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                  <text>URG students
compete against
the world

Partly sunny.
High of 67,
low of 46

Southern
sweeps
Lady Eagles

BUSINESS s 3

WEATHER s 5

SPORTS s 6

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Breaking news at mydailysentinel.com

Issue 166, Volume 69

Thursday, October 15, 2015 s 50¢

Mistrial declared in Daboni case
New trial tentatively set for mid-November

By Lindsay Kriz

the judge and the prosecuting
attorneys that because of the
deterioration of the relationship
POMEROY — A mistrial in
between Daboni and his most
a jury trial of Jacques Daboni
recent lawyer, Byron Lee Potts,
versus the state of Ohio has
of Colombus, that he wanted a
been accepted by Judge Carson mistrial.
Crow.
It was revealed that Daboni’s
As of Oct. 14, a new trial is
most recent lawyer was ﬁred
set for Nov. 16-18.
Friday, when Potts’ ofﬁce
Daboni’s new legal council
received a phone call from
is Jason Holdren, an attorney
Daboni’s sister at 1:40 p.m.
from Gallipolis. The trial was
Oct. 9, who told Potts that
initially set to begin at 9 a.m.
Daboni had terminated his serWednesday but was delayed
vices. Carson also revealed that
until 1 p.m. During that time,
Daboni had two prior attorneys
Holdren was allowed a private
whose services he had also
counsel with his client, and told terminated. His previous attor-

lkriz@civitasmedia.com

Lindsay Kriz | Daily Sentinel

Daboni can be seen in a wheelchair during Wednesday’s trial. The time was
originally set for 9 a.m. but was moved to 1 p.m. Shortly after Daboni’s new
council, Jason Holdren, an attorney from Gallipolis, said that after speaking with
his client, Daboni had decided to have a mistrial because of an initial lack of
council and then new council who was not yet familiar with his case. The state
of Ohio representatives in the courtroom are also attempting to revoke Daboni’s
bond after he allegedly made threats to an unknown person in late September. A
motion hearing is set for 9 a.m. Friday.

neys are listed as Stephen Paul
Ames, of Gahanna, and Kerry
Robert Toy, of Athens.
Holdren said that because
Daboni was without council
familiar with his case and had
just been given new council
Wednesday, that he would
declare a mistrial. Holdren said
his decision also came from
the inconvenience of the witnesses from out of county who
had been in the area for two
days without taking the stand.
Carson also said that the most
recent motion hearing from
See CASE | 5

Meigs Board
approves sports,
personnel hires
By Lindsay Kriz
lkriz@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — Hires were the main part of
Meigs Local Board’s recent Tuesday night meeting.
The ﬁrst group to be hired were substitute
teachers for the remainder of the school year.
James T. Simpson was hired retroactive to Aug.
28 and Guy Bing was hired retroactive to Sept.
18. The other three substitute hires were Jo Dunn,
Marjorie Blake and John Bailey.
In terms of transportation, the board approved
the hires of Bobbi Moleski and Karen Dixon as
substitute bus drivers for the remainder of the
school year. Penny Hysell was also hired as a bus
driver retroactive to Monday, Oct. 12.
Another hire was Mia Bryan, who will be a
substitute personal assistant for the remainder of
the school year. Jodi Shultz was also hired as an
intervention tutor at Meigs Primary School for the
remainder of the school year.
In terms of sports hires, the board approved the
hiring of Paul Jewell as the assistant varsity boys
basketball coach for the 2015-2016 season. He was
recommended by head coach Edmond Fry. Also
hired were Jared Vlastuin as junior varsity boys
basketball coach for the 2015-2016 season, Cary
Betzing as the ninth-grade boys basketball coach
for the 2015-2016 season and Kevin Musser as the
eighth-grade boys basketball coach.
The board approved the hiring of Tammy
Starcher as a substitute cook and Melissa Priddy
as a substitute custodian.
An overnight ﬁeld trip for 24 SkillsUSA studnets to Columbus was also approved. The group
will travel to Columbus for the Fall Leadership
Conference on Oct. 29-30. Lastly, the board held
discussion/ﬁrst reads on new/revised or deleted
Board of Education policies, laws, forms and/or
administrative guidelines.
Financial reports, bills and permanent appropriations in the amount of $29,646,158 were also
approved.

Beth Sergent | OVP News

Mason County was well represented at Wednesday’s groundbreaking for the completion of U.S. 35 with, from left, Sheriff Greg Powers,
County Clerk Diana Cromley, County Administrator John Gerlach, Commissioner Tracy Doolittle, Ernie Watterson from DOH, John
Musgrave from WV Lottery, Del. Jim Butler, former State Sen. Charles Lanham, Lynne Fruth, Eddie Lanham, Frances “Babs” Fruth, Del.
Scott Cadle, Commission President Rick Handley.

Ground broken on last stretch of U.S. 35
By Beth Sergent

the road’s completion
will entail taking the last
remaining 14.6 miles of
BUFFALO, W.Va. —
two-lane highway and
Persistence pays off, but
turning it into four lanes
in its own time.
using the innovative
On Wednesday, the
public-private partnership
persistence of many
ﬁnancing option, not the
came to fruition when a
use of tolls.Wednesday’s
groundbreaking for the
ceremony celebrated a
completion of U.S. 35 was $174 million grade and
held at the West Virginia drain contract that will
Division of Highways
construct the new fourMaintenance Facility in
lane road between W.Va.
Putnam County just past 869 (Buffalo Bridge)
in Putnam County and
the Buffalo Bridge.
County Route 40 (Upper
Years in the making,

bsergent@civitasmedia.com

Nine Mile Creek) in
Mason County.
The keynote speaker
was Gov. Earl Ray
Tomblin, who announced
plans for the completion
of the road in his State
of the State Address in
January.
“This project has taken
a lot of time and a lot
of effort,” Tomblin said,
calling it a “milestone
project.”
Tomblin added: “This
is an exciting day and
a beautiful day for the

people of Putnam and
Mason counties and our
entire state.”
Tomblin then
spoke about the state
investing “hundreds
of millions” into road
repair and improvements
this summer, and
owing residents solid
infrastructure.
“I hope this new
four-lane (road) is
another step in the right
direction,” Tomblin said.
See BROKEN | 5

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-992-2155 EXT. 2555.

Civitas sponsors ‘Virtual Costume Party’
Staff Report

— NEWS
Obituaries: 2
Opinion: 4
Weather: 5
— SPORTS
Volleyball: 6
Schedule: 6
— FEATURES
Television: 2
Classified: 7-8
Comics: 9

JOIN THE
CONVERSATION
What’s your take on
today’s news? Go to
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com and visit us on
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share your thoughts.

OHIO VALLEY — If you love
Halloween, costumes and contests,
then we have the competition for
you.
The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
Pomeroy Daily Sentinel and the
Point Pleasant Register will be conducting the Virtual Costume Party,
courtesy of title sponsor John Sang
Ford.
“CivitasMedia provides contests
for our local readers and encourages our community to participate
in good ol’ family fun activities,”
said Julia Schultz, media director for Ohio Valley Publishing’s
news outlets in Gallipolis, Pome-

roy and Point Pleasant.
“Halloween is a fun time and our
communities really get into the
spirit of the holiday,” Bud Hunt,
publisher of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, said. “With our contests,
our readers get to share their fun
with everyone, and so we thank
our advertisers for giving them
that opportunity.”
There will be one overall winner
chosen based on the total number
of votes received. That winner will
receive $100.
“The various contests that Civitas Media hosts throughout the
year encourage participation from
our readers, both through our web-

sites and in our papers,” Brenda
Davis, ad representative, said.
“The Halloween contest is a fun
family activity that everyone can
get involved in, and gives them the
chance to win prizes.”
Submissions begins Oct. 17 and
will end Oct. 31. Voting begins Nov.
1 on mydailytribune.com, mydailyregister.com and mydailysentinel.
com. Voting ends Nov. 10, with the
winner announced shortly thereafter. The winner will be featured in
the print version of all three papers,
as well as on all three websites.
Start thinking of those costume
ideas and send them in for your
chance to win.

�LOCAL

2 Thursday, October 15, 2015

Daily Sentinel

DEATH NOTICES

OBITUARY

BELLER
BUFFALO, W.Va. — Gladys Ann Beller, 70, of
Buffalo, died Tuesday, Oct. 13, 2015. Funeral services will be 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 17, 2015, at Deal
Funeral Home in Point Pleasant, W.Va. Burial will
follow in the Beller family cemetery in Leon, W.Va.
Friends may visit the family at the funeral home
between 6-8 p.m. Friday.
CROMLISH
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Sheila Cromlish, 56, of
Gallipolis, passed away Friday, Oct. 9, 2015, in
Point Pleasant, W.Va. Services will be 2 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 15, 2015, at Willis Funeral Home. Burial
will follow in Providence Cemetery. Friends may
call the funeral home between 1-2 p.m. prior to the
service.
SICKELS
GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Ann M. Sickels, 57, died
Sunday, Oct. 11, 2015, in her home. A celebration
of Ann’s life will take place at 4 p.m. Saturday, Oct.

TERESA BUCKLEY DAVIS

17, 2015, at Grace United Methodist Church, in Gallipolis, with a dinner to follow at the church. Calling
hours will be 4-8 p.m. Friday, Oct. 16, 2015, at the
church. Services are under the direction of Willis
Funeral Home.
STEELE
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Phyllis P. Steele, 82,
of Jacksonville, passed away Friday, Oct. 9, 2015,
at Memorial Hospital in Jacksonville. A graveside
service will be 11 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 17, 2015, at
Rome Cemetery, Proctorville, Ohio. Burial will follow. Hall Funeral Home and Crematory, Proctorville,
is in charge of arrangements.
WALLACE
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. — Jason L. Wallace,
34, of Point Pleasant, died Monday, Oct. 12, 2015.
Memorial services will be 1 p.m. Monday, Oct. 19,
2015, at Crow-Hussell Funeral Home. Visitation
will be noon until the time of services at the funeral
home.

MEIGS COMMUNITY CALENDAR
Editor’s Note: The Meigs Fox’s Pizza at noon.
Community Calendar will
only list event information SAT., OCT. 17
SYRACUSE — Pastor
that is open to the public
Mike Thompson invites
FRI., OCT. 16
the public to the Syracuse
POMEROY — The
Mission Church at 6 p.m.
Pomeroy High School Class with the Conners from
of 1959 will be holding their Ashland, Ky., singing
third Fri. lunch again at
Bluegrass gospel.

MIDDLEPORT — “Our
Salute to the Veterans” at
the Fall Harvest Gospel
Sing will take place at 5:30
p.m. at the Middleport Life
Center. For any questions
contact Jerry Frederick at
740-508-6782.

SAT., OCT. 18

CHESTER — St.
John’s Lutheran Church
will be celebrating the
175th anniversary of its
founding and current pas-

Music Educators
Association, Florida Music Educators Association,
American Choral
Directors Association, Tau Beta
Sigma, and The
Order of Eastern Star.
She is survived by her
beloved husband of 34
years, Daniel Davis, of
Cape Coral; mother Virgie Buckley; brother Richard Buckley (Mary Jo);
niece Laura Rittenhouse
(Robert) and son, Max;
as well as a nephew Wesley Buckley (Stephanie)
and their children Peyton
and Arianna.
Teresa was preceded in
death by her father, Paul
Buckley.
A memorial service will
be 7 p.m. Saturday, Oct.
17, 2015, at Alfred United
Methodist Church, St. Rt.
681, Alfred, Ohio.
A memorial service will
be 6:30 p.m. Thursday,
Oct.22, 2015, at City
Gate Ministries, 1735
Jackson St., Fort Myers.
In lieu of ﬂowers,
please donate to the
American Cancer Society.
Friends are invited to
send condolences via the
online guest book which
can be found at www.MullinsMemorial.com.
Mullins Memorial
Funeral Home &amp; Cremation Service, Cape Coral,
is entrusted with ﬁnal
care.

CAPE CORAL,
Fla. — Teresa
Buckley Davis,
56, of Cape Coral,
passed away
Thursday, Oct.
8, 2015, in Cape
Coral. She was
born April 25, 1959, in
Athens.
Teresa taught music
in public schools for
nine years in Ohio, three
years in Maryland, and
18½ years in Florida.
She graduated from Ohio
University with a Bachelor of Music Education
and earned a Master of
Education from Frostburg
State University in Maryland.
While attending Eastern High School in Meigs
County, she performed
with the Ohio State Fair
Choir in the Rose Bowl
Parade and a European
tour.
Her musical skills kept
her busy since childhood,
with many church jobs
as organist, choir director and accompanist at
churches in Ohio, Maryland and Florida. She
performed most recently
at City Gate Ministries
(formerly First Baptist
Church) in Fort Myers,
Fla. Teresa was also an
active vocalist, singing
with the Southwest Florida Symphony Chorus and
Chamber Chorus and also
with Vocal Artistry.
Professional memberships included Ohio

tor, the Rev. Linea Warmke,
is extending a welcome
to anyone who wishes to
attend the service at 10
a.m. The message will be
presented by the Bishop of
Southern Ohio, Suzanne
Dillahunt.
RACINE — Morning
Star United Methodist
Church will have their
homecoming with lunch at
12:30 p.m. and a service of
singing at 1:30 p.m. The
public is invited to attend.

Civitas Media, LLC

(USPS 436-840)
Telephone: 740-992-2155
Publishes every Sunday and Tuesday through Friday.
Subscription rate is $131.61 per year.

CONTACT US
PUBLISHER
Bud Hunt, Ext. 2109
bhunt@civitasmedia.com

CIRCULATION MANAGER
Ed Litteral, Ext. 1925
elitteral@civitasmedia.com

EDITOR
Michael Johnson, Ext. 2102
michaeljohnson@civitasmedia.com

SPORTS EDITOR
Bryan Walters, Ext. 2101
bwalters@civitasmedia.com

60615557

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Delinquent list

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jschultz@civitasmedia.com

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POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
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34 (USA)
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37 (CNN)
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39

(AMC)

40 (DISC)
42

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15
7 PM

7:30

Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Fortune
Entertainm- Access
ent Tonight Hollywood
PBS NewsHour Providing indepth analysis of current
(WOUB)
events.
Eyewitness ABC World Judge Judy Entertainm(WCHS)
ent Tonight
News at 6
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10TV News CBS Evening Jeopardy!
NFL
(WBNS)
at 6 p.m.
News
Thursday (L)
2 Broke Girls Girls "And
The Big Bang The Big Bang
(WVAH)
the Kilt Trap" Theory
Theory
PBS NewsHour Providing inBBC World Nightly
Business
depth analysis of current
(WVPB) News:
America
Report (N)
events.
13 News at CBS Evening 13 News at NFL
(WOWK)
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News
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Thursday (L)

WSAZ News
3 (WSAZ)
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at Six
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at 6:00 p.m.
Arthur
7

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(WE)
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(TVL)

62 (NGEO)
64 (NBCSN)
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72 (BET)
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6:30

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In Memory

10:30

Heroes Reborn "The Lion's The Blacklist "Eli Matchett" The Player "The Big Blind"
Den" (N)
(N)
(N)
Heroes Reborn "The Lion's The Blacklist "Eli Matchett" The Player "The Big Blind"
Den" (N)
(N)
(N)
Grey's Anatomy "Old Time Scandal "Dog-Whistle
Get Away With Murder
Rock and Roll" (N)
Politics" (N)
"Skanks Get Shanked" (N)
Woodsongs "Jorma
Pioneers in Aviation "The Egypt's Golden Empire
Kaokonen and Lowell
Race to the Moon" President "The Last Great Pharaoh"
Banana Levinger"
Kennedy turns to the moon. Relive the reign of Ramses II.
Grey's Anatomy "Old Time Scandal "Dog-Whistle
Get Away With Murder
Rock and Roll" (N)
Politics" (N)
"Skanks Get Shanked" (N)
NFL
(:25) NFL Football Atlanta Falcons at New Orleans Saints Site: MercedesThursday (L) Benz Superdome -- New Orleans, La. (L)
Bones "The Donor in the
Sleepy Hollow "Blood and Eyewitness News at 10
Drink" (N)
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Scott and Bailey Janet
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discovers a gruesome scene. is under pressure.
Chandler pursues a Jack the
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(:25) NFL Football Atlanta Falcons at New Orleans Saints Site: MercedesNFL
Thursday (L) Benz Superdome -- New Orleans, La. (L)

10:30

Bl. Bloods "Insult to Injury" Elementary
Elementary "Pilot"
Elementary
Element "Child Predator"
MikeTom.
Pre-game
NHL Hockey Ottawa Senators at Pittsburgh Penguins (L)
Post-game Penguins (N) Dan Patrick
SportsCenter
NCAA Football Auburn at Kentucky (L)
Scoreboard Football
Around Horn Interruption ESPN The Magazine
Fitness CrossFit Games
Fitness CrossFit Games
Fitness CrossFit Games
Project Runway "The Runway's in 3D!" (N) Fashionably
Project Runway "Broadway Project Runway "Make It
Project Runway: Social
or Bust"
Sell"
Thread "Crew's All In" (N)
Late (N)
Baring It All: NYFW Industry insiders are changing the
Cast Away (2000, Drama) Helen Hunt, Nick Searcy, Tom Hanks. The lone survivor
of a plane crash must adapt to solitary life on a remote island. TVPG
fashion landscape during New York Fashion Week.
(5:30) Tower Heist A group of hard working men plan to
Couples Retreat (‘09, Com) Jason Bateman, Vince Vaughn. Four couples vacation
rob the home of a business man that scammed them off. on an island and belatedly learn that couples therapy is mandatory. TV14
H.Danger
Thunder
WITS (N)
Thunder
Cloudy With a Chance of Meatballs TVPG
Full House
Full House
Law&amp;Order: SVU "Pique" Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam Modern Fam
Seinfeld
2 Broke Girls 2 Broke Girls Pre-game
MLB Baseball Division Series (SP) (L)
The Situation Room
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
A. Bourdain "Okinawa"
CNN Tonight
Castle "Den of Thieves"
Castle "Food to Die For"
Castle "Overkill"
Castle "A Deadly Game"
NBA Basketb. Pre-season (L)
(5:30)
I, Robot In 2035, a Chicago detective
Gone in 60 Seconds (‘00, Act) Nicolas Cage. A retired car thief re- Terminator
investigates a robot's role in the death of a scientist. TV14 enters the business to steal 50 cars with his crew in one night. TV14
3: Rise of ...
Rush "From the Ashes"
Gold Rush "Golden Boy"
Gold Rush "Viking Ship"
Gold Rush "Hard Bargain" Gold Rush: Pay Dirt (N)
The First 48 "Unarmed/ Bad The First 48 "Graveyard
The First 48 "Closing Time/ The First 48 "Fast Friends/ The First 48 "Bad Love"
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Love"
Family Matters"
The Thin Line"
Tanked!
Fatal Attractions
Almost Died "Trial by Fire" Fatal "The Night Strangler" Inside "My Body is Rotting"
Kingdom Come A houseful of quarrelsome relatives Bad Girls Club /(:15) Pretty (:15) Snapped "Rebecca
(:15) Snapped "Kalila
Bryan"
Taylor"
reluctantly gather together for a patriarch's funeral. TVPG "I May Have Kissed Him"
L.A. Hair
L.A. Hair
L.A. Hair
L.A. Hair
L.A. Hair (N)
DashDoll "Momma Drama" E! News (N)
Botched "Double Trouble" Botched "Dr. Nassif Saved My Life" 2/2
Botched (N)
Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Facts of Life Old Christine Old Christine Loves Ray
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Live Free or Die "Dead
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Dirty Rotten Survival "Car- Dirty Rotten Survival
Live Free or Die "Out for
"Desert Express"
Zone"
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Zone"
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Pro FB Talk Football
NASCAR Whelen Series
Mecum Auctions: Collector Cars and More "Chicago"
Nitro Circus (N)
NASCAR Race Hub (L)
Garbage
Insider
UFC 185 Anthony Pettis takes on Rafael dos Anjos from Dallas.
Pawn "Cold Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn "Mail Pawn "Ready Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn Stars Pawn "Reach Pawn Stars
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to Rumble" "Field Trip"
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Hostel: Part II Three American college students
Haven "The Trial of Nathan
studying abroad are lured to a Slovakian hostel. TVMA
elaborate, long-running rivalries. (N)
Wuornos" (N)

6 PM

POMEROY —Peggy S. Yost, Meigs County treasurer, advises that the delinquent list for mobile
homes and real estate will be published in the Daily
Sentinel on Nov. 13 and Nov. 20. The last day to make
payment of taxes to avoid publication must be paid
by 2 p.m. Nov. 6. No names can be removed after that
time. Contact the Meigs County Treasurer’s Ofﬁce if
you have any questions concerning your tax parcels at
740-992-2004.

10:30

Project
Blended (2014, Comedy) Drew Barrymore, Bella Thorne,
American Sniper (2014, War) Sienna Miller, Luke Grimes, (:45) HBO
400 (HBO) Adam Sandler. After an awful blind date, two single
Greenlight
Bradley Cooper. An account of the career of Chris Kyle, the First Look
"Steve Jobs"
parents find themselves stuck together at a resort. TV14
most lethal sniper in U.S. military history. TVMA
(4:40) The
(:25) The Break Up Feeling unappreciated, (:15) Belle (2014, Drama) Tom Felton, Sarah Gadon, Gugu The Knick
(:45) The
450 (MAX) Grand
a woman breaks up with her boyfriend in
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officer is raised among England's aristocracy. TVPG
Lotus"
"Crutchfield"
The Affair Everyone is
Walking Tall A retired soldier sets
Scary Movie Shannon Elizabeth. A
Homeland "The Tradition of
500 (SHOW) out to clean up his hometown, despite the year after an accidental murder, teenagers concerned about Cole's
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Model # 303 Little Rock $38,525
BALANCE OWED $15,900 ★
Model # 502 Santa Fe
$44,900
BALANCE OWED $17,500 ★
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�LOCAL

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 15, 2015 3

URG students place in international competition
Staff Report

RIO GRANDE — Senior business majors Kasey Crow and
Melissa Dickerson ranked in the
top 100 performers in the ﬁrst
week of the international Business
Strategy Game — and they are still
going strong.
The game requires students to
manage a mock manufacturing
company by making decisions
using skills they have learned in
their classes. Each of the 10 weeks
of competition represents one year
of business. Business professor
Roger Watson said he is excited his
students are working hard on the
project.
“This is the capstone course
in the School of Business, which
means it requires business seniors
to synthesize all the information
they’ve learned and look at the bigger picture, the strategic plans that
guide companies,” Watson said.

“The competition is ﬁerce. Ranking
in the top 100 among business students worldwide helps the students
see the quality of the business education they receive at the University
of Rio Grande.”
Crow and Dickerson ranked 61st
overall the ﬁrst week, scoring a
107, only three points short of the
highest possible score. For week
two, the team ranked 28th overall
scoring 108 and ranked 72nd for
week three, scoring 107.5. Watson,
who teaches the capstone course,
said he is proud of his students for
being able to keep up globally.
“The game is cumulative, so it
gets harder to maintain and bring
up your scores as you continue,”
Watson said. “The students have to
make over 100 decisions relative to
running a business each week.”
Crow, of Chillicothe, Ohio,
said she is excited to see how
she ranks on a global scale and
is glad she ranked in the top

100 three weeks in a row.
“It’s pretty cool because it lets us
see where we stand compared to
other schools,” Crow said.
Dickerson, of Coolville,
Ohio, said she is grateful what
she has learned at Rio Grande
helped her develop the skills to
compete.
“It’s awesome to see we can
match top schools in the country
or do even better. It takes all of our
classes and turns it into one big
project,” Dickerson said.
Students from the class have
ranked in the top 100 of the
competition for 18 of the past 19
semesters. Watson said he takes
the semester without a ranking as
praise for the class as a whole.
“To place 18 out of 19 times
really shows the caliber of the
students and their education here
at Rio. I think it’s a real feather
in the cap,” Watson said. “We
had one semester where every

Courtesy photo

Kasey Crow (left) and Melissa Dickerson have ranked in the top 100 of the Business
Strategy Game their first three weeks of competing. The game is a requirement for
seniors in the School of Business class taught by Roger Watson (center).

group in the class placed at least
once. Even the semester we didn’t
place, I took it as a compliment
because the students were doing
so well in the classroom. No one
could get ahead of the others
because they were all fantastic.”

The competition is run by
publishing company McGrawHill. According to the company’s website, 54,082 students at
611 universities in 54 countries
have participated in the competition in the last year.

Courtesy photos

AT LEFT, Southern High School FFA students Domineke Lyons, left, and Brook Cunningham, right, were recognized as high scoring individuals in the Urban Land Judging Contest held last month in Athens County.
They are shown with Jenny Ridenour, education coordinator for the Meigs SWCD. The top scoring team was from Southern and also including Lyons and Cunningham. CENTER, Southern High School FFA students
Dominique Wehrung, left, and Cameron Grueser, right, were recognized as first- and second-place participants in the Agricultural Land Judging Competition held in September near Albany. They are shown with
Jenny Ridenour, education coordinator for the Meigs SWCD. Third place was Kaylle Katena, not pictured. The top scoring team was from Southern and included Wehrung, Grueser, Katena, and Mikayla Hoschar.
AT RIGHT, Kim Romine, center, Pomeroy, was recognized by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources-Division of Soil and Water Resources, for her six years of service as a member of the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District Board of Supervisors. She is shown with Meigs SWCD program administrator Steve Jenkins, left, and Rob Hamilton, program specialist with ODNR-Division of Soil and Water Resources.

Pair elected to soil, water conservation board
Staff Report

Harold Carnahan, was the
ﬁrst chairman of the Meigs
POMEROY — The 72nd
SWCD Board of Supervisors
annual meeting and election
and served as a board memof the Meigs Soil and Water
ber from June 1943, to July
Conservation District was
1952, and from June 1958,
held recently at Meigs High
to May 1975, for a total of 26
School with more than 90
years.
people in attendance.
The other candidate for the
Joe Bolin, of Rutland, and
board was Howard “Buddy”
James “Tony” Carnahan, of
Ervin Jr., of Racine, a lifelong
Syracuse, were elected to
farmer in the Oak Grove area
seats on the Meigs SWCD
and a long-time member
Board of Supervisors.
of the Meigs Agricultural
Bolin has served on the
Society.
board since January 1992. He
Romine received a plaque
and his wife, Janet, reside on from the Ohio Department
a 120-acre farm in Rutland
Natural Resources-Division
Township. Carnahan was
of Soil and Water Resources
elected as a new member
in appreciation of her six
to the board of supervisors,
years of service on the Meigs
replacing two-term member
SWCD Board of Supervisors.
Kim Romine, of Pomeroy,
Meigs County Commiswho is leaving the board at
sioners Tim Ihle and Randy
the end of the year.
Smith presented a brief “State
Carnahan is the son of
of the County” address, highNancy Carnahan and the late lighting projects that have
Jim Carnahan and is a lifelong taken place this year or that
resident of Meigs County.
are scheduled to begin soon.
He spent his childhood on
They speciﬁcally mena dairy farm and during his
tioned paving projects on
youth was active in FFA and county roads, noting that 19
4H. He worked in dairy until percent of all county roads
1994 and is now involved in
were repaved this year, in
custom hay baling and corn
addition to two bridge projfarming. He is employed as
ects on Lickskillet Road and
a mechanic for Meigs Local
Bowman’s Run Road.
Schools and is an active memIhle commented that when
ber of the Big Bend Farm
one looks at Meigs County
Antique Club, Athens-Meigs from a distance, all that can
Farm Bureau, and River City be seen is a big cloud of dust
from all the things going on.
Players.
Commissioners also
Carnahan’s grandfather,

remarked
that trusses
are going up
on the new
Emergency
Medical
Services and
Carnahan
Medﬂight
building,
near Meigs High School, that
will replace the current building located behind the old
Veterans Memorial Hospital
in Pomeroy. In addition, a
new road will also be going in
behind the emergency room
connecting it to Pomeroy
Pike near Meigs High School.
Plans are in the works for
a new dog shelter to be constructed near the intersection
of state Route 7 and Hiland
Road near Pomeroy.
The current shelter, near
the Rockspings Fairgrounds,
is in dire need of replacement.
“One thing about the old
shelter, if you drive past it,
you know we can do better,”
Smith said.
Commissioners also mentioned state highway projects,
including the new intersection at the junction of state
routes 7 and 124 between
Middleport and Rutland, and

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the upcoming project to
upgrade the
junction at
state routes 7
and 143 near
Pomeroy.
Bolin
Smith also
described
the success of the Ohio Medical Mission that was held
this summer at Meigs High
School.
Rob Hamilton, program
specialist with ODNRDivision of Soil and Water
Resources, spoke brieﬂy
on that division’s upcoming transfer to the Ohio
Department of Agriculture.
It represents a signiﬁcant
change to Ohio’s 88 SWCDs
that currently work in cooperation with ODNR, but it is
unknown what effect it will
have on day-to-day operations.
Meigs SWCD education
coordinator Jenny Ridenour
announced this year’s Land
Judging contest winners. The
contest was held in Athens
County at Chase Farm near
Albany.
“This year, the contest
was completely changed,”
Ridenour explained. “The

Ohio Vocational Agricultural
directors decided it was time
to update the contest. The
test now includes questions
about soil structure, inﬁltration rates, living organisms,
water quality, and soil fertility.
Our contest was one of the
ﬁrst to use the revised soil
scorecards.”
Students from the
Southern Local Vocational
Agricultural Departments
participated in the contest.
Twelve students participated
with two in urban and 10 in
agricultural.
High scoring individuals in
the Agricultural Land Judging contest were, in order
from ﬁrst to third: Dominique
Wehrung, Cameron Grueser,
and Kaylle Katena. The top
scoring team was from Southern and included Wehrung,
Grueser, Katena, and Mikayla
Hoschar.
High scoring individuals
in the Urban Land Judging contest were, in order:
Domineke Lyons and Brook
Cunningham. The top scoring team was from Southern
and included Lyons and Cunningham.
Jim Freeman, Meigs
SWCD wildlife specialist/

watershed coordinator, gave
a report on the Thomas Fork
lime doser, which is used to
treat acid mine drainage. A
second lime doser is under
construction near the junction of state routes 7 and 143,
but is not yet operational.
Freeman said that ﬁsh populations in Thomas Fork have
increased dramatically since
January, 2012, when the
Thomas Fork Doser was ﬁrst
put into service.
The Meigs SWCD, established in 1943 is a legal subdivision of state government
that provides natural resource
management assistance to
county landowners and other
units of local government.
The district is funded by the
Meigs County Board of Commissioners, and county funds
are supplemented by funding
from the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources. The
district is governed by a ﬁvemember board of supervisors,
all county residents. Board
members serve staggered
three-year terms. Current
supervisors also include: Bill
Baer, Racine; Joe Bolin, Rutland; Tonja Hunter, Racine;
Kim Romine, Pomeroy and
Keith Bentz, Racine.

�E ditorial
4 Thursday, October 15, 2015

Daily Sentinel

THEIR VIEW

Taking
trophy photos
of your trophy
By Roger Wolfe
Guest Columnist

I think we can all agree that memories are
priceless.
Many of my fondest memories growing up
and even as an adult are centered on hunting
and the outdoors. What better way to preserve
memories of those memorable and successful
hunts than with pictures?
In today’s world of mobile devices there are
no excuses for not getting plenty of pictures
of your next hunt or trophy. The days of the
Polaroid camera are gone, and so are the
cameras the size of small television sets.
The digital cameras of today are getting
smaller and smaller and easily slip into a
hunting pack or even a pocket. Even better
if you carry a smart phone with you while
hunting, you are already carrying a perfectly
good camera.
Most cell phones have digital cameras built
in that take pictures as good as or better than
many of the expensive 35mm cameras of just a
few years ago. Unlike the old outdated 35mm
cameras though, new digital cameras give us
instant feedback to see if the picture was a
blurred mess, or an award winning snap shot.
Another bonus is that film is cheap! For just
a few dollars you can purchase a memory card
that will hold thousands of pictures. Best of all
you can always delete the ones you don’t like,
and only print the ones you do.
I am by no means a professional
photographer and I don’t carry the most
expensive cameras everywhere I go. I do take a
lot of pictures and every now and then I get a
good one or two.
The best advice I can give anyone to help
get some great trophy photos is to take a lot
of pictures. No matter what the trophy is that
you are photographing! You will far more often
regret the pictures you didn’t take, than the
ones you did.
As I said earlier you can always delete the
ones you don’t want, but you can’t go back and
take the ones you didn’t take once the moment
is gone. So keep right on clicking.
Another good idea when taking photos of
that trophy buck, or even that fat old doe for
the freezer is to take pictures from all sorts
of angles. Try to get all sides of not only the
animal but the hunter as well.
You want your photos to be reminders of the
hunt and the time spent on the chase, not just
the end result. You also want your photos to
show proper respect and appreciation for the
animal you have harvested.
Tailgate photos are seldom going to be the
shots that spark the fondest memories of the
hunt. We have all taken them, and I am not
saying they are bad, but photos taken in the
woods and fields are far more representative
and therefore reflective of that special hunt.
Take a little time in the field before heading
home to tag and brag on your trophy to take
some pictures in the field. Field pictures always
seem more special because it reminds you of
not only the animal but the location and season
of the hunt by allowing the background to
become part of the story.
Blood and gore are meant for the horror
shows, not the family photo album, so clean off
any excess blood and be sure to smooth any
ruffled fur or feathers. Pose the animal in a
natural or life like pose and try not to have the
animals head and neck twisted at extremely odd
angles. This always makes for better pictures.
Lighting in the field can sometimes be a
problem, and a lot of times our best trophy
show up and are recovered in low light
conditions. This is where a good flash can come
in handy. It can be tough to get the best photos
at night, so when possible, wait till the next day
to take some good field pictures.
Just as problematic can be bright sunny days.
The shadows cast by the sun can cover the
hunters face or shade the animal. One trick
around this is to force the flash to stay on even
on sunny days.
Most, if not all, cameras and even cell phones
have this feature to turn the flash on for each
picture. The flash will fill the shadows and
definitely help you get some better pictures
even on sunny days.
These are just a few things to keep in mind
when you get your next opportunity to take
those trophy photos. Just be creative and
always try to preserve as much of the memory
as you can in the photos you take.
If your memory is anywhere near as bad as
mine, you will be thankful for the pictures to
help bring back all those precious memories of
hunts gone by. So don’t be bashful, and smile
away as the camera goes click!
Roger Wolfe is an outdoor columnist for Civitas Media.

THEIR VIEW

Motorcyclists and Mary Kay consultants
My daughter, Celese, is a
especially since the other
Mary Kay consultant. For
three booths included two
you men, that means she
taco stands and a motorcycle
sells makeup, skin creams,
insurance group.
and other things to help
She felt awkward as people
make women beautiful.
wearing leather and sporting
I’m not trying to say
skull and cross bone tattoos
that women aren’t beautiwalked by and stared at
Daris
ful anyway, because they
the bottles of makeup. One
Howard
are. However, speaking
Contributing man walked up, his wife by
of makeup, one old lady
his side, both decked out in
Columnist
in our community said,
leather. “What are you selling
“Even an old barn looks
that kind of stuff for here?”
better with a coat of new paint.”
“Well,” Celese said, “even
One day Celese received a
women who ride motorcycles want
phone call from the man in charge to look beautiful.”
of the local motorcycle rally. “I’m
The man laughed heartily.
looking for vendors,” he said.
“Right,” he said sarcastically. He
“Would you be interested?”
then turned to his wife, who was
Celese told him she couldn’t
not smiling, and he instantly knew
see how Mary Kay products and
he was in big trouble. “Uh, they
motorcycles went together.
don’t, do they, Honey?” he stam“But our rally is really new, and
mered.
we need all sorts of sponsors and
She didn’t even answer him. She
support,” he said.
just slugged him so hard he stumWhen she declined, he said,
bled away, then she turned back to
“But we are desperate!” Celese
Celese and smiled. “I’ll take two
told him she had already ﬁgured
of those, three of that, one of this,
that out. She tried to politely
and …”
decline, but he waived the fee and
It was a huge sale, and just the
pleaded until she agreed.
ice-breaker. Her booth was soon
Then she had a dilemma of
busy with women purchasing
her own. What does a Mary Kay
products. Groups gathered and
consultant wear to such an event?
commented about how noticeably
Does she wear the leather that
different she was from everyone
the motorcyclists wear, or does
else, and they liked it. The women
she wear a dress or pant suit like
in the group glanced at each other
a Mary Kay consultant? Well, she
uneasily as one woman was sweardidn’t have any leather, so she
ing like a sailor, and her husband
dressed in her normal clothes,
shushed her. “Don’t speak like
and when she got there she stuck
that!” he said. “There is a lady
out like a … well, like a Mary Kay
present!”
consultant at a motorcycle rally,
On the second day, a lot of

women came dressed much nicer,
and by the third day, there were
enough that a person might begin
to question if it was truly a motorcycle rally. Indeed, some people
learned that motorcycle women do
enjoy being beautiful.
But Celese learned something
else, too. As she was loading up to
head home on the last day, she was
nervous as a rough looking man
approached her. “Lady, is that your
car?”
When she said it was, he pointed at her tire. “Did you know your
tire is almost ﬂat?”
She looked, and it was. She was
going to call her husband to come
help, but the man wouldn’t hear of
it. “Lady, if people at a motorcycle
rally can’t take care of a ﬂat tire,
what good are we?”
Soon a whole group of men gathered to help. Some changed her
tire while others loaded her car.
Half of the people at the rally were
there to wave her on her way.
As she was driving home, she
thought about her own attitudes
and prejudices, and realized that
a person can be wonderful even
wearing leather. When the man in
charge called her about her experience, she said a check was on its
way, even though he had waived
the fee.
“Next year,” she said, “when you
need booths for the rally again,
think of me.”
Daris Howard, award-winning, syndicated
columnist, playwright, and author, can be
contacted at daris@darishoward.com.

TODAY IN HISTORY...
Today is Thursday,
October 15, the 288th
day of 2015. There are 77
days left in the year.
Today’s Highlight in
History:
On October 15, 1915,
“The Metamorphosis,”
Franz Kafka’s famous
absurdist tale about
a man named Gregor
Samsa who wakes up one
morning to discover that
he has been transformed
into a huge, insect-like
creature, was ﬁrst published in the German
literary journal Die Weissen Blaetter (The White
Pages).
On this date:
In 1783, the ﬁrst
manned balloon ﬂight
took place in Paris as
Jean-Francois Pilatre de
Rozier ascended in a
basket attached to a tethered Montgolﬁer hot-air
balloon, rising to about
75 feet.
In 1815, Napoleon
Bonaparte, the deposed

Emperor of the French,
arrived on the Britishruled South Atlantic
island of St. Helena,
where he spent the last
5 1/2 years of his life in
exile.
In 1905, Claude
Debussy’s “La Mer” (The
Sea), a trio of symphonic
sketches, premiered in
Paris.
In 1914, the Clayton
Antitrust Act, which
expanded on the Sherman
Antitrust Act of 1890,
was signed into law by
President Woodrow Wilson.
In 1917, Dutch dancer
Mata Hari, convicted of
spying for the Germans,
was executed by a French
ﬁring squad outside Paris.
In 1940, Charles Chaplin’s ﬁrst all-talking comedy, “The Great Dictator,”
a lampoon of Adolf Hitler,
opened in New York.
In 1945, the former
premier of Vichy France,
Pierre Laval, was exe-

cuted for treason.
In 1946, Nazi war criminal Hermann Goering
fatally poisoned himself
hours before he was to
have been executed.
In 1969, peace demonstrators staged activities
across the country as part
of a “moratorium” against
the Vietnam War.
In 1975, the book
“Against Our Will: Men,
Women and Rape,” a
history of sexual assault
authored by Susan Brownmiller, was ﬁrst published.
Today’s Birthdays:
Former auto executive
Lee Iacocca is 91. Jazz
musician Freddy Cole is
84. Singer Barry McGuire
is 80. Actress Linda Lavin
is 78. Rock musician
Don Stevenson (Moby
Grape) is 73. Actressdirector Penny Marshall
is 72. Baseball Hall of
Famer Jim Palmer is 70.
Singer-musician Richard
Carpenter is 69. Actor
Victor Banerjee is 69.

Former tennis player Roscoe Tanner is 64. Singer
Tito Jackson is 62. Actorcomedian Larry Miller is
62. Actor Jere Burns is
61. Actress Tanya Roberts
is 60. Movie director Mira
Nair is 58. Britain’s Duchess of York, Sarah Ferguson, is 56. Chef Emeril
Lagasse is 56. Rock musician Mark Reznicek is 53.
Singer Eric Benet is 49.
Actress Vanessa Marcil
is 47. Singer-actress-TV
host Paige Davis is 46.
Country singer Kimberly
Schlapman (Little Big
Town) is 46. Actor Dominic West is 46. Rhythmand-blues singer Ginuwine is 45. Actor Chris
Olivero is 36. Christian
singer-actress Jaci Velasquez is 36. Actor Brandon Jay McLaren is 35.
Rhythm-and-blues singer
Keyshia Cole is 34. Tennis
player Elena Dementieva
is 34. Actor Vincent Martella is 23. Actress Bailee
Madison is 16.

�LOCAL/STATE

Daily Sentinel

Broken

Bill would spare severely
mentally ill from execution

the Buckeye State and the Mountain
State. She also talked about the
persistence many had for the project,
From Page 1
calling Lanham “Mr. Persistence” when
it came to U.S. 35 and saying without
“I know it will bring improvement
the “dedicated leadership” of Lanham
to the local community that this new
and Jack Fruth, “this would not have
stretch of highway will support for
happened.”
years to come. For years, Route 35
Capito added: “I can’t tell you how
has been recognized for its promise
ecstatic
I am about this. It’s about
to continue West Virginia’s economic
pulling
together,
about partnerships,
growth and bringing a new element
working
hard,
never
giving up and
of safety to the local communities. I
saying,
‘It
didn’t
work
this time but
know it has suffered a lot of setbacks
maybe
it
will
work
next
time,’ and that’s
along the way, but I’m proud we’ve been
what
you
did.”
able to work together and overcome a
After the speeches, several ofﬁcials,
range of issues, from lack of funding
including
Lanham, Lynne Fruth and
to (project) delays, to bring this
Frances
“Babs”
Fruth, helped move the
community the solid infrastructure it
ﬁrst
ceremonial
dirt on the project.
deserves. This ﬁnal 14.6-mile stretch
When asked if he ever gave up on the
will make a difference for those who call
project getting completed, Lanham said
the area home and for businesses that
count on this critical east-west highway he was certainly discouraged at times,
especially after Jack died. During those
for shipments and daily work routes.”
times, Lanham said he often thought,
Tomblin then recognized the early
“I guarantee you Jack Fruth would have
efforts of U.S. 35 advocates, Charles
had a solution.”
Lanham and the late Jack Fruth, for
“My dad and Mr. Lanham saw from
which the highway is named. Lanham
the
beginning how important it was to
was in attendance as were Fruth’s wife,
Mason
County,” Lynne said about U.S.
Frances “Babs” Fruth, and daughter
35
and
its
completion. “I can’t believe
Lynne Fruth.
that between Charles and my dad
“I’m pleased we are ﬁnally able to
they spent collectively 80 years trying
make the Fruth-Lanham Highway a
reality and I look forward to seeing the to get this road built. That’s a lot of
perseverance. They fought that ﬁght,
improvements and opportunities this
highway will bring to the Mountain
we got part of the road but the last 10
State now and for many years to come,” years, I give Charles a lot of the credit
Tomblin said.
for just keeping it out there and not
Tomblin then pointed to Mason
giving it up.”
County Commission President Rick
Lynne said now it’s up to Mason
Handley sitting in the audience and
County to ﬁgure out how to take
said, “Rick, I told you I’d get it done
advantage of this opportunity.
and I’m getting it done.”
Eddie Lanham, with the Mason
The governor was introduced by
County Area Chamber of Commerce
Secretary of Transportation Paul
and Farmers Bank, spoke about how
Mattox, who said the completion of
it’s all about location when it comes
U.S. 35 was “decades in the making.”
to developing real estate and how this
Mattox recalled John Musgrave, of
new road will create “35 miles of better
Mason County, inviting him to a
location for economic opportunity.”
meeting with Jack Fruth and Lanham,
Bizzack Construction, of Lexington,
where he had an opportunity to listen
Ky., is the contractor and this phase of
to the “merits” of the project and “how the project is to be completed by the
important it was to the region and the
fall of 2018. Upon completion of the
nation.” Mattox noted U.S. 35 is 412
earthwork project, an estimated $70
miles long and he was “excited to be
million paving contract will follow with
closer to providing a safe, efﬁcient,
the completed project scheduled to
continuous four-lane route through
open to trafﬁc in the spring of 2019.
Mason and Putnam counties.”
In the words of U.S. Congressman
Also speaking, U.S. Sen. Shelley
Evan Jenkins, who also spoke at the
Moore Capito (R), a longtime supporter ceremony: “It’s a great day for Mason
of the project. She recalled being at a
County. A great day for Putnam County.
rally for the road in 2001 with thenIt’s a great day for West Virginia.”
Congressman Ted Strickland, of Ohio,
speaking about the road’s importance
Reach Beth Sergent at bsergent@civitasmedia.com or
on Twitter @BSergentWrites.
in allowing commerce to ﬂow between

8 AM

WEATHER

2 PM

42°

57°

ALMANAC

HEALTH TODAY

Statistics through 3 p.m. yesterday

AccuWeather.com Asthma Index™

Temperature

The AccuWeather.com Asthma
Index combines the effects of current air quality, pollen counts, wind,
temperature, dew point, barometric
pressure, and changes from past weather
conditions to provide a scale showing the overall
probability and severity of an asthma attack.

High
Low
Normal high
Normal low
Record high
Record low

69°
46°
69°
46°
89° in 1954
25° in 1988

Precipitation

(in inches)

24 hours ending 3 p.m. yest.
Month to date
Normal month to date
Year to date
Normal year to date

0.00
1.30
1.23
40.33
34.26

SUN &amp; MOON
Today
7:37 a.m.
6:51 p.m.
9:55 a.m.
8:38 p.m.

Sunrise
Sunset
Moonrise
Moonset

MOON PHASES
First

Full

Oct 20 Oct 27

Last

Nov 3

New

Nov 11

The solunar period indicates peak feeding times
for ﬁsh and game.

Minor
7:45a
8:36a
9:30a
10:25a
11:20a
12:15p
12:41a

High

Very High

Major
1:56p
2:48p
3:42p
4:38p
5:33p
6:28p
7:21p

Minor
8:08p
9:00p
9:55p
10:50p
11:46p
---1:08p

WEATHER HISTORY
Hurricane Hazel hit near Myrtle
Beach, S.C., on Oct. 15, 1954, with
150-mph wind gusts. The storm
brought record rain to the central
Carolinas. Winds gusted to a record
98 mph at Washington, D.C.

Plenty of sunshine,
but cool

AIR QUALITY
300

500

Air Quality Index: 0-50, Good; 51-100,
Moderate; 101-150, Unhealthy for sensitive
groups; 151-200, Unhealthy; 201-300, Very
unhealthy; 301-500, Hazardous.

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

OHIO RIVER
Levels in feet as of 7 a.m. yesterday

Location
Willow Island
Marietta
Parkersburg
Belleville
Racine
Point Pleasant
Gallipolis
Huntington
Ashland
Lloyd Greenup
Portsmouth
Maysville
Meldahl Dam

Flood
Stage
37
34
36
35
41
40
50
50
52
54
50
50
51

Level
13.19
15.97
21.49
13.09
13.26
25.11
13.07
25.71
34.36
12.93
15.60
33.90
14.00

24-hr.
Chg.
+0.38
+0.01
+0.51
+0.39
-0.14
-0.17
-0.47
+0.29
+0.19
+0.11
none
+0.30
-0.20

Forecasts and graphics provided by
AccuWeather, Inc. ©2015

Let’s Talk
About Your

Partly sunny

66°
47°
Partly sunny

NATIONAL CITIES
Marietta
66/45
Belpre
67/44

Athens
66/44

St. Marys
66/45

Parkersburg
66/45

Coolville
66/44

Elizabeth
67/46

Spencer
66/46

Buffalo
66/46
Milton
67/46

Clendenin
66/46

St. Albans
68/47

Huntington
66/46

NATIONAL FORECAST
110s
100s
Seattle
90s
69/51
80s
70s
60s
50s
40s
30s
San Francisco
20s
72/61
10s
0s
-0s
Los Angeles
-10s
83/67
T-storms
Rain
Showers
Snow
Flurries
Ice
Cold Front
Warm Front
Stationary Front

WEDNESDAY

66°
44°

Plenty of sunshine

Murray City
66/43

Ironton
67/45

Ashland
67/46
Grayson
67/45

TUESDAY

59°
35°

Wilkesville
66/44
POMEROY
Jackson
67/45
67/44
Ravenswood
Rio Grande
67/45
67/45
Centerville
POINT PLEASANT
Ripley
68/44
GALLIPOLIS
67/46
67/45
66/45

South Shore Greenup
68/46
66/44

39

Primary pollutant: Particulates

Logan
67/43

McArthur
67/43

Portsmouth
68/45

Source: Hamilton County Department of
Environmental Services

0 50 100 150 200

SOLUNAR TABLE
Major
Today 1:33a
Fri.
2:24a
Sat.
3:18a
Sun. 4:12a
Mon. 5:07a
Tue. 6:01a
Wed. 6:54a

Moderate

Primary: cladosporium

Fri.
7:38 a.m.
6:49 p.m.
10:50 a.m.
9:19 p.m.

Partly sunny, breezy
and cooler

Lucasville
68/45

Reach Lindsay Kriz at 740-9922155 EXT. 2555.

BBT (NYSE) —36.75
Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.98
Pepsico (NYSE) — 97.92Prmier
(NASDAQ) — 14.40
Rockwell (NYSE) — 103,85
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 14.40
Royal Dutch Shell — 55.30
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 24.41
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 60.03
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 8.85
WesBanco (NYSE) — 31,35
Worthington (NYSE) — 30.04
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
Oct. 14, 2015, provided by Edward
Jones financial advisors Isaac Mills in
Gallipolis at (740) 441-9441 and Lesley
Marrero in Point Pleasant at (304)
674-0174. Member SIPC.

MONDAY

A morning shower;
mostly sunny

Very High

Primary: ragweed, other
Mold: 3464

SUNDAY

55°
33°

Waverly
67/44

Pollen: 19

Low

P (NYSE) — 58.15
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 22.34
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 105.54
Big Lots (NYSE) — 47.18
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 43.55
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 43.39
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 5.58
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.216
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 46.99
Collins (NYSE) —82.52
DuPont (NYSE) — 56,40
US Bank (NYSE) — 40,50
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 27.59
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 54.39
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 60.00
Kroger (NYSE) — 36.33
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 95,41
Norfolk So (NYSE) —78.23
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 23.50

54°
32°

Chillicothe
68/44

made clear who.
Holdren asked for a
timeline of this alleged
event, and Fisher said the
incident occurred sometime between Sept. 28-29.
Fisher said the state had
received the information
from the Secret Service.
The bond was originally
set around late June/early
July, he said.
A motion hearing
regarding the revoking of
Daboni’s bond has been
set for Friday at 9 a.m.
Evidence regarding the
allegations of threats will
be brought in at that time.

LOCAL STOCKS

Adelphi
68/43

POLLEN &amp; MOLD
High

niences, but gave midNovember as the current
time for a new trial.
From Page 1
Jeremy Fisher, assistant
prosecuting attorney,
Potts was made Oct. 7,
spoke on behalf of the
and stated that motions
state and his colleagues,
must be made at least
Meigs County Prosecutseven days prior to the
ing Attorney Colleen
trial, deeming the Oct. 7
Williams and Bill Gilkey
motion too late.
of the Major Crimes Task
The state requested
Force. Fisher said that
leniency regarding the
the state wishes to revoke
new court date, as many
Daboni’s $1 million dollar
witnesses from the Bureau bond, saying that they had
of Criminal Investigation just learned Wednesday
are traveling from Logan. from a source that since
Crow said he did not like his new bond was set in
to have to set any dates
September, Daboni had
in stone due to changing
allegedly threatened someschedules and inconveone, although it was not

SATURDAY

Shown is today’s weather. Temperatures
are today’s highs and tonight’s lows.

0-2 Low; 3-4 Moderate; 5-6 High; 7-8 Very High; 9-10 Extreme

Moderate

Case

63°
38°

0

Low

COLUMBUS — Murder suspects
with a severe mental illness at the
time the crime was committed could
be exempted from the death penalty,
under a bill before Ohio lawmakers
that would still allow offenders to be

FRIDAY

Sunshine mixing with some clouds today.
Becoming cloudy tonight. High 67° / Low 46°

convicted and sentenced to prison
including life without parole.
The proposed legislation would allow
a hearing before trial on an offender’s
mental condition and permit a judge to
rule out the death penalty if severe mental illness is proven. If the judge keeps
the death penalty on the table, the issue
could be raised again during the trial.

Associated Press

EXTENDED FORECAST

8 PM

61°

By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

Charleston
66/46

Shown are noon positions of weather systems and
precipitation. Temperature bands are highs for the day.
Winnipeg
47/25

Montreal
57/43

Billings
58/36

Minneapolis
60/35
Chicago
65/41
Kansas City
75/42

Denver
68/38

Toronto
63/42
Detroit
68/42

New York
66/54
Washington
67/50

Monterrey
90/66

GOALS

Fri.
Hi/Lo/W
66/52/pc
46/41/sh
78/48/pc
65/49/pc
66/42/pc
65/39/pc
80/56/s
65/45/pc
61/38/sh
75/45/pc
64/39/s
52/34/pc
62/36/s
57/40/sh
60/35/pc
87/59/s
71/43/s
57/35/s
57/34/c
88/77/sh
92/61/s
59/35/s
62/40/s
83/68/t
76/49/pc
81/67/pc
66/39/s
84/74/t
47/28/pc
69/41/pc
87/66/s
66/47/pc
71/49/pc
87/67/pc
66/46/pc
95/74/t
59/39/c
60/37/sh
73/44/pc
68/42/pc
63/38/s
79/56/pc
70/61/pc
70/53/pc
63/44/pc

National for the 48 contiguous states
High
Low

98° in Thermal, CA
18° in Angel Fire, NM

Global

Houston
93/59

Chihuahua
88/57

Today
Hi/Lo/W
82/56/pc
46/39/pc
77/57/s
65/56/s
65/46/s
58/36/s
78/51/s
63/50/s
66/46/s
73/48/s
60/33/s
65/41/pc
69/47/s
67/47/s
67/46/s
95/61/s
68/38/s
71/41/pc
68/42/pc
86/75/pc
93/59/s
70/45/s
75/42/pc
88/69/pc
92/60/s
83/67/c
73/51/s
87/76/t
60/35/pc
77/52/s
87/63/s
66/54/s
94/56/s
88/66/s
65/53/s
98/76/pc
66/47/s
59/44/s
71/47/s
69/46/s
78/48/pc
79/52/s
72/61/pc
69/51/s
67/50/s

EXTREMES YESTERDAY
Atlanta
77/57

El Paso
89/65

City
Albuquerque
Anchorage
Atlanta
Atlantic City
Baltimore
Billings
Boise
Boston
Charleston, WV
Charlotte
Cheyenne
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Columbus
Dallas
Denver
Des Moines
Detroit
Honolulu
Houston
Indianapolis
Kansas City
Las Vegas
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York City
Oklahoma City
Orlando
Philadelphia
Phoenix
Pittsburgh
Portland, ME
Raleigh
Richmond
St. Louis
Salt Lake City
San Francisco
Seattle
Washington, DC

High
109° in Makkah, Saudi Arabia
Low -29° in Summit Station, Greenland
Miami
87/76

Weather(W): s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy, c-cloudy,
sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow
ﬂurries, sn-snow, i-ice.
60576589

TODAY

Thursday, October 15, 2015 5

www.fbsc.com

740-992-2136

�Sports
Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 15, 2015 s Page 6

River Valley Lady Raiders fall to Alexander
By Donald Lambert
elambert@civitasmedia.com

BIDWELL, Ohio — They went down
swinging.
The Alexander volleyball team defeated
host River Valley 3-1 during a Tri-Valley
Conference Ohio Division match-up on
Tuesday night in Gallia County. The Lady
Raiders (4-15, 2-9 TVC Ohio) took it to
the Lady Spartans early on, but the visitors adjusted and took home the victory.
The Lady Spartans started the contest
with a 5-2 lead in Game 1. Senior Jacey
Walter helped the Lady Raiders take the
lead 8-7, forcing Alexander to call a timeDonald Lambert | OVP Sports out. Jacey Walter’s three points carried
River Valley senior Ashley Gilmore sending the ball over the net during the Lady Raiders’ loss to the Silver and Black to a 14-10 lead. The
Lady Raiders maintained their lead and
Alexander on Tuesday in Bidwell, Ohio.

URG soccer still
tops in NAIA poll
By Randy Payton
For Ohio Valley Publishing

KANSAS CITY, Mo.
— The University of Rio
Grande men’s soccer team
maintained its hold on
the top spot in the NAIA
Coaches’ Top 25 Poll
announced Tuesday by the
national ofﬁce.
The RedStorm received
17 ﬁrst-place votes and
498 points in the balloting
of 18 head coaches representing each of the conferences, independents and
unafﬁliated groups.
Davenport (Mich.) University, which grabbed the
remaining ﬁrst-place nod,
remained second with 482
points.
Rio Grande, which
takes a 13-1 record into
Saturday night’s match
at Asbury University, is
ranked No. 1 in the poll for
the 50th time since 2000
- more than any other
NAIA program. The 13
wins by head coach Scott
Morrissey’s club currently
leads the country.
The RedStorm has been
ranked No. 1 in nine of the
past 11 polls dating back
to last year and ranks second with 92 consecutive
appearances in the Top 25.
Only No. 11 Lindsey Wilson has more consecutive
appearances with 98.
Oklahoma Wesleyan
(462 pts.), Baker, Kan.
(444 pts) and the University of Northwestern Ohio
(431 pts.) round out the
top ﬁve.
No. 15 Park (Mo.)
improved eight spots for

eventually took the ﬁrst set 25-22.
Alexander made major adjustments
during Game 2 and they took immediate effect. Maddie Kish started the set
with a 5-0 run for the Lady Spartans,
then Sydney Davis took over with a 10-0
run to put the home team in a 16-1 hole
early. River Valley struggled to establish
an offensive rhythm in the second game.
Alexander took Game 2 25-15.
River Valley’s woes continued in Game
3. Davis took control of the match again
with a 12-0 run to give the Lady Spartans
an 18-2 edge. The Lady Raiders fell in the
third set 25-8.
The Silver and Black began to come
back in Game 4. After going down 18-14

Southern sweeps Lady Eagles
By Alex Hawley
ahawley@civitasmedia.com

the best jump within the
Top 25. The Pirates are
yet to lose a match in 10
events this year (8-0-2).
The ranking is the best
since a No. 11 status on
Oct. 6, 2009.
No. 23 Lyon (Ark.)
dipped the farthest within
the poll as the Scots
dropped their ﬁrst decision of the season, 1-0, at
then-unranked Columbia
(Mo.) on Oct. 10.
Three teams were newcomers to the poll this
week - No. 21 Columbia,
No. 24 Martin Methodist
(Tenn.) and No. 25 West
Virginia University-Tech.
Columbia is ranked for
the ﬁrst time since Oct.
15, 2013 (No. 15); the
RedHawks are mentioned
for the ﬁrst time since
Sept. 30, 2014 (No. 12);
and WVU Tech is ranked
for the ﬁrst time in school
history.
Dalton State (Ga.),
Auburn Montgomery
(Ala.) and Georgia Gwinnett were the three teams
which dropped off the list.
Sixteen of the 19 conferences, Association of Independent Institutions (AII)
and unafﬁliated group
were represented this
week. The American Midwest Conference and the
Heart of America Athletic
Conference ﬁeld the most
representatives in the Top
25 with three total. Five
other leagues landed a
pair of ranked programs.

Alex Hawley | OVP Sports

TUPPERS PLAINS,
Ohio —The key is to
always be playing your
best at the end of the
season.
The Southern volleyball team concluded its
regular season with its
ﬁfth straight win Tuesday
night, defeating Tri-Valley
Conference Hocking Division host Eastern 3-1 at
‘The Nest’.
Southern (17-4, 13-3
TVC Hocking) fell behind
early in the opening
game, but allowed Eastern (12-10, 8-8) just six
service points, and the
Lady Tornadoes claimed
a 25-12 win.
The Lady Eagles —
who had won four of their
last ﬁve matches prior to
Tuesday — scored the
ﬁrst ﬁve points of the
second game, but Southern answered with seven
consecutive markers. The
Purple and Gold never
relinquished their lead and
rolled to a 25-19 victory.
After battling through
seven ties early in the
third game, EHS jumped
out to a 13-7 lead. The
Lady Tornadoes rallied to
tie the game twice, ﬁrst
at 14 and again at 21,
but the Purple and Gold
never took the lead and
fell by a ﬁnal of 25-21.
Following a trio of
lead changes early in the
fourth game, Eastern
built a three-point advantage. Southern rallied to
take the lead at 16-15 and
pushed the advantage to
as many as seven points,
en route to a 25-21 win.
“Coming in here you
never know what you’re
getting into, but I knew
they’d come ready to
play,” SHS head coach
Chris Carroll said. “I felt
like we really came out
strong in the ﬁrst two
games, but we backed off
in the third. You can’t do
that against good teams
and Eastern’s a good
team. It’s going to be
tough sometimes, we’re
not going to have an easy
game the rest of the year
and we have to learn to
battle through those when
we are down a little bit.”
The Lady Tornadoes
were led by Ali Deem and
Cameryn Harmon with
12 points apiece, followed
by Kamryn Smith with
eight. Jansen Wolfe and
Marlee Maynard both
posted seven points,
Savannah Bailey added
ﬁve, Hannah Hill chipped
in with four, Haley Hill
contributed two points,
while Amanda Cole had
one point in the win.

Southern senior Madison Maynard is challenged at the net by Eastern sophomore Mackenzie Brooks,
during the Lady Tornadoes 3-1 win at ‘The Nest’ on Tuesday.

See SOUTHERN | 10

Randy Payton is the Sports
Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.

OVP SPORTS SCHEDULE
Thursday, October 15
Volleyball
Jackson at Gallia Academy, 6:45
Miller at South Gallia, 7:15
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 6 p.m.
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian, 5:30
Wahama at Belpre, 6 p.m.
River Valley at Wellston, 7:15
Meigs at Athens, 7:15
Southern at Waterford, 7:15
Boys Soccer
Grace at Ohio Valley Christian, 5 p.m.
Gallia Academy at Jackson, 7 p.m.
Point Pleasant at Poca, 7 p.m.
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Poca, 5 p.m.
Friday, October 16
Football
Wahama at South Gallia, 7:30
Ravenswood at Point Pleasant, 7:30
Warren at Gallia Academy, 7 p.m.
Jackson at Meigs, 7:30
Waterford at Southern, 7:30
Paden City at Hannan, 7:30
River Valley at Vinton County, 7:30
Eastern at Trimble, 7:30
College Cross Country
Rio Grande at Wilmington College

See RAIDERS | 10

�CLASSIFIEDS

Daily Sentinel

Thursday, October 15, 2015 7

Miscellaneous

LEGALS

Notices

Professional Services

Help Wanted General

Help Wanted General

Porter’s
Pumpkin Patch

Southern Local Board
of Education

Pictures that have been
placed in ads at the
Gallipolis Daily Tribune
must be picked within
30 days. Any pictures
that are not picked up
will be
discarded.

SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

Gallipolis Career College:
Instructors, Economics,
Communications, (require
minimum of masterҋs degree)
Medical Office, and Accounting (require minimum of bachelor degree). Send resumes to
Director@gallipoliscareercollege.edu.

Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood WV 26164
Taking Applications for
Part-time LPN. Apply at
Facility. 304-273-9482

th

will be accepting bids for the
following surplus items;

st

Open Sept. 16 – Oct 31

2002 27 passenger
Freightliner Bus (bus#3)

3 acre Corn maze,
pumpkins, fodder, Indian
corn, and gourds.
Great for kids and groups
welcome

2002 72 passenger
International Bus (bus#8)

Can call in advance

740-416-8844

60609417

Sunday – Friday 2pm – dark
Saturdays 12pm – dark

Help Wanted General

Bids will be accepted until 1
p.m. on Friday, October 23,
2015. Southern Local Board of
Education reserves the right to
accept or reject any bids. All
items sold as is. Mail or
deliver to the Southern Local
Board of Education, 106
Broadway Street, P.O. Box
147, Racine, Ohio 45771
10/8/15-10/11/15-10/15/1510/18/15-10/22/15
Lost &amp; Found
LOST: Female English Coon
Dog, lost in Rutland,Langsville
area. Reward Offered.
Call 740-742-4204
Notices

$$$$$$$$$

BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY
MOTOR ROUTE
Would you like to deliver
newspapers as an
independent contractor under
an agreement with

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Sentinel??
s Be your own boss
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3 hours daily
s Must be 18 years of age
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license, dependable vehicle
&amp; provide proof of insurance
s Must provide your own
substitute
OPERATE YOUR OWN BUSINESS
WITH POTENTIAL REVENUE
OVER $1,000 PER MONTH
For more information please
email Tyler Wolfe at
twolfe@civitasmedia.com or
apply in person at
825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, OH
Mon-Fri 8:30 am - 4:30 pm

$$$$$$$$$

60583312

LEGALS
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY
L. SCOTT POWELL, JUDGE
CASE NO 20155014
NOTICE OF HEARING TO
TRACI SMITH, UNKNOWN
ADDRESS ON THE 16TH
DAY OF SEPTEMBER
ASHLEY SMITH FILED A
PETITION TO ADOPT
BRAYDON COI SMITH, DOB
4/20/04.
THIS MATTER IS SET FOR
HEARING NOVEMBER 5TH,
2015 AT 1:30 PM AT THE
PROBATE COURT
LOCATED AT 100 EAST
SECOND ST, RM 203
POMEROY, OH
9/24/15-10/1/15-10/8/1510/15/15-10/22/15-10/29/15

NOTICE OHIO VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
Recommends that you do
Business with People you
know, and NOT to send Money
through the Mail until you have
Investigated the Offering.

Yard Sale
Garage Sale Oct. 16 &amp; 17
at 41000 Laurel Cliff Rd. near
Alligator Jacks lots of stuff, rain
or shine.
Half Price, 123 Park Dr. Pt.
Pleasant 9A-6P Tuesday
through Saturday.
Large 6 Family Yard Sale
behind Masonic Lodge in
Racine. 10/15, 10/16, &amp; 10/17,
nice items to much to list.
Multi Family Indoor Yard Sales
Haskins Rd. off Rt. 588
clothes,furniture,customes,
jewerly,baby- clothes etc.
Friday 16- Saturday 17
from 9am- 4 pm
Yard Sale at the Rodney Community Center October
15,16,17. 9am to 4pm.
Home Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local References.
Established in 1975. Call
24HRS 740-446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing
www.rogersbasementwaterproofing.com

Miscellaneous

Money To Lend
NOTICE Borrow Smart. Contact
the Ohio Division of Financial Institutions Office of Consumer Affairs BEFORE you refinance your
home or obtain a loan. BEWARE
of requests for any large advance
payments of fees or insurance.
Call the Office of Consumer Affiars toll free at 1-866-278-0003 to
learn if the mortgage broker or
lender is properly licensed. (This
is a public service announcement
from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Company)

Help Wanted General
Bartender position opening
send resumes to P.O. Box 303
Gallipolis,Ohio 45631

60615895

Arbors at Gallipolis is now
hiring full time STNAҋs and
offering a 600.00 Sign on
Bonus. Must have Certificate
of Completion or State
Certification in Ohio.
Background check and drug
screen required. Please apply
in person at 170 Pinecrest
Drive in Gallipolis.

Genesis Respiratory has a
sales associate position available at our "The G.I.F.T.
Boutique" in Gallipolis Ohio, 9
AM to 4 PM Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Please send
resume to rodney.mullins @
genesisemployee.com
Industrial Cleaners
Needed in Buffalo, WV.
Full-time Positions Available.
Days/Evenings. Must pass
background check and drug
test. 304-768-6309.
Miscellaneous

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Adoption
A childless married couple (ages 34 &amp; 35) seeks to adopt. Will be
full-time mom &amp; devoted dad. Financial security. Expenses paid. Call/Text: Katie
&amp; Adam. 1-800-790-5260.
Basement Remodeling
All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call
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Life Alert. 24/7. One press of a button sends help FAST! Medical, Fire,
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Health Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs! **Limited time
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Health
Struggling with DRUGS or ALCOHOL? Addicted to PILLS? Take the first
step to recovery. Call The Addiction Hope &amp; Help Line for a free assessment. 1-800680-1364
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Help Wanted CDL-A DRIVERS: New Pay &amp; WEEKLY HOME TIME! Earn up
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Help Wanted Drivers: CDL A or B to transfer vehicles from area body plants to
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Hunting/Sports/Outdoors
#1 in Hunting Leases. The
Best Land = The Most Success. www.BaseCampLeasing.com/hunt 866-309-1507.
Lease your private hunting spot now.
Misc.
Computer problems - viruses, lost data, hardware or software issues?
Contact Geeks On Site! 24/7 Service. Friendly Repair Experts. Macs and PCs. Call for
FREE diagnosis. 1-800-413-0748
Misc. Got an older car, boat or RV? Do the humane thing. Donate it to the Humane
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We Can Help! WIN or Pay Nothing! Contact Bill Gordon &amp; Associates at 1-800-5470636 to start your application today!
Misc. If you or a loved one took the blood thinner Xarelto and had complications
due to internal bleeding after January 2012 you MAY be due financial compensation.
Call Injuryfone 1-800-756-5190
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Sell your structured settlement or annuity payments for CASH NOW. You
don’t have to wait for your future payments any longer! Call 1-800-419-5820
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Misc. A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest senior living referral service. Contact
our trusted, local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obligation. CALL 1-877-2774797
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Misc. WANT A PRINT AD that reaches over 2,000,000 OHIO READERS in just 7 days?
Your ad can be Display or Classified… “One Call, One Fee, 127 Ohio Newspapers,
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SAWMILLS from only $4397.00- MAKE &amp; SAVE MONEY with your own
bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In stock, ready to ship. Free Info/DVD: www.
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SOCIAL SECURITY
DISABILITY LAW
Win...No Award / No Fee

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Bill Gordon &amp; Associates is a nationwide practice limited to representing clients before the Social
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�SPORTS

8 Thursday, October 15, 2015

Daily Sentinel

Meigs falls to Buckeyes
TV SIMPLY COSTS LESS!

By Donald Lambert

elambert@civitasmedia.com

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ROCKSPRINGS, Ohio
— The Nelsonville-York
volleyball team defeated
host Meigs 3-1 in a Tri-Valley Conference Ohio Division match-up on Tuesday
in Meigs County.
The Lady Marauders
(5-16, 4-7 TVC Ohio)
dropped the ﬁrst two
games of the match 25-14
and 26-24. The Maroon
and Gold got the best of
the Lady Buckeyes during

Game 3 25-21. The visitors
took the fourth game 25-17
to seal the match.
Alliyah Pullins led the
Lady Marauders with four
aces. Jordan Roush had
three aces for the home
team, while Devin Humphreys, Devyn Oliver, Kassidy Betzing and Morgan
Lodwick had one ace for
Meigs.
Betzing led with a teamhigh 10 kills, followed
by Pullins with ﬁve kills.
Oliver and Allie Hanstine

each two kills, while Humphreys and Lodwick had
one kill a piece.
This was the Lady
Marauders’ second loss
in three games. The Lady
Buckeyes defeated the
Maroon and Gold 3-0 on
Sept. 17 at Nelsonville.
Meigs will travel to Athens for their regular season
ﬁnale on Thursday. Game
time is scheduled for 7:15
p.m.
Donald Lambert can be reached at
740-446-2342, ext. 2106

THE BEST TV ENTERTAINMENT AVAILABLE

Red Wolves outlast URG

PLUS
MANY
MORE

By Randy Payton

Channel availability varies by package

Livingston ﬁnished with a match-high
16 kills and added 17 digs in the win,
while Sydney Durham ﬁnished with 12
RIO GRANDE — Indiana University- kills and four blocks.
East spotted the University of Rio
Abbey Ketchem had a match-best 43
Grande a quick lead, but rallied to outassists to go along with 12 digs, while
last the RedStorm for a 22-25, 25-17,
Madison Yoder and Hannah Best had
25-23, 25-23 win, Tuesday night, in
25 and 20 digs, respectively.
Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic ConSophomore Madison Wilson (Groveference volleyball action at the Newt
port,
OH) and redshirt freshman
Oliver Arena.
Brooke
Bostelman (Kenton, OH) led
The Red Wolves earned their third
Rio
Grande
with 12 and 11 kills, respecstraight victory, improving to 15-11
tively.
overall and 5-1 inside the KIAC.
Junior Kayla Briley (Marion, OH)
Rio Grande, which had a ﬁve-match
winning streak snapped, slipped to 15-5 had 40 assists and 10 digs, while junior
Chandler Brown (Stockdale, OH) had a
overall and 3-3 in league play.
The RedStorm led for nearly all of its match-high 37 digs. Sophomore Kylan
Strausbaugh (Kingston, OH) and freshopening set win, while IU-East used a
man Trista Lackey (Jacksonville, OH)
10-2 spurt midway through the second
added 15 digs each in a losing cause,
set to pull away.
Rio rallied from an early 6-1 deﬁcit
while junior Autumn Snider (Marion,
to take a 23-21 lead - with the serve - in OH) had three blocks.
set three, but the Red Wolves scored
Rio Grande returns to action Wedneseach of the ﬁnal four points to grab the day night, hosting Salem (W.Va.) Intermatch lead.
national in a non-conference match.
Set four was a back-and-forth affair
First serve is set for 6 p.m.
as well. IU-East ran off three straight
The Tigers, a member of the NCAA
winners to snap a 20-20 tie, but the
Division II Great Midwest Athletic
RedStorm returned the favor to knot
Conference, brings a three-game losing
the score at 23-23.
streak and a 5-12 record into WednesThe Red Wolves forced a service
day’s match.
break to get to match point and then
got a Mallory Livingston kill to ﬁnish
Randy Payton is the Sports Information Director at the
University of Rio Grande.
things off.

For Ohio Valley Publishing

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DR_16461_10x4.5

Medical / Health

Arbors at Gallipolis is
now hiring full time
LPNs and offering a
1000.00 sign on
bonus. Background
check and drug
screen required.
Please apply in
person at 170
Pinecrest Drive in
Gallipolis.
Business &amp; Trade School
Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452
gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

For Sale By Owner
House at 114 Klicher Road
3 bedroom remodeled for sale
$54,900 call 740-446-6565
Houses For Sale
For Sale Nice 3 bedroom
home - Full Basement -Lg Lot
Good Neighborhood &amp; Location $125,000. Seller pays
closing cost, low or no down
payment if qualified. 740-4469966
Apartments/Townhouses
2 BR apt. 6 mi from Holzer.
$400 + dep. Some utilities pd.
740-418-7504 or 740-9886130
RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.
FIRST MONTH FREE
2 &amp; 3 BR apts
$425 mo &amp; up
sec dep $300 &amp; up
AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts
304-882-3017
Spring Valley Green Apartments 1 BR at $450 Month.
446-1599.
Twin Rivers
Tower is accepting applications for waiting
list for HUD
subsidized, 1BR apartment for the
elderly/disabled, call 304-6756679

Houses For Rent
3 Bedroom house for rent
Gallipolis city limits $600mo.
740-853-1101- NO PETS
2 BR House with car Garage &amp;
Basement at 945 Roush Lane
Cheshire $500mo plus utilities
Call 740-645-2698 or 740-3670221

STATEWIDE ADS

Inc. is an equal opportunity employer and a
drug free workplace.

STATEWIDE ADS

MISCELLANEOUS
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STATEWIDE ADS

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application today!

Attention: VIAGRA and
SALE
CIALIS USERS! A
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REDUCE YOUR CABLE
Got Knee Pain? Back
740)446-3570
BILL! Get a whole-home
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Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
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elry, dental gold, pre 1935 US curmoldings, two-inch thick Hands on the River Masrency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
heart pine flooring,
sage, Geraldine GardMTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Help Wanted General
Gallipolis. 446-2842
hand-forged locks, and
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Employment Opportunity
windows. Listed in the
Pennsylvania Ave.,
STATEWIDE ADS
Civitas Media is looking for a Customer Service Specialist.
National Register of HisCharleston, WV. Call
This is full time hourly position, with Benefits include Health
toric Places. Address:
(304) 541-9139 for an
insurance, 401K, vacation, etc. If interested-send resume to
CAREER TRAINING
4377 Route 220 North,
Julia Schultz at jschultz@civitasmedia.com.
appointment.
AIRLINE CAREERS beOld
Fields,
WV
26845.
gin here – Get started by
Civitas Media LLC is a growing company offering excellent
Visit woltz.com for inSOCIAL SECURITY
compensation and opportunities for advancement to motivated
training as FFA certified
formation or call 800DISABILITY BENEFITS. individuals.
Aviation Technician.
551-3588. Woltz &amp; Asso- Unable to work? Denied
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Franklin
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HELP WANTED –
DRIVERS
CDL-A Drivers: Earn up
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Call 866-722-5112 or
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om
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Applications are available at www.slurrypavers.com and can be
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Help Wanted General

Employment Opportunity
Service and Support Administrator wanted. Bachelorҋs degree
in Human Services related field required, prefer experience
working with individuals with developmental disabilities, families
and agencies; developing, coordinating and monitoring individualized service plans. Position requires strong written and verbal
skills. Great working environment; health, dental, vision and life
insurance; sick, vacation and personal leave. Send resume by
October 22nd, 2015 to: Meigs County Board of Developmental
Disabilities, P.O. Box 307, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.

Help Wanted General

JOB OPENING – CITY OF GALLIPOLIS
Job Requirements for new Victimҋs Assistance Attorney Position:
The Victimҋs Assistance Attorney is a full time position under the
direction of the City Solicitor. The VAA is funded by a grant
Victimҋs Of Crime Act (VOCA) and the State of Ohio Victimҋs
Assistance Act (SVAA). The position is for one year, beginning
immediately to September 30, 2016. This position is eligible for
insurance and retirement benefits but does not accrue sick and
vacation time.
The VAA will be responsible for providing a full range of legal
services to victims of crime in Gallia County, Ohio. The services
include advising victims of crime during criminal proceedings,
and also representing victims of crime in temporary and civil
protection order hearings, and any other civil proceedings to the
extent reasonably necessary. The goal of the grant and this
position is to provide legal representation to victims of crime with
the objective of separating the victim from their assailant.
The VAA will work closely with the Gallia County Victimҋs
Assistant, Susan Grady, as well as the City Solicitor, the various
local law enforcement agencies, and other entities in this and
related fields to accomplish the goals stated above.
The VAA is responsible for their own record keeping, including
logging and reporting their activities as required by federal
authorities for perpetuation of future grant funding.
Must possess the following qualifications:
1. Licensed attorney at law in good standing in the State of
Ohio.
Applications/Resumes are due to the office of the City Manager,
333 Third Avenue by Friday, October 16th.
The City of Gallipolis is an Equal Opportunity Employer.

 Ability to multi-task in several computer applications while
holding a conversation with a customer
 Type 30 words per minute
 Enjoy working in a fast-paced environment while maintaining a
professional attitude
 Answer customer inquiries and provide appropriate technical
and/or product related information
 Contact customers to follow up on customer issues or order
information
 Independently resolve customer support issues and escalate
when necessary
 Document all contacts, actions, and responses in customer
database
 Maintain working knowledge of products and services
 Strong mathematical skills
 Excellent written and verbal communication skills
 Strong organizational, problem solving and analytical skills
 Commitment to excellence and high standards with close
attention to detail
 Ability to work independently and as a part of a team
 Ability to work well under pressure and diffuse difficult
situations
 Ability to handle multiple projects
Civitas Media has publications in NC, SC, TN, KY, VA, WV, OH,
IL, MO, GA, OK, IN and PA.
EOE

�COMICS

Daily Sentinel

BLONDIE

Thursday, October 15, 2015 9

By Dean Young and John Marshall

BEETLE BAILEY

By Mort, Greg and Brian Walker
Today’s answer

RETAIL

By Norm Feuti

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI AND LOIS

By Chris Browne

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�10 Thursday, October 15, 2015

SPORTS

Daily Sentinel

Unbeaten Bengals have grown up

Southern

dling was our number
one priority and deﬁcit
tonight.
From Page 6
At the net Southern
the Bengals (5-0) unbeaten. It sugdium. Cincinnati trailed the twoCINCINNATI (AP) — The
was led by Wolfe with
gested that this version in stripes
time defending NFC champion
unbeaten Bengals treated it like a
Eastern’s service
nine kills and nine
attack was led by
ﬁnally has what it takes to win big
Seahawks by 17 points. Nobody
playoff game.
blocks, followed by
Annalisa Boano with
games against good teams, even
makes up that kind of ground on
And for three quarters, they
Cole with seven kills
11 points including
when things don’t go so well.
played like it, too: An interception that kind of team.
and three blocks. Maditwo aces, followed by
“You have to rise up and play
And then the Bengals showed
in the end zone, a fumble returned
son Maynard had ﬁve
Morgan Baer with nine kills and four blocks,
your best for a quarter and a half
for a touchdown, a long touchdown they’re turning into that kind of
points and two aces.
to win a football game,” left tackle
team.
pass wiped out by a penalty.
Faith Teaford added
Brittney Leach ﬁnished four kills and four
Andrew Whitworth said on MonA 27-24 victory in overtime on
By that point, some fans were
with seven points and
blocks, Sierra Cleland
day.
Sunday did more than just keep
ﬁling out of Paul Brown Staone ace, Katlyn Barﬁnished with three
ber added ﬁve points,
kills and three blocks,
Morgain Little marked while Brynn Harris
three points, while
Alex Truance led Lady
kills. Toler and Smith had
couple of weeks. They were
hammered home four
Kelsey Johnson and
Raiders with 10 service
two kills a piece, while Arm- in it for each other, which is
kills. Marlee Maynard
Sidney Cook rounded
what we need to do to really
points and eight kills. Gilmstrong and Rachel Horner
posted a team-best 20
From Page 6
out the EHS scoring
compete. It was really great
assists, followed by
ore, Smith and Toler each
had one kill each.
with two points and
to see that.”
Hannah Hill with six,
had
ﬁve
points,
while
Walter
Toler
led
with
a
team-high
in the middle of the set,
one point respectively. while Deem led the
The Lady Raiders dropped
had
three
points.
Jayanna
three
aces
for
River
Valley.
Angel Toler’s ﬁve points gave
“We let them get
SHS defense with 12
Armstrong contributed two
“It was outstanding to see their ﬁfth match in a row.
the Lady Raiders the 19-18
up
several points on
digs.
The
Silver
and
Black
were
points for the Lady Raiders. the girls to band together
lead. Despite the late rally
us and it’s hard to
Barber led Eastern’s
also
defeated
by
Alexander
Walter had ﬁve kills to
and really play well,” Denise
from River Valley, the Lady
battle back, especially
net
attack with 12
3-0
on
Sept.
17.
River Valley’s efforts, folToler said. “This was the
Spartans held on to win the
against a good team
kills
and three blocks,
River
Valley
will
end
the
lowed by Gilmore with three best they’ve played in a
fourth set 25-22.
like Southern,” EHS
followed by Kelsey
regular season on the road
head coach Katie WilJohnson with 11 kills
against Wellston on Thursliams said. “It’s very,
and four blocks. Boano
day. Match time is scheduled
very important that we marked six kills and
for 6 p.m.
handle the ball from
a block, Mackenzie
the get go and get into Brooks posted four
Donald Lambert can be reached at
our grove. Ball han740-446-2342, ext. 2106
kills and two blocks,
while Baer had three
kills, one block and a
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in the loss. Barber also
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�SENIOR
$2?&lt;=.+CM��-&gt;9,/&lt;�� M� �� �s��239�&amp;+66/C� ?,63=2381

Quarterly
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Meigs County Council on Aging buys new van
By Lindsay Kriz
65&lt;3DĽ-3@3&gt;+=7/.3+L-97

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The new van for the Meigs County Council on Aging
is a 2014 Toyota Sienna that is wheelchair-accessible.
Before the van can be used, it must be compliant with the
Americans with Disabilities Act. The oldest van in the fleet
is a 1999 Dodge Caravan. All vehicles are well-maintained,
according to Meigs County Council on Aging Executive
Director Beth Shaver.

POMEROY, Ohio — A
new van has joined the
ﬂeet of those available at
the Meigs County Council
on Aging for residents 60
and older.
The van, a 2014 Toyota
Sienna, will serve as a
transport for anyone who
needs a ride to the doctor’s
ofﬁce, a hair appointment,
or any type of appointment
in the Ohio Valley area,
sometimes outside Meigs
County.
Beth Shaver, the executive director, said that
while the van was pur-

chased with the council’s
own money about two
weeks ago, it is not in use
just yet, as it has to be
compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act,
originally enacted by Congress in 1990.
“Reliable transportation
is extremely important
because that (carries)
precious cargo,” she said.
“The staff here have done
wonderful job maintaining
them.”
Until now, the newest
vehicle to the ﬂeet was a
2005 Ford Econovan purchased in 2004, with the
oldest in the ﬂeet a 1999
Dodge Caravan. While

V-J Day 70 years later

the newest vehicle is still
welcome, Shaver said
that the other vehicles in
the ﬂeet are still reliable.
Some features that must be
installed in the wheelchairaccessible van include a
ﬁre extinguisher and a
biohazard kit, among others. The vans are all driven
by designated drivers with
special training.
Dan Dunham, who does
marketing for the council,
has designed a new logo
that will go on all of the
vans to revamp the council’s image.
“We’re trying to start to
appeal to the baby boomer
generation, which is a dif-

ferent group,” Shaver said.
Shaver said she wants
the public to realize that
the goal of the council is to
keep people in their own
homes as long as possible,
as opposed to immediately
going to an assisted living
facility if they’re initially
not able to do certain tasks
like they once were able.
“It’s very hard for most
people to make that ﬁrst
phone call here saying, ‘I
need your help,’ if you’ve
been independent all you
life and never had to have
help cleaning or getting
meals ﬁxed. If you see
See VAN | 2

Holzer center starts
program for dementia,
Alzheimer patients
Staff Report

�38.=+C��&lt;3D�n��&amp;

Mowrey served in World War II as a Navy radioman from June 1944 to June 1946.

Mason Navy Vet reflects on his time at sea
By Lindsay Kriz
65&lt;3DĽ-3@3&gt;+=7/.3+L-97

MASON, W.Va. — On Aug.
14, 1945, Japan ofﬁcially surrendered to all allies, which was
considered an end to World War
II. The day became known as
V-J, or Victory over Japan Day.
And on that day in the Caribbean Sea, a young West Virginia
man aboard a destroyer ship
learned that he would not have
to ﬁght in Japan.
“I had relatives who said we
shouldn’t have dropped (the
bombs),” Mowrey said. “but
they saved my butt and all the
other people on the ship. (If we
had to go to Japan) it was going
to be bloody battle.”
Milford Mowrey, 89, of Mason,
W.Va., ofﬁcially drafted for the
Navy in June of 1944 to keep
from serving in the Army.
“The psychiatrist (evaluating me), he said, ‘Why did you
volunteer for the Navy?’ I said,
‘Because I’m turning 18 tomorrow and the Army’s going to get
me,” Mowrey said.
The psychiatrist passed Mowrey, and he was accepted into
the Navy a day before his 18th
birthday.
Mowrey said another stroke of
luck helped him to get into the
Navy as well. As a young man,
Mowrey had partial blindness in

his left eye, and was told that
if he couldn’t read size 20 print
from six feet away from both
eyes he could join the Navy but
couldn’t go to sea.
“They passed me anyhow,” he
said. “I got to go to sea, which is
what I wanted.”
Mowrey joined the Navy a
month after three fellow Ohio
Valley men — Jack Lewis, Bill
Buck and Lloyd Wright — had
joined. After completing boot
camp in Great Lakes, Ill., Mowrey was sent to Northwestern
University in Evanston, Ill. for
Radio School, where he became
a radioman who translated code.
After completing school, Mowrey went to Brooklyn Navy Yard,
where he joined the crew of the
USS Vogelgesang (DD862) and
did a shakedown cruise, or test
cruise, from Brooklyn to Guantanamo Bay and back under Commander Otto Spahr.
The crew again returned to
Guantanamo Bay to join a ﬂeet
of ships in 1945. The ships were
waiting to see if the atomic
bombs dropped in Japan would
cause the Japanese to surrender. If not, the ships were to
go into Japan’s harbors. While
worrying about the Japanese,
Mowrey said many men were
also worried about the presence
of Russians as well, who may
attack from the East and whose

�9?&lt;&gt;/=C�:29&gt;9

Mowrey stands with his grandmother,
Mary Yost, who Mowrey said raised him.

relationship with the allies would
continue to suffer throughout
the Cold War.
Another stressful aspect for
the men aboard ships was the
possibility of being hit by German submarines, which had
become notorious for downing
myriad ships and airplanes
throughout the war. Mowrey
spoke about one incident in
which his ship was escorting a
convoy toward Iceland, which
was considered halfway between
the United States and Europe.
See VET | 4

GALLIPOLIS — Holzer Senior Care Center
recently featured The Allen’s Cognitive Testing
Program for Patients with Alzheimer/Dementia at
a Family Night event.
The objectives when caring for a residents diagnosed with Alzheimer’s or Dementia include: What
factors contribute
to challenging
behaviors, what
are the risks with
utilization of antipsychotic medications for patients
with dementia,
describe general
techniques for
managing behaviors, and identify
the most common challenging
behavior and
ways to help.
Alzheimer’s/
Dementia is the
sixth leading
cause of death
in the United
States, and
cannot be prevented, cured, or
slowed. Almost
�9?&lt;&gt;/=C�:29&gt;9=
two-thirds of
Jason King, therapy manager of
Americans with
Holzer Senior Care Center, and
Leslie Shoecraft, music rherapist for
Alzheimer’s are
women. Every 67 Rhythm-n-You program, both gave
presentations at the event.
seconds, someone in the United
States develops the disease. Alzheimer’s is deﬁned
as the progressive degeneration of the brain that
leads to dementia.
Holzer Senior Care Center has begun utilizing
Allen’s Cognitive Testing program to get a feel of
where a resident’s cognition is. “All individuals are
affected differently,” stated Jason Moore, COTA,
Therapy Manager Holzer Senior Care Center. “It’s
learning how the resident’s respond to the stimulants and his/her environment and providing them
with a purpose and direction to focus on.”
“With implementing these strategies, we are
taking another step for treatment of dementia and
Alzheimer’s,” stated Teresa Remy-Detty, D.Sc.,
Vice President of Post Acute Care Division for
Holzer Health System . “Our goal is to get away
from prescription treatment, and provide a more
heartfelt and hand on care for our residents.”
Also incorporated into the treatment plan
includes music therapy, provided by Leslie Shoecraft, NMT, Rhythm-N-You. “The brain responds
to music,” Shoecraft commented. “It provides a
way to have more meaningful interaction and communication. In some cases, music can stimulate
movement.” Music therapy is being offered for
residents weekly at Holzer Senior Care Center currently and is showing to have a calming and engaging effect on the residents participating.
Taking this next step of educating our staff and
implementing the cognitive testing is a way to
show our commitment to our residents,” stated
Moore. “We want to do well, and we want to provide quality individualized care for our residents.”
Holzer Senior Care Center, a 70-bed nursing
facility located in Bidwell, Ohio, is an integral part
of Holzer Health System. The facility is one of the
top nursing home within a 50 mile radius of its
service area. Holzer Senior Care Center has been
providing medical, nursing, and rehabilitation therapies to both short-term and long-term residents
since 1995.
For more information, call Holzer Senior Care
Center at (740) 446-5001 or email info@holzer.org.

�SENIOR QUARTERLY

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Jobs retirees may overlook

�239�&amp;+66/C� ?,63=2381

By Ginny Grimsley

Hidden fees can upend retirement goals

�9&lt;��239�&amp;+66/C� ?,63=2381

By Toni Tantlinger
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OHIO VALLEY — What do school kids and
retirees have in common during these dog days of
summer? For many, it’s having lots of time and not
knowing what to do with it.
“But that comparison begins to breakdown almost
immediately, because in a few short weeks, kids go
back to school, but retirees have an indeﬁnite amount
of time to contend with,” says ﬁnancial advisor Jeff
Bucher, president of Citizen Advisory Group (www.
citizenadvisory.com), a ﬁrm that engages its community with education and charity efforts.
“Worse still for retirees, many don’t know if they
can afford the time they have left, which may not be
yielding a satisfying lifestyle. After all the technical
details I review with clients and their ﬁnances, such
as protecting and growing their money, I sometimes
offer a bit of unexpected advice: consider your
employment options.”
Many people who take his advice often do so more
for overall happiness than money, he says. Work gives
us structure, purpose and a social network. Bucher
reviews many fun options that retirees often ﬁnd
appealing.
�=eb\�Yekhi[0�J^_i�_i�W�fefkbWh�efj_ed�i_dY[�ie�
many retirees love golf. And, if you are a morning
person, work at a golf course is perfectly suited for
you. Some popular jobs available at a golf course for
retirees include golf shop staff, ranger, starters and
golf course maintenance.
�H[jW_b0�7�ic_b_d]�\WY[�WdZ�W�fb[WiWdj�Z_ifei_j_ed�
has earned many retirees positions as greeters at
places like Wal-Mart, but there are other stores that
may better ﬁt your personality. That may include
cosmetics at Macy’s or the shoe department at Dick’s
Sporting Goods. Think about where you like to shop.
�Ifehj_d]�l[dk[0�?\�oek�bel[�ifehji"�Yedi_Z[h�
being an usher at a venue. Ushers assist fans to their
seats and help answer any questions the fans may
have. You might have to walk up and down steps, so
if that’s difﬁcult for you to do ﬁnd out beforehand
whether the job involves steps. The job may have
perks, such as free tickets.
�Jekh�]k_Z[0�7�jekh�]k_Z[Éi�`eX�_i�je�_djheZkY[�
people to places that they are unfamiliar with, which
may include wineries, museums and a city’s historical
locations.
�J^[c[�fWha�%�pee0�?\�oek�mWdj�je�XhW]�WXekj�
your job to your grandkids, look into the local zoo
or theme park. Some of the most popular jobs for
retirees at these parks include ticket takers, working
at a merchandise stand or helping assist guests at an
information booth.
�Oekh�Ykhh[dj�eh�\ehc[h�`eX$�J^_i�ed[�cWo�j^hem�
you for a loop, but it could be perfect. You’ll likely
maintain the same salary as the rest of your earning
years; it’s something you already know and are good
at; and, many people derived much satisfaction from
their profession. You may ﬁnd new freedom in knowing that this job is more optional than before, which
may engender a sense of freedom and, perhaps, an
outside-the-box mentality.

OHIO VALLEY — Saving
enough money for retirement can
be a tricky proposition even under
the best circumstances.
But when some of those dollars
are being siphoned away by hidden – and perhaps unnecessary
– fees, then the path to a secure
retirement becomes even more
difﬁcult to navigate.
Even small fees can have a
major impact over time, which is
why people need to be aware of
what they are being charged, and
whether other options exist that
make for a better and smarter
investment, says Casey B. Weade,
a retirement-planning professional
and author of the book “The Purpose-Based Retirement” (www.
purposebasedretirement.com).
“Probably 99 percent of people
have no clue what they are really
paying in fees and expenses,” he
says. “They are bleeding out their
life savings.”
Weade says those hidden fees,
which are abundant in the ﬁnancial industry, are his No. 1 frustration with the profession.
“There are a couple of products
that consistently illustrate the
problem with hidden fees – mutual funds and variable annuities,”
he says. “Many people believe
their retirement advisor only
makes money when something
is bought or sold. But that’s not
always the case.
“With mutual funds, for example, some fees are disclosed in
the prospectus for the funds, but
often there are additional ongoing
fees that are not consistently or
adequately disclosed.”
Some of those mutual fund fees
and costs include:
�IjWj[Z�;nf[di[i0
o Loads. Different classes of
mutual funds have different types
of loads or charges that are similar
to commissions in that they compensate the ﬁnancial professional

Van
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physical capabilities declining, they
call here for help,” Shaver said.
“We’re just here to help. Using
our services doesn’t mean you’re
incapacitated in any way. We’re just
here to help.”
Another main activity of the
vans is to deliver Meals on Wheels,
which is special meals prepared
ﬁve days a week for those 60 and
older who are essentially home
bound. There are also meals that
are served in the cafeteria on site,
including a hot bar, a salad bar and
a separate senior hot meal, which
must be eaten on site as per the
rules of the funding that allows for
the meals. Shaver explained that
this rule is instilled so that anyone who takes food home doesn’t
accidentally eat it days later if it’s
spoiled, potentially chokes, or any
other hazards that may occur from
eating alone.

for selling the fund to you. Some
are front-end and you are charged
at the time you make your initial
investment. That charge usually is
about 5 percent. Others are backend, meaning you are assessed
the charge if you sell the mutual
fund, usually within a speciﬁed
timeframe.
o Expense ratios. Other than
loads, this is the only cost many
retirees and pre-retirees are aware
of, Weade says. The expense ratio
is used to pay distribution costs,
administration fees, management
fees and marketing costs. The
expense ratio can be 1 percent or
more, depending on the mutual
fund. According to the Investment
Company Institute, the average
expense ratio in an equity mutual
fund is 1.4 percent per year.
o Advisory fees. In addition
to the internal costs of owning a
mutual fund, you may be paying a
management fee to your advisor,
Weade says. This fee can range
anywhere form 0.25 percent up
to 2.5 percent. Even if you aren’t
aware of it, you should be able to
determine how much this one is
costing you because it is required
to be disclosed on investor documents.
�KdijWj[Z�;nf[di[i0
o Soft dollar costs. One of
the most difﬁcult mutual fund
expenses to uncover is soft dollar
costs, Weade says. Often, mutual
fund managers are provided software, education, research or other
services by brokerage ﬁrms. In
exchange for these beneﬁts, the
brokerage house gets the brokerage business and may charge a
higher commission for the trading
of stocks within the fund. That
commission is paid by the investor.
o Tax Impact. Mutual funds are
pass-through entities, meaning
you pay tax on every transaction
inside the mutual fund whether
you beneﬁted or not. The average
tax cost ratio for stock mutual
funds is 1 percent to 1.2 percent

“It’s not a punishment, it’s a protection,” Shaver said.
According to John Mattson,
associate director, for anyone who
comes to eat meals on campus,
seniors 60 and older are suggested
to give a donation of $3, with costs
for others at $6 for the senior hot
meal and $5 for the salad or hot
bar. All money raised goes to supplementing the senior nutritional
programs. The council has raises
money with baking and catering.
But while the vans are for residents 60 and older, Dunham wants
people to know there are other
services available to the community, including a gym on site that
is $10 a month for seniors 60 and
over and $20 a month for anyone
ages 18-59. Other services include
homemaker services, wherein
someone can come out and clean
for someone unable to, laundry services and even services regarding
insurance and medicare.
In the long run, Shaver and
Mattson said that one of the advantages of providing these services

“Probably 99 percent of
people have no clue what
they are really paying in
fees and expenses. They
are bleeding out their life
savings.”
– Casey B. Weade
"/&gt;3&lt;/7/8&gt;[:6+88381�:&lt;90/==398+6

per year, according to a Forbes
magazine article.
o Trading Commissions. Potentially one of the largest undisclosed expenses inside a mutual
fund is trading commissions.
“Every time something is bought
or sold within a mutual fund there
is a commission charged and,
believe it or not, these costs legally do not need to be disclosed,”
Weade says. A Wall Street Journal
article noted that a 2009 study of
thousands of U.S. equity mutual
funds showed that the trading
costs investors, on average, 1.44
percent.
Once you know about the fees
and charges attached to mutual
funds, you may be able to negotiate to lower some of them, Weade
says. “I regularly audit investors’
portfolios and ﬁnd expenses in
excess of 3 percent annually,” he
says.
But he also often recommends
“separately managed accounts”
as an alternative to mutual funds
because there are no loads and
there is more transparency.
Separately managed accounts are
somewhat similar to mutual funds,
but can be tailored speciﬁcally to
the individual needs of the investor.
“Regardless of the investment, it
is vitally important to understand
how valuable it is to avoid hidden
fees and charges that can add up
and prove costly, especially over
decades,” Weade says. “You want
to keep as many of your hardearned dollars in your account and
working for you as possible.”

for seniors is the lower cost to
families.
“A person gets Meals on Wheels
ﬁve days a week, has a homemaker
once a week for a couple hours,
and trips to the doctor and pharmacy (with the vans) is about
$5,000 a week, which is paid from
local levy dollars and programs,”
Shaver said. “If you compare that
to keeping a person in a nursing
home for a month, nursing home
care, we’re saying $5,000 for a
year, with some nursing homes,
at the very cheapest, are about
$5,000 for a month.”
“Every single one of them is saving about $50,000, $60,000 a year,”
Mattson said.
Shaver again emphasized how
grateful the council is to have a
new vehicle to help the community.
“We’re really happy to have it,
and we really hope all passengers
will be happy to ride it,” she said.
For any questions, reach the
council at 740-992-2161.
"/+-2��38.=+C��&lt;3D�+&gt;�� �[�� [ � ��($L�

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R. Craig Mathews, DDS
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%XLIRW��3LMS������
'EPP��������������SV����������������JSV�ETTSMRXQIRX
60615511

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�239�&amp;+66/C� ?,63=2381

$2?&lt;=.+CM��-&gt;9,/&lt;�� L� �� �����

Gallipolis centenarian credits faith with longevity
By Michael Johnson
73-2+/64928=98Ľ-3@3&gt;+=7/.3+L-97

GALLIPOLIS, Ohio — Helen
McNealey West may not be able
to remember many things, but
she sure can recall some of the
important ones.
One is the fact that she has
lived in Gallipolis her entire life,
which isn’t too shabby considering she’s an extremely lucid
100-year-old woman.
“I’ve lived here on this square
all my life,” she said of the
house she’s called home since
she was 5 years old – which was
1920. She added that she was
actually born at a home two
doors away from her current
dwelling.
West was well aware of family and friends who stopped at
her home during an open house
Sept. 17 to celebrate her 100th
birthday. While she says she
knew many of the people in her
home Thursday, she has trouble
remembering their names.
“I tend to forget now and

then,” she said.
West has witnessed many
changes, but couldn’t remember
them all.
“Gallipolis has changed. I
won’t say it’s gone downhill, but
we don’t have all the stores that
we used to have. That’s sad,”
she said. “You could go into
town and meet a lot of people
that you knew.”
West was born Sept. 17,
1915, the daughter of the late
John C. and Mittie (Fadeley)
McNealey. She graduated from
Gallia Academy High School in
1933 and immediately went to
work for Commercial &amp; Savings
Bank as a bookkeeper.
“I worked for 40 years at
Commercial &amp; Savings Bank,
which was in the Hotel Lafayette Building,” she said. “I could
just walk to work, come home
for lunch, and then go back. I
loved my job.”
West retired from the bank in
1973. She credits GAHS for getting her the job at the bank.
“At that time, we had

an ofﬁce training class (at
GAHS),” she said. “The teachers would put the students, if
they were good in shorthand
or typing, into the stores. They
put me in the Commercial
&amp; Savings Bank. I knew the
people in that bank, too. Some
of them were my neighbors
around here.”
In 1952, West married the
love of her life, Wendell F. West,
in Cincinnati. She has been a
member of First Presbyterian
Church of Gallipolis since 1938;
is a lifetime member of the Gallia Historical Society; and was
one of the ﬁrst members of the
Gallipolis Garden Club, where
she has been able to express her
love for ﬂower gardening.
Some of the attendees of
West’s open house included Gallipolis city commissioners Tony
Gallagher and Michael Brown,
who each gave Gallipolis’ newest centenarian a proclamation
from the city. Gallia County
Commissioner Harold Montgomery also presented West

�3-2+/6��928=98�n�$37/=[#/8&gt;38/6

Helen West, who turned 100 years old on Sept. 17, blows out the candles on her
birthday cake during an open house in her honor.

with a proclamation, as well as
Gallia County’s ofﬁcial ﬂag.
West also received recognition from state Rep. Ryan Smith
and Ohio Gov. John Kasich.
Many of the open house
attendees, including Gallagher,
asked West her secret to longevity. Her response was similar to
one asked earlier by another of
her party guests.

“Shredded wheat,” she said.
But on a more serious note,
West said she credits her faith
for staying healthy for the past
century.
“It’s the good Lord’s will that
I’ve been here this long,” she
said. “That’s how I feel about it.
It’s up to Him.”
"/+-2��3-2+/6��928=98�+&gt;�� �[
[
M�
/B&gt;L� �� M�9&lt;�98�$A3&gt;&gt;/&lt;�Ľ�239�.3&gt;9&lt;�35/L

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ESTATES
No amount too small
or too large!

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740-446-3808
501 Washington Street
South Point
740-377-9095
Visit our website at:
www.qcnservices.com

Fine Jewelry

STEPP
MONUMENT CO.

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740 - 446 - 2842

60610989

s Licensed Practical
Nurses
s Certiﬁed Nurse
Aides
s Home Health Aides
s Community CPR
s Educational
Services
s Home Health Care
Training
s Physical Therapy
s Occupational
Therapy

60610987

s Skilled Nursing
s In Home
Assessments
s Perinatal Care
s Homemaking
Services
s Respite Services
s Daily Living
Services
s Minor Home
Modiﬁcations
s Private Duty
s Registered Nurses

Gallia County
Council on Aging
The Services listed below are available to our seniors.
Please contact us if we can be of assistance.
HOME CARE SERVICES - Personal Care, Nutrition, Homemaking, Errands,
Medical Appointment Escort. Contact: Catherine Gill
HOME DELIVERED MEALS - Serving All Townships of Gallia County. Frozen
Meals for Weekends, Hot Meals Mon-Fri. Contact: Tina Crews 740-446-7000

CALL: 304-675-6573 or 304-674-1379

ADULT DAY SERVICES HOURS: 9:30 am - 2:30 pm Monday-Friday
&amp;OHDQ�6DIH�(QYLURQPHQWV��$FWLYLWLHV���&amp;RQWDFW��+DOH\�:DXJK�������������
TRANSPORTATION SERVICES: Shopping, Senior Center Lunch Program,
Senior Center Activities Available Mon-Fri. 8:00 am - 4:00 pm. Contact: Sandra
Ross 740-446-7000
60612918

60615564

For your LOCAL provider

x OXYGEN
x CPAP/BIPAP
x DIABETIC SHOES
x HOSPITAL BEDS
x WHEELCHAIRS

60612920

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Gallipolis

Jackson

594-7000

446-0007

286-0007

EVERY TUESDAY, SENIOR CITIZENS
55 YEARS AND OLDER

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ON THAT DAY’S PURCHASES
(EVEN ON SALE ITEMS!!!)

60612919
60381747

Route 62 North of Point Pleasant
(Camp Conley)
Mon. - Fri. 3 p.m. to 6 p.m

SENIOR CENTER MEALS - 12:00 pm Mon-Fri. Contact: Tina Crews 740-446-7000

�SENIOR QUARTERLY

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�239�&amp;+66/C� ?,63=2381

AAA7 presents awards at appreciation brunch
For the Times-Sentinel

PORTSMOUTH —
Giving thanks. That
was common place at
this year’s Area Agency
on Aging District 7
(AAA7) Annual Appreciation Brunch, which
was recently held at the
Southern Ohio Medical
Center Friends Center in
Portsmouth.
During the event,
several individuals and
groups throughout the
Agency’s 10-county district were recognized
for their service and
dedication to not only
the agency as a whole,
but more importantly, the
communities and seniors
served by the agency.
The Area Agency on
Aging District 7 serves
the following counties:
Adams, Brown, Gallia,
Highland, Jackson, Lawrence, Pike, Ross, Scioto
and Vinton.
Special awards that
were presented at the
event to individuals or
groups included:
William A. Jenkins
Award (Outstanding
Contributor to Our
Southern Ohio Aging
Network)
This year’s Area
Agency on Aging District
7 “William A. Jenkins
Award” was presented
to Jane Taylor, past state
director of the Ohio
AARP, who recently
retired. The AAA7 presents the award annually
to an outstanding contributor to the southern
Ohio aging network. The
announcement of the
recipient of the award
is kept secret until the
day of the appreciation
brunch. The award is
named in memory of William A. Jenkins, a native
of Gallia County, who
helped build the aging
network in southern Ohio
through the Area Agency
on Aging District 7.
During the award presentation, Pam Matura,
executive director of the
AAA7, acknowledged
Taylor for the signiﬁcant
impact she made during
her career throughout
the aging network, not
only in the local district
and Ohio, but also her
contributions to providing input and change on
a national level.

Vet
�&lt;97�:+1/��

“We got a call (from
an airman) who said
‘You have a torpedo’
coming at you,” Mowrey
said. Anyone who was
considered necessary
was to go to the upper
deck, and Mowrey said
he believed the men

Intergenerational
Educator of the Year
Award
The Area Agency on
Aging District 7 “Intergenerational Educator of
the Year Award” was presented to nine local university/college programs
that, over the years, have
assisted the AAA7 with
student placements to
enrich the learning experience for their students
and give them a real life
work environment.
The universities/colleges that were recognized
included: Ohio University
Social Work Program
in Athens, Ohio University Chillicothe Campus
Social Work Program,
Ohio University Southern Campus in Ironton
Social Work Program,
Ohio University Nursing
in Athens, Shawnee State
University Department of
Nursing in Portsmouth,
Shawnee State University
Department of Business
Administration Health
Care Administration
in Portsmouth, University of Rio Grande
Social Work Program in
Rio Grande, Southern
State Community College Human and Social
Services in Hillsboro,
and Morehead State
University at Ashland
Social Work Program in
Kentucky.
Partnership Award
This year’s Area Agency on Aging District 7
“Partnership Award” was
presented to the University of Rio Grande Esther
Allen Greer Museum for
their wonderful work
with the AAA7 during the annual Senior
Citizens Art Show and
Poetry/Essay Contest
that is held during May
and June each year on
the campus of the University of Rio Grande.
Staff at the Museum
have been a huge supporter and friend of the
event for many years,
providing use of the
Museum for the actual
hanging and preparation
of the Art Show, as well
as the two weeks the
art is exhibited and the
closing Meet the Artists Tea that is attended
by artists, guests, and
the community. The
AAA7 Senior Citizens
Art Show, which began

in 1982, has grown over
the years and during this
time, the University of
Rio Grande has been a
steady supporter and
partner. Their continued
assistance has been a
vital asset to the success
of the event, which is
a favorite among many
seniors in the district.
Caregiver of the Year
Award
The Caregiver of the
Year Award was presented to Aaron Bollinger of
Lawrence County.
Informal caregivers
are those unpaid individuals such as a spouse,
partner, family member,
friend, or neighbor who
are involved in assisting
others with activities of
daily living or medical
tasks. 65 million caregivers make up 29 percent
of the adult population
providing this care in the
United States.
A Gallup survey in
November 2012 found
72 percent of caregivers were caring for a
parent, step-parent,
mother in-law or father
in-law, with 50 percent
of these caregivers being
employed full-time.
Working caregivers often
must rearrange their
work schedules, decrease
their work hours, or take
unpaid leave to care for
their loved ones.
The Caregiver Support Program at the Area
Agency on Aging District
7 (AAA7) was created
in 2001 through Older
Americans Act funding to
assist informal caregivers
with information about
caring for themselves and
their loved ones, providing respite services, and
linking caregivers to
other needed services.
Regional Long-Term
Care Ombudsman Volunteers
Chelsea Adams, Ronda
Bivens, Carol Carter,
Daniel Farley, Jeannette
Hayburn, JoAnn Hilderbrand, Lois Ann Lemley,
Nancy Miley, Dena Morris, Debra Neal, Joan
Phillips, Maryellen Pratt,
Elizabeth Prayner, Lavon
Shields, Gerald Towler
and Kathy Wolf-Utter.
Wellness Coach Volunteers
Cher Belllar, Linda
Black, Libby Brisker,
Etta Charlebois, Ashley

were told to go to to the
top deck so that they
had a chance to make it
off the ship if they were
hit.
“I was high as I could
get near a life raft,” he
said. “And you could see
bubbles coming from
(the torpedo).”
While others in the
convoy planned to move
their ships to avoid

being hit, Mowrey said
Cmdr. Spahr refused to
move the USS Vogelgesang.
“Other men got after
(Spahr) and he said ‘No,
I’m protecting this bigger ship, I’m supposed
to protect that ship, and
I’m supposed to take the
hit,’” Mowrey related.
In the end, the torpedo cleared the ship
by 5-10 feet, and that
the USS Vogelsang, a
destroyer ship, had done
its job by protecting the
larger ships around it.
After his two-year
service, Mowrey was

Pictured front row, left to right, Carole Alder, Ohio University; Charles Gorman, Southern State
Community College; Gary Fenderbosch, AAA7 Board of Trustees President; and State Representative
Doug Green. Second row, left to right, Megan Brown, Shawnee State University; Joy Shytle, Ohio
University Southern; Kaci Compton, Field Representative for US Congressman Brad Wenstrup; Juli
Stephens, Field Representative for US Congressman Bill Johnson; and Pam Matura, AAA7 Executive
Director. Back row, left to right, Ginny Pinson, Department of Business Administration Health Care
Administration at Shawnee State University; Eliza Harper, Ohio University School of Nursing; Leeann
Denning, Shawnee State University Department of Nursing; and Paul Dovyak, University of Rio Grande
Social Work Program.

Daniels, Brittany Farley,
Cindy Goodman, April
Greer, Diane Hewitt, Kim
Johnston, Tami Jolly,
Joyce Lewis, Colleen
McCambridge, Dee Meddock, Marty Newman,
Terri Pearson, Susan
Pitts, Cathy Shipley,
Sandy Shirey, Tracey
Smith, Patty Snyder and
Sandra Williams.
Art Show and Essay/
Poetry Contest Volunteers
Joan Arrowood, Shelia
Arrowood, Kathy Bays,
Rita Baker, Clara Borden,
Alice Chinn, Jack Chinn,
Dennis Crabtree, Penny
Crabtree, Ruth Davis,
Martha Detty-Foster,
Diana Evans, Doris
Evans, Phyllis Fulk, Joyce
Haag, Mary Johnston,
Carolee Lewis, Freda
Lowery, Mary Maxson,
Rushie McAllister, Annabelle Miller, Maudine
Minnis, Pat Parsons,
Joan Shasteen, Nancy
Shaw, Lavon Shields,
Irena Skaggs, Jim Skaggs,
Joann Smith, Anna Summers, David Summers
and Phyllis Taylor.
Also recognized were
winners at this year’s
Art Show, including:
Alice M. Smith of Adams
County – “Victor Potts
Best of Show Award” in
the Amateur Category;
Pat Thompson of Adams
County – “Victor Potts
Best of Show Award”
in the Professional Category”; Rita Haley of

The 2015 AAA7 Partnership of the Year Award was presented to the
University of Rio Grande Esther Allen Greer Museum. Pictured is
AAA7 Executive Director Pam Matura and Jim Allen, Art Professor
at the University of Rio Grande.

Gallia County - “Mary
Peck Friend of Animals
Award”; Sharon Brown of
Jackson County – “People’s Choice Award” –
Norma E. Graf of Scioto
County for “Best Overall
Essay”; and Jeri Ingles of
Gallia County for “Best
Overall Poem.”
Outstanding Seniors
(As Selected by Each
County Senior Center)

honorably discharged
from the military
in June of 1946. He
attended Ohio University, where he graduated with a four-year
degree in three-and-ahalf years. He studied
accounting. After his
accounting work, Mowrey worked in the coal
mines of Prestonburg,
Ky. but returned to the
Ohio Valley to work
at Philip Sporn Power
Plant, which eventually
became AEP, where he
did work in the lab and
instruments section.
From then on he worked

Mowrey shows
a photo of a
hill that can
be seen in the
West Indies,
which is
where his ship
was during
parts of the
war. Mowrey
said that he
didn’t expect
tropical
islands to be
so wooded,
and was
surprised at
what he saw
from his ship.
�38.=+C�
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Chain Reaction!

Delivery, Drive-Thru and Pickup!

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
636 East Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

When you put money in our
bank, you started a chain
reaction. We made an auto
loan. A local dealer sold a
car. A salesman received a
commission. His family
bought groceries. The clerk at the supermarket got
a paycheck. YOU made that happen!

Thanks for putting Community First!

Hours: M-F 9AM-7PM,
S 9AM-4PM

OHIO VALLEY BANK

Phone: 740-992-2955
EQUAL HOUSING

ID# 519902

60615509

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60610986

Jittery Joes Gourmet
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Adams County – Pastor Phil Fulton; Highland
County – Juanita Kelley;
Jackson County – Wanda
Cross; Lawrence County
(Ironton Senior Center)
– Doris Roberts; Lawrence County (SybeneChesapeake Senior
Center) – Lorene Plybon;
Pike County – Richard
Rundels; and Ross County – Betty Hougland.

as an independent contractor who worked on
various engineering
projects.
During this time
Mowrey also married a woman named
Mary Margaret and
had two daughters: his
late daughter, Melissa,
and another daughter,
Megan, who is a veterinarian in Canton, Ohio.
Megan has two sons who
both attend Northeastern University in Boston.
After his wife passed
away, Mowrey married
a woman named Donna,
who resides with him in
Mason. Mowrey is still
involved with VFW Post
9926 in Mason.
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