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                  <text>LOG ONTO WWW.MYDAILYSENTINEL.COM FOR ARCHIVE s�GAMES s�FEATURES s�E-EDITION s�POLLS &amp; MORE

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INSIDE STORY

WEATHER

SPORTS

OBITUARIES

Obama must address
skeptics, lawmakers
about Syria.... Page 2

Mostly clear. High
near 81. Low around
56......... Page 2

Sullinger pleads
not guilty to assault
charges... Page 6

Thelma Adkins, 67
Ralph Cardwell, Jr., 35
Steve Danford, 59
Michael Henry, 60

Lawrence Leonard, 91
Richard Rutt, 57
Wanda Smith, 88
50 cents daily

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2013

Vol. 63, No. 142

Schools receive casino tax payments
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

OHIO VALLEY — Schools
throughout the state of Ohio
received an extra boost in funds
late last month, as each district
received its semi-annual payment from the Ohio Casino Revenue Tax.
Thirty-four percent of the
money from the casino revenue
tax collection is allocated to
the “Student Fund” which is

designated for schools.
Money is distributed based on
the number of enrolled students in
the school or district in the state.
As with the money that is distributed to the counties, money
received by the schools is not
designated for a specific purpose
and can be spent at the discretion of the district.
The total amount distributed
to schools in Gallia County was
130,971.65. Gallia County has
5,194 students according to the

report available from the Ohio
Department of Taxation.
Meigs County schools received $91,318.69 in payments
on Aug. 31. Meigs County has
3,621 students.
Gallia County Local School
District will receive the largest payment in the area at
$58,209.34 for its enrollment of
2,308 students., which includes
one student from Meigs County, two students from Jackson
County, one student from Vinton

County, and 14 students from
Lawrence County.
Gallipolis City Schools, which
has an enrollment of 2,171 students will receive the largest payment at $54,754.59.
Meigs Local School District is
to receive $44,241.38, including
$327.87 for 13 students who reside in Gallia County. Meigs Local
has a total enrollment of 1,748.
Eastern Local School District
will receive $20,374.86, while
Southern Local will receive a pay-

ment of $18,046.30. Eastern has
an enrollment of 805, and Southern has an enrollment of 713.
The average payment per student is $25.22.
Payments are not only made
to the five school districts
physically based in Gallia and
Meigs counties, but also to
programs such as Ohio Connections Academy and Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow
See PAYMENTS | 5

Cancer awareness poker
run set for Saturday
Staff Report

tdsnews@civitasmedia.com

Photos by Charlene Hoeflich | Daily Sentinel

Derek Miller representing the Pomeroy Firemen’s Association, and Michael Walters, employee of Powell’s Foodfair,
prepare to deliver food to the Meigs Cooperative Parish. This is the first year of what is planned as an annual event
to assist in providing food for those in need.

Firemen’s food drive underway
Charlene Hoeflich

choeflich@civitasmedia.com

POMEROY — They call it
“Feeding Our Friends Food Drive.”
The Pomeroy Firemen’s Association recognizing the plight
of the Meigs Cooperative Parish where some of the shelves
are bare has embarked on a food
drive with Powell’s Foodfair.
“Let”s face it, times are hard
and there are families in this community that need our help and
your help,” said Derek Miller, a
fireman for the past seven years.
The firemen have set up a donation center in Powells for nonperishable food items with a can
nearby for those who prefer to
give money which can be used
to purchase needed supplies.
They are calling on the public to
show compassion and support
for those less fortunate. They are
also challenging other area fire
departments to join in the drive
to feed the hungry.
The food drive began Thursday
and will continue through October.
Among the non-perishable
foods needed are canned vegetables and fruits, boxed meals,
dried beans and peas, pasta and

Hilda Weaver, center, who manages the food pantry, and volunteer Janet
Ambrose assist in unloading the food items delivered by Derek Miller of the
Pomeroy Firemen’s Association.

rice, peanut butter, instant mixes
like potatoes, canned meats and
fruit juice. To kickoff the food
drive, the firemen donated money to purchase some food which
they delivered to the Parish.
According to Hilda Weaver, a
seven year volunteer who handles the Parish’s food pantry,

about 100 bags of groceries are
handed out to families in need
every month. She admits that
when shelves start to get empty, like they are now, she gets
concerned.
As for the firemen, Miller
echoed their concern and their
desire to do something to help.

POMEROY — Five area
biker groups are collaborating on the First Annual
Ann Morris Cancer Awareness Poker Run to benefit
Meigs County cancer patients who need the services of the Meigs County
Cancer Initiative, Inc.
(MCCI) for transportation
assistance to access cancer
treatment.
Local cancer survivor
and biker, A. Lee Morris
is spearheading efforts in
memory of his mother, Ann,
who died from lung cancer.
There will be seven stops
at which a different type of
cancer awareness will be
featured with information
and educational materials.
Registration and free
snacks will be at the Portland Park from 10 a.m.
to noon. It costs $10 per

bike to play and $5 per
passenger. If you don’t
have a motorcycle, you
can drive your car. Nutrition and exercise information will be provided.
The schedule of stops
with arrival and departure
times (approximate) are as
follows:
B&amp;D Market (Tuppes
Plains), arrive — 12:45
p.m., depart — 1:15 p.m.
with information on colon
cancer.
Pageville Carryout, arrive — 1:50 p.m., depart
— 2:20 p.m. with information about men’s health.
The Rutland Park, arrive
— 2:35 p.m., depart — 3:05
p.m. with information about
cervical cancer and HPV.
Dave Diles Park (Middleport), arrive — 3:25
p.m., depart — 3:55 p.m.
with information about
See RUN | 5

ODNR announces
new forestry officer
POMEROY — The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) has announced that Stephen Rist of Athens has been named southern regional coordinator for the
ODNR Division of Forestry’s Service Forestry Program.
“Stephen is an experienced forester who will make
a great leader,” said Robert Boyles, state forester and
chief of the ODNR Division of Forestry in making the
announcement. “His enthusiasm and talent will greatly
aid the division in serving woodland owners throughout
southern Ohio.”
Rist gained experience while working as a service forester in southeast Ohio and was previously a crew leader
for one of the division’s Ohio Woodlands Job Corps crews.
He also served as a consulting forester in Michigan and
has assisted with research at the Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center. In his new leadership
position, Rist will be based out of the ODNR Division of
Forestry’s southern district office in Chillicothe. He will
continue to serve woodland owners as well as assisting
the division’s Service Forestry Program administrator in
directing program activities throughout southern Ohio.
Rist obtained an associate degree in forest management
from Hocking College, a Bachelor of Science degree in forestry, fisheries and wildlife from The Ohio State University
and a Master of Science degree from The Ohio State University in natural resources management. He is currently
working toward a doctorate in plant biology at Ohio University. He has been a member with the Society of American Foresters for 11 years and currently serves as chair.
The ODNR Division of Forestry works to promote the
wise use and sustainable management of Ohio’s public and
private woodlands. To learn more about Ohio’s woodlands,
forest health and tree care, visit ohiodnr.com/forestry.
ODNR ensures a balance between wise use and protection of our natural resources for the benefit of all. Visit the
ODNR website at ohiodnr.gov.

Randy Houser, Parmalee to headline Party in the Park
Sarah Hawley

shawley@civitasmedia.com

RACINE — The fourth annual Racine Party in the Park
will kick off on Sept. 12, running through Sept. 14.
This year will feature three
nights of musical entertainment, with national recording artists set to perform on
Friday and Saturday.
County chart topper Randy
Houser will be the featured entertainment on Saturday evening, taking the stage at 9 p.m.
Country/rock group Parmalee will be the featured

entertainment for Friday
evening.
Houser is a man refreshed.
“I don’t know how it happened, but everything in my
life has started lining up,”
says the Lake, Mississippi native. “I must have done somebody right in the past.”
Those positive vibes of renewal ripple through Houser’s
newest single “Runnin’ Outta
Moonlight” and “How Country Feels,” his first radio No. 1
and Gold® certified title track
from Stoney Creek Records
debut, How Country Feels,
which hit stores on Tuesday,

January 22, 2013. The title
track was his fastest-rising
single to-date on the country
radio charts and sparked a
wildfire of accolades and media appearances. “It was the
obvious choice for a lead-off,”
Houser says of “How Country
Feels.” “It caught my ear the
first time I heard it — like, ‘I
wanna hear that again.’”
Houser’s past contains no
shortage of achievement, as it
includes multiple nominations
for ACM and CMA Awards,
a No. 2 single in the form of
See PARTY | 5

Parmalee

�Page 2 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Local Briefs

Meigs County Community Calendar

Genealogy Fair
CHESTER — Plans have been announced for a genealogy Fair inner and experienced researchers to be held
Sept. 20 and 21 in the Genealogy Research Library in the
Chester Academy, Chester. The event will be held from
noon to 5 p.m. on Friday, and 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturday. Vendors tables are $10. There is no charge to attend.
The event is co-sponsored by the Chester-Shade Historical Association and the Bedford -Lodi Genealogy Group.
Food will be available at the Saturday session.

Wednesday, Sept. 4
CHESTER — The Chester Garden
Club will hold its annual open meeting at 7:30 p.m. at Chester Methodist Church. Guests are invited. There
will be door prizes and refreshments.
HARRISONVILLE — The Scipio
Township Trustees will hold their
regular monthly meeting at 7 p.m. at
the Harrisonville Fire House.

Thursday, Sept. 5
CHESTER — Chester-Shade Historical Associatiion will meet at 7
p.m. at the Courthouse.
CHILLICOTHE — The Southern Ohio Council of Governments
(SOCOG) will hold its next board
meeting at 10 a.m. in Room A of the
Ross County Service Center at 475
Western Avenue, Chillicothe, Ohio,
Reception Planned
SYRACUSE — Syracuse Postmaster John Henderson 45601. Board meetings usually are
will be honored at a reception to be held from 12 - 2 p.m. held the first Thursday of the month.
on Saturday, Sept. 7, at Syracuse Community Center. Re- For more information, call 740-7755030, ext. 103.
freshments will be served. Everyone is welcome.
Car, Truck and Motorcycle Show Benefit
POMEROY — The Home National Bank is sponsoring
a car, truck and motorcycle show on the Pomeroy Parking
lot Saturday to raise money for the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center Meals on Wheels program. Registration
will be held from 9 a.m. to noon with a trophy awards ceremony at 3:30 p.m. Chicken noodle dinners, pizzas, and
hot dogs and hamburgers will be for sale during the event.

Southern Open House
RACINE — Open house for elementary and high school
students is scheduled for 4-7 p.m. on Sept. 3.
Pre-School Orientation will be during the regular
school day Friday, Sept. 6. Students and parents can come
to meet the preschool staff at this time in preparation for
Pre-School which begins Sept. 9.
Immunization Clinic
POMEROY — The Meigs County Health Department
will conduct as childhood and adolescent immunization
clinic from 9-11 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. on Tuesdays, at the
Meigs County Health Department, 112 E. Memorial
Drive in Pomeroy. Please bring children’s shot records.
Children must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian. Please bring medical cards and/or commercial insurance cards, if applicable. A donation is appreciated, but
not required.
Traffic Advisory
MEIGS COUNTY — County Road 46, Success Road,
will be closed for approximately one week beginning
Sept. 3. County forces will be replacing a bridge at a site
1/2 mile east of Ohio 7.
MEIGS COUNTY — The westbound lane of Ohio 124
(located at the 63.91 mile marker, about 1.5 miles north
of Reedsville) will be closed to allow for a bridge replacement project. Traffic will be maintained by traffic signals
and concrete barriers. Weather permitting, both lanes of
Ohio 124 will be open November, 1 2013.

Church Calendar
No homecoming
POMEROY — There will be no homecoming at the
South Bethel Community Church on Silver Ridge this
year due to reipairs being made at the church. The event
is usually held in early October.
Sing at Reedsville Church
REEDSVILLE — There will be sing at 7 p.m. Sunday
at the Reecdsville Fellowhship church of the Nazarene
to benefit the Fall Harvest Gospel Sing. Singers will include Brian and Family Connections, Angela Gibson, and
Church singers. Russell Carson is the pastor.
Homecoming
REEDSVILLE — The Eden United Brethren Church, located on 2 miles north of Reedsville on Ohio 124 between
Reedsville and Hockingport, will be held Sept. 15 with a
carry-in dinner at 12:30 p.m. Afternoon service, 2 p.m.
with special singing and speaker Pastor Peter Martindale.
Yard sale
RUTLAND —The Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
will host an indoor yard sale from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., Sept.
5-7. Lunch will also be served.
Harvest Festival
PINE GROVE — The annual Harvest Festival will be
held on Sunday, Sept. 8, at St. John Lutheran Church on
Pine Grove Road. Worship will begin at 11 a.m. with potluck at 12:15 p.m. In the afternoon a community service
project will be carried out in celebration of the 25th anniversary of ELCA, God’s Love Our Hands.

Ohio Valley Forecast
Wednesday: Areas of dense fog before 9 a.m. Otherwise, cloudy through mid morning, then gradual clearing,
with a high near 81. Calm wind becoming west around 6
mph in the afternoon.
Wednesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 56.
Light west wind.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 79. Calm
wind becoming north 5 to 8 mph in the morning.
Thursday Night: Clear, with a low around 52.
Friday: Sunny, with a high near 78.
Friday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 56.
Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 83.
Saturday Night: Partly cloudy, with a low around 58.
Sunday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 84.
Sunday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 61.
Monday: Sunny, with a high near 87.

Local stocks
AEP (NYSE) — 42.16
Akzo (NASDAQ) — 20.11
Ashland Inc. (NYSE) — 87.47
Big Lots (NYSE) — 34.40
Bob Evans (NASDAQ) — 49.55
BorgWarner (NYSE) — 96.81
Century Alum (NASDAQ) — 7.91
Champion (NASDAQ) — 0.234
City Holding (NASDAQ) — 40.79
Collins (NYSE) — 70.68
DuPont (NYSE) — 56.39
US Bank (NYSE) — 36.06
Gen Electric (NYSE) — 23.06
Harley-Davidson (NYSE) — 61.07
JP Morgan (NYSE) — 51.13
Kroger (NYSE) — 36.82
Ltd Brands (NYSE) — 57.43
Norfolk So (NYSE) — 72.57
OVBC (NASDAQ) — 20.66
BBT (NYSE) — 33.81

Peoples (NASDAQ) — 20.85
Pepsico (NYSE) — 80.20
Premier (NASDAQ) — 12.08
Rockwell (NYSE) — 98.00
Rocky Brands (NASDAQ) — 16.28
Royal Dutch Shell — 64.75
Sears Holding (NASDAQ) — 44.84
Wal-Mart (NYSE) — 72.68
Wendy’s (NYSE) — 7.69
WesBanco (NYSE) — 28.85
Worthington (NYSE) — 33.16
Daily stock reports are the 4 p.m.
ET closing quotes of transactions
September 3, 2013, 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.

Friday, Sept. 6
MARIETTA — The Buckeye HillsHocking Valley Regional Development District Executive Committee
will meet at 11:30 a.m. at 1400 Pike
Street in Marietta. For more information contact Jenny Myers at (740)
376-1026.
SALEM CENTER — Meigs County Pomona Grange will meet at 7:30
p.m. at the Star Grange Hall. All contests — Family Activities, Art, Photography and Junior will be judged at
that time. All members are urged to
attend.
Saturday, Sept. 7
HARRISONVILLE — Larry Garner of Baton Rouge, La. will be performing Saturday night at Charlie’s
Place, the Sheets family barn, located
near Harrisonville. Also entertaining
will be the Mudfork Blues Band and
The Magic Mama Band. Doors open
at 5 p.m. Directions and ticket information can be obtained at www.foothillsmusic.org.
SALEM CENTER — Star Grange
#778 and Star Junior Grange #878
will meet with potluck supper at 6:30

p.m. followed by meeting at 7:30 p.m.
Plans for Chicken BBQ to be held on
Sunday October 6 will be made. All
members and interested persons are
invited and urged to attend.
Sunday, Sept. 8
REEDSVILLE — The Reedsville
Neighborhood Community Picnic
will be held at the Belleville Locks
and Dam Shelter House. The Belleville Locks and Dam is located on
State Route 124 in Reedville Ohio.
There will be a free dinner and drinks
provided. Along with music provided
by George Hall. The picnic starts at
1 p.m. Everyone is invited to attend
this free event. Come out and enjoy
great food, great music with your
neighbors.
Monday, Sept. 9
POMEROY — Meigs County Republican Executive Committee regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. at the Courthouse. Countdown to election day
project underway.
POMEROY — Meigs County Agricultural Society will meet at 7:30
pm at the fairgrounds.
POMEROY — There will be a
Look Good, Feel Better session at
the Pomeroy Library from 1-3 p.m.
for ladies undergoing cancer treatment. To register, call the American
Cancer Society at 1-800-227-2345.
This is a FREE service. LGFB is a
non-medical public service program
that teaches beauty techniques to
cancer patients to help them manage
the appearance-related side effects of
cancer treatment.
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Cancer Initiative, Inc. (MCCI) will
meet at noon in the conference room
of the Meigs County Health Department. New members welcome. For
more information contact Courtney
Midkiff at (740) 992-6626.
Tuesday, Sept. 10
TUPPERS PLAINS — The
Tuppers Plains Regional Sewer
Board will have their regular meeting at 5 p.m. at the TPRSD office.
POMEROY — The Meigs County

Board of Health will meet at 5 p.m.
in the conference room of the Meigs
County Health Department located
at 112 East Memorial Drive in Pomeroy, Ohio.
CHESTER — The regular meeting
of the Chester Township Trustees will
be held at 7 p.m. at the town hall.
Thursday, Sept 12
CHESTER — Shade River Lodge
453 monthly meeting, 7:30 p.m. at
the hall. Refreshments served after
the meeting.
Friday, Sept. 13
MIDDLEPORT — The Middleport Community Association will be
showing their September free movie
at 7 p.m. in the Middleport Village
Hall community room. Light refreshments will be available as well as
comfortable seating. Improvements
have been done to greatly improve
the acoustics in the former gym.
Copyright license prevents MCA
from being allowed to announce the
name of the movie but we can tell
you that it’s about the early years of a
NFL player and his adoptive family.
Tuesday, Sept. 17
POMEROY — The Meigs County
Health Department will hold extended shot clinic hours from 9-11 a.m.
and 1-6 p.m. For more information
contact the health department at
(740) 992-6626.
Saturday, Sept. 21
POMEROY — The Veterans Memorial Hospital employees will have
their annual reunion from 1 to 3 p.m.
at the Meigs Community Center.
Joyce Redman and Barbara Fry are in
charge of this year’s reunion.
Friday, Sept. 27
MIDDLEPORT — Health Recovery Services will be hosting an open
house in honor of National Recovery
Month. The open house will take
place from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. with
door prizes, food and fun. Health
Recovery Services is located at 138
North Second Avenue in Middleport.

Nearly half
Obama must address skeptics,
of U.S. births
lawmakers about Syria
are covered
by Medicaid
WASHINGTON (AP) — Congress
is holding its first public hearing about
U.S. plans for military intervention
in Syria as President Barack Obama
seeks to convince skeptical Americans
and their lawmakers about the need to
respond to last month’s alleged sarin
gas attack outside Damascus.
Secretary of State John Kerry, Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and
Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin
Dempsey were to appear before the
Senate Foreign Relations Committee
on Tuesday. A classified briefing open
to all members of Congress was to
take place as well.
The president’s request for congressional authorization for limited military strikes against Syrian President
Bashar Assad’s regime is at the heart
of all the discussions planned in Washington over the next several days as
Obama sends his top national security
advisers to the Capitol for a flurry of
briefings. And with the outcome of
any vote in doubt in a war-weary Congress, Obama was to meet Tuesday
with leaders of the House and Senate armed services committees, the
foreign relations committees and the
intelligence committees.
Obama won conditional support
Monday from two of his fiercest foreign policy critics, Republican Sens.
John McCain of Arizona and Lindsey
Graham of South Carolina.
A congressional vote against
Obama’s request “would be catastrophic in its consequences” for U.S.
credibility abroad, McCain told reporters outside the White House following an hour-long private meeting
with the president.
But despite Obama’s effort to assuage the two senators’ concerns, neither appeared completely convinced
afterward. They said they’d be more inclined to back Obama if the U.S. sought
to destroy the Assad government’s
launching capabilities and committed
to providing more support to rebels
seeking to oust Assad from power.
“There will never be a political settlement in Syria as long as Assad is
winning,” Graham said.
After a decade of war in Iraq and
Afghanistan, polls show most Americans opposed to any new military action overseas. That reluctance is being
reflected by senators and representatives, some of whom say Obama still
hasn’t presented bulletproof evidence
that Assad’s forces were responsible
for the Aug. 21 attack that U.S. intelligence says killed 1,429 people, including more than 400 children. Others say
the president hasn’t explained why intervening is in America’s interest.
After a Labor Day weekend spent
listening to concerned constituents,
Sen. Chris Coons, D-Del., said the administration needed to make its case

on these points, if only to counter the
misinformation and conspiracy theories circulating about Obama’s plans.
“Several people asked me if we were
only interested in getting Syria’s oil,”
Coons, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said in a
telephone interview with The Associated Press. “It’s important that Americans get the facts.”
Petroleum is hardly the most pertinent question. Even before Syria’s
hostilities began, its oil industry contributed less than half a percent of the
world’s total output. And Obama has
expressly ruled out sending American
troops into Syria or proposing deeper
involvement in the Arab country’s violent civil war.
But such queries are a poignant
reminder of the task awaiting the administration as it argues that the United States must exert global leadership
in retaliating for what apparently was
the deadliest use of chemical weapons
anywhere over the past 25 years.
Obama has insisted he was considering a military operation that
was limited in duration and scope.
The White House said Monday that
Obama was open to working with
Congress to make changes in the language of the resolution, which Congress was expected to begin considering next week.
In a conference call Monday with
House Democrats, several members
of Obama’s own party challenged the
administration’s assertions.
In a post on his website, Rep. Rick
Nolan, D-Minn., reflected a view
shared by at least some of his colleagues: “I am vehemently opposed to
a military strike that would clearly be
an act of war against Syria, especially
under such tragic yet confusing circumstances as to who is responsible
for the use of chemical weapons.”
Their skepticism is shared by many
tea party Republicans and others,
whose views range from ideological
opposition to any U.S. military action overseas to narrower fears about
authorizing the use of force without
clear constraints on timing, costs and
scope of the intervention.
The most frequent recurring questions: How convinced is American
intelligence about the Assad regime’s
culpability for the chemical attack, a
decade after woefully misrepresenting
the case that Iraqi President Saddam
Hussein possessed weapons of mass
destruction? And how does a military
response advance U.S. national security interests?
Pressuring the administration in
the opposite direction are hawks and
proponents of humanitarian intervention among both Democrats and
Republicans who feel what Obama is
proposing is far too little.

About half the births in
the United States are paid
for by Medicaid — a figure
higher than previous estimates — and the numbers
could increase as the statefederal health insurance program expands under the Affordable Care Act, according
to a study released Tuesday.
All pregnant women with
incomes below 133 percent of
the federal poverty level, just
below $15,300 for an individual, are eligible for Medicaid,
and many states provide coverage to women earning well
above that amount.
While previous research
has estimated about 40 percent of the nearly 4 million
annual births in the United
States were paid for by
Medicaid, the latest study
by researchers at George
Washington University and
the March of Dimes looked
at individual state data
and estimated that in 2010
48 percent of births were
covered by Medicaid. Researchers say they hope to
use the figure as a baseline
to determine the impact of
the federal health law that
expands Medicaid starting in January. Under the
health law, about half the
states are expanding Medicaid to cover everyone
under 138 percent of the
federal poverty level.
The percent of births paid
for by Medicaid varied widely
from a high of nearly 70 percent in Louisiana to below 30
percent in New Hampshire
and Massachusetts, the study
found ( see chart for individual state data ).
Cynthia Pellegrini, senior
vice president of public policy at the March of Dimes and
a co-author of the study, said
while poor women can access Medicaid when they are
pregnant, the health law will
help improve birth outcomes
because women will be able
to get the coverage before becoming pregnant. She said if
women are healthier before
they get pregnant, that will
increase the chances of having a healthier baby. Women
who gain Medicaid coverage
when they are pregnant
typically lose the coverage
60 days after giving birth.
The health law could make
some of them eligible to
maintain coverage.

�Wednesday, September 4, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 3

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obama gains Boehner’s support for Syria strike
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama won critical support from House Speaker
John Boehner for a punitive
strike against Syria on Tuesday, and senior Cabinet officials
labored to convince Congress
that Bashar Assad’s government
must be punished for a suspected chemical weapons attack the
administration blames for more
than 1,000 dead.
The leader of House Republicans, Boehner emerged from a
meeting at the White House and
said the United States has “enemies around the world that need
to understand that we’re not going to tolerate this type of behavior. We also have allies around
the world and allies in the region who also need to know that
America will be there and stand
up when it’s necessary.”
Boehner spoke as lawmakers
in both parties readied changes
in the president’s requested legislation, rewriting it to restrict the
type and duration of any military
action that would be authorized,
possibly including a ban on U.S.
combat forces on the ground.
Secretary of State John Kerry,
lead-off witness at a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, said, “President Obama
is not asking America to go to
war.” And yet, he added, “this is
not the time for armchair isolationism. This is not the time to
be spectators to slaughter.”
Obama said he was open to
revisions in the relatively broad
request the White House made
over the weekend. He expressed
confidence Congress would respond to his call for support in
a military action against Assad,
whose government the president
said used chemical weapons indiscriminately and “killed thousands of people, including over
400 children.”
The administration says 1,429
died in the episode. Casualty estimates by other groups from the
attack on Aug. 21 in a Damascus
suburb are far lower, and Assad’s
government blames the episode

In the Middle East,
Israel and the U.S.
conducted a joint
missile test over the
Mediterranean in a
display of military
might in the region.
on rebels who have been seeking
to overthrow his government in
a civil war that began over two
years ago. A United Nations inspection team is awaiting lab results on tissue and soil samples
it collected while in the country before completing a closely
watched report.
The president met top lawmakers at the White House before
embarking on an overseas trip to
Sweden and Russia, leaving the
principal lobbying at home for
the next few days to Vice President Joe Biden and other members of his administration.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Gen. Martin Dempsey,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs
of Staff, were on the witness
list for the Senate hearing, the
first of several Congress is expected to hold in the run-up to
a vote as early as next week
on Obama’s request for congressional backing for a strike
against Syria.
The Obama team sat shoulderto-shoulder at the Capitol as, a
few hundred miles away, United
Nations Secretary-General Ban
Ki-moon urged caution. He said
any punitive action against Syria
could unleash more turmoil and
bloodshed, and he cautioned
that such strikes would be legal only in self-defense under
the U.N. Charter or if approved
by the organization’s Security
Council. Russia and China have
repeatedly used their veto power in the council to block action
against Assad.

In the Middle East, Israel and
the U.S. conducted a joint missile test over the Mediterranean
in a display of military might in
the region.
Obama set the fast-paced
events in motion on Saturday,
when he unexpectedly stepped
back from ordering a military
strike under his own authority
and announced he would seek
congressional approval.
Recent presidents have all
claimed the authority to undertake limited military action
without congressional backing.
Some have followed up with
such action.
Obama said he, too, believes he has that authority,
and House Democratic leader
Nancy Pelosi said during the
day that even Congress’ refusal to authorize the president
wouldn’t negate the power of
the commander in chief.
Still, the president also has
stated that the United States
will be stronger if lawmakers
grant their support. But neither
Obama nor his aides has been
willing to state what options
would be left to him should Congress reject his call.
As Obama has often noted,
the country is weary of war after
more than a decade of combat
deaths in Afghanistan and Iraq,
and there is residual skepticism a
decade after Bush administration
claims went unproven that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons
of mass destruction. Additionally, a spate of polls indicates the
public opposes a military strike
against Syria, by a margin of 5936 percent if the United States
acts unilaterally, according to a
new Washington Post-ABC survey, and a narrower 46-51 if allies
take part.
Among major allies, only
France has publicly offered
to join the United States in a
strike, although President Francois Hollande says he will await
Congress’ decision. The British
House of Commons rejected a
military strike last week.

FAQ: How will the
individual mandate work?
The federal health law’s individual mandate, one of the key building blocks of the
insurance overhaul, remains controversial as
the October start date approaches for enrolling in new online marketplaces. Individuals
who don’t get insurance through work will
shop for insurance on these websites for
policies that will take effect in January.
The mandate, which requires most
people to obtain health insurance or pay a
tax penalty, survived a constitutional challenge last year in the Supreme Court but
remains under attack by conservatives. In
July, the Republican-led House voted to
delay the mandate, although the measure
is not likely to get a vote in the Democratic-controlled Senate.
Despite all that attention to the mandate, 26 percent of Americans aren’t
aware of the requirement or didn’t think
the law included it, according to a March
2013 Kaiser Family Foundation poll.
Here are some basic questions and answers about the mandate.
Q. What is the individual mandate?
A. The individual mandate is a provision of the federal health law that requires
you, your children and anyone else that
you claim as a dependent on your taxes
to have health insurance in 2014 or pay
a penalty. That coverage can be supplied
through your job, public programs such
as Medicare or Medicaid, or an individual
policy that you purchase. The health law is
setting up online health insurance marketplaces, also known as exchanges, to help
you shop for plans.
Q. Who is affected by the mandate?
A. The mandate is aimed at some of the
57 million people younger than 65 who
now do not have insurance. The Congressional Budget Office estimates that in 2014
nearly three out of five Americans will have
coverage through an employer-provided
plan and 12 percent through Medicaid and
the Children’s Health Insurance Program,
federal-state programs that provide insurance to lower income Americans. If you
have insurance in either of those ways, you
are not affected. If you are in Medicare, you
also meet the requirement.
Q. Are there any exceptions to the mandate?
A. Yes, the government has identified
exemptions. Individuals who cannot afford coverage because the cost of premiums exceed 8 percent of their household
income or those whose household incomes are below the minimum threshold
for filing a tax return are exempt. People
experiencing certain hardships, including
those who would have been eligible for
Medicaid under the health law’s new rules
but whose states chose not to expand
their programs, also are exempt.
Other exempt groups include prisoners, Native Americans eligible for care
through the Indian Health Care service,
immigrants who are in the country illegally, people whose religion objects to having
insurance coverage, members of a health
care sharing ministry and individuals who

experience a short coverage gap of less
than three consecutive months.
CBO estimates that in 2016, after the
major provisions of the health law are
implemented, 24 million people will be exempted from the mandate’s penalties.
Q. Why is there a mandate anyway?
A. The health law was designed to extend insurance to nearly all people, including those who have medical conditions
that require expensive care and are often
denied coverage today. But to pay for their
care, insurance companies need to have a
large enrollment of consumers, especially
young and healthy people who use fewer
services. The mandate was adopted to
guarantee a broad base.
Topher Spiro, the vice president of
health policy at the Center for American
Progress, a left-leaning nonprofit that supports the law, says it will be more effective
with the mandate than without it. “This individual mandate is to keep premiums low
for everyone,” he said, noting that “if you
don’t have incentives for everyone to sign
up for coverage then only the sick people
will enroll which will drive up premiums.”
But others suggest the mandate won’t
be effective because the penalties are set
so much lower than the cost of coverage.
“The mandate was an attempt to get
around the fact that insurance is going to become a lot more expensive for a lot of people
even with the subsidies,” said Joseph Antos,
an economist with the conservative American Enterprise Institute. Antos believes the
tax penalty for remaining uninsured is too
low and questions the government’s ability
to identify those who end up not filing taxes.
“I would argue that the individual mandate
is largely unenforceable and does not turn
out to be this solution to the other problems
that raise insurance costs for that particular
group of people,” he added.
Q. How do I satisfy the mandate?
A. Health coverage provided through
a job-based plan (including COBRA or a
retirement plan), policies that you bought
for yourself or your family, Medicare (and
Medicare Advantage), Medicaid, CHIP,
some Veterans Administration health programs or TRICARE coverage for members of the military and their dependents
will satisfy the mandate.
If you are uninsured or thinking about
switching plans, you can shop for coverage
through the online marketplaces beginning
Oct. 1. These marketplaces will operate in
every state and the District of Columbia and
will alert people with lower incomes that
they are eligible for Medicaid. The marketplaces will also offer tax subsidies to help reduce the cost of premiums if your income is
less than 400 percent of the federal poverty
level ($45,960 for an individual and $94,200
for a family of four in 2013) and cost-sharing
subsidies that will substantially reduce the
deductibles, copayments, coinsurance and
total out-of-pocket spending limits for people with incomes up to 250 percent of the
federal poverty level ($28,725 for an individual and $58,875 for a family of four in 2013).

Yet the president’s decision
to seek congressional approval
presents lawmakers with a challenge, as well.
Even some of Obama’s sternest critics in Congress expressed
strong concerns about the repercussions of a failure to act.
House Majority Leader, Eric
Cantor, R-Va., said after Tuesday’s White House meeting that
a failure to respond to the use of
chemical weapons “only increases the likelihood of future WMD
(weapons of mass destruction)
use by the regime, transfer to
Hezbollah, or acquisition by alQaida.”
Apart from the meeting with
Obama, the White House provided closed-door briefings for
members of Congress.
Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., said
after attending one session that
administration officials told
lawmakers that the targets the
military had identified last week
were still present, despite the
highly public discussion of a
possible attack. “Seems strange
to see some targets still available several weeks later,” Flake
said, adding that he was “still
listening” to the administration’s lobbying.
Others were firmly opposed.
Sen. Jim Inhofe of Oklahoma,
said on Fox News, “It may sound
real easy when people like Secretary Kerry say that ‘it is going
to be quick and we’re going to
go in, we’re going to send a few
cruise missiles, wash our hands
and go home.’ It doesn’t work
that way. This could be a war in
the Middle East, it’s serious.”
Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., who
has close ties to tea party
groups, said he probably
would vote against authorizing
Obama to use force. But he said
it also wouldn’t be helpful to
amend the resolution in a way
that constrains the president
too much to execute military
action, if authorized.
Democrats, too, were divided,
although it appeared the administration’s biggest concern was

winning support among deeply
conservative Republicans who
have battled with the president
on issue after issue since winning control of the House three
years ago.
The United States maintains
a significant military force in
the eastern Mediterranean
Sea. The U.S. Navy released
one of the warships that had
been in the region, leaving four
destroyers armed with cruise
missiles, the USS Stout, USS
Gravely, USS Ramage and USS
Barry. Also in the area was an
amphibious warship, the USS
San Antonio, with about 300
Marines aboard.
In addition, there are two aircraft carriers in the region — the
USS Nimitz strike group, which
is in the southern Red Sea, and
the USS Harry S Truman, which
is in the Arabian Sea.
While announcing his support
for military action and urging fellow Republicans to come to the
same conclusion, Boehner firmly
put the burden of rounding up
votes on the administration
Shortly after Boehner left the
White House after the meeting,
his spokesman Michael Steel
said, “Everyone understands
that it is an uphill battle to pass
a resolution, and the speaker
expects the White House to provide answers to members’ questions and take the lead on any
whipping effort.”
Senate Republican leader
Mitch McConnell of Kentucky was noncommittal about
Obama’s request. “While we are
learning more about his plans,
Congress and our constituents
would all benefit from knowing
more about what it is he thinks
needs to be done — and can be
accomplished — in Syria and
the region,” McConnell said in a
statement.
Obama’s trip this week includes stops in Stockholm and
then St. Petersburg, Russia,
where he will be attending the
Group of 20 economic summit.

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�The Daily Sentinel

OPINION

Page 4
Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Slave’s stay inspired Some flu vaccines promise
‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’ a little more protection
Bruce Smith

The Associated Press

CHARLESTON,
S.C.
— A Clemson University
professor is convinced that
Harriet Beecher Stowe
might not have written
“Uncle Tom’s Cabin” if
it were not for a fugitive
South Carolina slave she
harbored for a night before
starting the history-making novel.
The book, which fueled
the abolitionist cause and
helped put the nation on
the path toward the Civil
War, was published in 1852
after being serialized the
previous year. It became
a bestselling book of the
19th century, second only
to the Bible.
Stowe mentions harboring the slave in her Maine
home in a late 1850 letter
to her sister. She writes
that “he was a genuine article from the ‘Ole Carling
State.’” While it is wellknown to historians that
Stowe harbored a slave, neither her letter nor her later
writings mention his name.
Susanna Ashton, a professor of American literature at Clemson, says her
research has convinced her
the slave Stowe harbored
was John Andrew Jackson. He was born a slave
on a Sumter County, S.C.,
plantation and escaped in
1847, fleeing to Charleston
and then stowing away between bales of cotton on a
ship heading north.
Ashton’s conclusions appear in this summer’s edition of “Common-Place,”
the journal of the Massachusetts-based American
Antiquarian Society.
After fleeing, Jackson
settled in Salem, Mass. But
when the Fugitive Slave
Act was passed in 1850 by
Congress — meaning even
slaves who had escaped
from the South could be
returned to their owners
— Jackson headed north
through Maine to Canada.
Jackson later learned to
read and write, went to
Europe and his book “The

Experience of a Slave in
South Carolina” was published in in England in
1862. After the Civil War,
Jackson made a living as a
writer and lecturer.
In his book, Jackson
recalls the encounter with
Stowe, mentioning her by
name.
“She took me in and fed
me, and gave me some
clothes and five dollars.
She also inspected my
back, which is covered
with scars which I shall
carry with me to the grave.
She listened with great
interest to my story,” he
wrote.
In Stowe’s letter to her
sister, the original of which
is in the Beineke Library
at Yale University, Stowe
notes the effect that night
had on her family.
“There hasn’t been anybody in our house (who)
got waited on so abundantly and willingly for ever
so long. These negroes
possess some mysterious
power of pleasing children
for they hung around him
and seemed never tired of
hearing him talk and sing,”
she wrote.
In a recent interview,
Ashton said: “Was it Jackson who was hidden by
Stowe as a fugitive in
Brunswick Maine? I’m
99.9 percent sure. That
seems absolutely true. I
think he was an inspiration for the novel. I think
his pain touched her and
helped her to act.”
Ashton said after “Uncle
Tom’s Cabin” was published, a lot of blacks and
former slaves wanted to
meet Stowe and sought her
endorsement.
“She was one of the
biggest celebrities in the
United States and had
huge political and cultural
clout,” Ashton said. “It was
only when I looked at the
dates more closely I said
wait a minute, Jackson
met her before she wrote
‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin.’ That’s
how the remarkable nature
of this encounter began to
unfold for me.”

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Stowe would later say
she had a vision in a church
in Brunswick — the pew is
marked — where she imagined the ending of “Uncle
Tom’s Cabin” and went
home to write.
Ashton suggests Stowe
never mentioned Jackson
in her later writing because she would have had
to admit she violated the
Fugitive Slave Act.
Katherine Kane, executive director of the Harriett
Beecher Stowe Center in
Hartford, Conn., pointed
out that critics have said
Stowe, as a northerner,
was writing about a section of the country where
she had little firsthand experience.
Although born in Connecticut, Stowe spent 20
years in Cincinnati, just
across the river from Kentucky, a slave state.
“I don’t think we want
to devalue the time in
Cincinnati,” Kane said,
adding that Stowe was an
abolitionist who would
have seen owners hiring
out their slaves for work.
She also had servants in
her household who were
former slaves and collected
stories of others writing
about slavery, Kane said.
So, did Jackson prompt
Stowe to write the book?
“Quite frankly that might
be,” Kane said, although
she noted that it seemed
Stowe was moving toward
the book for some time.
“When you look at her
accumulated letters from
that time, you see it starting to build,” she said. “But
it gives me goose bumps
that Dr. Ashton has been
able to identify this unnamed person who was in
the household at the time.”
She added: “From the
Stowe Center’s point of
view, we are trying to use
all this history because it’s
important to us all today.
Here we are still talking
about ‘Uncle Tom’s Cabin’
and its impact, and the
more we know about the
individuals who inspired
the story, the better it is.”

Lauran Neergaard
AP Medical Writer

WASHINGTON — Flu vaccination is no
longer merely a choice between a jab in the
arm or a squirt in the nose. This fall, some
brands promise a little extra protection.
For the first time, certain vaccines will
guard against four strains of flu rather
than the usual three. Called quadrivalent
vaccines, these brands may prove more
popular for children than their parents.
That’s because kids tend to catch the newly added strain more often.
These four-in-one vaccines are so new
that they’ll make up only a fraction of the
nation’s supply of flu vaccine, so if you
want a dose, better start looking early.
But that’s only one of an unprecedented
number of flu vaccine options available
this year.
Allergic to eggs? Egg-free shots are hitting the market, too.
Plus there’s growing interest in shots
brewed just for the 65-and-older crowd,
and a brand that targets the needle-phobic
with just a skin-deep prick.
“We’re moving away from the one-sizefits-all to choosing the best possible vaccine for an individual’s age and condition,”
said Dr. Gregory Poland, an infectious disease specialist at the Mayo Clinic.
“The flip side of that,” he said, is that
“this will be a confusing year” as doctors
and consumers alike try to choose.
Federal health officials recommend a
yearly flu vaccine for nearly everyone,
starting at 6 months of age. On average,
about 24,000 Americans die each flu season, according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
Some questions and answers about the
different vaccine varieties to choose from:
Q: What’s the difference between those
new four-strain vaccines and the regular kind?
A: For more than 30 years, the vaccine
has offered protection against three influenza strains — two common Type A
strains called H1N1 and H3N2, and one
strain of Type B. Flu strains continually
evolve, and the recipe for each year’s vaccine includes the subtypes of those strains
that experts consider most likely to cause
illness that winter.
Type A flu causes more serious disease
and deaths, especially the H3N2 form that
made last year such a nasty flu season. But
the milder Type B flu does sicken people
every year as well, and can kill. Two distinct Type B families circulate the globe,
making it difficult to know which to include in each year’s vaccine. Adding both
solves the guesswork, and a CDC model
estimates it could prevent as many as 485
deaths a year depending on how much
Type B flu is spreading.

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respecting an establishment of
religion, or prohibiting the free
exercise thereof; or abridging
the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people
peaceably to assemble, and to
petition the Government for a
redress of grievances.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution

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Letters to the editor should be limited to 300 words.
All letters are subject to editing, must be signed and
include address and telephone number. No unsigned
letters will be published.
Letters should be in good taste, addressing
issues, not personalities. “Thank You” letters will not be
accepted for publication.

Q: How can I tell if I’m getting the fourstrain vaccine?
A: All of the nasal spray version sold in
the U.S. this year will be this new variety,
called FluMist Quadrivalent. The catch is
that the nasal vaccine is only for healthy
people ages 2 to 49 who aren’t pregnant.
If you prefer a flu shot, ask the doctor
or pharmacist if the four-strain kind is
available. Younger children, older adults,
pregnant women and people with chronic
health conditions all can use flu shots.
Four-strain versions are sold under the
names Fluzone Quadrivalent, Fluarix
Quadrivalent and FluLaval Quadrivalent.
Manufacturers anticipate producing between 135 million and 139 million doses of
flu vaccine this year. Only about 30 million
doses will offer the four-strain protection.
Q: Who should seek it?
A: Type B flu tends to strike children
more than the middle-aged, Poland noted.
And he said it’s not a bad idea for seniors,
who are more vulnerable to influenza in
general. But the CDC doesn’t recommend
one vaccine variety over another, and the
American Academy of Pediatrics said either kind is fine — just get vaccinated.
Q: How are these new vaccines different
from the high-dose flu shot for seniors?
A: Fluzone High-Dose protects against the
traditional three strains of flu, but it quadruples the standard vaccine dose in an effort to
rev up age-weakened immune systems don’t
respond as actively to regular flu shots.
The government calls the high-dose
shot an option for seniors, not one that’s
proved better. Last week, Sanofi Pasteur
said initial results from a study of 30,000
seniors vaccinated over the past two flu
seasons suggest the high-dose shot is
about 24 percent more effective. Federal
health officials will have to review the full
study results to see if they agree.
Q: What if I’m allergic to eggs?
A: Traditional flu vaccine is made from
viruses grown in eggs, and specialists say
it’s usually not a problem unless someone
has a serious egg allergy. But the new FluBlok vaccine eliminates that concern because it is made with cell technology, like
many other nonflu vaccines. So far, it’s
only for use in people ages 18 to 49.
Q: What if I’m scared of needles?
A: If you don’t qualify for the ouchless
nasal spray vaccine, there is one shot
made with a teeny-tiny needle that pricks
the skin instead of muscle. Called Fluzone Intradermal, it’s available for 18- to
64-year-olds, and protects against the usual three strains.
Q: How soon should I be vaccinated?
A: Early fall is ideal, as it’s impossible to
predict when flu will start spreading and
it takes about two weeks for protection to
kick in. But later isn’t too late; flu season
typically peaks in January or February.

The Daily Sentinel
Ohio Valley
Newspapers
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Stephanie Filson
Managing Editor

�Wednesday, September 4, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 5

www.mydailysentinel.com

Obituaries
Lawrence D. Leonard

Lawrence D. Leonard, 91, of Pomeroy, Ohio, passed
away on September 3, 2013. He was born on February
20, 1922, in Gallia County, son of the late Amos and Lottie Leonard.
Mr. Leonard was a member of the Trinity Church in
Pomeroy. He was a World War II Army veteran and a
member of the American Legion Post 39.
Mr. Leonard is survived by his daughter, Louanna
Leonard of Groveport, Ohio; sister, Lois Taylor of Kenton, Ohio; brothers-in-law, Gene Miley and James Conkle; and several nieces and nephews.
In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by
his wife, Marjorie Leonard; sisters, Dorothy Miley and
Betty Conkle; and a brother, Harry “Pete” Leonard.
Funeral services will be held at 1 p.m. on Thursday,

September 5, 2013, at the Anderson McDaniel Funeral
Home in Pomeroy with Pastor Tom Johnson officiating.
Burial will follow at Meigs Memory Gardens where military funeral honors will be presented by the American
Legion Post 39. Visiting hour will be from noon to 1 p.m.
on Thursday at the funeral home.
A registry is available at www.andersonmcdaniel.com.

Wanda Louise Smith

Wanda Louise Smith, 88, of Ravenswood, W.Va., passed
away August 30, 2013, in CAMC, Memorial Division.
She was born November 26, 1924, in St. Albans, W.Va.,
a daughter of the late Lloyd Martin and Jessie Luenah
(Hart) Withrow. Her husband, Benny Morris Smith, son,
Cecil Thomas Smith, two sisters and three brothers also
preceded her in death.

She was a former department store clerk and manager
and was a member of the St. Albans Church of Christ.
Survivors include her son, Timothy M. Smith of Sissonville; daughter, Brenda L. Smith of Pomeroy, Ohio;
sisters, Mary “Dody” Holstein of Melbourne, Fl., and Pat
Preis of Redding, Ca.; seven grandchildren, and 16 greatgrandchildren.
A funeral service will be conducted at 7 p.m., Tuesday,
September 3, 2013, at Casto Funeral Home Chapel, Ravenswood, W.Va. Visitation will be one hour prior to time
of service. Committal service will be 1 p.m. Wednesday,
September 4, 2013, at Cunningham Memorial Park, St.
Albans.
Email condolences may be sent to: castofh@gmail.
com.

Death Notices
Adkins

Thelma Jean Henson
Adkins, 67, of Huntington, W.Va., died Monday,
September 2, 2013, at St.
Mary’s Medical Center,
Huntington, W.Va.
Funeral service will be
conducted 1 p.m. Thursday, September 5, 2013
at Hall Funeral Home,
Proctorville, Ohio, by Rev.

Cardwell

Eddie Salmons. Burial
will follow in Getaway
Cemetery,
Chesapeake,
Ohio. Visitation will be
held 12-1 p.m. Thursday,
September 5, 2013, at the
funeral home.
In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be
made to the American
Cancer Society.

Ralph E. Cardwell, Jr.,
35, Wellston, died Friday,
August 30, 2013, at his
residence. Funeral services
will be 12 p.m. Thursday,
September 5, 2013, at the
Huntley-Cremeens Funeral
Home, Wellston. Burial
will be in the Fisher Cemetery in Vinton County.
Friends may call one hour

“We were playing a festival and I just had this song
rolling around in my head,”
Houser remembers of the
latter. “I stayed up till about
5 in the morning but then
got stuck. So I called up Zac
and we went on his bus and
knocked it out of the park.”
After Midnight will
open for Houser beginning
at 6:45 p.m. on Saturday,
Sept. 14.
Parmalee is a Country
Rock band hailing from
Greenville, North Carolina.
The band’s name was derived from the tiny, southern town of Parmele, NC,
located a couple miles from
their hometown, where
they started creating music together in a small barn
known as Studio B.
Parmalee consists of
lead singer and guitarist
Matt Thomas, bassist and
vocalist Barry Knox (Matt

and Scott Thomas’ cousin), Josh McSwain (lead
guitar, vocals, and friend),
and drummer Scott Thomas (Matt’s brother).
The group has recently
made the country charts
with songs “Musta Had a
Good Time” and “Carolina.”
South of the River Band
will open for Parmalee on
Friday night.
In addition to musical entertainment, there will be a
car show, 5k race and parade.
First, second and third
place awards will be given
in the following parade
categories: floats, antique
vehicles, walking units,
bicycles, doggy parade
(dressed in party attire),
school bands, antique tractors and horses.
Line up for the parade
will begin at 9 a.m. on Saturday, Sept. 14 at Southern
High School, with the pa-

prior to the funeral service
at the funeral home.

Danford

Steve Joe Danford, 59,
of Crown City, Ohio, died
Friday, August 30, 2013, at
his daughter’s home.
Visitation was held from
6-8 p.m. Tuesday, September 3, 2013, at Hall Funeral
Home, Proctorville, Ohio.

Per Steve’s wishes there
will be a private burial at
Miller Memorial Gardens,
Miller, Ohio.

Henry

Michael Don Henry, 60,
of Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
passed away on August 31,
2013. Funeral services and
burial will be at the convenience of the family. Deal Fu-

neral Home in Point Pleasant, is serving the family.

Rutt

Richard Rutt, 57, Bidwell,
died unexpectedly Tuesday,
September 3, 2013, in the
Emergency Department at
the Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral arrangements will
be announced by the Cremeens Funeral Chapel.

Party
From Page 1
“Boots On,” and songwriting credits for major names
such as Trace Adkins, Justin Moore and Chris Young.
In 2008 — mere months
after the release of his debut single,“Anything Goes”
— Houser was even asked
by David Letterman himself to appear on the Late
Show. The singer’s first
full-length, Anything Goes,
came out later that year,
followed in 2010 by They
Call Me Cadillac which
spawned hit “Whistlin’
Dixie,” and fan-favorite “A
Man Like Me.”
New tracks on How
Country Feels echo the single’s sunny self-assurance,
including “We’re Just Growing Younger” and“Along for
the Ride,” which Houser
co-wrote with Zac Brown.

Run
From Page 1
lung cancer and tobacco prevention.
Fox’s Pizza Den (Pomeroy), arrive — 4:00 p.m., depart
— 4:30 p.m. with information from MCCI Think Pink.
The “run” will end at the Gathering Waters Campground with entertainment, beverages and free food for
riders, as well as food for a donation for other attendees.
The entry fee at the final stop will be $10. A Chinese auction and 50/50 drawing will be held.
Tax deductible donations to benefit MCCI are being accepted at any City National Bank or Farmer’s Bank location. Plaques “In Memory of” or an “In Honor of” loved
ones can be purchased and will be displayed at the banks
until the day of the run; these will then be displayed at
the final stop.
MCCI members will be at each stop to answer cancerrelated questions. The Appalachian Community Cancer
Network will be represented as well as Holzer Health
System Community Outreach Program, the OSU Research Study Department, the Parish Nurse Program of
the Methodist Cooperative Parish and the Meigs County
Health Department. Local cancer survivors or caregivers
will be present at the various stops to share their experience with cancer.
For more information, contact Courtney Midkiff at the
Meigs County Health Department via phone at 992-6626
from 8 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. Or e-mail Lee
Morris at info@trenchroxx.com.

Payments
From Page 1
which serve students in the counties.
Other schools receiving payments for Meigs County
students were as follows: Alexander Local School District, $5,391.11 (213 students); Ohio Virtual Academy
Inc., $860.55 (34 students); Electronic Classroom of
Tomorrow, $1,189.59 (47 students); Ohio Connections
Academy Inc., $480.90 (19 students); Federal Hocking
Local School, $354.35 (14 students); Vinton County Local School District, $151.86 (six students); Tri-County
Career Center, $75.93 (three students); Buckeye On-line
School for Success, $50.62 (two students); Treca Digital
Academy, $50.62 (two students); Gallia Jackson Vinton
Joint Vocational, $25.31 (one student).
In Gallia County other schools receiving payments
were as follows: Gallia, Jackson, Vinton Joint Vocational, $9,029.08 (358 students); Fairland Local Schools,
$3,430.04 (136 students); Oak Hill Union Local,
$1,109.72 (44 students); Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow, $807.07 (32 students); Ohio Virtual Academy
Inc., $781.85 (31 students); Virtual Community School,
$756.63 (30 students); Symmes Valley Local School
District, $655.74 (26 students); Lawrence County Joint
Vocational, $428.76 (17 students); Treca Digital Academy, $277.43 (11 students); Ohio Connections Academy
Inc., $226.99 (nine students); Ohio Distance Education,
$75.66 (three students); Buckeye On-line School for Success, $75.66 (three students); Southern Ohio Academy,
$25.22 (one student).
The school districts receive semi-annual payments,
which according to the Ohio Department of Taxation, will
take place on Jan. 31 and Aug. 31.
** Enrollment figures for all schools are based on a report available from the Ohio Department of Taxation.

rade beginning at 10 a.m.
A complete schedule of
events for the three day
festival is as follows,

6:45 p.m. — South of
the River band on stage.
8 p.m. — Parmalee on
stage.

Thursday Sept. 12,
2013
5 p.m. — Food vendors
open; arts and crafts vendors open; video arcade
games open.
6 p.m. — Amusement
rides open; carnival games
open.
6:45 p.m. — Soul Harvest Praise and Worship
band on stage.
8 p.m. — Wayfarers on
stage.

Saturday Sept. 14, 2013
8 a.m. — 5k registration
begins.
9 a.m. — 5k race; parade
lineup at high school.
10 a.m. — Parade begins.
Noon — Food vendors
open; arts and craft vendors open; video arcade
games open; amusement
rides open; carnival games Randy Houser
open; parade winners announced on stage; chain
3 p.m. — Air-evac medisaw carver.
1 p.m. — 2013 queen cal helicopter; car show
crowning on stage; Cruisin judging.
5 p.m. — Car show
Saturday Night car show
awards.
registration begins.
6:45 p.m. — After Mid2 p.m. — Kiddie tractor
pull on basketball court; night on stage.
9 p.m. — Randy Houser
balloon artist; antique tracon stage.
tor show and games.

Friday Sept. 13, 2013
5 p.m. — Food vendors
open; arts and crafts vendors open; video arcade
games open.
6 p.m. — Amusement
rides open; carnival games
open.

USDA tests wildlife rabies vaccine in 5 states
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — The U.S.
Department of Agriculture is tossing
marshmallow-flavored plastic packets of rabies vaccine out of airplanes
in northern New York and parts of
Vermont, New Hampshire, Ohio, and
West Virginia.
The work is part of a third U.S.

field trial of a vaccine to control rabies in raccoons, skunks and other
wildlife. Biologists are evaluating the
safety and immune effects of the vaccine. So far, they’ve found it effective
in raccoons, coyotes and foxes, but it
hasn’t proven effective in combating
rabies in skunks.

The plastic blister packs are being
distributed this month by airplane
drop and by people on the ground.
The olive green rectangular packets
are a little bigger than a quarter.
The USDA says pets won’t be
harmed if they find and eat a vaccine
packet.

Ohio treasurer plugs new financial literacy effort
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Ohio’s treasurer
launched a state program
Tuesday that brings government and business together to help high school
students meet the state’s
new financial literacy requirements.
Republican Josh Mandel said he sees financial
education for youth as a
must, commending the
state Legislature for passing the mandate that kicks
in with this school year’s
graduates.
“My personal feeling is
this is one of the main issues facing young people
in this country,” Mandel

told about three dozen
high-schoolers gathered
for launch of the Financial Edge program at
Columbus
Downtown
High School. “When they
graduate high school and
graduate college, a lot of
them are saddled with
enormous debt and other
financial burdens and, unfortunately, have a strike
or two against them when
they’re going out into the
work world.”
The program provides
free downloadable course
materials, an online resource library and interactive programs and games
provided through a public-

private partnership with
EverFi, a leading education technology company,
to help districts meet the
mandate.
Mandel said the initiative will begin in urban
school systems, but the
resources are available in
school districts across the
state.
He told the students that
being financially literate
can help them to avoid excessive debt and predatory
lending schemes.
A state law passed in
2006 required all public,
private and charter high
schools to integrate economics and financial liter-

acy into one or more core
social studies classes or
into another class.
In developing the offering, schools were required
to make available publicprivate partnerships, resources and materials that
exist in business, industry
and college-level economics education centers.
Mandel said his effort
helps schools meet the
law’s requirements.
State law also bars most
Ohio public colleges and
universities from accepting students for admission
after this year who don’t
pass a financial literacy
course, Mandel said.

Somali man, son sentenced for illicit drug scheme
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A Somali man was sentenced Tuesday to
six months in prison and six months
of house arrest for leading an illegal
prescription drug distribution ring
and selling the stimulant khat while
using a check-cashing scheme to
launder more than $6 million from a
Louisville storefront.
U.S. District Judge John G. Heyburn II in Louisville also ordered
43-year-old Abdalla Hajisufi to repay
the state $119,000 for underreporting his income while claiming eligibility for food stamps.
Heyburn sentenced Hajisufi’s
son, 20-year-old Mohamad Hajisufi,
a native of Kenya and a University
of Louisville student, to a year of
probation for playing a minor role
in the plot.
The two pleaded guilty in June to
conspiring to distribute the painkillers oxycodone and hydrocodone between November 2011 and March
2012 to customers at their business,
the Hana Store.

Abdalla Hajisufi also pleaded
guilty to managing and owning
an unlicensed money transmitting
business operating out of the Hana
Store. Hajisufi admitted to cashing
payroll checks from employees of a
temporary employment agency, and
deducting a small fee for the transaction, without complying with the
licensing and registration requirements of Kentucky state laws.
The FBI said Hajisufi cashed
nearly 107,000 payroll checks totaling more than $6.6 million from July
2006 through December 2010 at the
Hana Store.
Hajisufi further agreed to the forfeiture of $25,008 seized at The Hana
Store during execution of the FBI
search warrant on March 13, 2012.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Jason
Snyder said Abdalla Hajisufi ran a
drug dealing operation, an illegal
business and spent time “ripping off
every available welfare program” before being indicted and fleeing the
country in 2012.

Abdalla Hajisufi’s attorney, Mark
Chandler, asked Heyburn for some
leniency in sentencing. Chandler described his client as a Somali native
who fled to snake-infested Kenyan
refugee camps before arriving in the
United States. Since then, Chandler
said, Hajisufi has maintained steady
employment and taken care of his
wife and seven children.
“Obviously, prison doesn’t scare
him,” Chandler said. “He’s been
through more and seen more than
any of us in this room.”
Mohamad Hajisufi’s attorney, federal public defender Don Meier, said
his client played a very small role in
the plot.
“This was a foolish mistake,”
Meier said.
Khat is a flowering plant native
to the Horn of Africa and the Arabian Peninsula. Somalia and Yemen
are among the places where khat is
commonplace. Users chew the leaf
to release stimulants that produce
a mild high.

�The Daily Sentinel

SPORTS

WEDNESDAY,
SEPTEMBER 4, 2013

mdssports@civitasmedia.com

No. 4 Clemson has best AP poll ranking in 25 years
NEW YORK (AP) — Breaking
down the AP college football poll
after Week 1 of the regular season.
MAKING A STATEMENT.
Barring a severe case of Clemsoning by Clemson, the Tigers should
be in the national championship
race for most of this season.
No. 4 Clemson surged Tuesday to its highest ranking in The
Associated Press poll in 25 years
after the Tigers won the biggest
game of the opening weekend of
the college football season, a 3835 victory against Georgia.
The Tigers received one-first

place vote in the new Top 25 and
have their best showing in the
poll since Sept. 12, 1988, when
they were No. 3.
Alabama remains No. 1 and received 58 of 60 first-place votes
from the media panel after beating Virginia Tech 35-10 to start
the season.
No. 2 Oregon and No. 3 Ohio
State flip-flopped spots from the
preseason rankings. The Buckeyes received one first-place
vote. Stanford is No. 5.
As for Clemson, coach Dabo
Swinney’s team should be able to
enjoy its lofty status for a while

as long the Tigers avoid Clemsoning at its worst. Clemsoning
is a term college football fans use
when teams with high expectations lose to inferior opponents.
Over the years, it’s been a nasty
habit of the Tigers.
Clemson this week hosts South
Carolina State, an FCS team —
though not a terrible one. And
after what happened last weekend with eight FCS teams beating FBS teams, Clemson best not
party too hard.
The Tigers should be big favorites in the next four Atlantic
Coast Conference games after

that before No. 10 Florida State
and remarkable redshirt freshman quarterback Jameis Winston come to town on Oct. 19.
Another tip for the Tigers:
Watch out for faked punts.
Back in 1988, when Clemson
was No. 3 in the country, the Tigers played Florida State in Death
Valley and were victims of one of
the most memorable trick plays
in college football history. With
the score tied and 1:21 left in
the fourth quarter, Florida State
lined up to punt from deep in its
own territory. Instead, FSU coach
Bobby Bowden called a fake and

LeRoy Butler raced 78 yards to set
up the game-winning field goal.
GOING UP. The current Florida State team moved up one spot
to No. 10 in the rankings, but no
doubt sent a message that it’s prepared to compete with Clemson
in the ACC, if not for a national
championship. In a dazzling debut, Winston led Florida State to
a 41-13 victory at Pitt on Monday night, going 25 of 27 for 356
yards and four touchdowns, and
running for a score. The Seminoles’ schedule also sets up nicely
for a battle of unbeatens on Oct.
19. No Clemsoning, Seminoles.

Kyle Robertson | Columbus Dispatch | MCT photo

Urban Meyer is introduced as the new head football coach of
Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, Monday, Nov. 28, 2011.

Meyer wary of
SDSU despite
stunning upset loss
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP) — Even though San
Diego State was beaten by
a lower-division team in
its opener, Urban Meyer
believes it is dangerous to
take the Aztecs lightly.
The Ohio State coach
made the case that the Aztecs were on the wrong end
of a 40-19 score at home
on Saturday night because
they lost Adam Muema to
an ankle injury — “arguably the best tailback we’ll
face all year” — and that
FCS member Eastern Illinois played a great game.
Rocky Long will bring
his Aztecs to Ohio Stadium
on Saturday to face the second-ranked Buckeyes.
After the opening-game
loss, he said, “That’s as bad
a performance as I’ve ever
been around, and obviously I’m responsible, so that’s
my fault. It was a horrible,
horrible job of coaching.”
Meyer, however, said
Long has always been a terrific coach, including stops
at New Mexico and now
San Diego State.
It was while Long was
at his alma mater, New
Mexico, in 2003 that his

Lobos handed Utah one
of only two defeats Meyer
sustained during his two
years with the Utes.
“I coached against Rocky
Long before,” Meyer said
Monday. “He’s an excellent football coach, tough,
and his guys play real hard.
They won nine games last
year, which is not surprising for his teams.”
Most of Meyer’s words
were directed at his own
team, which rolled to a 4020 win over Buffalo in its
opener.
As expected, mistakes
were made in the first
game. But the Buckeyes
figure to be a lot better
with the addition of star
cornerback Bradley Roby
and No. 2 tailback Rod
Smith, both coming off
one-game suspensions.
Roby, an All-Big Ten
performer a year ago, isn’t
guaranteed to start but will
vie for playing time this
week in practice. Armani
Reeves, who got the call to
replace Roby against Buffalo, and the other starter,
Doran Grant, would also
be in the mix.

OVP Sports Schedule
Wednesday, Sept. 4
Volleyball
Miller at South Gallia, 6 p.m.
Eastern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Southern at Waterford, 6 p.m.
Wahama at Federal Hocking, 6 p.m.
Golf
River Valley, Coal Grove at Rock Hill, 4 p.m.
Meigs girls at Wellston, 4 p.m.
College Volleyball
WVU Tech at URG, 6 p.m.
Thursday, Sept. 5
Volleyball
Athens at Meigs, 6 p.m.
Federal Hocking at South Gallia, 5:30
Portsmouth at Gallia Academy, 5:30
Waterford at Wahama, 6 p.m.
Ohio Valley Christian at Ironton St. Joe, 5:30
River Valley at Coal Grove, 5:30
Southern at Trimble, 6 p.m.
Golf
SEOAL at Gallia Academy, 4 p.m.
TVC Ohio at Meigs, 4:30
Eastern, Waterford at South Gallia, 4:30
Wahama, Belpre at Southern, 4:30
Boys Soccer
Gallia Academy at Athens, 5:30
Girls Soccer
Point Pleasant at Williamstown, 5 p.m.

Neal C. Lauron | Columbus Dispatch | MCT photo

Ohio State’s Jared Sullinger (0) celebrates with the crowd during a first-half run against Michigan in the Big 10
Tournament semifinal game at Bankers Life Fieldhouse in Indianapolis, Indiana, on Saturday, March 10, 2012.

Celtics’ Sullinger pleads not guilty to assault charges
WALTHAM, Mass. (AP) —
Boston Celtics forward Jared
Sullinger pleaded not guilty Tuesday to domestic violence-related
charges after allegedly repeatedly
pinning his girlfriend to a bed and
the floor.
Bail for Sullinger, 21, was set at
$5,000 after his plea on charges
including assault and battery and
intimidation of a witness.
Later Tuesday, Sullinger released a statement through the
Celtics in which he apologized
and called the experience “humbling and embarrassing.”
“I know that this situation has
brought both sorrow and embarrassment to my girlfriend, my
family, the Boston Celtics organization, my teammates, and
my fans,” he said. “To all of you,

I apologize from the bottom of
my heart.”
Police say officers were called
to Sullinger’s residence Saturday
evening by his girlfriend, Deann
Smith. She told them that earlier
that day he’d assaulted her after
she accused him of cheating on
her and began packing.
“During this heated argument
in the bedroom, Jared pushed her
down onto the bed and got on top
of her,” Waltham police wrote in
a report. “Deann states she tried
several times to get up, but he
kept pinning her down and would
not let her up.”
The report said Sullinger later
threw Smith to the floor and
wouldn’t let her up.
Smith told police that Sullinger grabbed her phone after she

threatened to call police and then
left because he was scheduled to
fly to Ohio. She told police she
called them only after she knew
Sullinger was out of state.
Police said Smith still had red
marks visible on her chest when
she spoke to them.
Police issued a warrant for Sullinger’s arrest and he turned himself in at about 6 a.m. Tuesday.
Sullinger’s attorney, Charles
Rankin, said in court that Sullinger and Smith were “long-time
sweethearts” who met at Ohio
State University. He told the judge
that Smith waited 10 hours before
calling Waltham police for help.
Sullinger averaged six points
and almost six rebounds per
game in 45 games as a rookie last
season.

Broncos’ Von Miller among 20 suspended NFL players
NEW YORK (AP) —
Denver All-Pro linebacker
Von Miller is among 20
NFL players suspended
for the beginning of the
NFL season.
Miller will be out for
six games for violating the
league’s substance abuse
policy. He will miss Thursday night’s opener between
Super Bowl champion Baltimore and the Broncos.
The league wanted a longer penalty for the thirdyear linebacker, but the
sides agreed to less than
half the season. It will cost
Miller about $800,000.
“I made mistakes and
my suspension has hurt

my team, Broncos fans,
and myself,” Miller said
when the agreement was
reached last month. “I am
especially sorry for the effect of my bad decisions
on others. I will not make
the same mistakes about
adhering to the policy in
the future. “
Two players are suspended for eight games:
Ravens defensive back Asa
Jackson and Cincinnati defensive end DeQuin Evans,
under the performanceenhancing drugs policy.
None of the 20 players
has been suspended for
violating the personal conduct policy, although Jets

running back Mike Goodson was arrested in New
Jersey in May on drugs
and weapons charges and
will miss four games for
substance abuse. His case
was sent to a grand jury.
Also suspended under
the substance abuse policy
for four games each were:
Jacksonville receiver Justin
Blackmon, Indianapolis receiver LaVon Brazill, New
York Giants safety Will
Hill, Washington linebacker Rob Jackson, Arizona
linebacker Daryl Washington, and Baltimore safety
Christian Thompson.
Also barred for substance abuse, but with

lesser suspensions, were:
Minnesota fullback Jerome
Felton (three games),
Cleveland receiver Josh
Gordon (two), San Francisco tight end Demarcus
Dobbs (one), Rams running back Isaiah Pead
(one) and Chiefs offensive
lineman Rokevious Watkins (one).
Suspended four games
for using performance
enhancers were: Seattle
linebacker Bruce Irvin, St.
Louis linebacker Jo-Lonn
Dunbar, Oakland receiver
Andre Holmes, Washington defensive lineman Jarvis Jenkins and Minnesota
tackle DeMarcus Love.

�tions, and proposal forms will
be forwarded from the Division
issued out of said Court in the

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

from Traders Bank, Inc., SucResources, upon receipt of a

money order s
in the
The check
Dailyor Sentinel
Page 7

www.mydailysentinel.com
lic action on the front steps of

27, 2013, at 10:00 a.m., the
following lands and tenements:
The following real estate situTownship of Salisbury,
bounded and described as follows:
Situated in the west part of Lot

and described as follows:
Beginning at the center of the

LEGALS

LEGALS

issued out of said Court in the

lic action on the front steps of

27, 2013, at 10:00 a.m., the
following lands and tenements:
Situate in the Township of Le-

come the property of the prospective bidders and no refunds will be made. A copy of
the plans and specifications
will be available for public review during normal business

Situated in Town 2, Range 11,

formation regarding the project
the primary contact person is

thence along the center of said
road in a southeast direction

Beginning in the middle of

sence you may contact the

thence northeast parallel with

Southwest corner of Section

Rutland, 12 feet southeast of

northwest direction 133 feet to

along the center of said high-

ficer, Scott Davies. They all
can be reached in the Athens
Each proposal must be accom-

the place of beginning, in center of said road leading from

issued out of said Court in the
LEGALS
lic action on the front steps of

Drivers &amp; Delivery

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EMPLOYMENT
Building / Construction / Skilled

Pleasant Valley Log
Homes &amp; Construction

The following real estate situ-

vised Code.
less.
Subject to leases, easements
and rights-of-way of record.
Reference Deed: Volume 202,
cial Records.
00080.000
The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants.

land now or formerly owned by

Township of Salisbury,
bounded and described as follows:
Situated in the west part of Lot

Full-time/Part-time
LPN’s &amp; CNA’s

to the East corner of a lot now
or formerly owned by Dale
and described as follows:
Beginning at the center of the

thence along the center of said
road in a southeast direction
thence northeast parallel with
northwest direction 133 feet to

the place of beginning, in center of said road leading from

740-547-7924
We also build
garages &amp; pole barns60440830

along the center of said road to
the place of beginning, containing 1.6 acres, more or less.
Reference Deed: Volume 328,

requires successful bidders to
pay recording fees and associated costs to the Sheriff.
Sealed proposals shall be delivered to the address given at

cial Records
the actual date of the opening
thereof.

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants

sources reserves the right to
reject any or all bids, or to accept the bid which embraces
such combination alternate
proposals as may promote the
best interest of the State.

213 E. Second Street,
Boyd and Rebecca Boyd.

bounded and described as follows, to-wit:
Beginning in the center of the
State Road, at the south
corner of Charles &amp; Isabel Au-

lic action on the front steps of
Miscellaneous
27, 2013, at 10:00 a.m., the
following lands and tenements:

land now or formerly owned by

The following real estate situ-

AT: $30,000.00. The real estate cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal does include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the
real estate.

NATIONAL
MARKETPLACE

Notices

Recommends that you do

fied check only) down on day

requires successful bidders to
pay recording fees and associated costs to the Sheriff.

to the East corner of a lot now
or formerly owned by Dale

after for furnishing the materials and performing the labor
for the execution and construction of:

and described as follows:

Are You Still Paying Too
Muchat the center of the
Beginning
Make the Switch to Dish
For Your Medications?
12 feet southeastToday
of
and Save up to 50%
You can save up to 90% whenRutland,
you fill your
e

21
in accordance with the plans
and specifications prepared by

prescriptions at our Canadian and
thence along the center of said
International Pharmacy Service.

Celecoxib*
$58.00

Generic equivalent
of CelebrexTM.
Generic price for
200mg x 100
compared to

CelebrexTM $437.58

along the center of said road to
road in a southeast direction
Get An Extra $10 Off
Promotiothe
connal place of beginning,
MOVIE or less.
Packages
&amp; Free Shipping
On
taining 1.6PREMIUM
acres,
more
thence northeast parallelstwith
arting at on
CHANNELS*
Your 1st Order!
ly
Reference
Deed: Volume 328,
...
Call the number below and save an
additional $10 plus get free shipping
on your first prescription order with
Canada Drug Center. Expires March
31, 2013. Offer is valid for prescription
orders only and can not be used in
conjunction with any other offers.

northwest direction 133 feet to
for 12 month

s

1-888-721-0871

Call Toll-free: 1-800-341-2398

Call 7 days
a week 8am - 11pm EST Promo Code: MB0113
The following described
real
*Offer subject to change based on premium channel availablity
estate situated in the
County of
Boyd and Rebecca Boyd.
bounded and described as folAT: $30,000.00. The real eslows, to-wit:
tate cannot be sold for less
Beginning in the center of the
than 2/3rds the appraised
State Road, at the south
value.
appraisal does incorner of Charles &amp; Isabel
Au-Repair
We’ll
YourThe
Computer
clude an interior examination
Through
The
Internet!
of any structures, if any, on the
real estate.
Solutions For:

Use of these services is subject to the Terms of Use and
accompanying policies at www.canadadrugcenter.com.

BURIED
in CREDIT
CARDDEBT?
Over $10,000 in credit card bills?
land now
Can’t make the minimum payments?

Fix Your
Computer Now!

Slow Computers • E-Mail &amp; Printer Problems
Spyware &amp; Viruses
Bad Internet
Connections
fied •check
only)
down

or formerly owned by

on day

check only) due
on confirmaAffordable
Rates
For
Home
requires successful bidders to
Business
pay&amp;recording
fees and associ-

✔ WE CAN GET YOU OUT OF DEBT QUICKLY
✔ WE CAN SAVE YOU THOUSANDS OF DOLLARS
✔ WE CAN HELP YOU AVOID BANKRUPTCY

ated costs to the Sheriff.

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Not a high-priced consolidation loan or one of those
consumer credit counseling programs

888-781-3386

to the East corner of a lot now
CREDIT CARD RELIEF
for your FREE consultation
CALL
or formerly

877-465-0321

owned by Dale

2500 Off Service

$

We’re here to help you Monday - Friday from 9am-9pm EST
Not available in all states

along the center of said road to
the place of beginning, containing 1.6 acres, more or less.
Reference Deed: Volume 328,

Mention Code: MB

213 E. Second Street,

cial Records

ment Services Agency
for funding under the Community Development Block
ded program administered by
the state. Village of

Yard Sale

from First baptist church Lawn
Furniture,recliners,longaberger,oak shelves,pictures,clothing etc.
ing Reclamation and Enforcefunds for this project. The construction completion date for
this project is February 28,

to provide citizens
with pertinent information
cluding an explanation
of eligible activities and program requirements. The CDa broad range of activities, including: economic development projects, street
improvements, water and sewer projects, park acquisition
and improvements,
and rehabilitation of neighborhood structures. The activities
must be designed
to primarily benefit low and
moderate-income individuals,
aid in the prevention of
slums and blight, or meet an
urgent need of the community.
Citizens are encouraged to attend this meeting on September 18, 2013 at 10:00
a.rn. to provide their input on

value) Vintage reo with 8 track,
Irons,quilts,watering cans. lots
at the project site. It is the in-

sell.

mence the pre-bid meeting at

102 2nd street. Crown City, All
must go, Holiday &amp; home

commencement of the meeting, an attendance sign-in form
shall be distributed among the
contractors present. This form

priced to sell.

signed in prior to collection of
the form who remain in attendance through the discussion of
the plans and detailed specifications shall be deemed
present for the purpose of determining eligibility for bid sub-

niture, lots of household items,
appliances &amp; much much more

tion in the site viewing subsequent to the completion of
the discussion of the detailed
specifications will not be required in establishing attend-

Resources, upon receipt of a
check or money order in the

ARE YOU A DIABETIC?

Call NOW to make sure
fied
you are ge"
ing check only) down on day
the best deal on your
check only) due on confirmaDiabetic Supplies!

AMERICA’S!DIABETIC!

SAVINGS!CLUB
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starting aro

und

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*with $99 customer
ation e and
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1-888-718-8142
��� ���� ����������� ��� ���������� ����� ���������

213 E. Second Street,

Career Opportunity

lic action on the front steps of

come the property of the prospective bidders and no refunds will be made. A copy of
the plans and specifications
will be available for public review during normal business

Sales/Marketing Representative
Applicant
must
be energetic
and enthusiastic. This posi27, 2013, at 10:00 a.m.,
the
following
lands
and
tenements:
tion requires an individual that possesses both Internet
Situate in the Township of LeMarketing Skills and face-to-face sales skills. The sucSituated
Town 2, Range
formation regarding
the project
cessfulinapplicant
will be11,self-motivated
with a desire
to
the primary contact person is
make things happen.
applyofby mailing
your
resume
to: the
Beginning Please
in the middle
sence
you
may contact
P.O.
Box
807
Gallipolis,
OH
45631
Southwest corner of Section

60446596

along the center of said high-

Child / Elderly Care
Healthcare needed urgently for
a 73yr old man ,no qualificaper week). please contact to
schedule interview :

port Center is accepting applications for a Substance Abuse
Instructor. This position will be
a contract employee working
part-time. Requirement includes a minimum of a bachelchology, social work or related
field and a professional license or addiction certification

issued out of said Court in the
Help Wanted General
monitoring

SERVICES

Health

from Traders Bank, Inc., Suc-

AT: $30,000.00. The real estate cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal does include an interior examination
Your insurance may pay for your
diabetic
of any
structures, if any, on the
supplies with li"le to no costreal
to you.
estate.

4pm

staff when the pre-bid meeting

Copies of the plans, specifications, and proposal forms will
be forwarded from the Division

Boyd and Rebecca Boyd.

Books,toys,clothing,household
items,misc. watch for signs on
8am to ? @ 311 &amp; 320 Condor

The first of two public hearings
will be held September 18,
2013 at 10:00 a.m.

The above described real estate is sold “as is” without warranties or covenants

requires successful bidders to
!!!!YOU!MAY!QUALIFY!FOR"
recording
• A glucosepay
meter
upgrade fees and associated costs
to the Sheriff.
• Free prescription
delivery
• Great deals on products
&amp; services
• And FREE gi!s

AUCTION / ESTATE /
YARD SALE

213 E. Second Street,

mo.

Order Now! 1-800-341-2398
Use code 10FREE to receive
the place of
this special offer.

prescription is required for all prescription medication orders.

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.

cial Records

The above For
described
3 months.real estate is sold “as is” without warbeginning, in cenranties
or covenants
Call from
Now and Ask
How!
ter of said road leading
Please note that we do not carry controlled substances and a valid

Typical US brand price
for 200mg x 100

ANNOUNCEMENTS

Sealed proposals will be received at the:

check only) due on confirma-

Township of Salisbury,
bounded and described as follows:
Situated in the west part of Lot

ric
Our P

THER ADVISED THAT, IF

check only) due on confirma-

The following described real
estate situated in the County of

issued out of said Court in the

tate cannot be sold for less
than 2/3rds the appraised
value. The appraisal does not
include an interior examination
of any structures, if any, on the
real estate.
fied check only) down on day

Rutland, 12 feet southeast of

LEGALS

Building log &amp;
conventional homes at
affordable prices
www.pvloghomes.com

meeting the requirements of

Turner.

Medical / Health

Experienced Preferred
But Training Available.
Interested Candidates can
Call 304-273-9482 or
come in and fill out an
application.
Ravenswood Care Center
1113 Washington St.
Ravenswood, WV 26164

bounded and described as follows, to-wit:LEGALS
Beginning in the center of the
State Road, at the south
corner of Charles &amp; Isabel Au-

27, 2013, at 10:00 a.m., the
following lands and tenements:

60443267

Professional Services

The following described real
estate situated in the County of

tion line to the place of beginning, containing one and six

ficer, Scott Davies. They all
can be reached in the Athens

Each proposal must be accom-

Amanda L. Tarbett, Director,
to accept resumes is September 6, 2013.
Professional Services
SEPTIC PUMPING Gallia Co.
OH and
Mason Co. WV. Ron
Evans
Jackson,
OH
800-537-9528

FINANCIAL SERVICES

�Page 8 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

AP Sports Briefs
WVU Tech names 5 to athletic hall
MONTGOMERY, W.Va. (AP) — West
Virginia University Institute of Technology has announced five new members of
its Athletic Hall of Fame.
Jerri Aleshire, Ronald Beatty, Kenneth
Knapp, Eric Smith and Jim Welker will be
inducted Friday.
Aleshire was a women’s basketball
standout who scored 1,159 points from
1996 to 2000. That was third most in
school history at the time.
Beatty was an all-conference basketball
player who averaged a team-leading 23
points per game as a senior in 1990.
Knapp played both ways in football
and hit better than .300 every season in

baseball from 1956 to 1960.
Smith played golf and baseball but
made his biggest mark in football. The
quarterback compiled 6,691 total yards
before graduating in 2003.
Welker was an all-conference two-way
lineman in football from 1955 to 1959.
Browns reach agreement
with kicker Billy Cundiff
CLEVELAND (AP) — The Browns
have reached agreement on a contract
with former Pro Bowl kicker Billy Cundiff, who has just a few days to prepare for
the season opener.
Cundiff, who previously kicked for
Cleveland, auditioned Tuesday for the

Money To Lend

Apartments/Townhouses

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)

1 &amp; 2 bedroom apartments &amp;
houses,
No
pets,
740-992-2218
Washer -Dryer Hook-up. NO
deposit Ph: 740-339-3063

Rentals

Repo's
Available
740)446-3570

Drivers &amp; Delivery
Truck Driver Needed - Henderson WV based - CDL License
&amp; 2 yrs experience MVR required. Call 304-675-7434
Help Wanted General
Maintenance Person wanted at
the Gallipolis Quality Inn.
Some experience required,
References a must. Apply in
person, NO Phone calls
please.
The Gallia Metropolitan Housing Authority is seeking a qualified candidate to fill the position of Maintenance Mechanic
II. Applications along with a
copy of the position description may be picked up at the

male 740-339-0497
Kittens to a Good Home (Inside Only) Liter trained call
AGRICULTURE

AUTOMOTIVE

gas engine, recent complete
lyoung@galliamha.org.
Medical / Health
Dr. Randall Hawkins is now
taking new patients. 2520 Val-

luxe equipped for large Lake
sured value, New Magic tilt

CALL About our RENTAL
SPECIAL

ant WV. (304)675-7700

offer, interested parties only,

Guardian Today

ANNUITY.COM

MEDICAL GUARDIAN:
Medical Alert for Seniors 24/7 monitoring.

READY FOR MY QUOTE
CABLE:
SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-

Annuity
Quotes from A-Rated

Guardian Today

CANADA DRUG:
Canada Drug Center is your
choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
will provide you with savings of
up to 75 percent on all your
medication needs. Call

MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,

READY FOR MY QUOTE
CABLE:
SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-

your prescription and free
shipping.
DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at

&amp; full description.
AUTOMOTIVE
AFTER MARKET

tric. We Pay water sewage and
trash. Minorities encouraged to
apply. No pets Ph: 304-674-

EDUCATION

Annuity
Quotes from A-Rated

Got A Chance! Options from
ALL major service providers.
Call us to learn more!
CALL Today.

Nationwide Service.

your prescription and free
shipping.
CANADA DRUG:
Canada Drug Center is your
choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
will provide you with savings of
up to 75 percent on all your
medication needs. Call

FIRST MONTH FREE

AC, W/D hook-up
tenant pays elec
EHO
Ellm View Apts

READY FOR MY QUOTE
CABLE:
SAVE on Cable TV-Internet-

your prescription and free
shipping.
CANADA DRUG:
Canada Drug Center is your
choice for safe and affordable
medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy
will provide you with savings of
up to 75 percent on all your
medication needs. Call

Boats &amp; Marinas

also be emailed by calling 740-

MEDICAL GUARDIAN:
Medical Alert for Seniors 24/7 monitoring.

Got A Chance! Options from
ALL major service providers.
Call us to learn more!
CALL Today.

Pets

Vouchers are accepted. Call
Manager Lacie Skeen at
(740)446-3344 for more information and applications.
“This institution is an equal opportunity provider and employer”

ANNUITY.COM

Retirement
Avoid market risk &amp; get guaranteed income in retirement!

boys &amp; 2 girls. Call 740-3393203

units will be
offered to qualified applicants.
Rental Assistance through
Rural Development may be
available for qualified applic-

Miscellaneous

Nationwide Service.

RESORT PROPERTY

Coming Soon!
Heatly Crossing
Newly renov-

Miscellaneous

Call

ANIMALS

Minnesota to host outdoor
puck game vs. OSU
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The State of
Hockey has waited long enough to host a
game outdoors.
Minnesota announced on Tuesday that
it will play Ohio State in a game at the
football team’s TCF Bank Stadium on
Jan. 17 in the Hockey City Classic. The
Golden Gophers appeared in the annual
outdoor game last year at Soldier Field in
Chicago against Wisconsin.
But the Gophers are eager to give their
fans a chance to pack the 50,000-seat football stadium on campus.
The two-time defending national champion Gophers women’s team will play earlier in
the day against Minnesota State, Mankato.

Miscellaneous

Retirement
Avoid market risk &amp; get guaranteed income in retirement!

Sales

RENTALS AVAILABLE! 2 BR
townhouse apartments, also
renting 2 &amp; 3BR houses. Call
441-1111.

EMPLOYMENT

Browns. The team needed a kicker just
four days before playing Miami after
terminating veteran Shayne Graham’s
contract and releasing rookie Brandon
Bogotay.
Cundiff made all six field-goal tries for
the Browns in 2009, when he filled in for
an injured Phil Dawson. Cundiff was cut
last month by the New York Jets.
The 33-year-old Cundiff made the Pro
Bowl with Baltimore in 2010, but he’s
best remembered for missing a potential
game-tying 32-yard field goal in the closing seconds of the 2012 AFC Championship against New England.
Cundiff has connected on 139 of 184
(75.5 percent) career field-goal attempts.

High Speed Internet starting at

IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.
immediate help.
MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.

Got A Chance! Options from
ALL major service providers.
Call us to learn more!
CALL Today.

UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION:
24 hr. Response - Tax
Deduction

immediate help.
MY COMPUTER WORKS:
My Computer Works
Computer problems? Viruses,
spyware, email, printer issues,
IT NOW! Professional, U.S.based technicians.

UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION:
24 hr. Response - Tax
Deduction

immediate help.
OMAHA STEAKS:
delivered-to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!

UNITED BREAST CANCER
FOUNDATION:

Business &amp; Trade School

MERCHANDSE FOR SALE

able.) SAVE! Ask About
Same Day Installation! CALL
NOW!!

ORDER Today

Gallipolis Career
College
(Careers Close To Home)
Call Today! 740-446-4367
1-800-214-0452

Carpeting

DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at

www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbff6
9

High Speed Internet starting at

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able.) SAVE! Ask About
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delivered-to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!

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ORDER Today
www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbff6
9

Absolute Top Dollar - silver/gold
coins, any 10K/14K/18K gold jewelry, dental gold, pre 1935 US currency, proof/mint sets, diamonds,
MTS Coin Shop. 151 2nd Avenue,
Gallipolis. 446-2842

gallipoliscareercollege.edu
Accredited Member Accrediting Council
for Independent Colleges and Schools
1274B

REAL ESTATE SALES

Houses For Sale

Land (Acreage)
55.75 acres of Land located on
Lower 9 Mile off Crab Creek

Sale-Carpet and Vinyl Direct
Spring Valley Green Apart-

Under New Management
Village Manor and Riverside
Apartments, MIddleport Ohio is

7444
Miscellaneous

DISH:
DISH TV Retailer. Starting at

and 2 bedrooms. Come check
out our updated units. Stop by
the office at 55 S 3rd Ave.
Middleport or call 740-9925064

Jet Aeration Motors
repaired, new &amp; rebuilt in stock.
Call Ron Evans 1-800-537-9528

High Speed Internet starting at

Ave - Kitchen with Stove &amp; refrigerator. One or two people -

ANNUITY.COM
Retirement
Avoid market risk &amp; get guaranteed income in retirement!

&amp; reference NO PETS 4464926
REAL ESTATE RENTALS

MANUFACTURED
HOUSING

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able.) SAVE! Ask About
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NOW!!
MEDICAL GUARDIAN:
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OMAHA STEAKS:
delivered-to-the-door
Omaha Steaks!

Guardian Today

SERVICE / BUSINESS
DIRECTORY

Miscellaneous

ORDER Today

Nationwide Service.
wooden 2/pc gun cabinet.

24 hr. Response - Tax
Deduction

www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbff6
9

BASEMENT WATERPROOFING. Unconditional Lifetime
Guarantee. Local references.
Established in 1975. Call
24hrs (740)446-0870. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing

Entertainment

WEDNESDAY EVENING
BROADCAST

NBC

!"#$%

ABC

!&amp;'"%

(3.1)
(8.1)

FOX

!(#'% (11.1)

CBS

!)!*% (13.1)

NBC

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PBS

!)-.% (20.1)
CABLE

A&amp;E
AMC
APL
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CMT
CNN
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DISN
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ESPN2
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TRAV
TVL
USA
VH1
WGN
PREMIUM

HBO
MAX
SHOW

7 PM

7:30

8 PM

SEPTEMBER 4, 2013
8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Got Talent A look back at the America's Got Talent (L)
Camp "CIT Overnight" (N)
semi-final show. (N) TVPG
TVPG
TV14
EntertainThe Middle "Last Whiff of
Modern Fam
Modern
ABC's the Lookout (SF) (N)
ment Tonight Summer" TVPG
"My Hero"
Family
TV14
Two and a
The Big Bang Masterchef "Top 4 Compete/ Top 3 Compete" Final four
Eyewitness News TVG
Half Men
Theory
cooks prepare a three-course meal. (N) TV14
13 News at
Inside Edition Big Brother (N) TV14
C.Minds "Brothers Hotchner/ CSI: Crime Scene "Ghosts of
7:00 p.m.
The Replicator" TV14
the Past" TV14
Wheel of
Jeopardy!
Got Talent A look back at the America's Got Talent (L)
Camp "CIT Overnight" (N)
Fortune
semi-final show. (N) TVPG
TVPG
TV14
PBS NewsHour TVG
Nature "Earthflight: North
National Parks "The Empire of Grandeur (1915-1919)"
America" (P) (N) TVG
National Park Service is founded to protect the parks. TVG
Wheel of
Fortune
Judge Judy

7 PM

Jeopardy!

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

11 PM

11:30

WSAZ News
(:35) Tonight
Tonight
Show (N)
Eyewitness
(:35) Jimmy
News 11
Kimmel (N)
The Simpsons Loves Ray
"Separation"
13 News
(:35) David
Letterman (N)
WTAP News at (:35) Tonight
11
Show (N)
Tavis Smiley
Inside E
(N)
Street

11 PM

11:30

Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Duck Dynasty Dads (N)
Modern Dads Modern Dads
CSI: Miami "Sink or Swim"
! !!! Pulp Fiction (1994, Crime Story) Uma Thurman, Bruce Willis, John Travolta. Two
! !!! The Italian Job ('03,
hit men cross paths with a gangster, an overdosing girlfriend, a boxer and two hoods. TVM
Act) Mark Wahlberg. TV14
TV14
River Monsters "Mongolian
River Monsters: Unhooked
River Monsters: Unhooked
Man-Eating Super Croc TVPG River Monsters: Unhooked
Mauler" TV14
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"Killer Torpedo" TVPG
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(6:) 106&amp;Park RealHusband The Game
The Game
Scandal "Enemy of the State" Scandal "Crash and Burn"
Sunday Best "Finale"
Top Chef Masters "Mindy
Million Dollar List "Third
Million Dollar List "It's
Top Chef Masters "Catch of
Million Dollar Listing Los
Kaling and Yo Gabba Gabba" Degree Burn" TV14
Personal" (N) TV14
the Day" (N)
Angeles "It's Personal" TV14
Reba
Reba
! !!! Good Will Hunting ('97, Dra) Matt Damon. TVPG
Cops: Reload Cops: Reload
OutFront
Anderson Cooper 360
CNN Films "The Flag"
CNN Films "The Flag"
(6:25)
The Daily
Futurama
Futura "Game Futurama
Futurama
Futurama (N) Futura "Space The Daily
The Colbert
Futurama
Show
of Tones"
Pilot 3000"
Show (N)
Report (N)
Unsolved History "Area 51"
Most Secret
Bermuda Triangle Exposed
Bermuda Triangle (N)
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A.N.T. Farm
Good Luck ... ! !!! Toy Story 2 ('99, Ani) Tom Hanks.
(:40) Jessie
(:05) A.N.T.
Dog With a
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A.N.T. Farm
"fANTasy girl" "Go Teddy!"
TVG
Farm
Blog
Ally
"ReplicANT"
E! News TVG
K. Cavallari
Kardash "Backdoor Bruiser"
The Soup
The Soup
ChelseaLately E! News
MLB Baseball Detroit Tigers vs. Boston Red Sox Site: Fenway Park -- Boston, Mass. (L) TVG MLB Baseball Tampa Bay vs L.A. Angels (L) TVG
ITF Tennis U.S. Open Men's Quarter-final and Women's Quarter-final (L) TVG
SportsCenter
Melissa &amp;
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Spell-Mageddon "Slam
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The 700 Club TVPG
Joey
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"Surprise!" (N) Dunk" (N)
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Restaurant: Impossible
Restaurant "Stella's Italian
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"Maniaci's Italian Bistro" TVG Diners (N)
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(5:30) ! !!! Battle Los
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The Bridge "The Beetle" (N)
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Property Brothers
Buying and Selling "Julie and Property Brothers "Sandra
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House
Property Brothers "Parker
"Bachelorette Pad" TVPG
Blake"
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Hunters (N)
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! Baby Sellers ('13, Dra) Nicole Munoz, Kirstie Alley. An
! Stolen Child ('11, Dra) Scott Elrod, Emmanuelle Vaugier.
owner of an adoption agency procures children. TV14
A couple uncovers shocking secrets about their baby.
Teen Mom 2
Catfish
Challenge
The Challenge: Rivals II
Challenge
Haunted Hath SpongeBob
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
Full House
(:35) F.House
Bar Rescue "Meat Sauna"
! !! Pitch Black ('00, Thril) Vin Diesel. Marooned space travelers
! !! Pitch Black ('00, Thril) Vin Diesel.
struggle for survival on a seemingly lifeless sun-scorched world. TVM
TVM
Ghost Mine "Secret Passage" Ghost Mine "Gold Fever"
Ghost Mine "Back on the
Ghost Mine "Return to
Ghost Mine "Back on the
TVPG
TVPG
Mountain" (N) TVPG
Darkness" (SP) (N) TVPG
Mountain" TVPG
Seinfeld "The Seinfeld "The Family Guy
Family Guy
The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang The Big Bang Conan (N) TV14
Opera"
Frogger"
"Killer Queen"
Theory
Theory
Theory
Theory
(6:00) ! !! Gaily, Gaily
! !! Captains of the Clouds ('42, War) James Cagney.
! Black Swan (1942) Maureen O'Hara,
! You'll
('69, Com) TV14
American pilots join the Royal Canadian Air Force. TVPG
Tyrone Power, Anthony Quinn.
Never Get ...
Cheer Perfection
Honey Boo
Honey (N)
Honey B. (N)
Cheer Perfection (N)
Honey Boo
Cheer Perfection
Castle
Castle "Nanny McDead"
Castle
Castle "Hell Hath No Fury"
Mental. "Red John's Friends"
Teen Titans
Lego Star
Lego Star
Uncle
King of the
King of the
American Dad American Dad Family Guy
Family Guy
Go!
Wars: Yoda
Wars: Yoda
Grandpa
Hill
Hill
Man v. Food
Man v. Food
Digfellas (N)
Digfellas (N)
Toy Hunter
Toy Hunter
Food Paradise
Food Paradise
The Andy
The Andy
A. Griffith
The Andy
Everybody
Loves Ray
Hot In "Love
Hot in
Hot in
The King of
Griffith Show Griffith Show "Hot Rod Otis" Griffith Show Loves Ray
"The Toaster"
is All Around" Cleveland
Cleveland
Queens
NCIS "Capitol Offense" TVPG NCIS "Restless" TVPG
Royal Pains "A Trismus Story" NCIS "Safe Harbor" TV14
Suits "Endgame" TV14
(N) TV14
(6:30) ! !! 8 Mile ('02, Dra) Eminem. TVM
Tough Love: Co-Ed
Tough Love: Co-Ed (N)
Tough Love: Co-Ed
Funniest Home Videos
Rules of Eng
Rules of Eng
Rules of Eng
Rules of Eng
WGN News at Nine
Funniest Home Videos

7 PM
5:15 !

7:30

8 PM

8:30

9 PM

9:30

10 PM

10:30

Million Hard Knocks TVMA
! !! Life of Pi ('12, Fant) Irrfan Khan, Adil Hussain, Suraj (:45)
Dollar Baby
Sharma. A man begins an epic journey with a tiger. TVPG
Boardwalk
(:10) Strike Back TV14
Strike Back TVMA
! !!! Cowboys and Aliens ('11, Act) Daniel Craig.
Cowboys fight to save the world from aliens in 1873. TV14
(5:30) ! !!! Gangs of New York ('02, Dra) ALL ACCESS
Inside the NFL TVPG
60 Minutes Sports TV14
Leonardo DiCaprio. TVM

11 PM

11:30

Hard Knocks TVMA
(:15) ! Dirty Blondes From
Beyond (Erotica) TVMA
Inside the NFL TVPG

�Wednesday, September 4, 2013

The Daily Sentinel s Page 9

www.mydailysentinel.com

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 2013

COMICS/ENTERTAINMENT

BLONDIE

Dean Young/Denis Lebrun

BEETLE BAILEY

FUNKY WINKERBEAN

HAGAR THE HORRIBLE

HI &amp; LOIS

Mort Walker

Today’s Answers

Tom Batiuk

Chris Browne

Brian and Greg Walker
THE LOCKHORNS

MUTTS

William Hoest

Patrick McDonnell

Jacquelene Bigar’s HOROSCOPE
ZITS

THE FAMILY CIRCUS
Bil Keane

DENNIS THE MENACE
Hank Ketchum

Jerry Scott and Jim Borgman

CONCEPTIS SUDOKU
by Dave Green

HAPPY BIRTHDAY for
Wednesday, Sept. 4, 2013:
This year you often will have to
push away a mental fog that creates
cloudy thinking and delusional outcomes. The more reality-bound you
become, the better off you will be.
You also will experience a better year
overall. If you are single, the problem
won’t be having a lack of potential
suitors, but rather it will be deciding
which suitor to choose. You might
go through quite a few possibilities
until you meet the right one. If you
are attached, the two of you will love
doing more together as a couple,
both with friends and on your own.
Take advantage of any free time you
have. A fellow VIRGO can trigger
strong reactions.
The Stars Show the Kind of Day
You’ll Have: 5-Dynamic; 4-Positive;
3-Average; 2-So-so; 1-Difficult
ARIES (March 21-April 19)
Confusion could cloud a
decision if it is made immediately.
Sit on this matter for a few days, if
possible. A partner will appear to be
more cheerful than he or she has
been in a long time. Know that a
boss or older relative might expect
certain things of you. Tonight: Go for
an early bedtime.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Your creativity is likely to
emerge when dealing with a partner who can be cold. You might
decide to suggest a weekend away
together. Understand that you can’t
change this person — only he or she
can decide to lighten up. Tonight:
Consider taking a midweek break.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
You might need some time
to reach out to a family member or to
deal with a domestic matter. A boss
or higher-up could be so vague about
what he or she wants that you might
need to read some tarot cards in
order to figure it out! Stay even-tempered. Tonight: Happy to be home.
CANCER (June 21-July 22)
Keep conversations moving. You might find that someone’s
voice has you drifting off to a different time or place. Try to stay present.
Someone who has been controlling
will become a lot easier to deal with.
Take advantage of the moment.
Tonight: Accept someone’s invitation.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
A partner could be more
creative than usual. This person
seems to be choosing not to see
what he or she does not want to. Try
to help this individual be more realistic without sacrificing his or her imagination. You might like the outcome.

Tonight: Take your next cue.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You might want to try a
new way of doing something, and
even if you don’t, a partner or loved
one will insist that you approach a
situation in just that manner. Keeping
the peace in this case might not be
very easy, but it certainly will be necessary. Tonight: Ever playful.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
You have a lot to do, and
you will do your best to accomplish
all of it. You could be overwhelmed
by everything that you hear. Do not
hesitate to question a family member, as this person often is elusive.
You know what needs to be done.
Tonight: Head home early.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
You might have been so
focused on work lately that you’ll be
delighted to have some fun with a
child or loved one today. You could
see a situation differently from how
an associate sees it. Make a point to
consider this person’s point of view.
Tonight: Play the night away.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Others will push you hard
because they know that you’ll perform to the best of your ability. You
might not feel comfortable with their
lack of perspective. You are likely to
distance yourself and say little. You
care more about the end product.
Tonight: A must appearance.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
You will want to reconsider
an offer that comes from someone
at a distance. You might not want to
share more until you are ready. You
also might want consider making a
change in your daily life. Recognize
the effect that this could have on others. Tonight: Surf the Web.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Try a different approach,
or do some rethinking and revising.
An associate or a partner could have
strong feelings regarding how a situation needs to be approached. Let this
person have his or her way, as your
convictions are not as strong as his
or hers. Tonight: Love the one you
are with.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Defer to a friend or loved
one. You might be uptight about
what you are hearing. Clearly, you
seem to be getting mixed messages.
Understand what is happening
between you and someone else. Let
this person reveal more of his or her
thoughts. Tonight: Go with the flow.
Jacqueline Bigar is on the Internet
at www.jacquelinebigar.com.

�Page 10 s The Daily Sentinel

www.mydailysentinel.com

Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Bengals sign DT
Geno Atkins to
5-year extension
CINCINNATI (AP) — The Bengals signed defensive
tackle Geno Atkins to a five-year contract extension on
Monday, locking up one of their best defensive players
through 2018.
The All-Pro tackle, a fourth-round pick in 2010, was entering the final year on his original deal. He made the Pro
Bowl each of the last two seasons. Atkins had 12½ sacks
last season, the most by any interior lineman in the NFL.
Cincinnati has spent more than $180 million since the
end of last season keeping the team intact. The Bengals
have reached the playoffs each of the last two seasons as a
wild card, only to lose to Houston in the first round.
The Bengals had a lot of open space under the salary
cap heading into the offseason. Rather than go after free
agents, they decided to keep their own players. Linebacker James Harrison was the only major free agent signing.
“The cap space is there to use, and we’ve continued to
use it,” coach Marvin Lewis said. “And we have a couple
more to do as well. That’s the thing: The team has really
stepped up. By my mere layman calculations, we’ve been
one of the top four or five teams in the league in spending.
That’s a big deal.
“We’ve preserved our young players and we’ve preserved our core guys.”
Atkins is the 12th Bengals player to get either a new
contract or an extension since the end of last season.
“It means a lot to know that they believe in me,” Atkins
said. “They drafted me in the fourth round and they believed in me. That’s going to show the younger guys that
if you do the right things on and off the field, that you will
be rewarded, too.”
Cincinnati has put emphasis on retaining a defense that
has finished in the top 10 each of the last two seasons.
The Bengals have signed linemen Carlos Dunlap, Robert
Geathers, Wallace Gilberry and Michael Johnson; cornerbacks Adam “Pacman” Jones and Terence Newman; and
linebacker Rey Maualuga to new deals since the end of
last season.
They’ve also gotten deals with right tackle Andre
Smith, long snapper Clark Harris, punter Kevin Huber
and kicker Mike Nugent.
Atkins has quickly developed into one of the Bengals’
top defensive players. He’s content to let others get the
attention, preferring a soft-spoken approach he doesn’t
think will change.
“I let my play do the talking,” Atkins said. “So I’m just
going to keep doing what I’m doing. A lot of guys look up
George Bridges | MCT photo
to me and if they need help, I’m going to coach them up a Geno Atkins (97) of the Cincinnati Bengals pressures Matt Schaub (8) of the Houston Texans in the first half of their AFC
bit. But I let my play do the talking.”
playoff game on Saturday, Jan. 5, in Houston, Texas.

Browns LB Mingo returns to practice
CLEVELAND (AP) —
Barkevious Mingo’s comeback from a strange injury
is nearly complete.
The first-round draft pick
who sustained a bruised
lung last month returned

to practice in a limited role
Monday, a significant step
in his recovery from the
mysterious injury.
Mingo was injured in
an Aug. 15 exhibition
game against Detroit

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and hospitalized for two
days at The Cleveland
Clinic. The No. 6 overall
pick took part in position
drills, but did not have
any contact during the 30
minutes of practice open
to reporters. It’s doubtful
Mingo took part in any of
the 11-on-11 team drills
Mingo’s status for
Sunday’s season opener
against
the
Miami
Dolphins is still to be
determined. The 6-foot5, 240-pounder will likely
undergo more testing
before he can be cleared
to play. He experienced
shortness of breath and
said he spit up some
blood while he was on
the sideline against the
Lions.
He was in the locker
room after practice, but a
team spokesman said he
would not talk to the media until Friday.
Browns coach Rob
Chudzinski was not available Monday.
Mingo was restricted to
riding a stationary bike,
some running and light
weightlifting last week, so
his appearance on the field
is a sign he’s made good
progress.
“It’s good,” linebacker
D’Qwell Jackson said.
“The main thing is his
health. He’s dealing with
something that I never
had experience with and a
lot of other guys haven’t.
So you want to be overcautious with something
like that. It’s good to see
him moving, and whenever we get him back he’s
going to be full steam
ahead. He’s a smart guy
and he’s done everything
right so far.”
Mingo doesn’t remember taking a hit that could
have caused the unusual
injury.
The Browns plan to use
him as an outside pass
rusher whenever he returns.
“He’s ready to go,” Jackson said. “He was a firstround pick. He wants to
be out there to show guys
how good he can rush off
the edge. We know how
good he’s going to be and
how good he is right now.
The good thing about this
team, we have guys who
can step up while he’s out,
so it’s no rush for him to
come back.”

Steelers TE Miller
inching toward return
PITTSBURGH (AP) — Heath
Miller, yet to practice with the Pittsburgh Steelers, took the next step in
the rehabilitation process after right
knee surgery some eight months ago
when he was taken off the physically
unable to perform list.
The nine-year veteran tight end,
who tore three ligaments in his right
knee against Cincinnati last December, called the move a step in the
right direction. He remains vague
about a possible return date: The
Steelers open the season hosting
Tennessee on Sunday.
“My mindset’s not going to
change,” Miller said Monday. “I just
want to keep improving each day
and keep stacking those good days
together. I still want to think short
term, so that’s day by day, and keep
getting better. That’s brought me to
this point, and that will take me to a
good point soon.”
He left it up to Steelers coach Mike
Tomlin to determine when Miller can
put the pads on. The two-time Pro
Bowler, however, remains steadfast
that he has never looked beyond incremental improvement.
“I feel good, and I’ve worked hard
to get to this point,” Miller said.
“Hopefully, I can take these last few
steps. Fortunately, the timing of the
injury was pretty good, because I
don’t feel like I missed as much as I
could have if I would have had to sit
and watch through a whole season.”
Still, Miller anticipates a bit of a
learning curve after sitting out training camp and each of Pittsburgh’s
four exhibition games.
“I did have to miss the preseason,
which is never fun when you’re
not out there with your team, but
I know that I’m closer to the end
than the beginning,” Miller said.

“So, that’s a good thing.
“As I’ve said all along, and I’m not
lying to you guys, I’ve just tried to
take each day (and) get better, and I
knew if I did that it would be a good
outcome, whatever that was.”
Miller’s even-keel approach and
tireless work ethic has rubbed off on
his teammates, particularly fellow
tight end David Johnson. Johnson
missed the 2012 season after right
knee surgery and was taken off the
PUP list several weeks ago, but spent
time working alongside Miller as
they moved through the final stages
of rehabilitation.
“It’s getting a whole lot better, and
I think it’s going pretty good,” Johnson said. “I’m just blessed to be back
out here and working. It’s been a long
road, but it’s feeling good. And every
day it’s getting a whole lot better, and
my running and blocking is getting a
whole lot better every day as well.”
While Johnson’s presence gives
the Steelers one of the better blocking tight ends in the league, he is an
afterthought in the passing game.
Not Miller, who led Pittsburgh with
71 receptions and eight touchdowns
last year.
“The team needs Heath,” Johnson
said. “I feel like once he gets all the
way back he’ll help the team even
more. We ran a little bit together, and
he’s doing pretty good. So, I think
he’ll be all right. And whatever the
team needs me to do until he gets
back, I’ll be ready for it.”
Miller could follow the path
running back Rashard Mendenhall took last season. Mendenhall
missed the opening three games
and returned after Pittsburgh’s bye
week. This season, the Steelers
play four games before hitting their
bye in early October.

Big 12 starts with 2 losses to FCS teams
The Big 12 is 0-2 against the Missouri
Valley Conference, and it took a late touchdown by West Virginia to avoid another
opening-weekend loss to an FCS team.
“That’s the story of the opening week
of the season, is who gets beat by somebody they shouldn’t,” Texas coach Mack
Brown said Monday. “There’s always a
couple, and this year there were a lot
more than that.”
Nationwide, there were eight FCS
teams that beat FBS opponents. That was
twice as many such upsets as the opening
week of 2012.
But that’s not supposed to happen to
a league like the Big 12, which going

into this season was 103-3 against nonFBS teams. The conference in its 18th
season almost matched that loss total in
one weekend.
“It will grab your attention. Luckily, we
were able to get tested and be able to overcome that,” said West Virginia coach Dana
Holgorsen, whose team escaped with a 2417 win over William &amp; Mary. “At the end
of the year, it really doesn’t matter what
the score was. It’s about getting the wins.”
Defending co-Big 12 champion Kansas
State failed to do that against two-time
defending FCS champion North Dakota
State, then Iowa State lost to Northern
Iowa. (Baylor beat Wofford 69-3 in its
FCS matchup).

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