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                  <text>Page 86 • The Dally Sentinel

www.mydallysentlnel.com

Thur~ay,August7,2003

BRIDGE

NEA Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER

1

lhlpe

Herd fight through
heat, humidity, Bt

Aneww to 'pre"IOUI Puu.le

(hyph.l

:'Mged

......

55~­

5 Exchlnge

511 Arm porto
10 Gl'lldUIIoa 5 7 - ·
Phlc rock
58 Feedbag

12 Sped

~~~~~~~~~
13~~·
North
14 ornl':r

moratla

00-()7,-113

A 85;
A97;
• K853

+
We~t

~~

A Q 10 9 2
•

K J 6 2

•

7 4

27 Blelllorw
30FHI

-

.QJOB 3

• Q J 10 9
• Q ~6 5 4

... J 10 9

soup

32 When
to 111 111,.
34 Croft
35 Gilt plvolo
38 Ughl
oword

5

• A 82
... A K 3

bird
7 In a fntnzy
8 Brucl'o IX
9 Perfect

place

10 Gl-.ao

37 Flllr-hlrlng

11 Exempt
ltonoro
12 Type
38 Troe'sjulco
of pesto
39 Blocldlolrd 17 Crotty

Dealer: South
Vulnersble: East-West

~'T\llll(; ~IJ,.$
t-\E \l1S ~ ~
~\Wilt~~~

3.

Ft)'.~ ~Ac ...

2.4.

Soulh
lA

Wes1

North

sA

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pus

Opening lead:

FRANK&amp;

MOtJNT

ARARAT1···

I WAS' tiOPING

cleaners
42 Mine yield
45 Polo groy
46 Clntury
unh
50 Unfasten
53 Ski-lodge

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

+J

.

47 Maine,

ottdlurn
31 Uvely joy
33 K~chen·

48 Qlyo.
49 Leg~~l

"""'"·

51 Feign
52 So-eo

volcano

25 Prune
28 Custard

6 Slnbld'o

excited

South
AAKJ763
•

1 Hoalbell
2 SIA uc
dy
3 c1 type
4 Uon'o proy
5 Won -

19 Eyo doctor
23 TO peallll
26 Some

72 .
East
•

DOWN

15 Clndl
16 Denver hrs.
18 Aelltivea

•

20 Gueat
21 Prom
honorH
22 One
of a pair
23 Several pta.
24 Two-wttular

.,.

from

o.. gon

29 Malo'

35 Brsy
37 Feminine
ending
40 Slgho

,t,!l

ligurea

Afler North raised spades,

South

immediately thought about a slam.
Dut he needed to find out whether
North had a suitable hand. So. he bid
three diamonds, what his partner

thought was a help-suit game-try.
cMake a game-try in a weak side sult.l

With a fitting diamond hono r and an
ace. North jumped to game. This was

sufficieitt to encourage South to skip

---~ \Ot-1\Gf\1 I

------

TOO,\ 7

FQ(&lt;:. 1-\E. I

-o:----'(

to the smalls lam.
After winning with the club ace,
South cashed his spade ace . When
East discarded a club. it looked as
though declarer had three unavoid~tble lo~ers : two spades and one diamond . But South worked out that if, at
trick I I, West was left with his three'
trumps. he W8!; a cus tomer for an endplay. This required finding West with
exactly 4-4·2-3 distribution.
Declarer played a heart to dummy's
ace. ruffed a heart in hand, crossed to
the diamond king, trumped another
heart, cashed the club king, ruffed the
club three in the dummy, trumped the
heart ni ne. and took the diamond ace.
South had the ki~g-jack o! spades
and diamond eightle!l. West held his
three trumps. When declarer exfted
with his diamond. West was forced to
ruff and lead into South's trump
tenace. West's :second trump trick disappeared in a cloud of white smoke.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
by Luis Campos
Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created from quotations by famous
people, past and present. Each letter tn the cipher stands lor another.

TOday's clue: T equals Y

"ZVTSXBCB
MeKCMB
"F X B
A H

K V

AH

EZCZJAHe."

XZCCAHKV

AIFADZFe

DTHFBCT

e

HB I U •"

'H

HZDDT

K S V
JZOAH

w c.

POMEROY
Meigs
Counly Agricultural Sociely
has finalized plans with ,a private Ohio firm for security at
next week's Meigs County
· Fair.
In the past, the fair board
has used deputies with lhe
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department to secure the
fairgrounds, but Sheriff
Ralph Trussell's wholesale
layoff of deputies earlier this
summer has eliminated that
option.
Language
in
Trussell's contract with the
officers' union and risk of
losing unemployment compensation also ruled out ariy
possibility
of
laid-off
deputies acting as special
OBrruARIES officers for the fair.
Trussell said earlier this
week he would authorize the
use of his deputies only if the
·Page AS
county commissioners would
authorize
his request for a
·• Jane Bare
$29,000 !ransfer of funds set
• Dalla Moodspaugh,23 aside in January for food for
county
prisoners.
Commissioners have refused
to do that on the basis of
advice from legal counsel
representing them in a civil
case Trussell filed earlier this
year.

INSIDE

PREVIOUS SOLUTtON- "To the dull mind all nature is
leaden. To the illumined mind the whole wo~d sparl&lt;les
with lighl."- R.W. Emerson
WORD
lAM I

r''&lt;E GoT
A MILLION
OF 'EM,
FOLKS!

I'f-1

8Y BRIAN J. REED
breed@ mydailysentinel.com

practice. See Page 81

you can work out how he made the

~'IOU

11(111\\

'

HERE
ALL WEEK 1

• EPA: Developer won't
sign consenl decree fa~ .
subdivisions. s8e Page A6
• Two convicted for theft
See Page A&amp;

WEATHER

Bv J. ·MILES LAYTON
ilayton@mydailysentinel.com

PEANUTS

I THINK 1LL IMPRESS
THAT UTTLE RED·IoiAIRED
61RL B'l JI/MPIN6 'O~F

OR MA'I'SE I'LL IMPRESS
(.IER 8'( JUST JUMPING
O~F THE LOW SOARD...

'
·'/Y
-1 . f ...

THE HI

I

'

SCIIAM·LETS ANSWERS

Yearly· Bigot- Oaken- Jounce- BACK to YOU
I was very surprised when a friend got a dog since
she seemed to favor cats. She explained that a dog would
come when you call him but a cat would take a message and get BACK to YOU .

Morpn McMAIIII
SOUIIiem elementary

today these splendid trails cou ld b&amp;
nowhere to be found.
T AUAUS (Apnl 2Q.May 20) - It's OK to
went 10 be left alone, but il tnis eldends to

being too R&amp;lf-servlng with no regard lor
your fellow human being, associates will
start to de6berately plac&amp; obstacles in your
palh 10 11ip you up.
GEMINI (May 21-Juna 20) - Normally
you're one bf the most open-minded and
ne~&lt;lble people to be around, but, much to
lhe chagnn ol you• companions 1oday, you
may choose to beha.'le in ways that are
1c1ally lh8 oppos~•CANCEA (June 2hJu1y 22)-

1 1'HOIJGHT I,OO(J

Being loosa
and lrfvolous whh your money is one thing,
but today your taste could be OU1 to lunch
and you may find yourself purcl'laslng a

WERE PONE 5HEWING-!

Classifieds

Get

Fast
Results

number of outlandish and grores.quelterns.

SOUP TO

NU~.

Tn oUll';e!&lt;l P'll~&lt;:e ,'•TS
1 M~NT1b 'tolL' WHOS

GoT~~ Ok.3Y:?

INDEX
2 Sections -

12

Pages

Calendars
A2
Classifieds
B2~4
Comics
Bs
Dear Abby
A2
Editorials
A4
Faith•Values
As
A6
Movies
NASCAR
B6
Obituaries
A6
Sports
B1·3
A2
Weather
©2003 Ohlo vaney Publishing Co.

Fair President Ed Holter
said Thursday a contract has
been finalized with an Ohiobased security firm, but
declined to disclose the name
of the company. Holter said
the contract will provide for
six Ia eight security guards
during the week's events, 10
guards during Friday night's
events, and additional officers as they are deemed necessary.
Holter said all of the officers hired through the firm
are certified lhrough the Ohio
Peace Officers Training
Program, and that several of
them are certified as emergency medical technicians as
well.
The fair board had set aside
$3 ,000 to pay for the county
deputies · services, and Holter
said the cost of hiring the private firm will exceed .that
amount, although he did nol
disclose the cost.
"The cosl of hiring the private firm will be somewhat
over budget, so we're
depending on private donations to help offset the cost,"
Holter said.
Fair events begin Sunday
evening. with the crowning
of the fair queen, and will
conclude on Aug. 16 with a
concert by Darryl Worley.

Second death within
six months inside
Middleport jail

Cloudo, S-011, HI: 80s, Low: &amp;Oo
1

\((,I~IH

·~)ll . t

, , \,,,,,,,,1,,1,, ,,,!,,,,1 ,,,,,,

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
hoeflich@ mydailysenti nel.com

Herd asSistant. See Page 81
• Clarett watches Buckeyes

The loser was eaten
as if by magic

•; ,

Security firm signed Go 'chic' with Morgan's Raiders wear
for Meigs County Fair

• Ftint native named new

43 Not bogus
44 Stlll-ocllve

contract. West leads the club jack.

\ COUL \)t-IT e£ 1-\01-\E
TO MI\KE. \)\1'\1'1(12:.

"-r1

•

This deal is arUully magical in its

!?'~TOP \'OUTING I Ci'\ ~Otz.(i:.'l~ Pf&gt;1 Dtf\ 1-\A/M MN&lt;.E. )()Mf.Jfllfi' !?'St\E: BO IL(.D f&gt;.. l-\/&gt;.,r.\BlJI7.6t.R.""'

,:

SPORTS

of ..llof

41 Domoacuo
locale
42 Bookie's

way . South is in six spades. While you
ar'e consuming your breakfast. see if

THE BORN LOSEH

J \~ - \,, 1

54¥;.-:._

In "The Winter's Tale ," Bill the
Bard wrote, "II this be magic, let it be
an art J Lawfu l as eating."

NeAR ASPeN.

Middleport • Pomeroy, Ohio

moner

By Phillip Alder

fOR J'"OMeP£.A(r

Gagne caps another
Dodgers wins against
Reds,Bt

MIDDLEPORT - A man
arrested by the Pomeroy
Police Department and
charged with resisting arrest
and receiving stolen property
hanged himself in lhe
Middleporl jail · Thursday
morning. This is the second
apparent suicide within six
months at the Middleport jail.
Dallas Moodispaugh, 23,
of Pomeroy was found dead
by a Middleport Police
employee shortly after 8 a.m.
Thursday according Ia
Middleport Police Chief
Bruce Swift. Gallia County
Coroner Dan Whiteley said
there will be an autopsy conducted, but Moodispaugh's
death appears lo be a suicide.
Moodispaugh was arrested
Wednesday as a suspect in a
possible theft which occurred
Monday. Several chain saws
valued at $3,500 and some
radiators worth more than
$800 were reported m1ssmg
from a garage on Bashan
Road.
County
The
Meigs
Sheriff's Department conducted the initial investigation and reported the theft to
the
Pomeroy
Police
Department
who
later
stopped Moodispaugh when
he r.m a traffic light Monday
evening. Police reports said
that Moodispaugh was also

accused of driving while his
license was under suspension
and with operating an unsafe
vehicle . The vehicle was
impounded and searched.
Police officers discovered
items similar to the ones
reported missing earlier by
the sheriff's department.
After conducting a thorough
investigation into the theft by
questioning several witnesses, the Pomeroy Police
Department
arrested
Moodispaugh Wednesday
and questioned him.
Police Chief Mark Proffill
said Moodispuugh admitted
to the crimes he was charged
with. He was to be arraigned
Thursday in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court on
those and olher charges that
were pending. Moodispaugh
had a lengthy aJTest record
and was on parole for vandalism, if was reported .
"This is a sad and unfortunate Incident," said Proffitt
The Ohio Bureau of
Criminal Investigation and
the
Meigs
County
Prosecutor'1 Office are conducting an investigation into
the im::ident
In February, Donnie L.
Sturgeon also died in the
Middleport jail as a result of
self- strangulation. Sturgeon's
body was found only three
hours after he was jailed on a
parole violation warrant from
Georgia.

·'

. POMEROY - You, too.
chic when the
can be
Morgan's Raiders cross
Vinton and Meigs Counties
in September if you're wearing a souvenir t-shiri. a commemorative hat, and a
pewter-like label pin
The items are being sold
by
the
Bashan
Fire
Department. the ChesterShade H.istorical Association
and the Pomeroy Merchants
in
Meigs
Association
County, and the Bicentennial
Committee
in
Vinton
County.
Proceeds from lhe sale of
the label pin will go toward
expenses . of the re-enactment. while money from the Go chic with bicentennial attire for the Morgan's Raiders weekt-shirts and caps will go lo end. Sept. 3-7. Here , from the left, Pam Schalz of the Chesterthe community organizations Shade Historical Association , Annie Chapman of the Pomeroy
selling them.
Merchants Association, Jane Ann Burns of the Wilkesville
The items are for sale in Bicentennial Committee, and Harry Spencer of the Bashan Fire
various locations around Department display souvenir items for sale. (Charlene Hoeflich)
both counties. The shirts sell
for $12. the ha1s for $10. the the hats and shirts.
be a souvenir bell made by
lapel pins for $5. Several of
A bicentennial booth will Fenton. The bells are a fund
the organizations also have be set up ·at the Meigs raiser of the kitchen commitMorgan Raiders mugs for County Fmr where ail of the tee. Cleo Smith and Elsie ·
sale although they don't feu- cemmemorative items can be Folmer. of 1he Chester Shade
lure the Raiders' scene us do purchased. included also will Association.

Commissioners
approve street
names for
Reedsville

. POMEROY - Meigs County
approved new
names lor lhree Reedsville streets
during lheir regular meeting
Thursday afternoon.
At the request of the Olive
Township Trustees, Chevalier
Drive off Ohio 681 will be
renamed First Street, Fire Hou~
Drive will be renruned SecOnd
Street, and a lhinl street, now
unnamed. located behind lhe
Olive Township Firehou.'le, will
be nruned Thinl Street.
Ire new narres will elimina!e
confusion among residents who are
providing diftelcnt street nan-es in
their addres.'les, accon:ling to
Township Clak Manha Durst.
Attending lhe meeting were
Commissioners Jetr Thomton
ru1d Jim Sheets, and Clerk Gloria
Kloes.

Commis.~ionen;

Prosecutor: Charges may be
dropped against arson suspect
COLUMBUS (AP) - A
proseculor said he was considering dropping charges
against a man suspected of
s!arting the fire that killed
five college students in a
house near Ohio State
University.
Franklin
County
Prosecutor Ron 0' Brien said
he questioned the charges
.after reviewing a videotaped
police interview with Robert
Lucky Patterson and interviewing five witnesses whose
statements would be critical
to gaining an indictment.
" It is rare for our office to
interview witnesses prior to
presenting a case to the grand
Jury like that." O'Brien told
The Columbus Dispatch for a
story Friday.

The police. fire departmenl . that they hild witnesses who
and FBI have been asked to placed him in lhe area on the
forward alllheir files and ev i- nighl of the April 13 tire.
dence (o the prosecutor\ stealing cilr slereos.
office , O'Brien said.
Homiddc Lt. Mary !(erins.
He wouldn't say what on acting commander of the
the videotape has caused him detective bureau that is hanto reconsider the charges. He dling I he case, said police had
will meet with the victims' worked closely with 0' Brien
families Friday to discuss 1he in filing the charges.
She said he was well aware
case. The Dispatch Silid.
O'Brien Sitld the decision of wha1 evidence 1hey had.
"We were in multiple meetto dismi s&amp; the charges has to
be made before Monday. the ings and discussion s allout
deadline for seeking an thi s with prosec utors,"
Kerins said.
indictment
0' Brien said he approved
If charges against Patterson
are dismissed. they ciln be Patterson\ arrest a week ago
refilcd at any time. O'Brien aflcr police iold him they had
said.
'J confession.
Police have said Patterson
Patterson was charged with
made incriminating slatements againsl himself and
Ple1se see Ch•rces. A6

Flbromyalgla Suppoa I Group

THE GRIZZWELLS

This FREE support group is sponsorecl by the Arthritis Foundation and Holzer Medical Cenler

ARLO &amp;

JA~IS

Tuesday, August 12, 2003
.-------.,

5:30.· 8:00PM • HMC Education &amp; Conference Center
Topics discussed will indude ... pain control, exercise, relaxation,
_fatigue, depression and doctor/patient .relationship.

MEDICAL CENTER
Discover th e HolzerD(fference

Toke a more active role in your heallh!

www.holzer.org

Far more informalion, or to register, call Missi

(740) 446·5121

- - - - -- - - - - - - - -- - -J

--·-

---

-..-----·~----

or

Ros•

at

1·800·816·5131

..

�OHIO

The Daily Sentinel
Satunlay, Aug. 9

Public meetinas

62""~

I Mln&amp;fletd

Monday, Aug. 11"
TUPPERS PLAINS
Eastern Local Board of
Education, special meeting.
7:30 a.m., to di sc uss possible
employment of personnel.
student handbooks and student fees.
Tuesday, Aug. 12
POMEROY
Meigs
County Board of Elections,
8:30 a.m. at the office.
Tuesday, Aug. 12
POMEROY Bedford
Township Trustees, 7 p.m. at
the town hall .

•

• i Columbuo '1141'/IICJO I

••

Clubs and
Organizations

Showers &amp; thunderstorms
By-oct-

Chance.of rain 60 percent.
Saturday night... Scattered
showers and thunderstorms.
Patchy dense fog developing.
Lows in the mid 60s. Chance
o( rain 50 percent.
Sunday... Partly cloudy with
a chance of showers and thunderstorms. Highs in the lower
80s. Chance of rain 30 percent.
Sunday night ... A chance of
showers and thunderstorms in
the evening ... Otherwise partly cloudy. Lows in the lower
60s. Chance of rain 30 percent.

Today... Morning fog or low
clouds. Showers and thunderstorms becoming numerous as
the day wears on. Highs near
80. Light and variable winds.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Tonight. .. Scattered showers
and thunderstorms. Patchy
dense fo~ developing. Lows
in the mtd 60s. Calm winds.
Chance of rain 50 percent.
Saturday... Again morning
fog or low clouds. Showers
and thunderstorms becoming·
numerous as the day progresses. Highs in the upper 70s.
Light and variable winds.

A DAY ON WALL STREET
Aug. 5, 2003

10,000

Dow Jones
industrials
'

e--- s.ooo

""

9,036.32

--------------=7.000
MAY
JUN
JUL
AUG

:;,=.., -1.63

High

Aoc&lt;lrd high: 11 ,722.98

Low

9,187 73 9,034 57

Jan. 14.2000

Aug. 5, 2003

1,800

Nasdaa
composite
, I

---1,400

- - - - - - - . . , . - - -----=-1.200
MAY
High

:;,=.., -2.37

1,711.11

JUN

JUL

Low

AUG

Rocord high: 5,048.62
Maret\ 10, 2000

1,671 .04

Aug. 5,2003

Standard &amp;
Poor's 500

950
B50

750

965.46

MAY

JUN

AUG

:;,=.., ·1 .77

High

Low

Rtcord high: 1,527.46
Marct\ 24. 2000

982.82

964.97

Local Stocks
ACI-19.29
AEP -27.40
Akzo- 30
Ashland Inc.- 32.47
BBT -35.05
BLI - 15.27
Bob Evans - 25.33
BorgWarner - 65
City Holding - 32.24
Champion - 3.68
Charming Shops - 5.60
Col- 25.35
DuPont- 42.73
DG - 18.24
Federal Mogul - .20

Friday, August 8,

Saturday, Aug. 9
POMEROY- Burlingham
Modern Woodmen, 6:30 dinner with meat and drink and
dessert being provided. Take
covered dish. Regular meeting to follow.

Concerts, Stiows

Monday, Aug. 11
POMEROY- Noah's Ark
outdoor drama will open for
7:30p.m. nightly presentations
through Aug. 17. Presented by
the Power in the Blood
Ministries and Hillside Baptist
Church. Live animals, free
admission. take lawn chairs.

Reunions

Saturday, Aug. 9
RACINE - The Bailey
family reunion will be held at
4 p.m. at Star Mill Park.

S~iety
Staneart family
reunion
ALBANY - Descendants of
Joel and Lydia Still Staneart held
their annual reunion on July 26
under the Meadows Shelter
House at Lake Snowden. Albany.
A delicious picnic dinner began
at noon with the blessing given
by Paula Staneart Pickens.
After the meal and much visiting, a group picture was taken of
those in attendance. It was pointed out that a Staneart family
reunion album is being assembled. Madeline Staneart also stated that she has pictures of past
reunions and anyone wanting
copies should let her Imow.
Dale Colbwn also said he had
pictures of two Staneart girls
who attended Ohio University in
the early
1900's. Lloyd
Blackwood hru. Staneart history
booklets for sale at $13 each.'
Anyone with updated information is asked to contact him. He
will make corrections and offer
updated copies for sale next year,
it was

Gannen - n.so
Geneml Electric- 28.08
GKNLY- 3.90
Harley Davidson- 46.12
Kroger- 17.12
Ltd. - 16.45
NSC- 18.89
Dak Hil Filar&lt;:ial- 28.29
Bank One - 39.14
OVB- 24.50
Peoples - 26.90
PepSICO - 44.99
Premier- 8.87

Rockwell - 25.42
Sears - 40.70
SBC-23.38
AT&amp;T- 21 .12
USB- 23.76
Wendy's- 27.70
Wai-Mart - 57
Worthington -14.08
Daily stock reports are
the 4 p.m. closing quotes
of the previous day's

transactions, provided by
Sm1th Partners at Advest
Inc. ot Gallipolis.

::
The Daily Sentinel
=gr~ Bt~J·32

Reader Services

not( .~ .

During. the business meeting
conducted by Paula Staneart
Pickens, Connie Staneart Largent
read the minutes of the last meeting. Mugs with "Staneart
Reunion 2003, Lake Snowden"
were donated by Dale Colburn.
Presented to Laum Lea Saunders
Mayers, Olthe, Kansas for traveling the farthest, mug; Wilbur
Colburn, 92, for being the oldest,
a mug ; and Olivia Rosyln Joyce
Mayers, 6 months, the youngest,
a Boyd bear. The most people
attending from one family
includes Lucky, Jenny, Wes and
Brad Luckett, Vera. Josh and
Zach Richardson. and' Paula

DEAR ABBY: I am 24, and
after four years of dating have
recently become engaged to
"Zack." We are very much in
love, and quite frankly, until
lately I never could have imagined myself with anyone else.
Last week. one of my coworkers - I' II call him Keith
- confessed to me that he's
developed a crush on me and the more I think about it,
the more I feel a mutual
attraction. Keith has been a
good friend over the years. We
work out together on a regular
basis in the company gym and
have shared many lunches.
Abby, I am confused. I find
myself thinking about Keith
more than my fiance.
Keith has always been easy
to talk to. I wish Zack and I
could have the conversations
I'm able to share with Keith.
The last thing I want to do is
wreck my engagement. How
can I stop this confusion and
once agam focus on my relationship with my fiance?
Help' - S.O.S. ASAP IN
THE SUNSHINE STATE
DEAR S.O.S.: Let's analyze
this situation. Why did Keith
wait until you were engaged
to Zack before declaring his
feelings? Could it be that once
you were "taken" you became
safe - ~nd not' a threat to his
freedom? Many men find
women who are married,
engaged, going steady, etc.,
easier to talk to and even more
attractive than those who are
available.
Do not allow yourself to be
distracted from a relationship

Dear

Abby
ADVICE
that has worked for four years.
Limit your workouts with
Keith and put your energy into
develoj)ing better communication with Zack.
DEAR ABBY: For more
than a year. I have been a livein caregiver for a sweet 94year-dld lady I' II call Ethel.
For the most part. Ethel has
enjoyed good health. We have
a lot of fun together.
Last week, when we went
on our weekly outing to the
beauty shop and 1unch. I
noticed how loud her voice
was in the restaurant. She
attracted the stares of several
dine~ . Ethel has also begun
chewing with her mouth open,
completely unaware of how
she appears.
I want to let her know that
she isn 't acting like the wellmannered · lady she's been in
the past, but I don't.know how
to tell her without hurting her
feelings. Please give me some
advice on how to broach the
subject. There is only one
restaurant in our small town.
and Ethel dearly loves our
weekly meal there. Thanks.
Abby. - EMBARRASSED
IN NEW MEXICO

DEAR EMBARRASSED:
Tell Ethel what you have
observed about her hearing
loss and schedule a visit with
her doctor. She needs a referral . to have .her hearing
c hecked. While you're there,
mention to the doctor the
change in her table manners.
Any abrupt change in the
behavior of a person is something his or her physician
should know about. '
Please don't be reticent or
embarrassed. You are her
caregiver, and it is your obligation to inform her physicians
· what you observe.
·
DEAR ABBY: I have a
wedding etiquette question.
Twice within the last month,
I' ve been invited to a bridal
shower without receiving an
invitation (o the wedding.
I have witnessed a social
blunder or two in my day. but
this takes the cake. Are you
with me on this, Abby? DISGUSTED IN SOUTH
CAROLINA
DEAR DISGUSTED: To
invite someone to a bridal
shower who will not be invited to the wedding is a breach
of etiquette. However, before
becoming· angry about it,
please consider that this was
tgnorance on the part of the
couple or the famihes.
(Dear Abby is written by
Abigail Van Burerr, also
.known as Jeanne Phillips, and
was founded bv her mother,
Pauli11e Phillips. Write Dear
Abbv at 1\W\I'.DearAbbv.com
or ·P.o. Box 69440.' Los
Angeles, CA 90069.)

ACivertlsing
Outaldt Saito: Dave Harr1s, Ext. 15
ClaetJCirc.: Judy Clark, Ext. 10

Circulation
Dllll1ct Mgr.: TBA, Ext. 17

General Manager
Charlene Hoeftich, Ext. 12
E-mail:
newsOmydailysenrrnel .com

their reunion invitation.
It was noted that relatives
from- four of the 13 children of

and Olivia Mayers. John and
Connie Staneart Largent, Wilbur
Colburn. Wiley Colburn, Dale
Colburn and Lloyd Blackwood.

Web:
www.mydailysentinel.com

Parker family
reunion

Town m Country
EXPO to be held
in September

EAST MEIGS - The 68th
annual
Parker reunion was held
Joel and Lydia Staneart were repat
Eastern
Elementary school
resented at the reunion.
Sunday.
Madeline Staneart reported on
Following a carry-in meal,
Howard and Ruth Fisher. Scott
new
officers were elected. They
and Maxine Staneart Leeds and
were
Gladys Parker. president:
Clara Mae Hutchison. Cards are
POMEROY - The eighth
Ralph
Parker, vice president:
being sent to those who are in ill annual Town an(! Country EXPO
Russell
Parker, secretary-treahealth. Paula Staneart Pickens to be held at the Rock Springs
surer;
Martha
Poole, gifts: Joe
heard from Feme Weissman, Fairgrounds has been scheduled
Poole, photographer; Nellie
West Newton, Mass., who was for Sept 20 and 21.
The event is held to showcase Parker, news reponer, and Keith
also unable to anend.
It was decided to hold next some of what the local area has to Ashley, historian.
Gifts were presented to Nellie
year's Staneart Reunion at Lake offer..in the way of arts and crafts,
Parker.
89, the oldest woman
Snowden the last Saturday in industries, animals, and products.
present;
Farrell Tackell, the oldJuly . Lucky Luckett, Vera It is a free display with free
est man present; Wilma and
Richardson, Stephanie Saunders, games and free entertainment.
Events will be held from I 0 to Howard Parker, longest married,
along with Paula Staneart
Pickens and Joyce Staneart 6 p.m. on Sept. 20 and from 10 · 42 years; Tina and Russell
Parker. newest married, 21
Sheline, agreed to send out a.m. to 5 p.m. on Sunday.
years;
Rachel Ashley Dennis,
The officers planning the
notices and plao the reunion.
Connie Staneart Largent orga- event are Hal Kneen. president: Columbus. traveled farthest:
nized guessing games won by Dale Kautz. vice president; Roy and Pauline Parker, largest
Rashawna Mayers, Wilbur Karen Werry, secretary; Peggy family; and Jacob Parker, 4,
youngest boy there.
Colburn, Wes Luckett and Paula Crane, treasurer.
Door prizes were awarded.
Staneart Pickens. She also read
Crane will also be handling floThe
Quaker ancestry of the
some jokes and readings. A scav- ral displays, JoAnn Kautz, the
enger hunt was played by the entertainment, Rosalie Johnson, Parkers was mentioned.
Present were Willis, Rodney,
children with a IJ.alloon given to the quilt show; Del Pullins, the
and
Theo Parker, Parkersburg,
each child participating.
inside and outside sp&lt;K:e allocaW.
Va.;
Rachel Ashley Dennis,
Attending the reunion were tion; Bill Radford, the antique
Columbus:
Pauline and Roy
Rolando, JoAnne and Joshua tractor display, Jim and Linda
Parker:
Carl.
Arlene, and Jacob
Aburto, Paula Jean Staneart Cunningham. games, and Dan
Parker; Mary Parker; Russell.
Pickens. Bill and Phyllis Smith; the pedal pull.
Tina,
Nicole, and Brooke
Events will include a flower
Kirkendall. Keith and Madeline
Parker;
Ferrell Tackett; Wilma
Staneart, Joyce Staneart Sheline, show, a wildlife display, car show,
and
Howard
Parker: Keith.
Marilyn G. Staneart Allen, Darla, pumpkin shoo~ new car, truck and
Emma,
and
June
Ashley: Gerald
Brittany, Jayden and Ace RV display, a petting zoo, chain
Facemyer. Mark. Stephanie, saw sculpturing, antique farm R. Crawford: Joe, Martha and
Brandon and Hope Saunders, equipment, along with pulls, a Will Poole; Nellie Parker, Urban
Vera, Josh and Zach Richardson, patriotic parade, a quilt show, flea and Judy Grar: Genevieve
Ermel. Jr.. Jenny, Wes and Brad market herbs and dried flowers. Lyons, all local. .
Reunion will be held at the
Luckett, Angela Henry and Reina commercial exhibits, demonstraMoore, Belly Irvin, Stephanie tions and shows, live entertain- same place next year on the first
and Noah Cox, Laura, Rashawna ment and a Sunday church service. Sunday in August.

\\ ursh1p C'~mcr. 87J S. Jl'l.l
..\• ~ . \lidJkJ'('n . t...e-Hn K.ml.l ..-. Pa~ l nr.
Smx..la~ . II am
\\ l-dru:sd:a~ . ~ 00 p m .
Y(•uth Fn i ·.lU p.m
Emmanut-1.-\pMtolk T•bn-mtelt lrtfLI "-\P RJ {lll '\ e\• L1ma Rd Ru1lanJ.
Sen1~· e~ Sun IO'flll a.m . ,\ ~ JO p m .
Thu r-. 1 ill p m . Pa•hlf \la.1' R. HU!Wn

Assembly of God
Libtrt~·

ASSt'mbl_\' of God
PO s ._.~ 4a1 . Duddmg Lane . Ma .)oJ fL
\\ \ 'J. .. PJ.stur :'\e ll T,·n nanl . Sunda~
~1'\KC\· IO OO. Im .mJ 7 pm.

Baptist
Hopt' D•pti'it C hurch tSoutht-m )
:\ill G1~mt St .. ~11Jdkp..:m. Pa!'tnr R••,
Da,1J Rr~an. Sunda~ ,,-ht-...11 - ~-JO a.m.
\\M-.h\[1 ; 1\ ,1m anJ f&gt; p.m. \\c.Juesda~
S...·n llC - 7 p.m
Rutland 1°irsl B11p1Jsl Chun-h
SunJ•t~ Sd~t•o l - lJ ~~~ a m . \\'llfShi p ·
Ill

-l~

am .
Pomem~- •1rs1

Baptist
PJ•h•l J••n Bn)d . .: rt. East '1::1111 St ..
SundJ.~ S~h•~t•l
'I ~0 J m . Wor.;h1 p ·
HI ~llam
First Southern Baptist
-\ ll.P ~ 1'\HllCrt\\ P II.,·. Pa .. tor r LJ.IllJ.r
LY!h ~ .1111. SunJJ\ s~·hlll.\] - ~ .lO a 111 ..
\\1&gt;f"-h 1p 1'l I~ .1m .. i/· .J~ am &amp; '00 11 111 ..
\kdn~· .... 1 .1 ~ Se-n •~··· - .., UU p m
First Baptist Church
P:t•lOr. M&lt;~rl \1 nrn&gt;l\. hlh an.l Palme-r S1 .
\l.JJ kpon , Sumla) Sd111ol • 1,), 15 a.m ..
\\ 1•r~ hir
10: 15 a.m. 7 00 p m..
\\ .-Jnc-.. la ~ Se-n •..:•·- 7-I KJ p m
RudnE' t"irst Baptisl
Pa~h1r Rt.-1.. Huk . SunJa~ Sch011l - 9:_lU
.1111. \\o1•t11p - lll -l O am
700 pm .
\\ .- Ju,·~J•t~ Sa\ ll~ ~ 7 UO p.m

Jt&gt;hn SII O
llb&lt;lll . Sunda\ Sdwol -

\\'D r- h1p · 11!1 .111

., 00 p.qt .

Su&gt; tlC"· 7 liO p m

Bapllst Chun;h
Great DcnU. Rou1 e I&gt;~. Racine. OH.

Paitor llumd M ~l·ea. Sunday Sch(XII 9.30 a.m.. Sunlln) \\'Orship- IO ..lO a.m.,
\\ednesduy Bible Stud) - 6:00p.m.
Old Bethel Free Will B•ptl!il Churdl
2Kfl0 1 St. Rt . 7. Mtddleporl, Su ndu~·
Sch1)(ll - 10 n m . EH~ni n ~ - 7:00 p.m ,
Thun~du) Scrvit.:~:s · 7.00
Hlll1lde Bapllll Chul"th
St Rt. 14) just oiT Rt 7, Pas1or: Rev
James R. Acree. Sr .. Sun day Unifi ed
St:I"\'JCt:. \\mship - 10 \0 11m .. fl p .m ,
WedncsJuy Seni~-e~ -i p.m
Victor,· Daptl1t lndependtnl
~15 N. ~nd St ~iddlcpon. Pa~tor JBme5
E. Keesee. Worship · !Oa .m., 7 p.m,
Wednesday Set\ 1ces • 7 p.m.
Faith B•ptls1 Chun::h
H!lilrnud St. , Moson, Sunday School - 10
a .m , Wor~hi p - II n.m , 6 p m.
Wednesday Scrvll'es - 7 p.m.

Fomt Run Daptist
Pu s1nr · r\nus Hurl. Su nda~ School - 10 ·
!l.m . Wo~lup · I I "m.
\It, Moriah BMptlst
Fm111h &amp;. ,\1:un Sl . M1ddlcpmt. Pa~ ttlf
Kc• Ci tlhr1 t C'la1g. Jr. SunJay s~· ho..•l ·
9:.l0 am .. Wohhip - 10:4 ~ :t m
A nllqu l l~-

Ba ptist

s,·hOill - 9.)0 :l .m . Worship -

10 .p; 11m , Sundil) h enmg - fl:OO p m .
Pastilr: Mark 'k(\•m a~
Rutland Frtt Will Baptist
Salem St . P.t~IIIL Jnm ic Fo1tner. SunJa~
S.:-hlllll · 10 U. nt ., Evcnmg · i p.m..
We~hw•dl iY Scrv1.:rs · 7 p.m.
St~o nd

Baplisl Churth

Ruvl' lhWOnd. W\j. Sunday S1.·hool \0 am

, Mommg worship II am
W~..'t.lnt·,Ua)

E~t•ning

· 7 pm .

7 p.m.

Pomrro~~1 am

Church ol Christ
St. ~h iiiS I I!'r Anlbt.\ft\

\1om ~
SunJ a~

S.:htll'1 .
IO·.lU am. tor Ill .

ll)

Q

:1

Insurance

Products+
Financial
AGENCIES Inc.
Bill Quickel

Pom11ro~

\\'f'!!o'ISide C hurc h of Chrisl
l1;~~h lhll,hcn·, H,&gt;ill C lhl. Sun,l.l\
S.,h,&gt;~ll · II l m . Wt\l'hlj' - 1\la m. (•p.m.
\\'.-dn,·sia~ Sen L •' C~ 1 !' m

Uh
,_

SARI

SAVII
··-

'

SunJa~

)lidd1E'p011 C'huiTh of Chriit
;~.nd

Mam.
Bill

Pa ~ l&lt;• r
FrJLI~r.

m . Wor,h•p· 1:!
p.m . W~·d ne~a~ S!!n ll'&lt;'"
.1

-

~f\ l l.'t' -

prJ\t'r

(_' •har~ Pii~J,rint

Jill

1lk

-rpm

Sut~&lt;t.ty S.:h""-'1 &lt;&gt; ·.10 am ..
· II .1. 111 . 7:110 r m . \\'c-..lne!ida)

Rt•}! ~·r W .tholn . Sun,l.l~

P.t•l&lt; \r
1) -.~o

Zion Chun-h of C'hrisl
1-i.un'tlllllll.: RJ 1R1 1-l.' l.

J.m . w.,r•ltlr

S,h,ll.ol

IO · Ju J 111

r m .. \h•Jn~·~tu~ .'ll'n '"'"

-.

IC nuk ,)n H.t J!.'i . Pa,hw H.,·\ 0 Dell

\\,•Nltp

oo

10 ,1(1

\\,· .ln.-~.t.~~

SunJ;l~

111 .

Q

JO a.m.

7..1\l

10 l."i :t .m ., YPu lh- ~ .~llpm
SiuJ~ \l.t"dm"'Jay 7 pm

a.m

8tl'&gt; k-

1\·.trl S1

\Ji,!Jkpt.lrl

D~•

1cl G dhc•r1.

Su11Ja~

Pa~tn r

Sdkool · Ill ru n.
WM~ htp
1tl-l5 p.m., Sunday E\·e-. 7:00
r-m. \\,·dn~.- ~d.l ~ 5('1'\ l•'t' - 7 : _1·(1 ('.Ill

RunltnlinE"SS l'hun·h
Sdw...•l
•nn a.m.. \\\ •~h 1p
10·-l _:i. .1m . i I'm . Tiun~~dH~ B1hk S1uJ~
JtL&lt;.l Y.•mh • 7 pm .
Suntl.l~

\tmi ~ tt:r

T1•1ll Run~ on. N~:'~ B r.1JI'&gt;ur~
RnaJ. \!id,ll.-·]l(,M Sunti.l! s~·h1-..11 - 9. '\()

am
w,,rshtr - Hl: ~n a.m.
Rutland Church of Christ
Sund a} s,·h111.1l - 1,) :30 am. \\'1...-shtp auJ
Ct1nt111unam - ltl ·.~O a.m. 8HI'&gt; J w,•rr)·.

Laul'l'll'lift hf'l' l\lrlbodisl Church
Rt·• - L•·' S1mnd1 ~ml Myra L. Str.amh.
SunJa~ Scht&gt;{ll - I,) _J\1 tl.ltt . Worship HJ · lll n II\ .md to p.m. \\t·d n c~day St:J'\'Il'C
- 7.00p.m

Latter-Day Saint.,

Brlildford Church of C hri s1
(\mwr ut Sl. H. I I ~4 &amp; Hra ll hur~ H.J

Mimstcr: D{•ug Shamhlin. 'wu1h .\hni~lcf
B1ll Ambers.er. Sundn~ s~.·hlk.'l - 9 :.10 tun.
Wnr , hip - N IMI n 111 . I tl : W II m . 7· 00
p.m .•Wcdne-..da~ Scn-11:c~ - 7 00 p.m.
Hlcko11· Hills Church of Christ
E\angelist Mike \!oun:. Sun J a~ Sdwo l 9 am .. Wurship - 10 a.m.. 6 .lO p.m.
Wrdncsday S e n · ~ ~-c~ - 7 p.m.

Rtednlllt Ch urth of C hrist
Phihp Stunn. Sunda~ School: 9:JO
n.m. Wouhip SerH ( ~ 10 ~0 n m . Bthle
Study, Wcdn~sdny. 6 .' Op.m.
Pa~tor ·

Dexter Churth o( C hri1t
Bill E~h~: lman. Suntluy ~IR-ol9 ..\0
11m.. Sormun Will. superintendent.
Sun da ~· 'o\.orsh1p · 10 ~fl 11 m
Pa.~ tor

l nleue~· uon

7 nnd 124 W, E•Mgtllst ·
Dennis Sargeu1. Sund~ty Rihlc Study ·
lJ·.\ 0 o.m.. Worshi r : IO:JO a.m. und t'dll

r m . Wedne:utay 81hle Study • 7 p m

Tht- C hurch of Jesus
Chrl!il or Latll'r-D•y Saints
S1 H.1 I 611. 446-62J'7 o r 446-7 486.
Sunday s~· houl 10:20- 11 a.m., Relief
S,lclcty/ Pncsthood II 05-12:00 nilOil .
s~~· nment
Sc r\I Ce 9- 10 . 15 a IU.
Homemaking m~C'Iing, l st Thurs. - i p.m.

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Church
Ptnc Gn.wc. Wor~1p • 9 00 a.m. Sunday
Schoo l - 10.00 am Pastor· htnes P.
Brudy

HRrli o~r d .

W Vu . P.t,l&lt;ll IJ,t\ 1d Greer
\(1

r

am , \\'{•t~h1]1 m. \h••hu~~dll~

S.lt&gt;:m Cr nltr
P11 ~1\lL \\illlam K. Munlm\1 , Sunda~
S~,·h\lc.l] - 10 . 15 a.m .. Wnr:;hill ~ : 15 run ,
81hk Slutl y Monduy 7-llll pm
Sno••tllt
Sunday s~· h ,~o.ll - 10 11.111 .. W~1rship - i:l am.

Su ndoy School • 9 4~ a.m., Worship • II
ll m. Ppsto r: James P. Brad y

United Methodist

Mt. Olin: United Methodist
011' 124 t-&gt;ch111 d Wil kr:s,i \le. Pastor: Rc \'.
]{,,]ph Spi 1 c~. Sunil&amp;) Scho.1ol · 9· ~0 a. m..
\\orsh1p . ](1 JO tl 111. 7 p 111 . Thur&gt;dny
Ser\l,· c~ - 7 p.m
Cuoperali n.· Pa rish
.-\lfre1l. PamH Janl'

~~lrl hen~ t C' l u ~ l cr.

Sund;1~•

Wt•!)ohi p - II am ..

s .. h.ul l
p.m.

9 \fl u.m ..

b : ~O

'

II Ill .. 6
pm.

p.m .

WcdnC ~ llay

Sund. 1 ~

Sd\1111l - 10
S.-n ... c, · 7 pIll

~ . m.

, Thursday

S\'f\Jil'6 - 7

Be than~
Dcwa)'tte Slutler. Sunday !kh•ll'l 10 a.m.. Worsh1p - 9 a.m.. WcJncsJay
Sen · 1c~s · 10 a .m

Joppa

Evl'mng s~rnll· ;o- tt: ~n p m . w~dn~:stla)

Churrh nf God nf Proph«~·
0 J While RU. off S1. R1. I(J/), Pa~t01 PJ
C1wpmun. Sunday S.:hou l - 10 am ..
Wnr~h1p- I I :1 m . w.·.t nc~ day Scn· 11::.-~ 7 p. m .

LmtW BuUom

N:t'edn11Jt
- '.l:.\0 u m.. Slmd :L ~' S.-hm•l •
111 .. F1r ~ t Su nd3) nf ~ hml h- 7:00

Wt lr~ hlp

--...........
.......,.,

. .l ..... . .

MIIIZ-1444

m:eaforb
ll\eal &lt;f~tate

Brogan-Warner

216 E. Second Pomeroy
740-992-3325

214 E. Main
992-5130
Pomeroy

INSURANCE
SERVICES

1971

-~~ - ~ ·---· -~'~- -

. ..

••

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,.

•

I

\\ t•JJL ~· s..la~ St•nl.:t·~

..

rIll

Clifton Tabf'rna.dr ChuiTh
Cl1ftllll \\ \ ',1. 'lunJ.1~ S.:h•••l It \ .1 m .
\\t\t-...hlr - ~ 1' m . \\ t•dn&lt;'•ti:LI :\&lt;..'n 1,·e . ~

p.m .
it'tur~

l\'1'" l.ift• \
_1 -. - .1 (',..., ..~,·~

ltulh ]-...&gt;lt ~.

1.. ) ] I

Sun.l:i.l S&lt;t\1"'' Ill
\\ ,·dn~·~J:n
~ p m &amp;

St.t~&lt;'tl ,

1\dl

l'.ht&lt;\t

(' t"nlf'r

Cft•t:l. H.,,ad.

m .~ ~ p m
Y,•uth ., p.m

.1

··un

S11lt'm Cnmnmnil~ ( 'hun:h
R••·•J \\'c-~ 1 c,,h11nb1.1 \\ \ .1 .

P:l~t•'•

:1111.

Cl••k h'ITdl. Sumlty S.:IH~t•lll . lt1

Suml.t:O

\\',• Jn,•s..\.1~

Hani.wn,illr

C'ummunh~·

Pas111r ThCr\\ll Durhum.
:!lid i

EuiiAbrt

C'hun:h

Su11d:1~·

Btllwl Chun:h

Township Rd .. 468C, Sunday School - 9
&amp;.m. Worship - 10 am .. Wednesday
Sen·ices - 10 a.m

HocklniJPOrl Church
Grand Street, Sunday School- 9: 15am .
Worship· 10:30 a. m, Pastor Phillip Dell

'l

.to

\\t:Jn.:sJa~

Sund11y Schnul · 9:JO a.m..
IOJO a.m.

Rt's(ol'lllion ( ' hri!iilill.n 1-'~llu"·!&gt;ihip
Ht ~&lt;.l1'&lt;'r
l{ ,\:ld . .-\thl'll', P:1~11•1 .
L,•nnn· Ctl&lt;lb . Stmd;t~ W,lf)]UJ' HIIKI :1111.
\\'L-.. tnc~&amp;·~ ~ pm

G•\~f'l- 1 .

Sun,la~
l\1\1 -

R111\~1111,

pm

SuuJa~

E\cmn~

7 pm.

p~,h\r
R·•l1l'r1 Mu ~'er.
Sd1111.•l •Uti am.. ~o.•r.;hlp 10:.\IJ

7. tMl p111. \\ cl lt l&lt;..'Mi rl~ S1.'"l~"~ 7:01]

Sernrt' - 7 p Ill

Pentecostal
PrntKo~lllll

S~nt('U~ Mis.~lon

1411 Bridscman St , Syr:t•' Usl'. · Sundu,.
- 10 II

m.

E\'CIIIIlS

f&gt; p

m..

H•zd Communlt) Churth
OfT Rl 124. Pa~tm · t::d~el Hart. Su nday
SdlOil l • 9:JO a.m., W1•ohip - 10 )0 a m.,
7:30p.m.

Middleport Chun:h orlht Naurtnl'
P.1Mur. Allen M1dcap, SunJ ay Sch{lc.ll ·
9:)0 am .Won;hip - IO:JO lUll .. 6 :.~0 p.m..
WedncMia y Sen· H·c~ - 1 p.m . Pa ~ t or .
Allen Mir.kup
Reflbvlllt': fellowship
Chur~·h uf 1he N11zarenr . Pa~ hJr Tc 1 c~a
Waldeck. Sunday School - 9:.l0 a.m ..
Worshtp • 10 4 ~ n m , 7 p.m.. Wednesday
Scf\'Jces - 7 p.m.

Pomeroy Churth of the NazartnE'
Pastor: Jan Lavender. Sunday School 9 .~0 am .. Worship · IIUO a.m and f&gt;
p.m , W.t!\lne~day Scrvict:s 7 p.m

Aswmhi,-

P:t"''' Wil1mm
Hot-onck . SunJa~ S.: hnol
10 am ..
henmg - 7 p.m.. Wednesdar Senkcs- i
p.m.

St

I ~-l . R :~;; n w.

R1

Presbyterian
S~ rvcu!ie

first United Prr~b, t~rilln
Paswr · Rt,t&lt;cn Cn.w•. Wnrsh1p- 11 u m

D)·a\'lllf' Community Churth
Sunday School - 9 30 a m., \\'r.•r~h1p 10·30a m.. 7 p.m.

Pu~wr :

Mom Chapel Chun:h
Sunday school . 10 a.nt .. Worship a.m .. Wedne~day Service . 7 p m

Middleport Pmbyteri•n
PnMor: Rnl'ler CNlW , Worship · I0 11.111

11

Faith Gospel Chun:h
Lona Bottom. Sunday Srh•-.ol - Y 3U a.m ,
Wors hi p - 10.4~ a.m., 7 .\ 0 p.m .
Wednesday 7JO p.m.

H•rrhon,·llle Pmb,1erl11n Church
Rollc-n Cn.1w,

W1 1 r~h tp -

q a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist
Mulhcrr~

Hts. Rd.. Ptlmeroy.

Pa~wr :

Roy

Lawuhky. Snturdn~ s~r \'il-t~ : Suhhn th

1\lt. Oll"f Co mmuni!)' Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush. Su nday Sch1'H.1l 9:30 11.111. E\·en mg · 6 .\0 p m.. Wedneday

Sdn\01 · 2 p.m., W1lrship- .l p.m

United Brethren

Servil.:e • 7 p.m.

Full Gospel Llahthnust
Hi1nnd R1 ltld. 1\lnll.'n&gt;y. PMh&gt;r R{1~
Hunl~r. S m 1~uy S(·hn:&gt;l · 10 1\.m . E•cning
7:)0 p.nt , Tue sday &amp; Thu rsduy - 7:.\ll
pm.
~ \04~

Nazarene

7 pm

Q _lto~

Faith \"nllt-)' Ta lk'rnadt&gt; Chun·h
Ha1k~ Run 1{,\n,l. P:1S1t1 r: H~·• l:nt ll\l'll

6~.

Wor~hip -

pm.

l ..a.n~ ,· lllr Christian C.' hul'\'h

l'brth Church

1 Cu Rd .

!'

rm . w.·dn.·....l:\~ - 7 rIll

Wednesday Sen·1ce - 7 p m.

R1clat
P11~to r : Bnan Harlr.no11. Sunda)' School 10 a.m .. Won.hip - I I a.m., Wednesday i
p.m.

ll'l'

llobStm Chrislian f'ellmrshlp ( 'hun'h
Wluh'. Slllltl.i~ Sdll.,\l10 mn, Su1111:i~ C'lwn:h Sl'l 1 ,,.,. · t• ..lll pm

Fu ll

S~h(lill

PutoJ: Bri•n Huknen, Sund~tJ Sehoul 10 a.m .• Wonhlp - 9 a. m . Wednesday - 7

M'fl

- ?:.tO p m . Wt• dnc~tl:t~ S&lt;'f\ ,,·~·

Th ursJa~

P11stor: llev.rayn~ St utler, Sij-ndny Sehoul ·
llu.m .• WoRhlp · 10 am

,.,,·ni n.!:
7 pm

" '1'\ ,._. .:-

South BtlhE"l Community Chun:h
Silver R1d~ c- l'a~ tn r LmJ a Dumt'Wlllxl.
Sunday Sdl\l{&gt;l · l) a 111 . Wnn.hip Sen ic~..
IOant.
Carleton lntudenootiiUitional Church
Kingsl'&gt;ury Rnnd. Pu~w r : Ko.•hert Von.·,·.
Su n da~ Sdllltl\
lJ .~0 .1.111 . \\'1\T~h1p
Scr\I•'C \ll:\0 tt .m .. F\l'lli ng Scn'll't.' rJ
p.m.
F!"ff'dom Go~p('11\lisslon
Buld Kr~&lt;•h. on Cn. lh l ll . Pn~tm . Rl'\ .
Rnger Wdl11'rd. SunJay s,·hnul . 4 ~i 11m·

MI. Hermon l lnllfd Brtthren
In Christ Churth
Tn11~ (\lll1Ul U111t y ]f&gt;411 W1 ckhum R1i.
Pnswr: Peter t-. IIUUnduk. Sund11y S.·h{l\119 .l O ll .tn. \\t1rsh 1p · Ill\()~~ m .. 7:00

p nl. \\t•d ne,o.Jny S~ l\' ll'C~ · i ()() pIll
Yuuth !lHIUp mee1i113 lnd &amp; -*th Sundn}'\
7 p.m.

•:den llnlttd Brelhn•n in C hris1
Slnl c H.tiUit' ll·l. R~·t·J~\ 1lk Sunll il~
Sl h&lt;~tll -

II tun .

Sun,l:i~

:1m. &amp; 7 iMI p m.
7·()0 r .m .

;, IKI

Wnn.h1p - Ill !Ill

Wcd n c~Juy

W~·\!llc- ~dn~

S&lt;..'n ~~- ~.- ~ -

Yt•UIII S{'l\ I•'C -

rm

Worsh ip- 7 p m.

\\hilt-'s l'hap..-1 Wr&lt;ilrya n
C'tlllh•i11 t:. Rc1:1J. t• a~ ll• r ){,·\ . Phillip
R1drnuut. Sundar SdH)(ll - '1: 10 u.m..
W,)n;hl ]' - 111·.\(l am . W,•.Jnr ..l;l) S.-rHo;c
- 7 p.m

Chesler C hur&lt;'h of lhe Nazarme

.............. zu

212 E. Main Street
Pomeroy

1.1111\'fh.•' hll\'11\,111 . \\,,J)ihip· ](l\kl ,\111

p.m. st;rv i~.e

.tt•btr .:funml ~omt

K&amp; C JEWELERS

Uft l 'hul'\·h
\1idJki'&lt;'1'1. I'.L•h'l

:nd -\1 "'

Mornlna Star

Chun-h or lhr NazartntMike Adkins. Sund u~ Sdmnl - ~ - JO
u m. Worshi p - 10 : ~0 am .. (I p.m ..
Wednesday Serv1ccs - 7 p.m.

Sdu,\1 - I,) :J n lt .m . Won;hip JU l1J.1 111

&lt;J

ltcjoit· m~

"till '

P:1~1t1r . l l ~rs..-hc l

E\~ning

Pa ~tor

IO:Jil11 .m.

S&lt;' hl'lt\1 - Q _l.ll nm. \\ 1•t ~ h1p . u .ltl tl m
and 7 p.m. \\,·,tn~.·~ du~·. 7 r .m. l · nd:l~ .
!dhl\\ sh1p ~er&gt; 1~'L' 7 p 111

7·.\0 p m

S und a~

HI JU

l\l ttl u m .

c.rmtJ.SUuon
Carmel &amp; Bashttn Rds . Ra~1nt . O hw.
Pustnr: Dewttyne Stutlc£, S unil ll~· Sdmt\1 9:30a.m.. Wor ~ h1p - 10 ~~ ,t. m. . B1hl"
Stud)· Wed. H)(} p.m

S~· racuJe

•!Ill

Suntla~ S,·hHl\1 -

SunJ:1~

7 rm

Middltpur' Community Chun·h
~7'i Pearl Sl . fl hdJkp\&gt;r1 . P:1•h&gt;1 S.utl
AnJef•nn. Sund:1\ S,lllll&gt;l 10 :1 111. .

1\t-lllr Hnh Randolph. \\·Mslup · 9 : ~1l
S)· rat'u~ t"irst Chun:h of God
Appk 1111d Sc.:ond Sl ~. P ~~ltu l{,·v Dll\'lil
Ru ~scll. Sunda y Sdtou l .md Wnrslup- 10
am.

:'lH-. St'r\1•'" tlllll'

Pa ~ 1 or :

(_~ h t&gt;ste r

Pa, tor Ja1w Bl'llllir. \V{•r•hip - Q a 111 ..

Rutland Chu rc h or (Jod
Pastot: Run !1 ~ :1 1 h . Sund:t) \\'or'-1np - 10

-\ s~1~ 1 .1111 Pasl&lt;\r 1\ Jn.•n 11 :1\ ~~- SunJ.t~
\\',,nhtp· 10 nm. E\ t·mng WMsh1 p 6 pm .
\ \llllh gn.lup b pm. WeJncst.ia) Pt1\\Cf m
Pr.&amp;~·er. ant.l Bthlc StuJ~ - , pm
Asb Stl'f'f't l'hurch
A~h S1 .. Mil.k11t'l"-'11 · SunJ.1~ S..:ht..,•1 · Q .10
am .. \ll,mut~ \\ ,\L&gt;&lt;h lr - 10:.'\l am .\: 7
pm. \\cJn,·sda~ Scr1 1c,· · ~ tlU I' 111 . '•'Uih
Sen i.:c - ~ (I} p 111
AJ{II.Pf' Lift• Cl'nt~r
"Fu li -G11Si)('l Ch ur~· h " Pu ~ t.\1 ~ Jt'hn ..~
P.ut~ \\'tid&lt;-'. Nl1 s,·.:,&gt;ml -\.,,. \!.,~,,, , -~~ ­

a 111

St. Paul Lutheran Churth

1k:ltll&lt;'.

\\ orship l 'rntl'r
l) a~tM 1-!. &gt;l l\ R :trh'!.

l.1"''111~

a.m. Worah~ • 9 a.m ., Thetday Service~­
i pm

M~lMs

i\lt. Morillh l 'hurrh of(;od
~hk Hill ~d .. RlK IIll'. Pa~wr Jaml·~
Sollcrfic 1d. SltnJny Sdwnl ') --'5 :t.m..
E''cnm~ - 6 r m . Wcdncsd.t~ s~n ~~~' - 7
p.m.
I

(1(1

t 'a.llh hll {;ospcl l'hurt'h
L&lt;lll)! Bntt&lt;•lll. Pu~1 u1 St&lt;'1o.' H.n·d, SunJa~

Coolrillt United Methodltt Parl1h
Pastor: Holen Kline, Coolville Ch ur~h .
Main &amp; Ftfth Sl. , Sundi)' School - 10

Church of God

~

Rolland
S.:ht&gt;&lt;.ll - Y· ~0 u.m . \\,u·s hlp HUtl .1m., Tim~Jay Sen11:c~ · 7 p.m

Our Saviour Lulhtran Chul"tb
Wulnul and Hemy Sis. Raven•wood.
W.VB .. Putor: Oovid Russell, Sundoy
School - 10 DO am, Wonhip- II a.m .

Service - 7:30 p.m.

Suntlny St:hn{&gt;l - ll
10 ~n 11 m . 7 oo
Sen i L l'~ . 7 00 rIll

Ill . nnu-..1!1~

\\hhl('•d : ·~ '&lt;'fll~' l'. 'T 1' Il l

G raham United Methodltl

H11rlfonl Chun-h of Christ in
Christian l inton

klll'll Sun..l.l} s .. n •.-~~

~ i~l ~·

(;m'pt'l t'hun:h uf lht l.hin~
S1n-io r
R1 ~ ~~ - -\nll•]llll\ . P.l ' '•'l k'"' .\h1111•.
Sen ~~·c , S:u u n.l :1~ ~ (10 I' nt

pm.

\\orshlf'l • Q·JO a.m ( lsi &amp; 2nd Su n), ,
7:30 p.m . (3rd &amp; 4th Sun).Wr:dnesday

Christian Union

.s:

. 1\l l)l\ .. 111

Abund11nt Gn~~~ R.F. I.
&lt;)_: _l S Thm.l Sl.. :&gt;.hJJ\ct"-'fl. P: 1~t·11 T~·n.·, a
lh\1 • . Sund:\~ ,,·n1.:1· . Ill .1111 .

Cnmr:r Syt'lu nore &amp; Second St , Pomeroy,

Church of Christ

Sth·rrs,·lllf ( 'onununil' fttun-h
PJ~ I,IT \\;J,~Ik' I{

Ro~.-k Spring!l
J.:.ei1h Rader. Sund:1y S.:h\J~.•! Q· l:'
a .m.. Wor ship
Ill a.m.. \,•ulh
t:dl\1\\ship. SunJa~ - t&gt; r m

Pa~ or:

RC\

H~· Sl'U

Bndbur.' Church (If Christ

1'111.

&lt;n 1' Ill

•

p.m ..

RlhiE' llolines.-. Churdl

7~

Ot)

~

,\1\1

or Ouist

s~·htl{•l.

\\t:J1w ~a~

SunJll~

S,·hfltll -

Sulllb~ ·-

R1ll.l BTIJ\H'r, \\'1'1(1ih1p - Y·Jtl a 111 ..

S.:n •~·.:- · 7:.111 p m

\'t l'S it&gt;~·a n

J.

-

.1 Ill..

7 r .m

Tuppt"rs Plain C'hun:h of Chri!il
ln ~ tnmwn1al. \\\•r.;h,r S\·n~~···
9 am ..
( \ •nt111UI1hlll · Ill

s. .- h,.._•l

Sum\.\~

\I aiiie)

l'url Chapt-1
S.-1\\"-JI - IJ a.m .. Worship - 1(1 a.m .

Sund."l~ s~· h1l0l - hU~

s.-.' 1\&lt;'

I' m
~thfl

l'omero~
Pll~wr.

]\)11)

\\ .-Jn&lt;.·~-·~

RJ .. P.t5\llf Jell) Sll llfCI.

Sd1•1o•l - lJ 1tl "111 . \\M, h tp
m . Wr Jn c~ J :1~ Sen 1..c.'~ . ~ 1111

.1

\\ ,•r..h11'

S..·h(li.ll - J(l

Pashlr Rllh R,lhin)l'&gt;tl , Sun&amp;~ S,hool - 9
am .. W,•n;hLp - ll) u.m.

Swllla~-

RMt' of Sbaron H11linrss Church
l.t·,,Jlll_!! C~ d. . Rd . Ru1IJnJ. Pnst,.,..· R..-1
0..•\\t'\ 1\.111~. Sunda~ M:ht.~t•l - I,) _J(l :.1.m .•
SundJ~
"''r~h1p -7 I' m. \\l.'dne."lta~
pm~ cr 11\c't' llllf · 7 p 111

8ib1t• l 'hun:h
P1lc Cu Rtl l':t•lt~l Ko
81.1..-k"" COl'l.i. Su.nJll\ S.-h•"-'1 •I .111 .1m.
J\1m1'J\ l~

Other Churches
p,,ltlanJ - Ka~· ml"

p.m
t' a h 11~

P.t\h' r \\III UIIll Ju-.t t' Sun.tJ ~ s~· hl .. ,1 .
l l) OJ :1m . M{'mm}: \\1or-dup · Ill -'"' JIll
Sunda~ ~n 1,.,. to _
t t) p.m

· ~am

lttath I~Uddlc-port i
Pus1m· R.xf Rm-..o:r. Sunday S.-h..ll.ll - lJ .111
a.m \\'r•rsh•r - 11 .00 a. m

Sc l\1\: c - ~l'(lp . m .

Pine (;rn,·e Bible UolintsS Churrh
p,,llll.'fl)~.

SunJ;t~

F.in'" Bihk nwrth
\\' \ :1 Rt I. P.a~rllr RnJn Ma ~
Surll.b~ s~· Jt...~o.11 - 'i ~~.1m " •'"h•r ~ 1l.l
p.m. \\ C'l..!nc·MI.t~ HLhk Sltll.i.• • 7 lll.l rIll

~nd:!.~ . ~

10 .~ n
p.m

~linrrnlllcC' h:trlc ~

M.:t;. ~·nn~·\\,u~hlp

faitb Fe-llowship fru--.dl' for Christ
l'a''''r Rt\ ~r.anl l1n ()u·l tlh Sl'l11\&lt;"

Ch~ ~ l{'f

(_' h11.pd

Pa~ll•r:

Rll.t,\.

Rutland Churdl ul the ~aui"'.''M'
P:tSIIlf' R~\ L,&gt;ul ~ S S1aut&gt;~. SunJ:n
s •.- ho:~ol - ~ .~ll a.n1. \\ ,'l"llhlp 10 _1() am.
to .m p m . \\c-..tn••·s.b~ Se-n,.-,.~ · ~ r m

SunJ"~

.

•;,:ho)o.•] - tJ :lO a.m ..
'' \'L&gt;&lt;hip - 10 .ltl am .t ~ p m

H :~m~··n•

Rtal"' allu" Rid~ ('bun:h or Chrisl
P ;t•l cw i:Jm~·c Tcrr;. SunJ.1~ S.:ho.•! -OJ .\1.1

~or

J.td..~,•n. S t m~.ta~

"r 111

K.~no Chun·h or Christ
\\t•r..l11p - 1,) Jll am . SIU I {b~- Sdw~·l ltUO am. r~ ~ ~~ ~r Jdfro.·~ \\';111.1.-..:. bl ;mJ
lnl Sun.Ja~

_, m \1n 1rs.tup

lhtn\illf' HulihftS C hun:h
SIJ! t' R&lt;lUit' 1 :.~. Lang~\ lie.

Wt.'liii&lt;'~,] JI

Ill

Fonst Run

Sen 1,·c- i p m.

&lt;.;,unJJ~

L~'1 :1n .

C'om nmnil~
s~· h cll•l

am.W.1ntur - tla .m ·

Pas11'1f" B\Jb R1~lll~'n .

(ian

Hafl ~\ n.

\•1uth
S unJ u.~ Sdl\~tll ·
I" Ill 1tl a 111

AI

Pash..- Rc\ H..-rhrf1 GntC'. Sun&amp;~ S..·ht,,l
- Q ..\0 !1.111, Won.tu p . I 1 a m . t1 p m .
\\..-dnc!oda~ Sef\ ,,.~, - ~ p m

Flat•·outb
Pashlr Kt- 1lh R11der. Sundily

O.urth
l'.&amp;•to•r St~·,c- Ttlnlt'l. \l.un Stl'f'('t
Rutl.md. SunJ.a, \\\•N11r- Itl (WJ a.m..

.l1ll .~~

'J Jll

7 lll

Holiness

Marketing Property
992-6677

Enlrrpri.w
P~ ~t••~- Arland KinJ. Sundi\ Sch1&gt;t1l . \tl
a n1 . Worshir - ~ a.m .. Bttll¢ Stud~ Wo:-.:1

l Syr..-~ ).

t•

ROCKSPRINGS
ICr~•w's Family Res~aurant
REHABILITTION CENTER
"Festurlng Kentucky Fried
The can you desene, close to home

Chicken "

36759 Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeroy, OH 45769

W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

740·992-6606

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

God so lm·ed rhe ;mr/d
he gave his only
(/Jego.tte11

"So I strive always to keep
White Funeral Home
.
,h 10 Shear Illusions
9i~t-etz-al ~a.HC-e I
Beauty &amp; Nails Salon my conscience clear hPifor.~ l
Since 1858
. _ \- 29.1 Soulh Second Ave .
God and man."
9 Fifth Street
174 Layne Street
MidJiepu11. OH 45760
New Haven, WV 25265
1740) 9'.12-2550
Coolville, Ohio
Acts-24: 1
James H. Anderson 30•4-882··8200IITnJdv• Lyon' (Owiier) Janice Grimm
Licensed Director Fax:
1
740-667-3110

'

Uh
,_

S~ rvices

Gl'll«' Episfopal Chun-h
J~6 E \bm St. Pon~e n•~- Rr~ Jan~
Bemad-.1. Rl!'l Kalhann F1lS1~r. Sund.a~
S,·h,,ll .1nJ 11,\1~ Et~.: han s 1 II flO 11m

Asbury

f1mmt unil~·

992-3785
Davls·Qulckel Agency Inc.
Full line of

Episcopal

Cttural Clustf1
Pa.sl.r. Hot! Rl)blhson.
Suno.b~ S..:hoo.ll • ~ - 4~ am . Woo.tnr - II
:t.m . WC'dne~~t.ht~ Srf\'ll'n • 7:.\0 r .m

\\,-Jn,·:-...1 .1~ 'it'f\1\e~

7 rm

."ith

· 1·.\0pm

nt.. \\',•r'5Ju p-

Scrvilcs- 6.JO p.m

your lig ht so shine before
thlll they may see your
wmks and glorify your
IF':.II1er in heaven."
Matthew 5:16

Trinity Cburt'h
&amp; l~tm. Pomrn•~ . Pa..._. or: Rt:\
Jonalhlln ' 1'bk. V.Ofshir 1o ~5 a.m .
SunJ:.t~ S..·ho-.ol lJ · I5 a.m
s~'\7\~

10 \Oa m Bit&gt;le Slud~

Mini~ tl'r

B~thiE'hE'm

Sunda~

Congregational

7 p.m

:1: \\'

l'uppl!n Plalm St Pll•l
Pashv: J:mr DuRie, Sun!.la~ St'hl"-'1 - 'I
a.m.. Won;.hip - 10 a.m . T\lesda) Sen·t~'t~

toJm.

lttmlodr. Gron Chrisliln Chun:b
~hm •tcr LJ.~ Bm-..n. w ,\.-,. hi r . 9 ~Ll

MnH ~I~·r:

Sarr-ed Hearl Ca thollf Church
\61 Mu lhcrry Ave, Pnmcwy. 992 -."i8q8 .
Pa~ tm · Re1 . W;tl lcr E lki111: . SaL Con
4 4."i -."i l."ip 111 . ~la s~ ."i :.\0 p.m .• Sun

Mall SubiCrlpllon
lnelqe Melga County
13W8eks ........ .....'30. 15
26 Weel&lt;s .............'60.00
52 Weeks ... . ....... ' t 18.80

•

.-\ pu~ll'l1~·

Catholic

By carrier or motor route
One month ............'9.95
One year ............'119.40
Detty . . ........... . ....50'
Senior Citizen ratu
One month . ...........'8.95
One year .............'96.70
Subscribers should remit In
advance direct to The Daily
Sentlnat. No subscription by mail
permlnad In areas where home
carrier service Is available.·

,·

RhC'r \ 'aUe~

Sun \1.1ss- v .'tl

Church of Christ
'SunJa~
"' S..:lll~11

MI. Union Baptist
Pa,tnr D,t, 1d \\ tl-1.'1111111 SumLt~ SLI1uoi 9A~
l .nl
E\elllttg
6 :.~0
p m ..
\h'Jnc".l&gt;t) Scr• 1n:-~ - O:J\l p m.

Subscription Rates

Ratti Outaldt Melga County
13 Weeks
. .'50.05
26 Weeks .
. . ' 100.10
52 Weeks
.'200.;!0

Churt'h of Jesus Cbrisl Apostolk
\an l4ndl an..t Ward R1t . Pa.)tor hmt"s
!loltlk r. Sumh~ s~· h u..•l - 1 0 :.~0 a.m ,
EH·mng - 7 ~(I p.m.

W t:o.h ll'~.~~

Published every aMernoon,
Our main concern in an stories is to be Monday through Friday, 111 CIIIJrt
accurate. If you know of an error in a Street, Pomeroy, Ohio. Periodical
story, call the newsroom at (740) 992· postage paid at Pomeroy.
2156.
Member: The Associated Press
and the Ohio Newspaper
Association.
Our main number Is
Postmaster:
Send address correc(740) 992-2156.
tions to The Daily Sentinel, 111
Department extensions are:
Court Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769 .
EdHor: Charlene Hoellich, Ext. 12
Reporter: Brian Reed, Ext. 14
Reporter: J. Miles Layton, Ext. 13

.1m.Datk~ M :b~-s

\1),1.111

tusPs 213·96.01

News

c,... .g -l_"i. Q 15 a.m ..

Sih u Run Bapli-11

Ohio Valley Publishing Co.

Correction Polley

WORSHIP GOD THIS WEEK

l-'a~h1f

Staneart Pickens.
JoAnne
Aburto and Laura Mayers were
also presented a gift for bringing

The Dally Sentinel • Page A3

www.mydallysentlnel.com

2003

CommunitY Engaged.woman's co-worker/gym
Calendar
partner is comi~g on strong

Ohio weather

-14L72 -

PageA2

so1~...

Jolm 3: 16

!francis Florist
Meigs Count )\ O ld t:"1 r-lori~l

352 East Ma1n
Pomeroy, Oh
74D-~92 -2644

740-992-6298

f!4,4fe4 &amp; ~
93 Mill St. Middleport, OH
(740) 992-9513
&amp; More

&amp;noufftr''
;firt &amp; &amp;afrt!'
TO.......D ,
1...0-N . . .IJ

Office Service &amp; Supply
137-C N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, OH
992·6376

�OPINION

J'he Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street • Pomeroy, Ohio

(740) 992·2156 • FAX (740) 992·2157
www.mydallyaantlnel.com

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. ·
Diane K. Hill .
Controller-Interim Publisher
Charlene Hoeflich
General manager and news editor

READER'S

PageA4

VIEW

Middleport leadm mmmended
Dear Editor:
As former mayor and presently a resident of the village of
Middleport, I would like to commend Mayor Sandy Iannarelli
and village council members for their wisdom and foresight in
setting aside local funds that can be used as seed money to
obtain grants for street resurfacing in the village.
·The recent paving of many streets in the village was made
possible because village officials were willing to invest about
$42,000 in local funds and resulted in paving streets that had
a total cost of $260,000. This has to be a smart investment in
anybody's book.
· Residents of Middleport need to realize that the good streets
that we have to drive on do not just happen. They are the
result of a mayor and council interested in improving the
community, and are willing to allocate local funding when
available in trying to obtain additional funding from federal
and state agencies.
Over the past three years. Mayor Iannarelli and council
members have provided $80,000 in local funds that have
. resulted in half a million dollars in street improvements in the
village. Many communities do not do this. We are fortunate to
have villalle officials who choose to spend our tax funds
where the mvestment return rate is high.
Keep up the good work.

Friday, August 8,

2003

George
Plagenz

for president, was then
mayor of Cleveland when in
the late '70s the city was
being dragged into bankruptcy.
As church editor of the
Cleveland Press, I suggested
in a front-page story that the
city 's · civic and religious
leaders sponsor a series of
prayer breakfasts to "help
dispel the malaise that now
engulfs
Cleveland.
Political and economic solutions will work only if we
can change the spirit of the
city and its leaders ."
The proposal snowballed
quickly and civic and religious leaders offered their
backing. Not everybody.
however, was enthusiastic. A
columnist for rival newspaper The Plain Dealer labeled
the prayer breakfasts "civic
boosterism's darkest hour."
It al so saddens me to say
that Kucinich, the man who
would be president, did not

think much of the idea either.
He turned down my invitation to address one of the
weekly breakfasts. But we
did not lack for distingui shed
speakers.
Despite the mocking of a
few critics, some 300 people
sloshed through a January
snowstorm to gather at the
first of the breakfasts. Even
The Wall Street Journal
came.
"Clevelanders Appeal for
Divine Guidance in Financial
Crjsis" said the Journal headline. "Fifty people had to be
turned away."
The prayer breakfasts went
on for II weeks. Speakers
included Dr. Robert White,
nne the country' s top brain
surgeon s who told the overflow audience, "If we are to
save thi s community from
the threat of financial and
social defeat, we must pray
for God's help and ask for
divine intervention."
Did the prayer breakfasts
"work"''
Well. Cleveland recovered
from its malaise and regained
its financial footin g. Later it .
was voted one of the "comeback cities" of the country. A
few1years later down the line,
it became the home of the
American League ba seball
champions, the Cleveland

Indians, and the Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame. The pride
and glory were back. The
"Cleveland jokes" stopped.
If prayer worked for
Cleveland, can it work for
the country?
We may have a chance to
find out thi s September when
a prayer organi zation in
Missouri known as the Unity
School of Chri stianity spansors its lOth annual World
Day of Prayer. The organi zation typi cally holds the
World Day of Prayer on the
second
Thursday
of
September. This year 's event
is no different and will fall on
Thursday, Sept. II , the
anniversary of the terrori st
attacks on the World Trade
Center. The prayer theme thi s
year is "Let Go and Let
God." The organization
hopes to have more than "one
million prayer partners of all
faiths uniting their hearts and
minds" and raise the "spiritual awareness of humankind ."
To find out more about the
event
visit
online · at
www.unityworldhq .qrg or
call Unity 's toll -free number
at (800) 669-0282.
In the words of McNeill ,
"Each in his own words, each
in his own way, for a world
united in peace. bow your
heads and let us pray. "

RICHARD OSTLING
Associated Press

BY

iT'S O\J10F'

COI'JTRol. aND iJ4?eaTeN~
1'0 CP~U~3NY'TJIII'I~
CLOS~ 1'o Ttfe. KoBE.
BR'/a~T"

Is the Bible "inerrant,'' that
is, totally free of errors?
Pope Leo XIII said yes in an
1893 encyclical that opposed
proposals to limit the Bible's
mspiration to morals and doctrine, leavin$ aside matters of
history or sctence.
"It will never be lawful to
restrict inspiration merely to
certain parts of the Holy
Scriptures, or to grant that the
sacred writer could have
made a mistake," Leo
declared.
Nowadays, inerrancy is
championed almost exclusively
by
conservative
Protestants. It became hotly
controversial with campaigns

case.

-Rtldne established 1819, tWt 1841

Keith Ashley
Pomeroy

Moderately Confused
WE'VE

60TT1h'IE.
THESE giLLS
~REN'T

DUE:
UNTIL LATER
Tit IS

AFTERNoON.

t?f"llWER-

c 2003 by Ni'A, Inc.

•

· Recently, our oldest son ,
Ron, composed words and
~usic to a song in memory of
hts brother, Eran, who died
Aug. 9, 2002 .
Verse one goes, "Your life
Ron
here on earth is through, God
has called you home. Even
Branch
th~ugh I'm glad for you, my
pam lingers on. I miss your
face and the joy you would
bring. I miss hearing you
laugh, and hearing you sing ." with the reality of life and
The second verse is, "You death. When a significant
know I still think of you and 1 loved one dies, good grief
miss
you
every day. allows us to release that barSometimes it doesn't seem rid inner paip. As Scripture
quite fair that it ended up this sugge sts. ··sorrow is better
way. But I know God has Hi s than laug)ller, for by the sadplan, and He 's in control . And ness of the countenance the
I'll see you again someday, 1 heart is made better."
Unfortunately, some people
know."
The choru s, "But I can 't ask go to the extreme of domg
you to give up Heaven now. everything to avoid grief,
while others dwell too much
And I know that you would on grief. Such grief will rot
not come back even if you your soul if you allow it. But
could some how. I can see God does not want that to
you walking on Heaven 's h
shores, and down streets of appen to us .
Therefore , what is good
solid gold. Still I am left to grief? How shall we grieve
miss you here until my dying welP Here is what has been
day, I know. So, when God helpful to me.
decides to call me home, two
Absolutely trust God and
things I just want to do the Heavenly hope He
first, I want to meet my promi ses. If it were not for the
Savior, then sing His praise hope He gives, 1 would not
with you ••·
have anything to do with God.
Good grief is a Godsend His Heavenly hope effectivesince Eran died. Ron's song, ly assuages simmering anger.
in its combination of humani - I re"solve to practice what I
ty and faith , speaks for us that believe and preach concernwe have been experiencing ing God's promises.
Helpful to remember is that
good grief during this past
year.
, God's people do not die
Grief is a remarkable gift alone. The thought that Eran
God has given to help us deal had to face death alone nearly

Special
ServiCeS &amp;
Events

brol4.e me. But in the moment
. my heart .was crumbling, God
reminded me He was wit]] my
boy for that time of eternal
transition . God lifted my boy
from his broken phy sical
body to clothe him with one
fit for. Heaven . God was faithfu 1 to me because He was
faithful to my son in h:o dying
moment. I continue to find
great consolation becau se of
it.
Good grief embraces the
spiritual truth that death is not
a- loss. To my knowledge,
there is nothing in Scripture
that refers to the death of a
saint as a loss. Knowing our
loved ones are a! ive with God
in Heaven is as a balm being
massaged into the spirit and
soul.
One night while we were on
vacation recently, I had a
dream, so real in its visions.
that God decided to bless us
by letting us have Eran present with us during daylight
hours. I was elated. I hugged
on Eran, and talked with him.
so much.
However, it ended when I
asked, "Eran, what is eternity
like?'" Then, I awoke sensing
a great comfort that Eran was
still with us, though aware his
days were being lived in a
better location .
I prayed, "Thank you , God.
That was good. " Then, I
rolled over, and went back to
sleep.
Ron Branch is pastor of
Faith Baptist Cht~rch 111
Masofl , W Va.

school, 10 a.m., preaching ser- p.m. daily, Church of Christ.
vice, 6 p.m. with Rick Barcus Theme is 'Son Harvest County

preaching, Addison Freewill Fair." For more information, call
Baptist Church.
675-5804.
· Friday, Aug. 22
1

:~~ ~::;~,'f Hymn sing held

Friday, Aug. 8
LONG BOTTOM - The p.m.tomiOOght, todayardtomorCrusaders will be at the Faith roN, Galia Col.l1ty Fairgourds.
Full Gospel Church at Long There v.ill be 20 to :Xl gospel
Bottom at 7 p.m.
~ pefbmiliQ. Fiae a&lt;tnisSunday, Aug. 10
Sion. Rail or shine. Bring chais.
GALLIPOLIS - Sunday Ccu:e; s'CIIsavailable. Forcanrr;/
school , 10 a.m., preaching inginbmalion,cill44&amp;4120.
service with Rick Barcus inbmationregardingthe · ball
preaching , 6 p.m .. Addison (740) 379-2647.
Freewill Baptist Church.
VVednesday,Aug.13
GALLIPOLIS Prayer
meeting, 7 p.m., with the Rev.
Carl Ward preaching, Addison
Freewill Baptist Church.
Sunday, Aug. 24
Thursday, Aug. 14
POINT PLEASANT
GALLIPOLIS - Ladies Preaching and singing by the
Aid, 7 p.m ., Addison Freewill Rev. Bill Banks and the Church
Baptist Church.
singers, 10 a.m.; singing and
Friday, Aug. 15
preaching by Jimmy McKnight, 1
POINT PLEASANT
p.m., Gospel Ughthouse Church.
Community carnival, from 5 to
7 p.m.. Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church. No
admission, everyone welcome.
Saturday, Aug. 16
Aug. 11·15
SOUTHSIDE - Special · GALLIPOLIS- 6:30 to 8:30
singing
by
Gloryland p.m. daily, Church of God of
Believers, 7 p.m., Hambrick Prophecy, White Road. Classes
Church on Little 16 Road.
for ages 3 to adult.
Sunday, Aug. 17
Aug. 11-15
GALLIPOLIS
Sunday
HENDERSON - 6:30 to 8

Revivals
Home

Vacation Bible
Schools

LONG BOTTOM - A
hymn sing featuring The
Cr saders will be held the
1thful Gospel church at
Long Bottom at 7 p.m. Friday.

Drama to be
presented
POMEROY - Noah's Ark
outdoor drama will be presented at 7:30 p.m. through
Aug. 17. Presented by the
Power in the Blood Ministries
and Hillside Baptist Church.
There will be live animals.
There is no admission charge.
It is suggested that those
attending take lawn chairs.

Outdoor hymn
sing
PORTLAND - An outdoor
hymn sing will be held at 6
p.m. Saturday at the
Freedom Gospel Misson
Church on County Road 31
in the Portland-Stiversville
Community.

The Dai1y Sentinel
'

&lt;'

!. '

subscnbe.today ¥740.992-2156

.

Debate exists about whether the Bible is entirely error-free

Fred Hoffman
Middleport

. Dear Editor:
Your paper recently showed a picture of. the new banners
placed in Racine. There are attractive and show a lot of pride
~aken in the community once called "the Paris of Meigs
County." However, I could not help but notice that the banners say that Racine was "established in 1841." This is not
l:orrect or even close.
Racine was ftrst called Graham Station. The Graham Station
post office was established in 1819. The town was being confused' with Graham Station, W.Va., so it changed the name to
~acine due to the urging of Robert Campbell. This name was
copied after.Racine, Wisconsin. The Graham Station post office
changed its name to Racine in 1852 as did the village itself
: Racine pre-dates even the post office of 1819 as Judge
fuller Elliot, M.D., was an agent for the Ohio Lande
Company coming to the area in 1792. He named Sutton
~ownship after his home of Sutton, Massachusetts, as well.
. Pomeroy made this same type of error on its banners·a few
:Years ago by using its date of incorporation as its founding
date. Incorporation has nothing to do with the·date of foundjog. There are many towns in Meigs County that have never
~en incorporated but exist just as much. When. historical
facts of this kind are needed, place contact the Meigs County
:Pioneer and Historical Society for assistance. They are very
~elpful and are established for this type of assistance.

Friday, August 8, 2003

Good grief is a Godsend- Church calendar

Uniting in prayer
It probablY'" couldn't happen in this day and age when
the U.S. Supreme Court and
the American Civil Liberties
Union watch and affect our
every move, but one of the
most popular daytime radio
shows during World War II
began with a prayer.
Don McNeill, host of the
"Breakfast Club," would get
festivities going by saying,
"Each in his own words, each
in his own way, for a world
united in peace, bow your
heads and let us pray. "
McNeill would then have the
studio ligtus dimmed for the
duration of a IS-second
silent prayer.
"Prayer Time" was such a
R.OPUlar feature of the
''Breakfast Club" that if was
carried over into the post-war
years . Prayer breakfasts
became quite a vogue for a
time after that, usually sponsored by church groups.
There was even a congressional prayer breakfast in
Washington.
I had a hand in sponsoring
a series of these prayer
breakfasts in Cleveland in
1979 - a time when the city
was in financial doldrums.
Dennis J. Kucinich, now a
congressman from Ohio and,
more currently, one of the
several Democrats running

Page As

FAITH. VALUES

The Daily Sentinel

r

to · require this belief from · tion of the woman caught in word out of a thousand in the
officials and teachers in the adultery (John 7:53-8:11 ).
New Testament is doubtful in
Lutheran Church-Missouri
Packer readily acknowl- any way and "no point of docSynod (starting in 1969) and edged that mistakes crept into trine is lost" if doubtful words
the
Southern
Baptist Bible manuscripts as they are dropped.
Convention (starting in 1979). were hand-copied and passed · How does Packer apply that
The evangelical magazine from one generation to the to inerrancy, which he defined
Christianity Today. recently car- next. Letters, words, even as "the total truth and trusttied some explanation of the whole lines were deleted or worthiness of the true text and
concept by the Rev. J.l. Packer, repeated. Scribes might alter all it teaches"?
aChurchofEnglandtheologian what they thought were misPacker said the view of
teaching at Regent College in takes, or add explanatory mar- Jesus and the Apostles was
Vancouver, British Columbia. gina! notes that were mistak- that the Scriptures were God
His piece responded to a enly included in later copies. "instructing, showing and
The modern discovery of telling us things, and testifyreader asking how to reconcile
inerrancy "with comments in important ancient manuscripts ing to himself' through the
Bible translations that state has allowed experts to make human writers.
In practice, Packer said, this
that a particular verse is not the text closer to· the original.
"Where uncertainty remains belief involves ·:advance
'in better manuscripts'?"
For example, such footnotes about exact wording or commitment" to receive all
often say ancient manuscripts authenticity, the margins of that the Bible teaches, "interomit the traditional long end- honest modern versions will preting itself to us through the
ing of Mark's Gospel and tell us so," Packer commented. Holy Spirit in a natural and
But he noted that only one coherent way."
Jesus ' preventing the execu-

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Christianity does not proclaim "the inerrancy of any
one published text or version,
nor of anyone 's interpretation,
nor of any scribal slips or
pious inauthentic additions
acquired during transmission," he said. "Rather, scriptural inerrancy relates to the
human writer's expressed
meaning in each. book, and to
the Bible's whole body of
revealed truth and wisdom."
Understood this way, he continued, inerrancy advocates
welcome the work of textual
critics to eliminate inauthentic
words and "give us exactly
what the biblical writers wrote,
neither more nor less."
As Packer defined it, "the
way into God 's mind is
·through his penmen's minds,
precisely as expressed, under

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his guidance, in their own
words as they wrote them."
"Inerrancy treasures the
meaning of each writer's
words,'.' and the textual critics
·work to see that "we have
each writer's words pure and
intact."
Once inerrancy. is professed, the harder work
begins, because even an errorless Bible needs to be interpreted correctly.
For instance, take the
account of the creation of the
Wflrld that begins Genesis. In
the famously furious dispute,
is this to be understood as
strictly literal history, as many
conservatives insist? Or is tt
semi-historical? Or is it mere
theological poetry that pro'
vides no scientific or historical information?

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

Thirty years of columns
This week marks my 30th
anniversary as a syndicated
columnist, and it occurs to me
that I should note the occasion
with a few appropriate
remarks.
In my early teens, I couldn't
decide whether I wanted to be
a writer on political affairs
(like my idol, Walter
Lippmann) or plunge into pol-·
itics myself. I ultimately
stumbled into the perfect job
where I could do both: as publisher of National Review, the
nation's leading journal of
conservative opinion . For 31
years in that capacity, I managed to participate in the
growth of the conservative
movement, its capture of the
Republican party, and its
emergence as the dominant
political tendency in the country. And in 1973, when the
movement 's
importance
could no longer be denied. I
was . fortunate enough to be
invited to write a syndicated
column on political affairs
from a conservative perspective.
Based ftrst in New York and
then (afte r I retired from
National Re view) in San
Francisco, T quickl y realized
that I couldn 't hope to compete, in te rm s of politi cal
reportage, with such fine
Washington-based columnists
as George Will and Robert
Novak. They were "where the

William
Rusher

action was,'' and able to communicate daily with the key
actors. I would have to settle
for commenting, I hoped
intelligently, on events as they
unfolded.
And that is what I' ve tried
to do. I respect my readers'
intelli gence, and assume a
basic famili arity with the
political scene , but try to furni sh, in each column , the
information needed to make
its basic point understandable.
The structure of a typical column, therefore, is a few paragraphs of ex plication,•just to
set the scene; then a straightforward expos ition of that
basic point: and fi nally a relati yely sharp and rhetorical
conclusion. In other words, a
beginning, a middle and an
end .
I will gladly add wi t, in the
form of asides or anecdotes.
though I am under no illu sion
that wi t is my strongest poi nt.
Unlike my colleague · Bill
Buckley. I will normally

avoid exotic words, however
appropriate they may be,
because I want the reader to
remain concentrated on the
meaning of the sentence as a
whole, rather ri sk distraction .
(D' accord?)
Do I ever run out of material? Never! American politics
is an unfailing source of both
philosophical stimuli and raw
entertainment. The problem,
though, with so many able
competitors around, is to find
something ori ginal to say. For
example, the subject on
everyone's lips at the moment
is Howard Dean. But what is
there to say about the man
that hasn't already been said a
thou sand times? Hi s strategy
of running to the left . hi s
prowess as a money-raiser,
his appeal for the Democratic
Party's base, hi s uneasiness in
dealing with matters (e.g.,
military affairs) not relevant
to governing Vermont - all
these, and lllUCh else concerning him, is common know ledge, and hence not suitable
fc : a poli tical column . Don't
tell your readers what they
already know.
Do I ever suffer from me nIal block? Once agai n, no. I
usually wri te my weekly col um n · on Sunday aftern oo n.
after the· Sunday papers and
the Sunday morn ing ta lk
shows have equipped me with
the latest news and views.

Ordinarily, two or three ideas
for a column will have been
floating around in my head
for a couple of day s; sometimes there's onl y on e. In
either case, I just let my
unconscious mind play with
the idea, or ideas; and when at
last I sit down at my PC I find ,
more often than not. that the
column has miraculously
written itself, and all I need to
do is take it down, almost like
a stenographer.
Any gaffes? I' m afraid so.
Some yea rs ago the Medi a
Research Center (on whose
board I sat) published an issue
of "Notable Quotables" - a
weekly compendium of silly
remarks by liberal journali sts
- that contained a particularly pungent piece of stupidit y
by Dan Rather. I couldn 't
resist quoting it in my next
column. But then, on Monday
mornin g, I received a phone
cal l fro m my old friend Mary
Lou Forbes, opinion page editor of The Wash ington Times.
Had I noticed. she asked, the
date cin that panicular iss ue of
"Notable Quotables"? I hadn't, but I qu ickly checked . It
was April Ist 1
Lucki ly. there was sti ll time
to kil l that blooper.
(William Rusher is a
Disting11ished Fellmr of the
Clclremont lmtitute for the
Study of Statesmanship and
Political Philosophy. )

\

-~------· -------·---· , . ' .... . .

"

•

'

I

' Mom thinks I'm too llnleto
belp. but sbt shouldn't wolty
'mut slit's i!IU pi tots of eh«u
tell. ~~slit's 'i!&lt;JUado b Atve one
lo lbt penon in lhllllttle cqe ol
lht btmlond they 'DRh'• •er
Iremember .J •Ish I
kne•·llow to teO ber.•
Wei, ptrfiapo banking 1sn 'I
that simple, but he wut learn soon ·
enough. YelliOIIIt of uus odult.
share hi&lt; ooal"usloll when deoUng
with tbe conCipl of our spiritual
wealtb. \'au ~. when • ·e in\-est
oor love ond joy wilb olb&lt;t• •·e
rmh• kIn ret ..n... with lnlens~
lor tbal v&lt;rymomenlwarmlh
surrounds us at1d Ill• our heart.
II we k'"JI God'slo" locked
wllhlo ·~ "' ml)' WlJIIdor whywe
.,.,•t happier. Wertod God's
lni!rudlon In I Ptier 4:9· 10"l'ndlce bol;pitJMiy ungrudclnJiy
lo one onolll&lt;r, .\8 ""h has
rmhtd a Rift, omploy It lor one
aaolher,os pld ~e..-.rds ol

""'"'Y·

Giving &amp;
Receivin

EJIOCM
IW ·Il

Acts 24:16
Guardrail, Fence &amp;

~·
.
7

N

P.O. Box 683
Pomerov Ohio 45769-0683

Blessed are the pure
in heart; fo~ they
shall see God.
Matthew 5:8
FRIDAY
-

t:l·l,

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SATURDAY

21:1·,,

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We A~-ccpt Medicare, Medicaid, &amp; Insurance

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33334 Hysell Run Rd.
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For a whole
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106 Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy, OH
740-992-2121
Fax 740-992-2122
Ben H. Ewing
licensed Embalmer, Funeral Director
Licensed Pre-Need Insurance
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122 E. Main St. Pomeroy, OH 45769
Before you pay your neKt home or
auto premium, che~::k out rates!
Call: Judy, Brandi, or Jane Ann
992-'3985 (Pomeroy) 594-~ (Athens)
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"So I strive always to keep
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God's '1rted fVMct."
Yes, we mUll give In ordlr tbal

MONDAY

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209 Third
Racine, OH

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6am -·8pm
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740-949-2210

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Pomeroy, Oh
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Matthew 5:16

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Local source for trophies,
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190

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312 6th St. PolntPI.... nt
675-1160 '
Variety of furniture, glass ware. crafts.
collectiOn of bottles &amp; primitiveOutside flea market April- Oct.
Layaways Available

���Friday, August 8, 2003

Friday, August 8, 2003

www.mydallysentlnel.com

The Dally Sentinel • Page B5
BRIDGE

Country lmrlQ 10 mlnut" Apartment for rent untur·
rrom
Gallipolis. Large niShed, 3 rooms. $350. utilikitchen, all appliances, din· ties pd. (304)875-3030
lng. living room, 2 bed· Somerville Realty.
""""'· batn , targe tront and - - - - - - - APART·
""" poiChes, C/A .no pets. BEAUnFUL
*uo dealers or users need IIENTS AT BUDGET
apply. $485 month , PRICES AT JACKSON
5400. doposit
74Q-446· ESTATES, 52 Westwood
•254 or 740-446-0205
Drive 1rom $297 to $383.
Walk to shop &amp; movies. Call
t=eniity reloCating in Gallla 740--446-2568.
Equal
County looking tor B 3BR Housing Opportunity.
fixer-upper. home In the
;pguntry to renfJbuy. Haw 2·
Clean First Floor 2BA locat·

""t

e~ildre n,

41o-ns-2200
HOUSE FOR RENT- 2 BRS
Great in-town location.
$475.00 per month. Deposlt
&amp; references required . Call

----::---::-c-::-:c:-

Wiseman Real E5tate·740· For Lease: Beautiful, 1600

446 3644

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

i

MOBJUFORof!~

I

IV..l'll

•

14x80

Mobile home at
Glenwood. Washer/ Dryer
j,ncluded. Good School
Location . (304)576-9991
2 Bf=!. Green School District,
feferences/deposit.
740·

667-0632

re-condhioned

PHILLIP' .
ALDER

automatic

washers &amp; drye11. rwtrigera·
tors, ga.a and electric
ranges, air conditioners, and
wringer washers. Will do
repairs on ma}of brands In
shop or at your hOme.

For Craft-Antique

sectional. excellent
oond . $400.00

Call

August

I·

j

rlO

FARM

EQuii'MENr

r

foi rent.

740-949-2217

~
Auros

[10 ,

Downl!

Central

New Homes • Vinyl
Siding • New Garages

and Toot Sox. (304)6757373

COMMERCIAL and

LT

~:-s

~~--oiiiiiitiiiiiio-r'

,

1 and 2 bedroom apartments. furnished and unfurnished, security deposit
required, no pets, 740.992·
2218.

Futon bunk bed, white wood
house for rent. Quiet neigh- twin bed , 5 drawer white
OOrhood, deposit/references
wicker dresser w/glass top
required, no pets 74D-446protector, ping-pong table,
t370
water softener, solid wood
full bed, all excellent condi·
Tara
Townhouse tion, catl (740)992·6373
Apartments, Very Spacious,
eHer 5pm.
2 Bedrooms, 2 Floor&amp;, CA, 1
112 Bath, Newry Carpeted, .
JET

1 bedroom garage apart·
ment in Middleport, S.OO
Adu lt Pool &amp; Baby Pool,
plus deposit, (740)992-3823
Patio, Start $385/Mo. No
1 BA apt., in Gallipolis, Pets. Lease Plus Security
Deposit Required, Days:
740-367-7886
740·446·3481; · Evenings:
1 SA furnished , and 1 BR 740·367-0502.
unfurnished, both AJC, WID
on premises, no pets, u!HI- ::-c-:--:-,-~Twin Rivers Tower Is accept·
tles paid, $350/mih +
ing applications for waiting
depos~. 740-446·3667
list for Hud-subslzed, 1· br,
1 BA. stove and refrigerator apartment, call 675·6679
EHO
included. 74Q-245·5659

1 BR. Apt. newly remodeled,
WID included, water/trash

_99 Chevy S-10 Pickup wlcab

4-'Wns&amp;

Gravely

paid, t956 St.Rt. 566,
$350mthl$350-doposit 4 t 9359-t788
~ BR., C/A, Quiet Location,
near Holzer, WID Hookup,
$359.00 plus utilities, lease
&amp; deposit required, no pets.

740-446·2957

Apartment Available Now.
RlverBend
Place, New
Haven, WV now accepting
applications tor HUD-subsl,dl~ed, 1 bedroom apartment. Utilities included Call

For

. Concrete,
Angle,
Channel . Flat Bar1 Steel
Grating
For
Drains,
Driveways &amp; Walkways. L&amp;L

RENr

r

7752

~~

1996

Windstar,

loaded.

Get Cash Today
, Bring your

I

'Last checking statement
•Last pay check stub
1 'Photo I. D. 'Phone Bill with name and address
1998 Dodge Grand Caravan 1
116 Main St.
Sport, loaded. good condi·
Pomeroy OH
·
740.992 CASH (2274)
-. - - - - - - · tion, 71 ,000 miles, $9,000,
$500 POLICE IMPOUNDS. (7 40)949-4037
lJays
Hondas,
chevys,
etc!
cars/trucks from $500. For 2000 Honda Odyssey Van
listings t-8Q0.719·3001 ex1 LX. gray with gray interior,
"I R\ I( I "'
45.000 m iles, exc. cond .
3901
$17,500
740-441-9665
--------t966 Ford Escort wagon.
1 1
66,000 actual miles. $600
firm, Estate sale, (740)949- 2002 Jeep Liberty. 39,000
miles, black, sun· roof, C/0 .._oiiBiiitAiiiiSEiiiMEiiiiNTiiiitiiii,..l : : : : : : · ·
2241

I

r'

6

IMPR~=ru.m

cassette, 4)(4, $13,900 OBO
WATERPROOFING
Ch811rolet Ca11al ier,
740.256-t616
runs good, $500 (740)949, ~F.;...;.._ _ __, Unconditional lifetime guar·
4037
~'10
antee. Local references fur·
- - - - - - -MoroRCVQ.ES
nished. Established 1975
1989 Cadillac S811111e, 11ery --• Call 24 Hrs. {740) 446good
condi11on, , fully 1981 Harley 1000 Sportster. 0870. Rogers Basement
1988

. .I

equipped, $2995
(740)742-8907

I

L

neg., Clean . $4,300. (304)675· Waterproofing.
3624
Brand New Mini Bike 4HP. · c&amp;C
General
Home
$900. (304)675-3824
Maintenance· Painting , vinyl
siding , carpentry, doors,
BoATS &amp; MOTORS windows, baths, mobile
FOR SALE
• home repair and m.Q_re. For
tree estimate call Chet. 740-

IIOWARD l.
WRITESEl

over the yean; to Rev.
Ron Heath and
Rutland Church of
God; to Burchfield
Pu~en~l Home; to

Holzer Hospital naft';
to Carleton School

and to Ill friends and
: family, thank you.
Ftoni. the family
o( Andrew

Lambert

"·

1

I
I

I
I

Let me show you how
affordable and easy It is to
get the coverage you need.

Rocky Hupp Insurance
and Financial Services
Box 189

MAINTENANCE
•SEAMLESS
GmER

•free EsUDIIIes•
949-1405

Doors

Used Appliances,
Reconditioned
and

Guaranteed.
Washers,
Dryers,
Ranges,
and

every month
All pack $5.00
Bring this coupon

~

s

... P\..IN\1::. ~

ji)~~;cv

PLON "K.

would find lhat?

SOME MUSIC'

4

already begun.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 221 - A misuse ot
your Imagination today could lead you to

1.-----:---...Jilili:..l
.-------------.

SEE? Sf.IE'S SiTTtN6
AT T14AT TABLE, BUT
Sl-lE'S l-lAVIN6 TROUBLe
6ETTIN6 Ti-lE UM8RE~LA
TO 60 LIP..,

....-----

ii1!)2C::::[.2J
,;,;,;

BETTY
tVE IJETEAA\1 NED ''END Ollf"
IS 11-IE CO~R~T WAY TO
INSTAU. 10\l.ET PA~R
ON 11-11: SPINOl.f

5

today as you would ordinarily Uke . Be

Handarsonr WV

879-2417 or 448-2912

Card of Thanks

&amp;r4oj~
Many thanks to all
the people who
helped make our
50th Wedding
Anniversary
a wonderful day.
One we will
never forget.
Thanks again
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Edger
Pullins

The family of Helen Lucille Deck£r wish
a warm and sincere thanks to our church~s.
relatives, neighbors and friends for their
prayers, kind words, food, flowers and cards.
We extend a special thank you to oUr
churches for the wondeiful meal they took
time to prepare. We also want to thank.
Pastor Clyde FerrY!ll, we appreciate you.
May God bless you all for your prayers, love
and comforr in our difficulf time and grief
'following the loss of our loving mother.

...

Cell Phone 674·3311 Fax 304-675-2457

~~~
High &amp;Dry
Self-Sto~age
33795 Hiland Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio

740-992·5232
THE944
• STORE
Salvage
Parts &amp; Cars
County Ad. 1135

Racine , Ohio

• Driveways • Tennis Courts
• Parking Lots • Playgrounds
·• Roads • Streets
WV

Contractors

992-6635

1

~y

Rearrange letters of
0 four
sc:rambled wotds

the A~~
be-

I

lOw to form four simple wordJ.

'T-TArWrL'-;-Y!;-.-'A:;...Yl..;-1

I Ii I I
1
~-=~-=~-=~·==·=~·-..J
r
r-~

2

I

I

•

•

•

demands upon your time and energy .
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. 19)- Instead
of fending lor yourself today. you could
try fo shift your responsibilities onto associa tes . but you ·re in lor a big surprise If
you do so . Tactics of th is ilk will misfire.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)- Your pals
won 't appreci ate being bossed around
tod ay, so subdue eny "let me run the
show" tendencies. It's a group ende&amp;IIOr,
and all must have a voice.

ARIES (March 2t -Apnl19i - UniOIS you
,--..,'_:;';t~~t-:"-d ha11e the ne cessary fortitude and c;1rlve to

II

I

•

,I1 1 1

. MU

.

18
.

e

.

• Garages
• Complete

740-992-lm
Stop &amp; Compare

_

•

V.L E L

9

•

"Why did y.ou take up golf?' the
wife asked her husband. "I took
up golfing to conserve energy." he

_

•

_

I' d "T

1

0

.•

SCfiAM.LETS ANSWERS

Rarity· Piece · Tinge • Locket· TOLERANCE
We had attended a big party for our neighbors. One
of their son's gave this toast to his parents, " Any wedding anniversary is always a testament to people's TOL-

ERANCE."
keep going and not fold earty today . you
will not get anything ot consequence
accomplished. Go all out now and play
tomorro,w with a clear mind.
TAURU S (April 20-May 20) - Usually
you're the type of person whose optimism
is eas ily aroused. but loday you could
re fuse all opportunities to do so . Don't
allow a negative attitude to engulf you
and take over your affairs.
GEMINI (May 2 1- June 20)- Either
extreme In handling your finances is bad
at any time . but today be extra diligent.
Be sensible about protecting your inter·
ests, but don 't be come too sell·sel'\llng.

CANCER (June 2t.July 22)- 4 lack of
coopt rallon from thOse with whom you
ass ocle:te today could come tram your

lnsl&amp;fence on ha111ng everything done
your way. Show a greater wllllngnegs to

,...------,

·

rep le •
he go I cart uses less
. gas than the -- • • • • • • ·.'
Complete th• ckuckl• quoted
bv filling In tht mining worda
you dev~lop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED It

. LETTERS

compromls1.

ARLO &amp; JANIS

I~~

I
I I I I
•

MONTY

• New Homes

•

P REG0

jI

il'M t71\'M 8·1

ROBERT
BISSEll
CONSTRUCTIDII

I
I

1--riW::----"OrN"TiN_,.,K,_-j
j~
15

I!Ll.LL~:-01-~

97 Beech St.
middleport, OH
(740) 992-3194

1~OO~~~~iiiW~~~~~~~

I &amp;I:E ONE MORE CAT
HAIR AROUNP He~~ l'M
OOINCf -ro 1.05~ 11 I
IF

Lie. #003506

Remodeling

(740) 517·9138
or
(740) 949·0020

GARFIELD

MANlEYS
SELF STORAGE

[lO'xlO' 610'x20')

should not be called in today to arbitrate
a family prob lem. In fact, their lnvollleme nt will on ly complicate matters and
make things worse .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·NOII. 22) - Plans
about which you·re qulle eJCcited should
not be shared with anyone who tends to
be a negative thinker. There is no better
way to squelch your enthusiasm than
with doom and gloom.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec . 21)- It
you find ~ourself involved in An unproductive Investment, it might tie wise today to
cut your losses and get out before ybu
are asked to pour more good money efter

prepared for outside Issues to make

MYERS PAVING

- - - - - - - ldltod

:~~~~t~l~ig~~:~ ~hat 8 load you 11 be .,r

bad.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jen . t9 ) Chances are it won't be e.n easy matter
lor you io fun ction as independently

Chapel Road, Porter, Ohio.

Drive· 8· little sa11e slot.

SGXCK

c~ased to exist. It might be fun ":======~

LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23 ) _ Outsiders,
especially distant relatives and in·laws.

Pomeroy, On!o
22 YEI&lt;!r ocal

cash. Visal Mester Card .

suddenly

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 - 11 you yield
to peer prossure today against your betler judgment, don't think you won 't end
up regretting it. 4nything you do contrar;
to your good sense will hove e price tag
attached to It

Free Estimates

9162. Free Estimates, Easy
financing, 90 days same as

PNOWK . "

'~~:t;~' S©~g{\~-~r-~s·
::::
tLAY •• ,CLLAN _ ; __ _ __

believe that your everyday duties he11e

V. C. YOUNG Ill
9~2-621

IWSWHKM ·

''The ultimate mystery is one's own self."- Sammy Davis Jr.

Before InVolving yourself In a new
endeavor In the year ahead, it woutd be
wise to tl• up any loose ends on ongoing

PEANUTS

OPW

•

OZN-TGKW

ddcnse would PREVIOUS SOLUTION- "Anywhere is paradise."
but who - George Harrison
.

'1bur'lllrthday:
Friday, Aug. 6, 2003

WAS A SON&amp; riTLE .

YOUNG'S

Mollohan Carpet, 202 Clark

N U

ANHW

AstroGraph

I'M Nbr iOOil 5llf!.E.
BUT I llONT THfNf&lt;.

I ' D CHEER
'(OI) UP WlrH

c

ON

have triumphed easily -

n

DOWN, SO
,;,._,..._ I THOUGoHT

CKKNZWX

ZGOPGR

~econd round of
HCXGLY
lh'ould lose three hearts and

heart or a club , the

5 FREE

CAMPERS&amp;
MaroRHOMES

U C G K

Finally, if West had initio fly led •

..,., _ _

Buy $5.00

• Room Additions &amp;
Remodeling
• New Garages
• Electrical &amp; Plumbing
• Rooting &amp; Gutters
• VInyl Siding &amp; Painting
• Patio and Porch Decks

GV

"RNINXM

~~~g::~==~~ spades,
hearts andcollecting
two diamonds.
one spade, two

~:::::=;;&gt;

Bonanza Get

CARPENTER
SERVICE

Today's clue: S equals V

two diamond~ . And if he dUcked two
hearts. the defense would revert to PGKKY

'r'OVR 616
CHANCE TO IMPRE55 TIIAT
LITTLE REO-HAIRED
61RL, CI-IARLIE BROWN ..

Last Thursday of

Celebrity Cipher cryptograms are created lrom quotations by tamous
people. past and present. Each letter In the cipher stands lor another.

.south took the first or

· hearts, he

I-IERErS

$450. and other parts, after
5p.m. ask for Jason 304-

r

THE BORN LOSER
la~t sp•de. South would have won
'Dit&gt;'&lt;OU WI"-\ N'-lYH\ING W\Tii '"'~ PjT ~'&lt;":., "SORR't,'(OU'~NOT ~""' P"'NOl' W\Tl-\ Tf\E. 'SN-11£ C.,""~D ·1'""1 his
the tnck and played another dJamond
Tli,.._i ~~~\liNT
to establish his nin~ trick~ while the
Wl~t-lt:~ ilil~ jlr.\t..! T~ N&gt;Mt-~1"
opponeqts could take only four.} Now
c.M:D l BOlX:t\T u~ 1
the defenders had to win five tricks . H

the PAIN
out of PAINTING'

6:30

50 H.P. Mercury Outboard 992-6323.

·East conti nu~d his

brilliant p er forman ce, winning with
the diamond queen and shifting to the
heart queen . !If he had contin ued wi t h

Ta~e

Open 4:30

I

r:

iler~ . tho1t~h .

projects and see Where they take you
You could reap a hefty retum from things

Let me j o t\ for youl

by Luis Campos

bleton .

(740) 843-5264

Every Thursday
&amp; Sunday

CELEBRITY CIPHER

lo have started with ace-queen-fourth,
or East to have ducked from nee-dou -

Middle~rt

Pomeroy Eagles
BINGO 2171

,.....,...."n'W""".,.,....,

over on a spade. then ied a 9iamond to
dummy's jack. expecting either West "--'-....1.-"--

lond um~s.

j/:1

dlroctor

53 IIOIIIAIIy
I'Uf!IOII •

five -card suit.

with a :opadc and play a diamond to the

burial and final expenses
for )'our family and

Early birds start

(740)446-7444 t-877-630-

The fanu1y of Andrew
Lambert would like to
asprua our appredation to everyone who
hM helped In our
time of torrow.
To everyone who ha1
taken time to Work
Andrew'• program

"

ll'i/1 Hold J:or 30
I

.

33 -Actor
Danaon
35 "Fargo"

six top tr icks : three spades, one
heart and two clubs. Obviously, the diamond s11it would supply the other

~ · -~ Don'tleave the debt of
.,,::o -~*fl.~ ~
-~ ~·a)~~ ·

51 MOon,

~ee

"WV's #I Chevy. Ponttac. Buick. Olds
&amp; Custom Van

,

41 Groin crop:

oportngly

three no-trump.

• ••
•••• •••

1-800·822·0417

~~

good

ln-1-+-+--

475 sOuth Church St.
Ripley, WV 25271

)t IN§TA-CA$H )t I

I(H)
1

With such a

king. At the time, lhough, Soulh came

.~: ~~
~ \

29 Glvo out

~T-n-

Free Estimates

992-2975

I

..,......,M~....

lr.r-1-+-+--

675 -5131

Good

(304)662-3t2t Apartment
Refrigerators, Some start at
available for qualified sen· $95. Skaggs Appliances, 76
k:.r/dlsabled person. EHO'
VIne St., (740)446-7396
•

'
1 Card of Thanks

NEW
AND USED
Steel Beams,
Pipe STEEL
Rebar

Scrap Metals Open Monday,
Tuesday, WedneSday &amp;
FOR
Friday, Bam-4:30pm. Closed
Thursday,
Saturday
&amp;
12x60 mobile home lot, Sunday. (740)446-7300
References required. $100.
deposit, $t25, month 740· New off white OOUflter tops,
446-0t75
$20 each; gas cook StOlle,
- - - - - - - - $20: wringer washer, $35:
Small commerc+al storefront (740)992-0309
tor rent. Main St., Pomeroy, ·=--~---!_~~
lacing river. . available now,
call (740)889-7122
L.~---o3Uiilirru&lt;o&gt;iiiiilio-,..l,
\ IIIH 11 \\ l !h l

4 rooms and bath , all utilities Baldwin Orgasonic, organ
paid, $400 month. 46 Oli11e and bench , exc. finish,
$450., Hide·a-bed dk. green,
Stroot. (740)446-3945
vlg cond. $125.740·446-

r

a:....

Elaht
..rmtd 9 through
onlmolo
Eurulan .
Stationed
rang&lt;~
Damp
10 Fruwoy

30 Yrs. Exp. • Ins. OWner: Ronnie Jones

Pomeroy, Ohio

BRING IN THIS AD
FOR O N LY S1:l 00 1-'f:H HUNDHHJ

6

alo-

44 Ubrlry flat!!
45 Body
al Wllor
47 C.M
4&amp; o.ta

In "Star
Wara"
27 Yuletide trio
28 Poroonallty
porto

North miRht have jumped straight to

BARNEY
WANNA EAT SUPPER AT
OUR !-lOUSE, JUGHAID?
MY MAW'S MAKIN' A

Dean Hill
New &amp; Used

740-446-6507 or 740-366-

7

three tricks. However, when t.leclarer
led a diamond to dummy's 10, he won
the Irick - Enst smoothly played his
eight!
Qr COUtS(&gt;. because Wf# have X-ray Vi·
sion, you or I .would return to hand

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Registered Sorrell Quarter 9789
Horse Mare, Registered
Paint Mare with stud colt, 1995 Plymouth Voyager V-6 ,
gentle,
7 40-441 . ale. tilt, cruise , am/lm cass ,
119 ry
2824n40.245..0356
Reese hitch, 96,000 miles,
.;.;;~;.;;.;:---, $3200, (740)949-2709

6

onock

28 Obi-Won,

was it?

SLUE-

loaded, power roof, 4x4 .

2
3
4
5

25 Ttx.Uo•

West led the spade jack. South could

Bucket Truck

GRAVELY TRACTOR

opring

otot
Lubrlcotu
Jol Bank, often
Firewood
quandHoo
Gold,
to Pedro
Tanned
Loafing ·

which the play or an eight was the key
to the success or failure of South's
contract of three no-trump. What play

MAGAZIN~S.

Top • Removal • Trim
• Stump Grinding

Law11 a11d Garde11 Equipme111 is our
busi11ess, 1101 our sideli11e

31
40
· 42

40 Prickly
llldCIII
41 Chrt.lle al
whodunftl
43 F . , _

24 Mlner11
1 Econamlc

mod
Blended
Crony
Turmoil
Fetched
Top pilot
Machine
IOOih
Pomplono
ohout

37

~nflx

DOWN

Since today is 08/08. here is a deal in

~l-OOMS

Snapper

204 Condor Street

Pass

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

llbout

21 firing

trolno

27
30
31
32
34
35

31 Typo al

clogg1111

11 Subtlde
Hkielon
19 Foreltgtlflllll' 39 Wound

By Phillip Alder

Tree Service

permon~h.

V.

~
110K, $3500.
AERATION MOTORS
Round bales for sale, $15, 1996 Aerostar. loaded. i07K
$4000.
Repaired, New &amp; RebUilt In
1996 Caviler t06K, $2500.
Stock. Call Aon E11ans. 1·
740.446-2624
800-537·9528.

SPACE

i

740-~7-7047

Oltio

North
t •
2 NT

(mode do)

18 Agreed with 58 Unho of wt.
20 Attechu
59 Quork'o
22 Chlcogo
horne
23 Medhotlon
method
24 - roving

A key e'lg ht
on the eighth

TttiS ISN'T A GOOI&gt;
SIGN ···MOST
I&gt;OCTO!l.S'
. WAITING

JONES'

Advertise
in this ·
space for $1 00

Cooling Systems, New and 6mth5/14mths in age. Full good, $2,900.
740·256·
Used. tnstatloo. (740)446- registration , papers, par· 6941
6306
ents on farm, 740-245·0485
bedroom. 9:00 A.M.·4 P.M. Office is
after 5pm.
t995 Ford E-350 Van, 14ft.
Located
at
1151
E11ergreen
deposit,
Electra Aide II Stairway ele·
Drive Point Pleasant. WV vator, (great for handl· Registered Angus yearling high cube boJC, excellent
Phone No is (304)675-5806. capped/elderly) call (740) bull. Sunset
new cond . 74o-446-9416
E.H.O
design
2702
qualifies
fo r
446·9738 afler 7:00 pm
1995 Ford EJCplorer, Red,

---Taking applications - 2-BR

I NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

57 - out

friend

Q t o 54

411 J ---'
' - - -Opening
- - - lead:
---

ttAVE

1988 Mark II, Con11ersion
Buks, Van, 7 passenger. runs

tobacco program, $1000.

g~~~~~------~~--------------------,

Phone (740)593-6671

Athens.

740·992·7599

QOATS FOR SALE
Boer

750 East State Street

FREE ESTIMATES

Package , 3rd row seal.
Excellent
Condition.
$19,500. ob o. (304)882·
3316 after 5

~

-

RESIDENTIAL

(304)675-7946 Before 9pm

367-7047
100%

West

54 T. .

ployer
(hyph.)

17 OuHit

Dealer: South

/cHiVRO,~T/

Windows • Rooting

1996 GMC Extended Cab
83.000 miles. 2 wheel drive.
Lots of Extras $8,300.

r

Q J 6 2
Q 8

A tO 8
7 5 2
... J 9 8 2

LARRY SCHEY

• Replacement

1996 Dodge Ram 1500, 4K4
Club Cab, towing package.
exc. cond. $10.500 080.
740-386-6391

Tahoe

7 6 3

•
•

Vulnerable : Both

1993 Ford Ranger Extended
cab AIC. AMIFM Cassette

Chev.

56 Record

•

3 NT

2000

ruldont

•

t+

PHI

52 Food floh

of oxan
55 Cf'lllt

411 A K Q

South

50Mount.ln

13 Bobbyof the NHL
14 Rlyldh

!iiouth

992-5479

FOR SALE

•

+

91 Ford T-Bird cell phone 1304-545-1510

Mustang mare, $500. each.
other horses a11ailable . 740-

4-

East

Jeff Warner Ins.

--:-:-=:-=-::-::C"::":":'c:-Cool

· llo;hdlld

49 llcne color

15 Bl...prlnt
16 Tlgger'o

+A K

Cellular .

Racine. Ohio
45771

15, 2003

• 5 4 2
• 9 5 3
.KJt064

.AlllEL

29670 Bashan Road

4cyl. 5-speed, standard.
power steeilng, brakes, ale.
66,000 miles. (304)675·
2793
Baby Pig lor sale. 740.367- - - - - - - - 0117
Full length running board for
F·150 Ford truck extent cab,
Belgium
cross mare, electric
red
in
co lor,
Arab ian
cross
mare, (740)985·3840

One 2BR. One 3BA .. both Now Taking AppllcationsALL STEEL BLDGS.
West
2 Bedroom Up to 60% oftl 30x40,
~lA.
total
electric, 35
Apartments, 501C80, 70x1 50 Call Nowt
~501month, $350./deposit, Townhouse
F40..245-9494 no calls after Includes Water Sewage, 1st come 1st servet Can
~pm., absolutely no inside Trash, $350/Mo., 740-446· Deliver! Roy (600) 4990006.
pets
2750

Tralier

OH

Application deadline

'56-6202 .

Middleport, 1
$350
plus
(740)992-3823

Collectable

7 40-992-!1298 or 74().992·95 13

Mechanics
Snap-On tool ·---iiliiiiiiiiiiio-pol
box $1000. some tools
included 304·615·3443
Farm aU 100 with Belly
- - - - - - - - - mower $2500. (304)67536~ solid oak round table _36_2_•_ _ _ _ _ _ _
also 4 chairs: 1 large., 2 For Sakt
7x20 Delta
small bikes. (740)992-9024 Livestock trailer 740·256·
1352
53 Thermo Guard tinted wln· r~~-------,
fer Rent 10x60 2BA Opportunities.
LivESIOCK
plpbile Home or sale for - - - - - - - - dows, box your patio in for
~000.00
740-388-0578 Modern t br. apt. (740)446- t/4 ot tho cosl 3Qo4.675• ·-------~
0390
4068
•
ti&amp;ave message

Small 2 bedroom trailer in Pleasant Valley Apartment
Racine, $225 rent, $225 Are now taking Applic:atk:lns
deposit. no pets. (740)992· for 2BR. 3BR &amp; 4BR ..
5039
Applications
are
taken
Small Uailer for rent in Monday thru Friday, from

&amp;

Show In Middleport,

I

3 piece

Htll's Self
Storage

VENDORS

model Rebet 56 lb. pull, t
FRurrs &amp;
Sq. Fl. , restored , second
model Excel 70 lb. pull,
VEGETABI.!S
floor apartment in Historic
$275. for both, call74()-.ol46· , _ _oiiliiilliiiliiiiiliito_.l
District, Ideal for profession- 1523 or 740-645-3753 after
al couple. all modern
Country Produce M1rket
amenities. 2 bedrooms;
Potatoes,
Tomatoes,
Melons. Corn. etc. in sea·
spacious living/dining; lots
ol storage, 11/2 baths; rear
son. Troyers Woodcraft 9
deck; HV4C..$600/m0nth
"--------~ mites west of Gallipolis
Buy
or
sell. Riverine along St Rt 141
plus utilities. Secur~ and
lcey deposit No pets.
Antiques, 1 124 East Main -Fr_e..:sh:.._F--t----h-.rees one peac es
Reflrencea .required. 740on SA 124 E. Pomeroy, 740- hom Romney at the Farmers
446-4425 or 446-3936
992-2526. Russ Moore, Market Wed &amp; Sat. after the
Mason Co Fair. If interested
For Lease: one bedroom.
~
in canning peaches $17.00
unfurnished, newly redecoMERa!ANolsE . bushet. Call (304)576-2264
or (304)576-2099 to place
rated, second floor Apt. ; at
corner of Second and Pine. 3 in 1 baby be&lt;!. $75; tlke order.
AJC ; $300.00 per month; new
play
pen,
$75;
I \ 1&lt;\1..., 1 1'1'11 1"
water induded. Security and (7401949-2166
,,11\I...,IIHI,
key deposit. Off street park-

2 BA, perlect, air, porch.
'-'erv nice. 740·446·2003 or ing. Aetwencea Required.
L•40-446.;..:..
__
-t_409
_ _ _ _ _ No pots. 740-446-4425 or
~
446·3936
.
~:SR. mobile home , out of
i:wm. \181')1 pri11ate, call 74D-- Gracious lilllng. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
i br. mobile home in Manor and Riverside
'"'lddleport, $250 deposit, Apartments in Middleport.
$250 rent, no pets, no calls From $278·$348. Call 74 0·
992-5064. Equal Housing
~fter 8pm. (7401992·5039

poncakeo

4&amp; Notlw of

Neftftlti'o
riwr

~

Two Hoyt USA Bows, 1

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1 Ob)ectlw
5 Kamel

~~!!!!, t 2

~

0W08f.

43 Pitcher

44 Light "

hokter

-------Used Furniture Store, 130
Bulavllle Pike, mattresset,
dressers, couches, bunk

r

ACROSS

I Purplo

beds,
bedroom suites,
recliners, ~rave monuments.
ed on Chillicothe Ad . $400. 740-446·4762 Clalllpollo.
monthly, $400. security Ohio HAS 1Q-4pm Stop By
deoosit . and references
required. Utilities not includ·
1
ed. Nopots 740-441-1t06

1· golden·retnver,

HOUSE FOR RENT· 2 BAS
Great in-town locatiOn.
-..
.
~ 75 · 00 per month. 0 eposl1
&amp; references required . Call
Wiseman Real Estate- 740446-3G44
~·~;_-~,...._,

Thompsons Appliance I
Aepalr-675-7388. For sa-..

NEA Crossword Puzzle

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Results

�Page 86 The Daily Sentinel

www.mydail ysentinel.com

.,. II you have a queatlon or a comment, write: NASCAR This Week, c;o The Gaston Gazette, ~0. Box 1893, Gastonia, NC 28053
WINSTON Ct II"

Wllllt: Sirius at the Glen
Where: Watkins Glen (N .Y.)
lnternational.(2.45 miles).
90 laps/220.5 miles
When: Green flag drops at
1:30 p.m. Sunday
Laat year'• winner: Tony
Stewart
Qualllylnll record: Dale Jar·
rett, Ford, 122.698 mph,
Aug. 10, 2001
Race record: Mark Martin,
Ford, 103.300 mph, Aug.
13,1995
Most recent race: Never before had the pole winner
. gone-on to win the Brickyard
400, but Kevin Harvick's
memorable day was one in
which many standards were
broken . The Brickyard 400
is held at t~e most famous

'~ 1 - f-.llf

( ' frM I SMI\N IHI!CK

HI JSCH SF Hlf S

S

track on Earth, Indianapolis
Motor Speedway, and even
Harvlck and Robby Gordon,
teammates and bitter rivals,
managed to put their differ·
ences aside as Gordon
helped impede the progress
of other drivers chasing Harvlck .' After all, a black-andsilver Chevrolet owned by
Richard Childress had won
here once before. The late
Dale Earnhardt won the second NASCAR race held at Indianapolis Motor Speedway,
in 1995. Points leader Matt
Kenseth finished second,
followed by rookie Jamie
McMurray and a pair of exwinners, Jeff Gordon and
Bill Elliott.

Wllllt: Cabala's 250
Where: Michigan International Speedway, Brooklyn (2
miles), 125 laps/250 miles
When: 1:30 p.m. Aug. 16.
Last year't winner: Michael
Waltrip
Track quallfylnll record: Jimmy Spencer, Chevrolet,
184.824 mph, Aug. 17,
2001
Race record: Mark Martin,
•ord, 1!19.571 mph, Aug.
19,1995
Most recent race: Hendrick
Motorsp_orts driver Brian
Vickers, only 19 years old
and driving a Chevrolet, won
for the first time with a VICtory Saturday at Indianapolis Raceway Park. Jason
Keller finished second.

What: Federated Auto Parts
200
Where: Nashville Superspeedway, Lebanon, Tenn.
(1.333
miles) ,
150
laps/ 199.95 miles
When: 9 p.m. Friday
Laat year's winner: Mike
Bliss .
Treck quallfylftll record: Mike
Bliss, Chevrolet, 157.322
mph, Aug. 9, 2002
Race record: Scott Riggs,
Dodge, 132.466 mph, Aug.
10,2001
Matt recent race: Joe Gibbs
Racing driver Carl Edwards, in
a Ford, won his second race
of the season at Indianapolis
Raceway Park. Travis Kvapil
finished second and took
over the points lead.

IN THE SPOTLIGHT

FFUD OF lHF WHK
I

v
MAn KE-NSETH,

E

WINSTON cuP SERIEs

R
IS

Jamie
McMurray

Kense_
th closing in on Winston Cup chaf]lpionship
By Monte Dutton
NASCAR This Week ,

M

att Kenseth's consistency
has been a distinguishing
characteristic of the 2003
Winston Cup season.
'fry as they might, Kenseth's chief
pursuers- Dale Earnhardt Jr. and
Jeff Gordon - have been unable to
chip away at his lead, which continues to grow in the aftermath of
Ken seth's runner-up finish in Sunday's Brickyard 400. .
At this point in the season thoughand with his biggest lead, 286 points
over Earnhardt, to date- Kenseth
yearns for a second victory.
"We're out here to try to win
races," Kenseth said. "We did everything we could to try to win the race,
and we came up a little bit short"
Kenseth won more races (five) than
anyone else in 2002 but finished
eighth in the points standings. This
year he has only one victory, but the
Indianapolis Motor Speedway race
marked his 16th finish in the top 10 in
21 races.
"I don't really feel 'in a zone,' but I
do feel fortunate we made it to the
end of all these races,'' Kenseth said.
"I feel really great coming out of
(Indy) second. Alot of people- I
shouldn't say a lot of people, but some
people- have been saying the last
few weeks that our finishes haven't
been as good as maybe they have
been in previous years.
"And we have been finishing 12th
and 13th and ninth and seventh and
stuff like that, so I was happy to be a
front-runner (at the Brickyard) . ... I
felt like we had at least a third-place
car all day and ran competitively and
called the race in a competitive manner, and I drove it as hard as I could
drive it. That's how we've been ap-·
proaching it all year. Just go out and
do the best we can.
"You know, I'm real thankful for the
finishes we've had, but we still have a
lot of racing to do and we've got to

Valley

u

Robby
Gordon

s

It seems as If the controversial
Robby Gordon runs afoul of someone
every week.
Rookie Jamie McMurray, en route
to a third-place finish in his first Brickyard 400, complained about Gordon,
who wound up sixth, blocking him
near the end of Sunday's race.
"He's a damn menace to society,
1 th ink," McMurray said. "He just
races so hard. Everybody was racing
hard at the end."
·
Second-place finisher Matt
Ken seth rose to Gordon's defense.
"He blocked Jamie really bad, but
I don't think it had anything to do
with his teammate . being in -the
lead," Kenseth said. "I think he
would have done the same thing, no
matter who was leading, to try to finish second at Indy. I think he was doing everything he could to protect his
position, and we were doing everything we could to try to take it. He
didn't do anything dirty or ove.rstep
his bounds or anything like that."
NASCAR Thla Week'e Monte
Dutton lll•e• his take: "I tend to ·
agree with Kensetl'l . Gordon made
life difficult for McMurray, but there
was no wreck. You can 't deny that
Gordon races to win.~

Y()l Ill riiHN
tfTrlll'&gt; fiiO"~ 0 1111 Ill AllfHS

Mora commercials?

I

am sick of NBC/TNT already! If I
wanted to watch back-to-back commercials, it would be different. I
want to watch racing. Fox sure doesn't break in every five minutes . They
try to do commercials when they
don't interfere with the race. If I
weren't such a fan. I would just shut
It down until Fox comes back. Fox ·
sure puts NBC/ TNT to shame .

John Clark/ NASCAR This Week

Matt Kenseth has finished In the top 10 16 times In the 21 races this
season. As a result, the Roush Racing driver owns a 286-polnt lead over
Dale Earnhardt Jr. In the points standings.
keep it up."
In short, winning is the goal, but
consistency is a rare commodity for
which Kenseth is grateful.
"I mean, there's somewhat of a
frustration at not winning," Kenseth
admitted. "We're d"oing everything we
can. ,, There have been a few times
this year where I felt we had the car
lo beat, and we didn't get it done and
didn't win the race.
"So that's pan of it I really want to
get back to victory lane soon, but, on

the other hand, I'm very thankful for
how we've been running. Only two
years ago (2001), we couldn't run in
the top 20 to save our life. I'm real
thankful for the year we had last year
and the year we've been having this
year. I've been sitting in competitive
equipment each and every week. If
we do all the right things with it,
we're going to have our opportunities
to win races."
Contact Monte Dutton
at hmd4858@peoplepc.com .

PeQyWolfe
Heber Spllnp, Ark.
You 're not the only one who feels
this way about commercials.

I AN

I

11~~ ....

With_Winston ending its sponsorship of NASCAR at the end of the
year, the stock-car ruling body announced a "Victory Lap" tribute program to honor the tobacco company
for its 33-year spons,orshlp of the
Winston Cup Series.
The tribute will honor dnvers who
won championships during Winston's
sponsorship tenure, beginning with
the Aug. 23 race In Bristol, Tenn. Drivers to be honored are Rusty Wallace, Alan Kulwicki, Cale Yarborough,
Bobby Allison, Terry Labonte , Dale
Earnhardt, Jeff Gordon, Darrell Waltrip , Bill Elliott, Dale Jarrett, Benny
Parsons, Bobby Labonte, Richard Petty and Tony Stewart.

&amp; Supply
Co.
555 Park St • Middleport

992-6611
•

106 North Second Ave. • MJddleport, OH

.

~-.~-

'

.

-

.' '

252 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, OH

Main Street, • Rutland, Ohio

!40-742-2289 or 1-800·837-8217
C•ll for hours or to

I·

an appointment

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