT.
*
**
*
M/F/D/V
*
** IFIND AJ.OB IN THE CLASSI~IEDS

De.m\ hst a L the *
U n1 vc r~H y

··

:
•
:
..

INDUSTRIAL WORKERS

Happy Ad

GIVEAWAY

8 Lab &amp; Beagle ml)(ed pup·
piSS IO 8 good home 3
female 5 males Ready July
16th (740)441 ·0405 or
(740)645·6951

Arm stron g hijS b e en repeate dl y te sted .

Advancement Opportunities Available

KIT &amp; CARLYLE

Lila c Point S1amese, 5 yrs 5 m11es out 21 8 on the nghl
old, fe male spayed Indoor Computer and stand wllh all

r

Cycling' s g o ve rnm g body
said Thursd a y th a t all blood
and urine doping te st s from
th e first week o f the three w e ek race were negative .'

, Fllrther lrifomwumr Pleme Call (304) 786-03 11
Great Fr111d, Great Peopk, Great Pay
A Grt al Place to Work. What at~ yon in tile mood far ?

YI\RD

POUCIES Ohio Valley Publlahlng reservae the right to' e&lt;11t, reject or t:ancel any ad at any tim a Errofl must be rllported on the first day of
1
will be rnpone1blelor no mora then the cost of the 1pace QCcupled by the error Bnd only the llrat •n•ert•on Wt 1hall not be h
any lou Of' expen11 that resulte kom th e publication or oml11hm of an advertlaernent Correction will be made •n the flrl t a ~• •l ab le ed1t1on
are alwaye contldent le1. • Current rate card app lln
• All "" ' fttate edvertl ~ements are 1ubjectto the Federal Fa~r tiousmg Act ol 196e
accept• on ly help wanted ads meeting EOE 1landarda. We will not knowing ly accept eny adver1l1l ng In vlolat•on olthe law

--

no

Help Wanted

CLASS~FIEDS

c hocolate 740·985·3357
, - , . - : : - -- --

1/2 St Bernard 1f2 German Lab With papers, 3 yrs old
Shephard 4 months old (740)446·3654
(304)675·7340 or (304)5458 -------~
To good home ~2 weeks old
5 Ptl bulls, 3 ff!male, 2 Black Lab/Boarder Calha
males 8 mths old good Pu ppy
good
wlk1ds
dogs Good homes only ,(3a0l!'4;;
)B.;.
B2;;.·.:.
29;,;2;,;;
B_ _ _...,
(740)3BB·0490

you want."

SHOP

Public Notice

r.o_

•
•

Bus Construction of
the Department of
Education adopted
by and with the con·
sent of the Director of
Highway
Safety.
Specifications
and
instructions to biCt·
ders are on hie in the
offtce
of
lhe
Treasurer,
Racine,
OH.
The
Board
of
Education reserve s
the right to reject any
and all or parts of any
and all bids.
By order of the Board
ol
Education
of
Southern
Local
School District.
Pamela L. Carter
Treasurer
Southern
Local
School District
920
Elm
Street
Racine, OH 45771
(7) 1, 8, 15

~

675-5234

To

Trlbune-Senllne i ·R~tg l lter

forms
college
books,
one 's debts but my own. Male Yellow Lab mnc, looks mo'v•es, cloth es toys and
Gary F Hysell, Pomeroy, Oh tuu blooded. good w1th k1d s more 711 6 •7117 , 8 ooam 6months old (304 )895·3012 5 OOpm

" At the Dauphine Libere , l
managed 'to stay with th e
b es t. At the Tour , I no longer
c an ," Moncoutie satd . " It ts
ltke that e v ery year. I know
that the Tour g oe s faster.
Th at i s th e w.11y it i s. So be it.
Y o u draw the c onclus'ion s

Cu st o ms officers checked
at leas! two vehicles from
two separate Tour team s
ThufS(j ay but found nothing
su spt c iou s.

YARD SALE

Blonde, black. &amp; 1

I'm not responsible fo r any- only Ca ll (740)446·2700

Nul.h:cl!i I n Nc~ s J:»UpcrN .

0.14 of an acre more

Ir

'G1VEAWAY

. lab m11( pupp1es ready to

Canceled P1stol Class July
23, 9 00 a m , VFW, Maso n,
WV Phone 740-843·555 5
or Cell 740·416·3329

It'» K• .. o -. l&gt;t.•ll vc ••'-'d Rh&amp;hl lu VuUr Dnooa·.

elal
Defendants
Court of Common
Pleas, Meigs County,
Ohio
In pursuance of an
order of sale to me
directed from said
court in the above
entitled action, I will
expose to sale at public auction on the
front steps of the
Meigs County Court
House on Friday,
August 5 , 2005 at
10:00 a.m. , of said
day, the following
described real estate:
Situated In the State
of OH , County of
Metgs and In the
Township of Olive.
Being
In
One
Hundred Acre Lot No.
103, In Sections Nos.
3 and 9, Town No. 4,
Range No. 1 I , of the
Ohio Company's purchase, and bounded
on the Soulh by
Lands
of
Pearl
Kibble; on the East by
lends of Pearl Kibble:
on the North by lands
of Fred Shumway; on
the West by State
Highway No. 124 and
beginning at a stone
217 112 feet South of
the Southwest corner
of lot deeded by W. H.
Smart and wile to
Edward
Simmohs;
thence East 150 feet;
thence South 72 I 12
feet i thence Wesl 150
feel , thence North 72
1/2 feet to the place of
beginning. containing
one Fourth (1 /4) of an
acre, more or less
Also, 'being i n 100
acre Lat No. 103, in
Section Nos. 3 and 9,
Town No. 4 . Range
No. 1t of the Ohio
Company's purchase
and beginning at the
Northeast corner of
lands formerly owned
by Peart Kibble and
Southeast corner of
lands
of
Fred
Sh u mwa y;
thence
Soulh 72 1/2 feet ;
t hence West 85 teet :
thence North 72 112
feet; thence East 85
feet to the p lace o f
beginning, corltalning

Oesc::rlptlon • Include A Price • Avoid Abbreviations

~ ·--~ •:::;::;::~
go

Arm strong.

Help Wanted

ANNOUNCI'MENI'S

___

For fast results, advertise in The Daily Sentinel classifieds!
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Thursday for Sundays P••P•or

• All ads must be prepaid'

• Include Phone Number "nd Address When Needed
• Ads Should Run 7 Days

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Dally In· Column : 1 : 00 p . m .
Monday-Friday for ln5ertlon
In Next Day'• Paper
~~:~~:=~ In- Column : 1:00 p.m.
f
Sundays Paper

SOURCES Tele Atlas. Earth Satellite Corp .
USGS Tour de France Soc1ety

B e ltra n , 34 , w as tak e n t o a
h os ptt a l wh e r e &lt;1 brain scan
f o und n o tntti al stg n o f se n o u s inju ry. a ltho u g h h e w as
b e in g k e pt ove rni g ht f or
o b se r va ti o n

NOTICE TO CON·
TRACTORS
Sealed proposals lor
the Meigs Counly
Paving
Project·
Round 19 will be'
received by the Meigs
County
Commissioners
at
their office at The
Meigs
County
Courthouse, Second
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 until 1:15 p.m.,
local time, July 28,
2005,
and
then
opened and read
aloud.
The project provides
lor paving 14,510 l.F.
of Meigs CR50 Eden
Ridge, 13,464 l.F. of
Meigs CR IS Hysell
Run, 9346 L.F. ol
Meigs CR 16 Beech
Grove Road, 20,962
l.F. of Meigs CR 3
Leading Creek Road,
and 9240 L.F. of
Meigs 'CR 3 Depol
Street, and paving
3960 L.F. of Orange
Township Road T627,
Tt 063, and T287 wllh·
In the community of
Tuppers Platns and
5808 l.F. of Salisbury
T1&gt;wnshlp Road 204.
The engineer's estl·
mate lor this prQjecl
ll $540,329.00.
Domeatlc Steel Use
Requirements
as
speclfled In Section
153.01 t
of
the
RIV118d Coda apply
to thla project. Copies
of Section 153.011 of
the Revised Code can
be obtained from any
of the offices of the
Department
of
Adm l nlstratlve
Services:
Bid documents may
be secured at the
office of The Meigs
County
Engineer,
34110
Fairgrounds
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769;
Phone
Number 740-992-291 1
for a $10.00 nonrefunclabtelea.
Each bid must be
acc ompanied
by
either a bid bond In
the amount ol1 0% of
the bid amount wlth a
surety satisfactory to
the aforesaid Meigs

Word Ads

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

a n o th e r .race r and c ra sh e d o n
the day's ftr st a sc~ nt , hittm g
ht s h ead. H e w a s so d azed h e
didn 't kn ow w here h e w as.
" H e WdS ask tn g . ' Wh e r e t s
(he pe l oto n '' Wh er e t s th e
p e lot o n ?"' sa 1d t ea m man age r Jo han Bru y n ee l , addin g
the S p a ni ard g in ge rl y pt c ked
him se lf up o il th e sun-ba k ed
t arma c
·

2 0 0:1, te mounl e d h " b ik e
with d t f ftc ulty ,md p eda l e d
o n f o r a b o ut 6 miles until a
race doc t or sa id h e should
slop . Bru y neel scu d.
" W e c:o ul d see th.tt he real l y dtdn ' t kn o w w h e r e h e
was. Th e r e wa s no po w e r at
all and after a w htle h e dtdn ' t eve n rea li ?.e t h a t h e had
c ra s h ed," Bru y n ee l sm d . "So
we f o r ced ht m to stop "

ct~SJG~A~T!

(740) .992-2156 (304) 675•1333 ~-?/SA

e r s Ar ms tro n g r e lt es o n to
l ead htm u p th e T o u r's b r utal
c ltmbs, t o u c h e d w h eel s wll h

Tour-w i1ln1n g te.tm sinc e

l\egt~tet

Sentinel

To Place

day.
B e ltran , o n e of seve ral rt d-

Beltran . w h o goe s b y th e
ni c kn a m e " ' Triki " a nd " h as
b ee n part o f A rm st ro n g·,

In One Week With Us
REACH OVER 285,000 PROSPECTS
PLUS V
AD NOW ONLINE

;

..

1BR house R10 caP1pu~
$300 /mo S300 depos•~
3·4 bedroom hOuse 2nc1
Ave Gallipolis S500/mo
ssoo,depos•l
28R apt ~~ou~(&gt; .Itt Aw
$300/mo SJOU d&lt;~po~ •l has

laundry hookup
No pets re t reqvued Call
onty
6 OOpm-9 OOpm
(740):446 2422
2 BR hoiJse located m
Gali•Pc?lls $400 rnonth f:Jius '
depoSll No Pets refe rence
req u1red Call (7.:10)441·
01 10 or (740)99251i4 aslo;
for Jay

2br HOII!'&gt;P 1; i Dar k Ot
S385 mont!"
Depos1t
References
No
Dets
(3041675 27J9
2br house ,r New Haven
$350 month (..&gt;04)682·2890
3 BOA 2 1'2 baths 2 car
garage lurn•st.led close lo
Holzer hospital (740)441 •
.
0310
-.--------3 bediOOITl Pomeroy. $400
per mo plus clepostl
(7'40)992·0064
Bnck House 1Bath
acres 20 M1nutes
T-oyota - Plant...,~011 month S5001deposlt
1 ~1U41~ 76 22 t 7
18R

~. prox 8
...., .., ~-

In Pomeroy house 7
AHentlont
rooms 1 1/2 ba ths. garage Locat company ofler1ng "NO
basement deck mclud•ng DOWN PAYMENT- proCleed to 3 tors on Ot11o R1ver gra"ms for you to buy- your
Bank Call lor appo•ntrnent nome 1nstead ol rentmg
and •nlormaiiOn 740·992- · 100"~ l•nanc1ng
3424, 740·992· 1949 740·
.less than perlect cred1 t
742·2007
accepted
----· PayiT'e&gt;r"lt cout&lt;! be the
Newtv Rem("'aele-d 2 ;'18R 1
1
1 2 BA HardNOOd Ce1&lt;~ ')( snr' ' Eb 1t:&gt;nt
~
~~o·•g&lt;lgt
Locators
Flo\JJ I.;. lui Basem(' 1 ! 1.. a• 7 4 tJ 1361 ()()()()
anacned Garage- Deck &amp;
_ _.c·- --'--uvge Fenced: Backyaro "EifiCICn t 2BR Ret Oep No
SSB 500 (859)797·9806 or PetS Con'11!31llf!lltly located
(304)675·2036 .
(304)675·5162

)

�..
•

•
Page B6 • The Daily Sentinel

Frida¥, July 15, 2005

www.mydailysentlnel.com

•

1r~~~

APARIMIMS
FOR IbM

I

Friday, July 15, 2005

The Daily Sentinel • Page B7

www.mydailysentinel.com

ALLEYOOP

Central-Air (304)675-2484 must have
ruferences .
or (304)593·1481
(740)«6-1637 or (740)446·
46 16 after 5pm.
fmmaculete cabin/cottage - · - - - - - - - 1BD on 40 acres of woods One BR apartment in Spring
CIA,
sitting
room Valley. $290 per month plus
$400/month . (614)595-1773 deposit .
Sun
VaUey
or 1·800·798·4686.
Apartments. no longer
floods. (740)368·0017 or
Nice 2 Bedroom House, (740)339-0362.
Gallipolis Ferry. Call atter
Tara
Townhouse
8pm (3040675-1761
Apartments. Very Spaciou's.
2 Bedrooms, CIA, 1 112
Bath. Adult Pool &amp; Baby
Pool, Patio, Start $365/Mo.
2 BOA 2 bath, Rio Grande No Pets, Lease
Plus
area.
a_ month includes · Security Deposit Required.
S400
deposit. (740)446· 3481 .
trash.
Twin Rivers Tower is. accept·
ing applic~tions lm· watting
list tor Hud·subsized. 1· Cr.
ap~rtment , call 675-6679
EHO
--:--:---:-::-Va lley Apartments 1n Mason,
WV
currently accepting
appl tcation s " Apply at 501
Shawnee Trail in Point
Appl ic~ t ions
Pleasant
accepted on Tuesdays.
' HUO assiSted
(30 4 }675·
49
_
:!10:-'o_ _"!':"_ _ __,

2 bedroom all electric, wate r
ahd t~ash included $350
mo. and deposit. Call
(740)441·7033 .

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
"'IIII

2 bedroom mobile home in
Middleport,
$375
plus

depos1t, no inside pets.
.(740)992-3194,
1354

7 40-416 -

2 bedroom , A/C. very nice.
no pets. in Gallip9lis .
(740)446·2003

i

2 Bedroom , Sandhill Road ____
tUK lb:NT
Refere'nce required , No
,pels. (304)675-3834
Downtown Office Space- 5
room suita $650/mo: 1 room
2 BR AiC , storage bldg. 10 olf 1ce· $225/mo., 2 room
min . from town , hospttal &amp; su 1te $250/mo. Security
powe'r ' plants. (7 40)446- deposit required . You pay
4234, (740)208-7861
utilities. All spaces very ntce
Elevator
Call (740)446 -3644
3 bedroom, 2 bath . rent
$400 and deposit $400 No for appoin tlnent. '

inside pets. (740)379-2254 .

ENERGY EFFICIENT

Zephyr Tanning Bed; 24
Bulb, seldom usEid $1 ,200
Hewlett Packard Computer.
Windows XP with desk.
excellen t condition $250
{304)675-5754 or (304)593·
1284

8 UIIJliNI;
Stii'1'1.11:J;

i

Approx . 1600 sq. 11. each . 1 Call740-245-5121 .

or 2 baths. l ease price

Carmichael Equipmer'll

inc.

{740 )~4 6-2 412 .

1991 Ca~e 1825 Skid Steer
Loader. 25 hp, Kubota
Diesel, · all hand controlled,
V.G .C. pe ~fect for Horse
Stalls. Barns (304)576-28 12
leave m~ssage

Gonus

Mi§iiQII!ipiitM

1

·r~·.------"'1~

.... r

FoRSA.t.E

or
s9U. Alvertne'
·
Antiques , 11.24 East Matn
on SA t 24 E Pomeroy, 740· 18 toot hard side swtmming
992 -2526 ,Ru s!i' Moore ·pool with sand l~ter Never
used. $300.00. 740-9492346
Fully loaded 3 sectton tackle
box. 740-985-4168.

Clean
fu rn1shed
Apartments, $3~5 and $350
water.
motith. incl udes
trash, Security Deposit and
References requ 1red call
after 5~ m. (3041675·3042
. CONVENIENTLY LOCAf·
ED &amp; AFFORDABLE!
Townhouse
apartments,
an.d/or small houses FOR
RENT. Call {740)44 t -1111
1or application &amp; inlormati on.
Furnished upstairs . 3 rooms
&amp; bath . Clean, ret. &amp; dep.
required. No pets. (740)446·
1519.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor
and
Riverside
Apartments in Middleport
From $295·$444. Call 740·
992·5064 . Equal Housing
Opportunities.

5000 220/ 110 Coleman gen·
I \1(\\ "' 1'1'1 II . .,
erator liio:e new $400 .00 atr,\ 11\l .... l(l(f&gt;.
compressors. saws. welders
&amp; misc. tools call ·tor more r,:~;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
into 304 -882 -2 196 or 304· lO
FAH:I\.1
377-8266.
EQuii'II1ENT
8 Grave Cemeter y Lot
s5oo DemQfls tratton BonusGraham Cemetery Contact
Let us demo a Jotm Deere Z
(304)882·2142 or (304)882·
Trail: or X Series All-Wheel
3228
Steer on you r lawn and
A two horse trailer. · S1.200 recetve an extra $500 ofl our
good condition . Roy Phillips already discounted phces.
limited
time
alter
(740)25Ei·1355.
Carmichael Equipment Inc
Diamond cluster gold· 10
(740)446-2412.
rtngs . 2 tenms bracelets &amp; 1
wa!Ct1. 3 pair pierce ear- O% Financing for up to 36
"ngs, $90 each. (740)992- monlhs on John Dee•e
14261eave msg.
COmpact and 5000 Sertes

2004 Ford F-150 Supercrew
4x4. FX4 oH road package.
5.4 VB. 6·CD changer, rlln·
ning boards, power &amp;\lery·

Jeep
Liberty
2003
Renegade. Loaded, 4x4 ,
' t9.000 miles, $12.500. Call
(740)256·1618 or (740)256·
6200

~~r~---V~A·N·S---,

FoR SAl F.

'"---tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit-·
1988 Chevrolet Astra van ,
one family owned. Good
condition. $1.475 . Estate
sale. Call (740)446·8997
i!r.jp;;~------,

M&lt;YIUKCYLL~~

. 4 WH v".F',RS

~-ioiiiiii'~ii'iiiiiiio-_.1
198-!. HOWG new front tire,
new battery, 12590 mites.
$8000.00. 740·992·9155.
1996

Yamaha

$1, 100.

1998

Blasler,
Kawasaki

(7 40)446·3200after 4pm.

KX250, dirt bike, $ 1,t 00.
(740)446 8138
'__:.:._ _:
· _:_:_·_ _ __
19~7 Honda Civic 109,000 mt. Alter market acces- 2001 Custom Panzer. 2000
sories , 38+ mpg. Clean. miles,
$13,800:
2003
black/black. Call (740)441 · Hundred An nv. Heritage,
9865.
600 miles, $17 ,000: 2000
- - - - - - - - -&lt;: Dyna Wide Glide, t 6,000
1998 Plymouth van 4 cyl. mites,
$11 ,500:
2003
S1 .600 080. 98 burgundy Hundred Ann .... Road Kin g,
Stratus 4 cyl. automatic. Gold Key package wf$7000
98.000 miles. $2,200 OBO. extra ch.rome , 300 miles.
(740)256· 1652.
$17.900: (740)992 -6520,
740-992-2670
1999 Chevy Metro. 4 dr.. 4
cyl. 76,000 mtles_ $3,000 2004 Honda Shadow 600.
Chromed out. $3,850 080.
OBO. Call (740}44 t· 0712.
(740)446-3993..
2001 HyUndai Sona ta: 4 cyt.
2.4 'titer, automatic, AJC, PIS, 94 Harley DavidSOn Ul tra
PMJ. cruise , CD player. sun- Classic, 10,000 mil.es. Clue.
roof. KBB .value 7.070 , ask- excellent condition, $13,500,
tng 55.500. (740)446-7"029. ~ 740)949-2217
Ellcellenl cond1t1on.

8&lt;J,(IS &amp; M(Jitlii.S

2dr 200 1 Dodge Stratus .
lOR SALI:
'like new. Pearl white. 3.0 V6 ,
42 .000miles . $8400 OBO 2001
Jonnson
SHP
Calf ( 650}54~-4079.
Outboard motor. low hours, "
94
Plymouth Voyager .. $700. 12ft. aluminum boa!
.
miles ,
Good wtlh older trailer. 2 trolling
115 000
motors and more $425 or
lntertherm Electric Furnace Tractors wrth John Deere CondiTion
$1,000 OBO
$1 ,000 for a)l. (740 }446·
C
C
w/ J
Ton
Central
Air
redtl approval. heck lhem (304}675·3250
_
6970
CondtliOner
Untt , call out! Carmichael Equ1pment ------~-- ~iii::"--::----~....,
(304 157 &amp; 2244 alter 5 pm
.Inc _(740)446-2412 .
97 Convertible Sebnng
CAMI~ &amp;
$2 ,995: 92 lsuzu Trooper
MOTOR HoM~
$2 ,000: 96 Chev: Cav. 2 '-o-rliillii-.:.:;~::o;..,J
door, autom $1.695; Ford
1999·-Trad Lite Bantam
6N trac tor w/brush hog,
Flyer. · Ellcellent condition.
$2 .800.
Lo aded. Must se9. 740·
Southern Auto Sate 701
949-2709. $8,000
Second A-ve.
(740)446-8554 .
2001 Jayco Designer Series
Mercedes Benz 260 E 88 _· 27RKS, 5th Wheel. Lots of
accessories
$21,000
Er:gmo re built, too much
3041675
2246
new to list. 25MRG . Nit::e &lt;
-

ADVERTISE YOUR
BUSINESS ·
ON THIS PAGE FOR

AS LOW AS$26.00-PERMONTH!
.

-

The Daily Sentinel

.992·2155

ride $3 .950. (740)245-9142. 98 Prowler 26 ft .. e~tcellen t
~
condition (740)339-3654 or
Spor ts Car. 1990 Mazda (740 )256 _1526 _
M1ata
Converttble. Top '=--'-------Cond1110n $2.995 1304)675· Coleman Camping Tra ile r
12FT, 2 Ktng Beds, $4,995
7790
ca ll tor Details (304)67515
TRliCKS
173 1 •
HlR SALI:
1978 Ford,F250 pickup. 460
motor. body fa1r, $500 OBO
(7 40)388-0481 .

10

HOMI: .
IMI'KIJVF" IINIS

1986 Dodge Ram SE . 283
Cl , 2WD w/cap and bedllner
138.000 orig1nat mtles.
Needs work . AS IS Best
otter over $500 Leave message at (740)388-1t35.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondtllonal liletime guar·
antee. Local references tur·
n1shed. EstabliShed 1975.
Call 24 Hrs. (740) 446 0870 . Rogers Basem en t
1989 Chevy Ut1lity bed truck
Wa!erproollng.
$1100. runs good 304·882·
2196 or 304·377-8266

1997 Dodge DaKota SLT V6 , ,
Automatic. 2 Wheel Drtve,
72,000 mtles (304)593·t614
99 Dodge Dakota Club-Cab
SLT: 100.0001m11es 4lC4 .
3 1815spd. loaded. many
elltras. ntce Truer sa.ooo
~30 4 )882-284 5

ADVERTISE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IN THE
CLASSifiEDS

7 5 '

t:au
• QJ
•

t

A4

•

1~888-HUPP234

•

6 3 2

•
•

Q J.
6 .

1 NT

30 Yrs,

and additiom;.

Advertise
in this
space
for
$52 per
month

E~p.

10 8

6 J
K J HH
6 3 '2

Col)crete Wqrk
25 Y~ars Exp~rience
David Lewis

740-992-6971

20 Bottle parts
22 Accord

Let me do it for youl

I&amp;!! TRACTOR SALES &amp; EO!J!PMENT
righl in lhe heart of Chesler
9115-4.l84

The Parish Shop
lo'urmerly at I 08
W. Main l,omeroy
IS NOW OPF.N A.T

Mulberry
C..: m'!munity Center
2f.O Mulberry Ave.
Th~

Pomeroy
Same Grfat l...oK• Price.f
mid .')im'ling

,..n.tmdly

Ful'e.~.

OPEN
Mon-Fri .
9am to Jpm

rn: 9'J2-41 g.l
My e r s Tree
Service
o

lnsurwl· l''rce
Eslhnules

Phone

(740) 992-5232
SxiO, IOxiO,

'I'D

Cunaiructlon
A ll Your Hom&lt;.'
Impmvcm.:tll Needs
• Sid ing • W indow ~
• Ikds • Pon.:hcs

• Ceramic Tilt' &amp;

MY FAMBI.Y

SEES THIS !!

Janel Jeffers
33795 Hiland Road
Pomeroy. Ohio

• Room AdJ . • Rooti ng

d I mo

MAlllEY'S
SElF STORAGE
97 Beech Street
. Middleport, OH

10x10x10x20

Advertise
in this
space
for
$52 per
month
STANLEY TREE
TRIMMING &amp;
GENERAL
CONTRACTING
• Prompt &amp; quality
work
• Affordable Rates
• References
Available
• Free Estimates
"Insured"

Call Gar; Stanley
740·742·2293 .
• Leave a message

Hill's Self
Storage

992-3194
or 992-6635
"Middleport's only
Self-Storage"

ROBERT
BISSEll
COIISTRICDON
• New Homes
• Garages
• Complete
Remodeling

140-992-16'11
Stop &amp; Coinpani

n i( '" ·'

1/aulillg
u nd
/ :·xntl·a ri ng

ll lll ldo•ll'l' ,\. !1 .1&lt; h. h &lt;~ \ ,\
t nll' f.. lu :.c "'' I 1 in ·"
"' t' pl i, "'''lt'lll
fu , t;d lalillll , 1 .t nd
( ILIII II :.C. l'11mh , ll u11H
"'il t''o . ll l'il' 1\ :I\"·
1 itllr"l"nt·. 1.r .11 d .
'.o ml. l"l"'uit , I ill tl 1rt
il ll d 11 101'1'

lUll

1 ..., 11 \ l \ l l ", "' ~ 11 , '1 1 } ~-\J .. II
l'1111 h·ru1, ( l hiu

29670 Bashan Road

Racine, Ohio
4sn1
740-949·2217

Sl%t1 S'X10'
to 10'x30'
Hours
7:00AM - 8:00 PM

AN' THE'&lt; ALWA'I'S SWORE
PAW WOULD NEVER
BE WORTH A 'DIME !!

l

f La&lt;:.~

YOUNG'S

CARPENTER
SERVICE

lr

• Room Addition• &amp;
Atmodtillng
• New GttiQtl
· • Ele&lt;:trlcal &amp; PlumiMng
• Roofing &amp; Gutters
• Vln-vt Siding &amp; Painting .

THE BORN LOSER

'
~~==~~~~~ ! ~~~~--~~

~

• Pttlo and·Potch Decka
We do It all except

5\LL'i FILCf-\ ~l&gt;.'i~ f\\:)FN-\l L'&lt;
t ~ GE.TIIt-iG 1\ &amp;\G ::,c.~U.t-1
PL1\":J ~I\ T\J I

furnace work

V.C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 wv 031.1725
Pomeroy, Ohio
25 Ytara Local Ex tenet

~

.
Wf-\'( t&gt;OTI-\E.'( C.f&gt;..LL
II 1&gt;. f'Lil.."&gt;M II/?

~

•

'BE.C.I&gt;.Ub[ \f-\E.'i'R[ ~0
E.'i-I'E.t-1~1\Jt:. 'iOU f\1&gt;.\JE. \0 (,I'IE.
5LOOt&gt; TO I"J&gt;.KE PI&gt;-.'( 1"\E.t'\1:::, I

BIG NATE.

10xl5, 10x20,
10x30

• Garages

14 yrs. ExJXricn~:c

~

!

G-AnE

H E.L L O!

ARE YOU

93 Columbus Rd.

OVE~.
El.l.EN ~

IMPORTS
Athens

,---,., ,__ CAATE

MER

Ha rdwood Flooring

• Kit~.:h e n s • 'Baths
'"No Joh ] ;, Small"
· Ral'inc, OH
740-247-2162 or
740-416-3508

I

Storage

discount
'\OYNI~ hfll'II•'IK'&lt;'

MERC'I', WAIT'LL

lligh and Dry

o Se nior C itizen
740-992·2621

LOWEEZ'I', LOOK-IT'S SNUFFY,
AN' THAR'S A
PRICE ON
HIS ·HEAD
!!

inch cutting width 3 year warrant)'

lnsund

Tate the PAIN
out of PAINTING!

·

• Task Master Tractors 26 horse • 38 horse,
4wd (I year warranty)
,
• Furm P ro Trnctors 20 horse - 30 horse
.. loaders, finish mower's, tillers

NEW ARRIVAL ZTR Dixon (Zero Turn
Radius Mower) 30 inch culling width lo 50

Call B.D. Cunsl.
' for all your hlmu.•

rtpair

n~ds,

ruofing.

~~iding. ad d ~ nns.

rcmodt.• lin~ ctt.· ••

111411 mo . pd

frH estimates

174111 '192-2979 .
leone mcssa •c

High cosl of fertilizer got you
17-17-17 "
$2~5 ton (While Suppy Last)

• Mushroom Compost
Availaqle
$35 · I ,000 lbs Appro&gt;. w~ight ~~~~
I~ spreader buggies available fot u~e
Atrway pasture renovators and seeders
available to rent.
licens~d agronomist on staff available for
c.ons,ulting.

SHAUE RIVER M;.SER\'U:E
]5537 St. Rt 7 North
Pumern)',.Ohio

UP!

Whaley's Auto
Parts
St. Rt.681 Darwin, OH
740-992-70 13 or 740-992-5553

PEANUTS
i-l l MISTER BROWN ... MY
NAME 15 CORMAC ,.I'M
YOUR SWIMMING 6UDD'1'..

See Brenl or Brian Whaley
M-Fri 8:30-5:00
Sat 8:30-Noon
Su n. Closed

·Advertise
in this
space for $1 04
per month.
In the Market
For a New Car:»

See

Joe Roderus

East
Pass

1\.ll pass

atlas

I ADMIT I DON'T KNOW .

MUC~ A60liT SWIMMING ...

15 YOUR NOSE SUPPOSED
TO GO ABOVE Ti-1E WATER
OR BELOW Ti-lE WATER ?

SUNSHINE CLUB

.

•·~· -·'·.··'
,
..

.

'

GARFIELD
•

1'HUDL.AND!

252 Upper River Road • Galli~lis
740-441)-0842 • 949-1155 Evenings
800-446-0842

ADVERTISE
· IN THIS SPACE
FOR $52 PER MONTH
GRIZZWELLS

Now Available AI

~'I

BAUl\l LUl\IBER
Scorpion Tractors

S!. Rt. 124 Chester · 985-3301

"I'M~ 1\\E

1/U~ER.l

, L£A\&lt;!_\-1. A
l\Til£ ..A&lt;,...'!&lt;cJ.

"Taki11g The Sri11g Out Of
Hard Work!"

BAUM ' LUMBER

1\Mt. I

PARK ~~fP,:S

..

~
A~T

M'I?€Lf

22 Sun,
in combos
23 Track star
· Jesse24 Place.
to leam

~5 Splendor
27 " Cookie's

in a gale
50 Godiva's
title
53 Off-- ,

Fortune"

actress
29 Morticia's
hus~and

tan~enl

30 Oograde
31 Ring

55 Dixte st.

Pipe
problem
boundary
~ 0 Float s along 36 Bruce Or

t2 Trlnkel
19 Vancouver

team

Em my
winner
47 Forrhe
asking
48 Ayla 's
creator
49 Sea,

56 Windy City,
breezily
57 Pewter

Laura
38 Got onto

component

lhelreeway

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Ce~lll'lly Opl'ler Cl'fplograms are c1ea1eo !rom qLJ01a110ns b'f tamous oeoplt pas1aM pr~11t

Eadl lener 111 !he c1phe1 slanelslor ano1he1

Today·s clue: 0 equals C

" AXGP
R F. F

XI

HZP

HEGP

YPXYFP

C XL A H

Z RJ P

T PPM

HZEMW

CZX

IEFGA

XI

,G R K P

TD

.HX X

GNOZ."

A XK P L T P L U Z

AHP .JPM

PREVIOUS SOLUTION - ' II Bach wriggles. Wagner wrilhes.·
- Samuel Butler
"Music is the best means we have of digesting ltme."- W.H. Auden

AstroGraph

'~i~~:~' ~© ttdtllA~ t.~~·
_ _:,;..:.._:_..;___;; ldl•od
CLAY R, 'OUAN
~~

WOlD
UMI

ltnerJ of the .
fovr terart~bltd word1 bt·
Jow to form four word3.

.o

"&lt;bur&lt;JIIrth&lt;llo&lt;:

Saturday, July HI , 2005
By Bernice -Bede Oaol
A number of good things are in st ore
lor you In the year ahead. Th e knowle dge and expprtl se you've . gathered
from years past are now ready to be
exploited and capitalized on in ways
that'll produce beneficial resu lts.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ) ~ The
possibilities of making some wan!ed
Inroads In ·your social lila ere quite
encouraging today. bu t in order to do
so, you must take the bu ll by th e
horns and make thing s happe n lor ,

·ltorral'liJ8

I
I

TURELB

I I 1I I
2

l AT T 0

I

LE O (July 23-Aug. 22) ~ Today you
w ill be masterful at managing challenging situ ation s, especiall y in rnat·
tars or In si tuations where you ctre
motivated to protect the interests of
those you love the most.
. VIRGO (~ug . 23-S epl. 22) ......:.
Occasionally it is necessary t o toot
our own horns a bi t and today may be
the day tor you to do so. Don't hes1 tate
to speak up if you've done someth •ng
that another is trying to take credit f01 .
LIBRA (Sept, .23-0ct. 23) ~ Profitab le
informati on may be shared with you
today by an enterpns1ng and successful friend . However. in order lo benefit
h om i\, you 'll have to act on it without
any hesitation.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24 -Nov. 22) - The
koy to benering your tot in tile Is not to
wait for things to happen ro you. but to
tak e the necessary poSitive measures
to make ce rtain that events w ill come
abou t exactly as you want.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec . 21) - II
plans go awry early 1n th e day for you .
don't sit around and pino. Make other
arrangements and get your own
bandwagon rolling . However. leave
some room tor others to hop aboard.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan. 19) Put yourself out lor friend s Ieday and
you·n be "am azed at tile favorable las I, ing Impression you 'll leavo with them.
Your kind gestures won't be easil y lo rgotten or go unrewarded
AQUARIU S (Jait . 20- Fitb . 19) Success in partnOrship silualions and
arrangements are likely today, provid·
ed yo u take the 1nilia\1ve to ,bring
things aboul. Your actiOns can in spire
and fire up those you want on board.
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) - b on't
put any llm1 tahons or restnc!lons on
your lhinkinQ and opportunities you
get today and something good' wlu cll
you alroB dy have in the mill and go1ng
fO•

HI0'5 V151TING·

NORRIS NOI,ITIUP DODGE

Mid-Si.ze 4Wheel Drive Tractor
with JOhp &amp; 40hp Kubota Engines

I

9

MOMA artlsl

4t

Jonn Lennon was ·a controversial and
imaginative figure. During the 1963 Royal
Variety Performance 1n London , played in
front of the royal family, lle sa1d, "Wi ll the
people in the cheaper seats clap your
hands? Alllhe rest of you. if you 'll just rattle your jewelry."
One of those words vague ly appli es to
this deal. You are South , the declarer in
three no-trump. West leads his fourth·
highest neart. How would you plan the
play?
When in no-trump, always start by count ing your top tricks: those that yOu could
win ins tantly. Here, there are only four: two
spades. Of'!e heart and one d1amond. But
the other live tricks can come from the
club suit.
Nex t, use the Rule of Eleven. Subtracting
seven (the value of West's leaU) from 11
tells you th at tne North . East and South
hands combined have tour hearts higher
than the seven ~ and you can see them
all . So. you know that you can win trick
one either in your hand or even cheape'r
with dummy's nine. But suppose you do
thai. wnat wou ld happen nexl? You would
continue with dummy's club qu een .
However, only a very friendly West - or a
·relative - would take that trick. Everyone
else Would win the second club. Then,
how woyld you get into your hand? You
wouldn't!
Since your only hand entry is tn hearts,
don't be a cheapskate - take the first
Irick with dummy's ace. You drive out the
club ace and eventually get back. to your
hand by dislodging Wesl's heart king . You
will pr,obably end with an overtrick and
receive clapping or jewelry rattling from
yOur partner.'

G

1 Interest amt.
2 5,\L olf8rlng
3 Stocky
horae ·
4 Avowed
5 Quick look
6 Genre
7 Helen,
• in Spanish
B Aussle band

==="'

42 Wind dir.
21 Term~ 44 Bare
43 EA sJaliers
abllr, (2 - . ) ·45 "Rools "

you .

Re..torkfi!'J /.ate Model
and Afler Market Parts

DOWN

maker
24 Popular pet
· 25 Hard seat
26 Llvy's year
28 Petri-dish
contents
32 Fiesta shout
33 Shootout
34 Wolf ,
to Pedro
35 Babysi1
37 Reassure •
39 Page ol an

Imagine there's
no entry

starting at 27 horse · 57 horse
with shuttle transmission .
4-wd! remote hydra ulics ' 3 year warranty

**"'*A lso a\·ailable"'"'**

heldquarters
61 Nevada
town
62 Time period
63 Wet weather

40 ·Work
as a model

.I l&gt;ON'T !:NOw wtit~E
Tti~ ,At,t, w~NT ··- '.I wAS viATCtHNG
THE. CLU,.

• Ins. Owner: Ronnie Jones

60 Raj

quartz

FRANK &amp; EARNEST

New Dealer lor Montanl Tractors

Free Estimntes

Pass

North
I t
3 :'ofT

~o1oncho

make do
17 Apply
makeup
18 Granite or

Opening lead: • 7

Free Estimates

LEWIS
CONCRE7'E
CONSTRUCTION
Concrete Removal
and Replacement
AUTypesQf~

West

52 RV hoven

54 Put lnlo IIW
58 Wiggly llllh
59 Come to a
conclusion

15 Forbldden
16 Barely

... KJIO II 8:i

South

11 Golherlng
13 Building
14

Suulh

• Bucket Truck :

Owner: Bdan Durham
.Phone: (740) 949-4011
Specializing in custom homes

1999 Blazer 4x4 LT. original ~~======~
owner. 76K. exc . cond ..
loa)1ed. ne...er in mud $9, 500
(304)458·100.2

2003 Dodge Ram 1500 41t4
SLT. 4.7 V6, red. 27.000
mtles, $18,000. (740)446·
7484 or (304}654·521 t .

"' Q 7

•

•

Top · Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

DURHAM'S CONSTRUCTION

r

1999 Chevy Suburban 4)(4 ,
good condition. loaded. new
tires.
Asking
$11 ,000.
'(7 40}441·0658 or (740)709·
1931 .

AQI0 4J

K1087j

Tree Service

W'll'
1 S /'\.'TV

~--------

A9 2

t

.

JONES'

Darts

10

Buy

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

•

parta
51 Floor
covering

. I

01 15·0.1

ncalcr: North
Vulnerable : North-South

thing, Tonn!Jau cover, tow r-~~~-~~~-,
package, 27,000 miles,
ft.
excellent conditi on. N.A.D.A.
John Deere 10ft. No Til Drill Book Value $30.375, sell for
tor
Rent.
Carmichael $2s.9oo. (740)446·8217.
r~
Equipmen t (740)446-24 12.
97 Chevy 1/2 ton V-8
Quality Guaranteed
John Oftfr"tommerclat Automatic . air, cruise , runs
ATV Paris &amp; ACC
Worksi te
Products and looks great. 54950.00 .
James A Will Jr.
Compact Excavators/Skid 740·985·41 80
Owner
Steers/Tractor
Lo ader
Backhoe 1n stoc;.k. CheCk out , .a
· 4x4
32 1l9 Wdshtown Rd.
our rental rates . Great ..,.
FOR SALE
Poml'roy, Ohio.
financing
available. ·~---iiioiiiiiii-r
45769
Carmichael Equipment Inc
eep
(740)
992·2432
(740)446-2412
Aesto,ed. $7,500 OBO.
Email:jwill45769
Your ProStart Trailer Deal er
Call 740 44..1 -0121 .
@ya hoo.com

i0,...;.......;_;___.......,

~------. -

200 t DaKota Club Cab
Sport PluS Hea ... y Duty,
Motor Sport Series. 2WD.
loaded,
keyless
entry,
red/black, lik~ new. ,34,000
miles.
$12 ,000
090.
(740)446- 1637 or {740)446·
4616 after 5pm.

West
• 9 7 4

45783

;F.QUII'MI:NI'
~ -5--TR·U
llJR·SALE
L1·0-~F~\.~.1-_.J IL'
CKS
--.,.1

PI: IS
Qegotiable to encourage
new
bu siness.
Call __
H&gt;H SA I.E
Mobile Home lor rent at (740)446-4 425 or (740)446·
Family Pride Mobile-Home 3936.
1 fema le Pekingese AKC
Park 3 br. $375 a man + C'J'ir""-":':":""_____ regtstered, 8 wks old, very
$375.00 dep no pets 304- ·
W A.li(Jl])
lovihg! (740)446-1000
675-4633
m RENT
AKC Basset Hound puppies.
Mobile Home Lot only
Need 10 en! A 9 1st One Shots, wormed, parents on Carmichael Equ;pmenl Inc.
u ·
·
Add1son Pike - $125/month- bedroomr unfurnishe;d
apt. premtse $300 each . AKC (740)446·2412
call (740)446·3644 tor more
·
reg . 2 yr old male Basset
E~~:cept stove and refngator.
info
Do not drink .or smoke. Hound. (740}256·6887.
,
LI'\IF.~I'OC 'K
Ntce 2 bedropm, 1 bath, Ground lloor. Please call La AKC Reg . Boston Terrier L~--------"
appliances. ellcellent toea· males $400 each . 740-378tio n. Security deposit. Nq ~ 6610
For Sale Quarter Horse
:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Mare. Just turn€d 1yr old,
pe ts, $375/mo. (740)446Bluetick beagle pups. Shots th is April 2005, Halter
3994 or (740)446- 2423.
HUUSfJ IOUJ
started , wormed. tO weeks Brook, Gentle, easy to catch,
Nice 2BR mobile home tor
old. $75-temal'e &amp; S50·mate. in the Field $500/negotiabfe
rent . 5mm from town.
'740·3?.8·66 10.
(304)593·5073
$375/mo. 2 references &amp; 90 Series Kenmore Heavy
goats ~
Nubian .
deposit required . Call after Dury washer &amp; dryer. 6 yrs. Golden Reteiver pupptes Pygmy
old, $300 Call (7 40 )388- AKC 1st shot &amp; wormed Barbados sheep $35 eacn .
5pm (740)446:9342
6901 or (740)388·6596.
5200 00
POP 304 -675- (740)245 -9 142
APARil\UNIS
3526
I \II ' ,'\ I. \ II III ' I 1.11 II'
F01 safe- sofa, lo...e seat &amp;
IUR RENT
ch a1r. good condition . $325. Golden Retrievm /Bfa.ck Lab WOW!! 0% Financing for up
(740}949·2910
mill: pupptes. S50·each . Call to 50 months on q1,1alifying
1 and 2 bedroom apart74 56 1100 ·
GX &amp; X Series Johri Deere
ments, furnished and unfur- Mollohan Carpet. 202 Clark &lt; 0)2 ·
nished, security deposit Chapel React. Porter. Ohio. ,.,lease co nsider adopting Lawn Tractors or No
required. no pets. 740-992- (7401446·7444 t ·877·830- one of these homeless dogs Interest, No PSyments until
2216.
9162. Free Estimates , Easy from the Meigs Co. Dog January 1, 2007 on all new
financing . 90 days same as Pound •.•.•• 740 •992 . 3779 . premium lawn tractors with
t bedroom apartment in cash. Visa/ Master Card. Collie mix lem. 2 years. John Deere Credit approval
Gallipolis near Wai ~Mart. Drive· a- little save alot.
Black&amp;white Beagle 1 year Carmichael Equipment Inc.
Utilities included. (740)245·
male. German Shepard mi)j ~0 1 446 " 2412 ·
5555.
. Th ompsons Appl tance &amp;
9 mo. Jam. Golden Ret. Lab '
Repair -675· 7388. For safe .
mix
male. Whtte Shepard
2
bedroom
apt re-conditiOned au tomatic
10
ma.te 1
year. 2 Aust.
Alfl'(lo;
Washerldryerhookup. Water washers &amp; dryers. refrigera· Sh
d 1
ed
S
paid. Nice location , no pels. tors. gas an d e I ec I r1c
.
epar s, mae neuter
L---~-~ii,Ri!'iiiAiiiliii,F.I!.- ·
$375/mo. plus
deposit.. ranges. air conditioners, and &amp; 1 not . Many nice breed
(740)446·9442
wrmger washers. Will do d__;og::_s_&amp;_:_
pu.:p.:.p_
;•_•· - - - - · 1995 Corvette. E~~:ce nent
repatrs on major brands in Schnauzers. Mtniature. AKC conditlon. (740)446-4255
2 bedroom, 1 bath, water h
·
males . Salt &amp; pepper. 2 1996 BUick. Reg al, 3 .8
paid, $350 month , $350 s op or at your Mme.
..
,
C
II
shots.
vet
checked.·
$ 300 · . engme,
'
·1
d
, 1085
secun y
epost .
a
Al':llQUJo:S
(740 ,696
_
good co~ d.l11.b n, runs
(740) ~6-3481.
•
good. 70,000 m1 1es. $3,500.
AMRT·
BEAUTIFUL
MENTS
AT
BUDGET
PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 52 Westwood
Orlve from $344 to $442:
Wa lk to shop &amp; movies. Call
740-446-2568.
Equal
Housing Opportunity.

•
114

;!~Tu~ppers Plains,

740-667-0700

For lease. Office or retail . Block . bric,k, sewer pipes,
spaces in very good condi· windows , lintels, etc. Claude
lion. Downlown Gallipolis Winters. .Rio Grande. OH

Beautitul river view tn
Kanauga . Ideal for 1·2 peo·
pte. No pets. '" please.
Applic ations being taken .
Call (740)441-018 1

.....

Residential • Commercial

S
· '--=---:-·--::-- .,____··,.Aciii·•.:""'-" ::_:_:..:_...:...;_:.::__ _

1 Snapohotl

• AK 5

41800 SR #7

Mobile HOI!Ie5 • Metal Roofs
Flat or Low Sloped Roof • Carpol$5
Barns • Porches

0% Financing for up to 60
months on John Deere
Round Balers. 0% lor 48
months on John Deere
Mower Conditioners with
John Deere Credit appro11al

Sort h

45 Eatgrau
47 AnlmaiiHe
50 Journey

a App..
8~~..1

Alder

Mirrored
Cherry
bdrm
Dresser. cost $900 sacrihce
at $200. PS2 Games Call
9304)675-2806

Video Camera. Cannon
Elura. 70 di9ital video camer'a. uses mini ov Tapes ( 2
tnCiuded), 360X
digital
zoom , 18X optical zoom ,
8MB memory, case , manual·
Paid $915, wants $700
(304)675·4 132 days, (304)
675 • 59 14 ·evenings

ACROSS

Phillip

Stock. Call Ron Evans, 1800-537·9528.
"

s4oo

(740)367· 7025.

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

For Rent 3--btdroom, 1.-bath, Large 2 bedroom apt. unfur·
JET
Fun basement, County nlehecl, ell utilities plld. $500
AERATION MOTORS
Home, Board Rd. Letan, WV month plus deposit. No pett, Repaired , New &amp; Rebuilt In

I

I
~·~
1 I' 1 r

MI G E R

"Once I discovered money
didn'tgrowontrees."my friend:
.. sighed, "I was way out · . a
•

I
~~-rl;:-N,:-1..:.1rll_,,v_lr:,:-]-i ~-i;l~:~~ ;~o~h~h~~:;,~g q~~~d~
1

-1--L--'---"--'---' you d evelop hom llep No J below.

L..

e

PRINT NUMBERED. LETTERS IN
IHESE SQUARES

9 .~;c:~~~E~ tEnm

,lo

r. ,

• I'

,S

I I IA I I I I l

SCRAM-!.ETS ANSWERS , .

I'-D 5

Vanity . Dolly· Parch- Repvte- PROVE .
Most people don't really know how lo counl calones
and t~ey have lhe figures to PROVE it

ARLO &amp; JANIS
T&gt;l I~ COUPL~ RUIODUW
fH~I£ HOME. ALOTLl K£ YOU

WWTIO DO OURS'

ru u ... an ba eo:p.andad upon

ARI ES (March 2 1· Apnl 1.9) - You
have the necessary lalent upon wh1ch
to draw today which wrll give you the
edge• ove 1 others in a cornpetit1ve
involve m ent . Don't put any ltmitat1ons
on yo ur th inking or possibilities
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) . ~ Be £!
te am player and keep 1n m1nd that two
heads are better than one. so don"t
insist on being a loner today. Harmony
ol purpose shared with others will ,
givo you purpose and assure success
GEMINI (May-2 1·June 20) - Two Si t·
uations wh1ch you may, have !ell
hanging w 1th the in ten l1on of .gett ing
back Ia them can be co ncl uded to
your satm tad11on today. You know what
th ey ~re . so ta ke th o appropnato
act1on

SOUP TO NUTZ
SWING?BAl"lf\ B\TIA
B.'ITTA BATrA SWINGg

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BAn-A B.O.TrA 8 ~1TA

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www.mydallysentinel.com

J:tage B8 • The Daily Sentinel

'

•

Sox shut out Tribe
CLEVELAND (AP) -Jose White Sox.
In eight innings, Millwood ·
Contreras pitched three-hit ball
for seven innings to lead the gave up six hits ~nd one run
Chicago White Sox to a 1-0 over eight innings . He struck
victory over Kevin Millwood out a season-high nine without
and the Cleveland Indians on walking a batter.
,
Thursday night.
.
Millwood settled down after
· The White Sox stopped a a 30-pitch lirst inmng in which
sea~on-high three-game losing he struggled w1th a damp
streak. Cleveland, trying til . mound .in a slight dnzzle. The
gain ground on the AL CentrJI oame staned II mmut~s late ·
leaders, lost for the s1xth lime !;;;cause of a brief rain. though
in seven !'ames and fell 12 the infield had been covered .
games behmq Chicago.
Tadahito Iguchi got a one-out
The White Sox improved to single in the Chicago first, eas23-9 in one-run games: il y ~ stole second base. and
··Cleveland is 14-22, including scored on a double by Frank
0-6 against Chicago.
Thomas.
Contreras 15-5) struck out ·Paul
Konerko. singled
seven in his se.:ond .:onsecu- Thomas to thirJ and Millwood
tive win. He issued three walks hit Aaron Rowand with a pit.:h
-. all to cleanup hitter Victor to l!md the oases - hut struck
Martinez - but unproved to 2- out .lcrmaine Dye and got A.J.
0 wil.h a 1.8J ERA in five Pierzynski to grounJ lc~ tirst.
career s tart~ against the
In the eighth. he y1elded a
Indians.
•
one-out built single to Scott
The right-hander had been 0- . Podscunik. who stole sewnd
3 with an 8.10 ERA m h1s four anu third. but MiiiWlxxl struck
previou s stans before defeating out Iguchi and thomas. . ·
Tampa Bay 01i July 6. ' .
Contreras was helped by two
Cliff Politte started the c1ghth tine defensive plays.
and struck out one hatter be lure
In the fifth. he yielded a oneDamaso Mane. just off the di.' abled list. ~ ntered and struck out double to Jhonny Per"lta.
out the side. He also fanned the Aaron Boone followed with a
leadoff hitter in the ninth. then liner that was caught by a divgave · way
to
Dustin ing ' shortstop , Juan Uribe.
Hermanson. who gave up th,e Cqntrcras balked Pe1:a1ta to
Indian&lt; fl&gt;urth hit bu.t ti111shed th1rd ' but 'got Gradv. S1zemore
to ll y out.
for his 22nd save in 2J tries.
Ro"•and\ husi,lc in the sixth
Millwood (3-R i. moveJ to
the top of the ,Indians· rotation helpeu. '""· With one out,
in place of left-bander CC. Travis Hafner hit a high pop
Sabathia by manager Enc towarJ left. Podsednik never
Wedge tc1 open the sewnd hall. s"w it. but Rowand raced over
lost for the fourth time in li,·e from center ami cau~ht the ball
starts and fell to 0-2 with a I.29 tx·hind "nd to the nght of Ius
ERA in three gamc·s against tl'e tean1m~ue.

Friday, July ts,

•
2005

Baseball Standings--N8tlonli LIIP
-~
WlPctGB

62 '$1 .1584 A50 40 .558 2~
Ph~la
46 44 .511 6~
NewYori&lt;
45 44 .506 7
Florida ·
44 ' 43 .506 7
Conlnll Olvloion
_
WlPctGB ·
56 32 .638 ,."
St. Louis
44 43 .506 11 Y:.
Houston
44 44 .500 12
Chicago .
43 46 .483 13'1,
Milwaukee
39 49 .443 17
1'111800rgh
35 53 .398 . 21
Cincinnati
WUNnglon

Alllll'lclln Lllgue
Eul~

W L, Pet GB
46 41 .539 -

Arizona
43 47 .478 5'{,
Los Angeles 40 48 .455 7'/,
San Francisco 37 50 .425 10

Colorado

31 56 .356 16
Thuraday'l Games

AP photo

Cleveland Indians shortstop Jhonny Peralta avoids Chicago
White Sox's Aaron Rowand, left,. after throwing to first to complete a fourth-inning double play on A.J. Pierzynski, Thursday
111 Cleveland.

Milwaukee 4, washington 2
Chicago Cubs 5, PiHsburgh 1
Philadelphia 13, Florida 7
N.Y. Mets 6, Atlanta 3
Arizona at San Otego,. 10:05 p.m.
San FranciSCO at LA. DodgerS, late

ALONG THE RIVER
StarS coming to Gallia fair:
Line-up set for main stage shoiNS, Cl

Toronto

Tampa

eay

44 45 .494 5'1,

ChlcaiiO
Minnesota.
Cleveland
Detroit

Kansas City

58
48
47
42

29
39
42
45

.667
.552
.528
.483

tO
12
16

~ ~

31 57 .352 27'.1
Weat Olvl1lon
WLPctGB

LosAnoetes
Texas

53 36 .596-

Oakland
Seattle

44 · 43 .506 8

'

tm

·~

•

46 40 .535 5'ta

39 , 46 .44813
'
Thursday's Games
. N.Y. Yankees 8, Boston 6
Kansas City 12, Detroit 9
ChiCago White sox 1, Cleveland 0
Tampa Bay 3, Toronto 0
L.A. Angels 3, Minnesota 2
rexa:a at Oakland, 10:05 p.m.
Baltimore at Seattle, 10:05 p.m.

Subscribe.today-- 992-2155 :·

Hometown News .for Galiia &amp; Meigs counties

CS screenings could begin in August

SPORTS
• Eighth District
tournament preview.
See Page 91

BY

BRIAN J.

administrator o( St.. Joseph's filed ·against the chemica l
A local testing center will
Hosp~ in Parkersburg, W.Va., company DuPont by Wood 'ope rare from the Veterans ,
and Dr. Pcte'r Bnooker, a physi- County, W.Va. , water Ctls- Memorial Hospital parking
cian from the Parkersburg area tomers, hopes to col.fect health lot, and could begin co llectwho are coordinating the col- histories from customers in ing health data and blood
lection of health data through the two local water districts, samples as early as midrhe C8 Health Project, dis- which have shown traces of Augu st. Brooker said . .
cussed the time schedule, the chemical used in the manThose who panicipate in
requirements for participation ufacture of Tenon and other the studies will be paid up to
and goals of the project.
DuPont ·signature' products, $400 - $250 for a hlood
The C8 Health Project, . and four others, including the . sample and $ 150 for .:omfunded through the settlement Mason County (W.Va.)Publ ic pleting a health que sti onof the· class-action laws'uit Service District.
naire. Those who participate

REED

BREED@MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM

POMEROY - The C8
Health · Project could begin
collecting health data from
customers· in the Tuppers
Plains-Chester and Village
of Pomeroy water systems
next month.
At a public meeting Friday in
the Meigs High School gym nasium, Art Maher, long-time

· (HESTER~SHADE DAY

NOTEBOOK

In their first 88 games. the
CLEVELAND (AP) lndi"ns
threw out only 22 perIIMIID EW ZOOS PHTIAC
IIIAJIII liW l005 CIEVY
C. C. Sabathia wants to be the
IIIAII!t liW l005 CIEVY
cent
(
18
of
63)
of
base
stealSUIFR
SU!1f
•
SOUID
2
DOOR
COLORADO 4WD PICKUP
Cleveland Indians' No. I
COLORADO PICKUP
ers. Meanwhile. the White
pitcher.
He wants to win even more Sox swiped 91 in 126
- so the two-time all-stat attempts, led by all -star outleft-hander said he "totally fielder Scott Podsednik at 44
j
· supported" manager Eric of 53.
Wedge's deci sion to move · "It's been a team thing,"
36 MPG on Highway!
27 MPG Oh Highway!
34 MPG on Highway'
.
Kevin Millwood to the front said Wedge. saying that
of the starting rotation on catcher Victor Martinez. and
Indians pitchers must work
Thursday.
"It 's tine with me ." said together to slow down oppo• Air Conditioning
Sabathia. "In fact. it's more nents.
• AM.4M Stereo
• Air Conditioning
• AUTOMATIC
•
60140
Split Btn(h Sen
•
2.8
Ute~
£!"1glnt
•
co
StrtrtO
SysUHO
• Power Sunroof
than fine. It 's totall y the right
• Electronic Shift To 4WO .
• Air Conditioning
• 2.2 Uter Engine
• Cr .ulse &amp; &lt;D St!!teo
thing to do."
FEELING
BETTER:
Millwood was on the Right-hander
Rafael
mound as the Indians opened Betancourt, sidelined since
IIIIAIID IIIW l005 CHIVY
. IIIAIID liW l005 CIEVY
IIIAIID llliW l005
the second half ot: the season July 3 with an in !lamed
COLORADO
m EXT. CAB 4WD
SLVIIIADO 4WD PICKUP
POIITIAC VIII 5 DOOR
with the first game of. a fo ur- shoulder, threw 40 pitches in
game series against the AL the bullpen and said he' feels
Central rival Chicago White good enough to pitch.
Sox.
. "I threw all my pitches and
"I'm only moved back one felt JUSt fine, " Betancourt
day, so it is not an issue at · said. "I think I'm ready. but
l2 MPG on Highway !
J4 MP&lt;i on HighWay!
all ," said Sabathia, anAL all- they want me to pitch balling
star in 2003 and 2004 who practice Saturday and then we
went 6-5 with a 4.50 ERA in will see."
an inconsistent first half this . Betancourt would not
• Off Road Pkg. 7:71
year.
addre'ss the issue of.his being
• Pow~ Seat
• AUTOMATIC
• AUTOMATIC
• Air .C&lt;lnditi&lt;JnP~
•
Adjust1bl~ Peda b
· " Let' ~ put it this way," h' suspended for I0 days July 8
• Air Conditioning
• Aluminum \Nhuls
• Traction "Control
•
Aluminum
Whettls
• Cruise Control I Tilt Wheel
• Powe. Windows &amp; Lodu;
continued, " If I' m managing for violating Major League
a playo,ff te"m , Kevin 's the Base ball 's substance abuse
guy I start the series with.
policy.
.,.., .W1005 O.n aVIRNJD
IIIAIID
200$ IIIICil
IIIIAIID IIW l005 IIICIC
IRMD IIIW l005 .CHIVY
''Why nor&gt; He's got the
'Til talk about that tomor'
I"UIBCUSJOI
1.011GB 'WD PICIM"
SILVIIIIADO EXT. CAB PICKUP
LACIIOSSI ex
expe'rience. He 's been there. row and (reporters) can ask
It is amazing what he brings any questions you want," he
to this team and I think I can said.
learn by followin g him in the
rotation.".
.
FEELING FINE: Third
Wedge said that Millwood. baseman· Aaron Boone. who
29 MPG on Highway!
29 MPG on Highway!
despite a J-7 record thus far missed all of 2004 aft~r havin his first year in Cleveland, ing surge ry on his left knee,
has emerged as a dedicated s"1d he . is sUilJrised at how
team leader.
good he fee ls.
,-Si• Puscmger Stating
• 31\00 V-6 Engine
~ Vortec V-1 Pow~
"He's. a true professional in . "If you h"d told me during
• 5300 V-8 ENGINE
·~ 8 Way Pow'tr S••~
• Ori ... er Power Lumbu
•
Au
Conditioning
• 4 Speed AutomJtic
every sense of the word, " said spring training or even at the
• Remote l(f!yless £ntry
• Power Windowt &amp; locks
• Au tomatic
• Tr1ilering Padr:~•
. Wedge. ·'He's _ pitched in start of th e season that I
some tough luck and · never would feel like this, I would•
complained.''
n't h"vc believed it.'' si1id
11WD lEW 1005 OEVY SI."JERADD
IIIAIID lEW ZOOS CIEVY
. IIIAIID lEW 2DiiS CJEVY
••ID lEW 10DS CHiVY a'JBIIIIO
Millwood. signeJ to a one- Boone. " It reall y feels good.
4
SILVEIIADO
EXT. CA14WD
1SOO LS ClEW CAl PICJIIII
TR ' • UER LS .WD
J/4 1'01111 EXT. CAl 'WD·
" I would think ' that next
year contract ·as a free agent
. in January, cnmp1lcd a .1.5R · season I'll he even heuer, he a
ERA in 15 stm1s in the first lillie f"ster 011 the bases, but
half. Three of hi s losses were the progress has been great."
by one run. including " 2-1
Booi1e struggled the first
setback to the White Sox in two months of the season. but
Cleveland's home opener has hit .286 (32- for-112)
April II.
since June I. He went R-for16 in the final four games of
STARTING OVER: The the first llalf to put his aver'
. ' Indians had an early workout age at .2 11 . ,
• Power Win dom &amp;Lod!.s
• V~rter 6000 V-&amp;
• 5300 V-8 ENGI NE
• 5300"V-8 ENGINE
• 4200 6 Cylindet ~nglnt
• Air Cond ition1ng ~
• Up lr.ttl Seating Pack~g•
before batting pn1pice.
• 1r Aluminum Whttk
• Tnilering P~clllge
• ~Mif:M Stereo
• Cruiu &amp; Tih
•
Powff
Windo""
&amp;
Locks
specificall y going through
BASELINES:
Former
fundam ental drills - such as Indians RHP Charles Nagy i&gt;
pitchers covering first hase.
rill in~ in as pitch ing coach for
• Taxes, Togs, fide feel extra. lebota induded in salt price of ·new vahlde listed whil!a applicable. On approved a edit.
' "It ·was just sumcthmg to the team·, Cia" AA farm
On selectad modek. Notrespamble for typographical an~. PrieM gaod July )4th through July 17th.
gel the blood flowing "fter team in Akron., The Aeros'
three days off." .'aid WeJge. pitchin~ coach Greg Hibbard
who did admit that one area i~ t;Jking ~ome time to he w_ith
the team must improve i' in his wife. who re.:ently dehv·....., ....
controlling the other team\ creu twhK ... I B Stephen
··~
W. I 7/ 1D
lAIN
running gam~.
Head. Cleveland's sec.ondll •• l:&amp;&gt; r T.....
l'l
Ylllt
•
anllne
at
•••·••
I
•••n.e..
~.:.r ..... o~ ~"
" It needs 10 get better... round draft pick. went 2-for-4
Wedge said - well aware with an RBI in his. first game .
..
that ' the four -game 'eric&gt; at Class A kinston after being
against Chi cago to open the promoted from Mahonin~
second half pits an Ind ians Valley. where he had hit .43_
MONDAY . SATURDAY 9 am - 8 pm • SUNDAY 1pm - 7pm • 422-0756 • TOLL FREE 1-800-822·0417
weakness agamstthe AL·, top ( 16-tur-37) with \ ix homers
and 14 RB" in i'O games.
base-stealing team.

Jl3 ggo·

•12,~~o ·

•16,990*

.

~15,990:

'

$18,190•

•18,1,60'.

$11,690~

•w

•18,980*

szz,ggo·

$19,990'

$20rggo··
.

$21 910*

.

·•

$23,660•

r===

~..,. FAIR!'
lrloo r:~
Mollh ot~ At

.-

,

'
a

29 61 .322 21
Central Dtvl..on
W L Pet GB

Sabathia supports
Millwood move

,..

House of the Week:
Nostalgi~ outside melds w~h modern inside, Dl

49 39 .65747 .tO .640 1',I,
47 40 .540 1 ~

Blltimore
New'l\&gt;rl&lt;

.

Indians BasEball
,.

LIVING

WlPctGB

Booton

We1t Division

San Diego

..

OBITUARIES
Page AS
• Margaret June Butcher·
• Mary Florence Chapman
• Vitral 'Doodle' Mount
• Irene Paris
• Infant Roberts
• Leora Sigman
• Clair E. Zeigler ·

The Chester Commons and
the red and white Ohio
Chautaqua tent were busy with
activity Saturday for the 10th
annual Chester-Shade bay eel·
ebration. Aweek of informative
lectures and educational programs based on historical figures from the 1920s preceded
the annual celebration of
Shade River history, and con· ·
eluded saturday with a presentation about Zelda Fitzgerald,
wife of writer F. Scott
Fitzgerald. On Saturday, below,
costumes from an earlier era
were on display in a parade
through Chester, along with
fire trucks, scout troops, fourwheelers and horses. The
Commons was also lined with
vendors and artisans, offering
hand-inade brooms, pcttery
and Reedsville produce. At
right, Keith Steele sells produce for Ruth Anne Balderson.
who has long operated Ruth
Anne's Market In Reedsville.
B~an

Please see Screenings. Al

Single-car crash
kills Racine man
Bottom around 4:20 a.m.
when the
2002 Ford
Mustang he drove went &lt;_1ff
LONG BOTIOM - A the right side of the road and
Racine man was declared struck a tree on the car's
· dead at the scene of a one-car right passenger side.
accident early Saturday on
. The car continued on and
Ohio 248 in Meigs County's t;ame to rest on the right .side
Olive Township, the Gallia- of the road, the report said.
Meigs Post of the State
Wolfe was inj,ured· in the
Highway Patrol reported.
crash and was transported to
James B. ,Boso, 23, 706 St.
Joseph 's
Hos pital ,
Sixth St. , was a pa·ssenger in Parkersburg, W.Va.. by the
a car driven by Benjamin R. Mei gs County EMS .
Wolfe, 22, 50802 Joppa
The
accident,
which
Road, Reedsville, according remains under investigation,
to the patrol.
marked the third traffic fatal Trl)opers said Wolfe was ity of the year investigated by
eastbound
near
Long the patrol in Meigs County.
STAFF REPORT

NEWS@MYDAILYTRIBUNE.COM

Shuler tri3l scheduled for October
BY PAUL DARST

County Jail
on Jan . 6.
He stated
GALLIPOLIS - Denis R.
that he had
Shuler is now scheduled to
been drinkstand trial for murder begining at his
ning Oct. 24 at9 a.m., accordbrother's
ing to the Gallia County
house on
Prosecuting Attorney's office.
Dec.
30,
The trial was originally
and started
scheduled for March, but was
thinking
delayed at the request of Dents R. Shuler about a dispute over
Shuler's anorney. William N.
rent
money
he
was ha\ing
Bachu s of Gallipolis.
Sl)uler, 43. of Langsville, with Cardwell .
Shuler said he stuk his brothwas indicted by the Gallia
County grand jury in February er's J2-calibt;r automatic handfor allegedly slayi ng Bennie . ·gun car and drove w Cardwell'.s
Cardwell of Vinton on Dec. house Cardwell let him in and
31. 2004. Shuler waived hi s they went to the bas~ment
right to a speedy trial to allow where a tiiendly conversation
his ·defense time to examine turneu into an argument.
ac~.:ording to the contes~ion.
ballistic evidens;e.
Shuler sa id that later he
Eachu s requested that the
.
wem
upstairs to gel a soft
Gallia County Common
Pleas Court pay for the "ddi- drink out of Cardwell's refrigtional ballistics tests. and erator. He returned to the top
Judge D. Dean Evans agreed of the steps to ask Carcfwell if
during the final pre-trial hear- he wanted one .. at whi ch time
Cardwell shot Shuler. according on March 18.
Prosecutor Jeff Adkins did in2 to the (Oilfession.
Shuler was &gt;hot in the
not object, stating !hat the
stomach
with a jB-caliber·
seriousness of the case justi hand gun . Shuler said he
fied the additional tests.
reached
around the corner
Shuler reponedly. aomined and returned
tire. Two shots
shooting Cardwell in a conlession viaeotaped at the Gallia
Please see Shuler. Al
PDARST@~YDAILYTRIBUNE .COM

J. Reed/pholoo

INSIDE
• Voinovich to relocate
Gallipolis office.
SeePageA2
• Local insurance agent
on council. See Page A2
• For the Record.
SeePageA2
. • Bobaflex leaves
Mason for nalional tour.
See PageA3
• Ames True Temper plans
to close Parkersburg
- plant. See Page A5
• Racine receives
bid for new water wells.
SeePageA6

WEATHER

New Mountaineer stack
signals economic upturn

must regi ster; either online at
www.C8Healthf'roject.com,
orby calling ·a toll -free number. (800) 5S 1-7658.
They will then be given an
appointment. Those who choose to participate will also benefit from
nearly $400 in blood work,
Brooker said. Results of the ·
blood tests, which include 51

BY IAN McNEMAR
IMCNEMAR@MYDAIL'1TR IBUNE.COM

BY TIM MALONEY
TMALONEY@MYDAI LYR EGI ST~R.COM

Details on Pllflo AB

INDEX "
4 SECTIONS- 24 PAGES

Around Town
Celebrations
Classifieds
Comics
Editorials
Obituaries
Regional
Sports
Weather

A3
C4
D Section
insert

A4
As
A2.
B Section

A6

© 2.005 Ohio V•lley Publishing Co.

RIO GRANDE - "the purpose
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. - The concrete for the course· is 'to enhance and
has all been poured and the forms are strengthe1f children 's knowleuge of
coming down on the new stack at their heritage," according to Dr. Tim
Appalachian Power's Mountaineer Plant. · Jilg, director of the Madog Center
a welcome symbol of new employment in for Wei sf\ Studie'S at the :U ni ve rsity
Mason County and the region .
of Rio Grande.
While as many as 500 craftsmen have
Local children had the opportuni been here building the stack itself. the ty to explore the Welsh culture and
real peak of ' emr.Ioyment' at the heritage. both here and abroad, with
Mountaineer Plam w1ll take place when the "Land of Wales" course at Kids
an·outage occurs in the fall of next year to College thi s week at URG.
allow the new stack and scrubber to be
Jilg led the kids through traditionanached to the plant.
al Welsh folk songs, history, lanExpected to last 18 months. the ou1age guage, traditional Slories. soccer and
will see as many as I ,400 to I,500 men they made Welsh cakes. The kids
and womeri working at Mountaineer.
were also given a history on the rich
After the stack is j:ompleted, as many Wel sh culture in southeastern Ohio.
as 40 new employees will be needed to
" It was, my ftrsl' time working with
oversee its operation, which would up the children ltnd I enjoyed the experitotal workforce from 128 to 168 .
ence." he said. "Th~y were preny
Finally. the new flue gas desulfuri zation rec;eptive· and,enthusiastic ." .
system will allow the burning of high-su lJilg has been the director of the
fur coal, which will mean the opening of a Madog Center for Welsh Studies at
new mine adjacent to the Mountaineer URG since April. Prior to ·that. he
taught Welsh to adu lt s in Wales. not -.
Please see Sblck, Al
•

Ian McNemar1photo
Jenna Haft. 11. gave help to Savannah Forgey, 9, during a game of "Go Fish"
in Welsh in !he Kids College course Land of Wales Friday at the Univers1 ty of
Rio Grande.
ing that only 23 percent of the 3 mil - Eugli'h ,·iewcd 1l1e Welsh lJng uage
lion people in the t:ountry ca'n \peak a~ a c~n1sc .~..~f lawle :-.~ ne ~~ in \Vale~
and rcp(&gt;rted that it "as ·holding
their native toungc .
In tile mip -19th · century. th~
Please see Heritagi!, Al
,,

'
'

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